The Daily Worker Newspaper, December 8, 1933, Page 2

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Page Two Honor Memory of S$ of Memory Leader to be Honored at New Star Casino, Comintern Dec. 10 DAILY WORKER, WiiWy \ Ui, 2sDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1933 | Detechiskers Strike Against Wage Cuts Bosses in Sharp Attack on Union Conditions NEW YORE refused to take a wage cut, they were Because the worker: en Katayama, at Mass Meet This Sunday 7 p. m. ~ Katayama and Tom Mann NRA Breaks Dugan Chain Bakery Strike Union Officials Agree | to Arbitrate Demands | NEW YORK, — Bakery workers, drivers and salesmen on strike against se | . ai ci sd out by the bosses ree! ee Glarence Hathaway Will Speuk for the Polbu- is & iat Sa Ermcceeneerse =| A Way to Make a Living reau; Trachtenberg and James Perea ces taed aealiys eS0) eas ie offctals of the A. F. of L. Teamsters’ aes Ford Other Speakers ; NEW YORK.—The memory of Sen Katayama, one of the leaders of the | Ta erm iage oars ‘ ‘st. Party, |J0bber a uoas (with the aegia i toaed af tae York. I don’t know the address, but I could take you tom: Communist International, a fou r ol American Communi: ‘arty, | refusal to giv and leader of the Japanese Party, will be honored at a Memorial Meeting, | order to compel the contratcors to NRA. the house. It used to be a saloon operated by eg called inst. Sunday, Dec. 10, 7 p.m., at the New Star Casino, 107th St. and Park Aye.|lower prices. Knowing that the Although great militancy was| Willard, and they tried to turn it into a speak, but it was -74 Alexander Trachtenberg, who had long conversations with Katayama ‘Union y Wor are on § workers of the Len Jay shop will not Local 138 and of the Amalgamated Food Workers Local 3 agreed to sub- | mit all question of wages, hours and | conditions to arbitration, at confer- | shown by the strikers, this was care- HIS gym where I met Dave Beal is called Willard’s, and a it’s on the corner of an alley off Delancey Street in New ses- too open, When the Scandinavian who made a gym out of Moscow his des " fp A MS aie accept @ wage reduction and have} P fully smothered by the officials who| . ‘ i sea ae pipes ae pba ba the statement continues, “with his|always put up @ militant fight for| tact glutionary Japanese leader | photographed with veteran | opposed mass picketing. The strikers| it had Willard lettered on the window, people started calling Slarence Hatt epri whole life of devotion and heroic! union conditions, the jobber refuses to| British Jabor leader in London in 1926. wanted to spread the strike, but this} him Willard, He felis you all © ; Clarence Hathaway, repre: Polbureau of the Commu struggle for the cause of the Interna-| provide work to them. was also prevented by the officials, this without mentioning his my boy was the same whose coast . picts, “ay / 3 ’ Hye 2 2 a ecord he had looked up, and I said 7. Ford, who will att as| tional Proletariat, the workers of| Officials of the International or- who advised the worker to rely on the ba ; Srey ames Wi; Mord, io will ¢¢ 85) New. York will demonstrate this|dered the workers of the H. and T. ‘s " r . N. RA. eek name. fpcnadin od He | was ae posal actual : ‘ ys nt, the [Pre- | Sunday evening, Dec. 10, at the New|Dress Co. at 698 Glenmore Ave., Do W; th Hi t] W k M The ruling of ional Board gym is run for neighborhood in ring Dave no rope ( sidiume of the Bateutive Gommpttes | Star Casino, 107th St, and Park Ave,| Brooklyn to resume working for the| wh Wi wer: | Workers In any aialaves tak coe ne fighters and cheap pugs who can't| tugging and no glaring. He waited = of the Communist Internatfonal | 4ainst the Jupanese imperialist ban- | Dotty May Dress Co., a jobber against | Ot crimination between union or non-| ®{ford Stillman’s or Duffy's. They| for the bell and walked out briskly. = states: “Sen Matayama always, “its! Against their new anti-Soviet| whom the workers of the inside shop Shout Workers at Cities to Protest union member,” This enables the| Come there without trainer or rian-| The other boy was chunky and {4 Metrehed in the first fighting manks| 8" Prevocations in outer Mongolia! | struck last week after refusing to ac- hairy, with puncher written all over of the proletariat, fearless of persecu- tien, without shrinking in the face of difficulties as a steadfast revolu- tionary, Katayama unhesitatingly q@ame under the flag of Lenin, and carried the flag courageously and steadfastly to the end of his life.” Urging workers to attend the me- norial meeting in masses, the N. ¥. District of the Communist Part; points out that “In the struggle against Japanese mperialism, for defense of the Ch: nese Soviets and heroic Red Arm: | For defense of the Chinese people | and their herole Red Army.” | ToMapFight to Oust * Zausner Machine To Expose Racketeer- | cept a lowered wage scale. The workers at the H. and I. shop struck | when they found that they were paid | . LONGN: pe | far less than the amount the strikers | Painters Call Meet The attack on union standards by | had received, the dress bosses aided by the I.L.G.W. officials calls for a sharp struggle which must have the fullest support of all dressmakers, the dress depart- ment of the Industrial Union points out. The union calls on all workers lines, Nazi Garden Rally (Continued from Page 1) |Garden even before the chairman rose to introduce the first speaker. Both the audience and the ofilcals on the platform sat on the edge of |their seats, listening for a dissenting |voice or a word of praise for Hitler. |to assist the strikers on the picket |The Nazi flag with the black swastika | hung from the platform amid the jred, white and blue, and red, white company to protect the scabs on the job. The arbitration board is to be appointed by the N. R. A. and must be accepted by the officials, L. C. Wills who is chairman of the N, R, A. in Brooklyn is the attorney for the Dugan Company and repre- sented {t during the negotiations. City Events ScottsboroVerdicts (Continued from Page 1) tion Brohm, Elmer Brown, Countee Cullen, Donald Henderson, James W. Ford, Max Bedacht, William Fitz- gerald, M. J. Olgin, Charles Krum- bein, Herbert Benjamin, and Richard B. Moore. The Union Square mass meeting will be preceded by & parade organ: ized by the International Labor De- Anti-Fascist Symposium ager and half the time they dortt pay. Some of them come ready stripped from the poolroom upstairs. You never see topnotchers train heré, of course, nor even a self-respecting club fighter. The only personage I ever met there was Eddie Brooks, the welter, and he didn’t strip, he was just showing some kid how to put a snap behind his left. The boys stood three deep around him and he told about a bout which pulled him $250. ee oe AVE BEAL, there for the first time, turned to me and said it him. He tucked his chin in and came winging into Daye, who coun- ed fast and workmanlike and ef- fectxely; you could tell from the jolts of the bushy head. For the most part, mave seemed satisficd to slide around 2{i take them on his elbows. It was 3 bloody, tough crowd, but even they sensed Dave wasn’t doing it out of timidity. But ye 2 id in defense of the Soviet Union,| . ° | is was & swell way to make a living. the name of Sen Katayama, founder) ing on Daily Tax, and | 64 : ’ jand black banners. Another swastika | fense, starting from 7h St. cor. AVe-| piichton Beach Workers Center,| After that, he disregarded Badie| Rodded with his mouth open. He | ft the Japahese revolutionary labor 1 0 Ing 0 ay § | was half hidden on the bottom of |nue A at twelve o'clock, where Joseph Ave Broke’ | Brooks and went to work on the| WAS breathing only slightly heavitr = 5 be area joc Strong-Arm Methods | |the flatform. Men in full dress with | Brodsky will speak. 722 Brighton Beach Ave. Brooklyn, | jcavy bag, and I met him again at| than two rounds ago and he mid, 5 iovement stands out as 8 gress and) © a | : |short Hitlerite mustaches and women ie ae Will hold @ symposium on fascism | ine” uineside taking time out, He| “The fifth.” inspiring example of a proletarian 3 Se 5 aes °% . iniemationalist and tireless fighter) NEW YORK.—To enable the mem-| Atty.-Gen. S Reply iced venus gowns Stood oul COn-| CHICAGO, Iil.—Workers of this {or Amchicen Shader rene OF" | bore few trade marks, but T Noted his| In the fourth the squat lad tired against imperielist war. |bership of A. F. of L. painters, Dis-| ~ |Spicuously on and in the high-priced | city wall rally on Saturday, “Scotts- ear ages fl build and watched him moving| and Dave shot a few to the stom- en the name of Sen Katayama,” | trict Council 9, to speak freely about | . orchestra seats near the platform. boro Protest Day,” to protest the Lsopwanaces yates elt grin Reger around and he was obviously no ham.| ach which knocked the last of his —_____________"_"_ | the terrorism and racketeering of the | TM LYNCH INQUILY | me two banners at eitner end of} Decatur death verdict ina parade | Goldstein and A. DeSantas, editor of | He showed the spindly legs, smali| wind out. He finished hanging on FROM SECTION 12, CHICAGO | offiicaldom in the painters’ locals, | etdiitc ~ |the arena proclaimed: “Americans!| beginning at 43rd and Indiana Avé,, ‘ waist, strong shoulders, back and| and as they broke Dave lashed open CHICAGO, Ill.—A group of work- | Local Unions 499 and 878 have issued | (Continued from Page 1) |The Right of Free Speech, The! at four p.m. and marching to the Metal Workers Meet biceps of the established lightweight | an old out down his cheek. He was rs in Section 12, Chicago, sent $15 |a call to a joint membership meet- | |Right of Assembly. Hold Them| Savoy Ballroom, 47th and South- ae on who has no trouble with the scales,| badly spent. to the Daily Worker, with a state-/ing, to which painters of all other| exclaimed, “so intolerable, so inex-|Sacred—Never Surrender Them.”| park Ave., where speakers from the Civil Works Jobs On the bench he introduced him- I knew from the motions of his ment. Lage ap workers to P jlocals are invited, at the Central) cuseable, so un-American, so unjust, | These Spnaeen which bts iS Compe bare ps AC iabebinig: of il pact: ime ba self and said he was from the coast | seconds they were instructing him port the ‘Daily’ as it is one of the | Opera House, 67th St. between Second i fi-| tion o: ie audience was called by| ban me, an er organiza- and the commission there had sus- | to one over if possible, and he most powerful weapons the workers |and Third Aves, on Saturday, Dec. |e ne Troms that It is di Nazi chairman, seemed an in-| tions will speak. Workers, includ- |Y2¢™ployed metal workers will be held yd ee cult to express myself in parliamen- | the | pended him for six months, but he ; did come out winging wide again, have against starvation, fascism |9, at 1 pam. Peary fauna © |congruous decoration amid the shouts} ing those from the stockyards, will | today, 20, at 35 F loth St. to discuss | had to live and came East to see | but Dave drove him back on his | and war.” The meeting will plan the next| In this connection Cummings pro- |! “Heil Hitler!” and the two swas-| march under their own banners. A Jone Mea cant abe th ices of | What he could do. He didn't want | heels with rights and lefts from all | << steps in te fat aeaineh ine sack-|alece to deal Gub “omental josie n|timat ON tbe iaitormn: delegation headed by Newton will wand ‘Metal Workers nom, | ‘© hook with any manager as yet, '| directions, hooking until the other I eeesiae euicen hee eee a he oeeas ke persistent | Thtee resolutions, calling for “sup-| vist Mayor Kelly Friday. the Steel and Metal Workers Unem-| je wanted to get the lay of the | junk drepped lie tenes Gell ened SAM & FRANK |S StRi ihe gunmen used by | ori Mcriaing, make erent pct of cur Pree and our ene ew a eae orate re | Se oe eS | oi 5 | Popa ; is " Rehr Min ey jagainst the forces of depression,” for} §T, LOUIS, Mo—The Park Com- SEAN SIRO not the place and he said he knew bloody from that cheek \ Trucking and Movin: them to maintain their control over ticularly those who evade the revenue | 28@inst the 1 . : R OM | ¢¢ P ve y vite 426 East ces Re the union. The meeting will demand laws that require them to divvy up|'2@ discontinuance of the boycott | missioner of the state which recently ‘Unemployment Insurance and | that but he had to go casy on cash. | gash and the towel flow from their Gramercy 7-9816 Special Low Rates for Daily Worker aders |the immediate resignation of the Dis- | trict Council and the impeachment} of the officials for gross violation of the Brotherhood Constitution. | the booty with the Uncle Sam. Of this type of criminal the Attorney General says, “if I can’t get him one way, I'll get him another, if I can’t lagainst Germany so that “political jand social conditions in Germany will be expedited”, and a condemna- tion of Mayor O’Brien for not allow- witnessed @ most horrible lynching of a Negro, refused to grant a per- mit for a Scottsboro protest parade under the auspices of a united front the A. F. of L.” Louis Weinstock, National Secre- tary of the A. F. of L. Trade Union He was fighting some place in Ja~ maica that week-end, a $20 fight, his first here, and he wanted some- one to handle him for the evening. corner, but the ped it. spoke little in the ENED . ’ : |ing the first meeting on Oct. 25, were | anti-lynch committee. Colonel Mil- | Committee for Unemployment Insur- allright ‘wouldn’ ‘Then The daily 50 cent work tax collected | use one law, I'll use another becausé| adopted without the formality of a|ler said that local eee ee: ance and Relief, will speak on “Un- pe ders aan a gen ‘the ply he Sai Ay ng his hat S nes DR. JULIOS LITTINSKY |)oes2e2enet Bot Zesuied, in putting | he ought to be gotten.” |vote. ‘Tho half-hearted shout, im-|Iynchings and that “in some cases |¢mbloyment Insurance and the A. F.| ‘The idea of someone from Wil- |te horus off benee te non ee le pera Ae ee fi Magda < po page tot! Serer T pe aie |mediately proclaimed the resolution | lynching is even too good for those |f L., tonights As p.m. under the aus-) Jard’s being “busy” evenings seemed | was Fi nape Ps got the $20. ‘They | g iS, get in, finally, “in view o: esi- | sregardi ri " Negroes.” ices oO} ¢ Ella May Branch, 4109 4 407 BRISTOL STREET |) itn which to maintain their strong~ | dent Rocevelt's Statement is the be. |C2iTied: disregarding the cries of “Not Ly y to strike him queer, but it suited | rec, him as we walked out Bet. Pitkin aad Sutter Aves, Brooklyn PRONE: DICKENS 2-012 Ofitee Ei 8-18 AM., 1. COHENS’S 117 ORCHARD STREET Nr. Delancey Street, New York City Wholesale Optietans BYES EXAMINED By Dr. A.Weinstein Tel. ORchard 4-4520 Factory on Premises Optometrist Drydock 4-4522 Harry Stolper, Inc. Optician |ments or to register its unemployed, “== attorney will address the meeting on jarm support. Revolt against the tax by the membership of Locals 499 and | 848, which refused to continue pay- forced Zausner and his associates to jeall off the registration, but the tax | continues. | To retaliate, the Zausner gang no- |tified the employers to lay off all |those who refuse to pay the tax. In- | junction papers were served against the District Council by Locals 499 | and 848 on Dec, 5 to restrain it from |depriving the men of thtir right to | Work. | Roger Baldwin, of the Civil Lib- jerties Union, and Harry Sacher, labor | Saturday, | STOCKTON NEAR QUOTA | STOCKTON, Cal.—The local sub- | Section needs only $2 more to com- plete its quota of $20 in the Daily partment of Justice"going to take any action with regard to lynchings?” “Not in view of or as a concom- mitant of any statement,” he says, removing his pince nez spectacles, his Jean frame, the picture of Olympian | Judiciousness, “I can make a ‘state- | ment’; all I can say on the subject is that the recrudescence of lynching is @ very distressing thing. There isn’t any possible excuse for it.” “But about the demands you re- ceived for federal investigation?” “We're doing the best we can here to create respect for law, because of the department's promptness in fol- lowing up criminal cases and the re- sults we have achieved.” And then came the blast on lynch- ing—in principle. And then, finally, | the confession that, with respect to | specific cases, the head of the power- |ful [Department of Justice couldn’t of the Garden. As a concluding speaker, Professor |Arthur Remy, of Columbia University, jextolled the Nazi culture in music, jliterature and art, continually prais- ling steps taken by the fascists to \“liberate the German people in cul- tural and intellectual life.” Remy, a member of the same university where seven professors reecntly is- {sued @ protest against the appearance jof Luther to speak, never made one |mention of the suppression and exile |of hundreds of German writers, pro- jfessors and scientists by the Nazis. |1egal evidence to support their charge \t titutional rights had been invaded in the states and that there- fore, the Federal Government was bound by legal statutes to: intervene, In fact, the Department of Justice, after studying. the evidence, prom- ised to investigate “if we have au- No!” that rose from many sectionsy SEG Se NEWARK, N. J.—A permit for a Scottsboro protest meeting was re- fused by Police Chief McRell when @ delegation representing more than 6,000 workers requested the corner of Somerset and Spruce St. for a demonstration. “Well hold the meet- ing anyway!’ said a spokesman for the delegation. 13th, Ave., Brooklyn, BMWU Membership Meeting A membership meeting of Local 4, Building Maintenance Workers Union, will be held tonight, 8 p. m., at 415 Lenox Ave. TUUC Educational Conference Educational Committee of the Trade Union Unity Council will hold an educational conference today, right atfer work, at council headquarters, 80 East llth St. * . . BOSTON, Mass—A demonstration to protest the Decatur decision was called here for Sunday afternoon at 3 pm. at Douglass Sq. A new Scottsboro campaign headquarters opened at 1029 Tremont St. from where a mass campaign to rally the workers of the city will be organized. Shoe Workers Meeting A meeting of all unemployed shoe workers living in Manhattan will be held today, 11 a. m., at Union Head- quarters, 77 Fifth Av W.LR. First Aid Class ® * PITTSBURGH, Pa.—The Inter- tional Labor Defense issued a call for % Scottsboro parade for Sat- him fine, he said, because he did his own training and fought his own fights. All Yd have to do is hand him the bottle for an occa- sional rinse, keep my hands off his face and hold the tights away from his belly between rounds. And I was not to chatter instructions. ésiuigsmaeay S AY we went to a movie before the fight and he apologized for letting me treat him, but all he had left was a dime to get to Jamaica. We traveled together in silence, but you could see he was not at all tense. I got a good look at him in the subway and asked whether he had Indian blood and he said he was a full-blooded Navajo, but for 25 years I was the third per- son who had noticed without being told. I judged him to be 28, but fighters generally look older than they are. ‘ognized through the aisles and gave Dave quite a hand. Back at the station he said it was a hell of a way to make a living. I hopped off at Sunnyside and at home I found he had stuffed a five-pot into my pocket. He was supposed to phone me, but he never did, and in about ten days I got a card from New Orleans which said he had hooked up with a man- ager who had connections down there and was going to try to build him up locally. Helping the Daily Worker Through Ed Newhouse Contributions received to the credit of Edward Newhouse in the Socialist competition with Michael Gold, Dr Luttinger, Helen Luke and Jacol) Burck to raise $1,000 in the $40,000 Daily Worker Drive: ’ urday, Dec. 16, “ Total to date ............$550.30 73 Chrystie Street, N. Y. C. || worker $40,000 campaign, Efforts | express himself at all, elther in|thority.” Cummings ordered Assis-| tre “Ave WICK eae eects Gus Data ote eee ee eee : Formerly with the LW. | are being made to go considerably | Parliamentary or unparliamentary| tant Attorney General William Stan-| march through the Hil district, eddtie te ie vy ipped early and made me bandage over the top. BRUMMELS @ 799 Broadway, Near 1ith Street, _ Carries a complete line of GENTS FURNISHINGS : In addition to our regularly low prices, FIVE per cent discount om aK purchases. TO DAILY WORKER READERS 10" DEMONSTRATE WITH US AT THE DAILY WORKER ANNIVERSARY ——_——— BRONX COLISEUM, 177th Street fashion. But what is Cummings directing the Department of Justice to do? Nothing. Despite the fact that care- fully prepared legal briefs, explain- ing the grounds on which the Fed- eral Government can act, have been }in his hands for days. Not since Maryland Hooligans oust- -|ed militia who declined to fire a shot to obtain leaders of the George Armwood lynchers, but before that event. It was in the early Summer —just after Armwood had been lynched in Maryland and Pippen and Harden had been lynched in Ala- fused panting to see “the” to be interviewed. He was man who pre- , but he couldn’t an was Patter- son or Roger Baldwin, or A. Hirsch, |all of whom he saw), that he has jnothing to say, and other officials of the Justice Department said “off ,” nothing will be done. en to Attorney General Cummings himself—he greets about twenty-five correspondents bowing and smiling, while the department’s publicity man passes out cigars and sented the bri terminating at Bedford Park with a huge mass meeting, wie, Dry Goods Workers’ Union Calls Strike NEW YORK.—Inspired by their re- cent strike victory at the T. and M. Knitting Mills, Orchard St., the Dry Goods Workers’ Union is developing th struggle for improving the condi- tions of the dry goods workers. A strike was called at the Zuckerbaum Brothers at 59 Canal St. this week for increases in wages, shorter hours and recognition of the union. All dry goods workers are urged to Cops Attack Protest Meeting DETROIT, Mich., Dec, 1—Police here brutally charged a Scottsboro protest street meeting yesterday in the heart of the Negro section, Hastins and Erskine Sts., and cru- elly beat up three women and three men, i ee PHILADELPHIA, Pa., Dec. %—~ Hundreds of Negro and white workers answered the call of the way ahead of time. The promoter asked who I was and said he hoped Do your share by getting new sub- MEET YOUR OLD BEACON, N, Y. Rates: $14 per week (incl. press tax! (from Unity, Kinderland and Nitgedaiget) AT A GAY WEEK-END PARTY THIS THANKSGIVING AT NITGEDAIGET HOTEL ALL THE SUMMER FUN WITH WINTER COMFORTS 60 Steam Heated Rooms—Excellent Food; Dance; Sing; Concert; Lectures CAMP FRIENDS Phone: Beacon 731 ); $2.45 for 1 day; $4.65 for 2 days | t ay oes the California and Mis- | cigaret Somebody wants to know epee Party and the LL.D, give: active sttpood sothik strike, ea $13 for I. W. O. and Co-operative Members souri outrages—that William L. Pat-| about liquor control, and the Attor- joined a parade which pro- ‘ttan |} (Private cars 1 daily at 10:30 from Co-operative Resta) it, ao SATURDAY, DEC::S 0,193 terson of the IL.D., and other mass | ney General's response is one hour’s| tested the death verdict and de- |Pecially members of the Manhattan val eave at 10:30 a, m. from 0) ve urant, ; eas 3 organization leaders gave Cummings | dissertat: i manded the release of the Scotts- | Youth, ,Ci-Grand and East Side 2700 Bronx Park East (Estabrook 8-5141), ADMISSION: ¥n advance 4c; at the door 400; Red Press Fund 10c Sante ass z boro boys, Telerams of protest | Workers’ Clubs. Come for the Week-End—You Will Want to Stay the Week “ ‘TICKETS for SALE; Sergei Radamaky Daily Worker Workers’ Book Shop, { Wo ® Program of New Songs (Store), 35 E. 12th Street; 50 Fast 13th Street Dance Till Dawn Fourth Annual | the January Places Order for 100,000 Copies; All Other Cities to Beat Its Record N.Y. Plans Peak Sale of 6th “Daily” Challenges For Honest Insurance Advice CONSULT B. WARANTZ General Insurance Broker E. 15th STREET, BROOKLYN ESP. 5-0938 | 2 N.Y. Demonstrations At HRB for More Aid NEW YORK. ~— Jobless workers should Join demonstrations for more relief to be held on Thursday at the 78th Street and York Ave Home Re- 1965 TEL: CHAIRS & TABLES COSTUME 12th Annual MORNING FREIHEIT BALL on Anniversary Edition lef Bureau, and Friday at the 44th Street Bureau, Dec. WORKER'S CENTER BANQUET | ARRANGED BY THE CENTRAL COMMITTEE OF THE COMMUNIST PARTY OF THE U. 8. A. | SUNDAY, DEC. 24th, 7 P.M. Al Mass Organisations, Party Units, Trade Unions, Groups and Supporters, Are Making Reservations and Electing Their Delegates BARL BROWDEK, General Secretary, ©. Pp, U. 8. A. CHAS. KRUMBEIN, N. ¥. District Sec., C. P., U. 8. A. | JOSEPH BRODSKY, Chief Attorney for the I. L. D. | JAMES FORD, ©, P., Candidate for Vice-Pres. of U.S.A. An Excellent Program ADMISSION 50¢ @ TO BE PAID AT THE DOOR @ WATCH TOR FURTHHR ANNOUNCEMENTS press on Jan. 6th. house to house canvassing with this best Daily Worker yet put out. The local Daily Worker committee has already placed a cash order for 100,- 000 copies of this edition. Special articles will appear in this edition by American Communist leaders, William Z%. Foster, Earl Browder, Robert Minor, and many ethers. Articles and greetings for the an- niversary edition will be sent by lead- jers of the world Communist moye- ment, the Communist International, and of the various Communist Par- ties, including the German, English, Polish, French and others. In placing a cash order for 100,000 copies, New York challenges Chicago, Cleveland Detroit, Pittsburgh, Phil- adelphia, and other cities to a revo- lutionary competition as to which can sell the largest number of this his- tory-making issue of the Daily Worker. All Districts are urged to send in their orders at once 24 pages, and will be the largest and@— NEW YORK.—Plans are being laid here for the largest mass sale of | the Tenth Anniversary edition of the Daily Worker which comes off the All Party members and sympathizers will be mobilized for an intensive historical edition, which will ecntain U.C. Holds Educa- tional Meet Tonight NEW YORK.—An educational con- ference called by the Trade Union Unity Council wiil be held tonight at 6 p. m. at the headquarters of the Council, 799 Broadway. Delegates from the unions will report on plans for their educational work and on the Present educational activities in the unions ‘Two classes organized by the Coun- are scheduled for Saturday, The in Strike Strategy with Andrew Overgaard as instructor will be held at the Workers’ School at 11 a. m, and in Current Events in the Labor Movement with Clarence Hathaway as instructor at 3.30 p.m. Comrade Hathaway will discuss the Civil Works Program and ite meaning for the workers, TO HIRE Dayt, 9-5504 Minnesota 9-7520 American Chair Renting Co. ‘The mobilization on Thursday will be at 347 East 72nd Street at 11 a. m. and Friday at 402 West 40th Street at the same time. Painters’ Locals Meet NEW YORK —A joint member- ship meeting of Local Unions 499 . J. MORRIS, Inc. GENERAL FUNERAL and 848 of the Brotherhood of PELE hal t/a Painters will be held Saturday, a sucks Dickens Relrarr4 Dec. 9, 1 p. m. at the (Central Ea aki Sip, Opera House. re al Workers Order ZLOTNICK’S BAKERY 676 ALLERTON AVE., BRONX Will Donate to the DAILY WORKER 10°, of all income during the 3 days FRI. SAT. SUN. DEC. & DEC. 9 DEC. 10 Comrades — Suport the Daily Worker By Patronizing ZLOTNICK’S BAKERY Saturday Night, ST. NICHOLAS ARENA ' 66th Street near Broadway The Proletarian Cartoonists of the Morning Freiheit YOSSEL CUTLER VS. BILL GROPPER In a Wrestling Match in Cartoons and Chalk Talk 9th KING DAVID’S Negro Jazz Band Orchestra ADMISSION AT THE DOOR — 50c TICKETS IN ADVANCE ONLY — 35c Tickets on Sale at Workers Book Shop,50 E.13th St. GALA CELEBRA TION-CONCERT & DANCE “HERBERT GOLDPRANK-Aciing Beeretary V8.0. 15 Balolaika Orchestea { Mot Jazz Band - Dancing Sparag-Frmovus Sopraao “TLL Morning-New Russian Trie Auspices - West Si¢> Branch ‘The Biggest Uptown the seas Cr mn 600 in adi

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