The Daily Worker Newspaper, December 9, 1933, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Page Two DAILY WORKER, NEW. YORK, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1933 Honor Memory of Sen Katayama at New Star Casino Tomorrow at 8 O'clock Workers Battle Scabs Interest of Workers "Refrigerator First, Says Cooper against scabs is bei the 100 strikers of the C. ed by Plan Fight to End | Zausner Control at | Painters’ Meeting - 7 Ww 2 strikers are demanding a union shop. | py z Left Wine Leaders s prevented scabs from un-|Lax Collections Fall to sad material at a freight station | Deny Charges; Final Session on Monday A. F.L. Bricklayers « Elect New Officials NEW YORK Tanager of Cl 67 trial together $1,200 as Members Stop Payments NEW YORK.—More than 1,000} nters are expected to attend the| joint membership meeting called by | Painters Le 499 and 848 to de-| mand the resignation of the Zausner,| . machine in control of the District Severino Runson Rank | Counct! | 1 . Zausne been. onsible for a and File Program putting over a daily tax of 50 cents | ie ring- : on the membership which, although | tution or| NEW YORK.—A. F. of L. bricklay-|said to be for organization purposes, | fight in |ers will elect new city officials today |has been used to build up his ma- Cooper’s answer came after he had ation to de~ s of ha ution, by cal tions ever held by the membership. Ca the pre: Ta, na ing. violated ing shop strik Cooper in his testimony exposed the atéitude of the International officials in-eliminating the left wing admin- | istration from deliberations of the jonal Union Executive good his many promises and Angelo :the case of the code conferences whieh were attended by other general | and is known to be a militant fighter | day night. in one of the most important elec- | chine control dates for the city executive are | against nt chairman, Thomas Mur- | refusal to continue payment has re-| a discredited tool of the Inter- | sulted in a decline in the weekly tax Board, | receipts trom $10,000 to $1,200, it was | Thomas Cleland, who was defeated | learned today, This is a victory for| last year after having failed to make |the rank and file. Severio, president of Local 37, who jner, General Executive Board. He quoted |is supported by a large section of the | Local 499 to the District Council were rank and file in the unions in the city |not seated at the meeting last Thurs- | The revolt of the rank and file the tax and the members’ | Louis Weinstock and Bruno Wag-| newly elected delegates from Fearing the results of the Managers, but to which he was not | called in. When he iked Nagler | about the conferences Nagler denied | any knowledge of the conferences. He | ent to Washington on his own ac- and after learning that the confer- s@nees were being held + Gooper declared that the with- drawal of two business agents in sSBrooklyn was a protest not a strike against the Joint Board for its fail- +-dire.to improve the conditions of the «workers in the shops, there 4M. J. Ashbitz, called by the pro- ~--Sécution to prove that the left wing ,administration had failed to comply with orders regarding finance, was tion by the defense that they had purchased dues stamps and assess- | tool of the workers for bettering their | the A. F, of L. painters in the court- zment siamps and had twice paid is to the Joint Board for Ashbitz is general pSethetary-treasurer of the Joint Board, ‘The defense as able to prove dur- of the questioning the signers of ing. the cou that most of charges against the left wingers are former business men. Osofsky and Meltz, signers, had been found guilty by .previous administrations of tak- ingrgrait. Pull responsibility for the forma- tion of the Committee of 100 which deds-considered by the officials as an toaet of “disloyalty” was placed at the doors of the International officials by «N. Kaplan who declared that they had done nothing to uphold condi- tiens in the shops and enforce the agreement. Members of the union ‘nave @ right to organize and demand | better conditions if the union fails to do-it, he deglared. en questioned on the Needle ‘Trades? Workers’ In- dustrial Union he stated that the policies of expulsions and class col- laberation of the International are the reasons for the existence of the Andustrial Union. If the Interna- thonal would pursue a class struggle policy, he said, it would lead to the formation of one union in the in- dustry. The sessions resume jon Monday when the defense will sum up vey the prosecution will follow with a final word by the defense. A com- mittee of rank and filers are also to be: given the floor for a statement, DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 BRISTOL STREET ‘Bet, Pitkin and Sutter Aves., Brooklyn ICKENS 2-9019 10 AM. 1-8, 6-8 P.M. WILLIAM BELL—— 3 | orrictat Optometrist O°” TH 106 EAST 14TH STREET Near Fourth le MOT THAVEN 9-8749 > DR. JULIUS JAFFE Surgeon Dentist 401 EAST 140th STREET (Corner Willis Avenue) DR. R. H. ISAACS Formerly of Baltimore, Md, has moved his office to New York at 304 E. 178th Street, Bronx, N. Y¥. (Cor. Anthony Ave.) Pho 3443 y 10 to 12 Noon | Get Comradely Services at +The Tremont Appetizing and Nut Shop 985 TREMONT AVE. ‘Bet. Vyse and Bryant Ave, RAPID SHOE REPAIRING 671 ALLERTON AVE. FREE RUBBER HEELS Mens and Boys Half Soles_590, Ladies Half Soles____490, Robber Heels _____26¢. Ladies Top Lifts 14c. for the workers’ interests. |membership meeting today, Zausner Severino is running on a rank and failed to put in an appearance, The } file program of establishing equal dis- |Meeting was hastily adjourned after tribution of work to eliminate favor-|the reading of a few’ brief reports. the | |itism and kick-back of wages, democ- |Ha‘ty Rosen, strong arm man of the racy and freedom of expression in tl | unions and elimination of the waiver | system. The program includes also |the consolidation of all New York | Bricklayers’ locals to eliminate un- | necessary expense and enable the un- |ion to function efficiently, the fight | for the 6-hour day and improvement | ro, officials to appear at a hearing |at which a decision will be made as Sentiment for the rank and file|to whether they could be restrained high and the general |from collecting the tax. The restrain- compelled to admit on cross examina- | Sentiment of the workers is to trans- jing order has been applied for by Lo- of working conditions, program is |form the reactionary unions into a | conditions. State to “Probe” Jordan Frame-up |Mass Protests Force | Gesture | PORTLAND, Ore, Dec. 8—Gov- ernor Julius Meier of Oregon has been forced to announce the appoint- ment of a “disinterested commission of three” to investigate the circum- stances of the frame-up of Theodore Jordan, Negro worker sentenced to die for murder. The International Labor Defense, whose organized mass action to save \Jordan has forced this gesture of concession, is raising the deman@ for | participation of a representative on the commission. Communist Party, Section 5 All members of Communist Party, Section 5, must report for “Scottsboro Red Sunday,” at the Otto Korvin I. L. D. Branch, 642 Southern Boule- vard, Bronx, at 10 a. m. Boro Committee Against War end Fascism ‘The American League Against War jand Fascism calls all Brooklyn Boro | delegates to the United States Anti- | War Congress to a meeting Monday night at the First Unitarian Church, |Monroe Place and Pierrepont Street | Goro Hall Station). Dressmakers’ Open Forum An open forum of dressmakers will "| be held Monday, Dee. 11th in Memor- ial Hall, 344 W. 36th St., 1:30 p. m. Attention Literature Agents 80 Fifth Ave., is open each day from 12 to 2 and from 4 to 8 pm. Sat- urday from 11 to 4 p.m. FIRST ANNUAL N, J. STATE Morning Freiheit CONCERT Part of Program Raya-Duncan Dancers G. & E. Babad-"‘Artet” Artiste Freiheit Gesang Ferein 8. Almazov, Nat'l Sec’y of Icor-Speaker Sunday, Dec. 10, 8 P.M. Krueger's (Main) Auditorium 25 Belmont Ave., Newark, N. J. | Admission 20 DOWNTOWN JADE MOUNTAIN American & Chinese Restacrant 197 SECOND AVENUE Bet, 12 & 13 Welcome to Our Comrades * fh OB CHINA KITCHEN CHINESE-AMERICAN CAFETERIA-RESTAURANT 283 E. 14th St., Opp. Labor Temple SPECIAL LUNCH 25c. DINNER 85¢. Comradely Atmosphere Phone: TOmpkins Square 6-9554 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY—ITALIAN DISHES A with atmosphere where all radicals meet 302 E. 12th St. New York ‘All Comrades Meet nt the NEW HEALTH CENTER CAFETERIA | Fresh Food—Proletarian Prices 59 ». 13TH ST., WORKERS’ CENTER———— he | Zausner clique again | | | i} | | I. W. O. Literature and Book Dept., | .. | | had gone to the unemployed. '30 N.Y. Delegates (ro threatened Weinstoc, leader of the rank and} file forces, with violence, in an ef- fort to keep him out of the meeting. Among the important developments in the Painters’ revolt against the tax was the granting of an order in the Bronx Supreme Court yesterday cals 848 and 499. A demonstration by room occurred when Null, attorney for the Zausner clique, falsely de- clared that 20 per cent of the fund So great was this pressure that Judge Cotillo was compelled to admit that the time had come when “min- orities in the union should express”. themselves. This movement, however, will soon embrace a majority of the workers. The meeting today will be addressed by Roger Baldwin, of the Civil Lib- erties Union, and Harry Sacher, labor attorney. The rank and file are ‘de- termined to hold their meeting, re- gardless of the rumors and threats of the Zausner clique to break it up. The meeting is called at the Central Opera House at 1 p.m. today. To Shoe Convention NEW YORK. — Thirty delegates have been elected from the Shoe and Leather Workers Industrial Union to attend the amalgamation convention, which opens in Boston on Sunday. The convention is to take up the question of merging four unions of shoe workers into one big union under rank and file control. he Shoe and Leather Workers Industrial Union, in a statement to- day branded as falsehoods the re- ports in the fascist Italian press} and the Jewish Socialist Forward announcing that the strike at the Meyer Brothers and Breslau shops has been settled. The reporis state that the workers have re- ceived a 35 per cent increase as a result of the efforts of the A. F. of L. Boot and Shoe Union. The Industrial Union declared that these statements are merely another attempt to break the strike which are still on in these shops and to aid the bosses to bolster up the A. F. of L. union. The union reports the following hops still on strike: Meyer Broth- ers, Breslau, Cornell, Dan Polter, I. Miller, Geller and Delman. To Russia? HUDSON Army and Navy Store 105 THIRD AVE. (Corner 13th Street) Gives Honest Values in Genuine Horsehide Sheeplined Coats; Windbreakers, Breeches, High Shoes, Boots, Work Shirts, Gloves, Ete. Going to Russia? Workers needing full outfits of horsehide leather sheeplined Coats, Windbreakers, Breeches, High Shoes, ete., will receive spe- ela} reduction on all thelr purchases at the SQUARE DEAL ARMY and NAVY STORE 121 THIRD AVE. (2 doors South of 14th Street) GARMENT DISTRICT ones: Chickering 4947—Longacre 10089 COMRADELY ATMOSPHERE FAN RAY CAFETERIA 156 W. 29th St. New York Garment Section Workers Patronine Navarr Cafeteria 333 7th AVENUE Corner 28th St. | Demonstrate Today to Demand Their Release! Samuel Leibowitz, engaged by the International Labor Defense to aid in the court fight for the Scottsboro boys, is shown talking over the case with Heywood Patterson and Clarence Norris (left), who have just been once more convicted in frame-up trials in Decatur, Ala, The third boys is Roy Wright, another of the defendants. Tens of Thousands To Mass This Noon In Union Square (Continued from Page 1) Improvement Association, Winifred Chappel of the Methodist Federation for Social Service; Christian Blohn of the Workmen’s Sick and Death Benefit Improvement Association, William L. Patterson, national sec- retary of the International Labor Defense; F. Elmer Brown, a member of Typographical Union No. 6 of the A:'F. of L., Countee Cullen, famous ‘Negto poet’ and atithor}: Donald Hen-} derson of the» Committee» Against War and Fascism; James W. Ford of the Trade Union Unity League; Max Bedacht representing the Cen- tral Committee of the Communist Party; William Fitzgerald of the Har- lem Sect. of the LL.D.; M. J. Olgin of the “Morning Freiheit”; Charles Krumbein of the New York’ District of the Communist Party; Herbert Benjamin of the National Unemploy- ed Council, just released from the military stockade in New Mexico, and Richard B. Moore, General Secretary of the League of Struggle for Negro Rights. Harlem Mobilizing Forces At open air meetings in’ Harlem and other sections of the city last night, thousands of workers; indig-~ nant at the monstrous Decatur ver- dict, pledged to come to Union Square and to bring as many other workers as possible, All owners of trucks and automobiles are urged to™loan their cars to help transport Negro work- ers from Harlem to Union Square. . . Boston Workers In Protest Sunday BOSTON, Dec, 8—Boston workers will demonstrate tomorrow, Sunday, at 3 p.m. at Douglas Square, Ham- mond and Tremont Streets, South End, * * Two Meetings In Pittsburgh Monday PITTSBURGH, Dec. 8—Two huge protest meetings will be held in this city on Monday night, Dec. 11, at 8 o'clock; one at the Bethel Church, on Wylie Avenue, and the other at the Watt St. School. A protest parade will take place next Saturday, Dec. 16, from Francis and’ Center Streets. The police have been forced to grant @ permit for the parade. ogee Providence Protest This Afternoon PROVIDENCE, R..1., Dec. 8.—A protest demonstration will be held here at Hoyle Square this afternoon under the auspices of the Joint Emer- gency Scottsboro Action Committee. James P, Reid, Communist candidate for representative for District 9 will be among the’ speakers. pa an Lynn Workers Protest Monday LYNN, Mass., Dec, 8—Lynn work- ers will protest the Decatur verdicts in a mass meeting at Lesters Hall, Monday night, Dec. 11. Throws Scottsboro Protest Through Window BALTIMORE, Md., Dec. 8.—Re- flecting the mass indignation against the Decatur verdict, some one threw a brick through the Cathedral Street show windows of the Enoch Free Library last night. The brick was wrapped in a paper on which the slogan “Free the 9 Scottsboro Boys, Death to Lynchers” was written. ia a NEW YORK.—The Workers Music League calls all who sing to assem- ble under the I. L, D. Chorus banner at the east side of the speakers platform at noon today, on Union | Square, Singers should be prepared to lead in the mass singing of “The Scotts- boro Boys Shall Not Die.” This song can be purchased at 2 cents per copy at the Workers Book Shop, 50 East 13th St, or at the ‘Communist Party - Calls for Sharpened Fight for 9 Boys (Continued from Page 1) | cracy of the American Federation of Labor, Carefully analysing the fascist trends of the “New Deal” and the) demagogic promises of “prosperity’) to all sections of the population, Hathaway compared these trends and demagogic promises to the similar methods used by the Ger- man Nazis to deceive broad sections ofthe German masses. He clearly showed that the victory of the Ger- }man Nazis had not only increased the misery of the German toilers, but had likewise sharpened the bour- geois crisis. The fight for the Scotts- bore boys cannot today be separated | from the fight against the murder of our heroic German comrades, Torgler, Dimitroff, Taneff and Pop- off, and against fascism in general. He declared it was now a race to decide which “way out” of the crisis would be followed in this country:— the capitalist “way out” of brutal fascist terror against the workers, against the Negro People and against the poor farmers, or the revolution- ary way out, which would emancipate the. toiling masses and win uncon- ditional equality for the Negro People with the right to determine their own future. The victory of the workers, he said, is dependent on the effective- ness of the work of the Communist Party, the revolutionary unions and mass organizations at the present! time. Activities in the first place in the shops and factories, and also in the neighborhoods, among the Negro masses and among the farm- ing and petty-bourgeois masses must be pushed with the greatest energy. The concentration program of the Open Letter of the extraordinary Party Conference must be put into effect. immediately. At the same time the effort to win the Negro People and farming masses as powerful allies in the revolutionary struggle must be in- creased tenfold. The Negro People are already strongly sympathetic to the revolutionary movement, but they can be won as allies only if the workers particularly the white workers, prove at all times their willingness to carry on the fiercest struggle against the lynchers, for the release of the Scotisboro boys, for the national liberation of the Negro People. All remnants of chauvinism within the ranks of the revolutionary workers must be ruthlessly rooted out, he declared. Hathaway was followed by Richard B. Moore, General Secretary of the League of Struggle for Negro Rights who outlined ‘the program for the mobilization of the workers for Sat- urday’s demonstration in Union Square and for . further actions against the Decatur lynch verdicts and for the defense of the Negro masses. Charles Krumbein, District Organ- izer of the Communist Party, acted as chairman of the meeting Workers Music League, 5 East 19th NEW YORK.—A youth Scottsboro anti-lynching conference and Open Forum will be held this Sunday eve~ ning, 8 o'clock, at 866 Tremont Ave., Bronx, Last Sunday the workers and guests of Camp Nitgedaiget held a meeting to protest the Decatur ver- dict, and collected $25.75 for the Scottsboro defense. Many Negro we from Dutchess Junction were present. A protest telegram was sent to Judge Callahan. Further work for the Scottsboro defense is being carried on at the camp and vicinity, of ers to Negro churches in: Beacon and Dutchess, Stations Set Up for Scottsboro Fund Drive Today, Sun I. L. D,) Calls ‘on Al Workers to Help Defense NEW YORK.—All members of} efense | and sympathetic workers are urged the Labor International to report today and Sunday at th district office of the ILD. 87 Broadway, to help in the collecti The following Tag Day have been set up: BRONX 792 H. Tremont Ave. 642 Southern Blvd. 1472 Boston Rd. 288 E. 174th St. (corner Olay Ave. 699 Prospect Ave. 2700 Bronx Park East—Schule 2075 Clinton Ave. DOWNTOWN 15 E. 3d St—ILD. Branch 50 E. 13th St.—Workers School 145 W. 4th St—Book Store MIDTOWN W. 24th St. SOUTH BROOKLYN Myrtle Ave. . Wyckoff Ave. Union St. | WEST END 4109 13th Ave. 67 Bay 25th St. WILLIAMSBURG | 61 Graham Ave. | 159 Sumner Ave. | 285 Rodney St. 46 Ten Eyck St. CROWN HEIGHTS 261 Schenertady Ave. 717 Gates Ave. 1813 Pitkin Ave. HARLEM 326 Lenox Ave, Texas Negro Killed By Officers; Body Mutilated By Mob (Continued from Page 1) attacked by James Cole, 24-year-old Negro,-the New England district of the International Labor Defense has wired Governor Ely, demanding he use the “full powers of the Common- wealth of Massachusetts to prevent a lynching. Cole, now a pirsoner in Pittsfield, Mass., is in imminent danger of lynch- ing following charges that he had at- tacked Harriet Richards, 26-year old beauty parlor operator, on a bus which Cole and a white companion, Nicholas Waypovich, are accused of having commandeered. District, Attorney Thomas F. Mori- arty said last night that he ‘would 108 132 291 343 ‘ask life sentences for both men. The wire of the LL.D. to Gov. Ely follows: “The press reports lynch spirit against James Cole, who is charged with criminal assault upon Harriet Richards. The whole case is an ob- vious frame-up based on an alleged ‘confession’ by Cole. Miss Richards denies the assault, thus proving that this is a typical example of lynch in- citement by the capitalist press. “We demand, in the name of 7,000 members and affiliates, that you use the full powers of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts to prevent a pos- sible lynching of Cole. We are call- ing upon all Negro and white op- ponents of lynching to support this demand.” Protest Meet Sunday ‘The I.L.D. is planning a mass pro- test meeting against the Scottsboro verdicts and the wave of lynchings throughout the country. The demon- stration will be held this Sunday aft- ernoon at 3 o’clock at Douglass Sq., Hammond and Tremont Sts., South End, Boston, Banquet and Concert for Juliet |” Stuart Poyntz A Welcome banquet and concert for | ! Jullet Stuart Poyntz is being given by the United Council of Working Class Women Sunday, Dec. 10, at 7 p.m, in the auditorium of the Coop- erative houses. Admission 25c, Pro- ceeds to T.U.U.C, A meal and pro- gram has been arranged. Olgin to Speak on U. S. S. R. Moissaye J. Olgin, Editor of the Freiheit, will speak on “Two Worlds— U. S. A. and U. 8, S. R,,” at the Workers School Forum, 50 East 13th Street, 2nd floor, Dec, 10, Sunday, at 8 p,m. OUT OF TOWN AFFAIRS 1 Why Ball Players Go Hunting UST as all natives of Canada are either hockey players or sergeants in the Northwestern Mounted Police (they get their man), baseball players hunt. About this time of year 0 | ion | when the football season is petering out and sports pages have of funds for the Scottsboro defense. Stations ! to fall back on human interest stories about captain-elects, lists | of awards and fast but very uniform hockey games, pictures | begin popping through of Critz on a moose hunt, Pennock gun- |ning after deer, O’Doul waiting languidly for a covey of emus. | For years this annual cru- | sade against Minnesota fauna has vexed but intrigued me. Once I met | Ruth on a train platform during | the down curve of his big slump two \years ago, and he had just lost at | poker too but I upped and asked him why ball players go hunting jin the winter months. He gave me | the sort of look you’d use on a king |cobra which crawled into your tot’s | cradle, I mean if you had a tot and “ny humiliation. Herb and J_ still chuckle about the incident and of re-~ cent he has summoned sufficient boldness to twit me. Only the other day I came upon him sitting in Bry- ant Park with a copy of Vogue. He drew forth a rotogravure clipping, the one about O’Doul and the covey of emus. He said, “Remember the time you didn’t know ball players went hunt~ ing in the winter time to sharpen their batting eye and their pitching eye? Those were the. days. Repeal’s there were king cobras in the neigh- borhood. UTH said, “What the hell you mean to say you don’t know why ball players go hunting in the win- ter?” “Neither do you,” I thought, “quit stalling.” But I wanted to shine and mischiefously I said, “I would not ask you if I did know, would I?” That floored him for the nonce. He walked ruminatively back to the compartment and I followed him, pursuing my vantage. “Well?” I said as he sat down near Pennock, He turned to Pennock and he said, “Listen to this dumb guy. He don’t know why ball players go hunting in the winter?” Pennock said, “You don’t?” At this point Ruth arose and left. I failed to pursue my vantage for fear the worm would turn. Worms have been known to turn. What was there to keep this particular worm from turning? “No, I don’t,” I said to Pennock in carefully measured accents, “Why?” “Hunting helps their batting eye | and their pitching eye,” Pennock said. “Hayen’t you ever thought of that?” My crest fell, I walked back to my own compartment and sulked. Pretty soon Pennock showed his face and I could see he regretted having hurt me and I could see he wished to make amends. He stood in the doorway, fingering a multi- lateral object, “Your fallen crest,” he said. “T thought you may have some use for it. Here...” He paused. He resumed. “Well, I guess Vil be mooching along now.” “You don’t have to “Stick around.” His own crest fell at such gen- erosity or bigness as we of the Yu- kon call it. Deftly I scooped the crest on the second bounce and deposited it into the southpaw which made him famous. The continent- ality of the gesture left him with- out words. Features aglow, trans- fused as it were, he took a seat, And we rode along in silence, fit- fully viewing what passes for scen- ery in Western Pennsylvania. ha saa go,” I said, IS was two years ago and Time, the Great Mitigator, has Mitigated ruined everything.” “I certainly was a simpleton,” I said ingratiatingly, “I had a whole theory about those pictures, I had them tagged as a publicity stunt. The way I figured it, at this time of the year there's a dearth of sports news and it’s baseball’s chance for a little limelight. Observe the ar- rangement. First they publish the official National League batting rec- ord which took them from Septem- ber until now to compute. This gives the hard-pressed editors a change to run a picture of Chuck Klein and reiterate the history of his recent sale to the Cubs, Next day we get the National League pitching records and it’s a story on Hubbeil’s 1.66 earned ran aver- | age, his ten shutouts and consecu- tive scoreless inning record. And the next day American League bat- ting, and Foxy, and today American League pitching. Now there'll be » doubling of the fishing and emu-~ hunting photos, all to sharpen the eye of the reading public, I imagine. This is about the time for Rumors, too. Gehrig’s being sent te the House of David. “No kidding, Herb, that’s {he way I had it figured. A sinister setup, a conspiracy of baloney. Machia-~ vellian you'd call it unless you're one of those who objects te the ad- jective on the grounds that Mach~ oe wasn’t machiarellian. Yow- “1wA, ha,” cackled Pennock. “You're @ real cut-up. I do b ieve Ili be but @ footnote in your biography.” “Go to,” I said. “I'll -be just an item in your appendix.” “Vermiforra?” countered the south paw. “That’s in the lap of the gods,” 1 said, 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 Jacob Burck to raise $1,000 in the $40,000 Daily Worker Drive: Red Sparks A. C. Previous total ... Total to date ....+000++. 9567.23 Sunday Schedule for Metro- politan Workers’ Soccer League Al DIVISION ‘Tico vs Red Spark, 2:30 p.m., 86th 8t., Central. Spartacus vs Ital. American, Crotona. Fichte vs Rome, 2:30 p.m., Thos. Jeffer- 12:30 p.m., n. Falcon ys Italia Home. A2 DIVISION Colonial ys Hinsdale, 3 p.m., Van Cort~ and. Monabi vs Prospect, 11 a.m., Van Cort~ nd. French vs Zukunft, 2 p.m., Queensboro, BL DIVISION Bronx Hunger, vs Dauntless, 10:30 a.m., Crotona. NEW OUTRAGE! ‘ RED STRONGHOLD BOMBED : Chieng Kal-shek's air-raiders bomb Communist region of Southern Kiangs!. Denge- ly populated villages wiped out. A” Dr, Bun-Yat-Sen, honored at anniversary “FATHER OF EMBASSY NEWSREEL THEATRE ANY SEAT, 25e, ANY TIME Brownsville vs. N. Y. Hung., 12:00, Betsy Head. Mapels vs Juventus, 11:30, 64th Bt., Cen- tral. Hero vs Spartacus, 12:30, 36th 6, Cen~ tral, B2 DIVISION Dauntless vs Maples, 10:30, 64th Street, tral, Harlem vs Red Spark, 2:30, 64th Btreet, Central. Ital, Amor. vs T.W.O., 2:30, McCombs Dam. South Amer. vs Fichte, 12:30, 4th 6t., Central Hinsdale ys Spartacus, 10:30, Betsy Mead. © DIVISION f Red Spark vs Spartacus, 12:30, Jefferson Park. Hero vse Youth Cult., 10:20, seth Celta vs Nonparil, 12:90, McCombs Dam. Central. 4 French va Greek Spart., 12:30, Queens- boro, : 46TH STREET AND BROADWAY Beacon, N. Y. CAMP NITGEDAIGET The Only Workers’ Camp Open All Year HOTEL WITH 60 ROOMS Phone: Beacon 731 FOR THE Steam Heat, Hot and Cold Munning Water in Each Room, } ° Wholesome Food, Sports, Cultural Activities z Daily, cWorker Best Place'to Rest Conte bist res Price: $14.00 Per Week (including press tax) : 4 Akron, 0. Private cars leave daily at 10:30 a.m. from the f Dec. 9th: : Cooperative Restaurant, 2700 Bronx Park East ¥ 48 i Estabrook 8-5141 y Entertainment Concert and Dance :} 5 NOTICE! ae | Philadelphia : ped wae RUSSIAN ART SHOP Ine, || Red Press Night arranged by John irra yar aac al at i : Reed Club of Philadelphia, Art . MOVED TO BRANCH AT ‘ sketches, chalk-talks, entertainment, 9 West 42nd Street 107 E. 14th Street Whittier Hall, 140 N. 15¢h St at 6:59 }11 Layee Selection of Gifts, Toys and Novelties from the Soviet Unies. Scranton, Pa. 10% Discount to Readers of the Daily Worker : Dec. 9th: careers| SALTZMAN BROS, MEN'S SUITS Ke Grand Rapids, Mich. FINE CLOTHING FOR WORKERS aes Dee. Seis READY MADE AND TO ORDER inh ee retay arty ny - 181 STANTON STREET i 1057 Hamilton NW. Admission free.

Other pages from this issue: