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~ —— Torture Herndon ( in Georgia Jail } J Tt | Re Negro Leader Pi it In “Solitary” j nly 250,000 Jobs | From Public Works, portRevea Is |Seven Workers Freed After Police Attack On Scandinavian Club NEW YORK Michael Gold Battles Burck for 2d Place In Fund Competition NEW YORK.—While Edward Newhouse leads in the Daily Worker $40,000 drive Socialist com- petition, Jacob Bure! f ca D cea s Dy, ATLANTS Roosevelt Had Prom- toonist, and Michael Gold, feature ‘aris +f, <¢ 6 000.000: Iekes columnist, are battling in a friend- 0 on has ised Ds UV 0 )0; Ickes ly but spirited manner for second “sana pened Sa id 2 5 0, JOO position. nity era th ASHIN( $508.64, Gold, $503.26. Only a aif.| | (2ECAUSE it is such a convenient indoor game and because ft |} sbor e 5 wi v e m ie a: MW *. ogy * * . 2). attorney in t ‘ v 1B aie oe ete eee requires so little equipment, many countries have tried to said today ier uBiic Sree Garces Gat >» Fourth. | graft basketball into their schools, They have failed neither Herndon was sentenced to f e deliberately distorted Will Burck hold his gain over} | because of any intrinsic deficiency in the game nor the fact meres years on the chain-sane : Michael Gold? Will either that it did not capture boys’ imaginations. for leadin; success demonstra Newhouse? ill our 7 : * pe tee pga met Tt was no national quirk that has kept basketball out of tion of white and (Spinach) Luttinge | s no national quirk that has kept basketball out o' demanding relief tween ce, who had broke: at the club for the lead? It is up to you, You will decide who is to be the victor, Rush your allegiance in the form of contribu- tions to your favorite. No time is to be lost! | France, nor lack of facilities. American tempo. Writin: about its unusual efflorescence in New York, one acute ob- seryer has so unburdened himself on But basketball is a game of the S. U. teams are playing outside teams and among themselves, I asked the L.S.U. district organ- izer why a league hasn’t got under way, and he said chiefly because The I. L. D. has called for y eclared that | entered in plain clot the subject: ue test from every part of the country id been iver Jobs: | vest or search wart | . voratanily this town develops the| CUf organizing apparatus is weak, 1] against this demand- 3.000.000 remains | Westioned on the Anti-Lynch Meets basketball teams in the country. It i" hiss ba odo ta OR: ¥ pital +) ing his immediate e, to be er $350,000.00 : say why they had ¢ it |isn’t only coaching which made C. C. “ed A im ‘fou have addressed to Governor Talmadge, 4 a N. Y. and St, Johns its materia},| © have something to offer in the and to the warden of Fulton County Jail, both at Atlanta, Ga TAY UNIT ISSUES DOWNTOWN IN DRIVE ¥.—The ‘ide JADE MOUNTAIN pie American & Chinese Restaurant nd Navy out of East Unit here raised $6.05 for the $40,000 fund, and chal- the Empire Case Goods Unit | of the same town to raise a similar} 3,000 Brave Bitter Cold to Hit Frameup Trials at Decatur mental count of the votes in the recent Spanish Cortes election gave In Many Cities Are Attacked by Police (Continued from Page 1) watch out th: at we don’t get after you.” S. aia |Some of Nat Holman’s most brilliant |stars were boys who never played | basketball before, small shifty kids jused to dodging cars and pivoting in the smallest space possible. “Tt have often walked from the Times Square subway through the garment district, shot up a crowded elevator, jostled through a bedlamic way of courts, and since the city has been consistently cutting down on public school facilities, this has been a source of additional compli- cations. In Manhattan, the Bronx, Boro Park and Brownsville, where the L.S.U. has fine contacts, the first steps for a city-wide league have been taken. Certainly, if we can = 8 i encanta = ; Sages ier Party 200,008 i i dressing room, beginning the day’s 197 SECOND AVENUE jamount. T East Side Unit will = “ Party 200,000 votes, a large gain, reflecting the growing 3 :. : cigaplie to raise more funds "| (Continued from Page 1) | © tolling masses for the revolutionary vanguard, ‘ST. LOUIS, Mo, Dec, 10,—Colonel| {eich Of the hates ctvey | the country, there are more than she : | sclias See | remorse ihe h Mo. Dec. 10. ection of the circumstances ot country, | 7 e to Our Comrades To k six-page “Daily Work- | 0Stration were Mo J. Olgin, | —— ie LOSES Pest a Mill, St. Louis Park Commissioner,| trip, You have to be familiar with | Possibilities in New York. A suc- econ tex moins wecamtiae oree: ee editor of the “Morning Freiheit”; | i s yesterday denied a permit to the Mis-| the garment center to realize the | cessful league here would be an in- = Saeitie 7 "| Mrs. Patience Williams of the Uni-| Postponed Benjamin | souri Committee against Lynching to| significance of this. In certain hours | calculable stimulant, The district ee ea a Yeral Negra. improvement Assos te eee 000 hold a protest parade on Dec. 16. He| jt't incomparably’ the most heetie | office of the Labor Sports Union is lation; Winifred Chappel of Greeting to Be Held | oenly Sanaa an Lahgee ct ied and chaotic spot in the most hectic phos Mog se Interested teams, ¢ EN F E Methodist of 8 Ta 7 | ed on his belief that local citizens} gna chaotic city there is. But some- | Whether experienced or in the. pro- ie ‘ 4. | | Service; rald of the Wed. at Webster Hall | L TING jfavor lynchings. When pressed by} where between your retina, ear- | ess of formation, may communicate —— Fresh Pood—Proletarian Prices 5% 18TH ST.. WORKERS’ CENTER. 4 lem S&S e LL.D, Wt, | the delegation which visited him to a is in dull: b? ta, ed ad with them at 813 Broadway, — ————— = — — ic t 2 w ‘bert B ly for the permit, he declared he} far thee wteeee ne ee ye pl ee RES HASR Rio ehe Damiayn bert Benjamin, apply ystioe a few other places, no doubt, you de- | included Sam Stein of the Ne District of the I.L.D.; Joe Brown and OF A.F.L. HEAD of the Unem- who was to speak was in favor of lynchings in “special cases,” stating “in some cases lynch- velop a series of reflexes that en- ab’e you to register the approach of Helping the Daily Worker Through Ed Newhouse | 7 SCIENCE and we pene MRD RIeaD OU Cte st Thursday ar-| ings ing is even too good for those Ne-| automobiles, hand-trucks, people, , - By William Gan ot the t core rol hhh . his pee 25) (Continued from Page 1} Sore. eight and unconsciously make your way Cons eatiana analy to the credit aA i te EERE without collisions.” of Edward Newhouse in the Socialisi HISTORY Montgomery Brown }) X Denounce Leipzig 1 Wednesday, Dec. {a hold a separate meeting in the arian Sa, pee Cheated caniiae z ore : competition with Michael Gold, Dr esolution: ¥ un , thi re . W. (Speer a | cad <p ~ ROVS a L apatea by fhe wo: ; ee bet Aton ee hes pe was burned in a Scottsboro mass|fRESS racks rush at you and you pea hal owe ae be Bh FOR GIRLS and BOYS = onstration ‘charged that the entire membership |Protest meeting at Broad and South veer. ‘Trucks rattle, you stoP! nov worker Drive: ; — {Decatur y |were “Communists” for not arising |Streets last Thursday. Over 2,000|Short. Skyscrapers loom oppressively y i at this is the first book of its kina {| frame-up tri secount {When the national anthem was sung, | Workers, Negro and white, from|on all sides, you're buttonholed by|M. Rensine .. 8 1.00 f e youth of the world and that it is the {| troff, Popoff miners |and hooted and yelled to prevent the |YWions, working-class organizations, |peddlers, you don’t care, obliviously Previous total + 567.23 ch meets their greatest cultural revoluti: ry century.—W.M.B. A $1.50 book for 25 cents, five copies for $1.00, the wave of the country sanction of cials, including Governor Rolph, of | ch has received the leading public offi- | # | membership from hearing the charges jf the speakers, | Harry Sacher, International Labor Defense attorney, who was employed recognition of ‘'s Union, He will count of his a military stockade lodges, churches, etc. attended the demonstration called to protest against the lynch verdicts sentencing Heywood Patterson and Clarence Nor- you proceed, reading a paper maybe. Nothing quite like that in Paris, Puny and undernourished though they may be, those child bootblacks of New) Total to date ..csseeee.. 8568.23 Allerton Avenue Comrades! tamps ‘in ; per bound, 320 pp., 27 chap. California, the jailor of Tom s 2 oes sts in. {on to die on Feb, 2. | York are uncanny and unnatural ex- stamps or coin; paper bound, 370 pp. oT seconey, f the soldiers Ba sag eh ne peal ae William Powell, of the International | ponents of speed and precision, They The Mode: Bak Money refunded if after examination the {| A Tesolution also, “adopied | peakers will | the part of the Zaumer machine, was |L20%" Defense, acted as chairman. /don't become basketbell stars, no, be- . bis oe. book is not wanted and is returned in good Jagainst the arrest and jailing of| g ding Richard B.| i . i The speakers included Herbert Woods |cause you have to go to college for|| was first to settle Bread Strike book is not |four young workers at Times Sq. e : not permitted to make his report due |of the Unemployed Council; Russell|that or belong to the Y. Also, you conaitions \1ast Saturday while speaking on Sereeyy oF! one the shouting, gutter language and |Watson of the League of Struggle for | need stamina, which doesn't ‘come|| @4 first to sign with the The Bradford-Brown Educational Co., Galion, Q. | Pehalf of the Scottsboro boys. | Rient van, secretary | aaruptive tacties of Zausner’s heneh- | Negro Rights; D. Davis of the Trade from irregular eating. But in their|| FOOD WORKERS’ : os = | : ‘ of the d Councils of; Union Unity Council; Mabel Reed of | economy and efficiency of motion are! INDU: 4 oe ere nr ern SERS { Workers Free Jailed Negroes Gree - John Moore|.,TBe_ Zausner clique, numbering the Communist Party. lcontained all the elements coaches! STRIAL UNION | | | NEW YORK, ag of Union, and 2P0Ut 100, called upon Sacher to pro-| The workers paraded through the |look for in their prospects, T a | 1 aa | Sive action on the part of wo Trade Union ,@Uce 4 union book if he wished to|<irects to Mt. Zion Baptist Church, | Last ‘Saturday I watched City Col-| 691 ALLERTON AVE. CA Mi 4 {in a Scottsboro demonstration at ‘Amter, Na-~ speak. When Sacher answered that|where an indoor meeting was held |jege roll over Baltimore University + Sapte fe e | Dean St. and Howard Ave. in the to: the. Unem- he had 1,500 union books behind him | with C. Cook, of the LL.D., chairman, 4 to 2) ‘Holman. started a ames ‘ Beacon, N. Y. Phone: Beacon 731 }! Crown Heights section of Brooklyn Soved Councils, will be chairman, | that were anxious that he speak, the|and Mills, district organizer of the| thot yemained in until a little before || 1 omroges Meet a1 : “A In | on Friday night forced police to free *~ 4 | membership broke into prolonged |Communist Party, Ted Richard of the | ine If. ‘Che i Aad weal ge : . 3 The Only Workers’ Camp Open All Year | two Negro workers belng framed on > Tovander of the Teague /Cheetine, When he charged that the | Young Communist League, and Wat- reser aiaa by uae tiene cae BRONSTEIN’S \. o "4 MS charges of, “suspicion of homicide.”) Pade la trict Council did not permi @ }son of the I.L.D., speaking. 1% saps _ “dl : HOTEL WITH 60 ROOMS | The workers, Henry McGregor and bade Pughts, 2: | membership to voice their opinions on at Peleimpre: hate ae oe shat GRRE | Vegetarian Health = Steam Heat, Hot and Cold Tunning Water in Each Room. | A. Pilgrin, are both active in the! joni ‘Trupin | te assessment of a 50 cent tax upon biden BAL arya scare Sy ee ihe Goeeeeee rn onocaee Restaurant 7 5 7 y iviti | fight to free the nine Scottsboro boys. : |the entire working membership, the iss, Dec, 10.—| rp 388 Clar-mort Parkway. Wholesome Food, fash ts, Cama Activities | "They were standing on the corner of s elected to ene Zausner gangsters, notably Harry |Hundreds of white and Negro workers |Teserves until there had been three | : Best Plac e to Rest | Dean St. and Ralph Ave., distributing | the Police : nm and ence ©/ Rosen of local 442, Laditsky and |!demonstrated on Worcester Commons |Complete teams in the field. It’s an Price: $14.00 Per Week (including press tax) the Daily Worker and telling the|Telease of the two Negro Workers. | _|Spander of local 1101, and Kamens {Yesterday in a militant demand for|interesting list of names to glance Sis. ‘ i ve . | workers of the neighborhood of the! When the committee reached the of local 905 replied that: “It's none |the release of Heywood Patterson, over: Weissbradt, Trupin, Banks,|[| ARRANGE YOUR DANCES, LECTURES, Private cars leave daily at 10:30 a.m. from the | demonstration to be held, when a! Police station and demanded the re- lof tha members" god-damned business | Clarence Norris and all of the Scotts- | Winograd, | Goldsmith, Greenblatt, | baniiene ares tai! {a Cooperative Restaurant, 2700 Bronx Park East | police car pulled over to the curb| ! ot McGregor and Pilgrim they | chat happened at that meeting.” boro boys. * * * Goldman, Pincus, M. Levine, Kauf-| | . Es i | and f the cops in the car called | ejected. Outside the station} at ‘Anti-Lynching Parade in Buffalo, |man, Schiffer, P. Levine, Berenson, | NEW ESTONIAN } pen esern Stee | thon over. When ther refused to the committee continued to demand| Louis Weinstock, elected by the Shuai leary * |g Levine, and Nabaroff. They bogged | ’ ) j them over. When they refused to niasak oP the work nen | Tank and file membership to the Dist- ec, 2 | nes S08 Oe 3 WORKERS’ HOME w/e go one of the policemen jumped out the re ase of the workers, and heise PP) Council and not seated by Zaus- BUFFALO, N. Y., Dec, 10—A huge | down considerably in the second half | of the ca, pulled a gun and shoved | —@ short time later—the demonstra~ | Tice Council and not seated by turnout is expected for the Scottsboro | but even so they had the visitors out-']| 27-29 West 115th Street Resistrati re) Today! | the workers against the wall tion neared the police station, the Guarging that Gangsterism: was prom, (Protest meeting next Saturday night |scored 16 to 13, New York City tened ithe N ‘ slice e two Negroes, arg teri ' eh 4 egis ration pens 0 Ne | police threatened the Ne tk poll ni sen Seer alent in the locals controlled by the = i PIUPASEY. Sualerni oe ane oie Soe ae al RESTAURANT and Winter Term err te Pte sea teyeut tmarch, at 1777) Zausner machine and that the $125,-|Westem ‘New York Conference| A basketball teams in this elt BEER GARDEN | over to the wall 2 u have it.” ; open-air meet- | 000 collected from the working mem- Renta 3 ed oe iored fockin a ar an nents N Hep SG cbbete, Mate: Passion iy see Phi eels |bers as an “organizational tax” for | “$@inst lynching. coer edbeidtoarnaber oppo: ~ | 8) R K E R S S | taken in the police radi r to the eakers of the Com-} building the union had gone into The mass rally will be preceded by| and it seems almost indecently silly | Vy | 77th Precinct station hous Young Communist | jie pockets of the District Council, ® parade through the city, starting | of us not to have made any head- | CLASSES IN | Committee Demands Release | e IL, D. urged the | Weinstock launched into’ an attack at 6 p.m., from 155 Madison Street,| way in organizing them. Of course DR. JULIWS LITTINSKY Principles of Communisia Historical Materialism | One block away, at Dean St. and need fo ki ing up the fight for). n the entire corrupt leadership of and proceeding through the Ellicott! the problem is complicated by Political Economy Science and Dialecties | Howard Ave., the “Free the Scotts-, the freedom of the Scossthoro boys. | cat iP Pp district to the auditorium. shortage of courts, the type of team 107 BRISTOL STREET : ‘ cat 7 = cee . 8 the American Federation of Labor. " Marxism-Leninism Revolutionary Journalism boro Boys” demonstration called by. The work who had braved the) The demonstration will be followed| to whom the Labor Sports Union || 54 pitkin and sutter Av | Ne Problems Revolutionary Theatre |the Young Communist League of; cold dw the march and at the| The District Council members pres-|on Sunday by a Western New York} wou'd appeal not being able to af- et» Breckiyn | lego psy sia oe z Crown Helchts was already under meeting, pledge to fight against ent did not dare send a speaker to|Conference Against Lynching at the} ford fees, But there are countless PRONE: DICKENS 2-3018 j Youth Problems Public Speaking ee way. When the workers were told lynchings, Jim-Crowism, and to fight|the platform when invited to by the'!Masonic Temple, Clinton, near Mich-| neighborhood teams operating un- || Office Hours: 8-10 A.M., 1-2, 6-8 P.M. Organization Shae toes = Spiess a the 19in of the arrest, a committee composed | to free the nine Scottsboro boys. i chairman. igan Avenue. der similar difficulties, Several L, i Trade Union Strategy English for Foreigners Histery of the American Labor Movement epee Reo en at - Teen gtr. oa = | | History of the Russian Revolution INTERNATIONAL BRAID TOILER, } jbeen closely connected with their ; Russian Published by the N. T. W. U., 1755] lives, eee | } CLASSES FILL UP QUICKLY Westminster St., Providence, R. 1. ie sim | t . , Nov. 1933, Vol. I, No. 1, The comrades also deserve much | ’ H Register Now | | : | COHENS’S ie es » credit for attempting to meet the Red |} | GET NEW DESCRIPTIVE BOOKLET Reviewed by Gertrude Haesster | issue, but here they also must be- 117 ORCHARD STREET i <ERS’ ¢ , 85 EAST 12th STREET, 3rd Floor ‘ " come more bold, and change their Nr. Delancey Street, New York City ; et ae teehee ALgonqnin 4-119 : # ls ea othe Pb saree piped eae eos ee at nves examen Bolt Opttetans i Southern textile workers—there was a iti By Dr. A.Weinstein Yel. ORchard 4-450 a see eeemmrmmacenr maa “ 2 eens | | food of shop napers issued in tex- workers, regardless of thelr political Optometrist Factory ou Premises tile mills in Nor“) Carolina and Vir- OE Se (ee de ee ne i Re ginia. Most of tem appeared only bet ainind price eats. tae j f one or two mon...:, and none of them ‘) | i cae Oat the each time” Of Me™) muss of this company. In the Elm-) the workers, One successful struggle of the N. T. W. U. But unfortunately found that these workers are the best! SAM & FRANK tt Except for the “Textile Voice” ts-| Wood plant is a local of the N. T-|even on a small issue — the unsan-|it is no good to the workers because fighters in the interests of the work- Trucking and Moving a i swe sued for 2 month or so in Boston in| W- U. In the Fletcher plant, because | itary drinking water, the unheated )nothing is said on how the code can |C*S: ‘This is saree sce | sy ii SATURDAY, DEC. 30th 193, and the “Royal Worker,” which, | Of ® certain process of development,| workrooms, ete—vvill show the work-|be attained. You might as well asi;|Has the Communist Party anything |} 196 East 12th Strect New York i ’ as far as we know, appeared only in| there is only a mere skeleton of aj ers that the N. 'T. W. U. is fighting|the workers to admire the beauty of | apologize for, for having Commu- Gramercy 7-9816 tt ss June, 1931, there have been no other | !0¢21 of the United Textile Workers| for them and leading them in the|the moon, and their reaction will be nists as their best secret sini - Special Low Rates for Daily Worker ‘ | 8 P. M. to 2 A. M. AT THE shop papers in the textile industry| ‘4: F. of L.), but with great prestige} right direction. Yet we have a page the same—something nice, but he- the entire pepe a. on firs poise Beaders j ‘ until the appearance of Vol. I, No. 1,| for, the N. 'T. W. U., due to the abie| and a half of small items describing|yond their grasp, Don't tell the| with the ciass_oolisiy good chante | oe of the “Int'l Braid Toiler,” in Pro- and militant leadership given to their! grievances inside the mill, and the| workers merely: “Support this code | ee eV ada Se Rengpers WORKERS--EAT AT THE vidence, R. I., this November. ‘There| Strike by the N, T. W. U, in July.|paper neglects to tefl the workers|and fight against the Roosevelt-em- |t0 explain ring tere sakes ; \ is the “Silk” Workers Bulletin,” in| The Paper is issued by the N. T. W. U.| what can be done about them. It’s)Ployers’ code, which is backed by the Against class felt inside the shop. Parkway Cafeteria ‘Allentown, Pa, but this is @ trade} fT both these mills, not enough merely to say: “Let's all|United Textile | Woikers Union.” | Kdticate the wonters wee an iene 1638 PITKIN AVENUE } paper, issued by the Union for all the Who Gets Out the Paper? together fight to get this without a/Where support it? How support it? Silt Sind Sep ony ie raises in order| Nf Hopkinson Ave, Brooklyn, R. %, WEST FARMS RD., 177 ST. silk workers in the city, and is not| It would be interesting to know| cut in our pay.” How fight? Where| Where fight the Roosevelt code? How (hae Uae 200) : ‘ 2 * ‘tn any sense a shop paper. whether it is the functionaries of the| ght? Who fight? fight it? ieeahat cally oe 1 ts good—one|| CHA A ae 5 At Last a Textile Mill Paper N. T. W. U. who issue this paper,} Of course, sometimes the mere| The paper very courageously of the Mdceoe bankes we have. IRS & TABLES 4 t Considering this weakness of our|or workers from both plants. The| mention of a grievance in a shopjtackles some complicated poiltical | ¢, reful typing, a very attractive mast- TO HIRE | i TH Dail activities in the textile industry, the| latter is the right way, of course, and| paper will prompt the employer to|problems. Every credit must be given hang pit se el of whim- ‘aK : _ appearance of the “Int’l Braid Toiler,*| the paper should immediately take| improve conditions a little. But not/for the attempt to bring home to sical Mustrations, "The titles of the |] Dayt. 9-3504 Minnesota 9-7530 ( i Comtrad Petty UA should be welcomed. Every effort| Steps to develop a joint committee.| unless he fears the workers are ready|these employed workers the necessity articles are varied—some in capital t ANNIVERSARY should be made to have it appear reg-| We are sure that the organizational to struggle for it if he doesn't. Un-|for struggling for unemployment in- |/2tt. others in underlined small let- |} American Chair Renting Co, f& | ularly from now on, And to the end| approach of the paper will imme-j less the N. T. W. U. outlines a con-|surance. This campaign must be con- ters, others printed by hand. In this i i that it may improve with every issue. eset, Maen ni nic eats devel~ Leet picts of action around a/tinued, and in continuing it, the ie respect there 4s scarcely any room| ———_——— = and become as effective as possible,| Ped o: ie workers ie the mill specific grievance, the bos will {gnore|proach must be drastically improved. men a ag teeaaee gee Me uation ee | we wish to draw the attention of the| are involved in getting it out. And) it, and the workers will merely say:|We must not use as an argument for panel pane sag Pridgen id CARL BRODSKY 1. Averbaran—Hall Azerbid- Press Fund We workers issuing the paper to certain) We are also sure that the political| “We know all that—so what?” unemployment insurance, for in- ning it off. If the workers issuing All Kinds Of xan Get Your Tickets Imme- shortcomings of the paper. | line of the paper will immediately) and where is the N. T. W. U. local/stance, that it will increase buying win put as much care and thought s 2. Coucaslan—Endee, Mende _iately at The paper has set itself the task| improve if the leadership of the|in this plant? Does i¢ not speak|PoWer. The greater security of the/o. manning into the organizational aa % Russian—Dunia and So Workers Book Shops: of organizing the workers in struggle| Union helps to gulde the comrades.!to the workers, and make known|Worker under a system of unemploy-|a5,oach of the paper, and in the INS URANCE < HY We Have Established « oo he bn, ce against the boss for improvement of) ‘There 1s a complicated organiza-|to the workers that an organized|Ment insurance is what must be|ojitical contents, we will begin to i uf Soviet Republic Gacw a, mone | shop conditions. It has set itself the| tional problem to be dealt with here,| group exists inside the shop? This| ought forward. Also we must not’ hove “toy the first time in the his-|| 799 Broadway N.Y.C.]. | 4, Tartar—Dance Song (in the Cooperative Barber task of drawing these workers tnto| due to the difference in the organ-| would greatly heighten the morale of confine our activity for unemploy- tory ‘ot the labor movement in this STuyvesant 9-557 oF ¥ ee ene, a) | the general working class movement,| izational stotus inside the two mills.! the workers, and give them more con-|Ment insurance, to writing Congress-| country, a really effective shop paper SS iH DAILY WORKER CHORUS “se vans ate” | Involving them in political campaigns.| Inside shop organization must be] Adence to undertake a struggle. men and Senators, The employed |in the texsile industry, art ¥ with LAHN ADOHMYAN et aut alee. hans The paper has the basic material for| built up, on a united, front basis. The workers must be made to realize the) “Norm: We ask all units and shop|For Honest Insurance Advice ‘| THEATRE OF ACTION ins Trades, 181 W. 28th Bt, doing this. Unfortunately the com-|U. T. W. leadership must be com-|_ There is an article which attempts necessity for united action with the| .oups issuing shop papers to send CONSULT Surprise Program the Daily Worker | rades issuing the paper are not skil-| batted. ‘The N. T. W. U. must be) to bring the idea of unioniem to the/unemployed. They must be roused conics to us, together with some in- B. WARANT j DANCING TILL DAWN . 8th St, full enough as yet in utilizing their| strengthened. Struggle against the) Workers, and the role of the N. T. W.|to militant action for this objective, 'romnation on the organizational . Zz ‘ material to the fullest extent, Also| employers must be developed. ‘The| U- 8 contrasted with the U. T. W.land the role of the Unemployed Coun- | ctus within the shop, Also let us General Insurance Broker : | ) their handling of such tsstes as| difference in the leadership of the| It fs oe ai on the concrete griev-|cils must be explained. know how long the paper has been |} 8 — 15th STREET, BROOKLEN i CLARENCE HATHAWAY Onemployment Tnsurance, the “Red | two organizations must be made clear| #nces of the shop. "The workers have! 1 would have been much better | issued, TEL: ESP. 5-088 ! c is Issue,” and other political matters, | to the workers, W. U. that it ts better than ‘the |’ have developed the demand for] Districts of the Party and unions Sy EDITOR OF THE DAILY WORKER, ONLY SPEAKER show that the leadership of the Na-| But mere words and statements U. T. Ww. ment insurance on the ba-jare asked to send information to us i tional Textile Workers Union must! will not do this. The concrete ac-|“* 7 "+ sis of shop lay-offs which are de-|or the National Office of the Party CLASSIFIED m4 tire Bae gudiance in the editing tivtey tenia oe eal on the path oe a Ramet al ein seribed in another acts, and susisns eo a) oe at Peet pacers being ace er i a ‘ ¥ per. e N, T. W. U,, in showing el e |. T.|which only immediate demands are tries, | SHARE MODERN ; i There is an interesting organiza~| workers how to struggle against their| W. U. code. What a beautiful pic-|raised. Had the comrades done that,/etc. Send several copies each rhea Oalt morales BUceatonter | EINE: TH SE SRT tional situation in the two Providence| day to day grievances, will convince !ture the paper describes of the code/unemployment insurance would have | paper. t