The Daily Worker Newspaper, December 16, 1933, Page 2

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Ts ikea a RGR. C. P. OF SOVIET UNION HAILS DAILY WORKER. NEW YORK, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1933 EROISM No Member Excused from Dec. 19 Control Day Unit Meetings The New York District Secre- tariat wishes to inform ail Party members in the New York Dis- trict that no one will be excused from attending the Unit Meeting a Fascists Guilty ‘By Own Evidence, \GUTTERS OF NEW YORK OUT OF TOWN AFFAIRS Daily, cWorker oe hy heh equi ate cae c¢ D4 S on Membership Control Day. : s= “Pravda tates nae rea || ae Pittsburoh pre the day apeiied, Comrades who. Revive Duelling! Dee, 17th: x > Fea on do not secure their contro! stamp ie Grand Concert given by the Amer fean Lithuanian Workers Literary Association at Lithuanian Mall, 142 Orr St, Excellent program arranged, on that day will not be consid- ered in good standing. All Party members should sec to it that no conflicting meetings are arranged by them on that night. FRACTION MEETINGS ON THAT NIGHT WILL NOT # “Gomi ist Organ inl Wy ‘ : = Might for Defendants Torm in Boston for entra organ vf tne comme Anti-Faseist Work F ONE were the deploring type one could put in a session of deploring about the fact that duelling in one form or an- other is not likely to be revived ploitation, would lend itself so well to commercial use that one can ascribe the neglect of its potentialities to oversight only. The Garden or the A.A.U. or somebody ought to get the law against it repealed. With the possible exception of an | . The practice, with proper ex- | Wilmington, Del. Dec, 20th: Soviet Pilm showing of “War Agatast the Centuries,” alos # Charley Chap~ lin comedy at Bden Hell, 208 W, 10th BE PERMITTED. SECRETARIAT, NEW YORK DISTRICT mu “~“eentral organ of the Co nist Party of the Soviet Union, ; ade i¢ e ee Communist Party U.S.A. 3 overripe Street, in-an editorial entitled “Igno-| Refuse Judges’ Offer banana, there isn’t a thing you @——~—————_________ = ‘minfous Finale Leipzig Trial”, writes a ‘" < 1 be was no fecling between us. I wasn’t * 240" almost three months this piti- | to Reject Mass ‘Cli M can’t repeal these days. carrying the, puck, Barry had it. tt!] Midwinter Music — Be Saat 2 ie | Of course the eventual legal-| was purely accidental. We had been et “4 oe ie aceasoes secacle of the Defense | ique aneuvers | lation of commercial duelling say | {riendly for some time. Festival and Dance oosueny ta — = i ‘|. “Twenty seconds after the accident wnfolded before the world. The I BOSTON, Mass, Dec. 15,—Judge | t Sid t k Sh be what the ice hockey magnates ate |, pened, Red Horner of the Leats|| *MAS EVE. DEC. 24th *\ wry of political trials saeple’ Gt rey OME sentenced five anti-Fascist | 0 Si e rac oe aiming at. Contemplate, if you will, | PAPPERES FEATURING punched me on the chin and I be- lieve I was struck because of the col- Usion, “I went into the dressing room to see Bailey. He was conscious. I said: ‘I hope you're not badly injured. I assure you it was not intentional.’ He replied: ‘That's all right, Eddie, It’s probably contains no olutionary firmness and supreme Joyaity to their class like that shown | “by"George Dimitroff and his three *“eomfades. “Their three-months struggle is | @ tremendous political importance and to a great extent explains why the events of last’ Tuesday's Toronto- Bruin brawl on the ice of the Boston | Garden. : No one knows why there should be more scraps at hockey games than in football, say. But it has been a tradi- tion and no matter how fast and | workers here to three months im- Continental Dance Orchestre IRVING PLAZA Irving Place and 15th Street ADMISSION 406, AUSPICES: Modern Culture Ctub prisonment and five dollars fine! when they rejected a proposal from } |him that they take a six months’ | probation, without appeal and repu- | diate mass defense. Appeals have | been taken by the International La- | bor Defense, which has also secured / Industrial Union Politicians at Boston Meeting Don’t Want “De Luxe beds for dogs, with legs, springs, and modern- istic designs. $10.”--Advertisement by Abercrombie & Fitch. i Bey | a! § fhe fascists are practically forced to admit through the mouth of ‘their Public Prosecutors that the Leipzig trial was an atrocity of the ruling classes. The court was un- able to produce a single proof ex- aerating the fascist incendiaries, ut many unrefuted proofs were accumulated convincing fascist Justice of a tremendous falsifica- tion. Conczal Indictment 220y was the indictment not pub- Whed? This is such a false farrago of lies that they decided not to pub- lish it. But the indictment exists! “This is the Brown Book, known to all . The fascist dignitaries of regime conv ly de- t rom it in court. he Prosecutors, ve Van der Lubbe, that he burned the signal for revolt. An mipied to claim that the n because mes- e Communist Party were This is one of the basic ar messenger y not cross- xemined? Dithitroff proved in detail the false oye wprising in February No Witnesses cution dares not main- redited thesis of direct gin the di: itplication of the German Commun- | st Party in the burning of the Reich- hing is left but to insist on ‘political responsibility of the mmunist Party”. The prosecutor ers to “reliable” witnesses. Where are these witnesses? Among the witnesses are twenty members of the criminal police, six provocateurs, two spies, two thieves, eight govern- ment officials, three fascist deputies, even fascist activists, one madman, and finally Goering and Goebbels. ‘The degree of their perjury is shown by tne fact that the prosecutor rely- ing-on the evidence was compelled to abandon the charge against the Bul- gatian comrades, Nari Aceomplices “Before the trial fascists claimed that Van der Lubbe had confederates. During the trial Van der Lubbe was convérted into a solitary incendiary. When the indictment became public, Parisius turned completely around to the defense thesis that Van der Lubbe had not acted alone. It is well known that Van der Lubbe did not act alone. It is also well known who were his confeder- ates. The Brown Book gives their names. But the proveeutor cannot give them. Apparently the enor- mous faseist police's spy system was unable to discover his confederates, Ridionlous lie! His confederates were not discovered because other- wire it would be necessary to put the fascist leaders as prisoners in the dock! bi Admit Perjury The speech of Parisius confirms this, The prosecutor himself struck a great blow at the fascist forgers when. under the pressure of facts and the indignant public opinion of toil- fhg mankind he was compelled to abandon the charge against the Bul- gerian comrades. But he demands the ‘blood of Torgler. “THe fascist dictatorship did not once completely admit its crime. It waiust be forced to! Hands off Torgler! A tremendous movement has arisen through the whole world against the bloody plans of the trapped incen- Glaries. i ¢ a ‘ -.,.The protest is sounding ever louder: Vreedom for Dimitroff, Torgier, Popoff, Taneff! Freedom for Thael- “* mann! Freedom for the thousands imprisoned in jails and concentra- _ ‘tion camps! The sordid comedy of the Leipzig srial is utterly exposed. But over two aundred thousand have been killed; shousands crippled, hundreds of thou- sands arrested—such figures give an approximate conception of the period terror, the signal for which was the burning of the Reichstag by the fascists. ' Marxism Firm ‘The German proletariat, the Ger- man Communists have not betrayed cheir fighting Communist banner. The faseist provocations have been exposed, the struggle continues fierce- stubbornly. But the cause of the German proletariat is in the firm aands of its Party which emerged she victor from the Woetpzig court. ‘This is not the only victory of the German Communists during the “truggle under difficult illegal con- © Reyolutionery Marxism continues ts great work. A tenement she | |the release of all five on bond, The five, Moishe Friedberg, Fred | Sousa, George Peters, David Walba, jand Harry White, were charged with |rioting, disturbing the peace, and sauntering and loitering, but the mi- litant defense forced dropping of the riot charge. They were arrested at the Anti-Nazi demonstration outside Ford Hall, November 26, when @ pro- ltest was staged against Ambassador Luther, who, with Roger Baldwin jand other speakers, were addressing ja meeting there. During the trial, the judge dis- |played bundles of postcards, resolu- |tions and telegrams, demanding the release of the five anti-Fascists, and declared the writers of these protests guilty of “contempt of court.” Mass | protest, however, which forced the |dropping of the riot charge, will be |intensified to secure unconditional |freedom for these workers, the I.L.D. announced. Reid on Communist | Election Ticket in Providence, R. I. | Has Been in Forefront | of Textile Workers’ | Struggles PROVIDENCE, R. | I, Dec. |tlonal Textile Workers Union since its inception and a charter member of the Communist Party of the U. S. A., is Communist candidate for rep- resentative of the Ninth Representa- tive District. Comrade Reid has been identified with every major struggle of the workers in this state since his early }youth, In the year of 1912 he was lelected to the above office on the | Socialist ticket. A former textile worker, Comrade Reid took an active part in many |strikes during the year of 1923, chief |of which was the Pawtucket Valley, | This strike soon spread to Paw- tucket, involving close to 10,000 work- ers. The National guard was mob- ilized to serve the mill owners and break the strike by use of terror against the militant workers on the picket line, led by Reid, resulting in the shooting of one of the strikers. The present democratic adminis- jtration of this state has instituted |the C. W. A. “starvation scheme of |relief” with interpertations all their jown. C. W. A. Czar Cody refused to pay the men for rainy days, so the “Right To Live Club” organized a demonstration of 1.000 workers who marched upon the state house to see the Governor, demanding their pay. The Communist Party program on which Comrade Reid is running, demands: State unemployed relief |as a step towards winning Federal Unemployed Insurance at the ex- pense of the employers and the weekly plus $3.00 for each depend- ent to be paid to all unemployed Government. Minimum of $10.00 workers too old to work, women workers during maternity and work- ers unable to work on account of sickness or accident, Abolition of |forced Labor (relief). For Union wages on all C. W. A. State and city projects. As the first step a minimum wage of $18.00 weekly (for 30 hours) with a guarantee of 40 weeks work a year. All workers are urged to work for the election of Comrade Reid and to yote for him on Election day, December 21st. News of the struggles of the tex- tile workers as well as the cam- paign to elect comrade Reid can be found in the Daily Worker on sale every day at Room 2, 447 Westminster St., office of the Com- munist Party in Providence, ATTENTION—DELEGATES OF SECT. ONE TO SECTION CONFERENCE ‘The place of the conference has been changed from Manhattan Lyceum to the | Workers Center, 35 E. 12th 8t., 3rd floor, Sunday, Dec, 17, 2 p.m. ae) . SPEAKERS CONFERENCE IN HARLEM A Speakers Conference will be held at Esthonian Workers Club, 27 W. 118th St. at 12 a.m. There will be @ discussion on the Negro People, . . UNEMPLOYMENT CONFERENCE NEWARK.--The Newark Conference for Unemployment and Social Insurance, which will discuss action on the fight for unem- ployment insurance, will be held on 1, 2 pm, at Doulgers Mall, 336 Morris 7 CELEBRATION OF RECOGNITION CLEVELAND.—Recognition of the Soviet Union will be celebrated Sunday, Dee. 11, at 2pm. at the Masonic Auditorium, Euclid Ave, and Kast 36th St. Among the speak ers will be Corliss Lamont. A musical Program has been arranged, Adm, 250, Un~ employed 5¢, Dee. Are. 15+} James P. Reid, President of the Na-| To Fight Nazi NEW YORK.—A series of mass meetings throughout the city have been called for 8 p.m., Monday, Dec. | 18, at which outstanding speakers will expose the Nazi frame-up and the proposed death sentence against the German Communist leader, Ernst Torgler. ‘These mass meetings will rally tens of thousands for the huge interna~ tional demonstration on Dec. 19 de- manding the release of all the vic- tims of the Nazi frame-up in connec- tion with the Reichstag fire. Members of the Communist Party are urged to call at their section headquarters immediately to get | leaflets for these meetings. The meetings will be held at the following halls, with the speakers listed below: BOWNTOWN — Manhattan Lyceum, 66 E. 4th St.; Clarence Hathaway, M. Katz. Section 1. MIDTOWN—Spartacus Hall, 269 W. 25th St.; Herbert Benjamin, Hyman Koretz (Needle Trades) Sec, 2, 4. YORKVILLE—Kreutzer Hall, 228 E. 86th St.; William Patterson, Sadie | | City-Wide Meetings Monday Death Threat Van Veen. Sec, 4. HARLEM—LW.O. Hall, 415 Lenox Ave.; Robert Minor, James W. Ford. Sec. 4. BRONX — Ambassador Hall, Third Ave; Charles Louis Hyman. Sec, 5, 15, BROOKLYN —Galileo Temple, 1719 Montrose Ave.; Sam Don, C, Yukel- son (Freiheit), RED HOOK—Red Hook Workers Center, 342 Union St., Brooklyn; Andrew Overgaard, Harold Farmer (Marine Workers Ind. Union), BROWNSVILLE—Premier Palace, 505 Sutter Ave., Brooklyn; M. J. Olgin, S. Kingston. Sec. 8. JAMAICA — Workers Center, 148-29 Liberty Ave.; G. Siskind, Sec. 9. LONG ISLAND—Masonic Temple, 41- 26 58th St., Woodside, L.I.; Williana Burroughs, Pauline Rogers. Sec. 10. BRIGHTON BEACH and CONEY ISLAND—Brighton Beach Workers Center, Brighton Beach Ave. and Coney Island; Julia S. Poyntz, Me- lech Epstein, Sec, 11. YONKERS—WorkeryCenter, 27 Hud- son St.; Charles Alexander, Sec. 12, 3875 Krumbein, NR.A. Throws Out | Needle Hearings {Continued from Page 1) dustrial Union demand wage scales! ranging from $39.96 to $60.72 a week.! Pietro Lucci, A. F. of L. fur rack- eteer, now out on bail under a Fed-| eral indictment for racketeering, sat at Howard's table as N.R.A. labor ad- visor for the fur indusiry, despite the workers’ vociferous objections to him. “Lucci is a racketeer,” they shouted, “take him out. We don’t want him.” Police officers will not stabilize the industry, Joseph Winegratsky, manager of the Fur Workers In- dustrial Union, part of the N. T. W. I. U., told Howard as officers rushed to grab him. “Officers keep order. We are going ahead with out program,” Howard called out. The workers shouted: “Shame, shame, let the workers’ representa- tive be heard.” Walter Keyser of the F. W. I. U., rose and demanded, “that the work~ ers be heard,” Again the workers’ delegation called out: “It’s a damn shame. We're starving and the N. R. A. wants to raise our hours and cut our wages.” Irving Bloom, a war veteran, is resentative of the N. T. W. I. U.! informed Howard, before being thrown out, that “the workers de-| mand the end of starvation.” The workers backed him up, calling:! “Shame, shame, on you bosses; 40 cents an hour, shame.” Demand To Hear Potash Howard: ‘We're not going ahead until we have order.” j Workers: “We'll have ‘order’ when the workers are heard.” Officers: “Sit down.” Workers: “What did we come here for?” Fur workers seated all over the hall demanded that Howard hear “our leader,” Irving Potash, head of the New York Department of the N, T. W. I. During the recess, James C. Worthy, assistant to Howard, con- ferred with the manufacturers. The meeting resumed with con- tinuation of manufacturers’ dicker- ing over trade practice terms of code. Sidney A. Haas represented the retail manufacturing furriers of America; David C. Mills spoke for the other employer group, the Na- tional Furriers Guild, Edward McGrady, Assistant Sec- retary of Labor and former Legis- lative Representative of the A. F. of L., acted as unofficial sergeant- at-arms. of the meeting. It is extremely doubtful whether the workers will be heard before late tonight or tomorrow morning. N.6.L. TO HOLD MEMBERSHIP MEETING ‘There will be x general membership meet- ing of the National Students League Sun- day, Dec. 17, at 5 p.m. at 114 W. 14th St, , this line had failed. Radio Operators on For Workers from Ships Strike After: 25 Per Cent Pay Cut NEW YORK.—The radio telegraph Operators were picketing the Amer- ican Merchant Line, at Pier 51, yes- terday, in the first strike in 13 years of licensed men in the American Merchant Service, The strike, against a twenty-five per cent wage cut, is led by the American Radio Tele- graphic Association. At noon a mass meeting was held at Twenty-first and West St., before a large gather- ing of longshoremen and seamen. Strike committee members spoke. The general manager of the Amer- ican Merchant Line, subsidiary of Merchant Marine, whose ship, the American Banker is the first one af- fected by the strike, told the strikers he ould hire any amount of opera- tors at “ten dollars a month.” The strikers have been receiving wages at $100 and $85 a month waiting for the N.R.A. to hand down a code, When the International Merchant Marine (Morgan controlled) declared it will not be a party to the code, William H, Davis, deputy administrator of the marine industry code under the NRA, declared himself “powerless” to do anything, thus giving silent consent to the wage cut. The opera- tors have been cut to $75 and $65 a month, working twelve hours a day. The radio operators strike com- mittee were refused point blank any | and Support from the, International Sea- men's Union (A, F,.of L.). They were told by J.’Sampson, of the In- ternational Longshoremn’s. Associa~ tion (A. F. of L.) that he was with them but “cannot do anything,” He refused even to ask his men to sup- Port the picket line, He said he must summon a district council on orders of International President Ryan be- fore he could act. The strike com- mfitee is being given the whole- hearted support of the Marine Workers Industrial Union The strike was decided unanim- ously after every effort by the marine wireless men to obtain restoration of @ 25 per cent Wage cut.on ships of ‘The radio men Thursday sent representatives in final Protests to Mr. Kermit Roosevelt, president of the line, As a result a tumultous meeting! was held Thursday night at the na-! tional headquarters of the radio or- ganization and immediate action or- dered against this line, The Steamer “Americn Banker,” now in port, is the immediate target of the strike, CLASSIFIED FURNISHED Room for girl comrade or couple; kitchen privileges; near park; reasonable; 2094 Honeywell Ave. Apt. 63, cor, 180th St. Call Saturday and Sunday, FURNISHED Room for rent in private tem- ily; single; comfortable; telephone; eleva- tor; $4; 608 W. 139th St. Apt. 6: ROOM Jarge; light; separate entrance; tele- phone; reasonable; 2156 Cruger Avenue, 1-3, Bronx. Stop Pelham Parkway Station. TO RENT 2 or 3 rooms, furnished or un~ furnished, Very reason 60 8, 9th Brooklyn. Phone: Stagg 2-6893. SUNNY Room; separate entrance; tele~ phone; call all week; 881 H, 178d Ot, Apt. & Any Struggles By CHARLOTTE TODES BOSTON, Mass., Dec. 15.—Conven- tion sessions were suspended today until Saturday when the Constitution Committee of the Amalgamation Convention of the shoe unions, an- nounced it is not yet ready to report. Another maneuver was exposed when @ report was given that the Resolu- tion and Constitution Committees were to meet jointly, enabling the machine to exercise stronger control over the rank and filers who may be influenced by the proposals of the Industrial Union. To whitewash clique rule the Constitution Committee held “open hearings” for delegates yester- day, The Industrial Union delegation appeared at the hearings and pre- sented the proposals adopted by the New York membership, which de- manded the industrial form of organ- ization, local autonomy in conduct of strikes and in districts, uniform agreements, wage rates and working hours, no arbitration and no affilia- tion with the A. F. of L., low ini- tiation and dues payments and fight for Unemployment Insurance. The delegates recommended affiliation with the Trade Union Unity League. The Clique at Work After yesterday’s display of ma- chine politics in action, more dele- gates are beginning to realize that the phrase, rank and file control, used by the clique, is mere window dressing to enable politicians to fast- en their hold over the new organiza- tion and turn it into a new brand of Boot. and Shoe Union (A, F. of L.). ‘The delegates expect that the Con- stitution will leave the door wide open for the entrance into the A. F. of L. after the convention by railroading a referendum ballot. “Independent: Union” is a mere cover for action lat- er as predicted in the October issue of Workers’ Age, which forecasts af- filiation after amalgamation is suc- cessfully concluded and declares this to be the “perspective of progressives of all existing shoe unions.” “If the shoe workers decide to come into the A. F. of L,,” they say, “the Boot and Shoe Union will not be the gate- way,” indicating that the clique aims to enter the A. F. of L. with a guar- antee they will dominate the new A. F. of L. union, Same Old Policy It is also anticipated by many dele- gates that the Constitution will not form an industrial union, but leave the unions in the districts to deter- mine their own form, but provide for domination from the top. Also they will sidetrack any immediate drive for improvement of conditions while they continue the policy of depending on bye boards, ‘us far the convention is charac- terized by the crassest kind of rail- roading, clectioneering and cheap maneuvering to disfranchise and ex- clude Industrial Union members. 'The Vigilance of the rank and file com- pelled the clique to retreat on the issue of closed sessions, which the clique wanted in order to hide their machine polities, The clique provoked attacks on. delegates and raised the cry of “reds” and “disturbers.” A con- temptuous attitude toward the rank file has been shown by Zimmer- man supporters who have tabled mo- tlons and used the worst type of par- Uamentary trickery. Their own steamroller in the chair and on the floor has prevented real rank and file expression, Committees were crowded with the politicians holding the reins and supported by the Socialist Party, Delegates must unite to prevent the new union from being the same as the old with a new set of fakers in control. Although barred against on thefloor the Industrial delegates are the center of the convention, for struggle and for rank and file con- trol, and the only ones calling for a constructive program. Have You Insurance Problems? CONSULT M. D. BAUM CoO, Brokers 1 LIBERTY STREET, N. Y. ©, TEL, JOHN 4-1574 SHOE REPAIRING 61! ALLERTON AYE. FREE RUBBER HEELS Mens and Boys Half Soles_b0c, skillful a game might have been, cus- tomers will sidle out discontented if they don’t get a set-to, Sometimes these fights have the appearance of a very perfunctory and haphazard crossing of sticks but they have the galleries standing up and interested. The general run of the flare-ups is not the McCoy, but you can’t explain last Tuesday's affair on that basis. eines a (E mimeographed advance pub- licity of the Boston team said in just so many words that there would be a riot at the Toronto game. The “Mirror” reporter’ as- serts to have overheard a remark of one magnate to the other “from the security of his box seat, while two hirelings were mauline each other on the ice: ‘They can't hurt us’, Now, Ace Bailey is in the hos- pital, dying, and Eddie Shore has a severe scalp wound and a concus- sion as a result of the brawl. The new supervisor of officials, Frank Patrick, sent a coupze of his least capable arbiters to handle the con- test when everyone familiar with the situation knew it would be a tough game. The officials assigned to the match let the situation get beyond their control by tolerating a lot of rough work early in the game that should have called for severe penalties, It would be unfair to say that the magnates deliber- ately cooked up a brawi to help the box office and had the collusion of the officials ess'-med to handle the match, but you could build up a pretty good case along those lines with the circumstantial evidence at hand.” As a matterof fact it would mot be unfair to make that charge at all. * * AS Bailey may be dead by the time these lines roll off the press. Shore would be held on a charge of man-| slaughter in that case. Questioned by’ the Boston police he made a state- ment I reprint for its dramatic values: “T was skating head down at a speed I figure of 22 miles an hour. Ir saw Marty Barry of the Bruins com~ ing with the disc and I was skating fast to get out of the zone before an offside was declared. “J didn’t see Bailey until it was too ‘ate. My left side struck against his left side. I don’t remember whether I was knocked down or not. There Al DIVISION Italian Amer. vs Rome, Hudson. Italia vs Teo, 2:30 p.m., Hudson. Spartacus vs Falcons, 2:30 p.m,, McCooms Dam. Red Spars vs Ecuador, 2:90 p.m., Thos. Jefferson. Fichte Dye, A2 DIVISION Red Sperk ys Zukunft, 2:30 p.m, Me- Carren. Prospect vs Qolonial, 10:90 a.m., Crotona, French va Bye. Hinsdale vs Bye. Monabl vs Bye. Bl DIVISION Brownsville ys Juventus, 12 noou, Betsey Head. Herzl vs Hero, 1 p.m., Gravesend, N. ¥. Hung. vs Mapels. Bronx Hung. vs Bye Dauntles vs Bye. all in the game.” “I did not strike him with a stick. There was no malice.” en iE statement is a little too well thought out but you can’t blame the severely injured Shore. And I suppose you can’t blame the of- ficials who were “giving the public what it wants” nor the public which has been driven and educated to want blood. One is more inclined to “blame” the profit motive which is the de- \termining element in the way hockey or any other sport is cur- rently run, The expression rings vague but it isn’t, really. You can't fight the profit motive in fundamental principle it is, Neither can you eliminate it until it exists as such. Only boxers and bullfighters live their lives “up to the hill” says Ernest Hemingway whose picture was in the rotogravure last Sun- day because he’s leaving the coun- try to go big game hunting. If he had stayed a couple days he may have consented to add hockey players to the list. And duellists, yes, the duellists, that’s what we started out with. Why Garden, not first blood but to the death? D'Artagnan of M. Treville’s Musketeers vs. Jussac of the Car- dinal’s Guards at Madison Square Garden foils twenty minute time limit. With his pull, Jimmy Johnston oughtn’t to find the State Commis- sion too hard. ,hen we could go on to more effective spectacles. A naked chorus girl against a starv\' Bengal closed cage with six basketful of rattlers, Let's see some showmanship Ww. 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 $40,000 Daily Worker Driv Schedule for December 17, 1933 B2_ DIVISION Dauntles ys LW.O. South Amer. ys Hinsdale. Maple vs Fichte, 12:30, 6th St. Central. Red Spark vs Prospect, 12:30 Thos. Jet- ferson. oom Den. Harlem vs Bye. © DIVISION Spartacus ys Celta, 12:30 p.m., McCooms Dam. Piehte ut Rat Spark, Cult. ys Bye. Greek Spart. vs Hero, 10:30, 6éth St. Central. French va Bye. EXHIBITION GAMES Al DIVISION Hinsdale vs bea 2:30 Betsey Head. IVIST Ital, American vs Red Spark, 10:30, Thos. Jefferson. Rush: Your Order for’ 24-Page Anniversary Daily Worker! DR. R. H. ISAACS Formerly of Baltimore, Md. has moved his office to New York at 304 E. 178th Street, Bronx, N. ¥, (Cor, Anthony Ave.) Phone: FOrdbam | 7-3413 Office Hours: 12 to 2; 6 to 8 P. M. Sunday 10 to 12 Noon DOWNTOWN JADE MOUNTAIN American & Chinese Restaurant 197 SECOND AVENUE Bet. 12 & 13 Welcome to Our Comrad Phone: TOmpkins Square 6-9554 John’s Restaurant: SPECIALTY—ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere 302 EB. 12th St. New York CHINA KITCHEN CHINESE-AMERICAN CAFETERIA-RESTAURANT 233 E. 14th St., Opp. Labor Temple ent DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet. Pitkin Butter Aves., Brookiyn PHONE: DICKENS &-3018 Office Hours: 8-10 A.M, 1-8, 6-8 P.M. MOT THAVEN 98-8749 DR. JULIUS JAFFE Surgeon Dentist 401 EAST: 140th STREET (Corner Willis Avenuc) unvite B-ite DR. S. L. SHIELDS Surgeon Dentist 2516 WALLAVE AVE. AIRY, LARGE Meeting Rooms and Hall To Hire Suitable for Meetings, Lectures and Dances in the ‘ Czechoslovak Workers House, Inc. 347 E.72nd St. New York nt DINNER 38. sports without attagking it as the | not have duels to the death in the| tiger, no holds barred, Mae West in a! A comrade ... --$ 4.00 Previous total . ees 586.01 ADMISSION ‘Total to date $590.01 ' Ital. American ys Spartacus, 11 a.m., Me- Office Phone: Estabrook 8-2573 GALA OPENING CONCERT and DANCER GIVEN BY TREMONT PROGRESSIVE CLUB 866 Tremont Ave., Bronx Program Groveman Ensemble Ruth Picker J. Habergrits Dave Kotkin Tric Saturday, Dec. 16th—8 p, m. Schriftmen Dancers THRILL | To the Soviet-Caucastan- Armenian songs of Sergei Radamsky HEAR end | Clarence Hathaway, i itor of the Datly Worker. PARTAKE Of the surprise festival of revolutionary songs by the Negro and white Daily Worker Chorus with Lahn Adohyman, SEE The presentations of the Workers Dance League Workers Laboratery Theatre—The Theatre of A DANCE Till dawn to the tune of a hot Jazz Band of pleces. AT The Daily Worker Tenth Anniversary Celebration. ON Saturday Eve. 8 p.m. te 2 am, Dee, 30th, 1933, THE Bronx Coliseam—1100 KE, IvIth St. Im advance, 40c; at the door 400, plus press fund of 10c, TICKETS At Workers Book Sho 50 E. 13th St. N. ¥. 699 Prospect Ave., Bronx In the Cooperative Barber Shop, Bronx LW.O. Literature Dept., 80 Fifth Ave, Needle Trades Literature Dept., ‘W. 28th St, shop, Brownsville 62 Herzl St. Attention! ‘The Moving Picture and Dance for the Benefit of the DAILY WORKER, announced by the N. ¥. Latvian Workers’ Olub for Dec. 9 has beeh postponed to DECEMBE® 16th BOHEMIAN NATIONAL HALL 321 E, 73rd ST., N, Y. C Tickets that have been sold and are dated for Dec, 9th will be accepted at the door - © « ADMISSION 400 Come One — Come All! WORKERS--EAT AT THE Packray,Cofeterla ear Hopkinsom Ave. Broskiya, B, 3. GARMENT DISTRICT » Phones: Chickering 4947—Lengaere COMRADELY ATMOSPEERS FAN RAY CAFETERIA 156 W. 29th St. . New York Garment Section Workers Navarr Cafeteria 333 7th AVENUB sth a

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