The Daily Worker Newspaper, December 21, 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)

3 2 at ks DoW e i ines ai A Page Two Thousands to Hear Shoe Powers on Trial Convention Against Injunc tions Ww HistoricAmalg gamation to Be Hailed at Meeting Tonight NEW YORK.—Mas ion officials © Boston ition, are to be of the meeting Leather Amalgamation Co he two high poi 9 which the Workers’ Ind ts member rs tonight ir sey Bt., Intense inte: the meeting bot! forward in A made by the ence and tl union wt in addin tions. Beside tional Secr Unity Magliacano, general unien’s shoe depa he meeting w the Boston Ci About 2,000 orles are to tives through v arranged by the also be an impor meeting While the $600,0 union Hatters’ when agair against charge on overthrow t “the union no’ ganization bece to the A. F. The A. F. of L. Boot Union, with which the wo! severed all conn ago, issued njunc tion years to of L.” nd Shoe press rel paper in ‘ in which lying ements a: ade and published as authentic ments of the Logan Leather | nm had ordered 2 to. the A. F. of L. that the militar its workers to re! Mass Meeting Will Protest Eviction of} Coney Isle and NEW YORK— An ope front mass meeting the, eviction of a s called at 7 p.m. t and 23rd St. Neighborhood C The shoemaker landlord, Mr. Mirrer because Mirrer neec Although his r until Feb. 4, 1934, t! all his machine tandicrd, Mr. } because Mirrer expand his profits. | City Events SEMPOSIUM ON SCOTTSBORO AND LYNCHIN International Labor symposium on the present w ings and the Scottsbor 22, 8:80, at Brook Lafayette Ave., speakers will bo Leibowitz, chief S ney; tary of the Inter: and Arhtur Garfe’ Yorney and aut‘io united against ker is being at Mermaid Coney Island e of Acticn. e will hold e of lynch: Laund moved fro! Street. LAUNDRY WOR! Laundry Wi hold a ma and low w 115th st tactics LL.D. BAZAAR COMMITTEE MEE’ AT AT THE Parkway Cafeteria 1638 PITKIN AVENUE Mar Hopkinson Ave Brooklyn, N. Williamsburrh Comrades De Luxe Cafeteria Yr. ome 94 Graham Aye, Cor. Siegel St. WARE _BVERY BITE A DELIGHT DOW Beery BERMAE’S Cafeteria and Bar 809 BROADWAY Between Lith and 12th’ Streets Tompkins Square 6- Caucasian Restaurant _ Russian and Oriental Kitchen _ BANQUETS AND PARTIES / East 1ith Street New York City ANDWICH| ' LUNCH | 101 University Place (Just Around the Corner) ‘Telephone Tompkins Sacare 6-0780-0781 | on the question was 78 in favor and 1g | 60 opposed. S. Ziebel of New York} Worker | ,| making the proposal used as a pretext ,| that Nolan and Mahan, officials who | | break amalgamation. Report; Act, | Today Last Day for |Party Members to Get Control Stamps YORK—Today is abso- lute the last day for Commu- ni arty members in the New York District to have their books NEW controlled. A Section represen- tative will sit all evening in every Section Headquarters to the books of those who ¢ unable to have their books controlled at their unit meetings. Every Party member must have a control a stamp affixed in his book before he attends control wi | the Today for Fight for Jobless Relief orkersUrged to Pack Court in Protest | on Frame-Up NEW YOR) he trial of George L. Powers, izer of the Steel and Metal Wo! Industrial union is scheduled today at 10 a. m,, in Part 8 of Special Sessions Court, cor White Centre Sts., New York City. Powers ts still awaiting trial in his case, which grew out of the United Front City Hall Unemployed Demon- stration of April 21, 1932, when police | beat up unemployed workers merci- lessly. His case has been called many times, and repeatedly adj instigation of the which, by keeping it suspended, tried to u kt as a club against unem- the next unit meeting. —DIST. ORG. DEPARTMENT Rank and File Shoe : Delegates Battle Betrayal Move | United Front of Clique, Officials Revealed at| Amalgamation Meet | BOSTON, Mass, ‘Dee. 20.—An at-/ tempt to nullify all amendments to the constitution thus far adopted by | delegates at the Shoe Union igamation Convention was made lay when the Constitutional Com- | mittee, headed by I. Zimmerman, | brought in a proposal to adopt the} nal constitution without amend-| ment | The proposal called for the accept- | ance of the original constitution dis- |regarding all amendments adopted {and for submitting to a referendum | vote any amendments desired. A vote | oved for a roll call vote which in-| volved the voting strength of the del-} egations. The roll call vote proved to be 209 1-3 favoring and 137 2-3 against the committee’s proposal. | Ziebel introduced a motion demand- | ing that all amendments thus far| adopted should stand and that all ad-| | ditional amendments be submitted to | | @ referendum. The motion is now be- | ing discussed at the convention. Rank and file delegates regard the | | committee’s motion as a betrayal of | the rank and file and an attempt to defeat amalgamation. Rank and file delegates are making sharp fight to} amend the constitution to establish an | organization for the shoe workers aranteeing control to the rank and | file and stripping the national offi- | | cials and the general executive board | of such power as may aid in setting up another bureaucracy. It és these | | amendments which the Constitution | Committee proposed to discard. | The Constitution Committee, in| are opposed to the amendments, will Actually their motion is a concession to these offi- cials. It indicates that the officials | hope to retain their power in the new organization and have a close tie up | with the Zimmerman clique The New York delegation was in the vanguard in exposing the united | front of Zimmerman with the general | | officials and flayed Zimmerman for | is silence to date in regard to the| Nolan and Mahan mation. Textile ‘Union Calls | Unemployed and Part) Time Workers to Meet | PATERSON.—A meeting of all un-| mployed and part time silk and dye | 6 d for Thursday, Dec. | 222 Paterson St., by! ional Textile Workers Union. re now more unemployed and dye workers than be-| N.R.A. In the settling of Ne | strike the leaders of the A. F. of L. did not take the unemployed and - | part-time workers into consideration. As a result of this the majority of| | which is fighting the frame-up, calls | upon all workers and all ployed actions. The International Labor Defense, workers’ organizations which support the struggle for unemployment insurance and relief to pack the courtroom | this morning. Call Meetings to Fight Persecution. Organizations Urged} to Send Delegates Saturday NEW YORK.—Denouncing the in- creasing persecution of foreign born workers under the N.R.A. “New Deal,” the National Provisional Committee for the Protection of Foreign Born has issued a call for a United Front Con- ference for Sunday, Jan. 21, at the Manhattan Lyceum, 66 E. 4th St. Preliminary meetings to combat dis- crimination against foreign - born workers as part of the general attack on the whole working class, will be held in five sections of the city next Saturday, at 2 p.m., at the following places: Bronx: Bronx Workers Club, 1610 | Boston Rd. Harlem: Esthonian Hall, 27-29 W. 115th St Downtown and Williamsburg: 108 E. 14th St., second floor. Brownsville: 105 Thatford Ave. South Brooklyn: 37 Bay 25th St. All unions and other workers’ or- ganizations are invited to send at least one representative to the meet- ing in their sections. Banquet to Raise Funds for Center NEW YORK, Dec. 20.—The Work- ers Center Banquet, arranged by the Central Committee of the Communist Party, will take place at the Workers Center, 35 E. 12th St., second floor, Sunday, Dec. 24. This is a banquet for delegates from workers’ organizations which have raised funds for the sup- port of the Workers Center. Among the speakers will be a rep- | resentative of the Central Commit- | tee of the Communist Party, Charles Krumbein of the New York District, Joseph Brodsky and James W. Ford.| The program of the banquet in- cludes the Chorus of the Freiheit Ge- sangs Verein, led by Jacob Schaeffer; | recitation by Babad of the Artef; |instrumental music by the WLR. Band and a Negro workers’ chorus, The Central Committee urges all or- | ganizations which have not taken | steps to support the banquet to elect delegates and remit contributions for | the upkeep of the Workers Center, the workers, after settling the strike, are either working part time or to- tally unemployed. The part-time workers are working as little as three to five hours a day and even five hours a week. It is clear that these workers can not exist on the wages they earn for this work. Despite all the promises by the | siasm among workers for the 24-page, ‘Cleveland Police “N. Y. City has 201,000 vacant apartments.”—News item. Total to date, $407.50. Initial Orders Record Mass Sale of Jan, 6th Issue NEW YORK.—A widespread enthu- tenth anniversary edition of the Daily Worker, coming off the press on Jan. 6, is reported from numerous cities and states in the country, Initial orders already placed for this issue, of which a minimum of 250,000 copies will be printed, point to a mass sale unequalled by any previous issue of our paper. Mountain Districts Utah plans a minimum sale of 1,500 copies, Denver, 1,000 copies. Sections in the Rocky Mountains hitherto untouched by the Daily Worker will be reached with the Jan- uary 6 edition. Milwaukee’s initial order for 2,750 copies is an increase of 100 per cent over any previous order by this city for a special issue of the Daily Worker. Rockford, Tll., has ordered 300; McKees Rocks, Pa., 500 copies. Competition Keen Keen competition marks the race between various districts and organ- Helping the Daily Worker through Del: Enthusiasm Soars for 24 of the Foreign Born Page Anniversary ‘Daily’ . izati " Point to izations as to which will sell propor: tionately the largest number of this historic edition. Detroit plans a minimum sale of 30,000 copies in an- swer to the challenge by New York, which placed an order for 100,000 copies. ‘The Workers’ Short Wave Radio Club, New York, in doubling its order of 50 copies, challenges all organiza- tions with a membership of 50 or less, to a revolutionary competition in spreading the anniversary edition of the Daily Worker among the workers. This club pledges to order 25 addi- tional copies for each 50 copies or- dered by organizations whose mem- bership does not exceed 50. Which organization will be the first to take up this challenge? The Executive Committee of the Women’s Councils calls on all its branches to arrange a systematic house-to-house canvassing with the anniversary edition on Jan, 6 and 7. Branches are to rush their orders to the nearest Communist Party head- quarters in their vicinity, or directly to the City Office, Daily Worker, 35 E. 12th St. All cities and districts which have not yet placed their orders are urged to do so at once. Bar Delegations to Nazi Consulate (Continued from Page. 1) against the railroading of Torgler and his co-defendants, to President von Hindenburg of Germany. The meet- ing also protested the convictions of | Heywood Patterson and Clarence Nor- |Tis, Scottsboro boys. Los Angeles Demonstration LOS ANGELES, Cal., Dec, 20.— Five hundred workers massed at an} anti-Nazi demonstration at the Plaza on Tuesday and demanded the im- mediate release of the four Commu- nist defendants in the Reichstag fire trial. The notorious Red Squad barred a delegation elected by the workers from the German Consulate. Surprise Meet In Philadelphia PHILADELPHIA, Pa., Dec, 20.— Several hundred workers staged a surprise demonstration in front of the North German Lloyd yesterday at 5 pm. The demonstration lasted: for about 30 minutes. The police at first did not attack | C.W.A. that the unemployed will be the demonstration, but later, when || Jan 6th “Daily” Will Carry Full Page of C.P. Unit Greetings NEW YORK.—Greetings from Units of the .Communist Party will occupy a full page in the 24-page, tenth anniversary edition of the Daily Worker, coming off the press on January 6th. Every unit in the country is urged to rush its greetings as soon as possible to make sure that it will appear on the page set aside for Party organization. All branches of the Interna- tional Workers Order, trade un- ions and mass organizations, clubs, ete., by sending in greet- ings quickly will assure promi- nent display of their greetings. These must be in the business office of the Daily Worker not later than Dec. 30th, and sooner if possible. Which will be the first to send their greetings? nto the crowd and arrested one worker, Mais heeds: Jobless Join Protest SHAMOKIN, Pa., Dec. 20.—The Unemployed of Shamokin, in the name of 1,263 workers, has sent a wire of protest against the threat- ened execution of the Reichstag fire provided with jobs, very few have re-}a window of the North German defendants to Hans Luther, Nazi Am- ceived such jobs, Lloyd was smashed, the cops sailed bassador in the U. 8. —by del TT EW Officials Aid|' Wage Cutting Drive of Dress ShopBosses Send Seabs, Gangsters to Break Strikes Led by Industrial Union NEW YORK.—Open collaboration of the officials of the International Ladies Garment Workers’ Union with the dress shop besses to cut union scales of wages established in the agreement following the general strike last fall and to bring the dress makers’ conditions down below the level of this prior to the strike is being revealed daily by members of the I. L. G. W. U. Not only are the officials refusing to mobilize the workers against the wage cutting campaign and appear- ing indifferent to all reports of such cuts, but they are actively assisting the bosses to break strikes against wage cuts called by the Industrial Union in the shops it controls. They are supplying scabs for the bosses and carrying on other disruptive ac- tivity to split the front of the work~- ers and prevent any real struggle against the reduction of union stand- ards. The predictions of the Indus- trial Union that the strike agreement would be a paper victory if left to the L L. G._W. U. officials to enforce are now being realtzed. At the Goldsheer shop where the workers are on strike under Indus- trial Union leadership, the officials have posted pickets with signs de- claring the shop to be signed up with the International and not on strike. Thugs are being sent to intimidate the strikers. At the same time the International has supplied workers to the new shop of the Goldsheer boss at Freeport, L. 1, where wages are 40 to 60 per cent less than the New York workers are receiving. In the Pride Dress Co. another shop under Industrial Union control, all workers were ordered to report to the International or work would be withdrawn from this contractor, The move to compel all Industrial Union workers to join the I. L. G. W. U. similar to the fur bosses attempt last summer is aimed at making the wage cutting drive general. In the case of the National Gar- ment Co. at 1400 Broadway, a jobber with 35 contracting shops controlled by the International, wage cuts are being imposed in several of the shops. Although the workers have demanded that the union take action, nothing has been done to stop the wage cut- ting nor has any attempt been made to mobilize the workers against tt by the International. Wander, out of town organizer, has aided a large Mt. Vernon shop to establish a $15 weekly minimum wage for the workers, |Rank, File Prepare to Fight NRA Code at Millinery Meeting NEW YORK.—The N. R. A. code in the millinery trade, which is to go into effect on Dec. 26 and will strike a sharp blow against union wage scales will be the main point of dis- cussion at the membershin meeting of Millinery Local 24 of the A. F. of L., Thursday night, December 21. May Zaritsky, the union’s president, who was a party to the sell-out code, which will mean drastic reductions in wages to the workers, is scheduled to report on the code, The Millinery United Front Rank and File Committee at 58 W. 38th St. has issued a call to the member- ship to attend the meeting and ex- pose the real meaning of the code and particularly the lie spread by Zaritsky that the code will not affect wage seales under the collective agree- ment. The call urges the rank and fire to reject the code and support @ proposal for a general strike to win improved conditions, ‘The meeting is called for Thursday, Dec. 21, at 6:30 p. m., at Bryant Hall, 1087 Sixth Ave. Rank and file mem- bers of the union are urged to at- tend regardless of the order issued by the officials that only members with regular union books will be ad- mitted, ee Mine Conference Makes (Continued from Page 1) itant on, could mditions despite the s, through m 2 improved , because of their mili- d the no strike and of the code with im- In fact, in rike, they made one of the conditions before returning to work that there be no fines for the strikers. | These discusisons also brought out y the labor bureaucrats continue trikebreaking activity and more id more openly side with the op- erators against the miners. The conference decided that on the basis of taking up the defense of the everyday interests of the miners, on the basis of now taking up the fight for every grievance of the miners, that we work for the development of a major struggle of the miners on April Ist, the time of the expiration of the agreement in mest of the coal fields, As part of the development of the jimmediate struggles of the miners | the conference decided that the great- est attention must be paid to the fight for the interests of the unem- ployed miners. The fight for relief, for the C, W. A. jcbs, for unemploy- ment insurance were all discussed as well as the coming Unemployed Con- vention to take place in Washington, D.C., on January 13, 14 and 15, The second outstanding question taken up at the conference was the fight for unity of the’ miners. The Party conference had to answer the question of unity in the light of the existence of separate miners’ organ- These m tant action d ine section in the code which | the course of | Important Decisions | NMU., the PM.A., the Anthracite Miners’ Union, the independent union in the state of Washington, and the fact that a large section of the miners are still unorganized. The conference subjected to discus- | sion the role of the various reform- ist leaders of the U.M.W.A,, P.M.A AM.W.U,, and gaye a clear answer to all miners of all organizations as to what is the policy of the Com- | munists with regard to the fight for | the unity of the miners, The U. M. W. A. officials, of course, refuse to recognize the existence of the other miners’ organizations and claim that only the U.M.W.A, is the organization of the miners, The con~- ference could not come to the con~- clusion, as do the Lovestone rene- gades, that only through the U. M. W. A. can the miners be united. It would be impossible to force the miners of the Illinois fields now or- ganized in the P.M.A, back into the U.M.W.A., aside from the fact that such a policy would be against the interests, not alone of the P, M. A. miners, but of all miners, including the rank and file of the U.M.W.A, Nor can we adopt the position of the Pearceys and Cappelinis that these organizations are the fighting organizations of the miners that should be built up on a national scale. Neither did the conference decide that only through the N.M.U. can the miners establish one militant union of miners, although the N.M.U, has established strong organization in the Western fields and has great in- fluence among the organized miners as well as unorganized miners in Pennsylvania, Ohio, West Virginia, | izations such as the U.M.W.A,, the Kentucky, ete. The conference de- .| miners in every pit, in every section, cided that the Communist Party posi- tion is that we shall work for the unity of the miners into one militant united miners’ union, and that such an organization can only be estab- lished on the basis of uniting the miners in struggle against the coal operators, against the bureaucrats of all the reformist controlled unions, and on the basis of a militant class struggle program and genuine work- ers’ democracy, ‘The Communists in all unions will work towards this end. This, re- quires that in all the reformist unions that we work tirelessly for the building of the opposition movement on the basis of such a class struggle program that the N.M.U. will be strengthened, and that it will take the lead as the fighter for the unity of the miners. But the conference at the very out- set sounded a word of warning against placing the fight for unity abstractly. Only through the devel- opment of the united struggle of the in every district, can the slogan of one national militant union become a reality, In this connection the conference approved the policy in the Anthra- cite which the Communists there have adopted. This policy is that we cannot call upon the miners still in the U.M.W.A. (the majority) to leave the U.M.W.A, and join the new union dominated by the infamous Cappelini. However, neither could we tell the miners in this new union to go back to Lewis as do the Love- stone renegades. Our policy must be to work in sitions in both unions and to unite the miners of both the unions in every pit, for joint struggle for the improvement of their conditions, for the ousting of the officialdom and replace them by honest mili- tant miners. In this connection the slogan of one militant union to unite all the anthracite miners outside the U. M. W. A, was approved as a slogan that can be more rapidly realized than one union nationally, ‘Though there ex+ ist many differences in the Illinois situation, where there are two unions almost equally divided in strength, the same policy on the whole is to be followed in the Illinois coal fields. The Role of the NM.U. The conference decided that the Communist fraction in the N.M.U, do everything possible to consolidate the N.M.U, organizations that now exist (New Mexico, Utah, Colorado, etc.), and that the N.M.U, shall enter into the unorganized fields where the pos- sibility exists to build the N.M.U, At the same time, while in the Penn.-Ohio regions where the U. M. W. A. organization has been estab- lished, the N.M.U, shall intensify its agitational activity, popularize Lage the miners its fighting program and take the lead in the fight for the unity of the miners. The conference also instructed the fraction to study more carefully the situation in the captive mines. where the miners have been most shamefully betrayed by the Lewises, and where, as a result, there exists side by side with the U.M.W.A., the various “unions” es- tablished directly by the coal com- panies, both unions, to organize the oppo- The conference called upon all Communists to support the N.M.U, in its efforts to resume publication of the Mine Worker, while at the same time it urged the comrades active in the various reformist unions to raise the question with the miners of the publication of oppositional papers. Other important decisions made by the conference include the work tor the coming national convention of the U.M.W.A., the participation in all the elections in the various unions, the work of the national fraction, etc, It was decided that there be estab- lished a monthiy Miners Fraction Bulletin to coordinate and guide the work of the Party in all mining fields. an intensive campaign to recruit the miners into the Party. From the in- formation gathered it was brought to light there are some 1,000 miners in the Party at present. The confer- ence, without setting any quotas, but rather leaving these to the Districts i aH | Lights and Shadows By SI GERSON Batting for Edward Newhouse? UR telephone rang, “Hello!” “Hello yourself. This is Eddie Newhouse talking. Si, will you please do a guy a favor and bat out a column for me. I’m busier than a cockroach in an East Side sink. I gotta write a three thousand word article for the New Masses and their deadline is tomorrow night. Whaddaya say, guy?” Eddie’s voice trailed off plaintively. We kept ominous- ly_ silent. Eddie began again with a wheed- ling persuasiveness that would have made a Vestal Virgin forget all her notions of chastity. “How ‘bout it, guy? You can say something about the Labor Sports Union in the col- umn.” We agreed, of course. Eddie gets you that way. But had television been a bit more common Eddie would have discerned more than mere as- sent behind our uh-huhs and okays. He would have seen what the pre- war movie sub-title loved to call A Diabolic Sneer On the Face of the Villain. We were going to get even! “Tf,” we muttered to our editorial self (you gotta mutter to yourself in these situations or else it’s a phoney), “if that guy Joe Freeman can foist upon an unsuspecting public a series of fourteen articles on a Russian lit- erary team called RAAP, hell and eddie newhouse, I can write one little column on the Labor Sports Union.” aa at R a variety of reasons, the work- ers’ sports movement in the United States has been woefully neglected. Probably the most im- portant reason has been the sectarian character of the revolutionary move- ment of the United States, its isola- tion from decisive sections of the American working masses and con- sequently from their day-to-day cul- ture, life, feelings and desires. Those of us who did—and do—work in. the labor sports movement got only an olympian condescension from our tovarishtchi—where we didn’t receive jeers that were something less than good-natured, Along with the heart- aches and headaches there were some compensatory lighter moments, how- ever, ee ee ICIDENT 1. Scene—Labor Sports Union office. A harassed treasurer is sweating over accounts. A basket- ball team is demanding in strident tones that they be scheduled for a visiting court for next week or else they'll leave the league. Two goccer managers are arguing an off-side goal in tones that are everything but hushed. The phone rings. A frantic voice on the other end, “Lo, L.S.U., LS.U.?. This is Ludwig of the W.LR. W.LR.—Workers International Relief. Lissen, L.S.U., you gotta send three guys over here right away to sleep at our office!” “But comrade”—this in a weary, patient tone—‘our comrades have places to sleep. Why do they have to sleep in the W.LR. office?” o- Genosse Ludwig brooked no reply “They gotta come over right away. Somebody’s been stealing money ov? ders from our mail at five o’clock i the morning.” “But, comrade, this is no detective agency. We're a—” “What?” he roared, “Ain’t this L3.U, office? What number have got?” . there was the desperate voles at the other end of the wire that demanded that the Labor Sports Union provide by the next morning a mass drill, a set of tumblers and two full soccer teams for a Hun- garian fraternal order picnic in New Jersey. The consequences in the event that the L.S.U. did not come through, the voice insisted heatedly, would be calamitous for the proletarian revolu~ tion in central New Jersey. When it was explained calmly and with a minimum of such terms as “dialec- tic,” ‘irreconciliable” and “ideological” that the L.S.U. was no vaudeville booking agency, the voice at the other end of the wire broke off nego« tiations and withdraw in a huff. You could almost taste the huff at om end of the line, ae CIDENT “three repeats Meolt with minor variations almost weekly. A timid young sylph, 200 pounds if an ounce, timidly ap- proaches some L.S.U. official. “I’m a little bit inclined towards plump- self kind of coyly. “And I thought maybe you comrades, maybe you could kind of reduce me, you know, kind of give me some exercists .. .” 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 Jacoh Burck to raise $1,000 in the $40,000 Daily Worker Drivet TOTAL TO DATE Seeeet WILLIAM BELL OFFICIAL Optometrist °° 7" LW. 0. 106 EAST 14TH STREET Near Fourth Ave, N. ¥. ©. Phone: Tompkins Square 6-8227 DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet, Pitkin and Sutter Aves, Brooklyn PHONE: DIOKENE 9-908 Offies Hours: 8-10 AM. 1-2, 6-8 P.M. ARRANGE YOUR DANCES, LECTURES, UNION MEETINGS NEW ESTONIAN WORKERS’ HOME 27-29 West 115th Street New York City RESTAURANT and BEER GARDEN [ LICENSE NOTICES i NOTICE is hereby given that license num ber NYB 15168 has been issued to thi tail, under Section 76 of the Alcoholié Beverage Control Law, at 326—Tth Avenue, New York City, to be consumed upon said premises. Ritz Bar and Grill, Beventh Avenue, New York, N. Y¥. CLASSIFIED FOR SALE — Twenty-five volumns of Lenin’s Collected Works in Russian. Edt- tlon 1933, red binding, Money realized will be donated to Philippine Communist Party, Send bids to H. M. c-o Daily Worker. Trade Union Directory ++ BUILDING bap" aesd WORKERS ION ‘108 Broadway, New York Otty Gramercy 5-0857 OLEANERS, DYERS AND PRESSERS UNION 228 Second Avenue, New York Olty Algonquin 4-4267 FOOD WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION 4 West 18th Street, New York Clty Chelsea 3-0505 MEET YOUR COMRADES AT THE Cooperative Dining Club ALLERTON AVENUE Cor, Bronx Park East Pure Foods Proletarian Price FURNITURE WORKEZS INDUSTBIAL UNION 812 Broadway, Now York Otty Gramercy, 5-8056 METAL WORKERS INDUSTRIAL, CHIOK 19th Street, New York City Gramercy 7-7812 NEEDLE TRADES WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION 131 West 28th Street, New York ow. Lackawanna 4-4010 and strenghten the ADDRESS CITY . BEACON, N. Y. Sledding! Skiing! Cars Leave and 6 P. roms Coop Be SPECIAL Daily Worker Volunteers 1 would like to join the DAILY WORKER VOLUNTEERS and do my bit to help build Christmas at CAMP NITGEDAIGET Ice Skating! Dancing? Gala Xmas Program! Join the Fun! TASTY WHOLESOME FOOD Make Reservations Now for the Best ouewape 0:30 A.M. Daily; on Frida y and Saturday at 10 A.M,, 2 Restaurant, 2700 Bronx Park East. mere arises ‘SCHEDULES FOR XMAS WEEKEN! DAILY WORKER. . STATE .. ene eeeee Phone: Beacon 731 Rikiizg! Heated Gym!

Other pages from this issue: