The Daily Worker Newspaper, December 30, 1933, Page 2

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Page Two re Fur Workers Cheer in| NRA Halls as Potash Presents Union Code N.R.A. Code BULLETIN ( lauded and cheered wildly Ben Gold, national secretary dustrial Union, mounted N.R.A. fur code. “It is generally ors. fur manufacturers spread employment, crease the purchasing of the workers will make the workers’ tions worse,” said Gold. ant fur of whom .are collected $38 for will will not ployed, to the Capitol. | Sharp Battle Looms| With Fur Bosses on Nearly 200 fur workers ap- of the Needle Trades Workers In- the platform to oppose the proposed understood that the National Recovery Act was drafted to help the work- The code submitted by the not in- powers and generally condi- workers, unem- the Morning Freiheit on their way By SEYMOUR WALDMAN Daily Worker Washinzton Buro) WASHINGTON, D. » Dec, 29. Irving Potash, the spokesman f a delegation of nearly 200 fur workers of the militant N rades Workers In eday presented the workers’ yosals to N.R.A. Deputy rator Earl D. H vessive delegation of ‘ose to a man and made the 1 rd. The Jommerce Department auditorium ‘ing with their as Potash | ended the rostru Potash emphatically against the wages of the wonosed code. “The larger part of the audi- i in what might would eon. daboi ‘Now the esente” dusty ~trer N.T.W.1. full minute ional Fur N.T.W. 28 nd clapped. Workers, rd declared workers laughe ard’s sense of propo eat that ihe membershi will does F n and» paper locels L of che A. ash. The workers ily. : Shortly after 1} Paul, a the Luce who, labor Lucci conne Admin: charte ioned to the presence im fu w fi "kers e prov’ isio ons of ein of the Inter- speak | T. x ad- cigar at of cted enough,” Howard in- terrupted imperious pushed as the various cod Potash declered forced to wait all day and not had ample time in w Fpeak.”” The proposed code, drawn “by the Associated Fur Coat Trimming Manufacturers, ovides for a work week of ours, The N.T.W.I.U. prop 0 hours. @ employers’ N.R.A. code BY minimum wage asks a while per scale 20 mranging from $36.96 _ week. KY.I.U. proposes $20. The code gives ithe zight to discharge. The I.U. says “No discharge.” Concerning Section 7-a of .R.A., which supposedly provi for the workers’ free choice my Ww. discriminat provisions come up, “At other fur hearings we were h up and For the $40, 000 Fund Thursday’s receipts ......$ 152.37 SEPtS seceees 163.07 Previous total ..+ssseces 38,426.81 Total to date $38,742.25 New Shoe Union Hears Delegates at First Meeting. NEW YORK.—The New York Dis- trict of the United Shoe and Leather} Workers Industrial Union held their | first official meeting Thursday night member | eed the pro- | cf: | the 2a The code provides for 14 a week qiinimum for floor boys. The N.T. emvloyer NT. the ides | of 1.U. tion nst our union, most of the workers, cion shall be exerted on 3 to join the eration of Labor ye their own union. Union eee Od the one chos- No our American to un- floyment insurance is provided WLU, in the code. The N. ses an unemployment ure fund contributed to by total weekly payroll. he employers’ group, which the ployers only of 3 per cent of de- cent | Committee for crease on the established scales | » $60.7: in Arcadia Hall, Brooklyn, and heard the reports of delegates to the recent Amalgamation conference tn Boston which resulted tn the forming of the united union with 70,000 members, The meeting was opened for the Jast time in the name of the old union, the Shoe and Leather W-s:- ers Industrial Union and closed in the name of the new. A telegram received Thursday by | Fred Biedenkapp, secretary of the New York District, from the National Labor Board, stated that the union | elections to be held Jan. 2 by un- o a ence workers, according to paragraph 7-a of the N.R.A., were postponed one month to Feb. 2. This was looked upon by the union as an attempt by the Labor Board, co- turers’ Board of Trade and t he scab A. F. of L. Boot and Shoe Union leaders, to the unaffiliated workers into submission to the A.| F. of L. Union Greets N. ¥. District A telegram of greeting was sent to the meeting from the secretary of ing committee of the Workers h elimination in our ranks we can ch forward to gain decent work- andards. In solidarity In his repor Biedenkanp said: “Our meeting tonight marks the end of one period and the begin- ning of another. History in the or- vanizell life of the shoe, slipper, stitehdown and repair workers is being made in a manner that spells decided progtess and advancement.” to the Union, Fred Biedenkapp stressed the fact that} ile 70,000 shoe workers were now| ited in ene union, there were still|Place after Roosevelt has already au- | PT ae 090 in the shoe and leather indus try, tannery aba into the organized workers’ yore Injunction Conference George Martin, Shoe Repair Department Ur and I. Rosenber of About 50 in- granted at Irving Plaza Hall. junctions have been bosses avainst the w Wenzel, Dunn and . The bring: last 12 injunttions include-a suit for $600,000. WwW orkers’ Center Sends Thanks for Helv at the Delegates’ Banquet NEW YORK.—The Committee for the recent banquet held for the raising of funds for the continuance of the Workers’ Center, has issued a statement thanking the lies our workers included, to be organizer of the the rg, delegate to malzamation conference spoke € with several other delegates. An anti-injunction conference has been called by the Union for Jan. 28 the ion by Judes { DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1933 |GUTTERS OF NEW YORK —" Roosevelt Sounds | War Note in Peace | | (Continued from Page 1) reference to Hitler's desire for re- armament for a new struggle for the | which will give German capitalism \new colonies, This explains the bitter comment of one of the German spokesmen of the Foreign Office that “present day | America is far off from the Geneva spirit.” Cuba Government which is rapidly attempting to es- tablish relations with Wall Street, and is moving toward the complete crush- ing of the workers’ and peasants’ {anti-imperialist revolution found Roosevelt's speech completely * “sal fying and gratifyinig,” despite the fact that American gunbobats are now anchored in the Havana harbor. ‘War Program Roosevelt's “peace speech” takes |thorized over one billion dollars in @ record-breaking war building gram. He is preparing to authorize another $460,000,000 for the Navy in |the next few weeks, since it has been | his consistent policy to lead the world | in the speedy building up of a Naval fighting machine. the naval office full scope to build} @ navy second to none in the world. The entire New Deal has been a program of persistent mobilization for war, behind an increasing cloud of pacifist demagogy. The re-habil- itation of the Muscle Shoa the concentration of railroad control the projected unification of the te |sidies to the war airplane industry, lare all indications of a gigantic or- ganization for the coming imperialist war, Roosevelt's non-intervention prom- ises are only the diplomatic invit | tion to the South American countries Arrangements DOW close to Wall Street's British | ¢ imperialist rival. It heral growing aggressive drive again: jain for foreign markets, with armed | lintervention an integral part of the | organizations that participated and Program, | those which contributed funds. “We send our revolutionary greet- ings to the clubs, banquet arranged by Workers’ Center. | “We send thanks to the Freiheit | ® | si nging Society, the Artef, the Work- | Into Unity Move International Relief and the a John Reed Club for help given in| | arranging the entertainment at the} and te the New Health Center for preparing the food, and to these employed at the Workers’ Center for co-operating in the prep- ers’ banquet, arations for the banquet. “Seven hundred delegates attended, and the proceeds amounted to $1,200.’ CHARLES KELNER, Manager of the Workers’ Center for the Arrangements Committee. unions and mass a reduction in the established | organizations which took part inthe) the Central | the support of the; Delegates Fo Force LID. Conference By SOL LARKS WASHINGTON, Dec. 29. — Unex- pected strength was revealed by the left-wing group in the League for In- | dustrial Democracy Convention terday, when a motion was carried | to invite three represenatives from »| the National Students League to ad- dress the Convention on the subject of student unity. | Joe Starobin, Ed Stevens and Joseph Cohen spoke for the N.S.L. bated their “ethics,” or practices, and the degree of ex- ploitation to which they would continue to exploit workers, in- cluded: Edward Fillmore Wholesale Manufacturers; Grossman of the Chicago Trimming Association; and_D. Mille of the National Fur: Guild. READY MAD YORK CITY A RY, ) SALTZMAN BRO MEN’S SUITS FINE CLOTHING E FOR WORKERS AND TO ORDER 181 STANTON STREET NEAR CLINTON STREET, trade of the Fur and urged unification of the studen on the basis of the N.S.L. progra Just previously, a motion to table consideration of the constitution un- til the question of unity was settled, |was defeated by the close vote of 22 to 19. Socialist and Young Peoples Socialist League delegates from New York then raised the “Red” scare, declaring that “unity meant affiliation vith the Communist Party, that it was necessary to align themselves with the “official” labor movement, to which the N.S.L. is opposed.” The Socialist leadership of the con- vention, in order to defeat the unity group, was forced to make the pro- posal for united front action with the N.S.L, on specific issues, but post~ ‘poning the question of unity. This was carried. The minority group today declared LOCAL BOY MAKE! “Grover Whalen has gone to Washington to report on his N. R, A. activities to the President. ”—-News Item. | Talk on Wilson, | operating with the Shoe Manufac-| jrevision of the Versailles Treaty, | The present government in Cuba, | Roosevelt is giving | plant, | jegraph and telephone lines, the sub- | —by del rover, im PROUD | Anniversary Meet | the celebration of its fifth anni- | The cable received at the Needle Thousands to Greet ‘Needle Union at 5th NEW YORK.—Greeting the Needle ‘Trades Workers’ Industrial Union on versary, the International Commit- tee of Needie Unions with headquar- ters in Moscow, U. 8. S. R. conveyed its heartiest wishes to the Industrial Union in behalf of the millions of | workers in the Soviet Union and the thousands of necd’e workers in its| ranks in other parts of the world in a cable to the Union. GOOD! Wase Cuts Loom as ‘LaGuardia Prepares ‘Economy Program’ (Continued from Page 1) | the introduet m of what he calls “an eciaee ate fare” on the subways. His 21 to “unify” the subways con- Il the prerequisites for guar- g the subway bondholders a | recent Roe! efeller the Morgan- bankers who hold the of the subway securities, his program protec- tion’ their leans and investments, an “adequate fare,” This means that the introduction of the nt fare is a definite part of the ia “economy program.” hed Relief Despite the iny army of jobless in the LaGuardia has definitely et forth “his ovposition to any en- |1a zement of the ef payments, |which even the official investigators Jadmit to be terribly inadequate. On |the contrary, LaGuardia has ex~ | Se of making the ments go a longer ‘more scientific” ap- | pr | way the present appropria- tions. This méans further slashes in | individual ‘relief payments. Protect: Bankers int needed to meet the im- » payments to the Wall Street banks is about | n-Rockefeller | $40,000,000. LaG |the bankers to rais In additior proposed R. Ayen| to bl val authorities with the Fede: nds “balancing the on | budg | The Morg n-Rockefelle er banks col- lect $100,009, year from the {city in in and loan payments. | All efforts by the overnment to | balance the budg rd gus arantecing these payments, | Brownsville Workers | To Protest Jim Crow | Eviction This Noon Brownsville workers nti-Jim Crowism dem- ck today in front } from which a Ne- cted after the land- cepted a month’s rent for | I rn had rented nent and moved in on Dec. the landlord discovered | thictiog! to a Negro fam- eject the iture into the snov Bryan's The B s' International La- bor Defense and the League of Strug- gle for Negro Rights immediately mobilized the workers in protest. A Bryan defense committee was. formed and has en nged & series of mass “AGAINS® MURDER OF ARCHBISHOP meeting to. protest ‘against the srehi Lech Tourain will be ‘at Webster Hail, at auspices of the Friends nd the American Com= mittee to Aid Armenians. that they would carry the fight for unity down to every campus in the L. I. D. One of the rank and file delegates, when. interviewed by. the Daily Worker, stat: “T favor unity with the N.S.L. because I. feel that militant organization, can the radi- calization of the students be achiev- ed, student problems. met, and the working class effectively aided. | Union headquarters Wednesday says | | in part: “Fraternal proletarian greet- | ings to the needie workers on the 5th | anniversary | terest.” 'Waiters’ Demands of $23,000,000 for the | e directed to- | only by uniting all students in one} of your revolutionary leader and or zer, The Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union. | The International Committee Needle | Union and Opposition groups follow | your struggles with the greatest in- The Union has completed final ar- rangements for the mass celebration | of the fifth year since the founding | of the Industria! Union, at Mecca Temple Sunday evening. Won as AFL Heads Stop Hotel Strike! Force Park Central To! Grant Pay; Led by Industrial Union NEW YORK—While Waiters’ Union officials were calling off the proposed generel strike on the pretext that a new hearing would be called at 2 future date to take u» chanzes in the N. R. A. code, more than 109 waiters of the Park Central Hotel pres’ demsnds to the management and won | substantial gains under the leader- ship of the Food Workers’ Industrial Union. Before the demands were made, th waiters at the Park Central w working without wages. The man ment fearing a strike ded to th demands and conceded $2) a month for two meal steady waiters, $3 extra, for New Year's Eve, a 9-hour day and) a@ 6-day week, workers fired for union acti ers and recognition of an elecie committee. This victory should inspire the waiters in other hotels to take similar action despite the A. of L. officials’ treachery, the Industrial Union points out. The action of the A. F. of L. officials in calling off the genera! strike is a direct violation of the de- cision of the membership at thir mass meeting. A str’ke vote was taken with tho understanding that 4 strike would be called unless the code were dhanged. The officials nave reccived [no such essurance, They are :netely deceiving the menibers again with false promises. Under pressure of their rank and file, | officials of the Amalgamated Food} Workers yesterday came to the office} of the Food Workors’ Industrial Union to take uv the question of a united front in the strike, While the A. nd | W. representatives refused to accept the proposal for a joint eoeumitese | and a joint organization drive in preparation for the general sirike, the representatives of both unions agreed on some minor points and will confer agein on the question of united action. At the mass meeting of the Amai- | gamated Food Workers Union Thurs- day night, the speakers declared | themselves the only ones in favor of | unity but failed to mention that the | Food Workers’ Industrial Union had taken the initiative in calling for unity, nor of the conference which had taken place. | Meanwhile the Hotel and Restau- rant Workers Union and the Cafeteria Workers’ Union, sections of the Food | Workers’ Industrial Union are going | abead full blast in the drive to pre- , lock- shop pare for struggle against the code and for better conditions. Part of | those preparations will be a mass | meeting called by the Union et Palm Garden, 306 W. 52nd St., Wednesday, Jen, 3, at 8:30 p. m. where plans ‘for the strike will be discussed. | Leaders of the A. F. of L. and Amal- gamated Food Workers’ Union have | een invited to come to the mesting and state their position on unity and on @ strike. Rank and file members of the A. F. of L. and the A. F. W. and un- organized workers are urged to attend the meeting. Preparations to resist the proposels to call off a general strike should be | made immediately by the rank and file in the A. F. of L. Opposition | forces diately call for local meetings and mobilize the workers to re, proposals and vote for strike. FURNITURE WORKERS TO MOLD NEW YEAR PARTY TONIGHT A New Year's Lve celebration will be heid tonight, given by thé Purniture Workers In- dustrial Union, Gustem Upholstery Seciton, at 812 Broadway, 8:30 p. m. COOPERATIVE AFFAIR TO GRECT CHILDREN’S CONFERENCE An affair will be held by the Cooperative House 41. its guditorium tonight to greet the National Conference on Children’s Work which will be held there today and to- morrow, A ceneert and dance will inciude among }many numbers the Youth Section of the Only about 50 delegates were pres- ent, with just two Negroes. Fretheit Gesangs Verein led by Comrade Schaefer, the Bootblack scene from “Strike ‘| sented the reinstatement of two| in the unions should imme-' The Burpers Intrigue | orgy of dirty linen washing about the sinister connivings of Mondt, Rudy Miller and other® well known figures. In fact, He Telis All | . ‘AR be it from me to suggest vile things, but the unkind thought comes to our mind that perhaps Mr. Pfefer has been chiseled out of something good and is making this public holier as one of the ways of muscling back in again. But with our characteristic firmness we are dismissing the idea. Mr, Pfefer is undoubtedly a benefactor of human- ity, am altruist of the purest water, @ Man Above Those Things, Never- theless Mr. Pfefcr’s information has ® certain value and we pass them on to our readers with the hope that they enjoy the delicious tid-bits as | much as we did. } : | ZRR PFEFER informs us that Jim Londos (the Greek God to you) was just an ordinary palocka who | was made world’s champ by execu- tive order, the executives being the Strangler Lewis, six times by Wladek Zybysko, and by Renato Gardini, Jack Sherry, George Calza and Ed. Santel. Nevertheless, the young Hal- lene Dh st. this in a whisper— hich, translated, means and “ah’s” that go “beautiful treasurer's teport. That the boys weren’t wrong in their judgment is proved by the fact that the turnstiles begen to click at an unparalleled rate shortly the boys got together on ugust aiternoon in 1923, the ing situation was everything but Champions were distributed around the geography like daisits in the field, and like this bit of flora ir heads nodded gaily in the Jan- of wrestling promotion. 2 Dartmouth football beaten Strangler Lewis for the title in Boston but “Gus didn’t know anything about wrestling.” Out in Ohio John Pesek was lord of the} realm of grunts and grcans, while Dick Shikat was uneasy with his crewn in Pennsylvania. A decision was reached and before you could say Wladek Zybysko, it was determi: that Lendos was to be, ladeez and gentlemun, the winnah and new wortlds champsen. And now we'll let Pfofer continues the tale: “So then and there we agreed on 2 division of the spoils. Londos was to. be made ehampion by beating ndeiphia in a return “Rudy Miller, Jack Curley and myseif were to get five per cent ef Loxdos’ earnings. Mondt. who was already en:ting Londos (or 25 per cent as a partner of Tom Pacis, Ed White ard Londos in the St. Louis faction, was to eontinue to | split up with these three, sharing equally in the profits after the others in on the jackpot had been taken care of. “Besides our 15 per cent, kitty was to be socked for 714 pet cent for Ray Fabiani, the Paitadel- phia promoter who was to put on the match that was to make Lon- dos champion; and 5 per cent was to go to Hans Steinke, who was Lonéos’ policeman. For the infor- mation of those whe don’t know what 2 neliceman is in the wrest- | ling word, he’s a good wrestler who goes ont and disposes of the cha!- lengers for the chempion if the champicn doesn’t think he can throw them himself. Steinke was a g00d policeman.” “The agreement reached, Londos and Shikat wrestled in Phiiadel- phia, Aur. 29, 1928, and Londes was er d champion. That ushered in 2 new and proszerous era in wrestling. In 1930, we had 2 big boom and everyone who was cutting in on Londes made lots ef money. The champion wresiled Ray Steele, Jim MeMillen, George | Zaharias, Gino Garbatdi and Cari Pojello dozens of times in all the large cities, always winaing. If Londos engased in 2 shooting match (honest bout—S. G.) in all that time, he did it without my eee He refused to meet — ne Fae mablemate:.” the EMPUS fugitted along and people get tired of ing Londos throw the same tramps out of the ring night after night, Curley wied to arrange something better but Londos wouldn't Listen and jump2d the Cur- CALL FOR DELEGATES Td WORKERS CLUBS CONFERENCE All English epeaking worker's ¢hubs not yet | members of thé City Club Council are urged to elect delevates to the second annual con- ference of the Werkers Olubs, on Jan. 7, 1924, at 33 B. 20th St., New York. UNEMPLOYED COUNCIL TO BOLD MESTING A meeting under the joint auspices of the Uppee Harlem Unemployed Counei! and the W. EB. 6. L, on the umempicyment sit- wation will he Neld Sunday, at 4 p.m. xt yw the Burping Trust has been busted wide open and angry belches can be heard from all corners. is on and the public is invited | to listen to the mournful bleatings of shorn lambs. Pfefer, announced in the columns of the N. Y. Daily Mirror as a Former Partner in the Wrestling Trust, tells a galleyfull | touching aforementioned Messrs, Curley,|tcans, bye (no games). Piefer, Mondt and Miller. Londos| 4? DIVISION was ‘thrown fourteen times by|,Colonils, Zukunft, Monabl, Red Spark, | 23. ley reservation. Mons. Jacaues, how- The usual Jack Monsieur Jacques Curley, Toots ever, couldn’t be licked. sympathy was him by the N. Y. State Boxing Com- mission, at the head of which was Jim Farley, and the sport writers of the metropolitan press. Jim Brown- ing and Joe Savoldi were built up overnight. This laid the basis, as we say, for the alliance of the two groups. The pact was signed only last week at the Hotel Pennsylvania and Londos will wrestle the Brown~- ing pets and Browning the Londos household friends. Ziverything will be just lovely, Metropolitan Workers Soccer League A somewhat SCHEDULE FOR DEC, 31 A DIVISION Tico vs. Fichte, 2:30 p. m., McCombs Dam Park. Faloons vs. Spartacus. Red Sperk, Italis, Keuacor, Ttalien-amer- French, Hinsdale, Prospect, no scheduled. BL DIVISION Heral vs. Brownsville, 1 p. m., Gravesand | Park, Bronx Hungarian vs. Hero, 12:30 p. m., McCombs Dam Park. Juventus vs. Naples, 2:30, Hudson Perk. Dauntless, not scheduled, B2 DIVISION Fichte vs. Crotena Park. Red Spark vs. I. W. O., 16:30, Betsy Head Harlem Progressive, 11 @. m., tess ys. Excapect Workers, 12:30 Cen- al Park, 64th St. South ‘Americans vs. 2:30 Central Park, 64th St Hinsdale ys. Naples, 2: a0 ‘Betsy Head Park. Spartacus ys. Zukunft, 3 p. m., Crotone Park. © DIVISION Red Sperk vs. Park. Celta vs. Greek Spartacus, 11 2. m., Me- Combs Dam Park. ‘pxputh Culture va, French, 10:90, MeCarren a Spartacus, French, not scheduled, WORKERS--EAT AT THE Parkway Cafeteria 1638 PITKIN AVENUE Naar Ropkinsom Ave. Brooklyn, ¥. Y. Italian-Americans, Hero, 12:90, Betsy Head CLASSIFIED “COUPLE wishes t# share 4-room apart ment in Greenwich Village. Landy, 52 Bank St, BEAUTIFUL largo room; quiet, Bits, water, stitablé 1-2; reasonabls. 329 W. 94th St., apartment 43, New York City. WANTED furnished room by Russian Jam- ily. Midtown section. man comrade | wishes to study Russian. Write A. M. ¢-o° Bookstore, 1615 Second Ave. FRENCH or Russian tet LOST overcoat, English cut, party, at 313 B. isth Bt, on Saturday, Dec. Reward. Apply J. W. c-o Daily Worker. ATTRACTIVE furnished room; front, private, adult femil. Separate entrance. Vicinity Union Square. Phone evenings all next week. GRemerey 7-2028. SUNNY and quiet room for a man, 2800 , Bronx Part East. Apartment N2. exiended | New York City, | Ss offered for,“ English. Greenberg, 760 E. 175th St., Bronx, | at ¥. 0, DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet. Pitkin ond Sutter Aves. Breokiyn PHONE: DICKENS $-30i2 Offies Hours: $-16 AM. 1-2, 68 P.M. WILLIAM BELL~.. 1 OFFICIAL Optometrist °. . Box ir 106 EAST 14TH STREET Near Fourth Ave. N. ¥. 0. Tompkins Square 7, MOT THAVEN 9-8749 DR. JULIUS JAFFE Surgeon Dentist 401 EAST 140th STREET (Corner Willis Avenue)” Stinviie 6s» ae DR. S. L. SHIELDS Surgeon Dentist 2074 WALLAVE AYE. corner Allerton Avenue AARON SHAPIRO, Pod. G. CHIROPODIST 223 SECOND AVENUE ALgonguin 4-443 Cor, 14th st. Scientific Treatment of Foot Ailmente Russia? Workers needing full outfits of horschide a lentber sheeplined Costs, pear ayn Brecches, High Shoes, ete., clal reduction om all thetr po Besant tl SQUARE DEAL ARMY and NAVY STORE 121 THIRD AVE. (2 doors South of Mth Street a | Garment Section Workers | Navarr Cafeteria 333 7th AVENUE DOWNTOWN JADE MOUNTAIN, | American & Chinese "or SECOND AVENUE | Bet, 12 & 18 Welcome to Our Comrades CHINA KITCHEN.“ CHINESE-AMERICAN CAFETERIA-RESTAURANT 233 E. 14th St., Opp. Labor Temple SPECIAL LUNOH 26e, Comradely Atm DINNER 35¢. sphere Phone: TOmpkins Square 6-9554 John’s Restaurant TS ee DISHES eo with atmosphere Suece all radicals meet 12th St. 302 EB. AM Comrades Meet at the NEW HEALTH CENTER CAFETERIA Fresh Food—Proletarian Prices—S0 F. 13th St—WORKERS’ CENTER NOTICE! NOTICE! RUSSIAN ART SHOP Inc. YRASANT & OVED TO 9 West “tand Street ANDICRAFTS JANCH AT 107 E. nTath Street Large Selection of Gifts, Toys and Novelties from the Soviet) Union, 10% Discount to Readers of the Daily Worker Register Now for Winter Term Harlem Workers School 260 WEST 135th STREET, Room %12-B CLASSIS IN Principles of Ciacs Straggle (Conducted in English arid’ Spanish) Current Problems Youth Problems Organizaticn Principles termediate of the Negro Lib- 2ration Movement Labor Journalism Political Ecsnemy Public Sporkiny CLASSES FILL UP QUICKLY GET NEW DESCRIPTIVE BOOKLET ~ Telephone: Awdul Elementary and In- English Russian |» Svanish hon 8-055 SONGS BY M and of SOVIET Fri., Jan. 5th New the I W. O. Hall, 415 Lenox Ave. (11st St.) ‘Me Red." + Hickerson will address the meeting. Come and Celebrate With Us at the DAILY WORKER CHORUS, A New Song Program THEATRE at.. Dec. 30, 8 P.M. to2 A. M.- BRONX COLISEUM - East 177th Street OF ACTION, “The Holy of Holies,” Ne MIKE GOLD, Daily Worker SERGEI RADAMSKY, ete, ticnal songs in German, An evening of new interna- Coiumnist, CHAIRMAN Armenian, Caucasian, Rrissian MOISSAYE J. TENTH ANNIVERSARY OF THE DAILY WORKER CLARENCE HATHAWAY, E4., Daily Worker, Speaker TEN-PIECE NEGRO JAZZ BAND, TICKETS OLGIN, Editor, Morniag Freiheit NEW DANCE GROUP, in a Unique Presentation (PLUS 10: PRESS FUND) Dance till Dawn 4c AT THE DOOR OUSSORGSKY RUSSIA by Sergei and Marie RADAMSKY School, 66 W. 12 St. 7% CENTS TO $1.0 _in a G * ‘

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