The Daily Worker Newspaper, January 12, 1934, Page 2

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1934 5 Negroes Lynched; 2 Missing, Homes DAILY WORKER, EW YORK, FRIDAY, JANUARY 12, US. Youth Prepare) ©UTTERS OF NEW YorK Antiwar Luxemburg WA WANT 25 VOLUNTEER WORK- ERS IN PARTY OFFICE TODAY NEW YORK.—Twenty-five un- employed workers are wanted at the District office of the Com- munist Party, 50 E. 13th St., for AFL Officials Fear | Navy Yd. Workers; Flee Own Meeting Sentiment for Strike Against 15 Pe. Cut and War Vets Denied Layoff Grows NEW YORK meeting they t ials of the Americ eration of her Almost one thou Yard had come Demand Relief by Thoma of L. metal co called to discuss action a made a meet the the projected workers Militant Union Warns Workers tha ing a terday Smith A. ©! Union sued a leaflet to the men calling up: them t for ne= diate return of the 15 per cent wage ut, unemployment insurance or C. W. A. jobs 20 an hour for the sid-off men. afraid Visit Mayor Today eterans will visit } morni r will be the imm the workers that e W. E. against the cut and the proposed la off, the A. F. of L, leaders fled the meeting hall and retired to a restau- rant. Phil Engler, chairman of the|19 mass lature, les of all W. Metal Trades Council and delegate to| Posts will be held to demand relief. nal day aS registration Deputy Local 556 of the Internati ciation of Machi: the workers. to follo Asso-| At one o'clock d destitute vet @ central d by leaving the restaurant owed the union leaders neeting” in the restaurant | fe ed” one. c Regulars Get Less Than C.W.A. s roused the is the fact machinists w $1.20 an A’s and other hotels. The del | ers’ go written the C. W. nt. Tuesday y 90 ce ped in the hall of tk workers for the rescind- 15 per cent cut, Steel and Metal Workers r to the C, S in his office. Union and machinists’ locals to demand of | stairs were told or their shop delegates that a mass [De Lamater. TY meeting of all the workers in these | least two, one two crafts be called where the eut | veteran and scheduled Jay-off will be dis- | They were told fi cussed. that De Lamai ane a They were then Police Attack Picket papell Line; Arrest Worker in | De Lamate * er | know when he Samea Laundry Strike NHW YORK.—Louis Walsh, strik- ing laundry worker, was arrested yes- | terday when police attacked a picket| wer line in front of the Giant Laund: West, h St., Washington Heigh where 150 workers, majority them Negroes, are on tire delegation upstairs. ing but drawing pay, know why vet of get jobs. Walsh} ‘The this Washington Height: for Court at 51st | t. and Amsterdam Ave. The Laun-| delay dry Worker: trial Union, which| to organize, e is leading t , urges all work- 2 ers to pack the court to prevent the| Call Rent railroading of Walsh to jail The strikers have been out 100 per cent since Jan. 8, for a minimum) wage of 3ic an hour, with a $2 in-| prease for those maki: minimum, and hou time and recognition of and the Union Workers of the Oak Laundry, at| S4th St. and Ist Ave. are presenting | c! similar demar pared to strike An appeal L., for support of the strike was re-/| to rally to the support of the jected by the officials of that union, } tenants. who refused to see a strike commit- | = tee from the Giant Laundry, and also| BENEFIT TO an * returned unopened ered let- ter without bringing it to the atten-| i tion of the mem Strike in BROOKLYN, N. Y week, with|has been de the Shop Committee | ment owned by the Dime Bank of New York. today and are pre-|of the for thi ho r demands. | neighbors an id especially Owners Ohio. GERMAN WORKERS CLUB DOWNTOWN — 79 EAST 16th ST. Patronize Our Kitchen Breakfast - Luneh - Dinner — —Proletarian Price 525 West his speech. From 5 P.M. till 7:30 P.M.—Banquet. and other musical and vocal numbers. From 8 till 10 PM —Concert. Review of all workers cultural organizations of Detroit, Giving out souvenirs to organiza- tions which fulfill their quotas in the financial drive, Floor entertainments C-E-L-E-B-R-A-T-1-O-N SUNDAY, JANUARY 14 — — — FINNISH HALL 5969 Fourteenth Street Program Consists of Four Parts: 1, One P.M.—Opening of the Celebration by band and ‘singing. 1:30 P.M.—Comrade A, Markoff from New York, will hegin 3 4, From 10 P.M. till 1 AM —Daneing. Admission only 5c. one hour’s voluntary work today. Hearing by CWA Head, De Lamater : Go to Mayor Today and |‘ Albany on Jan. 20; at 11 o’cl demands they will ma tion will be sent 8s. L. 20 to demand action poverished veterans from nm Jan, 18and E.'s. L. unemployed are to call at bureau Commissioner we, who earlier in the week prom- ut, they were told] ised the veterans’ delegation sleeping ie ities for single veterans in Y. M. gation, led by the Work- Ex-Servicemen’s League, had a A. office he Port building, Eighth Ave. and nd told by a guard that could go up to the tenth W. A. offices. The ard admitted that De Lama-| On the tenth calling the boilermakers’ | floor the three workers who went up-|®"d dancing. one could insisted on a Negro and one white | The delegates noticed that there dozens of C. W. A. officials ng up the offices doing noth- and wanted to ns are cut off pen- lemands of the veterans in- in the|Clude a job for all ex-service men, 10 discrimination, union wages, no Bank-Owned Apartment ; —A rent strike | above the | against an increase of from $3 to $¢|knecht-Luxer The United Council of Working- | 2¢ting s Women, No. 16, and the tenants | ealing to mitt to the ten- | Mittee of | | to Local 280, A. F, of|ants of houses owned by the bank|Eugene Gordon of the League of striking | TIMS OF GERMAN 4823 Lorain | High School, 173 | TORGLER'S SECRETARY TO sPEAK ‘ro|SPeakers, 7t|hold @ Lenin, Licbkn as Rayen 8t.,| -Liebknecht Meets Skaters Announce Anti- | War Meets in Streets; Memorials Tonight NEW YORK. cannot skate will can- ts with sandwich signs, pen air anti-war -Luxem- at th and Park i4 at 7 p.m, organisations the roller skating include the In- ternational Workers Order youth and e branches, the Interna- Defense and the Young workers The skat- at 1 p.m, | Chicago ¥. C. L. Calls to National Guard SAGO, Iil., Jan. 11—Commis- officers of the Hinois National Guard are inciting young workers in |the National Guard to attack the youth anti-war meeting here Jan, 14, 8 p. m. in North Turner Hall, 820 Clark St. The meeting is held on the occasion of the 1ith Aniversary commemorating the death of Karl Liebknecht and Rosa Luxemburg. The Young Communist League has issued a call to young workers in the national guard, peinting out the need |for unity against bosses war, urging them to attend the meeting in unity with other young workers, Jack Cling, district organizer of the |¥, C. L., will be the main speaker at |the meeting. An excellent program |of entertainment has been arranged. as | | Paterson Rally Tonight | PATERSON, N, J, Jan. 11—The youth of Paterson are being mobilized by the Young Communist League here for a mass rally against war and fas- cism on the oczasion of the 15th An- uiyersary commemorating the deaths of Karl Liebkecht and Rosa Luxem- burg. The meeting will be held to- night, Friday, 8 p. m., at the May and |Highland Streets Hall, The program arranged includes eakers, a children’s string orchestra see | Sas ie | Hili Speaker in Pittsburgh PITTSBURGH, Pa—The Lenin- |Liebknecht-Luxemburg mass meeting rst by a Mr. White | will be held here Sunday, January 14, | r would see them. shifted to a Miss he was De Lama- Smith told them S out, and she did not | would be back. They z , bs waited one hour and fifty minutes, | meanwhile finally getting their en-| jat the Lithuanian Hall, 142 Orr St., at 8 p.m. A Soviet film and an anti- war play will be presented. The main peaker will be Frank Hill, District anizer of the Y.C.L, Ann Burlak at Newark Meet NEWARK, N. J.—-The Young Com- |munist League is holding a huge anti- war Lenin, Liebknecht and Luxem- burg memorial meeting Saturday, Jan. 13th at Kreuger’s auditorium, 25 Belmont Ave. An interesting pro- Sram featuring a mass youth chorus, janti-war dancers, and a wedding of | Hitler and Roosevelt will take place. The speakers will be Ann Burlak, | National leader of the Textile Work- payments, the right|ers Union; John Marks, member of the National Committee of the Young |Communist League and Rebecca |Grecht, District Organizer of the |Communist Party of New Jersey. ie eee Boston Meet Sunday BOSTON, Mi Lenin-Lieb- urg anti-war meeting ed by the tenants of| Will take place Sunday, Jan. 14th, at| a half for overtime, and|274 ©. 93rd St., Brooklyn, an apar! -|the Dudley Street Opera House, 113 ings | Dudley Street at 8 p, m. The speakers will be Mack Libby, District Organizer of the Young Communist League, John the | Weber, member of the District Com- of the Communist Party and Struggle for Negro Rights. An in- teresting program will be presented. ens Ve Y. Memorials Tonight sections of the Young Com- m&nist League, 5 and 15, will hold a |Lenin, Liebknedit, Luxemburg meet- jing tonight at Herman Ritter Junior d St. and Boston Road, Bronx. There will be prominent section of the Needle s Industrial Union will t, Luxemburg s-|anti-war meeting at 6 p. m, tonight atiat 131 W. 28th St | A young worker just returned from - |reforestation camp will be one of the |speakers at a Lenin, Liebknecht, —_._—. |Luxemburg anti-war meeting tonight arranged by the Young Communist League, Section 7, at 240 Columbia St., Red Hook, Brooklyn. A slide feature i-war play ang other features be given. Admission free. Brownsville Young Communist , 1813 Pitkin Ave. Lenin, Lieb- | Knecht, Luxemburg anti-war meeting |tonight at 8 o'clock | an | will | Dress Meeting Acts To Strengthen Strikes NEW_YORK.—Dressmakers meet- ing at Bryant Hall Wednesday, after hearing reports on the dress strike, resolved to redouble their efforis to CHICAGO _ Workers of the North West Side and Albany Park! Greet the Daily Worker AT THE TENTH ANNIVERSARY MASS CELEBRATION Sunday, January 14—6 P.M, Program: Freiheit Mandolin Orchestra — Violin Recital Folk Dances—Recitations, Lou Gitlitz—Workers Theatre Special Features: Red Cabaret — Popularity Contest History of the Daily Worker — by Beatrice Shields Dancing till Dawn—Good Music—Presentation of Prizes Craftsman’s Masonic Temple—Harding & LeMoine Auspices: Section 5—Communist Party aid the several hundred striking the strikebreaking activities of the International officials and condemn- ing the code authority for interfering with their right to fight to maintain their conditions were also adopted. Five delegates were elected to the F.S.U. convention and two delegates to the convention on unemployment, to take place in Washington. Inspired by the enthusiastic re- ers, the strikers yesterday morning renewed their picketing with more determination. Two pickets, Mollie | Baker and Louis Migler, were arrested 3 | { | sponse on the part of the dressmak- Participating | dressmakers. Resolutions condemning ¥ i | | “Step by ter of transit unification:” —Comptrol step we are nearing our objective in the mat- ler Arthur C. Cunningham. New York Workers| 'ForcelnterviewWith. New C.W.A. Head | pias \Relief Workers* League | | Calls Workers to Back | p Demands Today | NEW YORK. |from the Rel delegation | League of | | Greater to the C.| W. A. 111 Eighth| Ave. that the |demands rkers be | granted. new execu- { Col. W. A. De Lamate: |tive director of the C, |the mer istence of the int an interview to the men for 1) |p. m. today. } The workers are demanding that |the pr scale he new policy of $4.20 a day for a four day | week; anteed a minimum weekly wage of $20 skilled workers to be paid union wages; im- |mediate re-instatement of the | Workers recently laid off at the Bronx Park Zool al Garden project, and no more Iz ffs on any C.W.A. jobs; immediate payment of back wages |Tecognition of job committees and the right of w to organize into unions of thei! R ectives and police sp ti removed from {all jobs; and jobs for all who register |for C.W.A. The Relief {upon all C.W.A. workers in New Yo! to be at the C.W.A. office today at }1 p. m. to back up the demands of the workers, ‘The Bronx local of the union, which has been taking a leading part in tt struggles of the workers, is now lo- jcated at 1692 V ington Ave., Bronx. League calls | Demand CWA Jobs Demonstrate at C.W.A.; | Form Jobless Group | police they called at the C.W.A. offices at 214 Duffield St., 3 Although at first re used admit- of the hun- sembled interview there the delegation. The de forced Madden to which to the had s for the commitiee that 4 ‘eno work About young 7 of the group then marched to the head- jquarters of the Unemployed Coun- |cil, 132 Myrtle Ave. where a mass |Meeting was held and a committee C.W.A, offices at 11 Eighth Ave., on Jan. 15th at 10 am. to demand {that jobs be pr {tered for C.W jobs, This committee, nittee of the Registered ers, urges all young to demonstrate before the ©.W.A. offices Monday, when they demand that jobs be provided for ail workers registered for C.W.A, jobs, C.W.A. workers ers Industrial Union ha: 13 and 14 as Workers Lyceui Credentia from the fol ers Clu Ww Albany Park W DEBATE ON COMA SPRINGFIELD, P sub- | district organizer of the Communist’ Party | will debate J. Allard of O.P.L.A. on “Resolved that the Communist Party has the only correct program on Sunday, Jay edral Hall, 7 | for better conditions, higher wages 85 | ; (cross State lines. | Significant | Mt sy | cies of the Federal Government. ‘Brooklyn Youths ("* “sstaster mata | |need of a National Police force. Thus .|dividuals who would be trained by was elected to go to the New York | d for all regis- | Tnitiative | -| “evils” were to be avoided, Copeland Majestic Metal Company Young Workers to Open Faetory Youth Center NEW YORK.—The young metal workers of the Majestic Metal Oo, are planning to open their own fac- tory center, These same young work- ers, together with the adult workers, conducted a strike six months ago, and union conditions. @ complete victory, Now that this shop is affiliated with the Steel and Metal Workers Indus- trial Union, the necessity for a meet- ing place in which to discuss shop | problems, hold discussions and social affairs has become more urgent. The youth committee which is con- ducting this activity, is planning to hold a big dance this Saturday, Jan. 13, at the Holly Club, 220 Houston St., N.Y.0. Anti-Labor Police | Asked by Copeland, | Tool of Hearst (Continued from Page 1) The strike was one described by Copeland as in- tended to curb ‘:idnapping, would es- tablish Federal jurisdiction in cases in which a “victim” disappears for more than three years — presuming that in such cases the victim would have been transported across State lines. Another would make it a Fed- eral crime for a fugitive witness to The program also seeks closer supervision of paroled persons and would declare that in criminal trials “the defense of an ibi shall not be put forward unless notice is given in advance.” Most of the conglomeration, is Copeland’s proposal to consolidate all “investigative” agen- howev Attorney General Cummings of the Department of Justice recently en- dorsed this suggestion, citing the jthe red-raids and the anti-labor |drives and deportations of the De- |partment of Labor and the Depart- jment of Justice, would be co-ordi- | nated under a real war set-up, Fur- Copeland would allow each | thermor of the 48 States to name two in- the Department of Justice and then |he returned to the State for “police” | work. Copeland mentioned that this would make more effective the Fed- eral fingerprinting service — some- thing which undoubtedly would be used against blacklisted strikers. The whole program obviously would back up the use of force by employers against labor. Copeland's measures say nothing about denying machine guns or any other weapons to depu- |tized thugs or other private soldiers. Less than a dozen Senators heard most of Copeland's fumbling, long- winded explanation of his program, One of them, however, immediately gathered the import of it. Senator | MeKeller, Democrat of Tennessee, in- | terrupted Copeland to say. } “If you're talking about increasing | the rviee and other agencies (which Copeland's program would do) I don't know about that. I think they frequentiy do great harm. I've been astounded at the tremen- dous increase of money spent on the | Secret service.” “Now I know about what evils have crept in,” Copeland answered, “and 1 want to avoid them.” 3 But instead of explaining how the continued by listing the numbers of pistols in the United States. He said there were probably 18 to 20 millions Burned in Georgia (Continued from Page 1) thrown into a creek near Bartow. Sheriff Smith states that he has been unable to find the bodies. C, 8. Bryant, a well-known farmer living in the vicinity of Bartow, was threat- ened by the mob, when he attempted to remove Will Walker to the Boon tal. Bryant appealed to Sheriff Smith, and two days after being wounded Walker was taken to Augusta, where he died the following day. When the body of Walker was brought back te Jefferson County, Sheriff Smith placed it in the county jail for safekeeping. Members of the Bartow mob came to Louisville and demanded that they be allowed to see the body. Sheriff Smith states that when he was convinced that the members of the mob merely wished to identify it as being that of Will Walker, he allowed them to view it. The in for the mob stated that they made the trip to the jail for the purpose of agsuring them- selves that Walker was dead. No Action Against Lynchers According to Sheriff Smith ne ac- tion will be taken against members of the mob unless further lynching takes place, because no white man ean be found who will testify against members of a mob in a case inyolying Negroes. He points to the action of the coroner's jury which investigated the cases of the deaths of three men, and which returned the verdict usual in such eases locally—‘Death at the hands of parties unknown.” Sheriff Smith has promised te appeal to the Governor of the state for militia to protect the lives of those Negroes in Bartow who are alive teday, if he thinks additional lynching wall take place. At the present time, however, there ean be found no evidence to show that the mob intends to cease activities, Reign of Terror Spreading The fact that no arrests have been made has been explained here as be- ing due to the conditions that make extremely difficult to convict a white man in a local court on a Negro’s word, This reign of terror which began in Bartow during the early part of December, and which reached its present state during the first week of January, has spread over Jeffer- son County. Negroes in all sections of the county express fear for their lives. Feeling has grown intense. Sheriff Smith states that he intends to take Sam Outlaw to the South Carolina state line and release him to filee for his life. Outlaw cannot at present stand on his feet because of the injuries he received at the hands of the Bartow mob. Local Negroes do not believe that the removal of Outlaw will ap- pease the mob, however, and they feel certain that further lynchings will take place. Local Papers Cover Up Attacks on Negroes The weekly newspapers of this county, in which are located the towns of Bartow, Louisville, Wadley, and Wrens, have made no mention of the deaths of these men. The daily papers of the state haye failed to report the actions of the mob, and the news-gathering agencies have made no effort to report the situation to their members in other states. No local correspondents for the dailies can be found who have made rerorts, perhaps because of a rule in the book of instructions sent to local corres- pondents by the daily newspapers of Georgia: “If a white man is mur- dered, telegraph it in; if a Negro is murdered, mail it in.” Bartow is a town of four hundred persons, about half of whom are Negroes. It is located in a rich farming and lumbering district. Its institutions for white people consist of a high school and four churches —two Baptist, two Methodist. . oreer es New Masses Editors Wire Protest NEW YORK.—The New Masses has sent the following protest telegram to Gov. Eugene Talmadge at Atlanta, Ga.: “Our correspondent, Erskine Cald- well, reports reign of terror against Negroes in Jefferson and other coun- ties of Georgia by a gang of 20 white men. Three killed, five beaten, others missing, 14 houses burned. authorities refuse to act. The New Masses calls this situation, threaten- ing a Southern St. Bartholomew massacre, to your attention, and ex- pects you to take action to end the lynch terror and punish the lynchers and afford protection to Mr. Caldwell, tow in Georgia as our correspondent, We are publishing the facts and await your reply. (Signed) Editors, ae Protest Actions Urged The League of Struggle for Negro “vghts, the Communist Party, the International Labor Defense, and the National Committce for the Defense cf Political Prisoners, yesterday sent out a joint call for immediate pro- test from every part of the country, demanding an end to this reign of terror, raising the following demands: An end to the reign of terror! Death penalty to the lynchers! Disarming of the Ku Kinx Klan songsters! | Arming of the Negroes of Georgia | and their white sympathizers for self-defense! Indemnity to families and relatives of the Negroes lynched! Protests should be addressed to President Roosevelt, Governor Eugene ‘Talmadge, Atlanta, Ga., and Sheriff J. J. Smith, at Louisyille, Ga. These should be held responsible in all wires and protests for the lives and safety of all Negroes now held, and for the lives of all those threat- ened by the raiding nightriders. rr reed New Masses. e —and didn’t mention how many are in the hands of private armies and the yarisug no'-> forces, City Events | MEETING An important mecting of getive members { the Workers International Relief will take place tonight at 8:30 at 15 B. ard St, to discuss cultural work. Reports by W. Film and Photo League and W.LR. HARLEM YOUTH LW.0. LECTURE ch of the Tnterna- CLASSIFIED PERSONAL MILLY REITANO—I have an important lety ter for you. Please write to me at once. Fred Reynolds. - ba ar ta rooms to let; 68 EB. i@th st, Apt. 54, ISEED Hootie, sit. iniproveneubs; reasonable; 947 EB. 14th St., N.Y.C. > o take care of 3 to mother or father, Write or call R. Green, 1668 Sealing Wax our column, some to damn wit damn. and Things ed ee time has come,” the Walrus said, “to speak of many things.” And the day of reckoning must come sometime, the day when our readers, gentle and otherwise, take ove h faint praise, others just to! A columnist’s fate is supposed to be sealed, you know, He who runs a column must the gauntlet also run. The old pugilistic saw that to dish it out one most alse learn to take it, is only too true. Today is reader's day and we must take it as cheerfully as our readers have these past weeks. Cabbages, kings, seal- ing-wax, and things—the order of business. The meeting is hereby de- clared open and the gentleman from Maryland is recognized. . ADD FIGHT RACKET Comrade: We read with consdierable interest your referenee to Bobhy Garcia, mown as the Mexican Wildeat, in your column of January 4th. ‘That Garcia is broken both in spirit and mind is ali too true. But that does not interest the racketeers who con- trol the boxing game here in the Oriole City. We are sending you a clipping from the Baltimore Morning Sun relating to Kid Williams, former bantam- weight champion of the world, who was compelled by court order to pay $26 a month, for the support of his children, The article on the Wil- liams Case doesn’t mention that the old bey is having a difficult time at the Sparrows Point steel mill. ‘They're paying starvation wages there. The future seems blacker than ever before for the ex-champ. —J, B., H. C., Baltimore, a ihr OPPORTUNITIES IN WESTCHESTER Dear Comrade Gerson: Your story about Rudy Marsh prompts me to tell you the following. In the summer of 1932 I was doing & little organization work for the International Labor Defense in White Plains, N. ¥, Speaking at a mass Meeting on the Scottsboro case, I appealed especially to the Negroes in the audience and urged them to help n every way, obtaining artists, ath- letes, etc, to render their services. At the close of the meeting a Negro worker told me he knew the captain of @ good local team that might be Willing to help. We found him, told him briefly about the case and asked for his help. The man said he would get his boys to play any team, if I got the opposing team and a field. I related this to a comrade who was to take up the matter with the Labor Sports Union. But nothing came of it which I thought a pity. It wasn't only the funds that might have been raised—extremely important as they are—for the Scottsboro boys but the contacts that might have been gotten, ‘There are a large number of ath- letic organizations in Westchester County. Suppose we try to interest them in the Spartakiad at Moscow. Tm not an athlete or connected with the L.S.U. but I'll be glad to give what help T ean. Hyman Barufkin, New York. . . . > eo. WANTS BOXING CODE IN NEW HAVEN Dear Comrade: Read Sammy Kovnat's letter in the Jan. 5th issue of the Daily Worker. Tm a boxer and all-around athlete. § ‘ COHENS’S 117 ORCHARD STREET Nr. Delancey Street, New York City Wholesale Opticians Tel. ORchard 4-4520 Factory on Premises Reid .3 By A.’ st Y dtr RICKOFF’S PHARMACY U6 Second Ave., cor. Ith St. Prescriptions Filled by Registered Pharmacists DR YDOCK 4-7755 3. J. MORRIS, Inc. GENERAL FUNERAL DIRECTORS BROOKLYN Nig : Dickeng For International Workers Order gest that you read the article of Di. Luttinger’s on Bernarr McFadden in the Daily Worker, Jan. 11. referring your communications te him for a more detailed answer. Won a couple of amateur cham- |pionships. I was interested in Sammy Kovnat's code. Could I get a copy of it? Am acquainted with Rudy Marshall, the Stamford fighter. I wrote to th Labor iad ant club, the Trojans, are going to enter rts Union on the Sparta-] now that Rudy Marshall’ the elimination for the Spartakiad, I'm Paine to get in touch with them. We'll try to organize statewide com- petition in all sports in preparation for the Spartakiade. How doing the same in Philly? about Billy Clark, New Haven, Conn. aioet Ss A DESERT KIBITZ Comrade Gerson: At a late hour last night the Daily Worker for Dec. 28 and 29, reached this particular benighted section of the desert. They brought us the news that Newhouse has been supplanted by Gerson, of second rate pugs we shall now haye box scores from Scranton, Or perhaps you could get Canary Sam to write Instead of dramatic tales his memoirs. He might tell us how he or his forebears sang in utopian free- dom on the slopes of the Hertz moun- tains until some bourgeois came along to put him into a cage and forced him to sing twelve hours a day for a few bird seeds and a small piece of moth-eaten lettuce. Out on the desert we have one game which is purely physical and is of extreme prolétarian origin. When we grow hungry for meat we take a rifle and chase deer all over the hills, thereby strengthening our leg muscles to kick Mr. Morgan from Broad and Wall to Wali and South, at the same time filling our bellies with sufficient proteins to build stronger and bigger and stronger muscles, ¥ours for bigger and better sport columns and more R, P. M. —Alexander Stone, Whitewater, Calif. TO A McFADDEN FAN J. Donoyan, Jersey City.—We We are DR. JULWWS LITTINSKY 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet. Pitkin and Gutter Ayes, Brookty: PRONE: DICKENS 9.3012 Office Hoare: 8-18 A.M, 1-9, 6-8 PM. CARL BRODSKY All Kinds Of INSURANCE 799 Broadway N. ¥. €. STuyvesant 9-5557 Tobaceo Workers Industrial Union Shop EL TROPICO Manufacturers of 100% HAVANA CIGARS 320 7th Ave., Cor. 28th St. BOX TRADE A SPECIALTY Fompkins Sq. 6-9748. Radical Rendezvous! TOM’S ITALIAN RESTAURANT 314 EAST 12th ST, Substantial M at Low Prices Allerton Avenue Comrades! The Modern Bakery Was first to settle Bread Strike and frst to sign with the FOOD WORKERS’ INDUSTRIAL UNION 691 ALLERTON AVE. CONCERT “Freiheit Singing Society” Horowitz Laba of the Artef. New Dance Grou Recitations by Finter Yossel Cutler, Cartoonist — CAN AGAIN BEACON, N. Y. Rimer PRIVATE QUARTERS HOTEL NITGEDAIGET The Christmas and New Year's rush is over. It is now pos- sible to get private rooms, Gpeeial diets filled without additional charge. Winter Sports are at their best—Join the Fun eoeeiiaeenel - and DANCE Great Central Palace 96 CLINTON STREET — — NEW YORK {. Kaplan and L. Benjamin in Songs, with Roger at the Pian 10. Adolph Rodof, Violinist; Flora eo at the Piano. A Fine Supper is Prepared. P. UDICH, Speaker, Labor Ed., Morning Freiheit Proceeds for the Morning Freiheit Arranged by Progressive Bakers and Council 1 BE HAD AT — PHONE: BEACON 731 wjth every convenience. ‘ [i yesterday on charges of disorderly meduct, in front of the Dotty May | shop, 212 W. 35th St, and were ann | Placed under $500 bail. The union Admission of 25¢ entitles bearer of ticket to a free two months subscription of Saturday Edition of Daily Worker Bryant Ave. Apt. 2 B. Bronx, “SMBORTABLE tu every convenien Gramercy 17-2088 Il hold @ lecbure to- Yous) Congress oO er, 415 | Phil Rosengarten wilt speak. ‘ Cars leave daily at 10:30 A. M., [rem Cooper:tive Restaurant 2700 BRONX PARK EAST. ‘Tel. EStabrook 8-1408 ed room; pri id Ave. and oth dre iven at t makers to carry calls upon all out the plo and help cket the striking s

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