The Daily Worker Newspaper, January 13, 1934, Page 2

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alae ss» | Page Two } DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, JANUARY 13, 1934 Liebknecht-Luxemburg Memoria Rally Workers, F armers All Over U. S. to Many Lenin Memorial Meets Masses Throughout the |Aucitorium, 2457 West Chicago Ave a * and at 2 A. M. on the day of the World Commemorate | pageant at the Coliseum. Lenin Many Meetings in Connecticut NEW HAVEN, Conn., Jan, 12.— - Communist Party|The following Lenin Memorial meet- ut the country are NEW YORK Districts throu World Youth | | | | announcing 10- |15, by the Communist Party, together | rial meet he\with other Working-class organiza- Tenth Ann: after | tions. the death of itiona: ridgeport, Sunday, Jan. 21, at 8 : | Viadimir Dyich Le , Jan, IP. 1924. M.,, at St. George’s Hall, with M. rd, Sunday, Jan. 21, 8 P. M., Center. gfield, Thursday, Jan. 25th. , Sunday, Jan. 21 at 2 Sunday, Jan. 21, ai memorials will/Olgin, editor of The Fretheit, as the at 8 vy Haven, Satu’ Jan. 20, at] , I. Amte: speaker at 18 Hal-| Commercial High Sei | Hartford, Sund M,, I. Amter at | P.| In Meetings Against War Liebknecht - Luxemburg Memorials Arranged Throughout U. S, | NEW YORK—Young workers, in almost every section of the United States and all over the world will anti-war rallies today and 15th Anniversary of the murder of Carl Liebknecht i Rosa Luxem- burg by the Noske-Scheidemann So- cial Democracy of Germany in Jan- uary 1919, Lieb! Luxemburg were outstanding leaders of the German revolutionary workers. They bucked the tide of nationalism with which other Socialist leaders were sweeping he ¥. W. C. A. hall. | the masses into the world war. Lieb- knecht and Luxemburg fought every inch of the way against imperial war. New York Meet Tomorrow Tomorrow, Sunday, New York working class youth, Negro and white, l, Star Casino, Sunday GUTTERS OF NEW YORK By DEL | A Discourse on Soccer one tubbes by me dipped his quill in DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 167 BRISTOL STREET Ret. Pitkin and Sutter Aves, Breckiys PRONE: DICKENS 3.3018 Offices Hours: 8-10 AM. 1-8, 68 P.M, WILLIAM BELL orrictan Optometrist badge LW. o. | what was evidently a bottle of distilled venom, compounded | ni | with horn-rirzmed fear, and in his “Anatomie of Abuses” de- | | seribed the current game of football z s “a develishe pastime . . « Whereof groweth envy, rancour and malice, and sometimes | brawling, murther, homicide, and great effusion of blood, as | experience daily teacheth.” Tr | the future will not be denied |by the more honest of our |present - day crop of sport | Seribes, but he was 2 bum guosser and futle reformer as far as the im- | mediate future of the game was con- cerned. | Despite the strictures of James I, |who refused to permit the heir ap- |parent to play the game, the sport jerew. It was, said the king, |“meeter for laming than making able the uss™ thereof,” but the masses thumbed their noses at the erown and went merrily at the exercise. So popular did it become in fact that every Shrove Tuesday was an annual football day in which the townspeople nat he had a prophetic vision of {Prospects for continued grow | development of workers 5 | affiliated with the Labor Sports Union and the desire Soccer Associat: sult cf this is a logical re- tuation, 'HIS is not to mainia some of our readers who by this time have reached the point where They Can't ;Stand Ths Nonsense Any Longer may have inferred, that soceer is |destined to replace baseball on the |American. scene. It will not—ever- |in this writer's flat and unassuming jopinion, Nor are we making subtle |propaganda for such an Un-Ameri |can, unconstitutional (see Marbury vs. |Madison, Chi | 196 EAST 14TH STRERT rth Ave. N. ¥. C, s Square oe (Bronx) | Near Phoue: Tomp! Office Pho! Estabrook 8-2) Home Phone Clinvitle 5-1109 DR. S. L. SHIELDS Surgeon Dentist ‘2674 WALLAVE AVE. corner Allerton Avence | MOT THAVEN 9-8749 DR. JULIUS JAFFE | Surgeon Dentist |/401 EAST 140th STREET | (Corner Willis Avenue) | AIRY, LARGE f : SL ace ae Isea 2-8682) change. | af pe reise paghat a rd ET the contrary, mis companeros. ational Lactes Gar- set’ or the Encyclopacdia Brittenies |Your columnist's idea of heaven is a whch has been adopted by the ieg: (classless society with green turfed ture office of the Daily Worker in. (baseball diamonds stretching from forms us that the yearly football | here to infinity. A hook of verses, a | | together with adult workers will rally Jan. 21, at 6|/to the anti-war meet in New Sta! 'Casino, 107th St. and, Park Ave., ai Jan. %, at 8;7 Pm. John Little, new organizer | of the Young Communist League, 25, at|N. ¥. District, and George Siskind, “David Dubinsky, Socialist president of the Ini ment Workers Union, hails Section 7-a of the N.R.A. as guaranteeing workers the choice of their own representatives.’—News item, “David Dubinsky orders police to club workers attempting to er Meeting Rooms and Hall To Hire Suitable for Meetings, Lectures and Dances in the New Britain, Sunday. P. M. infield, rday London, Thur: , Jan. si unist Party s arranged morial meet- n the following hall William Patterson in Newark Newark, Saturday, Jan, 20, at the g ncluding a 36-piece Jersey ity Pioneer band, Jack London Dance 3 Freiheit Gesangs Ferien of | Communist Party District Agitprop, will speak. A balalaika orchestra and Memorial in Chicago In Chicago members of the Na- tional Guard, who are being incited by their officers to attack the Lieb knecht-Luxemburg memorial meet- of the city. The meeting will be held tomorrow, Sunday, at North Turner Hall, 820 N. Clark St., at 8 p.m. Frank Hill, district organizer of the} Beethoven Hall in order to cast their vote in the ‘election’ of new officials |days were such that good men retired | 2@*eball bat and thoy, you know,| to Local 9 of the LL.G.W.U.’—News item, NRA Officials Hear Caffery Orders ‘Strike Threat from Blood Bath for Auto Union Delegation (Continued from Page 1) Demands $1 an Hour manding the right of the Cuban Ne- to their houses behind locked doors jand elderly spinsters crawled under | ‘prevent damage. . . pean though the news| |4 may be to some of our non-Marx- |sts liberal contemporaries, the history \of the development of football follows their favorite game was modified and gradually the unwritten rules of the |game were codified in proper British fashion. Towards the middle of the | But soccer I8 a growing sport and we welcome its growth. |fine game, good for developing wind, stamina, speed, leg, abdominal and |back muscles, head work and team | play. * * * carving huge holes in the atmos- phere with a right leg that seemed to kick everything but the mali- ciously erratic sphere, we held | Czechoslovak i | 5 are P M. an anti-war play by the workers’ |four-posters. “. . . shutters had to be| Without spreading any of that stu] Workers House, Ine, . ° | Laboratory Theatre are included in |put up and houses closed in order to | that makes the roses grow, soccer is a NEWARK, Jan. 20—The New Jer-| the program, 347 E.72nd St. New York Telephone: RHinelander 5097 IS body tried the game once, : rs | : Concert and Dance 3 ves Al | very el je lendid one, no doubt, for Y. M.H. A., High and West Kinney ing of the young workers, have been A t M D | t ¢ b W k |very closely the rise of English capi. a spl a o William "Patterson, National invited to attend the ‘mectas in| AAULOMeENDCLES ATION WHaAN WOPKELS jistism, “As workers were forced into| hardier souls than sports’ writers for benefit of “Armenisn of the International Labor solidarity with the anti-war youth Sees pemee: jthe huge textile mills of Yorkshire e o r speaker. A musical] “PANVOR’’ — Excelient Program — Part I—Selected Revolutionary and the Lithuanian Work-| Pittsburgh ¥.C.L, will be the main| at N.R.A, Office lain Pea ae Ge rorueng (Tuneteenth century a division in the teense Gitte oe ee Salty ada “laging Soo will be presented |speaker at a meeting in that city | a "The sppeal etaeear See MO | eae Apireren One ime War enews ue ee ee Gk at hl xs os gic as ee Grecht, Dstriet Organizer | tomorrow ev t i «I as” Tughy football and association ; Ka Communist Party, wil Delis Or gee vthuanien sian | By SEEHOUR WALDMAN | roc ttte Cuban Workers and peasents| (soozer) football began to take on in- Tharaas elterton Gola, sarned wth, |f 'Guem Aesnes Aelia, Chae, 3 (Daily Worker Washing’ jureau) /look first of all to the American | dividual identities. Today soceer foot-| 4S, too. nees—Bete rs Tuesday, Jan. 28, Car- Sale ap and Boston | WASHINGTON, D. C., Jan. 12—A|working class, and especially the|ball (known here as soccer and in ry ee « ut ’ Hall, 56 Van Houten St, at] 2H Burial, leader of the National! snappy little delegation ‘representing |class-conseious section of the Amers|the rest of the gomd ote 2 | Metropolitan Workers Soccer Clarence Hathaway, editor | Textile Workers Union, will be the|the Auto Workers Union today rid-| ican working class, for support in|the national game of the people of Leaque Part T¥—American Dancer. Daily Worker main speaker. | ™@in speaker at a memorial anti-| dled tie wage and slave provisions | their fight to shake off the shackles |eyery country with the exception of Sunday, Jan. 14th Sunday, Jan. 31 at Li-| TOE meting tonight at Kreuger’s| of the proposed N.R-A. Commercial |of wall Strect and to establish a|the United ater ard Japan, where| (Seheduied for Sunday, Jan. 14) mney) ene Workers’ Hall, 408 Court) Suditorium, | 25 Belmont Ave. in| Vehicles Body code with statements | workers’ and peasants’ ropubli of \tacehoil ie Ghe ganas Ai DEVERIOn A ee ft Sileey P. M. Rebecca Grecht, District | Newark, N. J. mu ist Party Organizer, speaker. ion City, Friday, Jan. 26, at 8 In Boston tomorrow night at 8 p.m. | and questions which exposed the starvation level to which the big| Cuba. “Wall Street's order for suppres- Soccer was brought over to the | Eeuador ys Spartacus, 12:30, Central 98th Street. Piehte vs Red Spark, 2:80, Central sith YUGOSLAV HALL n i th FouNs workers will rally to the Dud-| manufacturers would reduce the sion of the Congress marks the. in| ravens ea ae erent, waves of Wi 108 W. 24th ST. N. ¥, ©, Italian Cooperative Hall, 472| ley Street Opera House at 113 Dudiey | workers, tensification of the drive of the Grau|Scoteh, Irish and Welsh workers were | sai antes Maglite 2:80 Hudson. Admission 35e— Ave., Rebecca Grecht speaker.| St. Mack Libbly, ¥.C.L. organizer,| q¢ the interests of the auto work-|San Martin gov.rnment, demagogic| particularly keen on the game and A2 DIVISION Anspices “Priends of Panver”’ s Chicago —_—_—_———— John Weber, and Bugene Gordon of | ers are not safeguarded by the eode |epresentative of the Cuban bour-|soccer found a strong base among | ,, “olonial vs Hinsdale ist, 1, Ven Cort CHICAGO Workers’ | ‘ the League of Struggle for Negro| ag specified by the demands of the | geoisie, landlords and U. S. imper-|the workers of English descent in Or ae Ya. prosheek “AIKs 4 Mase biae. Cultural Fe paring Hold Own Meetin ‘i Rights will speak. Auto Workers Union, our local, No. 2, |jalism against the agrarian, anti-im- mining towns, Fall River, Pawtucket| French vs Monabdi, 10:30, Central 64th st. mass page in Memorial | ° ates * which represents 300 workers, is |Perialist revolution. Tt comes at this/and of course thé large population| Red Sperk vs Z.W.O. Ist, 2:30, ‘Thomas CONCERT and meeting at t 15th and| DETROIT, Mich. Jan, 12,—The | Wabash Stree n, 21, | Metal Union Urges Liebknecht-Luxemburg Memorial will prepared to sirike. In that event we time because Grau San Martin, Ba- centers like New York and Chicago. | Jefferson. BL ISIO} ; | A will hold the National Recovery Ad- | tista and other leaders of the pres- Today it is evidently on the upgrade| Juventus vs Mapel Podge. COSTUME BALL eases. hundred ined | be held here Friday, Jan. 19 at| ministration responsible,” George |cnt Cuban government are beeoming/in the United States, particularly in| Herel_vs Brownsville, 1, ‘Gravesand. Guin Be nosed. for BASEN) ae. volar.) Brewster Center. Gordon, President of the A.W.U. local| more and more discredited in the|workingclese communities Pi Hane: ve Sere, 2°80, Cretens, tame pe Seed fo report tals Rundey, Men of Na Yard The Communist Party has ar-| informed 1, K. Everitt, N.R.A. Deputy |eyes of the Cuban workers and ae Daunties, BYP, orvmron FOLLOWERS of the TRAIL Jan, 14 at 10 A. M. to the people’s vy |ranged @ series of four lectures on Administrator who presided at to-|peasants. The Cuban revolutionary | ers ! ot to Rely on AFL to Fight Cut |S.M.W.LU. Tells Work-| Leninism in each of the following 10 balls beginnng Monday, Jan, 15 and continuing through until Thurs- day, Jan. 18: Ferry Hall, Goetz: Greek Hall, Reno; E. Jefferson and Tennessee, day’s hearings held in the Sun parlor | trade unions haye exposed the pre- of the Washington Hotel. |tendud opposition of Grau San Mar- Samuel Dibsdale, spokesman for|tin to Wall Street, have shown up the A. F, of 1, Philadelphia Cay |the 80 per cent native employment Builders and Bus Builders Union, |!@W as an attempt to split the Cuban supported Gordon. “The men in our |™asses, have helped Jarge sections of What largely accounts for the grow- ing popularity of the game among the proletarian masses of the United States—particularly those in basic in- dustry of foreign birth or extraction ~—is the inexpensiveness of the sport Fichte vg Harlem, 12:30, Central, 99th St, Red Spark vs I.W.0., 10:30, Thomas Jef- ferson. Dauntles vs Prospect, 1, McCombs Dam. South Amer, vs Ital, Amer., 12:30, Cen- tral, 64th Bt. Hinsdale vs Mapels, 10:30, Betsy Head, Spartacus vs Zucumft, 12:30, Crotona, Saturday Evening, Jan. 13 at 2075 Clinton Ave,, Bronx Near 180th St. Sta., 3d Ave. L. Benefit of MORNING FREIHEIT iouinie Grenay ain, can ee and its relative freedom from risk. 2 o Cera re aS Admission 25 | — nies; Grandy fall, erlach; | loeality cannot exist on the 35 cents the Cuban masses to see the true Playing American football, on the|_ Red Spark vs Hero, 12:30, Thomas Jef- ANNIVERSARY NEW YORK.—The fight for the|South Slavac Hall, N. Det. Nowell:| we hogs proposed in the code,” he |Meaning of the demagogic phrases of other hand, is a complicated business, | #78 aay Soak. 80. eeu Our Gomp at Poskekil! 1¢ Open new: restoration of last summer’s 15 per oe Hees pom: Matin Hall,| told Everitt, je present regime, necessitating grim and joyless train-| gan st. : Z —All Winter Accommodations— 2 j cent wage cut and the planned lay-| Reymond; Vanderbilt Hall, Magis! ‘temwite the {aot that the manufac-| "The great strike struggles that|ing, costly moleskins, headguards,| Bronx Hung. vs French, 10:30, Crotona. Dail [o% is gathering momentum smong|earare, Aeleman and’ Markot;| turers themssives admitted thst be-|preceded and folloned tho weer ay healer tade Pea a) Heenan! Youn Gules Ue dahaoniiaey aa Ratz USA | the workers of the Brooklyn Navy|Yemans Hall, W. Brown, j | Yard here despite the second betrayal | of the men by officlals of the Metal | Trades Council of the American Fed- CELEBRATION Fy WORCESTER, Mass., Jan, 1 Liebkneeht-Luxemburg memorial 1 {now heing paid to skilled labor, the | tween 60 and 75 cents an hour is!of the Machado and Cespedes gov- ernments; the sirikes of transporta- code, written by the Employers’ Na- tion workers, of the sugar fields and tional Commercial Body Association, equipment. The annual casualty lst jand the danger of broken limbs is jalso no mean factor in discouraging Italian American Betsy Head. vs Rendezvous, 2:30, ’t Miss It! | F refinery workers, the seizure by work-|football leagues among workers. A Don't uss DISTRICT 8 | eration of Labor. je oe pee phoney, wan. & at the} provides for a minimum of 35 cents ers rer peasants of many Att man who must report to work in a A. & F, LAUNDRY PREADELPWA—On Feb. 3, sb Girard) _ Last Wednesday evening 1.000 Yard | Woer: Center, 3 Harrison St. Been | 88 hour to males, and 30 cents an owned mills are only the prelude to|?Olling mill on Monday 1s not parti- SERVICE CO. Bee eee” SUN Att. S08) WOrkees FARETEG BE CICRIO DY eI ee cad pda eden nr ORE, ta, woskate in cillen cpt over (tha gpemler. Remestey Soe, looming |Culerly keen on going places deter- 207 NEPTUNE AVENUE program arranged at Bullatng 27 ot fhe Font to hold E malscion {5 faye, 250,000 population in the North, Por! against the Grau San Martin goy-|minedly every Sunday through eleven DISTRICT 5 | mass meeting to ISCUSS e cut al as Teeny fo diaries the eis and = 5 cities under 250,000 population in the|ernment and all other Wall Street | uskes equally el ines pec Brighton Escorial N, ¥, HILL SECTION, Pittsourgh—Jan. 12. | projected layoff. cf of the Meta! 2 | same area, the manufacturers pro-| puppets.” |Set_nowheres r In fact, SOUTH SIDE, P: * | Trades Council, who had called the Three Logan Cirele pose 62 and w half cents an hourto| ‘shall be smeared behind the line. SHEEPSHEAD 3-3588 oars Oe, i | meeting, fearing the demand of the Sore cm | workers for action, ran away from | the meeting to “Tin Can” Chariie’s restaurant across the street from the Yard. This is the second time the | A. F. of L, officials haye done this trick, the previous time being in Au- gust, directly after the cut was an- nounced. s, very inter- Boys Are Executed; Cops Stop Protests (Continued from Page 1) males and 27 and a half to females. | In the South they propose 35 cents! to males and 30 cents to females—| and under. In both areas a work| week of 48 hours is specified. This| is about $15 a week. | The Auto Workers Union demand- ed $1 an hour for skilled labor, no} discrimination to be made between | CIPY EDITOR OF FREWEIT SPEAKS Wh. Abrams, eity editor of Morning Frei- it, will speak at the Middle Bronx We ‘S Club, 432 Claremont Parkwa: First and Second Internationals” day, Jan. 16, at 8:30 p.m. BANK OF U. S. DEPOSITORS All Bank of United States depositors are urged to come to the Supreme Court Build- on the on sun- This, more than anything else, in | | pondent, is the reason for the aston- lishing growth ef seccer here and its ¢ Going the opinion of your humble correc- |= HUDSON ARMY AND NAVY STORE 105 THIRD AVENUE Corner 18th Street JAN. 27 Eight P. M. COSTUME { Militant Metal Union Gives Aid an We 1d th 'LD. yma male and female for a week of $5 | tek aa” oe ike Ef at A Gives Honest Values in B ALL and ‘ berRore, it Fircom | , Thousands of leaflets are being dis-| /97- Nor could the T.L.D. learn what! hours, Im addition, the militant | eiectors GenuineHorsehideSheep- a, ‘ye the “main | tributed to the Yard workers by the) ##ppened to the bodies. ‘The organi-| yorvers propose the gbolition et chia | 4 | from New be the .ma| militant Steel and Metal Workers tn. | 280100, however, is working with the| tabor, specifying no employment of) MASS PROTEST AGAINST EVICTION = ? lined Coats; Windbreak- CON(C "ERT oo DISTRICT 8 dustrial Union, urging them to work eee pS aipicki) bghigaines §/ children under 18 years of age. | od Mi be hela nas oft Sreonare: USS la: OF Brosshes, Fh BOM a On Jan. 14 st 1563 N. Hard-| for @ real mass meeting where the| {Om nuisnal. Phey have been work-| «rt is understood that this 35 cents| 131 Harzl St. Brooklyn, to protest ‘against ic a ahi Boots, Work Shirts, Gloves of Sect. 5. Special! problems of the wage cut can be dis- Whigs je cate since the trial late) an hour is a minimum,” Admin- the eviction “of William Bryan and nis| Workers ae vindbroekite, Ete. CELEBRATING i ‘ ee ase tia: fT P| cussed. ‘The leaflet calls upon the| i? 132. istrator Everitt remarked to the audi- | family. Breeches, High Shoes, ete., will recel : ee Ste Bek men to make their own arrangements| Finally, a few days ago, they re-| ence. | GARMENT DISTRICT cial redu thelr purchases i WORKERS CLOTHES ‘On Jen. 13 at New Workers Cen for the meeting, hiring the hall them-| ceived from the White House a let- 33 Wisconsin St. (cor. of Larrabee). ‘Blue Blouses, John Reed Club, Finnish Youth| Selves and carrying through all the ter signed by Marvin H. McIntyre,| The half dozen workers smiled, re- | ealling the much publicized N.R.A.| SQUARE DEAL Chorus’ in 2 large program. Negro! preparation without relying on the| one of the Roosevelt secretaries, say-| “minimum,” Garment Section Workers ARMY and NAVY STORE P 1 | TEE ere Re eer age. im advance; | COMUPL A. F. of L. leaders like Ma-|ing the President would see a dele-| “But it must be regarded here as| Selenite RUSSIAN ART SHO : ai 'door, Auspices See. 4 CP | honey and Engler. At the same time,| gation yesterday. A committee of the maximum. We have proof that | 421i THIRD AVE. i eel ee the leaflet suggests, the workers i oahdeanggeied should demand the support of such a meeting by the various union locals. As ni Waltz Dream mbleton NORFOLK, Va.—On Jan, Church 8t. r ARE YOU COMING TO LAKEWOOD? “HOTEL ROYAL Comradely Atmosphere Union House — Reasonable Rates LEFT WING DRESSMAKERS TO BOLD ‘TWO OPEN FORUMS ‘The Left Wing Dressmakers of Local 22 will hold two open forums Sunday, Jan. 1, at 11 a.m, One is to take place at | 512 Sother Ave., cor. Alabama Ave., where PATTERSON TO ADDRESS MEMBERSHIP OF LL.D. William Patterson, national secretary of the LL.D., will address the membership at white and Negro representatives went and Mcintyre told them that the President would not see them, after W. Brown, Superintendent of the Washington police, refused to issue a permit for the workers’ protest march. The League for Struggle for Negro! Rights, and L.L.D., were leading pre- of the police for refusing the per- mit: “Traffic congestion.” First to be led to the chair was the N.R.A. regards that minimum as | the maximum,” James Adams of the | A.W.U. retorted. | Naverr Cafeteria in this industry will not coun! any wage scale under what Auto Workers Union, propose. Fred Greiler of the A.W.U. calmly | asked Brunson: “Just how does the | Phones: Chickering 491)~Lomgacre {M59 COMRABELY ATMOSPRERE FAN RAY CAFETERIA Nance | e, the) Period. “Mr. Brunson,” Greller rejoined. “T wish to call to your attention that. JADE MOUNTAIN (2 doors South of 14th Street) Brooklyn, N, INCORPO! D 107 EAST 14th 8T., N.Y. C. New York Ci — Large Selection — % ths. Assorted Bussian Candy MIMEOGRAPHS $10 © Your Machine Kept in Excellent Condition (See Us) th ANNIVERSARY Order e GALA PROGRAM e IWO Symphony Orchestra rnational 2. P. 36. Good program. Milton all. He had “considered” the case, Expose N.R.A. Code ' 333 7th AVENUE WORKERS- EAT AT THE Peasant Blouses, Lamps, Shades, Inte Lad the secretary said stiffly, and bad| veriti interjected: “Any more Commer 24th St. Parkway Cafeteria | shams, Condy, Novelties and Tors Workers’ City Events decided not to act. comments?” | oe he een Gare | from the 80 ak | A few hours earlier Major Ernest} Adams rose again. “The workers| “ | Nap Hopkinson Ave, | our speci t 5 ol Braverman’; Negro Grossman. will ‘speak. ‘The other "in the| Parations for the march. Angry|L.A.B. propose to enfores no redve-'| 156 W. 29th St. New York Stenels . .s130 | EMPIRE MIMEO SERVICE 5 bai 5 2 208 Princeton Ave. Phone || Bronx, at Ambassador Hall, Glaremant Park, | WOFKErS, seri hundreds of them, Has under wh is ae being paid?” || Paper 38 799 BROADWAY, N. ¥. C. and White Orchestras af d, MN. J. Lakewood 1146 || way and Srd Ave,, were ready to walk from Logan Cir- runson replies Nee EEE 3 llth St, Room 441 { aeere Ene se cle to the White House. ‘The exouse| stock N.R.A. 30 day code adjusiment | DOWNTOWN Ink . s Bote Ks e 7 fd at Memes unde, Jan. 14, at| Murray. Three guards and a Ne-|the N.R.A. in the Budd Automobile| ‘¢rican & Chinese Restaurant 4 Mass Pageant by I.W, * =| HORT, #6 Mannaien Leer, 6%. Oi oso preacher led fim. Pour minutes! BOY strike. tad the tame citcat you! 197 SECOND AVENUE S A L Z, M A e r Se , Moneble: 347°E. idth St, WO. | MATMAWAY To SPEAK oN GreMany |/ater Jackson followed. ‘Then came| have just recited, to Mr, Budd, And | Bet. 12 & 13 Youth & Childrens Section ona : . Clarence Hathaway, ‘editor of the Datiy| Holmes, down a long hallway to the|Mr. Budd ignored the admonition.| Wf to Our Comrad MEN’S SUITS e : elcome to Our Comrades Worker, will speak on “Faseism—Can Hit-| chair. It took 27 minutes for all. In fact it was the N.R.A. authority) | ~ mn Eth Wi Inst it lapse?" at the West Gee Werke rosee,| . All three sené final letters asking ee ke an FINE CLOTHING FOR WORKERS ne ES Oe aes 2642 Broadway, Sunday, Jan. 14, 8 p.m.| for the intervention of Roosevelt and, them to lose their strike.” | ‘ . M ic th i! PSS stead of answers, they received a| 8ress. Pay BBS ct: Of ade | STRE KENTON TO SPEAK ON THE N.R.A. “P 181 STANTON so aal iat Roane , for 1-2; beautiful view; -| Special supper of roast pork, peas,| Ministration but of law,” Brunson | SPECIALTY—ITALIAN DISHES Prizes! Prizes! Prizes! a prises Wary TesmmaRe: Hl alicia Sur speak’ ce tie heen nis | pokatoes anil blicuite, replied stiffly. A piace with atmos bie Pi shine Ms : ¥ meeting of the Metal Workers Forum, 35 E. 10th St, Sunday, Jan. 14, at 3 p.m. ve HOUSE PARTY TO AID CONVENTION AGAINST UNEMPLOYMENT A house party and dance will be held to- day at 100 Clark St. (Clark St. IRT) to aid the National Convention Against Uneraploy- ment, skirt at Central Opera House Wed. Return to Daily Worker office. rR ee HON w "| were: J. J. Williams of the Fxecuth AT FSET LEB PYRERY ggg alas aor pee Me AY: SECTION DAILY WORKER CONFERENCE| 8 pin. at Musicians Hail, 120 N. 16h se] Were: J. J. s ecutive issi A section Daly Worker Conference willl under the auspices of the Workers eenesl! Committee of the. National Board Rie TE SAE See NEW HRAI TH CENTER AFETERIA mission : | take eee. this Bundsy, Zen 14) at 30:30 Forum, on the “Leninist Struggle Against | who presented the {ull demands, and || Best Food Low Prices}, Bi, Sain Don, of the Editorial Stat of the Daily, will address the meeting, Jackson was speaking at the mo- ment the current was turned into his body, he was saying, “God bless every-! one.” | | DONALD HENDERSON IN PHILADELPHIA | Donald Henderson, National Secretary of the American League Against War and Fas- cism, will speak in Philadelphia Jan. 14 i303 newsreel of Russian pictures will! be shown, The Auto Workers Union also pri Posed a system of Federal Unemplo: ment Insurance at the expense of | the government and the employers. | They recommended this as one ot the best methods of abolishing child labor by indemnifying the parents. Others in the A.W.U. delegation i ¢ i where all radicals meet | 302 E. 12th St. New York WHERE COMRADES MEET Starlight Restaurant Meyer Applebaum, Secretary of Local No, 2, Detroit, \ Managament—JURICH from Pittsburgh NEW YORK CITY TASTY, DsLICIOUS, = | WHOLESOME NATURAL HEALTH FOODS TRUFOOD VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT 193 W. 4ith 8¥., EAST OF BWAY OPEN TILL MIDNIGHT. J Fresh Food—Troletarian Prices—50 %. 13th St, ‘WORKERS’ CENTER FOR BEST COSTUME s 69th REGIMENT ARMORY

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