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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, JANUARY %, 19. Threats of War on USSR to Be Answered at Lenin Memorial Meets Harlem Wins C.P. Recruiting; | Will Get Banner at Lenin Meet > (The International) IN THE AIR by del | MU Call Meetings In Many Cities Through U.S. HUDSON ARMY ‘AND NAVY STORE 105 THIRD AVENUE Corner 18th Street Gives Honest Valves in | We | ¥ YORK—Probably the great- || Initiation of New Party Members at Three New ST eae 7 1 | : ° ° | ined Coats; ap les of Lenin nee eel York Lenin Memorial Meetings | ofs, Breeches, High Shoes, working class, | Boots, Work Shirts, Gloves Ete. WORKERS CLOTHES NEW YORK.—The Harlem Section of the Communist Party has come out victor in the Socialist competi- tion of the New York sections in| the recruiting drive started on Oct.|ton of the League of Str 9th, Two hundred new members|gro Rights, Rose Wortis were recruited, increasing the mem-/|Overgaard, of the Trade bership of the section by 50 per cent.|Council, and A. Stern, rit of the teach- demonstrations | points for the| he American working list war, against HILE this column may have no guardian angel, it does not | lack for a prodding imp. Sammy Kovnat, our irrepressible Philly correspondent, applies the heated pitchfork with a vigor which, if applied consistently to his occupation, should bring | mobilization Tuggles 0} AIRY, LARGE rs | “ i he lichtweight he: at tk f cor | R.A, with its! Section 7 has come out a close sec-|Secretaty of the Young Com him to the top of the lightweight heap. But then, of course, | ‘ Hall r and the poss jond, while Sections 1 and 11 did well. | League, |Sammy is honest and a Communist, two characteristics that Meeting Rooms and ‘and for pater leant Gal asia te ae ete |, Other speakers at the Bronx j | are enough to bar a man from getting any fights, not to speak | To Hire at insurance at the expense of | jeading in the drive, will be awarded | 8¢Um will include Pauline Ro of a championship. ‘ |the Committee to Help Vict |German Fascism, * Henry jthe Trade Union Unity |John Little, District Or; | Young Communist Le: |Ford, who was anno’ will not be present, as he is s tending the Convention of the 5 pital come right back with a follow-! Peppering the typewriter|up on the idea. They write: | with lefts and rights at close |“Dear Si: ; | range, Sammy writes: fe read ir ea ae “Dear Si: : Gloves tournament, and think that] ina, Why don’t you put a little lit. an excellent idea, You mentioned | life into the leaders of the LS.U.| emething about ‘ine analysis bo- in this town? They appear to me ling necessary idn't, but it's Ox.) to be asleep. Why don’t you devote | with me.— Tf you go ahead| | few columns to the conditions un-|with it, and you need the analvtical | der which the Negro professional - be fight? ‘ wn South a colored man may not fight 2 white boxer. Many times tliey have entirely different fight clubs for black and white, Baltimére, for example, where they pay the fellows as low as $7 fer a ten round windup. I know & ntmber of colored boxers who were boxing there, well known boxers like Billy Purnell and Cal- pee a Sip state, snag, {tonight to Section 4 at the New York demonstrations will pledge |Coliseum, by the District Organizer Jof the Communist Party, Charles Krumbein, the main speaker at the meeting commemorating the Tenth | Anniversary of the death of Lenin. | This, however, will not be a def- inite award of the banner. As the Ls es jrecruiting drive has been extended | Utionary Unions of Cuba. until April by the Central Commit-| Speakers in the Arcadia Hall will , |tee, the other sections of New York) include A. Rosenberg of the Shoe will have an opportunity to intensify} Workers Union, Nell Carroll of the \their activity in recruiting and wn|Young Communist League, Herman SCHEDULED LENIN MEETINGS jthe banner away from the Harlem |McKawain of the League of Struggle re will be at | Section. |for Negro Rights and Sadie Van Veen o District,’ The award of the banner at the|of the International Labor Defense, tion of the! Coliseum will be in addition to the|in addition to Robert Minor, who will initiation of the new members who|speak in the name of the Central came in during the recruiting drive.|Committee of the Communist Party. ‘7 8.) which will take place at all three of} The meetings will start at 8 p.m. ven|the Lenin memorial meetings ar-|sharp. Admission will be 35c, includ-| "'nt9 ath |Tanged for tonight. Jing one cent for: the Unemployed | D. E. Ear-| Speakers at these commemorations | Councils. Suitable for Meetings, Lectures and Dances in the Czechoslovak Workers House, Ine. 347 E.72nd St. New York Shepar Telephone: RHinelander 5097 Going to Russia? Workers needing full outfits of horsehide a thow About “Nazi officials are frantically attempting to prohibit the reception of radio programs from Moscow on sets that were | distributed to workers for fascist propaganda.” c Com- | ot 1 be held in| ton Howard and Home, 1216 K. P. Hall, Romanta of the Daily ker at the 9 elabor- 20, 20, 21, Can- 8 p.m, h Hail, » SM ¥.C. , Rappaport's organ. and ¥. CLEVELAND. land Center, 20, Wood- fall, 2719 Wal- Clarence Hath- away. , Jan. 21, Richeller Hall, sth eets, 7:30 p. m., speaker, Herma: BALTIMORE, nn's Hail, lams, sect. org. CONNECTIOUT ATERBURY.—Sunday, Jan. 31, 168 EB. Main St., speaker, Jor @ the Lithuanian Chorus. N@W BRITAIN.—Sunday, Jan. 21, Work- ers Center, 53 Church 8t., 7:20 p.m. MINNESOTA PAUL. — Suni Jan. 21, Deuteches and Scandinavian Hall, speakers, Nor- n, Bernick, J. Cogan. MINWEAPOLIS.—Sunday, Jan. 21, Hum- boldt Hall and Metal Workers Hall, speak- ers, William Schnetderman, dist. org., Jack Garden Hall, ton Carson, sect. org. VIRGINIA. — Sundsy, Jan. 7, Workers’ Center. | CLOCQUET.—Sundey, Jan. 3, Workers’ | Mall, speaker, Morris OROSBY.—Em!] Nygard, Sunday, Jen. 31. BRAINERD.—Rudolph Harju, Sunday, Jan. 21 “ TRONWOOD.—Harold Otmstesé, Sunday, Jan. 21. BESSEMER. —Rarold Otmsted, Sunday, Jan. 21. DULUTH.—Morris Karson, Sumdey, Jan. 21. SUPERIOR.—Morris Karson, Smdsy, Jan. MICHIGAN SAULT STZ. MARTE.—rrank Arvole, Sun- day, Jan. 21, DETROIT.—Sunday, Jan. 31, 3 p.m., Arena Gardens, Woodward and Hendrie, speaker, Anna Schulte, MASSACHUSETTS LYNN.—Sunday, Jan. 21, Russian Ctub, 21_George St., 7 p.m. PEABODY. — Sunday, M4, Russian Club, 11 Northend st., 2 BALEM.—si y, Jan. a4 Jan. p.m. 31, St. Joseph's Hall, 160 Derby St., 2 p.m PENNSYLVANIA SCRANTON.—Saturday, Jan. 20, interna- tiohal Hall, 427 Lackawan: 0 p.m. ELPHIA.—Priday, 19, Broad- way Hotel, speaker, Leopold Stekowsk!, on “Ote to Lenin.” MILWAUKEE. — Sund . 21, Behn Fret Hall, 2:30 p.m. Sunday, Jan. 2i, Polo- Hall, 809 W. Burnham, 7:30 p.m. Sun- 21, Labor Hall, 6387 W. National STATEN ISLAND, N. Y.—Sunday, Jan. 21, Svea Hall, 789 Post Ave, W.N. Br., 2:30 p. m., spenker, Joe Gilbert. ROXBURY.—Seturday, Jan. 20, Dudley st. Opera House, 113 Dudley 8t., 8 p.m. WORCESTER. — Sunday, Jan. 21, Wash- burn Hall (beneath Mechanics Hell) 8 p.m. pi American Workers Chorus ROCHESTER, N. Y.— Sunday, Jan. 21, Labor Lyceum Auditorium, 2 p.m. Program, Pen and Hammer Trio, Pretheit Chorus. MASSACBUSETTS BAVERHILE—Sunday, Jan. 21, Andetson Fall, 19 Washington &t., 7 pm AMESBURY — Sunday, Jan. 21, spanish ‘War Vets Hall PROVIDENC! » R. I.— Sunday, Jan. 21, Swedish Workmen's Hell, 8 p.m. Speakers, Danold Burke and Anna Bloch, Prov. Sect. Ore. f ALLENTOWN, Pa.—Sunday, Jan. 21, Hun- 4 garian Hall, 520 Union St., 2 p.m., speaker, Pred Biedenkapp, of New’ York. + Mass Meeting Today for Negro Worker NEW YORK —The Downtown Sec- : of the International Labor De- is holding a mass demonstra- A today at 12 o’clock noon in Union ‘Sq. to protest the arrest of Oscar | Day, Negro worker who was employed { | Ao Markowitz as a janitor at { Rivington St., and who is being framed-up on charges of robbery and Y it and battery, for defending Nf from the murderous attack ‘of his white employer. Br + GOODS SHOP MEET TODAY YORK.—A shop conference of knit- workers from Industrisl Union and tional shops will be held today at 30 noon at Irving Plaza Hall, to develop fight against the NRA hunger code. Conference 1s called at the initiative Knitgoods department of the Needle Workers Industrial Unton. \ ay 1 Toe, LW.On meets Bund Branch 799, 1.W.O, meets Sunday, ‘Dm. at 323 8. 18th St pe eS i) “| weather conditions, additional one PortlandWorkers in CWA Union Demand | | | Jobless Insurance: |300 Join Union; Demand | $18 Minimum Weekly PORTLAND, Me., Jan. 19.— Three | | hundred C.W.A. workers in the Re-| | lief Workers’ Protective Association | here voted unanimously to petition; all Maine representatives in Washing- | ton demanding that they support the | Workers’ Unemployment and Social! Insurance Bill, and vote for the con- | tinuance of the C.W.A, program. | The meeting, attended by more) | than 300 C.W.A. workers, all of whom | | joined the union, also voted unanim- | | ously to demand of the Maine C.W.A.| jofficials a guaranteed minimum weekly wage of $18 regardless of | dollar weekly for each dependent of workers with families of three or} more; against favoritism and dis- crimination; and that one elected | member of the union be appointed to j the local Welfare Board. All workers organizations should follow the example of the Portland and federal governmental bodies en- dorse the Workers Unemployment In- surance Bill. City Events LAUNDRY WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNTON TO CELEBRATE VICTORY A gigantic mass meeting will be held by the Laundry Workers Industrial Union to célebrate the victory attained in the Samac Laundry at Lexington Hall, 108 E. 116th st. tonight. METAL WORKERS HOLD FORUM Charles Rust will speak on “What In- flation Means to the Workers in the Metal Industries” Sundsy, 3 p.m. at 36 B, 19th Bt. LEFT WING, LOCAL 22, TO HOLD OPEN FORUM ‘The Left Wing Group of Local 22, IL. .W.U., will hold a mass open forum Sun- A.m., at Stuyvesant Casino, Second | Ave. and Sth St., where Migdal will speak jon “Why Again Expulstons in Our Local.” * ° \@ | SPEAKERS CONFERENCE IN HARLEM | ‘The Agit-Prop Dept. is calling = speak- | ers conference for Sunday, 11 a.m. at Pin- | nish Hall, 18 W. 126th St, Herman Me- | Kawain of the L.S.N.R. will speak on the “Monetery Policy of | Roosevelt.” | | ATTORNEY To SPEAK ON SCOTTSBORO | Irving Schwab, attorney and eve witness | | of the Scott will speak at the) | Fordham Prog. Club, Sunday, at $ p.m. | : : | MEDICAL BUREAU TO MEET | | A genert] organizational meeting of the | Medical Bureau (sffllated with the F.6.U.) will be ‘held Sunday, 8:80, at Greenwich | House, 29 Barrow St. Christopher St. TALK ON MILLINERY OPPOSITION Arthur Peer, of the A. ¥. of L. rank and file committee, will spesk on the role of the opposition {i the millitery union of the Amerieah Youth Club, 407 Rockaway | Ave. Sunday, 12 noon. | . 8 GANNES OF D. W. TO TALK ON CUBA | Hsrry Gannes, recently returned dele- | gate to the workers convention in Havana, will speak on the struggle against impe- rialism in Cuba at the Village Forum, 224 W. 4th St. opposite Sheridan Square, Sun- day, 2:30 p.m. SS DRESSMAKERS VICTORY DINNER All dressmakers are invited to the Vic- tory Dinner given by the workers of the Goldsheer Dress Co., Sunday, at $ p.m. in Irving Plaza, 18th ‘St. and’ Irving Place. Tickets 500. . DRESSMAKERS TO HOLD 4 OPEN FORUMS Four Open Forums will be held Sunday throughout the city on various topics. In the Bronx, I. Potash will speak on “The Issue of Dual Unionism and the Role of the Lovestoneites in the Unions,” in Am- bassedor Hall, Third Ave. and Claremont Parkway, 11 Tn Chey Island, Lous Hyman, President of the N.T.W.L.U. will speak on “What is better for the dress makers: progressive or conservative ad- ministration?” at the Workers Club, 27th St. and Mermaid Ave. at 1 p.m. Ta Park, 8. Levenson will speak lon “The present situation in the dress in- dustry” at the I.W.O. Center, 1373—48rd St, st 11 am, In Brownsville, Jack Goldman, dress organizer, @ill spéak on ‘The N.R.A. fake in the dréss industry” at the Browns- ville Youth Center, 103 Thatford Ave. at 11 am. | 2 8 DAILY WORKER AFFAIR | NEW YORK.—An affair for the benefit of the Daily Worker and the Harlem Zibers- tor will be held by Unit 408, Sect. 4, this se workers, and demand that ctty, state,|cal No. 9 be admitted to the 1 C.P. Members of Needle} Union to Meet Monday | Party members of the Needle | Trades Union are called to a special | fraction meeting on Monday, Jan. 22,| at 7 p.m, at Manhattan Lyceum, 66) E. 4th St. Every member is expected | to be present without fail. | District Org. Dept. 7 Injured in Attack © on Local 1 Members by ILG Thugs, Police Beat Up Workers Who} Demand Admission for | Local 9 Commitiee | NEW YORK.—Seven workers were | injured when left wing members of | Cloak Operators Local No. 1 of the International Ladies’ Garment Work- | ers’ Union, were clubbed by police, gangsters and Lovestoneite supporters of the reactionary right wing clique at their membership meeting at Beéthoven Hall Thursday night. The attack occurred when a large ma-} jority of the members of Local No.1 demanded that a committee of fel- | low members of Cloak Finish to address the members. | Local No, 9 members came te the meeting to obtain the support of the members of Local No. 1 in their struggle to defeat the decision of the International clique to oust their elected leaders. Contrary to the rules of the local, Chairman Zucker- man arbitrarily ruled that the com-| mittee be barred from the meeting, When left wingers demanded that the question be put to the members for decision, Manager Levy declared that, regardless of previous actions by the local, the committee of fellow members would not be allowed to speak to the local. | To stifle the demand of the rank and file, which were growing louder and more insistent, strong arm men, reinforced by police, attacked and| beat up left wing members and threw the meeting into a turmoil. Seven workers were injured. One, Barnett Rubinstein, sustained a fractured skull and was given medical treat- ment. Although there were close to 1,000 when the meeting opened, the police drove the majority of the members out of the hall, leaving a small group of no more than 200 to continue the | meeting. Roosevelt to Fire Million C.W.A. Men by February 15th (Continued from Page 1) lion dollars for O.W.A. if he asked for it. The official announcement of the 24 and 15 hour maximum marks the victory of the Southern rich farm- ers and the Southern lumber barons, who were not satisfied with the peon tate of 24 cents an hour for a 48-hour week given them by the N.R.A. Ad- minfstration. General Hugh S. John- son, apprised early this week of the administration decision to insure slave labor to the rich farmers and industrialists of the South by cutting the pitiful C.W.A. scale, remarked: “That’s fine. That meets all the criticisms.” Asked by the Daily Worker cor- respondent whether he is consider- ing how to meet the problem of per- manent unemployment, Hopkins re- plied evasively: “A plan is being) made to deal with the unemployed but I have no details. It's a matter for the President.” The $100,000,000 of Federal Relief funds remaining, Hopkins declared, “will last until April 1 in a tight squeeze.” On May 1 the tighteness promises to be suffocating, as far as the ad- ministration is concerned. Support the National Convention Ay it Unemployment, Feb. 3, in Washington, D. C. ; | St.. N. W., Washington, D. C. | Wholesale Inflation As Gold Plan Result Py — ELE Nat'l Committee of | sotei Boxer, Leading | Denounces Lay-Offs (Continued from Page 1) | PTR Seer | measures for relief for the unem-j ployed, while actually they only sought to stop the growing mass movement for Unemployment and Social Insurance, | “In the light of this, the directives | issued to all Unemployed Councils to| intensify the struggle for unemploy- ment insurance and to petition city, state and federal governmental bodies demanding their endorsement of the Workers Unemployment Insurance Bill take on a special importance.” C.W.A. Workers and Convention The National Committee is en- deavoring to get a large and repre- sentative delegation of C.W.A. work- | ers to the convention in order that they may present their demands to Congress. A number of O.W.A. unions have already elected such delegates. C.W.A. unions are circulating peti- tions demanding the continuation and extension of jobs for every un- employed worker without discrimina- tion, and for unemployment and so- cial insurance. The National Com- | mittee advises that such petitions | continue to be circulated until such} time as they can reach Washington by airmail on Feb. 4, Petitions should be sent to S, Minken, 1316 Belmont | Will Call on Congressmen. Every delegation in Washington will call on the Congressmen from their district to demand that they support the Workers Unemployment and Social Insurance Bill. The Na- tional Committee calls upon all uh- employed councils and C.W.A. unions to write to their Congressmen and Senators informing them that their delegates ‘will call on thei on Feb. 5 and demanding that they be given a hearing and assurance of support. While the delegates are presenting these demands on Feb. 5, it is planned to hold mass demonstrations throughout the country in support of these demands. A plea for funds is again made by | the National Committee. It is impos- | sible to provide food and lodgings in | Washington at the rate of a dollar} a day and the National Committee must make up the difference. The convention hall alone will cost $700. All friends and sympathizers are urged to rush contributions at once to room 437, 80 East llth Street. Senator Predicts (Continued from Page 1) Reserve Bank of Boston, revealed the drastic nature of the program, agree- ing with Governor Eugene Black of the Federal Reserve Board, who in- sisted yesterday that reserve banks should be allowed to retain their gold, instead of handing it over to the Treasury, in order to maintain public confidence. Use War Talk War phraseology was adopted by the House Coinage Committee in their formal report recommending the bill. They referred to the $2,000,000,000 stabilization fund proposed for ma- nipulating gold in foreign exchange and for influencing the prices of government bonds as “the most in- genious instrument ever developed in the monetary system"—one which is “equally effective in attack and de- fense.” They also said that the fund would be used preparatory to “the return to gold redemption of the dollar.” On this peint—whether Roosevelt con- templates a return to some kind of & gold standard or whether he con- templates further inflationary defla- tion—there is rank confusion even among the legislators. Many have éx- pressed the view that the present program is but one of “several steps.” But what the other steps are remains unexplained. Bankers, endorsing thé bill, insist that, nevertheless, it must be interpreted as a “Stabilizing” ef- fort, and that a return to the gold standard must be settled upon in ad- vance. Senator Connally of Texas, however, is by no means the only one BOSTON, Mats., Jan. 18—Motel Boxer, 40, active member of tae Communist Party and militant leader of tho Carpenters Union died this afternoon after a long illness. The funeral will take place Sunday at 11 am,, from the Dor- chester Workers Club, T4 Wildwood St. olunteers Needed for Nat'l Unemployed Meet | | | | NEW YORK —Volunteers for im- portant work in connection with the National Convention Against Unem~- ployment are needed. ‘Those who can do an hour or move work are mittee, 29 E. 20th St. at ones. Pres.MendietaPlans Bloodbath in Cuba Against Workers (Continued from Page 1) Presidential Palace regarding the cabinet. A.B.C. Wants Jobs The A.B.C. dehiands the majority of the posts, The Union Nacional- ista is demanding the same. The wildest unfoundéd rumors are afloat as to the composition of the cabinet. It ts clear, howévér, that it will be most reacticnary. The new govern- ment plans to consolidate the rule of the exploiters’ and get the hélp/ of Yankee imperialism in large loans for the army and navy and higher sugar quotas. They know Uncle Sam is always geherous with money where revolutions have to be dtowned in bleod. There is & real danger of 2 whole- sale massacre of workers and the help of the American workers against this imperialist-supported reactionary regime must be aroused. For General Political Strike ‘The Communist Party’s appeal for a general political strike was taken up by the Cuban National Confeder- ation of Labor and it has decided to organize for it om the basis of artiplifying the present struggles and developing the widest economic struggles. Antonio Guiteras, Secretary of War in the deposed Grau San Martin regimé, is trying to provoke strikes, sending delegates to the unions. His supporters among tite leader- ship of the Railway Workers Union have decided to call a strike, which was demanded by the rank and file months before. This morning, at 6 a.m., 25,000 doc- tors and hospital workers struck. Street car workers are preparing to strike; the teachers are still on strike, The majority of the government office workers have retumed. But the health depaytment is still ovt for their own demands. Committees of Action Im the new situation, the Commu- nist Party continues the organiga- tion of joint committees of action to develop struggles. It is concentrating its work on the armed forces, arming of the proletariat and workers’ de- tachment. The ABC. is prep: @ murder- ous attack against the Negroes. The Communist Party is calling for atmed defense and counter-struggles ‘on all fronts, consid that President Mendieta has adopted ol. Batista’s slogan of “harvest or bloodshed.” The return of the reactionary Ma- chado officers to the army and navy will provoke mass struggles now being prepared. The new government, one of the last cards of the native landlord- capitalists and Yankee imperialism, cannot solve the crisis, nor give work and higher wagés to the sugar work- efs, nor satisfy the soldiers. It must resort to an open tétror drive, cub wages. attack the Négro and unem- plévyed with the help of Wall Strest. The fight is becoming more clearly a fight of the foress of the revolu- tion against the fotcés of reaction now concentrated in the néw govern- ment. It will not secure “divil paace” but heads in the opposite direction. Flas your organization élécted a delegate t6 the National Coriven- who has the opposite objective in mind, tlon Against Unem; in Waahipeves, D. On Fei round windup. Most of the time they didn’t even have a written guarantoe, and when they did, the promoter either ducked or chiseled them bold-facedly out of it, IN PHILLY, colored boxers don’t | have the ghost of a chance to make any money, A friend of mine, Bucky nes, won fifty straight him s windup. In all those 50 bat- tles, I don’t believe he made $7.50 at amy one time for his end. The same thing exists in N. Y., so it’s nothing new to you. I think it would be proper to devote some space on the Negroes in the profes- sional sport world. the old time Negro greats of the 8 ‘ j HE was A CHAMP—oNcE! | fight geme and how they ended up. | Joe Walcott is a janitor in the Madison Square Garden, for in- stance. Sam Langford is blind and Comradely, “SAMMY KOVNAT.” eae UR little seeds weren't cast on batrén soil, it seems. In our in- |Gignation at the Golden Gloves we mildly suggested the possibility o? holding a Red Gloves tournament for the benefit of the Daily Worker. A couple of chemists at a local hos- Bronx Unemployed to Demand Endorsement of Jobless Insurance NEW YORK.—Workers from the Bronx County Unemployed Council will visit Bronx Borough President Lyons on Mon.,, Jan. 22 at 9:30 a.m. to demand that he support and e Gorse the Workers’ Unemployment Insurance Bill and the Workers’ Re- lief Ordinance. Workers are urged to support’ the delegation by assembling with the delegation at 1400 Boston Road, Bronx, at 9 aim. and going with the délegation io the office of the Borough President. fights at one club before they gave | Wh “Alco, why not give some space to | just troubles over. | will be your urinalysis |Daily Worker? of the idea? big butter and e just LOVE to rect The two of us here the glory of it, without benefit of What do you think| Our mail-box is big, and, like the chorine said to the men in 1928, I consider yc." department for vin Reed, fer example, and the Teather sheeplined Conts, Windbreakers, S hes, High + ete., will reel - - U | d ( il Boston Communist, Diés | most, they got was $15 for » ten | SABRC lal redtetion on oll'thely purchases at hee Hall, 8708 Deo- | hemp oye OUNC | r SQUARE DEAL ARMY and NAVY STORE letters. | Al DIVIst Spartacus vs Falcons. Btreet. Red Spark ys Ital. Crotone. Monabi vs Prospect, 11 Street. | Sey, Head. land. Freneh vs LW.0., 2 p. Brownsville vs Dauntl Head. | Heto vs Juventus, 3 p. | Maples v8 Havzl, 3 p.m. B2 DIVIs! 1.W.O. vs Fichte, 11 a. Red Spark vs Hinsdale, French vs Youth Cult. Amer. Betsey Head. 96th Bt. EXHIBITION Adriatic vs Piehte, 12 Oval, METROPOLITAN WERS. SOCCER LEAGUE (Schedule for Sunday, Jan. 21) il Italla vs Tico, 1 p.m., Hudson. Fichte vs Ecuador, 1 p.m., Central, 98th Amer., A3 DIVISION Hinsdale vs Red Spark, 2:30 p.m. Bet- Colonial vs Zukunft, 1 p.m., Van Cort- Bi DIVISION | Rendesvous vs Bronx Hung. 12:80, Crotona, Prospect vs So. Amer., 1! Hero vs Spartacus, 1 p. Greek Spar. vs Red Spark, 12:30 p.m. Cente vs Bront Hung, 11 a.m., Central | AS ALWAYS Serving Beer, Liquor gap Riera mae Te ERE | Announcing Kerja’s ACADEMY LUNCH 144 EAST 14th STREET Has complied with demands of Food Workers Industrial Union Best Food for Lowest Prices publicity. | See ca | Bor oad uk hs Wa BAM | SPOS Bom Can Sas 1S is swell, boys, and this de- DOWNTOWN partment is sincerely touched. else wants to contribute his ices to a tournament for the | } | & Wine At Lowést Rates NEVER CLOSED (ON 2:30 p.m, a.m. Central 64th Best Food WHERE COMRADES MEET Starlight Restaurant 117 EAST 15TH STREET Bet. Irving Pl. and Union Sa. Low Prices Managament—JURION from Pittsburgh m., German-Amer, | less, 12:30, Betsey + Jasper Oval, Gentrel, 64th St, IN where 302 E. 12th Bt. .. Astoria, 10:30, Betsey Head. 1 a.m., Crotona. m. McCombs Dam. » iL pm, German CLUB GAMES — Breakfast - Lunch - noon, Queensboro TASTY, DELI | | cCIOUS, WHOLESOME All Comrades Meet at the Phone: TOmpsins Square 6-9556 John’s Restaurant : SPECIALTY—ITALIAN DIGHES ce with atmosphere all radicals moet NATURAL HEALTH FOODS TRUFOOD VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT ———— 153 W. 44th 8T., EAST OF B'WAY OPEN TILL MIDNIGHT. New York PPrraget Amer. vs Harlem, 1 p.m., Central th st. Spartacus, Zukunft, Bye, Dauntless, no eee GERMAN WORKERS DOWNTOWN — 79 EAST 10th 8T. Patronize Our Kitchen Dinner — —Proletarian Prices — NEW HEALTH CENTER CAFETERIA Fresh Food—Proletarian Prices—30 E, 13th St—WORKERS’ CENTER ———! ATTENTION HOSPITAL WORKERS LEAGUE he Executive Committée of the Hospital Workerg Lesgue should get in touch with the Theatre of the Workers Sehool, 35 B. 12th St, Room, 30, Wednesday, 8:30 pan. DAILY WORKER CHORUS IN HARLDIT ‘The Daily Worker Chorus has organtaed Harlem Section for Negro and white ‘The first rehearsal will take place te tehanie 415 Lenox Avenue, mn. at LW.O. Monday, 8 AT REDUCED PRICES BLUE BIRD STUDIOS 1595 PITKIN AVENUE, Near AMBOY STREET BROOKLYN, N. Y. — Phone DICKENS 2-106 MANHATTAN ST. NICHOLAS ARENA 69 West 66th St. Speakers: Earl Browder Ss. mn Rose Wortis A. Overgaard A. Stern Workers Lab. Theatre Auspices: Communist Party, Tonite at 8 P. M. COMMEMORATE 10th ANNIVERSARY of DEATH of vV.I. LENIN ATTEND MASS MEMORIAL MEETINGS! BRONX East 177th Speakers: Hi. Shepard er Gold line Roger John Little ‘Workers. Dance MASS CHORUSES OF WORKERS New York District 50 East 13th Street N. Y. COLISEUM Chas, Krambein bake BROOKLYN ARCADIA HALL 918 Halsey St. (near Broadway) Speakers: Robert or H. MekKowal H. Mc! in Sadie Van Veen Neli Carroll Fretheit Mandolin Orch. MUSIC, LEAGUE ~— ADMISSION 35c — including 1¢ tax for Unemployed Counetls St. League PHOTOS...of the better kind ad