The Daily Worker Newspaper, January 22, 1934, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

@age Two Z —— 20,000 Honor Lenin’ Memory In 3 N. Y. Meetings Saturday Section 4 Gets Leeupel, George Powers Up | Many Join Party For Trial Today | Guns for Cuban Masses a R ‘||| Gallagher Forces Naais —___||! To Extend to Jan. 27 .* || The Date of Expulsion BERLIN, Jan. 2i—Leo Gallagher, | | American attorney here to seek the release of Georgi Dimitroff and the jother three Communist defendants, | aequitted by the Leipzig court, has and Y. C. L. NEW YORK workers ma: vy YORK.—Ge Twenty hree Len: comn- ILGWTo Cut Wages, End Minimum Pay Industrial Union Urges Real Strikes To Assure Minimum Scales Party members of the Y¥ ake sto] ent oun, d ges ini- Inter- PI the ~% Banner -|c sige’ wb tha Cann man for the purpose of ew members, was flat prices on ower priced gai at the New York | 8 Proving to be a huge swindle. Th he stoppages are now being spread to Coliseum in the Bronx to Section 4,| ff0PoRees 8 of Harlem 200 new members were drawn into the Party since the drive started. But reports from shops show that | the intention of the officials is to jaa the bosses in doing away with Samat the minimum scales. ww the offi- cert Paumittee £0) cials intend to evade responsibility Pap © of the | 10r this is seen in Hochman’s state- Onan aaa cE Nny in Women’s Wear on Tues- Jan. 16, in controversies on the mini- scale would be referred to the Krumbein, district maker, he T.U.U.C., ne Roge Aid Victims of John Little, Distr ment mu the name of the Central | impartial chairman. of the Communist Party,| The dress department of the In- revolutionary | dustrial Union has called on the ace in Socialist) dressmakers of the RkL.G.WU. to 5.S.R., made by| turn the stoppages into real strikes and p ts, under ntenance of minimum the Communist Pa: 2 as provided for in the new 10 | agreei and that they refuse to )=| permit the minimum w: sc to | to be decided by the in Hy, | man. apd The Industrial Union, | ment today League of | man, is, Sadie Ven ational Labor De fense, and Nell Carroll, of the ¥.CL. Arcadia Hail was draped with red | banners and red flags. On the plat- form stood a statue of Lenin, dreped in red—ai inspiring monument to the | Union charged that the Hoch- Zimmerman clique is deliber- ately working to reduce the wages of the dressmakers, in a stat DAILY WORKER CHORUS ET the Daily Worker , Will take LW.O. headquarters, HARLE! tonight, at 8 p.m. 415 Lenox Ave. MASS MEETING IN HARLEM eeting tonight, 8 p.m., at 415 Lenox 3ist St. to hear the reports of was fur andoli Orche: choruses of sine workers clubs. | delegations sent to’ Commissioner of Public (Further reports on the Lenin | Wélfare and Colonel Delel Memorial Meetings in other sections | ep wing, LOGAL om TO HOLD of the country, will be published in | AL MEETING SPE later issues of the Daily Worker), | Lett Wing of Local 22 will hold a si | group meeting tonight, right after worl | Memorial Hall, 344 West 36th St. at GERMAN REFUGEE 10 SPEAK Mans Baer, refugee from a Nazi Concen tration Camp, will tonight, at Civic | Theatre Hall, Liberty Ave. and 114th St., | Richmond Hill. Jean Silver, classical violin- 1% omrades Mees a: RBRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health | ist, will also render 3 musical program. Restaurant 9 n | 358 Claremont Parkway, Bron) Bway Coffee Shoppe | 866 Broadway. Quality Foods Trade Union| Directory ««. BUILDING MAINTENANCE WORKERS UNION ARRANGE YOUR DANCKS, LECTURES, UNION MEETINGS at the WORKERS’ HOME 27-29 West 115th Street New York City RESTAURANT and BEER GARDEN 799 Broadway, New York Otty Gramercy 5-0857 FOOD WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION 4 West 18th Street, New York Olty Chelsea 3-0505 FURNITURE WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION 818 Broadway, Now York City Gramercy, 5-8956 METAL WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION ‘% East 19th Street, New York City Gramerey 7-784? NEEDLE TRADES WORKEBS INDUSTRIAL UNION 131 West 28th Street, New York City Lackawanna ¢-4010 | PATRONIZE SEVERN’S CAFETERIA 7th Avenue at 30th St. Best Food atWorkers Prices To Our NewYork Readers Fr AN effort to help put the DAILY WORKER on a self-supporting basis, the Business Department is un- dertaking an extensive campaign to sell advertising space to large stores, chains and firms who manufacture com- modities of common use, stich as food, clothing, cigarettes, beer, etc. r ORDER to make this campaign a success, however, the Business Department must be able to prove that DAILY WORKER readers will support DAILY WORKER advertisers. We must be able to show figures about the amount and kind of merchandise that our readers buy, where they buy and when they buy. ‘as Pen & Hammer Club has already responded to this campaign. Their members have volunteered to make @ survey of an important cross-section of DAILY WORKER readers in greater New York. They will call at the homes of these readers with an introduction from our editor and a questionnaire to be filled out, @ | ged YORK readers of the “Daily” can perform an invaluable service to our paper by giving the Pen é& Hammer Club members their cooperation, Answer the questions. When these reports are turned in to the Business Department, the figures and information will be tabulated. These tabulations will be shown to pros= bective advertisers. No names will be given out. ® | opcgaahagh : +. this is one of the ways to insure the DAILY WORKER against the deficits which our veaders have made up out of their own pockets. MOR! ADVERTISING REVENUE! Here is a chance to increase the income of “your paper.” Here is a chance to help “your paper’ increase its size and coverage of the news. Here is YOUR CHANCE to help make the DAILY WORKER a stronger newspaper for the American work- ing class, e | DAILY WORKER-S0 E. 13th St., New York City | The workers are kept in the dark | The Banner was pre-| Tesarding reasons for the stoppages. | hich he declared ; place | t | NEW ESTONIAN} .|™man, an active member of the Mid- Armored cars armed soldiers patrolling the streets of H ary agents in the saddle in Cuba. dent. vana as V This picture was taken shortly before Carlos Mendieta was named Presi- Street set its openly reaction- Needle Unions Members Of Party To Meet Today Drive Out Rank, File From AFL Hatters’ ‘Merger Convention members of the Needle Union are called to a special ion meeting on Monday, Jan. 7 p.m. at Manhattan Lyceum, 66 E. Fourth St. Every member is expected to be present without fail. DISTRICT ORG. DEPT. FP NEW YORK.—Fifteen militant wo- men workers of Local 24 of the \ cae: |linery Workers’ Union (A. F. of {entered Beethoven Hi jeter a iat coment to mer Drive for Huge War jand the Cloth Hat Cap and Milliner | Program Begun By Commerce | | Workers’ Unions was taking place we and disturbed the “peaze” delibera tions of the labor misleaders by de- manding that they be granted th {tights to participate in the affair of their union. The women |more than 150 w who were | ousted from Loca’ in 1931 and later | permitted to return to Local 24. Since represented (Continued from Page 1) An asing turbu- then they have been compel manifested itself in the pay dues but de While the s|in the unions involved in | The worke: reatening its | tion to de committee co i aisent boo! | Pe | memk | Green, pi | who presided at the s ven again st guarantor of |vered to get the w hall by calli hs r hi 1a: r asks | after their arrival. At the same time, rs aerate lene s palpably ical statement commends that of Commerce of the reaffirm its pos it announced that only those having | ould be admitted to the { | When the new session opened police }and strong arm on guard to | keep out all those hout creden- tials. | Outside the hal jcornered William P Zaritzky and asked for a hearing. | Ol EOSOe ula eee ; Green refused on the ground that he | due consideration to this nation’s re- Imew nothing about the c: | mn to the existipg world political | Zaritzky curtly told the workers to the needs of our world ;Was no use. The convention mmerce, as well as to our | called for the one purpose of me mal role as a champion of | the unions and would not take up any | other problem | ; “But we no other appeal, |must bring our grievances to highest body of the union,” said workers. “J kept us out of the convention, Zaritsky abruptly shoved them aside and entered the hall pro- tected by an escort of po ired thugs. The women ms. On this occasion, however, it {loudly and police drove them from | ominously omits mention of the mail | the hall, |fiction, It is outright war prepara- PES eI Ti - “Due to the important role to be pl: wit constitutes a proper for the United of the pr 8, which rev: ‘iven ‘mail’ dies by the gov- ernment to corrupt shipping corpora- ms, the Chamber of Commerce au- recommends that the gov: e its members more mil m iv | yed by an American-owned | unera oday for | Merchant Marine as a naval auxiliary i {in time of war, our government | 4. Should lend continued support to the | ea hie Mem i) ® Merchant Marine, particularly commended by the Navy ” ) " ish- NEW YORK.—Edwerd Stone Fish. “war Reserves aredness,” the town Section of the Internationa) ®"4 Industrial ‘ Labor Defense, died at 1.40 o'clock mittee | the National | Friday morning of heart disease as a | Chamber's p in urging amendment | Tesult of undernourishment and worry | Of the National Defense Act to per- | arising out of a long period of unem- | Mit educational orders for equipment, | ployment. munitions and a ries.” What are The Midtown Section of the I. L. | D. will hold a mass funeral for him! are that type | today. The body will be on vii at | of order long sought from Congress the section headquarters, 26 West | by manufacturers of munitions, ord- 18th St., today from 10:30 A. M.,|mance and other Army and Navy where workers can pay their last | equipment, and their uniformed lieu- tribute to this revolutionary fighter, tenants, which would permit the War The funeral will be held at 2 o'clock, |; Department to place contracts with- RN re ing with the legal neces- 0. Day, Framed Negro @ public bids, In effect, Worker, on Trial T oday actory subsidy plan, which would increase the profits from the War manufacturers beyond what they NEW YORK—The case of Oscar | ordinarily exact from the workers. Day, Negro worker, framed on al The very fact that big business is charge of robbery by the white land- | reviving its campaign for “educa- lord for whom he worked, Mr. Marko- j tional or constiutes @ sharp re- ; Witz, comes up for trial this morn-| minder of th imperialist war danger; ing in the General Sessions Court, for shortly after the World War the Part I, Center St. | ly forgotten Graham committee, It is urgently necessary that the | in its account of the stupendous war- courtroom be crowded with w | time graft and corruption native to to prevent this innocent ° | capitalists, roundly condemned the worker from being railroaded to a | use of “educational orders.” | Jong prison term, In its report entitled “Expenditures in the War sot CoG GE mea Bill by Large Vote |ditures in the War Department, on (Continued from Page 1) PRE Tew Aertel | April 10, 1920, emphatically stated: | “Your committee respectfully recom- mends that the power of secretary of war to suspend the requirements re- lating to advertising, under section 3709 and the amendatory sections, be , ae | either entirely withdrawn or be defi- drive for hegemony over China with nitely limited, so as not to permit the Monroe Doctrine policy of U. him to abrogate the wise pu i $ _ hin abrogate public policy Bean sree Wet oe Caribbean j of taking competitive bids quickly by erica, le demanded, in effect, other means, Your committee respect that the U. S. concede Japanese full ly recommends that such legisla- hegemony over China, while at the tion be made broad enough to cover same time warning the U. S. govern- ment that Japan was the only bar- other beri remed having similar tier between world capitalism and Powers of suspension. the rising revolutionary struzules of _ Other members of the Chamber of + Commerce Committee who signed the the Asiatic peoples against i - ; I ist cpemealbo acd Gai ta.} Tebort are: Philip J. Fay, Nichols and hea ig Fay, San Francisco, California, chair tion, The attack on the U. S. “Open|™2n; Walter C, Cole, business coun- Door” policy for dollar ex»lsitation | Selor, Detroit, Michigan; Jesse Draper, of China was accompanied by a lift- | President of Draper-Owens Company, ing of the press ban on news of| Atlanta, Georgia; Walter Harnisch- Japan's preparations to crown Henry | feger, president of the Harnischfeger Pu Yi as “emperor” of an enlarged| Corporation, Milwaukee, Wisconsin; | Manchukuo by March 1. The lifting | L. C. Newlands, ont of the ,of the press ban was marked by a| Oregon Portland redio broad¢ast by Chuichi Ohashi,| Portland, Oregon; and W. call Wil- |Japanese Vice-Foreign Minister of | son, chairman of the boxy! of direc- Manchukuo, who outlined the “aims”| tors of the Seattle Trust Cory Any, of the Japanese Manchukuo state. Seattle, Washington, Chamber | impetus to peace | ne essential to world | and to adequate | Roosevelt Ends CWA Hiring, Cuts Pay of ‘Men Still Working (Continued from Page 1) | to $207,000,000 spent. Hopkins, how- | ever, refused to reveal the amount of money left in the original federal appropriation. Thus in the two month's of its operation, the C.W.A. | had spent less than half of its ap- propriation, leaving more than one- half for Jess than a month’s opera- \ tion, giving the lie to federal state- |ments that too much és being spent on _the C.W.A, By this announcement all C.W.A. workers in cities of over 2,500 popu- lation will work on a reduced work week of 24 hours with a correspond- ing reduction in pay, and those in cities of less than 2,500 population will work at half time. Clerical workers who heretofore had worked 39 hours a week will in the future | work 20 hours. Clerical workers who |have been paid from $18 to $24 for the 39-hour work week, will get a pay slash in accordance with the new jhour schedule, This new attack upon the workers is the beginning of the “gradual ta- ering off” program recently an- nounced by Hopkins. Under the | guise of payrolls being too large, C.W.A. workers are to be forced to jsecept a wage cut, although reports from every part of the country show that the number of workers who have received C.W.A. jobs is much smaller |than the schedule announced at the | beginning of the C.W.A. program. ‘Cuba Doctor Strike ‘Leader Is Murdered (Continued from Page 1) | | [forces for the cstablishment of a workers’ and farmers’ government. The shooting of Dr. Borge was due directly to a government order to the police to protect all who scab and remain at work despite the strike. Mass discontent is growing within government organizations among the rank and file. Against this the gov- }ernment is preparing the sharpest reaction this week. The discontent in the army and navy is forcing an ebout face in the Mendieta regime jDlans, but the Communist Party is calling on the soldiers, sailors and | Students not to trust to these prom- ises but to prepare to fight. The strike of the doctors and | teachers indicates a movement of the petty bourgeois towards the prolet- farlat under its hegemony, The Lenin Memorial meeting last jnight at the Institute, under the ausPices of the Young Communist League was held legally for this (first time, with masses of workers attending. we NEW YORK.— President Carlos endicta, Cuban president installed with the help of Wall Street, has issued a statement promising to pro- jtect American investors. His bid for |fecognition was favorably received by Roosevelt who has promised action within a few days. The American capitalist press unanimously favors Mendieta as a faithful servant of the American bankers, sugar and public utility in- terests in Cuba, ° Siena I. L, D. Greets Crban Trade Union Congress NEW YORK.—In an open letter toj the congress of the Confederacion Nacional Obrera de Cuba in Havana, William L, Patterson, national secre- fense, pledging the support of the I. L, D. to the Cuban workers in their heroic struggle, called on all Amer- ican workers to intensify their struggle in support of the Cuban workers, and to strengthen their struggle against the attacks of the Roosevelt Wall Street government. “We call on American workers In shops, mines and factories, exploited and ground down by the brutal cap- italist tyranny which oppresses the Cuban workers, to strengthen their tight by a determined struggle in} support of their Cuban brothers,” says the letter, “We call upon the oppressed Negro people of the United States, held in bondage as an oppressed nation, to vnk their struggle against their struggle against white ruling class oppressors with the strugvle of the Cuban people against the same op- Tressors, “We call on all toilers to demon- strate their solidarity with the struggles of the Cuban workers by @ mass protest against American im- perialist terror and intervention in Cuba, in meetings, resolutions, and |} demonstrations addressed to Presi-~ | To Fight Roosevelt, forced the Nazi regime to extend to Jan. 27 the period in which he is to leave Germany. The original expul- sion order was for 3 days, expiring tomorrow. On Friday, the Nazis ordered Do. noysky, interprter for Georgi Dimi troff’s aged mother in her attempts to secure his release of her son, to leave Germany within 24 hours. The Nazi explusion orders, coupled with the continued detention of the three Bulgarian Communists and the handing over of Torgler to the secret Police emphasize anew the graye danger facing all four defendanis irom the Nazi murder regime. Jobless Convention! Firing of CWA Men (Continued from Page 1) meeting Wednesday evening elected Samuel Naimo, secretary of the local, as a delegate. Tuesday evening, the Finishers, Ironers and Packers’ Local No. 5 also voted to send a delegate. % ee ee CHICAGO, Il, Jan. 21. — Twenty- three thousand Chicago C,W.A. workers are now to be dropped from ©.W.A. work and no more unem- Ployed are to be hired by the C.W.A. as @ result of Roosevelt’s announce- ment that the C.W.A. program is being ended. In answer to this at- tack the workers of Chicago will demonstratae on Feb. 5 for imme- diate jobs or cash relief and for the passage of the Workers’ Unemploy- ment Insurance Bill. Chicago Send-off Meeting On Tuesday, Jan. 30th at 7.30 p, m., the workers of Chicago will hold a mass send-off meeting for their del~ egates to Washington, at the People’s Auditorium. Delegates from Seatttle, Wash., and Portland, Ore., on their way to Washington will address the meeting, With hundreds of thousands of unemployed workers in Chicago reg- istered for C.W,A. jobs, and while thousands of others waiting to reg- ister, all without jobs, the National Convention Against Unemployment to be held in Washington on Feb. 3, 4, and 5 becomes the rallying center for the fight against Roosevclt’s newest attack upon the jobless. Now those thousands on C.W.A, jobs are to be added by Rooseevit’s orders to the ranks of the unemployed with- out jobs or relief, To Hold Mass Demonstration On Feb. 5th, at the time when their delegates at the National Con- vention present to the government Officials in Washington the demands of the workers, Chicago workers will hold a mass demonstration for jobs or relief and for the passage of the Workers’ Unemployment Insurance Bill. The workers will assemble at Union Park at 10 a. m, march through the loop to Grant Park, and will elect committees to go to the C.W.A. headquarters to demand jobs, and to the city hall to demand the adoption of the Workers’ Unemploy- ment Insurance Bill, S. P. Leaders Sabotage Convention All working-class organizations, A. F. of L. locals, C.W.A. unions and workers unemployed and fraternal organizations are asked to elect del- egates to the National Convention and to come out in a body to the city-wide demonstration. The Cook County Convention Committee asks all locals of the Chicago Workers Committee on Unemployment to dis- regard the threats of Carl Borders and other Socialist leaders that any local sending delegates to the con- venton will be expelled from the or- ganization, and to answer this threat by electing delegates, Tair ae Youngstown Workers to Hold Mass Meets YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio, Jan. 21— Workers in this steel center will an- swer the Roosevelt announcement that all C. ‘W. A. workers are to be fired by a city-wide demonstration to be held Tuesday. Jan. 23, at 3:30 p.m., at Watt and Federal Sts, At a mass meeting held Saturday night C. W. A. workers under the leadership of the Relief Workers’ Union voted unanimously to support the demonstration, and to demand the continuance of the C. W. A, the immediate hiring of workers: registered for ©. W. A. jobs, and against the stagger system announced by Harry Hopkins, federal relief ad- ministrator. At the C. W. A. meeting, workers from every project took the floor and denounced the abandonment of the C. W. A. program. It was decided to circulate petitions with their demands among the workers and to send these Petitions to Wi with their tary of the International Labor De-| delegates to the National Convention|| 69% ALLERTON AVE° Against Unemployment in Washing- ton, D, C., Feb. 3, A send-off meeting for the Youngs- town delegates to the National Un- employment Convention will be held in Ye ‘Thursday night, Feb. 1 All See fs ee wanting to help in the preparations of this meeting should get in touch with the headquarters of the Relief Workers’ Union and the Steel and Metal Workers’ Trdustrial Union at 266 «EL St, Room 3, NEEDLE ‘TRADES UNEMPLOYED COUNCIL TO MEET to be held 3 furriess 10 cnight, at 8 p.m, at the Gesangs -erein Hall, 1304 Southern Boulevard, Bronx. MEETING TO WELCOME JAPANESE of aps Esperantist seamen A group fapanese jelcom sill be we ed at @ meeting of Workers Esperanto Group, 350 East dist St., tonight. All Kinds Of INSURANCE ident Roosevelt, Secret of State Hull, the "Suber _ ambassador a 799 Broadway N.Y. ©. hil ec Cote STuyvesant 9-8657 sulates tirguehout the country” By TED ROBERTS" (Batting for FELLOW on the bench was an American correspondent A (Cynical Cyril Should Read This Si Gerson) pointed out to George Palme in Russia, as the best centre- forward in the U. 8. S. R. Palmer was in the works of the referred to was played at the game themselves on various® factory teams, were able to sit comfortably and give ex- pression to English words descriptive | od different plays. The game had been between the best teams of the | Ukrainian and Russian Federated | Soviet Republics and had been/| marked by brilliant exhibitions of | head work and combination play which would have been expected, ac- cording to Palmer, only of the “Tot- tenham Hotspurs” at their best. The game demonstrated very forcibly the degree of efficiency and skill attained by Russian soccer men, since the first football coaches were English- men brought over to introduce the | game. Cae Nee is very enthusiastic over the superiority of the Russians in brain and brawn work on the grid- iron. It is interesting to note that the best of the footballers, swim- mers, skaters, skliers, tennis players and scullers are workers in factories, mines, farms and offices. ‘The Moscow river in the summer time, he tells us, is alive with teams both of men and women, and their equipment is as good as can be found anywhere in the world. Full rowing crews as well as single sculls, get into stroke and practice after work hours. It won’t be long when the U. 8. 8. R, will make the turned-up nosed spectators of the outside world state in amazement at the achiev- ments in the sport field of the Sov- jets. It will be a matter of some surprise to sport followers to know that several world’s records in swim- ming, running and rowing have been shattered by Soviet athletes. To the Russian athlete, the same spirit of competition in enterprise enters into their activities as it does in Science and industry, but it is not one of winning at any cost. It is Social and Socialist competition. The Workers Spartakiade is to be held in Moscow, next year, in the largest stadium in the world. Here, hundreds of wotkers from all over the world will engage in activity, free from that bitter na- tionalistic rivalry that has charac- terized Olympic games, and which on many occasions has threatened to cause international complica- tions rather then encourage friendly feelings. | " Dynamo Sports Club has the largest membership in the world. It is housed in one of the finest bvfldings in Moscow and if you ask Palmer he'll tell you that it is equipped with every known physical culture device and the most up to date sports accessories. He'll tell you further, that to see its members at a demonstration in sports regalia is a sight to gladden the heart of any sports lover. Some idea of the extent of sport in the Soviet Union can be gotten from the fact that two méllion young people of both sexes are today wear- ing the “Ready for Labor and De- fense” button, which is awarded to those who can surpass 22 severe tests, which include running, jumping, pole vaulting, swimming with one hand, swimming under water, ete. ‘“QEEING these young people at /the beaches,” writes Palmer, “in Soviet Russia today, does not lend color to the storfes of starvation so prevalent in the outside world.” Healthy young bodies with muscles lke wire. Bodies well trained under competent guidance. Vigor, strength, ability. All these make a picture of physical perfection not of a few lone individuals, but in thoustnds of cases, “Sound bodies—sound minds,” ts 2 slogam which is being carried out re- lentlessly. In comparing the prog- ress of industry under the Five Year Plan with the progress made in sport, (ec RIAs i a oe DP Ma tc CLASSIFIED ANYONE KNOWING OF A PIANO in fair condition that John Reed Club can have, communicate immediately. 480 6th Ave. pl | big dynamo plant where the topic of discussion switched from working conditions in the plant to soccer football. The game Dynamo Stadium, where more ; than 75,000 spectators, who in a majority of cases played the one can readily see that sports bj no means have been out of the pic- ture. The fact is that recreatior in many fields has outstripped the quota set in the Five Year Plan. Sport, in the Soviets, is purely ama- teur. Whether a man or woman is & player, manager or coach, or on the executive of a club, he or she must earn a living at some produc- tive occupation. The most inspiring feature about Soviet sport is the fact that any Position, anywhere, anytime, ix available te the one meriting that Position by reason of superior ability. The man digging ditches cam qualify for stroke on the fast- est rowing team; the girl washing dishes in a factory restaurant can Play tennis with Litvinoff’s wife, who pounds a typewriter for a liv. ing. The only qualification neces. sary to join the best club in the Soviet Union is, “You must be 2 worker!” Calvert A. C. Five Leads L.S.U. Basketball League NEW YORK.—Results of the fist week of tournament play in the Labor Sports Union Basketball League are as follows: Amer. Youth 1 Spartacus Young Wkrs. 0 Yorkville 0 1 'LW.O. No. 409 0 Schedule for the week of Jan. 22-29: Jan, 22—Lyceum Boys vs, Yorkville Jan, 22-—1.W.0. No. 454 vs, Young Worker: Jan. 23—Tremont Prog. vs. I.W.O. No. 400 Jan, 25—Spartacus vs. Red Sparks Jan. 26—Y.C.L. No. 2 vs. American Youth 0 1 Team W. Lj Tem Ww. 1 Calverts 1 6 | Rois 0 1 ¥.C.L.No.2 1 0 |Red Spark 6 1 Lyceum Boys i 6 |LW.O.Nods4 0 6 0 ° Tremont Prog. 0 ° Jan. 31st is the last day any team may enter the L.S.U. Basketball League L.S.U. Convention Asks Sat. Sport Page NEW YORK. — Greeting the Daily Worker on its tenth anniver- sary of existence, the Sixth Na- tional Convention of the Labor Sports Union, recently held in New York City, includes in its resolu- tion hailing the “Daily,” a sug- gestion for the creation of a regu- lar Saturday page, wholly devoted to sports. The text of the resolution fol- lows: “The delegates assembled at the Sixth National Convention of the Labor Sports Union, wholeheartedly greet the Daily Worker, the daily newsnaper of the American workers and farm- ers, on its tenth anniversary. We particularly greet the improve- ments in the new six-page Daily Worker, and especially the cre- ation of a sports department. The convention to the Daily Worker that it publish a weekly sports page, preferably on Saturday, and work towards the aim of having a regular sports page. This will serve to attract thousands of workers, adult and youth, and will be not only a great medium of broad- ening the circulation of the Daily Worker, but also of building a more powerful workers sports movement in the United States. “We on our part, have in the past, shown our loyalty to the Daily Worker, and pledge our continued support to it, the voice of the American masses. “SIXTH NATL. CONVENTION, LABOR SPORTS UNION.” DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet. Pitkin and Sutier Aves, Brooklyn PRONE: DICKENS 1-902 Ofites Hours: 8-10 AM., 1-8, 68 P.M. Allerton Avenue Comrades! The Modern Bakery was first to settle Bread Strike and first to sign with the FOOD WORKERS’ INDUSTRIAL UNION & COHENS’S 7 ORCHARD STREET Nr, Delancey Btreet, New York City RXAMINED Wholesale Opticians By Dr. Aiveiuriem Tel. ORchard 4-450 Optometrist Factory on Premises — HARRY STOLPER — DOWNTOWN lan JADE MOUNTAIN : : “I97 SECOND AVENUE oor, Heer SL NTO. eye oie Phone: Dry Dock 4-522 ‘All Comrades Meet at the Welcome to Our Comrades NEW HEALTH CENTER CAFETERIA — CAN AGAIN BEACON, ¥. ¥. 2700 BRONX PARK EAST. PRIVATE QUARTERS HOTEL NITGEDAIGET ‘The Christmas and New Year's rush is over. It is now pos- sible to get private rooms, wjth every convenience, Special diets filled without additional charge, Winter Sports are at their best—Join the Fun Cars leave daily at 10:30 A. M., from Cooperative Restaurant E. 18th 8t.—WORKERS’ CENTER ————' BE HAD AT — ‘Tel EStabrook 8-1408

Other pages from this issue: