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} Page Two WAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, JANUARY 25, 1934 ful Lenin Meets U.S. Restaurant in Congress Refuses to Serve Negroes DePriest in Sham Fight; ~; Moore C. for Mass L ‘* . } Run Rank and File Slate Struggle on. Issue for Office in A. F. of L.! x gues Pocket Book Union| gn amee ON 2 GUTTERS OF NEW YORK ‘Jobless Convention Needs Funds, Says ‘Unemployed Council | Calls. for. Support of Special Tag Days to Raise Money f By DEL Suecess Attended By Thousand Answer Threats of War lis GZ Memorial Meetings Were Held in Cities All Over U. S. More on the Manly Art ESTERDAY we introduced Mike S., who held the Chair of?” Seckology at a leading state university until certain cir- cumstances intervened. Mike was teaching the college lads the theory and practice of boxing from the ground up, but now finds that it’s only in the labor sports movement that he can |ployment to be held in Washinton, get appreciative and willing pupils, the kind that are eager Feb. 3, 4 and 5. The statement reads| to take on their teacher any night of a week for a practical : | demonstration. e 3 Hea % 2 its consequences,—a man who takes Mike has not only boxed—|tncge consequences eentirely as a he was, as we mentioned in| matter of course—is the boy who will / sterday’s column, an intercollegiate | Come nearest success in boxing. That !* state champ not so long ago—but has/ individual, living objectively, and mittee of in a staten peals to tions to | tional Committee s that the Na- tional Convention will be in danger. n of the hich has cha make a sounder and better existence. . anc | time. Unemployed Councils, 29 E. 20th St., Iilusion, confict between that {lusion not later than Monday, Jan, 29. Tag | with it.” Lewis, one of the Negroes r blishment of an unem- insurance fund paid by the ‘used Se ubstantiated the “We appeal to all members of the given a lot of thought to the entire| evaluating his activities coolly, will ment and declared tha Unemployed Councils, unions, fra-|science of the game. We offer the| nearest approach the educational taurant had been op 7 ternal organizations, clubs, etc., to continuation of his articles here| ideal which has been advanced no committee since 1921 x : |turn out for mass collections on the feeling that many boxers—would-be | further than mere talk. Education, as as never served Negro em- 4 , Friday, Saturday and Sun-|or otherwise—and fight fans among! by simulating life about one, by in- peoplaneSe ea es PiteSaber psy ag day, Jan. 26, 27, and 28, Boxes and jour readers will enjoy them. We will| ducing objectivity in all its relations, for dues| long as I thing to do credentials may be obtained from the have more of them from time to| and awoiding illusive chimeras, can ke THE APPROACH TO BOXING | ‘i ‘ j and aciwality, cause the pitiful : 2 and controlled by the workers.| service, is secretary to Congressman | day stations will be located at: Part 10 eonding sins pill Sew ae oe ae ny, ig pre-| ‘The tank and file committee calls| Osar De Priest, Negro millionaire Manhattan— Spartacus Club, 269 W.! In the unfavorable attitude or set| the vicious circles; ie, Fear-Subjective on all members to vote a str landlord and bourgeois politician of The Chief Mourners in aa 25th St.; Turkish Workers’ Club, 402/ of them, of which we speak, we find| Living-Feax. _ dictators pak ana tia ee: Chicago. De Priest has declared he |W. 40th St; French Workers’ Club./an “open sesame” to the game. For| Po ee due atta The rank and file slate includes | Will ask for a decision on the flgor | —— ae Seth Bt yen ate aaont, 410 W.|therem we find either absolute fear] @INCE the only feasible judgment of r. he followi idates: f . | Of Congress today. He pretended to ° . . ; 19th es ide ‘orkers' ‘ud, | of fistic consequences, or the conflict thinki man can be made— epee Se CHIMES Tae Mecslae. tron | Be Janioeant of tie enlenteaTo po) Ph 1 1 i h p Pl F ht fi )210 W. 68th St.; Lower Harlem Coun-|icoming between that fear of con-|,,% thinking man . 7 twenty thousand | 28¢T H. Guffer, for secretary trea- | be ignorant of the anti-Negro p liage p Ha ans 1g. TOR la oe Tate. went et ee a a boy's pride and falee| tat is, a judgment controlled by the YORK —Twenty thousand | surer, M. Lyon, for organizer, K.|Of the government and the hefeiie A Committee, 283 EB. Tenth St: U; jr eee eee cee ior dicts | 2nd alone as ppposed to domination pore Workers in mass meeun’s|Mehiman and W. Orenstein, for | Spread discrimination in the Distric! 2 ai 68 oy 99 . | eawen Goose aos ar oie Oe, | ocrane teats Bern OF lena S ae by the emotions-—through a complete led in every part of the city| chairman, M. Kassman and for| of Columbia, which is under the con. I rize Banner m Daily Drive 2 a Halchhe “CoRGL ADI E eee discover the | knowledge of tie facts, I propose drew up resolutions of protest agai recording secretary Eva Koenig. | trol of a Congressional Com: as J leecaeeee ig] yunsil, | first condition, it is best under ar placing, as cited previously, a com- imperialism in Cuba. Telegrams were| Rank and file candidates for busi- | and in which Negroes are con ae, pia ns hide ) |valling inspruction, of be the| Dlotely organized’ set of essential sent to President urging him t0/ ness agent are J. Distell, M. Horo- | ly barred from restaurants, theatres| , cine y F ey | ;erooklyn—Boro Park Council, 4109 | idea of building a boxer. ine § duel/£acts before the prospetcive athlete. “Stop intervention against the toiling | witz, “a. Schwartzman, and L.| and other public places. He declared,| 300 at Brooklyn Section Membership Meeting Hail | 3th Av.; Brownsville Council, aa Ory Gave te the continuous Gvel| This, of course, to give him a clea: ma. Cuba. We support the " with mock indignation: es . pebesyeet 1 | Powell St.; Williamsburg Council, 61] dias tate ae ees Bh ne|mental picture leading him to a for land, bread, “Tt seems funny to me that & man Drive for New “Daily” Readers |Graham Ave.; Brighton Beach Coun-|ing feelings, forcing ht | scaridl ob lective decison on the game, independence himself as well as the opponent, we ur imperialist must try to have him take one side of the fence or the other before we may dream of him as an effective student of the sport... . How often have you seen a man find himself? Or even a champion finding himself? It is certainly the result of a sudden clearing of the cil, 87 Bay 25th St.; Council, 2784 W. 27th Coney Island St.; wtih money to pay for his food, whether he be Jew, gentile or Negro, should be refused food in a public restaurant.” 24—walter| De Priest later agreed not to rai | the issue on the floor of Congress. He will attempt to smother it in the Rules Committee. a eae The ancient bromides of “guts,” “courage,” and “nerve” are thrown out, while progress is shaped by ability. Red Sparks to Hold Eliminations Tonight L. Protests Arrest of Walter Relis in Cuba NEW YORK, Jan. Relis, student leader, expelled from City. College. for militant opposi tion to the R. O. T, C. and milita ism in colleges, was arrested in HILADELPHIA, Pa., Jan, 24— Thi: ‘ict, which was one of the/ to reach its subscription quota but to first ‘aise its quota ij 40.000 | surpass it. poe ga gett ts oe viaocous bese | Pr eg ca | Boston Rd.; East Bronx Council, 2800 to be thé first to fulfill its quota in} _ BROOKLYN BAILS DRIVE _| Bronx Park E.; Lower Bronx Council, Daily Worker circulation cam-| BROOKLYN, N. ¥.—Section No. 8| 693 E. 136th St. aign and to capture the National} of the Communist Party here took | Worker banner. \ the first step to mobilize forces for! s were sent to Presi- Mendieta at Havan, “the liberation to mi-colonies from domi n,” and to the st Party of the Soviet Un- Other teleg! dent Carl Cuba, dem: Bronx—Middle Bronx Council, 1400 cecasion of th s. “¥ ail Cuba on a charge of agitating stu- dents while he was there as a dele- Moore Calls for Wide Mass Protest NEW YORK.—Declaring that the elphia undertakes to obtain | daily subscribers and 1,000} carrying through successfully the/| Daily Worker circulation campaign | Roosevelt Dollar fogs of conflict, of a precipitous solidfying of a new attitude in which the fear of consequences is shaken NEW YORK, N. Y., Jan, 24—The first of the Spartakiade elimina- gate of the National Student League | refusal of the U. S. Congress restau- | new re: for the Saturday edition | at a meeting of the section member- | . ifree, ceasing to hamper the boxer.| tions will take place tonight at the together with four member of the |rant to serve Negroes is not an iso-|of the “Daily.” | ship Tuesday night at 241 Stone ave.| Means Mass Misery emotional seething stops its}Red Sparks A. C. it was an- e contained | Anti-Imperialist League. |lated case of discrimination as De| The circulation campaign, for which! Great enthusiasm for the Datly 2 ae |tryanny over the attitude. nounced today. In protest to his arrest and im-| Priest pretends, but reflects a syste-|there is already a real enthusiasm | Worker was expressed at this mee! eiobec coe names Further, the particl finding of The events for Friday and Sat- sm were|Prisonment, the Na Student | matic policy on the part of the U. S. | amor 1 ere, will gain addi-| ing, which was attended by over 300. (Continued from Page 1) a boy is seen in the rapid improve- | urday will include Table Tennis ttended the | League sent the following telegram | Goverr ment, the National Council 1 momentum at the celebration; A member of Unit No. 1 stated that oe ment following a victory in a first | Tournaments, the finals of which to President Roosevelt and Mendi-| of the League of Struggle for Negro| of the ry of the Daily | after he had overcome his first tim- | $2,000,000,000 “stabilization fund, a fight, causing inhibitions to fall | are scheduled for the Manhattan President of Cuba: “Walter| Rights, in a statement signed by | Work lace here Friday, |idity to canvass workers’ homes for|poyerful weapon for sharpening the| jike shackles from his mental National Student League del- | Richard B. Moore, Executive Secre- Feb. 2, 8 arp, at Girard|the Daily Worker he succeeded in | fight for markets between the United Lyceum, Saturday, where the Red pn fee mechanism. And, on the other | Sparks will nold ‘their anniversary the toilin: to Cuban tudent Congress | tary, calls upon Negro and white | Manor Hall. 911 W. Girard Ave. The| gaining numerous new readers for | States an Great Britain, was! hand, have you not seen the sad ball, fie freed imprisoned in Cuba. We demand | workers and their organizations to | hundr of wo! who will gather | the “Daily” through persistent house | ignored, except for one oblique Te-| case of the chamipon turning A call has been made for those i ‘ his immediate release.” protest this infamous act of discrimi-|at the c on will be called| to house canvassing. jmark by Glass. He asserted that in-} chump? Joe Dundee is one. Their | who have not entered and wish to LOS A Cal—Over 2,000 ESM RATS Se nation. The statement upon to participate actively in put= | Unit No. 4 reported that it Js sell- | stead of “stabilizing” currenc. oa fear, the loss of the title, rivets the | do so at the Red Spark headquar- workers jammed the Trinity Audi- Ry “This is a case of discrimination by | i e over the] ing 25 copies of the “Daily” every|the administration euphemistically| attention and befogs thelr attitude | ters, 64 Second Avenue before 8:30 EES. i Gormiemorate the death of F res Wn re S |the government itself, whic openly | , editor of the day compered with only three and | promises, the bill will cause “fr: | so that effectiveness is reduced to |» m, The entree fee has been an- Lenin and to celebrate the achieve- carries through a. polic gim-Crow- | >’ be the main five three months ago. House to|and retaliation all over the world.”| zero, ments of the workers’ and farmers’ ‘+ + th 13 att cote 8 Feb. 3, activists from | crease. This Unit holds house par-|from the scheme to devalue the dol-| MAR of consequences is built about | ment under “the banner of of Thousands be isuinon Nee ieee Led E trade uni ties for new readers, some of whom | lar at 50 to 60 percent of its normal|I 9 distaste for either physical or depicting the life and freedom and equal'ty. This case is and have joined the Communist Party | value was emphasized only indirectly, | mental hazard, or both. Many are of the (Continued from Page 1) ism in all its departmcuts and flaunts j house canvassine brousht this in- 1 hold a special meeting to| and the League of Struggle for Negro! since the onl The big wage cut that will result ones who touched this nounced as being 25 cents for men and 15 cents for women, " , 7 re- saat 2 i reluctant to mess their Appolloesque d U age hg gp ea ira — Ou esi ieee pa peeriavay ae oe plans for putting the Daily | Rights. j : | Subject were opponents whose real| faces, many want no cauliflowers, ribs Tra e nicon main speaker was James Branch,| Workers in Winnebago County, and) the government itself in tha bac eg r circulation campaign on a) Further discussions on the circula- object in attacking the program is|cmashed, noses hashed, etc. Some Dir director of the C. P. District School | this will be followed by a mass dem-|\ RA of tis “NSS Deel= basis hitherto unequalled in| tion drive will take place in the Units. | to protect banks and to insure busi-| fear the knockout punch. And some ectory aaa in Californis. onstration on Feb. 5, demanding that | Scores Hypocritical Gesture By previous local drives. Hathaway will | Broad forces will be mobilized in all ness men’s confidence. | just recoil at the thought of losing a . * the city endorse the Workers Unem- ie , NDe Prisst esture By also address this meeting. | workers’ organizations to put the cir- | More Inflation bout. The conditioning of any of |] BUILDING Lat Ol eu WORKERS MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. — Seven | Ployment Insurance Bill. “On the bekiy of this fundamental | oe nae ciive aver te tap. | In fact, the Administration spokes- ain Caen ea a enners 100 Broadway, New York Oity Gee Wa, Schneiderman snd Jack Orisata Pocritical is the appeal of De Priest, arguments for the bill—theirs was/the whole sport. Carson were the main speakers. Three hundred and fifty workers attended 2 mass meeting in St. Paul while 70 Lenin memorial meetings were held in the Minnesota district. GLEN COVE, L. L, Jan. 24—One hundred and ten enthusiastic workers NEW ORLEANS. — One hundred and twenty Negro and 80 white work- ers attended the conference here, | called by the Unemployed Council | and the Relief Workers Protective | Union, and two Negro and two white | delegates were elected to the National | Convention Against Unemployment | who is an outspoken agent of U, S. imperialism and of the reformist N. A.A.C.P, hadership, to the Negro masses to have faith in the govern-| ment, in the constitution and to look | to the institutions of the government for redress of their grievances. Such an appeal is equivalent to an appeal against oppression to the main in-| House Passes Navy) Bill Unanimously, (Continued from Page 1) | Arrest 28inStrike at Kirehik Shoe Shop Cops Terrorize Worker: |forward as a scheme. the role of meeting the attacks and letting it go at that. For that mat- ter, Republican as well as Demo- cratic kingpins agree that the votes for enactment are already insured. It was Senator Tom Connally of | Texes who boldly put the program “safe” inflationary That fearful attitude, once built into the neryous system, would brand him “yellow,” which term is a catch- word of the ignorant, whose lack of fistie psychology is thus shown. It is unquestionable in my mind that the man who has so conditioned himself that he does no longer attach 4 West 18th Street, New York City ‘Chelsea 38-0505 FURNITURE WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION 813 Broadway, New York City Gi 5-8956 METAL WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION ‘85 East 19th Street, New York City Gramercy 17-7842 NEEDLE TRADES WORKERS attended the first Lenin memorial| to be held in Washington, D. C,, Feb. |° patrment expenses for the 1935 fiscal! Fighting Wage Cut te reat tke G, “ssoue went | 8% emotional aspect to the sport andj| INDUSTRIAL UNO meeting ever held in this city, the|3, 4 and 5. Ba Ot Nesto oppression—the U.| year, aside from the several special veanitaat tis dap ths ereatdedt ate Lackawanna 4 home of J. P. Morgan. ee building provrams, “will be about) new yorK.—Twenty-eight strik-|Tounced his cold oronram, stocks and Charles McGlaughlin, the local can- Police Raid C.W.A. Meet $442,000.000,” he stated. When neces-| nounced his gold program, si ors and t ers W ” te & , LECTURES, didate for Mayor on the Communist! GARFIELD, N. J.—Detectives en-| 1 |Sary the difference will be made itp | vasanlag Chee Mite oe ee ain ae ne mee sag ed UNION Raeritas " of A ticket in the recent election, made a| tered the home of a C.W.A. worker | n Yaci @ mers by the usual Navy Deficiency Bill. {tacked a nicket line of strikers at - ¢ measure proposed by the Presi- | at the presents stirring appeal for the unity of all/ here in which a meeting ws being : : : | workers in the fight against the cuts| wages paid the C.| held for the purpose of organizing a | Defy Injunction Chairman Carl Vinson (Democrat, | Ga.) of the House Naval Affairs C-m- the Kirchik and Beckerman shoe shop in Brooklyn, Tuesday. The ar- dent.” War Preparations NEW ESTONIAN “Oscar Sapp,” humorous, one-act play and other Entertainment i i = ra ae aga C.W.A. workers union, and ordered mittee announced early before the| rested workers were held in jail over- The debate disclosed sharp differ- WORKERS’ HOME GC ABA A Hi y. A. rkes At this ng workers ve or ” | 55 ropri rt ys a isclosed shary 3 r er arrest. s ; ‘ontinued fr ; a z “i i a + . nist Par the workers, under the leadership of | Se Rete) |tee for right of way in a day or two| they were released. There were seven | iMflationary effect of the bill will New York City SUNDAY, JAN, 28th, at 7 p. m, 600 Hotel Workers Strike at Waldorf (Continued on Page 2) out leaving it to Boomer and Osca: feating the growing power of th the Unemployed Council, are conti- nuing organizing the C.W.A. Workers Union, Rochester Workers Demonstrate ROCHESTER, N. ¥.—Rochester and Monroe County C. W. A. and relief workers have arranged for a mass demonstration on Feb. 5, for the de- mand that the city officially endorse he Workers Unempioyment Insur- ere last night at 546 So. Los Angeles St., by the Construction Workers In- | —— | | the miners do not report for work in | | 48 hours. | A pe-manent injunction was given to the Hudson Coal Co., the attorney | | of the coal company and the attor-| neys for the United Anthracite; | Miners of Pennsylvania agreeing to| the injunction being issued. So we have the attorneys for the Maloney | union, hand in hand with the attor-| these injunctions and that is by mass | Violation and to kick out of the union to bring his $475,000,000 special ship- building program before the House for a vote. With the unqualified in- dorsement of Roosevelt, the Vinson | five-year construction bill provides for a navy “built to parity” under the 1930 London Naval Treaty—in other words, “a navy second to none.” Un- der the terms of the Vinson proposal Roosevelt would be authorized to be- gin construction of destroyers, air- tion of the committee of 18 behind it, women among the jailed workers. ‘The two bystanders were held on | third degree assault charges. | The strike at the Kirchik Becker- man shop was called when the bosses broke their agreement with the In- dustrial Union, now the United Shoe and Leather Workers Union, and de- clared a wage cut of 25 per cent. Cc. W. A. program by the Roosevelt stop. DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY }) 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet. Pitkin and Sutter Aves., Brooklyn PHONE: DICKENS 2-3012 Office Hours: 8-10 AM., 1-8, 6-8 P.M. RESTAURANT and BEER GARDEN DOWNTOWN Tompkins Square 6-9132 Caucasian Restaurant “KAVKAZ” Beaty Hall, 615 Propect Avenue ANNIVERSARY Daily Worker 5 neys of the coal company, against a nape ‘ Engineers To Meet Tonight ee ccc eupport for| 8802 Bill. |the miners. As long as such collab | CTAft ee, pense Sak Thousands of engineers and archi-| | — HARRY STOLPER | Russian and Oriental Kitchen < EBRAT +4 the strike has spread among the hotel eae joration goes on with the enemies of | 304 #un othe eattar ee ie ; deem |tects, employed on C.W.A. jobs, who] ees | Rib eee odie lesson EL ION workers everywhere who see in this) LOS Angeles C.W.A. Workers Organize | the workers, we can expect the bosses | ©” 9S Soon thereafter as he may lhave already been handed wage cuts, | 1s 932 East 1th Street New York City 3 K first big strike since 1922, the hope of LOS ANGELES, Calif.—A mass| to win in thelr courts, ireion ha ine aioe, Treaty eX | cin hold a mass meeting to forestall | - — Philadelphia: building a strong union and of de-|™eeting of C.W.A. workers was held| There is only one way to deal with | With the unanimous recommenda-|the announced abandonment of the Co On Feb, 2 at Girard Manor Hall, 911 W. Girard Ave. Good program ’ ‘ | ittee eiekenie. Hoge nein ine 73 Chrystie Street “ethe Guild | Dae vase ater Sevent | dustrial Union, for the purpose of or-| these leeches who call themselves | as ttle oF a dtnioully inating der the ‘Federation of Avehitecs, OOF ae cere ee detg = Mg 5 ° . 5 = W.R.A. hearings with the ayowed aim|anizing ©.W.A. workers. Regular | WETS, | pach we fd bosses’ | the steel corperations their buleine |=nginers, Chemists and Technicians, bie eile Ab eecocat raed Cafeteria and Bar Pittsburgh, Pa. iS aking money | . et e eae of “protecting its members against) the trade unions.” It is rumored that the Guild received $25,000 from the American Hotel Association to keep the hotel workers under the owners control. At present it has 4,000 mem- bers in 9 different fraternal organi- zations, the majority of whom are| rank and file workers. | The first strikebreaking move was| mass meetings will be held every Wednesday night. C.W.A. Workers Force Reinstatement MANHATTAN BEAOH, Calif. —C.} W.A. workers on the 19th St. and East Railroad Drive C. W.A. project forced the reinstatement of three workers who were fired Saturday for their organizational acti s in be- out of the miners’ misery, | U.M.W.A. Members Strike | | The Harry E. Colliery and Maderia, | | Which the U.M.W.A. oficials ordered | back to work, refused to obey and voted to continue the strike. While | the press reports and the coal com- | Panies state that the working forces are normal, they say that the reason dividends and the jingoes their navy “second to none.” In the ¥crning the House Naval Affairs Uvdhmittee was told by Ad- miral Emery 8. Land, Chief of the Bureau of Construction and Repair, that despite the 15 per cent cut in wages and the unpaid furlough in operation at the navy yards, the orig- will be held at the Manhatten In- dustrial High School, 22nd St. and Lexington Ave, tonight at 8 p. m. LEFTY WING GROUP TO MEET TODAY A meeting of the left wing group of local 22 LL.G.W.U. will be held tonight, All members must attend. seta TS BAZAAR COMMITTEE TO MEET WILLIAM BELL orrictst. Optometrist °° ™"™ ow. 0. 166 EAST 14TH STREET Near Fourth Ave. N. ¥. C. 809 BROADWAY Between 11th and 12th Streets %” SANDWICH SOL'S LUNCH On Feb, 3 at Russian Hall, 1508 Sera St. S.S, Interesting program, Boston, Mass. On Feb. 10 at Dudley St, Opera House, 113 Dudley St., Roxbury. Clarence Hathaway, Editor Daily Worker, main speaker. Varied program, including Russian Work- °-| for the collieries not working is due| inal Vinson bill of $380,000,000 was 2 j ;. ins 3 8297 101 University Place eys Chorus. Presenting of Daily Get Wiens eo half of the Relief Workers Protective 9 tack of onder . jacked up 25 per cent to “provide for| night at ite 'E. lit st nom ae | a ee iste Wesaad- a potas Worker Banner to Bosten District waiters instructing them to report for | C™!°™- pe lap: This is an old story that is reported | the increase of costs under the Na- anes a Telephone Tompkins Square 6-9780-9181 Adm, 25c, dc immediately, ss , |4n every strike to demoralize the| tional Recovery Act,” most of which HUNGER HEARING IN HEIGHTS Dr. E. KICREL Se ee EWicket lines ate being maintained Cut Kenosha ©.W.A. Quota Again | strikers, The State Troopers are | SUpposedly goes for increased wages.! workers of Crown Heights sections will = i? ‘at the Waldorf entrances and also at| _ the Vatel Club, one of the Guild af-! _ iiliaates, to prevent any scabs from) being sent to take the places of the - workers in the Waldorf kitchen. _ _ The Food Workers’ Industrial Union dn a leaflet ot the strikers last night | greeted the splendid struggle of the} hotel: workers of the Waldorf and - pledged full support for winning union conditions. The union calls on the Amal- gamated to spread the strike to other departments of the hotel, the laundry KENOSHA, Wisc.—For the second ime the C.W.A, quota here has been cut following orders from Washing- ton. On Jan. 11, the quota was cut from 3,000 to 2,619, and the most. recent cut has reduced this to 1,659. Prior to the C.W.A., 40 per cent of the population of this industrial city was on direct relief, according to statements of City Manager, H. ©. Laughlin, Illinois C.W.A. Workers Organize COLLINSVILLE, Ill.—About 250 0. beating up innocent bystanders, as | Was the case of Garawitz of Ply- mouth beaten and slusged by State | Police and sent to hospital. The | Burgess of Larksville complains that | while the collieries there haye been| closed down for two years State Troopers are parading the streets and intimidating and checking the idle miners. Maloney threatens to enter suit in the civil courts for damages sus- teined by any member of his union who might receive unwarranted in- Little Employment Admiral Land revived the fiction that “84 per cent of the present $238,- 000,000 program, directly or indirevtly, goes to labor.” When this manifest blurb was first used by Secretary Har- old Ickes in his early P.W.A. bally- hoo, even high administration Bureax of Labor Statistics officials laughed. The latest figures of this bureau, the only ones they have on structural steel construction, shows that only about 36 per cent goes to labor. Land revealed that the total of men held an open hunger hearing at 1777 At- | lantlc Avenue, All workers living in the! Crown Heights section are urged to attend. ! Cres tak JOE HILL BRANCH LL.D. MEETS NEW YORK.—The Joe Hill Branch of the Midtown Section of the International La- bor Defense will hold its membership mect- ing tonight, 7:30, at the Jewish Workers University, 108 E. 14th St. PATRONIZE SEVERN’S CAFETERIA Dentist 150 East 93rd Street, New York City Sor. Lexington Ave. Tel. ATwater 9-883. ‘ours: from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Sun. 9 to 1 Member Workmen's Sick and Death Benefit Fund MEET YOUR COMRADES AT THE Cooperative Dining Club ALLERTON AVENUE Cor. Bronx Park East FRIDAY NIGHT, JAN. 26th MASS MEETING —Well Known Speakers— ‘| CA. HATHAWAY, Editor | D: FIRST NATIONAL CONVENTION Friends of the Soviet Union JANUARY 26th, 27th, 28th, 1934 SATURDAY, JAN. 27th CONCERT and DANCE BOBBIE LEWIS and , chambermaids, engineers, etc.) W.A. workers from Madison County, juries. This, of course, ig like going|employed—those retained and new Profetarian Price | ally Worker. TONY KRABER It calls for a united front in the} met here on Jan. 19 and drew ae hell to try the devil. Does Ma-|men taken on—under the $238,000,000|] _@th Avenue at 30th St. ||] tee Feoas ‘| DR. REUBEN YOUNG ‘From. Broads Hit, « strike and unity with the rank and| plans for organizing a rank and file|loney think that any miner ean col- | building prozram is only 30,000 work-|| Best Food atWorkers Prices Negro Intellectual ghegueehs gales Renae! file in the fraternal organizations af- | C,W.A. workers union. Delegates rep-|lect damages from a State Trooper,|ers, a figure ludicrous'y under the s (Brooklyn) CORLISS LAMONT White” will appear after theatre fillated with the Hotel Guild to help| resented C.W.A. workers in Newport,|in_the boss-controlled courts? employment claims of the propo- ee Author of “Russia Day by Day” | hours, 11:30 sharp. " spread the strike. It especially urges| Venice, Madison, Granite City, Glen| The strike of the Anthracite Min-| nents of Roosevelt's executive. order. i WORKERS-~-EAT AT THE 0. G. CRAWFORD the Amalgamated to join the United| Carbon, Maryville, Troy, and Collins- °S in its tenth day remains the same,|“Tt’s not so much re-employment as|]| A Sacrifice Sale of Dasit Catetert ‘sociatist Party of Erie Pa., ete. |VERNON ANDRADE’s Orchestra Front conference established recently | yi1¢, the number of miners on strike being|it is retaining those already em- arkway Caleterta Hot music, until ? hours, at the initiative of the Industrial about 20,000. There is a deal de-| ployed,” Land admitted. 1638 PITKIN AVENUE HERBERT GOLD) Best Union to prepare for a general strike im all hotels for the purpose of or- ganizing the workers. The Union will mobilize its mem- bers for picket duty and for spread- crs’ Industrial Union is calling a mass meeting tonight at Bryant Hall, 6th Avenue and 42nd St., at {8:30 p, m. to take up the question | Father Curran, Maloney states that | Of unity and the necessary meas- | there will be some good news by Fri- ing the strike to assure a real victory.| ures to be taken for winning the |day, but what it is he fails to dis-|plane construction, Vinson an- 125th. EET, big bee ae coe — ie New Star Casino. 107th St. and Pi kk | Hotel and Restaurant Work- | strike. ' close, ‘ ‘nounced shed poesia eereestetlen s i! bernie “ < . t af manding that the strike will be ter- |minated by the sending in of an- |other Commission as proposed by Tomorrow morning the committee will hear Rear Admiral Ernest J. King, Chief of the Bureau of Aero- nautics, describe the Nevy Depart- OSKI CLOTHES Near Hopkinson Ave. Brooklyn, N. ¥. Willlamsburgh Comrades Welcome De Luxe Cafeteria ment’s new bill for additional air- Ready Made and Made to Order Acting, Natl Secy, F. 'S. U. President, Full Fashioned Hosiery Workers Union. Negro band in Harlem. Repertoire of New Soviet Songs in Native Costume bi OA AROE