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®age Two Fur Work N.R.A. to Halt A.F.L. Contract With Bosses re Forced Registration Is to Cease; No Lockouts; Won By Militancy WASHINGTON, D. C., Feb. Fur manufacturers were ordered halt all pending negotiations agreement with the A. F. of vere told that agreement oncluded would not be con: x force, in a temporary decision ren- dered by the National Labor Board ast night. The Board has held ng the past week on Union’s demands for a refer © determine the fur workers’ \ dict on the union they ch The demands grow out of renewal of war ag the trial Union by A. of L. anc fur bosses involving lock-outs and terror against the fur workers ompel them to join the A 1 The National Labor Boa deci- sion concedes the Industrial Union's iemands that all workers locked out for refusal to join the A. F. of L. shall be reinstated in their shops, that no further lock-outs shall lared against the workers and forced registration of fur cease immediately. The decision on the referendum aas been withheld by the Board. Following the announcement of ling, the Fur Trimming Man- cturers Association consented to de by the decision but the A. F. L, Joint Council and th soci~ ated Fur Manufacturers refused to state what their action would be. Bosses, A. F. of L. Oppose Voie ¥ rday’s hearings before the Board, oth iated Manufacturers n and the A. F. of L. Joint Cor the referendum through their re: e dec they uld defy the Board to force them to carry through its decision. Dretel, a fur boss caused con- siderable merriment when he de- clared during the hearings that the Industrial Union is “no good for the employer” but it does rep- resent the interests of the work- ers, It is the only union you can’t buy and I have bought the other,” he said. Yesterday at the Rand School a small group of 150 met to “cele- ” the A. F. of L. settlement h the fur bosses. The meeting was gloomy and pi isti mosphere and soon di were not informed of the d mn. Workers Demonstrate Against AFL While the hearings were in in Washington, 5,000 workers demon- strated in the fur market Wednesday against the intimidation and terror- ism of the fur bosses and the A. F. an e A resolution adopted ir meeting demanding that th . and the police stop their ai racketeering Joint Coun rded to Washington. An- solution was forwarded to the Board in the name of 900 fur shop chairmen calling for the annul- ment of all agreements made by the fur bosses with the A. F. of L. The resolution warned that strikes would be called whenever the workers were forcibly made to register with the A. F. of L. The victory for the Industrial Union which the decision represents ahs been won by the organized strength and power and the militant mass action of the fur workers with the guidance of the courageous and fighting Communist leaders of the Industrial Union. The fur workers ferendum is won to settle finally and certainly that the Industrial Uni ly union representing the By Independent Union NEW YORK—The carpeniers of the Greenbaum Woodworking Com- pany went out on strike Wednesday against a lock-out and maneuvers of the boss to break away from the union, and destroy their standard of living. The workers are striking under the leadership of the Independent! Carpenters Union. All carpenters are urged to join the picket line, at 138 East 25th St., New York City. City Events SHIRT IRONERS TO MEET Ail shirt ironere who are working in hand laundries dealing with the Quick Service, Central or Pearl White laundries are called to a. specia! ing tonight at 7 p.m. at 148 E. 08rd GERMAN PROFESSOR TO SPEAK Prof. Alfons Goldschmidt, formerly Dean of the School of Economics and Journalism ot Lepisig University, will speak on “Can Hitler Last?” at the American Youth Club, 407 Rockaway Ave., Brooklyn, tonight Ne ear ac % RELIEF WORKERS LEAGUE MEETINGS TONIGHT ‘Three Relief Workers League Meetings will fake place throughout the city tonight at @ pm. In Dykers Park at Central Hall, 196 State St. In Harlem st 37 W. 115th St Jo the Bronx at 173 St. and 3rd Ave., Am- bassador all. TALK ON CHILD HEALTH Dr. John B. Schwedel will speak on “The of Your Child and the Conditions in the Schools” at 1532 Boston Road, to- night, 8:15 p.m. - ee, aa TALK ON RUSSIAN MINES W. Wood, Soviet Russia's chief consulting engineer, will speak on “Industrial Russia” tonight at 8:30 p.m. at the F.S..U, 1071 gen St. TEACHERS MASS MEETING TONIGET A mass meeting to demand better condi- tions for teachers and students will take Place tonight st Stuyvesant High School, Tirst Ave. and 15th St., 8:30 p.m. Tobaceo Workers Industrial Union Shop EL TROPICO Manufecturers of 100% HAVANA CIGARS 320 7th Ave., Cor. 28th St. BOX TRADE A SPECIALTY | | Fur}; Force Auto Workers Press Attack Against NRA Open ShopAutoCode Representative of 17,000 Says Men Are Being = Given Run-Around Daily” Offers 25,000 Trial Subs at 50c. to fitract New Readers er By MARGUERITE YOUNG (Daily Worker Washington Bureau) WASHINGTON, D. C., Feb. i—The Roosevelt administration is coldly ignoring @ steady bombardment of labor demands for a hearing on the NEW ing the pres- |/ 18 anki readers, the || N-R.A. open shop automobile code Dailv ets a trial sub- || Which expired last month and is due ath of the || to be renewed soon. are getting a regular run- Even a personal visit to ton has gained nothing de- fir Maurice Sugar asserted to- day. Sugar, representng the Auto- mobile Workers, the Mechanics Edu- cational Society and A. F. of L. tool and dye workers’ unions in the De- troit and Pontiac area, laid the de- mands before Leo Wolman, Chair- man of the Labor Advisory Board. Resent Double-Cross 17,000 union members in- d. s been d to the districts, s offer @ splendid approach: worker, “The ne revolutionary 4 D movement, readers of the “Daily” || Volved bitterly resent the way in are urged to approach their || Which we are being double-crossed by the Administration,” Sugar added. “We and other automobile workers for weeks have been piling in de- mands for a hearing on the vicious anti-labor provisions of the Auto- mobile Code. We have been com- pletely ignored. “And there is a curious circum- friends and fellow workers to ask them to take one of these trial subscriptions. ‘Shoe We kers Vote emblem. Here’s our suggestion. An association of capitalist newspapers is seeking an N.R.A. Administrator General Hugi §S. Johnson suddenly announced that it didn’t make any difference to him| whether the notorious “merit clause’} was retained in the code; it matters} a great deal to us. And President Roosevelt recently said that it would not go into any more codes.” Contains Joker Clause At Elections Today _Stratostat B (Special to the Daily Worker) United Shoe Union Urges Ail Workers to Answer Boss-AFL Terror NEW YORK-—Shoe workers par- pr gives the employers the right to hire | C240) i Commander Prokofiev of the strato- | 1 hours jay and night} | ee a ee ese ae mieht| stat “USSR.” left here for the place | extra pay for overtime of the accident to conduct an inves- erday to determine wv hoe workers choose to Jom. “ 1 a " tigation into the baloon disaster. ; I told Wolman thst his and the| ts The N.R other adm ietetlOn eerie ie] “Although the investigating commis- ballots in a havior is sowing the seeds of an-| Sion has not yet reported, it is fairly ton where other great strike,” Susser said, “He| certain to say that the wreck of the S: ass' me th we could hav stratostat was due to the unusually pene eae Tae cous ie strong air currents from Moscow to- mally extended; which, of course, is| Ward the southeast. At the great not satisfactory. Then he said he|helght attained by the Soviet aero- would see Johnson and try to ar-|auts, the stratostat struck excep- range for a hearing. But now I am/| tionally difficult atmospheric condi- manner in which the died, having experi- enced the “democratic” method of stolen ballots 4 raudulent voting practised in government elections. alloon Disaster, | A radio message received 15 kilo- | Lewis-Boylan machine, to sell out MOSCOW, Feb. 1 (By Radio).—An | meters from Gomel, White Russia, by, {he Tank and file and also by the authoritative commission, headed by | Nekluev, an amateur radio operator, ‘i » & se,” which| the famous scientist, Professor Mol-| deserves much attention. According | Fees Se anes Sawa ent of the scientific| to his statement he received the | i | ion which checked the seal- | following message on his apparatus | Union are employed,” side by side 3 | commiss! » the| 29d fire at will, the auto code con=} i fi byes! Aa zs ann | Wits > “new” conciliation board, tains a i 5 whi g equipment of the -stratostat}at the wave-length of 220—250 i hi Ly gst bay ciate under. whieh S001 Seon rie tiin” before launching, and | meters: | both bonrds to have the same “um- “Attention, stratostat speaking. | Inform operator Sirivus about this. Struck zone of great humidity. We're covered with ice. Situation hopeless, covercd with ice. Falling down, Two of my comrades are in | serious condition, I’m finish- | ing...” | This information, like « number of | j others, still require attentive investi-| less by proposing to put all griey- gation. garding the reasons for the wreck | &re expected when the commission | More exact information re- | | tion at point shall be referred, to the In N RA Referendum RAGE RE Pe U ‘S.S.R. Scientists Investigate | present umpire, James Gorman, whose | decision shall be final and binding.” d Shoe and Leather) ned a call today} kers in ten Board! scheduled to cast to all former st of Tr and an jand terror against the Union by a {100 per cent vote for the United | Shoe and Leather Workers’ Union. | facturer: The shops called to take part in today’s election are the I. Miller, Premier Delman, Cornell Unity, |Seymour Troy, Palter De Lisa, La Valle and La Pr All for- vhether now employed | unemployed should registe at the polling) places in the vi of the shops} from 1 to 7 p.m. | Reports have come in that work- ers in these shops are being threat- | ened i er intimidation to force them to} te against the United Shoe Union| t the shoe kers of I. Miller and| | other shops are determined to record an overwhelming vote for the only real rank and file controlled union among the shoe workers and to re- ject th ab Boot and Shoe Union.} The ited Shoe and Leather Work ers Union calls the workers to po: shop and Boot and Shoe scab agents at the polls, _, “Shoe workers, use this opportun-| ity to aga: the racketeering | Boot and Shoe Union, which means more the verdict of your heroic strike. | Vote for the United Shoe Leather Workers’ Union,” the union! statement declares. | hearing before the } Board, the joker clause came into a discussion and even Gerard Swope of the Ger to me in amazement and envy and exclaimed, ‘how did the auto manu- completion. informed that they will have to let | tions. me know later. EOE “When we were here on a strike ational Labor eral Electric Company turned get by with that?’” (Continued from Page 1) | | ing, big-bosomed daughters of the | manding. “ HL | American Revolution; with dismissals, lock outs and) o¢ Petriotic Societies; the United| unawares in their treachery, try to States | jand “other patriotic organi the Coalition | ciation; | izations. propaganda program, Naval Reserve As: This war the Reserve Officers Association an- nounced today, “is rapidly nearing The period selected for this observance . . . is particularly | significant in that it is inaugurated | | on the birthday of the savior of the| : union, Abraham Lincoln, and term e these threats in the presence| nates on the birthday of the founder do not propose to rest until a re-| Of the Regional Labor Board officials| of the union, George Washington. Whose birthday will be selected for | the leading commit | the declaration of war was not an-| that no unity exists. nounced. | Pershing is Pleased | In addition, General John J.| ery for you. Make this day| Pershing, who manages to get along| United strike action. on $22,500 a year while thousands} and| of World war veterans starve, has| expelled from the Communist Party given his blessing to the “week.” Pershing yesterday wrote Col. Kem- per Williams, National President of | Repudiate Official Sell Out Contrac’ War Dept. Planning Preparedness Week | finishes its work. | N. Y. Hotel Strikers Open Fight Against NRACompanyUnion \ttack On Workers: (Continued from Page 1) (Continued from Page 1) | | tract gives the officials the right to! tatives resigned from the company- collect dues, but provides no im~| ynion leadership and soon Watson provement in theh long hours and} was discharged. miserable wages for the workers. In| Meanwhile an A. F. of L. local the strike halls of the Amalgamated] had been organized with Watson as sentiment against the contract has} president. He complained to the spread like wildfire. “Throw it out,”| National Labor Board, and they “Burn it up,” the strikers are de-| turned it over to the Regional Labor | Board. That Board held a hearing | and announced, “we have decided to hold an election,” because the com- pany union was “a violation of the law.” Watson's discharge also was held to be a “violation of the law,” but the Board merely “requested” the company to reinstate him. It didn’t do it. And, before the election deci-| | Sion was executed, the company union | proceeded to hold an election — not) to determine collective bargaining representatives or the union to which the workers wanted to belong, but gamated leaders w xposed. Within | to determine which set of rules they e, it was clear) would adopt. In this election the Only among} Regional Compliance Board acted as the rank and file poe ee a nt supervisor, ing together on the picket line is! «phe electi vs 7 tl ie there a sincere desire for unity and | ployer eee bests ie and the Muskegon Compliance Board, | Tae authority,” Maurice Sugar, | lawyer b secks to squimm out of any respon-| Board here today. It was helt te sibility for the strike is revealed in| said, “under such circumstances as a ‘statement by him in his sheet,! t> shock even those who are com- The officials, confused and caught evade responsibility for the agree- ment. “It was drawn up by the Jaw department without the sanc-| tion of the officials,” said one. Thej law committee emphatically declared | that they did it with the approval) of the officials. A motion was made to draw up a new contract. The meeting ended in| an uproar as the treachery and be- trayal of the workers by the Amal- That ‘the Trotskyite Jim Cannon, | the R. O. A. that “the wisdom of| declaring that he is not a “special) Congress in providing funds for a| Strike organizer” but participating in navy ‘second to none’ establishes one | 22 “advisory capacity” in the Strike. | Bek of our defense forces on a} The ¥esponsibility for the strike, says | Social Insurance Cannon, rests with the Union offi- paratively immune to shock by il- Jegal acts on the part of employers, The election was held in the plant. Policemen were in attendance, Armed Bill Introduced in Congress Friday. (Continued from Page 1) which proposes cash cost of the gov payment at the nment and the em- | Dloyers to every worker unemployed | through no fault of his own for the! full period of unemployment. | It would supply a universal guar: | antee against insecurity from unem: | Ployment, sickness, maternity, acci- | notorious proper and satisfactory basis. The| Army should likewise be of sufficient | strength and properly equipped to} Permit its efficient employment . . .| I hope that adequate National de- fense in all its phases constitutes our | best guarantee of peace.” In 1917 the Imperialistic character | of the World War was hidden under | such misleading slogans as the now| “make the World Safe for) Democracy.” Today, however, the | | Imperialists are attempting to con-| fairs Committee, who just steered! company union legal, not because ince the workers that their in-| terests coincide with such imperial-| istic worshippers of Abraham Lincoln | | again looked to the 3 Presse guards surrounded the plant. r= cials. It is his “advice” however! men were exceedingly. active, ba which resulted in the treacherous | rounding up employes and getting betrayal contract offered the hotel them to vote. Employes were sought bosses, out by Company representatives at | The officials of the Amalgamated) ; y R.A. to settie| {heir homes and brought down to the strike yesterday while the strik-| ‘°° : ‘ ers were actively seeking to win their) Yet. when the Detroit Labor Board strike through mass picketing and{W@S asked to intervene, it refused.| « “In the light of the facts,” Sugar — | asked, “how can one avoid the con- Af-| clusion that the Board found the! spreading the strike. Chairman of the House Naval his $570,000,000 London treaty navy | it was illegal, but because its illegal- present to the aviation and steel ity was so obvious that the board corporations through the House; and) simply could not hold otherwise?” i, | Message follows “| convention compl: dent, and old age. It proposes @] and Geor 7, "9 if aaa ‘ ‘ se eit. a | ge Washington as the| mrs. William L. Ochiltree, President eae of benefits in no case less than! Standard Oil Compan.y This is} of the American War Mothers, who $10 per week for each adult and $3} borne out by the subjects selected | will of the mental, a week for each depend: . for the “essay contests” — | Benjamin wired the m meeting | Navy and our trade Janes” and | that preparations for the Unem-| economic value of the soldier.” % | ployed Convention are now complete | wrod, “Our,” is the narcotic which “The purpose of National defense |=-but that funds are still needed.| Will be used in the attempt to keep | week,” according to National Head-| | He urged that contributions be sent | the workers from realizing the true| quarters of the Reserve Officers As- in care of him, at the Masonic Au-| Significance of the colossal war prep-! sociation, “is to disseminate useful} | ditoricm, Tenth and U. Streets, N. w.,| tations. information to the citizens of the | | Washington, D. ©, the text of his| National Radio Hook-up | United States cone’ ‘ional The coast-to-coast radio hook-up | defense.” the R. O. A. ement | “I am extremely happy to announce | will present McSwain; Carl Vinson, declared |that as a result of our persistent |, ———— | Struggle the workers’ Unemployment | {and Social Insurance Bill will be | | formally introduced in Congress Fri-| Paes morning stop. We must now | multiply our efforts and intensify our | | Struggles so that Congress shall be| forced to enact this measure imme- | diately stop. . preparations “The | self : heart-wringing, | °| mother-son part of the war propa-| ‘The | ganda addresses i Workers Cooperative Colony 2700-2800 BRONX PARK EAST (OPPOSITE BRONX PARK) has now REDUCED THE RENT ; | ON THE APARTMENTS AND SINGLE ROOMS H | for our great ed our only re-| maining obstacle is dangerous inade- quacy of finances stop Your contri- tions and those of other workers New York and country if rushed to Ma-| sonic Acditorlum Tenth and U. Streets Washington will also help overcome this obstacle and make} | Possible complete success in this} mobilization for further struggle | against hunger stop Forward in the | struggle which can and must be} brought to successful conclusion.” | CULTURAL ACTIVITIES Kindergarden; Masses for Adults and Children; Library; Gymnasium; Clubs and Other Privileges Take Advantage of the Opportunity. NO INVESTMENTS REQUIRED SEVERAL GOOD APARTMENTS & SINGLE ROOMS AVAILABLE 9 a.m. to 8 p.m.| 9 a.m, to 5 pam. 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Office open daily Friday & Saturday Sunday | Pinins Road. Stop at Allerton Avenus [Uexington Avenue train te ra | Station, Tel. Kstabrook 8-1400—1601 DANCE AND CONCERT Euel Lee Br. L.S.N.R., Saturday night at 1871 Fulton St Adm. 15 cents. } Yet the A. F. of L. officials’ con-| stituted five of the eleven members |= of this beard. Their presence there! as a minority is necessary to give! a@ “democratic” appearance to the) thing—which operates in the inter- est of the employers. But instead | of attacking this set-up, the N. R.. A. machinery itself, the local A. F. of L. union leadership protest, in effect, merely complained against a part of the machinery, ‘New Maloney ‘Plan’ Would Sell Out the Hard Coal Strike | Proposes Bosses’ Tool in|! Full Charge of All Grievances ‘WILKES-BARRE, Pa., Feb. 1—In & So-called “peace plan,” broadcasted over the radio, Thomas Maloney, dis- trict president of the Anthracite | Miners Union, took a further step toward selling out the present strike of the anthracite miners, Maloney has endangered the strike by refusal to defy injunctions and} organize 2 broad mass strike with mass picketing. He now proposes that a new conciliation board be set up, but with exactly the same “um-/ pire,” James Gorman, as the present conciliation board, recognized by the N. R. A. Gorman is “umpire” of the board which now consists of three U.M.W.A. officials, three coal opera- tors and Gorman, also tool of the coal operators. “Decision Binding” Maloney now agrees to place the fate of the miners in the hands of the coal operators. He said in his Proposal, that disputes should be “referred to a board of conciliation to consist of six persons, three of whom to be selected by the opera- tors, three to be elected by the An- thracite Miners of Pennsylvania, and in case of disagreement, the ques- Gives Up Demands to Gorman Maloney lays the basis by these proposals for a deal between himself and the U.M.W.A. officials of the proposal to allow the present “con- ciliation” board to continue to func- tion, “where the members of the old pire,” Gorman. Maloney promises to send the strikers back to work “within twenty four hours,” if these “peace” propo- sals are agreed to, He asks obolition | of the check off, no discrimination | and recognition of the Anthracite | Union in collieries where it exists, but makes these demands meaning-| ances in Gorman’s hands. i Maloney has weakened the strike) daily by refusal to organize the mass} forces of the miners, and by con-| tinuing to advocate compulsory ar- bitration by a governmental “con- clliation” board. Strike Stil Effective ‘The strike is still effective, but the! miners are seeing more clearly each | day, that Maloney wants to sell them out to arbitration. The unemployed miners especially see that Maloney and Cappellini will not carry on a struggle to get jobs and unemploy- ment insurance for the unemployed | miners. Maloney announced today | that the new union will be spread to the lower anthracite, and that a/ mass meeting will be held in Sham-| okin, Sunday, Feb. 4th. | Bight locals of the U. M. W. A. around Nanticoke have proposed that a District No. 1 Convention be called to elect a new District Presi- dent and that Maloney, Boylan and pence on ! "$I GERSON By TED ROBERTS = (Batting for Si Gerson) Mid-Winter Hash c ses defeat of the Davis Cup team by Great Britain, four matches, to one, in this summer's interzone final, was a bombshell to American tennis enthusiasts. The echoes of its explosion are pretty certain to ring loudly through the assembly hall when the delegates to the annual meeting of the United States Lawn Tennis Association get together this winter. A lot of tennis men, especially those from the West, are coming to the meeting timmy TAR ea EAEGET determined to find out if the| pix! i team’s failure to get into the ae big regi ee ee detected by Harvard players, challenge round against France this | Dillon who was a Guard and fast for year was caused by unwise methods a big man, had raced the length of of preparation. ae a a ie al gM i Suzanne Lenglen and other French | 808 the other end of the field soporte ‘oct tennte swore coolepikan ie two team mates pulled the ball from their criticsm of the training meth- under Dillon's sweater. Then they ods, that, they said, sent the Amer-| Kicked the goal after touchdown, jeans into the interzone finals un-|™8king the score 11, Harvard 0. able to play anything but their best | 12@ next day, a writer in the New game. The fact is that the Amer-| TS Sun called attention to the icans have been subjected to such fact that while there was nothing in severe training that one may describe the rules to prevent this trick, since it as senseless, Dillon had stood in front of John- haa to | 07 35 the ball was being shoved un- do with the preparation of the der the back of his jersey, the play playecs know walp den sail pe really constituted a forward pass— Davis Cup team was not up to par and the forward pass was illegal in in condition for the matches. Such | self, urging them to win. And in | Cambridge in 1903. those days, is the state of affairs of most of our sport activities. In an en- deavor to prepare sufficiently for a contest, the managers of partici- pants stop at nothing, having no regard for the capacity of a player in training. Players undergo un- told agony through the pressure of managers who are chiefly inter- ested in the finances of the activity and know nothing of the game it- that keen desire to win, there is always the danger of going to ex- tremes in the preparation for any contest. Overtraining, staleness, and loss of the fun of the game are the penalties, 2 Trick plays and quick thinking have won many @ game or competi- tion for their eriginators, and one of these tricky plays is a classic of the gridiron that has had the sport world laughing for almost thirty years. It has been told many times before, but it is worth telling again. It happened in @ game between the old Carlisle Indians and Harvard at Soldiers field, In those days it was something un- usual for a minor college team to beat one of the big colleges, or even to play them a close game, yet in this game the Indians were leading, 5—0, at the end of the first half, Jimmie Johnson, Indian quarterback | having booted over a field goal. A field goal then counted 5 instead of 3. At the start of the second half, Harvard kicked off to the five yard line, where Jimmie Johnson caught the bail. Instead of running with it, he stood still and waved for his team- mates to gather around him. The other Indians ran to him and formed a circle. Hidden from view of the Harvard players behind this another candidate's name be cn the ballot, that the ballot also contain the question, do you want @ separate | union in the anthracite. | aa RE | TALK ON THE “WAYS OUT” i CLEVELAND—-David Reisz will speak on the “Proposed Roads to Prosperity” st Painters Hall, 2090 Euclid Aze., Sunday, 1:45. | ANNA SCHULTZ IN CHICAGO | CHICAGO.—Anna Sehuitz, former secre- | tary of Ernst Torgler, will’ speak on Ger- many at the Chicago Workers School, Buck- | ingham Hell, 69 E, Van Buren St. Sun- dey, 8 p.m. | the ball under the back of the blanket of Indians, Johnson slipped jersey of Charlie Dillon. Then Johnson shouted, “Go!” The Indians raced up the field in a body, while the Harvard players idn't know which one to tackle since none of them knew who had been carrying the ball. The spec- tators saw the hump on Dillon’s (Classified) VERY GOOD room; all modern house; | reasonable; 203 W. 94th St. Apt. 6A. RICKOFF’S PHARMACY 16 Second Ave., cor, ith St. Preseriptions Filled by Registered Pharmacists DR YDOCK 4-7755 GERMAN WORKERS CLUB DOWNTOWN — 79 EAST 10th ST. Patronize Our Kitchen — Breakfast - Lunch - Dinner — —Proletarian Prices — . J. MORRIS, Inc. GENERAL FUNERAL DIRECTORS 206 SUTTER AYE. BROOKLYN Phone: Dickens $-1273—4—6 Might Phone: Dickens 6-533 Fer International Workers Order Optometrist and Optician 0 Se L378 ST.wIChOLAS AVE at 179% STAN 1690 LEXINGTON A. at 106th ST.NY. Unity Camp All workers to whom money is due from Unity Camp please get in touch with the office of the Co- operative by mail, 2800 Bronx Park East. Fe ® SPECIAL PROGRAM ® gg Soy CAMP NITGEDAIGET LINCOLN BIRTHDAY WEEK-END uary 9th to 12th Cars leave 10:30 A. M. Daily, from 2200 Bronx Park East—EStabrook #-1400 Reduced Week-end Fare the —— Allerton Avenue Comrades! The Modern Bakery || was first to settle Broad Strike |) and first to sign with the | FOOD WORKERS’ | INDUSTRIAL UNION || 961 ALLERTON AVE’ | If this was a forward pass, it ix the shortest one on record. Any ways, the score counted, but the rules committee forbade further use of the trick. These Indians should have used the same sense when those imperialists from Eu- rope came here and took their land away. Cae ee They gave a dinner several weeks ago for Babe Ruth and Heywood Broun was there. To him it was a tragic affair because “the Babe is celebrating his last year in baseball.” Of course,” he admits, “the King of Swat will not be driven to the bread lines, when he quits.” There is a job waiting for him in any fleld of en- deavor. “But,” bewails the cap jour- nalist,” Ruth is still young. It’s 2 shame that a man of his age should be marked as too senile for his pro- fession. This department also bows its head in silent tribute to the de- But we do so only becau it reminds us of the millions of work- ers who grow “Too old” but do not share the good furtune of having other jobs waiting for them. pSreaciaieeteed ales. hry een san SANs A Sacrifice Sale of OSKI CLOTHES Ready Made and Made to Order 35 E. 12th STREET, N. Y. C. CARL BRODSKY All Kinds Of INSURANCE 799 Broadway Noyce DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet, Pitkin and Sutter Aves, Brosktyn PRONE: DICKENS 2-301 Ofites Hours: 3-19 4.M., 3-2, 6.8 P.M. COHENS’S 317 ORCHARD STREET Ne, Delancey Street, New York City Wholesate Opticians MINED Bor, epraied fel. ORchard 4-4520 Optometrist Factory on Premises ICOR B | | | FRIDAY AT 8:30 P M. Artists of the Maxim Tonight, Tomorrow, Sunday—(Feb. 2, 3, 4) ENTERTAINMENT, DANCING EVERY NITE RESTAURANT and BUFFET BARGAINS ON ALL MERCHANDISE Program AZAAR SATURDAY, AT 8:30 P, M. BIRO-BIDJAN COSTUME Gorky Club in Soviet | Entertainment | SUNDAY At 2 P. M., Children Concert At 8 P. M., Workers Laboratory Theatre |] IRVING PLAZA-Irving Place & 15th Street TICKETS: Friday 25c, Saturday 50c and Sunday 25¢ Combination Ticket 75¢. BALL THE HARLEM LIBERATOR WISHES TO ANNOUNCE That the avalanche of requests for tickets to the Mid-Winter Frolic of The Harlem Liberator which is scheduled for next Saturday evening, February 3rd, has necessitated cancelling our contract with Dunbar Palace where the dance was | originally scheduled and hiring the Lido Pool Ballroom a H Jarger hall, and more sumptuous ballroom. Spend an Evening of Fun with Danny Logan & His Louisiana Stompers Georgette Hatvey Theatre Action John Bovingdon Taylor Gordon Saturday. Febuary Ord—Lido Ballroom 158 West 146th St. Admission 40¢