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Job Deleg ates: to Be Men are Terrorized Mass Defense for Thaelmann Aided by New Subs for ‘Daily’ At Mar. 4: "Cokeebkice Against C.W.A. Firing, oa Will Plan Struggles Against New Roosevelt Hunger Plan YORK—The U Councils and the Relief League, in statements urged every C.W.A. job, every unem- ployed group, workers in factories | and trade unions, and unorganized; workers in flop houses and neii junions piled thei Leaders of Militant : Trade Unions Hit = NRA. at Hearings, e 1) (Continue complaints before | compulsc agree, would be enforced by the court: ‘by Steel Trust, Says |Pat Cush of SMWIU} (Continued from Page 1) anization,” would | hhogtie the regime typi- fied by today’s Weirton decision, The new Wagner proposel would | set up & permanent Labor Boart composed of se (instead of ni ember © from the em- ployers and three representing “the | | public.” This board #uld enforce arbitration “if both sides | This compulsory arbitration | as at present) senting “labor DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, MARCH 2, 1934 Hear Clarence H« Hathaway on Austria at Irving Plaza Tonight! NEW YORK.—With Ernst Thael- nn, German Communist leader, in ger of his life, many American conscious workers are redoubling efforts to inerease the cireulation he Daily Worker @ means for powerful mass pressure for ase from the incendiary Nazis. H. R., a worker from Boston, Mass.,, | wired the Daily Worker yesterday to the effect that he will help in the | building of such & mass campaign and the si time celebrate the vic- tory of the international workingelass in forcing the release of Dimitroff, Taneff and Popoff from the Nazi tor- ture chambers by securing at least ten new subs fer the “Daily” within two weeks, The Boston worker challenges 2, subs, To readers who subseribe for a Polis district sent im 18 new Satur- day subs. Keep up the good work, comrades in Cleveland and-Minnea- polis distriets! Of 65 new daily subs received yes- terday Chicago sent in 9; Boston 8; Detroit, and Newark, 7 each; Pitts- burgh 6. Additional letters came in re ing the offer by the Daily W: of “Karl Mars Capital in Pletures,” illustrated by Hugo Gellert as a prize and premium to swb-getters and readers of the Daily Worker, This three-dollar book is offered free of charge to those securing five new yearly subs or ten new six-month who lived on the fourth floor with his son and daughter-in-law and 10 children, spread so rapidly threugh Mother, 3 Children Die in Brooklyn Tenement Fire Building Was Typical | Old Brooklyn Slum Tenement NEW YORK—The second big tenement house fire since Feb. 17 yesterday burned to death a working- lass mother and three children, trapped on the top story of a Brook- lyn tenement at 186 Carroll St. Flames, first noticed early in the morning by Matthew Stanzione, 67, Weinstone Speaks Talks in Philadelphia member of the Central Committee of the C. P. U.S. A, who just returned from Europe, of industrial cities in Paterson to- night at 203 Market Street, next te the Garden Theatre, af 8 p, m. son workers for his active participa- tion in the strike in Passaic, and the textile battles in Paterson over a number of years. His address is de- voted chiéfly to the lessons of the Austrian revolt. He will show which way the American workers must take to realize the united front against fascism and war. Weinstone will address a phia meeting at 510 Fairmount Ave, at 8 p. m., Saturday, March 3rd. 4 4 Speaks In Bridgeport The Bridgeport Communist Party which is arranging the meeting on Sunday, March 4, at 8 p. m. at St, George's Hall, 396 Stratford Avenue, writes to the Daily Worker that the “uprising in Austria has created a good deal of interest among the Bridgeport workers and at an out- deer meeting in the support of the Austrian working class, held last week in conjunction with the Com- munist Party, a rank and file So cialist, Kieve Liskovysky, was chair. man and made a strong plea for® unity of action.” Tonight on Austria In Paterson, N. J. Tomorrows Sunday in Bridgeport NEW YORK.—Willam Weinstone, ill open a short tour Weinstone is known to the Pater- horhoods to be represented at the NRA. offi last night and| Although the bill deelares: “Noth-| other workers to equal or beat his remarkable book will be sent for/the egndemned structure that the | ——— Be CR RS eR RE Se Emergency United Pront Con’ today ing im this act shall be interpreted] pledge. Who will be the first to | Only an additional dollar. fifth-fleor family had no chance to to be held at Irving Plaza. 0 spokes or con: so “as to interfere with] accept this Bolshevik challenge? Celebrate the freedom of Torgier,| escape. March 4th, at 1 p.m } su nehing |or impede or diminish in any way] Rush our acceptance to the Daily | Taneff, Popoff, and help rally the} he dead were Mrs. Rose Galazzl, Richard Sullivan, organizer of the |criminations. which have reased | the right to strike,” it flatly revokes} Worker! American masses for @ powerful de-| 91 and her children: ‘Stephen, nine; Unemployment Councils of Greaterjunder the New Deal. A striker from| this by the compulsory-arbitration 147 New Subs. mand for the release of Thaelmann, | Tosonh, six, and Walter, ane year old. New York, said, “The conference | the Ford plant at Chester told how| provision and by another clause de-| On Feb. 28th, 147 new subs came|Torgler, by getting new subs for the ‘A fourth son, Angelo, 18 years old, must strike q decisive blow against /they got—and are still getting—the claring that the Board can act in’ in, 80 of them for the fle tyecg edi-| Daily Worker, our — was found ‘by firemen afterward the C.W.A. lay-offs and wage cuts} run-around from the blue eagle. | “any dispute.” On the very face of tion, Cleveland led with 40 new daily | in our struggle hunger, severely burned, Joseph Galazi, and the newly announced Roosevelt Jesus Christ Couldn’t Speak | the proposed Board, Wagner hereby) and 26 new Saturday subs, Minnea-| and war. father of the family, » laborer em- Re Sed wacees gives Reporting increasing tyranny|nes up two “Labor” members ployed, ironically enough, by the De- “gimple arithmetic,” Sullivan con-| Against independent unionism, in-|Seainst five “public and employer ment of Sanita'ion, was at his tinued, ‘would indicate that the] tensified speed-up, complete denial | * Ponce e ntatleen weula defend job eleaning away the heayy snow- Roosevelt program proposes to pro-|of the rights of free speech and papel Sagal ged | ‘all when the tradesy occurred at sembly, Cush said that 700 workers | the empl interests against: labor this crowded sium tenement. ee oe ® veer to cach une has been demonstrated by the per- ere BN in, in go a a _ Gannes, of the Daily Worker edi- employed worker . this would not take inte consideration the huge graft, high salaries to relief officials, and the tremendous overhead that is charged up to federal reltef.” “The Roosevelt program reverts to the Hoover stagger system, and of- fers’ a ‘self-sustaining’ plan to the workers’‘on farms. It proposes to transplant city workers to so-called farms, and give the unemployed a handful of seeds instead of jobs and unemployment insurance,” The Relief Workers League stated | yesterday that C.W.A. workers will foree the continuance and enlarge- ment of C.W.A. by demonstrating be- fore .C.W.A. headquarters, forming | committees on the job, and forming} strong united fronts of all workers in | unions, in the shops, in unemployed Sroups and in the neighborhoods. Michael Davidoff, president of the Relief Workers League, urged all delegates at the “Socialist” confer- ence to which the Unemployment Councils, the Relief Workers League, the T.U-U.L. and independent trade unions and all militant workers or- ganizations have been excluded, de- mand on the floor of the conference that ‘every \organization. present, be represented at the Emergency United Front Conference, to be held at Irv- ing Plaza, Sunday, March 4th. | ola uates to. the conference are urged’ td bring dohatibris “for the ex- Pemses of the meeting. Although these donations are not a prerequisite of attendance at the conference, the Sreat need of funds makes it neces- sary to asx for these funds wherever seibie. | Scottsboro Protest In *Harlem Tonite Detroit Workers Also Holding Protest, Other | Actions All Over World | NEW YORE. Protest meetings against Judge Callahan's latest lynch decision in the Scottsboro Case will) he “held ‘tonight in Harlem and} Detroit. The Harlem meeting is called for} Svo'clock at the I.W.O. Hall, 415} Lenox Avenue, under the joint aus~| | mands. ) Promised time to present them later pices of the N. Y. District of the International Labor Defense and its! Harlem Section. The meeting celebrate the victory mass pressure in ¢ffecting the release of Dimitroff, Popoff and Taneff and joint the les- sons of mass pressure on the court: Similar protest actions are being | called throughout the country. The intensity’ of the ‘mass ‘anger against | thé “dastardly trickery of the Ala- bama lynch court guarantees the | mobilization of new sections of Negro and white workers in the world-wide fight for the nine Scottsboro bovs. The International Thaelmann week, Mar. 3 to 10, will have as one of its central slogans, in all countries of the world, the demand for the release cf the Scottsboro boys, whose imnocence has been abundantly proved. | The N. ¥. District of the ILD. is urging all its members and sympa- thizers to take part in. the demon- stration Saturday noon, before the German Consulate, 17 Battery Place, for the release of Ernst Thaelmann, _ leader of the heroic German Commu- Mist Party, and ie thousands of other revolution: workers in the Nazi concentration camps. This dem~ Onstration will simultaneously pro- test the Nazi threat to sterilize all Gerhian Negro citizens; and will de- mand the release of the nine Scotts- boro boys from the clutches of fhe Alebaria lynchers. GANNES SPEAKS TODAY aT __ UNION CITY MEETING ON _. , AUSTRIAN SITUATION “UNION CITY, N.J., Mar. 1—Harry staff, will be.the main speaker Mass meeting on the Austrian "1378 ST.NICHOLAS AVE * 1690 LEXINGTON AVE. “4 at i79" at 106: _ ¥ J. MORRIS, Inc. GENERAL FUNERAL DIRECTORS | recently Dickens 6-520 al Workers Order at the Carnegie Steel Plant at Du- quesne, Pa., are ready to join the SMW1IU. but are prevented by owner-terror. If reminded Cush, he] added, of the Mayor of Duquesne’s declaration during the historic} strike of 1919: “Even Jesus Christ | himself couldn't speak in Duquesne.” He added ection TA deluded many workers into believing that they could join a union of their own choosing, but they realize now that the N.R.A, has been used to break strikes in the steel industry and has interfered with the inherent right of workers to-join unions of their own choice.” | ton workei N.R.A, Strikebreaker At the Republic Steel Company's Plant In Biiffalo, Ctish continued his @ strike occurred there, an N.R.A. of- ficia], publicly declared he would ‘step in and avert it. This Cush quoted from a newspaper. Thus, he declared, “the “N-R.A. says, ‘we will break this right to strike so that the workers cannot protect their jobs, their homes and children.’ “At the Westinghouse gates in East Pittsburgh they have a camera set up to take pictures of those speaking to the workers so that these can be broadcast to other companies and Sent to the Department of Justice. “No public meetings, have been held since the*N.R.A; was announced | in the steel towns of Duquesne, Brad- dock, Homestead and Rankin. There is an absolute denial of free speech and free assemblage. The S. M. W. I, U. tried to hold a meeting in Duquesne last fall. The Chief of Police came in and asked who was the chairman. The worker who an- swered that the chairman wasn’t there yet was arrested. Neither the S. M, W. I. U. nor the Amalgamated Association of Iron, Steel and Tin Workers (A. FP. of L.) are allowed to hold - meetings. In the ‘shotgun election’ held in the U. S. Steel Plants in Pennsylvania on Feb. 23, company gunmen and stool pigeons stood at the ballot boxes and ter-| pany,” rorized workers.” Cut Off Demands The N.R.A. chairman called time just as Cush began to present de- Cush protested, and was teday. Ford Workers Victimized Harry Girstein, representing the | Ford’ Workers Protective Association, told how. 1,000 to 1,500 Chester strik- ers are still refused. re-employment at the Ford plant. “We promised to fight. for the, rigbt, to live,” tu) striker concluded. “Ii labor is not, | given the right to participate in the making of codes and in the enforce- ment, of the codes, we will take this right for ourselves.” The Adminis- | trator asked Gerstein to go up and see Compliance Chairman Davis, who promiséd to “investigate” j the Chester case. Gerstein went— anu later told the Daily Worker that Davis said he would go to Chester Saturday, but frankly declared, “if they want to give you your jobs back, they will; if they don’t, they won't. There's nothing we ean do to make them.” Leave oxt Negroes Henry Sheparé Negro. representa- tive of the Trade Union Unity | Unity League, told an employment meeting last night: “The N.R.A. de- | liberately left out the Negro worker. ‘the textile code proves this. Out of the 14,000 Negro employes in this industry, 10,000 are ‘outsiders’ and ‘cleaners’ under the code and do not even get the miserable minimum. ” the youth- | formance of “publie” refresentatives in every existing N.R.A. agency. “Daily” Forecast Confirmed As forecast more than week ago! by the Daily Worker, the Labor Board today virtually told the Weir- “Now that you've gone back to work on our election prom- ise, and taken our promise of a poli- to-determine-whether-you-want - an election so nicely, we won't lift a finger to enforee collective bargain- ing.” The cssision declared: “Mr. Weir, (E. T. ‘Weir, President of the com- | pany), has not only refused any co- operation, but has made it plain to the Board's representatives that he/ union has 2,500 members but “when | Will net deal with any representatives | chosen at an election under the} Board's supervision.” | “Nothing to Say” | Therefore, the decision said, the Labor Board “refers the case to the Department of Justice with a request for immediate action.” First, the La-| bor Board said, in handing out the decision,. that an announcement of} the Justice Department action would} be made today, but then the Labor Board counsel conferred with the Jus- tice Department, and it was an- preg that there was “nothing to} ’ This simply means the end. of| all pretense in the Weirton case. The first time the Labor Board referred it to the Justice Department, it asked specifically for an injunction to in- sure an election, The department! sounded out three Federal judges, and} was bluntly informed none of them would grant arr injunction against the | Weirton Steel Corporation. So this time the Labor Board doesn’t even ask for an injunction; it just “refers” the case—to the graveyard of the Jus- tice Department, Does Not Surprise Workers “This action is more than mere ac-| quiescence in the demands and de- Cush commented. “It is a complete and cowardly, open capitu- lation to the steel eorporation, Of course. it is no surprise to the rank} and file in the Weirton plants, nor to any of the fighting local union offi- cers in those plants, nor to the In- dustrial Union (S.M.W.LU.) members jand their leaders. It is proof positive that the board's actions from the be- ginning were only a shabby pretense of forcing Weir to'accede to the work- ers’ demands.” The 66-year-old ‘Industrial -Union leader, ery major strike since that of 1899, smiled bitterly. He was in the Ameri- can Federation of Labor for 43 years before he was expelled by the Ex- ecutive Committee of the Amalga- mated Association while he was in jail for having spoken at the first) red anti-war day celebration in Pitts- burgh in 1929—expelled without be- ing allowed to appear at his trial. New Strike in Offing I asked Cush whether he thought there's to be another strike at Weir- ton. “Oh, yes,”"—his blue eyes blazed though his words were calm—“the brutal betrayals by the officials of the A. A., especially by Vice-President Ed Miller, who has been dubbed ‘Wildcat | Miller’ by the workers at Weirton and other steel milis, have only served to arouse those workers against the A. A, officialdom. When the proper season rolls around for strikes in the rolling mills, when the hot weather arrives, these workers in all probability will The New Deal only means more hun-} declare another strike.” ger and misery for the Negro work- ers in this country. It is only a weapon in the hands of the bosses and their agents against the workers both Negro and whi Citing the Scottsboro case as 4 ymbol of the whole reign of terror against the Negroes,” he recalled that Presi- dent Roosevelt refused to intervene. “Ladies and gentlemen,” he con- cluded, “if any of you here represent workers, do not depend on the New Deal, but go back home and mobilize the workers for a struggle against it.” Louis ‘Hyman, President of the Needie Trades Workers Industrial Union, exposed the manoeuverings of A. F. of L. bureaucrats, bosses and the N.R.A. officials against the mili- tant workers, and pointed out that in many shops where agreements existing provided as high as $60 a week, these dickerings resulted in reducing these earnings to the code ‘oinimum of $13. Where strikes were called to force employers to live up to the agreements, he declared, the local N.R.A. officials “used all their power to prolong the time for settle- ment, which resulted in forcing many workers to go back to the shops.” He told, too, of the use of injunctions: against pickets. Charles Oberkirch, socretary of the Food Workers. Industrial Union, de- nounced the hotel, restaurants and grocery codes. “The New: Deal has been a raw deal for labor,” he said, “N.R.A. has been a succestgfor the owners of “Do you think they are considering rike a pn now?” “Yes, they are,” Cush replied imme- diately. “And it goes without saying that workers throughout the coun- try will support them. Weirton has been an eye-opener to us, both in the rolling mills and elsewhere in indus- try. Weirton, Budd, Chester and Ford. They'll go down in history as out- standing examples of the tyranny of the masters.” NOTICE, SECTION. 2 Section 2 functionaries meeting will take place Saturday at 3 p, m. instead of 2 p, m. due to the demonstration. All comrades must attend. Section Buro, Section 2. industry. You have legalized starva- tion in the hotel industry.” Turning to the Administrator, he | asked, “Have you ever tried living in New York on $9.50 a week, which is the hotel code minimum?” Unan- swered, he declared that the split- shift, now legalized, keeps workers away from their families for 14 hours aday. He added, “you have legalized deductions of $3 a week. Your code says this must be mutually agreed to, but among the unorganized the boss dictates and if the worker doesn’t like it, he is free to starve in the slave market on Sixth Ayenve.” He demanded abolition of job-shark. pri- vate employment agenices and estab- lishment of free employment agencies to be administered by workers, | the who has been in virtually ev-| To Elect Officers of New Taxi Union ‘in New York Today NEW YORK.—Elections for several offices of the Taxi Drivers Union will take place today at Trying Plaza Hall, rting at 3:30 in the morning and lasting up until 8 am., it was an- nounced by Joseph Gilbert, fleld or- genizer of the union, Drivers are urged te come to the polling place as early ag possible and vote for the following slate: President—Sam Orner, Financial Sec—William Rubin. Joint Council—Sam Orner, Harry Cantor and A. Rabin. Trustee—Bernstein. Gangsters, who have attempted to muscle inte the union, many of whom visited the headquarters at 233 W. 42nd St. during the recent period placing demands before the leaders, have been told to keep their hands off the new union. William Gandall, erstwhile presi- dent of the union, who had recent dealings with the racketeers, has been forced to abdicate. Joseph Gilbert told the ‘Daily Worker yesterday that no racketeers will be tolerated in the ranks of the union. The membership of the Man- hattan local, Gilbert reports, is now 12,000 drivers. Boston Crews Vote | To Return to Work With $10 Pay Raise (Continued from Page 1) union delegates on the ships was reached at a mass meeting of strikers, where Roy Hudson, national chair- man of the Marine Workers’ Indus- trial Union, renorted, and after a lengthy discussion in English ari Spanish, “The strike ‘committee is to notify companies that the strike is ended with wage increases and im- | proved conditions,” said the mo*ion | adovted by the strikers. All ship's officers were to be informed that. there shall be no blacklist of militant seamen. Whole Crews Join Union All of the ships’ crews which were not on strike recognize the role of | the union and understand that they could nob have won the wage in- crease without it. One of these crews | lined up 100 ver cent with the union yester Similar reports of whole erews joining the union are coming in from the rest of the fleet. Hudson asked the seamen to take the floor and state what they think of the union. “The union is ours and the leader- shiv is honest and we are satisfied,” said one of the strikers. To Organize Fleet There was a tremendous endorse- ment of the role of the union by speakers at the meeting. One sea- man after another took the floor and strikers pledged to comovlete the unionization of the entire fleet within the next two months. This was the first big seamen’s strike since 1923. The victory is of outstanding importance to the work~- ers in all industries, in view of the | threatening war danger. | Today the banner of the Marine Workers’ Indus‘rial Union flies in the coal boat fleet as a signal for future struggles. The Daily Worker was sold all along the strike front. It was the only paper that reported the strike, The Daily Worker is the most popu- lar paper on the waterfront here today. COHENS’S 117 ORCHARD STREET Ne. Delancey Sti |, New York City Wholesale Opticians @ RXAMINE! Dat Weinstein Tel ORchard 4-432 Optometrist Factory om Premises GARMENT WORKERS WELCOME SHERIDAN VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT (Formerly Shildkrauta) 225 WEST 36th STREET Between 7th and 8th Avenues |2,000 Kenosha Auto stressed the feeling of victory. The} Men Strike; Toledo Walkout Is Broken (Continued Prom Page 1) five cent pay rise and “arbitrae tion” of other demands afterwards, Charles A, Dana, multimillionaire owner of the Spicer Menicecrurne Oo,, attended the strike meeting te make sure the A, F. of L, officials earry through the bargain previousl: arranged with the bosses ab a secret conference held at the Commodore Perry Hotel. As a result of the terms, the strik- ers returned to work. In the Spicer plant the men will get $18 a week and the women $13.70 for a 40-hour week, The strikers demanded equal pay for equal work, Further negotiations are to proceed secretly between the employers and union officials for reaching an agree- ment on other demands by April 1 when production is declining, Point 3 of the agreement states: “Tt is understood that there shall be no. strikes or lockouts at any of the eompanies concerned so long as peaceful methods for adjusting dif- ferences have not been exhausted.” Dana praised Thomas Ramsey, bus- iness agent of the A, F. of L, Auto- motive Workers Union, and other A. .of.L. officials for their amiable set- ement. In turn, Rainsey promised ‘that he will “show the employers how to increase production.” He spoke about the wonderful conditions in his plant, and safeguards for the work- ers. At the same time, two workers were hurt in the plant this week. Workers interviewed at the factory claim that in the production depart- ments the hazards are considerable. There is no reports yet this morn- ing on discrimination of returning workers, but many stated that they expect discrimination against mili- tant strikers, The Auto Workers Union issued a leaflet today to the returned workers, calling for the election ef depart ment committees and forming a united front of the rank and file of all unions, 1,200 Case Co. Men Picket Shop Despite Leaders’ Tactics Socialist Heads Ride in Police Car and Tell Men to Go Home (Special to the Daily Worker) RACINE, Wis., Mar. 1.— Twelve hundred strikers of the J, I, Case Co, (farm machinery manufacturers) picket here for 24 hours daily, de- spite the efforts of the Socialist- conirolied Workers Committee to dampen the spirit of the workers. Organizer Mitchell appeared in a police squad car last Saturday eve- ning and told the piekets te go home. Mitchell had the police arrest nick- ets at the Hisendrath tannery where 250 are striking, calling them “drunks and outsiders.” The Trade Union Unity League is active, urging a broad shop commit- tee, mas¢ picketing, and no arbitra- tion. The Nash Motor strikers are still out under American Federation of Labor leadership. The leaders have attacked workers distributing T.U.UL, leaflets. AMertan Avenue Comradast The Modern Bakery wes first to seitie Bread Strike to sign with the Industrial Union and frst Food Workers’ 691 ALLERTON AVE. | paused only injury and homelessness Come Away from the Noise and Rush of the City for Resi, Quiet — and a little fun at Came Nitgedaiget Beacon, N. ¥.—Ph.: Beason 731 All the Summer Fun with Winter Comfort Oars leave daily at 10:30 a.m. from Cooperative Restaurant—3100 Bronx Park Bast (Estabrook 8-1400) Angelo Galasgi’s condition was de- seribed. as ¢ritical at the Long Island College Hospital, te which he was Femoyed immediately after firemen found his badly burned body near a elope window, was only the accident of the tues "orivin on the fourth floor that prevented the destruction of every person im the building. Excited and tearful neighbors, com- menting om the fire in the streets outside, recalled the fire at 40 E. Seventh St, less than two weeks ago, which took a toll of eight lives. They mentioned numerous other fires in ithe leeal Brooklyn slum area. which and therefore did not rate much com- ment in the metropolitan press. Members of the committee which protested the E. Seventh St, fire in a demonstration at City Hall last week, pointed to the Brooklyn fire as a sample of the “immediate and cour- ageous action” promised them by Comissioner of Tenements Langdon W. Post. ‘While he is so busy mak- ing speeches and thinking up grand plans,” said one of the children who marehed to City Hall, “more workers and ehildren are burned to death. And I know of a hundred other houses where fires, ance started, would de- stroy entire families.” Hathaway Speaks Tonight for Nat'l - == Fraining.Schaol NEW YORK.—Clarence Hatha- way, Editor of the Daily Worker, will speak at Irving Plaga, 15th St. end Irviny Place tonitht. at 8:30 p.m., under the auspices of the Workers’ School. All proceeds will go to the benefit of the Na- tional Training School of the Communist Party, which is now in its eighth week. In his subject, “Revolution Knocks at the Door of Europe,” Hathaway will deal with the pres- ent reyolutionary events in Aus- tria, France and Spain, and the united front, CLASSIFIED Also singles. FURNISHED 2 and 2 rooms. All improvements; 347 E. 14th St. DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet. Fithin and Sutter Aves,, Brooklyn PRONE: DIORENS 2-281¢ Ottien Mears: 3-30 AM, 1-2, 6-8 PM WORKERS COOPERATIVE COLONY 2700-2800 BRONX PARK EAST has reduced the rent, several good apartments available. Cultural Activities for Adults, Youth and Children. Telephone: Estabrook 8-1400—8-1401 Direction: ‘exington Aye., White Plains Trains. Stop at Allerton Ave. station Qffee open daily from 9 am, to & p.m. Priday and Saturday 9 a.m. to § p.m. Sunday 1€ a.m, to 2 p.m. Workers help to carry on the struggle 9 of the Kuligosds Workers Tadustrial Union COME TO THE CONCERT & DANCE Saturday, March 3rd, 8 P. M. IRVING PLAZA "ive Pee & 15th Bt, Snappy Jazn Band. Admission 50e. PHILADELPHIA, PA. Daily Worker Benctit show y “Ten Days That Shook the World” Soviet Film and Workers Newsreel “Bread” Saturday, March 3rd, & P. M. at 3039 Salmon Street & Admission 1c. Chicago DANCE CABARET ENTERTAINMENT Sat.. Mareh 3, at 7:30 p.m. SOUTHWESTERN TEMPLE 1185 8, Albany Avene Concert at 8 pom. Cabaret at i Admission 250, Unemployed 100, Auspiess, Communist Party Seo. 3 CRAWFORD CUSTOM qoly CLOTH ALL NEW SPRING MERCHANDISE All Crawford Clothes will be $21 March 10th, Until then you may take your unrestricted choice of our entire stock at the low price of $18.75, The finest clothes in our history at the biggest saving we ever offered! CRAWFORD'S STUDENTS’ Suits and Overcoats now $15.50, March 10th price will advance. NEW YORK'S LARGEST CLOTHING CHAIN OAD! 467 FULTON NEW YoRK + + + Gor 35th St Cor, 12th St. Gor, 13th St. ke ¥ BROOKLYN 463 71h Ave, Near. t. 8. R. Sto, 826 Broadway . Sy oar | Ee 2 + Near Varet St. at 152 cant Oath 1S West 125th St., enox & 7th Aves. 1991S Nicholas Aver Bets {791K & 180th Sit BRONX 10 East Fordhom Rd. |. Near Jerome Ave. Goo. Kingibeidge Re, 168-05 Jomsica Ave. «+ Cor. 168th St, ‘At the End of the “L" Jamaica Lt. 80 Market St, JERSEY City” jabsier Ave. | 317 Central Avenue ._. Cor. Griffith St. Near 149th Couto 4 Journal mie OPEN S| DAY LOPEN EVEMING® | [ALTERATIONS 2R6s | ford Stores Are Open on Sunday: 1700 Pitkin Ave. 1622 Pitkin Ave. 1512 Pitkin Ave. Broadway 841 Broadway GRAND ANNUAL COSTUME and CIVIC BALL of the BAKERS’ UNION, —Amalgamated Food Workers— Saturday, March 3rd 8:30 P, Mi Tickets 50 Cents ANNUAL AFFAIR @ Ler fayette Sat., March 3rd_—sN. Y. Labor Temple 2A7 East 84th Street, New York City Splendid Program: N*ture Friends Dance Group; Balalaikea Orchestra; Yorkville Workers’ Athletic Club; Prolet Buchne and Others Admission 25¢ in Advance At the door 35¢ NO. 164 ‘a Aaieae® Ambassador Hall 3861 Third Ave., near Claremont P’kway —FOOD sHOW— Wardrobe 50 Cents th DINNER — DANCE “Soviet Russia Today” “Friday, Mareh 2nd Roger Smith Grill AT 7:00 P.M, 40 East dist St, N. ¥.€. Chairman; CORLISS LAMONT MUSICAL PROGRAM; ” NINA TARASOVA ASHLEY PETTIS, and others irina Skariatina Sergei Radamsky Justine Wise Tutin Mary van Kleeck Dinner Music—F.S,U. Balalaika Orchestra Dance Music — Valhalla Club Orchestra Reservations — $1.25 in Advance Admission After 9 FP. M, to Danco and Program ... - ee, SOVIET RUSSIA TODAY 80 EAST Uth STREET, NEW YORK Crry SPEAKERS: