The Daily Worker Newspaper, March 27, 1934, Page 4

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Page Four DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, MARCH 27, 1934 Use Cry<) Country’ to | Halt Strike Faker Collins, With Weasel Words, Leads Into Blind Alley By an Auto Worker Correspondent DETROIT, Mich—Faker Collins, | who organized the A. F. of L. labor unions in order to lead the workers | down a blind alley, fooled the workers again by weasel words. We are election ted f is only workers ® parrot Last year the Briggs strikers threw over the best working class leader in Michigan, Phil Raymond, and decided to be intensively Amer- The strikers paraded at se is Highland Park plant with Stars and Stripes at the head. The police tore down the fiag, tramp- ling it underfoot and felling a striker with the staff. The Mechanics’ Educational So- ciety of America must be rallied to the strike cause. Many members | are refusing support unless Martell | and~.Collins are eliminated. | cae aaa | Laundry Union Misleader Fights Negro-White Unity. But Women in South Get Together in Strike Meetings (By a Worker Correspondent) BESSEMER, Ala. — This is on! wage differentials in the South: In the Southern States, the bosses are able to use one part of the workers against the other. This is seen clearly in Mr. Ames’ speech at the Tutweiler Hotel in Birmingham, Ala,, Feb. 27, when Mr. Ames saw that the N. R. A. is bad for the working class of the South. He tried to show the difference between | girls in Southern and girls in Northern States, when he said that the Italians are better working girls than the white girls here, that the Negro and white girls of the South are fast for one hour, and after that they are ready to drop, in the mills. But Mr. Ames did not speak about the organization of the girls in the Northern States. They fight the| bosses in the Northern States, but | in the Southern States, the bosses | see the growing unity of the Negro and white girls of the South and this makes the bosses afraid of the unity of white and Negroes, United in one Front, because in the South the’ deep slave system has kept the Negfoes and white divided. This shows in the laundry here, where the leaders of the union says that.he tries to keep the strike down by any means, but the work- ers forced them to come out on strike and we could see the unity of white women and Negro women in this strike, although the leader tried his. best to split the ranks of the women. The leader had the Negroes in one hall and white in another hall, but the workers went to the Negroes’ meeting and asked the women to come to their hall. The leader did not want this to happen. - NOTE We publish letters from steel, metal and auto workers every Tuesday. We urge workers in thése industries to write us of their working conditions and of their efforts to organize. Please get the letters to us by Friday of each week. Work 10 Hours But | Punch Time for 8 InCar Wheel Plant (By a Worker Correspondent) | HAYS, Pa.—I would like to call | your attention to conditions pre-| vailing in the U. S. Steel Co’s car} wheel plant here. Before the N.R.A. | ve u to work from 8 to 4 under | speed-up system possible. we got paid for ei 1 workers objected to this | very The result | [) ted to this ex- | we ¥ workers were hired in our places at a cheaper rate—all under the| NRA | —FRANK J. TOMAS. (Signature Authorized). Company Union At Republic Steel Co. Backs 10-Hour Day (By a Steel Worker Correspondent) CHICAGO, Ill.—Just a few lines to describe the tactics of the com- pany union in the Republic Steel Corp., at 108 St., here. | The company called us chippers to | work 10 hours daily. The company union representative showed us again that his attitude is in favor of the company’s side and against the workers’ will, with the pretext that 10 hours work is only tempo- rary. When a few workers protested about the 10 hours work, the com- pany official said, “You fellows al- | ways have been working 10 hours. I don’t see whv you don’t do it row.” | The conditions at this mill every- where and in every department are unbearable. The Steel and Metal Workers’ Industrial Union is work- ing hard to organize the workers into a fighting organization, but the cmopany has restored, in and out- side of the mill, a powerful spy sys- tem by which the workers are fol- lowed. Workers, the S. M. W. I. U. jis at the gate every day. They | want to organize us but we do not jeven talk to these workers, depend- ing on the fake promises of the N. R. A. and the sweet words of the company. Get organized in a powerful In- dustrial Union and force both com- | pany and government to keep their promises. Murderers of John Bielak Helped by A.F.L. By an Auto Worker Correspondent DETROIT, Mich.—For the infor- mation of the Daily Worker, I would state that John Bielak might have been killed for his union ac- tivities and that the Dawn Patrol of industrial spies are not a few sissies. Don’t forget that. They are recruited from Grosse Point Italian gangsters, the Sicilian mob. Frank X. Martell was openly charged by James Francis Murphy, organizer of the Street and Alley Cleaners’ Union, with being a gang- ster head. Murphy carried the sign up and down Woodward Avenue until the Martell gang stopped him and broke up the sign. Notice how the A. F. of L. organizer, Owen, tries to show that Bielak could not have been slain for union activities. The Rank and File of the A. F. of L. should scrap Martell and then the United Front of labor will clean out the spies. Mechanics Educa- Points Out Misleaders A Month or Two, W re Telling Men to W;: hen Layoffs Begin ait a ’ Smash A. F. L. Gag on Strikes, Urges Detroit Auto Worker Correspondent Production in etion y | Steel Plant (By an Auto Worker Correspondent) | because we are being speeded-up | Gary tee an DETROIT, Mich.—We, auto work- ers of the Briggs’ Highland Park and Mack Ave. plants sure got a good taste of the betrayal role of |the Highland Park auto trim line | the A. F. of L. leadership at our first closed meeting held at Amity Hall on Thursday, March 22. Because of the strong strike sen- all the time to bui'd surplus stock for Ford and Chrysler. | It was particularly absurd because | went on strike today at lunch-time, | demanding an increase in pay—and got it! Maybe that was why McDonald _ Dropping Again (By a Gary Steel Worker) GARY, Ind—Production is drop- ping down again after only two weeks of pick-up, but the bosses are timent in the plants, we joined the|W@S so emphatic about not gving| calling more workers in the mills, United Automobile Workers Union, believing that through a strong and anization we could go 8 | doesn’t work e lexplained that the A. F. of L. is against strikes because them ment. it would put Well, who in the hell are the management? He went on to explain that (J weren't strong enough for a ake month or two) we wouldn’t have to strike at all. We could just send him to “talk turkey” with the bosses. What kind of reasoning is that? Need the Money Now joke if it wasn’t so damned tragic. ‘We need the money now! In a month or two we will all be laid off, in wrong with the manage-| out on strike. It does put hin in wieng with the management, who |hope through hm and the whole e A. F. of Lb. to gg Opposition Needed we've had enough of this Collins and Green hand in hand with and the auto manufac- s to delay and break the strike. got to smash that kind of leadership! We've got to build up a methods of McDonald and the rest of his gang of hand-picked officials. We've got to get together and |yet, and when we were strong force McDonald to adopt our po- |enough (which would be in about a licies of fighting against the man- | agement, not of cooperating with |them. We've got to get together | with all the other unions, with all | the organized and unorganized men jin the plants to make a strong front for higher pay and better con- | away, now, not next month, when | We'll all be sitting at home. Come on fellows, let’s do it! Achievements (By a Worker Correspondent) MOSCOW, U.S.S.R. — I am an American working at the Kalinin (Freser) Cutting Tool plant, situ- ated in Moscow, the largest tool plant in the Soviet Union and Eu- rope. I am a member of the M.O.P.R. (Russian section of the Interna- tional Labor Defense) bureau in my shop, and have been given the task of building up an international correspondence between employed and unemployed workers in Amer- ica and the Freser workers. that you could get me in touch with workers or groups of workers (es- pecially in large factories) as well as unemployed, who would like to correspond with the workers in my shop. The Kalinin (Freser) Cutting Tool Plant greeted the Seventeenth Party Congress with the following gift—165 per cent fulfillment of the original 9,000,000 ruble plan given it for 1933 and 101 per cent fulfill- ment of the 15,000,000 ruble coun- ter-plan placed before it in July| by Ordzhonikidze, People’s Com- | missar of Heavy Industry, at the | request of the Freser workers. This glorious achievement has | freed the country from the import | of 15,000,000 gold rubles worth of high-quality tools and has given the Soviet machine-building indus- Wheat Allotment and C. W. A. Do Nothing (By a Farmer Correspondent) PEERLESS, Mont.—Enclosed find $1.50 for one year of the weekly edition of the Daily Worker, as I cannot get enough money to take it daily. The wheat allotment has not helped the farmers much, just a pacifier, and the C. W. A. is no better. Only a few got work through cold and blizzard weather, and now that the weather is fair, most all are fired, with the roads that were worked on impassable. are joining up in Ford's, should watch Slim, the Swede; the Can- adian, Irwin; Walkowitz and Charlie Ware. They are the eyes of Ford. How about making the Daily Worker, the M.E.S.A. official jour- tional Society of America men, who nal? I am writing to you in the hope | of Tool Plantin USSR Told by Correspondent |try about 8,000,000 reamers, drills, | milling cutters, taps, dies and other cutting tools. us Built on an empty field on the | outskirts of Moscow, the Freser | plant began operations on the first ‘of April, 1932. On May Day, just one month | after the opening of the plant, the first milling cutters, reamers, drills, taps and dies began to stream out | of Freser to the machine and trac- tor stations and the heavy industry plants. Now Full-Fledged Workers ‘That was a year and nine months ago. A person who had seen these |former peasants in their home- | made bast-shoes working on the | most modern machine-tools then, | would not recognize them now. | They have become workers... | proletarians who handle their ma- |chines and lathes with the calm rapidity and assurance of old, skill- ed factory hands. Before 1932 (the first year of pro- duction) had ended, they had mas- tered the production of 156 types and sizes of cutting tools. By the end of 1933, they had learned to produce 434 different types and sizes of tools, During the first quarter of 1933, they turned out 7.5 per cent of spoilage; 4.8 per cent during the second quarter; 4.6 per cent during the third quarter; and 3.5 per cent during the fourth quarter. The youth and former peasants who run the machines in the Freser plant will master in 1934 the pro- | duction of new types of cutting tools never before manufactured in the Soviet Union. They will learn to produce ten new types of milling cutters, five types of drills, eight types of dies, |and six new types of taps. In all, | they will master the production of 29 types and 760 sizes of cutting tools. They will learn to produce, in 1934, milling cutters with inserted teeth. This alone will cut down the import of the bigh-speed steel by 30 per cent and save the country about one million gold rubles. They will learn to produce collapsible dies. hot-twisted drills, and milling cutters weighing 325 pounds apiece! They will raise their productivity of labor, in 1934, by a minimum of 20 per cent, and will produce 26,- 000,000 rubles worth of cutting tools compared with the 15,000,000 rubles worth produced in 1933. as in the Transportation Dept., where they used to work 15 to 16 | men on eight dinkeys on each turn. | With the increase of the production ;the company put in two more en- | gines in service but then they have ine: d the gang to 18 men to the turn. Instead of giving the | workers a few more days to the | pay, they have increased the speed- up. Furthermore, in changing turns, | they give you a day off on Satur- ploitation were fired, and other |we striking against anyway if not|Stfong opposition to the betrayal|day but then they make you double jon Sunday. You either work day turn or the afternoon turn. You have to make a double turn, but then you workers are making double in time but not in your pay check, and if one says something, they'll ask you how many days you want off. | But here is something that got | the transportation beat all to hell |and that's the 44-inch blooming | The whole thing would be a good ditions. And we've got to do it right | "ll. You work the day turn one day, next day you come out on the 12 to 8 turn and on the third day you have to come out on the 4 to 12 o'clock shift. At the end of your days’ work, you’re not told when to call for work so you are compelled to come out whether you work or not, and when you do come out, you are told to go home and call the next day. |Some of the workers live as far as forty miles from the mills. Workers of all departments, join the rank and file union, the Steel and Metal Workers’ Industrial Union, and only then will we be able to better our conditions, be- cause when you are in the above union you are able to form shop groups of rank and file workers and put up a real fight for better con- ditions. Letters from (From a Pattern Maker) St. Louis, Mo. Daily Worker: I am very anxious to join your Communist Party, and would like to subscribe to your paper, but as the situation is, I can’t make my way clear. : haven't worked three solid years, and I can’t see anything for the near future. I am a pattern maker by trade, and can make anything out of wood, from building houses to wood carv- ing, So it seems to me, I must be unlucky. I happen to grab one of your papers every now and then and it thrills me as I read it, for it has facts, not withholding any of it. Here’s hoping that some day I may become a regular member. Sincerely yours, TO ORGANIZE SPANISH WORKERS New York City. Editor: Four Comrades of Brooxiyn, hav- ing studied very closely the sit- uation in Spain, and realizing the big revolutionary movement, wish it to be led by the Communist Party of Spain. We thing that the Daily Worker doesn't give much import- ance in their columns, to this mat- ter. We have decided to propagan- dize. and mobilize the Spanish- speaking workers by doing this work. We notified you that we have @ very close contact with these com- rades that lead the revoluticnary movement in Spain, especially with the International Red Aid, with which we are affiliated. Therefore, we four comrades have joined together and we have formed this New Fraternal organization I am one of the unemployed and | Strike Now, Auto Man’s Wife Says For Someone to Yell “Stop Working” (By a Worker Correspondent) FLINT, Mich.—Inside the Fisher Body No. 1 plant the boys are wait- ing for some one to yell “Stop work- ing! We are going on strike”—de- manding abolishment of speed-up; better wages; shorter hours. Workers at all factories in Flint are for a strike. Many don’t like the delay, they are looking with sus- Ppicion on the leaders of the A. F. of L. Workers are saying that if the union don’t do something about getting better conditions for us, we will discontinue paying dues to the union. Many are very angry for failure to bring up the strike. March 20, at 8 p.m., Buick work- ers had a meeting where they ali voted for a strike today. Buick, No. 11, wanted to walk out this morning, but somehow they were stopped. My husband came home for lunch, very weak and tired; he didn’t even have an appetite for lunch, he was so tired; saying he can hardly drag himself around. And work! One can hardly catch his breath, they are speeding the lines so. It’s most disgusting and unbearable. Today they fired Joe Livak be- cause he protested against the speed-up on the body finish line, and that not enough wages are ‘paid. The shop steward from the ‘A. F. of L., Johnson by name, went ‘to Joe’s foreman, Douglas, asking him why did he fire Joe. Douglas didn’t answer, but went direct to General Foreman Thompson and the general foreman scolded the shop steward, saying to shut up, that he isn’t running this shop, and until then he and all men should do as told or get out. There was a lot more to it but the work- ers didn’t dare listen, for fear of being fired. This made the sentiment on the body lines go from bad to worse. The workmen hushed, but everyone of them eyed the foreman with hate. Our Readers called “The Spanish Speaking Pro- jletarian Aid.” We have issued a leaflet calling for a mass meeting to start organizing the Spanish workers. —M. G. A REAL COMRADE AND FRIEND Detroit, Mich. Dear Sir: I am a daily reader of this paper and enjoy it very much. Now I wish to write a small column about one of your workers by the name of Mrs. Anna Kushner. She is the most faithful and kind- hearted lady I have met in years. She is so nice. She has almost for- saken her home and children for the cause of your paper and her fellow-men. I think she should be spoken about in the paper, for the good work she has done in behalf of the paper. I thank you in return and hope to see this printed in the Daily Worker. —Mrs. A. G. PREPARING THE HARVEST E. Boston, Mass. In Soviet Russia, they use the tractor to plow the ground in order to harvest, and to make the second five year plan a success. Here in America, we must use the “Daily Worker” to educate the masses, in order to organize and to make the revolution a success. Cc. C. $5 FOR NEW PRESS Chicago, Ill. Dear Comrade: I am sending you $5 to help to- wards your new press. Please send me a certificate of acceptance. And also please send me infor- mation in regards to joining the Party. I am 52 years of age and still retain my revolutionary blood. —D. Vv. Transform Correct Organizational Policy and Perspective Are Necessary By JAMES LUSTIG Since the slowing up of the strike! wave in September, 1933, a great | deal more attention was paid by the leqdership of the union, to the work | amongst the heavy metal workers. Tt.has to be emphasized, however, that this work was not carried on in the spirit of the Open Letter and | the 18th Plenum Resolution of the Central Committee of our Party. Concentration on the Navy Yard. The Brooklyn Navy Yard is ore of-our concentration points. As far back as a year ago we had a group | the necessary another union. Therefore in order| to mobilize the workers of the Navy | Yard for struggle, it is important | to organize rank and file groups in- | side the A. F. of L. locals, so that | these groups shall be able to furnish | leadership to the | rank and file in opposition to the/ A. F. of L. bureaucrats and mislead- ers. Simultaneously with this we) have to recruit the unorganized, un- skilled workers into grievance com- mittees, shop committees and into our union. If this would have been followed our position in the Yard would be better than it is. Our union group would increase more rapidly ideo- logically and organizationally. The first prerequisite to successful concentration is a correct clean- cut organizational policy and per- spective. This policy was hammered out by of-Yard workers who adopted the militant policy of our union. They | “S chapman Ree roe oe expressed this, by joining our or- ganization. But we found at that time that the recruiting of new members came to a stop. Not only that, but even this group began to decrease. Why? All skilled workers of the Navy Yard, the machinists, boiler makers, welders, electricians, etc., are or- ganized into the respective locals of the American Federation of Labor. And while many or most of these workers are ready and willing to achieved are absolutely unsatis- factory—because we failed to carry out our correct policy in practice This lack of results can not be ex- plained by, as some comrades wanted in the past, that the Navy Yard workers form a_ special stratum of the working class, that they are bribed by high wages and therefore they are not willing to struggle. The workers of the Yard gave the lie to this false “theory.” A few weeks ago, as a result of our agi- take up militant fights against their grievances, they are not willing to leave their organization and join tation, more than a thousand Yard workers gathered in the Yard de- manding a mass meeting and action , t } in connection with getting their 15 per cent cut back. With this they proved that they are willing and ready to fight. This willingness on the part of the workers was not utilized by us to crystallize it into organizational forms. We criminally neglected to visit contacts, to talk to them and convince them of the necessity of organization. We confined most of our activity to agitation and propa- ganda. This agitation was in most cases concrete, dealing with the economic grievances of the workers and therefore prepared the ground for organization, but practically no steps were made to “cash in” on it. No special comrades were responsible for this most important detailed work, The second prerequisite to success- ful concentration is the assignment of the proper forces, to establish personal responsibility, to make a systematic check-up from time to time. The Cry for Forces. One of the most often used excuses why concentration work is not carried on, “we have not got the proper forces.” How can this question be solved? In the immediate neighborhood of the Navy Yard there is a metal factory employing about 40 Negro and white workers. All these work- ‘ 4 Pre-Convention Discussion the Factories Into Strongholds of ers joined our union during the last strike wave, but since we were busy |at that time with the strikes, they were neglected.. One of our most important task is to regain these workers for our union. In success- fully mobilizing these workers, im- proving their economic conditions, recruiting the best into our Party, we transform them to potential or- ganizers for our union, who will be in a splendid position to carry on day-to-day activity amongst the Navy Yard workers. This work must be considered as an integral part of the Navy Yard concentra- tion. This is one way to solve the ques- tion of forces. > to penetrate the big factory. . Another important prerequisite for successful concentration is therefore, that we shall look upon the concentration point not as an isolated unit, as if in a vacuum, but in relationship with its surroundings and connections. The Question of Demands. In the past few months the center demands we put forward in the Yard were to get back the 15 per cent cut, to put the laid off men on Cc. W. A. jobs and for social in- surance. These demands, especially the first, met with the enthusiastic re- sponse of the workers. These were their demands as the above men- tioned act of the 1,000 workers proved. Now that the workers are about to get back their 15 per cent cut we can point out that their action The argument brought forward |is at least partially responsible for by certain comrades that the above proposal is contrary to the basic idea of concentration because it wants to organize the small factories first in order to bring influence over the large workers’ establishments, does not hold water. These comrades look upon con- centration as if on a blue print, in a mechanical way. A small factory, surrounded by similar establish- ments, or entirely isolated, is the same in their eyes as one at the mouth of a big enterprise, upon which we concentrate. These com- rades do not see how the capturing of this small factory can be utilized it and we can “cash in” on this or- ganizationally. We can say therefore that our main demands were correct. But we entirely neglected to take up the smaller, every day grievances of the workers. We failed to mobi- lize the workers to fight these grievances and consequently could not strengthen either our rank and file group or our union. In the immediate future we have to pay much more attention to these small grievances and at the same time not to push into the back- ground the other major demands, but skilfully link them together to 54 the Communist Party Work Must Be Carried On in Concentration Factories bring about the best organizational results. The proper demands and the or- ganization of workers around these demands to fight for them is an- other phase of successful concentra- tion. I might mention here that besides the above mentioned economic de- mands, both the Party and the union carried on agitation and propa- ganda against the bosses’ war, de- fense of the Soviet Union and against fascism. If all that was said above will be future work, if we are not going to depend on the spontaneity of the workers, if we are to take the neces- sary organizational steps, by build- ing the Party, the Y. C. L., the rank and file groups in the A. F. L, and our union then and only then will we be prepared for the “quick turn of events.” Only then will we be at the head of the workers lead- ing them against the offensive of the Roosevelt government and the bosses, for higher wages, shorter hours, better working conditions, against bosses’ war, against fascism, for the revolutionary way out of the crisis; then and only then will we be in a position to carry out the Open Letter and the 18th Resolu- {tion of our Central Committee. |Wait At Fisher Body | PARTY LIFE Dear Comrade: In the Daily Worker of March 7, we were very much interested in the experiences of the comrade from Rockford, Ill., not only because he is a member of our district (Dist. 8), but also because in many ways the life of his unit parallels our ex- perience here. In our case, how- ever, the Section is located in a city at a considerable distance, which has added to the weakness of our unit. It is our opinion that this comrade touched on the chief cause of his and of his unit’s trouble when he said, “The Literature Committee was so weak I had nothing to do with it.” It has been our experience and observation that without theory there can be no inner Party work, and very little correctly guided struggle. A certain amount of spon- taneous struggle around easily re- cognizable objectives can be carried through with very little theoretic clarity; but the test comes when this point is lost or won, and it be- comes necessary to use this struggle as a paving brick in the road to- ward Soviet America. R... hag no old members, the en- tire Party Unit having been started with a group of the most militant “chain gang” workers. The almost seventy miles between this new unit and their own city made it very dif- ficult for the Indianapolis Section to give us the correct guidance. But I am very much afraid that at least three of the four Indianapolis Units are suffering from the same lack of theoretical growth as our own unit. Seven months after the R.. unit was organized, not one member of the unit had the sightest idea of the function and duties of the unit buro. Most of our members are still ig- norant of this basic principle. Two of us have read the Daily Worker constantly for more than two years. A few others have read this impor- tant source of Revolutionary knowl- edge and inspiration part of the time. Our repeated urging that a real study group be founded has met with no success, Although the “Communist” has been within the reach of the entire membership at all times for the past year, only three or four have read an occa- sional article. The rest have not even taken the trouble to look at it. Other workers’ publications — the Labor Defender, Soviet Russia To- day, and the T. U. U. L. papers— are read almost entirely by non- party workers. This criminal neglect of even those sources of self-education which are easily available even in this rather isolated community has resulted in a sloppy, slip-shod ap- proach to every problem of Party work. Even when the intolerable conditions of last year sent the un- organized workers searching for leadership and a program, our unit had nothing to offer. When some of the all-too-infrequent directives from the Section or District hap- pened to fit local conditions to the point that a struggle was begun, our unit lost itself in the blundering at- tempt of the blind to lead the work- ers whose eyes were only half open. Mistakes have been made in the last year and a half which will handicap the Revolutionary work Join the Communist Party 35 E. 12th STREET, N. Y. C. Please send me more informa- tion on the Communist Party. Street Experience Shows Units’ | Need of RevolutionaryTheory Indiana Unit Finds That Lack of Theoretical Training Weakens Leadership here for months. Naturally, having read nothing, discussed nothing but each other, and heard no speeches by experienced leaders, most mem- bers of our unit were mere fooled by the N. R. A. than the twenty- five or thirty non-Party workers who were actually reading the Daily Worker. The most intelligent workers have been driven from the Party Program by the blunders (some of them ex- tremely serious) which our unit makes, Our own members have lost the enthusiasm for an interesting novelty, which seems to have been what first attracted them. Now the unorganized workers, dis- illusioned and disgusted by the N. R. A., and seeing the pitiful pretense of security under the C. W. A. be- ing rapidly withdrawn, are again searching for leadership and a Pro- gram. That leadership and that program can only come from the Communist Party. But is our unit, which is the Party in R.., prepared to give it to them? We must take steps, in which we should receive the help of our Section Leadership, to overcome our weakness by estab- lishing study groups, which will not only give our comrades the theoret- ical equipment for leadership, but will train new groups of workers. LH, DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet, Pitkin and Sutter Aves., Brooklyn PHONE: DICKENS 2-3012 Office Hours: 8-10 A.M., 1-2, 6-3 P.M OPTOMETRISTSC2F (OPTICIANS || 1378 ST.NICHOLAS AVE* 1690 LEXINGTON AVE. q at!179" ST.RY. at 1061 ST.NY. —WILLIAM BELL——_—— OFFICIAL Qptometrist Ser 106 EAST 14th STREET Near Fourth Ave., N. ¥. C. Phone: TOmpkins Square 6-8237 DR. EMIL EICHEL DENTIST 150 E. 93rd St., New York City Cor. Lexington Ave. ATwater 9-8838 Fours: 9 a. m. to 8 p.m. Sun. 9 to 1 Member Workmen’s Sick and Death Benefit Fund I. J. MORRIS, Inc. GENERAL FUNERAL DIRECTORS 296 SUTTER AVE. BROOKLYN Phone: Dickens 2-1273—4—5 Night Phone: Dickens 6-5369 For International Workers Order 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 Trains. Stop at Allerton Ave. station Office open daily from 9 a.m. to 8 pam. Direction: Lexington Ave. White Plains Friday and Saturday 9 a.m. to 5 pm. Sunday 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. RENNAISSANCE World Negro Champions-Contenders World Championship taken into consideratoin in our | VS. All Star Aggregation Spindell, Posnack, Rothenfeld, Davidoff, Spahn, H. Cohen, H. Davis, R. Gordon Preliminary: Harlem Y. M. C. A. vs. Kaytee A. C, Admission: 49 Cents BASKETBALL GAME AND DANCE tint” 29th —8P.M.— St. Nicholas Arena 66th Street and Columbus Ave. for SCOTTSBORO DEFENSE FUND Auspices: Labor Sports Union YOU can do this by revolutionary gift, a trial below. Trial Offer--50c win over your friends and fellow workers to our revolutionary movement. DAILY WORKER. Present them with a real ROR a limited period, we will send the “Daily” for one month every day or for 4 months every Saturday for only 50 cents, ‘ IST below the name and address of the one you want to receive the trial subscription. Use coupon reaching them with our subscription of the “Daily”. This offer does not apply for the Bronx and Manhattan, New York DAILY WORKER, 50 E Enclosed find $.......... NAME .....0eseccrcccccsess AGGTESS «0... .ceeceveveseees CHY vcr cecesecvesscacsecseces DANY oo elds usy ec vecenn ox eee Trial Subscription Blank scription at the special trial rate. Check Daily or Saturday. . 13th St., New York City to pay for the following sub- peeee State iieevecsevesseese ie ec PEO Saturday es

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