The Daily Worker Newspaper, April 14, 1934, Page 6

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Page Six DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, APRIL 14, 1934 PARTY LIFE f | How O’Leary Tries to Tie Up Pennsylvania ‘Lack of Forces,’ Poor Defense Miners to Coal Ope d-Up System Miner Burned in Pit But 1: Tricked Out of Compensation Z F Couldn’t See for 12 Months; Fooled by Com- pany Lawyer and Is Denied Job isn’t any for me and a 7 3 ie word that he could on, ee geé me com tion. He was a £ : . company lawyer. On Oct. 9, 1930, estfield plant he brought me a settlement. I could neither had me sign it, read nor write and he go to bronze and I w hot lime and iron bu and a with i esas ‘ral x nd and I signed it. and I got d we sR the laws $30. After a ee We he said, “You signed an ron, a weil for your eyes.” Then I took the paper t Boyd and the judge he sa Is that all you got for your eyes? And I told him I did not want that I ted more and he toid my law- yer to get the doctor by 1 o'clock to go in the nd the docto not come, and to me, “If you do © after the doctor did not come, I into t you will have 80) went back to the judge and asked home and fir from the job,”) + did he sign the paper? And and I went in the pit and id to me, “Get a lawyer—have have a it at all. As 1 over again.” I tried to get Went into the pit a r and I could not get one Siter I was hurt to fight it for me at all, and then the hospital on Oct. 10, 1930, the doctor did not I S in there for thirty days and| give any more treatment, and I the doctor gives me a Ww card.| went to the company for a job and forked since, and I lost| and I was turned down. I haven't 2 months. The com- said that I had sued the com- ed me. I asked| pany and I can't get a job at all, pension, and he worked at all since I got hurt. PMA Officials Organize Drive Against Militancy (By a Miner Worker Correspondent) BENTON, Ill.—Just a 3 ago, the miners of Illinois shook off the shackles of John L. Lewis and formed what they thought would be a union of their little over own, the Progressive Miners America. But how badly they were |fooled is seen by the miners more Plainly every day, when they can’t of express their thoughts here any more freely than they would in the United Mine Workers’ of America. In the P. M. A. Orient No. 2 rators’ Spee Tells Men to Work Harder to Produce Coal in EESEEE i SE Se Bs BS Six Hours Than They Formerly Did in Seven By a Worker Correspondent CALIFORNIA, Pa., (By Mail). — An appeal to the miners of Penn- sylvania to help the coal operators’ speed-up schemes was made by John O'Leary in his speech April 1 to the meeting of 10,000 miners and their wives and ildren at the United Mine Workers of America rally here. John O'Leary, who is the Inter- tional Board member of Distric the U. M. W » Said to the miners, “Your leaders convinced the coal operators and t Government that you are capable of producing the same amount of coal in seven hours a day, that it now takes 8 hours a day to produce. If we, through more efficient’ methods of work (meaning more intense speed- up) accomplish this, then next year we can ask and probably get the six hours a day.” O'Leary also proposed on the part of the Penns |miners by saying, “If the Southern and Northern West Virginia do not} sign an agreemet, there will be a} stoppage (not strike) and we in| western Pensylvania will get their} orders.” The Brownsville Section of the} Communist Party issued a leaflet calling upon the mines to turn this| wives, | Y out earning a penny; also when the }a day City Officials every side by the miners and pat Backed By UMWA ments into broad local left wing] Against Miners six hours five days aweek and $6) a day. The leaflet was distributed | — celebration into a demonstration for) (By a Worker Correspondent) NEW KENSINGTON, Pa. — On April 1 the District officials of the in every mine, and the slogans raised in the leaflet were raised on United Mine Workers of America in the Brownsville section is to mobilize all the dissatisfied ele-| J! ss is ments into local left wing oppo- taane sdhisacd Les ing. The at- sitions, and take over the lead-|ndance was a little better than 3,000. The chairman of the meeting was Jack Hasan, formerly a West- moreland County detective. Thi man is liked so much that the same | evening a meeting of the local in Renton took place, where Hasan was told by the miners not to come back. | The Mayor Daniel Burns was to} speak, but instead they got a city] official named Silverman. They ership in the local unions, and begin to lead the struggles for the every day needs of the miners. Also pre- pare the miners for broad struggles that will take place this summer. Miners are not satisfied with the $5 a day, because it affect only about ten per cent of the day men The loaders will continue to work on the 2 and 3 shift system and will) not be able to earn even half of the $5 a day. Thousands of them will} continue to walk in and out with-| Was to the workers. He has a good mines start to slow up ad work only| Workers for distributing leafiets dur- | a few days in a week or in a pay,/ing the aluminum strike. The| the $5 a day will become a joke. | Workers’ water, gas electricity is | | | AgainstLack of Party Activity Proper Co-Ordination of Work Will Overcome Age-W orn Excuse | About a month ago an attempt was made to organize a local com-| mittee of the American League | Against War and Fascism in the neighborhood where I live. The del- egates attending the first meeting were Socialists and Lovestoneites and no effort was made to build the United Front by inviting trade unions and mass organizations in the neighborhood to send delegates. At the second meeting, however, sev- eral left wing organizations were represented and the Socialists and Lovestoneites, true to their splitting tactics, withdrew from the commit- tee. I attended this meeting as a delegate from three local groups of my mass organization and was Since this second meeting, the} record of using his police to arrest | committee has contacted a number| 00 the West Side. of L. or A. W. P. misleadership make any efforts in this direction. If our committee is to be built into a real United Front Committee, it must be done by the workers themselves; by the rank and file in every organization represented, as- sisted and led by our comrades who best understand how to fight war and fascism; by arousing the work- ers to struggle for their daily need. If our comrades lag behind and wait for someone else to give the commit- tee leadership, it will certainly be a paper organization and will remain one. There is another recent experience to which I desire to call attention. As a delegate from my unit, I at- tried to tell us how good the mayor elected secretary of the committee.| tended the convention of the new Waterfront Concentration Section When I read of churches, clubs, neighborhood | the Section Draft Resolution I no- settlement houses, parent-teacher | organizations, etc. in an effort to ticed that no mention was made of | the League Against War and Fas- We can, and must organize the| shut off by him, and evictions are| build a United Front Committee,|cism; and this seemed to me to be dissatisfaction into a struggle for 5|on the order of the day. | days a week, 6 hours a day and $6| Pat Fagan, District president of for every miner, Also a|the U. M. W. of A. was continsally | and has been partially successful, | despite the opposition of the labor misleaders and renegades. The an omission. I knew, however, that | the Draft Resolution was in no way |a final document and I expected guarantee of minimum of 40 weeks| interrupted by questions, point of| committee has held open air meet-| that the leading comrades would work a year and unemployment re-| order, ete. Mr. Hasan had to take | ings whn the weather permitted and| SPeak of building the League, in lief for all unemployed and part-| the micropone to eppeal to the|is calling a neighborhood mass meet- | their discussion. time employed. ing to rally forces in support of the| Because of this expectation and audience to be peaceful, but they| | Were unable to check it. | April 6th meeting at St. Nicholas| because, as a new Party member, I The miners spoke of $6 and 5) Arena, | felt that I could learn more by lis- | tening then by speaking. I did not local recently, a few of the blind Pearcy followers tried very hard to e Home ; 4 | hours a day, 5 days a week. During] vi ve i embe! 5 | In connection with this work, I vself. oa Sener’ fi rom Our Readers audience walked away. Pagan said| Wish to draw attention to the st-| rise my error. ‘In the entire discus: = . " 4 au ice walked away. Fagan ; & r. iS@ ieticit) AcAaNan 2 “yyy = : Y | questions. i o , % th yer} iefly. ie THE FIGHT AGAINST THE HIGH “ ‘When you go looking for work, | satisfied. these same people are) SOME GOOD PAMPHLETS ON 1930, the bank closed its doors be- ee a sister the con-| correct, When the question of af- tarneee Bean acd aga OF COSTS OF LIVING IN they all want kids,’ one woman! passing a petition around for the THE SOVIET UNION fore the check went through the| “me miners: will’ etrugele:. there filiation with the League was raised | +1, importance of marine in the BROWNSVILLE worker of 29 commented bitterly. same purpose again, and forcing New York City. clearing house and then the check | are many conditions Or the canines (oe ay Unit, there was immediate re- struggle against war and fascism but These are stirring nes in) “A superitendent, in rejecting a) the miners of the local to sia! I am very much interested in| Was forwarded back to me by the| hich ao not come under the agree- | SPOnse and delegates were elected. not once was the task of building Brownsville as well as in the Bronx, | Voman of 38, pointed to a sign for/ against these two members, by getting a real knowledge of the gen-| insurance company and on March 1,| au? £0 00. pushing cars cheating | BU’ When other units in the ter-| the Teague mentioned. While I heJp wanted, saying, “It reads Girls Wanted, not old women.’” far the struggle against the high cost of living is concerned. An effort to force the Borden and : Bi RY field Companies to reduce the e of milk products) Many groups of women work- é well as in| &?S. especially waitresses, salesgirls, in pr the Bronx nsville house- wives, under the leadership of that section of the Women's Counzils, haye stopped buying the milk of these two companie’ Open air meetings have been held to familiarize workers of the neigh- and such—know only too well that their very lives depend largely on preserving a youthful, attractive appearance. Such workers are naturally keenly interested in any- thing that holds out hope of help- ing them in this respect. (It would take a sardonic soul indeed to ac- borhood with the struggle. Agents a pe Srrbae of the compa came to the| cuse them of “vanity.”) women and asked them why they| Here too, an ounce of prevention were making so much fuss!—and if the price of milk would come down ould they please stop all jon? !! 1! cream was actually dropped 10 cents per measure to 8 That helps, but the battle Sour is not won yet, so a big demonstra- tion is being planned to demand all of the Brownsville This is scheduled for Bris- nd Sutter Avenues, Wednesday, 1 18 at 2p. m. All mass o1 is are asked to support this sronctration, Beauty Seeker En Route § ng. sailing, over the deep blue —of “beauty culture.” We were dealing with line and color as fac- tors in our appearance, and touched on the dressing of the hair as con- tributing to a symmetrical effect. What about the face itself? Can anything really be done to pre- serve or restore its youth? Here is a relevant passage from Grace Hutchins’ “Women Who Work.” is worth a pound of cure, and those will be fortunate who realize while young that cortortions of the mus- cles of the face due to various emo- tional or mental conditions, may be- come habitual to the point where a permanent distrotion is the re- sult. For example, drawing down eyebrow, pinching up the mouth into tight, bitter lines, speaking from one side of the mouth, etc. (How many of us are not familiar with the fixed, supercilious sneer | adorning the faces of some bour- geois dames, and with the egotisti- cal, lop-sided mouths and slitty eyes of bourgeois men who got that way trying to impress the world with their importance!) The working girl is faced with the problem of obstructing as far as possible the damaging of her looks by her hard conditions, the strain, worry, and constant scold- ing she endures. We'll touch next week on the care of the face and hair, and the caution needed in the selection and use of lotions, cos- metics and so on. MORNING FREJHEIT 2th ANNIVE Speakers: RSARY Saturday Evening, April 14th, 1934 New York Coliseum, E. 177th Street threatening to stop relief for those refusing to sign, callnig them sym- pathizers of the left-wingers, and have even gone so far as to threaten some of the members with knives; all because these two miners have voiced their resentment against the present P. M. A. officials’ policy of doing nothing for the miners. Instead of militant strike action and a class struggle program, the P. M. A. officials are ou‘bidding Lewis in knavery. The only course left for the miners is unity of both the U. M. W. A. and P. W. A. rank and file, and to go no further with the pro- gram of action which was drawn up jat the Illinois Rank File Confer- ence in Springfield, March 11th. —A Miner's Daughter. (Relief Officials in Alabama Fight Union By Starving Miners By a Mine Worker Correspondent FAIRFIELD, Ala.—The bosses are starving the workers to get them to | tear up, their check-off cards. All the Tennessee Coal and Iron Co. mines are all closing down Satur- day, and this is facing the workers —to tear up their check-off cards. | Why? Because the boss won't give | them relief until they tear up their cards at all T. C. I. mines. NOT We publish letters from coal and ore miners, and from oil field workers, every Saturday. We urge workers in these fields to write us of their conditions of work and of their struggles to organize. Please get your letters to us by eral government and economic ma- chinery of the Soviet Union. But on account of the large number of books on the subject that confuse and slander end misrepresent, I have trouble in finding one that is really honest and accurate. I should be therefore very grateful to you if you would recommend to me the best and latest writings on the matter. I shall be looking every day into your paper for an answer to my request. —An Unemployed Worker. See wie Editorial reply: There are any number of books on the Soviet | Union wich will give the reader an acurate account of what is | happening in the U. S. 8. R. To name a few small pamphlets, “The Soviet Union—Your Ques- | tions Answered,” “Religion in the U. S. S. R. (Conditions of work- ers and the trade unions), “The Working Women in the Soviet Union,” “Anti-Soviet Lies and the Five Year Plan.” These pam- phlets sell from 3c up to lic and may be obtained from the Work- ers Library Publishers, 50 East 13th St., New York. CONTRIBUTIONS ARE VERY WELCOME Calumet City, Til. Enclosed find $1 contribution to the $35,000 financial drive. The Peoples Cooperative State Bank of Hammond, Ind., just got through paying ten per cent 3rd distribution on March 1 to their depositors and | T held a bank draft check set value| for $2. The check once was issued to the Northern American Life and | Accident Insurance Co. Terre} | Haute, Ind., and on September 3,| 1934, all depositors under $2 were)! * paid in full and this is how I hap-| 0” weight, no payment for dead) pen to have a spare dollar to send) “ork. ete. : i H to the fighting “Daily Worker.” | TO lead the miners in the strug-| On Sunday, March 11, 1934, at 2| 8¢ against the worsening conditions p.m. I tuned in on Great Lakes ex-| i the mines, the opposition groups | change station and heard a Father| ust be organized, the Communists or Franciscan Justin speak from|in the mines must take the initiative | Buffalo, N. Y. He sure was giving| 1M the fight around the immediate| the Communists plenty of hell the| Needs, to lead the opposition in| way he instigated against the Com-| Cleaning out the corrupt local offi- | munists saying that they are the|cials in many of the locals, and/ most dangerous class that ever| Preparing the workers for struggle. lived, so that made me mad, I am| This victory of the miners of $5 one of the thousands of Trybuna|® day and 7 hour day was possible | D. W. fund. Comradely yours, F. B. M. DOG FANCIER PROTESTS New York, N. Y. Editor Daily Worker. Dear comrade: As a steady reader of the Daily Worker, I hereby protest today’s cartoon by Burck picturing the So- cialist Severing as a dog getting a bone from the fascist table. Comrade, this is a great injustice to the dogs, and entirely too flatter- ing to Severing. Dogs are the most faithful of all animals and man’s best friends. I feel that a snake bearing the name of Socialist Sever- ing on its fangs would have been more to the point—Justitia Omni-| mus! Comradely yours, The dictatorship of the prole- tariat must be a State that em- bodies a new kind of democracy, for the proletarians and the dis- possessed; and a new kind of dictatorship, against the bour- geoisie—Lenin. |Robotniczo readers and this is| Only as a result of the struggles the | |Why I am contributing $1 to the| miners have put up. This was given | |to them because they have some} |experiences of the miners strike | | when they marched 5,000 strong on the Clairton mills. | Relief “Bureau Leaves 'Employe Without Teeth By a Worker Correspondent NEW YORK.—4Julius Tanzer, age |60, an employe of the Emergency |46, Bronx, located at 188th Street| and Webster Avenue, had been re- |ferred to the Temporary Emer- gency Relief Administration Dental Cilnic for treatment of his teeth. They proceeded to extract all of his teeth, promising to provide him ith a false set of teeth after his gums were healed. Six months |later Mr. Tanzer, after suffering untold tortures of starvation and | inability to disgest his food properly | due to lack of teeth to chew with, | returned for his promised teeth. He was told that they had failed to | appropriate enough money for such an expendtiure, so therefore Mr. | Tanzer will be obliged to trust to | the Lord that he be able to grow a | Wednesday of each week. | | | WITH OUR YOUNG READERS Back to the Capitalist Country , I have been in the Soviet Union |for about a year and I saw the | difference between a workers’ coun- | try and a capitalist country. I have |gone to school there (Anglo-Amer- |ican School). They teach you there MAY DAY IS OUR DAY! This May Day will be bigger and better than ever. Thousands of | workers who have been or still are on relief, thousands who have lost their C.W.A. jobs, will know that EARL BROWDER, Secretary, Communist Party M. J. OLGIN, Editor Morning Freiheit Program: Maxim Gorki’s “STORM BIRDS,” presented by ARTE, FREIHEIT SINGING SOCIETY and DANCE GROUP. NEGRO QUARTET, members of Hall Johnson Choir. Admission 40c in advance, 55c at door. REGISTRATION NOW OPEN Spring Term HARLEM WORKERS SCHOOL "0 West 135th Street Room 214-A CLASSES IN: Principles of Communism Public Speaking Marxism-Leninism Labor Journalism Political Economy Trade Union Strategy Spanish—English—Russian Current Negro Problems Special Scholarship Rates for Organizations Ask for Descriptive Booklet Telephone: Audubon 3-5055 CLEVELAND, Daily Worker Banquet and Dance Banquet Pull Hungarian Supper From 6 to 8 P. M—25e Dance Excellent Dance Orchestra From 8 to ? — lic OHIO Saturday April 14th Speakers I, O. FORD, Former Communist Candidate for Mayor. JOHN WILLIAMSON, District Organizer of Communist Party. HUNGARIAN WORKERS HOME 11123 Buckeye Road, Cleveland, Ohio the | | May 1 is their holiday. This is their |different than here. Over there/day to march all together and show |they teach us working class history|their strength. Workers’ children| | and workers’ fight to free the world| throughout the country will let the| |from capitalist slavery. They also | world know that they are fighting| |teach us about the October Revo-|side by side with their fathers and |lution and about our beloved Red/ mothers. |Army. The defender of the work-| Pioneers are busy at work prepar- |ers’ fatherland and so forth. It isjing for the great demonstration. {so interesting, you feel that) This is what they are doing in New | this is the truth. You surely feel | York. In all sections of the city | different in the American School | the boys and girls are making floats. not a fairy tale. You know that Conducted by Mary Morrow, Chil- dren’s editor, The Daily Worker, 50 East 13th St., New York City. | will not do it. Home Relief Bureau, Precinct No.| new set of teeth at the age of sixty. | ritory were invited to participate| their response was one, either of in- | difference or oppositior. When a comrade approached one of the units for assistance in the distribu- | tion of leaflets for our mass meet- | ing, he was told, “We have no time} for this work. We must contact | the masses.” The Agit-Prop of an- other unit when asked to raise the | question, said, “What the hell. This is a paper committee.” The District Draft Resolution| points out that, “One of the seri- ous shortcomings of the district has | been the failure to take advantage | of the great interest aroused by the | U. S. Congrss Against War and Fas- | cism and the exceptional possibilities for building the League Against War and Fascism in the city.” The Draft Resolution also points out our short- United Front tactics. Whom do the comrades, quoted above, expect to apply these tactics? Certainly the Socialist and Lovestoneite leadership comings in the application of the) Nor will the A. F.| recognize fully the importance of the day to day struggle on the waterfront, I believe that the failure to tie up the League Against War and Fascism with the work and to make provision for the building of the League represents a_ serious oversight. R. V. A. Unit 33, Formerly Section 1. Now Waterfront Concentra- tion Section. Join the Communist Party 36 E. 12th STREET, N. Y. C. Please send me more informa- tion on the Communist Party. Name . Street City ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS Helpful Advice for Nazi Invalids “Dear Doctor: “A clever non-Jewish physician, Dr. Lakstchewsky, writes an amus- ing communication to a newspaper in Basle, Switzerland, that is at- tracting the attention of the medi- cal press. He remarked that since the Jewish spirit is to be destroyed in every branch of life, according to the National Socialist doctrines, he is anxious to provide a medical guide so that consistent anti-Semites should know what to avoid when ill. “A Nazi who has syphilis must not allow himself to be cured by salvar- san, because it is the discovery of a Jew: Ehrlich. He must not even take steps to find out whether he has syphilis because the Wasserman test, which is used for the purpose of finding this out, is the discovery of a Jew. If he thinks he has gon- orrhea, he must not seek to estab- lish the fact, because again he will be using the method of a Jew: Neisser, A Nazi who has heart dis- ease must not use digitalis, which was popularized by a Jew: Ludgiw Doctor By PAUL LUTTINGER, M.D. | will not use cocaine, or he will be | benefitting by the work of a Jew: Solomon Stricker. Typhus must not be treated or he will have to benefit by the discoveries of the Jews, Widal and Weill. If he has diabetes, he must not use insulin, because of the research work of the Jew, Minkow- sky. If he has a headache, he must shun pyramidon and _ antipyrin (Spiro and Eilege). Anti-Semites who have convulsions must put up with them, for it was a Jew, Oscar Leibrich, who thought of chloral hy- drate; the same with phsychic ail- ments: Freud being the father of psycho-analysis. Anti-Semitic doc- tors must jettison all dicoveries and improvements by the Nobel Prize men Volitzer, Barangaj, Otto War- burg; the dermatologists Judasohn, Bruno Block, Una; the neurologists, Mendl, Oppenheim, Kronecker, Ben- edict; the lung specialist, Fraenkel; the surgeon, Israel; the anatomist, Henle, and others. “Here's to the further increase in power of the Communist Party, and to a Soviet America in the very near future. | Where they teach you a lot of bunk and where they try to poison the | workers’ children’s mind with all kinds of fairy tales. Like everybody has a chance in this country to be- }come a President and so forth. | Some children fall for that bunk. | It is the duty of us Pioneers to con- |vince the children of the workers | that they are being fooled and mis- led; that the only chance they will |have is to join the Y. P. A. and} \fight together with their parents | for a Soviet America. | MARION SANKOFF, | Brooklyn, N. Y. | How about it? Shall we have les- | sons in real and true American His- |tory? Let us know if you want to learn the kind of history which your teacher dares not tell about. Be- cause if she did, she would prob- ably lose her job. | Here is the best answering picture |to our cartoon showing the boss |giving the worker a gun. It is by |Zirco Funcich, 12. The next best | were by Phil Stern and Boris Bassis, Each section is given a different} subject. In Harlem where the}; largest number of Negroes live, they | will take the Scottsboro Case. The | children on the East Side are using | (tenement: fires as their subject. In| |Brooklyn, the boys and girls will] jcarry on long sticks empty milk| bottles and the torn shoes and| clothes they have to wear to school. |In another part of Brooklyn, crowded school rooms will be the subject. On May 1 everywhere | workers’ children will be marching. In every town and city. They should make the day a success no matter how small the village. Bring out your class mates after |school to march with other work- ers’ children. If you can get enough |of your class or school to stay out, so that the teacher will not demote | those who stay out or mistreat them in other ‘ways, do so. In schools where the Pioneers have! been very active, a strike can be called. But if you haven't worked hard during the year, and this is | impossible, then you will not be able to strike on May Day. But you can all march after school! We'll see you all on May} Day! | JOIN THE PIONEERS Lets stick together all of us kids. We are old enough now to take off | our bibs. Attend and take part in all of our meetings, Fight for our rights without any cheating. | | | NemeIp! | | Sing our songs with a will, Tell your chums, Tom and Bill. j | Show how te chase all your fears | ALPHABET Some letters in the alphabet mean certain things. See how many you can find. Example: What letter is an insect? The letter B. What letter is— 1, A vegetable. 2. Something people drink. 3. It’s on your geography map. 4. A braid in the back of the head which our Chinese comrades do not wear any more. 5, Abbreviation of the train that runs on tracks high above the ground. 6. A noisy, bright-colored bird. 7. A river in Scotland. 8 What the farmer says to his |mule when he wants him to turn | right. 9. iy) PR 4 DIRECTIONS All the animals are on the ele- phant. You can spell them out by going from letter to letter up and down, crosswise and sidewise. Don’t skip any squares. You may have to slip between words but not be- tween letters. Tiger is spelled out. Now go ahead. See if you can find eleven more animals. Let's see who'll be the first to send us the complete list. To become a member of the Puzzle Club send the names Giecus is IN TOWN’ It is often the first word of Comradely yours, Traube. If he has a toothache, he 'F. B. Mi” WHAT DOES MAY DAY 1934 MEAN TO NEW YORK WORKERS? Here’s the fighting answer in a 20-page pamphlet! “MAY DAY 1934” By Mailech Epstein Educational Director, Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union Organize Sales in the Shops Spread them by the Thousands! Organizations can obtain “May Day, 1934” at the rate of 75 cents per hundred. ORDER TODAY FROM DISTRICT LITERATURE DEPT., 35 E. 12th Street, N. Y. C. UNITED FRONT MAY DAY ARRANGEMENTS COMMITTEE, 799 Broadway, Room 539, N. Y. C. CLARENCE HATHAWAY Editor, Daily Worker DANCE and ENTERTAINMENT . For Strike Fund of of at least eight animals to the|a question. Daily Worker Puzzle Club. OCG RQ AMS Answer to last week's picture talk. MON Bread and Cocca. | SACCO AND TOM The next best monograms were VANZETTI MOONEY sent in by Arthur Buchbinder and Virginia Luttinger. S| BY MURRY KRumHolTZ By joining up no Pioneers. in the Young By Estell Aldrich. i Will speak on AMALGAMATED HOTEL and RESTAURANT WORKERS | PASC! sm ae |B SUNDAY, APRIL 15 Sunday, April 15th j AS yo at 915 Kizhth Ave. Scandinavian Hall, rim siowy “POTEMKIN” 5111-5th Ave., B’klyn | Auspices: Scandinavian Workers Educational Society Also a Charlie Chaplin Comedy Picture Showing at 8 P.M. Benefit: Red of Navy Yard Dancing from 10 P.M, tt 2 AM. \ \

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