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Page 3 Longer Hours, Lower Pay Pushed by Electric, Steel Bosses ROOSEVELT SPEECH Philadelphia Drive Funds Raised United Front SOCIALISTS VOW To Hold Rally es ‘ Is Initiated To T ‘IN : —— eta Active Unit Proves ve é N.R.A. Gives Hearing to Electric Trust Demand Giant Meeting Friday ; Sh oe. Will Protest New Meee Atiend Election Rally in Newport News, Hear for Increase from 36 to 40-Hour Week— Alexander Wright, Negro Candidate for Rising Wave of Terror In State Is Met By Unity SATCU ObOiet so aos Lee eer ) U.S. Steel Corp. Prepares Pay Cuts | WASHINGTON, Oct. 10—Another step in the drive of the employers to cut wages and increase hours was taken here when proposals to increase the work week in the elec- trical industry were discussed by the National Recovery PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 11.—Plans |for a giant Scottsboro-Herndon pro- fest parade and mass meeting in |this city next Friday evening are meeting with a wide response from Negro and white workers and in- tellectuals indignant at the recent ruling of the Alabama Supreme | Newark District Working Hard To Fill Quota— everal House Parties and Affairs Are Scheduled for Daily Worker “T am amazed at the possibilities of collecting money for the Daily Worker, if only a handful of comrades work, not to speak of a majority of the membership of the Party, which is certainly far from being the case here.” Board and the National Electrical Manufacturing Industry. ts upholding ee peck ae The proposal of the electricalé —— wif SEDROI e CoO ee s PREUAIN Petes WORN manufacturers to raise the work Patterson and Clarence Norris, two week from 36 to 40 hours-came one May after the A. F. of L. convention in San Francisco went on record for five-day week and a six-hour day vithout, however, increase in week- ly pay. The intention of the bosses takes on added significance since their Proposal follows on the heels of the reports from Pittsburgh, which in- dicate that the United States Steel Corporation is planning to cut the wages of its 200,000 workers by at least 10 per cent. The present drive against the liv- ing standards of the workers was initiated by Roosevelt in his recent fireside broadcast. He raised the point that weekly wages were not as important as annual wages, i hence paving the way for wage cuts on the ground that the manufac- } turers could give more employment. | if their weekly payrolls were slashed, Workers are thus confronted by t a concerted wage-cutting drive and a concerted effort to increase the | working week. The campaign of the Communist Party for a shorter | working week with no decrease in } pay must take on new momentum in the light of these developments. Buffalo Jobless ; i e Will Hold Mass | } Rally Saturday Spe | BUFFALO, N. Y., Oct. 11—Hun- | dreds of unemployed steel workers | are expected to answer the call of | the Unemployment Councils of Lackewanna to mobilize at a mass meeting at the Friendship House, Ridge Rd., on Saturday, Oct. 13, at 8 p.m. | The mass meeting will elect del- } egates to the mass hunger march which will converge on Albany on Oct. 30. After a conference in Al- | bany the hunger marchers will pro- , ceed to the State House where rep- ' resentatives will demand that Goy- ernor Lehman call a special session of both houses of the State Legis- lature for the appropriation of ade- quate winter relief and enactment of the Workers Unemployment In- surance Bill and Small Home and Property Owners Relief Bill. The Workers Unemployment In- surance Bill, initiated by the Com- nunist Party and incorporated in the Communist Party election plat- form, has been endorsed by the Buffalo City Council under pres- | sure from the workers, and by 49 City Councils throughout the coun- try. Hundreds of thousands of workers in A. F. of L. unions and workers in other organizations have backed the Workers Bill. Cleveland, Ohio “KREPKIN"” play on the Russian Revo- lution, showing for the first time, by Branch 2068 Slov. Sec. I.W.O., together with the Dram. Circle of Slov. Workers Org., Sunday, Oct. 14, at Bohemian Na- tional Hall, 4945 Broadway, 4 p.m. sharp. Adm. ae in ady., 35¢ at door. Chicago, Ill. GALA Youth Dance, Saturday, Oct. 13, 8:30 p. m. at the Liberty Hall, 3420 w. Roosevelt Road. Duke Croswell and his Jobless Will Meet Sunday in Philadelphia PHILADELPHIA, Pa., Oct. 11.— Following the refusal of the Park Commissioner to grant a permit to the Unemployment Councils for a mass meeting at Reyburn Plaza on Saturday, Oct. 20, at 2 p. m., a call has been sent out for an emergency conference to be held Sunday, Oct. 14, at 2 p. m., at the Needle Trades Hall, 913 Arch Street. No amount of police terror, the Councils de- clared, will stop the unemployed and relief workers from assembling at Reyburn Plaza; every effort must be }made for a huge turnout. | The emergency meeting Sunday | will make plans for mobilizing the membership of all working class or- ganizations for the mass rally on) Oct. 20, at which time the committee | of one hundred, which is to place of the Scottsboro boys. The mass meeting will be held at the Broadway Arena, Broad and dressed by Angelo Herndon, Mrs. Ida Norris, Scottsboro Richard B. Moore, National Field Organizer of the International La- bor Defense, and several local speakers. It will be featured by a banquet at which the six Philadel- phia anti-fascists, recently released on bail, Herndon and the Scottsboro Mother will be guests of honor. The Arena meeting will be pre- ceded by a parade starting at 7 o'clock from Reyburn Plaza. In a last minute call issued today by William Powell, district secretary of the LL.D. and Russell Watson of the League of Struggle for Negro Rights, all organizations are urged to rally their memberships to be at Reyburn Square, with their ban- ners and slogans, at 7 p. m. sharp Friday evening. Soviets Honor | Christians Streets, and will be ad-| Mother, | What the Daily Worker start pointedly confirmed by Comrade E. G. Clarke, Daily Worker represen- tative for District 18, Milwaukee. | Workers are willing to support the Daily Worker—and they are ready |—but, as Comrade Clarke continues | to point out—“The comrades don’t | seem to realize this is a main task | of the district, from the organizer down to the newest member.” Because “a majority of the mem- bership of the Party” is not work- ing, the “possibilities of collecting | money” are useless in Milwaukee. | The organizational report of the | District shows the result. |. The Jewish organizations | turned in $8—the other organiza- tions nothing. | Examples of Good Work | If the Daily Worker drive should fail, the paper would find | itself in a sorry position indeed. | But in Milwaukee itself we find examples of the hard work neces- | sary to make the drive successful. | Unit 303, in West Allis, held a have | of the $60,000 drive is thus ¢— has been stressing since the District 14, New Jersey. This dis- | trict asserts that it “can be relied upon” to make its mark within the next few weeks. Several af- fairs and house parties are al- ready scheduled, collection lists are in the hands of hundreds of sympathizers, all I.W.O. branches and other mass organizations are making use of collection material. Some of the affairs that will soon be held are: One by the Women’s Council, on Oct. 24, at the Work- ers’ Center, 516 Clinton Ave., New- ark; one by the Jack London Club of Plainfield, Oct. 20, and a joint affair by the Russian, Polish and | Slovak branches of the I. W. O., in| Trenton, Oct. 20, A series of unit parties, oo numerous to mention,” are also scheduled. The Milwaukee sections might also consider the news from the Hudson River Valley section (12), in New York. This section has al- ready completed its quota of $500. Not only that, but it has given it- self another quota of $500! What this New York section, with | ROSWELL, N. M., Oct United action to smash the ing tide of fascist and vigilante ter- ror throughout the State of New Mexico has been entered into be- tween the rank and file Socialist and the Communists. Workers who are members of either party have been thrust into jail; lante bands are seeking to t all workers who take militant action for relief or on strike. In Clovis the Socialists are rally- ing to the support of jailed Com- munists. The American Civil Lib- erties Union is defending workers in Roswell. At Ratoon the Com- munists are defending the Sp: h American Federation. United tion by both has stopped vigilantes in many places. Together with the Farm Holiday Association the Socialists and Com- munists have adopted the follow- ing united front: All uncomradely criticism against one group by the other will cease at once and the united front will be relentlessly maintained. Both groups have pledged to protect each other's homes by every means at their command against court frame- ups, police terror, and by securing bonds and protection against thugs and vigilantes The meetings of both groups will be protected and assisted in every way, and the hospitality of each others homes will be extended to their comrades in both parties and functionaries in either party as grow- the trug- than $28—and raised their quota lits widely scattered territory and | true comrades in a common strug: the unemployed demands before the City Council, will report. Calls for a united front on the fight for the use of Reyburn Plaza, traditional meeting place of Phila- delphia’s unemployed, have been 3 Airmen for Record Flight | house party and turned in more | Bed cco ,., |farmer residents can do, the other | Neary pease tl Apeg oe sections throughout the country can | | proper pace. It cannot evade its | Guomsivel., ‘The ‘Dally, Worker is| responsibility to fill its $1,000 quota. | confident that the $60,000 will be | It every unit will stage a house attained—but for the safety of the | sent by the Unemployment Councils to the Communist Party and the Socialist Party. Complete support was pledged by the Communist Party. From the Socialist Party the Councils have received the assurance of David Felix that he will per- sonally support the Workers Unem- ployment Insurance Bill, but since | he could not speak for the Socialist | Party as a whole, he referred the | (Special to tho Daily Worker) MOSCOW, Oct. 12 (By Wireless). —For “heroism displayed and self- denying work,” the Central Execu- awarded the famous Soviet airman | Gromov and his companions the | title of “Hero of the Soviet eee Gromoy and his herole crew broke | @ world record Sept. 29 when they | flew 75 hours without landing in| tive Committee of the U.S.S.R. has} fund, and will get o‘hers to con-| party, if every mass organization | | will give an affair, if every Com- | munist Party member and Party | sympathizer will contribute to the | tribute, Milwaukee will fill its | Districts, Sections, Units and in- quota. | dividuals in the $60,000 drive. | Action In New Jersey | These reports will be printed. It might take a lesson from paper it must not be a long, drawn- out campaign! * NOTE:—The Daily Worker de- sires reports of activities of all Send them in.—Editor. Council committee to other members closed circle for a distance of of his party. The Council committee | 12,411 kilometers (8,135 miles). The will make every effort to meet with whole crew comprised Pilot Gromov, |the leadership of the Socialist Party,|Engineer Filin, and Pilot Spirin. it announced, as well as individual |All three were honored in addition | members in the fight against hunger | with the Order of Lenin. This is ‘and evictions, for adequate unem- the second time the title of “Hero |ployment relief, for joos at trade of the Soviet Union” has been con- |union wages for all unemployed, and | ferred, having been granted only \for the Workers Unemployment In- | once before, to the airmen rescuing | surance Bill. the Cheliuskiners. New Orleans Strikers Say Bag Company Pays Less Than $5 Weekly NEW ORLEANS, Oct. 11.—Em- ployes of the Mente and Co. bag factory are on strike for better wages and hours. The employes charge the company with disregard- ing even code wages. They are |Maxim Gorky. worked, they declare, as much as Engineer Filin and Pilot Sterrs- |fourteen hours a week oyertime,| man Spirin are both of working | with wages sometimes as low as class origin and received a uni- | $4.91 a week. versity educaiion after the October President Mamie Lee of Local | Revolution. Both have a number 2071, United Textile Workers, de- | of splendid flights to their credit | Clares that the company pays wo- and have been awarded various | men from $4.61 to $7.90 a week and |honors at numerous times. Spirin |men from $6.30 to $10.90 a week. | Wrote nine books on training pilots. | They are on a 54-hour week instead | | of the code 40-hour week. \Naff, Arizona Leader jand commenced flying as early as 1917. He served the Red Army in 1919 and afterwards was engaged in instructing flyers and testing new airplanes. Gromov has achieved a number of splendid flights. In 1926 he accomplished a remarkable three-day speed flight through Eu- Tope and in 1929 he made another European flight in the airplane Krilya Sovietov. Gromov was also commander of the giant airplane | Company officials admit that they ‘ make no effort to pay the code) Of Jobless, Nominated minimum of $12 (the Southern | B minimum) and claim that they are | Py. Pe for Governor not governed by any code, although | they are part of the textile industry. | _ PHOENIX, Ariz., Oct. 11.—Clay " | Naff, millitant unemployed leader ———_—_—__—_—_ aes in jail on a framed-up charge | of “inciting to rio*,” was nominated AFFAIRS FOR THE Ise the Communist candida‘e for c overnor by the nominating con- DAILY WORKER | vention which met here recently. Detroit, Mich. Ramon Garcia, in jail with Naff on a similar charge, was named as orchestra. Entertainment, Thestre Col- i at 2113 lective and others. Refreshments, ad-| AnAiz, Sizen te ea | ouaante for the United States mission 2c. Auspices, Y.C.L. West Side pee cid jenate. Section. Chicago, Ill. , The Communist Party in this Philadelphia, Pa “Kitchen Picnic" arranged by Unit 4) State faces open legalistic efforts of . Sec. 1 at 526 E. 11th £i.. 8 p.m. Inter- national Amusements. -Adm. 15¢. | Governor B. B. Moeur and Attorney ANTI-WAR and Fascist Sport Night, Boxing, Dramatics, Wrestling, Acrobatics. Report of delegate of Sport Congress Against Wat and Fascism, Saturday, Oc- tober 13 at 913 Arch St. Auspices, L.S.U. JOHN REED CLUB Writers’ Group General Arthur T. LaPrade to pre- vent its candidates from getting on | the ballot despite the fac: that all | legal requirements have been met. The other candidates named at Election and Daily Worker House Party | by Unit 912 at 1257 N. Campbell Ave., 3rd floor, Saturday, Oct. 13. Free food. Danee, Saturday, Oct. 13, at Imperial Hall, 2409 N, Halsted St. Adm. 20c. Pilot Gromov was born in 1899/ 1900 Workers Hear Herndon In Pittsburgh PITTSBURGH, Pa., Oct. 11.— | Nine hundred workers assembled in Northside Carnegie Library on Monday night to greet Angelo Herndon In a mass defense rally held under the auspices of the Pittsburgh Scotisboro-Herndon Committee. A total of $140 in cash and pledges from various individu- als and workers’ organizations was collected for the Scottsboro-Hern- don defense fund. Tumultuous ovations from the en- | thusiastic audience welcomed He:n- don as he appeared at the platform |and later as he uttered the defiant | answer of the Southern white and | Negro masses to the lynch ruling class—‘Despite their torture of me during the months in Fulton Tower, |I have today the same feeling, the ; Same determination, to carry on the | fight for liberation as I had the day | of the demonstration in Atlanta.” | “It is only your protests and mass action,” the Georgia unemployed leader told the workers, “that will | stop frame-ups such as my own case jand that of the Scottsboro boys.” Richard B. Moore, national field | organizer of the I. L. D., traced the | history of the Scottsboro case, call- ing for a renewed campaign for the |freedom of the innocent boys as | part of the appeal now to the U. S. Supreme Court. | “Scottsboro is not only the symbol |of 14 million oppressed Neg:oes in the South, but of every exploited |end oppressed minority the world over.” Resolutions were adopted de- |manding the release of the Scotts- | boro boys, Mooney, Herndon, Frank- feld, Egan, and the Ambridge pris- loners. Mrs. Ida Norris, Tony Minerich, Push W ge Cut Plan as Social Insurance Bill General Motors Official | | Extols Scheme at Cincinnati CINCINNATI, Ohio, Oct. 11.— The “Deane American Plan” for slashing wages in industry under the guise of unemployment insur- ance was placed before the Na- tional Conference of Catholic Char- ities here yesterday. The plan, spon- sored by Albert Deane, deputy ad- ministrator of the Federal Hous- ing Administration and president of |the General Motors Holding Cor- poration, provides for “mutual se- curity” of workers and industry, ac- cording to the words of its sponsor. | Briefly the plan calls for setting up a board to establish the number | }of hours work “feasible” in any | given industry and the staggering of work to all workers employable jin that industry. | Dr. George K. McCabe, of the | | University of Pittsburgh, who also | | Spoke on unemployment insurance, | |declared that the currently pro- |posed plans for unemployment in- | |surance were “unsound,” with the |Possible exception of the Groves |Law (Wisconsin Unemployment Compensation Act). | |. The Wisconsin Law, which is be- | ing fought by the workers of that| State, who have called a mass con- ference for the Workers Unemploy- ment Insurance Bill to be held in | Milwaukee on Oct. 28, eliminates ail| ithe present unemployed, farm and domestic employes, government workers, teachers, railroad work- ers in interstate transportation and employes in plants at which less \than ten are working. Payments are jlimited to a maximum of ten dol- | |lars a week for ten weeks. le. Both groups have agreed to take steps to encourage united political action. Both groups have united to their fullest extent for the defense of the Soviet Union. U. S. Senate, Pledge Full Support YEWPORT NE vacillating policie an automobile load of Soci vicinity attended an elect addressed by Alexander Wr 700 in Chicago Plan To Meet Against War CHICAGO, IL . 11—The 700 Chicago delegates to the Congres: Against War and Fascism will mect with the Congress Committee on S to map out a pr the American Le and Fascism here. Officers and an mittee for the next ye v men ernoon executive com- be combat the fascis' Ridge Civic Council and vigil groups in Morgan Park to lyneh spirit against, Negro students attending the local high school. Ac- tion will also be taken to fight the deportation of Eric Becker to Ger- many for his anti-fascist activities The meeting will be held in Room | 412, Capitol Bldg., 159 North St., on Saturday, at 2 p.m. Every Chicago delegate has been urged to attend. , Oct leaders 11.—-Brushing aside the the Negro question, from farm centers in this ly of the Communist Party zro candidate for United on e ledged to the the meeting the s sts came to the platform and exchanged 1 greetings with candidat of the Co! 1 platform for home neighbor= the Com asked fo: id that attendance at the n them their first g of the Commu- on the fight and on the een Negro and white v y pledged their votes to the Communist candidates, During the past week sevéfal thousand workers in shipyards, rail- reads, laundries, tobacco factori as well as white co workers, un- employed. and domestics, were reeched by local Communist cam- paign meetings. Wright, militant longshoreman, will leave on a State-wide tour: oh Wednesday which will carry him into the farming districts and work- ing class neighborhoods of many cities. His tour will continue until the day of the elections. A Mass Circulation of our “Daily” Means a Quickening Tempo in Class Struggle. 5418” No Charge for Alterations “PM WEARING ONE ie J Most men now realize it's WHERE YOU SUY—not what you spend that counts. Consider Crawford Clothes, at $18.75. Small money for clothes, yet they conform with the highest standards you know. How do we do it? Here's how: As New York's Largest Clothing Chain our volume is tremendous almost beyond belief. So we con afford to content our- ves with a small per-garment profit. In addition, we tailor and sell every Crawford garment. Obviously, such a policy means substantial economies all along the line. Crawford Clothes are authentically styled. We use fabrics of quality and distinction found in $40 and $50 suits. And master crafismen do the tailoring. present another of its famous Red Litera- “s home, 3614 a : | ~ sr -to-Fii” E ture Nights. Readings, Oriticlam, Diseus-| Wr“Soggerelt. "Road Sat., oek, sath, | (He Convention are: jand Carl Hacker were the othe-| Log Angeles To Hold Are You “Hard-to-Fii’? paces Suits and $1550 sion from floor, Refreshments, Sunday, Good food and entertainment. Adm.' Martin Gehon, U. S. Representa- | speakers. : fi 2 Instead of styling for mythical Overcocis. . . . « Sotober 14, John Reed Club, 196 fouth) free. Given by Unit 314. | tive; James Porter, Negro worker Affair To Aid Prisoners saveraye mens we xeop iH ind" cy cateark’ “Usiioran ‘ Philadelphia, Pa. jand candidate for Secretary of | 4 ; a | : flesh-and-blood men with common, “i Lancaster, Pa. Gohcadt pha, Oct. 19, 8 p.m, at | State, who is now in jail on frame- | Mass Fight in Chicago Tortured in Poland | everyday defects of staunch, long-wear- $a 75 up charges of “rio.” on Sept. 6; L. | ing fabrics... Vomecil, State Treasurer; Clarence | physique. Regardless of your proportions, remem Broadway Arena, Broad and Christian PAT OUSH, steel worker candidate for Streets. Emile Babad. from “Artef,” Governor on the Communist Party ticket, ‘i aot at oe ales Waged on Deportation | ,og ancrtms, Oct. 11—In a speaks at the Court House steps, Satur- day, Oct. 13, 7°30 p.m. on the lection Program. DETROIT, Mich. Pioneer Membership Drive DANCE DETROIT FINNIEH FEDERATION SATURDAY, Oct. 13th, 8 P.M. PROGRAM BY THE PIONEERS Tickets in advance, 20c; at door, 25c. 5969 - 14th Street and other attractions. Affair given by Unit 104 on Sat., Oct. 13th, at 1829 8. Fifth St. gram and plenty of fun. Lynch, I. L. D. attorney, for Attor- ee poration Commissioner; Loraine Banquet, Saturday, Oct. 14, 8 Taylor, militant young office worker, ni ee ees Nee for Superintendent of eupule In- s, WR. Fowell, Ben Gardner, | struction; Thomas R. Day, Negro . Good’ program of en- Roki Yertainment, Adm, a8e, "AUspices: Com. | WOrKer, for Tax Commissioner, and munist Party of West Philadelphia. | R. H. Williams, I. L, D. attorney, \for Justice of the Supreme Court. Goes, 8 pa at saw, cotenen Be Boston, Mass. Democrats Take Toll From A.A.A. Workers For Party, Is Charge House Party of the Season given by American Workers Club, Sunday, Oc- tober 14, 8 p.m. at Al Binch’s Home, 132 Seaver £t., Roxbury. Adm. 15c, PHILADELPHIA, Pa. DAILY WORKER CONCERT FRIDAY, October 19th Broadway Arena, Broad and Christian Sts. WASHINGTON, Oct. 11.—Demo- cratic claims of innocence of the old game of shaking down federal em- |Ployees for the party’s campaign chegt, were given the lie yesterday as Henry P. Fletcher, chairman of the Republican National Committee, waved a photostat of a check be- fore the eyes of Postmaster-Gen- eral Farley to prove that a ten per cent campaign tribute was being de- ducted from the selaries of A. A. A. cattle appraisers. “|mey General; George Barnes, Cor- | Of 2 to Nazi Hangmen | CHICAGO, Oct. 11—A mass fight |against the attempt of the U. S. |Government to hand over to t Hitler hangmen two Chicago ant |fascist workers is being developed jhere under the leadershi) of the International Labor Defense. The two anti-fascists are Eric Becker and Fred Werman. |. Becker was arrested while visit- |ing the German Consulate as a! member of a workers’ delegation to protest Nazi terror and demand the freedom of Ernst Thaelmann, heroic leader of the German working class. Werman was seized at a demonstra- | tion protesting the visit of a dele-| gation of Italian fascist students at) the International House of the) University of Chicago. | The I. L. D. is urging all workers and their organizations to send pro- tests to Secretary of Labor Frances Perkins and the Immigration De-| partment at Washington, D.C. The! two anti-fascist fighters face cer-| tain torture and death if deported | \litical prisoners in ‘Pilsudski’s Po- |land, an entertainment and dance |man, secretary of the Patronati, or ‘prison of Lutsk. Every effort is campaign to aid the tortured po-| will be held here on Saturday at the Workers Center, 2706 Brook- lyn Ave. The money raised will be sent to the Polish Section of the International Red Aid, for relief and defense of the politicals. The treatment of political pris- | oners in fascist Poland is briefly | described in the following state- | ment issued today by Harry Grau- Committee to Aid Political Prison- | ers in Poland: “Political prisoners in the Poland | of the Pilsudski dictatorship ars) worse treated than prisoners in Po- | land under the bloody Czarist re- | gime. We hear particulariy of the | cruel and sadistic treatment, the | military drills and third degree methods employed in the notorious | made to isolate prisoners from the outside. “We urge every anti-fascist, worker, every | every sympathizer with | Topcoats & Overcoats, $1875 newest colors . ORD ually ber that our designers CLOTHES — ARGEST: CYLOTHING CH NEW YORK 826 BROADWAY B41 BROADWAY. 100 Sth AVE... 1232 BROADWAY 452 7th AVE. 963 Sth AVE... 298 WEST 42nd St. . 152 EAST 86th St. WS WEST 125th . 1391 ST. NICHOLAS LADELPHIA 1225 MARKET ST. 38 South 69th ST enox & 7th A\ «+ Cor. 12th St. 79th & 180th Sts. BRONX 10 E. FORDHAM RD. . 340 E, FORDHAM RO., Opp. Kini New JERSEY CITY 37 CENTRAL AVENUE . . . . Cor. Griffith St. 4 JOURNAL SQUARE BOSTON Webster Ava. 378 E, FORDHAM RD. . . i « Near 149th St. $26 WILLIS AVE. 595 WASHINGTON ST. « Cor. Avery Sh BROOKLYN oe JAMAICA 467 FULTON ST. Cor. Lowrence St. — “ Necr LIRR Sto, '68:05 JAMAICA AVE. «+ Cor, 168th Ste «+s Near Rockaway Ave, Atthe End of the “L". Jamaica, tt, 1812 FITKIN AVE. Opp. Loew's Pitkin Theatrs 1622 PITKIN AVE. Cor. Hopkinson Ave NEWARK 26 MANHATTAN A + Near VoretSt. 94 MAPKET SFr. Cor. Washi to Hitler’s Germany. \the persecuted masses of Poland to |Support this affair to raise funds to | |be sent through the MOPR (Polish ‘Section, International Red Aid).” . 7. Olgin, editor Morning Frsiheit, main speeker; Babad. from “‘Artef”; Gabriel Braverman, Violin Solos; Cornelius, Accompanist. The same thing is being done,! Fletcher charged, in other branches | of the administration. OPEN HM Put the Daily Worker First on Your Political Calendar” cmenmsiietents