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_ “Page 2 EW YORK. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 2, 1935 7 VOTE | for the Workers’ Unemployment Insurance Bill | H.R. 7598 This ballot is sponsored by the Daily,Worker | creme eva omen HET EL NOR or CONU Hmtee ORAL America’s Only Working Clas: Daily Newspaper DAILY WORKER, ~NEW MOTORS HUM TextileBosses | AS SOVIETS ENTER | @mmchtive te agen’ . | Against Union NEW YEAR Ok PLAN Cotton Manufacturers To Establish Company Outfits CAFETERIA. UNION VOTES TO SUPPORT | meen | LNSURANCE BILL} attack of finance capital and | its government, but has sup-! Hits ported the offensive of Roose- | velt against the workers. The Join in Rallies for the Congress on January 7 FER | (Continued from Page 1) Industries Work Ahead of Schedule—Metal apes Company Union Scheme in Silver Chain of Smelting, Agriculture, Trade, Make Great Restaurants—Workers Will Present Strides chal MOSCOW, Jan. 1 (By sults of the closing of he se n Workers’ Fatherland to the Daily Worker) Wireless).—Totalizing the r cond year of the Second Fi ess BOSTON, Mass., Jan. 1.—Ernest N. Hood, president of the National Association of Cotton Manufactur- ers. in a review of the cotton in- dustry for the year, again launched an attack against the cotton work- 50 East 1 New (Cut out and sign 3th Street York this ballot teday) A. F. of L. national leadership |has endorsed the “reserves” | plan, fights real unemploy- ment insurance, and attacks Demands to Company Today | More than a thousand members of the Cafeteria Work- | ers Union, Local 110, section of the Food Workers Industrial : the Workers’ Unemployment | Union, participated in the elections of new officers and Ex- - oy wns Pe tenemos vda. ers for having joined the United A A 5. oO T r d mn, Pi pate 0 0 s Year Plan, the Soviet Communist Party organ, Pravda, ‘5 for Workers in hundreds of B and Social Insurance Bill, the | ecutive Board Friday and Saturday, tabulation of the votes writes: ee ee fc eiee ice eee its I have read the Workers’ Unemployment and Social | only measure that would pro-/ disclosed yesterday. . against the officials of the U. T. W eine ieee ae | Worker, ware attached ta agtc edule Labor conditions "have been FOR Cc AGAINST i, ployed. William Green. has Rally Fri d lar official ballots. The yots regis e egates highly unsatisfactory,” Hood stated furthered the no-strike policy a Bf rl ay | tarsal -on: this Wales whe aae tie ine “The successes of the rg a owing S seeded the baer Neos of the employers, has helped | bill, 17 against and 20 blanks. ists in smelting before schedule F ie J P r| 7| '0 capitalize on pes ‘ " 5 create compulsory arbitration F D ] | Numerous candidates were run- 7 Ss ora er ie eae ; increase membership, and therefore alii or Delegates .n" ten cecasion for jovous celebration for Or > an. ) al ey their own incomes. Practically all | Address Ecalbese sant boards which rule for the em- |ning in the democratically. con: the whole country the metalurgists Following upon the glorious Baku (Continued from Page 1) of the labor disturbances e started by union leaders to further Vote without delay and return your ballot at once to ployers, and has thus aided in | ducted elections. The elections | clearly displayed the live interest of ° proletariat brought its due to the Potectivé Association hers their own selfish interests.” the worker who gave it to you, or mail it to bi ng the demands of the 0) as ington oe Oe vais fu Ee ied eta es NC ers Protective Association here. & A cmd S. s i 4 general joy. The 19,000,000 ton eek The National Association of Cot- the “Daily Worker” he) 7 jence to a militant class struggle Manufactur i to The support of the Work- | ge Program of Azerbaidjan oi! Was yapISON, Ill, Jan. 1.—Unit 16 bert te oo geen del pater k par as 6. ry. laa |Gala Send-Off To Mark | policy was indicated by their yoting § fulfilled before scheduled time of the Federation of Unemployed | frtablish a company union network ers’ Congress for Unemploy- | i into office a list of honest and mili- ig Mining Gai has elected a delegate to the Na-| ; roughout the industry, and there: ° ment Insurance has been so| Departure of Social tant fignters who haves long Big Mining Gains tional Unemployment Insurance | £0F¢ hes repeatedly attacked the U e m in to n re a res \broad d so strong that | standing in the struggle for the im- “Neither do. the heroic miners of | tional _Unemp 1 surance 7 Ww. as well as the officials y |broad and so strong Parley Delegates | paWbedient “etthe. Gonaidicnasiee ite the Donetz Basin lag behind the Consres nas Green has erenoptin 140 laaae above mentioned. In honor of the es “ ;, BIDDEFORD, Me., Jan. 1.—For ° e forced to come out with at-| James w. Ford Negro labor Ofti Li ‘palpale 8) f thelr lib. SHAMOKIN, Pa., Jan. 1—United| BY Tait uCoeece _ 3 bor | ficers Listed etn ion ane Wate Denn Rewer, of Crp ane Soper aecenag come UOTE LOLI ay as Trial sscis on vee congres: He ns wot ana fasen Stet oetice| te (oe ae wn armies they today are pouring from Joifers of this city has endorsed pany plant here, the New Year will unsuccessfully tried to stem’ of the Communist Party, William|an overwhelming majority . vote: t 5 pouring from | { Jat: Nard J -|P xd their mines the last tons of the| ‘he National Congress for Unem- |. 2cin with a loss of their jobs. Half 60,000,000 ton program for Donetz coal. Today the last automobiles and tractors are leaving the con- veyors of the automobile and trac- tor works. Joyfully whirring th motors and announcing that the Program of these industries is like- ployment and Social Insurance and elected one delegate to go to Wash- ington, Waterbury Send-off Planned WATERBURY, Conn., Jan. 1.— Two delegates to the National Con- gress for Unemployment and Social of the plant was closed permanently yesterday Howard R. Whitehead, representa- tive of the company, declared. that “business conditions” in the cotton industry have led to discontinuance of all divisions except those making Of Hauptmann Opens Town’s Dwellings Jammed to the Rafters With scare, attacks the rank and| Union, will be among the speakers Newspapermen and Photographers— the demand of thousands of local unions of the A. F. of L. for the passage of the Work- ers’ Bill. Green raises the red file movements in the A. F. | Secretary-Treasurer, Seam Kram- berg; Organizer, Harry Reich; Busi- ness Agent, Arthur Bary; Labor | Chief, Bernard Branda; Delegates to the Trade Union Unity Council, Frank Frank and Charles Mitchel, at the send-off mass meeting for Be een eee Denes the New York delegates to the Na-| J 2 B. Spofford, of the Church League | for Industrial Democracy and Elmer Brown, chairman of the Amalgama- | tion Party of the Typographical of L. for real unemployment Nineteen workers were elected to . oO ted thi ‘old blankets and sheeting. The plant ; * + i ae tional Congzess for Unemployment! ; % 4 Mines, the chemical concerns, the| “surance were elected by the local i"tne iarseat im aiaine: ‘che some Speculation in Courtroom Seats insurance and adequate relief. | tneurance R | the, seeoutive Board.,.They., ara: enterprises of the rubber industry, | Unemployment Insurance confer-| pany. has plants in Fall River, ee Green, on New Year's day,| The meeting. to be held on Fri- | Anéelo_Dioletis, sentence ee from everywhere the joyful news 15 | delegates represent the Jewish Na-| MasS~ 2nd Opelica, Ala., beset FLEMINGTON, N..J., Jan. 1—| hot limelight that beats so merci- again endorsed the whole|day night at 8 o'clock at the St. Charles Mitchel, William Beale, coming. tional Workers Alliance and the|d¢cl@red that ‘its personnel w ~ | Bruno Richard Hauptmann, charged | Jessly on this little town: The | antilabor program of Roose-| Nicholas Palace, 69 West 68th St..| )o0 Kets, Bobet tone ‘Even in railway transport, which progressive Party of Naugatuck, |“ down accordingly with the murder of Charles Augus- | Prosecuting attorney who is suc- velt and gave unstinted en will feature theatricals, dances and | rapidus J. Gomez, Harry Lieben, vas and even remains, a weakling ae i di 1 “eet Tear et ~~. | cessful in. securing the conviction A S "| entertainment, and the playing of | REE aid 4 in the whole national economy, the Srseets| Secpratated oe tii: u | d S k tus Lindbergh, Jr., goes on trial to- | of Hauptmann will make a national |dorsement of the New Deal. | the Beethoven Fifth Symphony by Etsy Rap hekt Bey ee 2 first symptoms towards improve- aay ‘Workers peer ai thé ee oO to pea morrow in what promises to be one | reputation for himself and willhave| But millions of workers,|the Workers International Relic? | 545 Dristas, Mike Rodriguez, Ed- ment were observed in 1934 and Metal Workers Union and the of the most sensationalized juridical | made a long stride forward in @ farmers and intellectuals SYmphony. _ ward Teitelbaum and. George “In 1934 the country reached new | g, - as = , Political career. Even the defense | | Every éffort is being made to pre- | 8 7 ,| Communist Party c processés in the lcng. and gaudy = vith | throughout the country look ee Chrysler. heights. According to preliminary Tl af ‘ lawyers are posing for pictures with i K ° pare for this meeting a colorful and | Simultaneously, the union re= data, socialist industry augmented) A sendoff meeting for the dele- # history of American court pro- no reluctance, acutely conscious of to the National Congress for. varied program with wide appeal.| ortea on the progress made res the riches of the proletarian state | ates will be held on Thursday . * cedure, the future money value in saying. “I Unemployment Insurance as Delegates from New England and {Ported on th crpanieaslon et ine by new production amounting to| Might at which Professor Dorothy CEC UNION | tie entire town is packed to the | Was one of the lawyers in the fa-| 4} oi, guide, Workers in the |New Jersey. in addition to the New| workers’ of the Silver's Cafeterias, 39,000,000,000 rubles. The national | Douglas of Smith College will be tne | rafters with reporters, photog- mous Hauptmann case.” paste {HIM Hés °F So.| York delegates to the National Con-/tn¢ owners of a chain of cafe. revenue, according to the same data, | Principal speaker. The meeting wil raphers, Aewareel men, radio ah-| “Rumors that Nazis have supplied | (0-0, RUA OS TBI Mere, SO-| gress’ will attend the meating, | tanign "A large mumniner ot workers ~ fmereased 14 per cent. Heavy in- Dé broadcast. Ben Gold, National Secretary of nouncers and telegraphers. Two | funds for the defense are current, Cialist Party locals, A. F. of L. TRE the Needle Trades ‘Workers’ Indus- dustry, equipping economy with new teehnique, has overfulfilled its year- ly plan. It secured an increase in Preduction of 26.7 points, as com- pared with 1933. Are these not grand ficures! Farmers Make Record “The great victory in agriculture WAGON MOUND, New Mexico, Jan, 1—One delegate has left here | for the Washington Congress for | Unemployment and Social Insur-| ance, representing the Colfax Coun- ty Unemployment Council. BENLD, -Ill., Jan. 1.—The Hod| Carriers and Common Laborers trial Union, will speak at a mass meeting in support of the Ohrbach and Klein department store strikers tomorrow evening at Manhattan Lyceum, 66 East Fourth Street. Citing the importance of the strike of the department store orkers, and pointing out that 19 are to be tried for violating the weeks ago the local hotel was en- tirely reserved. Today every pri- vate dwelling for miles around is | occupied by strangers, in for the trial. A land-office speculation for seats in the tiny courtroom has been go- ing on, with $10 the lowest any self- ‘respecting newspaperman could of- Although actual proof is lacking, the defense seems to be liberally supplied with what makes the world go round and the sources for same are still a subject of discus- sion. Alibi Defense Strategy The actual trial will begin tomor- row with the attempt to draw a ‘unions, professionals, unem- |ployed organizations and shop workers have elected delegates to attend and sup- |port the Workers’ Congress. The masses are determined to resist the starvation decreed | have been recrtited into the union, ' Arrangements have been made for a conference with the owners for | _All Groups Asked to Attend | Each participating organization in the National Congress for Unem- | ployment Insurance is being urged | to rally its full membership for the mass send-off. An admission fee of 25 cents will, | be charged to all non-delegates. | Special low-rate tickets: are being jissued to unemployed worker's | at the offices of the company, 175 Eighth Avenue, where demands of the workers, including union recog- nition, will be presented. Company Union Hit | The last recruitment of 15 work- corresponded to the success in heavy | 1 ccal 1 has elected one ‘dslegate to|anti-picketing injunction’ Roce |fer the lotal sheriff, About .ten |jury out of & panel of torty-eignt. PY , Roosevelt, the employers through the Unemployment Coun- |ers was made Thursday night right industry. Despite very unfavorable go to Washington to attend the|Wortis, secretary of the Trade | times as many requests for tickets | Defense strategy, it is understood, | an Green | ‘ | Trwientataly: ‘ceber ta ny | otter a meeting called by the com- conditions—menace of the Sprin€ sessions of the National Congress! Union’ Unity Council, declared, in| to the courtroom as there is space is to establish an alibi for Haupt-| Those millions who stay at] ine daleiAten wit oie oe sey | Bapy st one of its establishments in : ecrntes aaa eoteasas the for Unemployment and Social In-| announcing the meeting: | has been requested, mann. The prosecution will try to home are called to demonstra- ch | erookiyn. The. mpeting. Was ads severa : south—the country has reaped for 1934 the substantial harvest of 4.- 500,000 tons more than- for 1033. And it is well known that last year’s harvest was a record surance, CHICAGO, Ill, Jan. 1.—Two dele- gates have been elected .to the Na- tional Congress for Unemployment | and Social Insurance by the Tllinois | “Every union is vitally concerned | in this fight. A victory for the Ohrbach and Klein strikers will mean that thousands of the most exploited workers in the city will be encouraged to organize and fight Foreign Papers Scnd Reporters London and Paris psvers are sénding their own reporters, while a Nova Scotia judge, whose applica- tion was filed early, will be one of the lucky seat-holders. Over one | identity Hauptmann’s ear and the ladder by which the baby was al- leged tot have been carried down from the nursery to the ground. State's witnesses were brought into Hauptmann’s cell on Monday to tions in every locality in the country on Jan. 7 in. support of the Workers’ Congress. On that day the Workers’ Con- | een Station to embark for Wash- | dressed by i on, Mr. Isidore Silver, presi- | dent of the company. He promised In the three days remaining be-| the workers a xaise of 7 to 10 per | foze the departure for Washington, | cent’ while introducing ‘the idea of | all delegates are urged to register at | “shop committee” organization un- | thé office of the New York spon- i ess will present its demands soring committee, 799 Broadwa: [cen company quecion:. Be ee “The country succeeded in gath-| worrers Alliance, an unemployed along with the rest of the organized hundred new telegraph wires have | identify him, it is reported. a R aa Ry s ‘i iid Ma the ina on | ean the Ge shou, sucbasing ering \two' good harvests consecu- | o.sanisation under. the. leadership labor movement, ° All department been strung out of Flemington to| Tons of copy will come out of this | '0 “Roosevelt. Every worker, thom 10 Gin to hgim. Those alee ey yous oe oe if ~ tively Sopa ae Las Kiet of the Socialist Party. |store workers are watching the accommodate the anticipated load town in the next few weeks about farmer and intellectual should oe mM. and assessments without gaining solidater joviet and collectiv - ing system in the villages. These suecesses in agriculture enabled the U. S. S. R. to crown 1934 with the greatest political-economic meas- ures in the country—the passing over from the rationed sale of bread to the population to the wide trad- ing of bread without cards. Trade Record Made trade turnover increased. According to preliminary data the retail trade runover of the country amounted to 61,000,000,000 rubles, an imcrease of 24 per cent by com- parison with 1933. Simutaneously with the growth in production of industry and agriculture the flow of goods has considerably increased. “The qualitative indices of in- dustry have improved. The pro- ductivity of labor has increased in industry and agriculture. The earn- ings of ously considerably increased, as well as the incomes of the collective farmers. The country has made a new step forward towards a rich weil-to-do life. “The most important landmark in the struggle is the plan of the Second Pitelitka. The success of 1934 is perfectly tangible proof that the plan of the Second Piatelitka is being fulfilled successfully. The closed year has created conditions for new successes in the forthcom- ing third year. It is sufficient to point out that the total new capital inyestments in the national economy in. 1934 amounted to 21,500,000,000 rubes. This is a sign that the coun- try is moving the development of the productive forces of socialism Onwards and developing its tech- nical basis “But the fundamental guarantee of further successes of the U. S. S. R. is the growth of creative initia- tive and productive enthusiasm of millioas of workers in building ployed councils, A. F. of L. unions, |magazine, a girl whom we had never 904 Eddie. beaches restricted to the poor peg-| famous Chicago gangsters: to. 68 Dr J JOSEPH S ON Socialism. The successes and the and two county relief commission-| seen before. She showed us the! We did not actually organize a| Ple. Then, for the rest of the weex that they get votes. The gangs have & & : : achievemenis of 1934 arouse a fresh | ers. | wave of enthusiasm on the titcon- hold of 1935. The countrs = ie Soviets is beginning 1935 as a year of still! more intensified love and care towards its splendid people, Who are creating so many wonders upon Soviet soil. Under the banner Of Stalin's slogan, “The chief thing now is the people who have mas- workers have simultane-) Proxy Made GREAT FALLS, Mont., Jan..1.—| Local 139, Journeymen Plumbers and Steamfitters of America, has unanimously endorsed the Netional Congress for Unemployment and| Social Insurance. Due to shortage of funds, however, the local is un- able to send a delegate to Washing- ton and has empowered the A. F. of L. Committee on Unemployment Insurance and Relief to act as its representative at the Congress with instructions to support the Workers’ | Unemployment Insurance Bill. SALLISAW, Okla., Jan. 1.— Boe- cause he was peppered with letters and requests by the voters of this town, Representative Jack Nichols. | local Congressman, has been forced | to evince interest in the Workers’ Unemployment Insurance Bill. He | declared in a letter to the local} sponsoring committee that he would attend as many sessions of the Na- tional Congress for Unemployment | Insurance as possible. S. P. Represented PROVIDENCE, R.I., Jan. 1.—At! least ten delegates will leave h2re this week for the National Congre: for Unemployment and Social In- | surance, These delegates represent the Central Federated Union (Cen- tral Labor Union), Barbers Union 224, Machinists Union 119 (New-| port), Painters Union 195, Operating Engineers Union, Polish United Front, Providence Y.W.C.A, and | New England Bryn Mawr Alumnae, Unemployed Seamer, Communist Party and Socialist Party. OMAHA, Neb., Jan. 1.— Fifteen delegates have left here for the Na- tional Congress for Unemployment and Social Insurance. Among these are representatives of the unem- ae | NEW YORK. —Local 379 of the | International Union of Operating | | Engineers, an A. F. of L. union with| | about 500 members, unanimously endorsed the ,Workers’ Unemploy- |ment Insurance Bill at its last meeting. | | strike with great interest. | and This is why the store owners are using every available force at their com- | mand to smash the strike ranks. One hundred and thirty-nine have been arrested.” Other speakers at the mass meet- ing include Rose Wortis, Dora Rich of thee United Council of Working Class Women, Gertrude Lane, chairman of the strike committee and secretary of the Office Work- ers’ Union, and strikers who will tell of conditions in the department stores. Telling of their life and activities in the Chicago stockyards, and how they ‘wrote a collective story based on their lives and struggles, five girls, stockyard workers, have ad- dressed the following letter to their class brothers and sisters in the Soviet Union: CHICAGO, U. S. A. To Workers in the U. S. S. R. Dear Comrades: We send greetings to all of you and are glad to write to you! We have written a true story about ourselves and the other girls who work in the Chicago Stockyards because we want other workers to know more about our struggles. The stories in the capitalist press and the Hollywood movies give an un- true picture of life. Our own story is part of the big true story of the awakening of the American work- ers. We were first called together by a writer from The Working Woman magazine and said it would print what we had to say, and the story would be read in many parts of the | At first we! world, by many people. did not think we could put together a story about ourselves at all, especiaily if we used our own can-| ning department as the scene of the drama. But we tried our very best started out by naming our of approximately 1,000,000 words daily, All in all a Roman holiday, the like of which has not been seen be- fore in American life, is being pre- pared. Every sign sesms to indicate that Hauptmann, guilty or innocent, will be thrown to the lions, with every newspaper reader in the coun- try looking on through the eyes of his favorite sheet. Whatever issues there were in the case seem to have been pretty well lost in the shoving and jostling of politicians to get into the white- which happened to us. We were working on the Federal Emergency Relief Administration meat. The governinent bought drouth-stricken | cattle from the poor farmers in the! Northwestern part of the United States, end had this starved, lean,| sick meat canned for the people on, relief. There are about twenty million families in our country on| relief, that is, they have no jobs and | no money, and must live on charity. We canned this meat for them and we know that it is not fit for any- one to eat. People are getting sick, from it. We expose this in our story. We will sell it from house | had to work, cutting our fingers and | getting infections. We came to our! stery-writing meetings very tired | and could searcely keep awake. But we always got a thrill out of doing | it, and when the last chapter was ended we were all standing up and shouting and cheering for Stella club, with officers or definite mem- bers, but whoever could come or make suggestions did so, and some came only to lis‘en. We worked to- gether, just as we work together at the canning table. About five of us carried the main thread of it. When we told the other girls in our de- partment about it, they said to be sure to show them a copy of the the protection of the hearth and the home. Nobody, it is expected, will have a word to say about the cocial conditions that make for kid- napping and all other property crimes. That is not what the sen- sation-seeking journals want. Be sure that you do not fail to send your greetings to the Daily Worker on its Anniversary! Your greetings should be in before Jan. | 12! Greet the Daily Worker in | the name of a comrade of your | organization. Chicago Stockyard Girls Tell Soviet How They Wrote Story of Stecky support and take part in the Jan. 7 demonstrations. For immediate passage of the Workers’ Unemploy- ment Insurance Bill. For adequate cash relief. Support the Workers’ Congress for Unemploy- ment Insurance. Demonstrate Jan. 7. Defeat the hunger pro- gram of the New Deal. Worker ard Stella we want to make Stella and Eddie our models for the way to partake in the struggle of the American workers. We hope other workers will help us. | prize to any other group of girls in a factory or mill who write a better story than ours, because we Want to read about the lives of girl workers in other industries. Our challenge wil soon be accepted by &@ group in the needle trade. / Chicago workers drink a lot be- cause they want to forget their un- happiness. Stockyards workers go to the taverns and dance halls, and to the White City, a carnival place, on Saturday nights. They gamble, and go to parties, movies, cheap shows and cabarets. On Sunday pent. On Sunday afternoon they g0 to parties or to the movies or church affairs. In pleasant weather, to crowded parks and parts of we know only one thing, hard work! There are 40,000 of us working at the yards, in the buildings like big prisons, with bad smells, and blood, and the cries of cattle all around us. We work very hard and fast, and then are laid off and spend our time waiting in the employment office, and worrying about where our food is to come from. We live We are offering al ito evictions and put back the fur- niture. We fight for the Seottsboro , boys and Thaelmann and Mooney and all class war prisoners. We are very, very anxious to hear about how you live, |Soviet system. Some of our work- ers have been to your country, and we ask them many questions. In jour dance halls we talk avout our conditions, and how we could better them if we followed your example. In our churches we demand to hear | about practical things — if the |Preacher has a big automobile and we have no food to eat—we want |an explanation! At our parties we ‘Play whist and other games, and in the midst of these games we begin to talk about organizing the work- morning they go to church to re-|¢rs. We are beginning to wake up! | The capitalist papers and politicians promiséd us prosperity but it does ‘Not come. The capitalist. politicians \in our neighborhood have the jfeuds and sometimes in the night we hear shots. Capitalist leaders try to keep us from uniting by play- \ing up our race prejudices against the Negro and Mexican workers, and our differences in religion. The Police are always watching us, ‘ready to break up our meetings. When we were on strike they attacked us, ___ | lodgings desired. under the_ gates who have sent in credentials | much. by mail are also asked to register. | This company union idea, how- | Each delegate has been asked to| ever, did not gain much support. A bring in his fee for transportation ballot was distributed indicating a and for food and lodging in Wash- | vote “yes” for open shop and “no” ington. The total cost will be $10.25 for union shop.. When the vote was | for each delegate. If delegates have cast the company men, who col- | other theans of obtaining food and lected the ballots, tore off the side lodging while in Washington, the of the ballot where thé “no” votes round trip railroad fare will be $5.| were cast. \It delegates have other means of | were not announced. | transportation, the cost of food at A meeting of ‘shop committee” | the congress commissary will be 15 | representatives which were cents a day; lodgings will cost 50| pointed by the managers of the | cents to $1.00, depending upon the | cafeterias was called in Silver's of= | fice at 8 o'clock tonight. |RADIO SERVIC | | REFRIGERATORS AND VACUUM CLEANERS REPAIRED SPECIAL DISCOUNT TO DAILY WORKER READERS SQUARE RADIO CO. 4919 THIRTEENTH AVENUE WINDSOR 8-0289 BROOKLYN, WE GO ANYWHERE NEW YORK RADIO TROUBLE? | AUTO OR HOME RADIOS Call CHelsea 3-9871 D. & L, RADIO AND AUTO IGNITION CO. 152 Seventh Avenue, New York | = "AND = DANIEL LUTTINGER, M. D. 5 WASHINGTON SQUARE NORTH, NEW YORK CITY 3 Hours: 1 - 2 and 6-8 P.M. Tel. GRamercy 1-3090-208) DENTIST One Union Square ALG. 4-2196 All Workers Meet at the NEW HEALTH CENTER CAFETERIA i asi ata in flats. Often| The capitalist papers tell us lies|—— Fre! Food—Proletarian Priees—50 E. 14th St—\VORKERS' CENTER ——. | * tered technology,” the country meets |main character Stella, because magazine. We printed an advertise-| 1% wooden shacks or in flats. mn | es | * the nety year assured of its excellent | Assembly of Students | there are so many among us of ane of the Ree in aes paper| there are several families living in| @bout the U. 8. 8. R. in order to | t future. To Mark New T. that name. We pictured Stella ve distri ‘a few rooms. We have a stove in|Prevent us from following your o ar! ew Term | 4 Di which we distribute secretly on the the main room to ki éxample. That is why it is so im- | — £ Workers School tne grey coublorione road, part the | oe ae eee 80M 96 We | “Gener fooms kre tala Means Perteat dor fou te aie eat DR. J. SAMOSI@: || Dr. S.A; Chemo | 3 | 9 Orkers SCHOO! the grey cobblestone road, past the | seribed in Stockyard Stelle, We| Nd other rooms are cold. Many tell SKIN, URINARY AND BLOOD | + | Chinese American pad trucks and pens of cattle—and then' will stick leaflets on the cattle cars,| houses have no bath tubs and no/tell us the true conditions of your|} 220 East 12th Street "Men and wom | : A general student assembly of the|geing through her hours of toil, | w ‘i hot water, no electricity or gas. The| life. We want to follow your ex- rinary and Blood .F | : . : general student assembly of the | geing es With chewing gum, advertising our | 14. t live Whe: ample and fight for a Soviet system ae 223 Second Ave.,.N. Y. C | i Viceroy Restaurant | new York Workers School, prelimi- | continually being speeded up by the| story. We will sel it from house pecan live and oe souk Dee isi ete We kee aeainee ee ay enon aan ina aa eee {| Lunch 107 W. 42nd st. Dinner na en Eee ge deel Pree wedi tia: Dace eae: ee greens enien Pe| worse houses. Although we live in| Derialist wars. If they give Ameri- : ‘ A er rm ay viet Tompkins Square 6-7607 i ae ove |i day, will be held Friday evening in|man, because many of us have| penny, so that our workers can all| th midst of plenty, we are very fae dow ana in Para nie! Algonquin 4-4437 X:RAY ‘nd FLUOROSCOFE | EG serlaetaiene |the school auditorium at 35 E. 12th | fallen in love with young men who|hear the hear.y, encouraging voices POT - Classified Street. | Abraham Markoff, director of the | School, will addzess the student body and will introduce a leading mem- |work in the yards, driving tractors and trucks, cutting meat, ete. And for a villein—one does not have far to search, when one works for a big | of Stella and Eddie ringing in their | ears, Stockyard Stella Read Marx and Lenin During the last war the five big packers made over two hundred million dollars’ in profits. We are turn arcund and fight for the liberation of the working class. your answer to this letter. If you IN CHICAGO, U. 5. A. We are watching the mail for Comrades Patronize ask us questions we will try to scalp, dry and Olly” schip. and ber of the district committee of the | bully who griads profits from the} Our title, Stockyard Stella, Popped | beginning to understand how the answer them all. We wish we could) J ADE MOUNT. ‘AIN other ailments of the scalp old Communist Party to the assemblage. | lives of workers. into our heads. It tells what sort| capitalist system works. Some of greet you personally : S. LINETZKY The schol administration warned Can Unfit Meat of person the story is about—a/us march in demonstrations and.) ‘ American. & Chinese Restaurant |||: “Hair and Scalp Specialist jvesterday that all prospective| We met one night each week, and ‘typical girl worker at the yards, spend money on Communist books| Your friends and comrades, 191 SECOND AVENUE re ae i |students must register before thejat each meeting we wrote a part! Stella, and her boy friend. It is a| instead of liquor. We read the) FIVE STOCKYARD WORKERS (Bet. 13th and 18th St.) $24 setond ee erty Room 14 - | first sessions of the new term begin, | of the story, basing it all on events story that will never end, because works of Marx and Lenin, We gO x é Risibedibtar isbn ‘ SAVE YOUR HAIR We cure dandruff, falling hair, itching Fe today at 1 o'clock in the afternoon ~ € The results of the vote > ap- |