The Daily Worker Newspaper, January 18, 1935, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

DAILY WORKER, N EW YORK, FRIDAY, JANUARY 18, 1 COMMUNISTS FIGHT FOR PUBLIC WORKS IN CHICAGO ELECTION Fighting Slate Nominated At Workers’ Conference 227 Delegates Meet to Adopt Program for City Elections CHOSEN FOR | OFFICE CHICAGO, Jan. 17.—With high- spirited working cless solidarity 227 delegates, representing a broad united front of 192 organization: totaling a membership of almost 50,000 launched their fight to place Communist Party candidates on the ballots of the coming city elections at an election conference held here | in Mirror Hall. The nominations of Karl Lock- ner for Mayor, Herbert Newton for City Clerk and Sam Hammersmark | for City Treasurer brought unani- mous response, in addition to the endorsement of forty-five working class aldermanic candidates. Robert Minor, the Communict Party election campaign chairman, gave the opening talk. In a deeply penetrating analysis of the eco- nomic crisis upon Chicago worker: he reached the crux of the issue: involved when he said: “The wrecking of the lives of three million working people and their families, the systematic starvation HERBERT NEWTON, Commu- nist candidate for City Clerk in of our children and the ruin of the | Chicago. schools through greed of a useless and idle ruling class—this is the issue of the Chicago election cam- Following the analysis of the Chi- cago municipal situation, Minor Proposed the following demands, which will be the platform for the ing elections and which was en- | d unanimously by the gather- | ‘Mill Strikers In Laneaster | When he finished, workers walked Congressman Gives Position Bail Fund Is Raised for Arthur Mitchell Serves | Notice He Will Not Fight for Negro Herbert Newion, Im- prisoned Nominee CHICAGO, Ill., Jan. 17.—Wiliam | Geberi., district organizer of the Communist Party, brought delegat at the election conference their feet in a spirited outburst of enthusiasm as he nominated Her- bert Newton, militant Neg:o, for City Clerk on the Communist ticket. WASHINGTON, D. C., Jan. 17. —Arthur W. Mitchell, Negro Con- gressman from Mlinois, gave notice last week that he does not intend to chailenge Jim-crow oppression of the Negro people or in any way represent the interests of the Negro People. He declared he did not come to Washington to represent colored people, but to represent the first Congressional District of Illi- nois, adding significantly, “the rich- | here to to the platform bringing nickels dimes and dollars to a fund raised 2) y Comrade per Se ee ee nee est Congressional District in Tili- Red Builder gave the fifty cents | 2S” which he had earned that day This blunt reaffirmation of the ; | Negro Consressman’s pledges to the Southern lynch rulers during his visit to Alabama shortly after his election, was made last week to a reporter of the Baltimore Afro- | ton of his nomination and of calling | American during the course of an upon the mayor and other officials | interview in Which the reporter to release this valiant fighter for | ‘Tied to sound him out on what the working class. | steps he would initiate in Congress More than 225 delegates, repre- /#8#inst lynching, Jim-crowism and senting a membership of almost Other forms of Negro oppression. 50,000 workers, attended the elec- |The same sentiments were ex- tion conference. Among these deie- | P=essed by the Negro Congressman gates were four Amezican Federa-|@Uring a visit to the Mu-So-Lit tion of Labor members, elected by | Club here, of which he is a former | three locals, and a delegate from a| Member. Commenting on Mitchell's teachers’ local representing 160 attitude, the Afro-American of Jan. members. 12, declared: The chief revort was made by| “Thus, through the discussion at Robert Minor who pictured the the Mu-So-Lit Club and in his first growing misery of Chicago's worx- interview with an ‘Afro’ reporter ezs and the enrichment of the in-|5ince he took the oath of office. selling papers. “Our comrade cannot conduct a | campaign from jail,” said Gebe | A delegation was appointed for the two-fold purpose of notifying New- | Illinois Negro | For the Workers’ Unemployment Iccurance Bill, H. R. 2827. For the Public Works: (a) Build- | ing of a subway in Chicago; (b) Building of workers’ homes; (c- Building of hospitals, schools, parks, | playgrounds. All workers on such | Public Work projects to be em- | ployed’ at union wages and condi- | tions, | Pending passage of the Workers’ Unemployment and Social Insur- ance Bil, H. R. 2827, direct cash relief to be paid to ail unemployed | at the rate of $8 per week for single workers, $13 per week for a family of two, and $3 for each devendent. For immediate winter relief, shces, clothing, coal, blankets and othe: necessities. For the right of the workers in the shops, on Public Works, work relief and unemployed to organize into unions and organizations of | the unemployed. For recognition of | representatives of the unions and ions for the unemployed at ns. of the ist police terror. -\sainst evictions and foreclosure | ©i workers’ homes. For the Farm- a Relief Bill. Repeal of the Sales | ast: | Free hot lunches and clothing for | the children of the unemployed and part-time workers. Against child labor; for state maintenance of those employed at present. For full social, political and eco- nomic equality of the Negro people. Against Jim-crowism and segrega- | tion. For Bill of Rights for Negro | people. Agminst ciscrimination of foreign-born workers. | Against fascism, vagrancy laws, pauper act, and Illinois Crimina: Byndicalist Law. Against imperial- ist war. For the defense of the | Chinese people, the Chinese Soviet | Republic and the Soviet Union. For | the withdrawal of the United States | Army and Navy from all colonies. For the support of the struggles of | the Cuban masses against Yankee | imperialism, | Por right of all youth over 18 Red Squad. | ToGo onTrial LANCASTER, Pa., Jan. 17——One hundred Lancaster workers atiend- ed a mass meeting last night in solidarity with J. Granville Eddy and nine textile workers who will go on trial next Tuesday here. Eddy, popular local Communist leader, explained the class signifi- cance of the cases. He stated that Prosecutor Muler was already he- ginning to retreat at the first sign of a mass defense campaign in sup- port of workers’ rights to organize and strike for better conditions. Rey. Clodfeler declared that any one who! keeps silent. while these crimes are being committed by the ruling class against labor is himself equally guilty, The main speaker of the evening, Bill O'Donnell, ex-soldier, ex-State trooper and present Section Organ- | izer of the International Labor De- | fense in South Jersey, was given a | rousing reception. He described the | mass fight Jed by the I, L. D. and! the Communist Party in South Jer- | sey that freed himself and 11 other | Seabrook strikers, | O'Donnell, who is not. a Commu- | nist, praised the Communist Party and its leaders as the only people | who can be depended upon to lead the American workers to a better life, Frank Scott, Lancaster organizer of the I. L. D., presided. Twenty of the 100 workers present joined the I. L. D. 4 Held in Car Strike Are Released By Court LOS ANGELES, Calif., Jan. 17.— | The International Labor Defense | today won dismissal of all charges against Edward Deibler, William Cochran, Eugene Martin and Her. bert Smith. The four workers had been ar- | rested by police on trumped-up and | hearsay “evidence” charging them with “throwing rocks at street cars” at the height of the street | dustrialists and bankers under the “recovery” program of the N.R.A. “There are four times as ma: unemployed today as there were people living in this country at the time of the American revolution,” he declared. “There are fou> times as many unemployed today as there were slaves in the revolution of 1861. Today, the life, liberty and | | happiness of our people can be secured only through the leadership of the Communist Party carrying onward the best and greatest revo- lutionary tzaditions of the American People.” Following Comrade Minor’s speech, Ralph Shaw, Communist Party or- ganizer for Montgomery Coun! brought greetings from the workers of Taylor Springs, where four mem- | bers of the village board are Com- munists. “Other candidates of other parties will make speeches between now and election day, copying our plat- form,” said Karl Lockner, Young Communist candidate for mayor, “But their speeches will be words only. We must make our campaign \a campaign of action, of fight.” Lockner is seczetary of the Cook County Unemployment Council, Sam Hammersmark, active in working class struggles for foriy- two years, was nominated for city treasurer. A number of aldermanic candidates, nominated at workers’ united front conferences in twenty- six wards, spoke. A. Guss, election campaign man- ager, called for a military mobiliza- tion of all forces Friday, Saturday nominating signatures to place the Communist candidates on the ballot, EXPLOSIVES TO GERMANY STOCKHOLM, Jan. 17.— More than 29 tons of explosive materials ave been sent in these last few lays from Goeteborg to Germany. The shippings continue. your Iriends about the D: Worker subscription con- vest. First prize-winner gets a free trip to the Soviet Union! Congressman Mitchell, the lone col- cred representative in the Halis of , | Congress, and the first colored Dem- ocrat ever to be elected to Congress, made it known that the colored population of this country had to look to someone else other than him to represent them in the Seventy- fourth Congress.” Congressman Mitchell condemned even the shadow boxing indulged in | by his predecessor, former Con- | gressman Oscar De Prist, on the | issue of discrimination against Ne- | groes in the House and Senate restaurants, operated by the gov- ernment. He made it al clear that the forces of Jim- sm will | have a free hand so far as he is concerned, Several examples of his policy of doing nothing that will offend the white ruling class are cited by the Afro-American: (1) his hasty exit | from the floor of Congress imme- | diately after he was sworn in; (2) | the. absence of his wife from the ceremony although the wives and | relatives of other Congressmen were present; (3) his refusal to serve on the Congressional Commit- tee which governs the District of | Columbia. Negro residents of Wash- | ington interpret Mitchell’s refusal | to serve on this committee as notice | {that he will not interest himself in | jany way in the rank discrimination | and Jim-Crowism existing in the | national capital itself. CITY COUNCILLOR | \% le MARTA SARANOVA, besides being a very charming young woman, is one of the brigade leaders in the Budyonny collec- tive ferm in the Stalingrad region of the Seviet Union. Becouse of her good work she was chosen during the last election to repre- sent her fellow workers in the Abramoy village soviet. AHH. ar Body Is Organized A University URBANA, Ill; Jan. 17 (Special)). —Vo‘cing the need of an organiza- tion that would function continu- ously in its fight against war and fascism, a University of Illinois branch of the American League Against War and Fascism was formed tonight in a meeting con- ducted by Professor Berman, of the Depariment of Economics, c} pro tem of the sessioh. “In previous year “groups have come and gone, b lasting good has ever been fulfilled. What this campus need’ is an or- ganization that will conti ist after students have gr: “For instance, the American Le- gion has in recent years cast an un- healthy influence over the student body. Such movements must counteracted by concerted effort on our part. A branch of the American egue is calculated to serve the Tom McKenna, secretary of the League, traveled from Chicago to deliver a speech on the development | | of fascism and the immediate men- ace of war. A number of professors were in attendance and spoke feelingly in | their approval for the adoption of Several persons expressed their | branch membership in the League. indignation to him last week when he visited the Mu-So-Lit Club. | During the argument which ensued, |and Sunday for the collection of |he is reported to have made the istatement that former Negro rep- | resentatives to Congress came here with the mistaken idea that they represented the Negro people. He came here for a different purpose, he! declared. | Reminded that it was the vote of |Chicago Negroes that swung the | jelection in his favor, he is said to | ‘have contemptuously retorted that he did not represent the Chicago |“Black Belt,” but rather the “Loop” LEAFLETS FROM BALLOONS BERLIN, Jan. 17—When the Streets of Berlin were packed with} crowds who had turned out to see General von Hutier's mid-day, several balloons suddenly rose in the ai: Shower of leaflets, appealing for the | struggle against Hitler's dictator- ship. At the same time a voice shouted, “The living are robbed to give to thé dead.” The affair caused excited discussions among the crowd, which hastened to stuff the pham- phlets into their pockets before the | district, the biggest business section | Gestapo (the secret police) should arrive, Workers Fight Mapped ByRadioUnion Workers Aci— Birmingham Jobless Rallies PHILADELPHIA, Pa., Jan The Unemployment Council are having meetings thro city for rep the Congress for Unemployment Social Insurance. A very well at- tended meeting of the Radio and Metal Worke:s Union of Camden (membership of 7.000), received an enthusiastic report of their dele- gate, Charles Sykes. who is the vice- cheirman of their organization Camden in Mass The union made the following de-,“'Amens!” cisions (1) To form a commitiee of nine | to carry on the work for the Work- | ers’ Bill (H.R. 2827) To print 10,000 leaflets to contain the Bill, on the bottom in the fo-m of a resolution, which is to be signed, collected by the shop sergeants and sent to the various Sena‘ors and Congressmen (3) The committee suggests to call a conference and prepare for a city-wide parade. This committee of nine will take the initiative of popularizing the results of the Con- gress throughout the city. Mass Meetings in Alabama TARRANT CITY, Ala., J: 1t— The Relief Workers League in Ta rant City is holding mass meetir here in spite of tezror. For the first time in the history of the unem- ployment movement here the w 198 2), Bil ‘Daily’ in Detroit x Is Weapon Against Coughlin and Ford While Radio Priest Cries hoot the Communists,’ Workers Gird to Spread Daily Worker by Hundreds “Shoot the Communists!” More in Auto City It has not taken Father Coughlin long to find the right passage in the gosnel. He can now walk along the paths of God secure in the knowledge that he has fastened upon the method of saving the nation. comes, of the other brothers in r Especially from Adolph Hitler cther comes from He! rd Both Henry and F: Coughlin come from the same dis:rict—De: troit. Ble. Ss each other, th curse in common — piously cou: to be Sure, but. with all their m: , and curse from day to night—; if it is necessa they curse the Communist Par the Daily Worker, and are only waiting a chance to put their curses into ac- tion. Both these pious menaces to the working class have to be fought from first to last. Henry Ford and Father Coughlin work hand in hand on their principal object— the exploitation of the workers. Never has Father Coughlin de- nounced “he conditions in Henry's industries; nor, in fact, has the be | from which fell a) ever urged the workers to fight against the conditions in any in- dustry, He has urged them to believe in God. Fisht Them With “Daily” workers rescued a Negro Ker from the police after he had been arrested as a Communist at a pub- lic meeting. This incident has mace the Relief Workers League stronger and more militant and the fak In the Detroit district, where are very careful in how they attack. these two figures must be fittingy The Unemployment Council locals | dealt with by the resident working in other sections of Birmingham | Class, one of the best ways of fight- are beginning to function. Full |ing them is by spreading the Daily plans for a city committee have not Worker. They and their deeds are | been decided on but it will most | exposed, as are all the rest of their likely take the form of a federation brothers in exploitation, by the on a broad united front basis, | “Daily. | If any paper should sell in De- troit, it is the Daily Worker. No worker in Detroit can be found uninterested in the conditions in s Akron Milk Supply Cut Off As Dealers Move to the automobile industry, which f the Patty Worker exposes. I'e- Enforce the Open Shop troit, furthermore, is a di rae .. Workers. It has almost 3.000 man- AKRON, Ohio, Jan. 17—The city's | ntacturing establishments; it is milk sup was suddenly stopped one of the most important ports on the Great Lakes; it is the fourth largest city in population as, without advance warning to the public, the Milk Producers Associa- tion in an effort to break the im the United States. It has more strongly organized Milk Drivers’) than 120,000 Negroes; more than Union, declared a lock-out. The 400,000 foreign-born. If any dis- Association’s action was in answer to the declaration of a strike by the Milk Wagon Drivers Local here against a small dairy because union members were discriminated against. | Subs Quota Paul Richards, secretary of the A f ¢ + _| Its quota in the suvscription cam- Mared The eee mall at os, pies | paign is 500 daily and 1,000 Sat- mitted into Akron until the union | U‘¢@y subs. | agrees to an open shop. The drivers’ The District Committee looks trict must make the Daily Worker cubseription and circulation cam- paign a succes in its territory it is the Detroit District. union declared that a flood of tele- | Upon the carrying through of this phone calls from farmers have been | tive as one of the most important 7 undertakings of the next few coming: in, with protests against the |months,” declared William Wein- action of the distributors, and ex- | _ 2 hase eae pressing sympathy with the aims of | ine the District Organizer, yes the union. ia Re, We eh Efforts of the farmers’ saa! | f Sr ay alt ae ae expects tives and other groups to set up an 9 tne Sections are emerrency milk distribution system Racing Ra ‘ia eke a were halted by the Akron Health uitghiain Department on the ground that 7 TGA Angela Gee BOSTON, MASS. sale of milk which has not been | ——————— bottled within city limits, despite | the fact that at least one large Akron hotel serves imported milk without interference. Official Opening of the Reading Room and Library NEW INTERNATIONAL 42 Wenonah Street Roxbury, Mass. HALL | Every reader of the Daily Work- ev a subscription-getter! years of age to vote, car strike here. Have You R eceived YOUR Button? Throughout the United States, workers are en- tering the Special Daily Worker Subscription Contest—competing for the Free Trip to the Soviet Union. These workers are members of the Daily Worker Shock Brigade. Every worker, entering his first subscription in the Daily Worker Special Sub- scription Contest, will receive an attractive Shock Brigader buttom. Your Ist Sub Earns This Emblem | of Chicago. | Fraudulent ‘Workers’ Bi Pt bate growing mass demand for the {Inasmuch as Celler, who is a Tam- | |* enactment of the Workers’ Un-|many Democrat from a workers’. (employment, Old Age and Social | neighborhood in New York City, has | [Insurance Act, H. R. 2827, has re- shown no intention of fighting for | | sulted in a whole welter of “Work- | its adoption, the move can only be |ers’ Bills” being introduced into | interpreted as one designed to split | Congress. the fighting ranks of the workers These can in no sense of the for, the enactment of such a meas- | word be innocent gestures by the ure as the National Congress for | | Congressmen who introduced them. |Unemployment Insurance spon- | | Rather these are definite and cal- sored. This is the Workers’ Unem-_ |culated moves designed for the ployment, Old Age and Social In- | Purpose of confusing the issue, con- | surance Act, H. R. 2827, | | founding the minds of the workers,| Charges of “unconstitutionality” and serving a demagogic role of lip- | were levelled at the Workers’ Bill |service to -the demands of the which was introduced last year into | | Workers back in the Congressional Congress as H. R. 7598. These | | Districts. charges, which chiefly emanated | | House Resolution 10 from the executive committee of the By Howard Boldt lis’ Pending in Congress rather than for defense of the vital} The old Workers’ Bill, and like- | interests of the masses. But we can | wise the measure which Celler has warn the Supreme Court and the| fathered, =tates on this point that | capitalist class for which it speeks, “funds for such insuzance shall that on the day when the court d2- | hereafter be provided at the ex- clares the Constitution forbids the pense of the Government and of only measure that promises to re- employers.” This, we are told, is moye the daily menace of starva-| class legislation, and therefore un- tion from over the heads of mil- | constitutional. lions, on that day it has struck a| We Communists are not the least blow against the Constitution far} bit wary of legislation against the deeper and more effective than any- | owning class; it is not on this score thing revolutionists have ever done.| that we support the change. But The Answer of Millions “If the Constitution prevents the | welfare of the working masses, and principles of the Workers’ Bill from | to further their fight, we waive the becoming law, then millions will) point. Thus, under the terms of the conclude, not that the Workers’ Bill | new Workers’ Bill, all money in the must be given up, but that the Con-/| Treatury not otherwis® sppropri- | we are vitally concerned with the | Sunday, January 20 — sk PM. PROGRAM Book Review by Merle Auther and Lecturer @Art Exhibit br John Reed Club Colby from * The ering chorus of the con ation 2, 4 and 7—to show Sections 5 and e first in the financial pect to do equally well ulation drive Grand Rapid. t upon the language or- y with industrial Hun- of Armenian. Bulgarian, Italian and We expect the Jewish ps, who lagsed , to make up in this drive. We call upon the Red Builders and Daily Worker representatives to do their hit!” CHICAGO TRADE UNIONISTS TO MEET § CHICAGO, Ill ing of mem Federation of Labor will be held here Saturday afternoon at 2 o’cloc at the Workers Lyceum, 2733 Hir: Boulevard. to hear reports of National Congress for Unempicy. ment Insurance. The meeting is under the auspices of the A. F. of L, Trade Union Committee for Unem- ployment Insurance. Lenin Memorial Meetings Miami, Fla. onal ey bration et its h Baltimor Madison Priday ive Jan. 38 speaker, Manning J ally known Negro Li gram: Freiheit Singing Soc Highs land Vanguards, Acrobatics, Political Cartoons, W.LR, Band. Buffalo, N. ¥. Meeting et Labor Educational Club Hall Jan. 29, Labor Oute standing program of revclutionary music and dancing. Omaha, Neb. Meeting Sunday evening, Jan. 20, 8 p.m. at Workers Cultural Center, 2404 Parker St. Program includes instrumental music and singing, a play by the newly organized troop of Young Pioneers, and speakers. Ad- mission free. Cincinnati, Ohio DETROIT, MICH. MAURICE SUGAR Outstanding Detroit Labor At- torney, Candidate for Judge of Recorder's Court, on the subject: “IsA mericaGoingFascist?” MACCABEE’S HALL Weodward and Putnam Mon,, Jan, 21, 8:30 P.M. Auspices John Reed Club Admission 25¢ Pregram: One of the first bills to come out of the Congressional hopper was American Federation of Labor, also stated that the Bill was drawn up the Win a Free Trip to the Soviet Union! House Resolution 10 entitled “The _ introduced by Representative Celler by Communist Party. Earl | Browder, general secretary of the {Communist Party, met each of | these charges when he addressed Workers’ Unemployment and Social Insurance Act.” The measure was stitution must be changed, Tr will remember the words of the Dec‘aration of Independence, that ‘whenever any form of government becomes d -tructive of thes? ends | ated shall be designated for benefit | Payments. “Welfar> Cia) | The somewhct vacue “welfare clause” of the United States Consti- SONGS ADMIS3ION 15c. A FREE TRIP to the Soviet Union is being offered to the worker who secures the most twenty-five (yearly subs or Twice Actual Size subscriptions over thelr equivaient), (of New York. the historic National Congress for . Shortly after, the Congressional | Unemployment Insurance in Wash- mill ground out H.R. 185, also pur- | ington on Jan. 6. porting to be a “Workers’ Unemploy- | C. P. Initiated Bill ment Insurance Act.” Representa- | “It is true that the Communist | \tive Beiter sired this act. Not to Party worked out this Bill,” Brow- (life, liberty, and the pursuit of | tution makes the assurance that happiness), it is the right of the such legislation is well within the People to alter or abolish it, and to| powers of Congress. The Constitu- institute a new government, laying | tion grants to Congress the power its foundatic:: on such principles, | to “levy and collect taxes, pay debts and organizing its powers in such | and provide for the general welfare form, as to them shall seem most | of the United States.” nine workers securing WRITE the Special Subscription able prizes! Nine other prizes are being offered to the next Apply today to your District Daily Worker of- fice, or write direct for information concerning for 10,000 new Daily Worker subscribers and enter the nation-wide competition for these ten valu- @ DAILY WORKER, 50 East 13th Street, New York the most subscriptions, TODAY! i Contest. Speed the drive introduced “The Workers’ Unem- ployment and Social Insurance Act,” which was designated as H. R. 2859. The first of these, H. R. 10, which was introduced by Representative Celler of New York, is identical with the Workers’ Bill, H. R. 7598, of the last session of Congress. Mr. Celler also introduced the same measure last year after Representative Lun- deen had introduced the Workers’ Bill, H. R. 7598, into the House of Representatives. “ Aimed at United Fight The introduction of tine same Dill as was killed in the House Commit- jtee on Labor last vear can at. this | ty the Supreme C: | time serve no purpose to further | of elderly gentle of | ous f genuine tnemploymer: insurance. | capital! the fisht for the en-cim-ni. ‘be outdone, Representative Sabath | der said, “after prolonged consulta- tions with large numbers of work- ers, popularized it, and brought millions of Americans to see that this Bill is the only proposal for | unemployment insurance that meets | their life needs. But this is not an | argument against the Bill; that is jonly a recommendation for the (Communist Party, for which we thank Mr. Green most kindly, even though his intentions were not friendly, “Mr, Green's second charge,” Browder said, “that the Bij) is un- constitutional, is a more compli- | cated question. Thi: is a legal point, ‘s “d will be said | on which the last wo: their obstinate d- | the Workers Unemployment, likely to effect their safety and hap- piness.’. . . ‘It is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such gov- ernment, and to provide new guards for their future security....'” C, P. Supports Change These charges against the Work- ers’ Bill on the technical point that it is “unconstitutional.” are met by Old Age and Social Insurance Act, H.R. | 2827, Thus, Section 4 of the act | reads that all money for pa, g the benefits “are hereby appropriated out of funds in the Treasury of the United States not otherwise apvro- priated, Further taxation necessary to provide funds for the purpose of this Act shall b2 levied on inheri- taness, gifts, and ir and of | corporation incomes of $5,000 a year| Rep: 36 © property and profits | and over.” | The eminent constitutional law- |yer, Leo Linder, who appeared at , the National Congress for Unem- | ployment Insurance in behalf of the | International Juridical Association, _ pointed to numereus Supreme Court interpretations of this clause. In his brief, extracts of which were printed in the Daily Worker of Jan. 7, he arrived at the conclusion that “the Workers. Unemployment, Old Age, and Social Insurance Act, H. R. 2827, once passed by Congress couid ibly be attacked as uncon- penditure of Federal SPEAXERS: EARL BROWDER Manning Johnson | The next article will | the “Worke=7’ Bi | ‘been introduced into General Secretary C. P. U.S. A. LENIN MEMORIAL MEETING Sunday, January 20th, 2:30 p. m. Royal Garden, 457 Springfield Avenue NEWARK, N. J. ABOUT LENIN” CARL REEVE. Daily Young Italien Violinist Accompanied by Mae Glebermen + UNEMPLOYED Sc. PRILADELPHIA, PA. : Worker Staff EMORIAL MEETING Friday, January 18, 1935 ARENA, 45th and Market St. Nationally known Negro Labor leader Chorus of 200 voices @ Dance Group @ Madam Sue Smith McDonald, Negro con- tralto @ Pulger’s Red Popply Orchestra” Adm.: Reserved seat $1 & 75c.-General Adm.: 35¢.-Unemployed 15,

Other pages from this issue: