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Page Two DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1929 TEXTILE UNION Rank and File U. T. W. SOVIET FLIERS | CONFERENCE TO Mill Workers with NT WU READY TO HOP <S3io" S222"! eceNSene,, \ tives are threatening to use violence | Building workers on eity jobs who PLAN STRATEGY J S. Carolina Conference, THE ALEUTIANS 2s cen Ske Sete a wat LABOR NOTES Cooperators! Patronize KRESTINTERN JOINS DEMAND TOFREE 13 MEN noe =. 8 ga CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. Y. jand_teamster’s union on strike | scale was not being paid were told! {against the Armour, Cudahy, Swift hy union officials to “return pending | {and Wilson meat packing companies. | further negotiations. “One hundred ‘For Any Kind of Insurance” s .. GREENVILLE, S. C., Sept. 28.—} child labor, women working at night, ‘ Pickets are being told that the strike / and eighty men struck. Bee iS Strong Demand for jover 100 delegates attended the|poverty and misery |Heavy Fog Continues |'« Bleak eauee and thee tee eo. Sends Solidarity Mes- Toa . ye first conference held by the Na- “Organization is our only way out.| en Speer ea toe oe errant OREGON WIREMEN STRIKE. ; Union in Georgia tional ‘Textile Workers” Union in|The National Textile Wervers bons Over Route |not.cense their activities against Ae) ace, (as Raa eobR > eee to Gastonia ieotecss uccass ede (Continued from Page One) Greenville, the textile center of is the only organization that can| Ese ae ae ganized electricians here struck for (Continued rom Page One) |? Hast 42nd Street, New York ridiculous yarn, Hugo Oehler said: “The accusation is another of the South Carolina. Delegates from the Moneghan Mill, Woodside Mill “the largest mill under one roof in the Detectives and police motorcycles Continued from Page One) |} lead ous in these str s { C 2 | nas ese struggles. The been driving up to the pack- National Textile Workers Uni ..{Moscow to New York journey, that | have pac pen oF lbetween Habarovsk and Petropav-|ing plants and taking away choice a wage of $9 a day and the 40-hour week. some execution on the electric chair of the 16 textile workers of Gas- malicious and contemptible lies con-| United States,” Brandon Mill” Pre Paha cranes ar mmc art Nt |lovsk and over the the Komandor/|rolls of meat. At the Central Labor DA Lena SOON amp, tenia. Patronize tinually being spread about the N. itl, Poinsette and Duneen’ Mill, is a union composed of the weckers |Jslands, has been completed, Union is is charged that this is their) TRUCK DRIVERS ORGANIZE. «rarmers and peasants of all T. W. U. More of them will be in-/ were present. A large delegation |and controlled by the workers, Onie| AS the plane, with the exception of reward for service to the unfair| ROCKFORD, Ill, (By Mail).—|countries, you must not permit this No -Tip Barber Shops vented against us. I have denied !¢rom Anderson and Seneca, S. C.,/a union of this sort can lead us ang (its twin 12,000 horsepower motors, | firms. Truck drivers here have organized! great crime! Organize demonstra- about one every day but the brains | were there and workers formerly ofjorganize us, us-and'/was constructed entirely in Soviet ig eet into aunt, tions and protest meetings against 26-28 ae souare eee us enemies ars cee oc, the U. T. W. and still in the U.T.W.| “In our fight we have many obsta- | Plants, and as the SRA SE el A EA ate Another Injunction. severest on sah 8 trike anested || 2700 BRONX Pik EAST : and baseless | were present. cles. The bosses use many things |¢d by Osoaviakhim (Society for Pro-| CLEVELAND, Ohio (By Ma whch an 1a Wa i ee (corner Allerton Ave.) lies. One of the reporters of the Whe madideeeneimmay oo 1 by in order to divide our ranks. One of Motion of Aviation and Chemistry),| Organized stage hands, at threat of CLEVELAND, Ohio. — ae textile workers of Gastonia!” e. capitalist press, Robert Barry, spent <.7'S,° hetinie sub-district or.,the weapons of the bosses in their Popular oganization with a mem-| going on s‘vike, have gained a wage | Electric Co. as ey nena bi erate German, Latin Protests. \ about two days with Major Bul. anizer at Greenville, formerly a(fight against the workers is the bership of 3,500,000, the Soviet] increase here of seven and a half pal pea yk ich. The ore, The Gastonia Joint Defense and Comrade winkle and the Loray gang and sold his pen to them, writing a series of articles in which one falsification followed anothe: Not one of his assertions is true as anyone familiar with the situation well knows. There is not one newspaper correspondent im the South that does not know how maliciously false Barry’s statements are. The figures of the U. S. gov- ernment on wages in the Southern textile mills gives the lie to Barry; the average wage of the mill work- ers in the South is $12.83, according to the U. S. Census on Manufac- turers.” Gets Even Less. “Actually, the average workers, taken into consideration time lost by unemployment, sickness, etc., re- ceives about $10 a week for 55 to 60 hours health-wrecking work. The North Carolina Bureau of Health re- cently stated that pellagra has in creased amonk mill workers 50 per! cent during the past six months.” These conditions, Oehler declared, are rallying the workers of the tex- tils mills to the union, and is mak- ng them eager for the struggle to be concretized at the Charlotite Conference, Oct. 12, 15. * 8 GASTONIA, N. C., Sept. 23.— With the coming of cold weather and rain storms, workers living in the Workers International Relief tent colony here are suffering great take proper*care of all the black- listed and have been unable to get jobs here. The National Textile Workers Union is sending as many 28 possible into mills throughout the five states to carry on agitation and erganizational wor!:. s + 8 The relief organization, Caroline Drew; its Southern representative said today, is doing its utmost to take proper cars of all the black- listed workers, and is now finding Loray striker, developed into a lead- er through the struggle. For the union, S. W. Gerson spoke and Hu-! bert Carroll, 19 year old Loray | striker. The keynote of all speeches was jorganization, struggle against the stretch-out system, for the eight- hour day, against child labor and! against bosses terrorism, and to up- hold the right of self-defense. The speakers scored sharply the, murder of Ella May Wiggins and} pointed out the necessity for organ- | ization of workers defense commit-| tees. In the discussion period the work- | ers showed their support of the N.T.W.U, policy. The following reso- lutions, quoted in part, were adopted | | unanimously, even the U.T.W. work-/ }ers in the conference, voting for them. On Organization. “The textile workers of the South| work under unbearable conditions. | | We work 11, 12 and more hours, day | and night shifts. The life-sapping| stretch-out system, makes us work| faster and faster. Our wages are miserably low. The workers of} South Carolina average $12.65 a/ week—when they work all year around. In short, the bosses have been steadily pushing us down into slavery. Pellagra, a disease of mal- nutrition, a disease, the basic cause | of which is low wages, is common) among the southern textile workers. “This is our lot:—the stretch-out, | long hours, low wages, pellagra, | United Textile Workers. The bosses | Workers and peasants feel an im- use the leadership of the U. T. W. — McMahon, Hoffman, ete. — to mislead the workers. They have sold out the workers in Elizabethton, Tenn., in Ware Shoals, S. C., and ly in Marion, N. C. In Gasto- 2 their misleaders came there, collected dues and then left the field. These fakers cannot lead the workers. They wi Ge ee Sau tae honoree tAleutinn Islands, which extend vir- this, Dosden, ‘helpless: , tually across the entire width of the “We, at this conference, pledge Pacific. After stopping at Unalaska, ourselves to go forward in our work |SeWard and Sitka, the flyers will re- of organization of a militant indus-|Place the pontoons on their plane trial union of textile workers— the |With wheeels at Seattle, whence they National Textile Workers Union, de. |Will set out for San Francisco, Chi-| spite all resistance and terror. We |C480 and New York. — ; pledge ourselves to make every ef- The Soviet cutter Krasny Vympel } fort to have Charlotte Conference has been delegated to supply fuel to} on Oct. 12 and 13, a success. To this the Land of the Soviets until it conference are invited delegates |Teaches Dutch Harbor. Eight tons from locals of the N. T. W. U., del-|°f Spare parts for repairs or re-| egates from locals of the U. T. W., | Placement of broken parts have been and delegates from unorganized forwarded from the U. S. 8. R. to} milla, Seattle, where the greater part of | “We say that all workers have the|them will remain, the rest having right to defend themselves and their |been shipped to Dutch Harbor, Sitka | union against attacks,” another res- and Seward. olution declares. These latest mob; Commander Semyon Shestakov, attacks prove to all the world that Second Pilot Philip Bolotov, Navi- our fellow workers, Fred Beal and|gator Boris Sterlingov and Mechanic the others, are absolutely innocent Dmitry Fufaev left the Moscow air- of any crime except that of organ-|drome in the first Land of the So- izing the textile workers, \viets on Aug. 8 and were forced | “We send our heartiest encourage-|down during a thick fog in a wild, ment to our attacked fellow work. |Uninhabited region of Siberia, near ers and organizers in Gaston and,Chita, just north of the Manchurian Mecklenberg counties, N. €., We will|border. The plane was badly dam- do everything possible to help them. aged, but the flyers escaped un-| “The solidarity of the working |scathed. fiage wil ia | On Aug. 30 they made a new start for the United States in a sister ship Chief Pilot Shestakov and his three companions and believe that the suc- cess of the tour will prove Soviet planes to be at least the equal of those produced in other countries. | The airmen are still faced with} many difficulties, as they must fly over an uncharted air route above rocky and unknown parts of the closed, and the growing strength of] the National Textile Workers Union} and rallying for the Charlotte Con-|| Are You of Those ference, Oct. 12, 18, was probably responsible for Edgerton’s sugges-| jtion that Southern bosses improve | their “labor conditions.” The ac-| tivities in the mill towns are called! jof the Land of the Soviets, arriving in Khabarovsk on Sept. 3, covering |the 6,805 km. in 45 hours of flying time, an average speed of 150 km. per Hour. Between Irkutsk ando Verkhneu- jdinsk the plane ran into a driving gale which pitched it about like a Withholding Day’s Pay from the Farty per cent. Mo.'un picture operators stage hands if the wage increase was refused. mense pride in the achievements of stated they would strike with the|quit when the firm violated the |standards for electric installations \set by the Electrical League. MELVIN, WELLS IN PITTSBURGH Speak, Labor Lyceum Wednesday Night PITTSBURGH, Sept. 23.—Sophie Melvin, 19-year-old defendants in the Gastonia trial, and Ben Wells, or- ganizer of the National Textile Workers’ Union, who was beaten by a mob of gunmen and mill officials near Gastonia last week, will be the main speakers at a Gastonia protest meeting which will be held Septem- ber 25, 8 p. m at the Labor Lyceum, 85 Miller St., Pittsburgh, Pa. The meeting is being held under the aus- pices of the Gastonia Joint Defense and Relief Committee. Other speak- ers will be Pat Devine, District Or- ganizer of the Communist Party, and Sam Herman of the Young Ccmmunist League. Max Salzman, Pittsburgh Secretary of the Interna- tional Labor Defense, whose head- quarters are at 119 Federal Street, will preside. IN. J. Metal Strikers Back; Many Realize ‘Sound TUUL Strategy (Continued from Page One) ary demands of the bulk of the workers—the unskilled—were thus defeated, The vote had been taken under ‘the jurisdiction of the town’s Mayor land police chief and was held on| ‘company property. Only 720 voted, | | 250 of these urging extended strug- | gle. Some 1,580 workers refused ‘to vote as a protest against the sell- | ' out. A continued fight, through organ- ization of a new strike committee, mass picketing and avoidance of| local government as the tool of the company, was urged by George | | Powers and Nat Kaplan when they | spoke at a meeting arranged by the| Trade Union Unity League last Saturday. The strikers, however, felt they realized the soundness of the League | program too late. They were urged \if they intended going back in any ‘ease, to return as an organized unit! land demand no discrimination. | Some years ago the men were be- Relief Campaign Committee also re- egived protests today from the Latin American workers and from Aachen, the center of bitter class warfare | in Germany. | The German workers declared, “We demand the immediate release of the textile prisoners, in danger of the electric chair for daring to strug- gle for better conditions.” American workers continue to; send in resolutions and expressions of solidarity, holding mass meetings, house-to-house collections and tell- ing of their mobilization of all workers in their organizations for |the mass collection days today and tomorrow, Wilkes-Barre Workers to Hail 10thCommunist Anniversary Sunday WILKES-BARRE, Pa., Sept. 23. | —The triumphs of the Communist | Party, especially in the Pennsyl- | vania coal area, from its inception | to the present time, will be recount- ed by speakers at the Tenth Party Anniversary Celebration at a picnic at Inmore Park next Sunday. The event will be held at 206 S. |Main St., above the Irving Theatre, at 5 p. main case of rain. i An attractive program of enter- tainment will be presented. Speeches will be given by D. A. Gorman, dis- trict organizer, and William Albert- Sophie Melvin, youngest of the de-|trayed by the A. F. of L., whose of-|S0M, district organizer of the Young fendants in the Gastonia murder | ficials organized them into a union, | trial, will tell the story of the trial | took dues and left the men flat. The as well as tell of her experiences in | company was thus enabled to propa- the Gastonia strike. She was per- gandize against all “outsiders,” in- sonally acquainted with Ella May| cluding the T. U. U. L. Wiggins, textile striker and mothe?) Those strikers who fell for this of five children who was ie mill | Propaganda and refused to form last week by gunmen cf the mill) +i. own union now realize the T. bosses. : |U. U: L. championed them from the | Wells will tell the story of his ex- first day of the strike, the League, |shell on a stormy sea. The moun-| perience in the strike as well as the reports. Communist League. Our own nge, the bourgeois age, fe distingnished by this—that it has simplified class antagonisms. | More more, society is splitting up into two great hostile camps, into two great and directly contra- bourgeoisie and pro- Build Up the United Front of the Working Class From the Bot- tom Up—at the Enterprises! Frances Pilat MIDWIFK 351 E. 7/th St., New York, N. Y. Tel. Rhinelander 3916 DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Rcom 803—Phone: Algonquin 8183 Not connected with any other office Dr: ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST cor, 722 BASE USth STREET ‘or. Second Ave. N Office hours: Mon., Wed. Sat, 9.30 a, m. to 12; 2 to 6 P.M. Tues. Thurs., 9.30 a. m. to 12; % to 8 p, m Sunday, 10 a. m: to 1 p. m, Please telephone for appointment. Telephone: Lehigh 6022 MEET YOUR FRIENDS at Messinger’s Vegetarian and Dairy Restaurant 1763 Sovthern Blvd," -ax, N.Y Right off 174th St. Subway Station RATIONAL Vegetarian RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVEi UE Bet. 12th and 1gth Sts. Strictly Vegetarian Food HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT I 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 5865 To ¥very Party Member! Tho the DAY’S PAY assess- ment was decided upon three months ago there are still thous- ands of Party members who have not yet given their DAY’S PAY. story of the kidnapping and beating of himself and two other union or-| ganizers, | tainous country and the possibility lof being forced down in an unknown territory made the danger of this comparatively short hop extremely great. houses for them as rapidly as pos- “growing pains,” and a little in- sible. The Gastonia Joint Relief|crease in wages, he proposes, will! and Defense Committee, 80 E. 1{thjalleviate them. | St., N. Y. C., is collecting funds to} The Southern textile workers are! help the southern textile workers. preparing for struggle—this must| Possibly one outgrowth of the|be apparent to everybody who goes Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 im John’s Restaurant To Mobilize Workers \ t conference Saturday between Gov-jinto the South—even capitalist re-| ‘Communist Candidates Against Reformists FULTON W. 46th st. Evgs. 8:50 LAST 4 DAYS: Aaa intent wo ernor O, Max Gardner, Arthur Dick-! porters who write lying reports.| ARE YOU ONE OF THOSE |) * ~ | Mats. Wed. & Sat, 2:30) Bactual! Dynamic! ‘Thrilling! where all. radicals. moce siidént of ict Ameridan iCots ; ictal ||STILL witHoLDINc = THE|/At Latin America Ball) (continued from Page One) EORGE M. COHAN” "ff “the remarkable Sovkino Film ane ae t son, president of the American Cot-|There is no mistaking the mood for| DAY'S PAY FROM THE PAR. 2 the most revolutionary advance of 302 E. 12th St. New York ton Manufacturers’ Assn., John M./struggle, and the bosses have recog: | Ty? a ‘5 ss ill be th Communist standard bearers in the} the motion picture to date! Sport, president of the North Caro-|nized this—consequently the pro-| fe Next Saturday evening will be the municipal elections. LIVING RUSSUA | The present situation in the |first big Red Night in Harlem dur- MBLING Russia at work—at play—in pain lina Cotton Manufacturers’ Assn.| posed bone. This will not stem the " e - a, A Te 4 cially fitting that this 7 canta z All Comrades Mi ' r P N. | pos I his 5 t countcy, the rising t f @ Pe é t is especially a powerful presentation of all eet at and Stuart M. Kramer, a big mill rising tie of militancy, tentileunion|} a gt (he marues thes stecete ef |e ea eee ne CRIED election rally takes place on the 0c-| The Talk of the Town! |pnetesofendiiaas it fad BRONSTEIN’S owner was the letter sent out by | organizers declare, | 4 A b ;~|casion when the militant workers of seaidandoukepresrake: sud nonin John E. Edgerton of the National the Trade Union Unity League ||nist Party has arranged a Latin] ‘osm Moen os Ute the 10th Anni-| | % -. i} Vegetarian Health Convention, the sharpening of the advise you to —Daily Ne was thoroughly discussed, it was dis- have witnessed, on the one hand, the complete degeneration of the pow Tonight—“THE SEA GULL” eo Tom. mat—“THE SEA GU LL Tom. eve-—“THE CRADLE SONG” | || Support of the Party in every ments Committee, promises to be respect. } the greatest Harlem event of the i i i IVIC REPERTORY 14th St iati | American election campaign rally : 6th Ave. and in pleasure. Association Manufacturers, to} The working class cunnet stmply | class strugyle in Gastonia—sure- |/and ball that night at Harlem Ca-|VeTS@ry of the founding of the Com- | Kvgs. 8:20, Mats, Wed, Sat. 2:30 “Completely fascinating Restaurant Senha. SRP ETE: io ee a ts own | ly in such a situation every Par-||sino, 116th St. and Lenox Ave.,|™munist Party of America, selares sere ae oe nual, Stop ntecest |] 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx The situation in the textile fields | purpeow.. io ea Mecsgi mn Gare ty member must rally to the||which, according to the Arrange.|the statement. ‘The last ten years! EVA Le GALLIENNE, Director avery saben | | SPECIAL ADDED ATTRACTION Unity Co-operqtors Patronize At a time when some of our socialist party, as part and parcel . Just arrived from Moscow! = id $3 '¢ | season. Qn that night the leading A | at | ( om unist Activities || comrades are face to face daily ||candidates of the Communist Party|f the bourgeoisie, and on be other! Denese a, GARRICK 1 JEWS ON SOVIET SOIL SAM LESSER m with the open fascist terror of ||in the next municipal elections, to-| hand, the steady growth of the in-| y the |°8:30. ‘Wise’ 3i30" | [vivid views of agrarian Jews in Ladies’ and. Gents’ Tailor the capitalist class there should || gether with the two Latin American fluence of the Communist Party in| : MATINEES THURS. & SAT., 2:30 | the struggles of the workers, and its the Ukraine and Caucasian regions —and on the same program— 1818 - 7th Ave. New York not be a si! ii i Mor i | ioe re. Between 110th and 11ith : Section 7 Functionaries. [officially called off, All League |! rails th fe Communtat wno || candidates, . calcio aie ea ty oo development from a sect into a revo- PR AME ae el Next to Unity Co-operative House A meeting of all unit function. |comrades are expected to attend the || fails the Party at such a period. ||Libertad Narvaez, will make their| development trom & kat ime ® roth: | WHEN MOSCOW shana aries of Section,7 wilt be held Thurs. | FAIY membership meet at, Webster | If you have not yet given your |/ official appearance before the work- itis ob/alie Comments Intern LAUGHS - = $35. ee oA 4 ti sien KS i lay’s pay act at } rl ic y at By MICHAEL GOLD 28th St. Any functionary failing to| Rae ae 1¢ Dey. guse ers of LS etegaie a als St BA tional, is the leader of fierce Class. ,.,. ead . a0 Hilarfous—Clever Genuine Humor Advertise your Union Meeti attend will immediately be removed Unit 4F, Section 6. you have done your duty to || workers of the 17th Assembly and First offering of the 1929-30 Season. |B witch set all Europe laughing! | Meetings and called to account oe * #&th St. must attend without fail or be suspended from the Party. m,, at 258 Atlantic Ave., Brooklyn, to Meets Wednesday, Sept. 6:20 ov, 4 are instructed to report at 143 E.| 103rd St. Wednesday, Sept. 25, 8 p. m./ | the Party see that every mem- || Aldermanic Districts where they are | lected and see that it is for- battles, already on the road to be-| Special Rates to Labor Groups. coming a mass political party of | FILM GUILD CINEMA Weekdays 12 to 2—35e; Saturday |] here. For information write to Attention Section 7. mobilize for the election campaign be of your nucleus does the |/running. Wm. W. Weinstone, Com- the working class. | ‘A. H. Woods’ Attractions (fos: west eicarn sree The DAILY WORKER pad! pmembers of Section 7 whojand the Gastonia defense, me. |munist candidate for mayor, will || MOROSCO THEATRE _ | f[nctween. Fiten and Sixth, Avenues Advertising Dept. ave been appear be- sear | " \ fore the Section Control Commission | Section 4 ILD Directors. || Demand of your nucleus offi- || also be there. pa * 45th St West of Broadway [continuous daily noon to midniteg||| 26-28 Union Sq., New York City on Thursday, Sept. 26, at 48 Bay| All unit ILD directors of Section | ¢ials an account of all money col- Of course, the night will not be MADAME X: || Eves. $:50. Mats, Wed. & Sat, 2:50 |) Special Forenoon ces | | OS WER Unit 14 Section 2, A meeting will be held Thursday at 6:30 p. m ee Bee Section 2 ILD Directors. Monthly meeting ‘Thursday, 26, at § p. m. Sept. oe Unit 18, Section 3. Meets Thursday, Sept. 26, at 1179 Broadwa 6 p.m, hee Latin-American Eleetoral Ball. The Spanish Bureau is arrangin, an election campaign rally and ball for Saturday, Sept. 28, 8:3 the Harlem Casino, Lenox Ave, Latin-American dances ries. f the New ~c. Le jonaries, called for Tuesday, Sept. 24, has been post- ponéd because of the Party member- ship meeting, and all other League meetings for this night have been Fraternal Organizations * * . Intl Branch 1, Section 8 The executive committee meets at |7 p.m. membership at 8:30 sharp, | Wednesday, Sept. 25, at the Browns- | ville Youth Center, 122 Osborn St. + # «# Bronx Election Rally Postponed. The election eg rally sche- |duled for tonight at Longwood and | Prospect Aves. has been postponed |by the U. C. W. W. New date will) be announced shortly. * eee | Unit 5, Seetion 7. The executive meets Wednesday, Sept. 25, 8 p. m., at W. 29th St. and Mermaid Ave. Coney Island. Mem- bership meet at 9 o'clock, * * * | Branch 3, Section 5. | The Tenth Plenum of the C. I. will) [be discussed at 1330 Wilkins Ave. | |today at 9 p. m, All comrades wel- | come, en ak | | Unit R2, Section 1, | | Meets Wednesday, Sept. 35, 7:30 p. m., at 27 EB. 4th St.’ Executive meets at 7 sharp. entirely devoted to speeches, and a nice program of Latin American |dances and songs has been prepared. John Smith’s Harlem Devils will furnish the music for dancing. Tickets may be secured at the Workers Bookshop, 26-28 Union Square, at the Spanish Workers Center, and at the Harlem Progres- sive Youth Club, 1492 Madison Ave. Drug Clerks Organize Union; State Demands The New York Drug Clerks’ Association changed its name to the New York Drug Clerks’ Union at! warded to the National Office of the Party. Let your unit insist that the district shall send all funds col- lected on the day’s pay to the National Office immediately. No Party member will be con- sidered in good standing who has not secured a day’s pay stamps either by giving a day’s pay or through unemployment per deci- sions of the nucleus. Send all money collected to Communist Party, 43 E. 125th St., New York City. OPEN AIR MEETS Pier 14 at 12 noon, speaker, V. a meeting held at Stuyvesant Ca-)| sino, 142 Second Ave. Pointing out that the drug clerks Smith; Pier 36 at 12 noon, W.!now work 60 to 70 hours a week, J dual role, in the newest Soviet Russian ? fee oe: lay constructed, ina dua ical Burke; 26th St. and Madison Ave.|the union stated that it is fighting > >, extraordinary film, Based on actnel patorical (office workers), at 12.10 noon, speaker, Pollock; Independent Laun- dry Workers, Herzl and Levonia Ave., at 5 p. m., speaker, W. Burke; j for a 48 hour week, recognition of | the union and job control. The union also demands a living wage for the \discovers at the end of the second A play, “Scarlet Pages” on exhi- bition at the Morosco Theatre, is described as a “new American drama” by its authors Samuel Ship- man and John B, Hymer. While the setting is supposed to be New York the theme is a sort of reversed ver- sion of the old French drama, “Madame X” that served long and faithfully as a tour de force for barnstormers. In “Madame X” the climax is reached when the young defense attorney discovers that the forloren hag he has been defending in court is his own mother. In the current play at the Morosco Mary Bancroft (Elsie Ferguson), a lady ornament of the legal profession, ELSIE FERGUSON Shwe SCARLET PAGES ts ELTINGE THEATRE West 42d Street Evgs. 8:50. Mats, Wed. & Sat. 2:50 The Great London Success Murder «= Second Floor A Comedy Drama in 3 Acts 'R—K—O CamMEO 42nd St, and Broadway act that the cabaret performer she has been defending is her own daughter. Of such clap-trap is the The lines are equally inane; there is not one clever moment in the whole performance. Even the actors, | |j most of whom have given creditable occurrence in, Jew! LEONIDOFF and Sunday 12 0 cents, Starting this Saturday, Sept, a8 Knut | Hamsun's “GROWTH OF THE SOIL” enacted by an all-star Scandinavian cast in the actual Norwegian scenes. Don't miss it! ETHEL BARRYMORE THEATRE 47th St. W. of B'way. Chick, 9944 Evgs. 8:50. Mats, Wed. & Sat. 2:30 sei wseai BIRD 3 HAND DRINKWATER’S 3d—=Last Week AMKINO Presents Newest Russian Triumph ds <n Hotel and Restaurant Workers Branch of the Amalgamated Food Workers 183 W. Sist St, Phone Circe 7330 BUSINESS MEETING: eld on the firat Monday of the month at ¥ p. ls a ARBEITER BUND, Manhattan’ & Bronx: German Workers’ Club. Meets every 4th Thursday in the month at ‘Labor Temple, 243 Sith St. New members accepte at regular meetings. German and English library. Sunday lectures, Soc entertainm: FURNISHED ROOMS Now is your opportunity to get a room in the magnificent Workers Hotel . lerks. r ‘ : 5 Brox Gastonia Defense Meet, |18 Union Square. Workers wishing |Zuker (Bakery), 635 Marcy Ave. |° performances, in, the past, simply | oe Unity Cooperative House usged tocsleet alepeten ts Whe att | atthtapait, tne Gantonia’ strike | Brooklyn, at 2.90 p.m. A. F. W. F ha ete aya rigs 1800 SEVENTH AVENUE tonla, Defense, Conference, called py thelz names’ and addresses at the local 3, speaker, 1, Baum. Dress Sho pChairmen Canine coo retee “yi belay ste OPPOSITE CENTRAL PARK onx I. L. D. a . I. R. for| Workers School, ‘ i f that Nora Mason (played by Clare ” Gea, Byeding. of Waenesday, fept) 36, All meetings off for evening rro the’ Terribl Cor. 110th Street at 1700 Western Road. ao Steet, ‘boa Ri, membership meeting. Will Meet Tomorrow sa), ae aahae te eee rad . Tel, Monument 0111 AL iectire onthe Arabinn Uprising | Siuare Sree steer eet aa union All shop chairmen of the dress/a week out of male patrons of the. Due to the fact that a number in Palestine will 'be given Wednes- Ct.” delegates imust. ‘be present |PENN R.R, GOBBLES BUS LINES | division of the Needle Trades Work- | place and she killed her foster father of tenants were compelled to doy, Sept, 25, 830 p.m. at 1761 | Members welgome.” PHILADELPHIA (By Mail)—|¢t8’ Industrial Union should attend|when he invaded her bedroom and leave the city, we have a num- under the aus- Cc. W. of Council 24, 'U, * 8 Wilitamsburgh Pale Under the auspic e Lecture. of William Bronx Y. C. L. Dance. The Y, C. L., Upper Bronx, No. 2, has prsesiged a dance for Saturday evening, Sept. 28 at the Bronx a special meeting which will be held tomorrow, right after work at the union headquarters, 16 W. 21st St. The Pennsylyania Railroad has ob- tained a controlling interest in the huge Greyhound Bus Lines, it is re- displayed what can be mildly de- Produced in U. scribed as an excess of fatherly af- |- fection. picturization of the condition: ke Lekkert to commit individ .S.S.R. by BELGOSKINO uses that ber of rooms to rent. No security necessary, Call at our office for further information. burgh Council 4 U. C. W. W.. a Workers Center, 1330 Wilkins Ave.|ported. The Gi A report will be given on the con- « ’—DAILY WORKER, ka had the Arabi i P; Wi ported. e Great Northern Rail-| 2° r In the course of the trial, as de- ewilh be ‘aiven av 36 fanbattan wit present @ play. Procseaa iets |road has sold to the Greyhound its hel sscaad pg industry and icted in the second act, a nun trom | Set ih awe every mentee MINE FAKERS “ » ( \ he pw Aye Set eetlomal Schock” Kan daithe, ageaeue [Northland Transportation Co., with | ¥ followed by a general dis-\a maternity hospital, produced rec- | ‘are excelient.--NEW. YORK FAKERS “ARBITRATE: a tg cussion from the floor, Esperanto Correspondence: Mlustra: | 3,300 miles of bus lines, Reduced PRINCETON, Ind. (By Mail).— ords to show that the girl’s lady! “Seeds of Free fine pleture ¢! ly because’ ; ye unit tb dltectors of Section | Be shown, afevetn in advance Yu | Wages are threatened, Not only has the |lawyer is really her mother, That’s are ieatiy' te myogvnnine vost, NuAMans aa a sstiog y ancear metas ‘ate Aetenaied io tapore at {43 | cents; at door 35 conte. | forged eapons that!—H.M W, @ | Station Mins Wait oo cereen vA ain STE LIPMAN Lup. | Build Up the United Front of EXTRA EL IN Wet iwhi edits Sis didald teaharks ™ é a Mo while the fakers “arbitrated” with : ayeets every. Monday, Weanesday | tong feB6 cp. nae ag Hart held) the Working Class From the Bot- Build Up the United Front of NINA TARASOVA }@3!the mine operators. A sell-out is ; and Friday, 8:20 p. m., in Room 6 lyrtle ‘Aves. | tom Up—at the Enterprises! the Working Clase, Supe ATTRACTIC ON! tm a group of Russign sones (@{ seem y.:.. 4 acini en EN cattate pets ~ > oo _&rO MOOD sas: ~ >