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US TOLERS GET Gul! Shrimp Cleaners, Wet, GRAFT SI SOCIALIST FARM /2""2gr¥, Combete Japanese DAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1929 GRAFT DISPUTES FOSTER TO TALK “ArsemZ” Shows Invincible PACIFICCOAST — OF ALF.L.FAKERS ONNEW METHODS Revolutionary Labor at War CONFERENCE IS GALVESTON, Texas., Nov. 11.—, Fishermen who take their boats “Ar 1,” now at the Film Guild MARGARET DELAME) B IN SOVIET UNION Turn Down Fliers Plan to Span Atlantic (Continued from F as follows: “Collective tate of 400 desetins, 45 t vs and other patronage F.S. tailed description way.” The F.S,U the Friends of juring the da revolution, fan lied tens of th mn this countr Soviet workers this demor never been f and Sov ter- blockade ral- ne aid to the an the , | containers A cent a pound for shrimp tails and until the catch is cleaned, 's what Galveston shrimp pack- workers get. Most of them are Negroes, but in other ports white families work, including little chil- dren. etimes the ‘men work half the night to finish up,” a shrimp packing boss said, The shrimp catch is brought in late in the af- ternoon and may give less than a dollar’s work to the men who have ed hours for it, Shrimp cleaners stand at bench ¢ tables paralleling the small boat’s several waters, standing on a wet floor exposed to wind and rain while they work. The sea food is salted and frozen, packed in cardboard of eight and one-half pound content, and shipped in re- frigerated ships to Japan, or in re- frigerator railroad cars to other s of this country. 10 to 15 miles out into the Gulf of Mexico for shrimp get five cents a pound for the first 400 pounds, then three and one-half cents for every- thing else, no matter how much they bring. They drag their nets in the bay when the weather is too rough for them on the Gulf. But stormy weather keeps them ashore entirely and depri the packers of work {and earnings as well, “Wet all the time,” exclaimed one | SPLIT MO, UNIONS Bricklayers Are Used for Half Million dictional dispute, the old trick of the A. F, of L. fakers, developed by them to a science in order to keep . LOUIS, Nov. 11.—The juris- | Cniema, is another fine picture from the Soviet Union, a film that seems to happily combine some of the pure- | ly experimental features of such pic- | kers School :t¥*¢s 8 “The Man With a Came sa IN CLASS FIGHT |At Wor | Forum Sunday recently shown at the ne theatre, and the substantial discoveries in film art, first appearing in America “New Methods in the Class Strug- ‘hrough “Potemkin.” | The present picture is a seriey of (realistic incidents of the Ukyanian |bourgeois and Soviet revolutions, so | gle” will be the subject of a speech |by William Z. Foster, general sec- of the fishermen, “That’s what our |the workers of various crafts split,|tetary of the Trade Union Unity |arranged as to tell a story through work is.” He brought his 20-foot gasoline-powered boat to the dock | and dived “below” into his tiny bunkhouse to change clothes. Fish | and shrimp are kept on the hold on great blocks of ice. boats are taken by venturesome fishermen, working two in a boat, 60 or 70 miles dowsfithe Gulf coast in season, searching’ for the lucious | red ‘er. But the snapper sea- working cla: Pe " ny time and the game is oe es as Cheaper Than Japan. aor my game is speech of Sh Polo as ot | Dake Grounds when he lveston ships thousands 0; z 5 “During the entire flight over the t0S of shrimp to Japan,” the boss Galveston fishermen used to be | ee eee eaeee ee trom|Dacker said. He has’ his boat | organized in the International Long- | Feo ee ee pe rom moored to “he inner dock with the |shoremen’s Association, but got nay oy and Kam-' vest of the “mosquito fleet” and |nothing out of it a nd quit. Almost chatka, at every landing point we were met by large groups of Soviet citizens who asked us to transmit our sincerest greetings to the toilers in Ameriea, upon our arrival in the United States. They asked us also to express their gratitude to the Friends of the Soviet Union for the aid rendered them during the diffi- cult year of famine in 1921.” Decide Not To Fly Atlant Because of the grave dangers to e faced on a trans-Atlantic flight at this season of the year, Osoaviak- him, the Soviet Aviation Society, has Jeemed it best not to grant the four U. 8. 8. R, fliers of the Land of the Soviets permission to span the ocean and return to Moscow by air, Semeon Shestakov, chief pilot, an- nouneed yesterday. “We consider our flight complet- ed,” Shestakov told the Daily Work- er, “Our further plans eall for a return to Moscow within a short time. We take this occasion to thank ‘again workers’ organizations and individuals who have greeted us for ‘their warm and cordial wel- come.” In the first workers’ republic, where cut-throat capitalistie compe- a has been eliminated and the Workers and peasants are in control, all possible precautions are taken, and no cost is too great or del-y too! long to insure the safety of the sells fresh shrimp for bait or hu- man food. LAY-OFFS START IN NAVY YARD A.F.L. Fakers in With Govt. Bosses (Continued from Page One) men and veterans of the Spanish- American War. After working in the Navy Yard a year, a man is en- titled to 50 days’ vacation with pay. Many of the men laid off had but a month, some as little as six days to go, before their year would be ap. Navy Yard men remember how April 25, when the 10,000 ton cruiser Pensacola was William Green, Frey, O'Connell and a host of other A. F. of L. fat- salaried men patted the admirals and Wall Street men on the back, saying how they were happy to help launch the big Pensacola which was ¢esign- ed to blow thousands of workers to smithereens. At the launching of the Pensacola, a “Harmony Banquet” was held, for launched, | | all nations are represented among | the shifting crews of fishermen, WORKERS. STRIKE TUUL Warns Strike) May Be Sold Out | | | | | (Continued from Page One) | the union and to aid the American | Federation of Labor to expel all the | militant elements, { By the use of such demagogic tac- | ties they succeeded in getting a mo- | tion passed by a small majority that the union demand that the A. F, of |L. International official; enter the )strike situation. They failed, how- ever, in their efforts to deny the jfloor to a delegate from the mili- tant Amalgamated Building Serv- ice Workers’ Union, who came to urges solidarity and to offer the aid of his union in the new organiza- tion drive, A joint committee of the two unions will meet to work out a common program of action. The Window Cleaners’ Section of the T. U. U. L. last night issued a BUILDING SERVICE : showed itself at its worst in the ease of the Bricklayers and the Carpenters locals here. As a result of the labor fakers’ actions in this matter, the local $500,000 by the Rockwood Corpora- tion of St. Louis, which manufac- tures a composition material elaimed to be a substitute for brick, woo and tile. The labor fakers of the Carpenters and the Bricklayers union began clutching at each others threats, in crcer to get the work, The dispute was carried to the A, F. of L. Building Trades Depart- ment, where the carpenters fakers got the decision. The bricklayers’ union fakers then stated they would order the members f that union to strike every job on which the carpenters got the work. The Rockwood Corp, then sued the bricbklayers union, because of work tied up by the jurisdictional dispute, Members of both the carpenters and bricklayers union here are now seeing the depths to which the ra- pacity of the labor fakers can reach, with the members themselves as the victims. “We're now seeing that a militant union for all building trades work- ers, which will leave the fakers out in the cold, and won’t serap over jobs and cash, is what we need,” said a bricklayer here. Communist Activities # Seetion 3 Members. Note, All members of Section 3 must at- t their respective unit meetings g the week of Nov. 11-14. Those absent will bedropped from the list. aga aier Unit 12. Meets Tuesday, 6.15 p. m Ree tae rag ee Section 4 Lit. Agents, Literature agents and agitprop di- rectors meet Wednesday, 6.30 p, m. at 143 E, 103rd St, + % * Unit 3, Seetion 4, Meets today, 8 p. m,, at 235 W. 129th | League, at the 8 p.m, this Sunday | symbolism. You are shown the con- | at the Workers’ School Forum, 26-28 scription, trench warfare, and starv- | Union Square. Reporting on the left.| ation at home. Czar “Nicky” writes in his diary how he killed a crow, the only outstanding eyent for him ward swing of the workers, Foster These small |bricklayers union is being sued for | Will cover the events at Gastonia,/of 4 day of slaughter and horror | Marion, New Orleans and Leeksville,/for the workers and peasants. jthe murder by mill thugs of Ella |ficers murder soldiers who have gone |May, and the state-instigated repres-|¢"azy from the things they see. |sion drive against militant workers | Finally the front breaks up, and the fF auduisin/ chanolea biota | returning soldiers run into a moh 8 one, jof hysterical bourgeois, who are set- The League secretary is just back|ting up Petlura’s government, and from a national tour in which he : n want to disarm them. There is a popularized the achievements of the! hair-raising depiction of a train Cleveland conyention, ; n wreck as the returning soldiers es _ “Come early if you want seats,” cape the white guards, and run the is the advice of the school. Many train themselves, after the engineer workers were. crowded out at the’ josog his nerve, opening of the forum last Sunday.) The principal character, the Bol- LOCKOUT shevist worker soldier, played by S. | Swazhenko, crawls out of the con- |fusion. He was in charge during Union Misleader Racketeer, Charge Of- |the smash-up, but he doesn’t shoot himself, or anything like that. He llooks sedately over the splintered | jcars and remarks: “I'll learn how \to run these things yet.” This character re-appears in many 2 | scenes, he typifies the unconquer- ‘able spirit of revolutionary labor. The bourgeois and intellectual CHICAGO, Nov, 11.—Racketeering burn candles before Petlura’s picture and ezarist dictatorship on the part and seorn the representative of the of the union officials, on the one (Bolshevik who appears at their con- Thand, and the use of thugs and the {vention to demand the factories for capitalist courts by the bosses on |the workers and the land for the the other, are the two forces which |Peasants. But when Petlura’s re- the 2,500 locked out members of the |CTuiting agents call on the soldiers Cleaners and Dyers’ Union here in who were at the front to enroll Dilbaah: aoa tatihe: themselves Jn the “Free Usraine” fn be army, one 0; them gets up and asks sociation, which took affect last Kill officers and bourgeois when -ze week, more than one-third are Ne- | find them on the streets? gro workers, most of whom reside! The picture takes its name from on the south side, Ben Abrams, re- | 8M arsenal, where the machines are actionary misleader of the Cleaners, | Utilized both as part of the story Dyers and Pressers’ Union here, is | St. Petersburg.” The workers strike when Petlura wants shells. They defend their arsenal by force of ers. The bosses, who also deal with the racketeers and should know one | when they see him, also make this ae —_—GREAT SUCCESS Organization Leads to and a symbolical background, in a| a racketeer, say the militant work- | Way foreshadowed by “The End of | Hamil- current In “Rope’s End,” Patrick ton’s dramatic thriller now at the Masque Theatre. Such is our revolutionary life and death.” There is a scene where one of the intellectuals of ePtlura’s government tries to shoot a Red soldier captive. Th: Bolshevik walks directly up to him, refusing to be shot in the back, and tears the gun from his hand. | The next flash shows a dead: white guard. On the contrary, one of the | white guard executioners is pictured | shooting down one unarmed man | after another, grim, and thin lipped. | The final scene is an exaggeration | of the spirit of the whole film. The | principal character is caught by a Petlura patrol after his machine | | gun has jammed, and he has hurled | the cartrages at the enemy, They} try to shoot him, and he does not | fall. They wonder if he is wearing | armor, and he tears open his shirt showing his bare chest. He says: | “There is something here you cannot | It is symbolical, perhaps | | slightly mystical, but on the other |hand, can be given a realistic inter- | |pretation—it could be simply a! |dramatic incident in which soldier: lof the white army, not sure they are right, nervous, shoot to miss, Any- way they fade away, and leave the |worker standing triumphant. So it jis with the whole picture, in lesser degree. | | The direction and scenario are by | Alexander Doyzhenka, the photo- | |graphy by Demutsky, seeting and | costumes by V. Muller and I. Spine!. | jill.” ROMAIN ROLLAND'S PLAY TO| | BE PRESENTED BY | THEATRE GUILD. | The Theatre Guild has put Romain Rolland’s “The Game of | Love and Death” into rehearsal and | the play will be produced on Mon- | Industrial Union (Continued from Page One) International of Labor Unions, This organization will smash the “fink halls,” the employers’ open hop employment agencies, and fight the ship owners and_ stevedoring companies hard for better wages, hours and conditions. ‘The delegates unanimously pledged to support the International Labor Defense, defend the Gastonia vic- ims, and the Soviet Union. The conference voted to fight the war danger. In preparation for the forthcom- ins: national convention, at which the new industrial union will be formed, the eonference decided to intensify orgenization especially among long- shoremen, There was a spirit of confidence ard enthusiasm, and the delegations are returning to the job determined to build a revolutionary union for this industry. “For All Kind of Insurance” ([ARL BRODSKY ‘Telephone: Murray Hill 5550 7 Kast 42nd Street, New York Patronize No-Tip Barber Shops 26-28 UNION SQUARE (1 flight up) 2700 BRONX P/ ~K EAST (corner Allerton Ave.) Cooperators! Patronize SEROY CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue Estabiook 3215 Bronx, N, ¥ Comrade Frances Pilat MIDWIFE proletarian pilots. which the Navy Yard workers had | statement warning the striking/** Discussion |, charge, but they make it to injure|arms, One Red soldier dying in an|day, November 25, as the second | ast B 7th Sz, New York, N. ¥. The safety of air travel in the U. to buy tickets or lose their jobs. | window cleaners against the new| _ Unit 12, Section 2 Buro, the workers’ chances of winning. outpost. skirmish is taken hone on subscription offering of the Guild’s | Sel Anes anaer INE S. 8. R. is indicated by the fact that! Besides Green, there were pres-| aneuver by which the right wing serene Eeert. FPP st 26 Union! Abrams has resorted to one of |@ gun limber, in a magnificent dash season. Rouben Mamoulian is during the last three years, out of| ent at the launching a host of other | 2352 are calling in the A. F. of L.| °!” a ee the age-old methods of the A. F, of |°ver barren rolling country—beauti-| directing the play and the settings MELROSE— a total of 1,716,875 miles flown with| loyal servants of the Wall Street | Srticials to “settle” (sell out) the Unit 12F, Section 2, L. labor misleaders in using the |f¥! scenic effects, and laid at the) and costumes are by Aline Bern’ | 10,052 passengers, there were only| Government. Among them were in- three injuries and four deaths due to cluded: accidents. Here in the U. S., the) Charles Frances Adams, secretary aviation casualty list exceeds this| of the navy and exploiter of thou- veeord in a week. | sands of Massachusetts textile work- The cablegram from J. S. Un-| ers; Seeretary of Labor James J. schlicht, Osoaviakhim vice chairman, | Davis; Joseph Ryan, president of the to the fliers reads as follows: “The| New York Central Trades and Presidium of the Osoaviakhim, while Labor Council John Sullivan, presi- greeting your readiness to fly the| dent of the New York State Federa- \tlantic, cannot accept your pro-| tion of Labor; Frank Morrison, sec- | strike. | “Only your militant leaders, whom | you yourselves have elected, repre- sent your interests and they alone can lead you to victory. Repudiate the right wingers who are trying to split your union and break your | strike,” the statement declares after jwarning the men to beware of the | | A, F. of L. betrayal snares, | posal, in view af the particularly d ficult meteorological conditions pre- vailing at the present time of the year.” TEN BURIED AS retary of the A. F, of L,; James O'Connell, president of the A. F. of L. Metal Trades Department; Peter J. Brady. president of the Federa- tion Bank and Trust Co, a “labor” Lank, and many admirals and naval “dignitaries,” The launching of the 10,000 ton Pensacola gave the lie to the shout- Cafeteria Union Meets| (Continued from Page One) \M, Gentili, A, Margules, M. Natalini jand A. Christman, with Costas, Sos- ofsky, Porginos, Kaplan and Miller as alternates. A @esolution calling for amend- Special membership meeting Thurs- p. m., at 1179 Broadway. Every | @ comrade must be present. oe Unit 5, Seetion 7. Meeting Wednesday, 8.30 p. m., at 2901 Mermaid Ave., C. I. to discuss the Party Plenum. Labor and Fraternal Organizations New Esperanto Class, The New York S. A. T. has decided to start a new class in Esperanto, Write to Esperanto Fraction, 350 E. Sist St. for information, Organiza- tions interested in a discussion on “Esperanto and International Cor- respondence” or in organizing cor- respondence cireles should also com- municate. Be Yorkville I, L, D. Regular meeting Tuesday, 8.30 p.m, * feet of his family, But the arsenal jis in danger, they dash away, stop- | ping only long enough to say to the wife or mother, “Well, here he is. There is no time for explanations, union’s funds to erect a “union- owned” cleaning and dyeing plant, at a cost of a million dollars of the union members’ money. The plant is not finished yet, Working Women Hail Six Years’ Activity | Six years’ intensive participation in- the workers’ struggles will be | reviewed at the celebration of the | sixth anniversary of the United Council of Working Women, to be held Friday evening, November 22, | at Stuyvesant Casino, 2nd Ave. and | Ninth St. The Passaic strike, the Paterson of the Russia “AMUSEMENTS -> VEGETARIAN Dairy RESTAURANT it Always Bind 31 Pleosant to Dine at Our Place, 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD, Brons (near 174th St, Statio PHONE:— INTERVALD 9149, stein. Alice Brady, Frank Conroy, Otto | | Kruger, Claude Rains and ‘Philip | | Leigh have already been assigned roles, | | RATIONAL Vegetarian ’ Now Playing! Celebrating the Twelfth Anniversary i Revolution! RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVE] UE Bet. 12th and 18th Ste, Strictly Vegetarian Food HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian ing of Wall Street’s government that | nent of the constitution of the ia "vt Meet silk strike, the needle trades strug- | ” UR ' “ < is Tne ~ i, 5 4 ig .) . SUBWAY CAVES it wanted “peace and disarmament,” Amalgamated Food Workers in ac- | Com. Fr: 10 a OO as gle, the cafeteria strike, the Gas- ES Apes RESTA ANT | Lay-off Shows A. FL Fakers Ue. cordance with the program of the | rb" Jur ‘a a aa an aatiaee at’ Gil tonia struggle, the present window | ox S os 1600 MADISON AVE. ‘ |_ And what’s happened to the Navy /neage Union Unity League was|Manhattan Ave, Tuesday night, Ad-| cleaners’ strike—all have found the | BS > + Phone: UNIversity 5865 : /Ceiisinied HOR Prge'Ore) vane worke Hy Since, inetnds 6 wit, [adopted by an overwhelming ma- mission free. All workers invited. touniile of the ‘sited: Count” of xe “a t is present lay-off, gay 4 + | jority. is tii ints out “ inet ‘ baud eh sal t ssi, ty spoted aut on: |e. rot Fine, Cenaey wit USGI, mee eRe ae tay rogers ghar Pasa meat, | mee ams ecary = Sal B2G0° Skt wale an e, they ed and suf: | a whole thieving peck of A F- le} fs ja, |exbibition will be held by the Jap- 7 ; - ‘ g i fered agony in the debris till help | eee: a Oe ee a te ot nla, tn gantrast ih the egeatt nese Workers Association this Eri-| Speakers at the sikeenation will | : ‘ +e SS John’s Restaurant arrived, in many cases too late. The the banquet what the A. F. L. had |£004 clerks, and o} er locals wh ye iat oe Menketien Lx-| point out the role, of the United a 4 Rg SPECIALTY: ITALIAN pis Eaeee waning OF aead and tniired di \d what they were going to have led militant strikes, has iso- 75 cents; $1.00 at door. Council in all these struggles and a Pe ee es A place with atmosphere } was not known as this edition of the | Gone and Wh y ated itself from the class struggle, ‘eae oer thas totnait ince ot tepadaning where all. radicals ‘meet 1 vas reported by cye-witnesses that! "ale f © of Brooklyn, according to the, reso-| w. Ww. will hear a lecture by Com, tai : nore of the 200 men were working |Daily Worker, reporter yesterday, |ition, which holds the bureaucratic | Chalupski on the “Hole of the Wor| An elaborate ‘entertainment pro- —— helow were hit. ‘This lay-off looks to many of us officials responsible for following a| Manin, the Russian Revolution” at 20) gram is being arranged. Tickets are All Comrades Meet at h y The excavations are being done | “avy Yard workers like the art ot course of class-collaboration, “com- air pia Pee ay iPad « 4 now on sale at the office of the —greater than BR ai , : for the BLM. . W. 14th St. sub- ® [hole ehes of PE merle to |Beting with Bakers’ Local 500, A.) 1sN#s «gg United Counel, 799 Broadway, Room || TEN DAYS THAT SHOOK THE WORLD” SRONSTEIN'S cae Aine. ach cent tng car tauee, (a0 anything; all those fakers do is]. 0° lv as to Which ae ate tne | ane educations! dtveceots Se Wie T- The Film-Epic of the UKRAINIAN Revolution depicting —— fan Health ; v p! : | go crawling to Washington begging 4 cal councils Rr, meek Wednesday, $3) with amazing force the titanic struggle for control between taurant ii While the injured lay in agony at | St. Vincent’s Hospital, Police Chief | ‘Vhalen paved the way for formal | -vhitewashing of the D. C, Serber, for work, for more cruisers to be built at the Brooklyn Yard. “They're now dickering for a new scale, The machinists here in small shops.” ILD Asks Volunteers D. m., at 80 St., room’ B35. Councils without directors must send organizer or secretary. ._ # * Iron and Bronze Workers, FURNISHED ROOMS | bee ote ms ool aad TS REM NICE ROOM with the Bolsheviki and the forces of the bourgeoisie headed by PETLURA —hbailed as the equal of “POTEMKIN” 558 Cleremont Parkway, Bronx Unity Co-operators Patronize v D y ei 7. Special quarterly meeting of the A. all improvements Ine, the contractors, by stating | ¥#8¢ 7 to Assist in Drives |:, Bs. WU. tanight, & sharps ai | soe one maa hee eleeneed Chee, : ~ | want $1 an hour, but they’ll get no the Rand Sch: Fe isth Ste Fine ia ‘ S i ‘ chat, the collapse was Gaused Priv jacking from the International of- — Aneial-and general conditions reports | serome ‘Lines Moshale, kway. Sta: pecial Added Super-Attraction’ SAM LESSER marily by continual blasting. I{icials, We expect a cut, or maybe International Labor Defense needs | Will be given. Ci il week, ‘Kingsbri Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailor. Actually, as workers on the scene «f the crash pointed out, the sag- ring was perceptible for weeks. Had the contractors completely repaired instead of hastily shoring up the) inking structure, there would have | heen no bloody sacrifices to boss | areed, they claim. | “I suw three of the men being | brought up,” an eye-witness said. “It was a horrible sight—one sot uch a gash over the head that his Another's ear | he planking been fixed in time.” rose was hanging. us up. the men into being willing sheep vas slashed, They could have | “What the men should do here is | ang believing ‘thelr debe secure. »voided the cave-in altogether had | join the Metal Trades Workers! put the present lay-off and the Wy Fight Class Verdicts | (Continued ;rom Page One) { bor Defense), Ben Gold, and others. | “Needle Trades Workers, the Min- ola-Gastonia comrades are in dan- ser,” the N. T. W. I. U. call de- claves, “It is your duty to save chese leaders from the clutches of our class enemies, Only through “our determined action to break this trame-up will you bring these com- | vades back to our ranks.” | Office Workers Gain a measly increase of a cent an hour. . More Lay-off to Come. “This lay-off ‘s only the begin- ning. They generally furlough the men, but this time the men laid off will have to start anew if they are hired again-—losing all seniority. “Why, the A. F. of L. has 2 fore- man as one of its officials, the secretary of Local 556, Machinists Union, and that fellow’s speeding League of the Trade Union Unity League. ‘That’s the organization that’s based on shop committees of the workers, and it don’t crawl on its belly-it fight.” While men are being laid off, workers at the Navy yard yesterday revealed to the Daily Worker, the government is feverishly rushing vbru a big army order for shells, and the men at the Navy Yerd are working on the cases for this am- munition, threading them. Speedup Gets Worse. The speedup at the Yard is get- ting worse daily. At the same time the Yards officials, while the A, F. of L. fakers look on silently, ara volunteers for clerical work in con- nection with th& Gastonia fight and the anti-tergor drive. They are ask- ed to report daily this week at'the National Office, 80 E. 11th St., room 402. present are working a six day week, the A. F. of L. men have kept help- ing the Yards officials kid the work- ers along by promising another cruiser. This kidding was to fool others to come have pulied the wool off the Navy Yard Workers eyes, the men say. Join the Metal Workers League! They now see that whenever slack periods occurred at the Yards the delegates from the fake Metal Trades Council rushed up to Wash- ington to belly-crawl for work. The fakers, say the Yards workers, have had many a good time spending the union's money on these nice trips, “All the work of the A. F. of L. has been concentrated on the pension fund instead of on a fight for better conditions in the Yards,” said other Navy Yard worker, “That’s why we're such easy marks when You will understand the secret of the YEAR-PLAN, The as the driving force The Trade Unions and Socialist Construction in the Soviet Unions By KATERINA AVDEYEVA “miraculous” successes of the FIVE- tion is revealed with startling factual arguments by a member of the Presi- dium of the Soviet Trade Unions. 15 Cents . Published for the Pan-Pacifie Secretariat a remarkable film showing the || S52 W. Sth Street Direction Symon Gould MA \JESTICSi, ‘St. W. of B'way, Bi 30 Mats, Wed & Sat. al 30 International Musical Triumph By JOHANN STRAUSS Soviet Trade Unions in Socialist construc- Thea, 44th SI W. of SHUBERT Bway, Evs. 8:30. Mats. Wednesday and Saturday 2:30 SERENE, SMITH Fr. in the Musical Comedy Sensation THE STREET SINGER ANDREW TOMBES ETHEL BARRYMORE THEATRE «7th St, W. of B'way. Chick, 44 Eves, 8:50, Mats, Wed. & 5 sews BIRD & HAND DRINKWATER’S “THE SOVIET FLIERS IN AMERICA” the Fliers in Seattle, San Francisco, Chicago, Detroit and New York—ALSO THEIR START FROM MOSCOW. FILM GUILD CINEMA (le X¥e81] SPRing 5095-5050 Continuous Daily Neon to Special Forenoon Prices—Weekdays 12-2, 35e—Sat. & Sun. 12 “A WONDERFUL NIGHT” enthusiastic receptions given to i24 ST. & BYWAY Nie aa a “AROUND THE WORLD VIA GRAF ZEPPELIN” Amaging TALICING picture ree ord of most daring voyage tim of mo ‘The Theatre Guild Presents KARL? ANNA GUILD . 8. Bvs. 8:50 Mats. Th.&Sat. 2:40 FULTON Ww. 46th st. Evgs. 8:50 1818 - 7th Ave. New York Between 110th and 111th Sta, Next to Unity Co-operative House DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST com WNION SQUARE “ovat connected with any other office SUNGRON DENTIST 21 RAST 115th 8’ eT s dd Ave, York DAILY EXCEPT FRIDAY Please telephone for appoin Telephor Lebigt ass" Advertise your Union Meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., \ Hote) and Restaurant Workers Branch of the Amalgamated New York City ' 5 ry Send All Orders to Ranglin tt kai Ata 4 Food Workers be Ten new members joined the Of-| putting over all sorts of tricks on | lay-off time comes.” TVIC RE TORY 1th 8 ge te Wed. we Bate Bee0 me Circle 7836 fice Workers Union last night dur-| the men, such as putting on an ap- . Navy Yard workers can obtain in- C PER 6th Ave. EORGE M, COHAN HP BU ETIN' ' ng a special meeting at wheih a| prentice instead of i man, ete. | formation shout @ real worke: WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS ‘ahubanal Mate ay Sat., 230 zr Ai ake tol pea: KY ’ ‘iseussion of the Stock Exchange} Instead off making a fighting de- | fighting group by writing’ the Metal 43 EAST 125TH STREET NEW YORK CITY EVA Le lage Director BLING aurtey—ome ‘ d its effects on Wall Street Trades League, Trade Union Unity | ‘ ‘ Lelie mind for a 40 hour week for first E lass machinists, who Fen SRR SOOM The Talk of the Tews!