The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 19, 1929, Page 2

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egro, White Workers | *k U ica 12th Year ington, D.C. D. C. (By Mail) vers DAILY WORK KER, NEW YORK, TU ES: DAY, NOV EMRE R19, wey AF. OF L. SPLITS. ‘mi ei “SEDACH TOTAL CLEANERS’ UNICN Freiheit Ge v can Ra ON LABOR in “Thunder ¥ mn the Air” ee Rather Odd Importation A new of immor delle | past conception of him. T Wont Toilers Meet | on Gastonia, Nov. 22nd MONTREAL, Que., Nov. 18.—De fense of the Gastonia strikers and victims of the free speech fight ir ARIA seagoing Er aE De Note. Mrownsvil view i i whe in goes ‘ bat . IN SELLOUT MOVE « ‘ 3 : re “Thunder in the Air” by Robins) Major Vexted sees him as the son Toronto are questions to be consi as Welle Gee is ae 3 BUM Miller, associate editor of the Glas- he has alw despised; James|@red at a conference of worke: : . ei Bian ils ee a si pextiie 24.40} gow Evening News now playing at | Harding sees him as the soldier who | organizations at 62 Rachel St. East, lage Bea Pedse pitiless Unit 1. LD, directors of Section the Forty-ninth Street Theatre. saved his life in hte front ranl;| November 22. The conference is Adinits Crisi is D t of Ameri¢a, and was a’ Styjkers Ave: alle wilt nest Tikivedee mally a . tA te 5 ee ee Lourie: re Called to | wit meet, Thursday, 8 p.m To Ritpose VaRIORSIE: While fundamentally the ideas ex- | trenches; Mrs. Vexted sees him as called by the Canadian Labor Tic Going, Prolor 1 : gaa as cd Magee a > ate Scabs 2 ¥ pounded are ridiculous, yet they are her beloved boy while Pamela Bent- | fense League. Le Be cise Bell, Re pudic ite Seabs Iuernational Princ 1, section's | Approaching War’ | unique to the extent of being odd ley sees him as the lover who gave ———- , (Continued fro On oatd University attended | (Conthiiied from Page Oke) ~|PERACPEEREC Weansetuh & vs hu,| THB Hote GP the BEstilie govelne | enna 2 We wolsen Of Ane | aM toca’ the limes Beanie eamaace| Bal Up the ‘United Front “ot Lae See Geren ot : celebration. Cle * Protective Union, Local 8, tnenty active in war preparations Bd fier sacral wee ce enleh ee oh aoet eis aH TAREE: HEHE A Tne] Hue VOnkLN einen bias tiip, Bat: an Federation of i he meeting began at 8.30 p. m./has at once taken action, The fight ut %, Se ae ily in the atts kg ts . yey ignored it can be labeled an above before all those present in these i A ubliely admits th v Tne) Begun BY es Bs : ; eoth St.) ore ; saa ec ab '@ | the average play, altho the acting various phases. tom Up—at the Enterprises! ly admits the rp under the chairmanship of |Wil be conducted on two front U. S. S. R., will be exposed by Max ee Pag bass I economic rises revea’ t ; nore of the American 2gainst the bosses and their com- Bedacht, tember of the Secretariat | O” the second night was not quite as| The cast that has been assembled | —_—________ c Wietkeb Grash, _ : ve id. adnate a is. da ere, etariat even as it should have been. for the play is far above the aver-| “For All Kind of Insurance” a ; Y sr Congress, who out-|P! union agents and for the of the Communist Party, in a speech “ a be: This gather : Fh eeloheatinn, |SPreading of the strike togthe unor- ; if at the Workers’ School Porum 6.98 | Tbe Play opens in the living room age, but somehow they do not click representatives of at foe any ster, ganized building service gvorkers "Wedhesias, ny at| Union Square, at 8p m. Suniay, of Major Vexted’s house outside|as one would expect them to. At serialism will endea "i es teres a ate iis orubisation dtive ie being bohe| 21° re aac will erelyse the betray. | Eondon. It is an evening late in tho head of the cast as Ronnie, is ‘at wrt Ss trduit oO unite toget under the Cae . e bene, DELEAY = ring a resi ime. There e' Y pce Oe a a t the Communist Party in(aucted jointly with the militant Section 7 Funetionaries. als of the Second International and |*2"17& at the present tims: There) Robert Haslan, a veteran og her "BAe achieve their emancipation, Amalgamated Building ice | Al! Ynit and Section executives: will /its British spokesinan, MacDoriald— | Pave been seances of an, amateur |play’s London fun, as is J. Fosher sat dkagine e Heretofore, the re eee Paoys | Workers’ Industrial Union. ‘cy rune | now labor imperialist premier—in Y@riety and out of them has come’ White in the role of the father. er East 42nd Street, New York ments of the Wail s p Union Meeting at 10 a. m. ent the 1914 days and after. the Rennie Vexted, who like many | rietta Crosman, known to all Broad- | gqeeseeaseemmmemenemmreaeas xecutive b in peng called to report at 6 a. m. this mom. |. tthe| than ready to betray the workers the war “to make the world safe the mother, and to this reviewers vate any belief the ; ites nae ing at the union office, 15 E. Third) ” | into participation in the impending for democracy.” | great surprise does not give her best Patromze | wa Pyete yy SOEACUay : : On behal? ne te ee St., where they will be given thou-| cH | war, he will show. A thunderstorm is brewing when in the role. eae a Sea aeee ecra (Sands of ledflets to distribute in of- | 2901 Me | Those who have not yet got tick- Rennie appears. He enters the din-| Others in the cast include Selna |]1NO= ip rper Shops) See Deepen by z Tal & mass recite |fice and eommereial buildings among jets for the proletarian banquet at | ing room in which are to be found’ Royle, Leonard Willey and Jeanette 6h 8 | Paik GI Sigauatk: 4 sae tne evolutionary |the building service workers. At 10 abor and Praternal| the school Thursday, November 28, | his father, his former sweetheart Sherwin. The American version of tiieay gee Re nee, sees. etna Ren cnieh ve workers fatherland was |o'elock they are called to report for | a |may still get them at the school |and others. They each sée him dif- the play is prepared by Charles éroo BRONX P> xk dee siiniaaests in the |¢ e members of the the regular union meeting in Man- Organizations | office. Admission is 50 cents. ferently. That is according to their | Crouch. foabaeks Alarcon Avene _ important ba: hattan Lyceum. The union an- a 8 SS ERTL els : ss adhd ment, and the incre YA pein: wie Ga BHAARL AUEineis a gat ig /6 Sailors, 12 Others pags in a brilliant ad-|to protect strikers against right f i Cooper ators! " : of os as out the role uf Amer- wing thugs and terrorists. FRY sHWAOY Reported Drowned in |“ sera . m in the Caribbean, A statement to the members * . : cause for this most in the Virgin Islands, |Sued by the union declares in par Yucatan Ship Sinking| S E RO Y ieee Gaiiuae a ions are so shocking) “The letter which the Interna- i | ieee vee ‘ CHEMIST aCe sige kih Ys ess has recently appoint-| tional officials sent to yesterday's ional prob- ee MEXICO CITY, Nov. 18.—Six/ tsi ap ose aC apie ge ion to “investigate” the | meeting through the well known F or the mass potece sailors and 12 passengers have |] a. abrook oa epg take guch a dra < of the natives in|cab, Rosenblatt, is composed of lies hg will be taken up. . 7, ; f sinki 6 Vi pent 's deep-going, and will cont to white-wash the iron rule of intended to demoralize the member- National Textite Workers Unton, NTWU, WIR m Fete W or. kers ‘Fight x ellow ates - penis! yi Hee i cae 2 u {ship so that the union may be split By ERE eWY Orme ay Dare ivi fey vee : that besides these extended confer- and) ay eatipany, buted sléd ahah te nd passe- | Thanksgiving Eve. Dog and Fakers Progiesso; Yucatan. The Heraiss, Cotrade enees there will be established a Lables Palineria Kanata, - Gor : 1 Geis ‘ , shi : * : « * washes, Palmeris, s, Gordons, «| While the textile barons of the NTC AC % ay _| was seen on the sand of Chiltepec permanent agency to Negro Conference Buchwalds andcother aeente of the iy aah ‘ fs ; say Se | (PRIGAR Gi Nor. 18.—The Asso: baz Saturday hight. j Frances Pilat clearing house for the c caer bosses, may be formed. 2 <-| country are laying in stores of ciation of Millinery Manufacturers SoG rats | MIDWIEF. of all the activities concer (Continued from Page One) Spreul the Rtubel | te ot tle, 18 W. 2 3 , | Pheasants, peacocks, larks’ tongues, of Chicago, demanding that the Ohio Youth |] 351 B. 77th St, New York, N. ¥ thereby becoming the fatherland of fide sbi PEtipe Obtise uptols OLS Lape truffles and pate de foi gras for’ workers sign a yellow dog contract io Youth League } Yel. Rhinelander 3916 MEET TQ Fic TO FIGHT all workers and exploited peasants, eae ee iat g a op }17 7. to ss envelopes and give| their Thanksgiving day orgies, and | renouncing their right to organize, 11 Drives, New York | Bh regardless of race or nationality. | #! officials and the right wing gang) oUt leaflets | rehearsing prayers of thanks to ‘god’ | has locked out ever seins | pan M R g We must see the question of or-/@@_ Now completely exposed as SPIT PN Ce rae cei ee ee District Challenged = EL OSE— ero workers in the Sttikebreakers and agents of the with I. A. DeSant he railroading of the seven Gas- ing to sign the agreement. eae Hy f the third period, a period |> Any tneeting that they call nd plas, oAarchlag Guiee Rave] Peete gree woe National Textile)” The-st-ealled Cay. alle) Milinery| | CHEV eee Oak Nov. 18—| Re hringine about the rapid i @ stab meeting. Any union that | Workers Union is embarking on an| Union, the scab agency of Zaritsky,, Si oreanizers of the Young Com- leasant to Dine at dor ms they form is a company union. Any ‘A * intensive organization drive which ¢ ; oa | munist League have been sent into | 1797 : tion of the workers, par- | ‘7° ny Anj UC AWW. th Anniversary, ill “ there which ruined the women’s millinery ‘ A j SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx the Ne who, | Settlement they make is a settlement ith Anniversary of thet. ¢, {| Will prove to the exploiters that the : Vithe field to build the League jn the (near 174th St. Sta Wop) PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 18.- Rs ne egro workers, who, of the bosses. ‘oe brated of Ss working class movement cannot be local here and broke the strike of important basic industrial centers PHON INTERVALE 9149 ‘ of their low economic po We nn quelched by terror. |the workers of the Richard Maier|in and around Ohio. The organizer than 500 workingclass ore hee the hardest hit by the in- i ; | bata : have been invited to attend 35 Here in New York, where there shop, is pretending to fight the have been sent to such industrial |} eee eee t rationalization prosess that L¥ceum at 10 o'clock today. Come ee ay Bein BRO: Spree no ne 00. 8 | ig ; ine | " confe se of the Philately ic woine on at thie time’ ‘This radi. (there and continue the fight for the are nearly 50,000 unorizanized tex-| bosses? latest move, but its past sell-| Centers as Youngstown, “oted, Ch | RATIONAL | ter »*Snal Labor Defense ion of Negro workers was 40-hour, five-day week and the other tile worker i the drive will be given | out record is keeping the workers | “nat is the 4 i i Cy in | Vegetari: if November 24, at Grand F chown by the large Negro (demands! Spread the strike to the a rousing send-off at the Textile | wide awake to the fakers’ parpose— | Sections. In the campaign fal an Hall, 1626 Arch Street. beg a tli bape Gee Bee ag | Workers Ball ard Carnival, to be 44% ji crease the League membership, to | REST. | Yong Ii ict ion that attchded the Cleve-|Porters, floor scrubbers and other field. ut tie New Baar Galan AUT ine ee ee issue more shop papers and build | AURANT | ie meets oe of ar ta land Cohventioh of the Trade Unlél agen ipsa wee ake Fae WRUPEEE See tey oma The Needle Trades Workers In-| move shop nuclei, in effect only ove || 8 SECOND AVEi UE vi y the bosses and the fees 927! Out wii a St. a “ S| ‘2 ji ji ‘ : F : ABH | et. 12tl F 4 ‘ § League held recently. Be- é i > ake ae . dustrial Union, Chicago section, has | ye, i Ke Pas and 13th Sts. coutts in the Philadelphia dist the ‘Negto workers are un. Seabs! Down with strikebreakers He Oe ae orang Sins called 8 the willinery worliers to ted i Sent Oh ny | Strictly Vegetariin Food ae er eee and unorganized,|#"0 Sgents of the bosses! Help | Workers International Relief, Fred fight the schemes of both their ene- Socialist rivalry has stimulated | ——— meeting, when delegates will chosen to go to the fourth national conference of the I. L. D. at Pitts- burgh, December 29, 30 and 31. The Philadelphia district has been gustries, Since they are unorgan-| CHICAGO, Nov. i8—The fact ehmaees date ni "> | Gastonia case. junion wotkers to strike. effort to recruit young Negro work- RESTAURANT one ©f the most active in raising ined they are unable to resist the|that the Red Cross, the capitalists’ Pain This affair, while primatily a mo- | ROTTS: |ers into the League. 1600 M bail to free the Gastonia strikers, | s,ecq-up and wage ents from whieh |hypocritical relief organization, re shop tates bilization of militants, also promises| IN JIM CROW LAND. PpeAt UNCMRE ne even though it is carrying on inten- iney suffer. It is noticeable that | fused the striking Ohio coal miners | eae to be the outstanding proletarian! GREENSBORO, N. C. (By Mail) | The working cine cannot simply ee ee sive activities on behalf of its own class-Wwar prisoners. Women’s organizations, Federation of Labor loca: American , Workers Cireles branches, language groups,| jerror against them is increasing. |the fakers’ monthly organ. chestra has been obt: - and all labor organizations have been joy sobbexy and bad. housing | ae | este ean Mig pate ae SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES invited to attend the conference. A). naitions are acute. The posit: (Continued from Page One) and can be had at the N. T. W. U. ‘ BOE th hertoeobers few of the cases in the Philadelphia| ;\\.. 45. the oreanization of these|i@ the party, in proportion to the | they’re short of scabs or want more | office, 16 W. 21st St., or at the W. | ¢ A M u g Ee M E N | g @ 302 E. 12th St. New York | distriet, enumerated by the secre- lh fOr the oreenation oe Tan, {number of Negro workers in the police to slug pickets?” was ote I. R., 799 Broadway, Room 221, poteeess = | taty of the I. L. D., Jennie Cooper,| 11) Teapues into fi fii --. | district (Harlem. alone has over | of the questions flung at the chair-_ _ are: 16 workers arrested May 14,| 9D‘ “Cages into fighting unions’ 990,000 Negro workers) have to! man. - under left wing leadership, are cor- LAST FOUR DAYS! || All Comrades Meet at while meeting at Bethlehem to celebrate May Day; three of these workers as well as Bill Lawrence, charged with sedition, will go on trial next month facing five to twen- ty years imprisonment; in Norfolk, Va., the I. L. D. secretary, Stephen Graham has been arrested, charged are the first to suffer from this increasing wave of unemploy- ment brought about by the intensive rationalization going on in the in-| ent months in the New York more and more Negro} s are being thrown out of} jobs and along with this, the police respondingly increasing. Marx wrote many years ago in the Communist manifesto: “Every class struggle is a political strug- What is particularly notice- n this period is the speed with ich these local economic struggles grow into class and therefore poli- tical struggl The workers find any zed effort on their t the speed ups, re met with all the forces t state, police, courts, operating on the side ses against the workers. Because these conditions are bring- with “riot” because he held a meet- “ng of Negro and white workers. He ‘jas been convicted and sentenced to that six months imprisonment. Tn Philadelphia itself hundreds of workers have been beaten and ar- rested on the picket line during the strikes of the window cleaners, shoe workers, butchers and needle trades org: workers. ing about a closer solidarity of the ti ‘ e HA chive A B2 W. Sth St. (Bet. Sth © ij black and white workers in their mong the Negro tasses., aetion Chrough rank and Hie com. |Board of the union announces. iT FILM GUILD CINEMA Gottinceur paty—nom to masse (DR, J. MINDEL 4} common fight against the onslaught | | " ¥ i } . PF * | Direction; Symon Gould SPRING 5095—5090 } 4 Charge Saul With Riot, of the bosses, the capitalist class tenegsades and right winz concilia- BD Wane eam es ae a ae points out. /delegates from mills in every tex-|] guecint Forenoon Pricest Weekdays 12:2=35e; Sat. & Sun, 12-2—B0e || SURGECN DENTIST in force ate: | tile center in the country. Forty | | is becoming worried and is busily | (Continued “from Page One) intensifying its propaganda of race ly, N. C.,, at which he was a speak- | host and segregation (increased All striking window cleaners are “Your union meets in Manhattan build a powerful union of all build- ine service workers!” FAKERS BOOST RED CROSS. families relief in 1928, does not pre- vent the labor misleaders of the Painters’ Union from boosting this ‘organization with a cover display on date succeeded in organizing very few of these workers into the party. This condition must be remedied. The Communist Party must rally all exploited workers to the fight against capitalist oppression. Since the Negro workers are the most ex- ploited of all groups, it is necessary | to intensify our work among these | masses. Along with our organiza- tional campaign, we must clarify the atmosphere in our party which has formerly hindered our Negro work, | by intensifying our fight against all forms of white chauvinism that may exist, so that we can prepare the way to hold these new members in the party and increase our influence ‘tors who are fighting the party, ow answer to their disruptive tact: must be to build and strengthen the ction, * & sto dtarkers Draniatle Con day. 8 p. AFL Calls Tammany T. U. U. L. Urges Stirke. The A. F. of L, policy was sharply denounced yesterday in a statement issued by the Building and Construe- tion Section of the Trade Union Unity League. Phurs- | The Second International is more Beal and his comrades, all of whom will be at ‘the ball, will “give thanks” to the workers for their re- | lease on bail pending appeal of the celebration of the season. | level of entertainment which will be | John C. Smith’s famous Negro Or- PREPARE FOR ~—BIGNTW MEET “Mr. John MePartland is gael ing a policy of the A. F. of L. lecopeeste with the bosses and the| Delegates : from All government against the interest of Centers; 40 from South the workers by calling upon the Tammany government to investigate the situation instead of organizing Preparations for the National Con- vention of the National Textile your militant picket lines,” the | Workers Union, to be held Novem- state declares. |ber 28 in the National Textile Work- | Not by appeals for investigations |ers Union Hall, Paterson, N. J., are ot petitions, but by vigorous strike | rapidly going forward, the National, Scab wages now laborers, $4.80; drillers, $6.90, and |delegates from as many different timbermen and shorers, $7-$8. of his fellows gave up his life in audiences portrs the part of way mies—the bosses’ yellow dog plan and the betrayal being planned by the Zaritsky gang. The Industrial Union has called on the locked out that radios would be installed in not n the Negro schools. _A feature of the drive is the special } The high —Announcement was made recently | the League members of District 6.| The district has challenged the New York district in building the League. iny hold of the ready-made state machinery, and wield tt for tte own purpose... Thix ne Commune (Paris a 3 cn tap is indicated by the fact that ever yiwhite school in the city, but !Gommine) breaks the modern’ xtnte | ! power.—Mare. “a fine Soviet film of Revolutionary Labor at War” PODOVIKIN—| “POTEMKIN” Praised by BARBU: Equal To —Daily Worker. NSTEIN “ARSENAL” Greater than “TEN DAYS THAT SHOOK THE WORLD” Special Added “THE SOVIET FLIERS IN AMERICA” a remarkable film showing the enthusiastic receptions given to the Fliers in Seattle, San Francisco, Chicago, Detroit and New York—ALSO THEIR START FROM MOSCOW. Attraction! |. HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian + acai ‘ Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx Unity Co-operaters Patronize SAM LESSER Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailor 1818 - 7th Ave. New York Between 110th and 111th Sts, Next to Unity Co-operative House 1 UNION SQUARE Rcom 803—Phone: Algonquin 8183 Not connected with any party. It was this group under the other office leadership of Lovestone and Pepper which was mainly responsible for \the neglect of the Negro work be- | ‘cause they were influenced by the VISIT AND BUY YOUR GIFTS ArT THY er. The meeting is a weekly event, | attacks on Negro workers by white held on private property. He is held’ gangsters, increasing police brutal- n the Gaston county jail for $600 and the sharpening of racial bail. | discrimination). We must counter- | timber S 8, $7-$8, |mills in the South are expected. i The Bronx strikers demand $7.50) In addition the mill workers of \a day for laborers; $9.50 for drillers, | New Bedford, Hl Ri all th 2, Wisconsin P Pr Be ord, Fal ‘iver, © | alind Lees ole and $10-$12 for timbermen and shor- | } England mill centers, of Pater-| am ers. 4 son, Passaic and the various New | A. FP. of L. groups involved are Jersey textile centers, and of the ENGLAND'S FIRST | ALL TALK DRAMA | Dr., ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST Saul was talking on the Gastonia | act this activity of the capitalists | case, and describing the unfair) handling of the trial by Judge Barn- hill when the police descended upon him. The police allege they found a pistol on him. They are also try- ing to prove that Saul is really El- bert Tatherow, youth organizer of the N. T. W. But when Totherow came to the jail to find out the) charge against Saul, they arrested him too. It is not yet known what | charge is seo ioteedld Sherite ‘Testifies, MARION, N. C., Nov. 18.—Ben Hensley, sheriff's deputy, was placed on the stand again as the fifth wit- ness of the state in the attempt to! railroad to prison four Marion Man-| ufacturing Co. strikers: Wes Fowl- er, Lawrence Hogan, Del Lewis, nad | J. Hugh Hall. They ate charged | with rebellion, insurrection and con- spiracy to riot. by increasing our efforts to organize and unite these workers in the shops and mills, by building shop nuclei. The conference will also take BB! the question of increasing our cadre | of Negro organizers by drawing all | new Party members into the Work- ers School and into the general work | of the Party and League. It will also discuss plans for drawing more | white comrades into Negro work. It will also take up the question of strengthening our influence in the mass organizations and building these organizations into effective in- | struments of struggle. We are faced with the serious question of rees- tablishing the Negro Champion as the necessary organ to reach the great mass of Negroes. Every Party member should participate and do | his part to establish this organ. It is self-evident that our work has been serioucly hampered through our | vanced the theory “of the reaction- with the strikers is being tried,| inability to bring out this paper. apparently for the effect on the Our Negro werk has suffered par- | reputation of the United Textile ticularly from a lack of coordination Workers Union, which poses as a of the Party, Trade Union Depart- real workers’ organization, Alfred | ment, Women’s Department, and Y. Hoffman, its organizer. Hoffman and his fellow officials of the U. T. W. sold out"the Marion strike but the workers came out again when they found that the deal | involved some of them being black-| listed. Six of them were killed when Sheriff Adkins and his dep- uties shot into them on the picket C. L. in this district, therefore, this question must occupy an important I flaee on our agenda. We can see from the above out- line program how important it is | for us to take definite action on the problems befdre us and only by this means will we be able to build the social-democratic theory of the iim- possibility of organizing the Negro masses. It was Lovestone who ad- ary mass of Negro peasants” which |was sharply criticized and repudi- | ated at the Six Congress in the Reso- ‘lution on the Negro Question in) America. It was pointed out in| this resolution that the Negro masses are not a reserve of capital- ist reaction, but because of their | oppressed condition, are potential | allies of the revolutionary prole-| tariat. The mobilization of the | | Negro masses for our party is one | of the most important tasks of our | party and every comrade must take this work as a major task. | This conference will mark the be- | ginning of one of the most impor- | tant steps in the history of our) party, and must be made the be- ginning of real work in the district. | Build the Communist Party! Fight race and class oppression, To the shops! Build shop nuclei! Fight against white Chauvinism! Strengthen our left wing trade unions! Mobilize the Negro masses! Establish the Negro champion! Unite the Black and White workers! | Every Comrade, an active Com- rade! Build the Workers’ School! Fight against in list wat! Defend the Soviet beat party in this district. The New York District, like other districts District For the Negro © No. 2. Locals 63 and 753 of the Interna-| anthracite and Pennsylvania will tional Subway, Tunnel and Com-! pressed Air Workers of America. Cleveland Tag Days for Gastonia Men! CLEVELAND, Nov. 18.—To show their solidarity with the Gastonia class war prisoners, Cleveland work- lers will participate in tag days on Saturday and Sunday, November 23 and 24 under the auspices of the I, L. D., for the purpose of raising bail money for those still in Char- lotte prison. All workers have been jurged to participate. The following are the stations for the tag days: Downtown, 226 W. Superior Ave. East Side, 5607 St. Clair Ave., South Slavie Hall. West Side, 4309 Lorain Ave., Hun- garian Workers Home. South West Side, East Tist and Gertrude St., Polish Peoples Home, Kinsman, 13720 Kinsman Road. First Celebration of Oct. Revolution by Maine Workers ROCKLAND, Me., Nov. 18.—The | workers of Maine celebrated the an- ‘niversary of the October Revolution for the first time, when the workers (of Rockland and Long Cove met at a inass meeting in Rockland, send delegates, The convention will map out blandit for the extension of the struggle jagainst slave conditions for the j mill workers, and for the organiza-| jtion of the tens of thousands of [eanniesiegt in the textile industry. Haltiote Workers Interracial Dance is Answer to Terror | BALTIMORE, Md., Nov. 18.—One) answer to the reign of terror by white chauvinists against Negro workers in Baltimore was made by the Negro and white workers at the interracial dance held here by Com-! munist and other militant workers. | The hall was actually too small to. accomodate the 500 Negro and white workers who attended this affair of | solidarity between the workers of all races. More interracial dances are planned by the Communist Party here, to bring the workers closer to, the Communist movement. sai RE Se workers heard Evald Anderson, of Worcester, Mass., and Martin Hend- riekson tell of the great industrial | progress in the U.S.S.R. and of the struggles of the workers of the South. A collection of $25 was di- | JOHN WITH DISTINGUISHED LONDON STAGE CAST MAJESTICiiats: Wea & Sats International Musical Triumph By JOHANN STRAUSS “A WONDERFUL NIGHT” ETHEL BARRYMORE THEATRE . W. of Biway. Chick, 9944 8:50." Mats, Wea. stews BIRD \ HAND DRINKWATER'’S ee Mats. Wed. & Sat. NEW MOON SURWAB & MANDEL'S MUSICAL GEM eth Bvgs. with | ROBERT aus HALLIDAY SHY 3’ Plenty of good sents, 7AIVIC REPERTORY Win, st 6th Ave. BVA Le GALLIENNE, Director Tonight—“THE SEA GULLY Tom, Night—“MLLE. BOURRAT” CHEAP FILMS RISK 102. SAN FRANCISCO, Cal., Nov, 18. —Use of the same dangerous, but cheap, sort of X-ray films that caused the Cleveland horror recently, imperiled lives of 102 patients and caused injuries to several nurses (forced to jump from windows in the University of California Hospital vided between the Communist Party The and the Daily Worker, here today. Fire from the films did considerable damage. BLACKMAIL M44 St. W. of B’way. Evs.8:50 at 2:80) & Sat 2:30! $1., $1.60, $2, $2.60) vel 8:80, Mats. hive, Sat 2:00 | Bde. $1, $1.00 | RUSSIAN BAZAAR 17 West 57th St. Painted Toys, Embroidered Decorated Linens, Caucasian Rugs, Samovars, Candy, Paint- ed Cigarette Boxes, and thous- ands of unusual articles at VERY LOW PRICES Everything at this Bazaar has been imported from Russia. Open ’til 8 p. m. on Bagnar ral tay pee by the Paxton Hibben Children's Hospital Committee “BROOKLYN THEATRES — LAST 3 DAYS! First Time in Brooklyn! “GROWTH OF THE SOIL” By KNUT HAMSUN ‘The world-famous novel enacted by an all-atar Scandinavian east in the actual locales of Norway under direct supervision of the make cewten —and on the same JEWS ON SOVIET T SOIL Vivid Views of Agrarian Jews VOMART T iulton St, Rovkwell Place, Brookly i ‘Telephone NEVInw 6278 Inuots performances dally 11 a, Mm 1. H, Ty to Nevina Street, BATRE. riduight. Popular Prices. Special prices | evenings—iie |! SabWay to Detealb Avenue, dud 249 PAST 115th STREET vie Ave. New York DAIL EXCEPT FRIDAY Ph lephon og cen” khan Cor. DR. MITCHELL R. AUSTIN | Optometrist 2705 WHITE PLAINS AVENUE Near Allerton Ave, Bronx, N. Y, TEL, ESTABROOK 2631 Special Appointments Made for Comrades Otitside of the Bronk. z iinet Hotel and Restaurant Worker Branch of the Amalgamated Food Workers Ash W. Biat St, Phone Circte 73% @ BUSINESS MEETINGS | sf on the firae ey of hy ' month at 3 Une Induste: and # he the Comiane bitic® Open trom 9 a. m. Advertise your Union Meetings here, For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 28 Union Sq., New York City FURNISHED ROOMS — $F: 110th St, Heated rooma; bert 3 pins wall thay eihente; near sub- Haigh tao et way.

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