The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 21, 1929, Page 2

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P _Page Two SPREAD BUILDING SERVICE STRIKE THRUOUT CITY Walkout in Bronx; Reply to Betrayers Is One Continued American on of La- r ’ local, for scabs, and | ing its best to com- The intensification anc f the window cleaners’ strike to building service workers is of the Window Cleaners’ Union to the efforts of munist, Krat, of the new a notori- he office of the of the in- demanded the other property. omptly shown betra agents were at a union meeting yester- the bosses’ etails of s of th 1 vealed The strike of the be p Yakimets, 1 gang to frame union treasurer, by eading a fake letter in which Yaki- cts supposediy offered to make a mancial deal with Krat, Lash and ‘ompany. The renegades are having trouble zetting their sell-out agreement igned because a number of the DAILY WORKER, oy ORK ’ reading | the! denounced the ef- | |N. Y. C ommunists, || |Your Party Needs) the Day’s Wages! w York District Party | Members! THE PARTY decided several months ago upon a Day’s Pay Assessment for every party mem- ber. THE PARTY is faced with ‘greater tasks today than ever be-| fore. Throughout the country workers conditions are becoming worse. unemployment grows, cap- italist militarism increases, the, Soviet Union is attacked by the| | bourgeois, the A. F. of L. is part | jof the bosses’ machinery against |the workers, the Gastonia textile, |workers are sent to jail, the |Party is being attacked because jit is the leader of the working |class and our comrades are being | | arrested and sent to jail in every district. THE PARTY expects every |member to assume greater re- _sponsibilities than ever retoek. | Discipline must become more! |Strict—demands upon the Party | member greater. | |_ “he Party in the New York | District has not completed its job—has not prid in full the | Day's Pay. “\ Party members owe their -y's Pay in the New York Dis- Are you amon,st ‘em? in your Day’s Pay to the » Communist Par- ih St, | TOILERS ON TOES, NOT KNEES, 27TH osses have decided not to bother | th a company union, but to run he open shop without camouflage. Their new agreement gives up prac- tis cally all the demands of the strik- Iuding the five-day week, ar as demanded by the Previously the bosses them- had never demanded an greement for longer than two ears. The agreement ignores complete- the of safety devices nd proper compensation insurance ind provides that no settlements ill be made with independent rms, Which means that the chief unction of the ‘union” will be to uild up the bi ” association. Simultaneously with the spread- ng and intesification of the strike, he window cleancrs union yester- y tock one nion. question ses of workers in other les. Committees of ere appointed to visit trade unions end other working class organiza- tions to ask for a The Workers’ | International Relief, which is con- ducting a dail kitchen for the strik- | s art a campaign for GUE CALLS FOR RENT STRIKE (Continued from Page One) 1e program of the Harlem Tenants jeague, stated Richard B. Moore, a Negro worker, and president of the | Moore recently appeared in his capacity as representative of the Har tenants in Albany and 1: the city hall to protest against the lifting of the limit on rents. The | Harlem Tenants League last spring | onducted a great protest parade through the streets, and this demon- tration had much to do with the decision of the Tammany adminis- tration to pass a city emergency law, the one that has fust been knocked out by the courts. Moore’s statement follows: “The decision of the supreme court, appellate term, wiping out the Ne York City emergency rent aws, is the final blow of the wealth- League. an for three years instead | speakers | Spend Thanksgiving Eve at Textile Ball A short while ago Hoover tore off the customary Thanksgiving | Day bull, setting aside Nov. 28 as a national holiday on which the | workers are snivellingly invited to make tracks for the religious opium dens, there to kneel in prayer and thank the good lord for having been able to survive one more year of | Wage-cuts, speed-up and long hours. But the class conscious members of the working class can no longer |be hornswoggled into going down on their knees to god or his creator, the exploiting class. At the same time that the priesthood is gassing before its altars, the national con- vention of the N.T.W.U. will be in progress in Paterson, N. J., plan- ning to spread the Southern textile | struggle. One way to show that you are not on your knees, but standing | flat-footed and ready to deal the | bosses blow for blow is to attend the | | Textile Workers Ball and Carnival in New Star Casino, 107th St. and Park Ave., next Wednesday night, | Thanksgiving Eve. The seven Gas- tonia leaders of the N.T.W.U. and the 250 convention delegates will be guests of honor at the affair, the proceeds of which will go to help in the union’s organization drive. There will be nothing sanctimoni- |ous about this carnival. Jazz music as only John C. Smith’s orchestra can play it; brightly colored bal- loons; red banyers and streamers; paper hats and everything else that | goes to make a rollicking revel will be pressed into service. Support the textile struggle! Get tickets at the W.LR. office, 799 Broadway, room 221, the N.T.W.U., 104 5th Ave., room 1707, or the Workers Bookshop, 30 Union $ Mill Press Has Weird | Theory of Beal’s Part! in U.S.S.R. 5-Year Plan | i FIGHT FRAME-UP- OF MILITANTS BY STEEL TRUST . Three Face 20 20 Years | Bethlehem in taeu Activities Freiheit Gesang Farein, Workers with voices can 1 i Boston Rd., Cg-operative n Fri¢ at the Functionaries, All Unit and Section executives will meot Thursday, 8 D. mat 3 bth Ss th Beach, Ever y tah it be present Section 7 rlem 12th Kear Celebration. of the Y.C.L Anniversary n Revolution with a and dance in Lexin eae ton Hall, 116th St. and Lexington Ave, ALLENTOWN, Pa., Nov. 20, —| this Saturday evening. Good band. ; ; : 5 arian play, admission 25 cents, Workers in this section are prepar- workers invited. ing for the fight to prevent the vate 165% railroading by th» steel trust and its courts of three militant work- ers, Burlack, Brown and Murdock, whose trial on a charge of sedition comes up on December 9. The three |face 20 years imprisonment. | The attempt to railroad these workers arises out of a raid by po-| jlice on a May Day meeting in Beth- jlehem this year. Part of the an- rer of the workers of Bethlehem |tant workers is a membership drive |for the International Labor Defense; la Hungarian branch has been or- ; ganized by Allentown workers. [Gaston Defendants at Brooklyn Meets Bath Beach workers will rally to the fight to free the Gastonia de- \fendants at a mass meeting next |Tuesday night at 8:30 at the Bath | teres Workers Center, 48 Bay 28th he meeting, arranged by the [Beth pee Branch of the Interna- tional Labor Defense, will be ad- |dressed by one of the defendants and | by other speakers. On the same night a meeting will lbe held in Brownsville at Hopkin- !son Mansion, 428 Hopkinson Ave., junder the auspices of the New York |District of the International Labor Defense. Fred Beal, W. M. MeGin- |nis, and Clarence Miller, three of the |Gastonia defendants, and Sol Har- per, Negro member of the Labor |Jury, will speak. | WASHINGTON, November 20.— julars,” has been formed, consisting | lof such reactionary senators as |Robinson of Indiana, Allen of Kansas and Metcalf of Rhode Island. The} “old guard,” led by Senator Moses, |has so completely exposed itself as a tool of finance capital and has recently been involved in so many, scandals that Hoover has been placed in a very “unpleasant” position, especially in view of the “progres- | sive revolt.” | The conflicts between eastern| manufacturers and western manu- facturers of agricultural products and wealthy farmers, especially over tariff issues, have reached such a point that the senate is virtually deadlocked. The new bloc, calling litself the “Hoover regulars,” is at- tempting the gigantic task of re- conciling these conflicting interests. Conflicts between various inter- ests is shown by the deadlock in the |Senate despite the fact that a ma- |Jority of the senators call themselves “republicans.” Old party lines, how- ever, have quickly disappeared in |the face of economic conflicts. Unemployment Grows) “in Pittsburgh Area’ PITTSBURGH, Pa., Nov. 20.—| | Unemployment is increasing rapi ly as a result of a decided slow-up} lin steel production. The U. S. Steel |Corporation has cut its ingot pro- and vicinity to the terror campaign | against Comm. nists and other mili- | Hoover Regulars Block | Formed in U.S. cauaagieid A new senate bloc, the “Hoover reg- | x ' Will meet Thursday night t discuss the Plenum and the tasks ol the Party |. Anniversary Celebration he 10th Anniversary of the Y International will b j brated with a banquet at Workers i 26 U Square, on Sun- m. by Districts he Y.C.L. “Prominent and League will pictures of the will be| y ung » and moving Day demonstration | }i Unit 4, Se ul meeting Thur day Metal Workers Fracti Meets Friday night at the Workers Center. All Party and League metal decoear must be present. Labor and Fraternal Organizations Cleaners and Laundry Workers, A meeting of the Cleaners and Laundry Workers, T. U, U. L., will be held Thursday, 8'p. m:, at 26 Union Important organizational probs ems and preparations for the mass meeting will be taken up. eRe National Wextile Workers Union, Meeting in the New York District | as follows: ‘Thursday, 8 p, m., ecutive Committee, ‘1 Any textile are asked to come to the national office of the union, 104 5th Ave., room 1707, to address envelopes ang give out leaflet 2nd District Ex-| W. 2ist St. U.CW.V oth ianaiveceney: The 6th Anni ry of the U. G W. W. will be cel ted at Stuyves- sino, 2nd A evening. interest: 50 cents, TULL. Local Benefit perform bound” at the Garrick Theatre 65 W. 35 th St, this Friday evening for T. L. Local 38 ‘and shop paper. T aus obtainable at the theatre or at Unity Cooperative Restaurant, 1800 ith Ave. and 9th St., this Jiving newspaper; = features, Admis- sion 0s $8 Theatre Party. nee of “Wint ees. Workers Dramatic Council. fs hool Thurs- 8 p. m. rs’ dramatic ups must send two delegates each, Beak igen es Lecture by Leo Plott on the chievements of 12 Years in the 3.8.R." Sunday, 3 n., at 1330 ins Ave, Jakira & error same day, 8 p. m.. Admission free. in at | T18 a 138th St Hives Workers Dance, Concert. A concert and dance, arranged by the Bronx Workers Athletic Club, will be hled on Saturday evening at the Rose Gardens, 1347 Boston Road, i as Office Workers Discussion. The Office Workers Union has ar- ranged a discussion on “Employers Welfare Schemes and the Office Workers,” to be led ny Benice Michaelson Monday, 6.30 m., at Labor ‘Temple, 14th St. and 2nd Ave. All office workers, invited. * Jugosiav Workers Ban, Play. An entertainment, ball and ‘play will be given by the Jugoslav Work- ers Educational and Dramatic Club this Sunday afternoon and evening at Bohemian National Hall, 321 B. Tard St. Ball, | s Progressive nnual ball this Sunday at the Cooperative Hall, 642 Hudson Ave.. West New York, N. J. Proceeds will go for the bullding new headquarters. $1. i From 42nd St. to 36th St exten ¥ The ate U.C.W.D. Speakers Class. Meets tonight, 8.30 sharp, at the Workers Center. All Council mem- bers wishing to train as speakers are invited. es ae Harlem Youth ¥ Danee. The first Sunday of the Har- |lem Progressive Youth Club will he eld this Sunday evening at the club oms, 1492 Madison Ave. Lehrman’s jiaze band will supply the musi | Gastonia Defense Mass Meet. A mass meeting for the Gastonia defense will be held on Tuesday, 8 p.m. in the Workers Center, 48 Bay tonia 28th St., Bath 1 the meeting. prisoners w Admission fre: workers out of work} HURSDAY, OV EMBER 21, 1929 INTERMEDIATE: “Veneer” at Sam H. Harris. URRIAN MOWAT] <2 Bosire, eh Henry Fie Without Giey the author’ teats to | of |shreds a dreamer’s romance withous Bedacht see Tell | Labor Gov't Sunday }any sop of a happy ending thrown . | to the audience. | The Workers School after adding | 0rs Story OF veneer ie mote three new courses, Statistical Meth-| 14 one of betrayal. Its characters ods, a 18th Fundamentals of Com-| 14 finely drawn sccording to cer- munism class and Elementary Rus-| 155 “Shases of modern American | slam) annouriceg «the eit oar of Altite, true—not the best and most fourth additional class, “Intermed- li inspiring phases but still things as | iate Russian.” All new classes have |{)0\, exist, | just begun, making it still po Henry Hull is featured in the cast for others interested to register. | 4+ Charlie Riggs, the dafce hall | | The subject for this Sunday’s | shiek who pursues his unscrupulous | Forum at the Workers School, 26|way with women. It is a fat part | Union Square as scheduled at which | overbroadly drawn with too much Max Bedacht, member of Secretariat | emphasis at times until the role ,C-P.U.S.A. will at length discuss | becomes somewhat of a caricature. pe his audience “Labor Govern-| The real acting honors of the per- ments.” formance fall to Joanna Roos in the | Huge ean! nee written a drama | | of character with an old story, which | | is presented in new form in a series | of nine “pictures” with the use of a | revolying stage and special lights. MARY PHILLIPS. n “Gambling,” for a quiss, opens tonight ’ a: Wilmington, D paeesee in ; The unemployment doles, thrown fpart of Allie Smith, the young jun oe Neo vel out to the workers as a sop while |library clerk with dreams of far | scheduled to fg ae rationalization processes are daily |away idealistic things. Miss Roos | debut during probably Tesuday night. are Edward Leiter, |Mary Thayer, Kate McComb, plays with some restraint and a throwing thousands out of work; restr a se of accent which is admirable. the intense subjugation ‘of the rest- |S George M. Cohan mystery play at the Fulton Theatre. week's 26, In its cast Louise Quinn, Dor- TEXTILE WORKERS a BALL and CARNIVAL Thanksgiving Eve NEW STAR CASINO 107th St. and Park Ave, For All Kind of Insurance” (CARL BRODSKY Murray Hill 5550 if Hast 42nd Street, New York Telephone: Patronize : |No-Tip Barber Shops k 26-28 UNION SQUARE «1 flight up) 2700 BRONX P’ K EAST (corner Allerton Ave.) less colonial workers threatening She is true to life in a delineation | Wells, and the “Labor” Empire; MacDonald|which in less capable hands might [nea ne Saas nae Cooperators} Pattecias the betrayer of the great general |ting melodramatic and false. : ee jstrike and the imperialist of the| Relief from the drabness of the | $ TO STARVE. S E R O Y present, preparing misery and blood | ain theme is provided by a happily |} AI Sa TE 5000 baths for native and colonial op-|¢ast quartette of young actors. cultural laborers are expected to CHEMIST | pressed, will be made to appear| The final curtain falls upon the Fee Caan avast winter, it was 657 Allerton Avenue - |be y . jamin: tbs disguise by Comrade inev Heebla sresecy vit eens ree | aantvad by W. Holmes, secretary || Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. ¥. | edac beth of “An American Tragedy” by of the peformise National Union of | scheduled to be held Thursday, Nov. | [kin production of “Machina last) MINER HURT IN CAVE-IN F Pil |28, at the school quarters, 26 Union | season. | AMONATE, W. Va. (By Mail)— rances 1 at Sa, promises to be a knock-out for war WITHIN” DUE HERE|John Purcell a miner in the Kim. | MIDWIFE ei Ss Sse ie NEXT WEEK. \ball mines, suffered a fractured |] 351 E, 7/th St, New York, N. ¥. | which has not been seen here as| “War Within,” the American spine and broken a teed See sy Tel. Rhinelander 8916 yet, musical program, and student | Playwrights’ presentation by Wil-} part of the mine wall caved in el entertainers besides plenty of food. |!iam Jourdan Rapp and Walter Mar- him. —MELROSE— This can’t be beat anywhere for the | 5 VEGETARIAN price—50 cents. Dair; Lar RESTAURANT German Industrial |\sAMUSEMENTS- Outlook Bad; Fear U. S. Competition | LAST TWO DAYS! | “—a fine Soviet film of Revolutionary Labor at War” —Daily Worker. BARBUSSE—PODOVKIN—EISENSTEIN Equal To “POTEMKIN “ARSENAL” Greater than “TEN DAYS THAT SHOOK THE WORLD” Special Added Attraction! “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. FILM GUILD CINEMA Direction: Symon Gould COLOGNE, Germany, Nov. 19.— The Cologne Chamber of Commerce and Industry at its meetings today | predicted a very unfavorable out- look for German industry. Com- petition with the United States is growing. Dr. Paul Silverberg, Rhenish in- dustrial leader, said that the point of domestic saturation in the United States had been definitely reached, and that American imperialism | would be forced to look for more} foreign outlets if industry was to be saved from a severe crisis. | He experssed the fear that the | handicaps now placed on German production would not enable German capitalists to oppose impending American export activities. The Cologne Chamber of Com- Praised by 52 W. Sth St. (Bet. Sth and Gth Aves.) Continuous Dally—Noon to Midnight SPRING 5095—5000 Special Forenoon Prices: Weekdays 12-2—5c; Sat. & Sun, 12-2—500e 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD. Breas (near 114th St. Station) PHONE: INTERVALE 9149, Vegetarian | RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVEi UE Bet. 12th and 13th Sts, Strictly Vegetarian Food | RATIONAL | | HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 5865 John’s Restaurant Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 | | merce is urging a wage cutting campaign, and at the same time | demands a cut in taxes for the 424ond bosses so that further burdens of | SWAY payments under the Young plan | will be thrown on the shoulders of | the workers. ——e ENGLAND'S FIRST ALL TALK DRAMA BLACKMAIL WITH DISTINGUISHED LONDON STAGE CAST 44 St. W. of B’ Ev9.8:30 /MAJESTIC iat: Wed" a Sats at'2:30 International Musical ‘Triumph \ By JOHANN STRAUSS “A WONDERFUL NIGHT” ETHEL BARRYMORE THEATRE | ith St. W. of B'way. Chick. 9944 | Eves. 8:50. Mats, Wed. & Sat, 2:30) JOHN Comedy BIRD ss HAND DRINKWATER’S CASINO Mats. * Wea. & sat, ARTEF FIRST JEWISH WORKERS THEATRE IN AMERICA plays at American Laboratory Theatre AST }iTH STREET, N. Y. C. NING PERFORMANCE urday Evening, Sun- © and Evening ‘and Monday Evening with the Great Jewish Revolutionary Play NAFTULI BUTWIN By A. WEWIORKA Direction 2 WILL JACOB Wisconsin ~_1789 Chicago Workers Honor.Nat Turner, | Negro Leader, Nov. 26) CHICAGO, Nov. 20.— Chicago militant workers, led by the Com-! munist Party and the Young Com-| munist. League, plan to commemo- rate the revolt of the Negro slaves led by Nat Turner in 1831, with a mass meeting on Tuesday, Nov. 26, at the Royal Circle, 104 E. 51st St. The mass meeting will mark the ac- tivity of the Party and League to! -ontrolled politicians and courts WIS opened igainst the working class tenants. | | GASTONIA, N. C., Nov. “The masses of the tenants and| | The Gastonia Gazette, organ of the varticularly the Negro tenants, are) mill owners who are back of the row completely at the mercy of the | black hundred gang that murdered ent-gouging landlords who have | Ella May has made an admission. seen awaiting this decision, Rents!One, A. L. Stockton, managing vill now be boosted as they were editor of another paper, has an hen the state emergency rent laws | article in the Gazette, in which he vpired, This will mean dispossesses, | states that if 75 cents were added tarvation and suffering for large | to the tire fabric in each four auto- 19.. asses of tenants, vages are constantly being cut and memployment is growing, this de- nm is simply an edict of the andlords to put streets to starve and freeze. The jarlem Tenants League has al) dong exposed the trickery of the} voliticians who passed the rent laws | imply as a gesture to catch their | otes, and planned this decision to ome after the elections, when the | enants ave unable to voice resent- rent at the polls. But the tenants | ust voice their resentment in a ore effective manner than by cast- gz a ballot. We must organize lass protest meetings and put for- vard demands for a permanent Jaw n the interests of tenants. We ust have no illusions, hat the politicians will grant such law or that the courts will enforce | even if the organized pressure f the tenants forces it from their iands. The decision just handed jcwnn should forever blast such llusions from the minds of the ten- Both Republican and Demo- tic judges have concurred unani- susly in the supreme court’s de- ion, thus proving that they are slike the servants of the landlord apitalist exploiters. Only the or- vanized power and struggle of the ‘enants and workers will avail to yrotect them against the line-up of ‘andlords, bankers, courts and mar- shals, “The Harlem Tenants League ‘alls vpon ali Harlem tenants to \ articularly at this time, when} tenants into the | whatever, | mpbile tires, the wages of the tex- tile workers could be doubled. This | shows how little the labor cost in these tires is, and what smal! sums the mill owners will kill for. ° The same article also refers to the Five-Year Plan of the Soviet | Union, for the tremendous upbuild- | ing of industry, and the institution | of shorter hours, the five-day work | week, more pay for workers, etc., in this fashion: | “There are men in Gastonia who | will tell you, and they sincerely be- lieve it, that the labor troubles | fomented by Beal and Pershing and other leaders of the Communists was a part of what is called the Five-Year program of Soviet Russia | to bring about revolution in Amer- j ica, England and other countries.” PSEA RET HERR 3 | to begin a campaign of struggle to | organize house and block commit- tees and to prepare not only for a mass protest, but to prepare to car- ry through a rent strike which alone can avail to stop the rent gouging of the 'andlords and their agents. “The Harlem Tenants League calls upon nall Harlem tenants to come to the tenants’ meeting next Monday night, November 25, at 8 | 2. ™, et the Public Library Audi- torium, 103 W. 135th St. A€ this meeting steps will be taken to mob- ilize the tenants of Harlem and to unite them with the working class tenants of the city of New York to tight against this decision and every attempt to raise rents upon the plundered and exploited tenants.” (duction down to 74 per cent of cap- — \acity. There is a sag in the manu- |facture of finished metal products. iM | Newspaper reports here declare that were it not for a few municipal projects now under way the unem- ployment situation would be ex- tremely acute. \ Steel production for November will be much lower. Official figures now published are a month or two behind. Window glass manufactur- ers also report a slowing down in production. Greet I. L. D. in U. S. i (Continued from Page One) day to day. If a tractor and com-| plicated agricultural machinery were formerly things unheard of in many villages, now they are to be found everywhere. New schools, hospitals, ete., are being built every year. In to day. We have built a bridge across to socialism, and we wage war against illiteracy. Our district MOPR counts 234 members. Do not lose heart, be brave champions for the cause of the working class, and the day of victory is sure to come.” Similar messages were received at the .same time from the MOPR group of the Far Eastern district section and from Khabarovosk. WHITE CHAUVINISM IN ENG- LAND. LONDON (By Mail)—A_ color line in kissing has been established by the British Board of Screen Cen- sors, which has barred a scene in a film in which a Chinese woman kisses a white man. R.R. WORKER KILLED. LONDON (By Mail). — Alfred Johnson, railroad yardman, was a word, our might grows from day much better in 1933 if the policy of Newark Workers Forum, Com. George Spiro will speak at the Newark Workers Forum, 93 i day evening on Hoover and Mac- Donald.” Question period and dis- cussion to follow, |N. Y. “Socialists” Want Capitalist Alliances for 1933 A continuation of the policy of any form of petty-bourgeois alliance to advance the interests of the de- crepit “socialist” party was decided (on yesterday at the recommendation |of John Haynes Holmes, Community |Chureh sky pilot. Holmes pointed out at a meeting of the inner-committee of nine, of the non-partisan committee, that the chances of ensnaring more “impar- tial” bourgeois votes for a New Your mayoralty candidate would be | | | diluting any traces of “socialism” that might have been overlooked in the cleaning out process during the past campaign was pursued. The “non-partisan” committee will be kept in existence as a bridge to eliminating even the name “social- ist,” and making the aggregation of sky pilots, retired petty bourgeois, unusually palatable to capitalist al- liances. TASTE MORE “LABOR” RULE. LONDON (By Mail).—East Ham borough will get another “labor” ruler when I. J. Lethaby, councillor and deputy mayor, takes office as mayor. WAR MONGERS CRY NO WAR. LONDON (By Mail).—“The labor government will not accept the sup- position that war is inevitable,” Ish- mobilize the Negro workers on the | South Side for the class struggle. NEW MOON” | SCHWAB & MANDEL’S MUSICAL GEM ayes h Speakers will include, C. A.| nveryn | ROBERT dant LAST DAY! Hathaway, district organizer of the, HERBERT | HALLIDAY sHY | | Plenty of good seats. $1,, $1.50, $2. First Time in Brooklyn! Communist Party, Harold Williams, $2.50 District Negro Director, Communist Party, Ora Boyce, Negro woman worker, Leonard Patterson, District By KNUT HAMSUN Eves. 8:0, Mats. Sat.. 2:30 The world-famo novel ‘Thur. 50c, $1, $1.50 League Negro Director, and A. |ali-star Scandinavian. cast Andrulis, editor of Vilnis, Lithuan.| 8VA Lo GALLIENNE, pirector | {ociles ot Norway under dest ovis ; ies t Today Mat—“THE SEA GULL” and on the same program ian workers’ paper. Tonight—“INHERITORS JEWS ON SOVIET SOIL Tom. Night—“MLLE. BOURRAT” |e ne 8 8 8 ww ow ag Vivid Views of Agrarian Jews Chicago Youth Hold % Z Not only has the bourgevinte ee St. and Rockwell P Brookly forged the weapons that ‘ First Celebration of | ier Msi Koilineee site Into « ence je men to midnight. Popular p October Revolution CHICAGO, Nov. 20.—Their first celebration of the Anniversary of the October Revolution will be one of the best working class celebra- tions Chicago has ever seen, declare | the militant young workers of Chi- | cago. The celebration will be held Sunday, November 24, at 7 p. m. at the People’s Auditorium, 2457 W. | Chicago Ave., under auspices of the , Young Communist League of Dis- | trict 8. The celebration will also mark the Tenth Anniversary of the | Young Communist International. A revolutionary tableau, good speakers | and a dance will feature, wield those wenpon working class—the Karl Marz (Commun! {11 a, m. |Take B. 6p. ma Subway to Di 'T. to Nevins st Manifesto), R. BROOKLYN OPENING Never such magnificence—such lavish such luxurtous comfort and heuty! okiyn another jewel in the crown of Grinment! 7 PN PITKIN AVENUB AT SARATOGA, BROOKLYN OPENS SATURDAY AT 11 A. M. The best from Broadway's stage and screen brought! to you in this wonder program at popular Loew prices ON THE SCREEN ON THE sTaGn i so THIS Is | * SCINTILLATING. 0, aragt COLLE GB” | fearne 2 mM ROADVEY Ax far an I am concerned, 1 can't rinim to have discovered the ex- ixtence of classes In modern soctety hi one another In hut the transition to we nbott- | Tho Pitkin Aristocrats of tion of all classes and he ers Is, were laughter on the | Juzz in “Cafe de Paree” uv ntfon of @ society of free ed equa) Metro-Goldwyn- | sophisticated — revue — with —Marx, Ly; ingen talking, singing | EMILE BORO, Internation- eo Witkin screen ntertuines bel MacDonald, daughter of the killed during shunting operations at Peterborough, Leicestershire. . ‘labor” premier, told a Hampstead audience & md Chester dancing revelation tn talking per- vetion! ‘8 dazzi ‘arisiennes.”” Build Up the United Front of the Working Class From the Bot- tom Up—at the Enterprises! ‘ (Ci REPERTORY = = “GROWTH OF THE SOIL” MOMART THEATRE || SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A. place with atmosp! | where all radicals mi 502 E.12th St. New York All Comrades Meet at 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 Sta, Next to Unity Co-operative Hou! DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Keom 803—Phone: Algonquin 8183 Not sonnected with any other office Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST 249 BAST 115th STREET, Second Ave, New York DAILY EXCEPT FRIDAY Please telephone tor nppointment Telephone: Lehigh 6022 Cor. n ix. (iT CHELL R. AUSTIN Optometrist WHITE PLAINS AVE Allerton Ave,, Bronx, ESTABROOK 2651 Appointments Made for nudes Outside of the Bronx, at Circle 73 etings held the sleet the month at 8 p. meetings—the third Monday of the month, Hxecutive Board” meetings—every ‘Tuesday afternoon at 5 o'clock. One industry! One Union! Join and Fight the Common Enem: Office cpen from 9 a, m, to 6 || Advertise your Union Meetings || here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER | Advertising Dept. || 26-28 Union Sq., New York City 3 ane aiid aN Heated. rooms; ta | | FURNISHED ROOMS i H dmproverments: near ub. —_ >

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