The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 25, 1929, Page 2

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Page Two an” IN PATESSON HOSIERY MILL» “For All Kind of Insurance” ([ARL BRODSKY CAP WORKERS Ro main Rolla IN BOSTON FIGHT Busy Week in B’way Theatres |Labor and Fraternal| Organizations | tivities ‘ion 6. at 129 Myrtle { Patronize | | ‘UNEMPLOYED | na’s Play Heads' AUTO INDUSTRY Unit 4¥, Office Wo Phe Offic i ‘Telephone: Murray HUM 5550 * ‘ood Fraction, * si \7 Kast 42nd Street, New York Mt J mbers who are W The Theatre Guild’s second pro-! LILY DAMITA - mapa eet ta duction, “The Game of Love and ss tu | Death,” by Romain Rolland, will | open tonight at the Guild Theatre. F 5: Re Ca : = |Alice Brady, Otto Kruger, Frank . 5 U. T. W. Fails to Halt ot Communiem. ane net’ ciass sill! Bosses Scared; Enlist TUUL Leads Rank and |Sory snd citcde ats ead the | No -Tip Barber hops | ' | Militant Action PATERSON, N. J., Nov. 2 which will be the s 1 Textile Workers’ al convention on Nov- to 80, is seething with t among the textile work- latest case of rebellion speed-up and low wages is strike o: 300 workers of the Mutual Hosiery Co., on Fulton St., Paterson. The 300 have struck inst a wage cut and against the on of i e company in refusing with the workers as union In tl case the strikers happen to be members of the United Tex- le Workers’ Union, but despite the act i of the Federa- hioned Hosiery of the U. T. W. the bran to which the strikers belong, the Mutual work isted on nilitant action in 2 ike, pick- cting the plant with the aid of the members of the National Textile Workers’ Union. At the national convention of the N. T, W., starting next Thursday, delegations will be present from ery textile center in the country, ith delegates from over 60 south- rn mills. The mill workers of Pat- erson, whose militancy is rising y, will send one of the largest ll the delegations. N. J. TRUCKERS TTLE THUGS Newark Strikers Beat Off Attacks (Continued from Page One) truckers in Harrison stopped six iruekloads of scabs and gunmen, proceeding to the Newark produce district, The ikebreakers and thugs were armed with hammers, jacks and other weapons, and the strikers, in self-defense, met the strikebreakers with the same weapons. The police quickly came to the aid of the scabs, drawing guns on the worke: This failed to scare he striker ve strikers were arrested, four of whom are out on bail for appear- ance in Harrison Police Court Mon- di of al & fh rs again fought scabs in on when pickets refused to iow a truck loaded with celery to proceed at 9:30 a. m. Saturday. Infuriated by the action of scabs , the strikers determined to t any further attacks on them. In addition to battling the thugs and scabs in Hartison, they fought scabs n three different occasions in New- Saturday. Each time “riot squads” of police came to the aid of the strikebreakers. - A striking driver, Ray Hutt, told how he had been attacked by two strikebreakers on Miller St., New- ark. He was taken to City Hos- pital with a fractured jaw. The Fruit and Produce Trade As- sociation, the bosses’ league, report- ed that aid had been promised them against the strikers by Governor Larson. The reactionary union misleaders meanwhile did their part in aiding the capitalist press campaign of lies against the strikers, by issuing, thru P. J. Reilly, business agent of Local 308, Teamsters, Chauffeurs and Helpers’ Union, a statement that “no guns are te be carried by nembers of the union who are out on strike” This statement has aid- ed the bosses’ lies. that the strikers were precipitating gun fights, The strike began last Wednesday when loaders demanded an increase of wages to the same rate as that paid to drivers, The drivers struck in sympathy with the loaders. Call Diggers to Act {Continued from Page One) the Contractors’ Association to de- feat the workers, and that only a general strike, to include laborers, nuckers, drillers, blasters, timber- men and engineers, will obtain the conditions for which the workers on the Concourse spur of the subway inder construction struck, + The . U. U. L, urges the strikers) “Last year they expelled men |b. lemand that a general strike yote ve taken. It points out that Tam- many Hal! is behind the contrac- ors, using police to beat up strik- ers and protect scabs. The election of a rank and file committee on each job, to take in all workers, is urged. One of the cardinal points of the . U. U. L. call is the unity of white and Negro subway construe- tion workers. The T. U. U. L. closeg its cali with a pledge to aid the trikers in every way possible. DEMAND 5-DAY WEEK Production of crude oil in Calif- ornia dropped 2,556 barrels daily in October below the September output. 1 VANCOUVER, B. C. (By Mail). —The building trades wrokers here are demanding the five-day week, and have forced the union official: to at least pretend a fight for it, d thugs in attacking strikers on| y P; te ’ * it 2F, BF, Section 6, ucational meeting at 6 p. at 46 Ten Eyck St, Discussion on m will take place. Roll ca!l s goes for Unit SF, Section 6. =’: N 5 Unit 31 Section 6. There will be an important mee ight at 8 p.m. at 6 Ave.. Brooklyn, N. Y. must attend roll call. e * Unit 1F Section 6, 6.30 p. Manhattan Ave. Brooklyn. ee Oe m. at 6 Roll call, Unit 12 Section 3 Bxee, Comm. he Pxecutive Committee of Unit tion 3 will meet tonight at 6.15 ee a, Unit 12 Seetion 3. Section will have a yery rtant meeting on Tuesday Nov. t 6.15 p. m. in the Section Head- | quarters. TEXTILE BALL IS ‘ONLY 2 DAYS OFF |Wor kUp Thanksgiving Appetite at Fete It may read like a low pun, but |it is true nevertheless that every | ‘class conscious New York worker should buy at least one ticket for the Textile Workers’ Ball, even if he has to put his watch and chain jin soak to scare up the 75 cents necessary, for in so doing he will | be actively aiding to strike the ba'l jand chain from the fiercely exploit- (ed textile slave, The ball, with a carnival thrown in for good measure, has been ar- ranged by the National Textile ‘Workers’ Branch and Local New York, Workers International Relief, and will be held in New Star Cas- ino, 107th St. and Park Aye., this Wednesday night, Thanksgivi Eve. Disregarding other considera- tions for the moment, what better | way is there of working up an ap- petite for the Thanksgiving Day | spread, if any, than by daneing to the 100-proof musie of John C. Smith’s Negro Orchestra? Or, for that matter, what better way of for- getting the empty larder at home? | As the affair is to be a sort of jinformal rally preceding the na- | tional convention of the N, T, W. U. |in Paterson, N. J,, the next day, the |250 convention delegates, coming {from the mill towns of New Eng- land, Pennsylvania, New Jersey and ‘the South, haye accepted invitations to attend as guests of honor, So ‘have Beal, McGinnis, McLaughlin, | Harrison, Miller, Hendryx and Car- | ter, the southern organizers of the union who were railroaded to prison ' for their labor activities in Gastonia and are now out on bail pending | appeal. | Tickets can be purchased at the W. L R,, 799 Broadway, Room 221, {the N. T. W. U., 104 Fifth Ave., | Room 1707, and the Workers’ Book- {shop, 30 Union Square. Sympa- thetic organizations should arrange to take boxes at once, as the big |day is only 48 hours off. | ‘More Illinois Strikes; | N.M.U. Leads Struggle | ol (Continued from Page One) companies grant the little demands | jin erder to stave off action on the | \genera] Nationa] Miners’ Union de- \mands. The time to strike and spread the strike for the genera) N. M. U, demands is now, Do not per- mit yourself to be sent back to work pending settlement or on settlement of these small grievanees. You must strike for the general demands of the N. M. U,” } Tlimers Defend Militants, | Local 808, U M. W. A,, at Orient | \Ne. 1 mine, heard the charges against Gerry Allard, one of the young leaders of the N. M, U., for the fourth time. The charges were |rejeeted, Only 16 men yoted to ac- | cept the ges, while 60 men voted against i Local 992, Zeigler, tried for six ‘months to evpel Pete Rosoke, the ‘membership standing behind him. |“ Royalton Loeal U. M. W. A, has been ‘ying for the past month to expel William Kabelo, and the men} are standing solidly with him, The} vc was 56 to sustain the charges, and 120 to reject the charges. Aji these men were charged belong- ‘ing to the National Miners’ Union. | --hout any trial and the companies ‘fired them from their jobs,” says t’ letter. “Now because the N. * | U. has become a power the com- panies and fakers are afraid to move against our men. were always penalized for wild cat strikes, Now the companies and fakers do not fine them. The eom-| panies and fakers settle all the small grievances and rush all the men back to work, Why? Beeause they are afraid of a strike at this time of the year, when the demand for coal is great, and they want to stave off action for a month or so longer, then they will move in against you with wage cuts, discharges, penalties, and expulsions.” Our awe age, the bomrucoln exe, im dintingmished by thiemthat $1 Radio | DETROIT, Mich. Nov. 24—So |serious has the unemployment vation become in this auto center | where thousands of workers are be- ing laid off weekly, and so scared have the open shop manufacturers become as the militancy of the work- | ers, rises daiiy, that an attempt was | made to allay discontent among the | unemployed workers here, by having \the city couneil appropriate $7,500, |600-in order to sapply a fraction of the unemployed workers with sla | jobs on public works, and th tempt to hide the seriousness of the ‘unemployment. situation. talk of raising wages indicates a tion, has added oyer 50,000 to the ranks of the unemployed workers in The bosses here are using the press and the radio, to pour out workers, The auto workers are now scoffing at the familiar lies of the {press here, which is advising them | net to take the slump too serious and that with,the new year will jecome plenty of jobs and big wages. | The fear which has been put into the pen shop manufacturers here is shown by statements broadcast over radio station WMBC, advising the unemployed workers “not to lose their heads,” and telling them “that the law does not recognize your fin- ancial condition as an excuse for crime.” 5 The Packard Auto Co. has pre- ceeded its planned lay-off with a wage eut of 30 per cent. Lay-offs continue daily at the Ford plants, Those remaining at Ford’s are work-| ing but one week out of two, or two days per week, DETROIT TOILERS AID GASTON 7 i Give $500 More to Free’ Prisoners $15,000 cash bail fund to release the was received yesterday by the na- tional offiee of the International Labor Defense fyom the Detroit dis- triet. This section of the I. L. D. is at present in the midst of a strong drive to reach their quota of 2,500 new members in the drive for 50,000 new members and a fund of $50,000 by January 15, when the appeal of the Gastonia prisoners comes up. The Michigan district conference of the I. L, D. will be held in Detroit ‘at the New Trade Union Center, | Sunday, December 1, 10 a. m. to It is signifieant that Ford, whose | ) plan to further increase rationaliza- | | this section in the past two months. < “prosperity” propaganda in order to | ‘ | stifle the rising militancy of the |“ Five hundred dollars toward the| remaining three Gastonia prisoners! File in Struggle BOSTON, MASS., Nov. 24.—Re- istance on the part of the rank and file capmakers in Boston, to the ‘| thugs of the reactionary Zaritsk; maghine, growing. Disgusted | with the cla: >| 0° Zaritsky, the members of , the local union of the capmakers is re- |fusing to attend meetings called by _ | the misleaders. 8.| A few weeks ago the reactionaries jlevied a five per cent tax on all is kL Bore Parl eS Meeting i a Xhibition of w Downtown St. On y and Ad- | work. Meetings have been called by n|the misleaders to enforce this te vy |In order to stifle organized re: lence, the machine expelled J. Kor- “| shun, a militant leader of the prog- ante group, for six months. Defy- 2.W.W. will cele-!ing the. reactionaries’ threats and by. paving | provocatioy , Korshun attended all naid Ave.,{the meetings. In order to throw {Korshun out of a meeting on Noy, 120, the fakers called the police, "| The Trade Union Unity League nt lis leading the struggle against the reactionary Zaritsky machine. With the assistance eof Zaritsky, who U.C.W.W 15 ¢ a er | ; broke the once strong local 7, the ; | ing conditions down to rock bottom | jthru wage cuts and speed-up. ; The majority of the membership | was terrorized into carrying car jin the fake local, and thus are ex- STRIKERS SOLID : Ste i, »|T.U.U.L, against the bosses and Stand Firm Under |their ‘henchmen of the Zaritsky NTW Leadership machine. SCRANTON. MINEOLA MEN , Nov. 24.—Un- Trade Union Unity League, the| strikers of the West Park silk mill} here are remaining solid. The strike | began when 17 workers on the night | shift walked out after an active) union member was discharged. The N.T.W. been conducting Bs is organization work in the West Park | for Those in Jail Mill along with a group of other mills in the Anthracite region. A| (Continued from Page One) mill local was formed the week be-|class war prisoners and announced fore the strike. The chairman of) his determination to help in the the local was called before the straw | fight to save the Gastonia prisoners, boss and told that he was “laid off” | Salvatore Accorsi and the Wood- altho the mill was working full-|lawn prisoners. He held a confer. blast. Preyiously two other active| ence with a group of leading I.L.D. |N.T.W. members had been dis-| members, including Leon Josephson, charged, and this was seen as the | attorney for the Gastonia prisoners, start of an attempt by the bosses to| J. Louis Engdahl, national secretary yictimize all union members. After hearing the N.T.W. organ- jizers, Anna Burlak and Martin Stone, the night shift decided to] the class war prisoners. strike. A leaflet was given out| “I was sentenced to 5 years,” Kur- among the 200 day shift workers, | land declared upon his release. “The ealling on them to join the strike. | constant effort of the needle trade Police were called by the bosses} union and workers on my behalf— | after the strike started. The police| and the fact that I was sentenced have been unable to halt picketing| to 5 years, twice as long as the | both at night and day. The N.T.W | capitalist layz stipulates for demands for the West Park Mill, alleged ‘erime‘—caused my release,” | workers include $20 a week for the | he said, “Otherwise I would have day shift worker; $25 for the night | had to serve the full time.” | shift; 40-hour-week for all workers;| “Prison life is bitter, cruel, es- | reinstatement of the worker dis-| pecially on the fellows with spirit. charged for union activities; no dis- | Talk back to a guard and they add izational secretary, and made plans to speak in New York on behalf of -collaboration policies | \members for a fake organizational | new play by Dan Jarrett, at the -|John Golden Theatre. | Kurland, Free, Speaks | of the L.L.D., and A. Jakira, organ-| my | William Gillette returns to Broad- ' a. for three weeks in Conan Doyle’s detective play, “Sherlock |Holmes,” which will open at the New | Amsterdam Theatre this evening. At this Harris Theatre this eve- ning Lew Cantor will present “Men- de}, Inc.,” a comedy by Dayid Freed- man, with Joe Smith, Charles Dale and Alexander Carr, Another opening for tonight is \“The Patriarch,” a drama by Boyd Smith, at the Forty-ninth Street Theatre, Cecelia Loftus and William | | | Courtleigh head the cast. , Frank Craven will return here Tuesday night in “Salt Water,” a | Plays the principal role in “The Dancer of Barcelona,” the new film showing at the Cameo Theatre this week. This will be Crayen’s first appearance in these parts in two years. “How Is Your Health?” by Booth Tarkington and Harry Leen Wilson, will be presented at the Vanderbilt Tyesday night, Donald Brian, Herbert Cortel] and Roy At- will are in the east. Another Tuesday opening is “Sons of Guns,” a musical comedy with book by Jack Donahue and Fred Thompson. Arthur Swanstrom, Benny Davis and J. Fred Coots | wrote the words and music. Dona- hue and Lilly Damita are featured. Sidney Stavro, director of the |p | Bronx Theatre Guild, will present | “The Killer,” a drama by Luther | Yantis, opening Tuesday eyening. |The company includes Stavro, John ms . a bike Roberts, Helen Harper, Robert Blake {co and Lauri-Volpi, Bees Faerie |Frank Webb and James Shaw. TeRYiniay! 08 TRAE Oe | “Top o? the Hill,” by Charles A. | Bor, Egener and Falco and Toka- Kenyon, will open on Tuesday at |'¥8? De Luca, Bada. 21th ‘ “Don Gioyanni,” Friday evening, the Eltinge Theatre. The leading y eriney evening; ciaccre uk Kaeiiesine |with Ponselle, Rathberg and Flej Charles D. Brown and Lester Vail, | Scher and Gegli, Pinza, Ludikar. mi reaneada nigkt we have “Der Rosenkavalier,” Saturday cys red : evening, with Jeritza, Stuckgold and We “phd iiver Thread,” an operetta, é ne Ge nay 98 “) Mayr, Schutzendorf. The Saturday | opening at the Martin Beck Theatre. | night opera will he aphounced later. |Jacquet and William S. Brady, and | BOSSES ATTACK LAUNDRY MEET METROPOLITAN OPERA TO REVIVE “GIOVANNI.” “The Girl of the Golden West” | will open the fifth week of the Met- |ropolitan Opera this evening, with |Mme, Jeritza and Besuner and Messrs. Martinelli, Tibbett, Pasero, Marshall and Babor. Other operas of the week will be: “Boheme,” as a special perform- ance on Tuesday evening, with Bori and Guilford, Gigli, and Scotti. “La Juive,” on Wednesday, with akowska and Mario and Martinelli, Tedeseo and Rothier. “I) Trovatore,” Thanksgiving mat- inee, with Corona, Homer and Ful- Alonzo Price wrote the book. Max Marcin’s new play, “The | Humbug,” comes to the Ambassador | ‘on Wednesday night. John Holliday | is featured. Another musical, “Fifty Million | | Frenchmen,” opens at the Lyric on | Wednesday. Lyrics and music are by Cole Porter and the book by Her- bert Fields. William Gaxton and | Genevieve Tobin are the leading | | Players. “Charm,” by Jobn, Kilpatrick, will| Workers at che Breighton Laun- be revived at Wallack’s Theatre on | dry, 587 Sheepshead Bay Road, | Thursday night. ‘came to the defense of union speak- “When You’re Eighteen,” a new jers who were attacked by thugs led eomedy by Elmer Harris, comes to | by laundry bosses at an outdoor |the Morosco Theatre on Thanksgiv- | meeting Thursday evening. Repeat- \ing Night. The cast includes Doro- jing their tactics of two weeks ago, try Appleby, Raymond Guion, Hilda | when speakers from the Cleaning Spong, John Harrington and Percy | and Laundry Workers seetion of the Moore. ‘|TULULL., thugs led by Herman Bessler, one of the bosses, attacked i \the second speaker, Breslauer, after Hit Welfare Schemes | he had finished speaking. The work- at Office Workers ors present, however, came to Bres- i j | lauer’s defense. Union Meet Tonight | The bosses were forced to retreat iosé spisiRaus ih including |P¥_ the militant workers. Threats 4s DROSS ie Bee Bae be va | Were made that anyone who comes to ke kore ity pig OL | speak to the workers again will be e disused and exposed at the Of-|iijed, but, these threats did not Speakers Defense |Brighton Workers in) 26-28 UNION SQUARE 41 flight up) 2700 BRONX P. « EAST (corner Allerton Ave.) Phone: LEHIGH 6382 International Barber Shop M. W. SALA, Prop. 2016 Second Avenue, New York (bet. 108d & 104th Sts9 Ladies Bobs Our Specialty Private Beauty Parlor Cooperators! Patronize SEROY CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue i Estabrook 3215 . Bronx, N. ¥, | Comrade Frances Pilat MIDWIFE 351 E. 7/th St, New York, N, ¥. Vel. Rhinelander 3916 Unity Co-operaters Patronize SAM LESSER Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailor 1818 - 7th Ave. New York Between 110th and ilith Ste, Next to Unity Co-operative Ho —MELROSE— . VEGETARIAN Dairy RESTAURANT omrades “Will Always Bind ft Pleasant fo Dine at Oar Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx (near 174th St, Station) PBKONE:— INTERVALB 9149, ang | ne a mr HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian | RESTAURANT i 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: Stuyvesant 3316 Phone: UNIversity 5865 i eaieteseiateeeenieenenneremmmmmmetnteeanentetedtdl | John’s Restaurant | SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 502 E.12th St. New York RATIONAL Vegetarian RESTAURANT | V 199 SECOND AVE. UB | Bet. 12th and 13th Sts, Strictly Vegetariun Food } All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S j Vegetarian Health Restaurant 4p,m. J, Louis Engdahl, national) crimination against union members; | 30 days on to y: ini r y s 54 ys on to your minimum term. secretary of the I. L. D., will attend! recognition of the local of the N.T.| Talk after 7 at night, and you go Formerly men | be the conference. Arbold Ziegler, district ILD or- ganizer in Michigan and Raymond Bascom, Labor Defender agent and direetor of the Labor Defender sub- scription drive for that district, will make a 12-day tour of the state for the ILD membership drive and De- fender campaign Their schedule be- ginning December 8 includes: Pon- tiac, Flint, Saginaw, St. Charles, Grand Rapids, Muskegon, Lansing, Ann Harbor and Detroit. Rot oply bas the bourgevisic formed the senpone that ~ bring death to iteelfs as also called into existence the men who are to Yonkers Workers to Greet Beal, McGinnis at Mass Meet Tonite Yonkers will welcome Fred Beal and W. M. McGinnis, two of the Gas- tonia defendants, at a mass meet- ing in the Workers Co-operative Center, 252 Warburton Ave. The meeting, which has been arranged by the New York District of the In- ternational Labor Defense and the | National extile Workers Union, } will rally the workers of Yonkers behind the eampaign to free all seven defendants and build the I. D, Tomorrow night Bea] and MeGin- ‘nis, Clarence Miller (if he is out on bail by that time) and Sol Harper, | Negro member of the Labor Jury that attended the Gastonia trial, will in Brownsville, at Hopkinson Man- sion, 428 Hopkinson Ave, Leaflets for this meeting have been distrib- uted among the Negro workers and the knitting mill workers of Browns- ville, and many of them are ex- peeted to be present, Another meeting will be held to- morrow night in Bath Beach, at the Bath Beach Workers Center, 48 Bay 28th St,, where MeGinnis and Henry Buckley, a member of the Labor Jury, will speak, Thursday night the workers of Passaic will weleome Beal and Mc- | Ginnis at a mass meeting. | Wegttnaiae, et usernames jore more. | arent inte fasd ¢ erent | Build Up the United Front of the Working Class From the Bot- | tom Up-rat the Enterprises! Tonight at 8:30 the workers of | the speakers at a big meeting | W.; against the speed-up—seven frames instead of 10; two 15-minute | vest periods, ete. Build Up the United Front of the Working Class From the Bot- | tom Up—at the Enterprises! ‘SPLIT HOFFMAN CASE FROM REST Legal Juggling Allows |. Railroading of 50 (Continued from Page One) tion charges. Another jury was se- ‘lected for the remaining charges, Friday. Yesterday the prosecution got Cowper to consolidate the cases of Hoffman, Lewis and Hogan, with separate rioting and resistance cases | against Hoffman himself and 653 others, including Lewis, Hogan and Fowler. This makes one trial for | Hoffman instead of two. Then So- |licitor Pless, of Marion, in charge jof the mill owners’ prosecuting staff, declared and got a court ruling sus- taining him that he would now try only the above named four at this time( leaving the other 50 for a later trial.) | Hard on Real Workers. | It is now possibleto treat Hoffman leniently without openly admitting lit. Hoffman is the man who helped sell out the Marion strike, who got six strikers massacred by opposing self-defense and telling them to carry “Bibles, not guns.” The other 50, real workers, can be railroaded in a separate trial to long sentences. Hoffman can pose as a persecuted friend of labor and still draw his reward for his treason to labor. The strikers will see through this manipulation and leave the fake union, the U. T. W., for the militant National Textile Workers’ Union. They see that in the Gastonia case the N. T, W. union leaders were the center of the employers’ attack, and got 25-year sentences, the longest given. Build Up the United Front of the Working Class From the Bot- | tom Up—at the Enterprises! ‘ on solitary confinement. Malkin has his minimum term of two and one- half years because he has not sub- mitted to the guard’s bullying. “Malkin is suffering from a rup- ture, but do you think they'll lighten his work for him? They treat him at the hospital infirmary by giving him pills. But they won’t excuse him from hard labor. “You know how I was sent up? During the strike one day, I was walking to union headquarters with | | a gang of gorillas and right wing- ers. We didn’t run like they thought. We backed up ugainst a wall—there were about 15 of them to four of us —and we fought it out, “That was assault, of course. I got a fiye-year term, but our attack- ers got off scot free, “Y’ye had enough of prison life— believe me—and I’m going to fight like hell to help the Mineola boys from going up.” Kurland will speak for the needle trade union and for the Internation- al Labor Defense in the campaign to raise mass protest and funds to saye the Mineola fur workers as well as the Gastonia and other class war prisoners, The Mineola trial will be called within the next month. | them a new trial. The same appeal, however, was refused Malkin and | Pranklin, who are now serving the two and one-haif to five year terms. TEXTILE y | WORKERS BALL and CARNIVAL Thanksgiving Eve >» NEW STAR CASINO With St. and Park Ave, FURNISHED ROOMS way. Wel Lehigh 1890, sid uf already had four months added to} a few strikers when we came across | They have already had one trial | and were sentenced to two and one- | half to five years. An appeal gains | | fice. Workers Union meeting tonight | sreighten the workers, and the meet- | 558 Clzremont Parkway, Bronx | at Labor Temple, 14th St. and 2nd ings will be continued. Aye., at 6.30 p.m. Benice Michael-|'"5) “inner, who was the special ——— Se {son will Jead the discussion, i target of the bosses, worked in the || DR, J. MINDEL | Office workers will improve their | proigh Laundry for nine years, 2 fry ef fi ro) | Breighton Laundry for y |conditions only by organizing, she] 444 was blacklisted in Brooklyn for | SURGES ae will point out, and not by depending | pis union aetivities. Other speakers ||)... 4., go3—Phone: Algonquin 6183 oa “charitable handouts’ drain their were Feldman and Gozigin. NDE aeenieed Mie Cane employers. An enthusiastic partici- shor effies pation in the diseussion from the f floor is expected. seca As tar an | am concerned, | enp’t | claim to’ have discovered the ex-— istence of classes In modern society or their strife against ove another Middle-class historians tong age — described the evolution of the class | xtruggles, and politieal economists | showed the evonomle physiology of (Continued from Page Oney the classes, | have added as 1 new contribution the following pr Within a day or two the union also | jexpects to enter into negotiations | Lis eyes on rbaal i pat per opicb sd | with the Manhattan Window Clear- | eopte production; 2) ers Protectiye Association, one of | the class strugsle ‘the two bosses’ associations in the | trade, Meanwhile the militant lead- | |ership is going ahead with the or-) | ganizaiton driye and the building of |the union on an industrial basis. Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST 249 BAST 115th STREET Seeond Ave, New York DAILY EXCEPT FRIDAY Please telephone for nppointmenut Telephone: Lehigh 022 Window Cleaners in) Active Picketing Cor, DR. MITCHELL R. AUSTIN Optometrist 2703 WHITE PLAINS AVENUE Near Allerton Ave, Bronx, N. ¥. TEL, ESTABROOK 2631 Special Appointments Made for rades Outside of the Bronx, Dr. M. Wolfson is but the transition ¢o the oboll- tion of all classes and ¢o the er: ation of a society of free and equal. | —Marx, | *“AMUSEMENTS:| i at H Surgeon Dentist rae | || AND DEATH” Keg Pe gad you of earl frentment. LILY DAMITA rts he cap ans GUILD 6% avs. 5:50 { By ROMAIN BOLLAND { | Ph.&Sat. 2540 Thea, 50th St. & Th Ave 4:30. Mats, ‘Thur. & Sut _“Dancer of Barcelona” |JOLSON’S | MAJESTIC3), &: International Musical By JOWANN STRAUSS “A WONDERFUL NIGHT” ——— ETHEL BARRYMORE THEATRE [ith Sc. W oof Bway. Chick, 9944 hfves Riso Mate Wea & Bat $:6h Extra Matinee Thurs, (Thanksgiving Day) | Advertise your Union Meetings here, For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City REGINALD DE KOVEN’S ‘ROBIN HOOD AMERICA'S GREATEST KITA ropular Prices—st NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES BRONX AMALGAMATED fouw wok JOHN Comedy fi ee"'s PAR Con pavxwaten’s BIRD s HAND . PARADISE “ CASINO Bay & s91n St, Bees, SO THIS IS COLLEGE’ Bakote Loca) 168 Mahe. Thnk fe Hats. Bt MREROE AH TASS success Uslon “tabel "aeved} With a Chamoroy Cayton Stage Show from Theatee--Brondway ‘Hotel & Restaurant Workers NEW MOON (SCHWAB & MANDEL'S MUSICAL GEM wit ur rt ated Fo AUGER: | BARRE, | 9a Baa dares Pel | Plenty of good seats, §1., $1.60, $2, $2.60 | Lo“w's PITKIN in Ave, aes got dia hela tne ay } adc gs—the thi | IC REPERTORY sth ave | ‘SO THIS IS COLLEGE’ Monday of the month. Executive Eves, 8:20. Mat ir, Sat, 2:30 " OKT meeting: o y. Be, $1, 81.00 METRO ON ROVE afternoon ‘o'clock. EVA Le GALLI Director | careumera ceree toe Ona insertions fae ut “Wg Se A Brilliant Stage Show from Tonight—-THK SKA GULL" Capitol Theatre—Hroad: Tomorrow Night—"MLLE, BOURRAT” see | Office cpen from 9 a, m. to 6

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