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peace Ty Two EXPOSE VERDICT Communist Activities NEARLY 1000 OUT WORKER, NEW XUKK Labor and fraternal | al ESD! AY, NOVEMBER 26, day BOSSES USIN § Flavin Lampoons Bourgeois Organizations ) TEXTILE y Fundamentais: ¢ Class, _—__ BY STEEL TRUST 27° 73S9 IN READING ION La TO GLU, Are Cs ae 2 iF | SE BALL and | ccney Sonat ceutatits J pris Roads,” Martin Piavie's | SASCHA JACOBSEN | CARNIVAL . Nair |thitd ‘play of the current season, Unit 12 Section will have a very | ection of the N.T.W.U. yey n’s latest opus is devoted to | or at masa bina Oks Auet er ner | Dateetore) can OF — Ihe accieitieg cof ertde av auelct NEW STAR Show How ‘Ohio Three 5 (AB, Ie Waits to Sell |} esday, evening, Nx: 3 Chicago Bosses’ in| Ee DRC HES a ala vee CASINO Were Railroaded Unit 1, Section 4. Educational meeting of Unit 1 be held on Thursday Unorganized Men Wage Cut: Drive | beginning, that the picture of ¢ lege life that is brought before us | 107th St. and Park Ave. ST. CLAIRSVILLE, Ohio, Nov. READING, Pa. Noy. CHICAGO, Nov. 2 ji very complimentary to th A i SADING, . Nov. C AGO, Nov. 24,—While the |is not very complimentary to those fetes VA ool © ».—How a jury, handpicked by the vale Ges number of strikers now out at the Hitec eletina ain A. F. of L. building union misleaders |Who are students in the schools of ‘ For All Kind of Insurance e entatives of the open shop| Meeting of Unit 6, Section 1 will be | Reading Iron Co. mill here is ex- ie Bie have assured President Hoover that |higher learning, While at times the teel and coal bosses, railroaded SOM beohiiteteea Ah eae pected to go over the 1,000 mark, they will stifle all sentiment of the play seems mechanical and appears ARL BROD.; hree pele of the Comimunisy fail to attend will be called to|When the maintenance men come building trades workers rank and|to be written according to formula, Party, Tom Johnson, Charles section control commission. Last call. | rar xpecte . ce SrhE OE Se GE at ms 7] itis yorthy contribu- cats a ua re 4 ah = it corset eat | out. The latter ae. expected to file for strikes against wage cuts jon the whole it is a worthy contribu Irelephone: Murray ELil 5550 Guynn and Lil Andrews, to a pos Unit 3, Section 4. join the original strikers at any | and general lowering of conditions, |tion to the contemporary theatrical : i i Baler orveare sn prison on chargys on twill be meld Ponight ot 8 | ee. es the Chicago Association of Com-|seaon. Many of the scenes ring true 7 Kast 42nd Street, New York d means used to accom- at Ww. 129th St. The strike began last Thursday merce, the bosses’ organizaion, has |to life, especially those in the first — SY he class-sentence, are nOW Moe when workers on furnaces 1, 2 and | Sov! passed a resolution reaffirming sup- act. The interest lags towards the tae evealed he International Labor - Fe as Seana |e: ae finishing department 3, | \ port of the infamous Landis Award, |end, the author apparently being | efens retary for Ohio munist US ny hold a prison |walked out in protest against the - which consists of a drastic downward |wnable to continue the same keen in- ‘ ' Patronize and We : : Fourth gt. 8Class war’ prisoners {intense speed-up. Under the stop- revision of building wages, compul- |terest for three full acts. pe Ls Teldk ee olitat ° The hired a special Il be represented. Keep this date |watch system of timing every op- late itrati vhicl 2 Then again, Flavin has a rather} Director of the Musical t Quar- . weaned eth pepresenter | een suis date ig every sory arbitration (which A. F. of L.| Then again, ‘ We oda Ante dita con! - spite heh ROS gO AL Bs 2 Admission 25 cents. jeration, the company kept cutting Ibuilding union misleaders have |Pessimistic way of writing, that was |tet who will give their in Hall th , , rf the Communists. | Hand- ABLE RoR jdown the number of workers, forc- ated they favor), and prevention |first noticed in his suceess of sev-|¢ert of the season at Town Hall this 26-28 UNION SQUARE ked Foe eerie gicreran ame rerens ling those left to do the additional of sympathetic strikes in the build-|eral seasons ago, “Children of the | evening, (1 flight up) | keepers and farm |neadquarters tonight at 5D. | work, ing trades. |Moon.” As in that production, he} 2700 BRONTE & East syed . ae enged by ke eaerancine ix | The workers at the plant are all! Sree The passing of the resolution by |gives the impression of being a)«MJAMI NIGHTS” STAGE (corner Allerton Ave.) efense, 4 he was a member| ‘here will be a Thanksgiving Day | unorganized, with the exception of! brate its second the bosses’ league indicates that the |Writer who is in despair and feels os PECTACLE AT LOEW’S f the American Legion and the | affair this Thursday at the Browns-| the maintenance men, comprising | Nov. 30 by a dance and entertainment |) 1%) ad h st thi in lif futil ville Youth Center, 122 Osborne St Paonstiies 26 W. 115th St building trades bosses of this city, | that most things in life are futile, ss forced his removal. the | Au members of the Brownsville unit |Carpenters, electricians, bricklayers Sy Ae eeprs who recently announced their detér.| The play concerns the love of PARADISE Cooperators! Patronize ; witnesses against (he |e ente. Brergons, vel: and similar: Workers, Chesor wats eS a ae mination to carry through the drive |Patricia and Michael, both students S E R O Y aT GEE NU AAI ited RR A jeager toms the aiactate. 30 pelt te oe greet |for drastic wage cuts, will make the |at the same college. Michael is! «iami Nights,” a colorful ex- ; icers and deputy sheriffs. he ‘CL, Dance Upper Bronx jstrike, but were advised not to do nee Miller and Me. is Sao kak aah i studying medicine and realizes that), _ a peste EM: hief of police stated that the very | .;A2, °mfertainment and dance be! so by G M. Rhode sident Id in Brownsvill Tanda. Awan ue iCHiek SF OSROR itd i snancial posi. (ttavaganza devised by Arthur Knorr, CHEMIST A ; jgiven “by the Young Communist jso by George odes, presiden the Hopkinson Manor, jagainst the Chicago building work- |he will not be in a financial posi- : ‘ act that the Communist Party was | ¢ of Upper Bronx 2, for the|of the Federated Trades Council, Ave, Brookyn. The | erg tion to marry for at least another |is the week’s stage presentation at 657 Allerton Avenue ‘ e eeti Q vhic! 01 efense 01 he Gas- « elé der the a joes ee i A n e . ‘, q q | of ondueting the meeting at which the | prisoners: The affair’ wilt ice | and the “socialist” councilman Jesse | Ta! under the aus-|“"T veactinonary heads of the A. |five years. Adhering to the code of Loew's Paradise Theatre. The fea-|{ Estabrook $215 Bronx, N. ¥. aaane Perea eae aac eae ON an Meg cere | Ceres ATR eral of the Interna- |, of L, Building Trades Council bourgeois morals, both Patricia and |ture picture is the comedy, “So This | sbbaarsninnst ional Red Day, August 1, was suf | Music by Spartacus band. Admission |, The A. F. of L. and “socialist have indicated that they will stand |Michael suppress their sex desires ” ve Schooler is icient basis for arrest. 35 cents, hae be dugtiie “Marotat! 3 t ; i Is College.” Dave Schooler and his ASHE, cate cheks ’ A ave been: conducting negoulation: ks in Bora Park. by while the bosses drive for wage for one another with the greatest ; Comrade The address of Prosecutor Me- | Mais deat |with the company, but are being | ur aneak: is dita Goouiou, Ur that statersant tha euitieules: Serenaders are another feature on | ia ‘ Selvey to the hand-picked jury was! Idustrial Tegistration must pe|closely watched by the strikers, | rooms of the padi chk Ay cos eid lhe a a say at y eve. |the program Frances Pilat he extreme limit of hatred against | Completed this week. They ae EL i y ‘li ) San Park Workers Club, 1373 \“the’ association’s action is only a; However, Michael, one lonely eve- DRT Oe pai cciaieg jcompleted. (Signed) |whose militancy caused them to re-| Brooklyn, Come on time formal move.” jning, flirts with a waitress in a@/ Qither items on the bill are a MIDWIFE lilitant workers, an incitement to ynehing. McKelvey boasted of his nembership in the American .egion. He called for the deporta- ion of the defendants. The assistant prosecutor, spe- ially hired for the occasion, houted and screamed and aften ecame breathless, in his rabid at- ack on the Communist Party, call- ng for everything from the maxi- num sentence and deportation to \ mass attack by the American ‘ion and all “red-blooded Ameri- ‘ani on the Party headquarters a Cleveland. He opened his speech by pray- “God to help me and give what I want ng to ne strength to 0 say,” and to prove to the court iow “terrible” the defendants really ere, trying to cause riot and sloodshed in peaceful Martins ‘erry.” He called the three work- rs “bastard spawn of anarchy vhich should be removed for all imes from this grand and glorious ountry.” INDUSTRIAL, DEPT. DIST. Ar, fraciien: A very important meeting of_the fraction of the Amalgamated Food Workers, Cafeteria branch, on Wed- nesday, Nov. 27, at 8 p. m. at 26-2 Union Sq. Mt will a taken LABOR JUROR IN TALK ON SLAVERY Harper Tells Need for Militant Unions SYRACUSE, N. Y., Nov, 25.— A Negro member of the Gastonia labor jury, Solomon Harper, on an organizing tour for the Trade Union Unity League and the joint Inter- national Labor Defense and Work- | ers’ International Relief Gastonia | ‘campaign, spoke here tonight, Harper spoke Friday at a meeting After these tirades of hatred for | especially advertised among Negro cilitant labor it took the jury, with | workers, held at 200 Willicott St., ts mind made up before it retired, | Buffalo, and described the Gastonia ut 11 minutes to return its verdict trial, the mill bosses’ terror in the “ guilty. A motion for a new trial was | nade by the defense, which the udge will rule on at a later date. | The defendants, on the stand, earlessly declared that they would | o on fighting, with the Communist arty, against the steel and coal vosses exploiting the workers. Rochester Strikers Shut Macaroni Plant to Jein Food Union ROCHESTER, N, Y., Nov. 25.— hirty-two workers employed in the ioio Brothers Macaroni Factory sre have been on strike since No- ember 13, shutting the plant down pletely. The workers struck when young worker at the plant was scharged because of his willing- th the other work- aing a militant 2ss, together s, to vod wo! The workerss in the Cioio plant we been working between 55 and 2 hours a week for wages ranging om $15 to $28. The worker dis- | harged is Patsy Soldi. The strikers re demanding a 44-hour week, a) age scale of $28; equal pay for jual work for young workers; nion recognition, and ne diserimin- | ion for union activities. The strik- | s’ spirit is high. Medd . ROCHESTER, N. Y., Nov. drive through the courts against 4e solid front of the macaroni work- rs’ strike here is being made. It} trongly resembles the notorious danbury Hatters Case of some years go. Twenty-one workers, belonging to he Macaroni League of the Amal- amated Food Workers Union, on ‘vike against the A. Giola & Bros. °o, are summoned by Supreme ourt Justice Mash N. Taylor, to opear in court December 7 and an- ver an application for permanent »junction against striking and pick- ing. Also a suit has been filed by he company demanding $100,000 images “done the company as a sult of the strike and because the} rikers urge others not to patronize, ve Giola firm Mffice Workers Hit Company “Charity” The office workers scheme—the nstrument of the boss to smother he influence of militant trade inionism among those he exploits— were exposed last. night at a well- tttended meeting of the Office! Workers Union at Labor Temple, | ‘4th St. and Second Ave. Benice Michaelson was speaker. Charitable crumbs from the boss- ‘s profit-table won’t help office 25.— vorkers, she pointed out.) Organiza- jon alone was the only instrument | © smash slave conditions, ‘ } Enthusiastic discussion from the Yoor followed, South. He pointed out the need of strong industrial union and defense and relief organization for Negro and white workers alike, without discrimination or any sort of race barriers. He sai Worse Than Pre-War. “There are more than 5,000,000 white slaves in the South, exploited worse than Negro slaves were be- fore 1861 for then the Negro slave was property under the “Censtitu- tion” and not to be killed but to be sold, today the white worker is not even property; he is worked until too old to keep pace with new auto- matic machines controlled by the bosses, or when he refuses to slave he is killed outright, as at Marion.” “The workers of the South are not backward when it comes to de- fending themselves, The program of the Trade Union Unity League is the only one acceptable to the work- ers .,, the race problem can not be solved by business, for business |thrives on hate, greed, exploitation \and pitting workers against each other,” Fight Rent Raise. Harper points to the New York Supreme Court’s declaring uncon- stitutional the Walker fake law against rent raises | previous exposure of this law in speeches to Negro workers in New York. The Negro workers are par- ticularly gouged by landlords of |Harlem, He calls for a city wide | rent strike to check the robbery of |the tenants by their landlords, for \whom the killing of the law is the | signal for raising the rates. Harper reports that there is wide- spread unemployment in Buffalo, and that the workers and jobless are {demanding organization. He is scheduled to speak at a Gastonia \defense meeting in Brownsville | Tuesday, Pennyless Worker Gives Watch to ILD “T have no money,” called out a worker in Branch No. 49 of the In. ternational Labor Defense in New | York, “but here’s my gold watch you can use to get bail for the Gas- | tonia prisoners.” This incident occurred at a meet ing a few days ago when another | Polish worker gave a $50 loan and a bi gave a $10 donation to help ail, A party and concert to greet the removal of Polish headquarters of the I, L. D. from Detroit to New York will be held Saturday, Dec. 14, at the Polish Workers’ Club at 267 | Bast 10th St., N. ¥. C. The Italian branch of the I. L, D, in Harlem contributed $30 to aid bail out the Gastonia defendants. ° The pores, bl 7 | paepon.. in workers’ | apartments as proving correct his | (ject a suggestion by Vice-President | Wenger of the iron mills that they return to work and then discuss the unbearable Bedeaux speedup system which led to the strike. Immediately after voting to re- demands were won, the strikers is- sued an appeal to the maintenance men to join them. The intense sympathy of the maintenance men for the strikers is expected to bring them out despite the A. F. of L. Splendid solidarity has been dis- played by both Polish and Ameri- can workers. Higher paid machine operators and furnace men have stated their determination to stick with the lower-paid laborers to the end. “We are striking for all,” was the statement of one worker at a meeting. spontaneous, and their militancy has reached great heights, the A. F. of L. is waiting to step in under and then betraying them. J. McGinley, general organizer of the Amalgamated Association of Iron, Steel and Tin Workers, no- torious for its betrayal of the steel and other metal smelting workers, is in Reading “watching the prog- ress of the strike.” 16 Shoe Shops Struck; Women Organize Aid| (Continued from Page One) cept Communists. The workers unanimously rejected the proposition and are willing to fight in a united body against this attempt to dic- tate their political beliefs. off week-workers, and insist on piece ‘work. The crew of the La Belle Shoe Co., organized, voted to strike if the boss refuses to reinstate workers who have been laid off. The strike goes into effect immediately. The shoe workers voted at their last strike meeting to organize their wives into the Shoe Workers’ Women’s Council. This organiza-| tion will give practical strike aid, to help their husbands on the picket line, and to rally assistance for this strike. Yesterday there were eight ar- lrests for picketing. Each striker has been released on $300 bail. Fifty strikers have been summoned for \contempt of court—violation of the injunction against picketing. Joseph Fontana was given seven months in jail for picketing—but the picket- ing goes on. iiggers Fight Fakers (Continued from Page One) Locals 731 and 753 of the Com- pressed Air Workers. These officers had taken care to order separate meetings from Sunday’s mass meet- ing at Webster Hall where the workers were supposed to have taken a long-delayed strike vote, Union officials were openly accused’ of trickery, they’re organizing a general strike, but any one knows they’re laying down on the job,” expressed the at- \titude of the men. Mindful of the advice of the Build- ing and Construction section of the Trade Union Unity League, the tim- bermen, drillers, and laborers are pushing organization of fank and file strike committees. Reports on progress in this direction will be given at today’s Harlem Terrace meeting. Revolutionary Social at Workers School on- Thursday Evening The Workers School announces that there will be no school on Thursday night, Nov. 28. A get- together of students and teachers will take place instead. The program will include a Soviet film, magics, musical solos and re- freshments and fun, Revolutionary sones will be sung. fuse to return to work until all aa American } While the workers walkout was | guise of “organizing” the strikers, The bosses are beginning to lay | “ “They’re telling us i to pro- of chil: | and f ng the r lunches in_ the | s, will be held | 8.30 at Brighton | Prominent speakers will! S the meeting | test dren childr cold a ° per hite | e held at Rose Garden, | Boston Rd., Bronx ments served. Admission 50 cents, | Saturday evening, December 29.7 Under the ausplece of the Saccs-Van: | zetti Branch of the I1.D. JUDGE SHOOTS A WORKER ON FARM Had Upheld pe Against 5 Communists (Special te the Daily Worker) .. PITTSBURGH, Pa., Nov. 25. —! | County Judge Thomas C. Jones of | McKeesport, who has just upheld | the conviction of five Pittsburgh |Communists for speaking at an |open-air meeting, shot a laborer on his Versailles township farm a week ago Saturday, it became known here | today. The worker, Tod Otson, fifty-five years old is now in a serious condi- | tion in the McKeesport Hospital, with a gunshot in his chest. The five Communists, E. P. Cush.) Fanny Toohey, Mike Harrison, Fred Kearns and Sam Herman, district | organizer of the Young Communist | League, will be ordered to surrender {sean and will be imprisoned in the county jail for 30 days. | The judge who attempted to mur- | {der Olson is at large, although it) lis apparent that he conspired with | the facts of the shooting for a week, In an effort to explain away his at-| tempt to kill the worker, Jones said} that “neighbors in Versailles town- ship knew of the affair, and I sup- pose it would be brought to the at- {tention of the authorities.” Records Hidden. At the McKeesport hospital, the! Daily Worker representative was told that the records of the case| “were misplaced.” Olsen, on his cot in the hospital | ward, declared that the judge had | once before threatened to kill him.| The jurist was drunk at the time of | the shooting, it is believed here. The district attorney, a close as- sociate of the judge in the inner re- publican machine of the county, to- day declared that he would bring no action against Jones unless the gun victim swears out a warrant. Such action on the part of the prosecutor is most unusual in criminal cases, especially where militant workers {are arrested and charged. | Judge Jones was recently re- elected on the republican ticket in Allegheny county where an anti-la- bor record is the first prerequisite for nomination. McKeesport, where \he lives, is in the grip of the National Tube Co., a subsidiary of the United States Steel Corporation, and the} McKeesport Tin Plate Co., both vici- ously anti-union in character, Physicians Admit 1 Effects of Child Labor, But Do Nothing) Fifteen leading physicians of the | nation connected with the National Child Labor Committee in a recent symposium of medical opinion ad- mitted that the major cause of phy-) sical unfitness among children is} child labor. They stated that some of the most serious results of child labor as far as health is concerned are curveture diseases and life i injury to bones and muscles. Child labor is held re- sponsible by the doctors for malnu- trition and failure to attain normal height. Build Up the United Front of of the spine, tuberculosis, catarrhal |! |day, A “Landis Award Employers As- sociation” is being maintained by the bosses, which can be quickly con- verted into a powerful open shop machine. Indications are that the building bosses will treat all con- tracts with the A. F. of L. building | erafts unions as mere paper, once the wage cut drive gets under way. Over-building accompanied by ra- tionalization, has resulted in the un- employment of over fifty per cent of all Chicano bu building workers. ‘9 EVENTS IN ONE AT TEXTILE BALL Reception to to Gaston 7 at Affair Tomorrow Do you believe in getting a run for your hard-earned jack? Ther hustle out right away and rustle yourself a brace of tickets for the, big Textile Workers Ball, which will be given.in New Star Casino, 107th St. and Park Ave., tomorrow night. Arranged by the National Textile Workers Union and Local New | York Workers International Relief, | this affair, for real proletarian | value, has every other festival of | the year backed off the boards. First of all, it will be a ball such as workers who have a yen for burning up the dance floor have a chance to take in only once in a red moon, And under the same roof, for the same price of admis- sion, there will be a carnival, with toy balloons, fancy paper hats, con- fetti, streamer and what not. Then too, the affair will be util- ized as a rally of the unorganized | “S| New York textile toilers, thousands af whom have been thrown out of work and all of whom are ripe for the N.T.W.U, drive to organize the local industry, and a mobilization of |forces for the forthcoming national convention of the union, to be held in Paterson, N. J And last but foremost, the ball will be a working class reception for the seven Gastonia class war vic- | tims, four of whom, Beal, McLaugh- lin, McGinnis and Hendryx, have already been bailed out, The other | three, Carter, Harrison and Miller, | will be taken out on bail in time for them to attend the ball, if it is at all possible, the International | Labor Defense announces. Their recepticn at New Star) Casino will be their first appear- | ance before their fellow-workers | since they were thrown into jail last June. Five working class events rolled into one, and the admission is only 75 cents. Rush around’ to the W.IR., 799 Broadway, room 221, the N.T.W.U., 104 Fifth Ave., room 1707, or ‘the | Workers Bookshop, 30 Union: Sq.,_ and corral those tickets before it’s | too late, | Pioneers’ Basketball Trains for Class War £ Youthful proletarian athletes of the Junior Labor Sports’ Union be- gan their first New York Basketball tournament last night. Negro, Fin-| nish and Italian workers’ children | jare included in the 15 teams com-| peting. A’ swimming meet and_ indoor track meet will be held during the) tournament. | The Labor Sports Union will train | | its children for the class struggle! tional program, Games scheduled for this week Monday, Echo Juniors va, Wil- msburgh, first game; Kaytee vs. Favorites, second game; Tuesday, Bast New York Red Star vs, Fin- nish Harlem Pioneers; Thursday, Boro Park Pioneers vs. Kayte Negro Harlem Pioneers vs. Bath Beach Pioneers; Saturday, Pioneer A, C, vs, Brighton Y. P, A., ar the Working Class From the Bot- } tom Un—at the Enterorises! first game; Chester Boys vs, Down- town Y.P.A,, second game, through its athletic and class educa- | head local restaurant. They go to a road house and spend the night together. Towards morning there is a police raid and both are caught in the po- |the Kelo Brothers, Reiss & Dunn and | | lice dragnet. Brought to court their names and pictures appear in the local scandal sheets. Michael then |feels that he has proven unworthy of the love of Patricia and prepares to leave the college town. Likewise, Patricia goes out itt | one of the sheiks After taking Patricia home, the col- lege Beau Brummel is killed in an auto accident. In the wrecked car is found Patricia’s vanity case which | links her with the dead boy. Police investigation discloses that she spent the night with him at the | hotel. Thus both Patricia and Michael are “disgraced,” which how- ever, brings them together more in their love for one another. A very fine cast has been assem- ‘bled for the play. Sylvia Sidney | portrays Patricia, Eric Dressler has | the role of Michael and Peggy Shan- non has the part of the waitress. Lozowick to Lecture for Workers School | The crushing forces which slave proletarians through speed up and rationalization; the consuming of all spare time by workers in the narrow, hemmed-in moments al- lowed them for the meagre rebuild- ing of torn bodies; the suffering and torment beginning to emerge above water in the world’s field of art, and participating in the enlightenment work of the class struggle, the drowning of creative efforts of the | working classes outside of the So-| viet Union and the influence of So- viet art on the broad masses of workers and peasants, are some of the features of the lecture to be given by Louis Lozowick who is| known far and wide. The lecture, | one of the forum series, is to be given Sunday, Dec. 1, at 8 p, m., at the Workers’ School, 26 Union Sq. The Workers’ School announces | an extensive increase in the number | of volumes of revolutionary litera- | ture received for its library sent in | by many comrades, great extent, permitting many to read and stud in afternoons as well as evenings, The library is open from 8 to 10 daily, except Tuesdays, which has 6:30 to 10 as its schedule. | On Saturday one may read from 12) to 6 p. m. and on Sunday from 6 to | 8p. m. The classes in Inter-Russian is |to start this Tuesday. All are ad- at the college. | en- | Th hours of | the library have been increased to a | | group of Chester Hale’s girls, Andra de Val Four, the Burns & Kissen, Frankie Maar ace” ‘PLAN BUILDING SERVICE UNION | Form Industrial Union | at Meet Friday (Continued from Page One) | o'clock of representatives of both organized and unorganized service workers throughout the city. lets are being distributed in build- ings and apartment houses calling {on the workers to elect delegates |to this conference. | Speaker after speaker told of the | brazen A. F. of L. sellout of the window cleaners’ strike and the or- ganization, with the aid of the |bosses, of a company union. Harry | |Feinstein, secretary of the window cleaners union, told of the growing discontent among those workers who have gone back to work and | have found the betrayal even worse than it is on paper. He called for } intensified picketing and pointed out the importance of Friday’s confer~ ence, Yakimets, treasurer of the win- | dow cleaners union, told how he had | been offered $50 a week by his boss, imore than the company |ister with the renegade outfit. Thus | the bosses are doing all in their | power to build up their “union.” | Other speakers were B. Fanning, organizer of the Amalgamated {Building Service Workers \trial Union, Peter Darck, Pete La- | | Rowit, business agent of the wind cleaners union, Schewchuk and Gil- |bert Lewis, Negro worker. Frank Pinto, president of the Amal |gamated Union, acted as chairman. — vised to register promptly to avoid being left out. | munism as well. ROOM TO REN7?—“ Brooks, 114 E. 15th St. Only Party my bers—Reasonable. FURNISHED ROOMS 138 East, 110th St, Heated rooms; large and gmail; all improvements: near sub- way, Tel. Lehigh 1890, *AMUSEMENTS->- | MAJESTI Mats, Thur, & Sat, at 2:30 International Musical ‘Triumph By JOUANN STRAUSS “A WONDERFUL NIGHT” “ETHEL BARRYMORE THEATRE paren W of Bway, righ . Hatt “50 Mats) Wea at, 27% | fixtra Matinee Thurs, (Thanksgiving Day) 70H warm BIRD HAND CASINO Biwar & goth St. Eves, Mats. ‘Thur, & Sat. at NEW MOON SCRWAK & MANDEL'S MUSICAL GEM with EVELYN | ROBERT Gus WERBURT | HALLIDAY SHY Plenty of good seate. $1. $1.50, $2, $2.50 RACCOON CACC ‘BRONX THEATRE GUILD 180th St, and Boston Road ney Stavro, Dir. FORD. 00922 Tonight and every eve, incl. Sun, 8145 A new play dealing with a social problem, The Killer ———————— BROOKLYN THEATRES ‘oor PETKIN $0 THIS is COLLEGE Pitkin Ave, Brooklyn MGM'S ALL JOY—ALL TALKING “€. fy] DE AED ren rilllant Stag I e Show fi rae Gapltel ‘Theatro—Broudway 44 St, W. of Bway, Bvs, 8:30, The Theatre Guild Presents “GAME OF LOVE AND DEATH” By ROMAIN ROLLAND GUILD W. sxb0 P) Mats, Th&Bat, 2:40 1 COS ern Ee Eves. $:30, M, h ee ves. ats. ‘hur, Sat, 50c, $1, $1 EVA Le GALLISNNE, Director | TONIGHT—“MLLE, ,BOURRAT” | TOM. NGHT—"INUERITORS” BRONX THEATRES ers PARADISE “st ‘SO THIS 1S COLLEGE’ MGM'S ALL Re LAUGHING ie “snag Nia TS," a Clamoroun Show from Capltol—Broadway CAMEO ©: doy | LILY DAMITA "Dancer of Barcelona” the bonracoiale Leaf- | union | agreement calls for, if he would reg- | Indus- | This applies to the | new class in Fundamentals of Com- | 2:30 | 351 E. 7/th St, New York, N, ¥. Tel. Rhinelander 3916 Unity Co-operators Patronize SAM LESSER Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailor 1818 - 7th Ave. New York Between 110th and 111th Sts, Next to Unity Co-operative House | 7 MELROSE— Dait AuSTAURANT ‘Plearant to Dive at Our Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx (near bike St. Station) PHONE: INTERVALD 9249. RATIONAL Vegetarian ! RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVEl UE Bet. 12th and 18th Sts, Strictly Vegetarian Food | i HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNI versity 5865 [eoratiiaidenienmmmntenaemenmmennaanmameanmenall | i | | |] Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 || John’s Restaurant SPECIALT ITALIAN | A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 302 E.12th St. New York |] All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE ||| Rcom 808—Phone: Algonquin 8188 | Not ¢onnected with any other office Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST 249 BAST 115th STREET Second Ave. jew York DAILY EXCEPT FRIDAY Please telephone for a pokmsaons, ‘Telephone; Lehigh 2) Cor. DR. MITCHELL R. AUSTIN Optometrist 2705 WHITE PLAINS AVENUE Near Allerton Aven nx, Ne ¥, TEL. ESTABROOK 2631 Special Appointments Made for Comrades Outside of the Bronx, Advertise your Union Meetings here, For information write to || The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept, | 26-28 Union Sq., New York City ARBEITER BUND, Manhattan & Bronx: German Workers’ Club, Meets every 4th Thursday in i'd month at Labor 243 a ro ings. English Mpraty, ‘Munday’ lectures, Ger- Social entertainmen aan. speaking workers ire wel- come. Ks Hotel & Restaurant Workers}| Heanch of the Amalgamated Food Workers, 133 W, bist St. N. ¥ CG, Phone Circle 7336 Business meet jd th irs Monday of Aig ae Nd Pye 4 meetings—the Minted ive the month, Execut! etgetinge~every ot 8c Hducational Monday of Board Join an ight the Common ‘Enemy! Office upen from 9 a, m. to 6 p.m