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erare ‘Two U.S, WORKERS’ DE LEGATION HAILS ACHIEVEMENTS OF THE U.S. 8. R. Working Women in Anti-War Conference DAILY WORKEK, NEW _XUKK, “Ut at “Plaza” January 4) At the last meeting of the eentral ), AY, DEL EMBLIC bab 1929 WORSENING MILL ‘Soviet Films to Aid in Five Year Industrial Plan ON HIS PART IN CONDITIONS ARE HOOVER SILENT (CARL BRODSK “For All Kind of Insurance” relephone: Murray Hill 5550 7 Kast 42nd Street, New York |body of the United Councils of The Secretariat of the i, ‘Adaoalds! euRhGeter of the opera, “Nose” (an in- ——— 4 Working Class Women there were tion of Workers in Revolutionary | terpretation of a wo: the fa- SUGAR GRAFT es 15 Delegate Reine cdi After Attending 12th |present about 70 delegates rep ROUSING TOILERS Kinetography has confirmed a | mous Russian author, N. Gogol), is Sveocesemavee id i ee aes verve senting 35 councils. They officially | scheme of work for an experimen-| supplying the music for the film, | Anniversary Celebrations in USSR endorsed the call for anti-war work-|___ oe tal Sound-Film group. This group |“Odna,” Sovkino production —no| ae : Patronsee : ; Ne PGE Ge Soa: ing women’s conference which will | Workers ted by NTW,, will study the theory and practice |less than twenty film-shooting Unfortunate Incident’ B b Sh Fifteen members of the American , of 1 war, and counter- take place Saturday, January 4, at ape aie | of the production of sound films,| groups are at present working in Pl JsW 1 for Pres 0- Ip ar er ops workers’ delegation which attended | revolution the Union has ex- 2 p. m., at Irving Plaza Hall, ving} Prepare for Struggles | carry out experimental research, | the Sovkino Moscow works. eads Wood tor Fress || Una CHTBNORLUAEE the twelfth anniversary of the Rus- ceeded the pre-war level of produc- Place and 15th St. Not only did | systematize all the data’ on the! xoyintsey and Teawecihe eabave : { 26-28 UNION SQUAR d from the tion and made tremendous strides they pledge to send delegates to this (Continued from Page One) —_| technique of the production and the | jf Gan Oiwaren, to take landecanel| 222 (Conran Pea nes Ane? 2700 BRONX P< EAST y on the § toward the construction of social- conference from their councils but spoke for the union. We must or- | | left for Oiratya, Hoover’s spokesman in this day o f | (1 flight up) : development of the sound film in| 5; tanta ” 4 Or Ave. Laneastria. tire delegation have actively undertaken to visit or- | ganize the unorganized; it is the | the Soviet Union cling tonithe pictire, /Aloned He cat pret etkal Let Ge Leese AueROR ee 2 var “ t jing f izati i . i OE an | principal role of the teacher will be his great grief, “that Lakin (r ineleded 28 workers from vatious One of the outstanding features ganizations and secure delegates only way to improve conditions of; ‘The Presidium of the Board of |! DAY Tee : he heroine | dent of the Cuba Co.) and Shattuck ndustries, for the Soviet of this construction is the tremen- | therefrom. the workers.” is Bagley Gariiniscariat for -Wags anne ey ee te ele rae | tae, Narcan \ Union, October Other members | dous inte and enthusiasm with Ellen Heino, the secretary of the! A Gastonia worker reported: | cation has pangedias plan ivaniittis of The New Babylon, the film of | (Hoover's personal attorney who got | Cooperators! Patronize of the delegation remained for longer which the Five-Year Plan of in- New York District of the Finnish |“They’ve got us stretched out as far | participation of the kinematograph the French Revolution recently | $75,000 graft) has established con- tours of the Soviet Union, and will |dustrialization is being carried out.| Women’s organizations, in addition |as we go. We are going to organize | industry in agitation for the Five | *#°W™ here at the Cameo Theatre. tact with the White House as re- | S E R O Y j soon return to the United States. Ww e find that in the first year, the| to the eall addressed to them, has |the South in spite of the boss, mili- | year Industrial Plan (“Pyatiletka”). | i j vealed in the former's letter to the aye In a unanimous statement t ase in production was 24 per addressed a call in the Finnish lan- tia and police. We are going to or- | JOAN CRAWFORD AT latter. CHEMIST members of the delegation enthusi hich was 3 per cent more than guage to all the Finnish women’s or- The Sovkino has been ‘invited to ganize the Negro and white workers | make systematic use for its topical PITKIN THEATRE| There is nothing startling about | 657 Allerton Avenue astically praised the achievements required by the plan. ganizations. |into the N.T.W.U. I told the boss: | ¢ijms of all measures connected | the fact that Hoover works hand in '] Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. Y¥. of the Soviet Union, and the prog- 11,200,000 in Trade Unions, A special leaflet is being issued ‘If I can work 10 hours for you I) with the “Pyatiletka,” and to in-| Joan Crawford appears this week /hand with the big imperialists, The | * ress made by the Five-Year Plan in| “We are also greatly impressed |to the oe ilk srarksra, radio, ‘ean work 18 or 19 hours for the! crease its output, and aid in the in-| at Loew’s Pitkin’ Theatre in her scandal crops up in the fact that = the construction of socialism. with the ade Unions, which have | electrical workers and department | union.’ ’ i bai aie Pee _j»| the Cuba Co. spent hundreds of The statement of the delegation in ‘ership of 11,200,000. We stores. “There are 2,000 people working | (usttialzation of the, Sete | first all talking picture, “Untamed.” ousands of graft, which Hoover's Pamradeints part follows: one of the most important | All working women are urged to in our mill,” declared a worker from | goonomy. | The supporting cast is led by Rob- | friends got, in an effort to obtain Frances Pilat “We, the American delegation rep- | tasks in ¢ ng out the F ear | get together in their shops and send Draper, N. C. “The mill is owned | “phe govkino has opened the first | ert Montgomery. tariff laws passed to their benefit, || * i . ‘4 resenting various industries of Plan is med by the Trade, their shop representat to the |by Marshall Field & Co., who own Topical News Kino Theatre in the “Oddities,” th resentation | Without having to oppose the bar- MIDWIFH, America, were sent to the Soviet | Unions. ad of the Trade| Anti-war Working Women’s Confer- mills at Charlotte, Draper and] i "3"s°R. in the premises of the| this Weck” fertmee tone Me scn [rage of opposition raised by the || 351 E. 7/th St, New York, N. ¥. Union to carry revolutionary geet- | Unions being isolated from the other | ence, January 4. Leaksville, The people are clamor-| yi. s.atograph hall of the Museum|and his orchestra, This Capitol Congressional representatives of | ‘Vel. Rhinelander 3416 ings from the American workers to | institutions, such as cooperatives, = ing for the union. The only success- : BR OTSHES eee is Capitol e rich beet farmers, the the workers and peasants of U.S.S.R. on the twelfth annivers of their victorious revolution and to of the workers state farms, etc., they, in collabora- tion with the Communist Party, are the driving force behind the whole system, which thru social insurance, Hoover’s Fascist Tries to Break Shoe Strike jof the Reyolution. Each showing will last 7 minutes; price of admis- sion, 5 kopeks (about a penny). Both current numbers and topical ful method is the one Fred Beal and the N.T.W.U. employed in the | South—a house-to-house canvass.” Best Ella May Monument. Theatre. production also has dame Maria Nedime, Cole and Sny- der, Cordon and King, Dennis Sisters Ma- the Three | a group of Wall Street’s governmental “ad and le visers” to the bloody Machado gov- General Crowder, who was one of | MELROSE— RIAN | Dairy x Bers URANT study the conditions : ait <+y_| films will be photographed by spe-| Che: irls i i is 3 dirtie omrades “Will Alw Find and the achievements made by them continuous work week, seven-hour| (Continued from Page One) _Wes Williams, of Bessmer City, (5.)° os wets eed te. the Chester Hale girls on the program. amet as) aoe IEE ety eres Plen o Dine ut Oar Pince. under the Soviet form of govern-|day, has raised and continues to! them down to lower wages, piece |N:. C» said: “The only chance to| 10 4° NBDE AR EREET GRGRON een Hie ee ees cate SOUTHERN BLY Nicarois ment. e the cultural level of the work- | work, crush their own organization |Win is to organize the unemployed. | er a thon oe wal ADES SECTION secrets to the Cuba Co. in order to (near 174th St, Station) Beniding Socialism s and peasants in the U.S.S.R.” | that they have buil fter years 1 Was on the truck when Ella May Daath oak Ga dee hai T.U.U.L, aid them in their tariff fight. PRONE INTERVALE 9149. | s ; 8 y have built up after years | NMS own. Remnant of Empire,” has written “We have visited the mines, mills and factories, homes for culture and numerous other institutions, and we find that in spite of all the lies, slanders and propaganda put forth by the capitalist class, and in spite A det the dele; led report will be made by ion, which will deal with various indu: s, colleetive farm- jing, cooper: etc. The delega- tion was sent under auspices of the | Friends of the Soviet Union. New Rail Plan Aids War Scheme Shoe Workers officials, For in- . +4 RESTA RS SeaSGEI. STE SIRE Tae cea 5 " the night shift and a 9-hour day |the conditions are the same—be- aye 80 p,m, | Starice, Manager Biedenkapp of tha! niet” said a worker from Scran-|coming worse ahd worse. Delegate HEALTH FOOD (Continueo from Page One) ant meeting will| union is criticized as being “under (..°"ba In Scranton, polnted out coming worse al ‘orse. Delega e | za indictment for conspiracy in Massa- ee 4 |Deak reporting on Passaic, said: e Vegetarian is carried out as it stands at present, or whether it is amplified or carried out only in part, a long step has been taken in line with the wishes of the railroad magnates. The railroad consolidation plan, “Wage cuts are the rule the last | h 6,000. If th ii STRIKING! A Powerful Drama of Post-War aes t # need —nothing for shoe workers to be | gay wo pew. Here Sre SHG neice yERW! Gt Life in B e. following shortly ,after Hoover's | ‘he school tor. tt t Gisewan ot: iiare toad sanction few weeks,” reported a Paterson | {break down the wages of the work- hae fe in Burope Phonet Stuyvesant 2816 message to Congress on Dec. 3 in! «nd sth Ave, gale “ 75 cents in ad- mill worker, a GRETA GARBO and $1.00 at door. which he called for large-scale rail- road mergers, is the third largest merger movement this month. The | merger connected with the Mellon in- terests, and Owen D. Young’s recom- | _ mendation of a giant electric com- munication monopoly in which the American Telegraph and Telephone Co. with the General Electric Co. | and the Radio Corporation of Amer- ica are to swallow up all other tele- graph, cable and radio companies. for thi nild Producti a B ee foneas ovement Sry theo Se | tic methods all workers’ organiza-| Saturday and Sunday, and the main labor, longer hours, extension of kes oh soles hebcedeanans 6 A M k jeg Ss consolidation 0 ie means of com-/ e Lge id | tions, of course hates the idea that | speaker of the occasion, Magliacano, | piece rate in place of time rate—all ee M T r@) R % i ay : 7 Will have a fur ? 4 . sue munication and transportation in) pues Dec. 84,6 D; m. sharp atel179 | some of them will continue to exist each shoe worker present voted to these familiar types of speed-up E E wa ST. & B WAY 8 oy IDR J MINDEI oe “ America is of the greatest import- ance as offensive moves on the part of American capitalism both from an economic and military point of view. Part of the attempt to ad- just American capitalism at home for the ever-sharpening struggle tor, | * the shops” should demand that) When police reported, the thugs ask-| “Results of this speed-up are seen! By ROMAIN ROLLAND | ; the world’s markets, particularly | ary} SE aenolays leaders of the union picket too.|/ed for protection from Schwartz, | in the increased output of silk work- ILTMORE 47th, W. of B'y © with Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF against Great Britain, the concentra- |, subject to be dis-) Wood omits to say that they do| and got it, while their victim was|ers who thus increase the profits of | B vs. \ CYRIL McLAGLEN : | tion and unification of the means of communication and transport is a | Communist Activities * # Workers School, Classes. > held as usual T m ends Dec. vance * n 4 D, W. Representatives. neeting of all Daily ves of Section 4 W. 129th * * sday, week s will at 1179 pro ae é Section : Meetings. ng meet- meet on 6 p. m.. at section nit secretaries must | 's to all members li [Bend epectar’ lett * * Special mee struction of tion for the new book to take plac and discu: at 14 ion on the new dues s E. 103rd St., roof 6, Tue p.m, sharp. Lxecutiv k. members of | A the Louis A, Baum will} lead. ection Buro; registra- | of betrayal by these A. F. L, and “Protective” unions, that this gov- ernment is protecting them. No wonder such a government, say the shoe workers, recognizes the A. F. L., the Protective, etc. For the rest, the Wood letter consists of a series of baseless and unsubstantiated charges of graft and crime against the Independent the trial of the issue,” without say- ing that what Biedenkapp is in- dieted for is for violation of an in- junction in the New Bedford strike was laid under injunctions, in the |g cents, now f New York courts, by judges who} tried to break their strike and pre- | vent picketing when the employers workers are pretty much dissatis- | | locked them out. | Calls Picketing Illegal. | ternational Red Day statement of | the Communist Party, saying that} | the Communists pr spare for a per- i 1 of illegality. The ™ S. gov- ernment, which hopes to crush by a | fierce persecution and by terroris- | illegally, and tries to poison the minds of the workers against it. Wood intimates that picketing (price is 5 | and improved working conditions. The letter quotes from the In-| |the shops is violation of the law. | He says: “The workers who are | urged to defy the law and picket picket—that some of them have been arrested for just that. ‘ ~ |one of the delegates, chusetts and out on bail pending |.+. employed in the mill, She fought until she died for the union and for the | LL.D, The strongest monument we can put up for Ella May is to or- | ganize the South, because that is | ees she bouche for. fae |are very ripe for a struggle in Pat- ection workers, mainly Negro, /erson, All that remains to do is to ee Ete face a paee aut Only | build a strong union to lead a good per cent are organizec | strike here in Paterson. In the silk mills conditions are | In the wool and sited mills, as very bad. “We work 12 hours on | wel] as in the knit goods factories, another scenario for the Sovkino, titled “Life Speaking.” The composer N. Shostakovitch, | fied and want action. Conditions “most women |«Conditions are very bad. Out of 16,000 who were out on strike only for $10 to $12 a week. More or- 6.000 are now employed. ganizers should be sent to organize | «qn Lawrence, in 1922, there were the workers, especially the women. 99,000 textile workes employed; working | ‘or the same work the Half of the time | The | Bae is not working.” Speed-up in Silk. A statement issued by Clarence Miller, secretary of the executive board of the N,T.W.U., one of the ang Gastonia defendants, faced with a A meeting of the Williamsburg | 9 rv jail sentence, for his union section of the Independent Shoe | act: es, says: Workers Union was held yesterday} “Silk workers live under an in- | at 94 Havemeyer St. After hearing | |tense speeding up of work. Doub- the report of J. Berg, on the Met- | |ling up of machines, new devices on ropolitan Area Conference of the | old machines, new machines and Trade Union Unity League, held} |new processes with fresh division of 5 { cents. we must work in the dark. fight it out with the bosses in the ‘have been tried out in a drive to in- 22 shoe shops now locked out even |crease the silk workers’ output of if it lasts a year. ; goods. Where formerly & weaver Two of the Dan Palter shoe com- | ran only two looms ‘in the silk’ he pany gangsters attacked _ B.|is now expected to run always four! Schwartz, a striker, yesterday. | and often six. threatened with arrest. Back from U.S.S.R. the bosses, but earn less in wages. | Average output of a silk worker has attend a Thursday, December 28, 7 p. m., Irving Plaza Hall, to discuss “The | | and brought all sorts of pressure to . in|bear for his sugar, trust friends. New Unions and in the Old Reform- | That is why he decorates his grief All needle trades Left | at the exposure of his “connections” Wing workers are urged to attend. ‘with the silence of the guilty. New Functions of the T.U.U.L. ist Unions.” All members of the Needle Trades | membership meeting on |The object w: at jaid, This he mead immediate] The central figure in the whole Section of the T.U.U.L. are called to | graft scheme was president Hoover. s to get his personal y RATIONAL Vegetarian RESTAURANT | 199 SECOND AVE. UB Bet. 12th and 13th Sts. Strictly Vegetariun Food | | | NOW PLAYING! SPECIAL DOUBLE-FEATURE PROGRAM The Cinema “R. U. R.” “METROPOLIS” The tremendous drama depicting the revolt of the workers against the master class, FILM GUILD CINEMA Direction: Symon Gould Special Forenoon Prices: Weekdays 12-2—35c: Sat. & Sun. 12: “STREETS OF SORROW” Uncompromising rev. the tragedies in the war-wrecked proletariat. sz w Continuous Dail -2— Se By 5, N, BEHRMAN GUILD W: 6% bys. 8:60 Mats. Th.@Sat. 2:41 Extra Matinee Christmas “GAME OF LOVE AND DEATH” LAT ! BRITISH THE morons i | LOST PATROL NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNI versity 5865 rn er nea John’s Restaurant | SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 302 E. 12th St. New York All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Clcremont Parkway, Bronx SURCECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Rcom 803—Phone: Algonquin 8183 Not connected with any other office | SURGEON DE 249 BAST 115th Second Av Cor, vital ue aa cane | 3 Unit 6F, 5 tion 3. tee Continuing the attempt to fright-| At a meeting of the Ridgewood |increased by 35 per cent since the | *RED RUST” | DAILY EXCEPT FRIDAY of caaediy as etsy aahete Hct only | Mahe on pureney Seeaneciote en the shoe workers into scabbing| section of the shoe workers yester- | war. By Kirchon & Ouspensky Loew’s "Big 2”? Please telephone for. appointment by the War Department but by ever’ y | ip, on resolution and elect tes to section conventions. | on themselves and their fellow | day heard President Alexanderson, | | workers, the U. S. government, thru| just back from the workers’ dele- Wages Fall. | “Woolen and worsted workers MARTIN BECK. oem Street of S Av. Bien 6. Seat ‘Thursday Telephone: Lehigh 60: important government agency with | Bring your membershin books. Hoover as the managing head. In linking up all the railw tems of the country, particularly the railroads of the North and South, | sor the I. C. C.’s plan lays the basis for |™ the more rapid industrialization of | the South as well as for the use of | Commissioner Wood says, “An ad-| gation trip to the Soviet Union com- | have seen their earnings fall by 18 ‘voeate of Communism cannot go} pare the conditions of shoe work- | per cent since 1920, Average hourly ect | | into court with clean hands,” echo-|ers here with those in the U.S.S.R.,/earnings of woolen and worsted do not_attend will be called be- | ing the cynical, brutal Gastonia| where the seven-hour day and five-| goods workers have been moving Section Discipline Com-| trial judge who told the jury not | day week prevails in most indus-|downward, though not to quite the | to believe anything Communist wit-| tries and in being installed in the | same extent as in the cotton branch |nesses said. Incidentally, Wood ap-| rest, and all workers are organized. lof the textile industry. and Saturday at 2:40 Extra Matinee Christmas PITKIN Pitkin Avenue Brooklyn PARADISE Grand Concourse DR. MITCHELL R. AUSTIN Optometrist 2705 WHITE PLAINS AVE Near Allerton Ave. Bronx. ON BOTH SCREENS JOAN th Ave. Eves. 8:30, Mats. Thur.. Sat.. 2:30 b0c, $1. $1.50 pms REPERTORY ith st Special Comrade Kibri he John Ce Sinith “Har-| ay ono htiRG Aen tie win ve| elves the letter of Dee. 1, <0! DATE Y WORKER OFFICE BRONX WORKERS ATHLETIC CLUB Honey? of the month Sat pein 4 lemite” Ji Band will pla: Wednesday, 8 p. m. at 2' 4th! the most direct threat of all: “ducational meetings—the third \ ._ lem lace Band will play. Pelee ep etm a Tiedatene -Poreiga: Bara: at Rose Garde 47 Boston Road Monday of the month, Executive its vast resources in the event of war. As for the railroad workers, the execution of the plan will bring) _ increased unemployment and speed-| , 4/ up. YCL Anti-Religious Dance Tonight The dance tonight of the Young Communist League at the New Web- ster Manor, 125 E. 11th St., will be the finest affair held during 1929. The hall has been beautifully decor- ated with anti-religious slogans, and with the wall newspapers of the Y. The Communist Youth are deter- mined to change the Christmas holi- day into a real revolutionary anti- religious frolic. A wall-paper com- petition will be held. All revolution- ‘ary workers should be present to- 2901 Mer : sentatives will be pre and there | will be discussion on section resolu- tion. Units, and 21 of Section | meetings this eve- . * Unit 7, Section 5. A iil hold its regular meeting Wed- y evening. a ¥.C.L. Antl-Rellgious Dance, Christmas eve (anti~ religious) dance will be held th the New Webs St, under the Music by J. C. Tickets 50 cents: at door 76 cents. * atte ntion YC. stous dares will be held 33 ve., by Bronx Unit . D 2 Good time in Bist register for the new 1930 membership books, Labor and Fraternal Organizations "| profiteers and labor felke~ =| proved of the sending of troops to shoot Gastonia strikers, Wood tries in a slimy {manner to charge the union offi-| | cials with stealing the union money, calling on them’ to let a committee | of the fascist Italian newspapers in New York audit the books. The union books are open to all elected officials and representatives of the workers in the union, and can be audited any time. But to let Mus- solini’s gang audit them! That would be asking for a frame-up! The U. S. government, and Mr. | Hoover’s Grand Fascist Council of ing through Commissioner Wood, “IT hope this warning will reach the foreign speaking workers in season to convince them that to fol- low such leadership (as the Inde- pendent Shoe Workers Union) is jative Colony collected $7 for the| panied by widespread unemployment indirect | striking shoe workers. ky of the Cooper-| “Overproduction has been accom- Other work-|in this industry since 1923. About ers are asked to do likewise, At) one-fourth of the workers have been every affair held. by workers, ap- | peals should be made for the relief | year period. When workers are out of the striking shoe workers. All| of jobs the union will try to organ- money collected can be turned over |ize them in councils of the unem- to the office of the union, 16 W. ployed. The convention took steps 2ist St. to set up these councils.” thrown out of work during this five- BUY YOUR TICKETS at the 26-28 UNION SQUARE, NEW YORK for the THE LLY ‘Tom, Night—"THE | RIvine CORPSE” JOLSON’S tea: 59th St. & Ith Ave, Evs, TONIGHT CRAWFORD “UNTAMED” HER FIRST ALL TALKING PICTURE 8:30, Daily Mats, from Xmas. VICTOR HERBERT'S BABES IN TOYLAND Popular Prices—$1 to $3 Stage Shows—Both Theatres from CAPITOL THEATRE, BROADWAY TONIGHT Package Party and Dance given by the Good Band Is Arranged Special Appointments Made for Comrades Outside of the Bfonx, Advertise your Union Meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City Hotel & Restaurant Workers Branch of the Taare re a Py Food Workers, 14 Ww, ‘St. Ne Vo Ge Phone Chelsea 2274 meetings every | ‘Tuesday afternoon at 6 o'clock. One industry! One Union! Join and Fight the Common Enemy! Office cpen from 9 am. to 6 p.m night. Tickets 50 cents, at door, smorial P t. certain to get them into trouble. pene Le ate, Danes, cat and drink ttll| Tha Lenin Memorial Parent to be| They not only lose their jobs, but CHRISTMAS EVE DANCE RBEITER BUND, Manbattan early morning. 1 heen Re ye Oe °Ehuare Garden, | lose the protection of the police and (ANTI-RELIGIOUS) , Bronx: eta “cheb Club, Jan, 18 Js, now in hehenrsal under di-| the courts.” He means the police ? pis every 4th “Th in the ction of Comrade Edith Segal and| iy Coe tp d th vis will given by at Labor ‘Ter 243 E, ks on h One hundred com- | W! elu! em an e cou! wi oh vueetitike ne paybiate| Huiswood Spea éa for‘important patte:| frame them up. ‘Then he says: YOUNG COMMUNIST LEAGUE, DISTRICT TWO paular meeting German an \hearsal Thur: » 26, 7.30 p,,m.| “A majority of our foreign speak- at } entertainments. AM Ger« “Negro in Industry” Comrade Otto Huiswood, who is the director of the Negro Depart- | ment of the Communist Party, will Rd. Pe a bd J this Sunday, December. 7 at, the meitingy ep Mettst BE timber tant | ever they seek to become naturalized LEMITES Cleaning, Pressing, Repairing Aetibe Chauvinistic policy of the A.| Workers affairs, Next meoting of tht | citizens. Even those who have been High Class Work Done — i embers are invited to the Chinese| admitted to citizenship are liable to Goods Called for and Delivered. F. of L., the use of Negro workers in breaking strikes, Jim Crowism, etc, The lecture will start at 8 p. m. sharp and will be held at 26 Union £ P| 5 8 Aer hy fe J : i ee gl alchamae cin aaa “ the Communiat’ Party, Kew" York Workers proceeded against by the D NC AN D ANCERS 133 ap peieetnigwnes, tat bring their shopmates. resentativen and proressive womene| U: S. government on this basis will U qUM and an p ers must come in droves. Admission is is 25 cents. LITERATURE AGENTS MEET A meeting of all Unit and Section at Workers inter, id gee 402, Package Party ot Dance. Is arranged by the Bronx Workers Athletic Clnb on Tuesday evening, |Dee. 24. at Rose Garden, 1247 Boston night at the Cooperative Auditorium, Tuesday night. * * Working Women Conferenée. Anti-war working woman's confer- lence will také place Saturday. Jan, 4at 2p. m. Irving Plaza Hall, Irving are requested to elect am, ae of rhythm are eligible. for the 40-hour and five-day week, ing workers are potentially good | citizens. Many of them are unaware that pledging themselves to the ob- ligations of a movement like the proceedings which contemplate re- vocation of such citizenship”—and exile to black-shirt Italy, with Mus- solini’s firing squad and hangmen waiting. find powerful forces fighting to save them under the leadership of the International Labor Defense. This latter, the shoe workers de- Spee will be replied to by the work- Here Again from Moscow for United States Tour CARNEGIE HALL, Seventh Avenue and 57th St. Saturday Matinee, December 28th, at 2:45 P. M. NEW WEBSTER MANOR, 125 East 11th Street TONIGHT, AT 8 O'CLOCK A NIGHT IN CHINA a Costumes—Chin TONIGHT—CHISTMAS EVE Excellent Jazz Band for Dancing speaking workers are wel- agents of the Communist ers through bigger picket lines and lish mi irculatic ke will take place on Friday ever |e Tees oh “4 more determination to defeat the ADMISSION $1.00, $1.50 $2.00 Every Worker Should Be Present! ers ty tudlisien: “Onde i cand abe at 7.80-at the Workers) the Workers Center. ran a 59m bosses and to spread the struggle +00, $1.5 and : i vane PROCEEDS OR ri pay. hehe of the Sixth Anniversary . LR, CLOTHING STORE All profits go towards strikers and their families. SHOW YOUR SOLIDARITY / WITH THE WORKERS! 1; all improveraants; near way. Tel. Lehigh 1890, tees REMEMBER. The Daily Worker must estab-