The Daily Worker Newspaper, December 31, 1929, Page 2

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ER TELLS OF NT, DAIL ¢ WORKER, N W y YORK, TUESDA Y, DECEMBER 31, 1929 \Bavanev, USSR Head of Civil Aviation, Here ILD, CONFERENCE: Internal Contradictions ‘ORGANIZE FIGHT “For All Kind of Insurance” ([ARL BRODSRY IN CHESTER TO ORGANIZE JOBLESS'?**2”4"" "RES ses pipyT, dn Bourgeois Marriage, seuwer yyyoy Uovsamed P, I. Baranov, chairman of the |}! ee ee Adee a rereleacd gaat . ——— Soviet Council of Civil Aviation, A. | -_ The besinning of the end of bous-| HAROLD LLOYD | 7 Kast 42nd Street, New Yorks eer yrs * . : ° N. Tupolev, constructor of e |geois marriage, d rivate Fr | Mill Owners Build Fascist Groups in Aim at/piane, the “Land of the Sovi “= AGAINST TERROR sssve ‘was ‘noted by Marx and BOSSES Hi SOUTH : which recently completed a flight | Engels in the Communist Manifesto. Fraud be Gh S| Patronize eo ING | | Terror; Trv to Strangle Union The Trade Union Unity League “It will continue its efforts to or-|Ciyj] Aviation, have just ar will begin at once to orga unorganized workers in Cheste: e ite of terror- ec methods of the bosses. from Moscow to New York, and sev- the Council of ed in » ace eral engineers of |this country for a short v g to an announcement made Over 2,000 Workers Are Represented It does not collapse at the will of the exponents, of bourgeois morality, but like the whole capitalist system, because of its failure, as a form, to change and adapt to a new way of Yemand Race Equality at Charlotte Meet No-Tip Barber Shops | 26-28 UNION SQUARE | «1 fight up) a ., r aN, . co! ee a must stop talking about < No Discrimination. crday by the Amtorg ‘Trading| (Contimed from Page One) __|life, based fundamentally on a new | (Continued fiom Page One) |i! 9799 BRONX PK EAST and organize C!esters’ working “The National Textile We oration ‘The delegation ‘will ers. Over 200,000 workers are rep-|form of production, it becomes ob- | ever happened in Charlotte || (corner Allerton Ave.) | ulation and prepare them for an! Union will organize all the 46 ion industry and com- | resented directly. solete. It cannot really adapt itself Many gave in their names |! === effective struggle against the open | workers here into one local. aiy lines in’ the United} There are 67 delegates from the| without destroying itself. and wanted to attend more meet- shop employers,” said George Car- be no discrimination; i |Pittsburgh district, many of them| A feeling of this contradiction, not ings. Young Negro workers took |{ Cooperators! Patronize ter, Gastonia defendant sentenced to and unskilled workers—both Negré at the offices of the|from the mines and steel mills.| possible of solution under capital- the Daily Work and distributed ~ 20 years and one of the deles: white—will be taken in on the aic. “The need |Philadelphia has 39, comprising ism and its codeSof morality, per- them after the mecting all over the S E R O Y to the Second Convention of the equality. in. the Soviet |needle trades workers, textile work- | vades lately, all capitalist literature Negro workers on, ‘ Sol Harper, district organizer of CHEMIST tional Textile Workers Union, in a statement to the Daily Worker. Carter told of the unemployment ...u speed-up in the textile mills of Chester. dysone Print works is an- e mill where the workers long hours for low in the near future a de- will be made to are wages termined effort Union is so acute, due to the tre-|ers and anthracite miners. There | and drama, and shows itself in cyn- mendous distances, particularly in|are 23 delegates from the South. |icism, pessimism, licentiousness—and northern Siberia that the Council of Civil Aviation proposes to more including the Gastonia defendants. Other delegations are as follows: | hoplessness, The latest and one of the best an double the present length of |New York, 27; Ohio, 42; including | examples is Sydney Howard’s “Half the Young Communist League, sent | the following statement to the Daily | Worker: “The American Federation of ‘La- 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. ¥ Struggle in Viscose Mill. lish the Net te this mill |} within the next three years, |miners, steel and rubber workers, | bor’ has made a lame gesture to Comrade Irving Mills are again runi o in another mill under the |p 1929 we had 12,000 miles of com- | Michigan, 20; Northwest, 2. ‘organize’ the 8,000,000 oppressed A 4 part time with less than management, the Bancroft| mercial airways to which some 8,000 | _ There is a total of 332 delegates 5 | white slaves in the mills and on the Fr ances Pilat their workers, Similar conditi in Wilmington, Del. Several miles will be added in 1930. Qur| Seventy per cent of the delegates) : farms in the South; but Negro MIDWIFE mills around Chester where| pigns call for 80,000 miles in opera- |have been in jail for their class ac-| Appearing in his first talking | Workers are not even considered by |} 35) u 7/th Ss, New York, N. ¥. exist in the Aberfoyles two mil The Viscose Mills are pre attack their workers and drive the condition need organizing. are equally rotten also tion by 1933, and there’s every like- \lihood that this program will be ex- | tivities. Twenty per cent of the} | delegates were women, and 14 per} | ST. PAUL GET film, “Welcome Danger,” at Loew’s Paradise and Pitkin Theatres. the A. F. of L. “In the meantime, the mill bosses | are gloating over the fact that they | Vel. Khinelander 3916 wages to the levels now being paid| “What has been said about the | ceeded. cent Negro; 10 per cent youth. oie PANES MEERA AOE IIR — to the rayon workers in the South. | textile workers is true of the other ba Esb-asees Besides the Gastonia defendants Gods,” now running at the Plym- control the farms with unorganized | —MELROSE— Already the bosses in the Viscose are | workers in Chester. The thousands there are present the following class| MORE FRE WEN outh. Howard is that fairly clear |Negto workers keeping the poor} Dairy weaunawiay preparing to strangle the union, A of steel workers, the Ford workers, war victims: Shifrin, Graham,| sighted and able playwright who| White farmers down at the same | AITy RESTAURANT special squad iz being organized and | and the waterfront and transport | Stromberg, Accorsi. F Noo pied caught some of the spirit of the|time with social equality bunk, and)} Cojcages, Vou, aimare blew tt although they are nothing else than | workers need organizing. The in- | At the Monday morning session) Wobblies in his “They Knew What | thus ee ote Saige ee 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx anti-union strong-arm men in the pay of the bosses they will be given police power. These thugs will try dustrial union, under the leadership of the T.U.U.L. will undertake this he T.U.U.L. will conduct a cam- BALL FOR MINERS A. Jakira made the organizational report. William F. Dunne delivered a report on trade union work. George | Maurer spoke on the struggle in Wages Hitting at Rock Bottom They Wanted”. He is a friend of martiage. His “Half Gods” is a play about a corporation counsel and his wife whose marriage cracks up |did before the Civil War. | “The state tax department shows | |that only one out of every 88 of the (near 174th St, PHONE :— Station) INTERVALB® 9149. to run every leaflet distributor out : ‘ (By a Worker Correspondent) cbingt ‘fedrat the South. because the wife does not like being | PoPule‘ion is of Marcus Hook. “The National Textile Workers Union will accept the challenge of the Viscose company,” said Carter. | paign in preparation for the coming | district convention which is to be held in Philadelphia, Feb. 9. Chester | must be well represented.” Rockland Palace Frolic Tonight Lovestone Stabbing of| Young Workers Shows) Role Against Workers) HARTFORD, Conn., Dec. 30.— The Young Communist League of | Hartford yesterday issued a state- ment showing the attack of the renegade Lovestoneites here on, Bennie Levine, a member of the! Y. C. L., as part of the Lovestone- | ites’ role agsinst the militant) workers. The statement follows in part: es A bang-up time will be had by thousands of New York workers, | who will also be helpling the Illinois | striking miners at the same time, at |the Workers’ Costume Ball at Rock- “|land Palace, 155th St. and Eighth OB a | Ave tonight, New Year’s Eve. “eneesS* The affair has been arranged by | local New York of the Workers’ In- | ternational Relief, and the Workers’ School. Communist Activities convention. 0 at Ave $e ow Workers School. All studer vised that school i ter Dec, 31, ex- dl classes. To mark! Snappy dance music that will keep ds to the Costume | everybody on their toes will be pro- ati vided by Vernon Andrade’s Negro | Syncopators. Tickets, if bought in ‘advance are 75 cents; at the door | they will be $1. They are on sale at to s Bookshop. — * * + New Years Eve Dance. Jakira reports an_ increase in| dues-paying members from 6,600 in| 11927 to 8,500 in 1929, and a great| progress in the collective member- | |ship since the last convention. He {pointed out some shortcomings and | {said these would have to be cor- lrected. Jakira said there was not ja sufficient basis in the shops and jinsufficient attention was paid to |Negro problems. Defense Commit-| |tees are to be formed. The member- | |ship drive will be extended to March j18. Delegate Frank reported on Ne- ‘gro work. Frank stressed the need | (for a wide campaign against lynch- | ing, etc. Maurer said the South il- lustrates a period 6f greater strug- | | gles for the use of the state power, | |as well as illegal means by the boss- | ST. PAUL, Minn., (By Mail) — Regarding conditions in St. Paul, unemployment is worse now than it has been for several years and is getting worse every day. Industries in general are laying off men. The shoe workers are practically all on the street. Shops who used to employ 300 to 400 men have only three or four men working now. Ford has laid off his best-paid workers. The packing houses are laying off workers right and left. Wages are low. Building trade workers’ scale is $1.00 per hour, but many of them are working for 75 cents to 85 cents and some few even jess. Most of the common labor is being obtained for 35 cents per hour. Workers at Montgomery Ward merely a licensed concubine—all that middle class marriage means, and who fly to feminism, psycho-analysis, law, medicine, prostitution and booze in hope of a relief. In the end they or less under the influence of a judge who quotes Emerson to them, and the advice of a children’s spe- cialist whose point of view is purely biological, and whose prescription couldn’t be printed without losing second class mailing privileges. But they come back with their eyes open: “No one has any right to happiness in marriage,” says the husband, and “T love you enough to fight it out with you for the rest of our natural lives,” says the wife. Which is a |confession of bankruptcy, come back to holy matrimony, more | by one | \thus she Jactual slaves in the mills. | “The murder of Ella M |gins and t xtile wo: jion, N. C., where Pres |spoke last year and promised the mill slaves ‘prosperity,’ along with | |the lynching of Willie McDaniels, | 22-year-old Negro farm worker, was | |the turning point of the southern | {mill and farm’slaves. We demand: | |Full social, economic and political | equality for Negroes! Down with mill and farm slaver- Stop lynch- jing by workers’ Organize |workers’ defense! Organize the \black and white workers. Fight un- | | employment ! Build the N.T.W.U.” ioneer Conference | | that 87 of them re RATION A L | Vegetarian ! RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVE, J& Bet. 12th and 13th Sts. Strictly Vegetarian Iood Prebiaaailncatinaaeinidiniasat ie HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 5865 t (Te re reer errr erner A Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant “On Saturday, Dec. 21, Comrade : Dane ke |the local WIR, 799 Broadway, room | 7 and Sears Roebuck, men with fam-|who wishes to preserve the institu- | i Bennie Levine, a member of the os Bin at 1330 Goi: ati tHe; Workatall Schull 20) este eee ee rey ilies, are working for $18.00 per tion. The play is a strictly class pro- Hears Delegation beeen oa Rohe tenge dea oo ¥ ist League of Hart-| kins an by Section § of fT? "0 » “9! He characterized the Charlotte 4 7 4 * ‘ A place with atmosphere oung Communist League of & | the st Party and the Hun-| Union Square. LL.D. conf yi int| Week. Speed-up, yes, we have it duetion, even aside from the fact Report on U.S. 8S. R Shere ain’ rwdtcnta meet ford, was brutally assaulted with a n Workers Club of the Bronx. | LL.D. conference as a ra lying poim’ | here, the packing houses have again | that few workers can afford to en- ep' ct) SSD Coal mere t inife by Kenneth Epstein, a degen-|Come and bring your friends. | for further struggle. The LL.D. i8|)00,’ speeded up at a terrific gait,|ter a Broadway theatre. The eco- estes) 02 E.12th St. New York erate Lovestone renegade of ee) Tet eect masse co: MANY MILL bapgpeayies ie ae pais mung you can imagine what workers get-|nomic basis of the reconciliation ce Pre fier ee paid sale (en Party. Comrade Levine received | wtlce!s Costum arranged to linerease our fight against face dis.|ti™e 36 cents per hour, and $18.00 | that the lawyer can still pay the| "Oy" ren. nets in. the Soviet |, All Comrades Meet at 4 five stabs in the back which ser-| close the school’s F ul term and for | emit ne be) ae ibs eae | Bee week have to do, with thou-|bills, and the wife finds that more 2nd oe ene in ead 3 io oo smtea? ieee comfortable than struggling for a|Umion, 72 delegates attended the BRONSTEIN’S iously injured him, requiring the | care of a doctor. “The fact that Dan Gray, the} leader of the Lovestone group in| Connecticut was passively looking | on at this assault and his threaten- | + remarks a few minutes before | e act, that ‘Levine is going to} get it’ shows that the attack was premeditated by the most active counter-revolutionary elements. The | removal of Comrade Levine from he ranks of the Y. C. L., since he 3 an active shop worker in a large | actory, would destroy the work of he League, in their estimation. “This act and the leaflets they | have issued against the Party and League expose the lies of the Love-| stoneites and the fascist role which | they are trying to play in the labor | movement. We call upon the/ League and the militant young} workers for a relentless fight against these black forces. We call upon the comrades all over the| country to energetically build the | ague with new proletarian ele- | ents, since this is the only guar- | tee against counter-revolutionary | vestoneism.” Call for Protest Meets, Anniversary ~» of Mella Murder; The United States Section of the All-America Anti-Imperis!ist League gas called upon all affiliated organ- izations to organize protest meet- ings on the anniversary of Julio Antonio Mella’s assassination, Jan- 40th. The Latin-American and = workers of Harlem have al- responded, in the protest held under the auspices of N. Y. Branch of the League last More thy 300 Negro and filled the New Casino Hall. The response of workers to the call for a big protest meeting on January een by the number of dele- are being sent to the \in-American Anti-Imper- onference, which is to be on Sanday, January 5th, at the Obrero, 26 West 115th St. itory to the anniversary of murder. conference will discuss the fort Congress of the League Imperialism, the organiza- 1 steps which must be taken in ice of the daily murders of in Cuba and Mexico and tions for the Mella where thousands of Latin- workers will rally in de- 5 -* the Haiian workers and who are in revolt against e rule. Enthusiasm for in Plentywood PLENTYWOOD, Mont., Dec. 30. Over 100 Plentywood people card Mother Bloor talk on the In- rational Labor Defense, and on © Soviet Union and its great in- strial progress. The meeting was \d in Farmets and Workers Tem- | Great enthusiasm was shown the “oo S icaaaaiilal ckets, 75 cents in advance and $1 the door. a Tuesday, Dec .31 at Rockland @alace, 156th St. and 8th Ave. ¥.C.L. will at 2 . mm. Special meetin day, Jan. 2, at 6.15 p. m. at 27 E. St. ction of delegates to section fon. Every member must be present, ew Years Eve Dance. t 1330 Wilkins Ave., Bronx, Tues- Dee. Good ‘music, ‘b ‘erybody ted. Communist Party Workers Clu = Auspice and H ee Unit 9F, Section 1 A special meeting will be held on Thursday, Jan. 2, at 27 BE. 4th St Blection of ction con- vention will Section 2. Jan. 2 6.3 sha e be in Every member m | RE Ge | Unit 5, Section 7. Meets Wednesday at 8.30 sharp the section headquart All must attend. Labor and Fraternal Organizations A Banquet. nanuet given by Council 17 of ning, Dec. Beach Ave Brighton cents Miners Play, New, Years Eve Ball, “Marching Guns,” a mine play. by John De Santes, will be presented the big workers costume ball New Year's eve by ¥ Lab tory Theatre. The ball, i be held in Rockland Palace, 155th St, and Sth Ave., has been arranged by Local New ‘York, W.I.R., and the Workers School. | A large part of proceeds will go to the striking I- linois miners, Tickets 75 cents in advance (at W.LR. local office and at Workers School) and $1 at the oor. | Satie OR necer Lentene. | ea yo} Italian F.C. Eastonian Wkrs. Napoli F.C. ... CAG habe Coney Island LL.D. wanna ste wabaweisii as o o each month. ‘The next meeting wil be held ‘Thursday, Jan. 2 at 8 p. at 227 Brighton Beach, Ave, ANC. Campaign, Against the discrimination of all gro tennis players will start at he dance in Bombar Center tonight, at 8 p,m. m., TAMMANIC THUGE (Continued from Page One) phone number of Vitale, under the jheading of “numbers frequently called,” it was revealed. It was revealed how Vitale re- turned Johnson’s weapon to the de- tective, an hour after it had been taken from Johnson by holdup men at the Vitale dinner. Johnson testified that Vitale had advised him to delay reporting the holdup. These are some of the facts which showed Vitale’s close connee- n with gangsterdom, a connec- tion which Tammany Hall is des- perately trying to hide, because it |might bring about revelations of the connection of all Tammany Hull with the gangsteis. The angstetis whom Vitale is said ™.|stopped ordering. mills have indicated complete stop- | Standing of the Metropolitan Workers z Pa Division B Rew = feats & Fe Bo Faleon A. Oo 4 Spartacus § 1 4 Hai 3 REDe Will meet on the first’ Thursday of] I PHILA, TO CLOSE AFL, Muste Fakers Do Nothing for Workers PHILADELPHIA, Pa., Dec. 30.— Trade journals point out that the closing down of full-fashioned |hosiery mills here during the holi- |day season is quite different in na- |ture and scope than in recent years. | Thirty of the mills have stated that |they will take long vacations “to {let the market absorb the surplus.” |The industrial crisis is smashing jsales, the unemployed are not able to buy, and the retail stores have About 26 of the page of from two to four weeks. The Full Fashioned Hosiery | Workers Union of the United Tex- \tile Workers, A.F.L. and Muste con- trolled, with sell-out as a consistent policy, has, of course, done nothing to force the employers to take care of workers made idle by the “re- | \cession,” and “industrial vacation.” One of the main demands of the |National Textile Workers Union in lits present national drive is for so- jcial insurance paid for by the | bosses, for shorter work days, that | will not accumulate so much surplus and for higher wages, so that some of the hosiery workers can occa- sionally buy more stockings too. Milwaukee ‘Socialists’ Quickly Come to Aid of Open Shop Bosses (Special to the Daily Worker.) MILWAUKEE, Wis., Dec. 30.— The “socialist” sdministration has made good to the big open shop bosses its oft repeated assurances that the “socialist” party is not against the business interests, by linvoking a law against distributing 6 leaflets, and arresting workers who 1 Fiwere giving out leaflets of the Trade ® | Union Unity League to the workers lof the Western Electric Co., here. Frequent wage cuts in the dif- ferent departments of the Western Electric plant have caused great discontent among the workers there, and they have welcomed the TUUL leaflets with a call for organization to fight the wage cuts. The “socialist” administration on Saturday, sent police to surround the plant with police, in an effort to prevent the call of the TUUL from reaching the Western Electric workers. Norman Satar, a worker distributing leaflets, was arrested. He refused to pay a heavy fine under the “law sgainst distributing leaflets” passed for the bosses by the “socialist” administration, } ENJOIN RAIL STRIKERS. PEORIA, Ill. (By Mail)—The Toledo, Peoria and Western Railway management has obtained from a lfriendly court an injunction against ithe 600 striking shop craftsmen on the road. ena to have hob-nobbed with are relied upon by the bosses in New York for use as strikebreakers and thugs against. workers. } |power shows the war preparations.” He called for an increase‘of a hun- (dred-fold in the anti-terror cam- \paign in Gastonia. | As a result of the demonstration in the Monongahela Hotel against race discrimination, 25 workers join- ed the Communist Party. | DISTRICT T.U.U.L. MEET, CLEVELAND Bill Dunne to Speak at) Mass Meeting, Jan. 5 | CLEVELAND, 0., Dec. 30.— Preparations for the Ohio-West Vir- ginia District Convention of the} Trade Union Unity League Jan. 5} are going forward. | Definite progress has been made | |by the T.U.U.L. in District Six since | the Cleveland Trade Union Unity {Convention. A number of locals of \the Metal Workers’ Industrial | League have been established as well | as other T.U.U.L. groups and local lunions in auto, building trades, needle trades and food, with a be- ginning of work among the railway and street car men. f A district center has been estab- lished and it is for the purpose of further co-ordinating and centraliz- ing all activities throughout the district and developing definite pro- grams of action that the convention is being called. The conditions are ripe for real organizational work. Unemployment and wage cuts are increasing. and the workers will rally to the Trade Union Unity League, the center of revolutionary trade unionism, rais- ing the banner of militant struggle against rationalization. | Dunne to Speak. | The convention will open Sunday morning, Jan. 5 at 10 a, m., sharp at the headquarters of the T.U.U.L., 1426 W. 3rd St., room 307. A good sized body of delegates is expected. Bill Dunne, editor of Labor Unity, national publication of the T.U.U.L. will represent the National Com- mittee of the ¥.U.U.L. at the con- vention and in the evening he will speak at a mass meeting to be held at Gardina Hall, 6025 St. Clair, at 8 p. m. Amalgamated Urges Food Workers’ Strike One hundred thousand leaflets are being distributed among 300,000 culinary workers by the Amalga- mated Food Workers asking work- ers to prepare for a general strike against bad conditions and low wages, it was announced yesterday ‘+e Hotel and Restaurant Branch. Workers are urged to join the Amal- gamated, | | YOUR ORGANIZATION. Go to its next meeting and pro- pose that it greets The Daily Worker upon the occasion of its Sixth Anniversary. sands of others waiting to grab their job if they only could. The workers are unrestful, but they are either so doped by the cap- italist press, or so afraid of their jobs, or to be known as radical, that it is very difficult to get them to subscribe to Daily Worker or any other of the Party Press. If the press of ‘he city and the labor fakers have stampeded the workers into inaction, we know that the present unrestfulness will break out sooner or later and the stam- pede will be toward the T. U. U. L. and the Communist Party. In the meantime we must keep pegging away, and doing the best we can. —A.N. A. Pioneer Kindergarten to Start on February 1 A downtown ¢o-opefative kinder- garten, in the English language, where working class mothers’ may entrust their four to eight year old children to be trained, is x. be opened Febraury first at the Work- ers Center. In honor of a heroic working class mother, the school has been named the Ella May Kin- dergaten Primary School, and will be under the auspices of the Young Pioneers of America, District No. 2, with an experienced teacher, Com- rade F. Serby, as director. By next Autumn it is planned that similar schools will be organized in other congested working class sections of the city. The school is to be situated on the sunny, spacious fourth floor of the Workers Center, convenient to Stuyvesant Park, and is to be opened five and a half days a week during the full employment hours of the parents. Only workers’ children are eligible, and to enable real prole- tarian elements to benefit by the school, the fee has been placed at $2 a week, with wholesome dinners provided at cost. Registration of children is now going on’ at the District No. 2 headquarters of the Young Pioneers of America, Room 206, 26-28 Union Square, New York City. ‘ Show Farmers’ Poverty The low buying power of the masses of American farmers which is being still further reduced by the growing economic crisis, is reflect- od in the mid-winter catalogues of Sears, Roebuck & Co. “and Mont- gomery Ward & Co., two of the largest mail order houses in the country. a NEW YEAR’S EVE DANCE 1330 Wilkins Avenue BRONX TONIGHT Good Music Auspices: SECTION 5, C. P. and Hungarian Workers Club , Buffet living. Slams at socialism and Bol- shevism fairly rattle out of the prin- cipal characters. As in Shakespeare, the only workers in the scene’ are used for comic relief. The part of the lawyer husband, Stephen Ferrier, is taken by Donn Cook; Mayo Methot plays his wife, Hope. All the cast is good, the dia- the result is futility—V.S. BEAL TO TALK AT SCHOOL FORUM. | Fred Beal will speak at the Work- ‘ers School Forum, stressing the his- ‘torical role of the National Textile | Workers’ Union in the South. Workers will be at an advantage by coming early. The subject in- vites crowds, especially with Beal speaking. The lecture is held at 26 Union Square, Sunday, Jan. 5th, at |8 p. m. Admission is 25 cents. GUILD 6% wes. 8:6 Mats. Th.&Sat, 2:4¢ Extra Matinee New Year's “GAME OF LOVE AND DEATH” By ROMAIN ROLLAND ILTMORE 47th, W. of B'y Kra, 8:50, Mats, ‘Thurs. and Saturday at 2:40. “RED RUST” By Kirchon & Ouspensky 45th Street MARTIN BECK 45th street Eves. §:49. Mate. Thursday and Saturday at 2:40 Exten Matinee New Year's doth St. & 7th Av, Eva, 8:30 JOLSON’S Daily Mats. VICTOR HERBERT'S \ |. BABES IN TOYLAND Popular Prices—$1 to $3 rence RUTH DRAPER in her Original Chardcter Sketches (INCLUDING 5 NEW ONES) nvery Evening, Including Sunday (Bxcept Monday & Thursday Eves.) COMEDY THEA, dist, EB. of Bway jatinces Thursday and Saturday om Very ood seats at Fy Extra Matinee New Year's Day LODZER BALL give log is sparkling, the satire keen, and | “AMUSEMENT Se This Week | LODZER BRANCH 324 TONIGHT—NEW YEAR’S EVE NEW YEAR’S EVE at NEW STAR CASINO, 107th Street and Park Avenue 25 per cent profit for “Morning Fretheit” conference for the defense of the | Soviet Union at the Labor Temple, | Saturday. They heard reports about the conditions in the Soviet Union | from Jessie Taft and Henry Hal | pern, two child delegates from York who went to the Soviet U last summer. These 72 delegates represented 8} different organizations and clubs, | including the Pioncers, the non- | |partisan schools, sports clubs and re- lief organizations. | | After the reports of the resolu- | |tions and credentials committees the | tasks of the delegates were outlined by Ruth Yukelson and the confer- jence ended with a discussion. After the conference the delegates ; of the Soviet Union from Film “A Visit to Soviet | Russia After this a two reel Rus- sian comedy was shown and the jdelegates and spectators left singing the “International.” | | saw scenes | the Sovii | gee REPERTORY 1th St | | 6th Ave. Ives. 8:30, Mats. ‘Thur. Sat. 2:30 | 50e. $1. $1.50 i | EVA Le GALLIEN (Tonight—“THE WOUL Tom. Mat, “PHTHR Ps Tor shti—HA SUNNY MORNIN jand “LADY FROM ALFAQUHQU | "3 A MEO NOW Wisconsin P&B WAY RL ae ae | MUND LOWE and CONSTANCE BENNETT “THIS THING CALLED LOVE” NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES Loew’s ‘Big 2” PITKIN || PARADISE Pitkin Avenue Grand Concourse Brooklyn rons \ | | | | | | ON BOTH SCREENS HAROLD LLOYD “WELCOME DANGER” ALL TALKING | | | Stage Shows—Both Theatres from CAPITOL THEATRE, BROADWAY n by DR. J. MINDEL| Vegetarian Health . Restaurant j 558 Cleremont Parkway, Bronx SURCECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE com 803—Phone: Algonquin 8183 Not connected with any other office | Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF RGEON DENTIST 249 BAST 115th STREET Second Ave. New York DAILY BXCDPT FRIDAY Please hone for appointment ‘Tel me: Lehigh 6022 Cor. DR. MITCHELL R. AUSTIN Optometrist WHITE PLAINS AVENUE Allerton Ave. Bronx, N. ¥ TEL. ESTABROOK 2 Special Appointments Made for mrades Outside of the Bronx. 2705 Near 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 Amalgamated food Workers, Hl W, Bint St. NW. Cy Phone Chelsen 2274 Business meetings held the first Monday of the month at » mM. iiducational meetings—the third Monday of the month, ixecutive Board” meetings—every ‘Tuesday afternoon at 5 o'clock. One industry! One Untont Join and Fight the Common Bnemy! Office cpen from 9 a. m, to 6 p.m W. 1. R. CLOTHING STORE n4z BROOK AVENUT Teleptione Ludlow 2098 Cleaning, Pressing, Repairing High Class Work Done Goods Called for and Delivered, All profits go towards strikers and their families. SHOW YOUR SOLIDARITY WITH THE WORKERS! FURNISHED ROOMS 110th St, Heated rooms; large J; all improvements: near subs vehigh 1890, MRADE WILL CARE for years denne day. Radical : 1 health(at’ environm ip e-¥e: irons Turk. Hast, (haveing. Mi Hien! Gardens) Apt, Katz. OLE 8070, SET, EL et Send Greetings to the Workers | in the Soviet Union Through the Special Printing of The Daily | Worker in the Russian Language! 00 12 EEE IED I EDIE EDV EDS, | )

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