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Y 6, 1930 al DAILY WORKER, ‘EW YORK, MONDA ISS MILL TOILER‘ OF SOUTH lO JOIN TEX'iiLE UNION National Textile Workers Union Forming Youth Section in Its Ranks Negroes Most Exploited! TUUL GALLS FOR _ PAINTERS? FIGHT ON BUREAUCRATS Fake Progressives Let |Zausner Take Control ' “Nattuli Botwin , Ts a Story of JOBLESS GROW IN. Young Communist's Heroism BUILDING TRADES REVIEWED BY V. I. JEROM {the hands of A. Veviorka, the brief y Ou § A N D S On the 6th of August, 1925, a| historic moment becomes invested Boston, Phila., Chi. nineteen-year-old youth was stood | With grandeur. against the wall of the Lemberg The play rises in places to mo- |prison and shot down by order of | ments of genuine greatness. The the Polish Government. strike scene, so admirably rendered, The boy had killed an is an inspiring piece of ensemble agent British Workless- Organize to Fight “Labor” Government YORKSHIRE, Eng., (By Mail).— The newly-formed branch of the National Unemployed Wo rker 8 Committee Movement is organizing committees to fight relief cases thrown out of the courts of the “labor” government. The branch reports 263 paying members. Union Must Unite Workers—Adults, Youth, Negro, White—in Common Struggle | (Continued from Page One) provocateur, who had wormed his | way into the Polish Communist Party and had been instrumental in playing.. Here, perhaps more than in any other scene, is there a life- full dynamie swing of movement Show Unemployment CHICAGO, Help Build a Powerful Young 5.—More than) Communist League! | Zausner’s men as their rivals in the | the arrest of a number of Commu- | and voice. It is the scene a faire | half of the building trades workers ay | ae eRe " i s involvi: the | of this stirring collectivistic drama. | here are jobless, according to state- ms ‘ cheng c i | race for office. jnists on charges involving j |here are jol iz t “For All Kind of Insurance” Pee Teal ara teenie EE | Both the fake progressives and | (ath penalty. sy | at i8 the spiritual apogee of the| ments of Victor F. Olander, mis. For AU Kind of all 7 . : orkers in learned through the leaders! of 4 is s | o or wski, by | 7 * ag er of t is F ati all to all young textile w orkers in the NU. WoO. thst only # Ae mt Zauener want 0 company. unlonige The provocateur, Czechnowski, by jdrama, The vastness of our leader of the Illinois Federation of he South to join the Yout hSection | '® *- *+ ™- elie Mlabads aa ss = ne name, was to have appeared in court | strength come before us with a re- | Labor. nt rd a complete Cla olidarity of the! the painters. They conducted -long St: are bat hi aa i e pahistres ef. the National Tex Workers sae al | secret negotiations trying to reach (2% State witness, but on his en-|inforced consciousness. And when | fs Shae Minion fas been iasucd by the South-| Trpce cone con we ever win better : 4 trance to the courtroom, a bullet) Naftuli, the boy about to be mar-| BOSTON, Jan. 5.—The number Telephone: Murray Hill 8850 working and living conditions. an agreement for division of spoils. jended his wretched career. om District he N. T. W. U.| 7% rete oe ates Sey s wrete yred, is seen rising proudly to lof building trades unemployed here | » 45 Te Gitiitocs inna, YU |_ Min building a strong,’ militant | The left wing and the militants in |" Nattuli Botwin, a young Commu. | Oxe,d8 seen Tsing Proudly to | or eater than at any time since (7 Hast 42nd Street, New York aa , 3 s hat ie ‘ Union that we can trust and rely the union are criticised by the T. U. nist, had resolved to execute the | every factory, in every house where |the depression of 1920-21, ‘admits Hodutinnaine c Venti: Gecaad oe ee eee U. L. for not exposing and fight-/spy. He was arrested on the spot.| there is want, the Naftulis are gath- |the Building Trades Employers As- | nion is formi za Section | old wor Negro workers, white | P ing against this situation earlier | Right days later, the boy, Naftuli,| ering, massing. sociation. Even the fakers in the| A Pi = Reece SOU te Wea Saaiye and young workers. For we| — Negro street workers in Phila- |this year. |died a martyr’s death. ‘The closing scene of tragedy and (Building Trades Council agree that || Cooperators iho ll: young workers to join and help| realize that only with all workers! ganji? meg om ad ; : | ide aera closing scene 0 ; i den ; | hein. fellow workers carry on the |ean we win so it is the duty of all| Cama | These are the lowest Now For Action! toes incident the play, (Nal | glory leaves the audiences with an |the Besasi Pal Wi teuenaPeD ier S E R ight.against the bosses to better | wor of color; ‘eteed:| feeinice neath oe cen | cRnoughy ofthis dilly-dallying!,” 453 Botwin.” is not ¢ drama, | Unforgettable experience. No work-/S8Y the Maptly oot se of the | the conditions to all the workers all | ¢, Fate dota. inthe | reeruiting agents go down South says the Building and Construction |*t! Botwin.” is not a great drama, | 2. sjould miss that experience. are unemployed because 0 | CHEMIST over the country. N. T. W. U. and ehlp build it into a “We all kno wthe need for a|strong and powerful weapon and in Union in the South ,and we also|the coming struggle, it will be able know that the N. T. W. U. is the/to lead us to victory against the nion that we want to lead us in! bosses.” Court Refuses to Hear About Mexican Terror Twenty-nine were arrested by the; in t untry. The judge stopped pelice at the New York demonstra-|her, and forced her to leave the tion against the terror in Mexico, | witness stand. When brought into court, at 9th After a long lecture, the judge Ave. and 57th St, Beatrice Siskind, | dismissed the case, in an effort to the chairman was charged with “or- | avoid further on the fight dering a parade” and the others | of the Communis y against the with parading. Taking the stand.| terror in Mexico. Beatrice Siskind spoke on the terror} While in jail, the arrested work- ageinst the workers in Mexico|ers recruited seven new members against which the workers were de-|for the Communist Party. Many monstrating, as well as conditions | workers joined the Party during the in the textile and other industries | demonstration. Hoover Wants Tariff Rushed For Big Bosses WASHINGTON, Jan. 5.—Re- newéd fight on the tariff bills will take place in Congress. The expo- ute of the Hoover implication in the-Cuba Co, graft has sharpened the fight between the big bankers | i who own over. $170,000,000 worth for a battle to rush the tariff of sugar interests in Cuba and the |through as the imperialist chief rich sugar beet farmers in the | promised the big bosses in his mes- United States who want an increase | sage to Congress that something on Cuban sugar. would be done for them along this The big capitalists want the tariff | line. of the growing crisis. The repre- sentatives of the rich farmers are haggling for ntages from the | finance capitalists, in tariff matters. The Hoover Senators are girding ‘A. F. L. Bureaucracy Meets in Charlotte _ | 5,—|ers Union and the Trade Union Ed- Press comment “anti-Communist CHARLOTTE, N. C., Jan. l President William Green and Secre- | ble l spats * em tary Morrison of the A. F. L., Pres- \ emake" of thie eafenensa: ident Thomas McMahon of the/ pjoyers are divided in their reac- United ,Textile Workers, various |tion to the A. F. L, move: some wel- question settled, especially in view | The em- | | and promise the Negro farmers, who live under miserable condi- | tions, all sorts of things if they | will come up North and. slave When the Negro workers come North, they find that they become just as thoroughly exploited by the bosses in the North as they are by the landlords in the South. ee | Workers Section of the T.U.U.L, in its present statement. “Get down to | work on the basis of the T. U. U, L. program”—which is: organize shop committees of the rank and file; |fight for the seven hour day and |five day week; fight the class col- |laboration schemes of the bureau- crats; fight against speed-up, wage cuts, and for union standards; fight for unemployment and social linsurance to be paid for by the jbosses and controlled by workers’ committees; fight against the hire ‘Women Conter, F; eZ ht I mper 1al sna"tive ‘system and for the right Wars at Meeter 2° 2 oa |organization of thousands of unor- Two hundred women delegates at- | ganized painters; fight for one dis- tended the Working Women’s Anti- | trict council of Greater New York, | War Conference at Irving Plaza | based on the shop delegate system; |Saturday, Delegates came from |fight to organize all building shops, factories, and working class |trades workers into one powerful women’s organizations. {industrial union.” Olga Gold, secretary of the Dis- | trict Women’s Committee, opened | the conference by outlining its pur- | AGAIN OPENING pose—to mobilize the class con- |scious working women for effective Preparations Begin for More Fighting | struggle against imperialist; war, |for defense of the Soviet Union, and | to fight for better conditions for the Chinese dispatches expose how empty was Chiang Kai-shek’s recent boast of “victory” and “unification” jconditions of the working women. | Other speakers included I. Amter, | District Organizer of the Commu- |nist Party; Rose Wortis, of the |T. U. U, L.; Anna Damon, of the of the country, Concurrently with reported anti-imperialist riots at |Chow Tsun, east of Tsinanfu, Peking | reports shows that the “model” gov- ernor of Shensi, Yen Hsi-shan, is National Women’s Department, and | Mry Adams, a Negro delegate. | | Sonia Margolis was chairman, and a |Negro delegate, Jensen, was vice- | | chairman. PROTECT WHALEN | but it has elements of greatness, In | sharpening depression. | * * Although the play is in Yiddish, | ? H |the vivid production, the intensely! PHILADELPHIA, Jan. 5.—Un-| proletarian atmosphere, and_ the | employment in the building industry | English synopsis provided with the | is especially severe here. No figures program, make the performance ac- |haye been issued on the number of | cessible to workers of all nation-| jobless. The Federal Reserve Bank C E L F R R A Tl 0 N alities. of this district says, regarding The Artef is arranging a per-| building activity in the Philadelphia | aaa formance of this play on Monday, |area: “The volume of both building sae | Jan. 27, for the benefit of the Party. |contracts awarded and permits is- Banner Edition for an Party members, friends and|sued in leading cities dacined i ny, |sympathisers should secure tickets | sharply in November and was below | Anniversary, Too | for that date. 'the level of a year ago.” (Continued from Page One) against rationalization, will go | “AMUSEMENTS: 25,000 copies of the Daily Sixth An- Rn. K. 0, niversary issue. |eua St. & Bway Phone Wisconsin | 1789 Close to a score of thousand copies PLAN BIG ‘DAILY’ jot the special issue will reach the | textile workers of the South, mobi- |lizing under the N. T. W. U, for | struggle against low wages and the | stretchout system. | | The California workers, engaged | in a great struggle against a ter- rorism designed by the bosses to | wipe out the Communist Party and jall militant labor groups, have or-| dered 15,000 copies of the special | | anniversary Daily Worker. | A special edition of 10,000 Dailies will go to Chicago. Textile mill centers of the South- | Knoxville, Tenn., and Greensboro, N. C., for example, have ordered | large bundles for distribution as | have scores of other industrial cen- j ters. One hundred thousand copies’ of | the Sixth Anniversary edition of the | Daily Worker will be distributed to | the workers of New York. Leading up %o these mass distribu- | tions of the Sixth Edition of the Daily will be mass distributions on a smaller scale in many industrial No | WwW AMKINO PRESENTS AMERICAN PREMIERE OF THE NEW SOVIET PHOTOPLAY The Man from the Restaurant | PRODUCED BY MEJRABPOM-FILM WITH THE CELEBRATED RUSSIAN ACTORS M. TCHEKHOV & VERA MALINOVSKAYA —and the Latest— SOVIET NEWS REEL |, Showing the Celebration of the 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. Y. W. I. R. CLOTHING STORE 342 BROOK AVENUE Telephone Ludlow 3008 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! * VEG: Dair RESTAURANT jee Wl Always Fing It Pleasant to Dine at Our Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD, Bronz (near 17éth St. Station) PHONE w= INTERVALD 9149, RATIONAL | Vegetarian RESTAURANT | 199 SECOND AVE: JE Bet, 13th and 18th Ste. Strictly Vegetarian Food HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNI versity 5865 9 aetna sree cere emeremmmnrmeeremsery Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant i : anything but a model of loyalty to|centers throughout the country this | ; ‘ SPECIALTY: ITALIAN OISHES presidents of-Tnt@mational pee Te/gome th ite a pi persis. tee Nanking se ia aad to be “am. | : 12th Anniversary of the October Revolution place, with atmoaphe unions and enough of thei 1h beiselbech Pen i “4 | en's attitude is sa’ e “am-| As part of the Recruiting Dri if a p ‘ ot, 1 ere radicals meet ence of about 200, are here ready to lee ate ‘3 apr iy Norte Gastitns | good American dollars Chiang-Kai|A., Philadelphia workers are to re- — meet tomorrow in the Hotel Char-| President 0: shek has lavished upon him as bribes =~ lotte, and plan some way of helping | Federation of Labor James Barrett the fees cppose the organization | praises McMahon, but deplores his drive of the National Textile Work- | Catholic religion. Vitale Freed Thug After Confesssion Vitale dismissed the case and re- the new revelations re-| Y : aa leased Fawcett, keeping the police- garding the dealings of Magistrate man to whom he made his confes- | to subordinate himself and his ter- Squash Counter-Move |ritory to Nanking. H 7 | Now Yen is said to be drafting a Against Him |new manifesto denouncing Chiang- . Pcs | Kai-shek and calling for a reorgani- S CC mnerteniadl (fone aga) Cee) , |zation of the Nanking government. itant workers brought before him, | Reports do not say whether this many facts leaked out which showed | moye of Yen is made in agreement up part of the stinking mass that with the fake “leftists” around jeeive 18,000 copies of the Daily, j jextra, this week, | | In California, 1,000 copies of the Now Playing! Raat dase his are{e Pe distributed | pyTRAORDINARY DOUBLE-FEATURE PROGRAM leach day this week. | pele the titanic awe-inspiring the incomparable Greetings from thousands of work- | drama of demonology POLA NEGRI jers are expected to make the spe- | cial issue of the Daily Worker a) message of solidarity of the work- | “ All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Cleremont Parkway, Bronx Vitale with the underworld brought ion off the stand, and then returned out yesterday, was the fact he had |the 79.48 to Joseph C. Harth, from characterizes the connection of New| wang Ching-wei ease tl York with the underworld murder | ably is, Pe Ne Ree aHY te BaD \ring, ers, These greetings will be read by the \workers of the Soviet Union, through | e Golem” DR. J. MINDEL AWoman of the World “... greater than ‘THE a sophisticated tragicomedy SURGECN DENTIST freed a confessed hold-up man who | whose cash drawer the money had was defended by an attorney re-|been taken by Fawcett, in an effort | tained by Arnold Rothstein. Rey. Thomas Wants to Norman Thomas has suddenly } discovered that his fellow capitalist politicians who have been success- ful in attaining jobs as magistrates pay as high as $20,000 to $30,000 for their positions. The “socialist party,” which at all times strives to keep capitalism | clean and acceptable to the workers, | is starting a drive for an investiga- tion to better the conduct of the capitalist judges so that the working | ¢lags will not, lose its faith in bour- | to hush up the affair. Preserve Boss’ Justice operate with his fellow capitalist | politicians in this investigation and | has addressed a letter to this effect | to Assemblyman Russell Dunmore | and Senator John ¥ night, majority leaders in the He*te and Senate; and Assemblyman Veter J. Hamil and Senator Bernard Downing, mi- nority leaders. The capitalist press gives the Thomas letter first page promi- nence, following the line of coopera- tion with the social-fascists which | A split between two factions of | Tammany Hall with rival factions headed by Wall Street’s ex-presi- Chiang Kai-shek has figured out ja scheme to have his old foe (or | friend, according to the treasury sit- uation), Feng Yu-hsiang, go abroad | strike-breaking Mayor Walker, was | |said by Ciro Terranova, one of Vi- | dential candidate, Al Smith, and |in retirement. But Yen seems to have prevented this plan, which also was A c to put the Kuominchun armies of tale’s underworld connections, to be | Feng under Nanking. Yen refuses |responsible for Tammany’s allowing |{o allow Feng to leave Shanghai, and some of Vitale’s thug connections to has thrown his own troops outward leak out. |from Shensi, where Yen has custom- Vitale's connection with a murder | contract ring, which is said to have | {carried out the murders of Frankie | | Yale and Frank Marlow, rival gang- ‘ster leaders, have been shown by the | | finding of his name in the note book |of a dope peddler and thug arrestei | | for dope peddling, Vitale’s name was | under “numbers frequently called.” arily held them in careful reserve, into Honan and into Shantung, Moreover, Yen’s commander at Tientsin, has made an alliance with one of Nanking’s formerly “trust worthy” generals, Lui Chen-nien, at Chefoo, And Chang Hsueh-liang, who has no use for soldiers or am- munition just now against the Soviet {a special printing of the anniver- sary issue in the Russian language for distribution to the workers of the U. 8. S. R. From workers in far-off Juneau, Alaska, come greetings to the Red Army, to be inserted in the anni- versary edition of the Daily Worker. Greetings from the Southern mill | workers will go to the Soviet textile | toilers, | The time limit for greetings to| reach the Daily Worker office for |the Sixth .anniversary edition has jbeen extended from Jan. 6 to Jan. 7, due to the great response shown | by the workers. Functionaries Meet DYBBUK’” "WLM GUILD CINEMA Direction: Symon Gould 52 love-tracedy of Theatre Guild Productions "=" “METEOR” By 5. N. BEHRMAN GUILD W. evs Mats, Th.&Sat. 21 “RED RUST” By Kirchon & Ouspensky Continuous Dally—Noon to Midnight Special Forenoon Prices: Weekdays 12-2—3he: Sat. & Sun, 12-2—50e RT Starting Sat., Jan. 18—“SHE-DEMON of the STEPPES”—a tremendous 1 UNION SQUARE Room 803—Phone: Algonquin 8283 Not connected with any other office of the Amertean bourgeoisie W, 8th St. (Bet. 5th and Oth Aves.) SPRING 5005—5000 es Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST 249 BAST 115th STREET Cor. Second Ave. New York the Revolution, th Ave DAILY EXCEPT FRIDAY Pe REPERTORY 4th st Eves. 8:30. Mats. Thur. Sat. 2:30 |] please telephone for appointment G0e. $1, $1.50 | Telephone: Lehigh 6022 BVA Le GALLIENND, Director nA G “American Opera Company; “OPERA IN GLISH” Dr. M. Wolfson Surgeon Dentist 141 SECOND AVENUB, Cor. 9th St Phone, Orchard 2333, Tonight at 8:20. in case of trouble ped! your teeth |they began particularly in the last | . ‘i But the leaking out of facts show- | [nj A A f Di t 7 t Will B Jan, Mme, Buterfly || come to see yor who has geois justice. : ah f Leora : nion, is reported furnished Yen} Of District 2 Wi e MARTIN BECK 45th street olanda of Cyprux || long experience, and can assure ts to co-'mayoralty election. ing Vitale’s connection with the | yi Ww. ‘, net Saves wf ; The Rev. Thomas wants lthags MAN dict, phewtttadie piveadt with Jarge amounts of supplies. Wie se Mme ste ay. ale you of careful treatment. \Agricultural Toilers Strike; TUUL Leads (Continued from Page One) | spreading, stopping lettuce harvest- jing. : The splendid solidarity of the workers is illustrated by the action of workers imported from Los An- |geles and Stockton in refusing to scab, when they learned, on nearing |the station, that the pe ivendye |to use them to bret Tike, Meets Ricndass gan. ith, 6p. m. an te teten OF the nastialist 4 iH |system in this section are being Communist Activities if us “i Party Members. | ¢omrades, Monday, Jan, 6, 2.30 p. m. arte Union 8q. + be ‘Unit 4F, Section 6. gola} meeting Monday. Jan. 0. at ose p.m at 129 Myrtle Ave. Imit 3, Section 7. ta Monday: Jan. 6. Important | business. Afterwards Five-Year Plan Olecus jon. * Unit 3, Section 4. ; pets Tuesday, 8 p. m. at 235 W. 12 st. ee eee] in aay, ane a 9 Bt | mobilized for use against the work- on ate ee me \ers, but have failed to intimidate ae PN team |the strikers. Sherit?; and their ts Monday Fane 8th, 6:30 p. m.,| forces have been rushed to the scene at ne dath. 4 |against the strikers, The federal 5 i Unit 2. oegten & page Htiiginesy has igs ene the ie ‘nis et Renisteation, |Of the bosses, wit e immigration espe” oka REINS authorities mobilizing for arrests mE and deportations of the strikers. Motel dar dan 1 Sp. m., at| The International Labor Defense, as : sagan 1. 8p. m., at | The International nse, 26 igs Ba re agi \a reply to the’bosses and their ma- : nn i " a t M |chinery of government, has made ‘Labor and Frate->> itself ready to fight for the defense Orean izations of al) workers arrested, i Yorkyilie.LD. | Imperial. Valley, located in the |southern part of California, near ti Thal ght, Ting Be * Me o \the Mexican border, is the scene of \ the most bitter exploitation of scores | of thousands of workers on the vast fruit farms owned by such huge y, Baum on W 230. m., a gn Buspices. ‘open shop concerns as the Del Monte | Company and others organized un- ‘Bulla The Daily Worker by |der the California Fruit Packers As- sociation, These open shoppers x it in All Basic In- were largely responsible for the no- torious criminal syndicalist law, ee \further, for it was threatening to smear no less a person than Grover A. Whalen, Tammany’s strike-break- ing police commissioner. Therefore, when the Tepecanoe | Democratic Club,an Italian Tammany group of which Vitale is one of the leaders, sought a summons for Whalen, on the ground that he was unlawfully withholding property of the club, Magistrate Bernard A. Douras, noted as an injunction judge, squelched this move which thight involve Whalen, right there. Douras stated that he “would not get tangled up in a case like this,” and refused t» issue the summons. He adjourned the hearing of Daniel Tamascio, John Savino and Joseph Catania, charged with having had | advance knowledge of the Vitale din- | ner holdup, until Monday. Huge Mass Protest | At Lenin Memorial Meeting January 22 The Lenin Memorial meeting to be} held in Madison Square Garden on Wednesday evening, Jan. 22, at 7 p. m. will be the scene of a huge mass pageant under the direction of Edith ee and Em Jo Basshe. Hundreds Negro, white and colonial work- ers are participating in the rehear- sal for this pageant. Scenes from strike struggles, A. F. of L. con- ventions and other moments in the life of the American working class are being included in the pageant. Yen’s arsenal at Taiyuanfu, cus- tomarily managed by British offi- cers, is working 10,000 men day and night—and altogether the prospects are for another outbreak of civil war upon Nanking and its American advisers. The anti-imperialist riots at Chow Teun took the form of wrecking the English Baptist mission there, while at Tsinanfu, 2 students’ strike has tied up the Christian university. LL.D. Fights Efforts of Gov’t. to Deport Picollella to Italy The New York District of the International Labor Defense is pré- paring to file an appeal in the United States Supreme Court in the case of Michael Picollella, 28-year- old Italian seaman and anti-fascist, whom the government is trying to deport to fascist Italy. Picollella, who came to this coun- try in June, 1925. was arrested last April in Hoboken. N. J.,* informa- tion supplied by fascist stoolpigeons. The Circuit Court of Appeals of New York recently upheld the de- cision to deport him, thus pavin; the way for the deportation of all militant foreign-born seaman who oppose fascist governments. Isaac Shorr is the attorney for the I. L. D. in the case. The New York District of the I. L. D. calls upon all workers to aid it in its fight to save Picollella from bein, sent to certain death or years o! Accompanying the pageant will be a large orchustra, imprisonment in Mussolini’s dun- geons, Held Sat., Jan. 11 The District Kxecutive Commit- tee, recognizing that the Party faces tremendous tasks and that new functionaries of the District must be mobilized in order to direct the activities throughout the district, has called a District Functionaries meeting to be held at District head. quarters on Saturday, January 11 at 3 p. m. sharp. The following agenda will be taken up at this meeting: 1. Mem- bership Drive, 2. Building the Party Apparatus, 3. The New Dues Sys- tem, 4. The T. U. U. L., 5. The frac- | tions arid mass organizations, 6. | Unemployment and Tenants League | Campaign, | Thesé are the immediate problems facing the Party in addition to the| growing danger of war and, there- fore, the following comrades are instructed to be present dt the meet- ing in order that the tasks of the Party may be laid down, fully dis- cussed, and the membership aroused to the work that is immediately im- pending: all D. &. C. members, mem- bers of the Central Committee, the District Language Bureaus, Trade Union Fraction Secretaries, leading Trade Union functionaries, Section Executive Committee of N. J. Y. C, L, Buresu. ¥ This meeting -will begin 3 o’clock sharp, UNEMPLOY 7) COMRADES, ATT NTION! All unemploye? comrades are in- structed to attend ‘2 special meeting at the ‘Workers C: and Saturday at 2:46 RUTH DRAPER in her Original Character Sketches (INCLUDING 5 NEW ONES) Every Evening, Including sunday (Gxcept Monday & ‘Thursday Eves.) COMEDY THEA., 41st, EB. of Brway Matinees Thugeday and Saturday Very good ats at $1 oem envencens yS§ 59: it. & 7th Av. 1. 8 JOLSON'S *°¢huth: Sten. ana Sat” VICTOR MERBERT'S BABES IN TOYLAND Vopular Prices—$1 to $3 DANCE Repertory Theatre Martha Grakam—Doris Humphrey Weldman—Tamirix Week of Joint and Individual Dance ee Bo MAXINE BLU Every evening including Sun., Mat. Sat. Only. Jan, 12 _ Notice to All Our Patrons! THE CENTER Has Moved to 30 Union Sq. Formerly the Book Shop, Freiheit Building NINE CHAIRS | TTS 29 St. FE. of By Ke oO} Yolanda of Cyprus Jan, 11....Mme. Butterfly 89th Street and Brondway ys. 8:20, Sat. Mat. 2:20 Yow at Box Office Advertise your Union Meetings here, For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City Seats NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES "Big 2” | Loe Hotel & Restaurant Workers | PARADISF Branch of the Amalgamated Pood orkers. % we Ne Xe | Pitan, Navenee Grand, Concourse Phone Chelsea 2374 8 meetings held the first mi at 8 Naucational “meetings—the ; sducational ON BOTH SCREENS Monday of the month. Hxecw ava apace card. meetings—e The Voice of Love! ‘afternoon at 6 oclock, 10 GLORIA SWANSON ALL TALKING—IN “The TRESPASSER” |] Stage Sows—Both Theatres from | CAPITOL THEATRE, BROADWAY | | | | Long Live New Born Marvin Borenstein for the Future Red Amer- ican Army! S, Snuchow. BARBER SHOP FURNISHED KOOMS East, 110th St, Heated rooms; i Md cps “pear 133, ‘spe . Apt. 10. Nently fare ninhed room. Toom and hoard: @1100 wer week, ro NO WAITING