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e Two DAILY WORKER. W YORK, TUESDAY, JANUARY 21, 1930 1,100 BROOKLYN BAKERS ititVOLT AGAINST A. F. L. BUREAUCRATS SELL OUT Largest Section of Local 500 Drives Old Leaders From Union; Fakers Then Burglarize Offices Overwehlmingly Repudiate Forward Gang Tricky “Compromise; 0 8 ” Meet Called Today ‘There is mass revolt in the A.F.L,|promise.’ They called two meetings | », ifi ~ getke: ue land adviaed that the’ old cdficars [eens ee ae argest of three sections into which | should stay on, elections should go jcourts. He was charged with felon: |through and that no general mem- | bership meeting should be held until 3akers Union, Local 500. he union is divided, the Brooklyn section, 1,100 members, recently \ whole new slate of officers, and jemanded that the old officers re- sign and get out, not staying they xyot around to “install” the new men. The old officers who have been selling out the workers, allowing he bosses to work the men 12 to 15 aours, barring union members sus- rected of left views from meetings, and generally acting in a manner igainst the interests of the mem- vers, refused to go. So the bakers chased them out. Steal the Books. | The general officers of the local } came down in the night and took | sway all the books and union labels. | The workers then refused to nomi+ rate again or to go on with the elec- ions until their rights were allowed. | The United Hebrew Trades and | che yellow socialist Forward came | ntu the dispute, in defense of the abor traitors, and proposed a “com- after the elections. This demand of the bakers for a |membership meeting is on eof the ;most important, because for a long | |time the executives of all sections |have been carrying on all business among themselves, without consult- ing the members at all, The United Hebrew Trade propo- | sitions got only six votes, against 400. T.U.U.L. Meeting Today. The Trade Union Unity League bakers’ section is calling a general mass meeting of all bakers, those in Local 600 and those not in the A. F, L. union, for Ir-ing Plaza Hall, 15th St. and Irving Place, today at 1 p.m. This is a mass mobilization with ood speakers, for unity against the employers’ long hours and low wag The slogan of the T.U.U.L. is: “One industrial union for all food workers!” TO RALLY FOR WIDE SILK STRIKE PATERSON, N. J., Jan. 20.—The National Textile Workers Union at the second annual convention held on December 21, 22, 1929, at Pater- son, N, J., reviewed the situation in the silk industry. The deepening crisis, the growing attacks ayainst the workers and the tremendous dis- content and the mood of the workers to struggle, call for the instant mobiligation for a national strike in the silk and dye industry. The na- tional convention of the union saw this: That they were right has been proven since the convention The | | | | | | | | attack upon the workers have grown worse. The strikes in the| Anthracite, in Lehigh Valley, in Rhode Island and New Bedford show the militancy of the silk workers and readiness to struggle against low wages, speed-up, unemployment and for the program of the militant National Textile Workers Usion. In Paterson the conditions of thou- sands of silk and dye workers have reached a point where a general strike is certain. The National Tex- | tile Workers Union and the Trade Union Unity League are making preparations for a national strug- gle in the silk industry. | Never before have conditions been | wworse in the “silk city” than they are today. The inhuman 18-20 hours’ shift is a common thing in the dye shops. The 13-16-hour day, | night work, no lunch period and} crushing speed up are the lot of | thousands of dye workers. The silk workers have been driven down to a practically starvation level. There seems no limit to wage cuts. The hours have been lengthened and the |x speed-up increased generally. © Un- employment is widespread. Thou- sands ate on the verge of starva- tion. The silk and dye bosses are al- ready taking steps to stem and mis- lead the developing struggle cf the silk and dye workers. They are al- ready giving front-page publicity in their newspupérs to the United Tcx- tile Workers, Musteites. Just as in Marion, Elizabethton and the South in general, where the bosses invite Rey. Muste, Thomas McMahon and the whole gaumut of labor fakers in order to crush the militancy and struggle of the Southern textile workers. In Paterson the silk and dye bosses are already utilizing the Associated Workers, Muste’s lieuten- ants, Post and Quinlan of the United Textile Workers, as strike breakers. These social reformist agents of the bosses are giving the freedom of the silk bosses’ newspapers, to slander the National Textile Workers Union, the militant leader of the textile proletariat. The workers of Pater- son in their response to the call of the National Textile Workers Union have already shown that they have -spudiated these agents of the hosses that will raliy under the banner of the ew revolutionary National Tex- cile Workers Union, for a gencral strike against the attacks of she horses and for better working condi- viens, Jewelry Workers ‘Here to Stay’ Call Meeting to Affiliate to T.U.U.L. The newly Workers’ Industrial Union is ac- tively carrying on organization work among jewelry, novelty, plati- num workers and watch makers. "Vovbers in all these trades are suf- > tervthly from unemployment. ‘on declares, “We are here ‘and ealls on all workers, oyed or not, to come 1 @'fiees at Room 600, at Sh St. and join, getting 1 stamps if out of work. ting of watchmakers is ‘ed at the above headquar- to‘ay at 6:30 p.m. All in the “to, organized or unorganized, are EXPECT 20,000 AT LENIN MEE (Continued from Page One) corrupt Tammany government, and the socialist nov \Fur Thug Kills Man SHOE WORKERS 'Who Didn’t Give Wife;| : | Often Cut Strikers) FIGHT UNIO N | William Yacker, called also Joseph | Boritz, a,slugger and gangster Se |the right wing fur company union, thas just been arrested for running | ja knife through a man, Louis Gregg, | who resented an attempt of Yacker warn jand some of his pals to simply walk | Ay) |up to Gregg’s wife and sister in a} bakery and take them away. | swer Bosses Tools With Militancy {took the women home, and Yacker ambushed him a little later. Gregg (Cortinued from Page One) died the next day. nouncing the Independent Shoe Yacker has been several times @t- | Workers Union and praising the but facist A. F. of L. and Amalgamated was always released by the bosses’ | Clothing Workers Union, a8 com- | . y unions, satisfactory to them. ous assault for one job, but was re Deu : e fries leased in March, 1925, by Magistrate | aio» ed States Department of Brodsky, In September, 1028, the | 2)°r,has attacked the Shoe Work. grand jury refused to indict him for |eign thie se the ast sean |knifing another lef wing fur worker. | 416° enemies nf a neat Sete At Last October he was up on another ‘Ne enemies of the working class knife charge, but was released a who try to »revent the workers |day later by Magistrate Stern. |}; O18, ing. The employers be- His present difficulties did not |lieVe that "by raising the issue of arise out of a strike, but it is thought |COmmuni:m they will te able to he will get off easy, as he is useful | {Tighten the worke~ and keep them from militant struggle. to the fur bosses and their com-|/Ti) Tmltant sti lpany union, the International Fux | ,The workers, However, are recog- | osteines. | nizing that the Communists are the best leaders and organizers of the | Sys ara workers and as the drive for cap- | italist rationalization is forcing | A them to -ganize, they accept Com- munist leadership with enthusiasm. 187 New Members Join| Communist Party | They exist for the sole function of strike-breaking and of aiding the The State Department of Labor DETROIT, Jan. 20.—Over) in fighting the | No worker has any illu'‘ons as to the functioning of the state and the United States departments of labor. | in an effort to confuse the workers | pretend to be in antagonism to the United States Department of Labor. ~~. | manufac‘urers \three thousand enthusiastic | unions. Mr. Regan of the State workers packed Danceland Au- Department of Labor may pretend i of biggest Leg : ae hese Ke Ce m- 8d the United States Department . : abor, but we know that as /munist Party in Detroit. The strike-breaking agencies they work joceasion was the commemora- | hand in glove with the manufactur- | tion of the death of Lenin, and | ers and the | kers against the in- he mobilization of the Party | terests of the workers. that he is in opposition of Mr. Wood | In order to man the Garden a|t ve} lene} staff of £00 comrades is needed. A|for intensified activity in the The struggle of 5,000 workers against the combined forces of the organized Jewelry me large part of thid staff is to be| filled from students of the Workers’ | Sehool. According to a decision of | the Students’ Council, all students of the school must gather at the Garden between 5:30 and 6 p. m., there to report to the responsible committee for immediate assignment | to duty. All Communist Party func- tionaries are also urged to report at | this hour. Workers gathering in union headquarters or fraternal or- ganizatims and Communist Party section headquarters must gather at | their various concentration points at the very latest at 6:15 in order to arrive at the Garden on time. There | will be a special section in the Gar- den for those who joined the Party | during the drive. There will also | be specia) sections for the Commu- | nist Youth and the Young Pioneers. | Comrades who are concerned by this must look for the banners which will be displayed in the Garden in order to locate the sections to which they belong. The splendid struggles carried on by the New York workers during the past year will find expression in the demonstration tomorrow night. Workers School, Day classes for night workers. Fun- damentals of Communism; Fi 3p. m., English; Thursdays, 3 p.m. _ classes: Capitalism and the American Negro, Latin-America, shop papers. Unit 2 seeti Tuesday, 8 p.m, 1 Room 6. liom 4, 43 E. 108d St. * * * ‘Unit 8, Section 4, ‘Tuesday, January 21, 8 p, m., “ Work in Fraternal Orgqnizations.” * Unit 1, Section 8, Tuesday, January 21, 105 Thatford ve., Brooklyn. SAe.. 28 Unit 7, Section 2. Tuesday, January 21, 6:30 . 1179 Broadway. 7 fe Unit TF. Section 2. Tuesday, instead of Wednesday, 1179 Broadway, 6:30 p. m. Get new membership book Labor and Fraterna! Organizations Hundrea@ Volunteers. To sell Labor Defenders at Lenin Memorial. Report at room 422, 79y Broadway. Proletarlan, competition. Alteration Painters, Organization, Committee, Tuesday, 7:30 p, m., 36 Daion 8q., Room 603. Progressive Tailors Ball, All Progressive Ladies Tailors Cos- ume Dressmakers will meet at the foncert and danee, Saturday, Jan, 25, 1930, at the Unity Co-operative House, 1800 Beventh Ave. The program will start at 8 o'clock. Progressive Group, Local 38. ; ‘ * Lenin Memortal Pageant. eoninal rehearsal for ail partlelpants . ay, 7 p.m. at Irvin Plaga, 15th Bt and Irving Pl. : Workers School Sports Club. Meets Jan. 22,at school to march |) boay'to Lenin Memorigl, ©? '"°? " Independent Workmen's Circle, 1 Bran decided all members beat Lenin Me- morial, Jan, 22. Committee with plac: ards at Madison Square Garden at 7 . m. . * * &@ Women’s Counell, No. 10, phnrpany n 48th Bt, mim , Jan. 23, 8:30 p. Bay ree 8 Role of Stoves lecture, n Klyn 5 Party in Labor 0. 4. Pp. m, 4! cture, ‘Role bor Move- Tuead 3 . 2h Whipple St. Brook! of Communist Party in ment. * 6 union to hear the report of the executive board, and to dis- cuss and act on a resolution to af- filiate with the Trade Union Unity League, will be held at the 125th St. headquarters, Thursday, at 6:15 p. m. The Jewelry Workers’ Industrial Union also calls all to attend meet- \ ycneval membership meeting of ing of unemployed, Monday, Jan. 27, 2 p. m, at the union headquarters, face of the growing crisis.’ State and the capitalists is not suf- Meetings of this kind are sche- duled all over the United | and orga — “‘on of the unorganized States will make it possible to defeat the iss . lens of the manufacturers, “These One hundred and eighty-seven are the tasks, therefore, of the In- workers joined the Party at this | dependent Shoe Workers Union: meeting. Many Negro workers | were present. A large percentage 7 ‘ Party. { 2—It is necessary through mass A banner presented by the Mos-| picketing and deiionstrations to cow Metal Workers to the Detroit| draw the workers out of the shops workers was accepted by Philip and into the struggle, thereby de- Raymond, of the Auto Workers’ veloping the militant spirit of the Union. | workers. With the large number of work-| 3—The Independent Shoe Work- ers who joined the Party at the|ers Union must mobilize the sup- Lenin Memorial Meeting, the De-| port of the whole working class in troit district has now exceeded the| this struggle, for the sight against quota set by the Central Headquar- | the shoe workers is not an isolated ters of the Party. by 114. Detroit | phenomenon of the class struggle to- has exceeded its voluntary quota of day. Running paraliel to the shoe 500, by fourteen. The speakers at the meeting|tion drive of the dressmakers of were O. Huiswood, Wm. F. Dunne| New York, the beginning of the and Nowell, who just returned from | struggle of the textile workers in jworkers’ struggle is the organiza- | | political equality for the ,|Picket Miller’s Market ie 11 Featherbed Lane, Bronx, signed the Soviet Union. There were) speakers representing the Young) Communist League, Women work- jers and the Pioneers. Jack Stachel, | district organizer, was chairman. | Two thousand copies of the Daily | |Worker and three thousand. “Why | Every Worker Should Join the Com- munist Party” pamphlets were sold | ‘land distributed A choriis of Negro | and whit? workers sang the “Red | Flag,” aud Ucld the @ore. | Mass distribution of the Daily} Worker was utilized to get the good | attendance. U. S. Gets Set | Back At Hague} (Continued from Page One) broached at Paris last summer, had agreed, under Briand, to give up “sanctions.” 1 The most notable outcome of the | Reparations Conference, however, was the etback American imperial- ism got, in trying to use Hjalmar Schacht of the Reichsbank of Ger- many, to upset the “agreement.” Moscow reports, quoting the “Iz- | vestia,” organ of the Soviet Gov- ernment, state that paper’s editorial view of the tilt between the confer- ence and Schacht as follows: The Morgan-Schacht combination was successfully resisted by the French; which means a temporary setback of “the endeavors of Ameri- can finance to use Germany as an advanced base for its campaign to conquer the European money market ard” The insoluble quarrel over Hun- garian reparations was “settled” by forcing Czechoslovakia to give up its part of the sum, so that Hungary could pay Italy reparations that are prior to those of Czechoslovakia, having a first lien, so to speak. This will cause further trouble in Czechoslovakia, of course, and with Hungary’s increasing bankruptcy, Italy also will have an empty ‘‘vic- tory.” Again; Win 2 Victories (Continued ‘from Page One) up. The entire public market at 284 E. 170th St., Bronx, signed. The United Hebrew Trades in- junction against the boss in the shop at 408 Troy Ave., to compel him to break his contract with the Food Clerks and discharge the union men, ‘was thrown out of court. The Food Clerks’ Union appeals | questionably, | struggle and in recognition of this Jillusion as to the role of the Work- | within this area, but ‘9 extend the not lead the workers into any strug- gle for increase of wages. 4.—The Independent Shoe Work- ers Union must recognize that the young ‘hoe workers are the best fighting elements for the building | up of the union and must draw| them into the struv and into the | leadership of the union. j Now Are Advancing. This goal can be reached by a clear understanding of the present period of the class struggle, in which the workers no longer are acting on the defensive, but definite- ly are taking the offensive against the capitalist class, being forced into the struggle as the result of rationalization. The workers, un- are in a mood to fact the leadership of the Inde- pendent Shoe Workers Union must destroy all illusions that they may | have as regards distinctions between the forces of the enemy class, and its representatives through the New York and the United States Depart- ment of La’ 1. They must have no men’s Circle leaders and the United Hebrew Trades, these social-facist organizations, which are openly combatting the interests of tle workers and support, the National Fascist Council of Hoover They must recognize that the small man- ufacturers play but a secondary role in the struggle and the main forces must be directed ~sainst the big shops controllel by the Board of ‘Trade. The Independent Shoe Work- ers Union must recognize that the struggle confined to the metropoli- tan area will not suffice and that preparations r st be made, not only for an energetic organization drive drive throughout the country, in preparation for a general strike. The shoe workers must recognize that their struggle is directly con- nected with all the other struggles and that full mobilization is neces- sary throughout the country. This mobilization through the industrial |Expect Gold To Be Out \of Canada Jail For the 'Defense Meet, Jan. 24 | | Ben Gold, now in & prison in Can ada, is expected to be out in time |to attend the Shifrin-Mineola-Gas- |tonia defense meeting to be held in {Irving Plaza, Friday night, when the five other well-known leaders in addition to many of the defendants will ‘address the audience. I. Amter, district organizer of the | Communist Party, Otto Huiswood, of |the American Negro Labor Con- |gress, J. Louis Engdahl, national | secretary of the International Labor | Defense, Michael Obermayer, of the | Amalgamated Food Workers and Sam Nesin, district organizer of the |LL.D., will also speak. Immediate need for funds in these \cases is expected to be met by mass tag days throughout the city next Saturday and Sunday. Workers are volunteering at the stations an- nounced, to get collection boxes in | whieh to gather funds. TWO STRIKES IN - COKE COAL FIELD NMU Calls All To Get Behind Union | (Continued from Page One) | 10,000 miners struck under the lead- |ership of the N.M.U,, the bosses, the |scabbing IL.W.W., and Lewis and |Fishwick machines of the United | Mine Workers of America, all co-op- erate to break the strike. The miners |know very well the United Mine Workers, led by the corrupt reac- | tionary John L. Lewis, is a company union and boss controlled organiza- tion. It was, this outfit which be- trayed the coke region miners in 1922 when victory was near. The U.M.W.A. and the Lewis machine \serve the bosses. The National Miners Union is a fighting rank and file union, seeking to obtain higher wages, better conditions, equality for the Negro miners and a better stand- | ficient. Only the mass mobilization lard of life for the miners. Join the National Miners’ Union! Fight against wage cuts! Fight for the 6-hour day and 5-day week! Fight for higher wages! Fight for ry x | the right to belong to a union! Fight 1—The majn job is to organize | apainst the speed-up and for unem- ployment benefits! Fight for equal pay for young miners! fight for full social, industrial and Negro workers! Fight for your freedom from the rile of tyrannical rule of the coal companies and their stool pigeons! “As to how to join the N.M.U., |and for further information, write to Room 410, 119 Federal St., N.S,, | | Pittsburgh, Pa. Correspondence will be held strictly confidential.” ime, Yorn’. Defies Arrest Order. CHICAGO, Ill, Jan. 20.—Miners who attended the Chicago district convention of the Trade Union Unity League, here, tell of the continued the fight against the terror at- tempted by the bosses, State, United Mine Workers and I. W. W. tional Labor Defense, I’d be in jail yet,” said Manmen, a rank and file miner who has come into prominence in the struggle in Southern Illinois. He recounted how, returning to Tay- lorville from the I. L. D. convention in Pittsburgh, where he had been sent by the local miners, he was greeted with the news that he'd be run out of town if he did any more “agitating.” Manmen’s answer to that threat was a meeting of forty- five miners in his house the very night he got back to Taylorville. The following day he had another meet- ing with eighty present, but Mon- day night they arrested him, hold- ing him incommunicado from Mon- day night until Friday night. Some seven charges were listed against him, Mammen said, but the I. L: D. got him out in time for him to get to the T. U. U. L. convention, and “was going to keep on defending him” and he wasn't “going to worry none.” Women Workers Rally to Win the Shoe Strike (Continued from Page One) while appearing before Judge Brill at the Gates Ave. court on a charge of disorderly conduct. Bock was also arrested a week ago for stand- ing near the Schwartz and Benja- min Shoe Co. in Brooklyn. Always Arrest Bock. A few days later the police ar- rested a striker who was leaving the Section Headquarters of the In- dependent Shoe Workers Union, at 163 Noll St. Bock protested the ar- test of this union member without cause. For this protest he was re- arrested in the court room, and an- other charge of disorderly conduct was placed upon Bock. He was re- leased on $500 bail. An additional unions affiliated to the Trade Union Unity League is, the safeguard for the workers of cach industry, and therefore the convention of the Textile Workers Union in Paterson, the building up of the National Miners Union, the building up of the Natioral Industrial Leagues of the T. U. U. L. as the first steps to the formation of fighting unions in th basic industries, are part of the process t’ * is takin’ place in the struggle of the workers for an im- provement of their = tion. group of about 20 strikers arrested at picket lines and demonstrations within the last week also appeareti before Judge Brill. postnoned until next Wednesday. ———— will not develop as it should. The Independent Shoe Workers Union has shown in the past that it can fight and with the proper leader- ship and proper policy, despite all the forces that are organized against the union, it will come out of the struggle with increased membership and with reinforced vitality and Unless these conditions are ful-|energy for the building up of an to all worker families to show soli- darity with the union in regard to struck and settled shops. filled and unless there is a clear|industrial union embracing all the perspective as to the nature andishoe and leather workers of the scope of the struggle, the struggle country. Help us) struggle in the coal fields, and of | “If it weren’t for the Interna- | Their cases are | “DISCUSSED FOR | CONVENTION “The capitalist press in Belgium is conducting a ridiculous cam- paign against. what it calls ‘Bol- | shevist agitation and intrigues in the Congo.’ It demands that ‘sus- | ‘Lay Basis For Many picious natives’ should be isolated | C iY al districts. | 4 4 | from the indu Struggles in N. Y. | «sn this foolishness is nothing but a cover for the fact that the resistance of the natives to op- pressive taxation and forced labor | is steadily increasing.” one picture of the Congo, sented in an Inprecorr press (Continued from Page Onc) ist and 2nd, at Irving Plaza Hall. |The resolution begins below: | “The deepening cr of Ameri- can capitalis: 1, the recurring crashes jon the stock exchange, the growing | Permanent army of unemployed, and |the consequent sharpening attacks lof the bosses against the living standards of the workers, which | But that’s a side of the Congo, lthe most vital side, that you won’t lsee in the travel film, “Up the Con- go,” now being shown at the Cameo. | Everything is hotsy-totsy in the |finds its sharpest expansion in the ai “ " [fascist council set up by Hoover, |Congo—s0, the American. “expion” which is beginning, wi i - fi ser 1 Moe as Ra asea ini vith: Sib aia Oe the medium of the film record of |the social reformists, Musteites and |". JA. F. of L. bureaucrats, to apply |theit journey. : |more and more openly fascist-ter-| The Belgian government. built |rorist methods to intensify the bur- |g0od roads, the Belgian government |den of rationalization, to cut wages did this, bla, bla, bla. |and attempt to ward off the grow-| But the Belgian government has ing crisis at the expense of the jenslaved about 75 per cent of the working masses. It further mani- population; has imprisoned a large | fests itself in the growing mood of |part of it; makes the natives do resistarice and offensive struggle of forced labor; shoots them» down |ever-broader sections of the Ameri- when they rebel; has brought dis- ‘can Working Class. The immediate ease to a once upstandingly healthy jtask confronts the Trade Union race. | Unity League of mobilizing its full) ‘These are some things the lec- strength and of co-ordinating the |turer who in sing song monotone strike struggles into a general of- fensive struggle against capitalist rationalization and the war-danger, | gamation of the Building Service and the attacks against the Soviet | workers with the Window Cleaners Union. | into a new Industrial Union, our in- “The N. Y. T. U. U. L. has many | tensive campaign among the Laun- achievements to register since the| dry Workers, Furniture Workers, Cleveland Convention (at which the | and the growth of our Metal Work- T. U. U, L. was organized Septem-|ers’ League and Textile Union, the ber 1). We have actively partici-| growth of our Marine Workers pated in many strike struggles and | League, established the fact that the made contacts with many sections |T. U. L, is on the road, extend- of workers with whom we had no |ing its activity and sinking its roots connections in the past. The New|among broad sections of unorgan- Jersey traction workers, the Metal | ized workers. Workers of Carteret, New Jersey,! In the N. Y. District, the T. U. the strike of the truckmen, oil work- | U. L. is faced with the following im- ers, the strike of the Subway and | mediate and impending struggles: Construction Workers, in which the | 1. Needle Trades. 'T. U. U. L. exposed the strike-break-| The Schlesinger _ social-fascist ing role of the A. F. of L. fakers |company-union, with the aid of the and has already laid the basis for an | bosses, police and state government, industrial union of Subway, Tunnel} is conducting a common campaign and Bridge workers. The determined |to completely company unionize the efforts of the T. U. U, L. to correct | industry and further increase speed- the errors of the left wing in iil ha and general rationalization. Window Cleaners’ strike, the amal- (To Be Continued.) NOW PLAYING! | A SOVKINO FILM TREMENDOUS! greatness, approximat- OF THE REVOLUTIONARY! STEPPES mendous acting.” a powerful drama of the Revolution in which a woma: See thrilling pic er plays the lending role in a ti LENIN addressing crowd! struggle between the Red Arm: | the Cossacks. | SPECIAL ADDED ATTRACTION! | | “CELEBRATION OF THE 12TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION” | Showing STALIN—KALININ—VOROSHILOV—and others | FILM GUILD CINEMA hse 0 Direction Symon Gould. Continuous Datly } Special Forenoon Prices—Weekdays 12-2, 35—Sat. DYNAMIC! re of a & 6th Aves, 5090 m to Midnight Sun, 12-2, 50. |C AME QXOW i? 9:4 WITH TALK AND MUSIC “UP THE CONGO” AMAZING ADVENTURE Theatre Guna Productions “METEOR” GUILD W. 6%. avs, 8:60 Mats, Th.&Sat. 2:40 A laugh with every thrill “RED RUST” By Kirchon & Ouspensky 45th Street MARTIN BECK 45th street Eves. 8:40. Mats, Thursday and Saturday at 2:40 Ethel Barrimore Theatre i} 7th Street, West of Broadway . Mats, Wed, & Sat. 3 “Death Takes a Holiday” with PHILIP MERIVALE A comedy ut I | PS 59th St. & 7th Av. Eve. 8:30 JOLSON’S Mats. ‘Thurs. and Sat. “The Prince of Pilsen” Musical Comedy Favorite with AL SHEAN VIVIAN HART, ROY CROPPER IVIC REPERTORY 14th, st Eves. 8:30. Mats. ‘Thur. Sat. 2:30 60c. $1, $1.50 NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES Loew’s “Big 2” PITKIN || PARADISE Pitkin Aven d_ Cor . ve ue Gran ni course | EVA Le GALLIENNE, Director Tonight—“THE SEA GULL” Tom, Night—“THE LIVING CORPSE” eee ——— BRONX THEATRE GUILD Sidney Stavro, Director Tremont Theatre, ‘Tremont & Web- ater Aven, Bronx Opens TONIGHT, January 21 “HHH” A antire on the medical profession, ved. & Sat. Eves. 8:0: Mats. Wed. & S: Tel. Tremont 5685. ON BOTH SCREENS oe ORES ALL TALKING! TOGETHER! “TAMING of the SHREW” Stage Shows—Both Theatres from CAPITOL THEATRE, BROADWAY COOPERATIVE RESTAURANT Service and Self-Service HAS REOPENED UNION SQUARE CAFETERIA, INC. 26-28 Union Square New York City, TUUL PROGRAM A Lot ot Things Are Not : Shown in ‘ |similar sights shown on the screen ‘Up the Congo’ explains the film (and so allows the Cameo to call it “the first talkie made in Africa”), somehow doesn’t seem to care to mention. The film is a fine photographic feat, a well-photographed record, altho no different than countless before. The travelers never manage t get too far off the beaten trac! despite the lecturer's talk of im#\ penetrable jungles. All thru the picture your, heart's with the natives who have to lug the party all across the Congo—so that the “explorers” may garner a photographic record that’s little dif- ferent than a myriad of others shown us before, and so that a man ‘with a rather nasal voice can have something to talk about and so bore an audience for over an hour, “For All Kind of Insurance” ([ARL BRODSKY | Telephone: Murray Hill 6550 7 Bast 42nd Street, New Yor! Cooperators! Patronize SEROY CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 8215 Bronx, N. Y. WORKERS’ CENTER BARBER SHOP Moved to 30 Union Square FREIBEIT BLDG.——Main Floor W. 1. R. CLOTHING STORE 5A: Ol AVENUE: Telephone Ludlow 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: IMPORTANT FOR CLUBS AND ORGANIZATIONS Typewriting, Mimeographing, Multigraphing Translations in and from ALL LANGUAGES COOPER-TISHKOFF 108 BAST 14TH ST., ROOM 200 Telephone Stuyvesant 9507 REASONABLE RATES —MELROSE— oe Always Find It Pleasant to Dine at Our Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx St, Station) INTERVALD (near 174th PHONE 14s. RATIONAL Vegetarian RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVEl UE Bet. 12th and 18th Ste, Strictly Vegetariom Food HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 6865 8 Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY! ITALIAN DISHES A. place with atmosp! where all radicals meet 302 E.12th St. New York All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 658 Claremont Parkway, Bronx DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Ri 803—Phone: Al, in O18 “°PNot connected wea ai : other office Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGRON DENTIST 249 Bas’ cor. Seconds Avan Tne ork DAILY EXCEPT FRIDAY wh mM neg spat Sa ghPralar=eet Advertise your Union Meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq.. New York City Hotel & Restaurant Workers) Auslmais Qiat Sf. Phoue Chelsea Business meeti Monday of t fe uonth 6 siducational meetings—t! Monday of the month. B: Buard | meetings—every afternoon at 5 o'clock. try! One Union} Join and the Common Enemy! Oftice cpen from 9 a. to 6 pm Sat, 2 mane, rane ‘Third ‘street NCntNs Herman, 60 |