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ve gigantic demonstration that the un- demonstrate all over the world. iwu -ATOVIS PROTEST “HOWS GROWING TASS indeed - xpresses Will to De- fend Soviet Union (Continued from Page One) g imperialist war danger. It was sign of the growing determination f the workers to organize into the ‘ighting industrial unions of the rade Union Unity League. “It demon: more than any- ning else the growing power of the | mmunist Party, which leads ers in all the struggles, ated and the ent 8 and to erect in its ‘place | @ » Soviet Government of the United tates, a Revolutionary Workers’ iovernment. “This demonstration was an an- wer to the corrupt Tammany Walker-Whalen regime, which u ts brutal Tammany police to keep | s from obtaining decent t was an answer to the ying propaganda of the Hoover im- erialist government that “prosper- ty is. permanent.” It was an an- swer to the yellow social-fascist so- cialist party and the rotten offi- ialdom of the American Federation of Labor, who are working with the rosses against the work “The yellow social fasc ts with Norman Thomas read declared the ‘Communists have . mania for martyrs,’ using the ‘anguage of the imperialist, Hoover. The socialist party cooperates with | the Tammany machine and one of! ts leading members, Charles Solo- mon, was responsible for procuring the injunction against the food clerks. In fighting against it Com- rade Steve Katovis was killed “on the picket line by the police. The role of the socialist party is that of | hangman of the working class. he struggles of the shoe, and} rs are,a demonstration of The actions of the United tates Department of Labor and of | he State Department of Labor inj in effort to crush the Independent | s Union, and brutal at; | st social- at theirs hoe Wor if the police on the food werk- | te that the capitalist gov- | s openly and brazenly operating in interests of the| bosses. The actio 3 of the state govern- ment in behalf of the reactionary needle trade union, with Green and Schlesinger collaborating with the| bosses against the workers, using | the police and gangsters, shows the | ¢ role of the government and the A. F of L. and the gangster world in the fight into which the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union is leading “o struggle to organize the tens of sasands of umorganized needle ades workers of this city and coun- try. | “Roger Baldwin, the petty-bour-| geois liberal, offers his lawyers and funds to make the fight for “free| cpeech,” but the workers have shown.| the Roger Bald s how to fight | in a poliée-ruled state. The fune- tion of the Roger Baldwin’s is to induce the workers to continue their | faith in the capitalist state and capi- | talist “justice.” | “The Communist Party known only one justice—and the workers ef this country are learning that this justice is class justice, that the | working class that struggles for| power metes out to its enemies. “The demonstration on Union} Square was a demonstration against | the brutality of the police, as tools | tools of the capitalist class. It was} a demonstration against the grow- ing danger of imperialist war, for defense of the Soviet Union, against unemployment. “The demonstration was held de- spite the decree of police commis- sioner Whalen that no demonstra- tion would be held on the square. The Communist Party was deter- mined that the demonstration on Union Square would be held. It imew that the tens of thousands of New York workers who would come to the square in anser to the call of the Communist Party would toler- ate no interference. The police com- missioner had to yield—and ae meeting was held. “The workers at the square | their jobs, came in thousands, and came to the square despite the ter- rible unemployment in the city, and with the knowledge that they were jeopardizing their job. They showed their solidarity with the Communist Party and Comrade Steve Katovis by joining the Communist Party in seores. “This demonstration will never be forgotton. It signalizes the intensi- fication of the struggles of the workers. It is the prelude for the ha ployed workers of the country a ae Hold on February 26 when the unemployed assisted and supported 4 Bren the workers on the job will “Steve Katovis’ name is written the history of the workers’ gies of this city. The workers ll remember him, and will join his -—the Communist Party—by yundreds, as a demonstration of “ir solidarity and support of the ‘solutionary working-class move- of the world. demonstration for Comrade “e Katovis was a tremendous vic- for the workers of New York the it in the final struggle to} e rotten capital-| {sticks in an attempt to br |threw stones, sticks and cans at the * | police. jhas issued orders for the arrest of | |demanding the payment of relief against the murder of Katovis will | by the District Executive Commit- | orial meeting was endorsed and all DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 29, 1930 j z \ “To Help Build Souiallom i in Soviet Russia of 12 tractors ®sent Soviet Uni in the ion an an worker 78. One of the lected from Ameri BERLIN JOBLESS STONE PARASITES Vancouver, 5 B. C. Sees | Battle of Jobless. | pees BERLIN, Jan. employed wor! Starving s the Berlin sub urbs, angered at the display of lux- ury of capitalist in the wealthy resorts near Berlin, | began «s the capitalist pleasure they passed through Koepenich on| Sunday, shouting but the cry, “Down with the bourgeoi Many of the | fat-necked Berliners were injured be- fore police could arrive. ine ar- rests, two of them wemen- —will not p the resentment of the worke Joining in the world-wide movement, they will demonstrate in masses on | Feb. 26. un- amilies Sundaying | ning the automobiles of seekers as ie!” ~“ * * Unemployed Council in Struggle. VANCOUVER, B. C., Jan. 2! Hundreds of unemployed worke' under the leadership of the Com- munist Party of Canada, battled | with the police, when the cops tried | to break up a jobless demonstrati ion | GhEh Uh relief or work at full- wage rate: Constable Reilly was cut in the: face when mounted and foot police tried to break up the jobless march. Starting their march after the | police had forbidden a parade, the unemployed were charged by a half. dozen mounted cops who used their | ak oP ’|511, New York City. the demonstration. Polly Karinsky was arrested bet} cause she struck back at mounted | to the United States, Soviet Union by the Friends bought by funds col Isend 12 Tractors | From U.S. Workers | to the Soviet Union . S. Bonnie B Brook and West om now steaming for Novoros- U. S. S. R., on the Black Sea, arry with them a precious cargo— | twelve tractors and twelve plows, the gift of the American workers and farmers to the workers and |peasants of the Soviet Union. The tractors and plows were bought with funds raised in a nation-wide cam- paign conducted by the Friends of the Soviet Union, 175 Fifth Ave., w York. The tractors are John Deere trac- tors and both they and the plows | will be shipped from Novorcssisk to Strana Sovietov, a collective ‘m on the lower Volga» Funds are now being collected by the. F. S. U. to send two Case tractors and two harvester tractors and four plows to a collective farm near Moscow. | Workers; sympathizers and organ- |izations are asked to show their solidarity with the workers and} peasants of the Soviet Union by sending funds to the Friends of the Soviet Union, 175 Fifth Ave., Room A. FL EXPOSES SELF AT TRIAL Attempt to to Jail Thre | Workers Is Boomerang) CHARLOTTE, "Jan. 28. — Joe Carr, Elbert Totherow, and C.}\ Smith, arrested, threatened with | ‘STRIKE KITCHEN; HEADQUARTERS Police Try The relief station and strike hear | quarters of the Workers Internation- |al Relief, at 94 Havemeyer Street. | | Brooklyn, was raided yesterday | morning, and 47 strikers were ar-| rested. The militant shoe strikers | | would not be scared out of their headquarters by police, judges or jail. They were arraigned at the/| Bridge Plaza Court and trial post- poned to Feb. 4, Twenty-four were | held on $100 and twenty-three were paroled until that’ date. | The frantic efforts of the bosses to have the workers’ headquarters | and, their relief stations raided by | the Whalen cossacks shows how des- | perate they are. The shoe workers, on the other hand, are more deter-|law and order”: thus sanctioning the | of the Needle Trades Workers’ In- mined than ever before to fight to} attacks, as legionnaires make up the dustrial Union, 181 West 28th S! the finish. Against Unemployment. | At the Katovis funeral demon- stration yesterday the shoe workers were present en masse. These shoe workers who have tasted the police brutality for almost 20 weeks came out to this demonstration to protest against the most severe attacks by the police upon the militant workers of all left wing industrial unions. For hours they followed the funeral procession. Many of the shoe work- | ers not on strike are unemployed, | * and regard the Katovis funeral as} a forerunner to the world demon- |i stration against Basen ment, Feb. Saakebdey: in Gates Ave. court, | bosses ¢ry their hardest to frame, ; the shoe strikers. About 120 cases |of disorderly conduct, contempt of court, and misdemeanor of all kinds were hurled at these shoe strikers Judge Raffel, who was sitting there |today was compelled to dismiss | | about half of the cases on account of lack of evidence. The judge then postponed the remainder of the) | cases. | The Women’s Department of the | ee | Independent Shoe Workers Union is | one given on Friday at 3 p ‘ealling a shop delegate conference of women of organized and seen ganized shops for Monday evening, | | Feb. 3, at the union headquarters, 16 West 21st St., New York City. All women shoe workers are called Constable Albert Doe, when he tried | knifing, and thrown out of the AFL! upon to elect their delegates to this to hit her. As a result the gun-} man’s horse reared up in the air and} he had to jump off. The workers Chief of police, W. J. Bingham, the leaders of the Unemployed Coun- cil. The unemployed workers are wages and against wage cuts. To Hold Katovis ™“amorial Meet on | Meh. Ind in Bronx} v memorial meet- ing will be held this Sunday, Feb. 2, at Ambassador Hall, 3875 3rd Ave., at 2:30 p. m. The tremendous protest aroused be continued at this Bronx meeting. All workers’ organizations are urged to send speakers, delegations, and placards to participate in the! meeting. In a statement issued yestei tee, the Bronx Steve Katovis mem- workers were urged to attend. The statement read in part: “The New York workers have given fit- ting answer to the alliance of Charles Solomon, Norman Thomas, and the socialist party with the po- lice and Tammany machine in the| murder of striking workers in New| York yesterday at the tremendous Union Square demonstration and subsequent parade. . “The memory of Comrade Ka- tovis will not be allowed to ewane, but will be continued in the strug> gles of the workers throughout the country.” Organize for Relief in Answer to Attacks of Whalen’s Cossacks The workers of New York are mobilizing to give the proper answer to the brutality of the Whalen cos- sacks. On Saturday and Sunday, February 8 and 9 hundreds of work- ers will go out into the streets of New York to raise funds for the support of the starving strikers en- gaged in the strike of the shoe work- ers, the needle trades in New York and the militant miners who are fighting in Illnois. It is the duty of every Commu- nist, of every class conscious work- er to register in one of the stations of the Workers International Relief and make Saturday and Sunday, Feb. 8 and 9, days of class solidar- ity. All secretaries of Party Units, of unions, fraternal organizations, workers clubs, workers schools, womens’ councils, and all other or- ganizations, must place on the order of business at their next meeting the question of the Tag Day of the W.LR. Elect W.LR. representatives ist Party of U.S.A. District Bureau, District New York. and get in touch immediately with the local officé of the Workers In- ternational Relief, 799° Broadway, | A.F.L. has completely exposed itself |“opening, meeting” at which they were the only real workers present. were released yesterday after a hearing in court in which the = got badly mixed in tlfeir stories. The A.F.L. witnesses had to admit that all Totherow and Carr wanted} was the floor to expose the A.F.L. | and the United Textile Workers | anti-labor activities in the South. The court house was packed with | Negro and white workers who with ly saw that the A.F.L. officials who | made up the so-called “Piedmont Organization Conference” and mass | meeting, did nothing to give Carr and Totherow the floor because they | had no answer to his criticism of A.F.L. policies, « The was case dismissed. The and its collusion with the police, in a conspiracy against the eworkers. | Policeman Lyles, according to the police and to the A.F.L. leaders, at- | tended in a double capacity, as a} delegate of the A.F.L. conference, | and as a policeman to arrest rea} | workers there. | The misleaders, trying to prove that they had a case against those arrested, swore they did not dis- tribute leaflets advertising their meeting and “were not trying to make it a mass meeting.” NEWS BRIEFS WHITE GUARD HEAD VAN- ISHES. PARIS, Jan. 28.—General Koute- poff, who two years ago took lead- ership of the-Czarist White Guard military, which is organized «in France by the kind permission of the French government (which har- bors this bunch of snakes, although it sustains relations under tpeaty with the Soviet Union), has van- ished. He was last seen attending church last week. It is expected that he either is on some secret counter-revolutionary mission or may be found in one of ‘the opium dens on the Montmartre. a SANDINO LOOKS FOR WHAT HE LOST. MEXICO CITY, Jan, 28.—San- dino, who quit the fight in Nica- ragua last year to take a wholly un- explained “rest” at Merida, Yuca- tan, after exchanging correspond- ence with Mexicap government offi- cials, the contents of which he has failed to make public, arrived here today. He expected to be met by a swarm of sympathizers, but none showed up, except his personal rep- resentative, Dr. Pedro Zepeda, a bourgeois and a friénd of the Por- tes Gil-Calles-Rubio group of Yan- kee imperialist lackeys.. Sandino came by plane of the Pan-American Airways from Merida to Vera Craz, though he himself ostentatiously claimed that the charge of taking bribes to quit the fight was “dis- proven” by his riding a day coach from Vera Cruz. He says he plans conference where most important questions of the trade will be dis- cussed, ‘SHARP RIVALRIES AT LONDON MEET, |To Hold Open Session Thursday for Hokum LONDON, Jan. 28.—After holding secret sessions for over" a week, the |vece-for-armaments conference, in | which the imperialists expressed the sharpest rivalries in their struggle for more war armaments, will hold | ° an-open session Thursday, at which a lot of fake phrases will be tossed off in an attempt to hide the war preparations and the threatened at- tacks on the Soviet Union. he Thursday session will be taken up with the “agenda.” Inga speech broadcasted from England to every part of the United States, Henry L. Stimson, head of the U. S. delegation spent his time denying rumors and trying to cover up the fact that the conference is in reality a struggle for more naval war armaments. “Parity between Great Britain and America is not a doctrine of naval rivalry,” said Stimson, who also said some time ago that the war threat against the Soviet Union “was not an unfriendly act.” As a stage-play, MacDonald has! ordered the cancellation of the re-} fitting of outworn cruisers. But, meanwhile both in the United States and Great Britain work on new, more powerful cruisers is proceeding rapidly. . Shifrin SpéaksTonight; Defends Self from Fate Meted Out to Katovis William Shifrin, militant worker, held under a murder charge for de- fending himself against gangsters s in 1928, who goes on trial in two weeks in Bronx Court, will be the principal speaker at a Steve Katovis memorial meeting, tonight, in Will- iamsburg Workers’ Center, at 688 Broadway, near Whipple St., Will- iamsburg. Shifrin, a personal ffiend of Kas tovis, will tell of the similarity of his case—and the murder of Ka- tovis. “If I hadn’t defended my- self,” he, said today, “I, too, would have been killed as Katovis was.” Shifrin, like aKtovis, was fighting to organize workers menaced by unem- ployment, low wages and the right union misleaders. Other speakers will be Sam Nesin, district organizer of the Interna- tional Labor Defender, and M. E, Taft. Nessin today requested that all workers who collected funds for the LL,D. in its big array of cases, turn the money over at once—as funds are greatly needed immediately on o resume the struggle in Nicaragua, "pn 221. that it was only “postponed.” the Shifrin-Mineola-Gastonia defense AGAINRAID SHOE. FRUIT BOSSES | Santa Clara valleys. SEND GANGS TO KILL FILIPINOES. to Starve American Legion Gun- Camegie Hall recital on Sunday aft- Strikers Into Slavery |men Patrol Cal. Roads |i on oe at ee tasek maa SAN FRA 28. NCISCO, Cal., Jan. | ed by the fruit and vegetable ranch lowners of California are spreading throughout the entire Pajaro and | Starting in ; Watsonville with, assaults on Fili- pino and Oriental workers, and the murder of one Filipino worker in his cabin by riflemen, they hay, |been further stimulated by the pa- trolling of the highways by armed American Legionnaires, deputized | 77 ..41, t by the sheriffs. Governor Young authorizes the Legion to “maintain | lynch gangs sent against the Fili- |pinoes. Many Filipinoes defended | themselves heroically and the cas- ualties are not all on one side, Workers School Hails Katovis Demonstration | - Ononing Mew Term The stirring enthusiasm created by the gigantic demonstration of | | the workers against police brutality in yesterday’s Union Square meet- | ing and parade along with the huge | gains in the membership drive has | jset for the Workers School the | great task of ‘satisfying the ideolo- | it could be plainly seen how the shoe | gical needs of the new recruits. In its Spring Term, which begins | | this Monday, Feb. 3, an to which | | all registered and noi ered students are summoned .for’ a gen- | ral membership i Monday at 7:30 p. m., the Wor s School has provided a wide curriculum. is of specia: importance that new Party recruits enroll promptly in one of the.-many Fundamentals of Communism classes. These classes given every night in the week and m.. for | night workers makes it possible for any worker to enroll. Communist Activities District Agitprop, Discussion——Outlines Leninism and war danger ready. oe ee * Unit 2, Section 4, Meeting postpowed to Thursday, Jan. $0, 8 p m., 147 E. 103 St, Room 6 eee * Seetion 1. organizers of Monday and Wednesday Units must report to seca | tion head&quarters at 5:30 before the unit_ meetings. All must call meetings for Wednesday or Thufsday Unit 7, Seetio Wednesay, January jat new headquarters, 3 ,Unit R2, lecacnaa: Educational meeting, January 29, at Manhattan Lyceum, cast Fourth St, rea * Open Forun 1 Am near 0 a.m. at Third Ave., of v Auspices, S: and Left Wing m tL. local. Iucational Seuting: Unit Section 1, wil have an educational meeting this Wednes 8 p. m., at Manhattan Lyceum, 66 Fourth’ st, Rue eee Branch 1, Section 8. Because of District membership meet Eecutive will meet, Wednesd 7p. m., at 105 Thadfor Ave. Memb: ship meet § m, oh * Section 1 Agitpro Meets tonight 8 p, m. 7 Bast ath Street with all Unit Agitprop di- rectors. . (ee ae J Unit 5, Seetion 7. Wednesday, Jan. 29, 8.30 p. m., Mer. maid Ave. en me Section Industrial Organizers, Thursday, Jan. 30, 7 p. m, at 2% ith Street. Ce ae Unit GF, Section 1. Thursday, Jan. 30, ame place. Metnt Fraction, Friday, night, 8 p, m., 26 Union S). ‘Labor and :Fraterna! .Organizations All income affairs, such ax bazaars, | dances, concerts, ‘etc. for which or- ganizations desire publicity in this column, must be pald for at the rate of $1.60 for a singe inxertion, $2.00 for three insertions. The xpace al, lowed at this rate ix a maximum of five lines with five words .to each Ine. A total of 25 words, seems ei: Mass Meeting. Jan, 31, 8.30 p m., 227 Brighton Beach ‘Ave. Prominent speakers. Auspices Communist Party Section 7 and Brighton Workers Club. Workers Laboratory ‘Theatre, Wednesday, 8"p. m,, bah oreens chool. Executive at 7 p. Downtown a0, Wednesday, January 29, 8 p. m., at Workers’ Genten, Friday, * 8 Mass Protest Meeting. Against police brutality and shoot. ing of Steve, Katovis, Wednesday, | January 29, 6 688 Broadway, Whipple St. entrance, Brooklyn. Auspicee LL.D. Willamsburg Educational Meeting. Wednesday, January 29, at Lyceum, 66 East Fourth St., arranged by Unit R2, Section 1. IMPORTANT FOR CLUBS AND ORGANIZATIONS : Typewriting, Mimeograph!::- Multigraphing Translations in and from ALL LANGUAGES COOPER-TISHKOFF 108 EAST 14TH ST., ROOM 200 Telephone Stuyvesant 9507 fund. REASONABLE RATES —‘“Race riots” deliberately foment- | Itz ‘tof an Empire” Weatesday, | | | LEVITZKI IN RECITAL AT Rene LeRoy, flutist, will give th CARNEGIE SUNDAY recital at Steinway Hall, ‘evening, their program comp Mischa Levitzki, the pianist, who | recently returned from a European tour and is now touring the Ameri- can hinterland, will include in h jor with the Turkish March and Schumann’s Symphonic Studies. | Giving her second recital of the season at Town Hall, Wednesday |evening, Winifred Macbride, pian- liste, will play the Bach-Tausig Toc- ata and Fugue in D minor, the |Schumann Scenes from Childhood the Brahms Sonata in F minor and a group of Chopin and Liszt. Marcel Grandjany, harpist, and Bessie I Conrad two of the s in “Hol Revue,” now showing at the djse and Pitkin Theatres. Jobless: Needle Trades ee Elect Today to, tion’s Council |jic Gant ph. Emmanuel Bach sonata lin C, the Jean Sebastian Bach son- ata, as well as a group of harp los and a group ef modern compo- sitions for harp and flute, Agnes deMille, the character dancer, assisted by Frank Parker, diseur, Warren Leonard, dancer, and |Louis Horst, pianist, will give her ital at the Forrest Theatre on Sunday evening. Para- a Today at 1 p, m., in the offices | the unemployed needle workers wil |meet to elect their representatives | to the shop delegate coun@l of the junion, The union feels that many | lof the tens of thousands of unem- ployed who. participated in yester- day’s huge demenstration in Union ee ye ra will wish to parti ipate here, | oT RE KILLER” SHOWN AT Tomorrow the union goes over BRONX THEATRE GUILD | completely to the shop delegate sy: The second duction of the jtem: ‘That night az 7:30 p. m. | Bronx Theatre Guild, Luther Yantis’ | Manhattan Lyceum, the membe: e Killer,” was nted last of the newly elected shop delegat ht by the Bronx Theatre Guild council will be installed. Sympa- at their new home, | thetic labor, orgarizations are in-| Theatre, the Bronx: vited to send representatives to the meeting. {will alternate with “H.IH.H.” Tonight at 7 p. m., in the union|' Sidney Stavro, director of the | offices, a special we actin, the last | Guild, heads the cast. Others in the meeting of the old joint board ot the| company include -Hassel Shelton, junion is called. This betrd‘disap-|Ruth Amos, Eddie Khy, R | pears wien ‘he shop delegates coun- | Blake, Joan Danton, Claude | cil takes over direction of the union. and Francesca Redding. the »Tremont It will be pre- CAMEO*: j42nd st, Phone “it's a fine picture, real! “Russian Moviet Rip Van Winkle th Prize.” vivid scenes of pre t day Russia.” —Daily’ Worker. Wins 3 Star —Daily News. me of the most ures yet (o emerge viet Russia.” sntinf: fro er gives a vivid mpressive, {i Y. American, AMKINO PRESENTS The American Premiere “A Fragment PRODUCED BY SOVKINO OF Moscow The Rebirth of a Shell-Shocked Man TREMENDOUS, MIGHTY, CONSTRUCTIVE i cw REPERTORY Lith st bs fhur $150 Theatre Guild Productions =""4) “METEOR” 2 30 20. Mats Be $1 By 8..N. BEHRMAN = * | . Director | ‘Ton’ N HAVE | ‘GUILD W. 62. Eve, 8:6 T | *Mats. Th.&Sat. 2:46 ‘Tom, Mat— IRRY ORC OE peas Tom. Night—*TIL 10) SEA GULL | LAST WEEK! | ELTINGE Thea. 42nd sts w. Bre Wednendas Mats. pre | “RED RUST” By Kirchon & Ouspensky MARTIN BECK Eves. $:40. Mat: and Saturday at A Love Story by Preston Stufges Author of “Striétly Dishonorabie” MUSIC AND CONCERTS CARNEGIE HALL Sunday Afternoon, Feb. 2 LEVITZKI-= PIANIST Concert Mgt. Daniel Mayer, Inc. (Steinway Piano) NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES 2:40 Ethel Barrimore ‘Theatre 47th Street, West of Broadway Eves, 8:50, Mats. Wed. & Sat, 2:30 “Death Takes a Holiday” with PHILIP MERIVALE A comedy about life. 59th St. & 7th Av, Evs. 8:30 |JOLSON'S- Mats, ‘Thurs, and Sat. ‘The Chocolate Soldier’ OSCAR STRAUS OPERETTA Loe Chatten Puree, tice maetcens:: || PYTKIN. |] PARADISE VIVIAN: BAR, ROY PROPER || Vitkin Avenue Grand Concourse Brooklyn Bronx BRONX THEATRE ‘GUILD Sidney Stavro, Director Tremont Theatre, Tremont & Web- ater Aves. Bronx “THE KILLER” A mae on A me aad BLEM mw ON BOTH SCREENS STARS—CHORUS OF 200 “HOLLYWOOD REVUE” TALKING + AND ANCING SING + Even, aise. ies. Wed. & sat. M-G-M Picture Mics weenie cline or pr,|| St28¢ Shows—Both Theatres trom Caligart.” Mat. 35c. Eve, 50¢| | CAPITOL THEATRE. BROADWAY em yeremiene sais EAST SIDE THEATRES 2nd Ave. Playhouse 133 SECOND AVENUE, CORNER 2 be STREET Continuous Noon to Midnight. Fovalay Prices. TODAY—LAST DAY! “LOVES OF CASANOVA” with IVAN MOSJONKINE SHIPS A SOVKINO "NEWS VAMPIRES Celebration of the 12th Anniverniry OF THE SEA of the Russian Revolution YoTE—Beginning Thursday, Jan, 30, the famous Soviet drame—“THE VILLAGE OF SIN” sented for the week, and thereafter | CAPTURE” > |Amter Talks on World Jobless Day I. Amter, District Organizer of |the Communist Party, is scheduled to speak at the Workers School For- um, 26 Union Sq., on Sunday, Feb. 2 at 8 p. m. stressing unemploymeni and the political significance of the late Feb, 26, which has been set ide for/the world-wide fight of the Admission to the lecture is ASS COLLESTIONS. tions days throughout begun Seturday and Sunday to meet the tremendous expenses of he mounting numbers of class-war specially, the Shifrin-Mineola stonia cases, will continue Sam Nesi i s colle the cit ivities over the wee itated the calling of ad- ral collections this week for the L. D. Great amounts are needed o meet the legal expenses.” “For All Kind of Insurance” Ue BRODSKY Velephone: Murray Hill 65541 42nd Street, New York Cooperators! Patronize CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Bronx, NY WORKERS’ CENTER BARBER SHOP Moved to 30 Union Square PREIGEIT BLDG——Main Floor . LR. CLOTHING STORE BROOK AV doe phone Ludlow Cleanthg’ Pressing, Repairing High Class Work Done Goods Called for and Delivered All profits go towards strikers and their families. SHOW ba 2 sO DARITY * iTh ' WORKERS: -—-MELROSE—, : VEGETARIAN Dairy ‘nestavnant : Coe Will Always Find t1 Pleasant to Mine at Our Pince 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD, Bronx (near 174th St, Stations PHONE: INTERVALE 9149 | RATIONAL | Vegetarian RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVE: UE Bet. 12th and 13th Sts. Strictly Vegetarian Food ——— ee HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE, Phone: UNI versity 5865 x : Stuyvesant 8316 s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES “A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 02H.12th St. New York | || AU Comrades Meet at | BRONSTEIN | Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Rcom 803—Phone: Algonquin 6183 Not connected with any other office | | a | { Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON. DENTIST | 249 EAST 115th STREET. 5 Cor. Second Ave. New York | DAILY XCEPT FRIDAY lease telephone for appointment ‘Telephone: Lehigh 6022 Advertise your Union Meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER | \ Advertising Dept. |] 26-28 Union Sq., New York City Hotel & Restaurant Workers Reranch of the Amal Ps. Ey Chelsen 2274 © Business meetings held the first Monday of the month at m, ducational meetings—t third Monday of the month, mpecutt val Bourd | meetings—every esday afternoon at 6 o'eloek istry! One Union! J the Common E TCHERS’ UNION Leva 174, Ad LW. of M.A. Office at Headquarters: Sth st. Labor femple, 243 B, oom 1 « T t a a t a