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! Page Two DALIY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1930 = MINNEAPOLIS BOSSES, A.F.L. PLAN “SURVEY” AS JOBLESS STARVE! Labor Fakers Working Hand in Glove With Bossses for Big Sell-Out But Unemployed Councils of the T. U. U. L Organizing for Huge March 6 Demonstration MINNEAPOLIS.—The unemploy- | Unemployed Council is functioning ment situation in the city of Minne-|in both Minneapolis and St. Paul. apolis is becoming increasingly | The unemployed workers are signing acute. Thousands upon thousands /| up in them continuously, of workers are walking the streets} Two withont food or shelter. families are faced with evictions! ent time the councils are working from the hovels where they must/ diligently for immediate relief for live. the needy members, and also for the In spite of the big noise that was! preparation for the March 6 demon- raised during the Hoover industrial | stration, which will be held all over conference about public works and| the world, led by the Communist about “Forward America, Business| International and the Communist js Good,” ete., the situation has not! Parties of the various countries, bettered. The American Federation | bureawerats have done nothing,! been elected from the working class promises are still less from them.| organizations of the city. The) The A. F. of L. officialdom has| demonstration is going to be the degenerated to where they are com-/ biggest ever held in Minneapolis. pletely at the disposal of the bosses, ee a in their fight against the workers. ROCHESTER, N. Y.—More than} Since the organization of the Un-| two hundred unemployed workers, employed Council by the T. U. U. L.,| men and women, attended the mass the A. F. of L. fakirs woke up to the| meeting called by the local section fact that the workers would orga-| of the T. U. U. L. for the purpose of nize in spite of them and their} organizing an Unemployed Council sabotage. So they are now working} and making arrangements for the together with the bosses and the| Internatioal Unemployed Day ses’ city administration, to make} demonstrations on the 6th of March. a survey of the unemployment sit- Sam Essman, who was the! uation. | speaker, pointed out to the workers | They are working on a similar; the causes of the present crisis, plan of selling out the workers as| rationalization, competition for that of William Green at the Hoover! world markets; and explained the Industrial Conference on a nation-| danger of an imperialist attack | wide scale. Meanwhile the army of | against the Soviet Union. jobless is increasing from day to! The workers showed a militant| day; workers are becoming des-| spirit and expressed a determina-| perate of want and hunger. Jobs| tion to fight for the slogan of the! are impossible to get. Unemployed Council, “Work or The only organization that is or-| Wages, Defend the Soviet Union,” ganizing the unemployed together /ete. Many of them expressed a with the employed workers in the} readiness to join the Communist Twin Cities is the TUUL and the| Party. Three workers filled out} workers are responding, too. An] applications for membership, | “Work or Wages” Needle Trades Strike | Slogan At Meeting in Saks; 2 Kidnapped (Continued from Page One) (Continued from Page One) Greater New York and New Jersey | needle trades workers are beginning in the huge unemployment demon- | generally to realize that the Schies- strations called by the Communist |inger settlement means only worse | conditions and the company union | Party for March 6. All unemployed workers. labor |for them unless they fight against unions, fraternal organizations and | it. workers in shops and factories that; The LL.G.W. hired gangsters are have not yet elected delegates to this | continuing their efforts to club mili- suecessful demonstrations | Men with | have been held already. At the pres-/ Delegates to the conference have | |Machines Take Pennies [from Snow-Shovellers hy, | In New York and other large cities, where after hours of long waiting in the bitter cold, the job- less could get a few hours worl: shovelling snow, machines are dis- placing them entirely now. Som« time ago, the city officials in New York proposed instituting a chem- tcal process of removing snow from the streets. MEETING TONIGHT Schwartz, Benjamin Case Postponed The Youth Section of the Inde- pendent Shoe Workers Union is call- ing a mass meeting of all y shoe workers of the union, . and open shops of N. Y. and vicinity tonight at 6.30 at the union head- quarters, 16 West 2Ist St. At this meeting the young shoe workers wi!l discuss problems of the young work- their organization into the militant union. The formation of youth sec- tions in the shops will be formulated. | Addressing mass meeting will be: | L. Schwartz, organizer of the Youth SHOE UNION HOLD ers in the industry and methods for | 500 IN NEWARK | DEFENSE MEET. FOR ACTION | Many Negro Workers; } Girl Ordered Beaten | NEWARK, N. J., Feb. 17.—Five hundred Negro and white workers defied the bosses and their author- | ities last night and held an enthusi- astic mass meeting to protest the arrest of workers held under $100,- 000 bail on criminal syndicalist ‘ charges, speaking from the floor and declaring “we won’t halt the ight till all the workers are freed.” Negro workers were especially ac- tive in calling for the defense of the workers who had attended the Un- employed Council meeting when the police made the arrest. One of the (workers, a World War veteran, showed a line of medals on his coat that he had been given, and offered to trade them in for a job. He praised the work of the Unemployed Couneil and the International Labor Defense which had called the pro- test meeting. Girl Ordered Beaten, Marie Staff, 18-year-old worker, ordered by the court to be whipped by her father in public, defied the demand of the judge, Harold Si- mandl, to give up her working-class activities and appeared at the meet- | ing. She was greatly applauded when she declared “I intend to con- tinue my work for the International Labor Defense, the Trade Union Unity League and the Communist | Party, and I intend to go on distrib- uting pamphlets and laboring for the cause of the working class—my | class.” The capitalist press has been pub-, | lishing slanderous statements that this young worker had “recanted.” Others who spoke were Sam Levine, who was badly beaten by the police last week; Sam Nesin, district or- ganizer of the I.L.D.; Harry Buek- jley, organizer of the I.L.D. and | member of the Gastonia Labor Jury, |and Sadie Van Veen. It was announced at the meeting that the Negro worker who aad been | Dept. Section; I. Clinghoffer, repre-| arrested has keen held i snvuni- sentative of the Youth Dept. of the|cadc, the au horities ref sing the | prominent speakers of the union. | The following are the slogans anc | demands of the young shoe workers: | 40-hour 5-day week and elimination }of the piece-work system for all workers, 6-hour 5-day week, two 15 | minutes rest periods daily, 2 weeks’ | vacation with pay and social insur- !T.U.U.L, N. Y. District, and other | L.L.D. lawyer permission t see him. Womens Organizations Will Help in Strike, Struggle on Feb. 22-23 The Strike and Struggle Fund Today in History of the Workers saddest ococibeal OSE February 18, 1915—Rosa Lux- emburg, German Communist lead- er, placed under “precautionary arrest.” 1919-—Boston sympathi- zers with textile strike deported from Lawrence, Mass., by police. 1925—Five German Communists sentenced to 16 to 17% years’ im- prisonment for Hamburg uprising. | } MINER LEADERS WON'T PAY FINES | Frame Court Contempt: Cases on Hawkins MOUNDSVILLE, W. Vs., Feb. 17. A move to make permanent the tem- porary injunction against picketing will be made by both the Eim Grove and Glendale conipanies in the Ohio county circuit court in Wheeling on Monday. More than 1,500 miners are on strike here and in Powhatan against a wage cut and for a series of local demands, under the leader- ship of the National Miners Union. The original charge of inciting to riot having fallen through, Ike Haw- kins, head of the Negro organizing department of the N.M.U., Frank Sepich, Ohio district vice-president of the union, and five strikers were convicted of trespassing and fined $10 and costs each. Refusing to pay the fines the men were sent back to jail, where they are now serving 10-day terms. While in jail they were served with the injunction papers ordering them to appear in court today, where a move will un- doubtedly be made to railroad them to prison for “contempt of court” on the basis of the injunction. Jack Rose, Cleveland secretary of the In- ternational Labor Defense, has ar- rived here, and is making efforts to get the miners out of jail pending | appeal. The immediate vicinity of the struck mines is infested with state troopers and deputy sheriffs, armed with sawed-off shotguns, and by a variety of company stoolpigeons. Meanwhile, in an attempt to bluff the miners back te work, the com- pany has posted notices in the mine that unless the men return to their jobs by today they forfeit their chances to slave for the company. The men see clearly through this old bluff, leaders of the strike declare, saying that the miners will not re- turn to work until they have won all | their demands. “8 6 MASS PROTESTS SAVE 2 FROM DEPORTATION | Ke motsuand Agopsca Saved from Death Julius Agopsca and his wife, of| Detroit, and Kenmotsu, Japanese | leader in the Imperialist Valley | strike, of California, all of whom) face death in their fascist-ruled | countries, have been saved by mass | protest mobilized by the Tnterna- | tional Labor Defense. | The deportation proceedings) against them have been halted. The | LL.D. which brought attention to| these cases, and fought to keep the| workers in the United States, re-| ceived word today of the victory. Mass pressure must be continued in order to halt the government from sending Stephen Zinich, editor of | Radnik and many others, out of the | land. Immediate response by the mili-| tant working class press and mass meetings throughout the land de-| manding the freedom of the workers | facing deportation, caused the re-! sults. The LL.D. is continuing its | fight against the deportation dan- ger—as well as intensifying the fight against the criminal syndical- | ism and sedition laws over the land. | ‘aka hihipaninnsiesanss | 35TH MONROE CAFETERIA OUT.) (Continued from Page One) the food workers that this is the| time for the beginning of rea! mili- tant struggles against miserable conditions,” said officials of the| union yesterday. The workers of hundreds of unor- ganized shops in this city are look- ing forward to the Hotel, Restau- rant and Cafeteria Workers Union | March |Call N. Y. Conference | Feb. 22 to Mobilize | for Int’l Women’s Day MOBILIZE TO COMBAT WAR ~ THREAT ON USSR Shop Delegates Meet To Be Held March 7 (Continued from Page One) tion of the backward reactionary masses all over the world by the church, the Executive Committee of the Friends of the Soviet Union has decided to meet these reactionary demonstrations organized by Bishop shops to act as instruments for the, Manning in harmony with other mobilization of the worker forces of black reaction in Italy, International Women’s Day is this , Great Britain and France, by a pow- year, unlike the practice in previ erful counter demonstration of the years, being celebrated on the day—| American workers. 8—when it occurs, The “On March 7 a conference of bration, which is under the auspices | workers from the shops, called by of the Communist Party, will be! the Friends of the Soviet Union, will held at 8 p. m. at Irving Plaza, 15th| come together in New York to con- St. and Irving Place. Two halls| sider this campaign against the have been engaged to handle the! enemies of the U.S.S.R. large crowd expected. “On March 16, the day that The Eastern District Women’s; Bishop Manning starts his prayer Needle Trades Conference, held last | meetings against the Union of So- The mobilization of thousands of |New York workers, _ particularly | those in the basic industries, |the celebration of International | Women’s Day March 8 will be the | chief task of a conference called by | the New York District of the Com- munist Party for Saturd: 2, lat 2 p. m. at the Work 26 Union Square. Trade Unions, workers’ fraternal organizations, organized and unor- ganized workers in shops and fac- tories are now electing delegates to this conference, which will form plans for building International Women’s Day Committees in the g Center, Saturday, endorsed International Women’s Day and in its chief reso- lution called upon all workers to aid the Communist Party in rally- ing workers, both men and women, for this great occasion. The dele-| gates pledged themselves to carry on activity.in the shops for Interna- tional Women’s Day. Every new Daily Worker reader | you get is a potential Party mem- ber. | = Section of the Trade Union Unity | | League, which is the only organiza- tion in this city that has preven | through the past strugg’es that it | is able to iead the food wo! rkers «n | to victory.” { } ‘A Theatre Guild Production™""* | cialist Soviet Republics, which ir reality are a cover for the prepara- tion of war against the Soviet Union the Friends of the Soviet Union will hold a mass meeting in Madison Square Garden in order to fight this new and vicious offensive against the first Workers’ Republic. “Bishop William Montgomery Brown will participate in this meet- ing, and will be one of the speakers against the slanderous attack of the church on the U.S.S.R.” RITE about your conditions for the Daily Worker. Become a Worker Correspondent. “For All Kind of Insuranee” ([ARL BRODSKY ‘Telephone: Murray Hil! 6550 7 East 42nd Street, New York NOW| Wisconsin C AMEQ iid ST. & B'WAY 178 4| First Time at Popular Prices! “METEOR? | By 8, N. BEHRMAN Their First TALKING Pictare || “ACROSS THE WORLD” |, MARTIN JOHNSON GI Mr. and Mrs. JILD. - 8% evs. 8:50 Mts.Thur.&Sa@t.2:40 NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES | | Loew’s Big 2” | Cooperators! Patronize SEROY 657 Estabrook 3215 CHEMIST Allerton Avenue Comrades Meet at Bronx, N. ¥. | PARK RESTAURANT PARADISE |} coed Avni ptetee ave. Ethel Barrimore Theatre| 47th Street, West of Broadway | Hives, 8:50. Mate, Wed. & Sat. 2:30 Death Takes a Holiday! A comedy abont life. with PHILIP MERIVALE | JOLSONS’ all-important conference are urged |tant workers into accepting the com- anc =! pe e for young workers. Teg days arranged by the National td do so at once. Wi - Ingndredy jpany union, and have the full co-| Jy the Aphallats Division of the | Textile orkers Wolo 408 Paterson if “opamp ate pt joa iggy bai fegeaee of the police. _«, | Borough of Brooklyn a hearing of | and for the South, will have the sup- TUUL age Nai rail a ett FS bieisirbawn Ata OUD oF AoA | the Schwartz and Benjamin injunc- | port of women’s organizations. All the T.U.U.L, is bending all energies |thugs sprang upon il Block in tion was supposed to take place yes- | women workers will be mobilized for toward making this conference truly | front of 500 Seventh Ave. and start- | terday morning, so Eisenberg, co |those important tag days. Beat ae tne teesd -Cantetle er hg tng him away. He put up 4 sel for the Metropolitan Shoe Manu-| Women's councils, Finnish and of the Unemployed Councils | fight, broke loose, and would have) facturers Association, decided to be other women’s groups stand ready N.M.U. Raps Injunction. PITTSBURGH, Pa., Feb, 17.—The National Miners Union, in a state- ment issued today, denounced the | arrest of I. Hawkins, Frank Sepich and five other miners in connection with the Moundsville strike. “Smash PITKIN Pitkin Avenue Brooklya A GOOD PLACE TO EAT Open All Night. Ladies Invited. \—MELROSE— Grand Concourse t Bronx H ON BOTH SCREENS GEORGE 59th St. & Tth Av. Evs. Mats. Thurs. and organized by the T.U.U.L, will be | escaped, had not the Tammany po-! jn Palm Beach. t 4 * foe . and |li icer N ‘ane | - ito support the N..W.U. Strike and} the injunction,” the statement de- | : VEGETARIAN wtrneied te conference, a [Seeman Ota Noid stasned "afar Mat grosine judge of Sencha tag Deion he anon |The Count of Luxembourg” | BANCROFT || Dateien o Mine at Our Pisce. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD, Brons (near 174th St. Station) PHONE INTERVALD they will act as the spearheads in| there, seized him and turned him | tpa+ div: hi Fy i: ‘ wh } ted | sat division then ruled that the) ration for the coming Paterson the drive to organize the unemployed | over to the gangsters. hearing be again postponed | strike and for the strengthening of in a fight against the mass starva-) They dragged him along the street, after months of delay. ‘forces in the South. One hundred tion to which capitalism is condemn- | and at 37th St. two more police offi- | Women shoe workers are mobil-| per cent mobilization for this vital ing them. Unemployment insurance, cers came over. When the police | icing for an organization campaign. itask is expected. Women workers are emergency relief, the seven-hour, {saw the situation they said to Block, | For this purpose the Women’s De-! asked to report at 11 a. m. on Sat- five-day week, no work no rent, | “You have got to go along with | partment of the union is calling a | urday, “February 22, at the union fight the imperialist war danger these men. They will give you pro- | mass meeting on Tuesday, Feb. 25, headquarters, 96 Fifth Ave., or call and defend the Soviet Union—these | tection. at 7:30 p. m. at the union head- yp the National Textile Workers to be intimidated by the latest move | of the company t 1 PEN Mth St Acting President Freeman Thomp- | eve REPERTORY 6th Ave. son of the N.M.U., and Lil Andrews, | maple ba ber Met chet convicted of criminal syndicalism, | EVA Le GALLIENNE, Director under the Ohio law, and out on bail, | Tonight—“THE $A GULLY i sppaking to miners’ mass meetings, | FOR Sigerererers ton te SER are active now in the Moundsville strike. They, with other organizers, “THE MIGHTY”| ALL TALKING Stage Shows—Both Thentres trom CAPITOL THEATRE, BROADWAY | names pai Vegetarian and other demands raised by the | Taken to Thug Hall. T.U.U.L. will be discussed by the The kidnapers took Block by force delegates whose iask will then be | t, Arlington Hall, Seblesinger’s | to popularize them among thousands | thug headquarters, where he found | of workers. another needle trades militant, The conference will also serve a5 Schulman, similarly kidnaped. The | a preliminary mobslization Yor the | two prisoners were taken separately | big convention of the Metropolitan | into another room and told they | Area T.U.U.L. to be held March 1-2| youtg have to register with the I. L. | in Irving Plaza, 15th St. and Irving |G, W., and pay $10 each. They ‘r0- | quarters, 16 W. 2ist St. Arrest 3 Wash. Young Leaflet Distribution WASHINGTON, Feb. 17.-Three young workers were arrested today Union, Watkins 0628, and be given the address of any station that may be most convenient to them, in any part of Manhattan, Bronx, Brook- soi Workers For Jobless | iyn, tong Island, Staten Island, Coney Island, Bath Beach, Browns- ville or Borough Park. were delayed by a breakdown while on the way to a meeting near Pow- hatan, and the first report was that they had been arrested. Write About Your Conditions for The Daily Worker. Become a Worker Correspondent. “... has moments of reatnens, approximat- Now Playing!. DYNAMIC! RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVEl UE Bet. 18th and 1ith Sts, REVOLUTIONARY! moadees acting ‘TREMENDOUS! “SHE-DEMON OF THE STEPPES” (A SOVKINO FILM) @ powerful drama of the Russian Revolution in which a woman- leader plays the lending role in a titanic struggle between the | RATIONAL ¢ | HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian Strictly Vegetarizn Food Labor and Fraternal Organizations Army and the Cossacks. —and on the same program— the film that startled all New York “THE EINSTEIN THEORY” @ comprehensive and vivid presentation of the | RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 5868 Place. {fused ‘Then the police were again | in front of the United States Em- called in, and after a secret consul-| ployment Agency on Pennsylvania tation with the gangsters, the police | Ave. for distributing unemployed | | remained out of sight, and the gang-| leaflets. to jobless workers. The \sters took Block and Schulman out, | three arrested, Albert Mallin, Frank WORKERS’ CENTER BARBER SHOP | Moved to 30 Unfow Square t PREIHEIT BLOG~—-Maio Floor The Significance of Tardieu’s Fall All income affairs, such as bazaars, dances, concerts, ete. for which or- sanizations desire publicity this — “Ye *harmony |and a short distance down the| Phillips aud Nathan Briscoe, were Column, mast be paid for at ¢ . Continued from Page One) | street knocked Block unconscious | released after a grilling by the po- | ot $1.00 for a singe Insertion, £4.00 scientific tucory tha wpnet the words Phone: rsa aie the fait of Tandieu's cabinet taker | With a blow on the head from be | lice. |Tawetd ing thin rate iy a ma Ta cloTume stone ||| ACME THEATRE $300, Stour ani 22 |] John’s Restaurant place directly after he had delivered | hind, and beat him up as he lay on| aoe ee | five Mtatal of 26 words. W.t ds F ee - |} SPECIALTY: {TALIAN DISHES French imperialisms ultimatum to the street. Schulman broke sway! T ovestoneite Betrays | Oust Settee $43 BROOK AVENUE ¢ jus ertormances Dally vA. M- to Midnight. Pricent trom x Wlaee. sole atuadomio’ the London Nava’l Conference for} feq half block and was caught ve m Strik |Pxposttion Internation Clnsieg, Pr ot i <M. 25¢ Her 5M. M. 35¢ ns all gee by a big navy. | rikers f Workers Fi fo Group, 28 , Pressing, Repairing 302 EB. 12th St. lew York . This came from Tardieu, who on ee eee ys this sort of police, | Furniture t | unten Square. sth floor, till Feb: 36. High Class Work Done EAST SIDE THEATRES fice desired to carry out ‘ f vy henley Goods Called for and Delivered pce office desire Try gangster brutality, the Needle (Continued from Page One) LL.D. Bazaar, Ait peosite 92 4 pvinere Feb. 26 to March 2, at N tie BS Taaiiten, ‘Aik Ceimradan Mised aa Briand's game of feverish war prepa-| Trades Workers Industrial Union yations and a suppression of the! jeads an increasing number of dress | Communist Party, while making makers in the struggle against the this with a camouflage of pacifism | Schlesinger slave contract. | us the “Great Ministry of eace”——in | j order to placate the petty bour-| geoisie, and the profound discontent of the petty bourgeoisie the undest ‘f the peasantry and the revolution- ary spirit of the proletariat. At the London Conference the other nations’ delegates were set aflutter by the fall of Tardieu, though it is quite possible that some strong financial wires were pulled to bring pressure on France as re- prisal for its naval demands that have rather upset the apple cart of 4 among the powers.” Call Strike Relief } Conference Feb. 20 For Mass Relief Plans the representatives of workers’ or- ganizations, unions, fraternal or- ganizations, workers’ clubs, etc.,| will meet at Irving Plaza Hall to work out plans for mass relief work ‘This Thursday evening, Feb. 20,| gades meeting when the T.U.U.L. repre- sentative appeared to speak, and the Lovestoneite president knew sentative would expose the treach- | erous role of the A.F.L. and the Lovestoneites. “Perlow’s action in thus betraying the strike,” stated the T.U.U.L. rep- resentative yesterday, “exposes the true nature of the Lovestone rene- and their working hand in hand with the A. F. L. misleaders.” “The T.U.U.L. will continue this struggle to expose all agents of the bosses no matter under what mask they may a] ir,” he continued. “The T.U.U.L. will continue the for the workers engaged in strikes all over the country. The call for this conference is issued by the Workers International Relief, and is warranted by the struggles confronting American workers. Over six million are un- employed, thousands are either on _ And in this connection the desire _ of the United States to law down the _ terms upon which the coming war, against the Soviet Union is to be} made, seem to have collided with the imperialist ambitions of France to dictate such terms as the military mistress of the continent France es- campaign for the organization of the unorganized furniture workers into one powerful industrial union.” Communist Activities Build the Party Concert and Dance. itself to be. any case, Tardieu, even if he ‘returns in & new cabinet to London, ‘will be chastened hadron ve im- perislists think, though French im- cannot but insist on hege- on the continent and “protec- rom Italy for its African “eolonies. The contradictions, there- pré, both in foreign and domestic ) remain. strike already or preparing to strike. In the Ilinois coal fields in «the South, in New York broad masses of workers are fighting against the bosses and against their allies the socialists, the A. F. of L. | and police. The workers of New York must organize to give support to these fighters. Have your Party fractions, your union, your shop committees, your workers’ club, your fraternal organ- izations, elect delegates immediate- ly. Send credentials to local New York, Workers International Relief, 799 Broadway, Room 221. 6 for It. Distribute It Your Fellow Workers! Saturday, Feb. 22, 8.80, at Italian Workers Club, 2011 Third Ave. aus- ices Unit 4° Section 4. Proceeds ally Worker and Il Lavoratore. Ad~- mission 35 cents: | | Section One, Section Committee members meet section Spee for instruction 6 p.m. All unit functionaries must meet section organizer or their sec- tion department hea before unit meetings for, Instructions. Unit 1F, Section 6. Toright, 65, Whipple se. Tonight & p. room & ‘ Unit R2, Tonight, & p. m, lection 4. . 143 EB. 103rd st., Cee Section 1. follow Shutings out of a strike | that at this meeting also the repre- | | casino. Collect, articles, fu sell tickets, volunteer at, 799 Broadway, and sil bydiphes. Office Workers Usion heap Friday evening, Feb. 21, Webster | Manon 41th Be between ‘Third. and Fourth Avenues. Negro Jam Band, entertainment, refreshment. All work- ers invited. Admission, 76 cents. Ella May Branch LL.D. Tonight, 8.30 p. m., 129 Myrtle Ave., Brooklyn. * * Sneco-Vanzetti Branch 1.L.D. Wednesday, 8.30 p. m., 1330 Wil- kins Ave. * + * Nat Torner Branch UL.D. Wednesday, 336 fang Ave. Bilt Haywood Brauch L1.D. | Thursday, 8.30 p, m., 227 Brighton | Beach Ave, * « * Bronx Midnight Performance. Pe Saturday, Feb. 22, 11.30 . 80- viet movie, "New ‘Babyion!” Brethele oad Then- itkine Ave. Gesaneverein. At Bosto: tre, Boston corner Freeman St. gubway station. Womens Council No. 1 and Cloak- makers No. 2. Joint unemployment a meet, onal Wednesday, 143 B. 103rd St. Holtmans and other speakers. Womens Council Ne. 2t. Toniéht, 8.30 p- m™.’ Dr. Altiure on “Bringing up, 6 gnilaren.” Womens Council No. 4. Tonight, 8.30 p.m. 68 Whippte St. Louis A. Baum “Womens Work and ‘Womens Day.” Mass isting, ‘ed- nesday, 8.30 m. Tillie Littinsky on School Situation, ‘Womens Couneil No, At. ‘Wednesday, Ul p. th, 1668 Vyse Ave., Bronx, Celia Schwartz on In- ternational Womens Day. ——— LT, Unit 5, Section a Mermaid Ave. Brooklyn, 8. $0. m, At 2901 Tuesday, Unit 1, Seotte Tonight, 8 p. m., 336 4 mn 4, Lenox Ave. i SOLIDARITY vita THE WORKERS! stieee abe ti ek PL abtath tos te par eee SHOW Y: OM tor is Mite ie wed Ams Avenee, ‘Workers, Patronize RELIABLE MUSIC COMPANY Majestic, Victor and ether Radios PIANOS eae nomoLas Expert Repairing full line of Spanish and Russian Records 1808 Third Ave, nesr 10let St. 1893 Fifth Ave. nest 115th St. ‘ORK CITY j NEW Y Tel, Atwater 0402 PHOTOGRAPHS AT THY sTUDIO On YOUR HOME THREE MORE DAYS—TopDay, First Time at Popufer Prices! Meals with the rise and fall KEEP THIS We Meet at the— Fresh ND. AVEN U PLAYHOUSE LAST TWO DAYS!—TODAY AND TOMORROW! NEW BABYLON ADDED ATTRACTION—“THE EINSTEIN THEORY” Weekday Prices—i2 to 6 P. M. 25. is Workers ! UCorkers’ Organizations ! Saturday Eve. MARCH 15th Watch for Further COOPERATIVE CAFETERIA 26-28 UNION SQUARE BRONSTEIN’S |} 558 Cleremont Parkway, Bronx DR. J. MINDEL SURGEUN DENTIST 1 UNION 8QU Rcom 803-—Phone: Ali Not eonnected other office TOMOROW aod WEDNESDAY A Sovkine Masterfiim! of the Paris Commune, 1871. _ Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SUNGRON DENTIST BA: cor. "Secons aver New York UAILY BXCHPT FRIDAT #) lephone Advertise Union Mectings here, Fe ne tapetaaiion ees te The DAILY WORKER * Advertising Dept 26-28 Union Sq., New York City | DATE OPEN Announcements! Hotel & Restaurant ranch of Workers, Phone Vegetables Our Specialty ||