The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 25, 1930, Page 2

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Page Two a DEnTA NP FRE REDON VALEEY MEN, F. Caxsmnaioy aA DIZ toneus of uw to and Gore v. Vee ‘fon 2ECh England Takes Fatherland; Qwn LONDON, numerous offensives against the So- England—One of the viet Union was made recently by Great Britain when it ordered the construction of 200 planes at a cost of over 2,500,000. They are described as “200 mile an © to houco canvas day when iil be circulated demand- ncdinte release. The na- of the I. L. D. is mo- e@ force behind this of Pacific phiet is coming e workers 2, with 1 be distribute: i sections of Am- er issue of the La- Deiendcr will be devoted to the | bor : A : sive Against Workers’ Werkers Starve will be added to the Royal Air Force. | They are being built for speed, dur- | abil aggressiveness. nd prepares for war id En against the workers’ fatherland at | Bosses eee our ACING 42 YEARS} MILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, _ iOVEMBER 25, 1930 = — = WHAT BYey AN'CALS Now WE'LL AVE AN NICE HISTORY CLASS INOUR ie Por ‘4 HAMMER RINE | Oo cee 4 = fl rent jy THAN WS Re WE map| HE EPPeRE H 's RICA 2 pee ge) BY Tani BYES AN’ Gals Whar Lessor! (5 BE cee. — Anyway, It’s True! — Po OF THE Jones SHOULD Have. FRee MEALS ONTIL THEIfe Bigenrrs HAVE THAT The Kips|| ||GAL ‘ mice! The BYes an! IN MY SCHOOL HAVE SENSE THAN LHAVE Mg SEE TeHaT They @ olf ARE SENT TO} ie HAV SENDING SCHOOL CHIL Seen To JAIL AND Piss 4 BeeMee THEY SENSE THA By RYAN WALKER. AND HEQE WE HAVE THE GREAT AMERICAN . ECTACLE OF A JUDGE THEM THEIR c MoRE (REFUSES HUSA, _ HOLMES APPEAL t Denies great expense, over 2 million workers | e left without jobs to starve in the| Usual Procedure hour fighters and bombing craft” and | streets of England’s cities. | ee aes, NEW YORK.—The application de- ee es manding an appeal in the case of | y anak fs General Attempts to Mislead Workers About Mave Husa and Ailene Holmes, two War oves |girl teachers in the Van Etten work- War love BERLIN, Germany.—That 2 world war is about to break out again is inevitable—this is what a generals, authors, etc., all are willing to admit. But they all attempt to hide the fact that the preparations that are being made now for war are against the Soviet Union. General Erich Ludendorff, knowing that workers are aware of the various lers’ childyen’s camp, now serving lIcor Bazaar Opening Advanced to Tomorrow | NEW YORK.—The opening night jot Icor Bazaar, 68 Lexington Ave., Jat 25th St. is advanced from the joriginalh date, Friday, to tomorrow ; night, and the Needle Trades Indus- | trial Union has called off affairs | given Gh that night by sections of its |organization, and calls on all needle |workers to be present at the Icor| |affair, The N. T. W. I. U. states: I? ‘In answer to the Zionists, the bosses and company union and imperialists war moves, is attempting to mislead |Prison sentences, made by the Inter- | attacking the Soviet Union make the them in a booklet entitled “World War | national Labor Defense to the Court |Opening night of Icor Bazaar amass Threate! Like the other tools of |Of Appeals, was denied by Chief the bosses he admits that a war is in| Judge Benjamin W. Cardoza in a de- the making; but he declares that it|Cision handed down by him yester- How- | day. will take place in Germany. ever, his attempts will no doubt be futile, for eve: against the workers’ fatherland. Ontario Jobless Demonstrate for Relief PORT ARTHUR, Ont—When a body of 825 unemployed workers | marched to the city hall under Com- munist leadership, and demanded bread recently, 800 plain clothes dicks armed themselves with pick handles and made an attempt to sii aah the jobless. ‘They were un- successful, but patrolled the streets all that night in groups of 10 against any made by the unemployed. Employed workers are being forced to join a| 2" special police force and fight their unemployed fellow workers MASS VIOLATION OF INJUNCTIONS (Continued from Page One) one or a dozen were not in view, and | no moment when singing and shout- ing of slogans did not take place. A. F. L. Thugs. The boss at the Zelgreen surrend- ered all hope of doing any business when the crowd first began to gather, before 5 p.m. The few customers i were chased out and the place crowd- | ed with hired gangsters provided by | the A. F. L. Local 302 which obtained the injunction to preserve the 12-hr. day in the Zelgreen. Police forces and mass violators of the injunction continued to increase in numbers until 6 p.m. The police) held the sidewalk in front of the ca-| feteria in force, the pickets marched iff masses up and down the opposite | sidewalk, which they filled completely | from house line to curb, from Eighth Ave. to Seventh. In the beginning | they also marched along the sidewalk past the Zelgreen door, but enough police arrived by 6 p. m. to block that. *A solid line of cops, about a dozen, barred the north sidewalk at that) time, preventing anyone coming onto it from Eighth Ave, Dozens were strung out, a cop every few yards, down the sidewalks on both sides of | the street half way to Seventh Ave. ‘Two patrol wagons stood in front of | the cafeteria door, with over a dozen | foot police around them. Mounted | Police rode up and down the street. Zelgreen Cafeteria wasn’t doing any business, Shortly before six a work- er heard a sergeant telephoning ex- citedly from a box to the station: “There's a hell of a crowd, swarming all around here; send another wagon!” Placards Raised. sAt 6:20 the placards went up and singing started directly across the Street from the cafeteria. Traffic stopped. The police fumbled around, waiting for the pickets to cross the} street. They didn’t. They just stood and shouted. Finally mounted police charged into the pickets, patrolmen followed, and one section was driven into Ninth Ave. and another «into Seventh. The demonstrations con- tinued, the workers retreating before mounted and foot police charging down the sidewalks, and closing in behind. Eventually the smaller crowd on Eighth Ave. broke through or marched around and joined the Jarger one on Seventh Ave. This sec- tion of the demonstrators, stuck, forming again and again after police charges, and returning to 34th St.,+ marching in solid ranks on the side- walk and in the street, singing, and imperishable placards still flaunting. Drive Cars Into Crowd, The police tried their old trick ot forcing chauffeurs and truck drivers to play through the masses, but it was noticeable that in most cases the vehicles moved so slowly that they did little damage. Cops could be heard urging more speed, usually without getting it. Finally the majority of the police and one patrol wagon moved down to Seventh Ave. Still the demon- tors stayed with it until long the supper hour. The organ- ized picketing ended about 7:30, but |a hunger catastrophe. | terrorizing the coil: ‘GORKI CALLS FOR DEFENSE OF USSR) ;August after a mob of five hundred Cable by Imprecorr) COW, Nov. 20.—Maxim Gorkt, | fens proletarian writer, published | an article in Isvestia dealing with the sabotagers against the Soviet Union. “The advance guard of the prole- | ing up a new world, abol- ation of man by man. The enemics of the Soviet Union are working everywhere against this progress and are striving to organize Kulaks are peasants on. ‘ill proceeding, i) war is and therefore the ‘Unless the enemy surrenders he shall ‘be exterminated.’ The outside capi- talists are allied with the sabotagers, working against the building up of & new world. Poincare, the French alcoho’ Birkenhead of Britain, and others have organized for interven- tion. Permanent warfare has existed between the Soviet Union and the capitalist world. The workers of the world must prepare to defend the Workers’ State. Should capitalism | again send armies against the Soviet | Union the workers of the world must give the final blow to toppling capi- talism, shoving it into the grave that history has already dug for it.” Party Activities, Special Meeting of All Party Members Working in the needle trades in the downtown district (14th St. to South Ferry) will be held this Wed- nese Nov. 26th, right after work, at 6p. m. at the section headquarters, Fourth St. This matter is of utmost importance; all Party mem- bers must show up on time. by the Bill Haywood Branch, I.L.D. and Brighton Beach rere Club, Thanksgiving Eve. N 26 at 140 little groups~ were still around even after that. There was, at latest accounts, no beating up of workers in the police station, at was done at the last dem- onstration, probably because of the early arrival there of Attorney Bui- parading tenkant for the International Labor | at 25th Piers sie The Young Defenders Assault Charge. Are coming through this Thanks- One of the arrested workers, Here man Bittner, is charged with felon- ious assault for kicking a policeman on the mouth and nose. He is held without bail, of the Italian organ of the C.P., Bat- urday, Dec, 13,8 p.m. at the Ttalian Paragraph 600 Workers’ Center, 2011 Third Ave. The other 18 arrested are held on charges of disorderly conduct and violation of “Paragraph 600” of the criminal code, which means a trial without a jury and railroading to sentence because they fought to pre- Subject’ "Modern Understandin ng of serve the right to strike. They are: Health and Diseases” delivered by, aa John Hablao, Laurenzo Stokes, Leo | Heo pre Wadt, Feu Ma oR oe Roegrs, Edward Dowlying, Russell Blackwell, Roselyn Davesa, Moe Gol+ din, Andrew Rosco, Thos. Barnadine, Phillip Nicholas, Sophie Cooper, Sal- lie Bartino, Dora Blumkin, Leo Scott, Harry Simon, Joe Bowar, Pauline Hubner and Ida Appner. The Smash the Injunction Com- mittee announced yesterday that the fight goes on, the workers are deter- mined to smash jthe injunctions and enter “chien Sunday, 7 ei Fig 106 save the right t. strike. a qarsey, Bt woagem ete program “ds leading the work- | }room and in the local newspapers. | slogan must be: | y war move that is be- evaded and ignored the attack made ing made is very evident as being |upon the children’s camp by the Ku |Defense that the district form of “outbreak” for food | case, | complete | The Court of Appeals sidetracked, Klux Klan and the direct evidence produced by the International Labor | attorney prosecuting the two militant teachers of the camp was with the trial judge on the bench during the trial direct- jing the rulings of the court in the Chief Judge Cardoza ruled out | the demand for an application for appeal on purely technical |grounds, thereby forcing the two | young girls to remain in prison and jserve their sentences without the usual chance of an appeal granted in such cases, The two girl teachers, Mabel Husa and Ailene Holmes, serving three month sentences, were arrested last Ku Klux Klanners, instigated by an employers’ organization and a local |minister attacked the W. I. R. chil- dren’s camp at Van Etten, New York, kidnapping two of the children. | At the trial, the local patriotic or- ganizations turned out in full force, using mob rule tactics in the court | When the International Labor De- | fense protested to Governor Roose- | jvelt the Tammany official refused to | take any action. The Daily Worker discloses the circulation situation in tables each Wednesday. Watch for) them. Study them. Labor and Fraternal RED UNIONS! Let workers know of your meeting nights and activities. ‘This column is for this purpose and should be taken advantage of. Write up your notices as short as possible and mail them in. a aw ‘The Cooperative Workers Colony Is building a children’s section of the library. Comrades who have any children’s’ books they can spare are Tequested to send them to the Worker ers’ Cooperative, 2300 Bronx Park E. Bullding Walatenance Workers Union General fraction meeting will take place Wednes: Noy. 26, 7.30 sharp. at 35 EB, 12th St. Members are requested to moblize | shopmates for the mass violation of | the injunction at Zelgreen’s Gafeteria, | 34th Street between7th and 8h Axes. Be here Monday id 5.30 ms m, Conf. for Collection of Signatures For the Unemployment Insurance Bill, Monday, 8 p. m. at 140 Neptune Aye. Brighton Beach, at the Brighton Workers Club. All workers’ orzan- izations are requested to send dele- wats, Workers of Brichton Rench, Attention Chinese evening and concert given ov Neptune Ave., at 8.30 p. m. Paley onde NEW JERSEY New Brunswick International Workers’ dance will Be held Nov, 28, 8 p. m. at 11 Plum i ren be TCOR Razaar Opens Tomorrow. And will continue until Saturday in the 165th Armory, 68 Lexington Ave. giving eve. with an anti-Thanksgiv- ing affar. Daneng, refreshments and entertainment—snappy pand. Grand Ball Under the auspices of the Friends of the “I! Lavatore’ for the benefit (bet, 110th and 111th St.) Good music, fine program, contribution, 35 cents. Get the Lntext Inhor Defender. All branches of the LL.D. and af- fillated organizations are requested to make their, orders now. ecture tae Workers Bronx Park Fast., ie, p.m. under auspices of Council 2, ‘ . . 4 au Workers Ave ay ni e 'o attend a house party given by Gomredg, Richard, at 39 W. 114th St, Apt. Hy, Thursday, Noy. 27. Proceeds to go to the Liberator, official organ of the cage 9 od ies fer Ne~ gro Right: hs ime is assured all. Goo mi NEW JER: aumeing, ete. Elizabeth ma will aplepeate | increasing daily here. | demonstration.” Jobless Young Toilers Being Driven to Steal in Order to Get Living| CHICAGO, 1.—Unemployment is Although the capitalist press tries to hide the facts they are coming out with the fact that there are over 400,000 unem- ployed in-Chicago. It is amazing the way the capitalist press comes out to “solve” unemployment here, They ; tell the public that the only way to get rid of unemployment is to “buy now.” But, how in the hell can the workers buy anything when they have no money. During the last months there has been an increase in crime, the ma- jority being committed by the youth. When asked why they have done it, they answer that they are out of work and their families are starving. This shows that the youth in Chi- cago refuse to starve. But they will only get themselves in jail unless they organize to fight unemployment. KIDS FORCED TO STEAL FOOD SANDUSKY, Ohio.—Children otf jobless workers here have ben forced to waylay children of working pa- | rents on their way to school in order | to take their lunch away from them. This is often the only meal these children have during the day. The authorities have “sicced” a dog on them in the form of the county pro- bation officer. PHILHARMONIC, The Philharmonic-Symphony Or- chestra will- give their next concert Thursday evening at Carnegie Hall under the direction of Leopold Sto- kowski, who will act as guest con- ductor while Toscanini acts in the same role for the Philadelphia or- ganization. The program: Symphony No. 4 in E minor, Brahms; “Wir glau- ben all,” Bach”; “Ich ruf’ zu dir,” Bach; Toccata and Fugue, Bach. This program will be repeated on Friday afternon at Carnegie. Next Sunday afternoon at the Met- ropolitan Opera House the program will consist of the Academic Over- ture by Brahams; Double Concerto, Brahams, and the Bach numbers of the Thursday program, The soloists are Scipione Guidi and Alfred Wal- lenstein, Ernest Schelling will direct the concert of the Young People’s Series this Saturday morning at Carnegie. The program: “Carnaval Romain” Overture, Berlioz, Variations, Sym- phoniques, Francke; Nuages-Jeux Vagues Fetes, Debussy; March to the Scaffold, from the Symphonie Fan- tastique, Berlioz. Carl Frieberg, pianist, is the soloist. HIPPODROME—Screen, Amos 'n’ Andy, in “Check and Double Check. Vaudeville: Josephine Harmon, Burns and Kissen, Rhea and San~- toro, Gilfoyle and Lange, Bernardo De Pace and Co., Australian Waites, the Galenos and the Dixie Four. 81ST STREET—Tuesday, stage: Pert Frences White, the Watson Sis- ters, Irving O’Dunn with Mary Daye and the Kanazawa Japs. Screen: “The Cat Creeps.” Wednesday to Friday; The “Ramaway Four,” the Brox Sisters Evelyn Dean and Boys and Whitey and Ford. Screen: “The Way of All Men.” R. K. O, 388TH STREET—To Tues- day—Vaudeville: Rae Samuels, Lock- ett and Page, Jean and Hazel Ken- nedy, Flynn and Macke, and Bob and Lucy Gillette. Screen: “The Cat Creeps,” Wednesday to Friday— Vaudeville: May Wirth and her Fam~ ily, Magic Fountain Revue, Tucker and Smith, and Lloyd Neveda and Company. Screen: “The Way of All Men.” * R. K. 0. 86TH STREET—To Tues- day—Vaudeville: Sybil Vane, Charles Aldrich, Larry Rich and Company, Eddie Pardo. Screen: “The Cat Creps."| Wednesday to Friday—~ ‘Vaudeville: Frances White, Art Frank ‘FOREIGN BORN CONVENTION SAT. Rally Wotlers for Big Struggle NEW YORK.—The national con- vention of the Council for the Pro-| tection of the Foreign Born meeting | in Washington, D. C., this coming| Saturday, Nov. 30, will vigorously protest the bills against the foreign born workers that are slated to be| | passed in Congress this winter and | Barl Browder, J. Louis Engdahl, |Louis Koves, H. Newton, S. Horwatt, jand various language speakers will | speak at a mass meeting Friday| |night, at Manhattan Lyceum, 66 E. lee Street on the persecution of the | foreign born workers that is so pre-e valent in the United States today. The attack on militant workers | who dare resistance to the employ-| ing class and the general unrest that is taking place in the country to- day ,because of unemployment is bringing forth an avalanche of leg- islation aimed directly against the workers especially the foreign-born | who are using this propaganda against the foreign-born to obscure the issues. One of the most vicious bills com- | jing up before congress is known as the Ashwell Bill, R. R. 9101, which | makes it compulsory for every for- eign-born worker to register with the police and carry the registration |car with his photograph on him and every alien must produce the card on demand by any petty official. A record of the alien is kept on file | in government offices as well as pole | | ice stations. Sec, 2 of the bill reads: “Every alien in the United States shall, within the time fixed by the president in a proclamation made by him within ninety days after the enactment of this Act, enroll or register at such time and place as may be fixed by regulation.” , Section 5 of the bill prescribes that every foreign-born must reg- ister once a year and give any in- formation that is asked of him and that will eventually, be used against jhim by the Ku Klux Klan, the boss or the American Legion. Sec. 13 providing for the showing of the card that the worker must carry on him like in all fascist countries reads: “Every alien shall, on demand, at any time exhibit his certificate of registry to any agent of the de- partment of labor, to any federal, state, territorial, or other public police or peace officer.” With the passage of this bill and other anti-alien legislation like fin- ger-printing etc. that is slated to become federal law, the Council for! the Protection of the Foreign-Born points out, the worker who happens to be of foreign origin will be dis- criminated against and persecuted by the capitalist class of America and its courts in a much more vigor- ous fashion than the fascist govern- ments in Europe do to any militant workers who fight them. At the convention in Washing- ton, D, C., over 400 delegates from various organizations will assemble to protest the persecutions, deporta- tions, and jailings of the foreign- born and work out plans for mass action against the boss class of, America who are behind these drives against the militant foreign-born workers, EAL THE BEST AT THE HONEY DEW CAFETERIA Incorporated Fourth Ave., Cor, 12th Street HOME-MADE MEALS You can select the best foods, as we have a great variety. We are sure you will Ike our cooking HONEY DEW CAFETERIA 4th Ave., Cor, 12th St.. New York City incorporated Stenographer Wanted. Job open for expert stenog- rapher; dictation, general office work; Party member or close WAITER OFFICIALS OUST 400 JOBLESS Use Thug First; Are) to Help Organization NEW YORK.—To finance organ- ization work the Metal Workers’ In- dustrial League of the Trade Union Metal Workers Affair’ SPORTWEAR SHOP WORKERS STRIKE INeedle Union Holds 2 Unity League is giving an entertain- | ent: and dance Saturday evening |at the New Harlem Casino, 100 W. Convicted Grafters | told the cops that these were Com- |sented Lehman ,with a bill for $148! NEW YORK.—Four hundred un-| employed waiters, who had been kept on the starvation lines for months by the crooked bureaucracy forced on Waiters’ Local 1, A. F. L., by the in- ternational office of the union, were attacked by a gangster and finally driven from the union office by po- lice Saturday. Both the gangster and the cops were set on the unem- ployed members of the union by its Officials, Isadore Strassburg, “Labor Chief” and “Brother Leh- man,” secretary. The workers asked for jobs and were refused. They gave Strassburg | an argument, and he ordered his gangster (he usually has three around) to shut them up. When the gunman, Skelly, attacked the job- less, they thoroughly beat him up, The riot squad summoned by Strassburg and Lehman cleared the place. The workers held an indigna~ tion meeting outside and even the police began to question the officials as to why they called in cops to do their own dirty work. The officials munists. The police captain pre- for the use of the police and the of- ficials will now try to make the mem- kor: e local pay for it. T. U. U. L, Active. The 400 unemployed have signed a petition to Walker. The Trade Union Unity League group is telling them that this tactic is no good and will not get them any results. The T. U, U. L. urges the jobless to organize. There will be a mass meeting some time next week. Strassburg and Lehman were kicked out some time ago by the members for taking money from the bosses for not organizing a shop. It was proved they got a bribe of $1,200 | from one place. Strassburg also bor- | rowed money from bosses for himself in the name of the union and the| union had to pay it back. The in- ternational office returned them to the! 116th St. ‘The Red Dancers with Edith Segal | will be on the program, also Alisson Burroughs in French Creole ana Nc- gro work songs. PATERSON MEET | Big Mass Meetings NEW YORK.—The Needle Trade Workers’ Industrial Union has just held two more successful open air meetings, one in the dress market, 36th St. and 8th Ave. and another in the millinery section, 38th St. and |6th Ave. A large number of work- , ers attended these open air meetings where the question of building the | unemployed councils, preparations for the dress strike and the anti- injunction demonstrations were taken p. The Foremost Sportwear of 1385 = HIT ALTEN BITS City Wide C Conference) November 28 | PATERSON, Nov. 24.—All working class organizations are urged to elect, delegates to the first city-wide con-| ference for the protection of the for- | eign born workers, which will be held November 28, at Union Hall, 205 Pat- | | erson St., this city. All workers’ or-! ganizations and shop committees are entitled to send two delegates. In a statement issued by the Pro- visional Committee for the Protec- | tion of the Foreign Born, it is pointed | out that the spear head of the bosses | attack against the working class is| directed at the foreign-born ad Ne- gro workers, and that many militant workers of foreign birth are facing deportation to fascist countries where they will be murdered as a result of their activities in working-class movements and especially in the struggle against unemployment andj} the bosses hunger policy for the un- employed millions. The statement also pointed out that many states have alreadv pases 7 iminatory laws against the foreign born, that congress is prepa put over several vicious bills directed against the foreign-born to facilitate the deportation of militant fighters working class. power. Goldstein, the attorney for Local 1| bureaucracy (paid for by the mem-| bers) is used by Local 302 to prose- cute the injunction violators at Zel- green Cafeteria. Theatre Gulld Productions ELIZABETH, THE QUEEN GUILD he 52d. Eve. Th.&Sat, ROAR CHINA MARTIN BECK "8. 46th St. West af, Beedres 0. Mts. Th. & Sat. 2:50 Evs, 43rd St. and HIPPODROME = f5r4,8t en BIGGEST SHOW IN NEW YORK Siccrs | AMOS ’N’ ANDY in ‘Check and Double Check’ THE GREEKS HAD A WORD FOR IT A COMEDY BY ZOE AKINS SAM H. HARRIS Thea., 424 St. W. of B'y Evening 8:50. Mats. Wed, & Sat. 2:30 THE QUEEN OF COMEDIES LYSISTRATA IT YOU BEAR ABOUT 44TH STREE TRUSTE, Eves. 8:40, — Mate, Wet. e Wan Hed $00 Balcony Sea “UP POPS THE DEVIL” A Genuine Comedy Ait with ROGER PRYOR Bioay MASQUE 45th St.hea.77, ot Mats, Wednesday and Saturday 2:30 Extra Matinee Thursday 46th Bt, Datly trom GLOBE he Bway 10:30 A. M. “BIG MONEY” sympathizer, Party work, OFFICE WORKERS UNION (6 WEST ist ST., NEW YORK Ask for MAY FIELD with his Yankee Volunteers, Sara- noff and Sonia, others, Screen: “The Way of All Men.” {f possible, apply between 10 & 12 5m. with © Eddie alan, Pod Armin “itive rom Seopar CAMEO £4", |NOW “Wild Men of Kaliharl” IVIC REPERTORY *** =. ) Miya iat GALLAENNE: Direatot Tonight . Tom, Night EDGAR WALLACE’S PLAY ON THE SPOT with agua RANE ison and N EDGAR WAL! Lacks FORREST THEA. 49 W. of By. Bvs. 8:60. Mts. W. & S, 2:30 Extra Matinee Thursday | NINA ROSA New Musical Romance, with esi ROBERTSON, ETHELIND TERRY MIDA, LEONARD ORRLEY, ‘Others stor TIC THEA., 44th, W. of Broadway E 0, Mats. Thurs.&Sat. 2:50. Chi 2600 sone AND CONERTS SOPRANO PINNERA t.HAENSEL & JONES (Steinway Piano) iets hae Bun, Aft., Nov. 30, at 3 noth JOHN CHARLES THOMAS Mgt. NBC Artists Service (Steinway) NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES RKO—ALWAYS A GOOD EuOW! RKO ACTS Art Frank and ‘ankee Vol-| unteers spree Switts “1000 Thrills Rhapsody” In Bil 1000 CRills Prospects 1613. RKO ACTS May Wirth & Dolly Ket Okay Bove Bob Hope and to undermine the struggles of the | $1.50, Mts, Th, & Sat., 3:30) Broadway was declared on strike, be- cause the boss attempted to put through a reorganization aiming to discharge a number of workers. All |of the workers responded to the call of the union for the strike and im- mediately began effective picketing near the shop. ” On Wednesday, November 26, 2 p. m., there will be a meeting of the unemployed needle trades workers at | Bryant Hall, for the purpose of form- |ing a general council of unemployed |needle trades workers. Wednesday, Nov. 26, at 6 p. m sharp, there will be a meeting of the Defense Corps in the office of the Union, 131 West 28th St. For a Gond Maal and Proletarian Prine Wat at th UNIVERSAL CAFETERIA Cor. 11th St. and University Place (Special Room for Conferences) “For Al Kinds of Insurance” (CARL BRODSKY Yelephone: Murray HINT ssst 1 Kast 42nd Street, New York Cooperators! Vatronize SEROY CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenve | Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N Y¥ DEWEY 9914 9 Oftieg, Hours: M, Sunday? "on as ae “1P DR. J. LEVIN . SURGEON DENTIST 1501 AVENUE U Ave, U Sta., B.M.T, At East 15th St. BROOKLYN, N, ‘Romeo and Juliet? eivied’ t{BoxOtt aT n Mall. 112.43 Y¥. {DR. J. MINDEL SURCLON DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Room 808—~ Phone: Algonquin 8182 '—MELROSE— Dairy | RESTAURANT Alwayy ine at Oor Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD. Bronx (near 174th St. Station) @HONBDi- INTERVALD 91466, RATIONA L. Vegetarian RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVE: JB 12th and 13th Sts, Strictly Vegetarian Food EALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE, Phone: UNIversity 6868 "hone: Btuyv it 3316 John’s Restaurant SPRUIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A piace with jieroammeee where all radicals meet 302 E.12th St. = New York Se, Advertise your Union Meetings here, For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept 50 East 13th St, New York fity SS

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