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AC ail Tw Ol) 50, 000 NEW. MEMBERS SOON FOR TRADE UNION UNITY LEAGUE IF POLICIES ARE CARRAIED OUT Enlarged Executive Committee Finds Present Program Correct If Properly Applied (Members of United Councils, Attention} On Saturday and Sunday the | Young Communist League is holding | a National Plenum in New York City. | , The District Office of the U. C. W. C.| W. appeals to all its members to help provide shelter and food for these comrades coming from all parts of the country. Any comrade that can house any delegate or feed him for this period is urged to get in touch with the Young Communist League | Reports on Red International and Red Unions District omce at 35 East 12th Street, in Canada and NEW YORK —That the Trade |tainable now in pamphlet form) wos! TAILORS MEET TODAY AT Union Unity League has an excel Opportunity to get ent 50,000 new mem- te future, on the basis of present policy if only it is properly applied, was one of the points stressed at the enlarged Na- tional Committee meeting of the T. U. day. This, and other matters connected therewith, was brought out by the report of the Fifth Congress of the Red International of Labor Unions, with which the T. U. U. L. is affili- ated, by John Ballam. The necessity of every militant worker understanding and carrying out the R. I. L. U. policies on strike strategy as formulated by the Strass- burg Trade Union Conference (ob- Labor and Fraternal Grand Ball Under the auspices of the of the “11 Lavatore’ for the bene! organ of the C.P. ter. Ave| (bet. 110th and 111th St) ¢ fine program, contribu eee naar | All Workers Are Invited | To attend a house party given by 114th St Comrade Richard, at 39 W. Apt. 1, Thursday, Nov. 2 to go to the Liberator, of the League for Struggle for gro Rights. A good time is all. Good music, dancing, etc. Elizabeth Elizabeth workers will celebrate | the opening of the new Workers | Center this Sunday. 7 p. m.. at 106 B. Jersey St. A complete program has been arranged Metal, Worker Concert ll cateearerns tan TO work son: Support ance of North 6, 8 p. m. at 569 Pri music, Admission ae and East New York Red Cabaret and Dance, 105 That- ford Ave., Sat. Nov at & p, m. Auspic ood time as- sured all. Admission 35 cents. ee ae) HARLEM PROG. YOUTH CL Will hold a dance Saturd at 1492 Madison Ave. y night . SUPPORT METAL BEAGUE CONCERT AND DANCE This Saturday, at Harlem Casino. Program includes Edith. -Sezal, Red Dancer, and the John C. Smith Ne- Bro Band. Admission 50 cents. LENIN YOUTH BRANCH Of the International Workers’ Or- der will meet Sunday at 3 p. m. at 134 E. Seventh St. Al-young work- ers are invited to come. WOMEN’S DELEGATION OF THE R.LL.U. TO SPEAK AT MASS MEET Saturday . 4, at Irving Plaza. Speakers will include Wm. Z. Foster. Sophie Melvin, textile worker; Anna XKornblath, textile worker, and C. Mc- Lane, Negro needle trades worker. | CUBAN WORKERS cum 412 Sutter Ave.. Brooklyn, will have a dance at the club rooms this Sun- day. Nove. 30, at § p.m. CONFERENCE oF TH WORCORS OF NEW YORK AND VICINITY | Will take place this Sunday at 1| Pp. m. at 35 E. 12th St.. fourth floor. | Comrade I. Amter will speak. Ali| workers interested in workers’ corre- spondence should be present. Red Nicht in China Dance with costume will take place tonicht, 8 p.m. at the Co-operative Auditorium, 2700 Bronx Park Hast Tickets, 49 cents; All proceeds to Section 5. « sete Needle Tradex Ball. December 5 Friday, at Manhattan Lyceum, 66 East Fourth St. Good program. Tick- ets 50 cents. Can be secured at the Union Headquarters, W, 28th St. or the Morning Freiheit, 50 B. 3th st. nage? aes Protext eMeting for the Release of Kileen Holmes and Mabel Husa Will be held Dec. 5 at the Finnish Cooperative Hall. 5 EB. 126th St. All youth organizations and clubs are urged to send delegates to draft a resolution of protest. et es Brichon eBrch Workres, Attention! You are urged to come for signa- ture collection for the passage of the Unemplovment Insurance Bill of the Communist Party, this Sunday, 10 a. m. at 140 Neptune Ave. Don't Forget Sunday nizht jamboree Red Build- ers News Club at 27 E. Fourth St. Hot dogs. ES Concert_and Dance Given by the Gonzalez Branch ILD. for the defense of the Imperial Valley prisoners, Saturday night, Dec. 6, at the Unity House, 1800 7th Ave. (cor. 10th St.) Admission 25 cents. Open Foram in English Will _be held this Sunday, 8 p. m. at the Bronx Workers Club, 1472 Bos- ton Rd. Subject—Trade Union Unity League. Admission free, Be Ne A Special Meeting Of all Labor Defender agents Mon- day, 7 p. m. at 799 Broadway, room 410. At this meeting work will be mapped for Imperial Valley week. Unemployed Councils Of Hungarian, Checkoslovak, Ger- man workers will meet_ Thursday 8p. m. at 347 EB. 72nd St 7, At this meeting we. will form the Yorkville Unemployed Coun- Brownsville Workers ‘School Open Forum At 105 Thatford Ave.. Sunday. 8 p. m. “Revolution in South America” lecture by Moreau. Questions, discus- sions. “ . U. L., which opened here Thurs- | Latin America illustrated by concrete examples |from experiences in this country. Two Types of Fakers. | Trade union militants must also, said Ballam, count the difference between the so- cial-fascist and the fascist | union leaders, the difference being in | the fact that the social-fascists, rep- resented here principally by the “Muste group” of the A. F. of L., ap- | proach the workers with “radical talk, which the fascist leaders, such |as Matthew Woll, ordinarily do not | e any pretense of demagogy, but more openly and brazenly ally them- selves with the capitalists against the workers. | This, however, does not mean that the social-fascists have any more in- | tentions than the fascists to help the workers in struggle. They lead the | workers to strike, but only to betray| | them—as seen even now in Danville. | Mexico and Canada. Other reports were made by a fra- | ternal delegate from the red trade junions of Mexico, the C. S. U. M. (Confederacion Sindical Unitaria de | Mexico) and by a delegate from the | Workers’ Unity League of Canada. In both these countries, as in the |U. S. A. many favorable perspectives were reported and lessons drawn from past errors common to all three countries. The Mexican revolution- ary unions had finally rid themselves of the worst opportunist tendencies and with proper co-operation given they have an excellent chance of continued progress. No Empty Gestures! This co-operation was alst stressed “ley Ramirez, reporting for the Latin- | American Trade Union Confedera- tion, who correctly and sharply criti- cized the T. U. U. L. for making empty gestures of aid to the Latin- American workers to which it did nothing to give substantial content. The great mutual benefit to both Latin-American and American work- ers in carrying out the co-operation already Pacts signed between the T. U. U. L. and the Mexican red unions and the Latin-American unions as a whole was stressed, as also the great op- States. “ALISON’S HOUSE” NEXT CIVIC REPERTORY PRODUCTION. The Civic Repertory Theatre will present their next production, “Ali- son's House,” by Susan Glaspell, Mon- day evening at their Fourteenth St. Playhouse. Miss Glaspell’s new play takes place on the last day of the old cen- tury, Dec. 31, 1899. The central char- acter of the play is based on the life of an American poetess, Emily Dick- | inson, Eva La Gallienne directed. | The costumes and settings are by | Aline Bernstein. The cast will includ Eva Le Gal- lienne, Alma Kruger, Josephine Hutchinson, Leona Roberts, Florida Friebus, Mary Ward and Donald Cameron. The cast of the Theatre Guild's production “Green Grows the Lilacs,” by Lynn Riggs, which opens at the Tremont Theatre, Boston, Dec. 8, will include Helen Westley, Richard Hale, Helen Coburn, James Patterson and Lee Strasborg. The 100th performance of “Up Pops the Devil” takes place tonight at the Masque, 45th St. Theatre. NEVIN BUS LINES 111W. 3ist (Bet. 6 & 7 Avs.) Tel. Chickering 1600 PHTTADEYPHIA HOURLY EXPRESS SERVICE $2.00 One Way $3.75 Round Trip Chicago ..........$20.50 Los Angeles ...... 55.50 Pittsburgh ... 9.50 Washington . 5.50 Baltimore .. 4.50 Cleveland ... 12.50 Boston . 4.00 Detroit . 15.50 St. Louis 22.50 Lowest Rates Everywhere Return Trips at Greatly . Building Maintenance Workers Union General membership meeting will be held Wednesday, Dec. 3 at the Labor Tmple, 243 HK. 84th St. Reduced Rates “MAINE TO CALIFORNIA” —Paterson—Passaic—A ttention— DAILY WORKER CONFERENCE This Sunday PATERSON—2) P. M. AT 206 MARKET STREET PASSAIC—4 P.M. AT 287 MONROE STREET All workers nterested in the building of a powerful mass DAILY WORKER-that will help fight the mill bosses are urged to come to this conference that will take up the ques- tion of buiidng up the circulaton of the DAILY WORKER carefully take into ac- | trade by the T. U. U. L. adherents here, | promised in the Solidarity | portunity emphasized for organiza- | tion of the millions of Latin-Ameri- | can workers here in the United) New York City or call Algonquin 5707. NOON; FIGHT WAGE CUT NEW YORK.—Today at noon at Stuyvesant Casino, 142 Second Ave., the meeting of all members of the Amalgamated Clothing Workers who want to struggle instead of starve, |takes place. This meeting is called |by the Rank and File Committee of 30, elected at a mass meeting of tailors to fight against wage cuts, piece work and the check-off. “Every | tailor,” says the committee, “should |come to this meeting to fight against these things, every shop should be represented, and every shop commit- tee come.” | MAKE NEWARK CITY WORKERS | PAY. NEWARK, N. J,—All the workers | for the city of Newark will be forced | to give back a part of their wages | for a relief fund for the unemployed, | instead of the city and the bosses | | providing help for the unemployed.— L. | || Stenographer Wanted. Job apen for expert stenog- rapher; dictation, general office work; Party member or close sympathizer, Party work, | Apply: OFFICE WORKERS UNION (6 WEST 2Ist ST, NEW YORK Ask for MAY FIELD f possible, apply between 10 & 12 am. Comrade T. YAKOVLEFF Educational Dept. of the Com. Party will speak on Economic Crisis in the U.S.A. at the Open Forum of the Bronx Workers Cooperative Auditorium Sunday, Nov. 30, at 8:30 P. M- Gottlieh’s Hardware 119 THIRD AVENUB |] Near 14th st. Stuyvesant 6974 | All kinds of CUTLERY || ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES | MAZDA Bulbs Our Specialty. DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, § SATURD. AY, NOV! EMBER 29, 1930 | JOBLESS GET CHARITY, igs League Affair SHIP OWNER PROFITS Tonight, With Segal NEW YORK.—Tonight the Metal NEW YORK.—On board S. 8S. | workers Industrial League concert “Saturnia” pier 84 city, a dinner was ,and dance, funds of which go to or- served for the unemployed yesterday. | ganization purposes, will take place The next gang goes on at 2 p.m, in New Harlem Casino, 100 West The crowd had to stand waiting in| 116th St. The features of the eve- the snowstorm for 20 minutes, the |ning will be a dance by Edith Segal) hall provided being too small, about of the Red Dancers; Allison Bur- 800 are taken on at a time. The roughs in Creole and Negro work | gatemen are asking for tickets, the songs, and music by the John C.| | Vast majority have none as the event |Smith Negro Band. There will also Was announced too late by the cap-|be refreshments. Admission is 50} |italist press, and when the story cents. All should come. }came out there were no tickets left | at any of the places mentioned by the capitalist press. There are about 200 children present ranging from babes in arms to boys and girls of | sixteen, about 300 women and about 500 men. There are about ten col- ored men. More people are coming in every mfnute in hopes of getting a free meal. Men, women and chil- | dren young and old are coming in| Those working on Italian ships groups of three and more. A grand average $32 a month, for 12 hours parade of the vast army of unem-'a day and overtime. ployed! The bosses call this a great | and prosperous Thanksgiving Day, While this is going on, gangs are | working on deck loading the ship. | The ship owner will make a grand profit of about $200,000 this trip to Italy. They give a few crumbs to jobless. p——"" Theatre Guild Productions IVIC REPERTORY send len oth 7 | mings § S00, $1, $1.50. Mta Th. ut Bat., 2 . EVA LE GALLIENNE, Direetor Today Mat. ................PETER PAN Tonight . SUNNY MO! NG_and | THE WOMEN HAVE THEIR WAY Seatedwks.ady.atBoxOff.&T’nHall,113W.48 EDGAR WALLACE’S PLAY ON THE SPOT with CRANE WILBUR and ANNA MAY WONG EDGAR WALLACE’S FORREST THEA. | 49 W. of B’y. Evs. 8:50, Mts. W. & 8 2:30 NINA ROSA New Musical Romance, with GUY ROBERTS ETHELIND TERRY RD CEELEY, Others 44th, W. of Broadway . & Si 30. Chi, 2600 ELIZABETH, 4 THE QUEEN GUIL W. 62d. Evs. 8:40 Mats. Th.&Sat, 2:40 ROAR CHINA MARTIN BECK 7BE4 45th St. West of Broadway Evs. 8:50. Mts, Th. & Sat. 2:50 THE QUEEN OF COMEDIES LYSISTRATA HIT YOU HEAR ABOUT TH 44TH STREE Tyitstee of Bway Eves. 8:40. — Mats. Wed. & Sat., 2:40 300 Balcony Seats, $1, All Performances “up POPS THE DEVIL” GLOBE ‘¢*%, 8. Dati trom A Genuine Comedy Hit & B'wayl0:30 a M. MADONNA OF THE STREETS with Evelyn Brent and Robert Ames 424 8t. CAMEO 2.., |NOW “BIG MONEY” with Robert Armstrong: Eddie Quillan—James Gleason MUSIC AND CONCERTS Philharmonic Symphony STOKOWSKI, Guest Conduct tor METROPOLITAN, QPERA Ho Sunday Afternoon, Nov. BACH—BRAHMS (Soloi Guidi and Alfred Wallenstein) with ROGER PRYOR Evenings at 8:50 Mats. Wednesday and Saturd: THE GREEKS HAD A WORD FOR IT A COMEDY BY ZOE AKINS 8AM H. HARRIS Thea., 42d St. W. of B'y Evening 8:50. Mats. Wed. & Sat. 2:30 NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES RKO—ALWAYS A GOOD SHOW! All This Week World's Greatest Funmakers ANOS RKO ACTS — Larry Rich & Co. Harry Hines The Three Foys Ida May Sparrow 300 plone Carnegie Hall, Thurs. Eve., Dec. 4, 8:45 Friday Afternoon, Dec. 5, at 2.30 SIBELIUS—STRAVINSKY Compl lar avd te Soho Maker & Redford Carnegie Mall, Sat. Eve., Dec. 6, at 8:45 Australian Sunday Afternoon, Dec. 7, at 3:00 watt Soloist: EFREM ZIMBALIST, Violinist elie SIBELIUS—STRAVINSKY ARTHUR JUDSON Mgt. (Steinway) FRANKLIN Prospects Mist TOWN HALL, Sun. Aft., Nov. 30, at $||—-— Aas RKO ACTS |in R. K. 0. Radio’s RECITAL JOHN CHARLES | Airy Large Meetino Rooms and Hall TO ATR Suitable for tings. Lectures and Dances in the Czechoslovak Workers House, Inc. 347 E. 72nd St. New York Telephone: Rhinelander 6097 ——_—SS=—==——————/! 3y6naa Jleve6unua DR. A. BROWN Dentist 301 Bast 14th St. Cor. Second Ave Tel. Algonquin 7248 29 EAST 14TH STREET NEW YORK Tel. Algonquin 3356-8843 We Carry a Full Line of STATIONERY AT SPECIAL PRICES for Organizations 2% REDUCTION TO CITY | Have Your Kyes Examinea and Glasses Fitted by | WORKERS MUTUAL OPTICAL CO. ander versona) supervision ot AND UNION WORKERS DR. M. HARRISON Optometrist 215 SKOOND poche Corner 18th Street NEW YOKK A Opposite New tork Eye ano ar tofirmary Telephone Stayveannt 8836 4 omrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Billy Kelly & Co. Hew ota vere| “Check and + H O M A _ sve: [Double Check” Three Oranto: OW PLAYING! AMERICAN PREMIERE DYNAMIC! REVOLUTIONARY! GRIPPING! "RAZLOM’” (THE BREAK-UP) A TENSE TALE OF THE OCTOBER REVOLUTION PRODUCED BY MEJRABPOFILM IN U.8.8.R. TH ST. PLAYHOUSE 52 WEST 8TH ST., Between Fifth and Sixth Aves—Spring 5095 POPULAR PRICES—CONTINUOUS NOON TO MIDNIGHT Mgt. NBC Artists Service (Steinway) FIRST TIME IN NEW YORK! “HARBOR DRIFT” Sunday, November 30th at 7:30 P. M. at HUNGARIAN WORKERS HOME 350 East 81st Street Germany Under the “Youngs Plan” A German Film of Working Class Life Magnificent Ocean Steamers—Tourists Flocking to Europe Poverty Along the Docks—Msery of Unemployment Ausp'ces: WORKERS INTERNATIONAL RELIEF TICKETS: 35 CENTS IN ADVANCE, 45 CENTS AT DOOR For sale at W.LR. National Of 36 East 20th Street and Hungarian Workers Home, 350 East 8ist Street SHOWING “Ten Days That Shook the World” This Sunday, November 30 at 2:30 P. M. at PROCTOR’S THEATRE Broadway and 28th Street in celebration of the Tenth Anniversary of Soviet Armenia Admission 50 Cents Speakers: Nazarpeg, A. S. Zartarian and J: Louis rhe Restaurant 558 Cluremont Parkway. Bronx Auspices: ARMENIAN FRACTIONS—BUREAU OF DISTRICT 2, communist PARTY AND SYMPATHETIC ORANIZATIONS MASQUE 45th St. Tee... of Bivay | 17 CONCERT AND DANCE TONIGHT AT NEW HARLEM CASINO 100 West 116th St. Special Features RED DANCER—EDITH SEGAL ALISON BURROUGHS—French Creole and Negro Work Songs JOHN C. SMITH’S NEGRO BAND Auspices: METAL WORKERS Industrial League and Jewelry Workers’ Industrial Union Admission 50 Cents Section 2 RED SUNDAY will be held at 64 West 22nd Street, 10 o’clock: All workers are urged to participate. Volunteer for DAILY WORKER RED SUNDAY. To visit workers’ homes, to get subs for the DAILY WORKER. Come to one of the following headquarters: DOWNTOWN: 27 East 4th Street 64 West 22nd Street BRONX: 569 Prospect Avenue BROOKLYN: 68 Whipple Street 105 Thatford Street HARLEM: 308 Lenox Avenue Comrades, Patronize CAFE EUROPA 317 EAST 13TH STREET, (Near 2nd’ Ave.) Clean Wholesome Food. “F. W. I. U. Place.” THE AFFAIR OF THE YEAR PROLETPEN MASQUE BALL at the ROCKLAND PALACE 155TH STREET AND 8TH AVENUE Saturday Evening, December 13th ELABORATE PROGRAM Artef Players Jazz Band (A novelty feature) “THE RED ROOSTER”—A humerous satirical journal specially published on this occassion and distributed to visitors. The Harlemite Negro Orchestra will play AUSPICES: PROLETPEN (PROLETARIAN WRITERS) Tickets: $1.00 at the Morning Freiheit Office 35 East 12th Street WORKERS SCHOOL FORUM Every Sunday Night 8 p. m. AT IRVING PLAZA HALL 15th Street and Irving Place begins SUNDAY NOVEMBER 30th with MAX BEDACHT on the “Crisis of Capitalism” Most Vital Problems to all Workers Discussed by FOSTER, BROWDER, OLGIN, AMTER, HATHAWAY, HARRISON GEORGE AND OTHERS ADMISSION 25 CENTS Unemployed admitted free on presentation of Unemployed Council membership card Get the Sunday Night Forum Habit! Directed by WORKERS SCHOOL OF NEW YORK 35 East 12th Street () wes BETTER VALUES IN Q) vuns AND YOUNG MEN'S we Suits and Overcoats go to PARK CLOTHING CO. 93 Avenue A. Cor Sixth St dz | | A = Eyes! Scientific Examination of eye glasses—Carefully adjusted by expert optometrists—Reason- able prices. 9. Goldin. snc: OPTOMETRIST§-OPTICIANS 1690 LEX. AVE|609W. 181s ST. Carson srcet | or eeu be (DR. J. MINDEL Phone: LEHIGH 6382 ‘nternational Barber Shop M W SALA Prop 2016 Second Avenue, New York (bet 103rd & 104th Sts.> Ladies Rohs Our Specialty Private Beauty Parlor Boulevard Cafeteria 541 SOUTHERN BLVD. Cor. 149th Street Where you ent and feel at home Fel. ORChard 3783 DR. L. KESSLER SURGEON DENTIST Strictly by Appointment 48-50 DELANCEY STREET Cor. Eldridge St. NEW YORK Vegetarian RESTAURANTS Where the best food and fresh vegetables are served all year round 4 WEST 28TH STREET 37 WEST 32ND STREET 225 WEST 36TH STREET We Invite Workers to the BLUE BIRD CAFETERIA GOOD WHOLESOME FOOD Fair Prices A Comfortable Place to Eat 827 BROADWAY Between 12th and 13th Sts. For a Good Meal and Proletarian Prices Fat at the UNIVERSAL CAFETERIA Cor. 11th St. and University Place (Special Room for Conferences) “For AU Kinds of Insurance” ((ARL BRODSKY ‘Telephone: Murray Hill S55¢ 7 Kast 42nd Street, New York 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Bronz, NY DEWEY 9914 — Office Hours: » A M.-9 P.M. Sunday: 10 A. M1 PM. DR. J. LEVIN SURGEON DENTIST 1501 AVENUE U Ave U Sta, B.M.T. At East 15th St. BROOKLY: SURGEON DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Room 803—Phone: Algonquin 8183 Not eonnected with any other office —MELROSE— VEUILARIAN SST 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD, Bronx olnear 174th St Station) ONE: INTERVALD 9146. RATIONAL Vegetarian RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVE, UB Bet. 12th and 13th Sts. Strictly Vegetariun Food HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 6868 DAILY WORKER REPRESENTATIVES CONFERENCE THIS SATURDAY AT 3 P. M. At WORKERS CENTER 35 EAST 12th ST. Very important matters will be taken up! Every Unit must be represented! “hone: Stuyvesant 3316 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: (TALIAN DISHES a ith atmosphere where al) radicals meet 02 K. 12th St, New York Advertwe »-ur Untor Meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept 50 East 13th St. New York City