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NAACP Looks jor Scottsboro NEEDLE UNION'T0 | 'Workers! Onto the Streets _ DAILY | WORK ER, EW YORK, MONDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1931 * Control Through Boss Court RATIFY PROGRAM | NEW YORK,—The traitorous eat ance of the N. A A. C. P., with the Alabama boss lynchers who are trying | to burn the 9 Scottsboro children was | | again clearly exposed recently when William Picknes let the cat out of the bag that the N. A. A. C. P., was de- | pending upon the Alabama boss court to manouver the N. A. A. C. P. into control of the defense in defiance of the wishes of the boys and their par- | ents. Pickens, who spoke at the church | of the Bronx Free Fellowship, dec- lared that in the final anlysis the | courts would decide which organiz- ation it would recognize. This is quite | in line with the brazen attempt of | Pickens and Walter White to deny the Scottsboro boys and their parents the right to decide on the defense poli- | cies. The parents and all the boys have repeatedly decided in favor of the militant policy of the ILD in backing up its legal fight with mass | pressure on the hostile boss courts. This policy scares the Southern poss | and they are anxious to eliminate the | son, | casions. Negro workers raised their protests, | and that it was only this stormy pro- test of the workers that have saved the boys so far, that forced their re- moval from Scottsboro to Kilby Pri- Several Negro and white workers in the audience challenged Pickens from the floor, asking him to explain why the NAACP had denied the floor to mothers of the boys on several oc- Pickens tried to laugh away this question with the usual buffoon- | ery. The workers then took the floor and thoroughly exposed Pickens and the rest of the reformist leadership of the NAACP. OF COMMUNISTS - Red Candidates to Address Mass Meet Today After Work 26, right after work, all needle trades workers are called upon to come to a mass meeting in Webster Hall to dis- | cuss the election campaign and to ratify the candidates and the elec- tion program of the Communist Par- |ty whitch has been endorsed by the shop delegate council of the union. The needle trades workers who | have been in the front ranks of the ILD NEEDS FUNDS | TO SAVE NEGROES, FOREIGN BORN, ILD from the case. They have cordi- Fighting ~ Many De ally welcomed the traitorous activi- 4 | ties of the N. A. A.C. P. in attempt-| DOrtation and Frame ing to smash the mass defense move- Up Cases ment initiated by the ILD. | In his speech Pickens condemned} Deportation and lynching, by mob | the mass d¢fense movement, which | or by law! alone can free the boys, declaring| ‘These are the weapons brought to the sending of protest telegrams undreds of organizations to the of Alabama was the best hod of “inciting” the oppressors ¢ Negro masses and getting the | executed. He ignored the fact | s had elready been rail- roede condemned to burn in the electric chair when the white and | TERROR GROWS | IN LYNCH BELT Mississippi Negroes’ Lives Endangered | The extent of the terror imposed by landlords and bosses upon Negro tenant farmers and workers of the South, is shown in this letter just recelved by the International Labor Defense from a Negro in Snowton, Miss. My dear friend: dust a few lines to let you hear| from us down here. We are in aj terible condition here in Snowton, | Mississippi. People are getting killed | daily and we don’t know what is the | matter. We are pleading for you! people up there to do something for | . The white people tell us about | “Reds,” that they cause the} @. Tell the “Reds” to do some- for us immediately. We are| hungry and nearly starving, the “Red Cross” isn’t doing nothing for us.| They are even robbing the mail that come from Chicago and elsewhere. | Let the “Reds” help the South im- mediately or else we cam't live 3 or 4 day They even come in your house and kill you. They kill the| babies and children, and they even} won't let us buy the newspaper. | Yours true friends in need | P. S. Please do something imme-| diately, we can't go to bed at night. PAD MASS MEETING NEW YORK.—Stressing the fierce | assault upon the wages of the pain- ters and the worsening conditions in the trade, the Trade Union Unity Leakue group of painters has called @ mass meeting for Monday, October 26 at 1610 Boston Road, 8 p. m. MONDAY Rehenrsaix for the Nov. 7th Pageant will be held at the Workers Cen- ter, 35 BE. 12th St., tonight, at 8 p.m. More comrades needed. . * * Workers tx-servicemen’s League Branch No. 2. will hold an open-air meeting at | 7th Ave. and 125th St., 8 p. m. Speak- ers requested to come early. * 6 6 Join the Williamsburgzh Vote Com- sees ee, munine Clabt All Workers of Williamsburgh are @alled up on to take part in the first organizational meeting of the Com munist Club, tonight at 118 Crook Street, 8 p.m, ies, Kean ILD School will hold its next class on Legal Defense with Comrade Taub in room 203, 60 ©, 13th 8 will be con idith Segal ft the Workers Co-operative House, | 2700 Bronx Park Hast at 8:45 p. m., Ander the auspices of the WIR Cul tural Department. Bring bathing suite. TUESDAY * Drug Workers Attention All unemployed drug store clerks, pharmaceutical factory workers, etc., afte called to a special meeting to be held by thte Medical Workers I. le tomorrow afternoon, at 108 B, 14th St, room 202, 3 p. m. ‘ae 3 WEDNESDAY Medtent Worke Industrio! Lenagoe. | will hold a membership meeting at 6 FE. ith St., at 30 p. m. Members are urged to attend. Very important! . age NEW JERSEY Union City. Internat’! Labor Defense, ring. Br. will hold a membership drive meet, | All| tonight, at 4344, Hudson Btv'l. Porkers are invited. . « mnovs will be held 6 t the last Week Of the Wlection Campaign tn the Snd and 4th Ass. Dists. Unit No, 5 of the Young Communist League and Nos. 17, 18, 19, C. P. will hold open-air meeting, 8 p.m. as fol- fowst Monday Oct. 26,—170th St. and Valton Ave, Wednesday, Oct. 28 on ns well as Claremont and Washington Ave, Fur- bear by federal, city, and county of- ficials everywhere against the spread- | ing anger of the Negro and white workers, too long ground down un- der wage cuts, unemployment, evic- tions, soup lines, so-called “unem- ployment relief by individual ini- tiative.” Negro and foreign-born} workers, the most exploited of all} | American labor, stand the first a of these attacks. Between all militant workers and the strong-arm of the bosses’ govern- | ment stands the International Labor Defense, organizing under its ban- | ner tens of thousands of workers for | relief and defense of class-war pris- | oners and their families. The Inter- | | National Labor Defense, backed by! the masses, stands between Secretary | of Labor Doak and the deportation of Edith Berkman, National Textile Workers Union leader, to fascist Po- | | land, where she would be imprisoned | | or killed. It saved Guido Serio from being deported to Italy, where fascist | forces would torture him to death. It | 4s fighting for hundreds of other for- | | eign-born workers, threatened with | being shipped off like cattle to| | Greece, Rumania, Jugo-Slavia, China | and other lands where white terror reigns. It has stood between the} | mine Scottsboro boys and the death | chair in Kilby Prison, Montgomery, Ala. Now it is mustering its mass force to rescue the innocent Willie | Peterson, tubercular miner, framed | for murder in Birmingham; the Ne- gro and white miners terrorized and framed for murder in Harlan, Ky.; to save from third-degree torture and lynch law the 60-year old Ne- gro farm hand, Orphan Jones, held | for days in Maryland jails without the right to have a lawyer, beaten | up, forced to sign confessions he could not read. Without funds the International Labor Defense cannot save these workers. It needs money for the necessary legal defense, for briefs, for court, expenses, for bail, for organ- | izing meetings, for leaflets. Imme-| | diately the I:L.D. needs funds to aid prisoners rotting in cells and their | | famines hungering outside. ‘The International Labor Defense is a workers’ mass defense. Workers must support it! Send contributions | NOW to Room 430, 80 East llth St., | New York City. | |Pressers to Hold a | Forum Today at 1 p.m. | Open forum of cloak and dress | pressers will be held on Monday, 1 o'clock, at Memorial Hall, 344 West | | 36th St, At this open forum there will be a discussion on the situation in the trade, the conditions of the | pressers and the plan for uniting all | the pressers, regardless of their union | affiliations, for united front struggle | to improve the conditions. All press- lers of the cloak and dress trade are called upon to come to this forum. | Leaders of the Industrial Union will |open the discussion. Rank and file |members are called upon to come and | volee their opinions. Jewelry Strike Now In) Its Second Week ‘The jewelry strikers of Fabricant shop at 125 Canal St. have been | out two weeks and jewelry workers are urged to show their solidartiy on | the picket line all day from 8 a. m.| to 5 p. m. All militant jewelry workers are called to the office of the Jewelry Workers Industrial Union, 5 East 19th St., this evening at 6 p. m. to tage up special matters on a bik shop | | ready for cation. “CHINA EXPRESS” TO BE SHOWN AT N.T.W.1.U, MONDAY, “China Express” will be shown at I'the office o fthe Needle Trades Work- ers’ Industrial Union, 131 W. 28th St., | Monday, Oct. 26th, 7 p. m. ‘This moving picture show will mark the beginning of the cultural activi- ties undertaken by the Negro Depart- ment of the Industrial Union. Ben Gold, secretary of the union, ‘will speak. Come and bring your family and friends along! | Give your answer to Hoover's | program of hunger, wage cuts and persecution} | support of the Communist Party. | tion of the Foreign Born informing struggle, fighting against the bosses, the capitalist courts and judges, against the yellow socialist bureau- crats who have sold out the condi- tions of the workers to the bosses, | realize that the struggle of the work- ers cannot be limited to the economic field alone, but must also find ex- | pression on the political field by the support of the Communist Party, the only party of the working class. Role of the Party. In the present struggles conducted by the Industrial Union against wage cuts, speed up, unemployment, the workers have found the Communist | Party and its press championing the | interests of the workers. The revolt | of teh needle trades workers against the miserable conditions must find its expression on the political field. All needle trades workers are called upon to come to the ratification meeting and show their enthusiastic A vote for the Communist Party is a vote against injunctions, against mass unemployment, against speed-up, | wage cuts, it is a vote for militant | Workers are called upon to come | from their shops in organized bodies. Ben Gold, Joseph Boruchowitz, and other leaders of the Industrial Union as well as Amter and other leading candidates of the Communist Party will address the meeting. Unemployed Council of Dressmakers to Meet at the Union A meeting of the dressmakers’ Un- who have filled out applications, will be held on Monday, 2 St. week. every Monday. have filled out applications, as well as those who want to become mem- bers of the Council, are called upon to come to this meeting. U.S. Bank Depositors Put Up Election The United Depositors Committee | Positors has issued a statement to the effect that it would mobilize its members in the elections to strengh- then its fight for the follwing de- | mands: 1) | tors. 2) big stockholders. 3) Immediate prosecution of all the responsible heads of the bank- ing department, as well as all the) directors. Trade Union Unity Council Affiliates to unionism and for a party that fights | for the interests of the working class. | ployed Council, consisting of those | o'clock, at the | office of the union, 131 West 28th At this meeting definite steps will be taken to organize the council on a functioning basis, with planned work and definite tasks assigned to the various members, for the coming The Council will meet regularly All dressmakers who | Demands to Parties) of the Bank of the United States de- | | for world war! Soviet Union! | |off C ieee Soviets! Join the | I. Amter, District Organi: |of the Communist Party, will | Tom Johnson, member of |Communist Party, | | Brooklyn, on Oct. | Bill Dunne, editor of the Prospect and Longwood Ave. at 8pm. Meeting places in other announced- Rally in large masses! members of your organization. Defend the Soviet Union! i} | |at Columbus Circle, Monday, Oct. 26, at 9 p- m. will speak at Pitkin and Stone Ave., 28, at 8:30 p. m- South Brooklyn:—Thursday, October 29, at 8 p. m— 50th St. and 5th Ave. Main speaker Car] Brodsky: Newark, N. J.:—Thursday, October 29, at 5 itary Park, Main speaker, Juliet Stuart Poyntz. mintang Government, agent of Yankee imperialism- | |your solidarity with Chinese and Japanese toiling masses. Against Im Imperialist War! Protest the War Against the Chinese People! | Protest the Bloody Invasion of Manchuria! | Smash American, Japanese and eagad of Nations plots | Smash imperialist intervention plot against | Support Chinese revolution! Demand hands | demonstration in your section. | zer of the New York District | speak at an open air meeting the Central Committee of the Daily Worker, will speak at , Bronx, Saturday, Oct. 31, p: m.—Mil- sections of the city will be Bring your shopmates, and| : Down with the bloody Kuo- Show CHATTANOOGA, Oct. 25. —Estelle | Milner, young daughter of a Negro share cropper in Camp Hill, Ala- bama, was brutally attacked and | beaten up by Sheriff Young in a | flare-up of the land-owners’ terror | against the Negro croppers, which |has already resulted in the murder | of one cropper, the disappearance of four and the jailing of 34 croppers on framed-up charges. | The girl was pummelled and kicked by the sheriff who invaded her home. Her spine has suffered serious injury and she is in a critical condition. This brutal attack fol- lowed the receipt by the young girl of a letter from New York through the mails. Sheriff Young, like all | Southern sheriffs, makes it a prac- tice to censor the mail of Negro | workers, inorder to keep them iso- lated from the outside world. When he learned that the young worker had received a letter by mail, Sher- iff Young flew into a violent rage and the outrageous attack on the girl followed. Directly upon learning, from one of its representatives, of the attack, the Southern District of the Inter- national Labor Defense sent a pro- test telegram to the sheriff, declar- ing, in part: “In the name of hundreds of thousands of workers in our ranks, | we protest against this brutal vio- lation of the most elementary tights of the croppers of Camp Hill, We pledge our continued Serio Banquet in Cliffside October 27; | Perth Amboy Oct. 30 CLIFFSIDE, N. J., Oct. 23.—The ‘The State shall guarantee pay- | ment in full to all depositors, espe- | clally to workers and small deposi- | Assessment of all directors and | workers of Cliffside, N. J., will give a hearty farewell on Tuesday, Oct. 27, to Guido Serio, militant Italian worker who is leaving for Soviet | Russia after being saved from depor- |tation to fascist Italy. The farewell | will be in the form of a banquet to lbe given Tuesday at 8 p. m. at the Russian Hall, The Serio case attracted nation- | wide attention as a result of the fight | waged under the leadership of the |International Labor Defense to save | him from being deported to certain |death at the hands of Mussolini's |hangmen. The Department of Labor |ordered him deported, but the U.S. 'District Court was forced to reverse Foreign Born Rody this decision and grant him a yolun- NEW YORK, Oct. 22—An affilia- | tion check and a letter signed by J. that this organization has decided to affiliate and give its full support to the Committee. The affiliation of the Trade Union | Unity Council comes as a result of the practical work which the com- mittee is carrying out in leading the struggle for defense and giving legal aid to the foreign born workers. All workers organizations should follow the Trade Union Council and affiliate with the Committee for the Protection of the Foreign Born, 32 Union 8q., Room 605, New York City. One way to help the Soviet Union Is to spread among the workers “Soviet ‘Forced Labor’,” by Max Bedacht, 10 cents per copy. "ATTENTION! | Mass pageant of 100 to be held | in N, Y. Coliseum Noy. 7 in cele- bration of 14th Anniversary of | U. 8. 8. R. is only half filled. More comrades are needed to par- ticipate. Workers Theatrical Groups, Workers Clubs, Fraternal Organizations, and individuals are asked to help make this a revo- lutionary success and attend re- hearsal in the Workers Center, 35 E, 12th St., Monday at 8 o'clock, Workers Cultural Federation, Drama Bureau, $$ $$ $$} | tary departure to the Soviet Union, .On Friday, Oct. 30, at 7 p. m. a Steuben of the Trade Union Unity Council, was received today by the District Committee for the Protec- | farewell banquet for Serio will be |held at Perth Amboy at 308 Elm St. | Admission to the farewell banquets being arranged by the New York Dist. | of the International Labor Defense. Alabama Sheriff in Murderous Attack on Young Negro Girl support to them in their efforts to organize against starvation and in their fight against the reign of terror carried on against them by you, your deputies and the land- owners and to tontinue to expose your murderous terrorism to the test of the world.” Robinhood Bosses Ask Injunction Picket Line to Smash Boss Injunction The hearing of the application of the Rebin Hood for an injunction | against the Industrial Union, sche- duled to take place today, was post- poned. The attempt of the Robin Hood Hat Co. to break the strike of the millinery workers through an injunc- | tion must be answered by a more militant picketing. iz The Industrial Union which is leading the strike of the trimmers has issued a call to the operators, calling for a united front struggle. In this call the union points out that only through a united strike commit- tee and a militant strike can the in- junction be defeated and the work- ers win back their jobs. Needle trade workers are called upon to report on the picket line in front of this shop (65 W. 39th St.) on Monday morning and thus show the bosses of the Robin Hood as well as all other bosses that the workers will not submit to injunc- tions but will go on with the strug- gle for the right to be organized, for the right to picket and ght in de- fense of their union conditions, ATTENTION NEEDLE TRADES WORKERS. A very important meeting of the needle trades general fraction will be held on Wednesday, October 28th, at 7 p. m. sharp, at the Workers Cen- ter, 2nd floor, to take up the imme- diate tasks of the Needle Trades Union, The meeting will begin on time. ‘Therefore all comrades are requested to be on time so as not to disturb the meeting. Bring along your Party membership book. Communist Party, Dist. 2, District Secretariat. NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES EAST SIDE—BRONS RKO cry ered fi, | leading Communist Party candidates. | there are urged to come early in view |New York are aroused as never be- |used by the Tammany and Republi- The New York banquet will be held Noy. 29, Millions More in Profits for Du Pont As Workers Get Cuts The net income of the F. I. du Pont de Nemours & Co. (Du Pont) for the nine months of this year was $41,41/,43. In the third quorter of this year, that is, from July to Sep- tember the net income was $13,802,- ane this amount ‘shows an increase in profits of $700,000 over the same period of months in 1930. Payments of dividends for the third quarter was just a little under a million dol- lars more than for the same quartér last year, being $12,206,054 and $11,- 540,317, respectively. | dends to the parasitic coupon clip- pers in nine months of 1931 was $7,706,606, The surplus of the com- pany, that huge hoard of accumu- lated profits made from the workers, was on Sept. 30, 1931, $211,792,122, against $208,082,665 last year, an in- crease of $3,000,000. At the same time du Pont is ac- cumulating vast profits and paying out millions to parasites, the workers in the du Pont companies are re- ceiving wage-cuts and are being old that “all classes are suffering from the depression.” , The total amount paid out in Givi- | Today to Tuesday On the Sereen— Theodore TEFFEBGN ako ACTS Dreiser’s RGclalde Hall Bert hg pel a Mares Novente| AN American Tragedy WEAN Philips Holmes Sylvia Sidney _ Premonte ik —RKO Acts— Geo. Jessel In Person Handors and Mi! jolp Other Acts Intern’] Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 1 UNION SQUARE STH FLOOR All Work Done Under Personal Vare of DR. JOSEPABON Cooperators’ SEROY CHEMIST 652 Allertop Avenue O1-2-7584 BRONX, N.Y. TO RIP OPEN FAKE } “RELIEF” SCHEME of TAMMANY HALL At Webster Hall Rally Thursday Night NEW YORK.—The $15,000,000 ap- propriation voted by the Board of Estimates for so-called Unemploy-| ment Relief which is supposed to take care of 100,000 families until next} June and which will be under fire | this Thursday night at the final Elec- tion Rally called by the Communist | Party, New York District, to be held| in Webster Hall, 119 East 11th St., at 7 p.m. There is to be no admis- sion charged so that thousands of | unemployed workers who are begin- | ning to follow the program of the Communist Party may attend the | and is an answer to a letter sent by | CONFERENCE ON Fight for NEW YORK.—The magnificent Solidarity of the children of the So- viet Union with the 9 Scottsboro Negro boys is expressed in a letter just receivtd in New York from the Moscow Pioneers. The letter is ad- dressed to Ella Lucille Wright, kid sister of Andy and Roy Wright, two | of the framed-up Scottsboro boys, her to the Russian Pioneers. In the Soviet Union, the children are not poisoned with race hatred and prejudice in the schools as is the case in those countries where dying capitalism still rules. The Soviet children are taught true internationalism, They deeply re- sent the wrongs perpetrated by the American capitalist Wadia the meeting and hear the speeches of the Workers who are expected to be of the record crowd which is expected | to attend. The jobless workers of fore over the fact that Jimmie Walk- er in alliance with the holy fakers of the alvation Army intends to carry out the program of “forced labor” | compelling jobless workers who have | hardly the strength to stand up to chop wood of the Salvation Army be- fore they can get a handout of slop and a place to sleep in the flop houses of New York. The Communist Party candidates will tell the workers the true facts about this unemployment racket now can racketeering politicians with the aid and whole-hearted support of the yellow Socialist leaders with Norman Thomas, Mr. Hillman and Mr. Pan- kin, giving the lead. Rally all the workers of shop and factory, in union and fraternal organizations, to in- form the workers of Thursday's meeting and to bring a record break- ing crowd to Webster Hall as a dem- onstration of support for the Com- munist Party. Every class conscious worker is called upon by the New York Dis- trict of the Communist Party to reg- ister at once at the Communist Party headquarters in your section to act as Watcher at the polls on Election Day, to go from house to house, to advertise in shop and factory, to send the workers to Vote Communist on November 3. If every worker and sympathizer of the Communist Party as well as the membership of the Party utilizes every day to advertise and organize for this purpose there is bound to be a tremendous victory at the polls for the Communist Party on Election Day. Farewell Banquet to Mrs. Wright, Mcther | of Scottsboro Boys ‘The City Committee of the League of Struggle for Negro Rights, together with the Finnish Women's Club, has Organized a farewell banquet for Mrs. | Ada Wright, mother of two of the | Scottsboro boys, before her return to the South, and August Yokinen, bat- tler for Negro rights, who has re- cently been released on bond from Ellis Island, The banquet will be held at the Finnish Workers’ Hall, 15 W. 128th St., on Thursday evening, at 8 o'clock, October 28. An excellent program has been ar- ranged, and all workers are urged to attend. Organizations are asked CHILDREN’S WORK C Supports Meet In Special Call In a statement issued yesterday, the Trade Union Unity Council gave full endorsement to the coming con- ference on children’s work which is being called for next Sunday, No- vember Ist, by the New York District of thé Young Pioneers of America. The statement follows: “The Trade Union Unity Council of New York endorses. the coming conference on children’s work which is being called by the Young Pioneers of America on November Ist. “As strikes are developing all over the country against wage cuts and the lowering of the standard of liv- ing of the masses of workers, the children are helping on the picket lines and in all the strike activity. Over twenty-five thousand workers are now on strike in Lawrence, Massachusetts, against wage cuts. “In all of these struggles which are being led by the Trade Union Umity League and all the revolutionary unions, the children have played an important role. In Lawrence a group of twenty-five Young Textile Pioneers led the picket line the other day. In the Paterson strike, many hundreds of children were led by the Young Russian Pioneers Pledge. ee Boys Negro workers and their children, They have held many mass meet- ings to protest the hideous attempt by the American bosses to legally lynch the nine Scottsboro children. The letter relates the activities of the Soviet children in defense of the young Scottsboro lads, and is here printed in full: “Dear Comrade Ella Lucille Wright? “I have received your letter the other day and was very happy ta hear from you. Your letter I have given over to the Pioneers of the Soviet Union. We have read your letter over and over. All of us are very much enthused by your letter. We all congratulate you on your mis litancy in defense of your twa brothers and the other boys as well. Our comrades like the letter of yours especially in so far that you, as young as you are, show already that: you know the meaning of class so- Udarity when you ask our Russian Pioneers to write to you and when you say that, ‘I’m not only helping to frve Roy and Andy but the other seven boys also, “The Pioneers here in the Soviet Union have from tne very beginning been fighting against this frame-up. In fact, our Pioneers were the first here to speak about the Scottsboro boys. As early as last May 2, the Pioneers of the Soviet Union had mass protests and resolutions adopt- ed over a mass radio hook-up reach- ing to all ends of the Soviet Union. After that, the Pioneer press carried on a campaign for the boys’ freedom. There isn’t a working class child in the Soviet Union that doesn’t know about the vicious frame-up. “Yesterday I spoke to a Pioneer group about your letter and the children decided to write to you and your brothers immediately. A group of children were chosen to write the letters which they'll send. to the Pioneer Truth, a Pioneer paper which will forward you all the letters they receive. “All, write to us some more, we would like to hear from you. Our Pioneers want to know about your's and your brothers’ lives; write to us. We will always answer you. “Keep up your spirit, young com- rade, and together with you we will keep up our fight for the freedom of the 9 Scottsboro boys as well as of all class-war prisoners. The Ala- Textile Pioneers in strike activity. The National Miners’ Union received: great help from the Miner's Chil- dren's Clubs in the strikes which it led and is leading. “The conference which is being called by the Young Pioneers should serve as the starting point in the or- ganization of the children by the trade unions. Every active trade unionist should support this confer- ence in every way possible and every trade union must support this con- ference by the sending of delegates to participate in the work and the starting of this work in their own unions or leagues.” Call Williamsburgh |Restaurant Workers To a Meeting Monday Restaurant and cafeteria workers of Williamsburgh have been called to a meeting at 795 Flushing Ave. (near Broadway), Brooklyn, Monday, October 26 at 8 p. m, in a leaflet: distributed by the Food Workers In- dustrial Union, restaurant section. Pointing out the increasing bad conditions in the restaurants and cafeterias and the need for unioni- zation of the Williamsburgh food houses, the leaflet calls on the work- to elect delegates to this banquet. The admission is only 25 cents. ers to join the Food Workers Indus- trial Union. AMUSEMENTS || EST SHOW IN NEW YORK HKU dat earts | 1 “The ROAD | | PrOowHeLL to SINGAPORE” With Doris Kenyon HIEPPODROME 2:5. | | i] 6 Sowemeneswr Week 2nd Alexis Granowsky’s “SONG of LIFE” and S, M, Bisenstein's “A Sentimental Romance” CONCERT At HUNTS POINT PALAC Double Brass Band for Dancing Given by the RUSSIAN WORKERS CLUB “NOVY MIR” Saturday, October 31, I. Belarsky, famous Soviet Opera Singer, will give a recital of the latest Soviet songs. Symphony Orchestra of the Novy Mir Club and other features PROCEEDS FOR THE RUSSIAN COMMUNIST PAPER ‘NOVY MIR’ and BALL at 8:30 p. m. Sharp E—163rd St. and So. Blvd. Admission 75 Cents Patronize the Concoops Food Stores AND Restaurant 2700 BRONX PARK EAS “Buy tm the Co-operative Store and help the Left Wing Movement.” All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian Restaurant 1600 MADISON AVENUE Phone University 4-9061 We Invite Workers to the BLUE BIRD CAFETERIA GOOD WHOLESOME FOOD Fair Prices A Comfortable Place to Hat 827 BROADWAY bama Ku Kluxers will never dare roast our boys in the chair if we raise a mighty protest that will swing their prison door open. Your Comrade, HARRY EISMAN (Harry Eisman is an American Pioneer who is now in the Soviet Union.) Tel. Stuyvesant 9-5557 If no answer call Stu. 9-1500 (24 hour service) CARL BRODSKY | “ANY KIND OF INSURANCE” 799 Broadway New York City Dr. MORRIS LEVITT SURGEON DENTIST secthsne ne cor, 176th St. N. ¥. 1 Tremont 3-1253 special tow prices for workers Sy6uaa Nevesunua DR. A. BROWN Dentist $M EAST 14TH STREET (Corner Second Avenue) ‘Tel, Algonquin 7248 DAY AND EVENING Commercial—Secretarial Courses Individaal Instroction Open the entire year lath St, at 2nd Ave., N.Y.C. TOmpkins Square 6-6584 Phone Stuyvesant 8816 1 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES 4, place with atmorphere er all radicals where 302 &. 12th St. few York Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 199 SECOND AVENUE Bet, 12th and 13th Ste, Strictly Vogetarian food MELROSE DAIRY VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT Comrades Witt Always Find It Pleasant to Dine at Our Pince, 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD. Bronz (near 174th St. Station) VELEPHONE INTERVALE #—91469 Advertise Your Union Meetings Bere. For Information Write to Advertising Uepartment The DAILY WORKER i Restaurant 558 Claremont Parkwey, Bron> Between 12th and 13th Sts. Y 50 East 13th St. New York City te