The Daily Worker Newspaper, October 27, 1931, Page 2

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Soemetornincesene | —-— DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1931 TAMMANY USES RELIEF AGENCIES | AS PART OF ELECTION MACHINERY "°= Bette: their noses into every bit of personal | Workers at Robinhood Wat Continue Fight Conditioas While the hearings for an injunc- tion applied for by the Robinhood Hat Co., 65 W. 39th St., are going on, the workers know that hats cannot be made by injunctions and are deter- mined to go on with their strike re- gardless of injunctions until the boss has been forced to reinstate all work- ers and agree to the union conditions that previously prevailed in the shop controlled by the Industrial Union. The Industrial Union is exerting ev- ery effort to build a united front of the trimmers and operators so as to, carry on the fight more effectively. All needle trade workers must give information which amounts to finger | their fullest support to the strikers of printing the working class. The|the Robinhood Hat Co. These work- Communist Party struggles every the ‘The registration places opened by Army headquarters. Organizations the Tammany Hall machine to regis-|controlled by the bosses will utilize exposed by the Communist candi-|find out everything ‘about a worker dates at the Final Election Rally to|and his family and particularly about be held Thursday, October 29, at/his political opinion. The Communist been opened in practically every|of the working class against the fake eharity settlement house or Salvation | relief schemes and charity hand-outs |and for unemployment insurance will | night, October 29th, at the final Elec- i | the bosses’ charity machine to pry | ate .|day for winter relief for the unem-~- Mobilize for Hunge | ployed, and raises the demand for March to Washington |$s150 cash payment to all jobless Four meetings of unemployed nee- | 8nd snooping into workers’ homes by dle trades workers were held yester- | charity investigators. The Commu- day afternoon, a meeting of cloak and | nist Party calls on all workers to at- f 5 8 i | ing to learn all the facts about ployed furriers, a meeting of the | even! ressmakers’ unemployed council, and | the relief racket of the bosses who a meeting of men’s clothing workers. | #@ Now collecting millions of dollars At all these meetings the present | : conditions in the trade were discussed | Publican and Socialist racketeers and at length. Many of the workers par- | St@fters. out that the treacherous activities of company unions in the needle | have et ified the un- to increase the speed up sys- tem, and long hours, The unemployed workers discussed the importance of ed for the purpose of building the Industrial Union as the only organ- ization representing the interests of ter workers for so-called jobs will be; this registration for a campaign to Webster Hall at 7 p.m. They have} Party which is leading the struggle | mobilize the workers on Thursday WORKERS MEET, workers as against this charity racket dress pressers, a meeting of unem-|tend the Central Rally Thursday | to line the pockets of Tammany, Re- ticipating in the discussion pointed} All workers who are citizens are yment situation by helping the niting the employed and unem- the employed and unemployed plo; Concrete plans of activity were worked out which aim to build up united front organizations of the un- employed members of the Industrial | Union and the A. F. of L. and the} unorganized unemployed workers for united tion to secure immediate ment relief, to do away with hours of overtime and to join with the general unemployed movement in the fight for unem- ployment insurance, to take part in the conference to be arranged in New York City, and to mobilize for a good representation in the national hun- ger march. All unemployed needle trades work- ers are called upon to join the coun- cil in their respective trades. Window Cleaners Meet Thursday Organize Fight for Demands NEW YORK.—A general mass meeting of all window cleaners, or- ganized and unorganized, Negro and white, will be held this Thursday evening, October 29, at 8 p. m. at the Manhattan Lyceum. The meet- ing is called by the Window Clean- ers Unoin, section of the Building Maintenance Workers Union, which is affiliated to the Trade Union Un- ity League. The workers will be presented with @ program of militant organization and fight against the unbearable working conditions in the industry, conditions made possible by the con- sistent betrayals and splitting tac- tics of the socialist and A. F. of L. fakers. The following demands will Placed before the meeting: 1. Short- er hours of work; 2. Standardized Wages; 3. All disputes between work- ers and bosses to be adjusted by the grievance committee; 4. Working cards system only; 5. Rain cr sun- shine; 6. Legal holidays with pay; 7. Extra pay for overtime; 8. One man for 3 sections of a ladder (18 feet) 4, 5, 6, (36 feet) two men; 9. Workers Compensation insurance; 10. Struggle for unemployment insur- ance; 11. Strike against wage. cuts. TUESDAY Drug Workers Attention All unemployed drug store clerks, pharmaceutica] factory workers, ete. are called to a special meeting to be held by thte Medical Workers I. L. tomorrow afternoon, at 108 E. 14th St, room 202, 3 p. m, ipa eee WEDNESDAY Medteal Workers Industrial League. will hold a membership meeting at 5B. 1th St. at 8:30 p.m. Membern | are urged to attend. Very important! ise i NEW JERSEY Union City. Internat’l Labor Defense, Eng. Br. will hold a membership drive meet, | tonight. at 4344, Hudson Biv'l, All| workers are invited. ae BRONX RED WEEK will be held Oct. 26 for the last week of the Blection Campaign in the 2nd and 4th Ass, Dists, Unit No. & of the Young Communist Ueague and Nos, 17, 18, 19, C, P. will hold open-air meeting, 8 p,m. as fol- lows: ‘Wednesday, Oct. 28 on same place, as well as Claremont Parkway and Washington Ave. Fur- ther dates will be announced in this YCUL, Needle Trade Workers Attention YCL members working in the nee~ @ile trades will be excused from their unit meetings to attend a fraction meeting at the Workers’ Center, 35 E. 12th St,, unless absolutely neces- ant wee | 4k. GSDAY— Steve Katovi« Br, LL.D. Will hold an open-air meeting at Sth St. and Avenue B, 3 p.m. s 8 ‘Tnit No. 3, See, 6, C, PB, ‘The Communist Party will hold a mass election campaign rally at Ans Mansion, 142 Watkins St., yn, 8 p.m. urged to register immediately at the Section headquarters of the C. P. as Red Watchers at the polls on Novem- ber 3rd to safeguard the rights of revolutionary workers who will Vote Communist, WHITE RAPIST KILLS NEGRO GIRL Murders ‘Her When She Resists CLEVELAND, Ohio.—Ethel Taylor, 13 year old school girl, was shot to death here recently when she resist- ed a brutal assault and an attempt to rape her by a white man, Sam Levido, Motivated by the “white superior- ity” idea that members of the white tuling class can command the body of any Negro woman for the satis- faction of their lust, Levido lured the Negro girl to his room above a Print shop and attempted to rape her. When she resisted he shot her thru the mouth, killing her. This atrocity is made possible by the lynch law system which divides the white workers from the Negro masses and makes the Negro the spe- cial prey for all forms of persecution and humiliation. Funeral of Comrade Milton’ Pender To Be Held Today Comrade Milton Pender, 29 years of age, organizer of the Jean Dessa- lins Group (formerly Osborne St. Group) at time of his death, died Saturday, Oct. 24th. He was exceedingly active in or- ganizing white and Negro workers, under the banner of the L. 8. N. R. He is survived by his wife, Com- rade Bessie Pender, also a very active member of the League of Struggle for Negro Rights. The city committee of the L. S. N. R., as well as the membership of the Jean Dessalins Group, keenly regrets the loss of Comrade Milton Pender, and invites all revolutionary workers, Negro and white, who are able to do so, to attend his funeral, which will take place on Tuesday, Oct. 27, at 3 p. m. from H. M. Scott Funeral Par- lor, 1936 Dean Street, Brooklyn. Take Lexington Ave. subway marked Utica Ave. to last stop. NEW PIONEER HAS JOHN REED STORY Many Other Features; Out Nov .1 NE WYORK.—Every child whose father works in a factory or tills the soil for a living will want to get a copy of the November issue of the NEW PIONEER, which will be on sale November First. In the November issue there is a true story of a little boy who grew up to be a general in the Red Army told by Moissaye Olgin, editor of the Freiheit. And there will be the be- ginning of the life story of John Reed, the daring and brave American who gave his life to the Russian Re- volution and whose death we comme- morate in November, with drawings as only William Gropper can make them, And if you've ever attended a foot- ball gabe you'll want to read the ex- | planation of the off-tackle play as explained by an expert. These and many other features interesting to grown-ups and children will appear in the November number, which sells for five cents a copy. To be sure of getting your copy, subscribe. I want to get the NEW PIONET?. Here is my fifty eents. ers are not only fighting in defense of their own jobs but are fighting in defense of the union, are fighting against injunctions which the bosses want to use as an instrument to de- stroy the conditions of the workers. LD. PLENUM OCT. 3LINCITY Plan Fight on Growing Bogs Terror NEW YORK.—The Plenum of the National Executive Committee of the | International Labor Defense will be held in New York City October 31- November 1. ‘Delegates from organ- izations affiliated with the Trade Union Unity League and I. L. D. organizations as far west as Chicago will attend. Another feature is the conference on legal questions at which I. L. D. lawyers will speak. The plenum will open at 10 a.m. at Irving Plaza Hall, Irving Place and E, 15th St., October 31. “This will be the first national gathering of our leading forces since in December 1930,” says J. Louis Engdahl, general secretary of the I. L. D. “This Plenum faces the task of clarifying the character of the In- ternational Labor Defense as an in- dependent mass organization of mil- itant class struggle fighting for the rights of the oppressed toiling mas- ses. On the basis of this clarifica- tion we must proceed to the build- ing of a mass organization, “The Plenum must speed the ac- complishment of these tasks in the Struggle against the growing terror that the boss class invokes as its best aid in putting through wage cuts, smashing strike struggles, re- sisting the discontent of the jobless, in gagging the growing cry for bread. We have special tasks in the. face of the growing war’danger (China- Japan) which is paralleled by an ever-sharpening persecution of the workers in all capitalist, colonial and semi-colonial countries. CHEER AMTER AT DEPOSITORS MEET Boo Norman Thomas for His Letter NEW YORK.—Over a thousand U. 8. Bank depositors crowded the auditorium of Public School No. 65 at Eldridge St. last Saturday night to hear the candidates for boro presi- dent of Manhattan discuss the bank of U. 8. affair and what their party would do for the depositors. Only I. Amter of the Communist Party appeared, while the rest. sent letters of regret. ‘When Norman Thomas's letter was read the depositors stormed with pro- test against his assertion that he, if elected as boro president of Manhat~- tan, can not do anything about banks which is a state matter. He was booed when telling the depositors that he does not think that they are entitled to indemnification if they had the misfortune to pick a wrong capitalist bank. The Freiheit and the Daily Worker were loudly applauded when the chairman told the depositors that these papers were the only ones that told the depositors the truth. A great ovation was given Amter when he was introduced. Several times during his speech he was loudly applauded. “Norman Thomas says in his letter that he does not know what he could do if elected boro president, the Communist Party pledges to you that if I be elected 1'll use all my of- ficial power as boro president to or- ganize all the 400,000 workers and small depositors for a militant fight to get their money back,” said Amter. A resolution was introduced to en- dorse the Communist Party in its election campaign. This resolution wes unanimously adopted. All the de- positors were urged to arrange he- tween now and election day as many | public meetings as possible and to ap- jPeal to the workers and small busi- ness people to vote the Communist ticket as the only party that {s fight- ing for the workers. Poyntz to Speak in Paterson on Wednes. Juliet Stuart Poyntz, touring New Jersey for the Communist Party election campaign will speak in Pat- evson, Wednesday, October 28, at 205 Paterson. Comrade Poyntz will speak in New- ark, Thursday, October 29, from 5 to 7 p. m. at the Military Perk and will be in Passaic Friday, and in ‘Trenton, Saturday, | the Mandolin Orchestra. FINAL RED RALLY IN BRONX FRIDAY Gold and Brodsky to Expose Boss Parties NEW YORK.—The final mass elec- tion rally in the Bronx will be held Friday, October 30, at Ambassador Hall, Claremont Parkway and Third Avenue, at 8 p.m, More and more workers are waking up to the fact that the boss parties, *| the Republicans, Democrats and So- cialists, are the bitterest enemies of the working class. Using false, sugar- coated phrases on one hand, the other hand carries out the most vici- ous fascist terror against the work- ing class. Each boss party devises new and better ways. of fooling the workers. But their brutal. answers to the de- mands of the hungry, their outright refusal of adequate relief and social insurance for the millions of unem- ployed, their feverish preparations for a blood-bath, have clearly shown ; the workers that the sugar-coated phrases are nothing but opium. Workers of the Bronx will come to Ambassador Hall not only to hear Comrades Ben Gold and Carl Brod- sky expose the boss parties, but will at the same time enjoy the music of the Freiheit Gesangs Verein and All work- ers are welcome. PROTEST MURDER PLANS OF CHIANG Cable Kuomintang Hangmen NEW YORK.—A protest to the the Second Organization Conference | Nanking government against the threatened murder of the secretary of the Pan-Pacific Trade Union Sec- retariat and his wife was cabled yes- terday to the imperialist hangman, Chiang Kai-shek, by the Interna- tional Committee for Political Pris- oners with headquarters in New York City. The signers of the cable to the Chinese government were Clarence Darrow, Theodore Dreiser, Lewis Gannet, Norman Thomas, Roger Baldwin, John Dewey. ‘The arrest and threatened execu- tion of Bruegg and his wife have aroused protests all over Europe. Among prominent Europeans who have cabled the Chinese government regarding their release. are Prof. Al- bert Einstein, Romain Rolland, James Maxton and Fenner Brockway, mem~- ber of the British parliament, Henri Barbusse, Victor Margueritte. Knitgoods Conference Will Be Held Sunday A knitgoods workers conference is cclled by the Knitgoods Department ‘of the Industrial Union for Sunday, November 1, for 12 noon at Irving Plaza. At this conference a report will be given on the activities and the achievements of the Knitgoods De- partment of the Industrial Union. Plans for future organizational ac- tivity will be discussed. It is impor- tant that all knitgoods workers come to this conference. Fur Shop Chairmen Will Meet Thursday A meeting of fur shop chairmen and delegates will be held at the of- fice of the union on Thursday, right after work to discuss some very. urg- ent problems relating to the fur de- partment, All shop chairmen and delegates, regardless of whether they are work- Friends Soviet Union to Publish Pictorial on 14th AnniverSary NEW YORK.—Showing a great number of hitherto unpublished pic- tures of Dnieperstroy, Magnitogorsk, education, cultural life, farming, sports and scenes of the Red Army, the Friends of the Soviet Union will publish a speciall pictorial magazine on the occasion of the 14th anniver- sary of the November 7th Revolution. | The Pictorial] will contain the greetings for the 14th Anniversary. All workers, friends, organizations are urged to send in their greeting lists immediately so that they will be included in the Pictorial. ‘The Pictorial goes to press on the 30th of October and all greetings must be rushed in by air mail. TO DEMAND FREE FOOD FOR KIDS Newark Council and Pioneers Will Act NEWARE, N. J., Oct. 26.—The Un- employed Council of Newark and the Young Pioneers of Newark have sent an open letter to the president of the Board of Education asking him and the Board to meet a delegation of unemployed workers and chikiren on Saturday, October 31, at 11 a. m. to receive the demands for one hot meal a day in school and shoes for those children who need them to be given by the board and the city free of charge. This demonstration will be backed by the signatures of thou- sands of Newark’s unemployed par- ents and school children, besides a massing in demonstration of unem- ployed and part-time workers at the corner of Green and Broad Streets at the time the demands and peti- tions will be presented. The secre- tary of the Unemployed Council of Newark went today to get a permit for the demonstration at this corner for this time, On Friday evening at 8 p. m. at 53 Broome Street the Unemployed Coun- cil has called a mass meeting where the delegation to visit the Board of Education will be elected and rati- fied. Den Shugrue, secretary of the Unemployed Council of Newark, Clarence Mitchell, local organizer of the Communist Party, and William Albertson, organizer of the Young Communist League, will address the assembled workers and call upon them to support the struggle for free food and clothing for children of the unemployed. OFFER SOVIET TRIP IN LIB. DRIVE Awards Include Plaque of Nat Turner A trip to the Soviet Union for the May Day celebration in Moscow is the first prize offered in the circula- tion campaign of the Liberator, offi- cial organ of the League of Struggle for Negro Rights. The worker ob- taining the most subscriptions in the drive for 10,000 new readers begin- ning Nov. 1 and ending Dee, 15, will, in addition, present to the Revolu- tionary Museum in Moscow an orig- inal and only bust of Nat Turner, revolutionary Negro leader in one of the biggest slave revolts in this country. ‘The prize winner will have an op- portunity to visit some of the large factories now under construction in the U. 8. S. R., workers’ rest homes, museums, parks and clubs. Should a tie occur, each worker wins the same prize. Other awards include a bronze Nat Turner plaque, and the same fin- ished in bronze and ivory colors for ing or not must report to this meet- | 25 and 10 subscriptions, respectively. ing without fail. The tade commit-| The recent struggles of the Negro tee will give a detailed report on the| 8nd white workers in Chicago and pans of activity, which will be dis- ieee nak Aah Uy a bbs ssed e police chalrmen and delegates, |fOFaetivity in reiting eviction, wil give great impetus to the Liberator eirculation drive which brings to the forefront the necessity to build and ” spread the paper in the day-to-day Becomes Electra,” At) preg ore ar ee ee “ay to-day The Guild Theatre| ment insurance, the fight against lynehing, jim-crowism, and for Negro ‘The Theatre Guild presented their | rights. second production of the season, “Mourning Becomes Electra,” Eu- FRANKLIN. gene O'Neill's trilogy, at the Guild} To Tuesday: On the stage, George Theatre yesterday. This long play of | Jessel, in person; Handers & Mills; O'Neill's will be presented in two per- | Amanda Randolph, other RKO acts. formances. “Homecoming,” in four]On the screen, “An American Trag- acts, starts at 5 ‘p.m., and the sec-|edy,” with. Phillips Holmes, Sylvia ond performance, consisting of “The | Sidney and Frances Dee. Wednesday Hunted” and “The Haunted,” begins|to Friday: On the stage, Charles at 8 p.m. There will be an hour and | Ahearn and his Millionaires; Harry @ gure ‘or dinner tntermission be-|Carroll’s Challenge Revue, with .2 ginning at 7 o'clock, The cast is|people; other RKO acts. On the headed by Alice Brady, Alla Nazi-|screen, “Smart Woman,” with Mary O’Neill’s “Mourning With a fearful winter of freezing and starvation looming ahead, news pours in from all over the country showing the misery already, before winter, of the masses of unemployed. Some items picked at random fol- low. Intensive organization of the ‘Councils of the Unemployed, in- creased struggle for immediate relief, against evictions for food for chil- dren, etc., is imperative. The city and national and state governments have no other policy than one of starvation concealed as much as pos- sible by fake promises and useless schemes, eects PITTSBURGH, Pa. Oct. 26—A four year old baby slept out in West | Park all night recently. With the baby was its mother, who had just Tost a job at housework, and its fa- ther, Walter Chervan, a blacklisted miner, and member of the National Miners Union. Chervan is a World War veteran, and was decorated by the Serbian government for the sin- gle handed capture of 30 Germans. He says he will die before he leaves the N.M.U. LOS ANGELES, Cal. Oct. 26— Michael Clancy, aged 21, unemployed, Reports of Worker Side Continue To Pour in from All Over Nation {Terrible Winter Ahead? “seartun, wash, oct. 26 Germ Unless the Workers Will Fight collapsed from hunger in front of 330 South Main St. He was given one meal at a hospital and turned loose to starve again. Joseph A. Comstock aged 60, ele- vator operator unemployed since March, killed his wife and himself, leaving a 17 year old daughter to face the starvation system alone. James Bresnahan, his wife Mar- | Saret and two year old baby, together with J. A. Brady, Margaret’s brother, were found huddled in the empty ice box of a refrigerator car here. They had beat their way from Bakersfield, without other food than one loaf of dry bread to eat during four days, and hoped to find work at Lds Ange- les. They were arrested. This family was discovered by the police while in the act of driving off the train 150 jobless men who were riding on it. The cops also arrested 38 of the men. Grace Flynn, jobless, and recently arrived from Denver, and at another address, Arthur Layday, jobless, both — Goodrich, unemployed truck driver, killed his wife and himself, leaving two daughters to support themselves if they can. Chace same CLEVELAND, 0O., Oct. 26—Tw highwaymen called Remy Van Lan ker “pal”, and left him alone when he showed his empty pockets. Four others left Edward Feist his last 18 cents with the remark, “You need it as bad as we do.” NEWARK, N. J., Oct. 26.—The Un- employed Councils and the Young Pioneers throughout New Jersey have started an intensive campaign to foree the Boards of Education to give the*children of the unemployed and part-time workers at least one hot meal a day in school and a pair of shoes for those children who need them. Demonstrations will take place before the various Boards of Edu- cation at 11 A. M. on Saturday, October 31, in Newark, Elizabetl Jersey City, Paterson, Passaic, Ne’ Brunswick, and Perth Amboy. Petitions are already being cir- attempted suicide by taking polson|culated in these cities by adulty on the same day here. and children. At the time of the FOOD WORKERS TO CONFERENCE ON OCTOBER 30-31 NEW YORK.—Addressing all food workers in the eastern part of the country, the Food Workers’ Industrial ‘Union has issued a call for a confer~ ence of food workers to be held in New York City Oct. 30-31, at Finnish Hall, 16 W. 126th St. The call states: “Only a strong industrial union with a militant program uniting all workers organized and unorganized, in every section of the industry for a struggle for better conditions will successfully resist the attack on the workers’ standard of living. The Eastern Conference will, as its main task, develop a program of struggle against the bosses which will unite all the workers, employed and un- employed, within the ranks of the A. F. of L. and A. F. W., and in the unorganized shops to fight against wage cuts, speed-up, for a minimum wage scale, for unemployment insur- ance, and for sanitary conditions on the job. It will lay the basis for the organization of the thousands of un- organized food workers and for a powerful industrial union of all food. workers! “Delegates to the conference will be on the basis of one delegate for employed and employed parents and children will bring these thousands of signatures to the Boards of Edu- cation to back them in their demand for free food and clothing. Conferences for free food and every 50 members of locals and|‘lothing with representatives from leagues of the Food and Packing|™8Y mass organizations are tak- House Workers’ Industrial League, of |!& Place in the cities in order to the A. F. of L. and A. F. W. unions} Prepare for the demonstrations. and one delegate from every shop, solar p ae every group and shop committee in] PATERSON, N. J., Oct. 26—with the shops and every unemployed| Unemployed workers dying like flies council. throughout the country of starvation, “The conference will be a two-day| With others desperately and mistak- session followed by a meeting of the| enly seeking suicide as a way out, the newly elected enlarged executive | bosses continue to peddle their lies board. that there will be no suffering that is “Forward to a solid united front of] Winter, the while they calmly ignore all food workers under the militant|the terrible mass suzering that is leadership of the Food and Packing| €Vident on every hand even now be- HOLD EASTERN |scsestsstessoat ese House Workers’ Industrial League SOVIET ACHIEVEMENT IN AERO- ROPLANE CONSTRUCTION The Scientific Experimental In- stitution of the Soviet Civil Air Ser- vice has just completed the construc- tion of the first all-metal plane of non-rusting steel alloy with the elec- tro-welding process. The tests have) proved absolutely satisfactory, and in the opinion of the experts the ma- chine represents the last ‘word in aeroplane construction. Neither the United States nor Europe have any- thing better to offer. for world war! Soviet Union! off Chinese Soviets! Join the Tom Johnson, member of Smash imper: Prospect and Longwood Ave at 8pm. Meeting places in other announced: ! Rally in large masses! your solidarity with Chinese Workers! Onto the Streets - Against Imperialist War! Protest the War Against the Chinese People! Protest the Bloody Invasion of Manchuria! Smash American, Japanese and League of Nations plots Support Chinese revolution! Communist Party, will speak at Pitkin and Stone Ave., Brooklyn, on Oct. 28, at 8:30 p. m- Bill Dunne, editor of the Daily Worker,’ will speak at South Brooklyn:—Thursday,’ October 29, at 8 p. m.— 50th St. and 5th Ave. Main speaker Carl Brodsky- | Newark, N. J.:—Thursday, October 29, at 5 p- m.—Mil- fore the advent of the winter, ) Recently, Harold Wood, a 36-year old unemployed worker of 47 North Seventh Street, collapsed of hunger on the street. He was taken to the General Hospital. The boss news! papers in reporting the case tried t:_. cover up the starvation angle witlF the lie that “he had apparently suff- \) ered a fit.” Tel. Stuyvesant 9-5557 if no answer eal] Stu. 9-1500 (24 hour service) CARL BRODSKY “ANY KIND OF INSURANCE” 799 Broadway New York City Dr. MORRIS LEVITT SURGEON DENTIST ‘jalist intervention plot against] Demand hands demonstration in your section. the Central Committee of the ., Bronx, Saturday, Oct. 31, Southern Blvd. cor. 176th Si., N.Y. Phonet Tremont 3-1253 Special low prices for workers Intern’) Workers Order | ( DENTAL DEPARTMENT | itary Park. Main speaker, Juliet Stuart Poyntz. members of your organization. Defend the Soviet Union! mintang Government, agent of Yankee imperialism- 1 UNION SQUARE 8TH FLOOR AU Werk Done Under Perronal Uare of DR. JOSEPHSON sections of the city will be Bring your shopmates, and Down with the bloody Kuo- Show and Japanese toiling masses. SOLLIN’S RESTAURANT eta 216 EAST 14TH STREET 6-Course Lunch 55 Cents Regular Dinner 65 Cents Phone Stuyvesant 3816 THE THEATRE, GUILD PRESENTS EUGENE O'NEILL'S Trilosy ‘Mourning Becomes Electra’ Composed of 3 plays “Homecoming,” “The Hunted,” quarter at about 7 o'clock. No matinee performances. & Mezzanine, $6. 2nd (6 Snaersr awed Week Alexis Granowsky's “SONG of LIFE” and S, M. Eisenstein's “A Sentimental Romance” Jobn’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES Rational’ Vegetarian mova, Earle Larimore, Lee Baker, Thomas Chalmers, Arthur Hughes and Erskine Sanford. Fraction Meeting of Needle Trades A very important meeting of the needle trades general fraction will be held on Wednesday, October 28, at 7 p.m. sharp, at the Workers Center, second ‘floor, to take up the immediate tasks of the Needle Trades Union. The meeting will begin on time. Therefore all com- rades are requested to be on time so as not to disturb the meeting. Bring along your Party member- ship book. Communist Party, Dist. 2 District Secretariat, Astor and Robert Ames, HIPPODROME. On the stage, Lew Pollack and his company, Mel Klee, Lytell and Fant, Whitey and Ed Ford, Joe Wong with Miss Fumi, Joseph and Roxy La Roc- ca, “Telepavision” and the Six Amer- jean Belfords. Screen: William Pow- ell in “The Road to Singapore”, with Dorls Kenyon, Marian Marsh and Louis Calhern. » “The Song of Life” (Das Lied vom Yaben), Alexis Granowsky's unusual motion pleture, is now ‘in its second end final week at the Cameo Theatre. On the same program the Cameo ‘Theatre is offering 8. M. Eisenstein's first sound film, “A Sentimental Ro- “The Mikado”, Gilbert and Sulll- van's operetta, opened last night at the Erlanger Theatre for a week's en- gegement < Orch, Pr ICES Batcony, $5, $4, $3 and $2. (INCLUDES 3 PLAYS. GUILD THEA., 52d St. W. of B’ 7 ‘The Group Theatre Presents The House of Connelly ly PAUL GREEN B: Under the Auspices of the Theatre Guild THEA., Marlin Bock Sena" Ave. Mat. Thurs & Sat. Penn 6-6100 ‘Thea., 49th St. W. of OF Bway. By. g Wed. and a 5 * MORRIS GEST presen: BALIEFF’S New CHAUVE-SOURIS ‘Workers’ Correspondence {s the backbone of the revolutionary press. Build your press by writing for it about your day-to-day struggle. ‘Th ” Atkinaon, N. Y, 7 THE LEFT BAN 3 By ELMER RICE iLittle Thea, W. 44th, Nights #1-88 Wed. Mrt. $1.00, $1.50, $2.00 Sats 81.00 te #250" The new musical comedy bit, with FRANCES WILLIAM! AR ANN PENNINGTON AVRERTINA RASCH GIRLS & BALLET; OTHERS SHUBERT Thea., 44th St., W. of B'w'y Even, 81:30, Matinee Wed. & ‘The Constant Sinner’ “Aa sound and respectable Belne- co’s ‘Lulu Belle’.”—Tho Ni ROYALE Thee, 45th Restaurant 199 SECOND AVENUE Bet, igth and 13th Ste, Strictly Vegetarian food MELROSE D AIRY VEGETARIAN RESTAURART i Comrades Will Always Find 1 Pleasant to Dine at Our Pinee. / 1782 SOUTHERN BLVD, Bronx (near 174th Bt Station) TELEPHONE INTERVALE 8—0169 The DAILY WORKER 90 East 13th St New York, City

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