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Page Twe To In | Unity In Shops Is Main Slogan NEW YORK.—Urging all dress rs to elect delegates from the Expose Misery Midtown Section vjthe United Front smakers, in a leafl terday, called a shop delegat ence for Saturday, November 28. 1931, held by the Midtown ~ Une ved | at noon at Webster Hall, 119 E. ther with the unem p loved | 11th St eater New York, Novem- Telling of the purpose of the con- ch Auditorium, 334 W. p.m. ference and the need for unity amonz 36th St., the dressmakers upon the expiration Workers ar® invited to come and|of the agreement with the manufac- testify about their experiences at em- | turers the leaflet says in part ployment agencies, flop houses, ch: The slogan for w must be ity. organization, with evictions, a taken up in every individual shop. | all other forms of misery that wor ers subjected to. This hearing like other hearings being held throughout | the country, The purpose of the Shop Confer- ence which is called for Saturday, | November 28, is to consolidate the | United Front of the dressmokers | | as a al of will ‘serve the capitalist system and its _meth-| so as to make sure that the com'ng “relief.” Letéers haye been sent | Is of the government,| urtion conditions, ods of strike will be a genuine strike for Jed by and for , etc, to defend themselves} the dressmakers. % they can against the accusations! The United Front Committee of i will be made Ng. | Dressmakers stressed the imper neve | 5 |need for a solid united front of all} T | rewire in the ae on *the basis of) 12 | auctions and sweat shop conditions. | EAT UP MOST OF |The committee pointed out that the FUND COLLECTED lofficials of the I.L.G.W.U. were op- |posed to the united, front policy and | that the workers would have to effect | Phila. Probe Last Year| Proves This But Bosses Keep It Up | unity over the heads of the company ‘PHILCO CO RADIO CO. SLASHING AGAIN: VAIL u¥ WORKER, sNEW YORK, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 193 BRAMHALL Candidate for Election Nov, 17 SAMUEL | Communist Lawrence, BRAMHALL WILL | SPEAK DESPITE | ORDERS OF COPS Great Inter ‘est of Work- | ers Scare Bosses LAWRENCE, | without | in ‘fact, “Mass, giving the slig positively any Marshal O'Brien of the Law- | rence police department positively re- | fused Tuesday to give Sam Bramhall, Communist candidate for Mayor, Nov 10.— h on, refusi rea- | son, any " | tuals are Mayor of | a officials. ¢ By LESLIE COPELAND LADELPHIA, Pa.—Today start- drive $9,000,000 in Phila- part the national Gifford Committee to raise fo: of ered, emaciated hands held up imploringly is the pos- tér design. Bankers, executives, poli- ticians and the various charity rack- eteers are making appeals through the medium of the pre: radio and posters appealing to the workers of Philadelphia to support the unem- Ployed. It would be well if the workers of ladelphia were to look into this see who are the beneficiaries, unemployed or the politicians and charity racketeers. The head of the Bureau of Unemployment Relief, bet- ter known as the Lloyd Committee, is Horatio G. Lloyd, president of Drexel and Co., member of the House of Morgan. This gentleman who, when questioned on the floor of the City Council during the so-called in- tion of the Helms Committee he Relief of the Unemployed and } Poor, of every commissions’ and dollar went to “Overhead and kne on of what was going tics he did fur- nish were incorrec Get Fat Salaries y, of the Welfare Federation itz who was a $ on the late North Ameri ceiving $12,000 a year p as sécretar Billikoff of tion of Jewish his rake-off $10,000 the Feder: ities admitted that Was in the neighborhood of aiyear his week over 5,000 workers re- ctived a slip telling them—further rélicf will not be forthcoming for | some time, you will have to get along on your own resources (?) YOU MUST NOT COME TO THIS OFFIC YOU DO, YOU MAY BE F is ANY HELP IN THE FUTURE! IF ~D The salaries of these vultures and the other personel is 15 per cent of tlie e ney collected. The cost of running the headquarters and th seven branch offices is $27,000 per month—a mere trifle of over $1,000 each working day. LET US HAVE A LOOK AT THE SO-CALLED AD-| MINISTRATORS OF RELIEF ant, two assistant pervisor: One chief account accountants, four one ¢ sistant supervisor tors (inves- tigators), 11 interv five office managers, 18 Stenographers, 110 of- | fice assistants, one case adjuster, five messengers, ope, Statistician, one sigtant statsti¢ian, four ‘telephone op- erators. What’s On— AURSDAY Greek A genera at-the Worker 7:30 p.m, FSO, Italian Branch Will show the Soviet Newsree} at the first meeting of th burgh Branch, Work Finshing Ave., Brooklyn ations for the Nov vited. ILD Steve Katovin Br, Will hold an ¢ Bth St. and Ave, FRIDAY drive | x the unemployed in Phila- } it was discovered. that 65¢ | admitted that he! the Community Council, | » | relief, - |took poison and died. | permit for | meeting that Bramhall has {one occasion in extracting such a | permit from the police of Lawrence in this campaign. The great success k nd re; n open-air campaign nig Layoff med fehire to| Cut Wages (By a Worker Correspondent) PHILADELPHIA, Pa—A couple of | ¢) months ago we workers of the Philco | plant were making on the average 28% cents an hour for women work- ers and 38 to 40 cents for the men. That was our wages after many cuts |we got and the speed-up. Yet after |driving our earnings below the ex- listence level, the bosses decided to | 4 on only lied in a policy of sup- pression on the part of the city au- thorities. However goes on. Meeting quently in Bramba 89 Union St., 3 held fre- and the town has |cut our wages again. |. lot of big poster cards around in | j the window for the | Skinne. and the rest of the bosses ight of the aw to. speak in the} knew that the workers were Oe csp i aaa izing, because we of the Grievance} Committee were issuing leaflets and | shop bulletins, so they used an old | | trick. First they announced that they |Add have lost an order and began to Victims us off. A little later they decided to | Heys aran oe comemoe ce) tO Hunger Death | Toll Thruout Land | only 18 to 24 cents an ‘hour and the; men 22 to 28 cents. Now we know that it was only a dirty trick to cut our wages Sam Harris of told reporters. e nothing I can mortgage, no I put ‘ | “T can’t get a job” Now more than ever we ip the/ Hutchinson, |Philco plant must organize to fight | this new attempt at wage cuts. Join |“I he and form grievance committees in jone will lend me mone levery department and fight against | up security. Kansas unless My boys, that one is} gia wage cut and speed-up. ipaniatcaud dhis te pelteck are: shed _——_—_ only things I have.” |perate from lor a o 5 5 eee Production Sag@s jin heed of an immedia 2 to New Low Figure | lon his nose omeme nage par |children for $200. “Latcr on when I get work I'll redeem them”, he said. seal iar YN, N.Y. - killed hims¢ too late for w | Automobile production has sagged to a new low figure of 14.6. Last | week the figure was 15.5 and last year | the figure was 53.6 This means that |" in one year of the crisis, from 1930 | 8 to 1931, production has fallen about Daniel Don- f because he rk. After g he finally got up nonths of job-hunti 29 per cent. In two years of the |% job as a steam shovel operator, the . from 1929 when the figure was |ay he was to start work he over- 100 until the present time, production |‘lept. He knew how brutally strict | has fallen by about 86 per cent, and {the bosses are on lateness ‘especially AGIb Gontihune: to fall: during the crisis and felt before even los' ‘oing to work the job li the months of painful wiped out. Rather than same hear rind of looking or anothe himself. Of the eleven plants completely shut down, only one has resumed op- eration, states the Cram’s Automotive Reports, but the total number of | automobiles preduced was “again | lower than the previous week.” | the lower priced field,” ee report, “further reductions of output lpehine utd were the rule, and the second largest | and committed s ‘ a PERORIA continues th serene te ‘ in his mouth icide. nis field remained closed so far Ri aviate as assembly operations were con-| Roe ISLAND, Tl! cerned. In the medium-priced field, | wetcii, age killed. her also, generally declined, al- and had a fourteen year | output |was a wid though the level of operations was|oiq child to support, but could get already so low that decreases in the |no job, | aggregate were small numerically.” s be The auto industry is one of the | country’s key industries. The auto|/[e{’s Al! Go to Thi igures, therefore, give the lie to the | | claims of economic recovery peddled | One, Says‘the LSNR | by the capitalist press, | Fellow workers, Negro and white: The League of Struggle for Negro | Two Unemployed Rights urges all who read this arti- Commit Suicide | le to take out your pencils and pa- | —~ per at once and make a note regard- EVANSVILLE, Ill.—Victor Meyer, | ing one grand ball which will be giv- and Charles Moon both |en by the New York District of the working for Servel, Inc., were laid off, | League of Struggle for Negro Rights |They could get no other job, nor any |0n Saturday, December 19, at Harlem they had’ no funds to carry | Casino, Lenox Ave., at 116th St. on with, the bosses of Servel, Inc.| The adrsission is only 50 cents. were not interested in them any | Music for the dancing will be sup- longer. Giving up the struggle they | plied by the O, K. Rhythm Kings. A great many tasks such as the | Liberator Drive, the Scottsboro Cam- Biggest Cincinnati Meeting |paign, fights against eviction, dis- crimination against Negro workers, | CINCINNATI, O.--Two hundred | otc, are facing the League of Strug- | workers, by far the largest Novem-| le for Negro Rights, and white and | ber 7 meeting here, filled the work-| Negro workers are alike determined | ers center on the occasion of the cele-|to unite in revolutionary struggle | bration of the 14th anniversary of | against the bosses of white and Negro the Russian Revolution, workers, er te ze Racine Meeting Hits War Plots | RACINE, Wis. —A resolution scor- ing the Hoover-Laval secret treaties | was adopted at the November 7 meet- ing here. §S. Peterson for the Un- | sary ofthe proletarian revolution, employed Councils, E. Petersen for| held here at the Vega Hall adopted the Young Communist League, and|a resolution pledging defense of the ROCKFORD, Ill. — Workers at a meeting celebrating the 14th anniver- 10th 5 Premont Workers Cut Wilt hold a lecture by Joe Paas | atethe John Reed Club on “'Reyolu tidiary Literature” at the new Club- rogms, 2075 Clinton Ave., near 180th Stgeet. ; et, ee Prospect Workers Center Will hold a lecture by Comrade Hiedaht on “Recent tions and ) Bioay'om Danger” at 1157 Southern Ws | Fred Basset for the Communist Par-| Soviet Union against imperialist at- | ty jwere the speakers, tack, 3S | human the Communist campaign | all headquar- | face the | without a| ard H. | | Rockford Meeting For Soviet Defense | |Big Proletarian |. Program This Sat. at. . . Cultural Center NEW YORK.—The official opening | of the Cultural Center, 63 W. 15th St., | which is now the home of the Work- jers’ Cultural Federation, the New Masses, the John Reed Club, the John Reed Club Art School and the John Reed Club Gallery, will be marked |by a housewarming that will take place on Saturday, November 14. The Cultural Center will be open: all day | from 9 a.m. until after midnight. The housewarming will be featured by an exhibition of proletarian paint- ings by John Reed Club artists. In the evening the program will in- clude dancing, entertainment and a few three-minute speeches by well- | known writers and artists. Workers and sympathetic intellec- cordially invited to the |housewarming, which marks « the opening of the first Cultural Center | of its kind in the United States. The entire three-story building will be open to all visitors throughout the 2 ac S ‘Hackmen to Wage War on Monopoly Mass Meeting Tonite | Hunts Point Palace The Taxi Commission will be called | before the Board of Aldermen soon | to give its report in favor of turning |the taxi franchise to “the most re- sponsible party.” This wilf'give a mo- nopoly to General Motors, and thou- sands of cab-drivers will be perma- Laenkiy thrown out of the industry, and those working a cut in commision. | At the mass meeting tontght at 8:30 at Hunts Point Palace, Southern | Blvd. and 163d St., the hackmen will elect their own Committee to make | demands to the Board of Aldermen protesting the handing over of the industry to the Taxi Trust and de- manding a living weekly wage and working conditions: 8 hour | day and three shifts with no black- |list. Petitions with these demands are being circulated by the Taxi Section of the Transportation Workers In- |dvstrial League, 5 E. 19th St. /The Hackmen Committee will have the upport of thousands of cab-drivers | signing these petitions, Hackmen: Come to the meeting— elect your committee and get the sig- latina of thousands of hackmen on | the petitions. International Comm. Formed to Save Life of Ruegg and Wife BERLIN. — An international com- mittee has issued an appeal for a concentrated drive to save the life of |the Pan Pacific Trade Union Sec- |retary Ruegg. As already reported, | Huegg, has been sentenced to death | in Nanking and his sick wife to hard | labor for life. No official information | concerning them can be obtained and HILLMAN CLIQUE ORDERED TWELVE TAILORS FIRED Deprived “Family Men of Livelihood With No Trial, Warning NEW YORK.—Acting with terror- ist vindictiviness the Amalgamated Clothing Workers bureaucrats yester- day caused the discharge of twelve Italian tailors of the Barbano Shop at 125 Blecker Street because they were suspected of being in sympathy with left wing policies. All workers are family men, and their discharge came suddenly, with- out warning, trial or charges lodged against them. No reason was given for taking them off the job. A report was car- ried to the Hillman gang however earlier in the week that one of the workers had said that both the A.C. W. officialdom and the defunc Inter- national Clothing Workers Union (the Orlofsky racket organization) were both racketeer bodies and did not represent the workers in the shops. No definite proof of any statement however, was brought against the twelve family heads now condemned to starvation together with their families. Work of Impartial Chairman Workers of the Weintraub & Fox shop on lower Broadway learned that the “impartial” chairman of the in- dustry was decidedly in favor of the boss when he ordered that the boss need but pay one weeks wages to the worker that he owed two weeks pay. Angered, the workers organized re- sistance in the shop, refusing to per- mit the work to go out until they receive their full wages. When two right wing members of the trade board of the coat depart- ment, A.C.W., fell out, one of them, Louis Goldstein slashed the other, Glickman, about the forehead at a meeting yesterday. At first ordered arrested, Goldstein was taken out by Glickman and Phillip Weiner, a bus- iness agent. There was no trouble in getting Goldstein out as the captain explained “we don’t butt in on the Amalgamated affairs.” KLEIBER’S LAST WEEK WITH PHILHARMONIC Next week marks the last of Erich Kletber’s direction of the Philhar- monic Orchestra this season. This Sunday afternoon at Carnegie he of- fers the Overture to Handel's “Es- ther,” the Love Scene and Fete of) Capulet from Berlioz’ “Romeo and | Juliet,” and Beethoven's. “Eroica’: Symphony. His final program is scheduled for ‘Wednesday evening, Friday after-/ noon and Saturday evening at Car- | negie Hall, and next Sunday after- | noon at the Brooklyn Academy of Music. It includes the Overture: to Schubert’s “Rosamunde,” two sere- nades from Mahler's Seventh Sym- | phony, German Dances of Beethoven, a Sinfonic Concertante for Viplin, fears are entertained for their lives. | The appeal calls for the formation of special Ruegg committees, and, if | necessary, for the sending of repre- sentatives to Shanghi. Amongst those | who have signed this appeal are: the | well-known German lawyer, Dr. Al- fred Apfel, Professor Alfone Gold- schmidt, the German artist, Otto Na- gel, the well known author and lit- erary critic Dr. Kurt Kersien, the | lawyer Giltay of Brussels, advocate Fournier of Paris, lawyer Brodsky of New York, and*the Japanese lawyer Fudimore of Tokio. In response to a request from Prof. Albert Einstein and others, Senator Borah of Idaho has promised to lend his personal assistance in obtaining the release of Ruegg and his wife. | YHEATRE GUILD TO PRESENT | SHERWOOD PLAY AT MARTIN BECK The Theatre Guild will open its ourth production of the season, | “Reunion in Vienna” a comedy by Robert E. Sherwood, which has Al- fred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne in the cast, at the Martin Beck Theatre on Monday. On the same evening, the Group Theatre production of Paul Green's “The House of Connelly,” which has been playing at the Mar- | tin Beck will move to the Mansfield | Theatre. Elmer Harris, author of “Marriage | for Three,” now a tthe Bijou Theatre, has completed “Poor Men's Daught- ers,” a new play which will be prod- ueed by the Shuberts later this sea- son. Lambert Carroll, author of the lib- retto of “Everybody's Welcome,” at the Shubert Theatre, joins the cast of the musical comedy tonight re- placing Lewis Marchand. Wesley Ruggles, the director of “Cimarre>,’ directed the Radio Pic- ture “Are These Our Children” which opens at the Mayfair Theatre tomor- vow. Eric Linden, Arline Judge, Ben Alexander and Mary Kornman head the cast, * The Cameo Theatre beginning to- day will present “Heroes All,” a series of pictures of every front during the World War. These pictures are com- piled from authentic sources. Advertise Your Union Meetings Here. For Information Write to Advertising Uepartment The DAILY WORKER 50 East 13th St New York City ’Cello, Oboe, Bassoon, and Orchestra of Haydn, and the “Blue Danube” Waltz of Johan Strauss. The advanced series of the Phil- harmonic concerts for Young People opens next Saturday morning at Carnegie Hall under the direction of Ernest Schelling. The first concert devotes itself to the Overture, and uses as illustrations the overtures to Mozart’s “Marriage of Figaro,” Bee- thoven’s “Fidelio,” Mendelssohn’s “Midsummer Night's Dream,” Schu- bert’s “Rosamunde,” Wagner “Tann- hauser,” and the “1812” Overture of Tchaikovsky, The first opera of the season of the New York Opera Comique, Lort- zing’s “The Poacher,” will be present- ed at the Hackscher Theatre, Fifth Avenue and 104th Street, on Monday evening, under the direction of Ernest Knoch. William Hain and Patricia O'Connell will sing the leading roles. To Open Workers School in the Bronx NEW YORK.—The Bronx Section of the Communist Party is opening a Workers School at 569 Prospect Ave- nue. Courses already arranged in- clude elementary English, intermedi- ate English, fundamentals of Commu- nism, history of the American Labor Movement, and public speaking. Information regarding the date of opening, hours of the classes, fees, etc., can be obtained any evening at 569 Prospect Ave., between 7:30 and 9:30 o'clock, Workers’ Correspondence is the backbone of the revolutionary press. Build your press by writing for it. about your day-to-day struggle. EAST SIDE Friday, Saturday Sunday Amkino Presents Sovkino’s Remarkable Film YELLOW PASS. With ANNE STENN NOTED SOVIET ARTIST —Other Feature Attractionn— UNFURNISHED APT.—438 E. 13th St. 3 rooms, electricity, bath, hot water, reasonable rent, Inquire Santo, Apt. 5. Mecca Theatre 14TH ST. AND AVENUE A, Continuous from 1 to 11 p.m. Wichickr Worker Hails Lawrence Textile Strike St. Joseph, Mich. Daily Worker: I am delighted to learn through the Daily Worker, the best paper that I haye ever read, that there are some real red blooded men and women in the textile industry in Lawrence, Mass. I wish them great success., A Communist to me is a person with good common sense. A Red @ person with real red blood in his veins, instead of a streak of yellow down his back. At the next election there will be ballots cast for the Communist Party from my household. My grandfather fought to help free the slaves. We workers must fight to free ourselves and families from the slavery of capitalism. E. D. Council Gets Action on Needy Case Mass Pressure Forces Charity to Act * (By A Worker Correspondent.) Mrs. Rosdeick, 350 East 3rd Street came to the Downtown Unemployed Council last Friday asking them to help her get relief. Her husband has been unémployed ,for a long time they were completely destitute and starving. She told of going to the Jewish Social Service, 318 Bast 3rd Street two weeks ago for help and they informed her that they would investigate. Days passed, but no in- vestigation followed and meanwhile her family was hungry.. She went to this same charity organization again, and the same business fol- lowed, as in all cases, promise of in- vestigation and nothing done. Finally she came to the council. The worker of the council immediate- ly mobilized and sent a committee with Mrs. Rosdeick to the charity or- ganization and demanded they give immediate relief and not promises. As a result, an Investigator was sent out at once, the committee went with the investigator. When the investi- gator saw all the workers in front of | Mrs. Rosedeick’s house she immedi- ately gave her $5.00 and promised more saying “I don’t want no trouble, I don’t want no trouble.” Mrs. Ros- deick’s husband was also promised a job, Brookiyn Laundry Workers to Meet Urge Fight Against More Wage Cuts The organizetion commitice of laundry workers of Brooklyn, a branch of the Laundry Workers Workers Union, yesterday ued a call for a meeting at the Workers Center, Pitkin Ave., near Christopher St., Friday, November 13, at 8 p. m. The committee called for a strugg- le against the bs of the AFL cecal 810, laundry drivers and against the recent racket union of the bosses under the name of the Equity Laun- dry League. The need to take up a determined stand against wage cuts in the industry was also pointed out. Metal Workers League Meeting Fri,, Nov. 13 The regular membership meeting of the Metal Workers Industrial League will be held Friday, Novem- ber .3th, 8 p. m. at 5 East 19th St. At this meeting the most import- ant items of business on the agenda will be: ‘The final preparation for the mass meeting of unemployed; part-time and employed metal workers, being held during the following week. Our participation in the Washing- ton hunger march conference and the march to Washington, Every member must attend this meeting on Friday night and bring with you metal workers from the shop and from among the vtiemployed metal workers, INAT TURNER MEET) HARLEM SUND AY Honor Revolutionary Negro Leader NEW YORK. Negro and white workers will celebrate this Sunday, November 15, the 100th anniversary of the heroic revolt of Negroes lead by the great revolutionary Negro Jeader, Nat Turner, with a mass meeting at Lafayette Hall, 165 West 131st Street. Speakers at this meet- ing will include Jim Allen, former editor of the Southern Worker; Charles Alexander, of the League of Struggle for Negro Rights; Henry F. Cabbot, organizer of the Section 4 of the Communist Party. There will be an entertainment program featuring the Staten Island Workers Chorus of the League of Struggle for Negro Rights. Nat Turner's revolt against the Southern white ruling class was one of the 29 recorded insurrections of the Negro masses against their op- pressors. Nat Turner was legally murdered by the slave owners gov- ernment on Nov. 11, 1831. The bosses tried to crush the resistance of the Negro masses with a terrific reign of terror, but this did not prevent other revolts. Today, the bosses are using the same terror against the Negro masses in order to crush their rising resistance against the Hoover Hun- ger Program, national oppression and lynching. Especially are the bosses alarmed at the growing unity of white and Negro workers as, un- der the leadership of the revolution- ary organizations, the workers are smashing the boss erected. barriers between them. 123 WORKERS OF CHICAGO TO BE TRIED ON NOV. 16) All Were / Arrested In| Fighting Hunger CHICAGO, Ill.—Capitalist “jus- tice” is once more reaching out to seize workers for its yawning jails. On Nov. 16 workers numbering 123 | are being dragged into the municipal | court of Chicago—because they dared oppose the hunger program of the | bosses. Seven of these workers were mem- bers of the demonstrating group that on Aug. 3 stood their ground under the blast of police revolvers that killed three of them, when they re- fused to allow a destitute Negro fam- ily to be thrown into the streets be- i cause the rent wasn’t paid. Three were killed and some twenty more arrested. Seven of those now face “jusvice” in the capitalist court. Twenty-cight workers were seized during a demonstrajion before the Polish consulate in Chicago when they protested against the imprisonment and torture of militant workers in Poland. The bulk of the workers facing jail on Noy. 16 were arrested at eviction demonstrations and demonstrations before charities. Some were arrested for distribution of leaflets, ‘The workers are being defended by the International Labor Defense and separate jury trial has been asked for each one. The cases will be tried in Judge Fardy's court at 11th and State Sts. THOUSANDS OF COLLEGE MEN ARE UNABLE TO GET JOBS Last month 6,000 college men from different parts of the country regis- tered at the Sloan House of the YM CA. Already reports the YMCA that 47.5 per cent have returned home. They came to New York backed by their college training and boasting of diplomas but found that the capitalist crisis is not particular whom it strikes. Ditch digger, steel worker, engineer, college-bred prof- fesional all alike face starvation un- der capitalism when capitalism can no longer exploit them for profit. Build a workers correspondence group in your factory, shop or neighborhood. Send regular letters to the Daily Worker. THE THEATRE GUILD presents EUGENE O'NEILL'S Trilogy ‘Mourning Becomes Electra’ Composed of 3 plays. Presente in 1 day “HOMECOMING,” “THE HUNTED, “THE HAUNTED” Commencing at 5.15 sharp, Dinner in- termission of one hour at 7, No Mats, GUILD THEA., 524 St., W. of B'way ‘The Group Theatre Presents The House of Connelly By PAUL GREEN Under the Auspices of the ‘Theatre Guild “THE LEFT BANK oy ELMER RICE $2.00 COUNSELLOR-AT- LAW ELMER RICE PAUL. MUNI Plymouth Wat'rnors x sat 230 i AMUSEMENT ;CAMEONOW Authentic War Pictures of All Fronts ‘HEROES ALL’ off the Sovii FS U Backs Bis? 21 Demonstrations for Defense of USSR The Friends of the Soviet Union will participate in the demonstrations arranged for November 21 thruout the country for the defense of thé | Soviet Union and the Chinese masses against the war moves of the im- perialists in Manchuria. The F.S.U. calls upon all its mem- bers and sympathiers to join in the demonstrations and to do active work to bring to these demonstrations tens of thousands of workers. The war preparations are moving fast. It is evident that imperialist America is using the present situ- ation to push forwrad its plan to smash the Soviet Union. On the Far Eastern border Jap- anese troops, are permitted to oc- cupy strategic points close to the Soviet borders. White guard soldiers are endeavoring to provoke an at- tack on the Soviet Unio nin order to embroil the Soviet Union in the present war. Ammunitions are be- ing shipped to Japan. The imperialist countries, headed by imperialist America, are now iit the most serious crisis they have ever seen. They cannot find a way out and so each imperialist country is trying to get the market of Man- churia, China and the Soviet Union, and stand ready to carry on their war of invasion in order to provide their capitalist class with profits. The workers and friends of the Soviet Union in the United States must not permit these war prepa» ations to go on. We must demobrte strate on Nov. 21. We must mtke this demonstration a mighty demi md that: American workers_want “hands eff the Soviet Union.” The withdrawal of al military forces from the Far East and China. Immediate publication of all s%e- ret treaties the United States has gone into with France, England, Po- pene Rumania, Japan, ete. That all loans for ammunitions to Poland, Japan and other imperialist pearance be stopped, Stop all shipments of ammunitions, chemical explosives, ete. Demonstrate November 21. t Union! Hands TEL. STUYVESANT 9-5557 CARL Insurance 799 BROADWAY, N.Y.C. D. W. Reader Meets this Thursday Eve., Nov. 12th 1931, 8 P. M., All Readers of D. W. Are Welcome At WORKERS CENTER 511 FIRST STREET Hoboken, N. J. Cooperators’ Patronize SEROY CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue O1-2-7584 BRONX, N. ¥. Dr. MORRIS LEVITT SURGEON DENTIST Southern Blyd, cor. 176th St, Phone: Tr nt 3-1353, cial low prices for workers NAY. Intern'| Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 1 UNION SQUARE 8TH FLOOR AU Work Done Under Persona) Care of DR. JOSEPHSON Phone Stuyvesant 3816 Joh::’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with herr aapetort where al) radicals 302 E, 12th St. na wae Rational. Vegetarian Restaurant ETHEL BARRYMORE The SCHOOL FOR SCANDAL Shert "s Immortal Comedy Henry Phoche STEPHENSON FOSTER ; MOROSCO THEA, 45th W. | Evens 8145, Mats, Wed. & EVERYBODY'S WELCOME ‘The new musical comedy hit, with egg cies A LA tant PENNINGTON, EBERTINA nascnt GIRLS & BALLET; OTHERS SHUBERT Thea,, 44th St, W. of Bow'y ve. 8:30, Mt Wed, & 2130 Adriane ALLEN ff Bway, oe 2130 199 SECOND AVENUE Bet. 12th and 13th Ste. Strigtly Vegetarian food -MELROSE DAIRY VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT a Comrades Will Always Find It Pleasant to Dine at Our a 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD. Bronz (near 174th St. Station) TELEPHONE INTERVALE 0—0149 SOLLIN’S RESTAURANT 216 EAST 14TH STREET 6-Course Lunch 55 Cents Regular Dinner 65 Cents