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seaggir Fane ‘Twe DAIL ¥ WORKER, NEW_ YORK, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 16 f 1931 Downtown Hunger March | To Be Held on Nov. 18th to Include Many Now Starving To Demand Cash Winter Relief and ad Das for Jobless at Municipal Lodging House Downtown east side unemployed workers and their families, jobless at the Municipal Lodging House, and unemployed of the city employment agency will take part in a sectional hunger march upon the Department of Public Welfare, at Leonard and Lafayette Sts., Wednesday, Nov. 18. at 1p. m. Starting from 7th St. and Ave. C the unemployed under the banner of the Downtown Unemployed Council will march to Rutgers Square, the to be joined by the East Side Unem- ployed Council and workers from the job agency and the Municipal Lodg- ing House. From Rutgers Square the hunger marchers will go to the offices of the Department of Public Welfare to present their demands to Com- missioner Taylor. Starving in Delegation. wenty starving families with their workers from the Municipal mong the delegation to pre- the deman The demands in- 5 h payment sent clude immediate 50 ca: for..winter relief, the opening of the St.. Marks hospital for the unem- and immediate cash relief for ing families at the hunger and reduction of the salaries of officials of department of welfare to $4,500 a year, the remainder to go to the unemploy for r ‘or j include: carfare to be paid to and from homes and} y by the city committee; free} lu the offices wv committee of unemployed to distribu the jobs. Specific demands for men and women at the Municipal Lodging House includes no separation of children from mothers who apply for aid at the house. These mothers are to be paid immediate cash relief to keep their family intact. About 10,000 leaflets will be dis- tributed for the hunger march. Organizer Scores Tammany. | Clarence Silver, organizer of the Downtown Unemployed Council, in urging a turn-out for the hunger march, scored the action of Tam- ny Hall in refusing to appropriate e $15,000,000 they promised before elections. Silverman said: “Just as the Unemployed Council pointed out before the recent elec- tions the Tammany Board of Al- dermen made a deliberate pre- election move by saying they would appropriate $15,000,000 for relief of the unemployed. We said at that time that it was to get the votes of the unemployed. And now after the election Mayor Walker, at the last meeting of the Board of Alder- men said when the matter of ap- propriation came up “there is no necd for this now” and made a mo- tion that practically shelves the matter. “This brazen bit of playing with the miseries of the unemployed and their votes must be answered by the unemployed masses, especially of the downtown sections by our Hunger March on the 18th. The fight for winter relief must be re- doubled.” m HARLEM JOBLESS COUNCIL GETS ACTION IN DEMANDING RELIEF | The Harlem Un- red immediate five of Harlem's and Negro white familie: through the evasions and ved tape of the Charity Organiza- tion Society, Association for Improv- ing the Condition of the Poor, Joint Application Bureau, and the Catho- Me Charities. An open hearing of the Unem- ployed Council was held on Noy. 11 at Lafayette Hall, 165 West 131 Street. Many of the ral hun- dred workers present told of their experiences with the charity societies to whom they had appealed for help. on, unemployed ring at Harlem thirteen year old from hunger said hei was too weak to lente her bed. A crippled house- Hospital daughter testified that for 2 months she had lived on bread and tea. An- other worker had been sleeping the subways for two weeks. Ot! rs were threatened with evic- closure of gas and also elec- tions, tricity A delegation of twenty-five unem- ployed was selected to appeal for immediate assistance on behalf of the most urgent cases Meanwhile @ canvass was made of neighbor- hood stores to give food for the hun- gry, and neighbors invited the home- 9 move in with them, pending r aid. the Harlem ofiice of the C. O. the unemployed delegation was 105 East tence re- B., referred to the main oMe: 23nd United ii Street. sulted in the granting of carfare to all the members of the delegation and mmediate sending of a social er to Mrs. Livingston ‘eet. meeting was held in front s. Livingston’s home, 12 West and St A committee of unem- . accompanied the social work- irs, reporting to the meet- hat Mrs, Livingston was given n food coupons, and promised il she received the city pen- to which she is entitled as a and for which she has been 1g for four months. . 13 the delegation pushed ploye widow its way past the crowded waiting rooms of the C. O, 8, demanding im- mediate assistance. Mr. Lawson Pur- dy, executive director, spoke with the delegation, which in militant terms criticized the society for its evesion and neglect of applications. ‘The C. O. S. finally agreed to help half the families represented, to wom they immediately granted food € ons, contrary to the usual pol- which delays all aid until af- wm investigation. Vhat's On— DAY svlet Union Printing Industry iN be the topic of a lecture by sade Rosenberg at the Irving Pi za, 18th Street and Irving Place. All typographical workers invited ca te Workers Dramatic Counct Will have a meeting at the ers Center, 36 East 12th Str night at & m. Worker are asked to send delegates TLD Schoot Will be held. in Room 203, 60 Haat BMth St., 7:30 Pig of . Nat Turner Group, LANR All organizations are invited te vend two delegates to the Finnish Workers Hall, 15 West 1226th Street, ior the establishment of a Liberator Campaign Committee . * Brownsville Aro h. TLD Will have a regular membership meeting tonight at 118 Bristol St,, Brooklyn. Tmportant matters are to be taken us The A. I. C. P., to which the other half of the delegation was referred, evaded immediate relief by promis- ing an investigation on Monday. An eged Nero worker commented bit- terly tha. his sixty-nine years of hard labor in factories, mines, and | railroads, had found him forced to beg $5.50 to pay his rent so that he would not be locked out. Others added that workers would no longer fight for a society which did not provide for them when in want. Mr. Burdett, director, finally promised to send social workers ready to give the families food and money that afternoon. At the Catholic Charities, the un- employed delegation was met by the Reverend Father Brennock, director. Father Brennock said that the Char- ities had helped Mrs. Davis, in whose behalf the delegation came, two days rs, had a large and expensive apart- ment, and was not deserving of any help. Mrs. Davis denied his state- ments and appealed to other mem- bers of the delegation who brought food to her tiny home. Father Bren- nock finally admitted that Mrs. Da- vis had not been to the Catholic Charities for months, and had never received help from them. Mrs. Da- yis was given money for food. The Joint Application Bureau, which “takes care of” single men, at- npted to appeal to race prejudice Ly coking the white worker present what he was doing among the Ne- groes. The applicants were offered one dollar a day relief during unem- ployment provided they kept away from the Harlem Unemployed Coun- cil. The committee refused indig- nantly, and by its solidarity, was promised work at the Bureau's wood- yard. Sealed envelopes entitling the holder to a twenty cent meal were then distributed. The delegation will report on the success of its work at another open meeting at headquarters of the Har- Jem Unemployed Council, 165 West 133rd Street. The office is open all day, and employed and unemployed workers of Harlem are invited to join the Council and report on all cases in need of aid. SHERWOOD’S “REUNION IN VI- ENNA” AT MARTIN BECK NOW The Theatre Guild’s fourth produc- tion of the season, ‘Reunion in Vi- enna,” a comedy by Robert EF. Sher- wood, will open this evening at the Martin Beck Theatre, with Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne playing the leading roles. Other important roles will be played by Minor Watson, Hel- en Westley, Henry Travers, Eduar- do Cianelli and Edward Fielding. ‘The Hippodrome is showing on its sereen, Elissa Landi and Lionel Bar- rymore in “The Yellow Ticket.” The stage show includes: Sylvia Clark, Jean Bedini and Harry Evanson, Nor- man Thomas Quintette, Cliff Naz- arro, Leary and Craven, Seiler and Wills, the Great Peters and Clark with Smith. <The Cameo Theatre is mow show- ing “Heroes All,” 2 compilation of authentic pictures of the World War, taken from official sources, showing the Italian, Germap. French and Russian fronts. “Sehwanda,” the new German op- era, will be given this evening at the Metropolitan Opera House. Other operas of the week will include: Ros- sini’s “William Tell,” on Wednesda; Mozart's “Don Giovanni,” Thursda; “Tristan und Isolde,” Pridey; “Han- sel und Gretel,” und “Pagliacci,” - the jobless | before; that Mrs. Davis kept board- | |NEW YORK LABOR CONFERENCE FOR NATIONAL MARCH Unemployment Insur- ance, Dec. 7 March | Main Agenda Points NEW YORK.—The Labor Confer- enct called by the Unemployed Coun- cils of the state of New York for Sunday, November 22 at 11 a. m. at the Stuyvesant Casino, Second Ave. and 9th St. will elect the New York state delegates for the national hunger march on Washington, De- cember 7. The conference is ex- pected to be one of the largest of its kind ever held here. Delegates from Unemployed Coun- cils, mass meetings of employed and unemployed, unions, fraternal or- ganizations, shop groups and Negro and. youth bodies are now being elected for the conference. A num- ber of American Federation of La- bor locals, notably in the building trades, have elected delegates to the conferences. The chief points of the agenda at the conference will be the struggle for unemployment insurance in the state, the national hunger march and the struggle for federal unemploy- ment insurance, LABOR UNITY IS TO BE MONTHLY Organ of TUUL Will Become 32 Page Magazine Along with the establishment of the new 32 page Labor Unity monthly magazine which is to be something |new in the history of the American Labor Movement, will come the set- ting up of a Trade Union Unity League Press Bureau and Service, to supply the revolutionary and Labor Press with news and articles on the economic struggles of the American Workers, the Trade Union Unity League announced yesterday. Coincident with the publication of the January issue of the new Labor Unity, which goes to press Decem- ber .5, will begin the plan to develop union papers and the TUUL shop or- gans, together with local unemploy- ment papers. All these will receive their direction from the new monthly Labor Unity magazine. Leaders of all the revolutionary unions and leagues, and of the Trade Union Unity League, will write in the first issue of the Labor Unity maga- zine of the struggles going on or soon to come in their industries. The Na- tional Hunger March to Washington, which will have been held a week be- fore the new Labor Unity appears, {will be thoroughly analyzed by those who directed the march. The Law- rence and mining strikes will be also analyzed. Not only the leaders of the unions and league, but also rank and file workers will write for the new Labor Unity, for it is planned to develop the workers correspondence and news of the daily life of the unions to a greater extent then ever. The sub- scription rates to the Labor Unity magazine will be $1 a year and 50 cents for six months. Money should be sent to Labor Unity, Room 414, 2 W. 15th St., New York City. The New Central organ of the TUUL will have a big birthday cele- bration at a banquet and entertain- ment which will be held at Manhat- tan Lyceum on Saturday night, De- cember 5. Many well known leaders of the revolutionary movement will be there including William Z. Foster, William F. Dunne, Ben Gold and others. Bronx Jobless Reveal Extent of Misery at Public Hearing’ Hundreds of Workers Pack Ambassador Hall to Hear Testimony of Jobless Families Between seven and eight hundred workers, men, women and children, crowded Ambassador Hall to the doors on Friday, to give and hear the testimony of the Bronx unemployed. Bronx officials of government and charity organizations had been in- vited to attend this meeting and to give answers if they could to the un- employed. But not one such official dared to. come and hear the public testimony offered at the meeting. About a dozen workers testified and-several children, Many more in the crowd wished to testify against the emergency employment commit- tee, the charities, the association for improving the conditions for the poor, landlords and city officials, but time did not permit. All the testimony was damning evi- dence against the city charity and city government. Mother of 11 Testifies. A widow, mother of 11 children, in answer to the questions asked, stated that she received from the charities fifteen dollars per week, out of which she is expected to buy food, pay for rent, gas and light, and clothing for eleven children and herself. Of course it cannot be done and she had been sending her children to the stores to beg for bread, milk and potatoes to help along. All the chil- dren with her were in rags and wear- ing torn sneakers which offered no protection whatever against the cold or wet. The charities advised her to put her children in an institute and to go to work. This she does not want to do but she feats that she will be forced to it. At the same time she declared that she believed it would be impossible to find work when so many are out of work. A Negro woman of 62 years of age stated that she had paid her last money for the rent which is twelve dollars per month and had not had any food in the house for several days having had to give every cent for the rent. She said she was will- ing to do laundry work or any kind of house work but that because of her age it was hard to get anything to do. She was in despair. “It is true,” she said, “that I am an old woman but I don't want to starve and I am willing to work.” A number of workers brought their dispossess notices with them. Sev- eral brought registration cards to show that they had registered with the emergency relief committee but had not yet received any jobs. One Negro, worker told of staying up all night for several days in order not to lose his place on the line. All Appealed to Charities. All the workers said that they had appealed either to the charities or to the Association for improving the conditions of the poor and in every case they had been told that nothing could be done for them. A newspaper reporter asked to have the following statement made at this public hear- ing: that Mrs. Lyle, head of the A. I. Cc. P., (above charity association), IERCHANT OF VENICE” OPENS SHAKESPEARE SEASON; ROYALE The Chicago Civic Shakespeare So- ciety will open its third season this evening at the Royale Theatre. The repertory this season will include but three plays: “The Merchant of Ven- ice,” “Julius Caesar,” and “Hamlet.” In addition to Fritz Leiber, Helen Menken, Tyrone Power, William Fa- versham, Viola Roache and Pedro de Cordoba, who will play the chief roles — the cast will also include such well known favorites as Whitford Kane, Gordon Burby, France Bendtsen, and Edith Campbell. The repertory for the week follows: Monday eveningfi Wednesday evening, Saturday mat- inee, “The Merchant of Venice”; on ‘Tuesday evening and Friday even- ing, “Julius Caesar”; for Wednesday matinee, Thursday evening and Sat- urday evening, ‘‘Hamlet.” National Textile Union Calls tor Stronger Organization LAWRENCE, Mass., Noy. 15.—Con- tinuing the work of organizing the textile workers here against discrim- ination and to force the withdrawal of the wage cut, the National Tex- tile Workers Union has issued a call for an enlarged National Council meeting to be held Sunday, Nov. 22, in Boston, Mass. After a long and militant battle 25,000 Lawrence tex- tile strikers were betrayed by the United Textile Workers and A. F. of L. officials intoeaccepting a 10 per cent wage cut. ‘The cail issued under the name of J. P. Reid, president, and Anna Burlak, assistant secretary, reads as follows: “The Lawrence textile strike, after five weeks of heroic struggle on the part of the workers has been broken and betrayed by the leaders of the United Textile Workers. “The efforts of our Union to pre-~ vent this treachery and bring about unity of all the workers in the strug gle against the ten per cent wage- cut were not successful and we now have the task of organizing the mass of the workers for the continuation of the struggle, for a) removal of the wag ecut, (b) No discrimination, (c) The right to organize, (d) For the rectification of mill grievances, (e) Por the dismissal of all cases now | 4 before the courts, and for the re- Tease of all arrested and imprisoned | Bem workers. “The Woonsocket, R. I. (in the same period of the Lawrence strike) the National Textile Workers Union Was successful in leading struggles of the workers in the Bonin, Cherry Brook and Jarrett Brothers mills, and having a 10 per cent cut in all three mills withdrawn. “In New Bedford, Mass., the Man- ufacturers Assn., have announed a general 10 per cent cut in wages to (CONTINUED ON PAGE THREE) NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES EAST 8IDE—BRONX Today to Tuesday JETER —On the Sereen— —RKO Acts— Ri STAR FINAL” ip? Finnard Ras’ Stone and) Beck Stevens Bros. turned 135 people away who had ap- plied for help in the 17st 30 days as unworthy.” All the workers who testified as well as the entire crowd that packed the hall expressed their readiness to join the Bronx branch of the Unem- ployed Councils and to organize and fight for immediate relief and for un- employmet insurance. Even the children were ready to fight for free food and clothing as testified by one little girl, one of a family of six whose father was working only two days a week and who was without a coat. All the mothers declared that free food and clothing given to all school children would be a great help to them and would lighten their terrible suffering. The following decisions were unani- mously adopted by the workers pres- ent: to support the hunger march to Washington for unemployment in- surance; to go in a body to the Bronx relief organizations to demand im- mediate relief for the worst cases; to go in a body to Bronx Borough Hall for the same purpose; to join and support the Bronx council of the un- employed, ‘The witnesses were questioned by Sadie Van Veen, and the verdict of the jury was offered in a statement by Tomash, members of the central body of the N. Y. Unemployed Coun- cils. RAID PROVIDENCE COMMUNIST OFFICE PROVIDENCE, R. I., Noy. 15.—Last Thursday the headquarters of the Communist Party was raided and everything in it wrecked. The action of the police, together with the extra legal forces, is not an isolated event. The activities of the Communist Party during the last week in organizing the unemployed workers into Unemployed Councils and forcing the city administration to call a special session of the City Council for tonight to take up the unemployment situation. The dele- gation of the Unemployed Council will appear before the City Council tonight, while a huge demonstration will be held outside. The delegation will demand unemployment relief and also denounce the action of the po- lice as an open provocation against the workers. The unemployed work- ers of the city are highly indignant against the police for this action. PLUMBERS MEET TO FORM UNION ‘The plumbers section of the Trade Union Unity League which has been growing lately because of its activity, has sent out a call for the formation of an Alteration Plumbers’ Union at a meeting to be held Thursday, Nov. 19, 8 p. m. at 108 East 14th St. This meeting will be preliminary to a mass meeting to be called by the plumbers. A statement issued by the plumbers section points out that the conditions of the plumbing workers, especially the alteration plumbers, is growing worse, and that the A. F. of L. union was thoroughly graft ridden and boss controlled held out no hope or in- terest for them. Return to Work and to Build Local of of the strikers’ demands by the bosses at a meeting held Priday, Noy. 13. At a mecting of the workers of the two struck mills held Thursday night a strike committee was elected to place the strikers demands to the Friday morning the strikers to bosses, put the following demands the owners :the return of the ay e 10 percent wage cut that precipitated the strike, no discrimination and recog- nition of the mill committee, Seeing that the workers were determined in their demands and fearing a militant strike the bosses acceded to the de- mands of taking back 10 per cent. of all cuts, and informa! recognition of the committee of mill workers. Some workers received more than 10 per cent return. To Build the Union A meeting held Friday night voted to return and immediately begin to build the mill local of the National Textile Workers Union. start this week to organize the work- ers into the union. Organization of the workers of the Bernon Worsted and Snydney Wor- sted mills, also owned by the Jarrett brothers will start at the same time. Workers of these mills also received wage cuts, but lacking organization and leadership, did not strike. Most of the victorious mill strikers are women and girls and the strike committee was composed, of eighteen ‘women and four men. STRIKERS WIN IN HALF HOUR (By a Worker Correspondent) STATEN ISLAND, N. Y.—On Thursday, Nov. 12, we workers at the Brewer Dry Dock Co, won a strike in half an hour. The bosses wanted to pay us straight pay for overtime and when we demanded double time for over- time the bosses refused it—so we struck, Mr. Morell, the boss, came to us and pleaded that we return to work at the old scale, but we answered him with an emphatic NO. When he saw that the workers would not agree with him he got awfully sore and called the superintendent. The su- perihtendent came, but when he saw the large crowd of determined work- ers he decided to pay time and a half for overtime. We held out for the original demands, but the boss got in touch with a Negro worker who was isolated from our group and con- vinced him to acecpt the time and a half proposition. This started a move to accept a partial victory. We went back, winning half of our demands. This points out clearly that the Ne- gro and white workers must always fight together. * e Editorial Note:—The Negro worker who went back to work first is not to be censured. The blame rests on the shoulders of the white workers who allowed their fellow Negro worker to become isolated from the main body of the strikers. AMUSEMENTS The Theatre Gutld Presents REUNION IN VIENNA A Comedy -By ROBERT E. SHERWOOD. Martin Beck $22" St. & 8 Ave. Eyes 8:30 Mats. Thurs.& Sat.2:30 v Gro tre Presents The Howes” of Connelly By PAUL GREEN Under the Auspices of the ‘Theatre Guild 2 7 Mansfield Ysa fh 8 loves 8:40 Mats. Thurs, & Sat.2/30 THE TREATRE BUGENE O'N GUILD presents LL’S Trilogy Mourning Becomes Electra Composed of 3 plays presented on ijday “ROMECOMING,’ ‘TR= HUNTED,” “THE HAUNTED” Commencing at 5.15 sharp, Dinner in- termission of one hour at 7. No Mats, GUILD THEA., 534 St. W. of Brway COUNSELLOR-AT-LAW Ry With ELMER RICE PAUL MUNI Thea. W. 45 St. Ev. Plymouth fos Tern & sn asec! aise EVERYBODY'S WELCOME ‘The new al comedy hit, FRANCES WILLIAMS, OSCAR SHAW, ANN PENNINGTON, HARRIETT LAKE, SHUBMORT Ther, 44th W. of B'w'y Hive. 8:30, Mats. Wed. & Sat, 2:20 with JULIAN WYLIE’S PRODUCTION GOOD COMPANIONS By J. B, PRIESTLEY 4 EDWARD KNOBLOCK From Priestley’s Famous Novet Company of 120-16 Scenes “4TH ST. THEATRE, W. of Bridway Eve, 8149 Mata, Wed. & Sat, 2:80 :CAMEONOW ‘The World War on Every Front ‘HEROES ALL’ Highlights from German, Italian, French and Russian Fronts “Represents the Ami At Its Best,” Atkinson, THE LEFT BANK By ELMER RICE Little Thea. W. 44th, Bves. Mats, Wed. & Saturday, ETHEL BARRYMORE The SCHOOL FOR SCANDAL Sheridan's Immortal Comedy Thea, 47th W of Ethel Barrymore n'vn:i'ts. % te S250 2140 Wed & Sat PHILIP MERIVALE CYNARA BIGGEST SHOW IV NEW VoRK ISSA LANDI and acTs: jonel a in Toe, sus | Yellow Ticket OPENING TONIGHT at sino And _a distinguirhed Company in & SAT. EVENINGS Evge. $2.50 to 0c; Sat. Mat. $2 to 50c Ad rf ‘Wednesday Mat. STRIKERS WIN a 'WAGE- CUT FIGHT | NEW YORK—In connection with Jarrett yarn mills voted to return to | work upon the basis of the acceptance | 10 per | cent wage cut, but they agreed to the | A drive will | The MERCHANT of Mt HAMLET $1.50 to 50¢ le Thea. 45h,W, of B'way CH, 9144 the Hunger March a series of unem- | ployed meetings will be held during; | the coming week. Meetings of the | unemployed dressmakers and unem- | ployed furriers will be held on Mon- NI TTT |day, at 2 o'clock at the union hall, | the N.T.W.U. |131 W. 28th St. On Tuesday, Nov. —- _ | 17, at 10 a. m. a meeting of unem-} | WOONSOCKET, R. I, Noy. 15.—!} ployed milliners will be held in | Strikers of the Cherry Brook and] Bryant Hall, 6th Ave. and 42nd St. .v Executive Meets Monday. A meeting of the executive council of the N. T. W. I. U. will take place on Monday, Noy. 16th, at the union office, 131 W. 28th St., at 8 p. m. Important problems concerning the union will be taken up. Dress Shop of Berman and Smith on Strike. The dress shop of Berman & Smith, | 213 W. 35th St., is on strike. Needle trades workers are asked to help picket this shop. \Newark Workers Hit Jim-Crowism | at Restaurant Place Barred Worker | NEWARK, Noy. 16. — Last Monday night, F. E. A. Welsh, New Jersey state organizer of the League of Struggle for Negro Rights, was told that he would not be served at the Russian restaurant on 53 Broome St., Newark, because “some of our white customers object to Negroes eating here.” On Wednesday night, a committee composed of Comrade Welsh and rep- resentatives of the Communist Party Young Communist League, and the Unemployed Council went to the res- taurant and demanded that Comrade Welsh be served together with the other customers. The woman in charge of the restaurant refused to do so. The owners were immediately notified that the place would be boy- cotted, that the Communist Party and the LSNR would call upon the members of the Russian Mutual Aid Society to stop their patronage, and a demonstration would be held be- fore the restaurant within a few days. The restaurant is owned by some Russian individuals and not by the Russian Mutual Aid Society. This latter organization, a workers mutual aid organization which jowns |the building in which this restaurant is housed, has only rented the restau- rant rooms to this individual. Prac- tically the whole trade of this restau- rant is dependent upon the patro- nage of the members of the Russian Mutual Aid Society. At the Nat Turner meeting held in the hall under the restaurant Sun- day, this act of discrimination was exposed, and the workers mobilized for a demonstration before the res- taurant within a few days and for Negro Rights. Negro Cooperators’ SEROY \CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue -7584 BRONX, N. Y. O12. Intern’ Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 1 UNION SQUARE 8TH FLOOR All Work Done Under Personai Care of DR, JOSEPHSON The Eighth Anniversary of The Daily Worker Will be held at The COLISUEM January 3rd, 1932 Working class organizations please keep this date clear! deal WIth BUSINESS SCHOOL Henry Phoebe Adriane STEPHENSON FOSTER ALLEN get Ale" hbase! prasoece. sae A Stenography—Typewriting Bookkeeping Individual Instruction 14th St, at 2nd Ave, N. ~~ * REDUCED RATES Wor Daily Worker Readers We tnvite Workers to th BLUE BIRD I PRITZ by RONDE 4 Urine foes! = CARRTERIA Faversham Roache Cordoba GOOD WHOLESOME FOOD Fair Prices (Also Wed. Kive. & Sat, Mat. A Comfortable Place to Eat TUES. & Far myae , ULIUS CABBAR 827 BRUADWAY Setween 12th and 13th Sts, || 50 ence ism st eens Active Uren Dressmakers Meeting Wednes- day. An active members dressmakers will be held on Wednes- day, Nov. 18th, at Irving Plaza, at 6 p.m. Dressmakers are asked to come to this meeting. All dressmakers who are unem- OF HUNGER MARCH MASS MEETS | ployed are asked to be in the office. of the union on Monday, at 11 a. m, to help with some work. Open Air Meetings of N.T.W.LU. This Week. Several open air meetings will be held this week in the garment center in various blocks and buildings. The first open air meeting will take place on Monday, at 12 o'clock noon at 36th St. and 8th Ave. Meeting of Negro and white dress- makers will be held Wednesday, Nov. 18th, at 7 o'clock at St. Lukes Hall, 125 W. 130th St. Police Raid Offices of Mine Union in the Brownsville Section BROWNSVILLE, Pa.—On Nov. 4, state police raided the headquarters of the National Miners Union, search- ing every one present, confiscating all documents, then raiding the house of Philip Giambatista, the or- ganizer of the National Miners Union in Brownsville, arresting him and holding him on deportation charges. The International Labor Defense has sent a telegram to Governor Pin- chot condemning this outrage, and demanding the immediate release of Philip Giambatista and the return of all documents. Attorney Margolis is taking the necessary steps to conduct the legal fight against deporting Philip Giam- batista to Fascist Italy + STUYVESANT 9-5357 CARL BRODSKY Insurance 799 BROADWAY, N. Y.C. Dr. MORRIS LEVITT ~~ SURGEON DENTIST Southern Blvd. cor. BL a St. N. ¥. Phone: Tremont 3-123 Special low prices for workers Patronize the Concoops Food Stores aND Restaurant 2700 BRONX PARK EAST “Buy in the Co-operative Store and help the Left Wing Movement.” JADE MOUNTAIN AMERICAN and CHINESE RESTAURANT Open 11 2, m. to 1:90 a. me. Special Lunch 11 to 4 ° 35e Dinner 5 to 10...55¢ 197 SECOND AVENUE Between 12h 18th & HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian Restaurant 1500 MADISON AVENUE Phone University 4-9061 All paar Meet et BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 568 Cleremont Parkway, Breax Vhone Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: [TALIAN DISHES A piace with atmosphere where all radicals mest 302 E. 12th St. New Youu Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 199 SECOND AVENUB Get. 18th and 19th Sts, Strictly Vegetarian food MELROSE RESTAURANT sant eae ne 1787 SOUTHERN hie Bronz (near 174th St. Station) HONE TNTERVALE Advertise Yuor Union Meetings Bere. For Information Write to Advertising Departament The DAILY WORKER New York Oxy } | i meeting of |) Paar