The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 24, 1931, Page 2

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_axe Two * DAIL 'Y¥_ WORKER, NEW YOI YORE, TUESDAY, , NOVE BER 24, 1931 2,000 UNEMPLOYED MARCH ON CITY HALL; 7,000 DEMAND RELIEF. ——= SHOUTS OF THRONG ON | STREETS EMPHASIZE SPEECH OF COMMITTEE: Call On oard of Aldermen. re ochade In Huge} Budget $200,000,000 Winter Relief March Back to Union Square; Hear Report That Aldermen Agree Only to “Consider NEW YORK. — What the capitalist | “Last year you handled unemploy- sress and police say, is the biggest of | ment with clubs. Have you clubbed i the unemployment demonstrations | unemployment out. Rybicki admit- the City Hall took place yesterday | ted 800,000 jobless last year. This fternoon, when 2,000 of unemployed | year he admits there are a million | workers, led by the various branches | unemployed in New York.” of the Unemployed Councils, con-|| While the committee was present- |ing the demands, and a resolution adopted supporting the demands at Ee City Labor Conference on Sun- , the shouts of the marching un- erased came in. The slogans they were shouting were for unemploy- ment insurance, for winter relief, against evictions, chimed invand re- inforced the statements of Winter and Lealess in quite a satisfactory fashion. They could be heard plainly in the aldermanic chamber and the} fat boys of Tammany misrule kept running to the windows and looking verged on it, and were joined by seven or eight thousand worker spectators | fro down town. The combined pro- ion tramped around and around the sidewalks, with police barring all and cops standing in a line through which a sparrow could not have found an opening, across the front porch of the Tammany of- iald The police were so afraid that the hungry desperate jobless would crash that line through, that they had the staircase choked with a solid body of | uniformed thugs inside the building. | anxiously out. ‘They had riot cars and mounted po-| The board of aldermen was going lice massed up side streets and be-| right on without giving an answer to tween buildings. the jobless committee, but Winter Vhemauds Placed stopped the capitalist who got on the A committee of six, four men and] | floor next and insisted on an answer. two women, with Carl Winter and | After an argument, the president of Robert Lealess as spokesmen, went in | the board said the demand would be to tell the board of aldermen that the | “considered.” | unemployed wanted $200,000,000 a: ap- | Try to Gang up the city budget then The committee went out of the un- | winter relief OG Seay A squad of cops with ae for gas, light or | | spokesmen into a room which a po- | lice captain was just then unlock- n, and other things to Officer 16,842 was seen down- s of the million jobless | stairs putting brass knuckles on and | pulling a glove on over them. He was $17,- | one of those who later upstairs tried $631,- | to get Lealess and Winter into the tions for 1932, | locked room. The committee stuck | so that charity | together and got out. et the} Winter was lifted up and called all for the un-| to me-ch to Union Square. The pa- rade to Union Square, up Lafayette s pounded home Fourth Avenue, was twice as big howing how this | as the one downtown. They marched, cutting off | filling the street from surb to surb, and hundreds working in shops along way leaned out of windows to them and shower them with paste made of torn paper. Seven thousand more heard the re- | ports from the three stands in Un- Club Unempioyment | ion Square, and yoted to organize and had treuble tt the floor, | fight until winter relief, unemploy- ey get it. Lealess, who was one | ment insurance and all the other de- je Oc:. 16, 1930 jobless delegation | mands are granted. The tag days, en up in Mayor Walker's pres- | Nov. 28 and 29, and the Bronx Coli- > in the very room they were now |seum mass meeting, Dec. 2, were es- aking remi d the aldermen: ' pecially advertised. Ohio Mooney-Harlan Meet Plans Program of Struggle (Telegram to the Daily Worker) ago they sent Billings and myself to HARLAN, Ky., Nov. 23.—The cases|@ living death. Tomorrow other val- ofthirty-seven Harlan County miners |iant workers will be seized as they charged with criminal syndicalism, | fight for their class. Shall the suf- banding and confederating and read- | |ferings of all these workers be in ing prohfpited literature has been | vain? Gird yourself for battle. Rise postponed until the March term of |@S you have never risen before, Tom | ar Mooney.” the county court ; ia . . . ; Telegrams from Sklar, Imperial YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio, Nov. 22 Valley class war prisoner, Upton Sin- oe Lane * ea. nig. | clair, Bishop Wm, M. Brown, the was held here with three hundred | thers were received and read, seventeem delegates representing 211] The conference passed resolutions organizatlyms with a membership of |©n Mooney, Harlan, Scottsboro, Im- off of free hot lunches for R The budget 672,000 for 609,000 tot nd hes ar aside Vinters and * facts, and ey could be found by 999,099 now slated for bank- 362,000,000 handed over to ce, and by cutting Mr. Jimmy 000 salary to $5,000, with ons in other bloated official twenty-five thousand in twenty |Perial Valley and Centralia class war cities, prisoners. A telegram to President “The conference started Saturday | Hoover demanding the immediate re~ lease of Mooney and other class war prisoners was drafted A resolution called for the organ- | ization of conferences throughout the ‘American Federation of | state and call for a mass state con- eel were represented. Greet-| ference April, 1932, building defense ings from Tom Mooney read eyvarm | committees in all organizations and fraternal revolutionary greetings. To- | °rganizing mass meetings through- day Harlan miners being framed. In| out the state in December. 1927 the brutal master class burned| The conference elected a state com- acco and Vanzetti. Fifteen years| mittee of twenty-five. afternoon. An anti-war mass meet- ing was held in the evening as eight hundred workers jammed the hall and many were turned away. Farewell Banquet for Serio and Machado to Be Held November 29 Plans are going forward for the What’s On— TUESDAY Drug Store Clerks, An. ‘unemployment mecting 0: érug clerks will be held this a big banquet on Sunday, Nov. 29, at re en Seta He which the workers of New York will ag . say good-bye to two fighters for the WEDN stl eva HES American working class, Guido Serio Knitgoods Workers Ba ; 2 “ Wie Rent erseiting reve at|and Eduard Machado, both of whom the Stuyvesant Casino, 146) Bese ey are sailing for Soviet Russia, The Ave. der th auspices of the 7 +8 Ave; under the auspices of the N- 't: | banquet will be held at 6 pm. at Ir on 60 cents, and a with coupon, ving Plaza, 15th St. and Irving PI. under the auspices of the New York Nota) Workers Indurtrial League District of the International Labor Will have an executive meeting at 6 H, 19th St. at 8 p,m, Defense. OK aK) Needle Trades Workers Are invited to the my: Tete} Phletic Club at 28th Bt + m at 7 py series in pamphlet furm at 10 cents yy | Per copy: Read it—Spread it: | wil y br, § ( the new headquarters | SRE EIR AD Cd Aa of “Bre le Workers ‘Center, 1813 vitkin A (8 pm, ing at the Manhattan Lyceum, 66 F, ? Fourth St, Urgent problems’ to be Concert and Danee taken up J AWi) be given in the Work eS Operative Auditorium at Hath Bench Workers’ Center Park Bast under the ausp Will have a concert and dance at 48 Bay 28th St, Brooklyn, at 8 p.m, Music School, , Admission i ee Admission 36 cents: ad Levy Branch LUD, ee NT: Ale | scales and rusted spots of literary jon close inspection to be the sanest |in a private house, of men he knows jfrom each department |“Steel” at Times Sa. hows Real Feeling for Mill Struggles When you see the bourgeois critic’s hammer knocking John Wexley’s “Steel” now playing at Times Square. just remember that what he doesn’t like is probably all right. This is a most surprising play to find on Broadway with a real working class point of view, in spite of numerous hysteria. To take up some of its faults first. The play has a streak of that Sher- wood Anderson type of railing at the damned dirty unlovely mills and at the industrial system because it in- terferes with green grass and birds and butterflies. One suspects that Wexley started to write a poem against industrialism, then went and found out what it was all about, and | flooded his poem with a lot of red- hot class hatred toward the steel barons, stool pigeons, state troopers and scabs. Or, maybe, he knew all the time, and had to put the other angle in to get it by in New York. The play may be criticized because it deals with a situation in which the mass struggle of the steel workers is the key, but which is cut down to the reactions to this struggle of a few petty individuals. But that is just one of the limitations of the modern stage, barring such expensive productions as Reinhardt can put on, or such as can be staged by the mas- ters of industry, the capitalists here or the workers of the Soviet Union. “In spite of such limitations, Wexley | has done a lot. He has gathered up many important types in a steel town. There is the American skilled | labor type, who howls against the “Bolshevik Hunkies.” One of these home guard types is the father of a youngster who has poetic ambitions, hopes to get educated and leave the mills. There are lots like him. Most- ly they turn shyster lawyer, and company politician, but some of them as this one, Joe Raldny (acted by | Paul Guilfoyle}, become strike organ- izers. There is the ordinary good fellow, proud of his strength, who becomes a company sucker, and goes from step to step to scabbery and stool pigeon activities. There are the “Hunkies” themselves, who turn out of the lot, class conscious and stub- born. There are the women, intent on getting their men safe and sound out of the mess, and that’s about all. It is not a complete picture, for there are in reality rebel women too, but the types like Melania and Betty in the play also exist. Daniel Raldny, the father, dies of ; apoplexy brought on by high blood pressure gained in the rolling mill. The part is acted by the old star of Civic Repertoire, Egon Breecher. The kid, Joe Raldny, gets into a difficulty (most of them do!) and never leaves the mills, stays in them and becomes a rebel. He is seen calling a meeting (his tactics are correct) and starting to organize. He doesn’t know anything about Communism, the word is only men- tioned once, like this: “The Commu- nists get their heads broke.” But he knows that the A. F. L. is run by crooks and there are no hopes in the Socialists or the Wobblies. It is a primitive type of union he organizes, in fact, it is hardly more than a group, but we're in that stage in a lot of industries. Joe has sense enough to look around for help, and “that big organizer from Chicago” who appears in town might be some one of our Metal Workers’ Industrial League men, for all you can tell in the play. The simple plot goes on, truthfully. Joe's brother-in-law, Steve (Barton McLane) becomes a straw boss, and when the strike starts against speed- up and rationalization, Steve becomes a scab. He doesn’t have nerve enough CROWDED DAYS OF PREPARATIONS BUILD NATIONAL HUNGER MARCH (CONTINUED PROM task of organiing the feeding ana lodging and financing of the Hungei March, issued a special statemeni yesterday, which says: “The Workers’ International Relief calls upon all workers participating in the struggle for unemployment in- surance for the millions of unem- ployed and asks them to participate in the Tag Days, the 28th and 29th. Not only that, we ask all workers’ or- ganiations to participate in the fol- lowing events for the Hunger March: “1, Tag Days, the 28th ahd 29th. “2. The Soccer Festival given by the Metropolitan Workers’ Soccer League for the unemployed and for the hunger marchers: The Soccer Festival takes place at 11 a.m., Sun- day, Nov, 29, at Dyckman Oval, 207th St. and Broadway. “3, The Medical Workers’ League is running a motion picture at the Labor Temple on 14th St. on Monday, Noy. 30, for the hunger marchers, “4. The Workers’ ‘International Relief calls upon the thousands of workers in this city to participate in the demonstration at the Coliseum on Wednesday, Dec. 2, at 8 p.m: where a welcome and send-off dem- onstration will be given for the hun- ger marchers.” The tag days, Saturday and Sun- day, are extremely important. ll workers’ organizations should put these days on their order of business and see that their membership turns out to collect funds for the march, All workers, and particularly all un- employed workers, should make it a point to go to the nearest station (a list will be published soon) and get boxes and assignments for col- lection. All workers should con- tribute. Soccer Games, The Metropolitan Soccer League, affiliated to the Labor Sports Union of America, states: “The Metropolitan Workers’ Soccer League, affiliated to the Labor Sports Union of America, has arranged a gala sports day at its own field, Dyckman Oval, on Sunday, Nov. 29. Three soccer games are on the card, while @ mass drill and @ brass band are also slated to be seen and heard. Alfred Wagenknecht, National Secre- tary of the Workers’ International Relief, has been invited to kick-off at 1 pm: A. F, of L. Team Plays. “While there has. been no high- powered ballyhoo about these work- ers’ games, as there is about a Notre Dame-Army “charity” game, there will, nevertheless, be pltnty of color at the game, In the two main games the Spartacus “A” team will tackle the strong Neckwear A. C. team. Ree a ee A ea | and the militia major organize a raid of strikebreakers and gunmen on a strike meeting. But when Joe comes home from the strike meeting with his head cracked, Steve betrays him to the police. And Steve's wife, Joe's sister, shoots one of the cops. Such things do happen, Free speech, American style, is shown up. Company domination of the courts is shown up, The impos- sibility of climbing out of your class without ratting is brought out. The workings of the speed-up, and the piece rate system are explained. The scab type is exlained. The necessity of crossing the artificial barriers of nationality and language, the cer- tainty that the best in each nation- ality will rebel and stick together, is demonstrated, What more can you hoe for on Broadway? It's a wonder you get this much. Sometimes Wexley seems to be back in the frame breaking days, but then to go with the others when his boss | the whole labor movement went through that phase. This man has promise. —v.s The Neckwear team is composed 0: \. F. of L, neckwear union worker< and is a team that clings to the prin- siple of workers’ sports despite the sabotage of their union officials who, hating every united action of the working class, fear the workers’ sports movement, too) In the sec- ond game the top-notch Red Sparks will clash with the rugged Italian- American A. C. In the morning opener the Needle Trades A. C. kick- off against the Prospect Workers’ A.C. Fans who come at 11 a.m. will have a chance to see the needle- pushers boot the ball around, © al- though the main program starts at 1 pm, A “T, Amter, ix months one of those who spent in jail for leading the movement in New York, “Workers can get to the field by taking the Broadway subway up to} Dyckman St: station. Get off and walk two blocks north to Dyckman Oval. Bronx workers can get there by taking the 207th St. Crosstown and getting off at Tenth Ave. (207th St. car can be gotten at Fordham Rd, and Webster or Southern Blvd.). Admission is only 25 cents. Proceeds go to the National Hunger March. Come early and bring the kids! The mass send-off for the march- ers, at Bronx Coliseum, will be a big and interesting affair. The main speaker is William Z. Foster, general secretary of the Trade Union Unity League. The W’I.R. brass band and | the Federated Workers’ Choruses will provide music, The 300 hunger marchers will enter in a body. There will be a delegation of the Workers’ Ex-Servicemen present. ‘Throughout these crowded days or- | ganization of the Unemployed Coun- cils goes forward, to provide a solid | basis for continuing the struggle to a victory. The main office of the Un- employed Councils is at 5 E. 19th St. Join the Councils. You can join at any of the branches, which are named and lo- cated as follows: Seamen’s Unemployed Council—23 Coenties Slip. Downtown—134 E. 7th St. Midtown—301 W. 29th St Harlem—2072 Fifth Ave. East Side—196 E. Broadway. Lower Bronx—493 135th St., Bronx. Upper Bronx—1622 Bathgate Ave. | Brownsville—610 Rockaway Ave., Brooklyn. Williamsburg—61 Brooklyn. COUNTY HUNGER MARCH TO STOP AT BLAWNOX PEN. PITTSBURGH, Pa., Nov. 23—On Nov. 25 the Allegheny County Hun- ger Marchers will stop in front of the Blawox Penitentiary to show their solidarity with the imprisoned miners. A representative of the In- ternational Labor Defense will speak, denouncing the bosses’ court that sentenced these workers to such Jong terms. A resolution will be submitted by the Internatioal Labor Defense de- manding the immediate release of Tom Zima, Pete Muselin, Leo Thomp- son, Tom Myerscough, Adam Ghetto and all other workers that were im- prisoned because of their activities in behalf of the working class. At the present time the following workers are serving in the Blawnox Penitentiary sentences inflicted for their activity in the miners’ strike: Tom’ Myerscough, Adam Ghetto, An- Graham’ Ave., Expose Harding Graft Collector As Manufacturer of “Red Plots” NEW YORK.—Graft collector for President Harding, later accused of murder, admitted crook and under- cover-man for any capitalist who pays him, Gaston B. Means, one of the many slimy sleuths of the bosses, is now revealed as a manufacturer of bomb plots at the rate of $2,000 per week, working with Matthew Woll and Ralph M. Easley of the Civic Federation. The latest exposure of Gaston B. Means comes through the New York “Daily Mirror” in connection with the manufactured “threat” against Mrs. Finley J. Shepard, millionaire angel who supplied the money for the Civic Federation and a whole pack of red- baiting blood-hounds gathered by Means. Prepare Raids In order to prepare for raids against the militant workers’ organizations, and to bring in greater donations for “protection against the Reds,” Means, according to the “Mirror,” engineered the sending of “threats” to Mrs, Shep: ard who is an officer in the Daugh: ters of the American Revolution. Mrs, Shepard, who has a fortune of over $85,000,000 has been donating heavily to the Civic Federation and to Gaston B. Means. Means wanted to get more money and decided to} push the “Red Scare.” 5 the receipt of a “death threat by Mrs. perd as follow Will give an interesting affair at Prompect Workers’ Center 313 Hinsdale St. Thanksgiving Eve.| Will have a lecture on the T.U.UL, AML oon 2a conte by Burochovich at 1157 Southern A a Blvd, at $ p.m niraCloms. Attention! AML renre 1 of the Commit- Steve Kat ae Branch 1.1.0. tee for the Provect 1 of the Foreign’ Will hold an “bpen-air meeting a Born wer reyuesten .o attendameet- Tenth St, and Second Ave, at § p.m, / ) 1 Federation Got Big Money stormy petrel of political intrigue, jail-bird, and about the most plausible and unreliable conspira- tor who ever wore a false beard, happened to be out of work and wanted to stir up something hot.” The ...:vor says that it appears no accident that Gaston B. Means’ scheme seemed to work so well with the appearance in the press of several stories of alleged “Red bomb plots,” as well as the Means-inspired ‘threat’ against Mrs. Shepard. “A suspicion that Means has played on society fears of the Ked menace and that Mrs, Shepard is cowering before nothing more dreadful than a word-picture of a hlood-thirsty Muscovite painted by the talented Mr, Means seems at present allowable,” says the Mirror, Means, it appears, when he got out of jail after an unusually riotous spree of grafting, frame-ups and robberies, was hard up and got Mrs. Shepard to kick in by working up “Red threats” for her benefit. Lately, Mrs. Shepard has not been shelling out so hand- The Mirror |somely and Means found it neces- sary to stir up his imaginative Red threat—with the help, of course, of “All because Gaston B. Means, the Civic Federation edema > Gaston B. Means, Civic Means, likewise, helped the Fish Committee to manufacture some of its evidence. It is with the help of such crooks as Means that the Civic Federation, the Fish Commission, the American Legion, and all other pa- triotic societies “gather” their ma- terial with which to persecuate mili- tant workers and prepare for raids against the Communist Party. EAST SIDE Here is History in the Making! Today—Last Times EISENSTEINS FILM MASTERPIECE! 10) DAYS Thatstook 10 DAY John Re Net ‘Tense Story of the || ‘Wrecking Days of the Revolution Mecca Theatre 14TH ST. AND AVENUE A, Exeept Sunday late. and eneeeiie | the World OUST OFFICIALS SEEKING PAYCUTS Sommittee of Action Is} Elected to Fight for Maintenance of Pay Thoroughly aroused to the treach- erous ai ities of their officials in seekiong, in connivance with the em- ployers, to cut their wages by under- | hand methods, five hundred lathers, |members of Lathers 244, American | Federation of Labor, voted by whelming majority to oust their of- | ficials at a special meeting held y: verday at the Labor Temple, Browns- ville A Committee of Action, elected to conduct the affairs of the funions and act as temporary officers until electis:.; are held. The revo.t of the rant and file of | the Lathes’ Union came as the cul- mination of a long gle of the workers agvinst the efforts of the employers : 1d the former union of- | fictals to abo.'sh the system oi hiring through the day-room and thus pre- paring the way for waze slashes The Day Room System. The day room system enabled the workers to keep a strict check-up on the hiring of lathers and thus spike any effort of the employers to cut wages surreptitiously. This system obligated the employers to hire all workers through the _ registration taken at the day room. The bosses and the officials have long tried to break the day-room sys- tem, the latter going so far as to send a few clique men out on jobs with- out passing them through the day room. But the workers, knowing that the day room helped maintain their standards of wages and was a weapon against wage cutting immediately protested this and pledged to fight this. The special meeting held yes- terday proved that the workers were | convinced of the treachery of their officials, The Committee of Action has set to work to organize the work of the union, strengthen the day room sys- tem and for the first time in the history of the union will institute picketing before three or four opera- | tions where employers are not hiring through the day room, HELP WANTED IN THE “LIBERATOR OFFICE” Comrades who can spare a half hour any time during the day for folding, inserting, sealing and stamping envelopes, should come to the office of The Liberator, 50 E. 13th St. Second Floor. Your help will do much for The Libera- tor circulation campaign for 10,000 new readers. Everybody welcome! na Rasefske, Helen Preselic, Basruk, Hom Boich, Louis Fazzio, Henry Stark, John Zigon, Steve Savor, Harry Boswell, Mike Sklorski, Joe Murphy, Sam Betti, John White, Pete Lesko, John Vargo, Steve Vargo, Leo Thompson, Bob Young, Stella Rasefske, Soich, Julius Hollis, Ed Greene, Edgar Jones, Will Mc- Queen, Mike Turk, Andy Skarupa, Ed Sherwood, Anton Zilich, William Diehl, D. Dellspine, Paul Babish, Joe Susak, Mike Vargo, Joseph Andrews. over- | composed | of fifteen rank and file workers were | | Counil Elected By. Bi Big Official Dictatorship; | NEW YORK. — The new Joint |Council of the International Fur Workers, elected by 1,230 votes, has appealed to the members of all unions to have nothing to do. with the latest scheme worked out by Kaufman, and the misleaders of the Amalgamated Clothing Workers, the International Ladies’ Garment Work- ers, the Cap & Millinery Workers, {and the Workmen's Circle. The Joint Council has called for unity | negotiations with the Needle Trades | Workers’ Industrial Union fur de- partment, and the N. T. W. I. U. has accbpted. Kaufman, president of the Fur Workers, met with Dubinsky, Zarit- sky, Spector, Baskin and others and decided to issue an appeal in the press for donations to finance them- \selves. The new Fur Workers’ Joint Council, regularly elected, warns that these funds will be used to hire Willie Yacker, Heavy-weight Stein- berg, Tommy Levy, Jewelry-baby Alex Fried and other highly paid gangsters to attack the needle workers, Repudiates Kaufman Loan. The Joint Council warns that it will not be responsible for any money loaned Kaufman and his clique, and will refuse to repay it. The appeal of the Joint Council reminds the needle workers how the 40 hour week and union conditions were once won in New York, and how the sell-out policies of the officials have smashed those conditions, with the assistance of McGrady, the Socialist Party and hired gangsters and the bosses. The appeal ends: “Fellow workers, support the furriers! Help the duly elected joint council drive out the Kaufmans and their paid gangsters! Assist us to build up a powerful United Front to establish one class struggle union which will be a mighty weapon in the hands of the fur work- ers in their struggles against the bosses and their agents for better working conditions.” It is signed by Isadore Cohen, chairman and D. Wolin, secretary of the Joint Council. Call For Unity. From this same Joint Council, the Needle Trades Workers’ Industrial Union, Fur Department, has just re- ceived a letter, desoribing the above situation, and inviting the N. T. W. I, U. fur department to appoint a committee to discuss the formation of a single militant union, free of misieaders, in the fur trades. The Joint Council’s letter to the N. T. W. I. U. refers to the sabotage by Kaufman and Stetsky of the unity movement a few weeks ago, and states: “The vote (by which the present Joint Council was elected) was a complete rejection of the policy of Kaufman and Stetsky, of fake man- euvers, or Clique boss and gangster rule, that brought about the an- nihilation of the conditions achieved by the furriers in 1926. “We are convinced that through the establishment of one powerful class struggle union and the carry- ing out of the program adopted by the workers at Webster Hall we can re-establish the conditions that were destroyed by the bosses with the as- | AMUSEMENTS THE THEATRE GUILD presents BUGENE O'NEILL'S Trilogy Mourning Becomes Electra Composed of 3 plays presented on {day | HOMECOMING, THE HUNTED HE HAUNTED Commencing at 5:30 sharp. Dinner in- termission of one hour at o Mats, GUILD THEA.,, 52d St, W. of Bway PHILIP MERIVALE CYNARA with Henry Phoebe Adriane STEPHENSON FOSTE ALLEN MOROSCO THA, 45th Eves, 5:45, Mats. Wed. & 5: 6th Ave. HIPPODROME’:s:;%. ua dient IN NEW YORK RK JACK HOLT and 2 RALPH GRAVES AcTs Incl, odten in A DANGEROUS ' og oo AFFAIR One way to help the Sovict Union is to spread among the workers “Soviet ‘Forced Labor’,” by Max Bedacht. 10 cents per copy. The Theatre Guild Presents REUNION IN VIENNA A Comedy .By ROBERT E, SHERWOOD. Martin Beek See's 2 Five. 8:40 Mats. Thurs.&Sat.2:40 The Group Theatre Presents The House of Connelly By PAUL GREEN Under the Auspices of the ‘Theatre Guild—LAST WEEKS MANSFIELD Wea, itn st Byes 8:30 Mats, Thurs,& Sat.2:30 EAST SIDE COUNSELLOR-AT-LAW By With ELMER RICE PAU! MUNI Plymouth Nn0"thurm asad: 20 EVERYBODY'S WELCOME q with ANN PENNINGTO ARRIBTT LAKE SHUBERT Thea., 44th St., W. of B’w'y five. 8:30, Mats, Thurs, & Sat. 2:30 ‘The Voice of A NEW PLAY OF Byes, $1 to 88, Reaches Broadway! STEEL Revolt! Author of “THE LAST MILE" TIMES SQUARE THEATRE ‘Thurs. Mat. 81 to $2.00; Sat, Mat. $1 to 82.50 Mill Workers: . By JOHN WEXLEY 4nd STREET (Went of Biway) Bring this ad to Box Office and obtain 2 tickets for the price of one. LATHERS UNION ee Council of AF of L Fur 'WorkersScores Kaufman, and AskstoMeet NTWIU torUnity Vote In Opposition to Repudiates Loans by Which Clique Tries to Finance Thugs sistance of Kaufman, Stetsky and their hired gangsters. “Therefore we have, at the first meeting, decided to invite you to continue the unity conferences which were broken by Stetsky and which we hope will now lead to the estab- lishment of genuine unity in one powerful union which will be capable and prepared to lead the fur work- ers in a struggle at the expiration of the agreement.” This letter, dated Nov. 16, was an- swered on Nov. 20 by the General Secretary-Treasurer of the Needle Trades Workers’ . Industrial Union, who complements the Joint Board on its vote of confidence from the rank and file members, on its stand against Stetsky, and appoints a com- mittee of the Industrial Union to confer with a sub-committee of the Joint Council to work out details of a unity program. By Popular Demand. The present Joint Council came into existence by demand of the rank and file of the International Fur Workers. After the sabotage of the old unity negotiations, the old Joint Council resigned, and the officials of the union set up a dictatorship. The members refused to accept this and proceeded to elect a new Joint Coun- cil for New York, which is the one which now asks unity of the fur workers. Give your answer to Heover's Program of hunger, wage cuts and persecution! STUYVESANT 9-5557 CARL BRobskY Insurance 799 BROADWAY, N.Y.C. Dr. MORRIS LEVITT SURGEON DENTIST Bivd. cor, ‘mot Ses St. N, ¥. prices for workers Ser Special low latern’l Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 1 UNION SQUARE STH FI0OR AD Werk Dene Under Persona) Gere of DR. JOCEPNSON Phone Stuyvesant 3816 Jobn’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: BLALIAN DISHES wracre all” radienls etek 102, 12th St. New York MELROSE DAIRY Sioracna’ Comrades Will Always Find it Pleasan: it to Dine at Our Fiance. 1787 SOUTHERN BLYD., Brenx (near 114th St, Station) LELEPHONE INTERVALE 8—9149 Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 199 SECOND AVENUE Rot, 12th and 18th Ste. Strictly Vegetarian feed “SEROY » 67 pony avin 1-2-7584 BRONX, N.Y. SOLLIN'S RESTAURANT 216 EAST 14TH STREET 6-Coutse Lunch 55 Cents Regular Dinner 65 Cents Advertise Your Union Meetings Here. For Information Write to Advertising Department The DAILY WORKER 30 East 13th St New York City Phone: Dry Dock 4-4522 Harry, Stolper, Inc, Ryne ae vemined 73-15 CHRYSTIE STREET TURNISHED ROOM steam, 239% Mh Bt Ape

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