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Dau Y WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, NOV (EMBER 26, 19; ree eerii Parasites Use Workers As Dogs In Game Hunt Revels (By 2 Worker Correspondent CHESTER, N. Y.—Robert Goelet, who is a millionaire parasite, has an estate near Chester, N. Y. Every year he has his friends come to his mansion to hunt pheasants and ducks. About a hundred workers are hired to be used in the place of dogs chasing pheasants. These workers form a line, and run over the land in straight formation, routing out the birds, going through briars, swamps and over rocks; tearing their clothes and cutting themselves, besides getting wet. If they break the line by shying away from these obstacles, or do not go fast enough they are maltreated by the game-keepers, the bosses’ tools. Two Workers Shot At lunch time liveried servants come on the field bringing fancy food and champagne for the para- sites, while the workers eat stew. After lunch the hunt is resumed; now the workers must be very care- ful, because some of these degen- erates are drunk. They shot two | workers last year. The workérs work ten to eleven hours a day and re- ceive three dollars; so they decided to strike for four which they were paid last year. The strike was not organized, scabs were brought in, and it was broken. Because a mili- tant Negro led the strike, Negro workers are discriminated against and are not hired now. Last year three hundred ducks were shot, and there was no market for them, so they were thrown on the dump. The workers were not allowed to take any game to eat. Workers, it is about time to stop these parasites from amusing them- selves by using us as dogs, and en- joying themesives at our expense, forcing us into misery and degre- dation, Join the League of Strugcle for Negro Rights, and the revolutionary unions to resist these bloodsuckers. TUUL CALLS ALL MEMBERS 10 TAKE PART IN TAG DAYS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) station. Answer the vicious attack of Mathew Woil and others by raising the necessary funds that will enable he marchers to reach Washington on time.” Go to These Stations: The Workers International Relief has issued the following statement: “The Tag Days will be on Novem- ber 28 and 29. The Workers Interna- tional Relief depends greatly upon the income of these two days to make possible the financing of the 330 and some odd number of delegates that will go from this district on the Na- tional Hunger March. To overcome the emergencies which have already arisen we urge all workers to be sure to be out on these two Tag Days and help collect a minimum of $6,000. Report at the following stations Saturday and Sunday: BRONX: 785 Westchester Ave. 1622 Bathgate Ave. 2109 Arthur Ave. 1410 Boston Road. 2700 Bronx Park East MANHATTAN: 16 Wfi 126th St. Spanish Workers Center, 4 E. 116th St. 143 E. 103d St. Hungarian Workers Home, 350 E. 8ist St. Onechoslovak Workers Home, 347 E. 12d St. 301 W. 29th St. 131 W. 28th St. 16 W. 2ist St. 142 E. 3d St. 196 East Broadway What’s On— “TRURSDAY Alteration Painters, Attention? An important meeting will be held tonight under the auspices of the Trade Union Unity League at 1610 Boston Rd. at 8 p.m. Workers’ ExServicemen's League Bi a@ a membership nth St at 8 p.m. e place. paar Bill Haywood Branch LL.D, il) hold a membership meeting at 140 Neptune Ave, tonight at 8:30 p.m Important discussion. . # Workers’ Ex-Servicemen's League Branch 2 will have its regular membership meeting tonight at 126th St. at & p.m. All membership are requested to attend, oo W. I, R. Band Will have an important relcarsal for the oliseum affair at the Cer! sky Club, 122 Second Ave, at § p.m. cpr eRIDAY Report on Harlan Frame-Up. Will be the subject of a lecture by Harry Gannes at the Boro Park Workres’ Club, 1373 43rd St., Brook- lyn, at 8:30 p.m * * Alteration Plumbers, Attention! A mass meeting will be held at the Stuyvesant Casino, Second Ave. and fenth St, at § p.m Proxpect Workers’ Center Will have a lecture on the Soviet Inion at rn Blvd, 8 p.m. cartoons and New Masses drawings to be exhib- ited. All workers invited. eat nee Williamsborgh Workers’ Cl Comrade Steuben will lecture a flushing Ave, at 8 p.m. on the “T. U. U.%4, und the Aincrican Federa ef Labor." * International Workers’ Order, Br, 521 wi Man- have a lecture on the churlan Situation at a regu ing at 1645 Grand Concours pm. Tae Pe | Brighton Beach Workers’ Club Will have a lecture on the “Jewish es in Poland” by Comrade hman at 140 Neptune Ave. at 8 Mn he oe eiDAY “Manchaoria” Will be the subject of a talk by Louls Engdahi at the Bath Beach Workers’ Club, 48 Bay 28th St. at 8 p.m. aie ae | Steve Katovix Br. LL.D. Will have a meeting at 257 @, Tenth St, at 8 p.m. All workers are invited, . ‘Tremont Workers’ Club Will have a lecture by of the Datly Worker staff on the “Crisis? at 2075 Clinton Ave, (near 180th Bt.) at $:30 Vern Smith LL.D. Members, Attention! A weneral membership meeting of | Needle Trades Athietie Club il] have a general membership megting at 191 W. 28th St. at 8 p.m. Supneedie workers Invited, 8 ig Dance and Entertainment WI be held at the Bronx Workers Contr, 669 Pros; Aye, at 8 p.m, Tunder, auspices of the Unem- uneil. Soviet movie and osh bition. Proceeds to go to Hunger March, ibe BROOKLYN: 6. Graham Ave. 795 Flushing Ave. 962 Sutter Ave. 105 Thatford Ave. 1844 Pitkin Ave. 1373 43d St. 140 Neptune Ave. 48 Bay 26th St. 2921 W. 32d St. “Take notice that there are over 5,000 boxes distributed for these two Tag Days. A proper distribution of forces will enable us to defray all ex- penses of the Hunger March. To over~ come all emergencies we call upon organizations and workers participat- ing in the Tag Days to observe strictly the following rules: 1—All money collected for the Hun- ger March must reach the W.LR. of- fice not later than Monday the 30th. “2—Organizations ana workers par- ticipating in the Tag Days should have proper committees placed at the stations. Do not tire out one comrade all day by leaving him or her in charge at the headquarters without giving proper assistance for release for an hour or so. “3—Be sure to register the collect- ors’ names and number of the box and be sure to give a receipt for the amount of money collected. Collect~ ors should be urged not to be satis- fied with being in the streets one or two hours and immediately return- ing their box, but upon returning they should be urged to take a rest. for one half hour or so and again go out collecting. “4—To make the collection effective every station should have a number of leaflets and wehn teh comrades are making their collections in subways there shall be two comrades, one to hand out the leaflets and the other to make the collection. Use the Button. “5—The W.LR. has a proper but- ton, for the support of the Hunger Marchers. Collectors should get it and give one to everyone who has con- tributed toward the Hunger March. “6—We particularly urge that every station have a few comrades in the evening who shall be the special mes- sengers to bring the money to the new WIR headquarters at 16 W. 2ist Zt. The office of the WIR will be open all day until late at night. This is particularly urgent as on Monday, November 30, the office of the WIR must pay in advance all expenses, such as trucks, Coliseum, food, etc, The New Pioneer Needs Your Help | Order Your December Bundles Now NEW YORK. — The “New Pioneer” magazine, in a letter to the Daily Worker, tells us that although it is out this month, it is having a lot of trouble. The editor tells us that the “New Pioneer” will not appear next month if the workers do not come to its assistance financially, The following is from a letter that we recently received from the “New Pioneer”: “This month I am also celebrat- ing the Fourteenth Anniversary of the Russian Revolution. My friends, the Young Pioneers of America, who issue me and write to me,” tell me they are all celebrating the birthday of the Russian Revolution in true Pioneer manner. I also have letters and pictures from the children of the Soviet Union show- ing how happy they are in the land where workers rule, “So you see — this month I have even more interesting material in me than before. Of course — all of you workers and your children want to read me. So hurry up, all of you workers’ organizations: The International Workers Ord Workers International Relief, and all you Communist Party and also Young Communist League units! You prosied to order many copies of me this month. How about it? And what about all you other or- ‘ganizations of workers? Aren't you going to help out the caly workers’ farmer children’s magazine?” iat andee Mane Nesetta| 4 Autos and Trucks | The National Unemployed Councils | Committee for the National Hunger | March and the Workers International | Relief call upon sympathizers to do- | nate the services of four automobiles | for use in tour in preparation for and | during the National Hunger March. | York delegation to Washington. Com- municate with the Workers Interna- tional Relief, 16 West 21st St., New York City, or phone WA tkins 9-4936 TO HEAD COUNTER International Labor'| Sports Meet, Chicago The workers Athletes of the U. S. thru the Labor Sports Union of U. S. have invited Tom Mooney to be the honorary chairman of their United Front Counter Olympic Committee. Realizing that the fake gestures of such night club butterflies and Tam- many grafters as Jimmy Walker for the liberation of Mooney are only efforts to make political capital out of the anguish of the imprisoned worker, the worker sportsmen ask Mooney to join in a real fight for his own release and to use the workers sports movement as one of the means of mass struggle for Moo- ney’s release, That the struggle against the bosses’ Olympics, scheduled for Los Angeles in the summer of 1932, is in accordance with the wishes of Tom Mooney is testified by the statement made last month where he called upon the amateur worker sportsmen of the whole world to boycott the Olympics. The Labor Sports Union not only has endorsed Mooney’s slogan of jes” but has gone a step further and is organizing a huge counter-Olympic campaign to culminate in an Inter- national Workers Athletic Meet at Chicago, simultaneous with the Olympics. Interest is lent to the in- yitation to Tom Mooney to become honorary chairman of the Counter- Olympic Committee by the fact that Herbert Hoover is honorary chair- man of the Olympics Committee and that the committee of which he is head has “failed” to -invite any athletes from the Soviet. Union. JOBLESS DEFEAT PROVIDENCE COPS to Smash Meeting PROVIDENCE, R. f., Nov. The Unemployed Council won another victory Saturday night, against the police department attempts to prevent. open air meetings which support the National Hunger March. A few days previous the police tried to pull Doretta Tarmon, speaker, from the pletform, but and put up such a fight, that Police were forced to retreat This Saturday the police pusted three fruit sellers on the corner, with large push carts, and promised them “protection.” It is worth while mentioning that these push carts were directly blocking the water plug, which is against the law. However, over 300 workers gathered before the meeting opened and be- the police. The neighborhood workers pointed out to the peddlers that in the future they would not be able to find customers to eat their bana- nas. Then a dramatic scene occured. paid the peddlers for the bananas, crowd. The crowd jumped forward, kicked, cheerd, and applauded. The police were booed, and the speaker raised by the crowd to the platform. The meeting continued untill 11 p. m. in spite of added police, who made some but feared for treated. their safety and re- WORKER BURNED TO DEATH IN PA. Western Electric Co. Responsible PHILADEL! [A.—On Nov, 18, dur- ing the afternoon, a worker was burned to death by a 33,000 volted live wire on top of the new Wana- maker building, which is under con- struction at Broad and Chestnut Sts. The big officials of the Westing- house Electric Co., the concern which 4s employing workers to wire the top of this building, had refused to shut off the current while the men were in the process of wiring, Just stub- bornness and carelessness on the part of these bosses {s directly responsible for this death of a worker, the young father of two children. The young a worker in this dangerous trade. wife is left without any insurance to Workers Correspondence is the backbone of the revolutionary press. Build your press by writing for it about your day-to-day siruggle. [ 4 o ah ie ‘THOUSANDS N DEMONSTRATION FOR UNITY MEET Also trucks are needed for the New| INVITE MOONEY OLYMPIC DRIVE) “Boycott the 1932 Olymp- | Elaborate Scheme Fails |¥ 24.— | the | the | workers packed around the platrorm | gan arguing with the peddlers and} A worker jumped from the crowd, | and threw the bananans into the| attempts to breek up the meeting, | santa i ee iO Win Strike Against 20 | Per Cent Wage Cut NEW YORK.—Thousands of dress- |makers joined in a huge demonstra- tion and parade through the market | yesterday noon. They answered the |call of the United Front Committee and cheered for the United Front | Dressmakers’ Conference, which will take place Saturday at noon in Webster Hall. The Unemployed Council of dress- makers met yesterday afternoon and | elected its delegates to the confer- | ence: Win Strike Against Wage-Cut. | The workers of Freidman Bros., @ leather goods shop, on strike since | Monday against the 20 per cent wage- cut, settled their strike today. The determined spirit of the workers com- pelled the bosses to withdraw the wage-cut and to recognize th eshop committee. Four Shops Struck. The Fur Department of the Needle Trades Workers’ Industrial Union has declared the following fur shops on strike: Goldman & Son, 101 W. 37th St., for working 48 hours and refusing to pay for legal holidays, I, J. Fox, 391 Fifth Ave. and Fox & | Weissman, 20 W. 36th St, Their shops in Philadelphia are on strike for union | conditions: Rucker & Warshaw, 247 W. 30th St. Wages were only $20 a week. YOUTH HUNGER HEARING TONITE Charge Tammany with Starving the Young NEW YORK.—The Youth Com- mittee of the Harlem Unemployed Council has called a special Open Hearing where unemployed young workers will testify to the starvation amongst young workers and children. The hearing will be held tonight at 8 p.m. at Lafayette Hall, 131st St. and Seventh Ave. A special youth jury will render a Verdict after the testimony is in, | but adult workers are invited to at- tend. | The youth invite the Tammany | Hall officials of this city to come and | defand themselves against the charge of deliberately conspiring to starve the young workers, to discriminate | against them, to evict them and of | causing the death of hundreds of vorkers and children in the FORCE ANOTHER CHARITY TO GIVE “A.1.C.P.” Wanted to Smash Up Family NEW YORK.—The Lower Bronx Branch of the Councils of ine Unem- ployed at a reecnt meeting had | before it a number of cases starva- tion among the jobless. One is that of Mrs. Gordon of 529 E. 135th St- She has five little children and has just received a letter from the prin- cipal of Public School 43 stating that her little girl is suffering from “mal- nutrition’ (starvation) and she “must | do something about it.” Naturally, Mrs. Gordon wants to do something. Her husband has been out of work for a year, and the whole | family is hungry. She has been given @ dispossess notice by the landlord, eviction to take place Monday. The Lower Bronx Branch immedi- ately took several of these families along with a committee and went | into the offices of the charity in lowe jer Bronx, the “Association for the Improvement of the Conditions of the Poor.” Miss Lyle, in charge of the charity office pleaded poverty and advised the families be broken up, the children placed in orphan as; lums, ete. Just what capitalists al | ways advise while they accuse Com- | munism of “breaking up the home:” UMW Local In Eddy Creek Supports the Opposition Program WILKESBARRE, Pa. Noy. 25.-— The Edy Creek local union of the United Mine Workers toray endorsed the program of action and elected delegates tothe Rank and File Op- position Committee in spite of the attempts of officials to gag the del- emates. The executive committee of the Rank and File Opposition has called & meeting in Peckville Thursday and is arranging two other meetings this week to expose the local demagogues. Movement Spreading Alarmed by the spread of the Rank and File Opposition movement against mass unemployment and wage cuts and its militant character, the UMW officials, bankers, business- men and preachers called a meeting in Carbondale in an attempt to stem the tide. They are also trying to work from within the Rank and File Opposition to secure a similar meet- | ing in Olyphant. Ten thousand leaflets contaning the demands and program of action | have been distributed by the Rank and File Opposition. FARMERS DEMAND NO TAXES, NO FORECLOSURES TOIVOLA, Mich., Noy. 25.—A imass meeting of farmers in Toivola Peoples Hall, on Nov. 15, one of many mass meetings of the mortgage ridden, highly taxed, and impoverished far- mers in Houghton and Ontonagon counties, adopted a resolution which points out just what the causes of this misery are, and demands post- ponment of tax payments, morato- rium on mortgage payments, no fore- closures of sales, county and town- ship work for the farmers with cut- ting of county officials’ wages, aboli- tion of certain useless county offi- cials, like the county agent; and free medical aid for farmers and their families, without the present man killing red tape and delays. The resolution was ordered to be sent to the county supervisors of Houghton county to be read at their next meeting, Dec. 8, and to the far- mers committee of action. There are practically no jobs in either of these counties. Theré is a blacklist on county work against all who are not very subservient to the officials, On November 10, a super- patriotic school teacher, Miss Olson, called the township board and deputy sheriff to come 40 miles to the school at Misery Bay, and help her expel 14-year old Esther Spiegel, who had managed to distribute the “Pioneer” for a year in that school. Esther also led a group of eleven other pupils on strike against over‘ime work as pen- alty for alleged minor infractions of the rules. 312 BANKS SHUT DOORS IN MONTH NEW YORK.—Following close on the heels of numerous statements of bankers and financiers throughout the country that the American fin- ancial and banking system was safe, the Federal Reserve Board, in a statement issued Noy. 18, reports that during the month of October 512 banks closed their doors in the U. S., wiping out $566,686,000 in savings, the most of which were the hard- earned dollars of workers. This large number of failures stands as record for such a period. Among the banks that crashed are: Ninety-nine national banks with de- Posits of $138,282,000, 25 state member banks with deposits of $141,188,000 and 388 non-member banks with de- Posits of $287,216,000. In the ten months ending Oct. 21 1,753 banks with deposits of $1,461 - 852,000 closed their doors and placed police in front of them to keep the workers from coming in and demand- ing their money, Miss Lyle's promise to grant some relief, ‘They will watch to see that this is done. The Lower Bronx Council will be on hand Monday afternoon to join the demonstration before the board The Unemployed Committee posi- tively refused to accept this as an an- swer, and after a long argument got HU (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) | tion will give a mighty reception and |send-off to their spokesmen, the | National Hunger Marchers, on Wednesday, Dec. 2, at the huge Bronx Coliseum, East 177th St. On Decem- ber 3 the representatives of tens of thousands of New York unemployed and employed workers elected at | workers’ mass meetings and organ- izations and at the New York labor conference will begin their march to Washington together with delegates from all parts of the country in order to place the demands of 12 million unemployed before Congress and President Hoover. William Z. Foster will be the main speaker, The Unemployed Councils and the Workers International Relief of aldermen for immediate relief from the city treasury, GE MASS SEND-OFF FOR HUNGER MARCHERS AT COLISEUM, DEC. 2 The delegation of six elected by the workers to present demands to the last meeting of the Board of Alder-| men will report the reply of the Tammany grafters to the demands of the unemployed. Party Members Duties. All unemployed comrades report to the Coliseum on Wednesday, Decem- ber 2nd, at 4 p. m. sharp. The sec- tion organizer or a member of the section buro must also be there at the same time. All other comrades should come to the hall immediately after work. The hall will be divided into sections, as on November 7th, and various comrades will report to their sectino organizers in the hall for activity. The comrades in charge will have to see that order and discipline is have arranged a special program. kept at this meeting. *\ Commencing at 5:30 sharp. Dinner in- JOHNSON NAILS LW.W. LIES ABOUT HARLAN, KY. CASE Civil Liberties Member| Sends Letter to ILD | | NEW YORK, N. N.Y, Noy. 19.—That the I. W. W. is fabricating lies to dis- credit the work of the International Labor Defense in the Harlan, Ky., coal fields is charged in a letter sent today by Arnold Johnson, free speech | tinvestigator for the American Civil Liberties Union, to Herbert Mahler of the General Defense Committee, Wobbly organization. The lie which Johnson nails ap- peared in the November issue of the Workers’ Defense, monthly publica- tion of the General Defense Commit- tee. It states: “Asa Cusick, Harlan murder de- fendant, now on bonds, reported in Communist press speaking for the I. L. D. in New York City, has never left Evarts, Ky. Cusick wired the General Defense requesting exposure of Communist impostor.” Johnson's exposure of this wobbly lie follows: 600 W. 122nd 8t., New York, N. Y., November 12, 1931. Mr. Herbert Mahler, 555 W. Lake St. Chicago, Ill. Dear Mr. Mahler: In a recent issue of your publica~ | tion, “Workers’ Defense,” you carry @ statement, “Communist Lie Ex- posed,” and then attempt to lead readers to believe that the Commu- nists had an impostor in New York under the name of Asa Cusick, I take this opportunity to clear up cer- tain facts. Asa Cusick was one of my cell- mates for 37 days in the Harlan County jail. I was imprisoned for my activities as a representative of the American Civil Liberties Union. I can claim to know Cusick, former chief of police of Evarts, Ky., and now facing framed-up triple murder charges in connection with the Evarts battle of May 5, Asa Cusick, while in Evarts, corresponded with me before coming to New York and informed me that he was coming. Asa Cusick arrived in New York dur- ing the morning of Oct. 9, 1931. I spoke with him over the telephone during the day. I met Cusick on Oc- tober 9 at the dinner of the National Committee for Defense of Political Prisoners, given to promote the de- fense of the Harlan prisoners. He | made an excellent speech to over 400 | persons at this dinner. Cusick talked about conditions in Harlan and praised the work of the National Miner's’ Union and International La- bor Defense. I spent Saturday eve- ning, Oct. 10, with Cusick and he spent that night as my guest at my place of residence. I heard Cusick speak at an International Labor De- fense convention on Sunday, Oct. 11, for the release of Tom Mooney and the Harlan miners and spent a good part of the day with Cusick. His friends in Harlan County know that, he was in New York. For your organization to publish articles stating that Cusick says he was not in New York is only making | Cusick the victim of a lie. Such tac- tics by your agents only confuse is- sues and facts. You have not ex- posed a Communist lie, because there was no Communist lie to expose. Ac- cording to your basis of judgment as Dunne Toastmaster at Labor Unity Banquet Saturday, Dec. 5th William F. Dunne, one of the best known leaders of the revolutionary labor movement, will be the toast- master at the birthday celebration | banquet and entertainment for the | new voice of the revolutionary union- ism, the 32-page monthly megazine, Labor Unity, the first number of which will be off the press on Dec. 15. The banquet and entertainment will be given at Manhattan Lyceum, 66 East 4th Street, New York City, on Saturday, Dec. 7 at 7 p, m- Short speeches will be made by such prominent leaders of the re- volutionary movement as William Z. Foster, J. Zack, Ben Gold, J. Louis Engdahl, “Jorge” of Red Sparks fame, Robert Minor, Tony Minerich, I. Amter and Earl Browder, On the program also will be new Soviet News Reels, muscial numbers, and artists of the John Reed Club. Admission is 50 cents, and $1 with the dinner. Tickets are now on sale at the Workers Book Shop, 50 E. 13th St., the Trade Union Unity Council at 5 E. 19th St., and the New Masses, 63 W. 15th St. FSU LECTURES ON THE SOVIET UNION Symposium 1 Last Sun. Proved Successful Almost a thousand workers were turned away from Webster Hall on Sunday at the Friends of the Soviet Union symposium. ‘Bill Dunne, the Communist Party representative at the symposium, spoke on the role of the Communist Party in the Soviet Union. Comrade Dunne took the place of William Z. Foster. Waldo Frank, well known novelist and critic, made an eloquent appeal for the defense of the Soviet Union, where “the goyernment is sincerely devoted to the cause of mankind, while every other government in the world, without exception, is as ex- clusively devoted to the property right of a privileged few.” On Thursday evening, December 3, at the same hall, Webester Hall, Pro- fessor H. W. L. Dane, who has re- cently returned from a trip with Ber- nard Shaw in the Soviet Union, will give the first in a series of lectures on “The New Culture in the Soviet Union.” His subject will be the “New Soviet Theatre.” Other speakers in this series are Marcel Scherer, Alen Potamkin, Louis Lozowick, Josh- ua Kunitz, and others — all of whom have been to the Workers Republic. Admission to ® single lecture is twenty-five cents. The whole series can be heard for two dollars, which includes a year’s subscription to the new magazine being published by the Friends of the Soviet Union on Jan- uary 1. Workers’ Correspondence is the backbone of the revolutionary press. Build your press by writing for it. about your day-to-day struggle. HELP COLLECT FUNDS TO SE! |THE MARCHERS TO WASHING- TON, publish a retraction exposing it as such, implied in your article, your state- ment isa Haste and I demand that you Sincerely yours, ARNOLD dea kee a AMUSEMENTS THE THEATRE GUILD presents EUGENE O'NEILL'S Trilogy Mourning Becomes Electra Composed of 3 plays presented on 1|day HOMECOMING, THE HUNTED THE HAUNTED termission of one hour at 7. No Mats. GUILD THBA.,, 52d St. W. of B'way “Represents the American Theatre At Its Best,” Atkinson, N. Y. Times THE LEFT. BANK By ELMER RICE Little Thea, W. 44th, Eves, 8:50 Mats. Wed. &. Saturday, 2:40 JULIAN WYLIE’S PRODUCTION GOOD COMPANIONS By J. B, PRIESTLEY and EDWARD KNOBLOCK From Priestley’s Famous Novel Company sf 120—16 Scenes “TH ST. THEATRE, W. of Br’dway Eve. 8:40, Mats, Thurs, & Sat., 2130 6th Ave. PIPPODROME 57% BIGGEST SHOW IN NEW YORK KO & JACK HOLT and RALPH GRAVES acis r Incl, A DANGEROUS || atsetists | AFFAIR One way to help the Soviet Union is to spread among the workers “Soviet ‘Forced Labor’,” by Max ‘The Theatre Guild Presents REUNION IN VIENNA A Comedy .By ROBERT E, SHERWOOD. Martin Beck fee's Ave. Eve. 8:40 Mats. Thurs. &Sat.2:40 Mike Gold, Harry | stp citn WORKERS FIRED WHO REFUSE T0 AID RED CROSS This Is What Bosses Call “Voluntary” Contributions WASHINGTON, D. C.—Two work- ers on the new RedCross building, one of them ® Negro, were fired on Nov. 15th, because they refused to contribute part of their wages to the annual Red Cross roll call, A notice has been posted over the pay window, calling for Red Oross contributions. Unskilled workers were supposed to give $1.00 and skilled workers $5.00 from thelr weekly pay. Those who gave said they did so in order to keep their jobs. A stone mason quit his job rather than con- tribute the five doolars. Two other workers who refused to contribute to the graft fund were fired at one, the boss, McClosky, stating that the men had no right to a job if they refused to contribute. The Negro worker was the first one to be fired. He was paid $16.00 for the five day week. When he told the paymaster that he had a large family and could not afford to give part of his pay he was told, “You haven't got a job here.” Although it was reported that the workers were rehired after a consider- able protest was made throughout Washington, this method of bulldozing workers and robbing part of their ‘wages to create a buddle fund for the Red Cross to pay high salaried offi- Clals, while they refuse to feed starv- ing miners in Pennsylvania and Ken- tucky because “they were not starving through an act of god,” is being prac- ticed nearly in every industry in the country. TEL. B STUYVESANT 9-5557 CARL RODSKY ANY KIND or Insurance 799 BROADWAY, N.Y.C. Dr. MORRIS RENEE SURGEON D Southern Blvd, evr, m Phone: Tremont ?-1253 Special low prices for workers N.Y. Intern’ Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 1 UNION SQUARE aTA FLOOR All Work Done Under Personal Care ot DR. JOSEPASON Cooperators' Patronize SEROY CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenne 01-32-7584 BRONX, N. ¥. Dr. M. B. SURGEON FELSEN Extraction Specialist 851 East 162nd Street Corner Prospect Ave. One block from Prospect Avenue Subway Station Phone: Kllpatrick 5-5028 Phone Stuyvesant 881 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: (TALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicale meet 302 E. 12th St. New York The House of Connelly By PAUL GREEN Under the Auspices pf the ‘Theatre Guild—LAST WEEKS Thea. MANSFIELD woz, Fives 8:30 Mats. Thurs.& ith St. way jat.2:30 EAST SIDE COUNSELLOR- AT-LAW ELMER RICE PAUL MUNI Plymouth Mat'rhare, @ Sats 320 PHILIP MERIVALE CYNARA WITH Henry Phoebe = Adriane STEPHENSON FOSTER ALLEN iy Re Mats. Wed. & Sat, 300 ;CAMEONOW TINO PATTIERA Formerly Metropolitan Opera Tenor Bedacht, 10 cents per copy. in “FRA DIAVOLO” Italian Operetta Bill Gropper will draw proletarian car' ADMISSION 25 CENTS seer 8 PROLETARIAN CABARET —dJoint Auspices of—— THE "LIBERATOR” AND THE “WORKING WOMAN” Saturday Evening, November 28, 8 p. m. WORKERS’ CENTER—35 EAST 12th STREET —EXCELLENT PROGRAM— ‘toons, Dining, Dancing, Nat'l Speakers semesaen mOROnOG THERA. 45th Y of Biway, MELROSE DAIRY VEGETARIAN RESTAURAN? Comrades Will Always Find it Pleasant to Dine at Our Place. 1187 SOUTHERN BLVD, Brens (near 174th St, Station) TELEPHONE INTERVALE 9—9149 Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 199 SECOND AVENUE Bet. 12th and 18th Bte. Strictly Vegetarian Food SOLLIN’S RESTAURANT 216 EAST 14TH STREET 6-Course Lunch 55 Cents Regular Dinner 65 Cents Phone: Dry Dock 4-4522 Harry <Stolper, Inc. Byes Examined 13-95 CHRYSTIE STREET Cor. Heater St. New York Special rates to readers of the Di Worker Advertise Your Union Meetings Here, For Information Write to Advertising Department The DAILY WORKER 50 East 13th St. New York City