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PAGE TWO PREPARING NATIO ALL COMMUNISTS “BE | GRATEFUL!” CALLED TO ACT: Ets TIME IS SHORT €£ AND NET ALL WINTER | Help Build Up United Front Committees; Fight for Relief Statement by District Committee, New York District, Communist Party: The stru for winter rel i the forces of t be mobilizeq in the he DA LILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, NOV! EMBER 14, 19 NAL HUNGER MARCH IS OUR NEXT MAIN TASK ; hrough this fight AIRT OUR BREADLINES Swit: boasts of the capitalists of this c! as to What they are doing for t ot ae = - WEWORK OURRELVES THIN COLLECTING FoR YA=ANID— Aint YA GOT Reostveut Now: By Quirt N.Y. VETS ELECT 50 1 PREPARE MARCH ON DEC. 5 Many Organizations at Conference - ROOSEVELT PROGRAM IS HOOVER'S PROGRATI— Lee THE y HUNGER ad GOOMFEDERA WINTER RELIEF TO SUPPLI EN LOCAL RELIEF NEW YOREK.—A committee of 50 fo complete préparations for thé Bonus March to Washington, Dec. 5, |from New York, was electéd at # mass Bortus March Conférence of 150 Celegates here tod@#y. Delegates and workers overflowed the hal. Fi- nanes and organization committees were elected. The conférence discussed plans for / The Fight of the I. L. D. Against Disrupters criminated no against relief ig their duced to the very | tional Labor Defense and the Néédle véxt Main 1 that the | Must Be Fought for ‘| trades workers Industrial Unfon, it Thé March Wash of New York, a | = was unanimously decided that full ves New York which split NEW YORK.—Determination of |Support shall be given to thé South in_ Washington ational Labor |New York workers to not recognize |River workers victimized by the next main action nning of this |<irike breaking injunctions is begin-| bosses of that town. Thé dééision Etection to mask them- |ning to win. In one of the rawest | points out that: its porters and sympa- tcases of the sort, two courts have} “On August 24 of this year, the jloyment ¥. I. L. D. District [now ruled against the injunction,| workers went on strike against an- ment and. social finds it necessary to mak |though in a way that will allow it to] other wage cut. Wages were already pense of the e foROWINE statement be re-established if the employers | too low to subsist on, being $6 and $8 ernment. The workers of the coun- he “Z: think they can manage it. a week of 55 to 60 hours, Working oe foun 00 Bie Commons Dery ce] arom, the ‘The New York County Supreme | Conditions were unbearable. poe eee | of New York City Court has granted the right to the| “The bosses mobilized the city ter is going to be a very | jority ot the branch passed a mo- |i4oq Workers Industrial Union to authorities, the business people, the Will Not Wait Long | tion wh Would have forced |continue picketing the Brunswick! thugs from Newark. A most brutal sa them to ‘Workers’ Pedern, [Cafeteria for which the A. F. L. local | terror was started. Strikers were ell s2 with the Workers’ Federa- 392 got shot down and one worker's child o some } tion” (an m headed judge rules that this i killed by the imported gun thugs. incomes ¢ | “lef ich has been {week and the injunction will go in ‘ not fe: mined to hav fo . =) “Not only were ie fs not ‘= S doe } iL 2 for many \effect if there is “any violence.” The | tested for ‘ee eden pn SO EVES i ridiculed the cor- |°™Ployers will probably send some} nut 97 workers af now being held Bae nd feserves vidi the cor, [gangsters down to attack the pickets | n'139 charges of felonious sssadilt, upoh, impoverished the I. L. D. on the } n excuse for setting( up the in-| inuiting to riot, riotin lawful the lowest le rmined campaign of Tom j junction again. ied pariah ig, unlawful as- es of Hi at “no one| Mooney th a militant mass —e sembly, ete. Peter fom b ee cold,” | wcateen i, front BALGW). The cafeteria locked out the F. W.| «This effort to place the blaine ; I. U, June 20. It reopened in July i all be pro- | mr Y| upon the shoulders of the workers is ns re ait | BREAK AWRY FROM ILD _ |with’ a contract with Local 302 by|the usual means used Ly the boskes “wit | 3,22 their loyalty to the Lettish |which the bus boys and dishwashers|to {errorize and vietimize the wofk- in 4 | Federation, the “Zihnas Beedri’ Jremain unorganized and get very bad|crs and bréax the struggles of the san tek tee. Sivent broke away n the LL.D. and |conditions and wages of $10 a week or | working class seer reécried, but will f ogee ge te ok hagenvers [oe eee Woe The fight for the relesse of the Gish te Ave wametve anthe ILD Latvian branch, |_Tbe FW: I. U. picketed, atid Locat | south River victims is a fight against milies f ees 7 event. /202, 80% the injunction out, as usttal.| sich dastardly tactics of the boss raination _1) They succeeded in prevent- |The injunction was argued in the | ciass Wwe pledge out solidérity with : the Latvian chorus and orches- rt of appeals, and thé F. W. I. U-|the south River workers. New ¥ tra from apr g at the LL.D. |won some modifications: The A: F. a re country, District Baz: of L. and employers appealed, and on bigs 24 M. STERN, They joined hands with the |Nov. 11 it was argued again the Su- or wai 7 gay ei Defensé E eaders of the Lettish jpreme Court. Pincus and Epstein, A K, lead the Le te theory of (Mutual Aid) Socisty and together | officials of Local 302 appeared as| for Needle Trades Workers workers of Ne | with them, under the name of |main witnesses against the -workers, Industrial Union trary. A million | gJoimt Latvian Council of New (and made a slanderous attack. The ae TRESS ployed are Ic ay Hew y | bosses also said that more picketing j | York, they have tried to draw s Bi *| Jennings Laundry on | Latvian workers away from the |Would ruin them. What to Do. | 1. L. D. branch. In order to carry out this struggle,} 3) For the same purpose of ithe whole Party must now be thrown} misleading the Latvian workers, PRINT ERS AGAIN This means tion of building they advertised themgzlves as a branch of the “Protection of For- eign Born,” although the Commit- into the work. 1) The o in the blocks, iggles up of | | actual | Block Commi nd the tee for the Protection of Foreign are on strike against the discharge of earrying on of the | Born has no branches (but onl} | a worker. The bosses of the laundry 2) Through these | affiliations), and although the Tate oral ‘7 at first promised the shop committee lection of delegates ‘Lettish Society” has refused even \ ote Against Pay Cut to reinstate the worker, but leter March to affiliate with the Committee, as and Worse Conditions| they broke their promise. 3) Mobi of the worker: they would have ponte to do The Jennings laundry trade Hes in : Ivan with a “red” organization. working class sections. The Laundry ie, se ores 4) The “Zihnas Beedri” also | NEW YORK.—Orice more the book | Workers Industrial Union appeals to Fae Pee necth played @ trick upon the I, L. D. | @nd Job printers here have repudiated | a working class customers to show sites to Ww | German Branch, getting them to Mes sodas cutting, brtority smashing solidarity. Al} workers are asked cies fo | agree to a joint dance orchestra |contract which the Printers League |{> come to the strike headquarters Hk foun | for their separate picnics at | (employers) ahd some of their oWn| 1499 Boston Road, to help in the big Reape e Gre ett | Zeidler's Grove, on Sept. 11, and |"nion officials tried to put over on| spike we eS eres Pat a feeder fo) thet of ising that they’ were |them. The vote this time was 3,780 : os ested put up in order | having a nt pienie with the I. | to 3,256. 4 rar ae: da or the} L. D. German branch | The history of, this contract is J eet : all jgetting to be long and involved. It a4 cemisbuieee. cf of all was submitted to a referendum ree | ‘il unions applications weeks ago, atid voted di of W. L. R. | to permit them {o form a separate |whelmingly. International Presi dent J } ote, a, Hel to and | Howard of the Typographica Union pees pe Ne Wobiigatton . of in competition to th isting Lat- | dnd his executive board refused to * PGE Orie meeeetn it vian branch, obviously only as a | sanction strike action, even after the! Block Committee Now ia | ma r before their membership | printing bosses posted notices that * * Be ee. | aha BefSte the Latvian workers, 48 |the new contrict woud go into emect| FUSHINS the Might cement on all ticke's | the leaders must have knowh per- | Oct. 16. A meeting was held of the | fectly well that the I. L. D. would | not even reply to such applica- ont ARD AGAINST DISRUPTERS r and every workers’ jon should be on guard ese splitters ahd disrup- Ss under what names es they may try to mask New York membership, which vot to ask again for strike sancion. Thi more hegolations, sce slight modi, in which voted down. east to oppose the contra ; and to put up an im- : cave’ |There were 21 workers preesit,. Irish, aE oe all againet all their | e made no strike prepara- | 5, Italian and Negroes. TREY ees te 4. or s and maneuvers é ihad taken seven families to the Home toga Sag ey di- | International Labor Defensé, N.Y, | ‘The Amalgamation Party in the |Relief Bureau thé week before, tellét Bee tt hese ein eves: ae | et ufioh calls for stitke if the Wosses|was promised for all, none of théti t . “we aa } D'strict Committee. PD a ber mist be conscious of the fact, | % eas try to cut wages of inteffere. with |rot anv eerie fe te Goine werk varomen the | priority. It demands a real five-dow|” “waikey, the éhairitiain, @ big stFon€ unit, the tion, mass orgenization. | Lazowiek and Johnson | weck. riot the sort contemptated in |Nezro with a booing vole, opened ete:, that he is now c¢: d upen to the eontract CLEYRLAND TEACTIERS ical: Art Class threw himself with fullest enery in’o | TO the putting through of the struggle | © FOOD UNION WINS INJUNCTION CASE But Right to Picket REJECT CONTRACT cations of the conttact, and a new referendum, the contract rs are meeting toda; The local officials have had to vr: _LL.D., Needle Union Pledge Joint Aid to South River Workers NEW YORK.—At a joint meeting of representatives of thé Interna- ito Strike; Broke Pledge to Reinstate Worker NEW YORK.—The workers of the Jennings Laundry, 811 Jennings St., ed en fi- NEW YORK.—Here is how a real block committee operates, as described by one of those present: “The Navy St. block committee, Boro Park Section, Brooklyn was to meet at $ p m. The executive met at 7 p.m. sharp. The little room lightéd by a kerosene lamp began to fill up. The meeting itself opened at 8, sharp. ct, the meeting and desctibed this sit- uation. “Later it devéloped that the six for winter relief and the Hun Le John. vear old child of one of thé families Merch, on Reed Ar CUNVELANT =O'-veland teachers ;cenied relief by this trickery of the In this ether ub ¢ of the new) will suffer when the school board |rine Relief Bureau, had died. mass recruiiment into th IR hool year at 7.30 p. m.) s to balancer iis » aceard- | >. sh to tine best fighting elements, who look ‘tonight at 450 6th Avenue, the club's | 1 A. Ben- Paral ahe Wie oA SG aed Part r Party to the headquarters Scetie From Pageant Celebrating Victories of the Soviet Union 22,000 Workers Celebrating the Bolshevik Revolution in Madison Square Garden cheered these Red Danvers, as they pictured the world war, workers’ revolution, and then Socialist Construction in the U, S. S. R. The wall they built on the stage first read “Five Year Plan,” and then they changed the “Five” to “Four.” (F, P. Pictures) “ } ae burv the child. The father and actually starving, e of the families of last week vevted, and three new ones, ‘The discussion devoloped; all be- to seé the nééed of united struggle. s8 phrases came otfen from the speakers: “Only as we afe organized.” “We will force them!” They decided: “1—All needy families meet at Unemplyoed Council headquarters, 73 Myrtle Avé. Monday to go to the B Relief Bureau at 1.30 and all wetkers Who can come should do $6 to supvort their demands. ‘2 —To collet clothing and money, ially ftom stores whete they vs, for the National Hunger March, ~To hold a mass meeting and » heaving Nov. 17, where the main “stion will be the fight for free |~c! light and gas, At this meeting c~etates to the National Hunger sh will be elected. —Delegates were elected to the v Worker Conference, and plans “eve made to circulate the “Daily” vd the Hunger Fighter.” ON HOMELESS CHILDREN Readers ef the Dally Worker are ) ke@ to send every possible news | P ent the banis of homeless ¢hil- | ( en roving the country as a re- it of the capitalist crisis; and refeularly of the brutal terror ) ed to chase them from place to Place, 48 sick McKEE ON TRIAL; FIND HIM GUILTY 400 Negro an and Spanish | Workers Make Charges NEW YORK.—Close to 400 work- ers, men, women and childrén, at- tended the public trial of the city government held Friday at the Laurel Gardén Hall: under thé au- Spices of the Unitéd Front Committée and the Lower Harlem Branth of the Unemployed Councils. Thirty Negro workérs were présent and purtici- pated in the affair, A. Mértinét actéd as chairman, Frank Quintana was ptosécutor in the Spanish Idnguage, and a repre- séntativé of thé City Unemployed Council spoke in English. ‘Thé Jury réprésenitéd séveral Work- ers’ organizations in the lower Har- lem séction, amofig Which weré the Cenfro Obfero dé Habla Espanola, Tobacco Workers Industrial Union, Gonzalés Branch, I. Lb. D., Young Communist Lédeué (Harlem 1), Tarm- pa Youth Club, Club Cuband, Jiilio A. Métla, Porto Rito Anti-Imperialist Association. There were fraternal from other workers’ present. ‘Ten workérs téstified, among whom weré an éx-soldier and a Nefro woman, who cried ouf loud, “They ate all rotten; I am willine and réady to. fight.” vor MéKee atid other “ety, offi- cials had béén fhivitéd to thé frial, put noné of thém wWeré preésént. Neither was Supérintendent Moore of thé Harlem Home Reliéf Bureau présént. Only a priést, Aparicio, who claims he is @ social worker, asked for the floor to speak. He was booed by_the crowd. The jury brought owt a vérdict of guilty, not ohly on McKéé afd the other agents of the bankers in the city, but on thé whole capitalist sys- témt in général. Four workers weré Fey to_go in the National Hunger March to Wash- ington, and thé crowd votéd to sup- port thé march, not only with money biit miéraliy as well. A resolution, inéluding local dé- mands drawn in line with thé reso- lution of fhe Ottobér 30 Conférence, was approved undnimously. sees rear FURNITURE WORKERS’ UNION The Furniture Workers’ Industrial Union has moved to new headquar- ters at 818 Broadway (near 12th St.), New York City, The new télephoné number is Gramercy 5-8956. delégatés organizations titern’ Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 15th FLOOR All Work Done Under Persona) Care lpparers of Soe, Candies Odessa Friit Chocolates 4 ys * BOX FOR $1.00 M. RICHMAN eked watts hu, oaltate 199% OPEN’ SUNDAYS Health Center Cafeteria Workers Center — 50 BE. isth St. Quality Food sonable Pricés Phone Tomkins Sq. ¢-n064 John’s Restaurant angen) ITALIAN DISHES 7. ntmosphere JADE MOUNTAIN Ainerican & Chinese Restaurant 197 SECOND AVENUE Bet. 12 & 13 Welcome to Our Comradce. Large and airy rooms and hall to hire, switable for -mectings, banquettes, lectures and dances Estonian Workers Home, 27-29 W, 115th St., N.Y. C. Phone UNiversity 4-0165 Facing Deportation for Protest Against Sam Brown Frame-up NEW YORK —Karl Ohm, a Ger- mén worker who was arrésted at th? Sam Brown démonstration in front of Judge Aurelio’s home, when along with hundreds of other workers he protéstéd the sentencing of Sam Brown, a Negro worker, to six months because of his demands for relief before the Home Relief Bureau for the starving families of Harlem, is now being héld for deportation. S. Oshen, organizer of the Com- mittée for the Protection of Foreign Born, a department of the Interna- tional Labor Defense, states that: “It is the duty of the working class to fight against this wave of terror by supporting the Committee for the Protection of Foreign Born and the International Labor Defense in its fight against deportation.” All Out! Stop Court from Dividing Family NEW YORK.—Nathan Trachtman, Son of Mr. and Mrs. Herman Tracht- man, residents of Harlém, who was taken from his parents by the Chil- drén’s Aid Society because they claimed the boy's parents were not fit to bring up children because they associated With Negroes, was freed on a writ of habeas corpus and returned to his parents through the efforts of the International Labor Defense, The case will be tried in the Chil- dren’s Court on Tuesday, Nov. 15, af 10 a.m. The International ,Labor Defénsé calls upon all workers, young and aduit to pack the Court Room at 137 E. 22nd St. to expose this at- tempt of the bosses to break the unity of Negro and white workers. “DEAR JANE” OPENS AT CIVIC REPERTORY THEATRE TONIGHT The Civic Repertory plavets will present their second prdouction this evening, “Déar Jane,’ ’a play by Eléa- nor Holmes Hinckley, based on the life of Jane Austen, the English novélist, with Josephine Hutchinson in the leading role. Eva Le Gallienne, Joséph Schildkraut, Beatrice Terry, Donald Oatheron afid Walter Beck will play leading parts. “Dear Jané” will be repeated on Wednesday and Friday evenings, “Camille,” will be staged on Tuesday evening: “Liliom,” on Wednesday thatinee and Thursday and Saturday nights and “Peter Pan” on Saturday matinee. Garment District Maiasion DAIRY RESTAURANT 147 WEST 27TH STREET Near th Avenue UNION RESTAURANT Garment Section Workers Patronize Navarr Cafeteria 333 Tih AVENUE Cartier $8th st @ march of the rank and file on the City Hall Nov. 25 to demand relief and endorssment of thé demand for the immediate payment of tlie bonus, E. Levin, leader of the rank and file contingents in the last march, described national activities for the march. Mobilization is underway \throughout the country. Tuskeégee, Alabama, nag Just anriounced that 45 are to deparu in time to reach the capitol on Dec. 5, he said. S. J. Stefiiber, chairman of thé City Rank and File Committée, discusseq the City Hall march Nov. 25. The fill support of the rank afd file membérship of the Veterans of Foreign Wars’ Post heré was pledged to the eonferente by Comrade Run- gee, V. F. W. delegate. froup in yotir, factory, stop or feighborhdod. Sevid reguiar letters to the Daily Worker. What's On— MONDAY Unit... 11, as list time. JOBLESS NEEDLE WORKERS MEET Today at Union Sq.: Fight Discrimination | NEW YORK.—All unemployed needle fradés workers aré calléd to a mass meeting in Union Square to- day at 2 p. m., or, if ft rains, at the same hour in Irving Plaza Hall, At present the Gibson Corimittes is jlegistering those to work on the | 500,060 yards of Red Cross cloth only if they come with letters from th+ Wemen’s Trade Union Léague, and A. F. L. outfit with some Socialists, among the leaders. Many unemployed women workers have applied for these jobs and have been turned away for lack of such letters. The mass meeting today will take steps fo stop this discrimination and jalso to fight the wage cuts on the Red Gross cloth job which Dubinsky and Hillman have agreed to. A big’ movement among unemployed neédle workers is developing over this struggle, and in preparation of the National Hunger March, All uném- ployed workers who Haye complaints of discrimination, eéte,, or need im- mediate relief, are urged to appear at the Complaint Department of the Needle Workers Unemployed Countils, at their temporary headquarters in | 131 West 28th St., Room 26 or at 58 West 38th St., Seeond Floor. Worker Writers Discussion Today The New York Worker Correspon- dents Group, at a meeting at 8 today at its headquarters, 114 West 2ist St., will take up reports on inti- midation at the polls Tuesday by Séetion 1, mécts same pledd bce Union Workers Genter spééial menibér= ship mééting at 661 Prospect Ave., Bronx, Genétal elections new executive. Unit 10, Section 13, meets same address as previously. Meééting of newly organtded downtown Shoe Centér_at 8 p.m. sharp at 31 Second Ave. near Pirst St. All shoe workers {n- vited to help build strong center cf shoe workers. New class in Bsperanto begins at 8 p.m. at Workers’ , Home, 360 B. 81st St., Room 5. .% Thé Communist Party, N. ¥. District, re- organtzations to refrain nging affeirs oh ae of Thanksgiving Day, as that night Nas been reserved for Grand Ball for Sbutret Training School. an orguatations a Sees ‘and al) sym- pathizers are requested to get their books, amphiets, ete, at Bronx Workers’ Book Shor, Leg Witkins Avé., Bronz, uéar Bos- members who acted as watchers and| ,,Proisteult Dance Group rehearsal at 49 pte of activity among the unem-| 1%; MBS att repli Mary Wigan Bee Ls oy" crults wanted. ANNOUNCEMENT Dr. Louis L. Schwartz SURGEON DENTIST ; Anhounces The removal of Hits office to Idtger quarters at 1 Union Square (8th Floor) Suite 803 Tel. ALgonquin 4-9805 107 Bristol Street (Bet, Pitkin & Sutter Aves.) B’hiyn DICKENS q Oftiés Heats: 6-10 AM., 1-8, 6-8 P.M. sesewmenenm THE THEATRE GUILD Presents ia “THE GOOD EARTH’ | Dramatized by OWEN DAVIS and DONALD DAVIS From the PULITZER PRIZE NOVEL by PEARL S. BUCK GUILD THEATRE Send St. W. of Broadway., Eve. 8: Matiieed Thufsday and Satutday at 2: 14TH STREET AND SIXTH AVENUE 50e, $1, $1.50. Evenings 8:30; be? we : ¢ CIVIC REPERTOR and Saturday, 2: EVA LE GALLIENNE, Director —REPERTORY FOR WREK OF ‘NOVEMBER Mond. Eve. opening . . . “DEAR JANE” '. Tes. Bee. » SCAMILE” Wed. Matin “EILIOM” Wed. Eve... AR JANE” Good Food Served fat | Farragut - Cafeteria 526 Seventh Av. at 28th St. Bronx anes Meet ar BRONSTEIN Veyetarian Health Restaurant 558 Cler+mont Parkway Bron Brooklyn WORKERS—EAT AT Tile Parkway Cafeteria 1638 PITHAIN AVENUE Neat Hopkinson Ave Brooklyn, NY “2nd Big Week—American Premiere =| Amazing! Thrilling! Amusing! THE GROUP THEATRE Presénte CCESS STORY Su \ By John Howard Larcon Maxiné — Elilotts Thea, Bs was Evenings, 8:40; Mats. Wed. and Sat., ze (The Armenian) ee mee Lt ee FASCINATING ahd COUNSELOR-ATSLAW fink BEAUTIFUL LOVS : way BY STOR ae ame ||PAUL MUN] ELMER RICH NIA. PLYMOUTH Ne hy W, 45th. LA. Rai “rheré's a todd ples at the Evenings 8:30; Mats. Thys. end B8t., 21 Avie. Gelsitit Parent nae =pAILY Woi _ authentic etory of country neo, CAMEO on ‘ Romantic sto eS RALD ‘TRIBUNE worsens Acme Theatre 1ith Street end Union Square ‘AMERICAN —_— neoMAYFAIR Shite, ei. “AIR MAIL” SS New kitted mit with RALPH BELLAMY—GLORIA STUART PHIL BAKER Daily to % p.m. B5e — 11 p.m. to clone’ 655 AND COMPANY OF 80 : THEA. Aith Bt Ws ot Diyas & Bat, 5TH AV. THEATRE RE reins TODAY TILL SATURDAY Deily 6:20 A.M. to 11 P.M. RK-O JEFFERSON i 4.4 TODAY TO TUESDAY—2 Features MAURICE CHEVALIER “Love Me Tonight” Jancn’s Piset Metin Picture in English “YOS H IWAR A” ‘Xi. | “WILD GIRL” PURITY QUALITY SUTTER Vegeterian and Dairy Restaurant SUPHER AVE. (Cor. George) BYklyn MOE AMY, SUNNY ROOM—Good for girl. one Block trom Bronx Park, 903 ©. 179th St, Apt. KC, Reno very reasonsble, FURNISHED dows, corns mfortable, 3 wine 1 blvek from sub- wi Congenial atmosphere, Very rea~ sonable, 251 W. Sich SL, Api 1. Schuyler 4—9770. “Call all weeks District Training School Ball under the AUSPICES of the COMMUNIST PARTY DIST. 2 Thanksgiving Eve., Wed., Nov., 23, 8 P.M, at MANHATTAN LYCEUM HALL, 66 F. 4th Street —— ADMISSION 40¢ —— l | Sera are ae by CHAI ~~ =