The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 17, 1932, Page 2

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WAY TO NATL CONFERENCE Misleaders and Farm Bloc Senators Try to Head Them Off ADMIT THERE IS “REVOLT” Farm Product Prices Falling Again WASHINGTON, D. C., Nov. 16.—With delegations of farm- ers ‘from the Pacific coast al- ready on the road to the Na- tional Farm Relief Conference re, Dec. 7-10, and with Sund rom Seattle and Mon- f San Th ber She LYAN S FRAZIER farm stri Fane ment this sum- mer. Misteader | men who have to depend on farm | votes do ike the program of the | endorsin, The farm delegates to w called this talk relief and a little real help.” They are going to demand at least | united demand from of plan for jo and city wor! the” eountry gages” so that less in- paid. But the farmer niercst, to say nothing i pal “In Revolt.” Senator Thomas, Democrat, of Okiahoma, admitted frankly, “The farmers are in revolt and the revolu- | tion has just begun. He proposed one |— of the usual years’ long congressional investigations into the price of farm | machinery and tools, “it is | possible publicity w peraté to Secure relief” from looting of | thru the farmers by the harvester tru: high -prices for what farmers buy. Thése ‘statements were made at the national conference of the Farmers | Union, whcih opposes militant action | by farm: but whose rank and file | are defying their leaders and striking, | and also sending delegates to the Na- tional Farm Relief Conference. The only additional proposal made | So far by the Farmers Union officials | is one for free’ silver. | Meanwhile, the/U. S. Department of Agriculture announcés that farm product prices fell again in mid Nov- | ember, from a level of 56 per cent of | pre-war in October. | ers, TENANTS FIGHT RENT INCREASE. Stand Solid Against! Eviction as Well | NEW YORK.—When the landlord raised the rent last week, the ten- ts at 235 Moore St., went out on | They are now fighting the | reat imcrease under the leadership of the Williamsburg Unemployed Counefl. All the tenants are standing solid. | When he tried to tell the tenants that the coal used to heat the house, was paid for with his blood, the workers present told him that it was not his blood, but the blood of the workers. Next, he tried to evict the family which is leading the strike. The Strike Committee held a meet- ing and decided; first, to fight against the eviction; second to picket the house, third, draw in the neigh- bors and especially the Negro work- ers who live in the. block, and some of whom are supporting the strike. With the help of the whole neighbor- hood, which is being canvassed the tenants are confident of winning the fight. Brodsky Speaks on | Scottsboro Tonight | NEW YORK.—Joseph Brodsky, one of the International Labor Defense attorneys in the Scottsboro Case, will speak on “Scotsboro—Next Steps” this evening, November 17, at 50 East 13th Street, Room 204. The meeting is under the auspices of Branch 500 of the International Workers Order. | | FEWER BABIES BORN NEW YORK.—Fewet babies were born in New York City in the week ending Noy. 12 than in any previous week this year, Shirley W. Wynne, Health Commissioner of New York City, announced yesterday. Figures released by Dr. Wynne showed 1,815 births last week, as compared to 2,006 in the corresponding week of | picket line and j order to bring the strike to a quick Workers! Refuse to Gibson Committee Your Pay! DEMONSTRATE AT Give the Give What You Can to the National Hunger March to Make Bosse: (By District Committee of NEW YORK B. Gibson, has organized the Emerge! It is made up of millionaires such Thomas W. Lamont, Charles H. Sal Alfred s in, BOSSES RUSH AID TO SCAB LAUNDRY Meet Called Tonight on Jennings Strike ¢ laundry bos- e help of the 811 Jen: d the Sterling rike breaking. Th + the Jennings ke is going on hal the scabs and the strong | arm squad. Something developed wt an increase The Jenr break the s' their teens. usual $10 a new in strikebreaking n the scabs demanded | work. | id to| ys in| nstead of hiring the | jay gangsters, they try | h a $1 a day boy off, from the laund: ized to the strikers. ll workers are 1400 Boston rikers in y and apol- | ed to come to Road and help the their activities on the street meetings, in | and successful finish. The Laundry Workers’ Industrial Union regular membership mecting will be held on Thursda; ov. 17, 8 D. m., at the Union headquarters, at East 138th St. A full report of the Jennings strike wil be given. Plans to develop the sirike, will be taken up, and all members are asked to attend. Refused Aid; Larger Delegation to Visit Relief Buro N Vv. 24th NEW YORK.—A public hearing, to be folowed by a call by a still larger delegation, will be the answer of the East Side Unemployed Council to the Home Helief Bureau, after the ureau tried to get out of aiding five es. The public hearing, the to be announced later, will be Nov. 21. A large delegation then wil go to the Home Relief Bur , in the marni | What’s On— ‘THURSDAY Worker vets who can blow a bugil 0 headquarters Post, No. 3, Thursday, at 6:30 p.m. for urged to repo! 154 W. 20th practice. Workers’ Film and Photo Section CLASS in 8:30 p.m. at 13 ¥ Intwor Youth Br. 401 I.W.O. Counter- Olympic California MOVIE and other news reels at 1013 7 Bronx, near West Farms, at 9 p.n 1 welcome. eague Film le ng at meeting { members will special prep- nd Relief March Meetings at 8 p.m. Freiheit Mandolin Orchestra hehearsal at 8 p.m. at 106 E. 14th St. P: N. ¥. District, requests all. workers’ zations to refrain from arranging any irs on Thanksgiving Eve, that night has ben reserved for Grand Ball for District Training School. Communi. All organizations of the Bronx and all individuals are requested to get their books pamphlets and ot! erature at Bronx Workers’ Bookshop, Wilkins Ave., Bronx, near Boston Road. oe 8 W. E. 8. L. Post membership meeting at 8 p.m. at 4215 Third Ave. (cor. Tremont Ave). Volunteers wanted for leaflet distribution day and evening. Call Friends Soviet Union, 799 Broadway, Room 330. F, 8. U. Wes! Years of Workers’ Rule in 8. U. ise Manor, 11 W. M . at Para- t. Eden Ave., 8:30 p.m. F. S. U. Romain Rolland Br. lecture on “Soviet Union Stands for Peace” at 2700 Bronx Park East at 8:30 p.m. Alfred G. Morris will speak on “Role of F. 8. U." at Staten Island, 28 Oxford Place, at 8:30 p.m. Workers’ Laboratory Theatre of W. I. R. first membership meet at 42 E. 12th St. at 8 pm. All invited. I. W. O, Br. 500 meeting at 8:30 p.m. at Room 204, 50 E. 13th St. Joseph Brodsky wil Ispeak on “Scottsboro—What Next?” All members expected to attend. I. L. D. Haywood Br. meeting at 8:30 p.m. at Workers’ Center, 3159 Coney Island Ave., Brighton Beach. Bensonhurst Workers’ Chorus, 2006 70th St., at 8:30 p.m., regular rehearsal, New members invited. Brooklyn. FRIDAY John Reed Club lecture at 450 Sixth Ave. at 8:30 p.m. Friday night. Molssaye J, Ol- gin, editing Pretheit and Asso. Ed. New Masses, speaks on “Gorki as Artist and Revolutionist.”” ony ie Bronx Workers’ Club, 1610 Boston Road, lecture at 8 p.m. Scott Nearing on latest developments in Far East. ‘World Congress Against War Mass Meet- ing on Friday, Nov. 18, at 8 p.m. at Cen- tral High School, High and New Sts., New- ark, No admission, Progressive Workers’ Culture Club, 642 Bedford Ave. (cor. Penn St.) Brooklyn, N. ¥., lecture on Hunger March at 8 p.m, No admission. Craig Marks speaker. SATURDAY American Workers’ Club first annual ball at Bronx Workers’ Club, 1610 Boston Road, near 174th St. Subway. Admission 25 cents in advance; at door, 35 cents. Dally Worker Party in Business Office of Daily Worker, 50 , 13th 8t,, 8th floor, at 8 p.m. Saturda; He ERY Workers’ Film and Photo League Movie and Dance at 8:30 p.m, Saturday at 13 W. 1931, and 2,353 in the corresponding week of 1930, 17th St. for benefit Hunger March, Inter- esting time promised. Smith, Herbert Thayer Swope, Myron 5ist Street and Ist Ave., on Nov. | } Bronx Lecture on “Fifteen s Provide Real Relief Y. Di: rict Communist Party.) | An executive committee of businessmen, led by Harvey ney Unemployment Relief Committee. | Corneli . Bliss, Walter S. Gifford, | Charles M. Schwab, Arthur P. Sloane, %. Taylor, Alfred H. Wig- | Felix M. Warburg, William H. | Wooden, Owen D. Young. It has d | termined that the relief of the mii lion and a half unemployed of the | City of New York, shall come out of | the pockets of the workers, who are | working parti-time at miserable | This is nothing but a direct wage cut. This is the meaning of Hoover's and Young's relief broadcast. Mc- | Kee’s and Roosevelt's appeal to the “population” generally, meaning the | workers, to raise relief for the un- mployed. The demand of the Unemployed Council and of the workers general must be that relief for the unem- ployed shall be raised entirely at the expense of the employers and the government. Emplo} especi the big capitalists, have not dimin. ished their prefits. On the contrary compared with 1927, their profits have increased during the present | ear 72 per cent, while wages have gone down 55 per cent. Does refusing to contribute to the Emergency Relief fund mean that | the unemployed of New York suffer | more? It does not mean this at all. | On the contrary only through mass | pressure and mass struggle will the une: d of the City of New Yor y relief whatever. Therefore, what is to be done? In every shop, store, office and factory, | build up a group of workers and mo- | bilize to refuse to pay ‘to the Emer- | gency Unemployment Relief Com- | mittee. Let the bosses understand | that the workers in the shops will not | | submit to this direct cut upon their | | wages, but demand instead that the bosses themselves be taxed to raise the funds for the relief of the mil- | lion and a half unemployed. Refuse to contirbute to the emer- | gency unemployment relief commit- | | tee. Give funds to the Unemployed | Council to carry on the struggle for | | adequate unemployment relief and | | unemployment insurance at the ex- | pense of the employers and the gov- | | ernment. | (Signed.) DISTRICT COMMITTEE, COMMUNIST PARTY, VETS TO DEMAND | | | | /Women Meet Sunday) | to Aid Bonus March | | — | | NEW YORK ~All veterans are called to support the demonstration in Brownsville tomorrow that will de- mand immediate relief for the job- | | less Brownsville ex-servicemen. The demonstration, which is being called by Post 75 of the Workers’ Ex-Ser- vicemen’s League, will be held at 9} am. at the relief bureau at Public School 150, Christopher and Belmont | Aves. Veterans and their wives will assemble at the headquarters of Post 75, 537 Hopkinson Ave., from where | they will go in a body to the relief | | bureau. The demonstration tomorrow will also serve to rally the vets for the | |march to City Hall, Nov. 25, that is | being organized by the local Veter- | ans’ Rank and File Committee, This | march, which comes only four days | before the New York contingent | leaves on the National Bonus March | to Washington, will demand immedi- jate relief for the single vets, more | adequate relief for the married ones, | the free use of armories and tax-} exempt institutions, such as churches, Y. M. C. A’s, etc., for homeless ex- | servicemen, special relief for the dis- abled veterans who are not receiving compensation from the federal gov- ernment, the admnistration of all re- lief by committees of Negro and white veterans, and the abolition of police control over the Hoovervilles and Camp Roosevelt at 78th St. and Hudson River. W. I. R. MEDICAL AID MEET A special meeting to prepare med- | ical aid for the National Hunger | March will be held Friday, Nov. 18, | 8:30 p.m., at W. I. R. headquarters, 146 Fifth Ave. Labor Union Meetings PHARMACISTS’ CLERKS A unification meeting of the two newly- enlarged Pharmacists unions will be held on Thursday evening at 8:30 p.m. at the Pythian Temple, 135 W. 70th St. ee PRESSERS ‘A mass meeting of cloak and dress press- ers will be held on ‘Thursday at 1 p.m. in Bryant Hall, Sixth Ave, and 4ist St. The purpose of the meeting is to take up the situation of the unemployed and also to elect delegates for the Hunger Marcheto/ Washington. All pressers are called upon to attend this meeting. DRESSMAKERS On Thursday there will be a dressmakers’ | membership meeting in Bryant Hall, Sixth Ave. and 4ist St. right after work. At this meeting the question of preparing for mass strikes in the dress trade in the coming season will be taken up. os as FURRIERS A meeting of all fur shop chairmen and delegates will be held on Thursday, right after work, in the auditorium of the union, | 131 W. 28th St. At this meeting the shop chairmen and delegates will” consider the following matters: A report of activities for the past few weeks, the unemployment insurance fund and how to enforce pay- ments by the fur bosses, activities during the slack season and the development of an intensive movement for union control and union conditions in the Associated, and how to organize the unemployed furriers for securing winter relief. | IRON AND BRONZE WORKERS ‘The Iron and Bronze Section of the Metal Workers’ Industrial Union will meet on Friday, at 8 p.m. at 80 E. llth Bt, Room 222. The order of business will be election of a trade board, hunger march, develop- ing strike struggles. | Ht METAL WORKERS ‘The Brooklyn local of the Meal Workers’ Industrial Union is mobilizing the employed nd unemployed metal workers to attend | stitute yesterday and staged a dem-! | when a seaman who had just been | already within, and a regular dem- RELIEF FRIDAY | ; Will present “Thé 5-Year Plan,” the THE INSTITUTE Discrimination Case Starts Hundreds in Heated Protest NEW YORK.—Nearly a thousand unemployed marine workers came | down on the Seamen's Church In- | | istration against the discrimina- tion in relief. They are fighting now for the right of any jobless seaman to get real relief there. The institute is given funds to pay | 65 cents a day relief to each jobless | man on its list. It actually gives a| 35 cent bed and two ten cent meals, | for two weeks, to a selected list—all | militants barred. ‘The institute has | been cutting off of relief members of | the Marine Workers Indu al Un- ion or members of the Waterfront | Unemployed Council. The demonstration yesterday arose | | placed on the list Tuesday was called | up the next morning and kicked out, | and even told ta.get another address | for his mail. | Gets Reinforcements. | He reported the matter to the M. | W. I. U. and the unemployed council | 25 to go back with him. As the dele- | gation walked through. the streets, hundreds of unemployed marine workers fell in behind it. When the big crowd got to the door | of the “Holy Dog House” the officials | within called the riot wagon, which | came and managed to Urive the dele- | gation out. But large numbers of seamen from the crowd had filtered in, explained the situation to those onstraton started inside. In the course of it Seamen’s Church Insti- tute officials, stool-pigeons pointed | out Ted Barron, jobless seaman, and | had him arrested as a leader. He | was releaseq at the station house, | on his own recognizance. Seamen on the New York water- | front are determined to smash dis- | crimination in giving relief against | militant jobless seamen, and demand | the institute be thrown open to all jobless marine workers. Cc. C. N. ¥. PROTEST MEET NEW YORK —A rally to protest the failure of City College-Tammany officials to reinstate Oakley John- mn, English teacher, dismissed for radical views,” will be held at 8:30 p.m., Nov. 25, at Webster Hall, under the auspices of the International Juridical Association. Johnson, Don- ald Henderson, Corliss Lamont, Reed Harris and others will speak. Stage and Screen |j “FIVE-YEAR PLAN” AT ACME THE- | ATRE FRIDAY AND SATURDAY | Beginning this Friday the Acme} Theatre, 14th St. and Union Square, film story of Russia’s Remaking. The picture is being shown at the Acme by special request of many patrons who wish to see the picturé. The film has a talk in English explaining in detail the 5-year Plan in action. The same program will have as an added feature a Soviet film, “Son Of ‘Thé Land” starring B. Ivanitsky. “Road To Life” will return to the Acme screen on Sunday and Monday. “Turksbid,” an outstanding epic of the progress made in the Soviet Union, will be shown on Tuesday and Wednesday, Nov. 22 and 23. ‘The American premiere of Amkino’s talking production, “Road To North,” showing the industrial revolution of the Soviet North, in Karelie, is book- ed for the weék beginning Thursday, Nov. 24, “KAMERADSCHAFT” IN SECOND} WEEK AT EUROPA THEATRE G. W. Pabst’s powerful film epic of the mines, “Kameradschaft” (Com- radeship), continues for a second week at the Europa Théatre. “SCARLET DAWN” “Please, Miss, write me a story that has uniforms in it. I want to wear one,’ so spoke Douglas Fairbanks, Jr.,” according to the program notes of the movie, “Scarlet Dawn,” “and the young lady addréssed was Mary C. McCall, Jr., novelist who was serving time just then at the West coast studios. This same young lady promptly supplied him with a story of the Russian Revolution , . .” So, we are informed, in this mach- ine-like manner, are film fables con- | cocted by Hollywood's literary lackeys. But. we must not believe that it was merely to satisfy an individual actor’s childish craving for gaudy uniforms that Hollywood's brain children manufactured this vicious lying film of the great proletarian revolution. “Scarlet Dawn,” a Warner Brothers product, is in fact, part of a deliberate anti-soviet film following in the foot~ steps of the recent Paramount film, “Forgotten Commandments,” This picture gives a fantastic, dis- torted account of the Russian Revolu- tion, is full of inaccuracies, and mali- ciously slanders the Red Army by showing them in the act of looting, Pillaging and mistreating women— acts of terror which were actually corhmitted by the white guardists, Tt is part of the ideological preparation for war against the USSR, — J. Rivers. ANDWICH SOL'S “ToxCH 103 University Place (Just Around the Corner) Telephone Tompkins Square 6-0780-9781 COHEN’S e Eyes Examined by Registered Optometrist Attendance 117 ORCHARD STREET (First door off Delancey) Greets Soviets Elmer Rice. well known Ameri- ean playwright, who has sent spe- cial greetings to the American Sec- tion of the Friends of the Soviet Union. Celebrate 15th Year | of Soviet Russia at the New Star Casino, Sat. es | Elmer Rice's special greetings toj the American section of the Friends | of the Soviet Union will be read at | the 15th Anniversary Celebration of | the Soviet Revolution, to be held on | Saturday evening, Noy. 19, at 8 p.m. | at the New Star Casino, 107th St. | nd Park Ave. N. Y. | Scott Nearing, Joseph Freeman} Donald Henderson, Dr. Oakiey John- son, M. J. Olgin, Earl Browder, William Patterson and others will speek at this gathering. An interesting feature at this cele- bration will be a performance by the | and they made up a delegation of | well-known Soviet artists—A. Lee of | the Mostow Theatre of Art and L.} | Kapelowitch Luganov of the Mos- cow Theatre of Revolution, Admission is 50° cents and tickets may be secured at the F. S. U. Dis- trict Office, 799 Broadway, Room 330, Workers’ Book Shop, 50 E. 13th St., and at the Workers’ Book Shop at 1457 Wilkins Ave., Bronx. | GIBSON OUTEIT WILL USE COPS Cut Pay on Red Cross Cloth Work NEW YORK.—Unemployed needle workers, meeting at the call of the Needle Trades Unemployed Council heard reports on the wage cutting policies of the Gibson Committee. ‘The Gibson Committee is having some Red Cross cloth made up into cloth- ing. They laid plans for further investi- gation and are working out a program to stop the wage cuts and the dis- crimination in handing out of jobs on this cloth. They elected ten dele- gates and three alternates to the Na- tional Hunger March, and endorsed it fully. They elected two more mem- bers on the committee negotiating with the Gibson Committee. The negotiations are in this stage. Keddy and Baker, representing the Gibson Committee saw a committee of the Needle Trades Jobless at the Gib- son Committee office, 70 Pine St. yesterday. In the course of a two | hour argument, Keddy told the Job- less Committee that Gibson will con- clude contracts for working the Red Cross cloth with any individual manu- facturer who does it cheapest The committee asked Keddy and Baker what they would do if the wage cut workers on this cloth struck, and the Gibson Committee representatives answered: “Well, we have the govern- ment to protect us.” Finally the conference broke off, with a statement by Keddy that he would arrange another tomorrow with the department of the Gibson Com- mittee that is in charge fo distribut- ing work to the unemployed. GREET BAILING OF BERKMAN In an official statement issued yes- terday by the Food Workers Indus- trial Union, the workers of this or- ganization greeted the partial victory of the International Labor Defense and the jTrade Union Unity League in forcing the deportation authorities to grant Edith Berkman, militant leader of the textile workers, a tem- porary and conditional release. Attention Comrades! OPEN SUNDAYS Health Center Cafeteria Workers Center — 50 E. 13th St. Quality Food Reasonable Prices Intern’ Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE Bth FLOOR AD Work Done Under Persona) Care ot DR. JOSEPHSON Dr. WILLIAM BELL OPTOMETRIST 106 E. 14th St., near 4th Av. Bronx Cooperative Dining Club ALLERTON AVENUE Cor. Bronx Park East Foods Proletarian Prices —— ADMISS an open forum to be held on, Friday at 8 p.m, at 5121 Third Ave. Brooklyn, “Hospital Prescriptions Filled Distr.ct 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 E. 4th Street /TAG DAYS HERE. | NOV. 19-20 FOR All Out Saturday and Sunday! Go to One of These Stations! NEW YORK—Cit: ide tag days to help raise funds for the National Hunger March will be held Saturday and Sunday, Nov. 19 and 20 it was announced yesterday by the Joint Committée for Support of the Na- tional Hunger March, who urged a mass mobiljzation for these important events in the struggle for unemploy- ment insurance The following stations in the five boroughs will be the mobilization and colléction centres for the tag day: Bronx: Co-operative, 2700 Bronx ark East, Middle Village Workers Club, 3882 Third Ave.. Lower Bronx Workers Club, 569 Prospect Ave., Bronx Workers Club, 1610 Boston‘Rd. Manhattan: Estonie. Workers Homé, 27 West 115th St., Finnish Workers Home, 26 West 126th St., Harlem Progressive Youth Club, 1538 Madison Ave., Hungarian Workers Home, 350 East 81st St., Harlem Section, CP.M. 650 Lenox Ave. Downtown: Greék Workers Center, 301 West 29th St., Needle Trades In- dustrial Union, 131 West 28th St., Ar- menian Workers Club, 103 Lexington Home, 122 Second Ave. Ukrainian Workers Homé, 66 E. 4th St., Down- town Workers Club, 11 Clinton St., East Side Workers Club, 196 E. Broad- way. Brooklyn: Bridge Plaza Workers Club, 285 Rodney St.; Brooklyn Work- ers Center, 61 Graham Ave.; Lithuin- | ian Workers Home, 46 Ten Eyck St.: Bronxville Unemployéd Council, 646 | Stone Ave.; Bronxville Workers Cen- ter, 1813 Pitkin Ave.; Hinsdale Work- ers Club, 313 Hinsdale Ave.; Boro Park Workers Club, 1373—43rd_ St.; East New York Workérs Club, 524 Vermont Ave.; Bath Beach Workers Club, Bath Ave. and 23rd Ave., Brighton Workers Club; Coney Island Workers Club, 2709 Mermaid Ave.; Jamaica Workers Club, 109-26 Union Hall St. Queens: Middle Village Schulé, 1 Fulton St., Queens. McKee Warns Brokers of Demonstrations Un- less There Is Relief NFW YORK.—Mayor McKee ad- dressed 700 members of the New York Stock Exchange on Tuesday, asking them to give something to the Gibson Committee. - “I have had occasion to receive delegations at City Hall,” he said. “They were delegations of citizens of discontent and unrest. I have seen demonstrations where there were as many as 20,000 people outside marching and raising their demands, and it was not a pleasant thing to contemplate.” The mayor then said that if some relief can be given new masses will not be drawn into the mass move- ment of protest, but “Once the break in the dike comes we have a problem of far-reaching consequences.” Garment District Garment Section Workers Patronize Navarr Cafeteria 333 7th AVENUE Corner 28th St, international Barber Shop 123 WEST 28th STREET Near N.T.W.LU. Building Classified NICE AIRY, SUNNY ROOM—Good for girl. ‘one block from Bronx Park, 963 E. 179th St., Apt. 5C. WANTED—Furnished room Downtown sec- tion with comrades. 8. B. c/o Daily Worker SINGLE ROOM—Comfo: 317 FE. 18th St. Apt. 11B. Call Sunday. ‘Rent very reasonable. SPLENDID LARGE Hall and Meeting Rooms TO HIRE Perfect for BALLS, DANCES, LECTURES, MEETINGS, Etc. IN THE New ESTONIAN WORKERS HOME 27-29 W.115th St., N.Y.C. Phone UNiversity 4-0165 The Printing Workers Club ~ ALGONQUIN 4-4489 ION 40¢ —— HUNGER MARCH Ave., WIR, 146 Fifth Ave., Russian | 1} a 1] || Days Shock Brigade || One hundred yoluntcers to act ibeve Wanted for Tag | as a special shock brigade for the |'Tag Day collections on Saturday | |and Sunday, November 19th and | 20th, are needed at once. | || jhis shock brigade will not be | | part of or interfere with the col- | |tections that are organized thru- out the city, in the neighborhoods. | || whe Unemployed Councils of | | Greater New York calls on all vol- | unteers for this important shock | brigade to be at the headquarters at 10 E. 17th St. on Saturday, at | 9. a, m, sharp. Bank U. S. Depositors | Told to Wait a year NEW YORK.—Bank of U. S. de-| positors, defrauded of the money | they had scrimped to save when the institution crashed in 1930, are in- | ted to wait a couple of years more | | while the state banking department | files suit against 18,000 small stock- | | hoiders of the bank, for $25 a share | | ass nent. Many of these little | | stock-holders are broke too, now, but lif the expected $5,000,000 to $10,000,- | 000 is collected from them. it won't | + the debts owed the di tors. | | mee! | Workers’ School Helps. | The 1,600 students and instructors in the Workers School, 35 East 12 St., are supporting the hunger march by | setting up a spécial station in the school, and devoting ten minutes of each class to explaining the hunger march and methods of aiding it. Stu- dents are taking out boxes, and col-/} |lecting food and clothes. Many tickets to the Sénd Off Meeting in the Coliseum Noy. 29 are sold through the school, On the return march, delegates who went to Washington will speak at the | i NICKEL FARE AND WORKERS’ WAGES: BOTH IN DANGER Board -of Estimates’ | Farce, Shows Bankers Demand Their Doom NEW YORK.—A row among Tam- many factions over bond — issues brought out in the Board of Esti- | mates meeting Tuesday the fact that both the five-cent fare and the city workers’ wages are in serious danger. Before the Board succeeded in passing a vote for him to shut up, Chairman Delaney of the Board of Transportation got on record that work on new subway construction in Brocklyn, Bronx and Queens was going to stop for lack of funds, and the workers added to the ranks of the jobless. To Kill 5-Cent Fare. ‘Then he also pointed out that the five-cent fare was doomed, unless certain bond issues went through, totalling $50,000,000. These bond is- sues were killed at the last board meeting, at the orders of the bank- ers for a budget cut. Tammanyites now state that if Delaney keeps the bond issues alive by court action, the | wages of city workers must be cut by $50,000,000, to placate the bank- ers, The million and a half of jobless in New York, and New York work- | ers don’t want either a ten-cent fare or, wage-cuts for city workers. They want the bankers to stand the bur- | den at once. Take the $200,000,000 the city bud- get now provides shall bz. paid the bankers as interest, etc., on the city debt, and turn this $200,000,000 over to unemployment relief! Three Gala Nights of the Workers School. Thése are: a mass meeting | Dec, 9, a concert and dance Dec. 10 and a banquet Dec. 11, all in Irving Plaza Hall. ANNOUNCEMENT Dr. Louis L. Schwartz SURGEON DENTIST Announces The removsl of his office to larger quarters at 1 Union Square (8th Floor) Suite 803 Tel. ALgonquin 4-9805 DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 Bristol Street (Bet. Pitkin & Sutter Aves.) Biklyn PHONE: DICKENS 2-3012 Office Hours: 8-10 A.M., 1-2, 6-8 P.M. MOSCOW NEWS ss; “False Uniforms’ is certainly a most outstanding Soviet adventure film and bt be enjoyed especially out~ ¢ Soviet Union, since adventure ior itself and requires no inter- speaks preter.’ SPECIAL SOVIET NEWSREEL AMUSEMENT ewes STARTING TOMORROW. NEW. SOVIET SOUND FILM “FALSE UNIFORMS” with English Titles HARRY ALAN POTAMKIN says “Yet, the memorableness of ‘False Uniforms’ above tis yarn is assured by the same uny: ing point of view that informs the rest of the Soviet kino: the class struggle. ‘The Powerful EPIC OF LABOR ND WEEK! 2! EK: ,AMERADSCHAFT (Comradeship) “An excellent film."—DAILY WORKER EUROPA. 2°4.%, 25¢ "2! 55th St. noon Continuous from 10:30 a. m. to Midnight New Revue Hit AMERICAN date PHIL BAKER AND COMPANY OF 80 SHUBERT THEA. 4th St, W. of es. Biway 8:30 Matinees Wed. & Sat., 2:30 THE GROUP THEATRE Presents SUCCESS STORY Maxine Elliotts Thea., 39th, E. of B'way Evenings, 8:40; Mats., Wed. and Sat., 2:40 fi THE THEATRE GUILD presents HE GOOD EARTH dramatized by Owen Davis and Donald Davis from the PULITZER PRIZE NOVEL By Pearl 8. Buck GUILD THEA., 52nd St., W. of Broadway Eve. 8:30, Mats. Thursday & Saturday 2:30 C OUNSELOR-AT-LAW Ra WITH By: PAUL MUNI ELMER RICE PLYMOUTH THEA., W. 45th. LA. 4-6720 Evenings 8:30; Mats., Thus. and Sat., 2:3 ‘BOUT TWO THOUS, Every worker, reader the Morning Freiheit. If e in a minimum of $3.00, ‘Trades Workers Industrial Furriers Dressmakers Cloakmakers . Knit-goods . ite White-goods ....... seeeee 1100 600 500 50 }0| Dally to 2 p.m. 35e — 11 p.m. to Needle Trades Workers—Rally to the support of the Morning Freiheit! The Morning Freiheit Is In Danger! Collect on the lists in the shop, office and home, Bring every cent you have collected to the office of the Morning Freiheit, 35 E. 12th St., 6th Fl. The names will be mentioned in the Freiheit. Needle Trades Comm. to Save the Morning Freiheit J, H. COHEN, L. E. COBEN, W. GREINBERG, A, RABOI, MUCI KIN, BROOKS, 8S. FREEDMAN, KOSEMEDOW, FRIEDENTAL, KEES (TVIC REPERTORY alee ag 500, $1, $1.50 Evs. 8:30 Mats. Wed. & Sat. 2:30 EVA LE GALLIENNE, Director Tonight and Sat, Eve. —. —“LILIOM” Friday Eve. “DEAR JANE” Seats Four Weeks in Advance at Box Office and Town Hall, 113 W. 43rd St. at the Acme ”—DAILY WO! —Added Feature— “BALINESE LOVE” A Romance of Bali Worxers Acme Theatre 14th Street and Union Square Cont, from 9 a.m.—Last show 10:30 p.m. St. & R-K-O JEFFERSON 8 5 WEDNESDAY TO FRIDAY—2 Features JOHN GILBERT in “Downstairs” “The Divorce Racket” with JAMES DUNNE and OLIVE BORDEN reoMAYFAT at 42nd St. and we “AIR MAIL”: with RALPH BELLAMY—GLORIA STUART se Boo Broad: 2000 LETTERS OUT TO THE NEEDLE TRADES! AND LETTERS with colleetoins lists for the Morning Freiheit drive to raise 40,000 dollars were sent out to the shop chairmen of the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union, of the Morning Freiheit, must remind his shop-chairman, whether he reads Jewish or not, that the situation in the Morning Freiheit is bad and that no time should be lost in raising funds to save very collection list should bring the quota set for the Needle Union would haye been raised. Following are the quotas assigned to the various departments: Raincoat Makers ....$ 50 Millinery .. Tailors Local 38 . seve 200 Left wing groups.... 1000. , CHAI- We Expect An Immediate Response!

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