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LANDLADY BARS | NEGROES: 600 INMASS PROTEST Finnish Workers Club Expels Mrs. Kirkland; Socialist$ for Her NEW YORK.—Because land tried to evict a whi and his wife for entertaining two Ne- Kirk- groes in her rooming house, at 25 West 126th St., she looked out of her front window on Sunday and over 600 workers were protesting . She had attempted to stop the Ne- gto workers from coming into her house to see B. Sklar and his wife, roomers, “You cannot stay here if you have niggers coming to see you,’ ske ‘told Sklar after his callers had gone. The Finnish Workers Club Sunday | afternoon expelled Mrs. Kirkland | from membership for her stand. At meeting at 15 West 125th St., the ib also adopted a resolution de- | e freedom for the nine Scotts- boro boys and denouncing the mur- | der of Cliff James and other share croppers. This to be sent to the} Governor of Alabama. | To Explain Need of Solidarity | In its resolution the club also calls | on its Agit-prop committee to “or- | ganize as soon as possible a special | mass meeting, in which the workers | will be explained the necessity of sol- | idarity and unity of Negro and white | workers in the struggle against the capitalist class.” Part of the roomers in Mrs. Kirk- land’s house moved out because of the way she treated the Negro work- | ers. Henry Shepard, one of those who | had called on Sklar, spoke during the | demonstration from Mrs. Kirkland’s | steps in behalf of the Communist | Party. | Sklar was chairman of the demon- | Stration. Puro spoke for the Finnish Federation. The demonstration was | called by the Communist Party. | All the speakers at the demonstra- | tion exposed the treacherous action of the Socialists who are rooming at | Mrs. Kirkland’s place. The Socialists, according to her statement, objected to the coming of Negro workers into | the house. She also stated that some | churchmen living in her house like- | wise objected. It was pointed out by the speakers Puro and Johnson, secretary of the | Finnish Federation that such an at- | titude toward the Negro workers was | Sponsored by the leadership of the Finnish Socialist Federation, Yonkers Klan to Get | Permit to Break Up Meetings of Workers | YONKERS, N. Y., Jan. 9—In a letter attacking Communists and all revolutionary workers, the local Ku Klux Klan has demanded that it be allowed to hold public meetings in the streets. Though it is not stated in the letter, it is clear that these meetings will be held for the pur- poSe of attacking the meetings and demonstrations of workers’ organiza- tions. This is the first time the Klan has asked permission to hold street meet- ings. Commission of Public Safety Morrissey has announced that such permission would be granted, thus giving official sanction to the Klan’s lyneh activties. 2 Anti-Bonus Groups Join Forces to Wage . Fight on the Vets NEW YORK.—Two organizations which have ben bitterly fighting the efforts of the veterans to get their bonus at once, without cuts in dis- ability allowances, have merged. The Veterans Justice Committee, which was formed to carry on a na- tional advertising campaign against the veterans, has united with the American Veterans Association, which has the same program. Both these organizations are com- Foséd largely of officers and well-to- do”veterans. The rank and file ex- @prvicemen throughout the country, Hundreds of thousands of whom are wnemployed and starving, despite the slanders of these and other en- emies, want the bonus now. ‘WHAT’S ON-- TUESDAY | ORGANIZATIONS who wish to book the| Red Players should communicate with W. dede Reigler, 58 West 38th St., Brooklyn two| reeks in advance. ENTERTAINMENT-Ball of Trade Union| Unity Council, Sat., Feb. 11, at Irving Plaza | fall, Organizations asked to keep this date annual affair of Red Sparks thetic Club at Manhattan Lyceum, 48 E. Fourth ®t, March 25. Organizations asked to keep this date open. CONCERT-Ball of Metal Workers lal Union, Sunday Feb. 12th, be- 4 p.m. at Manhattan Lyceum. Or- jons asked not to arrange affairs te. G of “Millinery Unemployment ittee at 140 W. 36th Bt. 6 p. m. to of committee sent to Executive 24 and to Millinery bosses associa- Also plans for further work to be OPEN FORUM conducted by Bronx Local ‘Alteration Painters Union, 11 a. m, this Forming at Local Day Room, 4213 Third e. Speaker: Sam Nessin. ‘ont Tactics of Alteration Painters. Inters asked to come. QLASS in Dramatics at Concourse Work- Club, 1349 Jerome Ave., near 170th St., Subject: United All i DRESSMAKERS | Dressmakers Unity Commit calls “Meeting of all dressmai in all after work Thurs- inery Unemployed Committee calls # ‘of all jobless and part time work- industry at 5 p. m. today at 140 36th St. to hear reports of the com- mt Carpenters Union calls all to its meeting, Jan. 11 at 8 p. m. to hear reports on recent Needle Trades | Jobless Force Relief for Eight More Cases NEW YORK.—The general mittee of the Needle Trades Wo! Industrial Union won imme: lief for eight needy cases com three Home Relief Bureaus yesterday. | At the Home Relief Bureaus at 149th St., the Bronx Opera House the committee found 1200 workers who had been standing in line sinc 8 in the morning waiting for relief. The committee, on its way through the line, addressed the workers and told them that only by organized struggle can they win relief. A cop standing near by shouted to the workers not to listen to these “reds,” but when the workers saw that the committee won immediate relief for three cases they were very much im- pressed. At the Home Relief Bureau at 59 Schermerhorn in Brooklyn the un- | employed committee won relief for three more cases. Then at the bureau at Skimel Hall in Brooklyn the militant stand of the committee won immediate relief | for two or more cases. | ADOPT 9 DEMANDS. OF FUR WORKERS Meeting Plans Steps To Push Them NEW YORK.—At a crowded meet- | ing of furriers held on Thursday aft- ernoon at Irving Plaza, the demands recommended by the trade board | were adopted with a few slight | changes. The demands recommended | were as follows: | 1, Working hours and minimum scale of the present agreement shall | be strictly enforced. 2. Six months division of work in- stead of three. 3. Workers to be entitled to jobs| and division of work after they work | in a shop three weeks instead of | Seven as in the present agreement. 4, Unemployment insurance funds | paid by the bosses and administered by the workers. 5. No contracting or sub contract- | ing. | 6. Guarantees that the bosses will | not break tne points of the agree-| ment. 7. Overtime shall be permitted only for a limited number of hours during | the busy season and only in such shops where there is absolutely no room for other workers. 8. There shall be no so-called im- partial chairman. 9. No discrimination against Negro | workers, equal pay for equal work, and | the right of Negro workers to work | at all crafts. The question of overtime called | forth a long active discussion and difference of opinion. A number voted for 12 hours a week overtime during the period of the season, Oth- ers voted for only 8 hours. The ma- jority of the members voted that over- time should be abolished entirely, The question was referred for further consideration to the trade board. Sam Resnick was chairman. The report was given by Ben Gold who analyzed the situation in the fur trade and the importance of placing some demands which were not in- cluded in the 1926 agreement because of the changed situation. The prob- Jem of mass unemployment did not exist at the time of the conclusion of the 1926 agreement. Therefore the demand for extending the period for six months, equal division of work and unemployment insurance fund are of the utmost importance. Gold also devoted considerable time to discussing the question of the con- tracting, sub-contracting and piece work and pointed out the necessity of mobilizing all forces in the struggle against the Associated, which means a struggle against these evils in the trade. Gold also dealt with the de- mand for the abolition of the im- partial chairman, pointing to the fact that it will be necessary to fight for this demand which the bosses will not readily give up. Among those who participated in the discussion were Opachinsky who disagreed with the demand against the impartial chairman while agree- ing with all other demands. Other speakers were Kaiser, Langer, Gus Hoppman and others. who pointed out the necessity of abolishing the impartial chairman who is used by || the bosses against the workers. It was decided that the Industrial || Union is to send out these demands to the Employers’ Association and call them for a conference. At the same time the union is to strengthen the drive for the maintenance of union conditions in the shop. Dismiss Berger Case; Frame-Up Too Raw NEW YORK.—The frame-up charge of assault for which Rubin Berger went on trial yesterday was dismissed because of the brazenness of the attempt to railroad Berger to jail for his activities in the strike against Needleman & Bremmer. Four leading comrades are now Serving prison sentences for this strike, in which the bosses locked out the workers at the instigation of A. F. of L, officials. These officials also tried to frame Berger. Sorger, a detective, the chief wit- ness, got his lying testimony all tan- gled up, which resulted in the dis- missal. ‘Worker Musician’ Concert on Jan. 14 On Saturday, Jan. 14, a concert for the benefit of the “Worker Mu- sician”, official organ of the Workers Music League, will take place at the Workers Music Center, 55 W. 19th St. The program will consist of songs rendered by different choruses, solo songs and instrumental numbers, string ensembles, mandolin group and many other features. This evening will mark the celebration of the ap- elect officers and to plan or- rive. pearance of the first proletarian Magazine devoted to music. Dressmakers for | United Struggle A. F.L. Heads Oppose Plan to Better } Conditions Ww YORK on Thursday night to disc present situation in the dress The central point discussed at| meetings wa question of| ted struggle of the dressmakers | the present sweatshop cond At the meeting of the Indus- 1 Union, a number of decisions} were made how to org the} dressmakers for united stru; at the meeting of the International, it was decided to get money out of} the dressmakers to fight against the united struggle. wo me reld both au At the meeting of the Industrial | Union it was decided 1) to begin a} drive in preparation for a mass| strike; 2) that every shop should at least one worker to the| and file organization commit- | tee; 3) that every organizer should | concentrate his activities on the| block and building in order to pre- pare the workers for the strike; 4) to strengthen the committees who are carrying on the work of organ- zing all workers of one jobber and| prepare them for a strike, and to| spread this work among the members| of the International so as to build one united force against the bosses; | | 5) to endorse the shop conference | arranged by the United Committee in Irving Plaza; 6) to intensify the work by organizing the rank and file) dressmakers for active participation | in the struggle. | The meeting also decided to issue a manifesto to the members of the} Industrial Union not in good stand- ing to make their dues good with} small payments. Decided that clean-| ers, finishers, examiners, pay $2, op-| erators $3, cutters and pressers $5. At the second meeting called by Hochman and Dubinsky which was held in Bryant Hall, the left wing group distributed a leaflet calling for united action and carried on a strug- gle at the meeting for united drives. These proposals made with the sup- port of a large number of rank and file workers, but Dubinsky, Hochman and Zimmerman decided against a united front and instead levied new taxes on the workers in order to help carry through the fake strike with the aid of professional organizers. The Industrial Union calls on the! dressmakers, members of the Inter- national, regardless of their views and opinions, not to pay these taxes which will be used in order to keep the ranks of the dressmakers split and over the heads of their leaders to unite with the members of the Industrial Union, the workers of the open shops for the purpose of de- veloping one united drive in prepa- ration for a united strike of all dressmakers. The Unity Committee which is car- rying on the preparations for this} struggle has headquarters at 140 W. 36th St. and has designated workers to take up complaints and to give advice to the workers of the open shops and International shops how to develop a struggle for better con- ditions. All workers employed in open srops are called upon to immediately re- port these shops to the Unity Com- mittee. Rent Strikers Sweep Onward; Cut Rents Picketing Today! (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) Bronx workers also held a victory block party Saturday to celebrate 10 per cent reductions in rents won by the strikers at 1408 and 1373 Frank- lin Ave, These tenants also forced their landlords to grant demands for no evictions and for recognition of the house and block committees and the Unemployed Council. Landlords in all four Bronx strikes are trying to settle with the respec- tive strike committees by granting the demands only in part. The com- mittees have turned down such set- tlements, with the result that the landlords will try to carry out their eviction threats this morning. Solidarity At 1392 Franklin, the landlord wanted to settle only with the house committee. He became angry and avowed he would go through with the evictions here this morning, when the committee refused to settle with- out including the block committee and the unemployed council. Mrs. Zeron, one of the ten: threatened with eviction at this ad- dress, is sick in bed. A child of Mrs, Frank, threatened with eviction from 1433 Charlotte Street, has a fever of 104 degrees. Olgin To Speak M. J. Olgin, editor of the Frei- heit, will speak Wednesday night at Ambassador Hall, 172nd St. and 3rd Ave, on the “Hunger March and What Next,” and “Rent Strikes.” The meeting will be under the auspices of the local Unemployed Council at 1400 Boston Road and the East and Middle Bronx Councils. Mulrooney Decree Is Blow at Car Owners, Raises Garage Profits NEW YORK.—Approximately ,30,- 000 auto owners in New York City, who cannot afford to pay garage rent, are prohibited from parking cars on the street by a decree issued by Police Commissioner Mulrooney. A short time ago this same Mulroo- ney, when appealed to in behalf of the garage owners, who wanted the police force to aid them drive cus- tomers into their garages, refused to do so. Probably the bid to Tammany was then too low, Anything being for sale under Tammany rule, it is obvious that Mass Funeral Today to Honor Clara Gabin NEW -— The folowing ement has been issued by Section of the Communist Party: “The death of Comrade Clara Ga- bin has meant the loss of an activ comrade and a militant the ranks of the Communist Party. | Comrade Gabin, who was a charter membmer of the Communist Party, was an outstanding fighter in the die Trades Workers Industrial nion. She tirelessly participated in all struggles of the union. “The members of Section 2 of the Communist Party wh were ac- quainted with Comrade Gabin, and who knew of her years of active par- ticipation in all ¢truggles of the workers, are deeply grieved over the loss of Comrade Gabin from our ranks. We pledge to make up for this loss by more energetic activity. “Workers of midtown Manhattan and members of the Communist Par- ty of Section 2 are called upon to come to the funeral which will take place from the headquarters of the N.T.W.LU., 131 W. 28th St. New York, at 2 P.M. Tuesday, January} 10. The body will be brought to the Workers Center at 9 a.m. on Tues-} day, and will lie in state on the sec- ond floor until the funeral takes place.” Union Holds Mass Funeral The body of Clara Gabin lay in state last night in the office of the Needle Workers Industrial Union, 131 W. 28th St, The funeral proces- sion today will pass the union office where a mass meeting in honor of Clara Gabin will then be taking place. Refuse Shelter for Militant Activities NEW YORK. — Despite the fact that he carried a “food and shelter” ticket from the Gibson Emergency Relief Committee, an unemployed worker was refused admission to the Man Builder for Homeless Men, 261 Greene St., because he was wearing a button of the International Pro- paganda Committee of Seamen and Harbor Workers. No shelter would be given him, he was told, unless he surrendered his button. On Jan, 7, the World-Telegram published a news item, asking its readers not to give money to unem- ployed workers on the street, but to hand them these “food and shelter” tickets instead. But evidently these tickets are no good if you happen to be a worker who believes in fight- ing for his class. This is only an- other instance of how militant work- ers are discriminated against by the relief authorities. The Unemployed Councils are carrying on a campaign against this and other forms of dis- crimination. Plan Broader Fight to End Mass Murder of Jews in Poland NEW YORK.— Another move to stop the mass murder of Jews by progroms in Poland was made Sun- day when 491 delegates representing 336 organizations assembled at Man- hattan Lyceum and adopted a re- solution of struggle for this purpose. Their fight also is to be directed against the Pilsudski government and for the defense of thousands of po- litical prisoners being tortured. by this government. The delegates elected a permanent committee of 23 to carry on. Many Polish, Ukranian and Jewish mass organizations were represented at the conference, which was called by the United Committee for Struggle A- gainst the Progroms in Poland. Among them were 61 branches of the L.W.O,, 22 clubs, 19 branches of the Workmen Circle and 26 “Landsman- shaftn.” Herbert Solow, well-known writer, reported for the committee. | Stage and Screen “THE LAND OF NAYIRI" (SOVIET ARMENTA) One of many lessons that the world proletariat and particularly oppres- sed nationalities can draw from the Russian Revolution, is the role it played in freeing Armenia from pro- groms, famine and destruction. If for a moment We should put aside all the achievements of the October Revolution, the existance of a Soviet Armenia alone with its progress, is a. living tribute to the revolution and Leninist policy for oppressed nation- alities, During the war, under the yoke of the Tzar, and particularly after its downfall, Armenia became a fertile land for imperialistic intrigues. The Armenian nationalists (dashnaks) had proclaimed a bourgeois republic, in reality a vassal state to English imperialism. But on November 29, 1920 the workers and farmers of Armerfia, with the help of the Red Army, drove out dashnaks and Eng- lish imperialists from Armenia and established a Soviet Republic. It is these historical events: fam- ine, progroms and oppression under the Tzar, and dashnaks, then sub- sequent progress under Soviet re- gime; new factories, electrification and general cultural advance- ment, that is pictured in vivid col- ors in this film “Soviet Armenia, the Land of Nayiri.” It will be shown for the first time in New York for the benefit of the Daily Worker and Panvor, on Friday, January 13, at Fifth Avenue Theatre, 28th St, and Broadway. This film prepared by Armenkino, has all the qualities that can com- pete with any western European mo- tion picture. Don’t miss it. . “KAMERADSCHAFT” THIRD WEEK AT ACME THEATRE The Acme Theatre is holding over “Kameradschaft” for a third week. rake in extra thousands of dollars, while many car owners will be forced the ante was raised and that, the garage owners will now be’ able to to sell their cars for junk to the second-hand car racketeers.' fighter in { { LR. T.COMPANY UNION PLOTS NEW | ATTACK ON MEN \Puts Out Old Story} “Cut Is Temporary” Men Know Better | NEW YORK.—“Why weren't the men represented when this wagé cu was proposed?” demanded the LR.T | employes at several of the Brother- | hood local meetings last week. | “Read your constitution.” said the | | President, in each case. These local | | presidents are the delecates to the | |eeneral committee, which does have | | constitutional power in this comnany | | union to make wage contracts without | j consulting the men. Runt. on the oth- | ler band. there is nothing to nrevent | their teking a vote on a pronosed ware cut, and svch votes heave heen | taken in the past. The IRT men! want one now. | Whose Fund? | Several local .president are busy cireulating the company’s latest nrop- | aganda, that the cut is not really a cut. because after the first two weeks’ proceeds from the cut are given to| the Gibson Committee. the rest will | be “placed in a fund.” What fund | and what for, the presidents don't | say. | They hold out the hope, which the men receive with well founded skep- ticism, that after a million dollars is piled up in this mysterious “fund” the wage cut will be revoked. The presidents even say this will happen about June. The IRT men meet this Statement with derision. The Brotherhood that serves them this way collects $1.50 from them| twice a year, and new men, especially, are bluffed by the Brotherhood and compeny officials (not much differ- ence) into signing up for a check | off of either 75 cents, $1.50 or $3 for | “sick and death benefits.” In addition the locals levy volun- | tary assessments for death benefits, Something New Plotted It has been divulged that the gen- eral committee did confer with the | management on wage cuts, but not | even the whole committee met for | that purpose. Only 6 or 8 went in and reported back, Various secret | meatings are going on cormected with | this general committee, and something new is being plotted. It also appears that the wage cut, announced by the feceivers as “10 to! 30 per cent” will really’ be 10 per, cent flat for the first two weeks, the | Gibson Committee to get that, and then will range from six to 30 per cen, scheduled in the various depart- | | colonial (in rea Lenin on War: 1 ADMIT MANY , are A Guide for Us in These Days] During the jast world carnage, Lenin, writing in the ‘Sotsial-Demo- | krat” (No, 44—August 23, 1925), said. “Capital has become interhational | and The been divided among a handful of | powers, powers success- ful in great plunder and in oppres- sion of nations. , monopolistic. world has great ie., . the three Asiatic states, China, Turkey, and Persia, which are now torn to pieces by the plun- derers waging a wa’ Japan, Ru In for ‘freedom’, ia, England and three Asiatic be called semi- y they are nine- tenths colonies), there are 360 mil- lion inhabitants, and their area fs 1414 million square kilometers (al- most one and one-half times the | area of the whole of Europe), | “Further, ngland, France and Germeny have invested abroad no less than 70 billion rubles. To re~ ceive a ‘lawful’ little profit irom | this pleasant sum, a profit exceed- | ing three billion rubles annually, there are in existence the million- aires’ national committees called | governments, equipped with armies | and navies, “placing” in the colo- nies and semi-color brothers of ‘Mr. Bi pacity of viceroys, consuls, ambas- sadors, all hinds of officers, priests, nd other leeches. “This is how in the epoch of the highest capitalist development, the plundering of almost a billion of the earth’s population by a handful of great powers is organized. No other organization is possible under capitalism. What Lenin said then is no less true today. Lenin’s, analyses remain basic revolutionary guides to action. | Toilers throughout the world under namely France. states, wh those ma; Figures Prove We s City-Wide NEW YORK.—Revelations made| by George Z. Medalie, United States attorney, prove conclusively the con- tention of the Daily Worker that thousands of votes fer Communist candidates were stol during the last election. Medalie gave the fig- ures for only seven election districts in the Fourth Assembly District, but but it. is safe to say that they are| typical of the city-wide vote-stealing engineered by Tammany with the aid of the republican machine, In the Sixth Election District the Communist candidate for U. S. Sen- ate got six votes, but was not cred- ited with a*single one. In the Fighth Election District the Communist vote for U. S. Senate, which was 14, was cut exactly in half. In the same dis- trict the vote for Congress was 15, but only five were counted. In the Ninth Election District ten Commu- | nist votes for U, S. Senate and 10 | for Congress were recorded on the voting machines, but not a single| | ohe was credited. In the 22d Election District, two votes out of seven for U. S. Senate were counted, and the | same for Congress. Many Socialist Party votes were also stolen. In some districts the re- publicans were also gypped, but in others, ery district for which Medalie gave figures, Tammany votes were made higher than they actually were. Medalie’s figures fail, however, to take into consideration many in- stances where Communist votes were not even recorded because the levers over Communist candidates were de- liberately jammed. He also makes no mention of the intimidation of Com- munist voters at many polling booths, or of the old game of “repeating”, the hiring by democrats and republicans of people to vote many times. the leadership of Lenin’s party—the Communist Party, will know how to} deal with imperialist plunderers, Workers of New York plan to as-j semble on January 21 in honor of} their great revolutionary leader, Man- | hattan and Bronx workers, will meet} at the Bronx Coliseum, 177th St. Brooklyn workers will gather at Ar- cadia Hall, 918 Halsey St. Interesting | programs are being arranged. ments to bring the wages even WNh those paid in similar departments of the BMT line. This may have some | bearing on “unification” plans of the | two systems and the Tammany gov- ernment. PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTIZERS Attention Comrades! OPEN SUNDAYS Health Center Cafeteria Workers Center — 50 E. 13th St. Quality Food Reasonable Prices a a BRIGHTON BEACH| Units 6, 9, 11 of the Newly Organized Section 11 Have arranged an AFFAIR JANUARY 15, 1933 3159 CONEY ISLAND AVE. | All Proceeds for the “Daily”. SPLENDID LARGE Hall and Meeting Roonis TO AIRE 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 DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 Bristol Street (Bet, Pitkin & Sutter Aves.) B’klyn PHONE: DICKENS 2-3012 Office Hours: 8-10 A.M., 1-2, 6-8 P.M. ANNOUNCEMENT Dr. Louis L. Schwartz SURGEON DENTIST Announces The removal of his office to larger quarters at 1 Union Square (8th Floor) Suite 803 Tel. ALgonquin 4-9805 FIVE PRISONERS SHOT DORCHESTER, N. B., Jan. 9.— Forty guards of the chester Prison, armed to the teeth with rifles, riot guns and revolvers, turned fire on 300 prisoners. Five of the con- victs were shot. Meagre details fil- tering through the censorship of Warden Goad indicate a_ typical prison “riot” in which unarmed pris- | oners demonstrated against oppres- sive and tions, intolerable prison condi- » their vote was raised. In ev-| employed Turkish worker who states cal 490 of Painters dopts Proposals for VOTE S STOLEN Relief of Its Jobless | NEW YORK.—The Unemployed Swindle | retier committee of Local 490 of the Brotherhood of Painters has adopted |@ number of proposals for the relief of the local’s unemployed members. Among them are: 1. All unemployed members are to register in the day room Mondays | from 5 to 8 p. m. and Thursdays from | from 2 to 5. 2. All members in need of relief will be taken by the relief commit- |tee to the home relief bureaus of their territories and aid demanded | for them in the name of the local. 3. The committee will visit the Emergency Work Bureau and demand. that members be put to work on various jobs at prevailing wage scales, The committee will also invite oth- er workers to participate in the re- Hef activities, | Turkish Workers’ Club Growing; Numerous Answers to Appeal | NEW YORK.—The organization of the Turkish Workers Club in this city is proceeding by leaps and bounds, | Numerous letters are being received ; at the present headquarters at 36 | Rivington st. One of the most interesting letters received this week comes from an un- his reasons. for visiting to join this militant organization, Wife Killed by Hunger “I have been reading the Daily. worker last week,” writes this worker, “and noticed you appeal to the Turk- ish workers to cooperate in the organ- ization of a Turkish Workers Club, “I am a Turkish worker, and have lived in this country the last 25 years. I have been unemployed for 18 ‘mos. My wife was starving to death, but nothing was done to save her until it was too late. As she was dying they took her to the Bellevue Hos- pital where she suffered terribly the last hours of her life, and died. “Please let me know when you start the meeting: THE BATTLE FRONT ABROAD NEW YORK.—A sign on a Nation- al Cash Register in the Service Cash Register Co., on 14th St. near 7th Ave., reads as follows: “$150 (domestic). Discount for ex- port.” AMUSEMENTS Held Over—3rd Big Week Ask Any of the Thousands Who Saw ‘Kameradschaft’ ‘Comradeship’ (All English Titles) See What A Mine Disaster Means! THE worxers Acme Theatre 14th Street and Union Square Cent. from 9 a.m.—Last show 10:30 p.m. 15 cents 9 A.M. to 1 P.M.—-Mon. to Fri. MIDNITE SHOW EVERY SATURDAY Br THE THEATRE GUILD Presents OGRAPHY A comedy by S, N. BEHRMAN THEATRE, 52d St., West of B'way 30. Mats. Thurs, & Sat. at 2:30 (IVIC_ REPERTORY 45.403 47. vs. 8:30 Mats. Wed. & Sat, 2:30 tALLIENNE, Director Tonight & Thurs. Evi eens LULIOM? Wed. Mat & Eve ‘ALICE IN WONDERLAND’ LAST 8 DAYS To Our Patrons ‘MEN and JOBS” Ast Soviet Sound Comedy Now Playing at the RKO CAMEO THEA. 42né Street and Broadway WILL NOT BE SHOWN IN ANY OTHER THEATRE IN NEW YORK CITY FOR AT LEAST THREE MONTHS. RKOMAYFAIR ‘nse Now “THE MUMMY” with BORIS KARLOFF Bway at HOSPITAL AND OCULIST PRESCRIP- TIONS FILLED AT 50% OFF White Gold Filled Frames Zyl Shell Frames ‘ Lenses Not Included Maahattan ptical Co. 122 HESTER ST, Betweon Bowery & Christie, N.Y. Open Daily from 9 to 7 Tel. Sunday 10 to 4 Orchard 4-0230 tatern’l Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 15th FLOOR All Work Done Under Versonal Care af DR. JOSEPHSON Send in your bundle orders for Lenin Memorial edition of the the special Ninth Anniversary- Daily Worker Jan, 14. Garment District WORKERS PATRONIZE CENTURY CAFETERIA 154 West 28th Street Pure Food Proletarian Prices every City Phone—EStabrook 8-1400 [ CAMP NITGEDAIGET BEACON, N, ¥. The Only Workers Camp OPEN ALL YEAR—HEALTHFUL FOOD, REST, RECREATION SPORT AND CULTURE All Winter Comtorts—Steam Heat—Hot and cold runiing water in $12.50 PER WEEK Automobiles leave daily from COOPERATIVE RESTAURANT, 2700 BRONX PARK, EAST ‘ Brooklyn r Brownsville Proletarians SOKAL CAFETERIA 1689 PITKIN AVENUE Mott Haven 9.8719 DR. JULIUS JAFFE Surgeon Dentist 401 EAST 140th STREET (Cor. Willis Ave.) room Camp Phone—Beacon 731 FRANCIS LEDERER & DOROTHY GISH in AUTUMN CROCUS The New York and London Success MOROSCO THEATRE, 45th St. W. of B’way Eves. 8:40. Mats. Wed. and Sat., 2:40 8X0 JEFFERSON 1 & ® NOW WILL ROGERS in “TOO BUSY TO WORK” Added KARLO! Feature (FIRST SHOWING IN THE U.S. A.) “THE LAND OF NAIRI” (SOVIET ARMENIA) Armenkino Production January 13, 1933, at 7:30 P. M. FIFTH AVENUE THEATRE 28th Street and Broadway ADMISSION 30 CENTS FOR THE BENEFIT OF THE DAILY WORKER AND PANVAAR LENIN MEMORIAL Coupon 30 Cents Meeting t SAT, JAN. 21, 1933 7:30 P.M. t MANHATIAN and BRONX BRONX COLISEUM EAST 177TH STREET BROOKLYN ARCADIA HALL 918 HALSEY STREET (mear Broadway) p4 uspices: Communist VBA. District No. 2, 52 st. ee %