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i | 1 _PAGE Two ih OATLY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, JA Plan Trade Union Unity Council Work The development of the class struggle unions in New York City has reached the stage where the question of the coordination of their efforts and activities through the Trade Union Unity Council assumes an im- portance as never before. The ac- tivities of the Council has in the past Suffered from: 1. Inadequate definition tasks and functions. . 2. The separatism of the differ- ent unions as they develop into mass organization As a result of this condition the Council has not been able to act as the center of not only policy but or- ganizational leadership, and on the| other hand the affiliated organiza- tions, developed a. tendency of com- ihg to the Council when they had difficulties but not reciprocating when the Council called upon them in support of struggles of other un- ionized workers outside of their trade. Of late the tendency towards sep- ratism on the part of the different | ions has developed to such a point | hat it becomes a danger to the ap- plication of the class struggle line whole. Not only we a elopment, of separati cording industrial tenden trade. | of its as a by shops there is th entating not of broad struggles the trade as chole but of remaining at politics hop by shop SPECTIVE Ww s methods of prac- ho ly. that ical apy ur different last 18 should be | become repr j the Council proposes for NEW YORK—The Trade Union militant unions and opposition grou! themselves, are in the proc more clearly the organizatio: draft resolution was adopted by printed herewith. al form: th of discussion of a draft resolution defining Unity Council, representing all the ps in other unions and the uni of the T.U.U. TU. s and activ e bureau of the further emphasized and particularly so the rooting of the union in the shops, nevertheless, it is essential to point out at this time that the con- tinued economic pressure upon the workers and the treach@rous policies | of the A. F. of L. leadership, con- tinued -wage cuts, and general wor- sening of conditions, have produced such a ontent that we must more and more orientate upon: 1. Sweeping movements erent trades. 2. Practical concentration of for- | ces in tackling the large scale shops. 3. Concrete. material and organi- zational support to those unions that are still weak, but operate in basic industries, metal, marine, tran- sport and chemical, where big capit- alists are strongest 4. The linking of the workers or- | ganized in trade unions with the | movement of the unemployed by in- lustry and in the neighborhoods. | 5. To help the different unions to of the differ- ties in their industr: o of the Negro workers. PROPOSALS In order to be able to realize the j above points of policy. the Buro of considet tion and discussion by the executive boards, councils and leading com- mittees of all organizations affiliated, the following: 1. That all services that are com- mon to all unions be centralized un- in the @ particularly der supervision of the Council, This > include for the present: (a) All phases of defense activity (b) The raising of means and upport through the affiliated organ- i for our unions in the basic industries such as metal, marine transport, chemical. 2, The activities of the different unions in relation to the struggle of the unemployed in industry and neighborhood. 3. The linking up of concentration upon certain trades or factories with the class struggle organizations in the neighborhoods and these fac- tories. In order to realize this it is pro- posed that on the question of defense ctivities as well as the unemployed movement sefarate conferences be called of those involved in this work under the leadership of the council. As far as the support to the unions in the basic industries which is of an urgent nature, it is proposed all unions affiliated outside of those in the basic industries pay to the Coun- cil: lc for every | and 5c on the first dollar for initiation and 10¢c on each additional dollar of initiation fee per member. REPRESENTATION New elections of delegates to the Trade Union Unity Council shall be held within four weeks by this ques- tion being put as a special order of 25c collected in dues, business at the coming membership meeting of all the affiliated organi- zations. If necessary a speaker from the Buro of the Council will be sup- plied for such meeting. The basis of representation proposed by the Buro is as follows: Needle Trades each 200 member and knitgoods 1 delegate for 50 members in the mass oppositions or other trade sections and 1 delegate for each op- position group that has less than 50. The same holds good for the Shoe Workers. Food Workers:—1 delegate for every 100 or major fraction thereof from the cafeteria, clerks, hotel and restaurant section, and 1 delegate for every 50 of the bakers or opposition groups that have less than 50 mem- bers. The same for Furniture, Laundry, and Office Workers. Metal Workers:—1 delegate for every 25 members. All trade sections to be represented by at least 1 dele- gate. The same with the opposition groups. This applies to Marine, Transport and Chemical. Large organized shops of more than 100 workers shall elect one delegate for each hundred workers, directly from the shop meeting. Shop groups that operate in open shops of 200 or more workers shall have one dele- gate elected at the shop group meet- ing. Oppositions: — All oppositions that have not been listed under the head- ing of these industries to have 1 de- legate for each 25 members or 1 de- legate for each local union group of less than 25 members. delegate for each Rent Strike Wave Sweeps Onward; Te rike || Bring ‘CONTINUE a ON PAGE TWO) orce the reduction of rent by 25 y nt, with all the ‘kers behind A sta nent rent dat rence to be 6-28. along wit! >f and Unempk Victory ave the W mples ights. Each of the of the | trike comm n to} srganize a house to go out on strike The Wo. national Relief is rgamizing the relief campaign. Struggle Spreads Meanwhile workers throughout the | ty are waging fi Several hundred sympathetic wor! the e ‘ve. ving their cars idewalk and demonstrating solice attempted to disperse the rtowd. Joe Lubitz of the Unemploy- d. Council was arrested and later of the a member | of the in front eleased; he was sass picket line “use. What a Court Counts For One of the evicted tenants, Joe | fartin, a war veteran, had an or-| ev—which was deliberately ignored -from Judge Husberg of the Muni- pal Court, the Bronx, entitling him ‘© remain until January 17. ‘Three more tenants are to be evic- ed from 1392 Franklin Ave. early oday, according to the landlord. That is, the ‘landlord hopes to evict them. “But, he'll have a swell ance,” remarked one worker sar- stically. Hundreds of workers will hon hand this Tuesday morning to iupulse the evictions. Five workers were arrested, women and children were beaten up in the tourse of an eviction at 226 Barrett Street, Brownsville, yestreday. _ marshall came with police to evict Davis, chairman of the house com~- mittee. A group of workers interfered with the marshall’s purpose; he call- ed for an additional police reserve which came by motorcycle. The cops began to club the workers, hitting women and children. Gerber, and Hendy, a Negro, were among those arrested. Their trial is to come up today at the court at Penn: and Liberty Avenues. Irwing Dold, arrested when police broke into an apartment from the room of which he was speaking yesterde gicketing the rent strike at 340 ‘Wat- cing St., Brownsville, will also have a hearing in court today ‘A demonstration call has been is- by @ conference of workers or- ‘ganizations of Bronwsville, East met “York and Crown Heights. Worker urged to demonstrate at abpal ployed Councils tomorrow at 1 Help oust Supervisor Miss Wal- ‘and Mr. Rock for terrorizing the ‘hemployed! Demand the removal of 4olice and gangsters from the Home lief Bureau! Put a stop to starva- ises—and fake investiga- ons! Mobilize at nearest Unemploy- Council! (See City Events on Page “Daily Worker). Twenty tenants are out on strike 1045 Brvant Avenue. Pickets in numbers were beaten up and d off yesterday. But the strik- ‘returned with increased forces, by a representative of the Fast Unemployed Council, smashed gh the police and maintained picket line. evictions of unemployed work- @ 15 per cent reduction of rents, ) recognition of the Charlotte St. Committee and the Unemploy- ouncil of 1400 Boston Road! were the demands won by the ints of 1525 Charlotte Street as evictions at 2027 Monterey , the Bronx, were halted by A demonstration against at this house is to be The house is near the ‘of Tremont and Third Aves. e | furniture of a worker evicte? Al Lenin Urged Fight Against AFL Misleaders |) Two working class representatives | oogragtie away at the very vitals of L. officialdom, last week of labor-fakerdom They were The tried to ans er, put on | e, before the Senate Com- | ring on the Black Bill. The | f American imperialism who | rited the traditions of Gom- conditioned addition y, are to have | and defended by | arch-traitor of the | Our comrade, William F. | who spoke before the Sen-| te Committee put forth the message | Lenin:—‘Workingmen the wor! over are breaking with their betray ers, with their Compers and their | Scheidmanns,” (Lenin in his “Le! ter To The American Workingmen, August 20th, 1918). | | ge Lenin memorial meetings for Saturday will depict Lenin and his relation to all-exploited masses. How | Lenin, though dead, still lives on! | There are many great historical scenes to be enacted, portrayals of the many phases of toilers struggles in old Russia. “... we are certain,” wrote Com- rade Lenin, “that we are invincible, for humanity will not emerge from perialistic massacre broken in spirit, it will triumph. Ours was the first country to break the chains of imperialistic warfare. We broke them with the greatest sacrifice, but they are broken,” To Comrade Lenin, the labor- lackeys of imperialism, the Compers, Cxxens, Wolls, were the most treach- erous foes of the proletarian armies outside the young Soviet Republic. Continuing, in the same letter, Lenin States: “We stand outside of imperialistic dusties and considerations, we have raised the banner of the fight for the complete overthrow of imper- jal'sm for the world. “We are in a beleaguered fort- | ress, so long as no other interna- tional socialist revolution comes to our assistance with its armies. But these armies exist, they are strong- er than ours, they grow, they strive, | they hecome more invincible the longer imperialism with its brutal- ities continues, Workingmen the world over are brevking with their betrayers, with their Compers their Schneidermanns, Ine’ itably labor is approaching Communistic, Bolchevistic tactics, is preparing for the proletai'an revolution, ... | We are invincib'e, The proletarian revolution is invine'ble.” Here in New York the local section f of the American proletarian army | will pay its revolutionary respects to | their great leader—Lenin. They will | rally Saturday at 7:30 p. m. in two places. Those of Brooklyn and Long Island will go to Arcadia Hall, 918 Halsey St., and those of Manhattan and the Bronx will go to the Bronx Coliseum, at 177th St. at 481 East 171st St., the Bronx, was replaced by 250 workers. A strike at 1566 Washington Avenue was sct- tled, with a 10 per cent reduction of rent. Because she insisted that her rooms be painted, an old lady who had lived in the same house for the last 18 years was evicted from 313 Krimmins Avenue, East Side Strike Tenants at llth and Avenue A picketed all day yesterday in mass under the leadership of the Down- town Unemployed Council, 96 Avenue B. They call for a large turn-out this morning and afternoon. The Jandlord has served eviction notices to almost everybody in the large building, and some of the evictions are scheduled to take place today. East Side workers turned out in hundreds to an cpen air meeting in support of the strikers late yester- day. Other meetings are to be held today, in addition to a large indoor mass meeting next Friday, 8 p.m. at 122 Second Avenue. More and more workers in th‘- cont'on ~ moving AMALGAMATED | Strike, 5 | before the season |_ ‘The pageantry planned for the two | to register the girls in the union? jsion for | sent the committee to the shop helped Bernstein to-register the girls | j tell us that on account | stzikes, why he helps the bosses cut | the wages, and why helps the boss- es throw the workers out of the shor \MEMBERS CHARGE HILEMAN SELLOUT Give Cases i in Recent Strikes ; Demand No Secret Settlement NEW YORK.—The Rank and File Committee in the Amalgamated Clothing Workers have statement sharply crit man leadership for treache: the present strikes and recent strikes. The membership say in their state- me “Before we were called out on we were promised that we would have a real strike against the | bosses for better conditions in the | trade and for a 25 per cent increase in wages. Why was the strike declared rted, when most of the shops were closed? “2. Why was the 25 per cent in- cre: in wages not mentioned in the leaflet? 3. When the workers of Krasny shop came down on strike, why were they sent back to the shop by our officials to finish out the work? “4. Why did the boss of the Gar- field, N. J., Mr. J. Victor, receive the strike committee with open arms and tell them that everything is ar- ranged with our nager Bernstein and that they can go up to the shop to have a meeting with his workers? “5. When the strike committee came to South River, where the workers were in a. bloody battle a few months ago with the bosses, gangsters and police, the same boss Berman, in front of whose shop a 9-year old child of a striker was killed on the picket line, this same Berman-geked the committee up to his house and told them that ever; thing is arranged with our manager Bernstein. He explained that he had not started the season, but he called in the workers and told the commit- tee that they could go to his shop “6—Jack Reisler, boss of the R. and P. shop in South River, N. J. in- make sure that there was no provi- an increase in wages and a in the union. “7. Why do the officials keep the cutters separated from us? This is done in order to send the cutters back to work, after which our officials will of the cut- ters, they are compelled to send us also back to work. “8—The strikers mus! | why he betrayed the tailo ask Hillman their “The strikers must ask wha of a settlement our officials made with the bosses, that they are so eager to drive the workers into the union, and why strike when a sett) ment is already made? “Don't Iet the officials of our local and the Hillman gang betray our strike. We must fight against our of- ficials for making deals with the bos es to establish the Amalgamated con- trol in the shops, to permit the bos: es to carry through wage cuts, in r turn for which the bosses will collect dues and taxes for the Hillman ma- chine, ‘The Rank and File Committee de- cloves that the conditions in the trade are urgeara'N2, and in order to im- prove our conditions, we must have a real strike led by the workers, and not by the bosses. “We demand that the union gives out a leaflet for the 25 per cent in- crease in wages to all shops in town and out of town. We demand that the union calls every shop to a shop meeeting where each shop should elect a strike and settlement committee. No settlement should be made without the shop committee and must be ap- proved by the workers of the shop.” NEW YORK.—The Sixth Avenue Grievance Committee Tuesday after- noon through a committee of siv forced the Active Employment Ag- ency, 6th Ave. and 24th St to give back the $3 fee paid by James Slade, sisted on reading the leaflet first to | nd | WHAT'S ON-- Tuesday OPEN MEETING tonight at 8:30 p. m. at Red Spark Athletic Club, 333 Sheffield Ave., Bro All workers in neighbor- hood invited. Auspices Unit 5, Section 8, GP. CLASS in Dramatics at Concourse Work- ers Club, 1349 Jerome Ave. 8 p. m. (Newark, N. J.) LECTURE at 8:30 p. m. tonight at Jack lon Club, 347 Springfield Ave., Newark. Speaker: Mrs. Marjorie Smith Walker, widow of the late Ryan Walker who @ed in Moscow recently. Subject: ‘One Year in the Soviet Union.” Admission 10 cents. Wednesday (Paterson, N. J.) MASS DEMONSTRATION at 10 a. m. on dnesday morning at County Courthouse, rson, N J. to demand moratorium on all county debts and interests and relief for the unemployed. All workers of Passaic County urged to attend demonstration for these demands. Medical Workers Hit the Lay-offs Greef ays: “No Pay Cuts, Just Less Pay” NEW YORK.—A mass meeting to protest against the insufferable con- ditions imposed upon hospital help and against the vicious discrimination being shown foreign-born and Negro workers was held Friday night at Irving Plaza, by the Hospital Work- ers League, Nearly the entire 1,200 city hospital employees who were dismissed since January 1 were foreign-born, and there was discrimination even within this discrimination. In the Harlem Hospital experienced Negro nurses were dismissed in spite of the fact that they were native born and therefore citizens. According to Wilks who was a member ‘of the delegation that went to ‘see Commissioner Greef two weeks ago, (Gr@ef having what even the “Times” fermed “undue police protection”) to protest against the wage and personnel cuts, the Com- | missioner said, “Wages were not cut. Workers were merely rehired for less wages.” (1) Porters in city hospitals are used in operating rooms as assistants to | surgeons, doing work that should be | done by trained nurses. Due to over- crowding, cots (not beds) for the sick are placed in ward aisles and in cor- ridors. Patients who are not “too sick” are taken care of by inexperi- enced student. nurses. The nurses work twelve hours a day. The expenditure for meals has gone down from 32% cents to 20 cents per meal. Work has doubled and in some cases tripled due to the decrease in the number of employ- ees, the placing of an inefficient per- sonnel, and the rise of infection in wards. These results of the so-called “economy” program of Commissioner Greef were thoroughly denounced by Morgan of the Council of Foreign Born. “Economy,” he said, “accord- ing to the dictionary, is the preven- tion of waste. This economy pro- tram is economy only for the bosses. It preserves their profits but it neg- lects the sick and the dying. There is the real, the criminal waste! The destruction of human beings. All nurses are forced to join the American Nurses Association. It was the A.N.A, officials who instigated the drive against foreign-born workers, The League will continue its at- tempt to organize hospital help of every kind. It is at, present obtain- ing signatures to a petition to be placed befere Commissioner Greef whieh demands (1) Reinstatement of all dismissed city-hospital employees without discrimination. (2) Abolition of the last wage-cut. (3) Immediate enactment of an 8 hour day for all hospital employees, BANKS CLOSE IN 3 CITIES DAVENPORT, Ia., Jan, 16.—The bank crisis swept three Ilinnis towns today, with the result that the cities of Rock Island, Moline and Fast Moline will go on a bank “holiday” of two weeks, The proclamations with- holding the depositors’ money and shielding the banks for this period and for which he had never received Boks -mployment. were issued by the Mayors of the three towns, r NU ony AY, 1933 eee Typograph ‘A Indapendnt Newspaper, headline from Hewson’s ining three lies. The Communists do not menace the union but fight for better condi- tions. The rank and file’ opposition to Hewson’s sell out policies is of all political beliefs. The members did not rally at Hewson’s call, only about 80 officials and their hench- men, a socialist and an arbitrator rallied. Lower picture is invitation admitting to the meeting. Meeting of Big 6 Official Clique Attacks Members Organization Problems in a Foundry (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) to prove local group is agent of Sta- lin.” 80 Out of 11,090. About 80, of a membership of 11,- 000, took part in the Red-baiting af- fair, at which foreigners, Reds and everyone and anyone who opposed the Hewson machine were “denounced as a menace threatening its (the union’s) very existence.” The report as given in this yellow Tag sounds like a translation of one of Ham Fish’s bad dreams. It names nomames, it produces no “docu- mentary evidence” beyond the repro- duction of an application card for the Printing Workers Industrial Union, and lies its way through a typical “Red scare” story of two columns length. Socialists In Conspiracy. From reliable sources it is reported that one the “baiters” present was none other than the kid himself, Ed- ward Cassidy, erstwhile candidate for assemblyman on the Socialist Party ticket, who told of the “Communists wrecking the needle trades unions”! This is the same Cassidy who on the floor of the union meetings weeps for the Printers League (bosses’ as- sociation) and tells the members to take a wage cut or the work will go out of town! /Another arch-reactionary {present was a guy by the name of Perkins who hadn’t been to a union meeting since John Delaney, whom Tam- many Hall rewarded with the job of Commissioner of Transportation, was president of “Big Six”. That was 27 years ago! And at the last union meeting he made a motion to give Heygon a vote of confidence! Even Hi mn, embarrassedly of course, had to turn it down. The Wage Cutter Also. One of the two “neutral” arbitrat- ors on the newspaper scale was there in all his “glory”, an old guardist by the name of W. N. P. Reed who has not worked at the trade since 1916, and who, as he said in his speech, “is always interested in union af- fairs, anyway,” and that he co-oper- ated with the foreman of the Mc- Graw-Hill chapel in pointing out at least 20 Reds in the shop. He also Publuhed Be-Weebly ond Dedicated tothe Enlightenment of me MEMBERS RA RALLY 70 SUPPORT UNION IN FIGHT ON MENACE OF COMMUNISM Lying Headline from owen s Journal ical Forum vabers Be Tree ton ome Group Meets to Devise Ways te Bring an End to the Rile of Moscow Within Ranks of Big Six Dae, es bd hl a Ga ‘Agan! of Stein~Sceater ‘tt Caesrevs Tearing. at the Vial of te Protect Your Union! ANTI-COMMUNIST MEETING Sunday, January 8, 1923, at 2.30 P.M, HOTEL PIERREPONT 55 Pierrepont Street Brooklyn Clark Street or Borough Hall Subway Station BRING THIS NOTICE Sd outlined a program of, attack on the opposition, which embraced Doak’s policy of deportation, We have quite a complete picture, n, of this gathering of reaction- Ss, stool pigeons, typical Tammany Hall politicians—and a socialist! These enemies of the members of Big Six are now draping themselves in the flag and shouting “Save the union from the Reds!” The present administration of Big Six is making a dying attempt in this way to cover up its betrayals of the membership for the past twenty months. There is to be an election in May! th Terror Against Members. The Amalgamation Party has con- sistently and determinedly fought in the interests of the rank and file of the union, and because it has aroused the membership against the Hewson administration which has very effect- ively co-operated with the employ on the two scales, it is now the ob- ject of this attack, which will no doubt include further and more or- ganized suppression at union meet- ings, vilification and the |introduc- tion of a reign of terror. At the last meeting already there was appointed a gang of “assistant sergeants-at arms”, to prevent the militants from participating in the business of the union. Quotas in Drive for Daily’; Results to Be Printed Semi-Weekly The following are the quotas for the various districts of the mtry in the Daily Worker Drive for $35,000: — District PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTIZERS 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 tntern’l Workers (Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUR ith FLOOK AU Work Uoue Under Personal Cary 4 PR JOSEPRSON HOSPITAL AND OCULIST PRESCRIP- TIONS PILLED AL 50% OFF sto $1.00 White Gold Filled Frames Zyl Shell Frames Lenses Not Included Maaghattan %Dptical Co. 122 HESTER ST. Between Bowery & Christie, N.¥, Dpen Daily from 9 to 7 Sunday 10 to 4 ay Orchard 4-0230 I. W. 0, Branches, Ciubs aad Other Fraternal Organizations MAKE SOME MONEY WITHOUT ANY INVESTMENT Secretaries Are Urged to INQUIRE «&! GARRISON FILM DiSTRIBUTOR: 72—ith Ave., Room 810 New York City THIS OFFER HOLDS GOOD ONLY FoR THIS MONTH the Attention Comrades OPEN SUNDAYS Health Center Cafeteria Workers Center — 50 E. 13th St. Quality Food Reasonable Prices Garment District WORKERS PATRONIZE CENTURY CAFETERIA 154 West 28th Street Pure Food : Proletarian Prices Mott Haven 9-8749 DR. JULIUS JAFFE Surgeon Dentist Organization Comm. Refutes Charge by Officials of “Big 6” (Statement of Executive Committee of Organization Committee for a Printing Workers Industrial “The Typo: ed for m bs backed by the administration of that Union has _ issued the following charge: That the Organfzation Com- mittee for the Printing Workers In- dustrial Union is a dual organiza- bers of ; tion and is attemp /ng to compete with “Big Si This is absolutely con- trary to the facts. This publication charges that there are thirt members of “Big Six” who have join- ed our Committee. This is untrue. In fact, our Constitution prohibits mem- bership to workers belonging to any other union. Over fifty per cent of those working in the printing industry are totally unorganized. The books of the cx- isting unions are closed against them. These workers are left to the mercy of unscrupulous employers who cut wages, increase hours and speed them up beyond human endurance. There was only one alternative, and that was—organization. Is this a crime? The officials of “Big Six” are intent upon preventing the unorganized from organizing. They hope to keep the workers divided, thus helping the employers to use non-union competi- tion as an excuse for cutting wag.e. In the unorganized shops wages have been slashed over 50 per cent. In the union shops wage cuts als took place and working standards wwe lowered. Unemployment is wide- Spread. The failure of the officials of “Big Six” to organize the entire industry in this city has worked against the organized as well as the unorganized. The Organization Committee for a Printing Workers Industrial Union has already made appreciable prog- ress in the short period of its exist- ence. It has prevented a five per cent wage cut in the bookbinding indus- shop committees have been form- ed in a number of unorganized shops. This organization is pledged to sup- port all efforts of organized labor to improve working conditions. We of- fer the organized crafts every assist- ance in times of strike or lock-out. Our aim is to help those who are at present unorganized and helpless. This attack upon us is altogether unfair and uncalled for. It is being used by the officials of “Big Six” to cover up their own incompetence and disloyalty to their membership. 3 SO. AFRICA POLICE FIGHT 300 BLOEMFONTEIN, South Africa. Jan. 16--Ani-government demon- strations ‘developing in the present election campaign resulted yesterday in the arrest of one man and several FOOD WORKERS - JOBLESS COUNCIL WINS BACK PAY a Newly Organized But Forces Relief in Many Cases NEW YORK.—The Food Wurkers Unemployed Council, though recently | established, has scored a number of | victeries Some 75 cases were reported to the council within the last three weeks, and the following is a typical result: A committee elected from the mem- bership of the Council took the case of an unemployed grocery clerk to the Boreum St., Brooklyn, Home Relief Bureau for immediate action. fter a lengthy “sweet” talk it was ised action within a day, ‘ince minittee ma them under- stand that if no action were taken a larger committe> would come back. Win Back Wages One of the important phases of the Food Workers Unemployed Commit- yp {tee is the fight to win wages denied | the wor s by employers after they have hired them through ‘agencies, "/ exploited thit1 for a week and fired }them to hire some one else. The | Food Workers Unemployed Council has collected over $200 wages due to | such workers, in eases which the state labor dep: ent and Legal Aid So- ciety refused to take up. Among the collections made are: $7 for two days pay due a kitchen worker from the Ar and Navy Club: $5 each for six waiters at the Steuben Restaurant, extra pay for New Years work for which the boss wanted to pay only .4) cents; $23.50 for a kitchen worker }Trom Park Restaurant; $60 for the chef and $20 for the \itchen man, in both caseS two weeks’ wages from the bakery and restaurant on Third Ave., between 76th and 77th Sts. Legal Aid Added é0 Loss Fer Charles Brown, a 60-year-old AFL. member, the council collected $17.50 for two weeks’ pay after the boss fired him as being too old. The cook at the Square Cafeteria was owed $20 wages; he went to the Legal Aid which took 50 cents from him and took no action jor thr weeks. The Food Workers Unemploy- ed Committee got him his pey in five minutes. There is much unemployment in the food <ndustry, especially among young and single workers. injured when police attempted to protect former Supreme Court judge T. Roos from a hostile crowd of 3,000. AMUSEMENTS Beginning Today— 3 Days Only! ZWEI MENSCHEN (TWO SOULS) Complete English Dialogue Titles. This picture was classed by the unanimous American press as one of the outstanding films of 1932, TRE worsens Acme Theatre ith Street and Union Square Cont. from 9 Last show 16:30 p.m. 15 cents 9 A.l to 1 P.M.—Mon. to Fri. MIDNITE SHOW EVERY SATURDAY A MASTERPIECE OF FILMCRAFT! (IVIC_REPERTORY 11 st-aon Av. WA, 9% 500, $1, $1.50 Eys. 8:89 Mats. Wed. & Sat. 2:30 EVA LE GALLIENNE, Director Tonight , Wed, Mat & Eve “ALICE IN WONDERLAND” B THE THEATRE GUILD Presents A comedy by S. N, BEHRMAN GUILD THEATRE, 52d St., West of B'way BiG NIGHT MAXIME ELLIOT’S Thea., 39th F. of B'way Eves. 8:40; Mats. Wed. and Sat. 2:40 ‘The GROUP THEATRE presents se Direction of “Roxy” NOW AT POPULAR PRICES ‘and spectacular nd @ new type: stage show [7 of stage show a.m. tolp.m. 35¢ 1t06p.m.55¢ Mon.to Fri. FRANCIS LEDERER & DOROTHY GISH IN AUTUMN CROCUS The New York and London Success MOROSCO THEATRE, 45th St, W. of Bway Eves. 8:40. Mats. Wed. Thurs. & Sat., 2:10 Bway & RKO CAMEO tx’ é. |Now MATTO-GROSSO (GREEN JUNGLE HELL) First Real Sound Picture from Brazil Bway at 6)ND nkoMAYFAIR fin'st 2Wwees “THE MUMMY” with BORIS KARLOFF RKO JEFFERSON "% st. @|NOW. “THE MATCH KING” with WARREN WILLIAM “UPTOWN NEW YORE” with JACK OAKIE Added Feature ‘eeouT 401 BAST 140th STREET (Cor. Willis Ave.) Brooklyn For Brownsville Proletarians SOKAL CAFETERIA 1689 PITKIN AVENUE Classified ADMISSION: 35 Cents, With This Coupon 30 Cenis LENIN "MEMORIAL } SAT, aN, 21, 1933 7:30 P.M, MANHATTAN and BRONX BRONX COLISEUM EAST 177TH’ STREET BROOKLYN ARCADIA HALL 918 HALSEY STREET (near Broadway) Auspices: Communist Party, U.S.A, District No. 2, 52 E, 13th St. FURNISHED ROOM WANTED Downtown. Write J. P., care Daily Worker. SPLENDID LARGE Hall and Meeting Rooms TO AIRE Perfect for BALLS, DANCES LECTURES, MEETINGS. Ete IN THE New ESTONIAN WORKERS HOME 27-29 W.115th St., N.Y.C. Phone UNiversity 4-0165 City Phone—EStabrook 8-1400 RESTAURANT, 2700 CAMP NITGEDAIGET BEACON, N. Y. : The Only Workers Camp OPEN ALL YEAR—HEALTHFUL FOOD, anon RECREATION SPORT AND CULTU All Winter Comforts—Steaza ieat—Hot ie pee running water in ~ every room $12.50 PER WEEK Automobiles leave daily from COOPERATIVE — Camp Phone—Beacon 731 BRONX PARK ane '