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Strengthened As New: Union Cooks Walkout 7 Ouestion of Wage N.Y. Hotel Strike [s/15,000 New York Taxi Drivers Strike Continued on Page 2) % rikers Unanimous On(|C. P. Members in A.¥.L. |¢ Will Meet Today DAILY WORKER. NEW YORK, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1 drivers on account of race, or color. creed Th eld at wh LaGuardia Men Disruptive | Ca he GUTTERS OF NEW YORK , By DEL 934 GRO By JERRY | i! 1 | ARNOLD | (Batting for Si Gerson) Papa Says O. K. DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet, Peete ced Setter Aves. Breettys PHONE: DICKENE $2008 Often Weer: 1 AM. 1-6, 68 FM 1378 ST.MICHOLAS AVE® 1690 LEXINGTON AVE. at ITO" ST.KY at 106th ST.NY | Increases ] ITTLE indeed did the National Student League think, when ee ere ae y they voted to incorporate sports in their program of activi- hpcneweag Boney ov THE | ties, that their action would arouse the enthusiasm of the See Me I the aim of hands of the Mayor and “settle the permitted to use that pusillan: self” has the temerity to parents of the college youngsters. Goodness knows (if I am imous expression), the N.S.L.| | boys and girls have trouble enough getting their dads and mas , r and his group of supporters to quit nagging them for having joined the N.S.L. and “taking 106 EAST 4TH STREET ic xc lt Sela waners. tt § Sh W k | break up any attempt at organization | their minds off. their studies,”* a MMe Fawr Ave, MY. ©. "ja broken a fresh spirit ,l MOE WOPKELS | wnich is necessary to win the strike. | So when a “father of three | 28%, those boys running around | Fhews: Tompbine Seare ¢-soe7 peeading among the st = » |He ranted continually against Com- |, | the court like I'used to when I was | vahnas ‘Office Phone: ma ecitiued . ] , | munists, and advised that the strik- |. students and a worker him- | a kid, I'm telling you it did my | Ottmritte 65-1100 Rstabrook 8.2578 Peat of ali UNITY ON DaASIS| ers piace the whole matter-into the | heart good. | would send the strikers Without bettering the’ conditio: “Was repudiated by the mass of work- ers when it was brought to light at of Boston Decision |“ NEW YORK.—Over three thousand strike in a legal way.’ | But in spite of this. .red-beiting, ole, of the Taxi Workers Union, was given a big hand when he took the floor and said; “I am: proud: that I WHAT A WHALE OF A DIFFERENCE A FEW STRIKERS MAKE! Those cab companies who a few weeks break all rules of parents’ reia- tionship to their children and seat himself down and write a letter to the “Daily” hailing with joy the new trend in the student move- “I liked the way they practiced. I've never seen this here ‘championship I. W. O. team’ but I’m willing to bet | part of next year’s wages that the| N.S. L, will rip ‘em wide open. oes ROR DR. 8S. L. SHIELDS Surgeon Dentist 9014 WALLAVE AVE. corner Allerton Avenue kers. ‘The | $H0e workers attended the Arcadia | am organized. We are the ones who| ago “considered the matter closed,” now feel that “this reece ee hk ee WOULD appreciate it very much MOT THAVEN 0-874 yqfarious meetings of strikers. | Hall meeting, Thursday night, called|are fighting for the nickels.” aaa son”? eaves me gaaplny. m is too if you would print this letter. I ontract, however, has not come up| ional Co-ordinating Com-|~ A tremendous ovation was given | Should be séftled by discussion. good to be true. ink it only fair to the NSI. that DR. JULIUS JAFFE shefore the body of strikers for a vote. the United -Shoe andj{io Sam Nessin,. representing. th } 5a . + SR Sade ars But here's:the letter—in black and ‘Daily’ readers in New York and “xt a meeting of the general aie © Workers Union |Trade Union Unity . Council o = ; lucene eg ecb till we get | elsewhere should know that here is Surgeon Dentist~ ommittee held Thursday night a e a™statement of a|Greater New York, when he told the | Id Ai = M k slscngiecs (ty one student organization that can||]/401 EAST 140th STREET of seven 1 will act of the Brothehood | drivers that, they had “the full sup- Emma otaman, ere to Make beat all others when it comes to : negotiation co: ttee, was his organization {port of the. T.U.UWE., basis of w: x > program put forward ‘the Food Workers Industrial Union. ad; Ruben, leader of the Food Work- ‘sies" Industrial Union, was invited to is not nerge before we decide the policy of the organization. Mazuma- jnian of the Co-ordinating Commit- ished at the Boston Con- vention.” The proposal of the committee that & committee of 11 be elected to su- I the election in the unioh of the former Shoe and Leather Work- representing over 50,000 organized workers. | Cantor attempted ‘to deny Nessin | the floor, but the ‘question was put’! “You need the support 6f° all the | workers,” Nessin’ “told the ‘Strikers. “You must demand 100 per Gent of | the nickel tax. Organize every ‘ga- | rage and elect a -committee: repre- senting every garage to lead the Some Cash, Sneers at U.S.S.R. Soviet Union; Just Loves the Press! NEW YORK.—While pickets carry- ing “We Are On Strike” signs pa- By SENDER GARLIN lutionary enmity against thé Soviet government. | about two weeks ago that the Na- “Dear Sports Editor: | “When you printed in your column tional Student League basketball Union tournament last year, I will admit that I had my doubts about the whole thing. But now I've heard that the N. S. L. has hired the big gym in the Church of All Nations on Second Ave, and Second St. for the student activity and then take on the basketball champs of the L.S.U. and beat them too. words about students and workers in sports. I'll be sitting in the crowd Saturday with my wife (1’m taking her for the dance afterwards even though she doesn’t know anything about basketball) to see if Si Gerson (Corner Willis Avenue) as 0] “And I'm pleased to hear that Si| S:rerognition: of | eee ae ea tee eich atin NGG TY nek He ae eae ee hatlenal Wome ensed, the ‘Interna. | Gerson, whom Tye heard of before || De Es REICHEL \ p strike and recognition of | oy" eeting, in consoli almost unanimously to hear the mili-] q. . . A 5 e = . No settlement is to. be| indie and thud the tou of nae [tai trade Walon Wade | Strike at Astor Is Minor Issue to Defamer of the|won the ane nias cabs Sports | Will referee the game and say a few Dentist ' consent of the Nad At © mat 150 East 93rd Street, New York City} Sor. Lexington Ave, Tel. ATwater 9-283¢ ‘Hours: from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m, Sun. 9 to 1 Member Workmen's Sick and Death Benefit. Fund mn % Yee. ‘ aintate 1 a si ser hat the N.S. L,| C22 Tun as fast as some of those Vattend a meeting of striking Park | ors rial Union and four of the|Sttike- If you build up ® strong |trotied the entrances of the Astor| Having announced to the reporters | S@me, and it s ems t players, ‘ 'aftand a ee ee ee era. Indust al Union and fou Pi ten} United organization. you will win.” ° ‘lotel at 46th St. and Broadway, yes-| that she would speak on literarure *n really means business. *Yolts fod betiar Janos spite KRAUS & SONS, Inc.. “there he spoke and was enthus' | of the former Industrial Union end], Tye applause greeting Nescin's re- | terday morning, Emma Goldman,| the course of her lecture on the) ‘I have a son and daughter inthe} «4 BATHER OF THREE Ort Manatixtcrea ia aly greeted by the Amalgan five from the other grour aarks was by fan the ereatest civen | anarchist and arch-defamer of the| major subject of “My Life,” I asked|colleze section of the N. 8. I, and DENTS AND A WORKER || Badges - Banners - Buttons kers. Ruben’s appeal for fendof-the Jydkistrini-were stented’ © one sp : oat a mest et Soviet Union, sat in a room on the bebelidies daughter in ths high Egret HIMSELF,” The Wakes, Cbs ind Gantbedices continue the strike for bi t the meeting. The other groups air’ Fhe Lo PERN ai cae zi eighth floor and talked sagely about grec iar Sain Spear t - reer ae my acauire anuee oe re ree pated bye the | will elect one each this week. This|mititant. fieht. 7 MNUREAEY. comDETAMrE aH tehe eet (imei tiene Goin ty sander en tole ALS Now what do you think of Mute tie eee purikers: present. committee will proceed immed‘ately! An old driver took the floor, He SB 3 that? More on N.Y. Masses tinued from Page 1) with calling of nomination meetings tremendous tion. The ‘audience rose and checred with enthusiasm. Paul Salvagi of Boston reported for | the Co-ordinating Committee. The reports given on the referen- dum vote held by the National Labor told of how the taxi men won the at onc* a united front strike com- dia crowd, who in the m . harwled for a hile and tried to sidetrack the mo- tion. but it passéd. But before the clections were completed, Cantor ad- By her side sat Roger Baldwin, di- the Soviet Union apparently being exhausted, Emma Goldman is seek- ing to ke a little cash by going on a lecture tour under the auspices of a “regular” lecture agency: The Pond Bureau, Room 1802, 580 Fifth N. 8. L. work too, would find encuth S. L, had, voted to become athletic I sure was glad. I even spent an evening watching them practice in a school near where we live end I can sincerely say that I was im- pressed with what I saw. I never Personally, I wish I had as much : Nga cs ° ney ne . time to develon their bodies along $2 ; ‘ t and the esrrying: through ot ele | trike. in. 1018, We must pat, Cis ape oe ae one with their minds, the LH, sree, the letiat teams = Fusion in ttemp | pee dankaain'e, Aion tee feohaa ise ae as aden eg end Se 7 including Nazi “You see, I'm a sports’ Loan play, and I'm willing to bet the wages iedenkapp’s plea for consolida- ack Wet ee eevee te “yee ; id he N. | on tion for unity was greeted with a] There was a motion placed to elect |, “°% Tovaltigs from books attacking and when my scn told me the im making right now that the N. S. L. won't win. But what surprised you is that there should exist such a parent who is so sympathetic to the stu- dents’ participation in labor athletics that he will come down to a bas- Going : to Russia? } Ave, New York, went to college myself but when | ketball game and dance—to say | Workers os oe rd show oxter osses| JOurned the meeting and told the s leather sheeplined Costs, Windbreakers, “tis closest advisors on the “Brain 1 Vie tor the Boot and Shoe scab| ‘he Lorraine Hall in Brooklyn. lpr AG which in itself 1s indleative of his r oo | eco. Te, aes cl mengs in| 7 ie remarsbly cet [and neve Dastorrapper, Mis Col Unemployed, C.W.A.) yer-sbsins ‘etcate: SQUARE DEAL This sum includes: $18,000,000 in| the shops, threatening them with| U despite all attempts to disrupt it} sik saepen 7 Moskos ty yi gg UelV othe! tock on life. ARMY and NAVY STORE , irmed by tt | be e "Beulles within. The idenness: with | tion—except those dealing with such | 7 ane “awards confirmed by the courts and} jockout, rom. hin, suddenness. wit! beelo qacmions.cas cee, citeaae Go new due; $12,000,000 owed for “labor | and services” on contracts already g@erformed; $4,000,000 of short-term symgtes which have not yet been ex- ‘tended; $7,000,000 for the retirement yet; unemployment relief bonds, and §8%,000,000 for the tax-deficiency re- se¥ve, which is required by the bank- ~ere* agreement. ‘The bulk of the new debi, there- fore, must go in payments to the bankers, and in payments to graft- Workers’ Delegates Open Nat'l Jobless Convention Today which the.strike hit the garages and | the outstanding militancy of the strikers has overwhelmed the cab owners and thrown them into a state of confusion. The walkout conunenced when 400 drivers of the’ Elmore Taxi Co., of Brooklyn, held a mass meeting and voted to strike. 2 Big Companies Tied Up Such comipanies as «thé Yellow,’ Parmelee, Radio Cab,: Progressive ward the Soviet Union, the N, R. A., the war danger, etc. Here shé ‘} ed and explained that these problems she would tc’ ¢ up in the course of her lecture tour. The proceeds from this tour will enable her to return to the South of France where she has vegetated dur- ‘ing the past few years, breaking into the’ capitalist press headlines from time to time with venomous attacks siaMA GOLDMAN her what she thought of the work of Maxim Gorky—especially since the “Russian Revolution. “Gorky is another example,” she Workers to Demand Jobless Insurance NEW YORK.—On Monday, Feb. Sth, at the time when the workers’ delegates in Washinton present the workers’ demands for the continu- ance and enlargement of the O.W.A. I don’t know just who this “father of three students, and a worker at that” is. But I strongly suspect him to be a kin of our little friend Joe Schmidt—if not one of his paternal ancestors. esriee FLASH! —In addition to the basketball game, J. Cohen will box L. Rifkin in a thrilling six-round match. Pop bottles for the cus- tomers will be supplied free of 221 THIRD AVE. (2 doors South of 14th Street) MASS ORGANIZATIONS WORKERS CLUBS-CULTURAL CLUBS To Help Build WORKERS hi ra r id alibiv. 4 program, and against C.W.A. wage! xe. J. Amold will referee, ing coniractors, while the attacks on | (Continued from Page 1) Cab, Key. West pil tea sal lag ne agen rca a SOR gion pode cc than ey cuts and lay-offs, and for the im- peel fealty * || CENTER IN FLATBUSH 2 the city workers and jobless continue | e or P., are per sat in the Astor Hotel room, dressed | “How about his literary works? I| Mediate adoption of the Workers’ Ideal Location—Virgin ‘Yerritory yirtthout let-up. : | Workers’ Uiemployment and: Soctatl toe sare demanding that,|in austere bleck with a black, red| asked of the saay wao insists that |Unembloyment Insurance atts Metropolitan Workers Tn normal times, said Berle suavely, | Insurance Bill, in reponse to mass “yor five.cent tax, they |and gold scarf about her shoulders,|in her lectures she always discusses | Workers throughout the countty will Soccer League 930 CHURCH AVENUE ity would: be able to tale care of |28itation for it in -his own state be paid $500,000 or more that hes'and wearing gold-rimmed spectacles | literature in terms of social forcen prepa a ae Mi a pitas ce city would be able to take care of/ and others. The bill was referred to| been collected since the tax,was im-|Emma Goldman spoke of her past| “Oh,” she replied, somewhat ir-| City governments endorse these anne Communicate with 8. Faye this indebtedness through long-term |the House Committee on Labor eesd leek Geter” fwith the reminiscent bratgadocio| ritably, “1 uony beaeve Gorky has | Workers’ demands, (Schedule for Sunday, Feb. 4) 38 East 12th Street, 8rd floor bea ra), bi he py which will holi hearings next week| The average income of the New | characteristic of a retired prima|ever shown greatness in large can- Saree een tall, Wokehre Deas Al DIVISION : i hevclaimed, Natod ora Phe regs on “social legislation.” The Work-| York taxi driver is at the present | donna, vasses, He did well, of course, in his| izations and trade union groups will cuts, enforced furloughs, and “reor- which the s to legalize. ganization of bureaus” Economy Bil! see! NEW, YORK, Feb. 2-—Added vhveats against the masses of New York were contained in the radio speech broadcast throughout New , Work City. yesterday by Mayor La Guardia in his demagogic “appeal to ” 2 + S tles vs Herzl. ia: * ” ves,” by Y South of France, where you live,” | and thoughts of man, and man is,|4» march to Rutgers Square, where | Daun ts GenuineHorsehideSheep- ; the peopie” which he announced he] auc , eee the fend em. sh Boe ere i eat io each ere of y oo Saad Eee ea vulgar, | they will pick up other groups mo-| ¢Mewet ¥* Brownsville, 11 a.m, Oentral fined ‘Costa; Windbreak. would make several days ago, He alps ieee pseuco-substitute of the A. Fof L. * She raised an inquiring eyebrow.! superficial way did this woman speax | bilized there, and march in a body B2 DIVISION ets, Breeches, High Shoes 4 ae “7 Ske heen : mee | me i sae aphicies ees This move: of LaGuardia was!“Oh, yes, there is suffering, too, in| of a writer who—rooied in the most | to the city hall. pads Meet vs Spartacus, 3 p.m. Cen- nye { Cont ares “nies from "het a ee ge clearly an attempt to place the strike|France. * | maligant stage of a dying soicety—| Elected delegates, who will ar-| "two. vs zuuntt, 11 ‘ath, Avkiatal — hirts, Gloves ‘wages, that unless the Bill Was | every state is being seed to send into hands well skilled in the art of}: “Of course there’s a lot of suffering | expressed in his work the essence of | range for an audience with Mayor| Harlem vs Hinsdale, 1 p.m., Central seth, Passed; their pension funds would be “endangered.” Me “appealed to the subway rider quyd the rent payer—the working 2 of New York's population ‘Hem he is preparing to victimize “hy putting over the increased subway sstare—by fulsome denunciation of ' “dishonest politicians who have pre- nteri the Hill's passage in the State { se 4 4 Meanwhile, even though the Bill ers’ Unemployment Bill is expected |to come up, with workers testifying | for it, at that time. | Meanwhile, in the Roosevelt De- partment of Labor, Secretary Fran- ces Perkins concocted plans for a big unemployment conference of her own, in Washington on February 14 jand 15, This conference, however, will place emphasis on “unemploy- |State Department of Labor repre- |sentatives to her conference. The |conference will serve, the Secretary announced to the press, “to reconcile possible differences between wage jearners and employers, and, through |the adoption of an easily understood program, to bring quicker and more beneficial results.” Beneficial, apparently, to thé em- ployers, who recently have rallied around a movement to swiftly enact time from $10 to $12 ver week. Driv- ers say that their farpilies are on} the verge of starvation and that their | fight is a struggle against hunger. Mayor Works for A. F. of 1. A delegation of strikers who visited Mayor LaGuardia “yesterday, under the ‘eaderchin ‘of’ William Gandell. president of the United ‘Taxi Drivers Union of Greater New York, were sellout. Frayne’s, strike-breaking ac- tivities are well known. throughout, the entire labor movement, , The Taxi Workers Union warned the strikers against making any ne- gotiations with Frayne and called the drivers to spread the. strike and eleci at once a representative com- mittee from all garages to lead the struggle. ‘ “Organized and unorganized taxi drivers!” said the call issued by the France Is “Lovely” “How did you find Franc2?” a capi- alist press reporter asked her. “A lovely country — tremendously interesting,” she replied with the air of & seasoned tourist. “What about the conditions of the workers and peasants in this lovely country?” I asked Emma Goldman, “I don’t mean in the in. France, but you must recall that the crisis was late in reaching France. Besides, the effects were less severe because the French people are known to be extremély economical.” Having thus profoundly dealth with the crisis as it affected the French proletariat, Emma passed on to another subject. Emma borrowed heavily from the arsenal of shopworn slanders against the present Soviet leaders, thus showing her comvlets intellectual af- Short stories,” she grudgingly ad- mitted with a pontifical air, She was much more generous to the French writer,Marcel Proust, who emphasized in his work the decay 92 bourgeois-aristocratic society. “Is Proust rooted in his time?” she was asked, “Of course,” she replied amiably. “He described the passions, feeiings its degeneration. In general, the interview from the viewpoint of the capitalist press, was on @ high intellectual level. “slow did you find the, women of Europe?” a female sob-sister in- quired, Before Emma Goldman had a chance to give her profound opinion, one of the Gentlemen of the Press broke in with: “They're hot!” meet at p'aces which they hove se- lected, and converge on city hall at 12 noon, Needle trades workers will mest at the union auditorium, 131 W. 28th St., at 10:00 a. m., and march in a bedy to the city hall. Cc. W. A. workers will mobilize at the Battery and converge on. the city hall. All downtown organiza- tions will meet at 7th St. and Ave. La Guardia, will first meet at 29 E, 20th St, at 10 a. m. to formu- late their demands. Captains an dmarshals will meet at 29 E, 20th St. Sun. Feb, 4 at lp. m, Powers Railroaded by Judge Freschi; ‘Tico vs Ecuador, 1 pm. Central 9¢th. Fichte vs Ital. Amer., 3 p.m, Central 90th. Spartacus vs Italia, 3 p.m., Crotona, Falcons vs Red Spark, 3 p.m., MeCooms Dam, \A2 DIVISION Hinsdale ys Prospect, 3 p.m., Betsey Head. ‘an Cortland. Bi DIVISION Hero vs Bronx Hung., 11 a.m, Van Cort- land, Prospect vs Red Spark, 11 ‘s.m., Crotona. Ital. Amer. ys Fichte, 1 p.m., Central 98th. © DIVISION Fichte vs French, 3 p.m., Central 96th, Spartacus vs Celta, 11 feCooms: Dam, Greek Spart. vs Bronx Kung., i p.m., Cen- trol 64th. Youth Culture, Hero, no games. EXHISITION GAME French vs Rendetvous, 2:30, German Am. bond Spark vs Prospect, I p.m. Betsey ead. Grovend F.C, vs Ital. Amer., 2 p.m. Graves End. HUDSON ARMY AND NAVY STORE 105 THIRD AVENUE Corner 13th Street Gives. Honest Values in. WORKERS CLOTHES | A Sacrifice Sale of OSKI CLOTHES Ready Made and Made to Order union. “Do not allow the bosses to} finity with the counter-revolutionary ae c i 1 eee ing fouaht for recon. | some substitute to head off the rapid-| divide us in the great struigle. Wel Trotskyists, ‘ Be (Classified ) 35 E. 125th STREET, N. ¥. C. Soran, he, Mctual beginnings of |iy solidifying mass demand for the| siust Join togettier Ina gotie'Guieed| En reply to a Giisetion from #-re- Big Rise in Bonds Faces Lon Term BEAUTIFUL, sunny room, near Riverside wage-cuts and en wets ‘city em. | msurance principles of the Workers| front, uniting all our forces, regard-|perter from one of the New York J : Drive. Convenient traveling, Broadway Seape widespread dismissals of city €™-| Unemployment B ill—guaranteed]| less of union, “afilladon: ce political evening paper, she said: oes Tine, |, Tnauiro daily, 600 W. isoth St., MIMEOGRAPHS “ployees is already in progress. 2 YOUTH OPEN FORUM FEBRUARY Every Sunday at 3 P. M. Feb. 4th: “Youth in the Next 2 War” MRS. LITTINSKY Feb. lith: “Has the Revolutionary ‘3 Dance » Place?” EDITH SIEGEL re Ml di both di Capitalist press, PARIS, Feb. 2.—A: it of ike Home Relief Buss tap ineressod| one amering, Me, ereabous plete’ com ote abaiear P Feb, 18th: “Youth Under the New i all day on lays. P gai 2 wed. 2.—As a result of) the Home Relief Buros ani increase: : ° i : Dea crisis, ‘witht unemplenmeet” sity he|®" SpIsTRICT SECRETARIAT; Wal Cotimtsiee He eet: ink yp] the, Roosevelt "establishment of ‘alrelief at City Hall April 2st, 1982) memes mith the Dally Worker, i Fea Meeting Rooms and-Hall £ DAVE GRANT creasing after multiple _ makeshift ee ‘ait ies iver es do you think it price of $35 an ounce for all gold|when Powers acted as spokesman of |} ——————————>-_____-__ {| Reb 25th: “Development of Re- |/ substitutes for unemployment in-|New L, S,.N.. R. Branch, “usinee tte last war,” she counterea| *erings, 00,000 fan ny the seleee ion Slanted lorpentity See GARMENT DISTRICT rua! Dee eet formism in Trade |/surance, the Roosevelt Government “ ee * with @ superior air, “one can’t af-|%° mcs Heyy panes) }mayor and the Board of Estimate. ‘ Wnions” 4 ” . ving Aff: i ight | ? have left France for the United| Judge Freschi made a prejudiced, se. SIDNEY BLOOMFIELD ascarid Gone ee pale. Ha e air Sat. N 8 pi eee 2) etree bre States within the last 48 hours, it|/vicious and cold-blooded frame-up Czechoslovak (ivery tnion snd non-union worker {| future, concern unemployment “re- NEW YORK—The new Euel Lee} fool Siateaa cor & prophet.” was reported today, This huge gold|charge to the jury lasting over three Workers Ho I . ba seis tose ad Se reaue, |} SeFVeS” and vague gestures, Branch of the League of Struggle for] “Are you opposed to all wars?”|@raim, if continued, will make it]/and a half hours in which he clearly use, Inc, =N.T.W.LU. “ANCE GROUP Ti Fifth Avenue Federal cash benefits equal to aver- age wages, without discrimination, for every kind of enforced loss of wages. Secregary Perkins announced, con. cerning her proposed conference: “The need for legislation and the form it shall také will be discussed relative to unemployment reserves, child labor, oll age pensions and standards of hours for wages for women.” They will hold a mass meeting at convention headquarters tomorrow at 7:30 p. m., CHICAGO, ILL. TWO GREAT FILMS opinion. a rank and file*strike committee representifig the strikers in every garage. Forward in militant mass action for 100 per cént paymierit of the nickel tax.” " : NOTICE TO PARTY MEMBERS “ All Party members are instructed to call at their respective Section headquarters today and tomorrow for distribution of a very important leaflet. Headquarters “will be open Negro Rights will have its official in- auguration this Saturday night at a concert and dance at 1871 Fulton St, near Ralph Ave., Brocklyn. The branch {s one of the largest and most active of the LS.NR, in Brooklyn, and its members heve al- ‘Lenin? Oh, a very great man. Stalin, of course, can’t be compared with him—or even with Trotsky, for ‘that. matter. ; -Emma, proudly described herself as an “educator,” and not an agitator. “I. don’t believe in this business of making converts,” she said smugly. “I don’t believe in shouting and Screaming.” “Do you see war in the offing,” asked another reporter from the came another question, “Yes, all wars.” “How about revolutionary wars”? I interposed. “There is no such thing as revo- lutionary was,” Emma replied. “How abcut the Russian Revolu- Gives Wall Street More Large Profits (Continued from Page 1) Wall Street speculators and bankers bigger speculative profits than they have seen in years, oe very difficult for France to stay on the gold standard, and is SpA bringing cries from leading Frenc! circles for an embargo on all gold going to the United States, British imperialism, which has been supporting the franc against NEW YORK—George E. Powers, militant working class leader, was convicted of “un!awful assembly” in General Sessions Court Wednesday. He was charged w'th riot and incit- ing to riot, carrying a penalty of from two to five years imprison- lesser charge, carrying a maximum sentence of one year, The arrest of Powers arose out of demonstrated that the present La- Guardia city government is_ keenly interested in continuing the Walker- Tammany police terror. Judge Freschi instructed the jury to fini Powers guilty either of inciting to riot and riottng or of unlawful as- ment, but was found guilty of the} BEA Apt. 61. FT™."SHTD room wanted, with Russian family, down lower East Side, Write A. M., 220 EF. sith St. GIRL or couple to share 3-room apartment, reascnable, Elsie Bayer, 45-54 39 Place, Long Island. City. St. 4-1151. ‘UTIFUL larze room, water, ble, Suitable 1-2; 319 W. 94th Bt. Apt, 43, PERSONAL $ Zamo Ostroff, born in Zbenigorod, Kiev, who came to the United States in 1913, any- Navarr Cafeteria 333 7th AVENUE Corner 28th St. $15.00 with Supplies STENCILS $1.50 Quire-Ink-Paper EMPIRE 2°! BROADWAY Room 401. Cor. 1ith Bt. FORMERLY WITH UNION SQ. MIMEO. To Hire 347 E.72nd St. New York r tl 1 = || Phones: Chickering 4047—Longnere 10000 : “ INS ” ‘was 4 the dollar, is leaving France to her|sembly in such a manner that a con-|{ | s WAR AGAINST See the ready et i mettle Oe peas gain, a crys one to |own resources as London banks are|viction was a foregone conclusion. COMRADELY ATMOSPHERE THE CENTURIES” sign? Pian nia tyasiine Bs re thé at idaee come?” She countered with a sneer, |2tiempting to Crive the pound down|Bail was denied and Powers was t in ction gainst ad el New York, Germany, Russia FEB. 4th, Sunday—at % P.M. AND Demonstrations in Chicago, “BREAD” WILL BE SHOWN AT THE FOLLOWING PLACES: FEB. 5tu) Monday , Meet in Wilmington Sun. of the Scottsboro boys. United Front Scottsboro IGTON, Del., Feb. 2—A “If Japan attacked the Soviet Union,” I asked, “on FO race side would your ipathies “Tt would ‘be on the side of the Russian people.” “What concrete form would that symvathy. take. since. the, Russian People have had_a government for in relation to the dollar to counter- act the Roosevelt devaluation of the dollar. The doliar, meanwhile, is rising on the foreign exchanges, a move which will soon necessitate the bringing of the Equalization Fund into play to drive it down, thus fur- sent to the Tombs and was bailed out the next day only with the great- Ey ne bail being again set at Powers will be sentenced Thurs- day, Feb. 8th. The workers must pack the court-room on that day, in a mighty protest against this vicious FAN RAY CAFETERIA 156 W. 29th St. New York nity Camp ‘WILMIN\ S Scottsboro protest meeting will be H Cre a sixteen years whieh has represented | ther intensifying the currency race|attempt to remove their leaders, Be- All workers to whom money is due from Unity || & West 44th si. 1806S. Rucin@ Aver helti* this Sunday at the National | their interest?” for avantage in foreign trade, al-| tween now and that time all workers’ Camp please get in touch with the office of the Co- | SEB, 7th, Wednesday FEB. 8th, Thursday Theatre, 8th anq French Streets,| “I would be on the side of the|though at present the profit avail~| organizations’ are asked to send pro- : ¢ ‘i 538 Wisconsin St. 1118 W. Madison st. protest the brutal prison treat-| struggling Russian people,” Emma| able to ew York banks in buy-| tests to city government and the ment of the 9 innocent boys and replied, italicizing the word “strug- demand their safe release. ing gold abroad for sale here, sling” to indicate her counter-revo- makes|court demanding the release of this move not immediately necessary, Powers, operative by mail, 2800 Bronx Park East.