The Daily Worker Newspaper, September 27, 1929, Page 2

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\ DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1929 ” SENATORS OPEN GENERAL ATTACK ON TARIFF BILL Resist Centralization of Government ASHINGTON, Sept ident Coolidge’s alleged - e with the tariff commissions sugar investi 1 during his ad- ministration was used by opponen of the flexible tariff provision to: day in an attack on President Hoover’s appeal for retention of that provision Senator L: t vi characterized lent Hoover r tariff-changing should be left the chief executive’s hands because of changing industrial conditions. “The President holds the power of life and death over nidustries and agriculture through the flexible Provisions,” he declared. “It is not diffieult to understand why the ex- ecutive wants to retain his vast power to adjust rates 50 per cent in either direction.” Smali Industrialists Panicky. Many small nidustrialists resent . the centralization of the tariff regu- lating power in the hands of the president as they fear that a low- ering of the tariff by 50 per cent on certain products might put them out of business, It is pointed out here that the tariff can be worked both wi First, as a weapon to establi: monopolistic domestic prices by shutting out goods that compete with the big industrialists, and sec- ondly, by lowering the tariff to permit the entry of goods from in- dustries in which Wall Street has heavy investments abroad to the detriment of small industrialists in the United States. It is the small industrialists for whom La Follette and the opponents of the tariff bill are speaking. George Assails Hoover. Senator Geprge, Democrat, G charged the proposed flexible prov sions violated the constitution in that they relieved congress from levying taxes through custom duty and imposed this power upon the chief executive. LaFollette reviewed the record of the tariff commission’s sugar inves- tigation and charged that President Coolidge attempted to divert the commission from its report on sugar by recommending an investigation of the butter tariff. Borah Leads Fight. Senator Borah of Idaho, who was stumping the country for Herbert Hoover a year ago, stepped clear off the reservation today to lead anti- administration forces in a battle against the president on the only tariff issue he has championed. But Borah went further today than a demand that the president be shorn of power to raise and lower tariff rates 50 per cent, as provided by the flexible provisions. He de- manded that Hoover speak out on otther tariff issues as he did when as conten he pleaded for retention of the tar- | iff-making authority. By his attitude today, the Idaho| Senator injected new spirit into the anti-administration coalition of dem- ocrats and western republicans. A sutvey indicated that one or two yotes will spell the margin of vic- tory for the coalition or the presi- dent in the only tariff fight the chief executive has attempted. Borah declared the President of the United States already “enjoys "Motion Pictures “GROWTH OF THE SOIL.” ,as a synchronized cartoon rounds The F. ld Cinema will pre-| out the show. sent, con ng this Saturday, the| Supplanting “Seeds of Freedom” first An n showing of Knut /on Saturday the Cameo will have ‘owth of the Soil,” en-| “Afghanistan,” a new Soviet film which is a cinematic record of an expedition into the Far East where the infidel, which is to say, his camera, have always been barred. A daring group of young Russians succeeded, however, in making a film chronicle of the life and habits andinavian cast in locales. The di- Sommerfeldt, had ion of the author in ions, cast and in the| n rec the col selecting o. The American editing and was done by Benjamin De res. main remote and mysterious and On the same program the Film m3 : Guild Cine will present Charlie present the result in “Afghanistan.” Chaplin, in “The Bank”; A Sovkino | ,, Dire. coe ages ap short, “Jews on Soviet Soil,” con- ae. NAPLES AND DIE” AT taining vivid views of agrarian) ,,.VANDERBILT TONIGHT | Jews, and an aviation film entitled |, “See Naples and Die,” the first ‘Happy Landings.” Full-length comedy by Elmer Rice, tectuiols Setumay) OgLeis. ths will open tonight at the Vanderbilt Theatre as Lewis E. Gensler’s first production for this season. With the opening of his comedy Rice will have two plays here, for his “Street Scene” is playing at the Playhouse. Film Guild Cinema will present the first American showing of a Sov- Si Nanook of the North,” and on the same pro-|"The ast includes Claudette Col. gram Poli Negri in “Forbidden! yo: Roger Pryor, Pedro de Cor- Paradise,” with Adolphe Menjou, di-| aha, Beatrice’ Herford, Horace rected by Ernest Lubitsch. Cooper and Margaret Knapp. “AFGHAD The final week of dom” holds sway at the Cameo Theatre. In this, appears L. M. Leonidoff of the Moscow Art Thea-;more than a month ago in the tre. He plays a dual role in this/Bronx, will take place Saturday Sovkino attraction. Nina Tarasova morning in the 161st St. Court. The in a sound featurette and Marc Con- |International Labor Defense will be nelly in a talking comedy as well in charge of the defense. j BARKOSK! TRIAL | | When Watts, partially intoxicated, : +; [attacked their friend Eddie Blos- |Witnesses Tell Details! sicks, Barkoski remonstrated and fe at | Watts turned upon him, hitting him of Miner S Death’ “liver the baad with sus Saw of Bis (Continued from Page One) | isieg who was called to the barracks early; Blossicks and two of his com- |Sunday morning, Feb. 10, to dress|panions fled the minute Watts’ at- a shoulder wound of Watts’ and to/ tention was turned away from them tend to some of the wounds on and do not figure further in the a TAN. Seeds of Free- The trial of 18 members of the ‘Young Communist League arrested | identifying the defendants in the court room, twice he refused to do so. The fact that at the inquest he was able to identify them and that today he cannot may be at- |Barkoski, and John F. Higgins, | story, blacksmith, friend of Barkoski’s and) Watts struck the miner again and eye-witness of most of the import-|again, the later sinking into a ant events of the night of the killing | crouching position upon the ground, have been examined and crcvs-ex-| vainly trying to protect with hands amined. and arms his already bleeding head. RefuSes to Identify. When Higgins tried to stop Watts Dr. Patterson told a graphic and|he was knocked unconscious with a hideous tale of the wounds he had| blow of the coal and iron police- dressed on the head, face and body! ™an’s revolver. Higgins’ story, of the miner early in the morning |¢overing the period of over four of Feb. 10, and of the vicious and; hours durnig which time Barkoski cruel beating he saw Lyster and} Was alternately kicked, clubbed with Watts administer to the dazed and /® fire poker ‘and a black-jack, hit half-conscious miner. He called the | upon the bare back with a leather defendants by name in describing | bridle strap and upon the face with their actions and said that he’d|iron knucklers, was unshakable un- known Lyster and Watts personally | der the searching cross-examination | before the fatal morning. However, |of defense attorneys Pritchard and when it came to the business of | Coll. Allegheny County Constable | Schaeffer, and Coal and Iron Police- the tariff commission has been men Meckling and Donaldson were |dominated by ex-tariff lobbyists, ; Present duirng the entire proceed- |that the present chairman, Thomas ings but did not interfere. Dr. Pat- O. Marvin, was a former lobbyist |terson, the Pittsburgh Coal Co.| for industry and opposed tariffs for | Physician who was also present, ob- | agricultural products. | viously did not wish to endanger his Gas, 4 f | job by calling for help, although he Not a single reduction of any | new the miner ‘ould surely die | moment has been brought about or | jf the beating were continued. Per- recommended by the tariff commis-| tans he figured that the life of sion,” he said, “Not one cent of the | hunky wasn’t worth that price. | Higgins’ story made the throng Bares Hoover Lie. that crowded the court room gasp Borah read an excerpt from Pres- |repeatedly. When he recounted how Jident Hoover's Boston campaign |Lyster had run upon the semi-con- | speech, advocating that the tariff|Scious miner half-sitting upon the |power be left with congress, point-| floor and kicked him in the eye with ling out that the president now is |all the force at his command, shivers asking that his power be transferred |f wrath and indignation ran down |to him. the spines of everyone there. Borah’s attack was followed by a|_ Lyster was convicted of murder once before. That was in 1922 dur- of a land which preferred to re-| Bronx Trial Saturday| 38 calibre revolver, Higgins test-| LOBBYIST TELL$ Amalgamated Betrayers Ave |FARMBOARDHEAD | SENATORS THAT Leaders of Muste Group | | The important role that the com- TARIFF MUST BF \pany unionized officials of the Am- | algamated Clothing Workers Union} plays in the Conference for Pro-| \Bingham Took Orders gressive Political Action, headed by A. J. Muste, of Brookwood Labor | from Textile Boss | College, can readily be seen when |it is remembered that two of the| |five members of that organization’s Senators Harrison and Robinson, program committee are leaders of | democrats, yesterday denounced the the Amalgamated. | |republican senator, Hiram W. Bing-| J. B, S. Hardman (Sulutsky), edi- |ham of Connecticut, for employing |to of Advance, official weekly or- |Charles L. Eyanson, assistant to the| gan of the Amalgamated, and | President of the manufacturers’ as- } George Gooze, manager of the Shirt sociation of Connecticut, to direct | Department of the union, are both | the work of preparing for the tariff|on the program committee of the |provisions on textiles. Bingham, an|Muste organization. lagent of the mill owners and no-| Enemies of Workers. torious labor hater, could not be re-/ Hardman and Gooze are both no- |lied upon to prepare the proper tar-|torious enemies of the militant jiff schedules that would enable the working class. Hardman, when he} textile barons to charge monopolis- | was known as Sulutsky, was a mem- tic prices to the consumers in the ber of the Communst Party. Of- United States so one of their ex-| fered the editorship of Advance by perts was sent to Washington to] Sidney Hillman, president of the guide him. Bingham supplied Amalgamated, Sulutsky betrayed Eyanson with a desk in his senatoral|the working class and through the office and permitted him to attend|columns of the Advance has since and influence the senatorial sub-| been assailing the militant labor committee on tariff when the gen- movement and praising the company |eral schedules were under considera- union program of the Amalgamated | tion. |that has resulted in a reduction of Bingham “Loyal’ To State. | woges, lengthening of hours and in- Bingham, who was under fire tense speed-up for the workers, At from several directions, said he was| the same time, the Amalgamated “loyal” to his state and wanted to|/has seen to it that the profits of |find out what the “people” of the|the employers, who have signed | |state wanted in the way of tariff/agreements with the organization, | protection. He did not explain how|have increased, always at the ex-| it happens that he considers only | pense of the workers who belong to jan exploiter of labor as representa-| the union, |tives of the state, nor did he explain| But the gangster methods of the} |who buy textiles to wear might|sky, the tailors of New York and/| have to say on the monopolistic | other cities found themselves in the | prices charged by the textile mills|deplorable state they now are in. that pay their workers starvation|.. .. Betrayed Shirt Strike. wages. Like all the other senators,| George Gooze, the other worthy |Bingham thinks the opinions of the| gentleman on the important com-j exploiters of labor are the only ones | mittee of the Muste outfit, is also) worth senatorial consideration. ‘very wellknown as a fighter against the workers. The New York shirt makers have not forgotten that in 1926, Gooze, who today is mouthing progressive phrases as a part of the Muste organization, signed a secret supplementary agreement when he ended that strike, meant worse conditions for the workers. Thoe sprogressive work- ers, who protested against this be- trayal,were expelled from the union. While the agreement that was signed on the end of the strike gave an appearance of victory for the workers, the secret agreement of Gooze meant that all that had been won by bitter struggle was actuaily lost. Muste on Committee. .. .. Then as to the third member of the committee. It is none other than Mr. Muste himself, red-baiter extraordinary, who expelled Arthur Calhoun, one of the Brookwoud Col- lege instructors because he believed in militant action on the part of the working class. Hhis article does not pretnnd to be a detailed analysis of the Muste movement, but w: itten to point out that by its association with the Amalgamated Union Offic: the Musteites condemn themselves bitter enemiesc of the working class that must be ruthlessly exposed and fought. Although Sulutsky and Gooze may make progressive gestures in their activities as part of the Muste | movement, actually their deeds in a| critical situation in that organiza- tion will be just as much against the working class as their actions tributed to the fact tha he is still | what, in his opinion, the workers | Amalgamated, sanctioned by Sulut-|as leading officials of the Amal- gamated Union. UPHOLSTERERS! Upholsterers are asked to come with their tools Saturday at 9 a. m. to Room 603, 28 Union Sq., to work for the Daily Worker-Freiheit Ba- naar. lin ease of inability to pay the whole fee. “Immediate publication and cireu- | lation of a ‘Unity Proclamation,’ calling for the unity of the Irish, Negro, Italian and other workers, and for equal admittance of all| workers to the union. “Immediate action of shaft com-| mittees of at least five workers, in- ‘cluding Blasters.” Strike Is Spreading. The strike spread yesterday when | all the men working in the Yonkers T. U. U. L. Demands. shaft walked out. Armed guards “Six-hour cay, 5-day week; all/of the company are stationed out- wages for tunnel workers to be 10/|Side of the shafts patrolling the |per cent higher than the prevailing |sround in an attempt to intimidate |weekly rate of wages; bathing fa-| the pickets. They wear a bullet leilities for all workers; full-time | belt and their revolver holster over |pay to workers when ill from ex-| their coat. | |posure or accidents on the job; rec-| Speaking at the strike meeting | ognition of the union; no discrim-| at Manhattan Lyceum, 66 E. Fouth | ination against strikers; no discrim-| St. yesterday morning, George E.| ination against Negro workers; im- Powers, former organizer of the | mediate discharge of all scabs, Iron and Bronze Workers Union, “In order to win the above de-|called upon the workers to spread | mands the following steps are neces-| the strike. He urged that they go sary: | to the engineers and blasters unions | “Immediate action to get out on| and have them join the strike. He) strike all those yet working. Bring| told of the militant action of the pressure for immediate strike action | Gastonia strikers and remarked that by Blasters’ and Engineers’ Unions| they should be inspired by their) |through rank and file committee, | fighting spirit. | jealling for special meetings to take Workers Will Act. | | place at once. “Immediate formation of Work-| in addition to being a snadhog, is) Jers Defense Committees to defend | also a member of the Blasters Union | |picket lines against police attacks.|stated that by not using safety de- “Enlarge strike committee andj vices the lives of many of the work- | execuive board to include morz rank/| ers are sacrificed to increased the and file and Negro workers. | profits of the contractor, He added “Mass picketing around each|that if the Blasters Union will not |shaft (with proper distribution of| call a strike, the rank and file will| SANDHOGS URGED TO BE MILITANT \Urge Shaft Committee Be Organized | (Continued jrom Page One) | demands and not to rely upon the bosses’ parties or their representa- tives. | so it can make more money at the expense of the workers. Adis Tammany Hall. It was learned yesterday that Patrick McGovern, head of the con- tracting company is closely con- ynected with Tammany Hall and is 'a regular contributor to its cam- paign fund. At present, he is actually supportnig Mayor Walker, and it is alleged that he is con-} tributor to the 1929 campaign fund, | now being raised. Plenty of Eats (Continued from Page One) ed at one third lower than their actual value. The needle trades workers are maknig men’s and wo- men’s clothing that would do honor to the high priced Fifth Avenue stores and the unholsterers are spending their Saturdays over hand tooled pieces of furniture that will | help to turn the interior of a tene- ment room into something like home, Also, the jewelry workers announce that they will have ready for the bazaar a number of novel gold pins and a fine selection of watches. Individual workers and organiza- tions are urged to speed the collec- tion of names for the Red Press Jim Kelly, an active striker, who+Guard Honor Roll, the feature of the Bazaar Journal, which goes to that | al SPENT MILLIONS WITHOUT RELIEF \Hoover Gang Facing New Scandal Another scandal at Washington loomed when Alexander Legge, millionaire former president of the International Harvester Company, appointed by Hoover recently as chairman of the federal “farm relief” board, admitted that he has not the slightest idea regarding the manner in which the farm relief | bill which was enacted June 15 can {be put into effect. Read It Twenty Times. Legge confessed his ignorance and incapacity in reply to a series of questoins by Senator ‘Caraway (Dem.) of Arkansas, while testify- ing in aysenatorial investigation in- to the fitness of the members of the farm relief. Legge indicated that he and other members of the |board regarded the law as more or jless “foggy.” “I have read the bill about twenty times,” he said, “and I don’t under- |stand it yet. If anyone of you un- | derstand it,” Legge said to the sen- ate committee, “you are better men than I am.” Legge explained that |of the $500,000,000 allocated by con- |gress for “farm relief,” the board |had already, in a trifle more than |two months’ ‘time, obligated itself |for more than $40,000,000. Hired Expensive Lawyers. Nothing whatever has been done |for farm relief, as preliminary work |is “not yet finished.” Legge ex- | plained that “eminent counsel” had | been hired to try to find out what |the law means, but refused to com- |ment on whether they had learned anything about it. When questioned about his con- ‘tion fee and issuance of member-, union pointed out that the contract-|nection with the International Har- |ship cards at once to all applicants | or constantly violates its agreement |vester trust, one of the most viciout of the concerns robbing and pillag- jing the farmers and driving them |from the land by thousands as it forecloses mortgages because of un- paid farm machinery bills, Legge was rather hazy. He said he had resigned as pres- ident of the trust when Hoover ap- pointed him head of the board (probably to relieve the far- mers of what little they have left after the harvester trust and the banks are through with them) and that his present holdings were only about one million dolla: Legge evidently considers a million a tri- vial amount, hardly worth mention- ing. He was also asked about the phenomenal rise of harvester trust stock from 1920 to 1929, precisely |during those years of depression on the farms. He refused to admit that there was any connection be- tween the wholesale pauperization of the farmers and the enormous jrise in harvester trust profits. press early next week. The sale of tickets must likewise be pushed, so that at least 100,000 workers are brought down to the bazaar in answer to the Zionist fascists, the police, the right renegades and all the forces of reaction that are bend- ing their efforts to crush the revo- lutionary prses. “AMUSEMENTS - Hie East 42nd Street, New York Cees ee ee “relief” | DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Reom 803—Phone: Algonquin 8183 Not connected with any other office | | | | Dr. ABRAHAM MAREOFF SURGEON DENTIST 240 HAST 115th STREET Cor. Second Ave. New York Office hours: Mon., Wed., Sat., 9.30 a. m, to 12; 2 to 6 P. M. Tues, Thurs. 9.30 a, m. to 12; 8 p,m. Sunday, 10 a, m. to 1 p. m, Please telephone for appointment. Telephone: Lehigh 6022 Patronize No-Tip Barber Shops 26-28 UNION SQUARE (1 flight up) 2700 BRONX P’ ~K EAST (corner Allerton Ave.) Unity Co-operators Patronize SAM LESSER Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailor {} 1818 - 7th Ave. New York Between 110th and 111th Sts, Next to Unity Co-operative House Cooperators! Patronize CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. Y. “For Any Kind of Insurance” ARL BRODSKY Telephone: Murray Hils 5356 Comrade Frances Pilat MIDWIFE 351 E. 7/th St., New York, N. Y. Tel. Rhinelander 3916 GETARIAN ESTAURANT Always Find It o Dine at Our Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLYD., Bronx (near 174th St. Station) PHONE:— INTERVALE 9149, Dairy MEET YOUR FRIENDS at Messinger’s Vegetarian and Dairy Restaurant 1763 Sorthern Blvd., onx, N.Y. Right off 174th St. Subway Station | RATIONAL Vegetarian RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVE] UE Bet. 12th and 13th Sts; Strictly Vegetarian Food | i All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx { || HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT more power than any living sover-|fulisade from democrats—Walsh, |. ‘ - strike circulars). act. ees a : | so tien” |Mont.; MsIiellar, Tenn.; Tydings, |in& the coal strike when he Killed @/ utmmediate reduction of initia-| John McPartlan, secretary of the | rae RAT aise GONIGHE: SEE BORD FHEATEE hace ENR O s The Idaho Senator charged that|Md.—on the flexible provisions. |S*tiking miner. At that time he was : | "bbe {ith St. W. of B'way. Chick, 9944 : sity 5 a state trooper—better known as the LASr DAY! Sioa wad He MEIC MLS AOR | Eves. 8:50, Mats, Wed. & Sat, 2:30 | Yewenmenqenensrenenserwewnaern |Cossacks. He was sentenced to the! 5 “Ts S ; TLAND YARD fount Gamay BIRD us HAND 3 chair but a grateful bosses’ gov-| Actual! Dynamic! Thrilling! CO | DRINKWATER’S N Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 |FULTON W. ernor first commuted the sentence | ‘to life imprisonment and later par-| 46th St. 8:50 Seats Now on Sale at Box Office Seats John’s Restaurant MOROSCO THEATRE SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES The Remarkable Sovkino Film ‘The Most Revolutionary Advance of the Motion Picture to Date! Bves _ Fraternal Organizations “ M0, Corre a i Laboratory ‘Theatre N be ahoWh, Hekeee ih advances 28 will " hol¢ {executive "committee ASTORIA, L. I. — Tel. Monument 0111 Stn a aor Wb conte mest at fp, opine. Also eaneral Bntertainments {@ Due to the fact that a number Lower Bronx Carnival. Bership 40. take pact ia th oa ahaa Bowling Match the Fy Argentine Tani Dg ee Omi ere nineieleyy oh ‘Maven ie Btanch 1, Section § has arranged|and rehearsals of “White Trash.’ We National Costumes and oa reuse Acecatine Zepee f fe le city, we have a num- a gertival and dance for Saturday,|meet at Workers Center, 28 Union Wal Be Hahiblted by Prodaced in U.S. by BELGOSKINO er of rooms to rent. No 9.8 P.M» at 116 B. 188th St.) Sq, room 607, security necessary, Call at our héecos Hainlaika Orchestra, plenty to Pe ee eee Grape rd PROF. JOAQUIN. ORTEGA Darran niniprenemren nae yponacecse rt pira-ir aeireebra offiee for fiarthe tas hy eat, splendid entertainment, Party r, Leiber Lee i . MA fine pieturin r inform: i, ‘andidates. will speak. Admission 25| Dr, Léiber will lectate cement at and lots of other fun NIGH I Age HIS DISCIPLES tea weroos like Tewhese, toe Sonate att NSat seis at iebbarepioe) the Brox Workers Hungarian Club, terror + + “DAILY WORKER, Sie epee tp ata - Communist Activities |doned his when he had served but| Mats. Wed. & Sat. 2:3 A 4 | 45th St. West of Broadway | place with atmosphere vais, 18 secpion #11004 aniversary of tue Party, mne|® few months, His uniforms, ete, IVING RUSSI A Beart ita he Eerie EORGE M. COHAN” = saan ia mee U 1F Sect 2 will ho al|next meet will be he! yednesday | were restored to him and he sta‘ i‘ ® dpe (Rats clgds fark [PEPE il tele, art | mare sere Mn bad L thle hte ELSIE FERGUSON ew York iegatinabeabe . a 2 fork. ii i | a powerful presentation of all phases of every-day life ina we Brownsville and East New York. | time in 1927 or 1928 when he was) paces Land of the Soviets revealing the tremendous Melodrama SCARLET PAGES Latin-American Blectoral Ball. The Spanish Bureau is arranging an election campdign rally and ball for Saturday, Sept. 28, 8:30 p. m., at he Harlem Casino, ‘116th St. and| port at 9.30 a. m, Lenox ‘Ave, . Latin-American dances |P0°t 8° 950 fs my Mellon for whom he served a8 a} SPECIAL ADDED ATTRACTION Meee CeEee eany IVIC REPERTORY 1th st |} The DAILY WORKER and fit Peedi a anal pas Brownsville Workers Club, lieutenant in the ranks of his thugs ‘Tart anvived rom Woscowt a eenG Oeake. Tondow Bkgnene aves, 8:20. Mats, Wed, Sat. 2:30 Advertising Dept. ng Communis y ‘The Brownsville Workers Club will |until he beat life out of the miner, bepiagkg ‘ Soe, $1, $1.00 Barkoski’s body, speak, Admission 75 cents. Sas ae Greek Fraction. Meets tonight, 8 p. m. at the Workers Center, 28 Union Sq. Section Two Attention An organization cnoference of all unit organizers and financial secre- tariés will be held Monday at 6 p. m, at 1179 Broadway. * Greek Meetink Postponed, The Greek faction meeting, has néen postponed on account of the e Bronx ¥. C. L, Dance. The Y. C. L., Upper Bronx, No. 2, has arranged a dance for Saturday evening, Sept. 25, at the Bronx} ,.., Becton <n ike. sd tile UJ ELORE, Hung. Com. Dally " “ Fhe Eber Sports XUnton will presen’ Club’ is arranging a hike for thie on W. & Strect (7e x5") SPRing 5095-5690 Unity Cooperative House a. play. roceeds to the Gastonia | Punday. | WV ve tinnonc Daily Noon to Mi t i d 1} 2 Madison Av Cont D idnig! Geer? SES oaltion ot international oes BOHEMIAN HALL Special Forenoon Prices—Weekdays Miata se nate stag of crag Tye OPPOSITE CENTRAL PARK Wsperanto Correspondence; illustra- boratory ‘Theatre, Second and Woolsey Avenues Saturday and Sunday 12 to 2—S0 Certs UE ot merribie® Cor. 110th Street cents, All invited, * * * 1330 W Av jBrighton Bench Outdoor Meet. Mcsnae ralk @ ELE. NION AT THE BIG DANCE Gad Sepsemntae OTENC, Wan ateettles ime mien woetaee y n en air ee" " eld s a ‘ ; y aiuiady sant 3s, mg at sth a Sat, fsduensionat CRS : Mush by the d ( aGhecar oie eset ener yoni eMEs, CARPENTERS! St, ch ve. under | tonight a . mm. at 894 Myrtl he n Ss at e ihe Senlees'of'tne Brighton, Hach | Beas EP. at 894 Myrtle Ave. at tha, ‘Bok Gflite e00 International Art, Music and Ddncing Association ot cated af, Fredddnis th, a tite, picture ctttetly meudune All carpenters are asked to come Workers Club and Council 17, U) C.| members’ are Invited, AT THE ROYAL PALACE. are justly famous."—N, V. BVONING POST, |to the offiée of thé Daily Worker. eee Oe Brighton Beach Workers Club. xecutive meeting Friday, 7, P.om., at 227 Brighton Béach mimontiones meeting same eve- Ave. ‘The headquarters for the signature ville and Bast New ated this Sunday at discharged for insubordination. He didn’t stay out of a job long, but drive in Brow York will be 1 122 Osborn St. Comrades should re- hold an atfair tomorrow night at 122 |Osborn St. Brooklyn. Proceeds for |the Morning Freiheit. ie * Dance Tomorrow Night. A carnival and dance will be held tomorrow night at 8.30 p. m, at 715 Vintage Festival E. 138th St. arranged by Section 5, Branch 1. ‘ The New York Hungarian Workers Organizations and eties arratiged their annual great VINTAGE FESTIVAL for the benefit of thé hae Hast New York ‘The International 8 will meet Tuesday at 443 Bradford St., Brooklyn. ning, 8.30, same place. Refréshments. Admission free, a Ws Sunnay. Sunday, September 29 We leave at 8:30 a. m, from Tickets in Advance ry pve * Htalian Workers Clan. low to et. theres tori: re Hot" Bo Wilntear’ to Mort ave Italian Workers Educational vi The club Station. The hall is twe bloéks will open the season tonight from there, With a4 concert and dan Pe ih lance at 314 DB, } was immediately seized by Andy) | progress and showing Russia at work—at play— in pain and in pleasure JEWS ON SOVIET SOIL ivid views of rian Jews in ' the Uuraine and Caucasian regions —and on the same program— WHEN @ MOSCOW LAUGHS Hilarious — Clever Genuine Humor which set all Europe laughing! GUILD CINEMA ote ite, es FILM 16 Manhattan Avenue, Near Broadway, Brooklyn ELTINGE THEATRE Murder «t: Second Floor A Comedy Drama in 3 Acts CamEO * 42nd St. and Broadway In & dal role, extraordinary EXTRA ATTRACTION! LEONIDOFF in the newest Soviet Russian film. Based on actual historical occurrence in Jewish Ghettoes,of Old Russia. eeds NINA TARASOVA in a eroun of Russian songs The Talk of the Town! EVA Le GALLIENNE, Director 'Tonight—*The Master Builder.” Tom, Mat-—“The Cherry Orchard” Tom, Night—“The Sea Gull” 3d—Last Week AMKINO Presents Newest Russian Triumph ad 3 SEE AND HBAR Advertise your Union Meetings here. For information write to 26-28 Union Sq,, New York City Hote! and Restaurant Workers Branch of the Amalgamated Food Workers 133 W. Sist St. Phone Circle 7334 BUSINESS MEETING eld on the firme Monday of the ats FURNISHED ROOMS Now is your opportunity to get a room in the magnificent Workers Hotel 1800 SEVENTH AVENUE 603, 28 Union Ss., as soon as pos- | |Freiheit Bazaar Committee, Room | sible,

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