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Page Two PIONEERS FLAY BOSS ATTACKS; WILL FIGHT ON Young Pioneers Show Role of Bosses Schools (Continued from Page One) ent attack falls on the Young Pio- neers who carry on work among the workers’ children in the schools, The boss class is not content in enslav- ing the adult and the young workers in the shops and mines; it is not content g millions of workers’ children in the factories and on the farms. The boss class knows that the school child of today is the worker of tomorrow. There fore the ruling class uses the schools and all other government educational institutions to enslave the worker's child while yet young. “The Young Pioneers of America will carry on the struggle to win the workers’ children for the working class in spite of all terrorism against the members in its ranks. The Young Pioneers of America have proven their loyalty to the working elass. They have been in the front fanks of the picket, lines of the Strikers, they have mobilized masses of workers’ children to help the striking miners, the textile workers of the South. They have mobilized the workers’ children to take part in all the demonstrations of the workers. They have done this in the past in spite of the terrorism in the schools, in spite of all arrests. - “To Whalen to the employers, to the school authorities, the Young Pioneers answer: threats, in spite of all expulsions, in spite of all arrests—the Young Pioneers of America always have been and always will be ready to fight for the cause of the working classl' Labor and Fraternal Organizations Paris Commune Mass Meeting. March 18, at Central Opera House, GTth St, and Third Ave, § p. m. Spealr- ers: Engdahl and_ otters. * Workers iepitnattane’ Attention! Order blocks of tickets now for the Daily Worker costume ball, to be hetd) March 15, Distribute them among your members and their fel- jow workers. Tickets in advance are 50 cents, at the door, 75 cents, ee ae, 3 White Goods and Underwear Workers Dance and Entertainment. Friday, March 1800 14, Seventh Ave. 8 p.m, * Labor Sports Union Moved. National office and office of East- ern District now at room 309, 2 Weet 15th Si Pe Rea’ Sports Affair, Of Brooklyn Workers Socc League, March 15:8 p.m. at Rova Palace,'16 Manhattan Ave., Brooklyn, Low prices. One quarter ‘ot receipts to W.L. * * Womens Council No. 17, Friday, 8.30 p. m., 227 Brighton Beach Ave. Dr. Zlotkin on “Revolu- tion in Medicine. ¥ * + Sneco-Vannett! Branch LL.D. ioe 8.30 p. m,, 1330 Wilkins | WRITE about your conditions for the Daily Worker. Become a Worker Correspondent. Communist Activities Chinese “Vangunrd ard Weekly” Banquet. ‘Wednesday, March 12, 7 p. Ma darin Restaurant, 30 Bowery, Tickets | $1.at Workers Bookshop, 26 Union Sq Scition Seven: Control Commission, Thursday, § 5 m., 136 15th St., Brooklyn. All units must dispose of cases on hand, ees ie Down Town No. 1—Y.C.L. so ‘ular Unit meeting, 27 E. Fourth | ursday, 8 p. m. Buy your tickets in advance for the Daily Worker Costume Ball to be held this Saturday at the Rockland Palace. Tickets in ad- vance 50 cents, at the door, 75 cents. FOR their press, their pol prison FIGHT FOR “Fight against long prison terms the Mineola defendants! Defend LOCAL OFFICE 799 Broadway, Room 422 ‘In spite of all} 40 Years Prison NEW YORK’S UNEMPLOYED COMMITTEE! FIGHT IT! The Unemployed Committee—Foster, Minor, Amter, Ray- mond and Lester—is still in jail. out to railroad them to long HOLD MASS PROTEST MEETINGS! : DEMAND THEIR RELEASE! They Are Trying to Put Shifrin Back in Jail! Rush Funds, Cash, Liberty Bonds, Stock, Property Securities for Bail. They want to deport 16 year old Harry Eisman MORE BAIL IS NEEDED FOR THEM! parents persecuted by Tammany for demonstrating against hunger! Rush Funds to the ‘Daily Ww cnkar Costume Ball, Saturday; Come and Bring Shop Mates All workers are asked to support The Daiiy Worker by attending themselves and bring their fellow workers to The Daily Worker Cos- tume Ball to be held Saturday night at the Rockland Palace, tertainment has been arranged. The Workers’ Dance Group (Red Dancers) will dance a group of Rus- | sian and American Folk Dances, ac- companied by Sascha Leonoff, well- known accordion player. Many class- struggle group costumes have been arranged by the Workers’ Labora- tory Theatre and other workers dra- matic groups. Score Expulsion of White Goods Militants (Continued from Page One) years they fought and exposed the|Shop of W ruinous policy of submission to the | bosses, pursued by Mary Goff and! Schneider, which practically destroy- ed the local and reduced the white goods trade to an open-shop trade where the workers, both of open shops and so-called union shops, ate compelled to slave under the most miserable conditions and low wages. Fought Treacheries. “They were expelled because they fought against the treacherous pol- icy of working hand in hand with the bosses against the workers, be- cause they fought against the con- tinuous wage reductions, which are being carried through by the bosses in the shops with the knowledge of Schneider and his machine; because they demanded that the union take action to stop these wage cuts; be- cause they called on the white goods workers to unite with the honest and militant cloakmakers, dressmakers, | furriers, milliners and all other needle workers, who are building he | Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union, a real workers’ union, that is fighting for the 40-hour week, | for the right to the job, for higher | wages, and better conditions for all workers in the industry. “White goods workers! The in- ternational company union and officials in Local 62 have demon- strated their inability and unwilling ness to fight for the workers and | their close alliance with the bosses against the workers; they must be |wipd out if the workers are to “« jorganized into a real union to do- lfend their interests. | Organize For 40-Hour Week. | We must take up the struggle for the organization of the unorganized workers in our trade, organize shop Peas in every shop, fight jagainst wage cuts and for wage in- jereases under the leadership of the | Industrial Union, and thus prepare | the ground for a real general strike as against the fake strike of the bosses and the company union. Buy your tickets in advance for | the Daily Worker Costume Ball | to be held this Saturday at the Rockland Palace. Tickets in ad- | vance 50 cents, at the door, 75 cents. Varied en- | WAR ON ‘JOBLESS SAME ON STRIKES: STATES N.TWALU, Needle Union Shows It Is G (Continued from Page One) against the workers of New York, as well as throughout the country, in an effort to beat them into submis- sions to be unbearable conditions, the General Campaign | speed-up system, the low wages and unemployment forced upon them by the bosses. Arrest Police. “A striking illustration campaign against the workers oc- curred yesterday morning near the erman & Kabek, 247! West 37th St., where the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union is conducting a strike at the present time. The workers of this shop who {number about 100, most of whom are young workers, are most ruth- loited, working 50 hours for wages that range as low While peacefully picketing their shop, 23 of these workers were arrested for no other crime than that they dared to strike for better conditio: “This together similar instances prove conel that the Red scare created by Com- issioner Whalen is nothing but a screen under which he is car- ying out the bosses to ter a wee as $10 per week. ively ize the workers. “The wo: of New York, thru their demonstration on Thursday and through their numerous militant struggles under the leadership of the Trade Union Unity League have shown that they will not be beaten into submission, that they will not be terrorized by threats of impris- onment and deportation, that they will carry on their struggle un- |abated, that they will defend their imprisoned leaders filers, will develop the movement for the organization of the unem- ployed and will rally to the National Unemployed Conference, arranged by the T.U.U.L.” Railroad Worker. appeal of Edward Stark and rank and The |needle trades worker, who was ar- rested for picketing two weeks ago and was sentenced to 30 days’ im- prisonment without even being given a chance to secure his own counsel, was denied by the court to- day. These very same judges, who permit gangster criminals to go free, send Edward Stark and many other workers like him to prison. Fur Shop Strikes. The workers of the following i ito organize the white goods trade, | three fur shops have gone down on strike against the attempt of their {bosses to force them into the com- pany union: B. Axel, 333 Seventh Ave.; E. Schnur, 151 Wst 30th St.; New York Gasps at “Grischa’s” Volunteers for Addres-| sing on | | Workers International] | Relief | |Volunteers needed immediately to | |do addressing. Any comrade who, jean type and can spare time should ‘come to the office of the Workers | International Relief, 949 Broadway, Room 512. Very important work |and you should respond at once! | The bosses, lice, their courts are terms! YOUR CLASS! for Potash and Winogradsky and the hundreds of children and their OF THE I. L. D. NEW YORK CITY cedent... stands ablazing beacon of daring enter- prise! Radio Pictures Presents } HERBERT BRENON’S Masterwork from Have You? Bought isnt for yourself ‘and _your shopmates for the Dany WORKER COSTUME BALL to he held thix coming Saturday? Prepared your class strug ‘sie, group. costumes? (We have reports of groups of Paris Communards, of strik- ing miners, of fighting tex- tle workers on the pioket you p Batty ‘Worker Costume everywhere you go eens = ber when dotng th: qe helping support the fighting workers’ daily. of this | with many other | instructions of the | DAILY WORKER, } EW YORK, WED) ESDAY, MARCH Shoe Strikers Keeping! ‘Scabs Out of Delman) ‘Shop; Release Pickets The strike a “the Independent Shoe Workers Union at the Delman Although the long awaite: reen | a op, 45th St. and Second Avenue version of Arnold Zweig’s book,| centu s being successfully carried on by| “The Case of Sargeant Grischa,” | th the workers. They have prevented now in film form at the Globe scabs from going into the shop. Theatre is above the average of This has caused a change in front | gees are One Con- on part of the bosses who frantically , live up to expectations in all re-| arms. E insisted upon having the pickets ar- ference, ] March 29 | spects. While Herbert Brenon has| On the same program is shown rested and the obliging Whalen po- done a fairly accurate job in direct- “U Boat 9 or 3 Brothers.” An in- lice, always ready to serve the boss-|,_ (Continued from Pago One) | ing the picture, the two leading teresting film of the German sub- es, immediately dragged two of the, March 6 mass demonstration for a | figures, Chester Morris and Betty marines, pickets to the 7th St, Court wher: s | eras aaaeminee jsrraeele prey Compson, are miseast. —----- charges of disorderly conduct and, (re attempts of the bosses to stilt) altho a happy ending would mean, Difficulties Arise in with being dangerous Communists | the burdens of the onto the | ore shekels at the box office, the were lodged against the epee | "James O'Neil, cociai-faseist rushed | Picture comes to an end with Deportation of Eisman; Attorney Buitenkant, for the) Bacar ta rake cantatas Grischa facing a German firing! We¢¢} a7 a) union was, however, successful. in{* the aid of the capitalists, when | Grischa facing # German “rine Getting Habeas Corpus ; another {He learned of Whalen’s industrial spy tactics, and informed the com- missioner of police that he would proving that this was merely |frame-up in the entire conspiracy | on the part of the bosses against the : 4 A fon, the aner bate Wpees ion, and |2t have to fire 9,700 Communists demanded the immediate release of |" New York, as he, O'Neil, had | the workers. So flimsy were the|made a study of the Communist charges against the workers that the tcourt was compelled to dismiss them | in the entire country. This fable fcabeiee by the Germans, afee he jat once. Those arrested were Jessia|Showld give Whalen more heart in | cscapes his swectheart, Bahska tie ye |George and Philip Sarab both of | his work. | GMliss Compson) suggests that he! Juage a 8 {\ “Whalen, watch dog of Wall|Post as Bjuscheff, a Russian sol- | whom returned to the picket line im- mediately, The six months lockout drive on ithe part of the Metropolitan Asso- ciation of Shoe Manufacturers, against the Indeperfttent Shoe Work- ers Union has not been successful in destroying the organization and many of the shops have again signed with the union and the workers are back at work. . Street, has already gotten his too the courts, to place charges of fel nious assault against the ployed Committee, and placed bail at | |$10,000 for four, refusing any. bail | Labor Defense, stated. “This means that the working |class will simply fight harder in its tireless attempts to free not only} this group of workers, but all thi arrested on March 6,” he said. ‘ Banquet to Build Union A { ifs . International Labor Defense, which \Celebrate Loray Strike jo iready placed beil for $12,500 | ccthe Hee New vere use| Tuesday night, April 1, the anni- | Foster, Minor, Amter, Raymond and versary of the beginning of the fa- | Tester, is fighting hard to get the mous Gastonia textile strike in the | aagitional tremendous amount of Loray mill, will be celebrated by a (bail, Workers and friends of the} banguet, all funds to go to the 5 : ‘ i : their support of the fight to fr moet a peice ei eeee daeaces |the unemployed workers. They will ment of the TWU.U.L., in Manhattan | 9189 Tally to the workers’ Lyceum. Other workers’ organiza~| ; : tions are requested not to take this date. In |free the workers.” T.U.U.L, PAINTERS BOARD. The executive board of the paint-| Fascist Attack May 1 ers’ section of the Trade Union 3 i Unity League meets tonight, in the | The fascist Veterans of Foreign | new Trade Union Center, at 13 West | Wars have announced that they will 17th St. The meeting is at 8 p. m. |arm three thousand of their strike | breakers on May 1 for a demonstra- | ° | tion in Union Square. | Zaltman & Lindy, 282-6 Seventh} A direct connection between the Ave. \fascist elements and the city gov- These strikes are conducted from | ernment was shown when the Board the office of the Industrial Union. | of Aldermen voted to make May 1) All fur workers are instructed not |a holiday for ex-service men, with | to go to scab these shops, and are |pay, so they could join the fascist called upon to assist these workers |demonstration against the revolu- on the picket line. tionary workers on May 1. | UNION $4 LARE Now Playing! A SOVKINO FILM First Time at Popular Prices! 4 CAUCASIAN of The true story struggle of the Ca people against the ruie of the ezar. VW LOVE —on the same program— U BOAT NO. 9 Vivid! Thrilling! Daring! ON East 14th St., Between Acme Theatre }3:::., Broadway and 4th Ave. Continuous Performances Daily 9 A. M, to Midnight. Prices: from 9 A.M. to 5 P.M. 25¢ After 5 P. M. 35¢ Sat. and Sun. 35¢ all day usual program pictures, it does not the Cz Zw dier who had been Unem- | dis | German general staff is to the ef- for Foster.” J. Louis Engdahl, gén- | fect that any Rus eral secretary of the International | vicinity who does not give himself tody and condemned to die. rest of the film is devoted to the at- e | tempts to save hi: the end are w is presented by Radio Pictures. the Acme Theatre, Teer ¢ National Textile Work working class all over America, and | actually taken in the Caucasian spreading of National Textile Work: | especially in New York, are sending |mountains. Tt shows the life in the tion work in the South, The ban. |tlegtams and resolutions offering |Caucases exactly as in the 80's The make up of the actors on the costumes of the individuals support | of that period. New | taineer, Vashia, is supposed to be a | York property bail can be used to | descendant of the crusaders of old. |Some of whom, a | SRO RES | tory, |Walker’s Govy’t Prepare mountains of Caucasia. There are | at the present time 10,000 of these, he 1980 army. Not only is this Th who have read Arnold book will remember that it e g's movement and there are only 5,000 {concerns a Russian soldier who is ; yoo kille Bjuscheff’s Babska Grisha, identity | It seems that an order of the an soldier in the hours is to be arrested as Griseha is taken into cus- The life but which in sful. The film OVIET FILM OF CAUCASES AT ACME THEATRE him held p capitalism by they live toda ago. Even dhere to the of the crusaders, young men have uncanny skill in the use of old that h e the t their rable to U di officers holding Harry Eisman, ions with the Soviet Union. oung had ye: moned him to court, cha violation of parole because he at- tended the Unemployment Demon- | stration March 6, and had ordered soner in the Heckscher Foundation while they found out if deportation were convenient. Although the Young Pionee¥s are a considerable worry to American activity in or- ganizing workers’ children, and His- | man is by no manner of means the least active among them, seems unde: 5. ism to recognize the U.S. to get rid of him. cooking up sdme other way. | have indicated that theygmay try to | it are | They lobe Theatre as they lived in their dress ys of old. There are among these descendants who the end of the film but its most! ,, Pederal immigration authorities ararsdeul oe ent t was stated yesterday at Ellis : Island, have notified the probation 15- member of the Young Pio- cannot be deported, S. has no diploma- still S. imperial- “S.R. just Now they juggle nations and deport him to} “Caucasian Love,” now playing in is a Soviet film | s based | re The young moun- ording to his- ttled in the remained and cent: in United Rumania, The Se International Labor *Defens: will get a writ of habeas corpus | for the youngest politicai prisone States today, to have him | ased on bail until the day of hi hearing, March 20, “AMUSEMENTS + CAMEO: 2nd St. & Bway Phone Wisconsin 1789 Amkino Presents—American Premiere Cc " INA ¥ EXPRESS Now fe faa Realistic Episode of the Revolution in China PRODUCED BY Soviet and Chinese —and on the same SOVKINO OF MOSCOW Enacted by an Eminent Cast of Players program— Latest Sovkine Newsreel Buy your tickets in advance for the Daily Worker. Costume Ball to be held this Saturday at the Rockland Palace. vance 50 cents, at the door, 75 Tickets in ad- PHOTOGRAPHS AT THE STUDIO OR YOUR HOME 25% REDUCTION TO CITY AND UNION WORKERS Bertin Photo Studio 454 THIRD AVENUE Near iat St. New York City CALEDONIA 6766 Have Your ties Examined and Glasses Fitted by WORKERS MUTUAL - OPTICAL CO. under personal supervision ° DR. M. HARRISON Optometrist 215 SECOND AVENUE Corner 13th Street NEW YORK CITY Opposite New York Hye and Ea: Specia} Rates “for Organizations BUTCHERS’ UNION Local 174, A.M.C.&@B.W, of M.A. Office and ie gt ‘Temple, pg! sath of >— ir Infirmary AMALGAMATED Telephone Stuyvesant 3836 FOOD cane Meets Int in the month at 31 as. N.Y. Phone: LEHIGH 6282 Ask fer ° wiasepe tac tee.) 1 International Barber Shop Union Label Bread) M. W. SALA. Prop. 2016 Second Avenue, New York (bet. 103rd & 104th Sts.) Ladies Bobs Our Specialty Private Beauty Parlor Advertise your Union Meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City WORKERS’ CENTER BARBER SHOP Moved to 30 Union Square FREIWEIT BLUG.—Main Floor Hotel & Restaurant Workers Branch of the Ai i mW. Bond nn a ttle RED HOT MUSIC ” by to mon pa DAN BAKER ‘rom 9 a. m. to 6 p. m “THE CHEF br TUNES” and his ORCHESTRA ICELY FURNISHED ROOM || Every Occasion’ Roseland Bldg, Special Rates to wanted downtown.) Call Stay, Daily Worker Readers. | vesant 1696, REBOUND PLYMOUTH 7} LOVE, HONOR and BETRAY: ELTINGE Thea, 42 St. W. of Bway. We Meet at the— Theatre Guild Productions 4) LAST WEEK! “METEOR” By 8. N. BEHRMAN GUILD. | 5% Mts.Thur. Satz: “THE APPLE CART” By Bernard Shaw MARTIN BECK 4; Arthur Hopkins presents a new comedy by Donald Ogden Stewart with HOPE WILLIAMS Th, 45th St. W. of Biway | vs. 8:50, Mats, ‘Thurs. and Sat, 2:40 | OPENS TONIGHT AT 8:45 A. H. WOODS presents A. Satirical Comedy With ROBERT WILLIAMS ' PITKIN Pitkin Avenue Brooklyn NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES | Loew’s “Big 2” | ON BOTH SCREENS PARADISE | Grand Concourse RAMON TALKS! SINGS! “DEVIL MAY CARE” Stage Shows—Both Thentres from CAPITOL THEATRE, BROADWAY EAST SIDE THEATRES 138 SECOND AV LAST DAY! ND. AVEN U PLAYH © f'¢ K, CORNER EIGHTH STREET NOVARRO LOVES! 3 COMRADES AND 1 INVENTION A part of the new Russia, where workers are building a new world and stop on their job —ON THE SAME PROGRAM— “A MYSTIC MIRROR” A gripping UFA production ally to laugh at their own expense, COOPERATIVE CAFETERIA 26-28 UNION. SQUARE Fresh Vegetables Our Specialty | RATIONAL Dr. M. Wolfson WHALEN CENSORS (77e Case ‘of Sergeant Grischa’ 1,000 PROTEST MARCH 6 PHOTOS 7/0" @% the G IN ELIZABETH 8 Arrested; Krasowsky Held for Pocket Knife ELIZABETH, N. J., Mar. 11.— Over a thousand unemployed work- ers demonstrated against starvation in Union Square here today. The police ed and arrested eight of them the meeting; Jack Rubens, Frank scher, Shapiro, Joe Venzevich, J, Rosen, Krasowsky and one other. All are charged with disorderly con- Juct and held in $100 bail, except Krasowsky, who is being held in $1,000 bail for ying a pocket knife. They come up for trial to- morrow at 10 a. m. “Por All Kind of Insurance” ([ARL BRODSKY ‘Telephone; Murray Hil 5550 7 Kast 42nd Street, New York ‘Special for Organizations” C. M, FOX UNION SQUARE Stationary and Printing Stencils, mimeograph paper, oftice supplies. %MReduction for Daily Worker Readers, W. I. R. CLOTHING STORE 2 BROOK AVENUR ‘Telephone Ludlow 3098 Cleaning, Pressing, Repairing High. Class Work Done Goods Called for and Delivered All profits go towards strikers and their families, SHOW YOUR SOLIDARITY WITH THE WORKERS! Cooperators! Patronize CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. Y. COMRADES MEET AT— CAFE INTRO 249 East 13th Street Near Second Avenue A QUIET EATING PLACE Regular Meals, Reasonable Prices. Comrades Meet at PARK RESTAURANT 698 Alerton Avenue Corner White Plains Ave. A GOOD PLACE TO EAT Open All Night, Ladies Invited. —MELROSE— VEGETARIAN Dairy RESTAURANT omrades ‘Will Always Find it Pleasant to Dine at Oar Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx (near 174th St. Station) ®HONE:— INTERVALD 9149. Vegetarian RESTAURANT Bet. 12th and 13th Sta. Strictly Vegetariun Food | 199 SECOND AVE] UB HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 5865 (on eee ere rer tee eres Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN UISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicale meet 302 E.12th St. New York All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Rcom 803—Phone: Algonquin 8183 Not connected with any other office Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST 249 BAST 115th STREET Second Ave. . New York DAILY EXCEPT FRIDAY lease tele for appol: it fcr aureintmen Cor. Sy6uaa JleyesHnua DR. A. BROWN Dentist 301 Enst 14th St. Cor. Second Ave. Tel. Algonquin 7248 Surgeon Uentist 141 SECOND AVENU: . Phone, Orchard’ Soviet Ot come to sce your long experience, can mesure : vou of carefal treatment. Minnie Suraz, chairman of «