The Daily Worker Newspaper, March 18, 1930, Page 2

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: Page Two Civil Liberties Against Ask Stuffed Clubs t Now that the 7,000,000 or more, jabless workers in the United States have warned the bosses and their government that the working class will not starve to death quietly, al the hole and corner “remedies” are beimg trotted out by those who: petty-bourgeois world seems ping urider their feet. Yesterday, Heywood Broun, a lib-| etal who feund out once before in} some slight misunderstanding with his boss on the New York World, that capitalism uses the liberals as| -leaf and not as ed on the “Teleg a “remedy” for ur stoutly denying th: gestd as a solution for Broun suggests that follow his example, which avjob till June.” He is, he ing to give one person a job at a week until June, and he ur everybody to do likewise. But he zoes om and invites everybody out of work to write to him stating what they are fit for and what they'll do in a pinch.” Then he invites those; who will “give a job till June” to tell him about:it. We suggest that those out of work who haven't the money to buy paper and stamps to send Jetters, simply go down to the| Telegram and. ask Mr. Heywood Broun about that $20 a week job. According to Broun, “prosperity,” and other jobs, will be available in Jane. But that’s where he exhibits a child-like faith in Hoover's lies. As to his motives: He sa, If you are satisfied with your present eco- nomic status’ (speaking to the bosses) and want the current ar- rangetnerit to ‘continue, please have the foresight to do a little to pre- serve it.” The fig-leaf is as plainly seen here’as that which it fails to conceal. The» middle class, Broun’s god, is getting anxious, Also, yesterday saw a new lie sprufig by the New York Board of Trade. Agreeing with Broun, it “reported” to Governor Roosevelt} that conditions have shown “a de-| cided improvement” since February | and that there would be more jobs! FLOCK OF LIBERALS TRY TO RE-HANG FIG LEAF ON CAPITALISM Telegram Columnist Offers . Job “Till June;” Board of Trade Prefers Fancy to Fact {man Thomas, and it is so very éx- | tremely “liberal” that it grants that ./even, apparently, the right to dis- y| granting the police such “rights,” it <| longer can bear it, even with all its police to save the greedy bosses from! |them the rights for which the lib- | DAILY WORKER, NEW Y ORK, TUESDAY, MARCH 18, 1936 Haitian Workers Back Liberator-Labor Ball Saturday, March 22 Haitian, American, West Indian and white workers will demonstrate their solidarity with the Haitian workers’ struggle in one of the JOIN DEFENSE AS HONOR TO COMMUNARDS Liberty Minus Permit; 0 Beat the Workers “in a few weeks.” The Board re-} ported this, by pre-arrangement | March 22, and promises to be a big event in the history of the mobili- zation of the workers for solidarity (Continued from Page One) ers of all countries to celebrate the anniversary of the Paris Commune) struggles and organization. by joining the ranks of the IRA. | The Committee on Arrangements ; 2 . thus strengthening proletarian sol-| for Liberator-Labor Unity Ball an- with Roosevelt, who had asked for /iazrity and relief work internation-(nounces that there will "be some facts.” The Board had no facts, | sity unusual feat this di but it had lots of gall in reporting ee ene ae Neen GROSS pee hing | i : gether with an elaborate program. Ruother itis iitea ebeinterat |: é Meeting Tonight. i | Duke Ellington’s orchestra, the best peatarday Saai’ the (pettnasekteled “Don't starve, fight!” is the slogan | jazz players in Harlem, have been by @ bandved ov #0 “tmeaaa a6 jof the Paris Commune Meetings) engaged for the dance. ya hundred or so lnerais,” dé- taking place everywhere this year,, Workers of all nationalities manding that > yor Walker re-|segev ‘ berths i move the Commissar of Clubs and|‘cd4¥. The heroic class warfare of/ are urged to come to the ball and * * * Shes the Communards over half a century join their voice in solidarity blackjacks known as Grover Whal-| ago, retold at these meetings in a demonstration with the Haitian a fe petition is thé handiwork | period of rising working class strug-| workers. of the leading social fascist, Nor- gle, will be an inspiration to the present day fighters. The New York meeting will be ” the held tonight at 8 p. m. in Central on March 6, and | Opera House, 67 St. and Third Ave., 2 West 15th St., or at the box office. *-/ under auspices of the International But while} Labor Defense. a a 7 A central point in all the speaking G0 IN GROUPS T6 objects to the brutal “manner” of will be the necessity of defense for | i dispersing. If capitalism continues ‘the more than a thousand workers to be so brutal that the workers no | arrested in the vain attempt of the| Tens of Thousands Are Expected Tomorrow Tickets are on sale at the office of the Anic, 799 Broadway, Room Whalen had a right to “bar” 338, New York, and the T.U,U.L., parade of worl perse “the throng.” pretensions of “democracy” so ea8-' the demands for immediate unem- ily seen through when the clubbing | ployment relief, and work or wages, starts, these “liberals” of the petty | during which brutal assaults were bourgeoisie, might be upset with the | made on the hundreds of thousands Test in the consequent revolution. | o¢ demonstrators, and the vast num- So: “Bar workers’ parades, and dis- | hot of arrests made. perse their meetings; but do it! Speakers. gently, not brutally.” ‘ Since Whalen has testified under |, Speakers at the Central Opera unemployed workers will be at the oath that there was “no clubbing,” House meeting tonight will be J. Bronx Coliseum, 177 St. and Bronx and Walker has praised the police | Louis Engdahl, general secretary of/ River tomorrow at 7 p. m., to carry as “gentle and good-natured,” it) the 1L.D.; M. J. Olgin, editor of on the fight against unemployment, seems there must be a perfect |the Morning Freiheit; Herbert New-/ for work or wages and for the im- agreement all around among the tom, of the American Negro Labor | mediate release of the workers’ de- |bourgeois liberals and the police|Congress; Irving Potash, needle jegates elected at the Union Square| that, after all, the workers have no| fades worker recently knifed by | March 6 demonstration, the Agit-| ARMS RACE MEET DIES BY INCHES. But Naval “War Plans) Go On Rapidly LONDON, Mar. 17.-—MacDonald, speaking for British imperialism, | under the disguise of “official | spokesman” today said that nothing ; can be expected from the race-for- | armaments conference this week. | The delegates from the imperialist | bandit powers have been squirming about for an excuse to close the conference doors and go ahead with their naval arms building, which is the real purpose of the capitalist powers, The “spokesman” for British im- perialism said nothing would be done until Premier Tardicu returned | to London. Whether anything will | be done, outside of what has already been done, namely, a flood of pasci- | fist propaganda to hide the war) preparations, is out of the question. As a maneuver, Lord Alexander of the British Admiralty, announced that the submarine building pro-! gram would be “temporarily sus- “pended.” The cruiser and battle- ship building program, as well as intereasing the air fleet, goes right ahead, and so will the submarine program, just as soon as the propa- ganda effettzof the move satisfies the Britiahe' perialists. . Socialists’ Rob Berlin Workers of Their Dead) (Continued from Page One) workers, and their transport to the jjudge in revenge, bitterly reviled ;case came up yesterday it was ad- | will be published in a few days. A greater number of resolutions must jyet be adopted, copies of which |should flood the court where the | trial is taking place, the newspapers, jete, lare facing long terms of imprison- ment, that can also defeat the at- tempt of Norman Thomas, the So- | the attention of the New York work- ers from the struggle against unem- ployment and the arrest of the New York delegation and towards the cheap manoeuvering which Thomas! is conducting with the city officials! in order to get more publicity for the next election campaign. “All out to the Bronx Coliseum the defendants. Oscar Landis was assaulted by the cheap gangster, Roth, in the dress- makers’ strike. Roth is one of Schlesinger’s hired men. When the mitted in court that Roth is doing time in the Tombs for larceny. So that case went over to April 15. The case of Rose Auerbach and Harry Donbish, arrested because the pickets defended thentbelves at B. Axel’s, had their cases set for Friday. Donbish is held on $2,000 bail. Anti-Fascists Meet and Plan Conference of Labor Delegates’ right to the streets they built. Re-| Seb herders, and arrested; Harold) prop department of District 2 of the cently the Civil Liberties Union de-| Raymond, and Victor Gyer. |Communist Party says: clared that the Communists were | The chairman will be Sam Nessin,) “Only the greatest mass mobiliza- “anlawful” for parading without a Y. district organizer of the LL.D. / tion of workers against the attempt permit. Next the right of “free| A féature of the meeting will be}to yailroad our heroic comrades, speech” must have a permit to be| the play, “The Paris Commune,” members of this delegation, to long recognized as “lawful” by these |y the Workers Laboratory Theatre, terms of imprisonment, will succeed liberals. e and music by the Workers Interna- in stopping Whalen and the Tam- All of which proves that the|tionel Relief Band. jmany administration from its pur- workers cannot count on any but een rg pose. their own mass power to secure | N.T.W. Wins the tions, trade unions, fraternal organi- sf b: _ zations, cooperatives, Women, Youth, eral bourgeoisie is supposed to Vanity Mill Strike ana Negro organizations, etc., etc. stand, but whieh they repudiate the —- (are urged to go to the meeting in instant they think the workers mean | (Continued from Page One) a body, bringing with them placards to overthrow the bourgeois system | were immediately on the job. On carrying their slogans and demands. fore gaia and war. The | Saturday ee Lelie val age! | Organization Protest. z }eommittee the members decided to| ,, 3 A otash, Weiss, Each jare not taken back on their jobs. {Communist Party, New York du Held on $10,000 Ball ee eee eee oat trict, that many organizations have | «1, |adopted resolutions to rotest | he strike | ‘. : ae (Continued from Page One) bend a vt oar ne a Oo ae |against the arrest and imprisonment and Weiner. Potash was today ad- | ceiibers of the union. mitted to bail at $10,000, while the Ti 2bose brother then came to two thugs wete held only on $3,000 union headquarters and offered to mail. The cases of all ate set for|+a16 all three back if Sarah Cher- Friday. George Weiss, arrested on nov would not be chairlady. Again similar charges, though not arrested the workers refused on the picket line, is held for trial ‘At five o'clock the. boas reported oe Bead. Cathe ete ed a go |that he accepted all of them, and Edward Stark, sentenced to 30 ‘agrees to Sarah Chernov as chair- | py by eae gerd ane | ady. He also agrees to the demand picketing, was released yesterday sles cPayits s and immediately brought up with for an agtonr as jy ae two others on another picketing |"tises to pay for overtime. # "€ | the National Textile Workers case. The case fell flat, but the Union, New York District, had a representative on the job all the time. Previously these workers had com- peled the boss to stop discriminating against Negro workers, giving them lower wages or longer hours. The Police were present when the picket- ing started. é i The union continues its drive to} organize all knit goods workers in| New York. Labor and Fraternal eas Organizations Mass Meeting. 6ith St, and Third Ave, 8 p. m. Speak- ers: Engdahl and, others. Dance Recital. d ensemble of Nadia Chilkovsky an ‘March hildren, Sunday, Bae ae) Shy ‘at ‘Civic Repertory A special meeting of the Executive | “"***T* * 8 Harlem Revel S Saturday, March 2: ce, 1 it. and 8th lington’s Orchestra. advance, 75 cents. Committee of the Anti-Fascist Fed- eration was held Saturday, March 15, {at Labor Temple. Representatives jfrom fraternal and labor organiza- arity Dance. Rockland Pal- Ave., Duke, El- Tickets $1; in ry * jtions were present. Michael Karolyi, member of the International Anti-Fascist Buro ad- | dressed the meeting on the struggle Harlem Grand Ball. Of Italian Workers Club, Saturday, March 22, 8.30 p,m. at Clairmont Hall, 62 #. 106th St. Concert, dance, Jazz. Admission 6 cents, * LOE All militant labor organiza-| of the delegation. The list of these | Duplicates should also be sent! to the Daily Worker for publication. | In this way can the working class| in New York free the comrades who} JOBLESS, DISEASE | greatest international solidarity I 4 " demonstrations ever seen in the . city. The Liberator-Labor Unity} riali “j | Commune ne atio n Ball will be held in Rockland Palace, Imper ialism Bi mn gs in Struggle Period 280 west 155th St, Saturday, Misery SAN JUAN, Porto Rico.—Unem- ployment, along with disease <\$ actual starvation, are the “benefits” conferred upon Porto Rico by Yan- tkee imperialism. Neither the much- touted new imperialist overlord, Roosevelt, nor Santiago Iglesias, the slimy trickster of Yankee imperial- ism’s “labor department,” the so- called “Pan-American Federation of Labor, who masquerades as a so- cialist” and betrays the Porto Rican workers to Wall Street, can hide this fact, Not being able to hide it, both the imperialist Roosevelt, and the im- |perialist lackey Iglesias, are having | to admit it, but in doing so they act as though the miseries of the Porto Rican workers are, so to speak, in- evitable as ‘acts of nature,” of something outside the realm of pre- ventable things. Yet the fact is that Porto Rico |has been bled to death by Yankee _imperialists, who have robbed the toiling masses of wealth a dozen times greater than the present total | valuation, only to leave the workers and peasants who produced all the riches the robbers have taken to | Wall Street, in the most abject mo- starvation. | Much effort is made to lay the blame for the misery upon the tor- |nado, and the tornad unquestion- |ing poverty. But Yankee imperialist rule has been more devastating than |a hundred tornados, and all the soothe palaver of Governor Roose- velt and the hypocritical laments of Iglesias, nor any other impezia'ist “remedy” will solve the er must be solved by the revolutionary action of the Porto Rican masses, led by genuine revolutionary work- -—the lawyers and capitalist poli- ticians, such as Iglesias and Bar- celo, must be thrown overboard. |All Painters Called to ‘Meet at 73 Ludlow St. } All painters, whether organized lor unorganized, employed or unem- tployed, are called by the Trade | Union Unity League painters’ sec- tion to a mass meeting at Grand | Mansion Hall, 73 Ludlow St. at 8 p. m., tonight. The regular mem- | bership meeting, to which all are | also invited, is held every Friday at {1400 Boston Road, at 8 p. m, A regular Manhattan membership | meeting is held every Thursday at! 18 West 17th St., at 8 p. m. | Talk to your fellow workers in your shop about the Daily Worker. | Sell him a copy every day for a week. ‘Tren ask him to become a |vegular subscriber. | enorcew night! Make the mighty voice of the New York working class cialist Party, and the liberals to turn/ open the prison doors and free our! | workers’ delegation. | WORKERS’ CENTER BARBER SHOP Moved to 30 Union Square ©REIBEIT BLDG——Main Floor i i Dance, 6407S. cemetery secretly, to prevent the @gainst Fascism. tendered by, fiers of the Trall, BWAY.446" workers lining*the streets. J. Louis Engdahl, general secre- | Saturday, March 22, at the Carlton, é ‘The Berlin workers are furious {ary of ce aoe Labor De): 1%, ANDI a : at this hideou izure of their dead | fense, spoke on tl velopment of Hariem Solidarity Dance f comradé’> Slies, ‘The workers’ ;fascism in the United States and the |,.2:U;Uatgarauttons “ahould reneree | an now press declares that Zoergicbel’s rote cinee ane a ical, thal gole ta, eheie members for the, are latest chicanery puts Czarism in the shade, as even under the Czar re- yolutionary burials were always im- mune from persecution. . . ° “United Press dispatches late Mon- | day stated that three persons were | injured and twenty arrested in Ber- lin when Communists clashed with police in a cemetery in the suburb {her work. The Anti-Fascist Federa- ‘ot Friedrichfelde, during the fun- eral of two workers, Erich Frisch- Yann and Georg Karkovski, who ‘Gied recently from injuries received in the unemployed demonstrations of March 6. The dispatch states that the Communists defied a police order against having a funeral cor- fege, and the police attacked the Mertege with clubs. , TENANTS RESIST RENT HOG. The Yorkville Tenant League won ‘its firet fight against greedy land- dordism .oucy when it successfully ‘Penisted a $15 rent raise. The land- lord had attempted to increase rents capitalist class and its hireling, the capitalist government, to crush the j growing resistance of the working class, Abraham Markoff, secretary of the idarity Dance to be held at the Rockland Pal- for Labor Unity and . * Women’s Council No. 14 Wednesday, 8:30 P, M., 1 Fulton Av., Brooklyn. cture by Morris Taft on the dance classic® UNDER U. S, RULE ‘yass of misery, of pestilence and | Calling attention to the fact that! tens of thousands of workers and! ably added to the already exist-|. is. This | ALICE BRADY IN SATIRICAL COMEDY |Strike-Breakers Hail FROM THE FRENCH Whalen’s Brutality ao Against Unemployed Chief Gunman Whalen, it is ru- mored, will resign his present job, “Love, Honor and Betray,” starr-|““ARSENAL” AT THE ACME} THEATRE heatre, choses a graveyard for the place where the action takes place.| The “Ar is shown now. in iti 5 ae hGea Gat Treats Peavy {the Acme Theatre, 14th St.‘ and/and return to exploiting workers at eing a dreary, heavy | tion Square. It is a portvayal of |Wanamakers. At the same time drama, the play adapted from the | | O'm vclution in the Ukraine, of a| Whalen’s rumored resignation is re- C French of Andre-Paul Antione, by . Frederic and Fanny Hatton, is one | $!gantic struggl of the cleverest and sauciest come- | forces, the Bolsheviki dies now on Broadway. {tionary forces of Petlura. The satire is concerned with showing that while women are sup- posed to be the weaker sex, actually ‘it is the men who belong in that category. As proof we find buried | jin a certain cemetery, next to one another, three men, for whose death 'a certain woman is responsible. The | ported, two enemies of labor make and the reac- | Statements approving the boss- ordered slugging of unemployed workers on March 6. nh ap Joseph P. Ryan, president of the SIC AND CON: central Trades and Labor Council CERTS {Tammany cohort and chief New On St ee re arch 22,| York strike-breaker in a letter, to see unde i ba ae en. | Jazzy Mayor Walker, praised Wha~ semble ildren from the Non !en’s police murderous attack on the Partisan Schools will give a dance , unemployed. Along with Ryan, U. |play opens with the three bodies or | recital at the ( Repertory The- |S: Department of Labor tpn (whatever you desire to call them, /atre. It is t heatre of its | Sioner Wood, who collaborates witl holding a counsel of war in which |kind in this ¢: | the shoe bosses against the workers they discuss the female who sent | eiso. praised Whalen’s brutality \them to an early grave. The first, against the jobless. a youth, tells how when the woman \found out that he was penniless | between two 'UNDER M l Shoe Workers Holding i SE Build The Daily Worker—Send H F Important Meeting at : : |gave him the air and how he then| Dp Fane eee in Your Share of the 15,009 New committed suicide. Irving Plaza, Thursday suns. The second man ‘ells the other! : : |two, how he married her two months | “It is now more than six months after the boy took his own life.|since the Metropolitan Shoe Man- |The shock of armours caused the |ufacturers Association in agreement death of this man from heart trou-|with the United States Department | ble. of Labor locked out 3,000 me ‘s | The third of the trio states that |of the Independent Shoe Work |as soon as the funeral was over the | Union because they refused to ac- |woman came to live with him, but |CePt wage reductions and open shop lafter a period of time he found out | conditions,” the union states. that although he was unusually “It is the duty of shoe workers | \healthy in the beginning, the de-|that are employed in Union and non mands she makes on him sexually Union shops to send finan |taxed his health. The woman broke tance to these worker him down physically so that he also |tions to the Independe: if \ dies. jers Organization so that help may | In the final act the mother falls | be given to those in dire need.” in love with the sweetheart of her| Thursday, March 20, at 8 p. m. | daughter, but the man repulsed her! | sharp a membership meeting of the |The curtain falls with laughter com-| Independent Shoe Workers Union ling from the three graves. will be held at Irving Plaza Hall, |_ Full of sparkling satire and amus- |15th Street and Irving Place, City. jing situations it is a play well worth | Important business will be trar |while seeing. |acted and nominations for union of- Miss Brady, of course, plays the |ficials will be made. | woman, while the three men are por- | jtrayed by Robert Williams, Mark |Ra | | Smith and Clark Gable. | “For All Kind of Insurance” ARL. BRODSK'Y ‘Telephone: Murray Hill 5550 7 Mast 42nd Street, New York “Special tor Organizations” al M. FOX 32 UNION SQUARE | Stationary and Printing Stencils, mimeograph paper, » office supplies. 10%Reduction for Daily Worker Readers. Saxophone Suite RED HOT MUSIC DAN BAKER “THE CHEF OF HOT TUNES” and his | ORCHESTRA Intertainers for 1658 Broadway Every 0 Roseland Bldg. Circle 1699 Taught 413 lly Support For Liberator) } pecial Rates to i Daily Worker Readers. ‘Opposition in Ranks of | |Fascist War Vets to yogi wor Patriotic May 1 Plan but radicat, i |Negro masses ha Opposition to the fascist plan of | Paper, which exposes every form of | the Veterans of Foreign Wars to Negro oppression in this country | attempt to terrorize the unemployed |and links it up with capitalist. ex- | workers on May 1 by holding coun-! Ploitation of all es throughout |ter May-day demonstrations is de-| the world. j | | veloping within the ranks of the) The Liberator is the only Negro | gunmen outfit. |newspaper which fearlessly e: The New York County Council of | the capitalist system as the (Continued from Page One) not only mperative e their own news- W. 1. R. CLOTHING STORE 542 BROOK AVENUE. 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! Vegro’s ‘the organization adopted a resolu-|arch enemy, and call him to struggle || Cooperators! Patroni: |tion opposing the “patriotic rally |and organization side by side with jon May Day.” The capitalist pa-|his white fellow worker against the S E R O ¥: |pers do not carry the reasons for | system which exploits and oppresses but undoubtedly | white and black workers. CHEMIST \ the - opposition, {some employed workers who have The instrument for this is the} jbeen misled into membership in the | Liberator. Support the Liberator! | Veterans of Foreign Wars are pro-!Send in your contributions at once ‘testing against beating up their'to the Liberator, 799 Broadway, fellow unemployed workers. New York City. 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 8215 Bronx, N. Y. —MELROSE— Dairy SEemTAtiA? omrades Wi In Always Find 11 Pleasant to Dine at Our Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx (near 174th St. Station) *AMUSEMENTS-> { PHONE: INTERVALD 9149. Now! Theatre Guild Productions 1 RATIONA ory CAMEO ie iar a A MONTH IN |} Vegetarian 7 American Premiere | THE COUNTR Powerful, stirring melodrama RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVE] UE Bet. 12th and 13th Sts. Strictly Vegetarian Food | By IVAN TURG GUILD W. 524. Mts.Th.&! v | 30 | | STRANGE CASE OF | DISTRICT ATTORNEY “THE APPLE CART” months, and introduced plans for fur- dealing with the problems of the Federation, gave a brief report of the activities of the Anti-Fascist Federa- tion during the last six or seven tion intends to issue a call in the near future for a conference of dele- gates from as many labor unions oe fraternal organizations as pos- sible. The object of this conference will be: 1, To secure the affiliation of la- bor and fraternal organizations with the Anti-Fascist Federation so as to the Paris Commune. . * LD, » Brooklyn. B h Park Wednesday, 1373 43rd unit pat Mee nit 2, St, room 6; Uni it; Uni Pa Mi P, M, 3 Lenox 7, 80 B. Me 2901 Me: 4 Coney Island; Unit R: é 8 B M37 % 4th St. Yorkville Unemployed Meeting Wedne z one Hungarian create a real mass proletarian basis for the Anti-Fascist movement. 2. To establish a large emergen- cy committee that can be mobilized for work when the situstion arises. 3. To launch a monthly bulletin Me 2 Workers Home, 360 8, si st. 8 @ Masa Protest Meeting Unemployment, for work or ir the immediate and uncon- reléan the delegation, 16,006 workers. At Bronx Bronx ante, f0 irae ‘oliseum 7 P.M, 177th Be and Brot . Unemployment Demonstration Dis- Anti-Fascist movement in the United from $29 to $42 per month, obama States and abroad, itl wih, cussions to be held between March 17 bleed 29, Get material at District Of- DIRECTION —6ixth or Ninth Avenue “L” to 185th Street TICKETS 75 CENTS ai ONE DOLLAR AT THE DOOR TICKET STATIONS: ‘The liberator . Porto Rican Barber Sho 182 W, 135th St. 7th Avenue Broadway United Co-operative Reom 338 Lal 2700 Bronx Park ¥:5+' workers Booksh: 2 Finnish Co-operative ‘36 Union ‘Square, Workers 15 W. 125th St, 26 Union Food Workers New, Masses Needle jen sees ast Ste aati Menai St. 181 W. 28th st. johnnie Jackson Hi ants League Resnick Pharmacy 2295 Tth Avenue 336 Lenox ‘Ktenue 2181 7th Avenue By Bernard Shaw 45th Street MARTIN BECK 43th Street Eves. 8:30. Mats. Thursday and Saturday at 2:30 HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 5865 With Brilliant International Cast Pathe news with color and talk Other Talk Featurettes REBOUND Arthur Hopkins presents a new | comedy by Donald Ogden Stewart | with HOPE WILLIAMS | PLYMOUTH sist Ret Brey IVIC REPERTORY 1412, st Eves. Wi wit cher Sat. 2:30 | EVA Le GALLIENNE, Director | Tomight—THE LIVING CORPSE” Tom. Night—THE SEA GULL” Now Playing! LXL23S FIRST TIME AT POPULAR PRICES! “ARSENAL” The film epic of the Ukrainian Revolution, depicting with amazing foree the gigantic straggie for control between the Bolsheviki and the forces headed by Petlura. “GREATER THAN TEN DAYS THAT SHOOK THE WORLD” —Added Attraction— “The Wild Heart of Africa” SAVAGE!}——ROMANTIC!———-THRILLING! Acme Theatre Enst 14th St. Between Broadway and 4th Ave. Continues Performances Daliy, » » 35¢ OA. M. to 5 PM. 256 Besisning Saturday, March 22——“AFRAGMENT OF AN EMPIRE” Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals Tmeet 302 E.12th St. New York All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health 558 Claremont Parkwa), Bronx DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Reom $03—Phone: Algonquin 8188 Not with any other office oN UNION SQUARE M, to Midnight. M. 35¢ Sat. a Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGRON DENTIST DAILY BXCEPT FRIDAY Fifth Anniversary Grand Ball of the Italian Workers Club of Harlem Saturday Evening, March 22 at 8:30 at the CLAIRMONT HALL, 62 East 106th St. Business meeti day of them one “a ie Sane tings —the ra S itd mectings— . tternoon at 6 ‘olclocie CONCERT and DANCE ADMISSION 50 CENTS JAZZ BAND We Meet at the— COOPERATIVE CAFETERIA 26-28 UNION SQUARE Fresh Vegetables Our Specialty Advertise your Union Meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER 26-28 Union Sq, New York Clty

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