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E FIGHTFOR RIGHT Cera Theatre in Moscow to Feature Economic Films a Polyteahnical Mu- (conor B! i =a DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, APRIL 8 1950 Terror "10,000,000 MOR WAR MATERIALS TO THE STREETS) Bombing Plane <egeaes is fe WALL ST. IM RUSH WAik HIPS AT THE CHINESE PEASANT ARMY, INEMPLOYMENT STILL, GROWING Lies of Bosses’ Press PERIALISTS) s-ver # JOYCE BARBOUR the St ‘ow, the ush Building Organize in Shops for » . Cinema 1 Communists Lead Troeeps Massing Against City Sin May Day to. Show ceehtnical. Bnd | Won’t Produce Jobs tuhkis »* Rankers ims J sj] WASHINGTON, April 7.—The a Fematine -| of Kiukiang; Bankers Finance Nanking i alice WOT enh Sou) It ig known | ha aac BANRAS SEER ir kaa g war building program of the ed fir : ‘S, imperialist navy was given an|C™Ployment is widespread, and the ided push teday ee $10,000,000 | workers in the shops continue to. be Ea era, Ssed by the Senate | *Pecded up to the limit, drainins Ud idely a aap A day, | their energy and making them can Wivatld Meek Mails! |didates for the capitalist serap-heap This is but a drop in the bucket} at an early age. jof the big war building program to Pastint dereen for Police: {be undertaken by the Wall Street} The Veterans of Foreign War ers in preparation for the nex!!and American Legion, the nuclens World War. | of the organization that is to take in | nues to worsen, in spite of brazen vitempts of the metropolitan o deny it. The Merchants’ ction of New York is given big headlines yesterday for its state- t that the “peak of unemploy- nent is passed.” The only evidence red for this fiction is partial wes showing one and two p nt gains in certain seasonal of the ‘onomic for- | rricaded Behind American ancing Northern Rivals | Chiang Kai-shek, F Gold, Faces Adv SHANGHAT, The American ir ordered a gunboat stationed on the Yangtze River to proceed to Kiu- kiang, stragetically one of the most BS ae 3 7.—|within its territory. But the lack of news from the Southern provinces of Kwangtung, Kwangsi and Hunan hina, April alists have j s-) De} > na Auditorium of the ion, Moscow, the ionary activities have quieted down {mportant cities in Central China,| in this area. On the contrary, lack; Ortiz Rubio, 1 | A ieee bent af the apaiene Il fascist patriotic organizations, paren lustries. Fake plans for relief con- where the Red troops and revolting | of news is mostly due to interrupted) ido by grace of ltion is for facilities for the air-| being put forward as a smokescreev tae heen onened) © Tite nue to appear, intended as propa- peasants led by the Communist Com-| communications and is a sign of ex-| received a7 terror |hombing fleet for the Navy. Mil-| for the police of New York. They teelis then ‘ + canda and not as relief, d con- e revolution- lions more will be spent for navai aMnounce that they have hel mander, C de Chu Teh, arejtraordinary revolution ca gn ag i Ret @ ae i massing their forces for the capture/ ments rather than a slowing down| ‘cers and peasants, when | war armaments, without even wait- ferences With Police Commissioner | POGTams: Fe. ccling Artual Dro’ a Humane, Spiritual. of the city. of activity. many demonstrations took place iv | ing for the return of the delegates Whalen, who undoubtedly put tho 0" " AE e BOStE POUNCE. \CYERY itz dl President Green of the A. F. of The e which the In the meantime, the wa -| the industrial centers of Mewico, |to the debacle of the London con. stamp of approval on their plans “", ake 6 : | nes speaking to the order of Brith imperialists give for t iween they N g and Anti f lease of all work- | ference. for the demonstration against the igs oat | Abraham (a Jewish nationalist or- move is the usual one of “ king forees is developing slow ers imprisoned. | Pron een ee | working class on May I Recie aaeelae sanization) Sunday in Brooklyn the missionaries.” With this very |steadily. The Anti-Nanking fc —- Mint 7 | The workers of New York will ge tne Bruce ee boosted the five-day week as an ai same the American and backed by British and Japanese im-| Ranort San Antonio \Filipino Workers |not be robbed of their May Day so a ein eee to the unemployed, but, of course, other imperialist gunboats have it! perialists are proceeding along two age sce - | Vote Not to Support jeasily. The conference held on Fri- pore ores oa ne advised no struggle to obtain it. numerous occasions in the past help- lines. General g Yu-Hsiang’s orkers Demonstrate | day, April 4, attended by 595 d les of cow life, An ex Green’s argument is that “It will ed the Chinese Militarist execution | Queson and Osmena. ates from shops, unions, frater m of photo reporting of the; come—-humane and spiritual reasons forces are advancing toward Han- jdt for “Work er Wages” | and of newspaper nake it necessary.” Exoploiters, Cossack ers. kow while his ally, General Yen Hsi News of peasant uprisings and|Shan’s army is moving s Re ¥ CHICAGO (By Mail).—Becoming | showed by their spirit that they hd ;Pecmse d in the : es 4 The Trade Union Unity League guerilla warfare in South and Cen- Shangiung. Chiang Kai-shek gat ummerified report, from Samt|disgusted with the policy of collab- /fight for the right of the workers ‘79! 0! {ls ‘Aesitte theatre) Back Starvation | and the councils of the unemployed with American ntonio, Texas, states that a lovation with American imperialism |to demonstrate. ‘The rising spirit in| 4/80 has a readin een leita ale eel a iy and sport organizations and clubs, plied planes and ammunition. tral China are pouring in from all directions to Shanghai. section Army Fund Campaign mstration of thousands of work lin the Philippines, more and more | the shops for a strike on May Day, lay week, and organize the workers tions. Performances | Revolt Sweeps On. alking about some my nar y of wher were Mexi ns and | evidenced by the so-called indepen- | the growing consolidation of the un- aa He Rothe eee italist exploit- ,t¢ fight for it, also for unemploy- Judging from the various reports, of his that may launch an attack on | Negro workers, took place Sunday !qenee Jeaders in the Philippines, led [employed into unemployed councils, P4lf how |_A big array of capitalist exploit | ctie? paid for by the govern: revolutionary activities seem to be, his enemies. in front of the City Hall. by Queson and Osmena, fifty-seven | Which link up their activity with the = Pit ee eee Me aie. . i rive | ment and administered by the work- most active in the two Yangtze prov-| According to Japanese repé The capitalist papers are cited aS |yijipinos yoted for the affirmative | workers in the shops through the HOP MURDER CASE” AT) Whalen, ore su ae sooo FS and unemployment insurance. inces of Kiangsi, where Nanchang | Shanghai bankers have raised $5,-|**ine the demonstration was very |in a debate on the question “Shall) Trade Union Unity League, indi LITTLE CARNEGIE jor the Salvenon ? zor goer | and Kiukiang are situated, and/000,000 to help Chiang Kai-shek to| and that Governor Moody | the co-operation policy of Queson| cates that the workers will fi “The Bishop Murder Case,” the |' ¢ ne conte oa Kiangsu, which has many large in-|finance his campaign against the |™de attempts to stop the demon-| nq Osmena be discontinued?” Fif-|not only for the right to the use jadaptation of S. 8. Van Dine's best | 008 gp s” supported by mil-| «por All Kinds of Insurance” dustrial cities including Shanghai| Northern militarists. |stration. Traffic was tied up when |i. five yoted for the negative, A,|of the streets generally but for eller, in which Basil Rathbone plays |!ions of unemployed workers, under Soviet Workers Fight Imperialist War Threat MOSCOW (By Inprecorr P. Service).—Factory protest mee ings against the campai, ement being whipped up by the churches against the Soviet Union, have been held all aver the country. The resolutions adopted everywhere condemn the slanderous allegation of the religious obscurantists, and pledge the workers to answer the attacks by redoubling their efforts to carry out the Five-Year Plar in four years and to inerease the defensive capacities of the Sovict Union. The resolutions point out that at the first sign of danger the workers will lay down their tools and spring to arms to defend the Socialist Fatherland from the attacks of world capitalism. The resolu- tions appeal to the workers and peasants of the world to prevent the capitalist governments from attecking the workers ard peasants Stat and conclude, “Hands Off the Soviet Union!” {the crowd reached the City Hall. | Banners, demanding “Work or | Wage: the seven-hour day and five-day week, and other slogans of the Communist Party were carried |by the workers, according to the re- port. | The report is that the mayor and capitalist politicians tried to put jover a fake proposal of a bond issue jas an answer to the unemployed de- mands of the demonstrators, but | without success in fooling the work- ers. ‘Counts to Speak at First Membership Meet of Local F.S.U. Branch Almenana, member of the Anti-Im- perialist League, opposed the Que- son-Osmena betrayal. A. Gonzales supported the sell-out of the Fi pino misleaders, Celebrate Founding of Freiheit, Sunday Thousands of workers will fill New York’s largest hall, the New York Coliseum, April 13th, at the jubilee of the only Jewish workers’ newspaper on her ninth birthday. Workers’ organizations are mobil- izing their members for the jubilee. An artistic proletarian program is being prepared. The program which is being pre- | right to demonstrate on Union Sq. on May Day. The fas who are enemies of the workers, the officers lof the Veterans of Foreign Wars jand the American Legion, who are | using the working class elements in thes organizations against the working class will not succeed so | easily. May Day Conference. | The United Front May Day Con- | | ference is setting a minimum 2f/ 1,000 delegates to the next confer- | ence on April 24, and this will be the next answer to the pompous threat that Union Square will be jtaken away from the workers on) | May Day. | Workers of New York and the} Protest against the d entire country: jattempts of the fascisti suppor | Dr. George S. Counts, associate | director of the International Insti- tute of Teachers College, Columbia University, will be the chief speak- er at the first membership mass meeting of the New York branch of the Friends of the Soviet Union, to be held Friday night at 8 o’elock in Irving Plaza, 15th St, and Irving Place. Dr. Counts has just returned from a 6,000-mile trip through the Soviet Union. He was a member of the technical staff of the American trade union delegation that visited the U.S.S.R. in 1927, At the meet- ing Friday night Dr. Counts will \speak on “Educational and Social Planning in the Soviet Union,” \Mayor ‘Can Not Stop | Soviet Defense Meet Senatorial Report Will Whitewash Huston WASHINGTON, D, C., April 7—} Every effort will be made by the senatorial lobby investigation com- Unofficial adviees from the com- mittee were that it would make no ‘recommendations but would merely fs |report “the facts.” The facts are mittee on which democrats and “in-'|inat Huston took some $31,000 of surgent” republicans have a major-|Muscle Shoals Lobby money and ity, to save the reputation of Claud- | treated it as though it were a bribe. jus Huston and John J. Raskob,| Raskob is proved to have con- chairmen of the republican and dem- | tributed about $66,000 to the Asso- ocratie parties, it appeared today. jciation Against the Prohibition Act, Huston republicans circulated a re- | and this causes trouble with the dry port that Huston would not resign. | democrats. Egyptian Strikers Fight Scabs (By Inprecorr Press Service.) CAIRO, Egypt.—The increased exploitation of the workers has re- sulted in a series of strikes recently in Egypt, in the railway workshops and in the cigarette trade. A strike has now taken place in one of the largest textile factories in Alexandria. Collisions occurred between the pared for this occasion will be an|by the police to take away Union expression of the struggles of the! square from the workers on May revolutionary working-class, their | Day! Tp all working class organ trivings and ideals. An interest- | jzations—unions and fraternal or- ing program of singing, dancing, anizations—pass resolutions con- recitations and sport is being pre- | demning the fascisti and demanding pared in whieh 700 will participate. | the use of Union Square on Ma Get your tickets in advance. You | Day. Elect delegates to the A’ will thereby save 25 cents on a'24 conference. Make this a resoun¢ ticket and will save yourself the | ing answer to the challenge of the! trouble of standing in line at the | fascisti, Coliseum, Strike on May Day! Most of all—build up shop com- mittees in all shops, and prepare for Foster to Welcome | strike in your shop on May Day; Education Meeting ture the shop committee elect dele- | gates to the April 24 conference to} The banquet which the Workers’) jnobilize the workers of New Yorl:| School is holding on Friday night, | for the strike on May Day together | |April 18th, at Manhattan Lyceum, | with the unemployed workers of the |will be a rally for all students and | city, alumni of the School as well as for | The right of the workers to use all workers who ave interested in| Union Square is no longer a local | Sinko, Joseph Ludin, strikers and police and strikebreakers whereby 13 strikers were ar- rested. Watson Admits Sentiment Shifts From G. 0. P- WASHINGTON, D. C., April 7.—|the fake “farm relief” legislation Republican party leaders here are! relieves them much, The working muttering in corners over the re-|class says that whoever is prosper- ports brought in by their scouts sur-/ous it isn't the worker. And even veying the country previous to the | the business interests, on the whole, election campaign. It seems that/insist that the tariff booty is not the Hoover prosperity bunk hasn’t | properly distributed. worked. Wide dissatisfaction is re-| “I know there is a shifting of sen- ported on all sides. The agricultural |timent away from the republican states, where the population really party,” stated Senator Watson, re- has 2 vote, don’t seem to think that | publican floor leader, yesterday. Jobless Family Lived in Garage; Evicted DETROIT, Mich., April 7.—Frank: Pama, an unemployed worker, his wife and their four children have been ordered evicted from their one-room shack, a former garage with a dirt floor. Pama has been out of work for sie months. He formerly worl:ed for the Michigan Central Railroad. They have been eating garbage which the father has been able te beg from charity organizations. Austrian Fascists Ape Hoover Fake Program VIENNA, Austria, April 7.—Un-| 350,000" are out of work, and to employment has reached such Summon a conference like Hoover's 7 sent: f work- |i2 the United States. eae eee eennert ee aha _, The Austrian equivalent of the ers has mounted so far, that the Hoover fake building program will faseist-inclined Premier Schober has | he a “trail building” program in the been forced to admit that “at least | Alps. 75,000 Shanghai Workers Struck in 1929 SHANGHAI, April J.—Despite ; 75,000, half of whom were women the white terror of the Chiang Kai-, workers. Fully 25 per cent of the . stri ill out. The largest Shek government, 108 strikes were Strikers are sti cs Z é | strike of the year, the report says, called in 1929, admits the Chines@| was that of 12,000 women, who Bureau of Social Affairs, The to-! struck for higher wages in a Shang- tal number of workers affected was | hai silk mill. . Fight for “Work or Wages” in Greece ATHENS, Greece (By Inprecorrylition of those rudiments of social Service). — Under the pressure of | insurance which exist in one or two 1s ; 1 a ists |iPdustries (tobacco), Under the ipinrapenes Jed by the Communists pressure of the employers Venise- and with a view to bring them un-|jog has decided to postpone his bill der reformist leadership if possible, | until next October. The reformists the Veniselos government has in-|are conducting a sham struggle for trodiced a draft bill for social in-| social insurance with a view to sec- surance. The bill contains no men-|uring influence on the masses. The tion of any unemployment insurance | revolutioinry trade unions and the which does not exist in Greece. The | Greek Communist Party are mob- employers reject all idea of social |ilizing the masses in a struggle for insurance on the ground that eom- _ meree and industry cannot stand the __etraisi’ They even demand the abo- widespread social and unemployment insurance under the control of the rorkers. in Bellingham, Wash i | BELLINGHAM, Wash., April 7. —Over 150 workers attended a | meeting for the defense of the So- | viet Union at Tulip Hall on March /30, despite the attempts of Mayor | Kellogg and the local capitalist rep- til pr to keep the workers away. Sydney Bloomfield, organizer of the Communist Party in this dis- | trict spoke on the Five-Year Plan. |He told of the amazing achieve- |ments that are being made by the | workers in the U,S.S.R., which is jone of the main reasons for the sud- |den “holy war” erusade of the im- | perialist bandits. Much enthusiasm and applause \greeted Bloomfield’s speech. Twen- |ty-five workers accepted application cards for membership in the Party. Hindu Worker Beats Deportation Charge | PATERSON, N. J., April 7—One jof 12 Hindu workers arrested last | August in Paterson, N. J., as a re- sult of labor activities has won his right to stay in the United States. The government sought to deport the men on the ground that they had overstayed temporary permits. Mohib Alli was able to prove that he entered the country prior to 1924, when the law governing temporary permits was not in effect. Alli’s case came before the U. S. District Court at New York. GRAFT AMONG CUSTOMS MEN. Graft among the customs inspec- tors in New York was revealed to» day when U. S. Attorney Tuttle an- nounced he will investigate whole- sale bribing and smuggling of dope and booze. Tuttle is trying to get |the underpaid small customs offi- cials, but the big grafters, as usual, will get higher protection. STEEL, INJUNCTION. The. Structural Steel Board of Trade, formerly the Iron League, has served on the Structural Iron Workers Union an injunction ob- tained five years ago, and made final about six months ago, It is being used against the workers on the Starrett job, which is ex-Gov- ernor Al Smith’s “Empire State Building.” Build The Daily Worker—Send soe Share of the 15,000 New working class education. The delegates to the Working- jclass Education Conference will be present and will be welcomed by William Z. Foster, National Secre- tary of the Trade Union Unity League, and Sam Darey, Assistant Director of the School, nal organizations are urged to send the names of their delegates to the Workers’ School and to instruct banquet in advance. ELECTRICIANS STRIKE. ASBURY PARK, N. triciang here have struck following yefusal of contractors to grant a wage increase of $1.20 per day and improve conditions. Contractors on the new Convention Hall and Wool- worth building capitulated and signed on the dotted line. ‘Communist Activities Section Six Funetionarics, Tuesday, 8 p. m., Section headquar ters. + * # Meetings Tonight. c. 4,8 p.m, 148 KE. 108rd t Unit 2 St, Room Unit 1F, Section 6, 86 Whipple St, 8 p.m. Unit’ 1, Section 4, 8 p.m, 386 Lenex Ave, ‘Unit 3, Section 4, 8 p. m, 836 Lenox Ave. Unit SF. x Unit R2, Section 1, 7:30 p.m, 15- 17_B. 3rd ard floor, Unit 5, tion 7, 8:30 p, m., 2901 Mermaid’ Ave., Coney Island. i Unit 6F, Section 1, 6:15 p, m., £7 E. 4th St, * ¢@ Shoe Workers Fraction, Tonight, 8 p. m., at Center, ee Workers School Banquet. To open Working Class Education- al Conference Friday, April 18, 7 on. m. Manhattan Lyceum, 66 1, 4th St. Program: John Reed Club; admis- sion $1. ‘ : < Rea Prisonpra Night. Saturday, April 12, Reekland Pal- nee, 280 W. 155th St, near Sth Ave. Admission 75 cents, in advance, 65 cents, Labor and Fraternal f Organizations Cooperative ILD, Wednesday, 9 p, m., Sol Harper, of ANLC, wilt speak, Rrownayille 1LD. Wednesday, 8 p. m., 105 Thatford Ave, é ‘ wi "a Comneil 11. Wednesday, 8190 nag atto Brons Pork East, Comrade DeFazio, “Paris Commune." i ae. we ‘* “paste camnm Brighten Beach A’ Bri De TDs pcfectoesadinc > Trade | D. unions, workers’ clubs and frater-| them to buy their tickets for the} J.—Elec- | matter. Union Square has become ja center of struggle between the | workers and the fascisti. The work |ers all over the country must an- |swer this challenge of the fascis' | supported by the police, by orga jing mass political strikes on May’ a: May Day will remain the day not jof the black fa: who are sup- {ported by the police and the under- world, but the day of the revolu- onary working class. SEND $25 FOR SOCIALIST BUILDING. YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio.—Twenty- five dollars has been collected | among a few workers in this city | jand sent by the Youngstown branch | of the Friends of the Soviet Union as a contribution toward the social- ist upbuilding of the Soviet Union. | | W. I. R. CLOTHING STORE 542 BROOK AVENUR Telephone Ludlow 3008 Cleaning, Pressing, Repairing High. Glass Work Done Goods Called for and Delivered All profits go towards strikers and their families. SHOW YOUR SOLIDARITY Wita hHe WORKERS! FOUND Ladies pocketbook, money and other articles. Write or call M. Max, c/o Mrs, Shink, 34 St. Marks Place, 2nd fl., New York. Tel. SACramento 2592 The Szabo Conservatory of Music 1275 LEXINGTON AVENUE at 86th Street Subway Station NEW YORK CITY Instruction given to Beginners and Advancers in MUSIC COMPOSITION VOCAL, VIOLIN, PIANO, 'CELLO Theory and other instruments Circle 1699 Saxophone TaURRt RED HOT MUSIC iy DAN BAKER “THE CHEF OF HOT TUNES” and his ORCHESTRA 658 Broadway jonelnnd Bldg. Beterraters for very especlal, Rat Day Worker the leadership of the Communist Party. The list of exploiters sup- porting the starvation army includes such open-shop organizations as the principal part, is the chief fea- ture at the hous CARL BRODSK ‘Telephone: Murray Hil 5559 Little Carnegie Play- Beginning Wednesday, for three |SUC” oPe™ “Rober! \days, Little Carnegie will present a| General Samuel McRoberts, Chat-!¢ gast 42nd Street, New York ham Phenix National Bank and sereen version of “No No Nanette,” in which Bernice Claire and Al ander Gray have the leading rol Trust Company, domestic banks; 8. 0. Blackiston, Bush Terminal, ter- minals and warehouses; Fred T. “A Lady to Love,” Vilma Bank » nga Fac 5 tors! Patronize first talking picture, commene: Leap ea eotber eae four-day engagement at Little Car- J0rse¥» railroads; Bernarr MacHad- S E R O Y negie on Saturday, April 12. Cop, “BEWEDRDSTS: SSS * " CHEMIST Newark Workers Are Labor Defense Fights dba atiedica labia Fined, Sentenced for to Free Anti Horthy Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. Y. Y Shop G NEWARK, N. ing for the Westinghouse Electric | bosses, Judge Howe today gave ition Saturday, against Alexander seven Negro and white workers sus- yy .. é i ol | Magyar, the flying fascist agent o | pended sentences of six months, and | Maeyar, | als 2nd | Horthy, are held under three months probation, and fines | Se eee i rey of $50 to §25 for holding a shop|,, The Newark court is protecting gate meeting in front of the West-| ‘he interest of Bu loody pikes ina ing house plant here. jment in Hungary, by imprisonment The workers tinea eatined en pay | 2nd detention of these workers who) the fines and are appealing the|™ean t fight and expose tt case. Dominick Flaiani was fined | _ STORSOES | OTRO RADONE Se | $50. Those fined $25 were William | “8d to contribute to the I.L.D, who R Larvieed: (38 handling these cases and will use Thomas Acquah, N. Wall and Henry eo ee pressure to get them re | Walker. eneens ate Meeting Workers Held on Bail == . NEWARK, N. J., April 7.—The. J. April 7—Act-| seven men and women workers ar: | rested at the anti-fascist demonstra- WORKERS’ CENTER BARBER SHOP Moved to 30 Union Square ®REMHEIT BLDG.—Main Floor Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST 249 EAST 115th STREET Second Ave. New York DAILY EXCEPT FRIDAY Please telephone for aj Telephone: Lehigh Cor. DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Room 803—Phone: Algonquin 6183 Not eonnected with any other office cs 12 TRACTORS FROM F. S. U. Navy Arms Race MOSCOW.—Twelve tractors from Meet Is Smashed ‘he United States have arrived at ao the collective farm, Land of the (Continued from Page One) Soviets, which is under the patron- delegation is scheduled to sail for age of the United States Section home by April 22. Three admirals !of the Friends of the Soviet Union. have already been recalled. | In the next six years American 2 aN ‘ *, i Dai VEGETARIAN imperialists will have spent $1,000,- spend something for replacements,” | SITY | BBPTAURANT | omrades ways Find tt 000,000 on naval construction. The Edwin James stated in yesterday’s | 8 naval conference gave British im-| Times, “but not so much as Amer- | perialism a breathing spell. The ica. . . . We, however, will have next step is increased naval build-|an advantage in the newness of our ing. “Of course, England also must ships if we build them.” Pleasant to Dine at Our Place. (near 174th St. Station) P®@HONE:— INTERVALE 9149, RATIONAL Vegetarian | RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVE] UE Bet, 12th and 13th Sts, Strictly Vegetarian Food Pes “AMUSEMENTS- |MADISON SQ. GARDEN 31982 | ‘Twice Daily, 2 & 8. Doors Open 1 & 7 P.M. | BROS. and | BARNUM |@ BAILEY | 1,000 New Foreign Features incl. Tribe of MONSTER weeinen UBANGI SAVAGES Admission to all incl. seats, 81 to 83. . tax. Children under 12 half pris pt Sat, Tickets at Garden mbel Bros. & Usual Agencies Pheatre Guild Productions A MONTH IN THE COUNTRY By IVAN TURGENEV GUILD W, 524. 8 Mts | All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant “THE APPLE CART” By Bernard Shaw fives, 8:30. Mats. Thursday and Saturday at 2: TRIANGLE DAIRY RESTAURANT 1879 INEERVALE AVENUE Cor, Jennings St. BRONX OPAZE” — Hit from the French | FRANK MORGAN, Phoebe Yoster, Clarence Derwent 4 A. H. WOODS presents ALICE BRADY '= LOVE, HONGR and BETRAY A dddsical Oumbay | LAURA D. WILOK presents ‘When. 42nd St. W. of B'way Eltinge men angst wot eyes) “TROYKA” Ev. | ——_—__—_—_— | By Lula Vollmer from the Hungarian HUDSON Thea. 44th St. E. of Bry | Sat. . 8:40, Mats, Wed. & | at 2:20 | HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT of Imre Fazekas i eit 1600 MADISON AVE. A st f the Russian Revoluti ( : AME O Now story of the. Russian’ Revolution Hiee biraeeu ke 2d ST. & BWAY tha A wee meet 2nd Ave. Playhouse 12% Second Avenue, Corner 8th St. A Double-Feature Program! Today and Tomorrow ANNA MAY WONG SHOW LIFE “Dancer of Barcelona” with LITA DAMITA Powerful, Absorbing Dramat “GUILTY” NIA VALLE AND Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 302 E.12th 8t. New York Is sHOWS pty Ay Bay fr e L0:3Ocn. “FRAMED” with EVELYN BRENT and Regis ‘Yoomey. More thrills than “Under- world” and “Alibi” combined, Popular Prices—10:30—1 p, m. 35¢ || Advertise your Union Meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City Every new Daily Worker reader you get is a potential Party mem- ber. Branch of the Amaigamated Fo Workers, 18 W. 2iat St. N. ¥. C. Phi Chelsea 2274 held ti of the month at We Meet at the— COOPERATIVE CAFETERIA 26-28 UNION SQUARE Fresh Vegetables Our Specialty s—every t 5 o'clock. ne try! One Union! Join and Flzht the Common Knemy! Office vpen from 9 a, m, to 6 p.m afternoon 0 ppointment 6022 |—MELROSE—, 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx bs > Then, 45th, W. of | Eat where the best dairy foods MARTIN BECK 43¢ street, |) MUSIC BOX siwas, eras, at 8:10] are served. Where one customer et SA’. f) Mats. Thursday and Saturday at 2:30 | recommends another,