Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
a | Page Two = { FEW MEN IN ONE ROOM, CARRY OUT BOSS POLICY. REGARDING COMMUNISM Fish-Cabinet Disappointed When Lackey Has No “Gold From Moscow” Evidence Legislation to Curb Native Workers and to Deport Foreign Ones Hinted At A little stuffy room is crowded | beca with a handful of Red investigatots, | Wood ex¢eedéd in umber by the corps of | to t: reporters present. The room will as t not seat more than 35. There murmuring and confusion. The w! . Wood, commissioner of |in Communism later and more eom- ion of the U. S. labor de- | pletely. partment, does not speak clearly.| When asked if there was anything He fidgits around and, in the little |élse, Wood exhibited a shop paper, room, he can scarcely be heard by |stating shop papers were very ef- the reporters and “investigators.” | fective among workers. Tall, nervous, well past fifty, this| Fish: Did you bring any clippings agent of thé bosses, ironically wear- |or articles from the Daily Worker? ing a red nécktie, talks tediously| Wood: I didn’t, but I have a com- and incoherently. plete Before the Communists can make | any progress, Wood says, they must |the file and getting articles of a e lied that the Negroes liked and pick up a little change y talk. file. intérested in Communism, We will go into the subject | roes and Indians interested | Fish: Would you mind going over | first Win over the workers. As a bulwark against the Red menace the old unions can be used. Chairman Fish asks about the number of native Americans in the movement. Wood replies the num- ber is negligible. Americans mostly in the Interna- tional Labor Defense and the Work- ers International Relief. Fish: Has strike-frequency creased since 1925? Wood (answers vaguely): Princi- pally violence to promote activities to ptovoke the police. Congressman Bachman: Strikes and the movement have been pretty much confined to industrial centers, the movement has not made much headway among the agricultural centérs, it makes its spread quicker whéte there is a large foreign pop- ulation, does it not? Wood: Yes. De you know generally how move- ments are financed here—or by Soviet Russia? Wood: Not one kopek is sent from Soviet Russia. They next took up the question of the Workers’ School. Exhibit_madé of Workers’ School leaflet. Wood reads. The word cadre is not understood and someone asks Wood to explain. Wood tells them it is a military unit! When asked about Negroes who in- | revolutionary nature? | Wood: Why, it’s all revolution- ary. But it’s of no importance. The | workers outgrow it and then laugh Jat it. Bachman: That's the leading We find native |Communist paper in the country, lisn’t it? | Wood: Yes, by all means. | Bachman: Who owns it? | Wood: The Communist Party. Bachman: You don’t think it |should be permitted through the U. |S. mails, do you? | Wood: No. | Bachman: How is it financed? Wood: Certain awards from time to time, and the return on buildings, | subseriptions, donations. Bachman: The Communist build- ing is on Union Square, isn’t it? | Who owns it? Wood: (Not clear.) Nelson: What is the circulation of the Daily Worker? Wood: Less than 12,000. In New York they sell bundles of papers. Fish: Is it your view the paper is self-supporting or is it subsi- |sidy, bit foreign? | Wood: It is subsidized loéally, not |ffom a foreign souree. Fish: I doubt if anyone in the country could have made the re- port you have given us. Is there anything you have overlooked? Wood says he’s tired. Czec.c Workers Greet PRAGUE (LP.S.)—The striking workérs of the Heinik factory in Prerau decided in a strike meeting to send a telegram of greetings to the Sixteenth Congress of the Com- miunist Party of theSoviet Union, ex- plaining their struggle against wage réductions and for improved work- ing conditions and assuring the leader of the Russian proletariat that the working masses of Checho- slovakia, tinder the leadership of the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia, the Communist International, the Red International of Labor Unions, ete, would follow the example of Trotskyists Vote With Social Democrats MOSCOW (I. P. 8&.).—In_ his spééch in the discussion on the re+ pott of the Central Control Com- mission and the Workers and Peas- afits Inspection, comrade Yaro- slavski pointed out that Trotzki had fértied a block with all Trotskyists abrodd and with all renegades and eoufiter-revolutionary elements. The voting at the Vienna congress of the Freethinkers Association where White Terror in China SHANGHAI (I. P. 8.)—Aceording Congress of C.P.8.U. their comrades in the Soviet Union. The central council of working peasants in Czechoslovakia has also sent a telegram of greetings to the Sixteenth Congress of the Commu- nist Party of the Soviet Union, eon- gratulating the Russian masses on Arrested For Selling Daily Workers At Shop NEW YORK —I. Ross, arrested for selling Daily Workers before the West Point Iron Works, at 126th St., has had his charge changed to disorderly conduct. He reports that he has been held two days in the Fifty-third Street Station, in an overcrowded jail, with 20 sleeping on the floor besides those in cots in a cell. The keepers beat up the | poorly clad prisoners. Ross distrib- uted what was left of his Daily Workers to the proletarian pr: ers in jail, and when he left the dis- cussion was still going strong. SIDE EVICTIONS Mass Meeting Friday, July 18 at 8 p. m. NEW YORK.—Facing immediate evictions from their tenement homes by orders of the Tammany admin- istration, the workers in the neigh- borhood of Cherry and Montgon Sts. are rallying to answer the bo politicians by a mass meeting. |The meeting, has been called for | Friday, July 18, at 8 p. m. at Clin- |ton Hall, 151 Clinton St. under the | auspices of Section 1 of the Com- | munist Party. Tammany’s Real Estate Deals. Utterly disregarding the fact that many workers are unemployed and }have been living at Cherry and | Montgomery Sts. for many years, the Tammany graft politicians | eager to realize the profits of their real estate deals have served notices of eviction. Aroused to the | danger of being thrown upon the streets and having no roof over | their heads, or forced into still | worse quarters, the workers are de- |manding that they stay in their | present homes until the city pro- ides them with sanitary living | quarters at the same rental they are paying now. | Workers Must Fight. | Pointing out to the workers, in a | leaflet distributed today by section 1 of the Communist Party, that only dized—I don’t mean local source sub-| by a mass struggle against the | Wall St. Tammany gang can they win their demands, the need for organized is stressed. | Speakers in English and Jewish will address the meeting. FOUR FUR SHOPS NOW ON STRIKE Demand July Increases Inspired By N.T.W.LU. TO PROTEST EAST » DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, JULY 17, 1930 NY.GOMMUNSTS JoblessLeader CALL WORKERS TO Assault Case ANTLWAR MEET). 02080" For the seventh time the boss | controlled officials of the Magis-| |Prepare For a Giant |Demonstration, Aug. 1 {trate’s Court, 4th Distr 57th | St. postponed the cases yesterday of Foster, Minor, Amter, Raymond} Jand Lesten on the trumped up| a a charges of “a ig a poli an.” | spud ‘ (Continued from Page One) ¢ 4 E 4 Late capitalist press Berlin] se Calg 4 is be- The trial has been set for July 25s! despatches yesterday report that sharpened the antagonisms be-| through the efforts of Attorney | 1° P h the imperialist powers a *.| Hindenburg has granted authority | Brodsky of the International Labor Defense. | 4a ed itself into an imperialis council for a united attack st the Soviet Union, This frame up is aimed at adding to the sentence of the previous case. | ce of the District Attorney witnesses was the spe-| se made by the court f gn of hatred against ; et Union, under the cloak of a religious crusadé, the forged documents of the infamous police] postponing trial. But while he is | clubbe halen, the campaign of| not available for the trial of the| | the fas Matthew Woll, Eas-| inemployed delegation, Whalen will | ley, and Hamilton Fish—are all be on hand this week to present his | jparts of war preparations | forged documents before the Fish | | Committee to investigate militant workers’ organizations and assist the imperialists in their prepara-| tions for war against the Soviet Union. The International Labor Defense urges the workers to smash the at- | E th against the Soviet Union. The danger of an imperiali war is tremendously hastened b: the deep world crisis of capitalism | and the growing revolts of the op- ed colonial masses. American m particularly has no out- GERMAN BOSSES GET READY FOR DICTATORSHIP Socialist Betrayal Is Further Exposed to the Bruetiing cabinet to remain in power despite the fact that it could not gét a majority in the Reichstag. * * (Wireless by Inprecorr) BERLIN, July 16.—-Yesterday the Reichstag session proved to be very critical for the governmen: when the government’s finance p) Si was iiscussed. Article 1 aling with emergency levy on officials was adopted ty a government majority because the sodialists ab- ained from voiing. The socialist fraction announced that it will grant all necessary taxes providing the * 3 | government abandons the poll and NEW YORK.—The campaign for | the success of their work for the) yyy increases conducted by the Litins Lovcomets of agriculture fc ind | Needle Trades Workers Industrial for the carrying out of the Five-| Union is spréading very rapidly. Year Plan of industrial construction. | Four company union fut shops are The telegram promises to do every- thing possible to organize che pea- sants of Czechoslovakia for the struggle against the rich landown- ers and for the overthrow of capi- \on strike. The workers of these | company union shops declared their strikes over the heads of the com- | pany union officials, and were in- spired by the campaign conducted | by the Industrial Union. The shops on strike are: Diamond & Altman, 214 W. 29th St.; Harris | & Hammer, 129 Westg9th St.; New the Trotskyists had voted for the | Idea Fur Co., 242 West 30th St.; social democrats and against the| Feinberg & Freeman, 315 7th Ave. Communists, showed that the| The Industrial Union is calling Trotskyists had finally completely | upon all furtiers to support these talism. revolution and exposed theif feal | cfeases as well as follow their ex- attitude to the Communist Inter- | ample and to declare more shops on national. For this reason the party | strike. i s 3 congress would not answer the) A mass meeting of furriers will declarations of the Trotsky sup-| take plaee at Cooper Union, Thurs- porters, day, next week. A very important meeting of the Shop Delégates Council will be Weld today, at Ifving Plaza, 15th St., Irving Place. At this meeting a the frontier of the provinces Hupeh | report will be given of the activi- arrived in the camp of the counter: | strikes and help thei win July in-' & shops and factories. let from the crisis except incr exploitation of the working masses jand armed stfuggle for control of the world markets. | The subjection of eight million workers to unemployment and | starvation, the sweeping wage cuts |and increased speed-up, the growth |of fascist terror, especially evi- | denced in the police murders of the | Negro worker, Levy, and the Mex- j ican worker, Gonzalez, the new wave of fiendish lynchings of Ne- jgro workers; brutal death threats |in Atlanta, and inhumanly long prison terms in California, Penn- sylvania, ete., is part of the entire campaign to crush the growing re- sistance of the workers to unem- ployment, wage cuts, speed-up and the war preparations of Wall | Street. | “On August Ist, the international | day of struggle against imperialist | war, the working class throughout | the world will organize to struggle | and demonstrate against imperial- |ism, for the defense of thé Soviet | Union, for work or wages, against increased exploitation and fascist terror. “This year the Communist Party, which leads the struggle against im- perialist war and capitalist ex- ploitation and oppression, enters the election campaign with its plat- form of class struggle against capi- talism. The election campaign of the Communist Party is a struggle to mobilize the masses against un- employment, imperialist war prepa- rations and for the defense of the | Soviet Union. “Workers in the shops and fac- tories! Organize anti-war com- mittees in the shops! Send dele- gates to the Anti-War Confer- ence, Thursday, at 8 p. m., July 24, at Manhattan Lyceum! Sup- port the election program ef the Communist Party! Fight faseist terror of the bosses’ police! Not a man, not a cent, not a gun for the imperialist army and navy! “Support the revolutionary strug-| gles of the Indian and Chinese! | Workers and peasants! Fight for | unemployment and social insurance, | for the 7-hour day and5-day week! | Fight for the immediate release of |the Unemployed Delegation and all) class war prisoners! For full in-| ; dependence of Haiti, the Philip-| | pines, and all colonies oppressed by | | American imperialism! | “Demonstrate on August Ast tempted frame-up of the jobless leaders by a vigorous protest in the | courtroom on July 25. The International Labor Defense urges the workers to protest this attempted frame up of the oble leaders in the court room July 25, Lesten, a seaman, is held on bail, | and deprived of a chance to get a job by the setting of the trial every two weeks or so. He has served 30 days for the March 6 demonstration. The other four were sentenced to three years, and are in prison. COPS BREAK NEWARK MEET, ARREST TWO NEWARK, N. JA street meet- ing held by the International Labor Defense and the Civil Liberties Union here was broken up by the police. The meeting was called to demand ths use of the streets of Newark for meetings of the workers. The police were well mobilized to break up the meeting. As soon as Paul Stark began to address the meeting he was arrested by the police. The workers began to protest and Taylor, from the Civil Liberties Union, who led the protest was also pulled in. At this writing, the charges against these two could not be learned. They will be defended by the I. L. D. SPREAD STRIKE OF ILL. MINERS tax on bachelors and reimbursing | the treasury with eight per cent increase in income tax. Hindenburg sent a letter to the Prussian government, allegedly without the knowledge of the Reich | government, cancelling engagements jin connection with Rhineland evac- uation ¢elebrations in the Prissian Rhineland provinces becatise pro- hibitions of celebratiors by steel helmets were maintained in Stahl- helm. The socialist premier, Braun, immediately despatched a slavish letter to Hindenburg, assuring that the prohibition will be withdrawn, if Stahlhelm is ready to give as- sufance that further activities will expressed hope that Hindenburg will withdraw the cancellation. Building, Construction Workers to Meet Sat. NEW YORK.—A mass meeting of building and construction work- érs to take up the problems facing them, will be held Saturday, July 19 at 1.30 p.m. Just what the building workers must do to fight the terrific un- employment, as high as 75 per cent, existing among them will be an- swered by the building trades dele- “All Quiet On “All Quiet on the Western Front,” how playing at the Central Theatre, produced by Lewis Milestone from Eric Remarque’s fatious war novel, be held within the law. He also | Is a Real Picture of War is the finest thing by far which has yet come out of Hollywood. The cutting technique of the gréat Soviet film directors, Eisenstéin and CHICAGO, Ill, July 16.—Reports received by the Trade Union Unity League headquarters show the fol- lowing mines are on strike n the coal fields: Ziegler No. 1 and No. 2 of the Bell and Zolla Co; Agoa No. 1 and Agoa No. 12 in Eldurado; Royalton Peabody No. 18 in West Pudowkin, are amply madé use of by Milestone. Eisenstein, diréctor of “Ten Days That Shook the World,” of “Potemkin” and “Old and New,” has great praise for “All Quiet.” The picture follows the famous novel faithfully—very unusual for Hollywood. Remarque dedicates his story of the horrors of the last im- perialist world war “to a gefera- tion who, though they may have escaped its shells, were destroyed Frankfort. The west mine in West Frankfort has been completely shut down and 400 miners were thrown out from the mine. The sentiment for spread- ing the strike is growing daily. The National Miners’ Union held a meeting in Eldorado and prepated | against imperialist war!” The efitire Party organization is | mobilized to take the struggle | | against the acute danger of imper-| ialist war and of an armed attack | against the Soviet Union into the| The keynote | of the Party’s agitation in the anti- | wat campaign is “Organize Anti- War Committees in the Shops.” The Trade Union Unity League | to hold meetings in many other mining towns, calling on the miners to spread the strike and to get rid of the Lewis, Fishwick, Howatt and the so-called rank and file Belle- ville clique of the U. M. W. A., whieh are leading the mifers in the interest of the bosses. The latest report from Harris- burgh states that State’s Attorney Rumsey issued warrants to arrest by the war.” Says Remarque: “It is not an aceusation.” If only Remarque had made “All Quiet” an accusation, instead of a thrilling, and, in a sénse, pacifist work, we would have a valuable revolutionary, social documént. No- where in this fine film _picturization of all the miseries suffered by the common soldiers in the imperialist war, in the cross-section of -he kill- and Kiangsi. In Hupeh itself, near Wukiang, government troops captured twenty- eight red soldiers. They were im- mediately executed, including sev- te the reports of the Chinese press, a Févélutionary column 6f 200 men wWa$ surfounded and compelled to surréfder by government troops. Every tenth man was put against |eral women who were with the the wall and shot. This occurred on/ group. Swedish Workers Fight Visiting Fascists STOCKHOLM (I. P. S.)—A de- tachment of the Finnish Fascist “Defence Corps” visited Stockholm t6 make propaganda in favor of thé ith Faseists. Motor boats full démonstrating workers put out to se@ £6 givé the Fascists a welcome. eafried placards against the Fascist terror in Finland. Police cutters protected the Fascisis and the whole quay was cordoned off by uniformed police. In the strééeta however, collisions oceurréd between the Finnish Fascists and Swedish workers. The Swedish police ar- rested three workers. ANLC IN BIG ANTI LYNCH CAMPAIGN White and Negro Toil- ers Must Fight Terror NEW YORK, J uly i6—With ay terror continuing unabated in th, making life for the great _ miasses of Negro workérs and farii- es tee hell, the Anierican N Labor Congress has com= _ménced a big anti-lynch drive to be | on the coninion interssts of the white and Negro workers against théir white exploiters. Calling upon the Negro masses to ehtt aside the illusions of fighting ing by petitions and “humani- ian” s, the Ameriéan Negro gress strésses the necés- hité and Negro workers izing the importance of the fight of the Negro masses for sélf- determination. This terror has been flaming up for inonths now and shows no sign of abatement. Bighteen workers have been lynched already this year —seven more than for the éntire year of 1929. The eustomary charge of rape has not been able to stand up in these lynchings, has not been \able to cover up the economié clause. -Plan Big Campaign. The campaign includes an éxten- sive cireularization of Negro and white organizations, unions, fra- ternal orders, ete, with a four page leaflet depicting the conditions of the frightfully oppressed southern Negroes and giving statistics, in- cluding the economie causes which the Congress declarés to be back of most lynchings, of eighteen lyneh- ings which it says has taken place during the first half of the present year. Preparations for the National Convention of the Améfican Negro Labor Congress to be held itt St. | Louis, Aug. 30, 31 and Sept. 1, are now well under way. ties in the various trades and pla’ | for future activities will be con- | sidered. A successful conference of active tegistered cloakmakers as well as Industrial Union members tock place yesterday, Tuesday, July 15th, at the office of the Union. About 175 were present of whom a large number were registered cloak- makers. A plan for starting a campaign in the cloak field to prépare the clodkmakers for a struggle for con- ditions for a fight against the com- pany union was présented and was enthusiastically accepted and ad- opted by the conference. It was also decided to make all necessary plans fot the mass meeting of cloak- makers in the very near future. This conference constituted itself as a committee of action to carty otit plafis of the union ip the cloak trade, ‘ 2 gt Communist Activities Séction § Funetionary Meeting will be held Thursday, July 17 at 7 ry m. & 56 ie romuaey Ave. 5 Blection Campa ‘ vony ihe held tontant, friday rei to 9 and Sunday up to 2 p. i. All coma 68 Ase ¥ wang" 5 Unit i; section 7, Wiil Have .an open Air meetin night fey secon Bt. and Ave, Brooklyp. e aries. Meet Wilt Tage, Poni tion hea quae tera, 68 filth first ie Whipple st: ance eld by Unit. 2 and_5 of Harlem, saturday, Itty 19, at & Pm at 43 E. 103rd St. htnipeion, 5 cents, jeedle Trades Aver Reng Will be held tonight at 7 p.m. at the Workers Gentes a6, Union Sq. Cleaners and Launders lion WIM Be held tonight . at 26 Union Sq, at ‘revolutionary unions are pféparing ‘from 50 to 75 miners who partici- jto take the Augtst 1st campaign | pated in the mass picketing in front into the shops and factories, to | ofthe O’Garra No. 12 Mine, prevent- mobilize the organized as well as |ing the breaking of the strike. The the unorganized, the employed and report states that some miners had unemployed behind the anti-war | wanted to get into the mine to work {conference call by the Commtnist!and had been forcefully stopped Ly Party and fer the organized par-|the strikers, and some automobiles ticipation in the mass anti-war|had been smashed. There were | demonstration at Union Square on|more than 1,000 miners in front of ing of millions of worke workers, as the unwillin, of rival groups of capitalists, no- where is there an accusation against the criminality of that capitalism, except in the mouth of one obscure soldier-character for a fleeting mo- ment. by other Puppets Nevertheless, such a pictite as | August Ist. | Our Build the that mine. Biggest and Best Workers’ Outing of the Season! | Baily S85 Worker All Workers from Can Reach. REMEMBER THE DATE SUNDAY, Picnic-Carzival Held in Co-operation with =All Revolutionary and Sympathetic Workers’ Organizations; All Party Comniunist Papers; —All Daily Worker Readers; the Shops That We AUG. 17 PLEASANT BAY PARK | SBNSATE “All Quiet” can make workers mote determined than ever not to bé used against othe® workers in thé éom- ing imperialist war. WAIL Quiet” tells the story of Paul Baumer, a young Gernian boy, eartied away by patriotic lies, plus IRKO THEATRES -LETJ GO/] LOBE “gist ay sue “LAWFUL LARCENY” Broadway AMEQ 2nd teat? “AT THE BOTTOM OF THE WORLD” ONAL POLAK HR PRBITION New York Premiere. f We Meet at the Fresh COOPERATIVE CAFETERIA 26:28 UNION SQUARE FRESH FRUIT SODAS AND ICE CREAM Us. 8. R. CANDIB8———CIGARETTES Working Women Rally Labor and Fraterna to Aug. 1 Demonstr. age Womens Anti-War cetinient Conference will be vias iia * July 18 at 7.30 p. m, at 26 Union | “Millions of women workers in| 9"! ap Brgy ae Brighton Beach membership meetin, 0p. m, at 208 Otis PL. \the United States and in the Euro- jean countries are being trained and jmobilized for the next imperialist |blood-bath. In some countries the bosses are agitating for conscrip- | + * & Alteration Painters Will meet tonight at 8 p. m, at ¥ tion laws for women as well as men | W: 17th St. emis |workers.” This is part of the state- Woifers Ex-Servicemen |ment issued by the Women’s De- | Will have an executive méeting to, night at 8 p. m, at 26 Union Sq |partment of the Communist Party, | i * |New York District, in its call to working women to tend the | Women’s Anti-War Conference to| }bé held July 18 at 7:30 p. m. at 26 Union Square, New York. | |. In the demonstrations on August 1 women workers will take their | place with the men workers in pro- j testing the war prep of the | limperialists and the on the |Soviet Union. The Women’s Con- ference of July 18, which will in- cludé délegates from factories as well as from wor $8 organizations, will make prep tions for this anti-war demonstration. ie kers Center wil turday, July 19 a pare 7 This Saturday July 19 Vvvvvvyv LLD ‘Excursion SAMER: “MYLES STANDISH” Leaves Pier A South Ferry Saturday 2 P. M. BEAT WORKERS AT HARLEM MEETING Fight Starvation and! Imperialist War | BIG PROGR. DANCE AND ENTERTAINMENTS a a Lm Mn Me Me GHEY TICKETS AT I. L. D., 799 Broadway, Room 410 —— Stuy 3752 While members of the Commu- AM nist Party-were holding a street meéeting at 132nd St. and Lenox | Ave., Tuesday evening, Comrade Melvin Green was viciously ittacked | by @ reputed member of the “Back to Africa” movement of Marcus Garvey, sél*-styled provisional presi- dent of the republic of Africa, in| |which white and Negro members of | the African Communist Party are | facing death from bullets of the| British and other capitalist powers. | This is the third attack made on | Negro and white workers. The first | was that of Comrade Alfred Levy, | Ne worker murdered py police | at the corner of 133rd St. and Lenox | Ave. during an anti-lynching protest | meeting, and the other was Com. rade Gonzalo Gonzalez, Mexic worker murdered while walking with (ARL BRODSK ‘Velephone: Murray E11) S55¢ i Kast 42nd several Spanish workers to the Cooperators! Pai se funeral parlor where Levy’s body pains SEROY gates, featured from the National CHEMIST Convention of the Unemployed in} Chicago, July 4-5. | 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Brons, NY. | Ali Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S | Vegetarian Health | Restaurant |] 558 Cleremont Parkway, Bron Western Front” 1A BANKY RATIONAL Vegetarian RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVE, JE Bet. 12th and isth Sts. Strictly Vegetarian Food : VEGBTARIAN Dairy sesravnant | omrades 1 Always Fimé ft Pleasant (o Dine at Ouy Pisce || 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD. Brons cay (near 114th 8 tin) In a revival of Rudolph Valen- eHONB INTER AY : 9149. tino’s film “The Son of the Shiek,” now showing at the Cameo Theatre. HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNI versity 6865 the spiel of his schoolmasters. He with his classmates join the army; they go to iraining camps and soon find out war isn’t the fun they thought it was. At the front the “fighting for one’s country” turns out not to be the pleasure the pa- triotie elders told the lads it would be. Patil's mates ate killed off one |] Phone: Sturvesent 818 by_ one. '| John’s Restaurant Paul is wounded and granted |] spECIALTY: (ITALIAN wISOBS leave and realizes, at home, that he is changed, all his illusions about patriotism gone. He actually has- | tens back to the front, there to die, amidst the blood and ditt of the trenches—reaching out for a butter: | fly ote morning while “all is auiet | on the Western front,” according to | the military dispatches. The cast gives a great perform- aneé; the work of Louis Wolheim, as Kaezinsky, the corporal, being outstanding. A remarkabl* film—but what the | Soviet directors could do with it! =N. Hi A place with atmosphere where al) radicals meet 02 H.12th St. New York Ur. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGKON DENTIST 249 WAST 15th Wor. Second Ave. elephone jephone: Pel. ORChard 8783 DK. L. KESSLER SURGEON DENTIST Strictly by Appointmént 48-50 DELANCEY STREET Bldridge St. NEW YORK vor DR. J. MINDE SURGEON DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Heom 803— Phone: Algonquin 8188 Not é¢onnected with any other aftice A Theale Guild Production ~ THE NEW | GARRICK GAIRTIES GUILD W 52d. Hvs. #:30 th &Sat 2:30 —— EE ARTISTS AND MoDtIS HArAZALVIérn BAitton: or inth Advertise your Unto. Meetings here For mformation write to The DAILY WORKER MAJESTIC Thee, he * st Advertising Dept. wi at ¥i + BG: a Mats, Wea Ph 26:28 Union &4 New York City BATRE € t FOOD WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION OF NEW YORK 16 W. 21st St. Bronk Headauartérs, 10: Chetsea 2974 t998 Thies Avenue, Mel 0128 Headquarters, 16 G: eye 8: Pulasky vesd pee pe Th sh RAP ESR Vegetables Our Specialty ebninite Unit pene erent EES Pe PET area “For Alt Kinds of Inewranee” Y New York —MELROSE— —s