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Unemployed Council Catches Sliding-Door Closes; Took from Uner NEW YORK. — A worker named Lukac Yanco, living at 99 St. Marks Place, a member of the Down Town Council of Unemployed, informed the | he had paid for a job as a ste , where he wa | take care of ten horses. Pay to be $50 and board. When he got to the job he found out that the ten had grown to 15 horses, and that the employers re- fused to give him board, and wanted | him to sleep on a bale of ha He went back to the Victory “agen- | 145 East- Fourth St., where he had bought the job, The agent) pulled the usual! stall, promising him another job tomorrow.” | When the Down Town Council heard of this, they mobilized all for- ces and marched on the agency. The agen’ on and a clerk were in the office, and told the workers that the bos: at his other office, 125 East Four A few workers stayed there, and the others marched to 125 St | they saw a panel in the side of the wall just closing. One of the workers put his hand in and foreed it open. If this panel had once closed there would have been no way to get into the secret hiding cy, In there place this job shark had prepared in w 1 to shelter himself from those he cheated. He returned the 5 dollars. After the new workers that were What’s On— SATURDAY Dance and Party rade Mear near Fulton Russian Tea Party py Unit 12 Section 5 Ave, at 8 p.m. Adm Bryant. Hinsdale Workers Youth Club Meets at 313 Hinsdy} workers a Attention Paterso: Bill Haywood F ged a al nenefit-of the lace at “Workers Center, ny LW.O. a concert daily Worker, | Annual Concert and Dance At the Bath Beach Workers Club, qt 48 Bay St., Brook! Good dance mus’ ission Workers 1 Talk on the Unemployed § p.m. “Port War Literat First in a_series of lectures by §F. Jacobson. at"4.30-p. m, at the Work- ers School Andttorium, . 12th St > oe INDAY Workers Sch Vern Smith w fean Imperialism M: at 8 p.m. at th second floor, Open Forum speak on ‘An Speakers Class | Of the Workers Ex-Seryicemen’s League meets at 12 noon at 79 E. 10th St * * 8 Open Forum At 2 p. m, at 2061 Bryant Ave, Bronx. ray Open Forum Bronx Workers Club at 1472 Boston Rd. “The Lessons of the Paris Com mune and the Bolshevik Revolution,” Open Forum At 8 p.m. at 1655 Grand Concourse (entrance on Mt, Eden Ave.) on “Communism—What It Stands For.” r Bike Call ef the Wild The wilds of Forrest Park are calling ay young worker who wants to hike there with the Williamsbure Unit of the YCL, Come to 61 Graham Ave. at 16 8, m, and bring your lunch, Neither a wild nor a tame time as- sured. . . Workers Film and Photo League at 7 E, 4th St. Sunday night showing at 6 and $ p. m. “Arsenal,” Soviet Film will be seen, Admission 2c, Red Builders News Club of Bronx Pea ada at 2.80 p.m, at 1622 Bathgate ve. Prog, Youth Club Meets bes pan, ae 1402 Madison Ave, A hot band will supply eually het music for the dane ce, tet Worker at ToS Mrhattora Pp. “Thial of the Menshevik counter rev- olutionaries in the Soviet Union,” The virst Session Of a study elass on the Communit Manifeto takes place 6 to 8 p.m. 2700 Bronx Fars weet, Apt. 1 . jen Open ‘Forum Ats a ws ee Grand Concourse (enter on Mt, Unemploy~ ment and poly insu nce, <8 Brighten Dench Opes Foran At 140 Neptune Ave. Persecution of deporta horn. at tion of if ae Ge. Oe Proleeult Lecture by Solon De Leon on “The Press and the Labor Movent,” admis. sion 20¢, Tea and dancing at 126 BE, 98rd St, Brooklyn, re Bane, we ran a gent aan Ts MONDAY— Pp. ™, Talke on the work of» MOPR Admigaion, free, ae ont 4g, re 1D. Biciyn, e TLD and Penh x. ‘Weckers: eebatkats Group Will conduct a class for beginners and the ad venge syne, oe night Bt 8.20 p. “o ve Workers f..! ailaibiied ‘ bd Secret Panel, Hine Hae Fail Swindling Job Shark to | th | 200 9 i a| wee ew York school i the chil- dren for 15¢ a term, the leading a: ticle was called “Will Other B Russia's Goods? s word for word n of the lies | published in the daily capitalist | press, took 2 and a half pages of | the total 4. Minnie Rishen, a 12-year old Pio- neer and a 1 of > School No. up during class, and | was the Russian | workers s hat they are better off tha < in any} | other country. She brought a book, “The U.8.S.R. in Construction,” to} | principal | Party, j,|¢il for Protection of Foreign Born Him Just As He Returns $5 He nployed Worker Ma the “Five ¥ Union, and hed uner illustr at in head coun- will 1 in the iet abol Lanter Th here. lecture. Fourth S PUPIL EXPOSES LIES; EXPELLED Pr otest| Students Expulsion arch | got told 12 tes that the story tements, but | school to prove her he teacher took it away from her. The next the day pupils had to say| pledge of allegiance to the Am- an flag, but Minnie refused to} She wea brou sistant prince’ sit in a corner till 3 o'clock after the child was struck by him on the] face when she repeatedly said she lid not believe in the flag. When Apr 's mother came to see the 1 the next day oO prot inst her child's being hit, Mi was again asked whether she bel: d in the flag. When she said “No,” she was taken to the prin- nie Dr. Katz. He broke into ora- about the flag and finally de- red Mir suspended from the chool. The Young Pioneers immediately ized a school gate meeting of chool children. Four cops tried to break up the meet. More meet- ngs will be held by the school chil- dren in front of. the school to de- mand Minnie’s reinstatement BRONX, N. Y.—Tillie Weiss, who protested the taxing of 25¢ for the G. O. fund on children of the un- employed, has been warned by the that if she did not rer nounce the Young Pioneers of Ame- rica and the things it stands for, by signing a note to the effect, she will be either transferred to another school or expelled. Section Five School Opens Tomorrow; Banquet Sun. Night The first class of the week-end| training school of the Communist Section 5, will be tomorrow, | Sunday, at 10 a. m, at 569 Prospect; Ave. The subjects which will be taught | in the school will be Organizational | Principals, instructor J. Lustig, Fun- damentals of Communism, instructor Toruck, and Trade Union Work, in- structor Stubin, | Sunday night there will be a ban- quet to celebrate the opening of the school at 6 p. m, at 569 Prospect Ave. Workers are urged to come to the banquet. Two Protest Meets In Brooklyn Tonight NEW YORK.—In preparation for March 28, national day of struggle against lynching and deportations, two mass meetings will be held in the Brooklyn section tonight. One at 1660 Fulton Street, Brooklyn, the other at 10926 Union Hall Street, Jamaica. Yokinen Defense Meet Sunday at Manhattan NEW YORK. — A mass protest meeting bas been arranged by the Council for Protection of Foreign- Born to be held Sunday, March Pay at Manhattan Lyceum, at 2 p.m,, to Protest the attempt to deport Yoki- nen, because he pledged to fight for the unity of all workers, white and Negro, Many, organizations are participating in the preparation of this meeting and in the defense of August Yoki- nen, On Saturday, March 21, the Coun- will hold two large open air meet- ings at corners, 10th and 2nd Ave. and at 12th St, and Avenue A. These im, | meetings WIE bake Plaeh 8§ 7:20 par. All workers are urged to attend these to participate in the Demonstration in Harlem on March 28, the National Day of Struggle Against Deportation and Lynching. The details will be explained at the Mass Protest meet- ing on March 22 at the ttan se { 1) ¥ ' THE ADVENTURES OF BILL WORKER THAT THEY HAVE THESE AUXURIES TN ORDE. TO GiVé JOBS To = D) (3 THE L WORKERS —-=ass | $ Sh == IWW, COPS UNITE, “ATTACK WORKERS Club ‘Uj Elére Editor With A Hammer NEW YORK— ngsters, hired by the I, W. W., and armed with ham- mers, and police with the usual clubs, called in by the I. W."W,, cooperated | to assault a number of class con- scious Hungarian language speaking workers Wednesday night. One of the workers badly injured is the edi- | tor of Uj Elore, Hungayian languser | Communist paper. The I. W. W. has been touring al Hungarian, language speaker named Fishbein, to make the most slander- | ous attacks on Communists, and par- ticularly to attack Hungarian work- | ers’ fraternal organizations. Has Gangsters. Finding that the workers refuse to listen to his lies, and know how to shut him up, the I. W. W. speaker | has been carrying around with him a crowd of about 20 gangsters. Meet- ings held in Detroit and Philadelphia have broken up in fights. Each time the I. W. W. calls in the police. In New York Fishbein chose | Wednesday night to use the Sokol Hall, a place run by Hungarian fas- cists. He brought his gang there; he got a few locgl thugs, and then the police were planted with a patrol wagon near by. Attack With Hammers. As soon as Fishbein began to vomit against the workers’ organizations, workers in the audience of about 160} rose up to indignantly protest. They | were unarmed, but the I. W. W. gangsters with their hammers came rushing out of a saloon and attacked them. It was during this that the Uj Elore editor had his head broken by a hammer blow. He is home,| badly hurt. * Even so, the unarmed workers put | up such a fight against Fishbein’s| thugs, that in despair of ever beating them, the Wob called in the cops, who cleared the hall, The meeting was not held. Smash the anti-labor laws of the bosses! “5% REDUCTION TO CITY AND UNION WORKERS Have Your Eyes Examined and Glasses Fitted by WORKERS MUTUAL OPTICAL CO. ander personal supervision of DR. M, HARRISON Optometrist 215 SECOND AVENUE Cormer 18th Street NEW YORK CITY "headquarters, 353 Lenox Ave. |Hungarian Home Sun. |days of the casar, will be shown Yokinen Defense Meet'nes Calendar MARCH 21 J., four outdoor meet- ings, 2 p. m, Newark, J., indoor meeting, 93 Mercer St,, 7 p. m., LSNR. Bronx, N, ¥., five outdoor meet- ings, 8 p. m. Yonkers, School Nepherham, 3 p.m, MARCH 22 Ambassador Hall, Third Ave. and 174th St., 2,30 p. m, LSNR. | 569 Prospect Ave., Bronx, 2.5) p. m, Jamaica, L, 1, 10926 Union Hall St, 2 p.m. Brooklyn, N. ¥., 1660 Fulton St., 2p. m. Manhattan Lyceum, 2 p, m, MARCH 26 Harlem, N. Y., Reuaisance Casino, 137th St. and Seventh Ave., 2.30 p. m, ILD. Newark, N. Section Four Has Banquet Tonight! NEW YORK.—On the eve of its convention, Section Four will hold a banquet tonight at the new section A small admission of 35 cents will be charged, with special rates to the | unemployed. All workers are urged | to turn out and have a pleasant eve- ning, Show Soviet Film at The “Living Corpse,” a Mejrabpom- film, based on Tolstoy's noyel deal- ing with marriage and divorce in the | Sunday, Mareh 22, 1931, from 2 o'clock to 11 o'clock p. m. at the Hungarian Workers’ Home, 350 E.)| 81st St. Pudovkin, director of “Storm Over Asia” plays the leading part of Fedya, in this film, ~~ NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES EAST SIDE—BRONX Harry Delmar's Reyue Reynolds and White Joseph Pope Jones Thaler’s Cireus FRANKLIN Prospects 10158 Youngsters Yesterday Wilson Bros. King Brawn Roy Gordon and Co, Drifting High Revue of Opposite New York Bye and Sar tafirmary Telephone Stuyvesant S836 29 EAST 14TH STREET NEW YORK Tel. Algonquin 3356-8843 We Carry a Full Line of STATIONERY AT SPECIAL PRICES for Organizations able prices. Beran oldin, snc I.Goldin Sujtable for ! >tings, Lectures! and Dances in the Czechoslovak Workers House, Ine, 347 E. 72nd St. New York Telephpne: Rhinelander 600? Phone: L.BHIGR a ‘nternational Barber Shop M. W. BALA, Prep. 2016 Second Arena New York (bet. 103rd & 104th Sta) Ladies Robs Our Specialty Private Beauty Parlor Gottlieh’s Hardware © THIRD AVENUE Near 14th St, Stuyvesant 6974 All kinds of ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES Cutlery Our Speelalty APARTMENT TO LET, at 338 East 19th St; suitable for one or two families, Phone DUNN, Stuyvesant 9-8637, race ‘CONCERT TONIGHT AT NTWIU BAZAAR Were Crying Over It | Build Union By Buying) at Monster Carnival The drive to raise a large defense fund for the arrested and imprisoned dress strikers, is making headway at the Needle Trades Bazaar, which is| | now going on at the Star Casino, and | | which will continue until late Sunday | night. The first two evenings have | | shown an enormoys interest of a | large number of workers | bazaar. at this Besides the many hundreds of bar- | gains, which the Needle Trades Work- | ers are known to bring to their | bazaar, there is a bazaar restaurant this year, A special feature of this bazaar is| the concert program, which has been | arranged for every eyening. The feature for tonight will be the Frei- heit Singing Society, and an inter- esting program of songs, under the | popular direction of the famoys con- | ductor, Comrade Jacob Shaeffer. Every worker should make it his business to be sure to attend this! bazaar tonight and tomorrow, to help | the arrested and imprisoned striking | dressmakers, to help build a powerful | revolutionary Needle Trades Workers’ | Industrial Union, to strengthen the | spirit of solidarity among the work-| ers. Admission tonight only 50 cents, | tomorrow 35 cents, Mozart’s Requiem will be sung by | the Society of the Friends of Music tomorrow afternoon at the Metropo- litan Opera House. This will be the last concert of the season. Artur Bodanzky, the conduetor, will have the following quartet of soloists: Elizabeth Rethberg, soprano; Merle Alcock, contralto; Hans Clemens, te- nor; and Siegfried Tappolet, basso. ‘Bronx Jobless Put Back Furniture; Kids NEW YORK.— —Unemployed Coun- cil of 1472 Boston Road sent a com- | mittee to put back the furniture of the Tyacht family, 810 Suburban | Place. An open air meeting was held, and the neighbors started for- | ming a tenants’ league. The job- Jess at tne meeting elected a com- mittee to help form the league. Tracht has been* out of work for seven months. They have four chil- dren. Recently Tracht got some sort of temporary work, and offered to | pay part of the rent, but the land- | lord said “I am not in the install- | ment business.” When the husband came home the other morning, he found his furni-+ ture thrown out in- the street, the children erying for food, and his wife | trying to get some place from the | neighbors in which to feed her chil- dren. The kids had come home from | school at noon, and found the home smashed up. They leaned on the | furniture and cried. 5 Open Air Meetings in Bronx Tonight NE WYORK.—The workers of the | Bronx will demonstrate their solidar- | ity tonight with their fellow worker | Yokinen, whom the boss government of the U, 5S. wants to deport to fas- cist Finland for his willingness to fight for full social, political and ; economic equality of the Negro | masses of this country. ‘The meetings will be held in the following places: Wilkins and Inter- vale, Aldust and So. Boulevard, 161st and Prospect, Washington and Clare- | mont Parkway, 138th St. and Brook Ave. Tomorrow, Sunday, at 2 p. m., there will be two indoor meetings, one at the Ambassador Hall, Third Ave. near 17nd St,, and the other at 569 Pros- pect Ave. NEW SOVIET FILM!—AMERICAN PREMIERE! === AMKINO PRESENTS TRANSPORT or FIRE SILENT ¥ILM WITH ENGLISH TITLES) A OF THE 1905 REVOLUTION pnagagio oron Boe 8. Rhy Bevking PLOTS REVOLUTIONISTS! COUNTER PLOTS! TH STREET PLAYHOUSE 52 WEST 8TH BT, Retwoes Fifth and Sixth Aves,—Spring 5095 POPULAR PRICES—CONTINUOUS 10 4, M, TO MIDNIGHT Guild Prodgetion' LAST WEEK Green Grow the Lilacs & Bat, 3:40 Miracle at Verdun By WANS ORLUMBERG Martin Bek "y°ctipeee Eve, 6:80, Mts, Th, % Bet, 9:30 “ "ARTHUR BYRON © IVE STAR FINAL We electrie and alive” pat) F THEATRE, Stree Cele AHO, Mata eA ‘ond Bat, 2:30 scealhdianenieedenmene HIPPODRONE <* -- & 484 ot BIGGEST GROW IN NEW yORE crs | Kept Husbands’ With DOROTHY MACKAILL 5. ‘wa Eninese’ Collagione ” SATURDAY, MARCH 35 CENTS IN ADVANCE BALL AND ENTERTAINMENT Armenian Weekly (Communist Paper), 21 SPARTACUS HALL 301 WEST 29TH STREET 195 LEXINGTON AVENUB [0 42 ng STREET & BWAY THE NIGHT THE WORLD WAS DOOMED! THE WAY Pian 'HE NIGHT A MADMAN HELD THE WORLD IN HIS GRASP! 1th Sty th Av. c wh iad Spar t endo coKe" re Seats ¢ weeks r Ben Office Tove Hat Tis "Ww. ts street MUSIC AND CONCERTS Philharmonic-Symphony TOSCANINI, Seedeetr pose Arthur bred sag 1981 7P.M. AT THE DOOR 50 CENTS \Scherer to Lecture On Soviet Treason Trial Tomorrow Scherer, secretary of the International Relief, who} attended the Ramin Trial during his tour of the Soviet Union, ‘will | | describe the trial in an illustrated | Marcel | # orkers | Menshevik Trial,” Sunday, March 22, 1931, at the Bronx Cooperative Cen- tre, 2700 Bronx Park East, at 8 o'clock. Scherer, toured thousands of miles through the Soviet Union, visiting and taking pictures of industrial cen- tres, the collective farms, peasant villages, workers’ homes, clubs, the prisons. He was present at the trial of the plotters against the Soviet Union when the intervention plans of the imperialists were exposed, ‘The pictures taken by this workers' delegation, brought back by Scherer, will he projected for the first time, to illustrate his lecture. Admission will be twenty-five cents. YOUR FOOD will do you more good if you eat under conditions of QUIET 4 There is Comfort aad Protection in CLEANLINESS Eat with people who have the wit to know that qj Foop and HEALTH are RELATED COME Tv THE CRUSADER (SELF-SERVICE) Restaurant 113 EAST FOURTEENTH ST, (Near Irving Place) | | A NEIGHBORLY PLACE TO EAT Linel Cafeteria Pure Food—100 per cent Frigidaire Equipment—Luncheonette and Soda Fountain 830 BROADWAY Near 12th Street Vexetarian RESTAURANTS Where the best food and fresh vegetables are served all year round Concoops Food Stores anD Restaurant 2700 BRONX PARK EAST “Buy in the Co-operative Store and help the Left - Wing Movement,” MELROSE oe AIRY VEOETARIAN BESTAURANT wm r aot BLYD, Bronx seiadnad ALL Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health — By RYAN WALKER STATIONS FOR I.L.D. TAG DAYS \On Saturday, March 21 and Sunday, March 22 | Will be open from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. POWNTOWN + Roon St, | YORK VIL | 850 Hast Sist st. HARLEM Lenox Ave. BRONX 1472 Boston Rad, 7N5 Westchester Ave. 2700 Bronx Park Hast BROOKLYN Ave, Ot Grabam 10% 136-15th 140 Neptune Ave, Brighton Beach, ALgonquin 4-7712 Office Hours: 9 A. M8 P.M, Fri, and Sun. by Appointment Dr. J. JOSEPHSON SURGEON DENTIST 226 SECOND AVENUE Near 14th Cooperators’ SEROY CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 BRONX, N. ¥. DR. J. MINDEL Surgeon Dentist 1 UNION SQUARE Room 803 Phone: Algonquin a188 Not connected with any other office fel. ORChard 3783 DR. L. KESSLER SURGEON DENTIST Strictly by Appointment 48-50 DELAYCEY STREET Gor, Eldridge St, NEW YORK 3y6xan Jlevebnnua DR. A, BROWN Dentist 301 EAST MTR STREET (Corner Second Avenue) Tel, Algonquin 7248 HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian Restaurant 1600 MADISON AVENUE Phone University 6865 Phone Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES r i Sntra all” tadhoale "aneet $02 B, 12th St New York Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 1p SECOND AVENTR Bet 18th and 19th Sta, Advertise Your Union Here, For Information Write The DAILY WORKER Advertising Department BO East 18th St, New York Olly We Invite Workers to the BLUE BIRD CAFETERIA“ GOOD WHOLESOME Fair Prices A Comfortable Place to Eat 827 BROADWAY