a, “Locals Defy Lewis and Vote Walk-Out [LYNCH 9TH NEGRO (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) met (apparently Saturday) and voted to strike all the mines of the company. At Truesdaye Colliery, tie local of- fieials opposed the strike, and no representatives were sent to the Joint Grievance Committee. Here the National Miners’ Union was Preparing in its own name to call the miners to a meeting last night. Even the local U. M. W. officials, who in ordinary circumstances are forced along with the men at least to the point of saying they have “nothing against a strike,” have in two mines at least railroaded through 2 vote not to strike. In these locals they allowed none but officials to apeak, In one of the locals the miners beat up the officials after the meeting. Boylan and Lewis have both issued statements denouncing the strike as | “wildcat” and “outlaw,” and assur- ing the company that they will help break it. Agents of International | President Lewis of the U. M. W. and) the U. M. W. are hurrying from local | to local, ordering the men back to work, while “grievances are taken uy | through proper channels.” | Lewis and Boss United. Meanwhile the loca? press gives the lie to Boylan and Lewis by printing % statement of S. D, Dimmick, an Official of the Glen Alden, that no grievances have been presented. Lewis and Boylan never intended to Against Wage Cuts, and Long Hours present any grievances, they have given the Glen Alden a clear road to cut wages and lengthen the work- ing day in violation of even the Five and @ Half Year Contract, which was itself a sell-out of the miners. Starts Over Firing. The strike started in Maxwell Col- | liery, No. 20, when the bosses tried to make the men put in an extra, | unpaid hour, dressing and undress- | ing the mules. The drivers refused | to accept and walked out. They were fired and the whole crew came | cut. When the mine boss ordered them down; they made as though to throw him down the shaft instead of themselves, and he rushed into the breaker building and stayed all day, calling for state police, The superintendent of Lance Col- liery, No. 11, has been particularly active firing miners and hiring la- borers at lower wages to do their| work. Recently he fired a teamster and hired a truck driver at $85 a/ month for nine hours work. The) strike agread immediately to No. 11.) The Glen Alden Coal Co. made} 1926 to 1929. There are 25,000 men _ working | (part time) for Glen Alden in this neighborhood. The company has 29,000 employees altogether in 21 mines. The mine locals began to hold meetings Sunday and Monday. Where the local officials did not call | a meeting, the National Miners’ | Union steps in and calls the men] together. NEGRO AND WHITE (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) Upland Streets. All working class and fraternal organizations are asked to send delegates. ‘The council succeeded in preventing the threatened eviction of a Negro worker with a family of seven chil- dren. Hearing that the workers of the neighborhood were mobilized to prevent the eviction, the constable did not dare to enter the home of this worker. . CLEVELAND, Ohio., March 25.—/ Unemployed workers and poor farm- | ers from all over Ohio will join in) a hunger march on the state capitol, beginning April 16 from the more dis- | tant points and reaching Columbus in | time to present demands for relief | to the legislature when it convenes | on April 27. Unemployed insurance for the jobless and state relief and eredits for needy farmers will be the major demands of the farcers. MARCH ON HARRISBURG JOBLESS TO The march is being organized by the Unemployed Councils affiliated to | the Trade Union Unity League, fol- | lowing a state conference in Cleveland | on March 14, The marchers, who are expected to number between 300 and 400 by the time they reach Columbus, will con- sist of delegates representing Unem- ployed Councils, trade unions and working class fraternal organizations. A special organizer of the United Farmers League is securing the co- operation of poor farmers throughout the state. e ‘There will be four separate lines of march, starting from Cleveland and | Youngstown on April 16, from Toledo | THIS YEAR; FIGHT! As March 28 Protest Nears (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) dreds of other militant working class | organizations. Big Meets in All Cities | Plans are being completed for a) big mass protest meéting March 27 at the Elmwood Music Hall, Buf- falo, N. ¥., and on March 28 at the Labor Lyceum in Rochester; on March 28 at the Hippodrome Hall in Niagara Falls, N. ¥Y. Many prepara- | accounts. Despite the fact that the | condition of the subscription list is Overdue Subs to Be Dropped, Renew or Subscribe Today; Philly Reacts to May 1 Drive With increasing mass circulation attained in the drive for 60,000 read- ers, it is necessary for the Daily Worker to run on @ solid foundation financially. Financial methods in force with a circulation of 15,000 are ruinous with a cifeulation of 38,000. It 1s for this reason that we can| no longer extend credit to those sub- seribers who are past due in their better than ever before in propor- tory meetings have been held in the | tion to the subs paid in advance and Buffalo district to mobilize workers | subs overdue, the additional costs for 3) MURDERED, 100 INJURED IN INDIA Labor Gov't ‘Troops Kill Demonstrators (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) dust begrimed and nearly blinded by a fierce desert sandstorm through which his train from New Delhi had just passed. “ ‘Go back with your truce, some| shouted at him. Others bawled out: | ‘Down with Gandhi!’ On every hand were sneering faces of Indians made resentful by the execution of Singh | and two companions at Lahore. “Gandhi was obviously pained at for March 28, of papers make it impossible for us to carry the overdue subscriptions on our shoulders. All bundles and subscriptions will have to be paid for, and we urge those who are past due to send their new subscriptions in, in order to extend their time, so that they do not miss receiving thelr Daily Workers. PHILA. COMMENTS ON MAY 1 SUB DRIVE Trenton, N. J., is picking up in Daily Worker activity. From M, Sil- ver, district Daily Worker represen- tative of Philadelphia, Pa. we re- ceived the following: “Increase Trenton bundle to 60 daily (110 Thursdays). In connec- tion with our State Hunger March send a bundle of 25 copies daily to O. BE, Harrisburg, and send a bundle of five daily to H., Philadelphia. “T don’t think it is correct for District representatives to find out about Daily Worker campaigns only after it is published in the Daily,” he continues, referring to the new May 1 drive for 1,000 subs or re-| “We are now making strong ef- newals, “outside of the fact that dis-| forts to build a Red Builders’ News trict. representatives should be pre-| Club. Have developed about pared beforehand so as to enable) workers who are willing to sell the them to swing into a campaign im-| Daily every day, and in about two mediately. weeks we are going to call a Daily “Your plan provides no encour- | Worker Sellers’ Jamboree, at which agement for long-term subscrip- | We will organize a club of the red tions. It is my opinion that it is | paper builders.” correct to get the subs renewed, Don’t forget these snappy leaflets and, in order to encourage renew- | advertising your Jamboree which are als, the offer is a correct one, but | fine drawing cards! this should have been limited to | six and twelve-month subs,” he | YOLUNTEERS PROMPT adds, in regard to our offer to | TO HELP DAILY WORKER start new accounts with new sub- | Enthusiastic responses to our ap- peal for help in the Daily Worker scriptions, “We are making plans to go, 0ffice came from a number of volun- In Philadelphia fourteen huge open air meetings will be held on March | 28 at the following corners: Fourth | and Federal streets, Seventeenth and | Fitzwater, Seventh and Snyder Ave- nues, Eleventh and Rodman streets Thirteenth and Reed streets, Ken- sington, McPherson Square, 7 p. m., Marvine and Coluiibia Avenue, Mar- | vine and Girard Avenue, Hutchin- of President Boylan of District 1 of | $46,000,000 profit in the three years| Son and Poplar streets, Forty-sixth | and Haverford Avenue, Fortieth and | Poplar streets, Thirty-second andj Cumberland streets, Twenty-fourth | and Turner streets, Twenty-second and Indiana Avenue, * Many Meets in N. ¥. City In New York City the main dem- onstration will be held in Harlem, starting from Lenox Avenue and 144th street at 2:30 p. m, with a parade through 144th street to Sev- enth Avenue, down Seventh Avenue to 114th street, and through to Fifth Avenue, down Fifth Avenue to 110th street, where a monster meeting will be held. In the evening there will be & huge affair at the New Star Casino, 107th street and Park Ave- nue. A huge demonstration will be held in the Bronx, at Washington Avenue and Claremont Parkway at 3 p. m., Saturday. A number of street and factory gate meetings | | will be held in the downtown and | midtown sections of» New York. In Williamsburg there will be a demonstration at Court and Fulton | streets at 1:30 p. m. South Brook- | lyn will have a mass parade and demonstration beginning at 40th St. and 9th Ave., and ending in a dem- onstration at 5th Ave. and 50th St. Demonstrations will also be held in Long Island City and Astoria. | Newark, N. J. workers have ar- ranged five street meetings at 2 p.m. on April 18 and from Cincinnati on April 19. More are being organized to join in at each city the Hunger March passes through, and all the marchers will converge on Columbus the night of April 25. All of these marches will be on foot, hitch-hil ing being permitted. 3ig Steel Mills To Slash Wages AGB ONE) | (CONTINUED FROM P- undivided surplus of nearly $472,000,- 000 in its coffers to help pay divi- dends in future years. But in spite of this, and in spite ~ the statements of its president, James A. Farrell, that “the purchas- Ing power of workers must be kept up,” a wage cut is coming. In a pamphlet full of propaganda for the | employers and the American Feder- | ation of Labor, put out by the Hoo- ver Hunger Committee (President's Emergency Committee for Employ- ment), Myron ©. Taylor, chairman of the Finance Committee of the Bteel Corporation, says that “when the final chapters of this depression is written, the United States Steel Corporation’s record in . providing work and in extending relief to its employees will be one of its out- standing achievements.” ‘The workers in Homestead, Gary, Clairton, Woodlawn, New Castle, Ambridge, and the hundreds of oth- er steel and coal towns are soon going to have a-taste of this “re- lief.” The world’s leading industrial corporation, the most powerful com- pany in the capitalist world, is about to drain @ little more blood out of the veins of its workers. Under the leadership of the Metal Workers In- dustrial League, the struggle against this wage cut will be waged by the steel worl THURSDAY | Joe Hill Bratch, ILD gitits at 620 p.m, at 182 B, 26th 1 Rs m, at Workers ould be pi resent, Takes, ite at 0 Center. vin reps FRIDAY Cleaners, Laundry Workers Ind. eague General membership meeting at 8 p.m, at 16 W, 2ist St. John Reed Youth Club Meets at S p.m. at 154 Jackson ve. Jersey, City, New Jersey, JAMESTOWN, N. Y. —DANCE— FRIDAY MARCH 27TH 8P,™M. at the NORDIC TEMPLE 0. ©. MUNSON will speak on “CAUSES AND REMEDIES FOR UNEMPLOYMENT” Auspices Jatnestown Unemployed Council 000 WITHOUT JOBS IN PHILA. PHILADELPHIA, Pa, — Although | by admission of Secretary of Com- merce Lamont over 246,000 workers | are out of work in Philadelphia, little | is being done to aid the actually larger number of jobless here. Total contributions to the local committee for unemployment relief, coming in its largest part from de- ducting money from workers’ wages, amounted to $3,597,407. This enabled | the committee to “help” only 13,722] jobless men, each being given a| check for $11.58. It costs at least twice that much to live in this city. The committee is forced to admit that conditions are now worse than at any time, and the need for as- sistance is being ‘greater than ever. In the demonstrations held up t6 now the Philadelphia unemployed had arried out their protest against fake relief schemes and charity- bluff, used by the bosses to sidetrack the workers from their real demands. The movement for unemployment re- lief is growing among the jobless of Philadelphia, who readily respond to every call of the Unemployed Coun- Cils, affiliated with the Trade Union Unity League, The fight must be in- tensified. The next step is the state hunger march to Harrisburgh, where the unemployed will put forward their demands to Governor Pinchot and the state legislature, —LF. Ww. RED UNION INT'L 290, | industrial town of New Jersey and Linden, Elizabeth, New Brunswick Paterson and Passaic will also hold demonstrations. Yonkers will holc two demonstrations at 11 a. m, EMONSTRATIONS | r FOR MARCH 28TH Parades and Meetings in Every Borough The International Labor Defense, | League of Struggle for Negro Rights, | and Council for Protection of Foreign | Born are speeding up arrangements | for the mass demonstrations against | lynchings and discrimination of Negroes, deportations and persecu- tion of foreign born in every borough | of Greater New York and in every t v up state on Saturday, March 28. The central demonstration will be held in the heart of Jim Crow Har- lem, Thousands of Negro workers and white workers are expected to rally to the anti-lynching parade which will begin at 144th St. and Lenox Ave. at 2 P. M. and wifl wind up with a gigantic demonstration scheduled for 4 P, M. at 110th St. and Fifth Ave. A series of street and factory gate meetings in the down town and mid- town sections of New York will wind up at four central demonstrations at 12:30 P. M. at Tenth St. and Second Ave.; Seventh St. and Avenue A; Clinton St, and East Broadway; and at the Seamen’s Church Institute, 25 South Street. After a series of street and factory gate meetings the workers of the Bronx will demonstrate by the thous- ansd at Washington Ave. and Clare- Mont Parkway at 3 P. M. Large num- bers of workers in downton New York and the Bronx are planning to par= ticipate in the Harlem parade as a demonstration of the solidarity. The workers of Brooklyn will rally at @ mass demonstration at Boro Hall, Court and Fulton Sts. at 1:30 p. m., while thousatids will turn out to the South Brooklyn parade which will be- gin at 40th St. and 9th Ave. at 2:30 ISSUES AN APPEAL MOSCOW.—The Executive Bureau of the Red International of Labor Unions has issued an appeal to the workers of the world, the working women, the working youth and the unemployed workers, entitled, “Down with Hunger, Misery and Unemploy- ment! Expose the ‘Leftwing’ Manoeu- vre of the Second and Amsterdam Internationals!” The appeal is signed by the members of the Executive Bureau of the R.LL.U, and by the representatives of the revolutionary trade unions and revolutionary trade unton oppositions in Germany, France, Great Britain, the United States, China, Japan, Poland, Latin- America, Ozechoslovakia, Italy, Nor- way, Greece and the Soviet Union. The appeal exposes in detail the treachery of the Second and Am- sterdam Internationals in all coun- tries and calls on the workers to drive the reformist officials out of the trade unions, to join the revo- y trade unions #7)» pw P, M,, march to 50th St. and Fifth Ave. where the parade will wind up in a mass demonstration. Meetings and demonstrations will also be held in Newark, Elizabeth, Linden, Amboy, New Brunswick, Paterson and Passaic, at 2 P. M Thousands of workers are expected to turn out at the militant demonstra- tion at Gettys Square in Yonkers. Demonstrations will be held in Long Island City, in Astoria at the Queens- boro Plaza at 3 P. M. Numerous preparatory meetings will be held all during the week. On Thursday night the League of Strug- gle for Negro Rights has arranged an indoor mass meeting at St. Louis Hall, 115 W. 130th St., 8 P. M. The Council for Protection of Foreign Born will hold its preparatory mass meeting at, the Labor Temple, 350 E. 84th St. } Thursday at 3 P. M. On Friday, March 27th, there will be an indoor meeting at 105 Lexing- ton Avenue at 8 P. M. and an open air demonstration at Yonkers, 6 P. M., and another one at Columbia and Garrol Sts. Brooklyn, at 7 FP, M. running the present number CARTOONS FREE TO BEST SELLERS Ryan Walker, popular staff car- toonist on the Daily Worker, will give his original cartoon strips to the three best sellers of the week, whether they are Red Builders, individual workers or Party units, Send in your records, and use the cartoons for your headquarters. They're mighty good-looking in the original! INDIANAPOLIS, IND., BOOSTS ORDER TO 200 “We in Indianapolis are already getting in a bundle order of 150 cop- ies. We want you to send us 50 more to M. M., which will make 200 for Indianapolis in all,” writes Roosevelt Stone. through with this drive with the, teers who assisted us in typing let- slogan “all, expirations renewed, and | ters, addressing envelopes, inserting, hundred additional new subs by May 1’ April 19 will be a concen-, our thanks to: Bessie Carman of tration-day for this campaign, and,| Brooklyn; Rose Rosen, New York; according to‘the-plan, every member| John Johnson, New York; Lillie in “Our district will have a certain| Similes, Brooklyn; S. Kay, » St. task tq ‘perform ft connection with | George, Staten Island; Henrietta this day.” | Weintraub, Brooklyn; Sonia Shep- tinsky, Brooklyn; Paul Anrae, New SPRINGFIELD, ILL., York; Frank Skolnick, New York. HOLDS MASS MEET Should any others find an hour “We here in Springfield, Il, are) two on their hands, and wish to starting to make a noise and put help the Daily Worker send out some this town on the map,” writes R, g,| Of its accumulated correspondence, “We are going to hold an unem-| We Would appreciate it. Take the ployment mass meeting next Sun-| “levator to the 8th floor, circulation day afternoon, after which we will| (partment, at 35 E. 12th St. an Unemployed Council and go oe PROLET. ‘ARI |AN SOVIET COSTUME BALL ward from there.” SATURDAY MARCH 28 R. J., according to the report, was elected unit Daily Worker represen- tative, and was instructed to sell 25 copies of the Daily Worker on the | streets every day. oxi ae “I think I can do this. Also t wil}! 50 EAST 13TH STREET try and place them on all news | SECOND FLOOR stands. I will close with comradely —Arranged—. greetings for the real work the Daily | Worker is doing throughout the country and will see that it does its share here.” The Springfield comrades have or- dered 200 extra copies for Sunday's mass meeting and we hope it will be the beginning of some real activity among the unemployed workers in that territory. Correct Dangerous Bladder 4m, Catarrh by Unit 9, Sec. 1. CP., D. T. 2. YCL Admission 25 Cents Jazz Band Part of proceeds to Daily Worker MEET IN THE Workers Center THE NEWLY BUILT MEETING ROOMS ON THE THIRD FLOOR ARE COMPLETED YOUR ORGANIZATION CAN Burning ; a tion, night rising mby be the wee, || MAKE ARRANGEMENTS FOR of a serious sickness which may |} PERMANENT MEETING PLACES affect your entire health. Take steps at once. Get Santal Midy from your frrgcist. For half a centory, it has || N. Y. WORKERS CENTER out the world for rapid relief. 35 EAST 12TH STREET OFFICE: 4TH FLOOR Santal Mid w FOR THE PROTECTION OF THE FOREIGN BORN! INTERNATIONAL EXPOSITION OF FOLK DANCES Pantomime on the Persecution of the : Foreign Born Costume Ball MARCH —PARTICIPANTS— 28 German Prolet Buhne, Hungarian, Ukrainian, Finnish, Spanish and Lithuanian Dancing Groups NEW STAR CASINO 107TH STREET AND PARK AVENUE AUSPICES: City Committee for the Protection of Foreign Born ADMISSION 50 CENTS | } i 8:30 P.M. 10} sealing and stamping, and we extend | the sudden outbursts .. .” C4 ee (Cable by Imprecorr) BERLIN, March 25. — Ninteen were killed and fifty injured at Cawnpore, India, as the result of | large scale fighting following the ex-| ecution of three Indian revolution-| ists at the order of the British Labor | government, The fighting took place | during protest demonstrations. The} curfew law (a form of martial rule) was proclaimed yesterday eyening. | Mills and offices are closed. Large military forces are patrolling the cit- ies. ‘Temples and mosques were at- tacked during the fighting and many shops were gutted by fire. The telegraphic offices and the law courts were stoned and windows bro- ken. A Reuter mid-day wire from India describes the situation as seri- | ous. Gandhi was given a hostile re-| ception at the Karachi station, large} crowds of Youth Leaguers following | his auto, shouting “Down with Gan-| dhi!” ‘The sessions of the Indian| National Congress are to open soon at Karachi. * * 9% A New York Times cable from Karachi, India, tells of the arrival of. delegates to the Congress. It tells of the difficulty Gandhi is go- | ing to be faced with in his attempts | to put over the sell-out he arrived at with Lord Irvin, in view of the | execution of Bhagat Singh and his two companions. Describing the trip from Lahore to Karachi, the Times dispatch tells of militant dem- onstrations the entire 750 miles of the way. The train was stormed by young revolutionists. They broke the windows on the train. “Then about a score of local youths | tramped through the car shouting) |‘Bhagat Singh forever!’ and ‘Long| live the revolution!’ and were per- | suaded to desist. only. .by Congress leaders on the train. They did not offer personal violence but.their at- titude was menacing enowgh to cause! a certain amount of disquiet, and altogether. it was a most uncomfort- able awakening.after an already dis- turbed night.” : COUNTY POORHOUSE OVERETAO LAY OFF THOUSAND WORKERS ELIZABETH, N. J.—More than 1,000 railroad shopment were thrown out of jobs when the Central Rail- road of New Jersey posted notices the shops are to be closed until sum- mer, = nn More Arrests Made of Communist : Leaders in the Philippines; Police — Bring Machine Guns to Meeting Constabulary Make Speeches to Counteract Communist Influence Among Filipino Peaants; Red Flags Barred F 4 MANILA, Philippines—The police and constabulary sol- diers are beginning to arrest the peasants’ and workers’ leaders. The American Governor General is giving the instructions to watch carefully and suppress the workers’ and peasants’ militant movement. Honorio Ventura, Secretary of the Interior, and Jose Abad Santos, Secretary of Jus-© tice, the bourgeois politicians now Were immediately transferred to occupying high positions in the gov-| Bilibld prison after their arrest, | of red flags, ernment, served as lackeys to the| Pail American imperialist agent in sup- pressing the Communist movement in the Islands. Attorney General Delfin Jaranilla on Jan. 29, 1931, is- sued an opinion prohibiting the use| On Jan. 30, Comrade Juan Feleo, Vice-President of the Philippine Na- tional Confederation of Peasants,! was assaulted by the constabulary soldiers, while delivering a speech on} the occasion of the funeral of the! late Communist leader, Comrade} Antonino D. Ora, who died in an automobile accident in Sta, Rosa, Nueva Ecija. He was badly hurt and arrested for sedition and re- | sistance against the authorities. Attorney Ignacio Nabong, who de- livered @ speech on that occasan| and criticized the acts of the con-| stabulary, was also arrested for sedi- The three comrades are now out on On Feb, 18 the Provincial Fiscal of Rizal filed again complaints for Sedition against four comrades: Manahan, Evangelista, Capadocia and Pangilinan, Evangelista and Manahan were arrested again in Manila and Pangilinan was arrested in San Pablo Laguna, while Capa- docia will be arrested in Negros. Evangelista and Manahan are now out on bail, while Pangilinan will have his bail tomorrow, The bail for Capadocia will be fixed after his ar- rest, More arrests will be made perhaps this week in Manila and the prov- inces. It was announced already in the capitalist papers that Evangel- ista, Manahan, Monroy and others will be arrested again this week for sedition also in connection with their speeches delivered in various meet- ings in Manila and in the provinces. The constabulary and police offi- tion. Both of them are now out on bail of $1,000 for each charge filed | ba bee ed oe cers are making speeches also t ‘The meeting was attended by more | counteract the Goiuaanie sorb than 3,000 peasants and workers. | ment in the Philippines, ‘They are Comrade Jacinto G. Manahan ar- trying their best to suppress the rived late on the scene in Sta. Rosa,| ranid growth and the increase Nueva Ecija as he came from Manila) number of the Communists in the at that time. He continued the} qejands, meeting after Feleo and Nabong; ‘The workers and peasants in the were arrested. and delivered fiery | Philippines are becoming more rey- speeches criticizing and attacking the | olutionary than ever under the pres- brutalities and hostilities of the con-/ ent leadership of the Communist stabulary soldiers and their officers,| party of the Philippines, including the department secretaries | and high government officials in} their order and the fight against the | defenseless peasants and workers. The constabulary soldiers used bay- onets in their guns and brought with | them machine guns that night, The big crowd of workc~s and peasants voiced their protest nst such] hostile and brutal attacks. The red flags in the platform were also taken by them and will be used as evidence in the courts for the prosecution, for being Communists. On Feb. 6 three worker and peas- ant leaders, Jacinto G. Manahan, Crisanto Evangelista and Dominador Ambrosio, were arersted for sedition ‘and charged as Communist leaders. ‘The motives of arrest were based on the printed platform of the Com- munist Party of the Philippines. Comrades Evangelista and Manahan were arrested in the City of Manila, the first in his house and the latter in the office of the Philippine Na- tional Confederation of Peasants in Manila, while Comrade Ambrosio was arrested in the Sta. Cruz, Laguna, Comrades Evangelista and Manahan Force Chicago Dept. Store Workers On a Commission Wage Chicago, TH. Goldblatt’s fs one of the largest department stores in Chicago. Young workers are hired to work on @ commission basis, These young workers are put in the slow depart- j ments of the store. For the busy departments part: time workers are | hired. These part time workers get paid $2 2 day. For these low wages the girls work from nine to nine three days a week. When it is very busy the manager asks the girls to take only 15 minutes for Iumch, ALgonquin 4-7712 Office 9 A. M.-S P, Fri. and Sux. by Rbporutaieed Dr. J. JOSEPHSON SURGEON DENTIST 226 SECOND AVENUB Near 14th Street, New York City Cooperators’ Patronize SEROY CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook $215 BRONX, THE PICTURE PORTRAYS HEROIC PRODUCED IN U, 8. 5. }—— NEW SENSATIONAL SOVIET ADVENTURE FILM!== AMKINO PRESENTS TRANSPORT or FIRE (SILENT FILM WITH ENGLISH TITLES) OF FIRE ARMS BY THE UNDERGROUND ORGANIZATIONS DURING THE TIMES OF THE CZAR TH STREET PLAYHOUSE 52 WEST 8TH ST., Between Fifth and Sixth Aves.—Spring 5095 POPULAR PRICES—CONTINUOUS NOON DR. J. MINDEL’ Surgeon Dentist 1 UNION SQUARE Room 803 Phone: Algonquin S188 Not connected with any other office EPISODES OF THE TRANSPORT R. BY 50) )ZKINO ————" Theatre Guild Presents “———" Miracle at Verdun By HANS CBLUMBERG Martin Beck "Wost'swes Eve, 8:30, Mts, Th. & Sat. 2:30 WOODS Presents F “ "ARTHUR BYRON * IVE STAR FINAL “Bive Star Final’ ts electric and alive. —SUN. CORT THEATRE, West of 48th Stree Evenings 8:50, Mate, Wed, and Sat, 2:30 IC REPERTORY 1+th St. 6th Ay. Evenings 8:30 boc, $1, $1.80. Mate. Th. & Sat. 2:30 EVA LE GALLIENNE, Director Bidar Mh a: enti is eat vi “CAMILLE” Tonight “THE WOULD BE GENTLEMAN Tom, Mat. .... “CAMILLE” Seats \4 weeks adv, at Box Office and Town Hall, 118 W. 43 Street A NEIGHBORLY PLACE TO EAT Linel Cafeteria Pure Food—100 per cent Frigidaire Equipment—Luncheonette and Soda Fountain 830 BROADWAY Near 12th Street [ MELROSE | DAIRY J2GEtARIAN RESTAURANT Comrades Will Always Find It Pleasant to Dine st Our Place, 1187 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx (near 114th Station) ALE 9—0149 [eksetespeemetatttecceconseneeaneent ocean HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian Restaurant 1600 MADISON AVENUE Phone University 5865 TO MIDNIGHT 7CAMEON O 49 nd STREET & B'WAY TERRIFIC DRAMA OF THE SECRET SERVICE THE Wl PLaN| THE NIGHT A MADMAN HELD THE WORLD IN HIS GRASP! Phone Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A where ail” radlonle est 308 E. 12th St. New York £ 6th Ave HIPPODROME ‘+: BIGGEST SHOW LN NEW YORK | Kept Husbands’ RE acts Including: With DOROTHY MACKAILL Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 199 SECOND AVENUE Bet. 12th and 13th Sts. Strictly Vegetarian Food JOINT ENTERTAINMENT AND BALL Hon. Mr, Wu and Chinese Collegians of the 29 EAST 14TH STREET GREEK BRANCH, I. L. D. and the NEW YORK SPARTACUS Tel. Algonquin 3356-8843 We Carry a Full Line of STATIONERY AT SPECIAL PRICES for Organizations GREEK WORKERS CLUB in support of the Striking Dressmakers and Class War Prisoners Friday Eve. March 27 ATS P.M. PARK PALACE T 110TH STREET Phone: LEHIGH 6882 ‘nternational Barber Shop ‘M, W. SALA, Pr (near 5th Avenue) 2016 Second Avenue, York Red Dancers—Freiheit Mandolin (bet. 103rd & 104th Sts.) Orchestra—Freiheit bier Med bs Our clety—Kranitz, Vi! vate Beauty lor Negro Artists