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we ge Two 4 sentence MINE, STEEL JOBLESS READY FOR HUNGER MARCH, APRIL 18 Demonstration in All Industrial Towns On Way; Rally Great May First Demonstration to Demand Unemployment Relief, Insurance PITTSBURGH, Pa., April 9.—Preparations are rapidly pushing ahead in the Pittsburgh district among 300,000 unemployed steel work- ers and coal miners to mobilize for the State Hunger March on April 18. In Pittsburgh a big meeting to give the hunger marchers from the entire district a send-off, will be held on Friday 17 at the Irene Kauffman Settlement, 1835 Center A new auditorium, at 8 p. m. April ing will be V. Kemenovich, of the National Miners’ Union, George Powers, of the Metal Work- ers Industrial League, and Ben Care- athers, of the League of Struggle for | Negro Rights. All the city block committees of the unemployed coun- | cils, workers from the “Helping Hand,” “Jungles,” and flophouses are being mobilized for this meeting and in the struggle for relief. Several mass meetings have been arranged in this district in order to elect delegates to the march and to mobilize the support of the work- ers for the struggle for relief. In McKees Rocks, on Friday, April 10, a mass meeting will be held at 341 Olivia St., with George Powers, of the Metal Workers Industrial League the principal speaker. | Many Mass Meetings | In Washington, also on Friday | night, a mass meeting of the w employed council will be held at Mil- ler’s Hall, Woodland and Jefferson Avenues, at 7 p.m., to elect marchers | to Harrisburg. In Johnstown, a large mass meet- ing to greet the hunger marchers at the half-way point to Harrisburg will | be held on April 18. Watch for fur- What’s On— PRIDAY— Manhattan Alteration Painters Meet at 8 p.m. at 8 p.m. at 16 West | Street. | The Ori h was tc al Night have been hold rs Hall in Harle off. iy | Bench United Front ¢ Day meets at 140 . at 8:30 p.m. All wo organizations are urged to send del Fates. Metal Workers Ind. League Meets at 16 W. 2ist St. at $ p.m May Day will be discussed and plans laid. Workers Ex-servicemen's League Membership meeting at 79 E. 10th Street, at 8 p.m. All exservicemen are urged to attend. rani | | Jersey City John Reed € Meets at 8:30 p.m. at Van Nostrand Av. Discussion on May Day Boro Park Youth Br. 1.W,0. M at $:30 p.m. at 4211 42nd St. “Village of iet_ film will be seen 28th St. at 7 p.m. under t pices of the Strikers of the Jerry sé Co. Adm, 25c. | | Council 61 Will hold lecture followed by a Giseyssion at 61 Graham Av., Brook Subject: “Cement” the Sov . Council 35, Bronx | Meets at 8:30 p, m 57 Ave. Lecture on Class Should Organize. on SATURDAY— Young Defenders Chinese Nite will be held at 8 p.m at the Workers Center, 569 Prospect Ave., Bron rae Open Air Meeting In preparation for May Day will be | held by Unit 2, Sect. 7, at 43 13th Aye. Brooklyn. All workers of this section are urged to be present at & p.m. * First Annual Dance Section LW.O. wil be held Complete program outh Irving Plaza. including play and physical culture exhibit will be seen. Adm. 50c, Meeting of Women’s irectors Of every unit in Section 7 wil take place at 4 p.m. at 12th Street (fifth floer). | Young Workers Dance Given by the Y.C.L. of Yo will he held at $:30 p.m. at Sist St. Proceeds to “Young Wor er,? Adm. 35¢. . SUNDAY— Young Defend Membership meeting ton Rd, at 6 p.m, At § pm. ers Theatre John Reed Club. oe 1400 Bos- Work- “What Does the Communist Party Stand Fort” Is the topic for discussion at the Open Forum at the Bronsville Work- ers Center, 105 Thatford Ave., Bklyn. noe Open_ Forum z At the Bronx Workers Club, 1472 on Rd, “The New Russian Lis terature.” Adm. fr . Bensonhurst You Meets at 1 p.m. at 2006 70th Brooklyn. . 8 Speakers Class For Veterans of past wars meets every Sunday noon at 79 E. 10th St. Al ex-servicemen interested in this ith Club on Ave. at 8 ers Health— Dr, Leiber. Harlem Prog. Meets at 1492 Mad’ pm. Lecture on “Work Today and Tomorrow,” All workers welcome. Concert for Pianeer Magazine n by the Youn legates from workers’ fi EL Brighton Beach, Workers and Be welcome. Novi Mir Orchestra Will rehearse Sunday at 11 a.m. and again on Wednesday evening at the Russian Workers Club. “Noy! Mir.” AN workers wishing to join the orchestra are urged to commu. nieate with the Novy Mir, 35 East 12th Street. | . East New York Workers Forum Meets at Sutter Ave., Brooklyn, at § n.m. to hear a lecture on “The Socialist Party—Enemy of the Work- ine Class. Adm, free. All workers invited, eis Coney Enlnnd .m. at 2921 W. $2nd ‘of the Women's AN working to attend. . Council & Lecture at 8 Street on the “ in the Soviet Unio clase women are ur . Protetkult of Brooklyn Lecture by Vern Smith on “The Press and the Labor mo prea Yea Pn Ben Brooks ther announcements as to place and time of this meeting. In McKeesport, at the Workers Center, 12th and Locust streets, a mass meeting to give a send-off to the hunger marchers will be held on Thursday, April 16, at 8 p.m. In Pittsburgh a conference of de- organizations and unemployed councils was held on | Wednesday, April 8, to stabilize the work among the Pittsburgh jobless workers, and to push the struggle for relief. Destitution among the work- ers of this city is great, suicides are reported daily, evictions are increas- ing. Constables participating in the evictions are now beginning to draw their guns on the unemployed coun- cils who so far have prevented many evictions from taking place. Despite these terrible conditions, (CONTINUED ON PAG THREE) (GRANT EXPOSED AS VICIOUS STOOL Wants Militant Negro Workers Deported NEW YORK.—Further exposing role as a stool pigeon opera against the Negro Liberation Strug gle, the Garvey reformist, Grant, tried to have the police turn over to the immigration authorities for de- | portation the two revolutionary Negro workers whose arrests he caused last Saturday on a framed up charge of assaulting him and robbing him of is money and watch, following a fight between unemployed Negro workers and Garvey thugs. The two workers, Comrades Arthur Williams and Louis Campbell, held in $1,000 bail for the Grand Jury after a farcical trial on Tuesday, were re- leased today on bond furnished by | the International Labor Defense and immediately visited the offices of the Daily Worker to give their story. Thinking the two comrades were foreign born workers, Grant de- manded that the police cail up the immigration authorities “to take of these Reds.” The two w happen to be born in the Uni States, but Grant showed clearly the role he will play against Negro wo’ j ers from the West Indies who refus to be longer misled by the Garvey fakers and insist on waging a real struggle against oppression and for national independence of the Nezro masses of Africa, West Indies and the Black Belt of the Southern United States. While the comrades were being held in the police station, Inspector O'Neal, whom Grant quoted as tell- ing him to beat up and frame mili- tant Negro workers, came along and had a private talk with Grant. Soon after, the Garvey reformist. seized a photograph of a white girl which one of the comrades had in his pocket- | book and demagogically held it up to the police as an example of social equality practiced by the Communist Party, demanding that the comrade be railroaded to jail for this defiance }of the bosses’ dictum that Negroes are inferior and should not be per- mitted to associate with white people. While in the station, Grant boasted to his police allies that he had had a revolutionary Negro worker killed last. summer. rade Alfred Levy who was murdered by police and Garvey thugs while speaking at a meeting held in Har- lem by the Communist Party to pro- test the bosses’ lynch terror against the Negro workers. The police at the station attempted to bribe Comrades Campbell and Wil- liams into abandoning the revolution- ary struggle for Negro rights by telly ing them if they were not Reds they would do something to get them out. Asked if they did not like the U, 8. Government, the workers answered they could have no love for the gov- ernment of the lynchers. As Reds, they were also starved while held in Jail. Negro and white workers will pro- test these frame-ups by the Garvey reformists and the police by coming into the streets in joint demonstra- tions on May Day against unemploy- ment, starvation, wage cuts, lynching, Persecution of Negro and foreign born and for unemployment relief and in- surance, DISPOSSESSED, SUICIDE HOUMA, La., April 9.—Aurestile Hotard, 80-year-old fisherman, blew his head off with a shotgun when they came to take his home away on @ mortgage two days ago. He had a wife and five children and no place to keep them. Use your Red Shock Troop List every day vn your Job. The worker next to you will help save the Daily Among the speakers at this meet- He was referring to Com- . THE ADVENT Now THE Sovurtion OF The UnlemeLoyenenT | LY. a MR No Brain Reformer. ALL OUT ON UNION} SQUARE MAY 1 Police Try To Bar | Workers From Square ROM PAGE ONE) (CONTINUED First. The Ma Conference refuses to be intimidated. May First is the day of struggle ‘ainst speed-up, wage-cuts, unem- ployment, for the 7-hour, 5-day week and unemployment insurance, against imperialist wars and for the defense | of the Soviet Union. The Russian White Guardist generals and their colleagues, the socialist party, have nothing in common with May Day— hence, the united front between them and the police. Demonstrate On Union Square. “The May Day United Front Com- mittee continues with its task of or- ganizing a May Day demonstration on Union Square from 1:330 to 5 p. m, Further protest demonstra- tions will take place before May Day, every workers’ organization will be mobilized to protest against Chief Commissioner Mulrooney’s deliberate attempt to create trouble. The wo) ers, including ex-servicemen, former supporters of Tammany Hall and the socialist party, will be out on Union Square May Day, but under the lead- ership of the May Day United Front | Conference. If any trouble arises, it will fall squarely on the shoulders ot the police dejartment, and their allies, the so: ist party. Signed by B. D. Amis, Negro worker and chairman of tie May Day United Front Conf itee and b. John Lembke. , the commit tee has ved ancther state the press and to the work jobless workers of New York, as fol oa this ince the strike in the 8-hour day on May 1, 13 Day has be: the wort: ational day of struggle wh: bas been combatted by ry re: tor tionary force in the country. Union Square symbolizes working-clas struggle demonstrations in the cit of New York, therefore, we see all the anti-working-class forces mob- ilizing this year, as they did last) year, to take Union Square away from the workers by a decree of the police department, The workers, through the May D: Conference, are dete will demonstrate on U May First. ‘Hunger stalks the-streets of every neighborhood in New York City— thousands of children go hungry to sehool, eviction is the order of the day--attacks against the foreign- born workers have been intensified— discrimination against the workers is increasing, This, with | wholesale wage-cuts, speed-up, longer hours, has lowered the standard of living of the workers fully 50 per cent in the last few years, Bosses’ Campaign. mined that they ion Square on “This is the program of the em- | | ployers as a whole being put into effect, namely, to make the workers pay the full cost of the economic crisis, and the attempt to give Union Square to either the fascist leaders | of the Veterans of Foreign Wars or | !to the socialist party is part of the | | bosses’ program to make the work- {ers pay, and it is quite natural that | the bosses, through the police de- | partment, should be the instrument | | by which the socialist party is or- ganizing for May Day. “The socialist party has nothing in common with May Day—the Inter- national Day of Struggle against wage-cuts, speed-up, for the shorter week-day, for unempleyment insur- ance. The socialist party has noth- ing in eommon with May Day, the International Workers’ Day of Soli- darity and Struggle against imper- |ialist wars and for defense of the | Soviet Union. A May Day on Union Square, under the leadership of the socialist party, would be May Day | under control of Wall Street. “The May Day United Front Com- mittee is making fuull preparations for May Day on Union Square, 1:30 to 5 p. m, The 300 organizations now affiliated to the May Day United Front Conference will be doubled at |the next meeting of the conference, | to be held Monday evening, April 20, |} at the Manhettan Lyceum, We ca!l | upon all workers, and Negro, | farcign-born and native, to join the May Day Union Square demonstra- tion and to protest against the de- liberate provocation of the police and to demand that the police shall not interfere with the May Day dem- onstration,” Day United Front | United Front | Negro | “THERE'S ACRES AND S$ OF LAND | UNORCUPIED Ta-Tas COUNTRY. Suice OFF | TEN THeRe Back To THE LAND AND Ger Lw BERTY AND HaPrnt ‘ = | TEN ACRES HERS AWD HERE'S THe Toors ND —Short and Sweet!— LITTLE Py SEGDS AND HeRfest} $$ yes AY LANDIZ WON'T Se 1 AM HOLDING IT Foe IN VAWES. YOU Say You 'T Because Me wo SAM TAAT BY Tani For. Tue OUT oF Works. THar THe ON EMPLOYED PROBLEM wourn JE Be Sonvep, THIS You CAN'T TAKE lO ACRES a LL IT Wow, NCREASE Want BRaws 2) sol = THERE 15 mY IGN. THose Wor! Society BEFORE MAKE Portce. THe ARMY AND PRESIDENTS’ ME. Jude Kinas® Prorect, a SNORE SEE HERG, You Meratany IN Words = THe Gmmunsts| ARE GOING: Te Socialize THe LAND OF Tue Word For Tac Workses AND You AND You kiargs AND PRESIDENTS PLUS YooR. Tres AnD AVATE PROPERTY Whi Be a Lor of fooey! : Propaganda. For Wage Cut Spread in Bliss |Foundry, Crazy Stuff NEW YORK.—A series of letters, | really polite warnings that a wage- cut is coming, are being distributed | to the employes of Bliss Foundry, | 58th St. Brooklyn. They are signed | by J. C. Loughry, The first letter | has just appeared and is mainly an gument that the falling prices (prices have actually not fallen much when the worker goes to buy the | things he needs!) compel employers to reduce costs in order to keep or- ders, and, if he does not, his men will be fired, and, in that happens, other factories will also have to shut down because the men out of work cannot buy the goods these other factories make. The author tearfully assures the reader he is so busy at his office that he has to prepare | these letters at home, from which it would seem that his concern at least could pay more wages. But Loughery does not say that, instead he urges the men to “keep | employed,” It is intimated that they should take wage-cuts to do this, and hus help others. Loughery, of course, | says nothing about the fact that when a workers’ wages are cut, he cannot buy so much, either, and thus throws other men out of work, be- sides cutting their wages, too, and extending the process, "ERSEY FRAME-UP NEWARK, April 9.—The Interna- mal Labor Defense is mobilizing 2 workers for a house-to-house col- ion of funds for Sunday, April 12. 2 funds will be used for the De- e for the five Paterson Textile orkers, All members of the L.L.D. and sym- athetic organizations are called up- on to respond on Sunday the following stations in nective cities of New Jersey: Newark, 3 Mercer St., 52 West St., St. 7 16th Ave., 29 Aley: Paterson, 205 Pat Passaic, 39 Monroe St, Elizabeth 106 E. Jersey St. y, 308 Elm St. 11 Plum St. George Street. | It is necessary to have one hun- | | dred per cent mobilization of all our | | forces in New Jersey in order to raise | the necessary funds to enable us to take up the legal defense for the five textile workers who are behind the | prison bars in Paterson on a frame- (P charge of murder, CONCERT AND BALL BRONX DAILY WORKER CIRCULATION DRIVE BUREAU April 18—8 p. m. 569 Prospect Ave., Bronx ADMISSION 35 CENTS Bronx Au | Send-o' (Upper —Music by nts 1 50 ¢ divance and 5 i ) Broadway; Spanis BED FUNDSFIGHT morning their 's Center at corner | FAREWELL RALLY AND BALL FIRST DELEGATE OF THE LATIN-AMERIOAN WORKERS IN USA f to th MAY FIRST CELEBRATIONS IN THE SOVIET UNION “TURDAY, APRIL 11, 1931—-8:30 P. M. at the NEW HARLEM CASINO 116TH STREET AND LENOX AVENUE Various “Attractions—Latin-American Dances—American Jazz HAVANA ROYAL ORCHESTRA Workers Hookshop, 50 Kast 18th Street; National Warkers Center, 26 “Vida Obrera” office, 2856 Third Avenue By L. Koveéss A 21 guns salute for the Japanese world parasite, Prince and Princess Takamatsu, when they arrive in New York harbor; 423 years sentence for T. Hariuchi, Japanese worker; White | House reception and military guard of honor for the Japanese imperial oppressors of workers and peasants; | deportation against Kenmotsu, edi- | tor of the Japanese Labor News, fighting for the interests of the work- | ing class. Special Exclusion Act bar- |ring immigrants from Japan and | discrimination against the Japanese | workers already in this country; banquets, parades, orgies to amuse the oppressors of the Japanese work- ing masses. This American imperial- ism divides its functions on class | lines. Thus American and Japanese governments cooperate—one in de- porting the Japanese worker fighters from this country, and the other in waiting for them with executioners. The brother of the Japanese em- /peror left his country at a time when, incited by the Anti-Soviet capitalist interests, murder was at- | tempted against a representative of | the Soviet Union in Japan. He ar- |rives in the United States at a time when the incitement for war against the Soviet Union under the pretext of “dumping” charges, “slave labar,” etc., in this country is taking on tre- mendous proportions. | Murder Japanese Workers | The foreign policy of Japanese im- ‘ perialism in its main line is the same as thé foreign policy ef American im- perialism, both corresponding to the domestic policies of the ruling class of Japan and the United States, The domestic policy is war against the _ working class within the country. The | Imperial Ordinance providing death sentences for revolutionary workers in Japan, corresponds to the Crim- inal Syndicalist Laws, Incitement for Insurrection, ete., ysed by the Amer- | ican ruling class against the working | class. The need of the two imperial- | ist governments is to strengthen their cooperation in suppressing the move- ments of the industrial workers, agricultural workers, colonial masses and strengthen their ties in the pre- parations for war against the Soviet Union. In the “Silver Bullet” war in China which is accompanied with the lad | NEIGHRORHOOD THEATRES | EASY SIDE—BRONE | |] Ludwig Sate in Teron “wank and Mit Britten & Rang ff to the e Hall) the famous cents at the door, Tickets now on sale Office of 1. Ie De nd at the 1 98th 4 —GALA Saturday Evening, A Ist Annual Dance YOUTH SECTIONS TIONAL WORKERS ORDER Play by Workers Lab, Theatre—Labor Sports Union Exhibition IRVING PLAZA ADMISSION 50 CENTS EVENT— pril 11, 1931, 8:30 p. m. ‘Demonstrate Against Killers | of Japanese Toilers; 3 p. m. bullet war against the workers and | Peasants establishing Soviets, efforts |are being made to bring the two im- | perialist governments into closer fighting units against the Chinese Soviets, The arrival of Prince and Princess Takamatsu this morniag to New York harbor must be the signal for the workers of New York to demonstrate against the anti-Soviet war prepara- | tions and against persecution of the working class both symbolized in the person of these members of the Im- perial family of Japan. To demon- strate the solidarity of the American working class with the proletariat of Japan, of Korea and Formosa and of China against the workers and pea- sants of which countries Japan and the United States from now on even more unitedly intend to carry on war. The American workers fighting against unemployment, wage cuts, starvation, persecution cannot remain indifferent and passive in fact of a prepared unity of two imperialist countries each starving and oppress- ing its own workingclass, On to Battery Park, Pier A, at 3 p.m. this afternoon. YCL CALLS MAY DAY CONFERENCE NEW YORK.—The Young Com- munist League last night ,call for a May Day and National Youth Conference to be held Monday evening, April 13, at 35 East 12th St.. fourth floor, at 7:30 o'clock. The call points out that the young Negro and white workers are especially affected by the crisis: “The economic crisis has thrown many thousands of young workers out into the streets to starve and freeze. Suicides occur daily. Those who are still at work have had their Wages cut and their hours lenthened. They never know when they will be next thrown out. “The danger of war, especially against the Soviet Union, the work- ers’ only fatherland, is more acute i issued a! F urniture ‘Thrown Out Thru Door; Tenants Put Back Thru Window; | NEW YORK. — A worker, Acker- dispossessed yesterday t 2927 st 32 Street, Co- ne} land. He was trying to live off a month's security, after ilving in the place for a year. The tenant’s Jeague was on the job at once and by the time the marshall got back with three policemen, they had the furniture back in the flat. The mar- shall and the cops put it out again, and as each piece was thrown in the street, the tenants’ league put it back in through the window. More police were called in and stopped the re- turn of the window, and at last accounts the family was still there, with the league waiting an opportunity to return the furniture. A street meeting was held, and five speakers explained the situation ot a crowd of about 300. A canvass of the other tenants in the place was made, and 16 signed a notice to the landlord that they would pay no rent if this worker were not put back in possession of his home. now than ever before.’ The unem- ployed young workers are forced to | join the C.M.T.C., National Guard, Army and Na’ “Terror against the young and adult workers is steadily increasing. Lynchings are frequent. Deportations take place daily. “The students are also carrying. on the struggle against militarism and | for unemployment insuranee. “Tt is necessary for the young workers and students to redouble their fight against the attacks of the bosses. May Day and National Youth Day (May 1, May 30) must be the mobilization point for thousands of young workers and students in their fight for unemployment insurance, against militarism and the war dan- ger. “This fight will be strengthened and intensified’ on the first Annual Youth Day to be held on May 30 in Passaic, N. J. “In order to prepare fully and to mobilize the greatest number of | young workers for the May Day and the National Youth Day demonstra- tions, a preparatory Conference is being called by the Young Commun- [AMUSEMENTS | Amkino Presents PRODUCED IN THE U, A GRIPPING DRAMA OF LOVE AND WARe Produced Under the Sovict R :] CAMEO “Be Sure to See This Picture”—says Vern Smith in the Daily Worker, AMERICAN PREMIERE CITIES «> YEARS Ss. R. BY SOYUZKINO Based on the Famous Novel by the Sovict Writer CONSTANTIN FEDIN With the Famous Russian Actor IVAN TCHUVELEV (of “The End of St. Petersburg”) and BERNHARD GOETZKE the Great German Actor Director Eugeni Tcherviakov ays nroanway | 2d Big Week (WIS. 1789) POPULAR PRICES ————Theatre Guild Production Getting Married By BERNARD SHAW GUILDS." Fives. 8:40 Th, & Sat. 2:40 Miracle at Verdun By HANS CHLUMBURG Phea,.d5th st Martin Beck “W'st wa Hive. 6140, Mis. Th, & Bat. 2140 BIGGEST SHOW LN NEW YORE BBO ° ’ acs ‘Beyond Victory Incloding; | With JAMES GLEABON Hardeen and BILL BOYD “UVIC REPERTORY vain St i Soe, 31 $y Mote Th. & & EVA UE GALLIENSE, Direc : We GENTE ‘Wee! at Office bie welt, 118 W. 43 Street | m ‘ bth Ave. incl. Sat., Sun. 2 and Ap. im. tow open to NO RINGING BROS. and BARNUM & BAILEY Presenting for the First Time in N.Y, IKON NERVED Alone In Steel Arena with 40 Ferocious perfor’ Lions and Tigers Oriand-Mara Sensation—1000 New Foreign Features—800 Cireus Stars—100 Clowns— 1000 Menagerie Animals, Freaks, Admission to all--inel, seats, SL to $3.50, incl. tax—Ohildren under 12 Half Price very Aft. exe, Bat, Tickets now selling a jarden, 49th & 0th Sts, Box Offices, bel id Agencies Congress of ve t Gi Gh & BF, WOODS Presents ARTHUR BYRON * STAR FINAL Winal mn electric» Five “wive Star nie meEN THEATINE, Weat of 48th Sircet Mats Wea. and mat exit LIONELL ATWILL HE SILENT WITNESS KAY STROZZI-FORTUNO BONANOVA MOROSCO THEATRE, 45th, W. of BB’ (byes, 6:50 Matinees Wed, and Bat, CORT Kvenn furniture through the | Hoover Jokes About Starving Kids May Day Will Be A Day of Struggle WASHINGTON, April 9.—Hoover today mocked the millions of work- ers’ children who are starving to death because their fathers are un- employed. He denominated May 1 as “Child Health Day.” The decla- ration of May Day as “Child Health Day” was deliberately undertaken by the capitalists to distract the work- ers’ attention from the international revolutionary struggle on May Day | against capitalism. This May Day there will be hun- dreds of thousands of workers’ chil- dren diseased and bed-ridden because their fathers cannot buy them enough proper food to eat. Millions more will slave in the factories and fields, draining their life's bleod so that Hoover and his fellow parasites can live like lords. But the revolutionary workers wil! deliberate May Day as a day of struggle to wipe out capitalism and all its misery for the workers. The American Federation of Labor misleaders approve of dominating May Day as Child Health Day, They do not want the workers to be aroused against wage-cuts and star- vation. So they give Hoover's dec- jaration the stamp of their approval. In 1928, the executive council of the A. F. of L. passed @ resolution saying that May 1 is a Communist Labor Day, but they favor the call of the president to mock the chil- dren and call it Child Health Day. “At the same time May 1 no Iunger (CONTINUED ON PAGE THREE) ee ist League, the only organization that is leading the daily struggles of the young workers and students. All workers organizations are invited to send two (2) delegates to this Con- ference, which will take place on Monday, April 13, at 35 Hast 12 8t., New York City.” 3 ROOM FURNISHED APARTME! Houskeenine Conple ar ee alt improvements. $20 nar month—108-110 East 2nd Street, Apartment 21—Stange. SEROY- 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 BRONX, M. ¥, HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian Restaurant 1600 MADISON AVENUE Phone University 8365 Vhoue Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN 4. place oopbere here “all eedieale "ect Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 199 SECOND AVENUE Bet, 12th and 13th Gtm Strictly Vereterian Feed me» Ae eat Se UNIVERSAL CAFETERIA Cor, ilth St. and University Place (Special Roam far Conferences) Intern’l Workers DENTAL DEPARTMENT 1 UNION SQUARE 8TH FLOOR All Work Done Under af DR. JOKE! DN Care Advertise Your Union Meeti Here. for information Write The DAILY WORKER Advertising Uepartment 50 East 13th St. New Yer’ City