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iat ‘Two ~~ DAIL! ¥ WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, APRIL 16, 1931 y State Legislature Turns Down 1,500,000 Jobless; Says Starve (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) flag casting con- act upon the flag This hypo- blem, placard or tempt by word or of the United States. crite wraps relief to the un- country, vetoes @ b employed, approves the cutting of wages, says nothing about the fear- industrial accidents owing to speed-up. The bill was the result of the demonstration of the hunger marchers at the Albany cap- ol in the demand for unemployment insurance, when the unemployed were savagely attacked by the, state troopers, for which dastardly act, the State Assembly voted thanks to the tate troopers. ne day in Washington U. 8. another “progres- ul increase of Couzens, i Senator LaFollette, an- ‘progressive.” spoke with tears voice about 11,000,000 suffering | country) and while 1 session in Augusta, that a business man tic if “as an individual nditions he reached at wage cuts within the rights hroughout the coun- ies of his position to say f he so desires,” the situation of avated. ther in hi mn he is ry becomes more The lower wages. show bankers are determined to Their statements mere- what going on at the e, and their intentions of es to the bone. Tammany Jobs. is time the Board of York City con- the ate of same New sider the appropriation of $2,000,000 for relief proved by. the State As- sembly. At the meeting of the Board mn Tuesday, the statement was made the min y leader that the pro- vision that only those who are voters ll receive work through the ap- opriation means that they must be democrats. This is an open declara- tion to the foreign born that they may starve as far as the bosses’ gov- ernment of New York City is con- cerned. But it more: jt shows ariy that the Tammany Hall ma- chine is trying to build up its ma- chine by using public funds to aid a small number of unemployed. is That t is true is evident in the following: A colored man recently employed by the Prosser Committee + $5 a day, 3 days a week, was laid He complained to the boss and was told that he would be rehired, provided he went to a Tammany boss, and promised to vote the democratic ticket. But this off. 000,000 fund must not be regarded as money that will be used exclusively for paying wages. On the contrary, various kinds of CITY CALENDAR PHURSDAY Needle Trades Youth Section meet at union office, 131 W, right after work. All young s invite Mass Meet in Harlem 8 p.m, at 143 E, 103 St Open Air Meet Br. LL.D. at Northe treet and ist Ave, BxServicemens’ Lea th St. and Fifth a Workers Ind, t w. Workers e Ave League . 2ist St on the “Im- at 6:30 p, m, kyn. Harlem Prog. will hold an open on Youth cub ir meet at Mad- and 06th St. Ave Hungarian and ra i lecture on m of the fT UU Lat the Workers Home, 350 BE. 8:30 p, m. Attention, Shoe and Leather Workers membership meeting of the Shoe and Leather Workers Ind. League at 8 p.m. at Union Headquarters, 16 W.| t St. Important matters on or- nizationaY work will be taken up. Your presence on time is urgent. . . FRIDAY ™ th Section wil meet . mm. at 16 W. 2ist St. All young metal workers are in- vited. at Trem v tona Pk. at 8 Mass Meeting Harlem Prog. Youth Club at Madison Ave. at the 1492 Steve Katovis Br. 1 at 8 p.m. at 108 E meets Workers Youth Club Hinsdae Subject of hat Must a Worker Do in Order to eKep in Good Health.” LLD. Bronaville Br. , Will hear a lecture at 138 Wathing Street, Brooklyn, on “Persecution of Foreign Born Workers and Deport- ations,” . 8 6 Membership Meeting WESL 8 p.m. at 79 East 10th Street. vicemen are urged to ate SATURDAY— Dance and Entertainment wiven by the YCL at Youth Center, 120 Osborn St, B’klyn, at 8 p, m. oe te Seventh Annual Concert Freiheit Mandoin Orchestra at Town Hall, 48rd St. between Broadway and 6th Ave. at 8:30 p,m, Tickets (re- served seats) at Morning Freiheit Office and Town Hall Box Office, Branch 74 1WO is giving a concert and dance for the benefit of the Freiheit at 1472 Boston Road at 8:30 p. m, $e 68 May Day Prep Meetings Bronx will take place at the i : Claremont Pkw: ; Wilkins and Inter Avs,; . and Prospect A th St. and Brook. Aves saiat ind White Plains Ra; 163rd s St. Nicholas Ave. in t t and . Hal Prog. Youth Club will hold a musical and iterary eve. aing at 1292 Madison Ave, ae Oe Young’ Defenders jem meet at West Farms Post Office, (7th St) at 9 a.m. for their hike. May Day’ Pageant “Kehears 4320 p.m, 360 E, Sist St AN fasted: in the flag of this} ed business to end idle-| al are in-| materials will be needed for the work, the graft on this and other contracts, will leave a small sum for relief and work. But even considering that only 15,000 men will be employed at $15 week, the $2,000,000 will last about |four and a half weeks. But since the whole sum will not be available for wages, it is clear that only a few |weeks stand between even the 15,000 |and hunger. And as for the rest, the | corrupt, his henchmen in office representing starving. ‘The workers of New York now see “their” governments in action—their refusal to help the unemployed whose |situation becomes worse day by day. They see the intentions of the bank- ers and manufacturers to cut wages still more, There is only one answer to give |these people: build up the Unem- {ployed Councils. Build up the revo- lutionary unions of the Trade Union Unity League. Fight for Unemploy- |ment Insurance and relief, against | wage cuts and speed-up, Demon- strate against these conditions on| May Day under the leadership of the United Front May Day Conference. which will be held at Manhattan Ly- ceum, 66 E. 4th St., on Monday, April |20, at 8 p. m. Let Walker, Roose- velt, Couzens, Hoover and their A. F. of L. and socialist anti-working class friends know that the fight will go on till the workers get what they demand. rare Reformist Parade Fiasco March Starts With 19, Ends With 15 NEW YORK.—The efforts of Har- | lem Negro reformists to exploit the misery of the Negro unemployed and | part-time workers to advance their own class interests was signally de- feated yesterday as Negro workers rejected the appeal to parade in Har- | lem under the leadership of rent- gouging landlords, parasitic preach-!mney are now in jail indicted with trickery that is unusual even for |nas decided to continue the School ers and other Negro business men who sought to narrow down the struggle against starvation and divert the masses from militant struggle into|»een taking part in the work of or- | distributing leaflets for channels harmless to the bosses. Not more than 19 persons showed | grafting Jimmie Walker and} Wall Street, tell them to continue} THE ADVENTU JRES OF BILL ‘WORKER Now HE PeFore T, HERBERT Hoole PResWevy OF 5 Te nied STATES. ~ (ee COATES = I™ A HUNGRY | ji__—z, "WHEREAS, se ReNon fe? ‘ {NG Oo: ReaLire, ary Expose the Hoey on May Day! os he THER BELOVED CHILDREN! THS 1S A i. Ant) PR CoUN TR: ort ea WS Feet Tey. IF You! Wary : whe, * | ere) fencny hy ‘MEET TO DEF END | PATERSON FIVE Face Sacco - - Vanzetti Fate | PATERSON, N. J., April 15—To ‘rally the workers of this city in de- fense of the five Paterson workers who face the fate of Sacco and Van- |zetti on a framed-up murder charge, a mass meeting will be held Friday, April 17, at 205 Paterson Sa, at 8 p.m, | Among the speakers will be Hyman and Biedenkapp. On April 19 there ?| will be a mass meeting in ama jat 159 Fourth St. A leaflet issued by the National Leena Nouker Held | are for this sort of work. | Textile Workers’ Union and the In- | ternational Labor Defense, advertis- jing the Passaic meeting, where I. Amter, New York District organizer jof the Communist Party, will speak, | says: “The bosses of Paterson are schem- ing to murder five innocent workers. jmurder. These five workers are ac- tive members of the National Tex- | tile Workers’ Union. They have ganizing the silk workers against their miserable conditions of wage- |May Day Captains Meet Thurs. Night} NEW YORK.—On Thursday, April at 7:45 p.m. at.16 West 2lst St. ike Captains elected by every orga- | nization affiliated with the May Day | United Front Conference will gather. At this meeting the Captains will plan organization work for May Day. Captains elected by their respective organizations should without fail be present to this meeting. CURED BY POLICE FOR DEPORTATIO., | On Ellis Island NEW YORK.—Santiago Ake, a Mexican worker, member of the Food | Workers’ Industrial Union, -is now on Ellis Island, faced with deporta- tion as the result of a piece of police these corrupt defenders of capitalist profit and graft. On Feb, 6, Ake was arrested while the New York dressmakers’ strike. He was charged with violating a city ordi- up for the much advertised parade jcuts, speed-up, lay-offs and. unem- |nance and released in custody of his which was to mobilize the Negro masses for “race loyalty” interests of the Negro exploiters and apologists for imperialism. Almost all of the 19 were business men and women. The promoters of the parade took no part in the funeral march which | aroused the laughter of the few work- | ers who paid it any attention as it “paraded” from 150th Street down 7th Avenue to 125th Street, to Lenox Avenue and up Lenox to 145th Street. If it was the hope of the promoters | that others would join in once the parade got going they were sadly dis- appointed. It began with 19 and |died with 15. The four who dropped out were | probably the only workers who had |been trapped into the march, |these expressed the utmost disgust |with the misleaders who had told |them to come out, but who deserted |when they saw they could not fool | | the masses, | promoters who followed the parade was Gothard, and he followed from the sidewalk. Of the many banners which had |been prepared for the grand occa- | sion, not one denounced the murder- jous frame-up and legal lynching planned by the Alabama bosses for 9 Negro youngsters, not one de- |manded unemployment relief and in- |surance, not one raised the demand |of Equal Work at Equal Wages, of | abolition of discrimination against | Negro workers by employers ‘thpough- out the city. The Communist Party exposed the selfish motives of the rent hogs and misleaders behind the movement. The Communist Party fights in the in- terests of the workers against both white or Negro business, but the Com- munist Party pointed out to the Ne- gro masses in Harlem that solution for mass unemployment and misery .|is not to be achieved by Negro work- ers putting up their last pennies to support the rent-gouging Negro land- lords and other business men, but by mass revolutionary struggle, hand in hand with the white workers, against starvation, wage cuts, discrimination by employers, against all forms of persecution aimed at the working class and for the demand for unem- ployment relief and insurance to be paid by the bosses and their govern- ment and administered by commit- tees of Negro and white workers. The Communist Party calls upon the workers, Negro and white, native and foreign born, to demonstrate in iron solidarity May Day in Union Square for the demands of the un- employed, and against lynching, de- portations, persecution, and imperial- ist war. Down tools May First! Demonstrate! FREIHEIT MANDOLIN ORCHES- TRA AT TOWN HALL SAT. The Freiheit Mandolin Orchestra will give their next concert at Town Hall this Saturday night, with Jacob Schaefer conducting and Matthew Kahan as soloist. The program: Military Symphony, Haydn; In the Forest, Akimenko; Minuet, Op. 78, Schubert; Prelude to “Khoyant- china,” Moussorgsky; Symfonetta for Mandolin Orchestra, Schaefer; Ro- man in F and G Major, Beethoven. to the class | and | The only one of the! ployment: These are their crimes! Organizing and fighting for the in- terests of the textile workers form: ing and building a real union of the j Workers—the National Textile Work- against the bosses and their friends, the officials of the A. F. of L. “This is a plot not against the five | workers alone, but against the en- |tire union. The bosses’ aim is to |destroy the National Textile Work- ers’ Union and to prevent the further organization and struggle of work- jers against miserable conditions. Or- |ganized protest will stop the bosses from going through with this scheme. A strong union, to continue the good work done by our imprisoned com- rades must be the answer to the bosses. Join the union! Show your solidarity with the arrested mem- |bers of our union, ‘Demand their immediate release! Organize against junemployment and for Unemployed Insurance!” |Protest Wires | Continue Flood Ala. Governor | NEW YORK—As working class re- |sentment continued to rise against \the planned legal lynching of 8 Ne- gro youths by the Alabama boss courts, the following additional pro- tests were wired the governor of Ala- bama: Union League and Communist Party school representing labor organiza- tions throughout entire country pro- eight Negro workers sentenced to death on frame-up charges in Scots- boro, Ala, We demand their imme- diate release and new trial by jury of workers, half of whom shall be Negroes.” (Sent by students of the National Training School.) meeting Friday night at St. Hall, Harlem, and reads: “Hundreds of workers, Negro and white, assembled in St. Luke’s Hall, protest railroading of 9 young work- ers by your courts. We hold the state officials and the judge and prosecutor responsible. We demand uncondi- tional release of the young Negro workers.” Eight of the nine youths tried were given the death sentence. The 9th, a 14 year old lad, is to be tried again, the bosses being afraid to give him the death sentence in viow of the rising anger of the masses sgainst the sentencing of the ther eight who range in age from 16 to 20. Negro, White Painters Meet Tonite In Harlem NEW YORK.--The first mass meet- ing in Harlem of all painters, Negro and white, April 16 at 143 East 103rd St, Luke's All are invited to a discussion of | plans to fight the growing unemploy- ment in the trade and the bad con- ditions. The meeting is called by the Building Trades Workers’ Industrial League of the T. U. U. L,, Painters Section. |ers’ Union. That is a crime, but only | “We students of the National Trade | test and condemn legal lynching of | The second was sent by the mass) wik take place today, | attorney, Jacques Buitenkant, repre- senting the New York District of the International Labor Defense. Feb. 19, when the case was called +before. Magistrate Earl Smith of Jefferson Market Court, Ake was forcibly taken from Buitenkant’s cus- tody and rushed off to the Alien Criminal Investigation Division of | police headquarters, Carol Weiss | King, another attorney for the New York I. L. D., obtained a writ of | habeas corpus, but when she arrived at police headquarters, much to her surprise, she was told Ake had been released. Subsequently Ake distributing the leaflets, but his case was dismissed. Abe told Mrs. headquarters had kept his first citi- zenship papers and his union card. Mrs. King called up the headquar- ters and was told by Captain Mc- Dermott, who was in charge, that Ake could have them if he called for them, Ake called for the papers and on Tuesday Mrs, King was in- formed by Captain McDermott that he was being held for deportation. When Mrs. King protested at the luring of Ake, which was in viola- | tion even of capitalist law, the po- |lice captain laughed and made in- sulting remarks, The New York District of the In- ternational Labor Defense will fight jthe attempt to deliver Ake over to |the fascist terror government of Mexico, The I, L. D. points out that | Ake is in this country legally, but is being victimized for his working- |class activity; if the poXce and the | department of labor are to be allowed | to have their way“it will be a prece- |dent for the luring of other militant |foreign-born workers in the future, All worwers are urged to support the fight to secure Ake's release. Against evictions, for rent reduc- tions! —-Concert given at ADMISSI Sports Club. In conjunction On | was tried for | King that police | Daily Worker SATURDAY EVENING, APRIL 18 BRONX WORKERS CENTER 569 PROSPECT AVENUE—8:30 P. M. N38 CENTS Excellent rogram is being given by the W. I. R., Novy Mir Club, Spartacus . Piano, Violin Solos, Singing, Athletles AUSPICES:—Bronx “Daily Worker Circulation Drive Bureau” FILL Yo uR SELF Fou. oF PuBLIC ‘Ate SCHOOL PaTRisTism 9D You WiLL Row UP To BE || OC LE rm = f) 1ZENf }} R Hoover, toover ey TA ie IN or ANY To MAKE Masher A, NICE _DAY FoR ove 2 CHILDREN, We WANT, bi [ TO ConfeRve THEIR: Heart AND (trap NES By RYAN WALKER Abe 000 hy us eae Stan th FONG Re AND.LO MAG, Servant Girls Enslaved in New Yorks YWCA Admits: NEW YORK.—A story of bitter , \slavery of servant girls here in the homes of wealthy men was told by |reporters to the National Board of | |the Y. W. C. A. Tuesday. | Josephine Carroll, a Negro social worker, told in detail how a slave- hunting ring, going under the title | 12 a “commercial agency” (the name | | was withheld by the capitalist press), |was rounding up Negro and white \girls in the South and , practically | selling them to rich women in the North, The gizls are worked unlim- ited hours, at about half the regu- a wage, and are deliberately kept | so busy that they can not go out | \and find out what the wages usually Many unemployed office girls are vice, where they are frightfully over- worked, it was also reported. Mrs. Philip Le Boutilier, in press reports ,as “prominent in society and a member of the Na- tional Board of the Y. W. C. A.,” was successful in having a motion passed to prevent the radio broad- cast of the reports. proposal made the day before to the board by Dr. Hazel Kyrk of the Uni- versity of Chicago that the boar excess of 54 hours a week. The mo- | tion was committee for study.” | Workers School to for Summer Season | } The Workers’ School Committee | |in the summer, The summer term |will start in the latter part of May | and will last for eight weeks, Im- |portant courses like the Fundamen- | tals of Communism, Political Econ- |omy, Leninism, Russian, Spanish, \ete., will be offered. Classes are to be held in the evenings. This de- jcision was made in view of the in- jereasing demands of many workers jto secure training in the summer. | | Workers are advised to register now | |at the Workers’ School office, 48-50 | |E. 13th St., second floor. The num- | |ber of students in each class will be | imited, Correspondence courses will i be given in the summer in order to | | benefit workers in various parts of | the country to be trained for lead- | ership in the intensified class strug- | gle. Further information about this can be secured upon writing to the | Workers’ School, 48-50 E. 18th St. ‘PHILHARMONIC ORCHES- | | TRA CLOSES SEASON THIS SUNDAY The Philharmonic-Symphony Or- |chestra closes its eighty-ninth ses- sion this Sunday afternon at Car- negie Hall, with Arturo Tosranini conducting Bach’s Symphony in D, Mozart's G Minor Symphony and Strauss’s “Don Quixote.” On Thursday evening and Friday afternoon, at Carnegie Hall, the or- chestra will play the following num- bers: Symphony in D, Op, 18, No, 3, J. C, Bach; Symphony in G Minor, | Mozart; Introduction to “Agamem- non,” for chorus and orchestra, Piz- zetti; Te Deum, Verdi; Passacagli and Fugue in C Minor, Bach-Res- pighi. The Schola Cantorum will take part in these concerts. The Students’ Concert on Satur- day night at Carnegie Hall will in- clude the following: Overture to ‘The Bartered Bride,’ Smetana; Sym- phony in F, Szostakewicz; Flirtation in a Chinese Garden and “Parade,” Chasinns; Suite from “Snegourot- chka, Rimsky-Korsakoff; Overture to “The Flying Dutchman,” Wagner. and Ball— for the the with all Bronx organizations at given ADMISSION:—EMPLOYED 25 Unemployed ex-servicemen. that Come and Meet your buddies HOUSEWARMING PARTY WORKERS EX-SERICEMEN’S LEAGUE at their headquarters—79 East 10th Street | SUNDAY, APRIL 19, AT 7 P. M. Unemployed ex-servicemen with WESL membership card the by the CENTS—UNEMPLOYED FREE |the new employ Hotel Manger Owners, Along Race Division NEW YORK.—The Hotel Manger jchanged hands recently and Monday fired the whole crew and let rs hire a new one. | The new crew is made up entirely of Negro workers, The Food Workers’ and the others hired to organize, and pointing out that the firing of the white workers and hiring of Negro workers is a trick to divide the work- ing-class along race lines, and that Negro workers if they do not or- ganize. All were called to a meeting at 16 W. 2st St. at 3:30, “MELO” “OPENS TONIGHT ETHEL BARRYMORE The premiere of Henri Bernstein's “Melo” will take place at the Ethel AT April 13, “Six Characters In Search of An | Author,” by Luigi Pirandello, opened at the Bijou Theatre last night, with | Walter Connolly and Eugene Powers in the leading roles. also being forced into domestic ser- | described | She also campaigned against al “referred. to the national | on | Industrial | Union of the T. U. U. L. has issued | a leaflet urging the workers fired | the same trick will be played on the | Barrymore Theatre this evening. The | opening was originally scheduled for | |May Day Papeant | Rehearsal rehearsal by the Workers’ Lab- Theatre and the Proletbuen, first Day Pageant, orat will take place tonight, at 8:30 p. ni., at the Hungarian Workers’ Home,, at 350 E. 81st St. All comrades who want to participate are invited. No “Emergency” Work for Jobless Into Regular Road Job NEW YORK.—Board of estimate | Sessions yesterday as a committee of the whole, and a secret session of |Have 8-Weeks Course|Try to Split La b o r}| the board of aldermen, brought out more facts in the swindle being put |over on the unemployed here in the matter of city emergency work. The $2,000,000 fund proposed last Friday by the board of estimates is to be used for road work. It was $10,000,000 when the board was only | talking about it, and did not think the law would allow them to give janything. ‘The legislature (repub- |lican) put over a fast one on the | board (Tammany) and changed the law, so then the board changed the ~ | amount, Walker, stated that speaking to the board, “the city will soon have to surface the roads in Queens, Brooklyn, Bronx and Staten Island, anyway, and this is a good chance to get the work done.” This, of course, is only postponing the unemploy- ment problem, for the work will not be there later, but that is part of |the game, | Then Baldwin, the minority leader in the board of aldermen, admitted that there are really 750,000 jobless jin New York's five borroughs, which, \besides agreeing perfectly with the Daily Worker estimate months ago of 1,000,000 in Greater New York, |makes the plan of the alderme! ‘put “about 15,000” to work “ AMUSEMENTS says Produced by American SOYUZKINO CITIES - AND E {BE SURE TO SEE THIS PICTURE” THE NEW OUTSTANDING SOVIET FILM | Russta AND GERMANY .......... (star of the “End of St. Petersburg” AMEO Vern Smith in the Daily Worker Premiere Released By AMKINO After the novel by Fedin . IN 1914 AND 1918 A German Engineer Two poles of intelligen In the leading roles are: The German major— the celebrated German actor BERNHARD GETZKE IVAN CHUVELEV and other films.) 2ND STR T : and proapway | 2d Big (WHS. 1789) rorciar prices! Week eatre Guild Production Getting Married By BERNARD SHAW GUILD, 5274. Byes, 8:40 Mts, Th, & Sat. 2:40 Miracle at Verdun By HANS CAHLUMBERG Martin Beck "Wo" st i'was ys. 8:40, Mts, Th, & Sat. 2 in LIONELL ATWILL T HB SILENT WITNESS KAY STROZZI-FORTUNIO BONANOVA MOROSCO THEATRE, 45th, W. of B'way Evgs. 8:50 Matinees Wed. ‘and Sat.,\ 2:30 Evenings 80c, $1, $1.60, Mats, Th. & Sat, 2:30 EVA LE GALLIENNE, Director Today Mat. Fonight .. Tom. Night . civic REPERTORY 3**4 St. 6th Av. WOODS Presents ARTHUR BYRON ” with Discharge Papers free Ryan Walker of the Daily Worker Staff will draw cartoons for us night! Five star FINAL “Five Star Final is electric and alive” —SUN CORT THEATRE, West of 48th Street Kventnge 8:00 Mate, Wed. and Sat, 2:50 bE B-8th nae 2 amd Sv. m, Toor open ted 7 a “CIRCUS Presenting for the First Time in N.Y. IRON NERVED euyps BEATTY Alone in Steel Arena with 40 Ferocious perfor’g Lions and Tigers Orland-™ tion—1000 New Foreign Features—s00 Circus Stars—100 Clowns— 1000 Menagerie Animals, Congress of Freaks. Admission to all—te inel. tax—Children seats, SI t ler 12 Hall $3.50, Price very Aft. exe. Sat, ‘Tiekets now selling at Garden, 40th & 50th Sts. Box Offices, Gimbel Bros, and Agencies, 'S GREATEST PLAY gix CHARACTERS IN SEARH OF AN AUTHOR vith & Eugene POWKRS «45th St. Mat, Sai, ngs 840 wn Awe | qePPODACHE -..y BIGGEST SHOW LN NEW YORI, Walter CONNOLLY. BIJOU THEA, W Including: ‘PIONEER TAG Toni ght) | ce om sav) DAYS SAT. & SUN. Drive for “Magazine In Full Blast NEW YORK.—Thousands of work- ing class children and their parents will welcome the first issue of the new children’s magazine on April 26, at Webster Hall, 119 East 11th St., | at 2 p.m, Watch the new magazine on the stage of Webster Hall, and see the children enact the contents in life. A jgiant enlargement of the magazine |favor overtime pay for work done nls $2.04 0, 000 “Will Be Put} will be made, so that you can see all the stories, sports and news spill out onto the stage. Pioneers, WIR Scouts, IWO chil- dren’s schools will participate. And what a show! Get your tickets in advance at the District Office of the Pioneers, 35 E. 12th St. Come in groups, bring the kids, bring your friends. In order to insure the appearance of the Pioneer every month, the Pioneers are having a Tag Day this Saturday and Sunday. The Pioneers call on all militant workers to par- ticipate in this Tag Day. The subscription to the Pioneer is only 50 cents a year. If subs are sent in now, they will be in time for the mailing of the first issue. Send all funds and subs to the Pion- eer, Y.P.A. Dist. 2, 35 East 12th St., New York City. 30 deys” if they can prove they voted here the last two elections, look sick, Then it came out that of the 25,000 fired or being fired this month by the Prosser Committee, only 1 per cent have found other jobs, New York jobless will mobilize for a Great May First demonstration this year, and one of the main de- mands will be the right to live and not to starve to death, FORA TRUSS BANDAGE or STOCKING go to P. WOLF & CO. INC. 1499 Third Ave.) 70 Avenue A Bot. At & 8S Sts! oe gw 5 ate. (st Floor) Oven Eves 8 pv, m.' Open Eves 8 p. m. NEW YORK CITY SPECIAL LADIES’ ATTENDANT Intern’! Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 1 UNION SQUARE 8TH FLOOR All Work Done Under Personal Care of DR, JOSEPHSON HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian Restaurant 1600 MADISON AVENUE Phone Stuyvesant, $816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with hy pgm where all radicals 302 E. 12th St. buns York Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 199 SECOND AVENUE Bet, 12th and 18th Ste. Advertise Your Union Meetings Here. For Information Write to The DAILY WORKER i Advertising \epartment 50 13th St New “York City BEAUTIFUL unfurnished — apartment Bklyn. Hats: 2 large, snactous rooms, separate entrance; kitchen facilities, Charles Ahearn, with OLSEN & JOHNSON see ak $40.00 Pa eg ing gas, elec Bore” Mall Stay oe Als 4-308, We Pee