The Daily Worker Newspaper, April 30, 1931, Page 5

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ta ean F gem!’ (fF 18 0 Ment cia are Sa DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, APRIL 80, 1931 Page Fi ive |-On From Union Square May Day to Bronx Coliseum, 177th Street East, at 7:30 P.M. Speakers: Foster, Patterson, Amter, and others. Revolutionary Pageant; Presentation of Bust of Stalin BRAND ROLE OF SOCIALISTS AS AID TO BOSSES IN FIGHTING THE JOBLESS AND PREPARING IMPERIALIST WAR: New York District of Communist Party Issues| Statement Calling On Socialist Workers | to Support Communist-May 1 ‘The socielist party lesders more openly and frazonly than ever are adopt the language and policy of our eyemy, the capitalist class. ‘Tha misery that every working class family confronts--through un- employment, wage cuts, speed-up and the stagger plan; in the attacks on tha forelgnborn and the discrimin- ation and lynching of the Negroes, the socialist party leaders are either silent or aid the bosses against the workers, What have they done in regard to unemployment? Have they not: con- sistently understated the number of unemployed, for the purpose of min- imiging thé suffering of the unem- ployed. Have they not smiled when the police beat up and clubbed the unempjoyed (New York)? Have they not allowed unemployed workers to hunger and be evicted in Milwaukee and Reading, where there are social- ist administrations? Have they not ‘sold out strike after strike against wage cyts--Rochester, Reading, Phil- adelphis, Kensington, Marion, Dan- ville, Tinois' miners—where the so- called “left,” “radical” socialists, like Muste, Hapgood have led? Have the So¢ialist-controlled unions not openly worked with the bosses against the workéraethe Amalgamated Clothing Workers, International Ladies Gar- ment Workers, Amalgamated Food ‘Workers, ate.? Have they raised their voices against the attacka on the foreign- born? ‘The workers attending the bal] at the Finnish Socialist Club Rater yaided and about 20 were ar- rested and held for deportation. What “aid the. weiialiea Jeaders do? Nothing lieve that the Hoover plunder ifn- perialist government has honest in- tentions in regard to Nicaragua, and all that the workers must do is to push the Hoover government to a Teal peaceful policy toward the col- onies! Every worker knows that im- perialist governments are against the workers, and that the strategy of , withdrawing the marines in Nicar- agua is a sham and does not mean that the U. S. government will not at 2: 30 p.m. at 380 East Bist Street. Wicheie tip lictsactints the meets at 125th Street and Madison Avenue (Pythian Hall) at 8 p. m. in conjunction with an outdoor meeting at jasth Street and Fifth Avenue. All vets are urged to attend. An pareticn te cay De ‘Day, “will be se the Downtown Ws Bs vat euinton and 7 fae “act Broadway, ry, Pe 7 Eve Ball nd Rally, 6. Dows Seumet rae ane peices re, 31 W. 28th St, at 8 p. Ad~ miieeion 26 gents “xt agar 35 “Cents. tines afirect “American rkers, on Whe New York Work- ors’ me ntists Grow bart Re 35 By a eenaglen, Ai ey 0 A il tins over. vths world will be reed. mee eee, ome ‘Bneish Branch tor the purpose of corel “Smith wit tate mn “Sf Weance of May Day.” All mrerabel rs are eenroren to attend. WwW. } Ronen val, at £30 p.m, at 131 W. 23th st, All invited. ere Plumbers and Helpers TUL fi i : g special mobilization i radet being oe - * shopmia ae [at Larkin Plans, protect the interests of Wall Street in | the colonies. Marines are not needed | in the colonies, for airplanes, with | chemicals, gasses and bambs will do the job as they already have done in Nicaragua. Hoover, the representa- tive of one of the bloodiest. govern- ments in the world, talks about the | “bandit” Sandino, who must be clean- | ed out! Sandino is a representative of the fighting workers and peasants of Nicaragua, who must be supported | by every fighting worker. But Thomas calls ypon the American} workers to support Hoover and the | ‘Walk Street bosses. The socialist party leaders are the bitterest enemy of the Soviet Union, | no matter what honeq words some | of them may use. Not only the Jew~ ish Daily Forward—but the entire list of the leaders. And we must not forget that Hillquit, the repre- sentative of the American socialist party in the Second International, called upon the workers and peasants | of the Soviet UOnion to overthrow their government. The socialist party leaders helped the counter-revolu- tionaries in the Soviet Union in their plots to overthrow the government, In an attack on the working class, in all the struggles that the workers | conduct against their growing misery end against the plans of the bosses, the socialist leaders show where they stand: against the struggle of the| workers—against the interests of the) workers. In the Tammany Hall scandal, the socialists only demand that they have @ hand in investigating, with the aim finally of establishing in New York City a “non-partisan” govern- ment. This will be a capitalist gov- ernment. Do not the socialists so- operate with the LaFollettes in the coalition government in Wisconsin? Are they not the staunchest sup- porters of the Bruening semi-fascist government in Germany? Are they not. the chiefs of police in the Ger- man cities, who shoot down the work- May Day should take place in order to prevent the unity of the workers of New York in revolutionary strug- gle and protest. The bosses of New York know what the role of the socialist party is—to deceive and be- tray the workers, to keep them di- vided and to sell them out to their enemies. Workers of New York, still support- ing the socialist party! The history of the socialist party since the world war has been one of constant be- trayal. Today in the crisis, the so- cialist party has gone the way of fascism-—~against. the workers and for the capitslists. They still know how to use working class language, and to cover up their fascist face. The Communist Party uncovers their treacherous faces. The socialist par- ty leaders are social-fascists. They are your enemies—and enemies of the entire working class. Give them. the fitting answer on May Day! Come to Madison Square at 12.30 p. m.! Line up with the fight- ing workers of New York! March with them to Union Square in chal- lenge of the bosses of New York and their socialist and AFL allies! Make May Day the beginning of a cast campaign of organization of the workers under revolutionary leader- ship to fight against the growing misery of the working class, against lynching, against imperialist war, against intervention in our work- ers’ fatherland, the Soviet Union! COMMUNIST PARTY, U.S.A, Call All to Yonkers May 1 Demonstration, Noon, at Larkin Plaza YONKERS, N. Y., April 29.--The Comunist Party calls upon the work- ers of Yonkers, employed and unem- ployed, Negro and white, to come to the demonstration May iat at noon THE ADVENTURES A CUT IN WAGES MEAN, LESS FOON FOR THE EA | OF BILL WORKER A CUT IN WA) CLOTHES Brownsville Workers in Huge Scottsboro Protest Rally Today | Rush Preparations to Mobilize Masses for An Immense May Day Demonstration BROWNSVILLE, Brooklyn, N. Y.— In protest against the attempts of the capitalists to legally lynch nine Negro boys in Scottsboro, the /workers of Brownsville, under the leadership of the Communist Party, the League of Struggle for Negro Rights and the International Labor Defense, are pre- paring a mass parade and open air yally and a huge indoor mass meet- ing Thursday April 30th at Duubar Center. The parade will start at Dean and Rockaway Aves. and will go up Dean Street and across to Her- kimer St. Many meetings will be held on the line of march which will wind up at the indoor meeting at about) 8:30 p. m, Thousands of Negro workers in Brownsville are unemployed. Due to the discrimination practiced against | the Negro workers, they are forced At the mass meeting the evening of May Day at the Bronx Coliseum, a bust of Comrade Stalin made by Adolf Wolff will be presented by the John Reed Club, through Phil Bard, to the Communist Party of the U.S.A. Acceptance speech will be made by Comrade William Z. Foster for the Communist Party. jactions, lost the confidence of these | workers who are looking more and more to the Communist Party of Brownsville. Because of the importance of this} issue, and in connection with the mo- bilization for May Day, the workers of Brownsville must make this parade and rally a huge demonstration against lynching and persecution of all workers. Many Street Meets to Rally, Downtown Workers for May Ist NEW YORK, N. ¥.—A number of meetings wil be held by the Com- | munist Party, section 1 at the follow- ing placés to mobilize the down town workers for the May Day demonstra- | | Lyceum: Plan Drive NEW YORK.—All slipper workers are to meet Thursday night at the Manhattan Lyceum, 66 East Fourth Street at 6:30 p, m., to prepare plans for a general drive to organize the slipper industry. Smash Frame-Ups! Workers! Maintain Proletarian Discipline At the Demonstration! (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONES debate before Madison Square. Speak to workers around you. Sell literature, Shout appropriate slogans, Help develop the proper atmosphere, for the spesk- ers, Don't parade around when the speaking begins. Stick at your post, with your union or mass organization wherever your group is stationed. The formation of little discussion groups while the speaking is going on, is a terrible disgrace for the entire Party, It means that you are rendering the best service to the c:ass enemy by disrupting the demonstration, ‘ 3, Don’t regard yourself merely as a visitor or onlooker at the demon- stration. Become an active parti- cipant. Help draw the masses into participation by paying careful at~- tention to the speakers Respond to the climaxes in the speeches with shouting proper slogans.’ with cheer- ing, vith helping to rouse the great- est militancy and response from the masses assembled around the speaker, Become @ real living transmission belt, between the speaker and the workers. 4, Don't run around euring the pa- rade. Maintain the strictest discip- line necessary for a Communist army. Stick to your line. Keep calm and alert, March with determination. Don’t straggle. whenever anything happens. Don't act on your own accord. Always wait the meeting opens on for instructions from the steering committee and parade captains. Don’t | Sing or shout anything that comes | into your mind. Follow the cheering committee, Remomber that the job of the cheering committee is not to do all the cheering. They lexd the cheering and singing. Cheer and sing as much as possible in unison. Carry your placard high so that the Workers can see them. 5. Every Party member is expected to be in the line, During the parade not a single comrade should be seen on the sidewalk, trailing the parade. Remember that you are the leaders of the parade, fused with the march- ing workers, Walking along on the sidewalk with the curious and general onlookers js desertion of your post, which js in the marching lines. 6. The same discipline and strict order at the outdoor demonstration. and parade -must be observed at the Coliseum evening demonstration. No walking about. No whispering or congregating in the back of the hell or isles. Don't let your enthusiasm run away with you. Your reyolu- tionary enthusiasm must be organized and controlled in a Bolshevik manner. Cooperate with the ushers and speak- ers to the fullest extent. CT . MORE PATCHES ON Your. GES MEANS || A WAGE. THe SUPPORT FIGHT Anti- Imperialists For May 1 Demonstration NEW YORK.—A =A statement, issued New York branch of the Anti-Imper- | ialist League calls on all workers and | anti-imperialists to join in the May Day demonstrations under the slogan of fight against imperialism, The statement reads: “May Day, 1931, with the deepening jof the economic erisis of word capi-| talism and its disastrous consequences | upon the toiling masses, we find, sim- ultaneously with the growing strug- gle of U. S. workers against wage cuts, for unemployment relief, a gigantic wave af armed fight of the colonial peoples, especially in the U. &. cal- onies, against the imperialist exploit- ers and their native agents. | | Liberation heroically fighting U. S. pieaned forces, the workers captured the north-eastern coast city of Puerto drown the revolution in blood, While Mr. Hoover is denouncing Sandino as a “cold-blooded murderer” and puts him “outside the civilized pale,” and U.S. gun-boats actively fire upon the Chinese Red Army as “bandits,” American imperialism strongly sup- port the most savage butchers, Ciang Ka? Shek and Machado, against the masses of China and Cuba. Revolutionary leaders of Filipino workers are still in the dungeons of “civilized” American imperialism, Mr. Hoover lamented about Child Health in Virgin Islands and Porto Rico, but his administration actively carries out the bosses campaign of wage-cuts, deportations, lynchings, © clubbing against the starving millions in the States. American imperialism is the common enemy of the U. S. workers and the colonial masses, “The Provisional Committee, while proceeding with the organization of the N. Y, Branch of the Anti-Imper- iglist League, appegls to all workers and enemies of imperialism in New ‘York ta show your solidarity and sup- port the struggling masses of Nicara- Beginning Saturday May 2 FIRST NEWARK SHOWING ‘THE MARVELOUS SOVIET FILM ‘CHINA EXPRESS’ PRODUCED FN U,8,8,R. BY AOVRINO ADDED ATTRACTION “LOST GODS” A THRILLING EXPEDITION OF EXPLORATION IN ANCTENT | MORE E DIFFICULTY IN Paster ON IMPERIALISM by the provisional committee of the) “In Nicaragua while the Army of} —Organize and Strike asin Wage Pig CUT MEA A WAGE Curr MEANS A CUT IM LITTLE THINGS Foi THE KINDIES By RYAN WALKER ' STRIKE AGAINST WAGE | Sei THE UNEMPLOYED seus WILL JOIN WITH After (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) | capitalism for the international sol- jidarity of the working class and the oppressed nations throughout the world. In the demonstration Satur- day, the Negro and white workers of Harlem witnessed the fear of the bosses and their police of the mass protest against the Scottsboro legal massacre about to be perpetrated. The Harlem workers are preparing to rally by the thousands to Madison Sq. and march to Union Sq. against hun- ger, lynching and discrimination, Coliseum Meeting At Night, The workers of New York will clase the mighty day of demonstration and | struggle by rallying in thousands to bration at the All Out On Madison Square May First At Noon! March to Union Square! PROTEST SCOTTS- Mass Meeting at Bronx Coliseum at 7: | the Communist Party May Day cele- | Bronx Coliseum, } BKLYN MEETING BORO LYNCHING Mother of Patterson to Be Among Speakers N. Y.—Against the of the Nine Seotts- the workers of 30 P. M.| March the Workers Laboratory Theatre and | Prolet Buehne, a novel event at the| Coliseum May Day demonstration will be the presentation by the John Reed| BROOKLY Club of a bust of the leader of the| legal lynchings Communist Party of the Soviet Union,| boro Negro bo; | Comrade Stalin, which will be accep-| Brooklyn are preparing a mass dem- ted by Comrade Foster, for the Cen- | onstration which will demand the un- tral Committee of the Communist | conditional release of these young Party of U.S. A workers. Employed workers, down tools on| A mass protest meeting bas been May Day! | called by the League of Struggle for Employed and unemployed workers | | Negro Rights to be held on Thursday, —all out to Madison Square, 25th St. | | April 30, at 8'p.m., at the Tiveli and Madison Avenue, at 12:30 p.m. | Theatre Hall, Fulton and Myrtle Ave., Join the march to Union Square! | Brooklyn. White and Negro workers! Demon-| Prior to the wiass meeting the strate and fight against hunger and | League of Struggle for Negro Rights wage cuts! nd the Communist Party of Section For Unemployment Insurance! are preparing for a dozen of epen Against lynching and race discrimi- lies in the Boro Hall territory nation! to thé attention of the entire “unconstitutional,” by Judge Walter Wanamaker. The case has attracted wide atten- tion and many mass protest meet- ings had been held throughout the year Rubber Company where the} world’s largest Zeppelin was under construction. He was arrested by a) (CONTINUED ON PAGE THRED) gua, Honduras, Haiti, Philippines, Cuba, China, India, ete.,—by demon- strating on May 1 at Madison Square. “Hands off Nicaragua and Hondu- ras! “For the immediate independence of the colonies under American im- perialism, “For the immediate withdrawal of IVIC REPERTORY 500, $1, $1.50. Mates. EVA LE GALLIENNE, Director aERSNEeENEEEe T LIONELL ATWILL HE SILENT WITNESS *8 BAY STROZZI-FORTUNIO RONANOVA MOROSCO TREATE! Eves. 4:50 Matineos ed. and Sat, 2:50 Fight lynching. Fight deporta-. tion of foreign born, Elect dele. gaten to your elty conference for Protection of foreign born, U. 8. marines and all military forces | from Nicaragua, Honduras, China. “All war funds to feed the unem~ ployed. “Down with imperialism and its na- tive agents in the colonies, “Support the anti-imperialist strug- q (VAGABOND BALL) ne With an excellent All-German Cast s5th, W. of Bway gle of workers and peasants in the colonies. Against the imperialist war. “For the defense of the Soviet | Union and the Chinese Soviets, “Long live the solidarity and unity of U. &. workers with the colonial} masses.” |. The Provisional Committee also calls upon all workers of New York to attend the mass protest meeting against U. S. intervention in Nicara- | gua and Honduras on May the 8th/ {at ‘Harlem Casino, 16th st, and} Lenox Avenue, A MERRY GERMAN FILM LUMPEN BALL sth Ave HEPPODROME *”,'; BIGGEST SHOW IN NEW YORK RKO acts| “CIMARRON” ren ieaines)| With RICHARD Drx Waldman | and IRENF DUNNR ‘Five Siar Final I electric and aly i iu A. H. WOODS Presents rt ARTHUR BYRON *” , IVE STAR FINAL p sag the policy of lynching which | ers? Are they not the government ee | Cabezas, which throws a new light| | Voi ight: test and dane g-class section the dastardly Dorses “of this country. have| of Great Britain, which has mur-|' live under the most mniserable | tion: satan at Sat Meuaciae g internals eecasle 177th Street, Bronx, New York, ThE} cainst Haas a aaing Gf the Ne. | {tame-up under which these innocent launched with @ fury against the Ne-| dered thousands of Indian workers |COditions, facing actual starvation, x oe for complete independence of Nicara-| main speakers at the Coliseum meet-| sr5 boys in Scottsboro! |\Negro boys have been condemned to grees ’for ‘the of terroridng | and nts, and jailed 66,000 of | ving in the forst sections of Browns-| 1. Whitehall and South Sts. (So, ‘ i ‘ Ls Fe. socialist. fas. {death by the Southern bosses and parece rroriaing | and peasants, jailed 66,0 4 singel |gua. In Honduras, the Indian slaves|ing, which will begin at 7:30 p, m.| Repudiate the police, socialist, fas- | them? Have thay yaised their voices | them? Are they not the butchers of | Ville and are threatened with evic-) Ferry). _ are taking arms to drive the exploit-| (right after Union Square) will be | cist veterans and ezarist white guards | ‘C!T prejudiced courts. ~-santnat the contemplated savage mur | the natives of Nigeria and South | tons almost every day, [ios Tia Stean Asonne te: ers of the United Pruit Company. | william Z, Foster, I. Amter, and Mrs.|anti-working ¢lass provocation on|_ At the indoo rotept meeting der of nine Negro boys in Scottsboro, | africa? Have not they, together with| The workers of Brownsville realize) 3. 2nd Street and Avenue A. Revolt reported in Paraguay. Dis-| Patterson, mother of the youngest| may Day! ; the nd prominent Alp? Not @ word hag come from the social demooratic leaders of Ger-| that they must organize, both Negro| 4 10th Street and 2nd Avenue. | 0461 “compyehended” in Haiti. Elec-| of the nine Scottsboro victims of the’ ‘ cl will speal Wan. these people, for it mean struggle,| many and France, sold out strike |end white, to prevent the murder of| 5. Seventh Street and 2nd Ave. ii Liots developing in the Philip- yout s and landlords of Ala-| Demonstrate the solidarity of while | Paterson, Negro workers’ leader, and and the socisties leaders want no/ after strike, and aided the govern-| workers, whether Negro or white. The| 6 Monree and Jackson. pines. In India, tremendous masses! bama. fe ater hy Well knowa|#4 Nesto, native and foreign horn| the mother of Paterson, one of the struggle, ment in putting through a general |case of the Paterson silk workers, who| 7- Clinton and East Broadway. | begin to denounce Gandhi and the|ryariem attorney and leader of the | Workers against capitalist exploitation | boys who is now in jail awaiting exe- ‘What have they done against tm-| wage cut? are being framed up on a false charge| 8- 14th St. and University Place. | Tadian National Congress and pre- League of Struggle for Negro Rights and bosses’ terror! cution at the hand of the bosses. perialist war? Ys their policy ons of} Are the leaders of the socislist| of having murdered their boss against| 9% Broome and Attorney Sts. pare to fight against British imperial-| Fi) be chairman. Besides the rev-| Smash the imperialist war plot), “ leaflet issued by the LSNR, to steuggle?. No, ié consists of disarm-| party of the United States any dif-| whom they were striking, clearly il-|' 10. Rivington and Clinton Sts. ism. 50,000,000 people already live! ciutionary mass pageant aranged by |#eainst the Soviet Union! | the workers of Brooklyn stated: “The ing ‘the working qlass. of talking} ferent? Can you workers who still | Justrates the offensive against all the| All workers are urged to come to! under the Soviet rule and the masses range | struggle for the liberation at the Ne pacitism, While the government rre-| support the socialist party continue | workers when they dare to defend the meeting in their neighborhood, | are self-sacrificingly fighting for an . i gro masses is ah inseparable part © paves for war. More than that—| {o support a party whose policy is for | themselves, when they dare to fight | {rom where we will all march to the | all-China Soviet Republic of workers | the struggle against imperialism.” It Norman Thomas, in the New Leader, | support of the caitalist system, of for better conditions. two central ralli¢s, (1.) 10th Street! and peasants. On a whole, the corm Mass Pressure Frees Kassay; | | further called upon the workers, black “shows that he openly supports Hoo- | balancing budgets for the benefit of] me role of the socialist party is| #24-Second. Avenue, (2) Clinton and trodden colonial masses in Asia, Cen- | ’ | and white, to “Save the Nine Scotts- ver and and has only praise | the caitalists (England) no matter) .)., clearly exposed as no different | 225+ Broadway. All meetings start at tral and South America are rising for | . . ° boro Negro hoy and to “Smash for Hoover's clearly imperialist poliey | what it costs in the lives of the|ti.5 that of all anti-working class( 730 PM» Promptly, determined strugele against. foreign! 10 yn Ica ust ct ega lynehings and segregation of the Ne- and strategy in Nicaragua He savs:| workers? Dhose policy means be-| ovanications, ‘The socialist prcty ele In Brons, TAMRTLEN HEUTE DeNreesie, end | Paws ieatiet ¢urther sppented to the “Secretary Stimson's refusal to send| trayal of the workers, whose aims| iio oh once enjoying a large follow. | Washington é Claermont Parkway. | landlards, : leaflet further appea J American boys to fight their way| js the overthrow of the Soviet Gov- |). Se Ley eee | 161 Bivset ae Thiseenta Avenue “This May Day will mark another) AKRON, ©. April 20,—Paul Kas-, country, especially in Ohio, where) workers that through the tropical jucgles of Ni~| ernment. ing in Brownsville, has, through its eet a tatievale prota higher stage and wider scale of this | Say, militant worker, who was arrested | demonstrations have taken place de-| gro and white workers must unite carague in order to protect Amere| ‘The police department of New add Gh Ad Whiha Plaine Avece,| REESE: on frame-up charges of sabotage and | manding immediate freedom for Kas- | for the struggle of the workers against icans in the right stand and the only | yor, representing the bosses of this To Present Bust ‘ 48th Street and Brok Avenue. “| “I answer to this battle for free-jindicted under the erimina] syndi-|say and the rest of the class war pri- | the bosses which is giving the workers tight stand.” ... To keep the ad-| city alone makes possible the dem- : 4 dom and bread of the colonial peo-| calist act of that state has been freed | soners as part of the Amnesty drive | lynchings, discrimination, unemploy- ministration on the right road and] onstration of the socialist party on}. Of Stalin At Bronx 5 ples, American imperialism is rush-|under mass pressure of workers or-| organized by the International Labor | ment and starvation. | | to put it forward, Americans, lovers | ynion Square. The police department li “4 Slipper Workers Meet |ing more warships, airplanes and| ganized by the International Labor | Defense. 1 of peace, must speak up against the | speaking for Wall Street saw to it Coliseum Meeting Thursday, Manhattan bombs to these lands, and strengthens |Defense. A demurrer was sustained} Paul Kassay’s arrest took place on| GIVE YOUR ANSWER TO HOO- imperialists.” that the ist demonstration on ° it native puppet governments to|in court today and the laws declared | March 20th at the plant of the Good- | VER’S PROGRAM OF HUNGER, WAGE CUTS AND PERSECUTION! Special Priees to Daily Worker _. Read STOCKING go to P. WOLF & CO, INC. 1499 Third Ave.; 70 Avenue A Bet., 84 & 85 Sts, Bet. 4 & 5 Sts. (st Floor) Open Eves § p. m.1 Open Eves 8 p,m, NEW YORK CITY SPECIAL LADIES’ ATTENDANT Gottlieb’s Hardware 119 THIRD AVENUS Near 14th St. Stoyveses? G@T4 All kinds of © ELECTRICAL SUPPLYES Cutlery Our Specialty “‘SOL-ART STUDIO OLE, Mth Street Cor, 4th Ave. (Next to Klein's) Passport photos made in 10 minutes f $1.50 per Dozen ENGLISH SPEAKING BR, International Workers Order VERN SMITH, Speaker “SIGNIFICANCE OF MAY FIRST” Thursday Evening at 8:30 EAST U4TH STR u ET ADMISSION FREH ALL WELCOM™ Advertise Your Union Meetings Here. For Information Write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Department okt THEATHE, West of 48th Street Brenings 8:50 Mate, Wed, mod Sat, 2:30 50 East 13th St. New York City

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