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Page Two ‘ DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, MARCH 7, 1932 Councils of Working Class Women Endorse Women’s Day ‘VICIOUS ASSAULT ‘Get Credentials from Shops ON TENANTS MADE for May1 Conference, Mar. 20 CONFERENCE T0 - SAVE THE DAILY’ By ROSE NELSON { The Central Body of the Counciis { Working-class Women in New York endorses International Women’s Day, March 8, the campaign of the Communist Party. International Women's Day must become a day of struggle, when thousands of working- class women from the shops and homes, will be drawn into the ranks of the revolutionary movement. This year, International Women's Day finds the Councils of Working- | class Women of New York and New Jersey actively participating in the daily struggles of the working-class. In the many rent strikes that are taking place throughout the city our organization is taking a leading part. ‘The Brighton Beach bread strike is one of the outstanding struggles we are conducting at the present time. The workers of Brighton Beach are determined to carry on the fight until they win. We are also doing our share in the great strike of the New York dressmakers and the Ken* tucky miners. We are raising funds and food, as well as helping picket shops. During the next two weeks we are planning open air meetings in every section. These meetings to be held everywhere that working-class moth- ers are. In every demonstration that will take place in connection with the International Women's Day cam- paign, we will participate in actively. We are also planning a number of Jectures and discussions on Inter- national Women's Day. We will also| nfobilize the working-class mothers of each neighborhood to come to the section meetings that will take place in the evening of March 8, While we are actively taking part in the neighborhood strikes and struggles, we must build our organi- | Beat up 6 and Jail 20 | in Attack NEW YORK. — Saturday, March | 5th, was the scene of one of the most vicious police lattacks ever seen in| Brownsville. An open air meeting | was held a little away from the| j houses on strike. A large militant | | crowd, with the detectives stationed | | in between it, cheered the (speakers. | After the meeting a mass picket line was formed and a crowd of 2,500) zation. We must now, more than| cheered them. The police began their! ever before, draw inte_our ranks| brutal clubbing; they slugged six working-class women. We must make | Workers on the head and arrested 20, | special efforts, and pay special at-| ne of whom was beaten cruelly on/| tention to enroll Negro women who| the head and body. The riot squad, | are even more exploited hard hit| With tear gas and machine guns was | than the white women. Build the | °alled out and the crowd was dis- | Councils of Working-class Women, | Persed urider the police clubs. About | Help build and strengthen the class | 500 workers showed militant |resis- | conscious fighting front of working- | ‘nce by throwing bottles and booing | class women! Join in demonstration | the Police. | on March 8. | This demonstration was the con-| «tinuation of what has been going on | INBROWNSVILLE | March 20th, 1 p. m, TUUC CONFERENCE for the last few days at 518 and 526 | Pennsylvania Ave. at the corner of NEW YORK.—Credentials are com- ; ing jn from shops, unions and work- | ers’ organizations to the mass united front May Day Anti-War conference called by the Communist Party and revolutionary unions for Sunday, at the Stuy- Casino, 9th Street and 2nd vesant Avenue. The call to the conference points out |the special importance of the coming May Day as a day of mighty mass struggle and demonstration | against mass hunger, imperialist war and capitalism. This May Day calls for the greatest unity of all workers, organizer and unorganized, Negro and white, native and foreign-born, | revolutionary workers and rank and file members of the American Fed- eration of Labor and proletarian members of the socialist party in one mighty display of working class soll- darity and struggle against the grow- ing attacks on the living standards of all workers, for unemployment in- | surance and against wage cuts, against boss terror, lynching and dis- | crimination of Negroes, deportation and persecution of foreign born, against the bloody Japanese imper- ialist war on the Chinese masses, take steps immediately to organize the participation of their shop or organization in the mighty outpour- ing of tens of thousands lof New York workers in the May Day strug- gle against hunger, war and capital- ism. Elect your delegates to the conference! the arrangements committee, 50 East 13th St, New York City. MASS WOMEN’S RALLY IN BRONX Hail International Women’s Day NEW YORK.—Thousands of Ne- gro and white women workers will attend a mas srally to be held in the Bronx on Tuesday, March 8, 1932, at 8 p.m., at Ambassador Hall, Third Ave. and Claremont Parkway. Hundreds of striking dressmakers and workers, who are at present par- ticipating in the rent struggles in| Send your credentials to | BOSTON, Mass., March 17. — To} answer the fake settlement just com- pleted by the International Ladies Garment Workers Union officials be- hind closed doors in the Boston City Hall, the masses of dressmakers will rally this morning in a huge picket demonstration under the leadership of the United Front Strike Commit- tee. | HELD ON SUNDAY | Arrange Tag Day to Mobilize 5000 to Raise $8,000. ° On Sunday, March 6, at 11 a. m. 123 delegates from 122 workers’ or- ganizations and clubs assembled in conference at the Workers Center to plan a campaign of mobilizing 5000 volunteers to raise $8,000 to save the | Daily Worker from suspension. The plan of action propos:d and decided upon was a Tag Day Fri- day, Saturday and Sunday, March 11, 12, 13, are to be National Daily Worker Tag Days. The purpose on these days is not only to raise funds for the Daily Worker, but to mobilize | workers in mass demonstrations for | the workers’ paper. | According to the plan, volunteers are to be stationed at all places where | workers go, meet, or gather. Shops, | factories, transportation points, sub- | ways, elevated trains, surface cars, The latest developments of the United Fyont Strike show that the rank and file of cloak and dressmak- ers are strengthening their position. | While settlements went apace, win- ning better conditions in the shops, | workers in all sections of the dress |and cloak trade were busy during |Saturday carrying out the decisions of the United Front Conference held Friday. Plans to spread the strike and broaden the United Front are | being acted upon. i To assist the international officials | ferries, Homes and clubs will be visit- | the Bronx, will be at this rally in| €d and canvassed for funds to reach Dressmakers to Mass Picket Boston Sweat Shops Today in their thuggish attempt to split the ranks of the workers and sell them out to wage-cuts and vicious speed- up, new forces of reaction have been imported to the Boston strike area, Charles G. ,Wood, notorious federal strike breaker, and Miss Weinstock, well-known among the working class for her strike-breaking activities, have arrived in Boston to cooperate with Mayor Curley in his attempt to break the strike. The United Front Committee re- ports that more shops applied for settlement. The shops having already made individual settlements report substantial gains in wages and a shortening of hours, The workers in the settled shops have pledged to assist in their off hours the workers who are still on strike by rallying to the picket line and contributing money to the strike fund. UNORGANIZED SHOPS TO RALLY TO | UNITED FRONT DRESS STRIKE 2 ONE? leaders of the United Front Strike. TRY ARBITRATION, and the extremely threatening war | | {CONTINUED FROM PAC a th if $8,000. tively. ava. de. Greve, Os full fofce, to demonstrate their sol- | and surpass the quota of $8,001 Ben Gold, secretary of the United ON RENT STRIKE Thursday, March 3rd, 8 tenants from these two houses were evicted, their} furniture being piled up on the street | ON YOUTH WORK Turned Down; Threat) Of More Evictions | NEW YORK. — The Holygrass Re- ality company threatened more evic- tions and an injunction in a desper- ate effort to break the strike for low- er rents at 733 Arnow Avenue. The workers remaining firm in face | of the past evictions ani the new threats rejected the “arbitration” pro- posed by the Bronx Free Fellowship, denouncing the Fellowship as “an or- ganization of s%vialist party traitors.” ‘The tenants ¢xposed Mrs. Bergman | as a spy in tie service of the land- lord. Evictions, spies, tricks will not / break our strike declare the tenants.” | “We will strike until we win.” Five hundred workers demonstrated at 733 Arnow St. Saturday. The land- | lord stool pigeon called the police. | Not being able to find a pretext for | breaking up the enthusiastic demon- | stration, the potice were finally forced | to leave without doing anything. jof the Trade Union Unity Council/ around the’ streets off ithe corners - | in front of the houses. Zack Reports on the | The police have set up a temporary gs : police station outside of one of the! Recruiting Drive | buttaings. Cops patrol the street all | | day. The entire territory is under} NEW YORK.—The first follow-up! semi-martial law; people are driven on its decisions in the recruiting) and away from the houses. Again drive was the first youth work con-| the leaders of the Unemployed Coun- | ference which was held on Saturday, | cil were arrested, together this time | March 5. | with 4 women and a Pioneer. One of The total attendance was 90 dele-| the women was bearing a child. gates, representing 12 unions and | On Monday, March 7, the land- leagues of the T.U.U.L., the youth | lord, with the help of the police and | committees and mine factories. Also! the injunction, intends to evict the nine fraternal organizations and) remaining tenants. The workers are youth clubs were represented. | militant. They are going to protest | Comrade Joseph Zack made the | this fascist sten,on the part of the} report for the T.U.U.C. on the re-| police and landlords. A demonstra- | cruiting drive and emphasized the| tion is called for Monday. need for special forms for our youth! ‘The cases of the organizers of the work, The report of the youth or-| Unemployed Council are coming up Sanizer, Carroll, dealt with the rad non at 9 a. m, at the Pennsyl- of the union youth section and meth-| yania Court. ods of youth work. | sts : The Unemployed Council calls upon The discussion was a lively one, in| the workers of Brownsville to dem- which over 15 young comrades re-| rted their : | onstrate and demand the uncondi- | ported on their experiences, in thelr | tional release of the strike leaders. moves against the Soviet Union. Workers in shops, unemployed | councils, trade unions, and all works | benefit and fraternal organizations are urged by the May Day arrangements committee | to| speed up the election of delegates to | the conference on March 20th, to} YOKINEN EXILE CASE UP TODAY Being Persecuted by Chauvinist Bosses NEW YORK.—Comrade Yokinen, who is now out on bail having been | arrested and held for deportation to | Finland on charges of being a Com- | munist, is coming up for trial on ap- peals Monday, March ‘th, at 10 a. m.| at the Circuit Court of Appeals, Post | Office Building. | Comrade Yokinen is being (perse- | cuted ever since that White Chauv- | inist Trial he had at which he ad- | mitted his wrong tendencies and | ers’ cultural, | idarity on this international working- | class holiday. An eéxcellent program has been ar- ranged, which includes the Red Dan- cers, Freiheit Gesangs Verein and other popular numbers, Prominent speakers will address this meeting. INJUCTION USED TO BREAK STRIKE Building Workers Continue Picketing NEW YORK.—The floor scrapers | on the job at 1838 Park Ave., near 126th St., who struck eight weeks ago | against a wage-cut of 20 per cent,.| are still shop. In spite of the temporary injunc- tion taken out by the boss, and in the face of efforts to intimidate the Pickets on the part of hired thugs and police, the floor scrapers, led by the Construction Workers’ Indus- militantly picketing the Comrade I. Amter, district orga- 3 i nizer C. P. U.S. A, District 2, ad-| Coming week. : dressed the conference pointing out Shop Strikes 3 Months—Wins. the urgent necessity for savisg the| The workers of the W. R. ‘Dress Front Strike Committee, has been called to trial today on a trumped up charge which has been pending An apartment house opposite set- | shop, in strike and in the building tled without a fight; the landlord of}of the youth section of their union. the 733 Arnow St. house threatened | Bob Austin pledged the full support to make it a political fight to the) of the Young Communist League to end. | the T.U.U.C. Recruiting Drive and| Mary Howard spoke for the National Youth Dept. T.U.U.L, A youth committee of 15 was) Tenants Pledge } Laat eg to direct the work of building | Eviction F i gh t youth sections in at least six unions by the end of the recruiting drive. A| resolution and plan of work was Force Officials to Feed | Babies adopted, as well as special resolu- tions on Harry Simms, the boss ter- ror and imperialist war. A telegram | of greetings was sent to a sectional youth conference of the National NEW YORK.—Nathan Finkelstein, Miners’ Union, being held in Ken- 1448 Crotona Park, has been evicted | tucky, and the conference adjourned Sun Laundry to Go On Strike Today New Style Strike Is Still On The workers of the “Sun Laundry’ ] 179th St. and LaFontaine Ave., are going on strike this morning in order to stop the boss from firing workers, and to regain the recent wage cut. The Sun laundry is a part of the United Power Laundries, and it is promised to carry out all tasks given him., For this he has been ordered | edly for victory. arrested. -~ Singled out because of his mili- Since the arrest of Comrade Yok- | tancy, Mike Stark, organizer of the inen, deportations have become more | Building and Construction Workers’ numerous. In the last few weeks,| Industrial League, was arrested on Workers Club in Coney Island, Span- | trial comes on Wednesday, ish Workers Center in Brooklyn and | March 9. Jugo-Slav Center. Workers have | been pulled from their jobs and out | called on to come to this shop strike of bed nad rushed to Ellis Island. | and help in the mass picketing. This The International Labor Defense sent its protest to Secretary Doak, condemning his action! We call upon | all workers to turn out to the Yok; | inen Trial, show their solidarity with all persecuted workers and to protest against bosses’ terror. up the first strike against a wage-cut in the Trade Union Unity League. The picket line is held every morning» at 7:30. trial League, are battling determin- | | All building trade workers are strike is very important because it is | the building trade industry, led by | | Daily as the leader and organizer of the working class in all its struggles, including the struggle against im- | periaiist war and war against the |Soviet Union. Comrade Am':r fur- | thermore pointed out that the Tag | Day is a political as well as financial campaign, and that if properly plan- ned and executed there is no reason why the quota will not be oversub- |serived and the “Daily” saved. | In order for the Tag Day to be |pciitically effect a@ special Daily Worker leaflet be printed and | distributed to every coavibutor | Organizations are competing to send most volunteers for the Tag Days. Organizations are circularizing their membership urging them to report at their stations. |. Workers, don’t wait till your are asked—Volunteer now! Fill out the attached Volunteer Blank and mail or bring it to the District Daily Worker office, 50 East 13th St., 5th floor. VOLUNTEER CARD. National Daily Worker Tag Day. Friday, Saturday, Sunday, March 11, | 12, 13, 1932. | “I hereby volunteer as a canvasser raids have been made |upon Italian | 2 Charge of disorderly conduct. The in the National Daily Worker Tag | | Day. I will report... . Saturday | | Co., 253 W. 26th St. who have been | on strike for the past three months, made a settlement Saturday winning a substantial victory. The Interna- tional officials together with the Lovestoneites made several attempts | to settle the shop and sent up scabs, | but the determined Spirit of the | strikers defeat all these schemes. The | firm was compelled to settle with the Industrial Union and reinstate all| for developing and broadening the workers on the basis of union con-/| strike, the Executive Strike Commit- | ditions. This victory of the W. R./| tee has called a meeting today at 5 | workers has greatly stimulated the | o'clock at the office of the Indusrtial | fighting spirit of the other strikers. | Union. The Executive Council of the 8 Fur Shops Strike. | Industrial Union will meet today at Meanwhile |the furriers have) 8 p. m. to analyze the developmenis | launched an offensive against the of the dress strike and to consider Kaufman wage cut agreement. The/| the fur and millinery situation. All workers of eight fur shops downed | members of the Executive Council | their tools and came out on strike must attend this meeting. Friday. | A |special meeting of all unem- | The developing |struggles of the| ployed dressmakers to take up the dressmakers, furriers, millinery work- | problems of the jobless dressmakers ers and needle workers in other | will be held at the headquarters of branches is driving the company the United Front Strike, 559 Sixth union agents to desperation. The In-| Ave., at 10 a. m. today. Workers of ternational officials are bringing all| the open, shops who are resuming for some time. Ne \ ‘These conspiracies, however, in- stead of dampening the fighting spirit of the strikers, are |serving to strengthen the determination of the needle trades workers to carry on the struggle and defeat the schemes of the bosses and their agents. In order to consider further plans the pressure to bear they can pos-| sibly muster to jail and arrest the) work are to report their shops to the organization committee at once. || Workers’ Clubs Should Advertise in the “Daily” ce within a week. On March 3 this starving family was thrown out on the. street. Several workers from the Bronx Unemployed Council ral-{ lied and held mass open-air,meetings in front of the building throughout | the day. The scattered furniture of | the family lay on the street guarded | by a burly Tammany cop. | A committee of 8 approached the | Home Relief Bureau, with little re- sults. Finally the officials were forced to feed two starving babies of this unemployed worker, The ten- ants of the neighborhood pledged to. organize the adjoining houses to put an end to evictions. The neighbors, | with tears on the cheeks, denounced the landlord as a scoundrel and with the singing of “On the Picket Line.” Cops Bar Way to Relief Bureau When Jobless Try to Put Demands (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) the biggest plant of the U. P. L, trust. This plant has 36 drivers and about 150 inside workers. The rest of the | plants. of the trust are located inMan- |hattan and the workers are expected jt go out on strike together with the {workers of the sister laundry, the | Sun. The other laundries of the same corporation are, Planet, Pioneer, | West Side, Eagle, World and Star. counting office.” At the local bureaus | Three laundry drivers were already they answer the workers demands by | 2*"eSted Sunday for distributing leaf- saying “Don’t tell it to us, tell it to | Het the Central Bureau. By this passing| In the New Style, 16th St, and 3rd of the buck, the city hopes to con- | Ave. the workers are determined to fuse the workers, {keep up the fight until they force Already the Downtown Uneniployed the boss to reinstate the workers and Council has arranged to take up the | Teturn the wage cut. All workers “a » ee’ | are asked to help the Laundry Work- promiseti to overwhelm him with | fight for the needy families further. militant mass action. To Greet May Day at Trade Union Unity |On Tuesday the council will lead the | ¢'S Industrial Union, 269 E. 138th St., unemployed of the East side, includ- | ‘© Win these strikes. Help is needed ing the needy families refused admit- | / Picketing, canvassing, etc.. especi- (ance to the bureau today in a dem- | ally in the Sun laundry, where the onstration in front ef three local bosses have prepared themselves with home relief bureaus. “SOMETHING TO LIVE FOR,” NEW THEATRE GUILD PLAY The Theatre Guild has acquired a new play called “Something to Live For,” by George O'Neil, a writer hitherto known as a novelist and poet. His novels have been “That Bright Heat” and a fictioned work on Keats, .“Special. Hunger,” and his Published poetry, “White Rooster,” and “Cobbler in Willow Street.” The vaudeville features at the Hippodrome this week include Harry Welsh, with Harry Hills; Paddy Cliff and Orchestra, with Flo Herman; Eddie Hanley and Company; Dezso Retter, Jeanne and Lynton, with Helen Gorman and Six Bekefi Girls; Six Franklins; Tom Fulman; and the Karoli Brothers. Joe E. Brown, in “Fireman Save My Child?’ is the sereen attraction. Evalyn Knapp, Dickie Moore and Guy Kibbee have Mass Resentment Over Finger- Printing of. Unemployed Workers) “MINNEAPOLIS, Minn.—The Wel- fare Board is carrying on a system-| atic campaign to cut down the relief for the unemployed. One of its first | steps is to order the finger-printing | of all single men who ask for relief or | tickets in the fiop-houses. Refusal to be treated like a criminal would cut off a worker automatically from get- ting a 10-cent meal ticket which is | called “relief.” In addition to this, | the Welfare Board is considering the | cutting of the grocery allowance to| needy families by 20 per cent. A third proposal befare them is to cut the “meals” given in the flop-houses from three down to two a day; the latter proposal was made by Alder- (day,....for canvassing, Name ..... Cie ce eee | | | oe Soe Re aay ae Patronize the | | City rts | Memberiof we Concoops Food Stores || (Name of Organization) anD Sa ae Restaurant Columbia Slipper | Asks for Injuction | To Break Shoe Strike ‘The Columbia Slipper Co. applied for an injunction agdinst the Shoe and Leather Workers’ Industrial Union, which is now carrying on a strike at this shop for the last six weeks. Throughout this period of the strike the firm was frantic in the | stubbornness of the entire crew to| bring the boss to terms. Having | failed to break the strike with the few scabs, the firm is now resorting to the last means by way of injunc- 2100 BRONX PARK EAST | “Buy in the Co-operative Store and help the Revo- lutionary Movement.” HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian Restaurant 1600 MADISON AVENUE Phone Lehigh 4-9860 tion. These attempts will fail, as all other attempts have failed. The crew is determined to fight until a successful finish, JADE MOUNTAIN AMERICAN and CHINESE | RESTAURANT | man Swanson, important roles. The Unemployed Council is organ- Open tt a.m, te 1:30 a. m, | ‘The uni Hs 11 shoe and | ar gaieeeri’ th bocne el sacs Special Lunch 11 to 4...35¢) slipper workers to come on the picket | Menges of gangsters. 1 on 3 Council Carnival | ‘me workers will start with a pe]! Workers of New York wilt usher in )T®4° from 7th Street and Avenue A| Workers in A. F. of L. May Day at the International May a a.m., march to the bureau at Trt * First Carnival, arranged by the Trade | 1st Street between Avenue A and Ist Unions ,Endorse Bill Union Unity Council, to be held on | Avenue, then to the bureau at Hous-|for Social Insurance Saturday, April 30, at the New Star |ton and Essex and terminate in a| — Casino, 107th St. and Park Ave, Ar- | demonstration at 293 Broadway. The| , MINNEAPOLIS, Minn—On March rangements are being made, in con- | Workers are aroused at the way the | 2/St @ conference will take place in junction with many language fra- | City plays with their hunger; their | ig A. F. of L. hall of all local unions terhal organizations for an interest- | Militancy is mounting and they are| ‘0 discuss the campaign for unem- ployment insurance. The following ing and varied program of entertain- | 4etermined to force immediate and ment and fun. adequate relief without further de- The T.U.U.C. is the organizing cen- | '@¥. locals have already endorsed the con- ference; Building Laborers Union, ter for the trade unions in New York | elty and vicinity. In the carrying, on of our daily activity in the class struggle we are faced with many difficulties. One cf them is the prob- | lem of finances. A great deal of our | activity will depend on the financial | success of April 30 | ‘Tue T.U.U.C., therefore, requests | all organizations not to arrange any affairs on this night—and to co- operate with the T.U.U.C. in making this affair a real success. Workers of New York, hold open April 30! Celebrate May Day with the T.U.U.C.! | What’s On— MONDAY The singing class of the Tremont Work- ers’ Club will have a rehearsal at the club rooms, 2075 Clinton Ave. Bronx, at | 8:30 p.m, All workers are welcome. | 4 bes egies Avregular meeting of Ue Newark Branch | of the Workers’ International Relief will be held at 8 t 75 Springfield Ave. Com- tude Freeman will speak on the “W.1R— What It Js and What It Stands Por.” 45) 6 A regular meeting of the Altera Painters, Bronx Sec will be hi 1328 Southern Bivd., p.m, ‘VUESDAY ‘The Painters’ Oven Forum will be held tM aan. at 1225 Sov.rern Blvd, arent; | jomrade Wilz will speak ets 1 | |ize the young workers of |New Cabinet. Makers Union, Carpenters’ Union, Painters’ Union. Other A.'F.‘of L. locals are being lined up by an active committee of A. F. of L. members who are visiting the various union meetings in order to get delegates to the March 2ist conference. The A. F. of L. officials are putting every possible obstacle in. their path. Build a workers correspondence group in your factory, shop or neighborhood. Send regular letters to the Daily Worker. ‘Trade Union, Youth | Conference Greets Ky. Mine Youth Meet | NEW YORK. — The following | telegram was sent yesterday to| | the young miners of |Kentucky, meeting in Middlesboro, by the Trade Union Unity Conference on | youth work, held in New York) City on Saturday: | “We, 90 delegates to the first _Trade Union Unity Council con-) ference on youth work, greet the | sectional youth conference of |the | National Miners’ Union being held | in Kentucky today. We pledge our full support to the brave min- ers of Kentucky in tneir fight against starvation, and to organ- EAST SIDE TODAY, Nicolai V. Gogol’s FAMOUS NOVEL “TARAS BULBA” THE UKRAINIAN COSSACK TUES. & WED. A Tense Drama ef the Mountain ‘Tribes Who Rebelled Against the Czar ACME THEATRE 14TH ST. & UNION SQUARE | York behind the unions of the, Trade Union Unity League. Long “Taras Bulba,” based on the well- known novel by the Russian writer, Nicolai V. Gogol, is now showing on the Acme Theatre screen. The pic- ture follows the Gogol tale very closely and makes a good drama. This is the story of the Cassack re- bellion against the Tsar in the eighteen-sixtys. The film will show up to Wednesday inclusive. The New York Opera Comique, be~ ginning this evening, will present Of- fenbach’s “Orpheus in Hades” at the Heckscher Theatre. Ernest Knoch will conduct. The cast is headed by Rise Stevens, Hall Clovis, Patricia | O'Connell, William Hain and Wells Clary. People's Symphony Concerts an- nounces The Gordon String Quartet, at the Washington Irving School, this Friday evening. NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES EAST SIDE—BEONX JEFFEBION —RKO Acts— Eddie Stanley Three Bredwins Pease & Nelson Jackson and G —On the Sereen— Constance izing a mass campaign against these proposals. Every shop, mine and factory fertile field for Daily Worker sub- scriptions. line Monday morning, 686 Broadway, New York City. : ‘Through mass “picketing the work- ers will defeat any attempt of the boss and all his strike-breaking schemes. AMUSEMENTS THE THEATRE GUILD Presents HE MOON IN THE YELLOW RIVER By DENIS JOHNSTON GUILD THEA., 52d 8t., W. of B’ Eve. 8:40, Mats, Thurs., Sat., 2:4 ay. Dinner 5 to 10.. .55¢ 197 SECOND AVENUE Between 12th and 13th Sts. Intern’) Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 1 UNION SQUARE 8TR FLOOR All Work Done Under Persons) Care of DR. JOSEPHBON Int'l Workers Order "OPTICIANS Harry Stolper, Inc. 38-15 CHRYSTIE STREET Third Ave, Car to Hester St.) : Dry Dock 4-452 ‘THOROUGH EYE EXAMINATION EXPERT PITTING OF GLASSES Special Rates to Workers and Families WILLIAM BELL OPTOMETRIST and OPTICIAN 106 East 14th St. (Room 21) ‘Tel. TOmpkins Square 6-8237 ——————— Chester Cafeteria 876 E. Tremont Ave. (Corner Southern Blvd.) Quality—Cleanliness—Moderate Prices All Workers Members F.W.1.U. Pho Tomkins Sq. 6-9554 John’s Restaurant COUNSELLOR-AT-LAW with | eee RICE PAUL MUNI SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES Plymouth jai"vbirn asec! Sd | Ante" oles "meet 302 E, 12th St. New York. THE THEATRE GUILD presents EUGENE O'NEILL'S Trilogy Mourning Becomes Electra Composed of 3 plays presented on I!day HOMECOMING, THE HUNTED THE HAUNTED Commencing at 5:30 sharp. Dinner tn- termission of one hour at 7 No Mats. ALVIN THEA., 52nd St., W. of B'way Vhe Theatre Guild Presents REUNION IN VIENNA A Comedy By ROBERT E. SHERWOOD Martin, Beck Sea's Ave. Eve. 8:40 Mats. Thurs.Sat BIWAY. & ard st. **o CAMEO First Time at Popular Prices! MELROSE “EXPLORERS ] DAIRY [reracrast OF THE WORLD” Comrades Will Always Find It Pleasant to Dine at Onr Place. 1782 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx (near 174th St. Station) TELEPHONE INTERVALE @—0149 Schildkraut’s Vegetarian Restaurant | HIPPODRONE”:..::; BIGGEST SHOW IN NEW YORK KKU 8 Ki 0 JOE E. BROWN Paddy Cc! Incl, & Orchestra “Fireman Save My Child” Bennett ‘Lady With | | live the National Miners’ Union.” | | b Prospects est Szous-| Past ‘Top-0-The- with aon a waner | BEN LYON Martin’ 2''martia | David Manners LATEST SOVIET WOODEN WARE, TOYS, PEASANT H FIRST TIME AT POPULAR PRICES! (10 Per Cent off With This Ad) 100 East 14th Street (Near Fourth Ave.) 4 West 28th St. Wishes to announce a radical change in the prices of our food— to fit any purse—yet retaining the same quality food. Those new prices shall prevail only at the 4 West 28th Street Store ‘We hope to greet you as before. IMPORTATIONS _RUGS, CANDY, SHAWLS ANDICRAFTS AU ‘.omraces Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Claremont Parkway, Broux FIVE COURSES 50 Cents Siberia-Russian RESTAURANT 315 East 10th St. Bet. Ave. A and Ave. B Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 199 SECOND AVENUE , Bet, 12th and 13th Ste. Strictly Vegetarian food ONLY ONE WEEK! NEW ROYAL THEATRE Southern Blvd. & Jennings St. Bronx BEGINNING Friday, March 4th to Thursday, March 10th “KILLING TO LIVE” A Sovkino Production. Auspices: Br. 99 and Shul 15, of the In