The Daily Worker Newspaper, March 8, 1932, Page 2

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Page Two DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, MARCH 8, 8, 1932 DEMONSTRATE AGAINST ROBBER WAR ON CHINESE MASSES BEFORE JAPANESE CONSULATE, WHITEHALL AND SOUTH STREETS ON SATURDAY, MARCH 12th, AT 11 O’CLOCK IN THE MORNING ie ss Strike s Police Jail Ten ‘Spreads ‘Extraordinary Proncate of Revolutionary En- | tertainment Arranged; All Urged to [5 obless Demonstrate | Today For Free Food | Clothing for Children. NEW YORK. | workers, men and women, demonstrate for their children to- day at 2p. m. in front of Home Relief Bureau at Public School 42 and demand free food and cloth- — Uriemployed | will | NEW YORK —The Liberator, offt- | | cial organ of the League of Struggle | | for Negro Rights, organizes and agi- | tates for negro rights, against lynch- | ings, Jim Crowism, Segregation, the | MOORE MAIN SPEAKER SUNDAY AT HUGE LIBERATOR CELEBRATION | Concert and Celebration next Sun- day, March 13th, at 2 p. m. at Star Casino, 107th St. and Park Ave. At this concert we will demonstrate the solidarity of Negro and white| Suppot “The Liberator” NEW YORK, March 8.—The New York dressmakers opened their fifth week of struggle yesterday by spreading | the United Front Strike to new shops, at the same time chalk- ing up new victories. BERGER SERVICE STRIKERS WIN {shorter hours and recognition of the » a shop committees and the Industrial ‘Uaton. Among the shops that joined the jstrixe yesterday were several ‘oper- ‘ated by jobbers who were eran work from the bosses of several strik. ing shops. This new development confusion and additional sweatshop owners have sent the Settlement co: Sa Committee plews for settlement. All, Halt Wage-Cut After curing the day the Settlement Com- | mittee considered these pleas. settlements were being negotiat the workers as we went to pr 10 Arrested. The bosses in an attempt to halt the spread of the strike called again on the Tammany police to them. The police answering te Striking Three Ways; Victory 100 Per Cent NEW YORK, March 8.—The 300 workers for the Berger Service, Inc., jcleaning and dyeing establishment, who struck Saturday against a 50 New ee tng for children of the unem- | ployed. Children are fainting from lack chain gang system, for equal rights | workers and be present at an extra- |for Negroes and self determination | ordinary program of revolutionary for the Black Belt of the South. Laundry Strikers — 17 1: ASS MEETINGS Tricked Into Re- Turning 1 to Work |Bosses Use C Gangsters ito Keep Workers from Re-Striking Today, International Wom-, \en’s Day, thousands of women, | jchildren and men will come out | on the stretes of New York to} demonstrate against the slav- jery and exploitation of work-| Several shops joined the strike and 10| jshops concluded settlements, winning an increase in wages, | of food in this scholo, many go to | school with torn clothing and shoes which with their undernoure In order to strengthen the Lib- | | erator it fs the duty of all Negro | | and white workers to rally round | the Liberator at its Annivers ry ished condition makes them sub- The demonstration will also the same day at 8 p.m. in the FRAME UP OF | ject to illness. No lunches |are | being given to the children in P. | .< ‘UNCOVER VICIOUS mobilize neighborhood for Inier- national Women's Day meeting Ambassador Hall, Claremont Park- | | '16-Yr. Old Willie Used By Phila. Police As Goat PHILADELPHIA, March 1.-—Ar- ‘Communist Vote Shows Big Gain in Hamtramck HAMTRAMCK, Mich—The muni-| , cipal elections in this city Just held rested because “he did not look good,” | March 2 showed how rapidly the in-|charged with rape and murder be- {fluence of the Communist Party is| Cause the police had to save their own faces, and tortured for 36 hours er cent wage-cut, won a hundred growing. In the primary March 2 “, i i it milital coral EO ate |in prison to extort a “confession’— ee tha cesta che fares Der Cent victory in thelr strike yes-| where our Party had as its ean-| this is the outline of @ story brought | : hea a terday. 4 « : ea case against Ben Gold secreiary of) 4) the workers from 52 shops in didate for mayor, Comrade Kristal-| to light here last week by investiga- | the United Front Strike Committee, | .annattan, Brooklyn and Long | SkY, 757 votes have been officially|tors for the League of Struggle for | which was called for Monday ¥8S'Teiand walked out on strike Satur-| credited to him out of 9,000 votes | Nero Se ate pe sade again postponed, day after being told that their wages | cast. Two years ago Kristalsky, run-| eat oe dimeia sade nal | These jailings and police iterror,| would be cut 50 per cent. These ‘ut however, served to intensify the mili- | tancy and determination of the cuts in pay. Everyone from the man- strike: The picket lines were| agers to the office boys participated | strongt sterday and the workers!‘ the strike, which was led by a tm the strike hall showed a decided | rank and file committee elected by stubbornness and will to win the the strikers under the guidance of | struggle. the Trade Union Unity League. The At # mass meeting held at strikers accepted fully the policy of stgike hall on Sixth Ave. proposals to! the T.U.U.L.. and elected John Stu- bring cown the unorganized shops ‘were, received with great enthusiasm. Every, mention of spreading the strike was met with cheers and applause. Today the strikers will picket all! shops, It is expected that several | new, shops will be striking before noon. ben, organizer of the New York T. U U, C., as a member of the strike com- mittee The strikers demanded the taking back of the-wage-cut, no discrim- ination against any of the strikers | and recognition of the shop commit- tees. The bosses were forced by the Fur Shops Settle. militant mood and the sound strike workers had previously received two | ning for mayor, got only 330 votes.! frame-up of an innocent Negro Best Our Negro candidate for City Coun-| Willie Brown, a 16-year old Negro | cil, Cass Baily, pooled 562 votes. | Worker, was arrested on Feb, 12, and charged with the rape and murder of Fgunne Macks, member of the, 4 seven year old white girl, Dorothy Young Communist League, running) Lutz. Brown was tortured by police for the office of city clerk, got 447| and detectiyes into a “confession,” votes. The other candidates for City | which he later repudiated. | Council get each over 400 votes. Sobol; ‘The investigators tell the following who was the candidate for City|story of the frame up: ‘Treasurer received 419 votes. | Finding a Goat. | All of the Communist candidates; O" February 3, little Dorothy Lutz | are in third place. Although this| 85 found dead. The police depart- | increase of votes was not sufficient Memb failed to make any arrests. to place our candidates on the final | The newspapers grilled the police and ballot yet this considerable increase | demanded that the murderer be! in comparison with two years ago| found. Immediately a search began | | shows that the influence of our Party | for @ Negro—although there was no | bread strike, | entertainment including the famous Staten Island Negro Quartette, the | Freiheit Singing Society, the Prolet- | | buelne, |the John Reed Club, the} W.LR. Band, the Red Dancers. Also prominent speaking, including Robert Minor, J. W. Ford, M. Olgin, B. D. Amis, Ben Gold and Richard BP. Moore, chairman of the afternoon! Come early, Negro and white work- ers, and bring your friends! Want Injunction to Break Bread Strike NEW YORK, Merch 7—Though | the bakery owners refuse to lower | thelr bread prices they |have raised | fund of $10,000 to obtain an injunec- tion to break the Brighton Beach | it was pointed out at & mass meeting of workers and con sumers Friday night in Ocean Park- way Hall. The injunction is pending in Supreme Court, the case came up today and wsa postponed until to- morrow, 12 noon. Fleischman Yeast Company, Medal Flour Company and other large corporations {are contributing to the fund to break the strike. On Saturday a mass demonstration was held on Brighton Beach: Av and crowds of consumers marched in parade carrying ling to sh the Injunction,” “Fight for! Lower Bread Prices.” Two large open air meetings were held at two other points. Three thousand signa- tures were . collected protesting against the injunction, which will be presented with the brief of the con- sumers’ lawyers. More signatures would have been gbtained but for the shortness of time. Sixteen workers were dismissed to- | day in Coney Island Court; ceived a suspended one tence re- land Goid | | NEW YORK.—The bosses of the | Sun Laundry, 179th St. and Lafon- {tain Ave. Bronx, after promising a | committee of the workers that they | would take all workers back without discrimination, and that all wage- | cuts would be returned if the threat- | ened strike was called off, tricked the workers back to work and broke the | agreement. When the workers came to work | Mondey, after @ settlement had been | reached with a committee late Sun- day night, the boss surrounded them | with a mob of about a hundred Gangsters and bosses from other \Jaundries. The workers were rushed out to work on the wagons and | trucks under guard of one or tyro} | @angsters each. Many had cars of | gangsters following them besides. | | The drivers were virtually prisoners, | {end it took some of them hours to | outwit their watchmen in order to, call the Laundry Workers’ Industrial | Union, 260 H. 188th 8t., to tell what | happened and to get instructions. | But if the bosses intended to break | the spirit of the workers with this | | guerilla warfare, it had the opposite | effect. ‘The workers involved learned | something about the methods of the bosses, but their resentment is much more bitter than ever and they are determined to fight against the gang- sterism and slavery of the bosses. | The; are preparing to give the bosses proper answer and develop a nov only in the Sun Laund: i in all the United Power Laun- dries, to which the Sun belon: ch ag the Planet, West Side, Fagie, De- | mand and Star. | The strike in the New Sayle Laun- | dry, 16th St. and Third Ave., is en- tering the second week. ‘The workers | ere as determined as ever to win} their demands. The boss has let it be known! through a third party that he would | ee ling women, against wage cuts, and unemployment, against imperialist wars and the war makers. In every | | section of the city, there will be dem- onstration, marches led by women | jand children at the factories, at the Home Rélief Bureau, at the Borough Balls, demanding equal pay for equal work, demanding social and maternity insurance, demanding immediate re- lief and unémployment insurance. Aunt Molly Jackson, Mrs. Baldwin, and Hazel Garlen, wives of Kentucky miners will be present at some of the March 8th meetings to bring the jgveetings of the heroic Kentucky miners and their wives to the work- ing women of New York. In the evening of March 8th, In- | ternational Women’s Day, will be} celebrated by 17 mass meetings in the New oYrk District. The following | meetings and demonstrations will | |take place on March 8th: Pe Manhattan, Sec, 1-10:30 a. m— Hunger march to Home Relief Bu- reau starting at Ave. A. 7th St.,| noon: outdoor rally at Eagle Pencil Co. 8p.| m.; Mass meeting at Man- hattan Lyceum, 66 East 4th St., N.| ¥.C. Speakers: M. Bedacht, Rose | | Wortis. Program: Red Dancers, Ukrainian Chorus, Singer. Manhattan, Sec. 2—Noon: parade | through needle trade market start- | ing at 38th St. and 8th Ave., march- ing to Bryant Perk demonstration. 8 p. m.: Mass meeting at strike hall, $89 Sixth Ave., N. Y. Speakers: C, Winter, Mary Adams. Program: Proletbuehne, musical program. 3. Harlem, Sec. 4. — 11 a, m.: Hunger march to Home Relief Bureau starting at 142nd St. and 7th Ave. 8 p. m. mass meeting at Finnish Hall, 15 West 126th St. N. ¥. Speakers: G. Siskind, Maud White. Program: Red Dancers, Finnish Chorus, Pioneers. | 4, Bronx, Sec. 5 and 16. — 12 noon: Demonstration at Home Relief 2. ane A few of the fur shops that came | out,on strike last week have nego- td agreements on |the basis of unign conditions. wanize the fur workers against the’ Kaufman betrayal is intensifying and sharpening. Masses of ‘uprie:s/ The drive to or-! strategy concede to all of the strikers’ de- | } mands, { Steps have already been taken by | the workers to build a permanent or- | ganization of cleaning and dyeing! workers throughout Greater New} in this city. ‘The Party also decided that Kr talsky and Cass Baily, a Negro work- er, candidate for Council, will run on strickers in the final elections which will take place April 7. of the workers involved to! is rapidly growing among the workers ; ©Vidence that a Negro had been in-| Julius Dubrowsky was sentenced to 3 | Volved, | days in jail, when they The basis for a frame-up was laid | the charges of “unlawful pl when Le Strange, assistant euperin- | ‘The strikers call upon the Women’s tendent of police, said: “The police | Council to immediately forward the possess no description of the slayer. | money being raised to fight against | No one has been able to give us al |the injunction to the International tried on | eeting.” ( jal | grant the cemands of the drivers if} Bureau, Intervale and | 2eman Sts. | they would desert the inside work-| 58 Pp. Mm. mass meeting, 2 bassador , but this wae flatly rejected by | Hall, Claremont P’kway and 3rd orkers. | Ave. Speakers: Pauline Rogers, Sonia ‘Two strikers of the New Style were| Schechter. Program: Freiheit Cho- sentenced to ien days each for talk- [rus Red Dancers, Artef, Recitation. {ing to a scab. i IN NEW YORK DISTRICT FOR INT'L. WOMEN’S DAY 5. Willlamsbure, Sec. 6.—- Noon: Out- 4 door rallies at Gem Razor, Kayser Knitting Mills. 12:30 p. m.: hunger march to Borough Hall, beginning , at Myrtle Ave. and Broadway. 8p. ™.: mass meeting at Gromé Manor, 318 Grand St., B’klyn, Speakers: Amier, 8. Gross. Program: Luithue anian Chorus, play by Workers Law, ‘Theater. 6. Section 7. — 11:30 a. m, hunger march beginning at 36th St. end 4th Ave. 8 p. m.: mass meeting at 450 Hick 5t., B’klyn. Speaker: Este her Carrol, 7. Borough Park, 8 p, m.: mass meete ing at 1378 33rd St., B’klyn. Speake ers; Fannie Jacobs, Markoff. Pro- gram? Freiheit Mandolin Orchestra Play. Coney Island, 8 p. m.: mass meeting at Oceanside Hotel, 22nd St. and Boardwalk. Speakers: Ray Ragozin and C. Hope. Program: Freiheit Chorus, Play by Wor: Lab. The- ater. Brownsville, Sec. 8—1 p. m.: Dem- onstration Home Relief Bureau, Belmont #14 Christopher Sts., 8 p. m.: macs meeting at 1813 Pitkin 8. Ave. Speaker: Lena Davis; Pro- gram: Frelheit Chorus, Movie Slides. 10. Newark, N, J. — Mass meeting at Russian Hall, 53 Broome St. Speak- er: Charlotte Todes. 11. Paterson, N. J, — Mass meeting at Oakland Hall, 211 Market St. Speaker: Sadie Van Veen. 12, Passaic, N. J.—8 p. m.: Mass meet- ing at Marcus Halil. Speaker: 8. Melvin. 13. Elizabeth, N. J. 8 p. m.: Mass Meeting at 106 Jersey Ave. Speaker: Anna Lyons. 14 Linden, N. J., 8 p. m.> Mass meeét= ing at 16th St. and Wood. Speaker: Anna Cornblatt. 15. Pert Amboy,.8 p. m: mass meet- ing at 308 Elm St. Speaker: Sonia Margolis. 16. Yonkers, 8 p. m.: Mass meeting at 27 Hudson St. Speaker: Ger- trude Ackerman. 17. New Brunswick, N. J., 8 p. m: ™mass meeting at 11 Plum St. 18. Staten Island, 8 p, m.: Mass meet- ing at 50 State St. ANY $1.50 OR $1 INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHERS BOOK WITH QNE 12-MONTH SUBSCRIPTION TO THE DAILY WORKER |are expected to rally to a mass mect| York. The workers will return to in the fur market today to expose | work today with complete job con- the Kaufman sellout. The meeting which was called for yesterday was | — postponed until today on account of the cold weather. ‘The hearing on the Kaufman in- junction, which aims to stop all mili- tant struggle of the furriers, will be | held today in Special Terms Court trol. | Number 3 lin the Supreme Court Building. The Settlement Committee of the United Front Strike announced that it has moyed its offices to 131 W. 28th St. description of even a suspect; we | | believe, however, that the crime was | | committed by either a dark-skinned | white man or a light-skinned Negro.” | With this statement the cue was | given. (ECL. MEMBERS, ATTENTION! | All unemployed YCL members | | ,are instructed to be at the district | office on Wednesdsy morning st |10 a. m. sharp. lI | Chobe Secretariat. “Didn't Look Good.” * ‘The boy, Willle Brown, was ar- rested on February 12 by Detective | Agnew. At the Coroner's inquest, Seven Jailed Ky.-Tenn. WomenLeaders Issue Call on Intern’! Women’s Day Working-class women of Kentucky | company houses made of thin boards, ance and through- | and working-class women out the country! For the first time in these Ken- tucky and Tennessee mine fields, In-| knowing from day to day whether | into the Women’s Auxiliaries of the ternational Women’s Day, March 8, holds real significance for miners’ wives. wo"mnite to fight for their rights, | March & means to the miners wives a day to begin intensive mobilization against starvation, a day to pledge their men solidarity in the fight) ‘Ss & day to pledge solidarity in the | organization of working-class women, | class women are mourning the death| slaves, and has put seven women | !70™ him by torture. —cold in winter, warm in summer— | Seeing her children sick from the starvation disease, flux—and not | her husband will come out of “the the| mines after the shift is over—if he| | is working at all. At Pocohontas, Virginia, working- of their men. Thirty-six were killed jy an accident in the mines, that is he daily occurrence throughout the coal fields. In other sections of the country Agnew stated: “I was walking gouth | when I saw this colored boy coming | |north. He did not look so good | When asked what he meant by ing that Brown did Bot look good, | the detective answered: “I did not| know him. He just looked suspicious | |and I just played a hunch.” | At the police station, Brown was! kept for 36 hours without food and| water. The police asked him if he was hungry; the nthey brought him | food, held it just out for his reach,| and demanded that he confess. They threatened him with @ lynching un-| In Kentucky and Tennessee, where | less he did so. Brown repudiated - his “confession” at the Coroner's in- “Southern chival has not ke miners’ women nile living lives “s | Quest, stating that it had been forced | local demands of the women, In Kentucky and Tennessee, March 8 must be a signal for organization | National Miners’ Union. Evidence of Innocence. All evidence points to the complete || | innocence of Willie Brown. On the day of the murder, he was with his mother at the New Garden 'T!.satre into the Pineville jail, and indicted them for helping the miners and their wives organize against starva- tion and terror, the miners’ wives | and daughters see the necessity of Labor Defense, 799 Broadway. Meeting of Medical Workers Tomorrow Night at. 8 P.M. A general meeting of members and | sympathizers has been called by the Medieal Workers’ Industrial League, as the first step in mobilizing ‘the | membership to carry out the éeci- sions fof the Trade Union U} Council Conference, Comrade Zack, secretary of the New York District of the T. U. Gans fie es will report on “The T S of he | Medical League in Fulfil the De cisions of the T.U.U.C. Conference.” All medical workers acquainted with the factivity of the Medical | League are urged to come and parii- | cipate in the general discussion. The meeting will take place at 108 East 14th Street, Room 202 on/ Wednesday, March 9, and will begin promptly at 8:30 p. m. | What’s On— TUESDAY ‘The Painters’ Open Forum will be held at 11 s.m. at 1325 Southern Bivd., Bronx. against starvation and terror now| women are slaving in the shops and} carried on both on the strike front| mills at wages of one-half to one-| and inside the mines, under the/| third the amount men receive for! leadership of the National Miners’! the same work. organization, Kentucky and Tennessee working- class women! On March 8 pledge} until 4 o'clock. The child Di othy disappeared at 2, The hairs clucched in the hand of the child was long Comrade Wilz will speok. WEDNESDAY The Anti-Imperialist League will b lecture at the Spanish Center, 31 Union. March 8 means the begin-| Today war threatens. It has al- ‘Olldarity to the working-class strug- ang kinky. nsive ©) tion of the | ready begun in China. Working-/@¢! Pledge organization into the| the press whipped up lynch spliit e the Women's Auxiliaries | class men and boys will be forec Women's Auxilisries of the N.M.U.,| against Brown. ‘The Philadelphia | of the National Miners’ Union, to go from ihe mine fields to be to fight for better conditions in the j Tribune, a Negro paper under’ the fight for the day to day needs of the | non-fodder for Wall Street bosses, hing camps, to make organized de-| influence of the N.A.A.C-P. has de-| women in the mining camps. The readiness of the women to struggle, side by side with their men, hes been clearly shown during the strike. Faced daily with the impos- sible task of keeping the miners’ wages” between their family and vation ing their children dying from flux, under their very eyes, whe: sivike call came, the er and daughters were ready with thelr fathers, brothers and husbands. At Kettle Island, at the outset of the strike, the women, at the head | of the picket line, sat on the railroad treck in front of the mine and pre- vented the scabs from entering the mine. +At Maythell, no sooner was the Women’s Auxiliary of the National Miners’ Union formed than the wo- men went to ovher mi the women into auailiaries At Glendon, a miner's wife went to the pit mouth, puiled her hus- band out of the mine when he at- tempted to scab, In many of the struck mines wo- men led the picket lines, unafraid of | the guns facing them in the hands of the gun thugs hired by the coal operators, Fhe gi in the Kentucky and Ten- y mining camps, without o:- é as only an carly m riage forward to, Afte: vige, a grim fight to make ends meet ior.sher famil, vaused by slow starvation—a without sufficient food or clothes hpi’ and her family ws life for in ne 8 tO Organize | an early old age,! Instead of giving the 12,000,000 un- employed the wMemployed insurance they demand the workers will be sent. to the battlefront. to shoot down | other workers with whom they have no quarre!, and to be killed them- selves. The women of the mining fields will be given back an official i r in the place of their sons. While the unemployed men will & sent to war, the women will take their places in the shops end mills, | | turhing oUt “ammunition and other | wat materials at terrific speed-up and starvation wages. Working-class women! Join with | the men in the fight against the im- | | Perlalist robber war! On March 8, throughout the world, under the leadership of the Communist, Party, working-class wo- men will demonstrate—will march in parades and mass in meetings. In the Soviet Union, where the workers rule, the day will be a day jot celebration. The women will hold ii happy demonstration celebrating the social rights they have gained— | equal wages for equal work, child and | | motherhood protection, etc. In the capitalist countries the wo- nen, housewlves and women in the will demonstrate again peasants Union, against shipping munitic head imperial de gair of the and straight, Willie's hair is short | ei mands on the company to have your | liberately men paid in cash, and not be forced | | the white to trade in the company stores! Or- | of Brown's alleged act as “a hideous ganize the Women’s Auxiliaries of | evim ” and assuming th ‘It the National Miners’ Union, to fight | poy, g the guilt of the | for competent, medical and dental care for your children and decent Every shop, ne ane a houses to live in. Organize to de- shop, mine and factory 9 mand from the Board of Education| fertile tlelé for Daily Worker sub- free, hot lunches for your children | s¢riptions. played into the hands of boss lynchers by speaking at school! Demand immediate une |r rer errnennne ‘mployment relief from the logal,| Yation and oppression. county and-state government, from (Signed) Doris Parks, | agencies such ag the Associated | Margaret Fontaine, ‘cea and the Red Cross! Add Dorothy Weber, es ur strength to the fight against Norma Martin, the bosses’ robber war! Julia Parker, Ann Barton. | Kentucky and Tennessee women! Join with your class! Join with the women in industry, struggling in the shops and mills, fighting against speed-up, wage-cuts, unemployment, hunger and war. Kentucky and Tennessee women, | and women throughout the country! | | Follow the Communist Party, the | | front guard of the working class, | | which is leading in the fight against | Clarina Michaelson EAST SIDE | LAST TWO DAYS Nicolai V. Gogol’s FAMOUS NOVEL “TARAS {1 Guaternaia. A meeting of Will be held at 1325 So at 8 p. general meeting of m HS and sym- | Pathizers of the Mediesl Workers’ Indus- 'New Issue of N.Y. “Hunger Fighter” Now Off the Press The new issue of the “Hunger | Fight is just off the press. his | eight page paper, official organ of the | Unemployed Councils of Greater New } York, contains news of the struggles | of the workers in and around this city | sgainst evictions, for immediate re- | Ave. lief, and for Workers’ Unemployment | 44, Insurance, There is an expose o? the | “plock-aid” hoax of the emergency | Werk lief committee and an article on ne rent strike vietories throughout | the city besides other vital news. This | j issue is certainly much better than ithe last—it establishes the “Hunger | Fighter” as a real fighting paper; one that should be circulated to as many as possible. It sells for only two cents @ copy and can be obtained at the {CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONR) Bridge Plays Club, 285 Rodney St. Lelsve Hall, 46 Ten Eyek St. Workers’ Center, 61 Grabs Throop Are. Workers’ C' Are. 263 Throop | Center, 1 Fule | Miaate Villuge Workers’ * Psletit Center, 51 Atlantic Avi it, O57 Fairview Ave, Bi SECTION 7 | 1533—45rd 8t., Boro Park, Brookiyn. i 1109, 65th St., Bore Park, Brookiyn. 1 2006, 70th St., Bensonhurst, Brooklyn. l, ip 28th St., Bath Beach, Brooklyn. Clud, 2921 W. S8n@ St., Brookisn. s" Hicks 8t., Brooklyn. 136 15th St, Brooklyn, Rosslan Workers’ lab. SECTION 8 118 Briston 6t., ic" Brooklyn (Brownsrille). 5.000 VOLUNTEERS T0 COLLECT $8,000 MARCH 11, 12 AND 13 962 Sutter Ave., Brooklyn (E. New Yerk). 403 Pennsylvania Ave., Brooklyn (Bast New York). 1813 Pitkin Ave., Brooklyn. Hinsdale Workers’ Club, 313 Rinséale Ave., Brooklyn (East New York). American Youth Cleb, 78 Thattord Ave, Brooklyn. Brownsville Youth Center, 108 Thattord Ave., Brooklyn. BECTION 15 Prospect Workers’ Club, ai i Biter 1400 ‘1187 Sontherm stom Road. Matic Bronx Workers’ Clad, 9862 Third Weonten's Comnett, 1619 Bosson Road. Shale 11, 2700 Bronx Fark East, Bronx Workers’ 1323 Bouter: ‘Trem Are. Center, it Workers’ Center, 2075 Clintes Unemployed Council office, 5 EB. 19th Street, N. Y. C. | “TARAS BULBA” IN LAST TWO DAYS AT ACME THEATRE. | ‘Today and tomorrow are the last | two days to view “Taras Bulba” at Acme Theatre, J4th Street and Union | Square. The picture is based on the well known novel of the same name (by the Russian writer, Nicolat V. Rational Vegetarian Gogol. The director has tried and succeeded quite well, in ioeucita) Restaurant | ne dramatic incidents 198 SECOND AVENUE | deals with the Cossack hill Net. ith end 18th Ste, is well tole | Strictly Vegetarian Feod MELROSE DANY eesaney BRATAURANT | red ww: Pind mm Eisauane ta Ding ei Oar Place, | 18% SOUTHERN BLYD., Bron: || (near 124th St. Ststien) VELEPEONE INTEEVALE Beane THE TREATRE GUILD Procents HE MOON IN THE YELLOW RIVER ab DENTS JOHNSTON 1A., 694 St., W, of Biway, 0, Mats. Thurs., Set. 2:40 THE THEATRE GUILD presents EUGENE O'NEILU’S Trilogy Mourning Becomes Electra’ | Composed of 3 ptaye presented en Iiday | HOMECOMING, THE HUNTED THE HAUNTED Commencing at 6:30 sharp. Dinner in- termission of one hour at 7 No Mats. ALVIN THEA., 52nd 8t., W. of Biway RALLY TO THE | ae coal operators and all other op- | ressors of labor—the Communist | ear which is lending the fight pu the imperialist robber w i aside March 8 as BULBA”’ 1 "THE UKRAINIAN COSSACK A Lense Drama of the Cossacks Adapted From Gogol’s Well Known Stor, Ge ‘ of 6.000— ACME THEATRE UTH ST. & UNION SQUARE net end whi Intex Isentucky men through aut the 2 Bolidacity for the victory veninst First Annual Joint Students’ Ball OF THE TWO PROLETARIAN SCHOOLS WORKERS SCHOOL JEWISH WORKERS UNIVERSITY | Saturday Mare EW STAR CASINO—107 TICKETS IN ADVANCE 50 CENTS Workers School, University, 108 E. 14th St., Workers’ Book Shop 60 E. 13th St. Com .By ROBERT ES F) feRWoOD Martin Beck fe as fue Bre. $146 Mates. Thureeat an “i HIPPODROME::..::, & 43r4 St. pomage yf} SHOW IN NEW YoRK BK 8 ane JOE E. BRO Sunday, March incl.) “Fireman Save fora | My Child” | —PROMINENT J. W. Ford, Robert Minor, B. h 12th at 8 p.m. th Street, and Park Avenue |) AT THE DOOR 75 CENTS 36 @. 12th St., Jewish Workers ADMISSION Workers’ Clubs Should Advertise in the “Daily” ANNIVERSARY CONCERT STAR CASINO 107th St. and Park Ave. ~—PROGRAM— FREIHEIT SINGING SOCIETY—J. SCHAFER STATEN ISLAND NEGRO QUARTET Prolethnehne—Red Dancers—John Reed Club—W.LR. Band RICHARD B, MOORE, Chairman Intern] Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 1 UNION SQUARE ern FLOOR Su Werk Done Under Persons! Care of DR. JOSEPHSON SOLLINS’ RESTAURANT 216 SAST 14TH STREET 6-Cogres Lench 35 Cente Regoler Dinner 65 Conte 13th, at 2 p. m. SPEAKERS— D. Amis, M. Olsin, Ben Gold 50 CENTS

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