The Daily Worker Newspaper, March 10, 1932, Page 2

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Page Two — »alLY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, MARCH 10, 1932 ‘New Ford Piled Up Profit of Over 81 Million in 1929’----Headline in New Cops Try to Whitewash Thug Who Shot Militant Needle Trades Leader United Front Strike Continues Steady Spread; Conference Saturday |fice of the L. S. N. R, “Liberator” Anniver- sary Issue Will Be Off The Press Today The special anniversary issue - of the Liberator is off the press today. All sections of the Party and all L. S. N. R. branches should call for their Liberators at the District Of- 5th floor, Workers Center. York World-April 9, 1930 ‘Tag Day Army Startsat10a.m. Friday to Save Daily Worker; More Stations Added to List SECTION 7 1873—49rd St., Boro Park, Brooklyn. i ., Boro Park, Brooklyn. Tomorrow at 10 o'clock in the morning opens the three-day battle } of the Tag Day Army to save the | Daily Worker. Register early to- | , Bensonhurst, Brooklyn. 48 Bay 28th St., Bath Beach, Brooklyn. Workers’ Club, 2921 W. 32nd St., Brooklyn, Rent Strikers To Fight Eviction Of 2 Families NEW YORK.—Two workers are or- dered to be evicted on Friday from 1547 Minford Place, where a strike for lower rents is in progress. In one of the‘ families there is a worker's wife, who only two weeks ago gave birth to a child. The land- lord says he will spend all his money to evict this particular family be- cause before her confinement the DEMONSTRATE SAT. AT JAPANESE WAR ON CHINESE MASSES;DEFEND USSR NEW YORK.—New York workers will demonstrate against the robber | war on Chinese masses and war provocations against the the Soviet Union. Workers! Don’t be fooled by the imperialist lies and pacifist illusions! morrow at the one of the followin; 450 Hicks St., Brooklyn. Soviet Demand the recall of Japanese NEW YORK, March 10.—P< detectives, lawyers and| ll District Secretaries of L.S.N.R. station Raveccbinel coy ae 196 16th St., ‘Brooklyn, Russian Workers’ | woman took a leading part in the | Union, before the Japanese Consul-| troops from Manchuria and all parts vagistrates, all agents of the Tammany capitalist “law and | stoups throughout the country should | | 449q “eh pestedaste ae ssi mort | Seesieiiecal eu cins seit (See ate, Whitehall and South Sts., this | of China! NaN ita Rema : ; lw us ice, 50 E, | 20¢e 8 sty as | SEC . NX. i - | Saturday at 11 o’cloci is iploniatie serieenaric r’ government, busied themselves throughout the day | Wtte to the Liberator office, 50 workers’ organizations came forward| 18 Bristol St., Brooklyn (Brownsville), ‘The house committee and the un- | lay at 11 o'clock in the morn-| Drive out the diploma ese esterday trying to whitewas ustrial h the gangster David Rowner, 13th St., N. Y. C., for bundle orders at the rate of 1 cent per copy jon to give active support to the Daily | 962 Sutter Ave., Brooklyn (E. New York). | employed council ask the workers of ing. The war which was started by |tatives of the murderous Japanese 2 ‘ eG. case, P a ¢: Worker drive. 408 Pennsylvania Ave., Brooklyn (East | this neighborhood to rally in sup- | the Japanese in Manchuria is spread-| imperialism in the United States! vho shot and seriously wounded Iddie Stark in a rajd on the! bundles of 25 and more. | "he Tag Dey Army MOeT’win thie ete Tet sve, rset port of these two families and fight | ing and threatens to become another} Demand the withdrawal of Ameri- ee emit acti ea ef 2 | three-day battle, MUST save the| Minsdate Workers’ Club, 313 Hinsdale | 28ainst the eviction World conflagration arenes Se site Indu ee Ny need Up Election Of Dele ates To May | Daily Worker for leadership in the Lah ore ago aay Reha ane EO ORR ee an ‘The Japanese imperiailsts are con-| Hyer ware nae vho was arr ed lue N) | , I We I ) | workers’ struggles. The Tag Day | Breetiyn, POWELI ST RE | tinuing their slaughter of the Chi- es e sebbee ! sae Apa dt siiny Gece i eon | Atte will Wis Ae SU ive st: your |, Are eMeTN eeth Centers. 105, Zhabtord,) “Od, TY | Meee masses and are advancing each| Dorian ine socket Union! SF a aieaene ates Day Anti-War Conference March 20 support, if you register early tomor-| New Lots Club, 507 Christopher. St. | day further along the Yangtze River. i ips con hanablaseetaa cs eae . Jot % Wy Ke and come out again on Saturday | Unemployed Counell, 608 Stone Ave. | 2 pecealtoee 0 rourt. not by only All shops, trade unions, unemployed cuts, for defense of the Chinese LW.O. School, 257 Schencetady Ave. 1.1.0, School No. 1, 9128 Ave. L, Canarsie. SECTION 9 and Sunday, Study the following | stations and pick the one that is most, STRIKERS WIN Their armies are now marching on Nanking while their battleships are threatening Canton. At the same Insurance — 183 CONSULATE TO PROTEST ROBBER Goldst ‘ i councils, all workers’ fraternal, bene-| masses and the Soviet Union! In oporeniest AA lee et ene eee ee | wet eos Reed 9 ceenania of bean Aaa cn crak For And 43 Against if "| SEOTION i—DOWNTOWN ™. ‘ : z 3 | e othe: ts, aE Detective Leef of the 30th St. police fit and cultural societies are urged by | order to organize properly, and lay ast Thied Sty NYC. UATTAN | be X. Clty, Lt. Workers’ Club, Att Fourth | 591 Powell St. won a complete |vic- inlilstg ees RUA HouEat fae *\,| DULUTH, Minn—J. Cogan, secre : i his utmost to have the Provisional United Front, May|the basis for the organized partici- fast Tenth Bt : yeti tory today, in thelr’ iuilitan€ catriee | forces in|’ c lso did his utmos a 66 E. 4th S cops lempstead, Ukrainian Hall, Uniondale | tory lay, vr Tilitant strike | Manchuria close to the Siberian b tary of the Trade Union Unity © gangster freed Day Committee set up by the Com- | pation of the workers from the shops, oe th St. Ukrainian Workers’ Club. | ave, and Front St | against high rent and for recogni- ne BIDeree BOL L hi debated with F. W Lah 2 P panies a diately {elect | unemployed councils, unions and all! tae 9, PyoRaWay: East Side Workers’ Club. |“ wicksvitle, Ukrainian Hall, 57 Broadway. | "2 é der line in preparation for an in-| League here, debated with F. W. Magistrate Goldstein, after listen- | munist Party to immediately c y nk . he Counc, 1" St» Powntown Unemployed | ytmont—Finnish Hall, 73 Meachem Ave. | tion of the House Committee. | vasion against the Soviet Union. Thompson of the I.W.W. before a | ing: carefully, to, pleas of detective: thelr delegates to the May. Day ANH | Coney | Snake) sCeuanisamens: 11h: $88 [er carat wane wane ides SECTION 15 | Seeing the unity and the deter- say : crowd of 450 on the subject of “Un- Leef, reduced the bail of the gang-| War United Front conference called | mightiest day of struggle ever wit~| trial Union. | ,dtlddte Bronx Workers’ Club, 3882 Third | mination of the tenants the landlord| The capitalist class and their lack- employment Insurance,” and, despite ster from $10,000 to $1,000 for Sunday, March 20th, 1 p. m., at nessed in New York. L3t Second Aver ascen Woreere GUE | "Women's Council, 1616 Boston Head: of the house gladly settled and gave | (YS, the socialist: and A. FOU. | tke “area atumber of Wobbly sup- reangements for the white Stuyvesant Casino, 9th St. and Sec- | -_ 29 KE. Tenth St, Workers’ Ex-Servie Shule Jt, 2700 Bronz Park Bast. in to the demands which included | ‘aders, are purposefy tryi nlotglulteh porters present, when the vote was a confer s men's Le. Bronx Workers’ Center, 1823 Southern | | a leaders, are” purposely trying to lull : are being made by a lawyer named ond Ave. This conference must be ° . saanene s-aKthiOWW. teoribn sealord: as follows: . purposely trying Julll taken 183 voted in favor of chan Reese of the Cop-Markovich law firm | the broadest ever held in New York 3 Evictions To ay Figs Ht IDTOWN #8 Tremont Workers! Center, 2075 Clinton | (1) A ¥8 reduction on 4 rooms and | the workers to sleep though all Kinds | Siorment) inemanee non ag mem whose chief activity has been hand-| The provisional arrangements com- BUY. Bad tales a $2 reduction on 3 rooms; (2) Rec-| Of misleading reports, fake confer-| against it. ‘The A. F. of L. eewery, ses for the Schlesinger-Dub- | mittee appeals especially to all shop We ree bes ERS ae yan mee ognition of the House Committee; (3) | €nces and pacifist illusions, so as to ; s : hi 5 13t W. 28th cs ib he gs Workers’ Local has invited the Trade y clique Fe es eee Uo ne n hilams urg tet Pees ae J D E D R Reinstatement of |the evicted ten-| disarm the workers in their* fight) union Unity League secretary to Schwartz, Industrial Union mem- League unions and Leagues, ito the SEUHON CHABCAME aN om rtiee | | ants; Kleinberger, SkalInik and Le- | @ainst the raging imperialist war speak before their local on unem- ber, who was taken by the police| workers in the shops generally, and . Czechoslovak Workers’ Home, 347 E. 72nd | vine, who will be released from pay- | and the danger of invasion against | pioyment insurance. ‘Tuesday and is charged with attack | to the rank and file workers in Amer- Re nt Strike gp ofan Arai ah | ciant of ‘cast, dus THOb ADA’ yall bi80 | —____— y ata ing the gangsters, was released on ican Federation Local Unions to | Italian Workers’ Club, 314 E. 104 | damages for the eviction. 'Seott Nearing Speaks A new neighborhood branch of the ss 00 Gel yasterdag elect delegates to the conference, Finnish Workers’ Clap, 15 Ww. d2eth st. | |): The: Unembloyed Gotmoll vend alt : Unemployed Council has been or- Stark In Serious Condition which will prepare the mightiest out- Three of the rent strikers of 34] ydaty hayitt® AY» Merlom Progress | | workers of the neighborhood wish to/ On Soviet Union In |ganized in Duluth Heights among Meanwhile Eddie Stark lies in the pouring of tens of thousands of New |Bartlett Street will be evicted today | 4. 116th St, Spanish Center. | Sopress, condolense, with. .Commade) Harlem Priaay Nicht! oo oo ens } in a serious condition. ‘The York workers on the International March 10 by the landlord. Because | SEC. 5—L. BRONX AND WESTCHESTER | Kleinberger, whose chil | LY NIg! SE PS nospita! in a serious condition. | | Hlesphrien -Watkers’-Cenlet, boo Preccet Kleinberger, whose child expired last | | doctors state that they will no doubt | day of labor solidarity and struggle | they are striking for a reduction in| aye "feria" i aren : Creer | Sunday. | NEW YORK.—Negro workers this| JOBLESS, HE COMMITS SUICIDE have to operate as the bullet, which seaices: Sapiens fs |e Sees TRS Ree ae | Se TON TA ca Nica, | WOT RELS a eaLLY - LO ee | Friday evening, March 11, will hear | Dayton, Ohio. — Because he could “ an explosive one, is still lodged All other working class organiza- | this block and neighborhood to come | mya, NGIN' SAM AT THE HIPPO- tions are also urged not to fail to elect. their delegates without delay and have them present at the con- #4 3 t get a job and received no relief. | Scott Nearing in a graphic descrip- | ead = ss : ‘ | tlon of “How the Russians Are Plan- | Parl E. Brehm, 42, of 45 Bierce Ave- Singin’ Sam, known to tedio fans| ning the New World.” ‘This Open |MUe, ended “his life ‘Thursday after- |to protest and demonstrate against | Shule, 1400 Boston Road, |the landlord, who is evicting these} {10 Elder ave. in Stark's body DROME. The shooting was part of an or- Their Support Sat. NEW YORK.—After a judge in ganized attack launched by a group ‘ | three workers. Because they demand) 170 as “The Barbasol Man,” will head | orym, established by th ‘na- | t00n by firing a bullet through his of gangsters against the Needle ference. This year above all past /lower rent, no eviction of unemployed | || SECTION ¢_wiLLIAMSBURGH Sictan arrest court ordered the) the vaudeville bill at the Hippodrome | onal Branch of the friends or tea (heart, He leavés a wife and: iyo Trade Workers Industrial Union to May Days, must see the best organ-| workers and recognition of a house | /"jquemniny, Workers’ Clab, 795 Flush. | eviction of 80 families with thelr | peginning Saturday. Other acts in. | : Soviet Union meets every second “Hildren, to struggle alone. Luke’s Hall,| Suicide is not the way out for the | Working-class. Fight for Unemploy- ment Insurance. ®eores of children |into the streets ization of the New York workers to | committee, within two days, he told the workers fill the streets with the slogans and} The landlord, Mr. Loscher, of 34] “5 demands: For unemployment insur- | Bartlett St., Brooklyn, took three of | Thresp ACe trortta Tana Ave. that they and their freezing children ance and immediate relief! Against |the rent strikers to court Tuesday. | 4v¢- had nothing to complain about. the bosses’ imass hunger, murder |‘The judge gave them only two days| gilitlian Proletarian Circle, 197 Bamboldt | “your troubles are nothing compared terror and war campaign, for organ- | time to move. Usually the court al- | g wee ce Spanish Workers’ Center, 31 ization and struggle against wage |lows five to ten days time to find | “Tiasewosd-workers’ Neeaimii: rooms. This shows clearly that the | view Ave. iaps. Mua eee : le Village, Middle judges with their court, police and | Mere een | Contes 1 Fulton 8: the rest of its agents are working | FOUR JAILED IN : | BAKERY STRIKE siz: een estes erie ret March Issue of “a Sop)? | Today this same landlord gave out | The Communist |five more eviction notices to these | Just Off the Press | | striking tenants. These tenants, must | Teer | appear at Lee Avenue court, March |15 in order to terrorize the rent |strikers. The landlord brings two NEW YORK. — Tammany police | policemen along with her when she | continue to carry out the orders of | goes to see the tenants. This is an-| stop the organization of unorgan- ized shops in the New York gar- ment center. The five gangsters who invaded the union on Tuesday are part of a gwoup which is con- trolling about 10 open shops. The gangsters are paid fat sums by the bosses of these shops to terrorize the workers into accepting sweat- shop conditions and to break up apy organizational attempts on the part of the workers. The Needle Trade Workers Indus- trial Union had made some inroads into the Ritz Millinery shop at 151 | W. 28th St. Workers in this shop nad complained against the gangster terror and the Industrial Union as- ted them too rganize against the gangsters and for better conditions. The thugs in desperation seeing that Bridge Plaza Club, 285 Rodney St. clude: Carl Freed, Danny Small and | Laisve Hall, 46 Ten Eyck St. Marry | Mays; Raymond Wilbert, | tye West sre at St The Screen program feature will be | Beott Nearing has aroused thie tn- CAV TOT SEEEE. TRGiy er | bertal oft Neato <weelara: wen hia| oo with Richard Arlen and Pauline | with the Lindy baby,” he told them. | prederick. “Wayward” is an adapta- | latest book, “Born Free,” besides he | Build a workers correspondence The eviction order fulfilled the | tion of the novel “Wild Beauty,” and | has exposed imperialist oppression of group in your factory, shop or order of the landlord who by this act | was directed by Edward Sloman. A| Lt Negro Tasses in an earlier book,| neighborhood. Send regular letters hopes to crush the rent strike in 5| special added attraction will be the ‘Black America. to the Daily Worker. houses on Longfellow Avenue in| exclusive showing of the official pic- Which these families are. partici- } tures of the Bat Battalino vs. Eddie Pating. | Ran contest. The landlord's lawyer showed leaf: | plese ene ce ets to the fudge and told him that} “The importance of the Commune the workers hung strike signs in the lies in the effort that was made to | Windows and on the walls. .This, ac- | break up and destroy the capitalist Don't fail to get your copy of the jeerding to Jaw, was a_crime. “It state bureaucratic machine, the theoretical organ of the Communist | SPolled the houses,” said the lawyer. | courts of justice, military and police Party. Single copies 20 cents. Sub-| The exhorbitant rent |the landlord | apparatus, and to replace it by a self- scription price $2 per yéar. Special | Charges is perfectly in order. | governing mass organization of work- rates on bundle orders. Send your| The judge delivered a rabid speech | men, making no distinction between Workers’ Club, 285 Throop Center, Workers’ Clubs Should Advertise in the “Daily” MELROSE Worke rs. Intensify Picketing Intern’l Workers Order |; VEGETARIAN ey were losing control over the | the bakery bosses. Today four more | other trick of the landlords to break | Orders to The Communist, P. O, Box | lasting three-quarters of an hour to legislative and executive powers.”— | DAIRY RESTAURANT DENTAL DEPARTMENT orkeré in the shop, planned the Workers and housewives were arrest- the unity and spirit of the strikers | 148, Sta. D, New York City. the tenants. He tried to convince the | Lenin, “Bourgeois Democracy and the Comrades Will Always Find it ed after being brutally handled by the police. Lola Fine was arrested in front of Tannonbaum’s Bakery and held under $300 bail on the charge of | “disorderly conduct.” Bessie Horn | and Clara Ableson were taken in front of the White Gold Bakery and | CONTENTS: Japanese Imperialism in All Insolent Nakedness. The Fourth Year of the Five Year Plan. Pleasant to Dine at Our Place. 1782 SOUTHERN BLVD. Bronz (near 174th St. Station) fELEPHONE INTERVALE #&—9149 1 UNION SQUARE 8TH FLOOR All Work Done Under Persona! Care of DR. JOSEPHSON armed invasion of the union with the purpose of killing Ben Gold, secretary of the union, in whose office the spoting took place. Workers throughout the garment | mire are highly indignant and oused over the shooting and have and break the strike. We the tenants | of 34 Bartlett St. are determined to fight until our demands are won. Another house in this block, 52 | Bartlett St. the tenants have been | organized under the leadership of the | Williamsburg Unemployed Council. | workers, many af them unemployed, | pictatorship of the Proletariat,” LL.D. othres with wages cut or working | Paris Commune Anniversary, March part-time, that they were the wrong-|18, 1932: Mooney-Kentucky-Scotts- doers and the landlord the poor suf- | boro Campaign. ferer. “The landlord is poor him- | By N. Ossinsky. | self,” said the judge. Times are bad | The Directives on the Secomd Five | £T them.” The landlord's well fed | Its SOLLINS’ COHEN’S ined an intensive organizational drive among the unorganized needle workers as an answer to this latest held under $200 bail. Anna Kaplan | and Rudolph Staggler were pulled in from the picket line at the Ocean | The house committee presented the | demands to the landlord for a redut- tion in rent, Year Plan of Soviet Union—Resolu- | *#°¢ Was good testimony for the tion of the XVII Party Conference | {udge. of the CP.S.U. ‘The workers were refused the Save the Daily Worker! CUT RATE OPTICIANS RESTAURANT and renovating the What is your Unit or Branch doing? HERE ARE SOME | View Bakery and held under the |same bail. The hearings were ad- | Journed for Monday 14. A women with a child in her arms act of thuggery. Despite all efforts of thugs and po- lice and the Schlesinger crowd to ter- rorize the workers and trick them in- rooms, and recognition of a house | Organizational Problems in Our Un-| “ght to have a spokesman and were | committee. The landlord is willing employment Work. called to be cross-examined one at | piglet thepllngs bering pena es ey Be wee: Sa houdete; SiSc eaten ok | 216 KAS 14TH STREET ° 6-Course Lunch 55 Cents Eyes Examined by Registered Opticians “ Regular Dinner 65 Cents White gold rims $1.50 117 0: jthe tenants are determined to fight | How the Crisis Hit the Auto Workers, how she had Jived in the house five | Welt tla 2 eu Gees pateaeey to accepting non-union conditions,| was hit by a cop when she protested | and continue the strike until all the By Robert L. Cruden and nd ld her rent regulorly W. AYS:— the United Front Dress Strike con- | the slugging of the workers. | demands are granted, Robert W. Dunn. EA ete nt regularly, | : but now leveryone was unemployed | except herself and she was support- | ing a big family. She militantly scored the landlord: “The landlord can spend thou- | sands of dollars for cops and thugs and evictions but he can’t reduce the | rents.” “Why don’t you pay rent,” |the| judge kept asking. “We won't pay until the landlord | grants our demands. If he refuses, we will keep striking, even if we are | } | finues its steady spread. Several] wae Cann, a Democratic party po- | shops came down yesterday and sev-/titician, personally directed the at- eral settled. The picket lines were |tacks cooperating with the bakery strengthened all along the strike posses in their desperate effort to| front. Good meetings were held in| preak the strike. The bosses are up- | he strike halls. set that they did not receive the in- To Raise Funds For Daily Worker | junction against the strike as quickly The striking dressmakers have el- as they desired. The injunction is ected a committee of 10 to be placed | now pending in Supreme Court. 3,000 in charge of raising funds for the | workers have signed a petition against | Daily Worker. The committee points|the injunction and pledged them-|the Soviet Union. This lis a real Armaments and Profits. out that it is the task of every striker selyes to fight the injunction even if | proletarian film, enacted by a non- | _ By Labor Research Association. © participate in the Daily Worker |is granted in Coney Island Court, 8th | Professional group—every player in | “Disarmament.” Tag Days, to collect money to save | and Serf Avenue. | the large cast is a worker from the By V. I. Lenin. the workers press. | shop, factory or mine, These work-| The Tasks of the Communist Sections Meetings Tonight morrow before Judge Malaban, in- | &S have never appeared on the stage Regarding Municipal Policy.—Reso- Tonight after work there will be famous for his sentences against the | OT Screen before, but they managed! lution of the Enlarged Presidiumlof meetings of building and block com- workers, ‘The strike Committee calis| ‘©. turn out a drama of engrossing| the E.C.CL. February, 1930. mittees from 26th and 35th Street, | tor a crowded court room to stop the | terest. in the office of the union. All active | ratiroading of these workers. furriers on the Unity Committee are | The Growing Political Significance of Organizational Work in the Pres- Concerts, dances, af- fairs to— SAVE THE DAILY WORKER Attend the one nearest you; spend an enjoyable evening! Help your fighting paper! “BROKEN CHAINS” OPENS AT) ACME THEATRE TODAY. | ent Situation. The Acme Theatre, 14th St. and By C. Smith. Union Square, has booked a Soviet |The Uprising in Salvador. film, “Broken Chains,” and will pre- | By O. Rodrigues. sent the picture on Thursday, Fri-;On the Theoretical Foundations of day and Saturday. The film, which | Marxism-Leninism (Continued from was produced in the USSR by Prolet-| last: issue). Kino, deals with a phase of life in By VY. Adoratsky. Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 199 SECOND AVENUE Bet. 18th and 13th Ste. Strictly Vegetarian food TONIGHT! | Joseph Brodsky will speak on “COURTS and JUSTICE in the SOVIET UNION” IRVING PLAZA | 15th St. and Irving Pl. | Thursday, March 10th, 8 p. m./ AUSPICES—F.S.U., N. ¥. District, 799 Broadway, N. Y. C, Tel. EStabrook 8-5141 COOPERATIVE COLONY TAILOR 635 ALLERTON AVENUE Patronize the Colony Tailor and Help the Revolutionary Movement evicted,” was the ready reply of the tenants. | This spirit deserves the support of every worker. Mass on Longfellow Ave. between 174th and 175th Sts. on | Saturday and Monday morning and support the plucky workers in their | fight against the evictions and for a) victory in the strike. Entertainment and Dance for the Daily Worker given by Unit 4, Section 6, Communist Party Saturday, March 12 At 61 GRAHAM AVE. “Twenty strikers are to be tried to- Defend the Soviet Union against | “EXPLORERS OF THE WORLD” IN | the attack of the bosses! called to a meeting tonight which will also be held after work. The Cen- be held Saturday at 1 p.m. at the headquarters of the United Front Strike, 559 Sixth Avenue. A full re- port of the strike will be given at this conference. Plans are also being completed for the Needle Trades Bazaar which wil) be held April 7, 8 and 9. are urged to bring in articles now to the office of the Union to ge sold at the bazaar. A concert and mass meeting has been arranged at the Golden Gate, tral Strike Committee will meet to- ; | i | Strike Committee will report and a| record of six famous explorations to | || Entertainment, Dance and night in the office of the Union at 7.| protest will be raised against the|China, the Arctic, Africa, South | | Packing Party ANNIVERSARY CONCERT An important strike conference will | Detroit slaughter. | American jungles, the Antarctic, | Workers | On Friday, at 8 p.m. there will be @ mass meeting at Ocean Parkway | Hall, 3034 Ocean Parkway, where the | SECOND WEEK “Explorers of |the World,” travel | Borneo, and other interesting adven- ture spots, will continue for a second | week at the Cameo Theatre, where | it is being presented for the first | time at popular prices. The noted | | explorers who lead these travel jaunts | | are Harold |Noice, Lt. Com. J. R. | Stenhouse, Laurence M. Gould, Har- | old McCracken, Gene Lamb and/| James L. Clark. | A conference of all workers organ- izations in Brighton and Coney Is- land, the Women Council, I, W. O., Communist Party Units, etc. has been | called for Sunday at 1 p.m. at 140 Neptune Street to prepare to fight the | injunction ait granted, The case of “assault and battery” against Fred Martin, a striker, was |dismissed today when the workers | lawyer showed up the crude frame | up against him. EAST SIDE THE THEATRE GUILD Presents HE MOON IN THE YELLOW RIVER By DENIS JOHNSTON GUILD “THEA., 524 St., W. Vhe Vhentre Gulld Presenta REUNION IN VIENNA 4 Comedy 8; ROBERT E. SHENWoOD ‘ THEA, 45th Martin Beck sas Ave. Rive. 8:40 Mats. ThursSat 2:40 COUNSELLOR-AT-LAW 8. With ELMER RICE TRE THEATRE GUILD presents BUGENE O'NEILL'S Trilogy 58 Boston Road, in support of the| The strike committee asks that all | striking dressmakers, Sat., March 12,|funds in support of the strike be | at 8 pm. |rushed to the general office of the Women’s Council, 799 Broadway, and not to the LL.D. as previously stated. They also call for workers to join the |picket line and assist in collecting |more sginatures against the injunc- | | tion. What’s On— THURSDAY An important meeting of the Furntture Workers’ Industrial Union will be held at | 108 TF. 14th St, at 7:30 p.m. The T.U.U.L, | district conference and the situation in the jon will be discussed. All furniture workers are invited to attend this meeting. Oe ed te ‘The Bronx Section Executive of the LL.D. will 8:19 p.m. Representatives of the 1. branches and affiliated organization urged to attend this meeting. Cana er CAFETERIA FRACTION. A very important meeting of the | Cafeteria Workers’ Fraction |will be held this Thursday, March 10th, at | 8 p. m. in the Workers Center on the | 2nd floor. All Party members must | be present, as some very important | questions will be discussed. ij District Org. Department. are Comrade Joe Brodsky will speak on rts of Justice in the Soviet Union,” under the auspices of the F.BU., at the Irving Piata Hall, 18th St. and Irving Pl., at B opm. f Red Builders, help get subscriptions, | Today, Tomorrow & Saturday SENSATIONAL PROLETKINO FILM ‘BROKEN CHAINS’ PRODUCED IN U.S.S.R. A Real Proletarian Film—No Professional Actors—Don't Miss Seeing This Important Prole- tarian Picture —100% WORKERS CAST— ACME THEATRE 14TH ST. & UNION SQUARI | Mourning Becomes Electra | Composed of 3 plays presented on tiday HOMECOMING, THE HAUNTED THE HAUNTED, Conimencing at 6:80 sharp, Dinner In- termission of one hour at 7 No Mats. | | | | ALVIN THEA. PAUL MUNI Plymouth jiacrhare: &'sm0: 2:20 Workers Correspondence is the backbone of the revolutionary press. Build your press by writing for it 52nd 8 of Biway “40 Minutes in the U. S. S. R.” Latest News Reel and a Good Program at the “NOVY MIR” Anniverssry Concert and Ball Saturday Evening, March 19th, 1932 MANHATTAN LYCEUM—6¢@®, Fourth St, N.Y. C. After Concert—Dancing Until Morni@ Coneert Starts 8 P. M. Sharp Russian Buffet Admission 50¢ Beginning 8 p. m. Adm. 25¢ ‘ for the benefit of the Daily Worker Sat., March 12, 8 p.m. At Ukrainian Workers Club 66 East Fourth St. Arranged by Units 5E and 5C, Section 1, Communist Party, U.S.A. “Secgion 7, Units 6, 9 and Concert and Entertainment for the Daily Worker At 3034 Ocean Parkway Ocean Parkway Hotel Speaker, E. LEVINE Entertainment and Dance UNIT 4A, SECTION 1 for the benefit of the Daily Worker Sat., March 12, 8 p.m. At 216 E. 14th Street F.S.U, Meadquarters Report all Daily Worker Affairs to this column Sunday, March 13th, at 2 p. m. STAR CASINO 107th St. and Park Ave. —PROGRAM— FREIREIT SINGING SOCIETY—J. SCHAFER STATEN ISLAND NEGRO QUARTET Prolethuehne—Red Dancers—John Reed Club—W.LR. Band —PROMINENT SPEAKERS— J. W. Ford, Robert Minor, B. D. Amis, M. Olgin, Ren Gold RICHARD B. MOORE, Chairman ADMISSION 50 CENTS : Anniversary Entertainment & Dance | Of the WORKERS EX-SERVICEMEN’S LEAGUE, Branch No. % . Saturday Night, March 12th At FINNISH WORKERS CLUB 15 West 126th Street In Advance 25 Cents At the Door 35 Cente

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