The Daily Worker Newspaper, March 11, 1932, Page 2

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Page Two DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, MARCH 11, 1932 Mass Dress Strike to Terminate Sat.; Shop Strikes to Continue Close To 200 Victories Won In Five Weeks Struggle; Over 6,000 Workers Involved Dressmakers Forge Ahead To Strengthen Unity And Build Union In Shops NEW YORK, March 11.—The United Front Dress Strike Committee at a meeting held last night in the office of the Industrial Union voted unanimously to terminate on Saturda March 12, the successful mass strike of the New York dress- makers. es With close to 200 substantial vic- | of the 40-hour week, the right to the tories chalked up to their credit, the | Job, no discrimination of Negro work- striking dressmakers will now march | ers and young workers. | “The strikers who are still out on forward consolidating the gains won | and drawing greater masses of work- | the Picketline, the dressmakers who are daily going down on strike, are ers into the struggle for more wide- determined to go on with their strug- spread victories. The strikers will con- SECTION 1—DOWNTOWN MANHATTAN 142 East Third 8t., N.Y.C, 257 East Tenth St. 66 E. 4th St., Ukrainian Workers’ Ctub. 196 E. Broadway, East Side Work: 134 E, 7th St., Downtown Unemployed | Connell. DELEGATES TO | ANTI-WAR CONF. Only Two Days Left To Elect Delegates NEW YORK. — The New York District of the Friends fo the Sov: iet Union is calling a huge anti-war | conference March 13 at Irving Plaza at 10:30 p.m. With only two days left before the conference, all or- ganizations which have not yet el- lected delegates should do so. Only | by means of a mighty mass move: ment of all workers can the war| | that is now being prepared against | the Soviet Union be fought. The establishment of the air base | by the Japanese Army within 150 | »), | miles of the border-line of the Soviet | Se read Boston Road. | Union, and the closing in of the| 614 w. Japanese fleet on Vladivostok, all | 170 Nagel Ave. 140 Broad St., Marine Workers’ Indus- trial Union. Clinton St., Downtown Worker: Second Ave., Russian Workers Tenth &t., League. CTION 2—MIDTOWN SECTION 29th St., N.¥.C. Club. Ex-Service- Workers’ 103 Lexington Ave. SECTION 4—HARLEM AND YORKVILLE Czechoslovak Workers’ Home, 347 E. 72nd St. N.¥.C. Hangarian Workers’ Home, 350 E. 81st St. Italian Workers’ Club, 314 E. 104th St. Finnish Workers’ Club, 15 W. 126th St. 1482 2 Harlem Progressive 4 E. 116th St., Spanish Center. SEC. 5—L. BRONX AND WESTCHESTER Hungarian Workers’ Center, 569 Prospect Ave., Bronx. Shule, 353 Beekman Ave. Club, 1157 Southern Prospect Workers’ vd, Club. | F. 8. U. CALLS FOR! YOUR TAG DAY STATION IS HERE | Ridgewood—Workers’ 657 Fair- | view Ave. | Middle Village, | center, 1 Fulton’ St. Center, | SECTION 7 | 1873—43rd St., Boro Park, Brooklyn. 1109, 45th St., Boro Park, Brooklyn. | 2006, 70th St., Bensonhurst, Brooklyn. 48 Bay 28th St, Bath Beach, Brooklyn. Workers’ Olub, 292 Brooklyn. Brooklyn, Rassian Workers ECTION 8—E. N.Y. AND BROWNSVILLE 118 Bristol St., Brooklyn (Brownsville). | 403 Pennsylvania Ave., Ave., Brooklyn (East New York). | _ America: | Brookiyn. | | Ave., Brooklyn. | New Lots Club, 507 Ghristopher St. Unemployed Council, 608 Stone Ave. LW.O. School, 267 Schencetady Av: LW.O. School No. 1, 9128 Ave. L, Canarsie. | SECTION 9 | Jamaica, Finnish Hall, 109-26 Union Hall | Street. St, near Vernon and Jackson. Middle Village Workers’ | 21 W. 82nd St., Brooklyn. 62 Sutter Ave., Brooklyn (E. New York). Youth Club, 78 Thatford Ave., Brownsville Youth Center, 105 Thatford L, L City, Ll. Workers’ Club, t11 Fourth NEW YORK.—The workers of New York will fight against the bloody Japanese slaughter of the Chinese masses, and for the defense of the Soviet Union from the growing men- |ace of the imperialist war that is ,| being organized by the Japanese and Wall Street bandits, at a huge dem- onstration called by the Communist Party this Saturday at 11 am. at | Whitehall and South Sts. From * Brooklyn (East | there the demonstration will parade | New York). : 3 | 1818 Pitkin Ave., Brooklyn. past the butcher Japanese imperial- | Hinsdale Workers’ Club, 318 Hinsdale jist consulate on Broad St. and into | the heart of the imperialist bankers | and trust magnates, the home of the | United States government, Wall St. Hundreds of marine workers, led | by the Marine Workers’ Industrial | Union, will participat® in the dem- onstration under the slogan “Tie up every dock and ship! Stop the | transport of munitions and all war material to the Japanese imperial- ists against the Chinese masses and presage the nearing of the attempt | SECTION 6—WILLIAMSBURGH Hempstead, Ukrainian Hall, Uniondale Ave. and Front St. Hicksville, Ukrainian Hall, 57 Broadway. Elmont—Finnish Hall, 73 Meachem Ave. the Soviet Union!” The Workers’ tinue the individual shop strikes. During the course of the strike gle to win union conditions, to spread |of the Japanese and other capital- the movement for united struggle and | S* Powers to hasten war upon the | Williamsburgh Workers’ Club, 795 Flusb- | ing Ave., Brooklyn. Bridge Plaza Club, 285 Rodney St. Laisve Hall, 46 Ten Eyck St. which began February 8, over 6,999 dressmakers answered the call of the United Front Strike Committee. These | Sellout E. |posed. workers put up the most heroic and| ,, determined struggle ever witnessed in| At the same time that the dress- | the New York dress market, and were | eke es eee ee dee ere tbe Oe the rewarded for their militant efforts | United Front Strike Committee have | ‘iar F 8 fought and won union conditions, the | ee aie mmauit, | fake strike iockout conducted by the tees and. the Industrial Union, | International, with the aid of the Through their united front activities |!™mermans who have fought every | the dressmakers not only blew the lid effort to unite the ranks of the dress- high off the Schlesinger sell out |™#Kers, is now recognized by the | strike, but built up strong rank and workers as a most shameful sellout tile oppositions inside the Interna- and betrayal of the dressmakera, a tional unions which are forging ahead cote Nett Goll Ba webieeele steadily smashing the labor fakers | W@8@ Cuts, lockouts, and the elimina- | and leading the workers toward a|.ti? of the last vestige of union con- final sweeping victory over the sweat- | “tions. shop bosses. “This fake strike lockout has proved Statement of Strike Committee. that in fighting against the united The United Dress Strike Committee | front strike the officials of the In- issued the following statement last ternational have represented the in- night on the termination of the mass | terests of the bosses and have car- strike ried through the policy of the bosses | “In terminating the dress strike to keep the ranks of the workers di- conducted under united front rank | Vided. : and file leadership at the end of the To Continue Shop Strikes. fifth week, we come before the work- “The United Front Strike Commit- ers in the dress industry to report | tee of the rank and file of the work- substantial gains and accomplish-|ers of the striking shops, has ex- | ments and plans for consolidating | posed this fake sell-out and worked these gains and forging ahead toward further unity in the ranks of the dressmakers in buildi ol class struggle union to defend the interests of the dressmakers “Despite the intensive campaign of the bosses, the leadership of the International and the Lovestonites, despite their poisonous propaganda against the united front of the workers, over 6,000 workers have answered the call of the United Front Strike Committee not onyl in the Manhattan Section, but in Wil- Vamsburg, Bronx, Brownsville, etc., and have fought militantly for the demands formulated by the rank | to strengthen the base of the Indus- trial Union, the union of the workers. front strike of the dressmakers and we will concentrate all our efforts to continue shop strikes during the en- tire period of the season. We once more call on the members ef the In- ternational who are already paying the price for the shameful sellout, not to submit to the lowered conditions forced upon them by the bosses and officials of the International, to take up the struggle for union conditions in their shops and together with the strikers of the Industrial Union and the United Front Committee to unite | with the ranks of the workers and to build a united front of the workers and file of the workers. against the united front of the bosses “The United Front Strike of the | and their agents, the leaders of the dressmakers was a strike representing | International. ail the elements in the trade, par-| “tn terminating? the strike, the teularly the new elements—Negro | members of the Strike Committee are workers, Italians and Spanish work-|not terminating thelr activities. Just and workers of all other national- | as the Strike Committee was in the es, young workers, including even | forefront on the picketline, leading shipping clerks and other general | the workers in the struggle for better workers in the dress shops. For the | conditions, so w! first time in many years, there was a {mination of the real united front of the workers, irre- spective of political views or opinions, and a strike conducted under rank and file leadership. “Members of the Industrial Union, members of the International workers of open shops, Negro, Spanish, Italian and Jewish workers fought side by side on the picketline showing one | united front of the workers beige strike, take upon our- selves the responsibility of helping to |consolidate the gains and to exert every effort to strengthen the base of the Industrial Union and to con- | tinue the struggle for unity until we have succeeded in uniting all dress- |makers and building one powerful union representative of all workers in the dress trade. “We call on the workers of the settled shops to be on their guard against the attempt of teh bosses to rob them of the gains won as a re- struggle, close to 200 shops have been | {ri,°" the detaeselberl dlr settled, with substantial "ininrove- | 4 Sc tase who ore still on stchee ments in the conditions of the work- | salsa enti Haedla og rs. In practically every shop the “We call ‘on the workers of the workers have gained increases, rang- | striking shops to consolidate their ing from $2 to $5, the establishment |T@nks, to strengthen the picketline, |and fight until they have secured im- provements in their conditions. “We call on the members of the the united front of the bosses and their agents. Substantial Gains. “As a result of this militant united What’s On— FRIDA ¥ r out, against the wage-cut, reorganiza- tion agreement, to unite in the shops and to fight for better conditions. @ Harlem Progressive Youth Cinb will | «yy, have its regitlar weekly membership meet- We call on the workers of the ing tonight at 1492 Madison Ave. All |Open shops who were not involved in members must ster ar the strike not to continue working An_ important membership meeting of ,UNder open shop conditions, but to the Bronx and Washington Heights F.8.U. organize their ranks and with the Branches wil Itake place at Ambassador Hall, ‘third Ava and Claremont Parkeay, (assistance of the Industrial Union to at 8 pm. fight and win better conditions. Beott Nearing w speak Oh “How: the “We call on the unemployed work- Paselane Are Planning one, World” at ers, members of the Industrial Union, uke’s Fall, 125, W. 180th 8t., at 8 p.m. Under the auspites of the Harlem Interna. members of the International, unor- tional Branch, F.8.U ganized workers, to organize their Comtade eon Wpstein will speak on '@OKS and togeiher with the employed “War In. China—A Threat to the Soviet Union,” at 257 Schenectady Ave., Brook- lyn, at 8 p.m., under the auspices of the Mastern Parkway Branch, ¥.8,U workers, fight against speed-up, long | hours, low wages and for more jobs for the unemployed. ‘Dressmakers: ‘The United Front Dress Strike has demonstrated the strength that Hes in the unity of the workers, The United Front Strike has exposed the poisonous propaganda of the officials of the A. F. of L. that workers will not strike during a crisis, SATURDAY AN entertainment and dante for the beuefit of the Daily Worker will be given by Unit 4, Bection 6, of the Communist Party, at 61 Graham Ave., Brooklyn, at @ Pm. Admission 25 cente, An entertaisiment, dance and package party for the benefit of the Daily Worker has been sranged by Units 5-E and 5- Bection 1, of the Communist Party, at t Ukrainian Workers’ Club, 66 E, Potirth st., at 8 p.m, demonstrated that: through unity in the ranks of the workers we can over- come all obstacles, win union condi- | tions, and build up our union as a real | rument to lead the workers in the | struggle, ‘The Williamsburg Workers’ Club will have & dance at their headquarters, 795 Flush- ing Ave., Brooklyn, ‘The Carl Sklar Youth Branch, LL.D., will have ® party and entertainment at 623 Union Ave, Brooklyn, at Bertha Pield’s, at 6 p.m. makers under united front leadership! Women's Council, No. 91, hat aranged a| “Forward to greater unity! hous eparty at 927 Jennings st, Bronx,| “Forward to struggle! Forward to the proceeds to go to the Dally’ Worker. | ee building of the Industrial Union! * Section 3, Communist Party, will gt Vecherinka at 134 E. Gayenth st. for the benefit of the Daily Worker. Ad- mission 15 cents. Unit “In unity and struggle les our strength!” o Units 6, 9 and 11, Section 7, Communist Party, have ® ‘concert and entertain- for the benefit of the Duily Worker Ocean Parkway Hotel, 3094 Océan Park~ way, Brooklyn. Oomrade &. Levin will pen ANY $1.50 OR $1 INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHERS BOOK WITH ONE 12-MONTH SUBSCRIPTION TO THE DAILY WORKER e tirelessly to bring about a real united | ill we now, at the ter- | International to fight against the sell- | The United Front dress strike has | | “Hail the gains won by the dress- | Soviet Union. Workers’ Center, 61 Graham Ave. | The attempted murder of the Ger- | ,,22f0°P Ave. Workers’ Club, 285 Throep man Ambassador to Moscow would | Italian Proletarian Circle, 197 Humboldt serve as just such another incident | be Boro Hall, s ; Spanish Workers’ Centez, 31 | as the one in 1914 which started the | Atlantic Ave. | Boulevard. | Ex-Servicemen’s League, revolution- | ary unions and unemployed branches are'‘expected to rally their numbers in large numbers. Workers! The Japanese bandits are carrying their fearful slaughter further and further into China. With SECTION 15 Middle Bronx Workers’ Club, 3882 Third ve. Women’s Council, 1610 Boston Road. Shule 11, 2700 Bronx Park East. Bronx Workers’ Center, 1823 Southern Tremont Workers’ Center, 2075 Clinton |horrible carnage in which over ten | million workers were maimed, crip- ied oe tee a the eg time, Woll Squirms On that another World War, directed | Stand At Kaufman Injunction Trial, at the Soviet Unton;~would be the | means of destroying the example set | by the Russian workers and peasants | to the workers of the world as to| decent living conditions and cultural | advancement, A World War would have started | long ago if not for the fear of the | example of the Russian Revolution. ‘The capitalists know that the work- Betrayal ers, in their own respective countries | would turn this war into a civil war.| NEW YORK—The hearing on| Despite this fear, the powers are | Kaufman's application for an injunc- energetically pushing this Anti-Sov- | tion to restrain the Joint Council of jiet Campaign, and the working class | registered furriers, who were elected | must rally in millions to the defense | by 1300 workers, from organizing and | of the Soviet Union. striking opened yesterday in the Su- eaaltaipe--aiaglieimsos tami preme Court building with Matthew | Students Ball Sat. Loses Memory When| Asked About 1926 | Woll as the chief witness against the | workers On the stand Woll said that | Kaufman had concluded an agree- ent with the A. F, of L. giving the | A. F. of L. supervision over the organ- ization of all fur workers. Woll stated that a committee of three, which in- cluded himself, McGrady and Hugh Franey, was given complete control over the fur workers, On cross examination, however, Mr. Evening; Brilliant Program Scheduled NEW YORK.—The First Annual | Students Ball given by the Workers School and the Jewish Workers Uni- | versity will take place this Saturday | night at*the New Star Casino, 107th | St. and Park Ave. A dance to the mu- | Woll completely lost his memory. The | Sic of a selected nine piece band will | crowd in the court which was com- | begin from 8 p.m. and continue to 3 | posed mostly of fur workers broke | |@.m. In addition to the original pro- | into laughter several times when Woll | |@ram of dances by the Red Dancers, | dodged questions tnat were shot at | jMass singing, etc., a new timely play, | him by J. Buitenkant. |“China Wakes,” will be given by the| Buitenkant asked Woll whether he | Red Players. | knew about an agreement that was | Other varieties are in store for the | Made in Washington between William |students and all workers in between | Green, himself and the fur manufac- dances. Tickets are 50 cents in ad- |turers for a wage-cut agreement while vance and 75 cents at door and are | the workers were on strike and fight- |now obtainable at the Workers School, | ing on the picket line. Woll lied that | 35 E. 12th St., the Jewish Workers |he knew nothing about the matter, | University, 108 E. 14th St., and the | The fur workers in the court there- | Workers Bookshop, 50 F. 13th St. All | upon broke out into roars of laughter. | workers are invited to this big night | Kopp, attorney, demanding thé in- | | of the season. | junction objected to the cross--ex- a | amination of Woll, stating that such | “THE MAN I KILLED” |examination was being made for the | AT FRANKLIN SATURDAY | benefit of the enemy press. | “The Man I Killed” (Broken Lul-| The hearing will continue today in laby) will be presented on the screen | the Supereme Court, Part 6, Frank- from ‘tomorrow to Tuesday at the |lin and Centre Sts. It is expected that Franklin Theatre. The cast includes | Kaufman will be examined by the de- Lionel Barrymore, Nancy Carroll and | fense at this session, Phillips Holmes. From Wednesday | to Friday the screen feature will be Pola Negri in “A Woman Commands” | | with Roland Young, Basil Rathbone |and H. B. Warner. A varied pro- |gram of short subjects will be in- |ecluded 6n the program during the week, i | meeting, package party and dance The Eddie Ran vs. Bat Battalino |has been arranged by the I. W. 0. | fight pictures will be shown at the| Branch No. 95, for the support of Hippodrome, Jefferson, Franklin, | the striking dressmakers, to be held 125th Street, 23rd Street and Regent | om Saturday, March 12, at 8 p.m. at Theatres, starting Saturday. This is To Support Striking Needle Trade Workers NEW YORK.—A concert, mass Goldengate Garden, 1258 Boston in substitution to the Petrolle vs. Bat- | Road, Bronx. talino battle pictures originally sched- A very interesting program and uled. | Sunday evening, at the Town Hall, | Paul Robeson will give his farewell recital. He will have the assistance |of Lawrence Brown at the piano, with Ignace Hilsberg, pianist, playing | two groups of soll. | La Argentina, Spanish dancer, makes her last appearance in this | speakers has been arranged. The Workers Laboratory Theatre will give a play, vocal and instru- mental selections will be given by individuals and by the Freiheit | Gezangs Ferein. Ben Gold, Secretary jof the N.T.W.LU. will speak on the significance of the dress strike. |tendance of about 8,000 women and Concert, Mass Meeting | the help of the Japanese, United States and British warships and troops the bloody treacherous Kuo- mintang government is extending its war on the Chinese Soviets and their heréic red armies. At the same time, the Japanese imperialist war provo- cations against the Soviet Union grow more threatening daily. Al- ready the Japanese fleet is concen- trated at Vladivostok. Huge armies are concentrated almost at the gates of the Soviet Union. In the west the United States and French im- Perialists are consolidating their war block against the Soviet Union through the Balkan and Baltic states. The same government that mur- Bureaus, factory gate meetings, 4/ gers the unemployed, that gives us march through the needle trade} | bullets instead of bread, is ready for market and 17 meetings throughout the war on our Socialist Fatherland, the New York District with an at-| in, Soviet Union, is helping Japan slaughter the Chinese masses, War on the Chinese masses, war on the Soviet Union, is war against all work- ers. All out to the demonstration! Demand in mighty numbers the im- Ne wYork Int'l Women’s Day Meet Rallies 8,000, Marked By Marchers | On Relief Bureaus NEW YORK—International Wo- men’s Day was celebrated in New York by marches on Home Relief men workers, In spite of the cold weather, hun- dreds of workers marched with plac- ards through the various sections of the city and held demonstrations at the Home Relief Bureaus demanding | thruout the entire plant. mediate withdrawal of all imperialist forces from Manchuria and China! Fight the imperialist war plot on the Soviet Union! Drive the diplomatic representatives of bloody Japanese imperialism out of the United States. FAIL TO BREAK _ LAUNDRY STRIKE Ask Workers To Help} Strikers NEW YORK.— The boss in the | New Style laundry who declared that he would go the limit in order to) break the Union in his shop has} tried every possible means at his disposal in order to break the strike. Last Monday, when two young strik- ers appeared in court to answer to a disorderly conduct charge, for talk- ing to a scab, the boss in the New | Style laundry, 16th St. and 3rd Ave. | {had it fixed so that these young militant workers, their lawyer being away, were refused an adjournment and not being able to defend them- selves, were sentenced by a vicious judge to ten days each in the work- house. Workers downtown ste asked to come to the strike headquarters at 5 E. 19th St. and help the strikers win their first struggle. The Laundry Workers Industrial Union is also conducting a strike at Rogers Shirt Laundry, at Flushing, Long Island. The boss of this laun- | dry notified these workers that they would have to take a 5 per cent wage cut. However when these workers re- ceived their pay envelopes they found out that the boss not being satisfied with a 5 per cent wage cut had | without any notice given them a 10 | per cent wage cut. They immediately came to the Union office for help and are ready to develop this strike Workers in that section are asked to come and assist the Union in winning this strike, free food and clothing for children, relief for single women and men and unemployed insurance. In the Bronx and in Brownsville, trucks decorated with banners, having committees of white and Negro women inside, rode through the working-class sections Workers’ Clubs Should Advertise in the “Daily” and held flying meetings on the cor- ners, telling workers the significance of International Women’s Day and | calling upon them to attend the eve- | ning meetings. Women and men workers, among them Negro workers, joined the Com- munist Party a tthe March 8 meet- ings. These meetings stressed not only the necessity of utilizing Inter- MELROSE DAIRY VPGETARIAN RESTAURANT Comrades Will Always Find it Pleasant to Dine at Onr Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD. Bronx (ear 114th St. Station! > (ONE INTERVALE 99149 Intern’ Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 1 UNION SQUARE 8TH FLOOR All Work Done Under Persons! Care of DR. JOSEPHSON national Women’s Day to organize the broad masses of working women for the revolutionary class struggle, but were at the same time a stirring protest against the brutal murder of four jobless workers at Ford’s plant in Detroit. Telegrams denouncing this fascist brutality of the police and agents of the government were sent to the mayor of Detroit and Dear- RUSSIAN MEALS For Poor Pocketbooks KAVKAZ 332 E. Ith Street, N. ¥. C. Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 199 SECOND AVENUE | Bet, 12th and 13th ste, | Strictly Vegetarian food born and to the Governor of Michi- gan. | Challenge Betrayer | Of Rent Strike To | | Appear At Meeting | NEW YORK.—The - Brownsville | | Unemployed Council has challenged Leo Gitlin of the Tenants League to defend his betrayals of the rent strike before the workers of Brownsville and | West New York on Sunday, March 13, at 3 p.m., at the Workers Center, Pit- kin Ave. Richard Sullivan of the council will present the program of the Unem- ployed Council. | The Hinsdale St. Block Committee is holding a concert and banquet Sat- urday, March 12, 8 p.m., at 313 Hins- dale St. Sat. March 12th RED DANCERS Tickets in Advance 50c¢ TOMORROW NIGHT! STUDENTS’ BALL WORKERS SCHOOL JEWISH WORKERS UNIVERSITY —— ON SALE AT — WORKERS SCHOOL—35 E. 12th St. JEWISH WORKERS UNIVERSITY—108 E. 14th St. WORKERS BOOK SHOP—50 E. 13th St. New Star Casino 107th St. and Park Ave. DANCE TO 3 A. M. : RED PLAYERS SONGS, ETC. At the Door 75c Workers Correspondence is the backbone of the revolutionary press Build your press by writing for it | country until the autumn of 1933 on | Sunday evening, March 20, at Car- |Megie Hall. Following this she will | tour Europe and the Near East. | SHOE AND SLIPPER WORKERS’ AMUSEMENTS | ANN OPEN FORUM. | An open forum, of shoe and slipper | | workers will be held Sunday, March 18, 11 a.m., at 1813 Pitkin Ave., Brook- |lyn, Workers Center, arranged by the |Shoe and Leather Workers Industrial | Union. S, Alexanderson will speak on THE THEATRE GUILD Presents HE MOON IN THE YELLOW RIVER By DENIS JOHNSTON GUILD THEA., 52d St., W. of B'way. Eve, 8:40, Mats, Thars., Sat., 2:40 THE THEATRE “Shop Problems”. ILD presents ea lll EUGENE ‘Trilogy EAST SIDE LAST WEE) TODAY AND TOMORROW: 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- tarlan Picture 100%, WORKERS CAST— ACME THEATRE 14TH ST. & UNION SQUARE Composed of 3 plays presented on tiflay HOMECOMING, THE HUNTED THE HAUNTED | Commencing at 6:30 sharp. Dinner in- | ALVIN THEA., 58nd St., W. of Bway | | | The Vhentre Gulld Presents REUNION IN VIENNA A Comedy By ROBERT B. SHERWOOD Martin Beck OMS. Eve. 840 Mats ThurgSat 2-40 COUNSELLOR-AT-LAW ny With ELMER RICE PAUL MU Plymouth ght" Mourning Becomes Electra’ termission of one hour at 7 No Mats | W. 4% St. Hy, S20 ure. & Sat wae! First Time at Popular Prices 2nd Week STAR EXPLORERS | D STATEN ISLAND VERSARY CONCERT || Sunday, March 13th, at 2 p. m. CASINO 107th St. and Park Ave. —PROGRAM— ‘ FREIHEIT SINGING SOCIETY—J. SCHAFER NEGRO QUARTET Proletbuehne—Red Dancers—John Reed Club—W.LR. Band —PROMINENT SPEAKERS— J. W. Ford, Robert Minor, B. D. Amis, M. Olgin, Ben Gold RICHARD B. MOORE, Chairman ADMISSION 50 CENTS R All Seats 6th Ave HiPPODACHL:”,: BIGGUSsT SHOW NEW YORK & &Y JOE E. BROWN AUIS Inch, (Paddy cure & OBrien in “Fireman Save My Child” In Advance 25 Cents Anniversary Entertainment & Dance Of the WORKERS EX-SERVICEMEN’S LEAGUE, Branch No. 2 Saturday Night, March 12th At FINNISH WORKERS CLUB 15 West 126th Street Demonstrate on Sat. AgainstCALL MEMBERSHIP Bloody War on China Masses MEET OF FRIENDS OF SOVIET UNION To Plan Fight Against Boss War Plans NEW YORK.—Because of the ne- cessity of taking immediate organiza- tional steps to prevent war against the Soviet Union, the N. Y. District, Friends of the Soviet Union, is calling general membership meetings in each borogh, at which plans will be made to carry on organized and systematic Anti-War campaigns throughout New York. A general membership meeting of all Bronx and Washington Heights F-S.U. branches is called for tonight— to take place at Ambassador Hall, Third Ave. and Claremont Pky., at 8 p.m. The 50 worker delegates, elected from basic industries, who are being sent to the Soviet Union, is one of the most effective means of fighting war on the Soviet Union. This delegation campaign and many other questions of vital interest wil! be taken up at tonight's meeting. All members of the Bronx and Washington Heights, whether as- signed to branches or not, should surely be at Ambassador Hall tonight at 8 pm. sharp. FIVE NEW LL.D. BRANCHES IN OHIO CLEVELAND, O.—Five new bran- ches have recently been organized by the International Labor Defense in Ohio. They include a Greek branch, a Hungarian branch in Canton, a German branch in Cincinnati, and an Italian and a Youth branch in Cleve- land. Save the Daily Worker! What is your Unit or Branch doing? HERE ARE SOME WAYS:— Concerts, dances, af- fairs to— SAVE THE DAILY WORKER Attend the one nearest you; spend an enjoyable evening! Help your fighting paper! Entertainment and Dance for the Daily Worker given by Unit 4, Section 6, Communist Party Saturday, March 12 At 61 GRAHAM AVE. Beginning 8 p. m. Adm. 25¢ Entertainment, Dance and Package Party 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 50, Section 1, Communist Party, U.S.A. Section 7, Units 6,9 and 11 Concert and Entertainment for the Daily Worker At 3034 Ocean Parkway Ocean Parkway Restaurant Prolet Buehne, Artef Group Violinist and Singer 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. Headquarters ~ VEC HERINKA! Good Program! Refreshments! ALL FOR 15 CENTS given by the COMMUNIST PARTY, UNIT 5B At 134 E. Seventh St. Saturday, March 12 50% of proceeds for Daily Worker Everybody Welcome SOCIAL EVENING | Sat., March 12, 8 p.m. At WORKERS CENTER 236 West 62nd St, Admiss'on 1c Proceeds to the DAILY WORKER. Auspices—62 & 63 Block Comm. AFFAIR—at Columbia Hall Wood & Linden Ave. Linden, N. J. for the benefit of THE DAILY WORKER Prolet Buehne and Mandolin Orch. Red Dancers Admission 25¢ At the Door 35 Cents Report all Daily Worker Affairs to this column

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