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Page ‘Iwo DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, MARCH Eye Witn of Salisbury Lynching Sard Authorities Know Names of Lynchers of Matthew Williams NEW YORK., (CNA).—Brutalities over: hadowing in hor- ror all the facts previously known about the lynching of Mat- hew Williams in Salisbury, Md. on Decemeber 6th, are de- ess Tells Horrors|Mooney Placards |Friends of Soviet Union An Carried by 24. Labor Athletes Street Run, Meet. Hit A.A.U. Boss Role | + NEW YORK, March 13.—Running | the 2%4-mile distance from Rutgers | ti- War Conference Plans Wor: NEW YORK.—At the mass anti-; ter-revolutionary organizations ft’ * war conference held by N. Y. Dis- to penetrate—in order to disrupt tae trict, Friends of the Soviet Union,' meeting. Representatives from the yesterday afternoon, there were 457 Communist League of Struggle tried delegates representing] 67,551 work- | to get representation at this confer- ers from 338 branches of 69 organ-' ence. When asked if they would de- izations. Among them were nine A. F. fend the Soviet Union against all its of L. unions. | enemies and if they thought Trotsky The meeting was opened by Frank was an enemy of the Workers Fa- Siegel, district organizer of the therland—they answered that they Friends of the Soviet Union. The en- did not think Trotsky was an enemy tire delegation arose in honor of the and expressed their support of his, 14, 1932 Kau‘men Pocges [Dressmakers in Drive Questions at Injunction Trial 30 Fur Shops Strike; Bosses Rush Pleas for Settlement NEW YORK, March 12.—The | njunciion hearing was continued in the Supreme Court here yesterday. seribed in a letter from an eye-witness to the lynching, which | square in 13:15 minutes, Ben Tucker | has come into the hands of the editors of the Crusader News | of the Red Sparks A. C. broke the | —————@ Agency, tape at Union Square to win the Tom QC D OC That the local officials of Salisbury | Mooney Street Run, held under the BC! Ne RESS IN | know very well who the leaders of the | auspices of the New York District of | lynch-mob wer mac the Provisional Counter Olympic} T vy T J\in this letter. almost | Committee Saturday. Following him W ACK (1 T ORI y three months f sed since this | Were H. Backlund of Fufac, a Scan- i E brutal murder of a Negro t, ne| dinavian brotherhood, who covered NEW YORK.—The capitalist press | arrests have odcurred, and no move | the course in 14:07, and M. Cohen, ; has been made to investigate the | Unattached, 14:08. Twenty-four run-| ing and praising | lynching, in spite of repeated prom-| Hers, in all, broke the tape at the | > and lay-off ises of action by Governor Ritchie | finish of and ate Attorney Lane. | Starting at Rutgers Square at 2:30) tal po} ed jaune nto ar utting their r; nes intc The New h only last. week prided itself in bold ad- vertisements on the great advert ing lneaze it carried, has announced a wave cut for its emnloves in the editorial and other denartments. The New York American, defender of American institution and cham- pion of the peonls, has also an- nounced a wace reduction The New York Post, staunch sup- porter of the Hoover hunver govern- | William Powell, organizer of the Bal-| tion as they broke the tape in shoul- | that the czarist regime in the Soviet | ment, has also informed its employes that in svite of its belief that pros- perity was just around the corn they, the workers, wovld have to con- tent themselves with a slash in ‘wares, | The New York World-Telecram, | the ereat liberal newsvanver, has gone its contemnoraries one better in the way of increasing sufferine among the workers. The World-Telecram | has cut its steff. But in keening with ifs hynocritical tone, that news- pron bes charseterized all dismissals as “shifts.” When a man loses his jeS on the World-T-leerem, he is not fired out of a job—he is just shifted and that, of course. makes him feel much beiter...and his wife and @hildren, too. | ‘The Brook'vn Times in taking over the Stendard Union, another capit- alist:Waily. fired the entire st-ff of aréetd 190 men of the latter news- | pape? with the excention of four mem Three of these men, it re- tatméd for political reasons. The} fourth man will, ro doubt, drive a fellow-worker on the Brooklyn Times out: of a job. The Brocklyn Daily Eacle, pride of the smug American middle class, has had its share of wage slashes and dis- micsls during the past two years. All these papers will continue to preach to the American masses and to the men and women, whose wazes they slashed, that American capit- alist institutions are the best, that the Soviet Union is trying to ruin civilization, and that the Daily Worker should be suppressed. Some time ago Paul Block, the “philanthropic” publisher of the | Standard-Union, over the radio and | by the press assured his employes their jobs were intact. Now they all face starvation. WIN STRIKE, AT _ DRELI, SHOE (0, NEW YORK.—When the boss in the Drell Shoe Co. fired a girl work- er in order to break the attemnts of the workers to organize under the leadership of the Shoe and Leather Workers Indvstrial Union. The whole hop crew of 40 workers went down | on strike in defense of the discharged worker. The bosses did not exnect such so- lider" on the part of the workers. At fi the boss attemnted to de- mors'ze and defeat the workers with @ move for arbitration. The workers ziided bv the Shoe and Leather Workers Industrial Urion answered with a de‘remined struegle which foreed the boss to reinstate the dis- charged werker and to grant recog- nition of the shop committee All ‘the workers joined the Shoe & Leather Workers Industrial Union. ‘The strike in the Columbia Slinper Co. is still on. The boss tries to get an- injunction to break the militancy of’the workers. The Shoe and Lea- ther Workers Industrial, Union and thé-workers will not be scared to fight and defeat the injunction. All hoe and Slipper workers are asked to come on the picket line every day at 686 Brodaway, New York. Financial assistance of the work- ers ‘is needed to bring the strike to a successful end. “THE MAN I KILLED” AT JEFFER- SON THEATRE. The Jefferson Theatre is now showing “The Man I Killed” (Brok- en Lullaby) direct from its Broadway run. The cast includes Lionel Barry- more, Nancy Carroll and Phillips Holmes. From Wednesday to Friday a double feature is being presented; Pola. Negri in “A Woman Com- mands”, with Roland Young, Basil Rathbone and H. B. Warner, also, “Working Girls”, with Paul Lukas, “Buddy” Rodgers and Frances Dee. The photoplay attraction at the Hippodrome this week is “Wayward”, starring Nancy Carroll, with Rich- ard Arlen and Pauline Frederick, “Wayward” is the screen. adaptation ‘of the novel “Wild Beauty” by Ma- el Howe Farnham. An extra fea- are official m he not victures 0: he y ‘ pro- 50 police had gathered, | he |pm. Protested Starvation Pay Vey naa Lon Coto aes AMET Tt will be remembered that Wil-| rabor Sports Union organizer, spoke aS Wee Oe See aches oe to the athletes and assembled work- | result of his reques aniel J. El-/ers the runners were preceded | lott, owner of the Salisbury crate througrout the. course by @ police | and basket factory, for a slight in-| (4. As they swept around the cor- | crease in his starvation wages of 15 cents an hour. ner of Fourth Ave. at 17th St. into | Union Square, over 1,000 workers The letter of the eye-witness tc | preeted them with cheers. The en- the lynching is printed below in full.| thusiasm mounted as one by one the The writer is a worker. His name} req-jerseyed and workers’ sports-| is withheld only because its publica-| emblemed athletes broke the tape. | tion would probably result in another| ive girl athletes, running a dis- | lynching. The letter was written tc! tance of a mile, received a great ova- | timore branch of the League of| der-to-shoulder formation, Struggle for Negro Rights, The — As soon as all the runners had ar- | follows: | rived a shot meeting was opened by | “Dear Mr. Powell: | St Gerson, national secretary of the | “The lynching of M. Williams in | Labor Sports Union, one of the or- | this town was the most brutal sight | ganizations actively participating in| human eyes could witness. And it | the work of the Counter-Olympic | certainly has brought a black gloom | Committee. Bill Albertson, rep-e- | over the entire state, [senting the Young Communist | ryone down here knows just | League, exposed the corruption | who led the mob that lynched this | class-character of the A.A.U., citing | man, everybody here knows who it | ti example of Nurmi, Finnish “ama- | was that shot him while he was in | teur,” who earned a fortune in the the hands of the police. four Ford workers, who were mur-/ plans. In face of the expulsion of ' Kaufman, who was the chief witness dered by the Murphy Ford police Trotsky from the Soviet Union and | during the morning session, followed | his disruptive work since then in The main report was given by) fighting the Workers’ Fatherland— last Monday. Marcel Scherer, national secretary of | was proof enough to the credential the Friends of the Soviet Union, who coommittee and to all the delegates at the conference, that these dele- outlined the international situation— showing the imperialists’ attempts to gates be not seated. provoke war upon the Soviet Union| titioning China among themselves. Carl Winters, secretary of the U: employed Council of Greater New, egates to participate in this work. York, brought greetings and pointed | out that in the, Soviet Union there is unsmployment insurance, in com-| parison to the starving condition of the American workers. He also point- ed out that the unemployed workers haye just as great a task in carrying on defense work as th eemployed! workers. | Comrade Lena Davis, who rere) RIGHT JIM-CROW sented District 2 of the Communist Party, showed that it was under the leadership of the Communist Party defense of the Soviet Union. Union was overthrown and a work~- ers government was established. It is under the leadership of the Com- munist Party that the Soviet Union was changed from an absolutely agrarian state into an industrial state, ranking second in the produc- tion of the world. She pointed out that anti-war campaigns were car-| ried on the world over under the leadership of the Communist Party. ‘The resolution committee brought in resolutions on the murder of the four Ford workers and the imprison- | ment of the nine Scottsboro boys. A Sunday, March 27th CLIFTON, N. J. — Three hundred | workers met in mass protest last Fri- Negroes, as expressed in the words of the Police Chief Holster, “We wont stand for mixed dances in Clifton.” days after a mixed dance of 300- workers was held under the auspices The delegates endorsed teh confer- —showing how Japan and the other ence called for March 20, which is capitalist powers are gradually par-| to make preparations for the anti- | war demonstration and parade to be | held on May 1—and elected five del- | A united front committee of 15 was elected to further carry on the work of the conference. Throughout the conference, emphasis was laid on the necessity of a strenuous and organized fight for the support and! ~ RULEIN CLIFTON Conference Called for day against the policy of segregation jof the local city authorities against | This statement was madt a few the example of the first witness, Matthew Woll, by conveniently losing, his memory while under the wither- ing cross-examination of the defense lawyer, J. Buitenkant. Kaufan, who applied for the in- junction against the rank and file joint board of fur workers to restrain them from organizing and striking | against wage-cuts, was called to the stand by his own attorney, Kopp. | Upon being questioned by Kopp, Upon being questioned by Kopp, Kaufman declared that the joint council was illegal, notwithstanding the fact that the council was elected by 1,300 registered furrieis. ‘(he only jegal council, said Kaufman, was the aufman council, a group which has not the support of the workers and is supported only by the fur manufac- turers. On cross examination Kaufman evaded the questions by resorting to the cowards trick of saying that he did not remember. The role of Kauf- man not only as a labor betrayer, but as a thief was brought out clearly in the coutse of examination. Kauf- man stuttered and splutiered when asked by Bultenkant if it was not true that in 1907 when he was sec- retary of the union that he took money from the union for himself. Kopp objected to this question and the objection was upheld by the judge, despite the fact that Buiten- kant had a signed affidavit to the effect that Kaufman had stolen the |: money from the workers. When asked whether he was a 1 to Back Strike Gains NEW YORK, March 14—At the meeting! of the Strike Committee where the strike was officially ter- minated, it was d-c'ded that all forc- | es be mobilized for an orzanization campai~n to organize the workers of the oven shovs and imnrove the | conditions. The workers of the union shops pledved to co-onerate in every way to helo unionize the-e shons. A membership meeting of dress- makers has been arranced for the} coming Thursday, March 17, tight after work, at the strike heedauar- | ters, 559 Sixth Ave., where a full re- | port on the accomplishments and the | shortcomings in the dress strike and further plans for svreading the unit- ed front among the workers espe- clally the members of the Interna- tional who have been sold out by the Schlessinger clique and to consoli- date the gains won as a result of the strike, will be given. Workers in oven shovs which have | been closed down during the period of the strike and which have re- sumed work now are called upon to! bring their complaints at once to ine Industrial Union. Workers of the In- ternational shons are called upon not to submit to the wage cuts, but to! organize in ths shons, to onme to’ the Industrial Urion with their coms viaints so that they can we assisted in carrying on their struggle for union conditions. 3 Pickets Get Suspended Sentence. On Friday morning three pickets were atrested at the Arrow Hat Co. where the workers have been locked out by the bosses at the instigation | of Local 24. When the pickets were brought to Jefferson Market Court | before Judge Gold-tein, they received Suspended sentences and were warned | not to go on the picket line. The workers are determined to go on with the picketing until they have won back their jobs. These arrests are the beeinning of the campai7n on the part of Zaritsky and the bosses | to put through a fake stoppage in | for better conditions in the knitgoods j Cussed is the activization of the Ne- Yacker, one of the| strong armed guards of the Kaufman machine, as the assailant. The case came up in . Jefferson Market Court, and Marko- wich, the lawyer of the company unions in the needle trades, was the defense couricil for Nathan Yacker, Despite the fact that teh worker identified him, he was left in the custody of Markowich. »nd@ the case was adjourned till March 21. The frame up against Ben Gold, which was postponed several times, will come up once more at the Court of Special Sessions in the General Court Building, Monday. Knitgoods Shop Chairmen and Com- mitteés Meet Monday. A meeting of shop chairmen and shop committees of the knitgoods shops has been arranged for Monday, right after work, at the office of the union, 131 W. 28th St. At this meet- ing, the leading committee will report plans for developing a mass struggle trade. The plans will be thoroughly discussed by the shop chairmen and committees. A meeting of active Negro workers will be held on Monday, 6 pm. at the office of the union, 131 W. 28th St. James Ford, assistant secretary of the Trade Union Unity League, will be present at this meeting. One of the outstanding questions to be dis- gro workers in all the activities of the union All union members are invited. A call was issued by t he Organt~ zation Department of the Industrial Union today for all needle trades workers, especially the workers from the settled shops, to report to the office of the union on Monday, 7:30 in the morning to assist the workers at the strike dress, fur and milli- nery shops. The dressmakers will picket the individual striking shops this morn- ing. All workers should report at the office of the Industrial Union at 7:30 a, m. | United States several years ago. He | “ i urged all working-class youth to boy- | Ie r explain tee po haw era” ee | cott the Olympic Games and to fight | ate Mt orrible the | for the success of the International Workers’ Athletic Meet in Chicago next summer. Lil Daniels, one of the girl athletes, | whole thing was. “First they dragged him to the court house square, and hanged him, then they cut h'm down, tied the rope to the back of an auto, and | SPOKE for women-worker athletes, | tion not only of individuals but of dragged him. to the Negro section | of the town. They then got about | 40 or 50 gallens of gasoline, but before they throw this gas over him, they cut off his fingers and toes, threw them on the porches and in th yards of the Negro homes shouting these remarks, “that they (the Negrces) could make ‘nigger’ sandwiches out of them.” Then they threw the gas over him, set a match to him, and while the human torch burned, they passed booze around, drinking and shont- booze around, drinking and shouting. “They also warned the Negroes that the would burn their homes down, if they heard as mach as a whisper ont of them. Keep Negroes off Streets “They also told the Negroes not to be seen on the town streets after 9 p. m. unde penalty of death; even now, weeks after the lynching, the Negroes are not seen on the streets of the .wwn after 9 p. m. “We would like to know if some- thing cannot be done to publish the leaders of this crime.” Officials at the New York head- uarters of the League of Struggle for egro Rights and officials at the n: donal office of the International La- bor Defense stated that further in- vestigations would be made, and that they hope to make known the name: of the lynchers of Matthew Williams. | urging them to fight side by side | with the men against boss sports. | Throughout the entire affair police | | kept close watch over the conten- | conference for the defense of the So- | tants and the workers who had as-| viet Unton, together with the Red sembled to gieet the runners. Ac- cording to Si Gerson, a Chrysle: | sedan, containing several A.A.U. offi- als, Square was present at the Union | ri resolution was introduced by the Friends of the Soviet Union, which showed the turn of the Friends of the Soviet Union towards the facto- ies and basic industries and brought out clearly the necessity of organiza- | of the Ramblers A. C., affiliated to the Labor Sports Union of America, and it was printed in the local press | a day after the police chief had ar- rested and fined the hall owner $27. Rallying to the call of the Commu- nist Party and the Young Commu- nist League, which pointed out that | “he act of Holster was part of the rosses policy to divide Negro and white in order to enforce wage cuts, ‘hunger and war, the workers gather- ed at the entrance to the hall in which the dance had been held, and which had been promised for the] mass protest, only to fine the place locked. Investigation soon showed organizations, especially. A cable was sent to Comrade Voro- shilov, pledging the support of the Army. t Even at this conference for the De- fense of the Soviet Union, the coun- salesman for the fur manufacturers before he was president of the union Kaufman said that he did not re- member. The fur workers in the court laughed at this answer, for all of them knew that Kaufman was & fur salesman and was at all times closely linked with the fur bosses. Kaufman’s only answer to the ques- tion of whether his so-called uhion was allowing wage-cuts, long hours and the sub-contracting system to be put over on the workers was that he had an agreement with the sweatshop bosses. the millinery trade so as to put throuth a company union agreement on the same basis as the wage cut- ting Schlessinger aereement, and to company unionize the trade. Millinery workers are ured to fight this wate cutting policy of the boss- es and the Zaritsky machine and or- ganize in the shops to fight for bet- SPORT RETURNS Metropolitan Workers League. A Division Red Sparks 1, Juventis 1. Tico, 2, Bronx Bakers 1. ter conditions. B Divicion Negro Worker At. -ked. Spartacus 2, Bupian 3, ‘The close co-operation between the C Divisien underworld and the company union agents was uncovered yesterday when Antonio Joseph, a Negro worker who was attacked by the same gang Red Sparks 3, Prospect Wkrs. 3. Williamsburgh 2, Hero 0. Spartacus 1, East Side 0. Adriatic 4, Downtown 0. SOCCER RESULTS,’ ee) scene throughout the ae TERROR FAILS IN | The prizes, awarded by the Inter- national Labor Defense, were an autographed Tom Mooney photo and a gold medal to the winng:, and sil- ver and bronze medals to the second | and third to come in. LAUNDRY STRIKE, New Style Strike Still, Goes Strong The bosses’ association are trying o frame up the officials of the In- | ustrial Union, and the most active | trikers of the New Style Laundry. | NEW YORK. — For the first time Thursday Brother Stillman, an orga- in the history of Long Island, revo- | nizer of the union, and five workers lutionary celebration of May Day will| were arrested on frame-up charges be observed and im all the three of felonnious assault and kept under counties of Long Island, with 8 dem- | five thousand dollars bail. When | onstrations in all the larger towns. Blum and Schribman, organizér and ‘To ensure the success of these | sccretary of the union, came to court | demonstrations 2 mass united front | Friday morning, they were also | conferences are being held on March | framed and kept without bail.’ ‘The 20th; one for Central Queens in the | bosses, with the aid of the police and Finnish Workers Club, 109-26 Union | the courts, are trying to break up} | Hall street, Jamaica, L. I, and the | our unicn. The answer of the thou- {other for Nassau and Suffolk coun- | sands of Laundry workers will be to ties in the Ukrainian Hall on Union- | tighten our ranks and fight the vici- | |dale Ave. and Front St., Hempstead, | ous terror of the bosses, their gang- | |G. I. Both will start at 10 a. m, | sters, police and courts. | | The strike in the New Style Laun- To Celebrate May 1 | In Long Island; Call Preparatory Meeting ‘COPS SHOOT AT WORKERS RESISTING LONGFELLOW EV.CTIONS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONED them away from the neighborhood of the houses. Guards were posted’ at the doors to stop any of the tenants from leaving their homes. The workers broke through to be- gin a meeting in front of 1801. The police charged, aiming for Landis, a leading worker, cracking heads, punching faces, starting blood, to grab him. The workers retaliated— men and women—the women espe- cially valiant, using chairs, bottles, stones, ete. to fight for Landis’s freedom. The cops tried to drag Landis away, The workers fgught every inch, the cops feeling their wrath. Tt was at this point that a cop pulled a gun. Landis broke away, the cop fired and the worker was only saved from being hit by hiding behind an automobile. Another squad of cops, detectives nd thugs rused to reinforce the cops eady there, swelling the ‘agents of the bosses to over 50. The workers had reformed, their picket line, Again they were at- acked. A young worker, Lubitz, tried to speak, the cops grabbed him and’ beat him until he was bleeding. The workers tried to rescue him and | the cops and detectives pulled their uns, waving them in the faces of the rkers, shouting: “If you trye to free him we'll shoot.” A young pioneer, 14 years, tried o ak. She was knocked to the where she lay unconscious | f « few moments. She had to be child's defen: At ~~~" | dry is in a good condition. The work- H jers are determined to win this strike | against wage cuts, firing and intimi- | dation. | The Laundry Workers Industrial Union calls upon all Laucdry work- ers to join its ranks and help fight | existing conditions. NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES EAST SIDE—BRONE when the cops thought the workers were completely routed, the courage- cus workers reformed the picket line, men, women and children marched up and down, singing and shouting slogans. { RKO gros | The evictions did not take place. | The marshal failed to appear. The plans of the landlord and cops to wipe the street clean of workers failed. They did not reckon with such resistance. Today the attempt to evict the workers will be made again. The en- tire neighborhood is aroused by the bloody assaults of Saturday. “The landlord can pay thousands for cops and thugs, but won’t lower the.rent,” is the talk of all the workers. Another act which has enraged the workers is the practice begun last week of sending thugs and cops to force their way into the houses of the striking workers, and command- | ing them to move, if they did not pay rent. A number of girls have been beaten for proiesting the en- trance to their homes. Workers, you showed splendid mili- | VIENNA tancy Saturday. Rally again today, | ~~ stop the evictions, mass at Longfel- | The| MMORTAL low Ave. between 174th and 175th <ISUANE HAID & GUSTAV FROHLICH Sts., at 9 a.m. The story of a musical genius who retuons to his native villag finds love at the foot of a erected in his honor. —Lotest UFA Triumph Acclaimed in Burdye und America ACME THEATRE WTH ST. & UNION SQUARE LE SCE AIRE ET 8 SSDAY y. Y to TUE “THE MAN I KILLED” {Broken Lullaby} | With | LIONEL BARRYMORE | | | Nancy Carroll Philips Holmes Other Short Features— NEW LOW PRICES MATS, 15 Cents Except Sat.; Sun., and Holidays || EVES. 25 Cents | EAST SIbDz ‘Today, Tomorrow, Wednesday A DRAMA OF THE TYRO- LIAN MOUNTAINS—AND g ORGANIZATION COMMITTEE MEETS WED. NEW YORK. — All workers who were active on the general organiza- tion committee of the United Front smakers’ strike must report at office of the Industrial Union ai- k Wednesda A deport o! f the committee dur i.ke will be ter the ac * given ab iis | ‘dated and threatened the hall owner ; mantic story of the Tyrolean Alps, based on the opera of the same name, | Photography ard its musical score.” | Mourning Becomes Electra’ ‘The drive to organize the fur coat shops for strike which was started a few days ago is containing with marked intensity. Out of 50 fur head shops thirty are now striking under the leadership of the Industriai Union. Already several pleas for settlement have come in to the office of the union and the workers have started to negotiate settlements on the basis of union conditions in the shops. cucinnteindidisacs eit { Workers Correspondence is . the backbone of the revolutionary press Build your press by writing tor & What’s On— | savin Comrade Cecil Hope will speak on he “Paris Commune” at the Browns- ville Branch of the LL.D., 118 Bris- tol St., Brooklyn, at 8 p.m. Pa Mies | The Downtown Unemployed Branch will meet Mondays, Wednesdays and | ~fidays at 134-E. Seventh St. at 1:30 pm, that the chief of police had intimi- who at the last moment backed out. In spite of this, the workers re- mained and listened to Negro and white speakers for two hours in front of the hall in a biting cold, The workers endorsed the holding of another dance in the near future in Clifton and showed themselves as ready to defend it. Full support was | pledged to a conference called for | Sunday, March 27tii at the hall in| which the dance was held, in order to lay the basis for smashing jim- crowism in Clifton, “THE IMMORTAL VAGABOND AT ACME THEATRE, “The Immortal Vagabond”, a ro- | ‘s now being shown at the Acme The- atre. “The Immortal Vagabond” is a story of a young Tyrolese music master, who leaves. his native town to seek fame in Vienna. The picture | sparkles with the color and life of | the Tyrolean native life, and the ac- | tivity of Vienna. There is a beauti- ful music?! score rurning thru the length of the film. Colorful dances and native songs play a big part in the picture. The film was highly praised in Europe and by the New| York critics. The N. Y. “American”! stated that “the production had high | merit in its background, dialogue, ° A regular meeting of the Newark W.LR will take place at 75 Spring- ileld St., Newark, N.J., at 8 p.m, ete * A regular meeting of the Altera-| tion Painters will be held at 1325 | Southern Blyd., Bronx, at 8 p.m. | ‘ | oe Titles are in English. The leading! The Friends of the Soviet Union! roles are played by Liane Haid, Gus-, School at 216 E. 14th St., will con-| tav Frohlich and Hans Schlettow— | duct three classes from 7 to 10 p.m.' all well known and brilliant artists First class, Frank Siegel, “Organi-| of the continental stage and screen. zational Methods"; second class, The picture will be shown! until, speakers’ group, Jos. Portell; third Wednesday inclusive. f | class, “History of the Soviet Union”, | Sklaroff. | | “Explorers of the World”, travel! aay : record of six fan:~us explorations, is| ( Mass organizations, get into now in its second week at the Cameo! “€VOlutionary competition to Theatre. save Daily Worker. AMUSEMENTS COUNSELLOR-AT-LAW B; With ELMER RICE PAUL MUNI Plymouth jiau'rnare: seu. 220 "to CAMEO 5" “EXPLORERS OF THE WORLD” | THE THEATRE GUILD Presents HE MOON IN THE YELLOW RIVER By DENIS JORNST! GUILD ‘THEA., 524 40, THE THEATRE GUILD presenti BUGENE ONE LAST WEE! ‘omposed of 8 nlayz presented on Idas HOMECOMING, THE HUNTED THE HAUNTED Commencing at 6:30 sharp. Dinner in- termission of one hour at 7 No Mats ALVIN THEA,, 5nd St. W. of Biway which invaded the Industrial Union & few days ago, recognized Nathan Crotona 4, Red Sparks 1. Br'nsville Wixrs. 2, East N.Y.W.O. 1. Workers’ Clubs Should Advertise in the “Daily” Schildkraut’s Vegetarian Restaurant 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. | AU omrndes Mees at | BRONSTEIN'S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 358 Clur+mont Parkway Brows Patrontze the Concoops Food Stores AND Restaurant 2700 BRONX PARK EAS) “Buy in the Co-operative Store and help the Revo- lutionary Movement.” _—————— HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian Restaurant 1600 MADISON AVENUE Phone Lehigh 4-9860 JADE MOUNTAIN AMERICAN and CHINESE RESTAURANT Open 11 a, m, to 1130 a, m, Special Lunch 11 to 4...35¢ Dinner 5 to 10...55¢ 197 SECOND AVENUE Chester Cafeteria 876 E. Tremont Ave., (Corner Southern Blvd.) Quality—Cleanliness—Moderate Prices All Workers Members F.W.1.U. LOST—Pocketbook, 2 keys and money in or near Central Opera House on Intern] Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 1 UNION SQUARE STH FLOOR AU Work Done Under Personal Care of DR. JOSEPHSON | Intl Wor'ers Order OPTICIANS Cyt Harry Sto!per. Inc, 73-18 CHRYSTIE STREET shird Aye, Cor to Hester 8.) 9am to 6 pm. Daily Phone: Dry Dock 4-4523 THOROUGH EYE EXAMINATION EXPERT FITTING OF GLASSES Special Rates to Workers and Families WILLIAM BELL OPTOMETRIST and OPTICIAN 106 East 14th St. (Room 21) Tel. TOmpkins Square 6-8237" FIVE COURSES 50 Cents Siberia-Russian RESTAURANT 315 East 10th St. Bet. Ave. A and Ave. B Rational Vegetarian Resianrant 199 SECOND AVENUL Bet itth and 13th Gts. Strictly Vegetarian Food MELROSE DAIRY VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT Comrades Will Always Find i Pleasant to Dine at Our Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD. Bronz (near 174th St Station) TELEPHONE INTERVALE 90149 — Phone Tomkins Sq. 6-0554 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where nit radicals meet 302 E. 12th St. New York & = 4 43rd Whe Chentre Gi Vrenents BIGGEST SHOW IN NEW YORK REUNION IN VIENNA Bg RAGS. CRROLY A Comedy: 8 acis Dy ROSDRT BK, SHERWOOD Martin Beck Hageinag e, 8:40 Mate, Friday, Return to D, W. 8th floor, small reward. LOST BANK BOOK Anistgamated Bank, a