The Daily Worker Newspaper, March 22, 1932, Page 2

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Page Two DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, MARCH 22, 1958 300 ORGANIZATIONS SUPPORT MAY DAY ANTI-WAR PROGRAM, Thunderous Applause ( rreets Call by Amter to Prevent Shipment of Munitions Against Chinese Masses and Sov iet Union (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) ‘evolutic unions and industrial he TUUL, 30 branches of the International Labor Defense, 13 unemployed councils and-block com- mittees, 28 branches of the Intern: Workers Or and delegates from Womens’ Councils, workers | @lubs and other organizations com- posed the conference A presidium of 20 members repre- | senting the most important organi- | zations and sections of the New York working class was elected. M. Ober- mier of the Food Workers Industrial Ur and Trade Union Unity Coun- cil, and R. Jones, organizer of the Marine Workers Industrial Union, were chairman and secretary respect- ively ©. Buchanan, Negro worker, of the League of Struggle for Negro Rights, was vice-chairman. I. Amter, secretary of the New York District of the Communist Par- | was the first speaker. He out~ lined the situation facing the work- | ing class, and the tasks confronting | the revolutionary organizations in preparations for the coming May Day af struggle against mass hunger, terror, imperialist war and the whole | system of capitalism. Must Give Answer To Boss War And | Starvation Our answer to the bosses mass | hunger, terror and war offensive, said Amter, to the enthusiastic ap- plause of the delegates, “must not only be words and demonstrations, but in work. Arms and ammunitions are being shipped from the United States against the Chinese masses, and the Soviet Union. This entails special responsibilities for the Marine Worker8 Industrial Union, but not} only upon them, All workers must. be united in the struggle to tie up and stop the loading and shipping of war material to China. We must not only carry on widespread agita- tion, but we must build a united | front of struggle against the robber war on the Chinese masses, for de- fense of the Soviet Union in the shops, on the docks and on the ships.” 15 delegates participated in the dis- cussion on Amter’s report, bringing | out the views of the delegates and Mass organizations represented on the preparations for May Day. Resolutions were unanimously ad- opted against boss terror, on the com- ing presidential elections, and on the war danger and the program of ac- tion. By recommendation of the Re- solutions committee a special resolu- tion on the block aiders scheme of the bosses was unanimously endorsed, and a special passage on the strug- gles of the colonial masses included in the main resolution. All the reso- tional 15,000 AT FUNERAL OF FIRST JEWISH REVOLUTIONARY WRITER (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) a great deal of the intellectuals wa- vered and betrayed the working class. ‘The World War found him fighting the imperialist war while another supposed revolutionist, Abe Cahan, was kissing the American flag and urging the Jewish workers to fight for democracy.” And then the Russian revolution. The socialist party which in the United States has been officially op- posed to the war because of left-wing pressure attacked the Russian work- ers for seizing power. The socialist party became an active counter-revo- lutionary |group. Vinchevsky broke with these. In 1924 he went to the Soviet Union, not as @ sight-seer but as an active defender of the Prole- tarian Dictatorship. And the Russian Bolshevik Party showed its apprecia- tion for this old battler by taking him into the Party of the victorious revolution. This was a smashing blow against the yellow betrayers who began spreading rumors that Vinchevsky was really opposed to the dictator- ship. But these were soon spiked by the poet who declared that anyone who is an enemy of the Soviet Union is his enemy. That finished him in the eyes and mouths of the Jewish socialists and nationalists. He was shoved away and forgotten by them until after his death. Then these shameless vultures reappeared and with the aid of the family of the dead fighter which worked hand in hand with the union bureaucrats seized the body and declared that no Commu- nist would be allowed near the fun- eral. The workers thought differently, however. And on Sunday morning between 15,000 and 20,000 revolution ary workers with flaming banners gathered outside the Amalgamated House in the Bronx, where the de- ceased lay. Around the body of the dead fighter stood an honor guard of members of the Radical Squad and gangsters summoned by the Jewish socialist union leaders. Outside the house a line of capitalist police guard- ed the entrance. ‘The order had gone out that no one be allowed in. And when the workers insisted upon paying their last. respects to a dead Bolshevik, the police pounced upon them and start- ¢d their clubbing. First ot fall was Comrade Marmur, the closest friend of Vinchevsky and his biographer. Sath Liptzin was so badly beaten that | Coliseum on the evening of April 6, | the workers in their neighborhood, in | week and the demonstratoin on April | lutions and the program of action the c erence were distributed to the delegates, who unanimously pledged to report to their organiza- which are to draw up concrete | rograms of activities in line with | the general program of action adopt- ed by the conference. Some of the immediate activities decided on by the conference which | |call for immediate organizational | Steps and energetic activity on the | | part of all organizations represented | are the following: 1, Endorsement | of the anti-war week from March 1) to April 1. A United Front mass de- | monstration to be called at the Bronx the anniversary of the U. S. entrance in otthe last world war. All organi- zations to participate through the holding of meetings, mass literature | distribution, the organization of the membership of each organization and the shops where the members are employed, among the workers in their nationality, etc, for the anti-war 6th. 2. The continuation and intensi- fication of activity by each organt- zation in accordance with the pro- | gram of action leading to May Day. 3. On May Day the united front conference to organize a demonstra- tion on Union Square at 12:30 p.m. The Executive of the United Front Committee was empowered to make arrangements for all other mass manifestations on May Day, as well as to organize an indoor demonstra- |tion at the Bronx Coliseum in the evening. Conference Votes To Unseat Trotzky Renegades Upon the report of the credentials | committee all delegates were seated. | The proposal to unseat the three de- legates representing the counter-re- volutionary Trotzky group on the ba- sis of the open slanderous counter- revolutionary activities of the Trotz- kyists against the Soviet Union, with the Trotzkyites assuming openly the Tole of the advanced guard of the bourgeois counter-revolution in the war on the Soviet Union, was un- animously and enthusiastically car- tied by the conference. The confer- ence elected the Executive of 35 that will meet Wednesday, March 23, at 7:30-p.m. at the Workers Center, 50 East 13th Street. In order to organ- ize the Executive, and get the ma- chinery into immediate activity to mobilize the shops and all organiza- tions for the anti-war week and all preparations for May Day. The con- ference adjourned after singing the International, This convinced the kidnappers of the body that the workers were ready to fight to see their comrade and all were allowed in. The black banners put out by the family was hidden beneath the flaming red banners of on a 26 Poccumckas x: GAD RAROMNUNMETHUECKAR Tm et Papen tateceinael SUE bear rita Some 2 Meome wn tomorreoeveck eprom Cehnemanb pats: Photograph of the membership book given to the old revolutionist Wincheysky by the Communist Party of the Soviet Union when he visited the U.S.S.R. in 1924. the workers, the banners on which Vinchevsky had written and to which he had given up his life, Fifteen thousand workers listened to the talks of representatives of the Jewish workers press and organiza- tions. As the Jewish bourgeois press wrote: “The funeral was transform- ed into a Communist demonstration.” And in order to end the demonstra- tion as soon as possible the body was shoved into the hearse and rushed to the cemetary without mourners. There was one short talk by a union faker at the ceretary and the dead |Chinese Communist | guard, |m., | dance. Paper Holds Dance Friday March 25th NEW YORK—The Chinese Van- the only revolutionary organ of the Chinese workers in America, will hold a dance to celebrate its | second anniversary this Friday, Mar. 25, at 8 p.m. at Manhattan Lyceum, 66 E. Fourth St., N.Y. C. The pro- gram will include dancing until 1 a Clinese and Japanese boxing, inese music, a new play dealing with the situation in China, entitled, “China Wakes” by the Red Players. | Besides, there will be an unusual ex- hibition of |Chinese and Japanese revolutionary posters and pictures. A selected band has been engaged for a The Chinese Vanguard has greatly increased its influence among the Chinese in America and is becoming an effective leader and organizer of the Chinese masses in the revolu- tionary struggles. All workers should come to the dance and support the Chinese Vanguard. Tickets are 35 cents each and are obtainable at the Vanguard office and the Workers Book Shop, 50 E. 13th St., City. BRONX PAINTERS OUT ON STRIKE Urge Workers to Help on Picket Line NEW YORK.—The workers of the Hunts Point Decorating Co., of 882} Hunts Point Ave. Bronx, and the Art Craft Decorating Co. of Bronx- ville are all out on strike and show wonderful spirit. All of the men were out on the picket line this morning. The bosses were running around to inspect the jobs to see whether the men really mean to carry out their decision to strike until they win their demands. This assurance they found when they came to the jobs and found the men picketing there in good numbers. One of the bosses is beginning to weaken already. He is trying to convince the work- ers that by picketing his jobs they will “ruin” him. The workers told him that this will be his “hard luck.” ‘The same boss, Max Nichtenberg, is @ member of the Krakauer branch of the Workmen's Circle. Mr. Smith, of the Artcraft Co., thinks that he can break the strike by seeking help from the AF. of L. local of Mt. Vernon. We are sure that the rank and file members of the A. F. of L. local unions will not be misled by the same officials who are today co-operating with the Building Trades Employers’ Associa- tion in putting over a general wage- cut of 25 to 40 per cent thruout the building industry. On the contrary, we are sure that the rank and file of the A. F. of L. workers will sup- port this strike and refuse to scab on us. ‘We urge every painter to come to the strike headquarters, 1325 South- ern Boulevard, Bronx, and help us to picket wie Jobs: on eee The Alteration ‘Painters will hold @ general membership meeting Wed- nesday, March 23, at 8 p.m, at Irving Plaza Hall, At this meeting there will be a general report on the activity on how far we got with the organization of the union. There also will be a re- port on the strike we are conducting at the present tirfe. One of the strikers will report on the strike. A report of the coming wage cut and the situation of the workers in the A. F. of L. building trades unions will be given by George E. Powers, sec- retary of the Building Trades League. It is very important for every mem- ber to come to this meeting and all other painters, organized and unor- @anized, are urged to come and line up in the organization. 1,500 Demonstrate At Detroit Welfare DETROIT, Mich.—Over 1,500 work- ers answered the call to demonstrate in front of the branch office of the Welfare Department here at North 80 BUTTONHOLE SHOPS STRIKE AT WAGE-CUT Full Support Urged by Rank and File Committee NEW YORK. — Eighty button hole shops of the children’s clothing trade shops struck yesterday over the heads of the Amalgamated officials against @ wage cut which the Hillman ma- chine was trying to force on the worktrs. ‘Tse strike was called on toe initi- ative of tsree tmall local unionn of | the Amaliamated Clothing Workers Union, Button Hole Workers No. 59, Lapel Makers No, 161 and Turners Local 55. The workers demand that the wage cut be taken back and that the scab tactics of the Hillman ma- chine be immediately stopped. At a strike meeting held yester- day at the Rand School the workers pointed out that the leadtrs of the Amalgamated called up all shops and instructed the worners not to strike. All of the workers in eighty shops walked out, however, Strikers who took the floor at the strike metting stated that Hillman of the Amalgamated was sending workers to work in the shops at scab wages ranging around $300 a day.. Workers declared that Hillman was sepiding scabs in to break the strike under the protection of Tammany police. The Amalgamated Rank and File Committee issued a call today urg- ing all workers to support the strike of the button hole workers and re- fuse to work in the shops in case Hillman sends scabs into the shops. It is expected that hundreds more workers will soon be involved in this struggle which is spreading to all stctions of the shops under control of the Amalgamated Union. TENANTS REJECT LANDLORDS OFFER Arnow Ave. Strikers Threatened NEW YORK.—Wm. Grassi, land- lord of 773 Arnow Avenue, after call- ing the strike committee of tenants, and offering them 50 cents reduc- tion per room announced that if they refused the offer he would break the strike with the aid of the Landlord’s League, police department and in- junctions of Tammany judges, all of whose support he boasted. The tenants have been demanding a 15 per cent reduction and even re- fused to discuss Grassi’s terms. The House Committee has announced that the strike will go on with ren- ewed energy. The tenants of the house ask the neighbors to join them in picketing and in the open-air meetings. Call Sheet Metal Workers to Mass Meeting Thursday As part of the preparations to re- sist the wage-cut of 25 to 40 per cent in the building industry an- nounced by the bosses, a mass meet- ing of sheet metal workers is being held Thursday, March 24, at 8 pm. at 93 Avenue B, corner 6th Street, New York City, (3rd floor). ‘The meeting is being held to dis- cuss the impending wage-cut, unem- ployment, the betrayal of the work- ers interests in these and other im- portant matters and what steps must be taken to mobilize the sheet metal workers, organized and unorganized, employed and unemployed for strug- ge against the present miserable conditions and those responsible for them, the bosses and the union of- ficialdom, All sheet metal workers are urged to attend. CULTURE FILMS FOR THE MASSES. Detroit. Though there were a num- ber of Murphy's cops present, they did not interfere, A delegation of 20 was sent in to demand unemployment relief and free lodging. ‘The delegation pointed out to the district superintendent, Miss Grace Cain, that many starving workers are denied any relief. The delegation was headed by James Smith, a Negro worker, ‘The supervisor promised to “take up the demands.” A mass meeting was then held outside the depart- ment. Mayor Murphy has now cut relief to 15 cents a day, with the result that many thousands more are slowly starving. NEGRO COMMUNIST GETS 2477 VOTES IN ST. PAUL revolutionist was buried. The fear of the Communists haunted those re- sponsible for this shameless deal. On Thursday at 8 in the New Star Casino there will be a memorial meet~ ing for the dead comrade. Arranged not by the fakers but by the Commu-~ nist Party. All workers should come and pay their last respects to the fallen battler for a workers’ world. Mass organizations, get into revolutionary competition to he fed to be taken to @ hospital. pave Dally Worker, ST..PAUL, Minn.—On a recount The outstanding artists and cul- tural achievements of Soviet Russia will be brought to America in a stries of motion picture shorts called “Art and Culture in the U. 5. 8S. R.” The first of these reels is now being on the same program. with the Soviet film, “Cossacks of the Don”, which is now in its American primiere at the Cameo Theatre. This reel offers the famots Leningrad Ballet, a factory orchestra, the Kharkov House of Cul- ture Chorus, and Caucasian music and songs. The other reels will bring the foremost Russian writtrs, artists and singers in a number of inter- views in both Russian and English, What’s On— TUESDAY % ‘onsy, Cowall. will speak on. Pratetesian music at the first meeting of the Musl- of the primary vote, the official returns show that the highest vote received by the Communist candi- dates was that of Comrade Rob- ert Turner, a Negro worker, who was a candidate for the City Council. In the last election, two years ago, the highest vote received by & Communist candidate for City Council was 1,700, showing an in- crease of nearly 50 per cent. The Communist. mayoralty vote also showed an increase of 60 per cent. clans Club at the John Reed Club quarters, 63 West 15th Bt, at 8 p.m. welcome. . ‘The Honeld A. Edwards und the Harry Bismen youth brauthes of the LL.D. will have @ combinde membership meeting at 380 Grand Street, at 8 p.m. ot bot pranahes are urgently requested to wre, ‘Bastern Parkway Branch of the FS. ‘U. will hold an open air meeting at Utica Avenue and Bastern Parkway, Brooklyn, tonight. WAIN Chica, enterteinment and dance we Metal coe eee Lette wil ee Denne to Speak to Food Workers Fri. Bill Dunne will speak before the | members of the Food Workers’ In- | dustrial Union on Friday evening, | March 25, at 8:30 p.m. on the Role of the Communist Party in the Re- | Yolutionary Trade Unions. This lec- | ture is one of a series of open forums to be held monthly on the last Friday jevening of the month for union members arranged by the Educa~- tional Committee of the Union. All workers, whether members of the union or not are welcome to attend. ‘The Educational Committee of the Union has also arranged for 2 class in Trade Union Problems which will be held weekly on Thursday evenings at 9 p. m. with Sidney Bloomfield, secretary of the Union as the in- structor. The class begins on Thurs- day evening, March 24. Food Work- |ers are urged to register for the class and attend the first meeting on Thursday. COUNCIL WINS RELIEF FOR TWO Mass Pressure Wins; Lone Action Failure NEW YORK. — The Dowtown Un- employed Council continues its record of unemployed victories every day. Five cases came to the council to- day. In each case the council mob- ilized a committee and went with the destitute workers to the Home Relief Bureau. In two cases relief was se- cured immediately, the remaining three were promised relief for today. Benny Warren, one of the workers who won relief, had been registered at the burtau, for some time. He had gone to the bureau individually asking when his needs would be cared for, each time the officials postponed the case. Finnally he was evicted waiting for aid and had to live in a cellar. The organized action of the council forced the bureau to pay a months’ rent and give him a food card. V. Friedman, 251 E. 7th, had also been registered for some time and as in the case of Warren could get no satisfaction as an individual but when she went with a committee of workers, she was immediately helped. Tronically enough, this worker lives next door to Sol Fassler, Tammany alderman of the district, who pro- mised so much for the workers when he was elected. ‘The pressure and militancy of the workers is so great that the bureau give in to their demands with little resistance, New workers form the committee each day, thus broadening the ex- perience in the tactics of winning re- lief and educating greater numbers in the class struggle. Double Number of R. LL.U. Magazine Here The latest number of the R.LL.U. magazine has arrived. This is a double number. The whole is de- voted to the speeches and workings of the world revolutionary movement as taken up at the recent eight ses- sion of the Red International of La- bor Unions Central Council. All trade union functionaries and actives must immediately get their copy. Bundle orders for organiza- tions should be gotten at the office of Labor Unity, 5 East 19th St., New York City. “ROAD TO LIFE” AT JEFFERSON 58TH ST., ROYAL AND FRANKLIN “Road to Life”, first ussian talkie, which was so highly praised by cri-R. tics and which broke all house records at its Broadway premiere, has been booked for four RKO neighborhood theatres, beginning Wednesday. This picture will be the first Russian film to play at these theatres the Jef- ferson, 58th Street and Royal, Wed- nesday to Friday, and the Franklin Thursday and Friday, and it was booked in response to an unprece- dented request by the theatres’ pa- trons. “Road to Life” is the drama of the homeless waifs of Russia, who roamtd the streets of the cities committing all sorts of crimes, and who were reclaimed to useful citizenship by a band of brave Russian teachers. Tit- Jes in English explain the story and Dr. John Dewey, professor ermeritus of Coiumbia University, appears in the prologue of the film. Among those who have praised the film as one of the finest of motion pictures are: George Bernard Shaw, Maxim Gorki, Theodore Dreiser, as well as critics in every important city of the The Hippodromt screen offers the first presentation of “Carnival Boat”, &@ new RKO-Radio Picture. Bill Boyd, Ginger Rogers and Hobart Bosworth have the featured roles. The stage acts include the Russian ambassador of entertainment, Dave Apollon, and his ntw revue “Surprises of 1932”; ‘Wilson Brothers, German singers and yodlers; Harry Webb and Pat Lane, with Vi Maye; Gerald Griffin, tenor; Wan Van San, Chinese, Pipifax, clown, Eddie Panlo and Miss Elsie. SPECIAL MOBILIZATION 10 ~ ATTACK BLOCK AID RACKET Unemployed Connell £ Calls “te Volunteers to Canvass Mid- (CONTINURD Chum PAGE ONEL campaign workers grom every part of the city will be sent in and a quarter of a million leaflets, and thousands of pamphlets, “Hunger Fighters” and signature lists will flood the concen- tration area, Parade Friday The climax of the campaign will take place in a huge torchlight parade on Friday, March 25, at 6:30 p. m. starting at Columbus Circle, 59th St. and Eighth Ave. The parade will move through the entire area in- cluded in the concentration and will enlist, as it goes, workers for a tre- mendous mass meeting at Bryant Hall, 42nd St., near Sixth Ave. At this gathering, the workers living in the area will elect leaders for their respective sections and will set up Block Committees where none existed before. In announcing the plans for the campaign, Carl Winter, secretary of the Unemployed Council of Greater New York pointed out that while the campaign is to be concentrated in a relatively small area, the forces of FORD AT FOREIGN BORN MEET WED. To Give Report on Washington James W. Ford, member of the Na- tional Executive of the League of Struggle for Negro Rights and TUUL will report. of the Protection Foreign Born Delegation which testified be- fore the Immigration Committee of the U. S. Congress on March 1, 1932. Wednesday, March 23, 8:15 p. m. at the Brownsville Workers Center, 118 Bristol St., Brooklyn. All residents of that section, native and foreign born, Negro and white are called to attend this meeting to protest against the bills which aim to deport militant foreign born work- ers. On Friday, March 25, a report will) be given by D. Bartkin and E. Nick- olays, members of the second delega- tion, who represented the Ukrainian | -. and Russian organizations. The re- port will be given at Manhattan Ly- ceum, 66 East Fourth St. Ukrainian and Russian workers in paritcular are called to attend this meeting to protest against hte anti- alien bills. JAIL KOVACHEFF FOR TELLING OF THE SOVIET UNION DETROIT, Mich. March 20.— Comrade N. Kovacheff, a member of the American Workers’ Delega- tion to the Soviet Union, who is touring the country under the aus- Pices of the Friends of the Soviet Union, was arrested Sunday after a meeting at Homestead, Pa. The arrest was caused by the Mace- donian Citizens League, the same fascist political organization that made an attempt on his life in Massillin, Ohio, Feb. 21. His assassination in February was averted by the vigilance of the workers. The murder was planned by the Macedonian Citizens’ League and the American Legion, in or- der to stop Kovacheff’s work in building the Macedonian People’s League, an anti-fascist organiza- tion of Bulgarian and Macedonian workers in this country. The fas- cists fear the message about the Soviet Union that he:is bringing to the Macedonian and Bulgarian masses and, frustrated in their at- tempt to silence Kovacheff by mur- der, they are now trying to ane him up. EAST SIDE ————— 8 DAYS—TODAY TO WEDNESDA\ [, “THE RED OFFICER’S FRIEND” A TENSE DRAMA OF THE CRIMEA ACME THEATRE 14TH ST. & UNION SQUARE, —THIS FRIDAY NIGHT!— —~DANCE— TO CELEBRATE THE 2nd ANNIVERSARY OF THE “CHINESE VANGUARD” MARCH 25th 8 P.M. MANHATTAN LYCEUM 66 East 4th Street A Selected Band—Chinese Music—Japanese and Chinese Boxing— Chop Suey—“China Wakes” by the Red Players—Rev. posters, Eto. ‘Tickets 35 cents each on sale ai Bookshop, 50 East 13th / the Vanguard office, Workers’ Street, New York City | ‘ town Section | all the unemployed groups in the city would be required to make the drive successful | The “Block-Aaiders” declare that | not only will their method end “dis- tress,” but that their prize collection of stool pigeons will come in handy “in any crisis.” With Japanese im- perialists at this moment massing troops on the Soviet border, and en- gaging in the most brazen provoca- tions to involve the U.S.S.R. in war, so that the United States may join the rest of ‘the capitalist world in an attack on the Workers’ Fatherland, it does not take much imagination to guess what the “crisis” they refer to will be. READY 10 FIGHT EVICTION OF 8 Longfellow Strikers Call for Support NEW YORK. — The 8 families in the five Longfellow Avenue houses, striking for lower rents ignored the eviction notices strved on them and did not appear in court last Friday. The marshall has informed them that they would be evicted but have not given any definite date. | The workers expect the attempt will be made Tuesday or Wednes- day and therefore call on workers | and neighbors to be on the picket line these two days at 7:30 or 8 a. m. At a banquet held last Saturday, the workers showed high spirits and said they were not frightened by the landlord and his courts and will stay on the picket line until they have won their demands for lower rents. The workers had good time at their little party, The landlord also held a banquet Saturday, at Tremont and Washing- ton Avenues where they talked over the “terrible rent strikes”, and what they could do to stop them. The landlords will not be able to} break the rent strikes. The move- ment will spread into every proletar- tan neighborhood and force the rob- Dress Workers Membership Meet Thurs. March 24 oe Shop Conference Webster Hall Saturday 4 NEW YORK. — All members or the Dressmakers section of the Needld Trades Workers Industrial Union are called to rally to a mass membership meeting which will be htld Thursday, at Webster Hall. Ben Gold, secretary of the Indus trial Union, will give a full report on the United Front Dressmakers strike Following the report there will be a thorough discussion by the members ship. All members of the dress section of the union, especially the new mem- bers, should attend this important meeting without fail Prepare Shop Conference. The campaign for the shop con- ference which will be held at Web- ster Hall Saturday at 1 p. m. is dtve- loping, drawing in a large section of workers from the International shops. Fur Workers to Meet. The Needle Trades Workers In- dustrial Union reports that there will be an important shop and delegatt conference of the fur trade Wednes- day after work in the office of the union. Plans for struggle against the Kaufman injunction and the program of action, struggle ageinst wage cuts in the fur trade will be taken up at this meeting, BUILDING WORKE SATURDAY The Buil and Construction Workers’ Industria! League {s calling a special membership meeting Satur- day, March 26th at 2 p. m. at Irving Plaza. Irving Place and i5th N.Y, The discussion on ways and means to put fuliy into effect thé program of action which started at the last meeting will be completed and further steps will be taken in preparation for mass strike nj the building and con struction industry against the 35 te 40 per cent wage cut which the Build- ing Trades Finployers Association is preparing to enforce. MEET within the income of the work will win no evictions fcr the unem- ployed and fight for free rent, gas, ber landlords to cut the high rents electricity for the unemployed. AMUSEMENTS THE THEATRE GUILD Presents HE MOON IN THE YELLOW RIVER By DENIS JOBNSTON GUILD THEA,, 52d St., W. of B'way. Eve. 8:40, Mats. Thars., Sat., 2:40 ‘Theatre Guild Presents REUNION IN VIENNA A Comedy . By ROBERT EB. SHenwoon THE. , Martin Beck grt, a's Ave. Eve. 8:40 Mats. Thutesat 2:40 6th Ave. HIPPODROME®:<*.5:. BIGGEST SHOW IN NEW YORK KO, Bill Boyd ~ in ACTS pave ™*! |“Carnival Boat” APOLLON with Ginger Rogers very shop, mine and factory a fertile field for Daily Worker sub- scriptions. The Romance That Thrilled All Russia! Presents—American Amkino Premiere ‘COSSACKS , DON’ of the The First Real Portrayal of Cossack Life Based on the Soviet Novel, “The Quiet River Don,” by Michael Seholokhov Directed by Olga Preobeazhenskaya Who Produced “The Village of Sin” A Sound Film—Titles in English CAMEO Ona st. & Bway All Seats tol x x. Mon. to First Russian Talkie! DIRECT FROM 5 WEEKS AT CAMEO Drama of Russia’s‘ Wild Children’ NEW LOW PRICES—AT ALL THEATRES WED. to FRI. AT THESE THEATRES JEFFERSO 58th Street ..e%,. Westchster & ROYA! Bergen “Aves, “Thurs. and Fri, At This Theatre FRANKLIN Mth St. & Sed Ay 161; Prospect Workers’ Clubs Should Advertise in the “Daily” MELROSE dane Ag oe Will Always Find Ncarant’ to’ Dine et Our Pines. 1187 SOUTHERN BLVD. Bronz (near 174th St, Station) QFELEPHONE INTERVALE o—o100 SOLLINS’ RESTAURANT 216 EAST 14TH STREET 6-Course Lunch 55 Cents Regular Dinner 65 Cents “The labor movement will gain the opper hand and show the way to peace and socialism.” LENIN. Intern’! Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 1 UNION SQUARE 8TH FLOOR AU Work Done Under Personal Care ot DR. JOSEPRSON COHEN’S OUT RATE OPTICIANS Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 199 SECOND AVENUE ‘Bot. eth and 10 Bia. Gtrietly Veroterian Feed \

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