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Page Two oAILY WORKER, NEW YORK,. SATURDAY, MARCH 26, 1332 “SCOT TSBORO LIMITED” AT “DAILY” BANQUET, MANHATTAN LYCEUM, 66 E. 4th ST., SUNDAY NIGHT | AMUSEMENTS | | Attendance L | Daily Work at Ly ceum Tomorrow imited “- Thomas Joins er Banquet NEW YORK.—To back up the ap- peal of J. P. Morgan who supported the “Block-Aid” drive against the unemployed, it was proper and fit- | f at the Daily Worker Banquet Sunday night | ting that Norman Thomas, introd- {at M et delegates from we uced by Haywood Broun, should re- , Class and F y orga: ions, but essential that as many orga! present the Socialist party in a radio | tions as possible be present alk in the Wall Street scheme to | Final check-up in the Daily Worker campaign will be made, save the profits of the rich from dis made by 1 the s | reports and speech | ty, including a m ber of members of the Communis' the Daily Worker, district f the demand of 12,000,000 unemploy- ed for relief. | tionaries, and officials of the trade union and mass organizations. “Norman Thomas, Socialist leader, | Because of the dastardly news from Scottsbao, the will continue the radio appeal for | ston Hughes, the famous Negro poet, “Scotisbord Limited,” will have an| | support of the campaign with a | unexpected ai ppeal. It will be performed by Negroes of | | broadcast tonight,” said: J. P. Mor- | the League of for Negro Rights. | |gan’s newspaper, the New York Several musical numbers will complete the program, | | Evening P Yes, “continue the 4 | radio appeal” started by J. P. Mor- DRESS SHOP CONFERENCE TODAY WILL : LAY BASE FOR BROAD UNITED FRONT NEW YORK.—Tod the shop will take St. between Third onl Fourth This conference coming atfer the | United Front Strike and the fake strike of the International will be a teal gathering of workers to review the hapenings of the last few weeks, | to analyze these strike and on the basis of this analysis to work out a program of common action to fight QBgainst the wage cuts, against the misery that exists in the vast ma- | Aye. jority of the shops in the dress trade. | Many of the workers of the Inter- | now beginning to unde! an himself, heda of a group of banks and croporations who control $75,000,000,000. Morgan’s speech was made openly and directly—so reco; nized by many of the capitalist newspapers—to keep the unemploy- ed from demanding relief at the ex- pense of therich. Norman Thomas supported this grive, to save the profits of the bosses, to fight against | unemployment insurance. “I do not believe that the natio alled strike othing but the that it fraud, nd are rstand why the leaders of the International stood in a “Block- the way of unity and are beginning! Aid” system is the great spy system |to think seriously about the urgent{that the Communists profess it need of united action en the part of | would be,” said Thomas, his preach- all workers in order to improve the jer voice quaking with emotion. He standards in the dress shor wants the workers to believe that It is expected that this conference | Morgan, the financier of all the fas- | Will be a rea) ex} on of the needs | | cist powers in the world, the head }and desires of the dressmak The | of the steel trust, with its gigantic conference will mark a new and ‘spy system, is a white lamb when broader phase of the united front ]it comes to feeding the unemployed. work among the dressmakers. No more despicable role has yet been 20,000 A. F. OF L. LOCALS GET UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE APPEAL (OONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) ecently again been repeated by Green and his fellow officials at their tonference in Washington endorsing the Costigan-LaFollette bill which ealls for individual relief of $375,000,- p00 for the 12,000,000 unemployed workers, which would give about $30 tota family for the next two years, which obviously means slow starva- tion, and which rejects and fights egainst government unemployment Insurance is against the interests of fhe membership of the A. F. of L. apd of the workers generally, aban- doning them as it does to the present actual starvation. This devastating situation demands the immediate establishment of na- tional government unemployment in- surance as the only means to ward off wholesale starvation of the work- ‘ers and their families, To accomplish this it is absolutely imperative that the great rank and file of the A. F. of L. unions speak their real opinion on this life and death question; be it therefore re- solved— “That our local union registers its disagreement with the decision of the A. F. of L. Vancouver convention ygainst unemployment insurance and foes on record in favor of the follow- | ing National Workers Unemployment Insurance Bill “Immediate unemployment insur- ance at full wages (on the basis of the yearly average)—That a system | of federal government unemployment insurance be immediately established by an act of Congress and made im- mediately effective, guaranteeing full wages to all workers wholly or partly | unemployed through no fault of their | ‘own, for the entire period of unem- | plpoyment (since the so-called high | wages of the American workers is | only a myth, their wages were only about $20 a week at the height of | prosperity). “For all workers, no discrimination That unemployment insurance be | paid to every unemployed worker, adult and youth, whether industrial or agricultural, office employees and| all other categories of wage labor, | native or foreign born, citizen or non- Citizen, white and Negro, men and| women, and without discrimination | BUILDING AND CONSTRUCTION | WORKERS IND. LEAGUE | Special membership meeting of the Building and Construction Workers | Ind. League, Saturday, March 26, at | j 2 pm., at Irving Plaza, Irving Place || and 15th Street (4th floor) DURABLE ST STRIKERS’ “REUNION AND DANCE TONIGHT | The Metal Workers Industrial League calls upon all workers to come to the Durable Strikers Reunion Dance, to be held tonight at 8 p.m at WIR Center, Admission free! 16 West 2ist Street. To Demonstrate Before Japanese Embassy In Wash, WASHINGTON, D. ©., March '25.—A mas sprotest demonstration against the robber war on China and imperialist preparations for armed intervention against the successful building of Socialism in the Soviet Union will take place Saturday noon at 1 o'clock in front of the Japanese Embasssy at 2514 Massachusetts Avenue. The demonstration is arranved by the Washington branch of the Friends of the Soviet Union. The Negro and white workers of Washington are called upon to} | turn out in a tremendous militant demonstration against the boss war preparations, for the defense of the Chinese Soviet Districts and the Soviet Union and against the partition of China, | That -}played in the United States by .a so- cialist than this latest line-up of Thomas with Morgan — the open fusion of the Socialists with the most vicious enemies of the Amer- ican workers-—the Fords, Mellons, Rockefellers, and the Morgans. ‘Thomas tried to wring tears from his hearers about the suffering of the unemployed. “They may be- come violent,” was his theme. Tho- mas wants the unemployed to starve gracefully, quietly, without making any “unreasonable” demands from the rich, The “Block~Aid” system, Thomas in his unbounded generosity admitted, was no “solution for the relief problem,” but, he said, “it is against any race, color, age or polit- ical opinion. No worker shall be deprived of unemployment insurance because of refusal to take the place of strikers or to work for less than union rates of pay. “Insurance at the expense of the employers and the government—That the full funds for unemplpoyment in- surance shall be raised by the gov- ernment from funds now set aside for war preparations and by taxation upon the capital and profits of cor- porations and trusts and also by sharply upward taxation upon all incomes over $5,000 a year. In no instance shall there be any contribu- tions levied upon the workers in any “BLACK SEA MUTINY” form whatsoever for this insurance. type neta sae a pina ‘Administration by the workers—| “FIGHT AGAINST STARVATION” the unemployment insurance | LABOR TEMPLE fund shall be administered and con-| Fourth St. and Second Ave. trolled by th workers, through com- | = mittees elected by the workers them- | Proceeds selves, | FOR KENTUCKY MINERS “For other forms of social insur-|7 and 9 P. M. ADMISSION 35 Sat. Eve., March 26th WORKERS NEWSREEL “KENTUCKY-TENNESSEE 1932” SOVIET FILM J.P. Morgan; Backs “Block-Aid” Racket something to keep the unemployed jfrom joining violent demonstra- tions.” “They have been patient, but they must not be insulted too much,” said ‘Thomas. It must have done Morgan's heart good, as he eat in his palatial Jib- rary on Madison Avenue, where his luxurious furniture and nicknacks, | valued at millions, are enough to} feed thousands of unemployed fam- flies, to hear the Socialist y-pilot plead with the unemployed to starve quietly, to accept the “Block-Aid” system of blacklisting, to follow the wishes of J. P. Morgan and to re- frain from any revolutionary action against capitalism. As the crisis gets worse, Thomas and the Socialist party become more openly the best supporters of the hunger program of American capit- Jelism. Not only does Thomas back Wall Street in preparing war for new colonial plunder and against the Soviet Union, but he wants the Am- erican workers at home to starve in accordance with the wishes of Mor- gan so that capitalism can find a way out of the crisis at the expense of a new slaughter and new mass misery for the American workers. NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES EAST SIDE—BRONE RICHARD DIX “THE LOST SQADRON With. MARY ASTOR ROBERT ARMSTRO. and JOEL McCREA —Other Features— NEW LOW PRICES MATS. 15 Cents || EVES. 25 Cents Except Sat., Sun., and Holidays MUSIC — CONCERTS Philharmonic-Symphony BEECHAM Guest Conductor Carnegie Hall, This Sun, Afternoon at 3.00 BORODIN, DELIUS, HANDEL, BEETHOVEN, TCHAIKOVSKY Carnegie Hall, Thurs. Eye., Bt, at 8:45 Friday Afternoon, April 1, at 2:30 Soloist: MISHEL PIASTRO, Violinist Mozart, Tchaikovsky, Rimsky-Korsakoff ance—That social insurance be paid nT pr FOUR DAY BAZAAR to workers to the amount of full wages to compensate for loss of wages | FRIDAY, MARCH 26 SAT., MARCH 27—Entertainment through sickness, accident, old age, er oe sd SUNDAY MARCH 28—MUSIO Various Articles at any price! | Restaurant Service—Open day, night Good Fresh Meals Come and enjoy yourself in a Revolutionary Atmosphere Brownsville Workers Center 1813 Pitkin Ave, Brooklyn. PRPS LEST ITI | Queens County Labor Lyceum | Assn,, Ine, SILVER JUBILEE Saturday Eve., April 2 At & o'clock COSTUME DANCE given by the |phe Followers of the Trial” | Queens County Labor ee Forest and Putnam Aves, Ridgewood, Brooklyn, N. ¥. MUSIC BY MARAT MERTEN Re ’ ENTERTAINMENT—DANCE fremont Workers’ Center 2075 Clinton Ave., Bronx Including Hatcheck sre ‘Saturday, March 26th at 8 P, M. | Admission 50c | |All Proceeds for the Daily Worker ADMISSION 35 CENTS Gottlieh’s Hardware 119 THIRD 4VENDE Near 1th St, Tompkins Sa. 6-4547 All &inds of ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES Cutl ialt, {ntl Workers Order utlery Our Specialty OPTICIANS || Meeting Rooms and Bal Harry Stolper, Inc. TO HIRE 78-75 CHRYSTIE STREET Phird Ave. Cur to Hester St.) 9 am. to 6 pm. Daily Phone: Dry Dock 4-4522 Suitable for Meetings, Lectures and Dances in the Carnegie Hall, Sat. Eve., April % at 8:45 Morart, Dvorak, Rimsky-Korsakoff ARTHUR JUDSON, Mgr. (Steinway Piano) SIDE EAST Now Playing—Limited Engagement Extraordinary and Exclusive Presentation! “Soviet’s Challenge” Adapted from “THE 5TH YEAR” An Authentic Picturization of the Progress and Achievements of the U.S.8.R., Produced by PROLETKINO in the Soviet Union. ADDED ATTRACTION “Songs of the Cossacks” ACME THEATRE 14TH ST. & UNION SQUARE MAX BEDACHT Lecture “The Way Out of the Crisis” Sunday, March 27th PARADISE MANOR 11 W. Mt. Eden Ave. (Corner Jerome Aye., Bronx) SPICES—English and Youth City omm. International Workers Order ADMISSION 15 CENTS Czechoslovak bedgrinasis House, Inc. 47 E, 72nd St. New York ‘Telephone: Rhinelander 5097 SOLLINS’ RESTAURANT 216 EAST 1408 STREET $-Course Lunch 55 Cents Regular Dinner 65 Cents AT COMRADELY PRICES Telephone OR (Se; mour Printing Company '— OMMERCIAL PRINTERS = SUFFOLK STREET New York City rd 4-8260 COHEN’S CUT RATE OPTICIANS Eyes Exam@ned by Registered Opticians White gold rims $1.50 117 Orchard St, Shell rims $1.00 Near Delancey 29 EAST MTH STREET = = aia NEW YORK nT ETN TREE Vel. Algonquin 3356-8843 ee We Carry a Full Line of $E5 il » SUPPLE STATIONERY AT SPECIAL PRICES for Organizations Prolet-Mimo STENCILS 82.25 — amma Harlem Youth Dance WITH STRIKING DRESSMAKERS | Saturday » March 26th At 8:30 P.M. NEW HARLEM CASINO 116th St, and Lenox Ave. ° Negro Jazz Band—Danee till 3 | WORKER CONCERT and LECTURE AMTER of the Communist Party Wilt be the Speaker DAILY i. Sun., March 27, 8 p.m. WOLFAN'S HALL Fourth Sireet Lakewood, N. I. — “WAR AND ‘rife DAILY WORKER" * | AUSPICES--0 &. of Lakewood, NJ. The Romance That 2nd Week! 3 sCAMEO% ° Bway Thrilled All Russia! AMEINO PRESENTS LATEST RUSSIAN SOUND FILM COSSACKS sii: DON on the Soviet Novel, “The Quiet River Don,” by Michael Scholokhoy Directed by Olga Preobeazhenskaya, Who Produced “The Village of a 10 A. oT PAM, Mon, to Fri, 25¢ THEATRE GUILD Presents HE MOON IN THE YELLOW RIVER By DENIS JOHNSTON GUILD ‘THEA., 52d St., W. of B'way. Eve. 8:40, Mats, Thar Sat., 2:40 The Theatre Guild Presents REUNION IN VIENNA by ROBRRT £. SHERWOOD Martin Beck cas Ave, Eve, 8:40 Mats. Thurg.Sat 2:40) COUNSELLOR-AT-LAW with ELMER RICE PAUL MUNI Plymouth Then. W. 48 St. Ev. Oth Ave, YIPPOBROME®::.."7: BIGGEST SHOW IN NEW YORK & “THE LOST ake SQUADRON” gees RICHARD Nee wares: DEUX USS: This Sunday MARCH 27th, 1932 At 8:00 P. M. QUESTIONS Admission 258 M. OLGIN Will Speak on the “BUILDING UP OF SOCIALISM IN THE SR. At WO FO 35 EL 2th St. 2nd DISCUSSION bg DANCE U Cigarette Girls Baloons COLOR-LITE DANCE Manhattan OUT: Branches of Inter’l. Labor Defense H NTIL DAWN SAT., MARCH 26th MANHATTAN 66 East Fourth St., New York ADMISSION 50 CENTS 10-Piece Negro Orchestra TTAN LYCEUM DINNER and CONCERT for the benefit of the | DAILY WORKER | At Mapleton Workers Club | 6720—20th Ave. Brooklyn Sun., March | 27, 2 p.m. | AUSPICES—All Working Class Organizations of Bensonhu: ADMISSION35 CENTS Come, meet your friends and comrades, enjoy a good dinner and sbove all help build THE DAILY WORKER | Mass Concert—Dance and ENTERTAINMENT for the benefit of the DAILY WORKER Given by 11 Branches of the Russian Mutual Aid Society, Polish Workers’ Club, and the Stalin Branch of the Friends of the Soviet Union Saturday, April 9th At MANHATTAN LYCEUM 68 East Fourth St. TWO HALLS TWO ORCHESTRAS 2-3-4-5 ROOMS— Bronx Botan 2707 Barnes Avenue (C 2723 Barnes Ayenue i 2559 Wh LIVE IN A— 2800 BRONX Tel. Estabrook 8-14 ake Lexington Avenue trai Get off Alle LOW RENTALS! WORKERS COOPERATIVE COLONY We have a limited number of 3 and 4 roam ans NO INVESTMENT NECESSARY - OPPOSITE BRONX PARK omradely atmosphere—In this Cooperative Colons you will find ~« library, athletic director, workreom for children workers’ clubs and various cultural activities NEAR SUBWAY ‘lp-to-date Modern Apartments a few blocks from the ical Gardens 665 Allerton Avenue 690 Allerton Avenue ‘orner of Allerton Ave.) 2704 Barnes Avenue (Corner of Allerton Ave.) (Near Allerton Ave.) Office:—OSINOFF BROTHERS te Plaivs Avenue Tel. Estabrook 8-0131 riments PARK HAST 00; Olinville 2-6972 n to White Plains Road and rton Avenue a.m, tos p. 7 ie om Office open trom: Satur m every day; Pam top m to S p.m, Sunday LATEST SOVIET (10 Per Cent off With This Ad) , WOODEN WARE, TOYS, epic H ~ FidsT TIME AT POPULAR PRIGaS! Cry IMPORT * TIONS RUGS, CANDY, SHAWLS ANDICRAFTS Workers’ Clubs Should Advertise in the “Daily” 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! DANCING TILL 8 A. M. TICKETS $1.50 in advance; $2.50 at the door. On sale at NEW MASSES, 63 West 15th 8 (orders accents by ma'l of hone, ALg. 4-145); WORKERS BOOK® HOP, 50 E, 18th St, and other centers. 4 f th Daily Worker Dinner || and Entertainment Sun, March 27; 2 p.m. Mapleton Workers’ Clubrooms 6720—20th . Avenue, Brooklyn Admission 35 Cents. Joint Auspices: Communist Party, 7, Unit 10, International Workers Or- der, Mapleton Workers’ Club, Interna- tional Labor Defense, Working Women’s Counell, Bensonhurst’ Children’s School. J Intern] Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT Sec. 1 UNION SQUARE 8TH FLOOR All Work Done Under Personal Care of DR. JOSEPRSON Report all Daily Worker 7 RCA PE AE A EE, RAR Alg. 4-0649 Strictly by appointment Dr. L. KESSLER SURGEON DENTIST 858 BROADWAY Suite 1007-1008 Cor, 14th St. New York Affairs to this column Parkway Cafeteria The Only Strictly Vegetarian Cafeteria in Brownsville THOROUGH EYE EXAMINATION EXPERT FITTING OF GLASSES WE SERVE GOOD FOOD A TRIAL WILL CONVINCE YOU 1638 PITKIN AVE. Near Hopkinson Ave. Brooklyn, Phone Dickens 2-7653 y Special Rates to Workers and Families * WILLIAM BELL OPTOMETRIST and OPTICIAN 106 East 14th St. (Room 21) ‘Tel, TOmpkins Square 6-8237 Rollin Pharmacy PRESCRIPTION CHEMIST 675 ALLERTON AVE, SPECIAL REDUCTIONS TO WORKER! ‘Telephone, OLinville 2-9991 N.Y. i Chester Cafeteria 876 E. Tremont Ave, (Corner Southern Blvd.) Quality—Cleanliness—Moderate Prices All Workers Members F.W.1.U. Phone Tomkins Sq. 86-0554 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with where all ra | 302 E. 12th St. FIVE COURSES 50 Cents Siberia-Russian RESTAURANT 315 East 10th St. Bet. Ave. A and Ave. B New York i ' 4 NEIGHBORLY PLACE £0 £A1 i ; : MELROSE * ; j | Linel Cafeteria DAIRY ene | Pure Food—100 per cent Frigidair: Posey MME Cty - LY Equipment—Luncheonette and 781 SOUTHERN BL : Soda Fountain ' ary 114th _ St. eee . 830 BROADWAY TELEPHONE INTERVALE 9—@149 Near (2th Street ‘ Rational Vegetarian | ie Restaurant i 199 SECOND AVENUE none STagg 2-2294 Bet. 12th and i3th Ste. A GOOD PLACE FOR WORKERS Strictly Vegetarian food THE KALE CAFETERIA | 098 BROADWAY BROOKLYN, N.Y. (Neat Metey Ave) RUSSIAN MEALS Si eS aa SR a Yor Poor Pocketbooks LUNCH uc; DINNER 50c KAVKAZ (or Comenden) 332 E, 14th Street, N. ¥. © Worke are members of FOOD WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION / rt of receipts goes tol. L. D. and Workers’ sel EAT AT THE ed RED STAR/ROYAL CAFETERIA 49 EASY (27TH ST, 827 Broadway . (Bet, 12th and 18th St.) ag ie YOU WANT TO EAT THE BEST Patronize the FOOD, GIVE US 4 TRIAL, au Concoops Food Stores AND Restaurant 2700 BRONX PARK EAST omrades Mees at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Cleremont Parkway, Sroux “Buy in the Co-operative Store and help the Revo- lutionary Movement.” Schildkraut’s Vegetarian Restaurant 4 West 28th St. Wishes to announce @ 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. JADE MOUNTAIN AMERICAN and CHINESE RESTAURANT pen (fF a.m. te 1:0 #, om, Special Lunch 11 to 4...35e Dinner 5 to 10.. .55¢ 197 SECOND AVENUE Veiwern (2th and 18th Ste YPEN TODAY! Garden Restaurant 323 EAST 13TH ST. Service NO TIPPING EXCELLENT LUNCH — Dinner » Ia Carte Delightful Atmosphere FROM A BITE TO A BANQUET ‘Management JAMES—Formerly Greek Wkrs, Club JULIUS—Formerly Camp Unity Tel. TOmpkings Square 6-9707 GREENWICH YILLAGE—Large sunny rovm, two windows, rexsoms 6 Charles St., Apt. 12. all Improves Chernomorsky. AG” ments, 1 RAE TM. Thin