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Page Two DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 1932 10,000 N.Y. Workers Roar IBLOCK AID TO : ‘Masses of AFL Workers Vote Approval of Resolution | BE CHALLENGED for Unemployment Insurance Against Bosses Robber War Comrade James W. war meeting at the Bror ord, as chairman of the huge anti- Coliseum, briefly explained the pur- pose of the demonstration, pointing to the Japanese concen- tration of troops on the Soviet Far Eastern borders, the Jap- anese admissions that they expected to by joined by Roumania, BY UNEMPLOYED Needy Families In East | NEW YORK—The New York A. F. of L. Trade Union Committee for Unemployment Insurance and Relief received the endorsement on its ref- erendum for Government Unemploy- * | ment Insurance from the Central La- | ag Be 6 Re- | tor union of Albuquerque, N, M,, In- | let at Noon to their sub-district No. 6, district 12, convention which will represent 6,250 workers and urge its adoption by the convention, With the endorsements of the ref- erendum, many orders for the pam- phiet, “Why Unemployment Insur- ance”, issued by the committee, came Poland and other puppet stat French imperialism in Ei n rope. Amter Contrasts Capitalist Decay With Socialist Triumphs In Sovict Union Comrade I. Amter, dis or- ganizer of the Communist Party and representative of the Central Com- mittee, declared that war had al- ready begun in China, that a ne world war was threatening, 15 year: after the World in whi on y killed, 20 m. and aimed for life, with in- liction of misery and suffering on untold mill and with the t= age of three hundred and sixty lion dollars worth of wealth prod- uced by the working-class. He show- ed that the burdens of war fall upon the shoulders of the workers and poor farmers and upon the enslaved co- Jonial masses. He pointed to the collapse of capitalist economy, the world-wide decay of the caj system, the continuous deepe: the crisis with increase in unemploy- ment and mass misery, the Hoover wage-slashing program, the denial of unemployment relief LEFT WING WINS IN CLOAKMAKERS CONVENTION Elects Six Delegates On Class Struggle Basis NEW YORK.—The movement of the cloakmakers against the fake strike that Schlessinger is already supporting to be put through in the cloak trade jointly with the bosses, found concrete expression in the el- ections of Local 9 which took place yesterday. Despite all efforts of Schlessinger and the fake progressive | anarchist-Lovestone combination, the | left wing slate polled the highest vote and elected 5 of the 7 delegates who ran on a program of class strug- gle, a program against clique control of the International, for a real strike under rank and file leadership. In the elections of Local 38, one of the left wing delegates was elected and the machine is now manouever- ing, for a recount. Arrest 16 Workers For Picketing | Sixteen workers were arrested yes- terday for picketing in front of My Favorite Dress Shop in the garment district. The court was later forced to release them. Furriers Plan Mass Meet to Launch Drive On Work Card System NEW YORK.—The struggle of the furriers against the enforcing card racketeer system is taking on a mass character. In every shop where the Kaufman agents together with the bosses came up to force the workers to pay money to the underworld Kaufman gang, the workers answered with determined resistance. At the Cooper Union mass meeting to be held soon concrete plans for Spreading and intensifying this strug- gle will be discussed by the workers. All fur workers, employed and unem- ployed are urged to mobilie and come en mass to this meeting, SOVIET FILM “REVOLT IN THE DESERT” AT ACME SATURDAY “Revolt in the Desert,” a new Soviet Amkino production and newest film release from Soviet Russia will have same time that the government is donating billions of dollars to the railroads and banks and spending huge sums for war preparations. Amter contrasted the deepening mass misery in the United States with its army of 12,000,000 unem- ployed with conditions under the rule of the workers and peasants in the Soviet Union where, last week, wages | ternational Ladies’ Garment Workers A number of families denied relief by the Home Relief Bureau will be led today at noon by the Unemploy- ed Council to a local Block Aid sta- tion at 2 Avenue A to demand aid. The Block Aid campaign has, by and dimes raised over $2,000.000 dol- lars. Yet when a committee from the Downtown Unemployed Council , brought needy workers and asked were again raised 11 to 20 per cent| for relief last week they were told the industries. He called for ®!by the Block Aid on Avenue A that ited struggle of all workers and/they had no relief, Proving that poor farmers against the capitalist| tne plock Aid is not only organized hunger and war offensive and for! 5 to deceive the working class, to spy support of the party of the working- | : y Jon them and to pile heavier and class, the Communist Party, in the! heavier the burden of the crisis on coming elections. |them but is a complete hoax, refus- Exposes Sham Bourgeois Democracy | ing to take care of needy cases after Hudson, secr of the Marine |@ising money in the name of the Workers Industrial League and re- | Needy. presentative of the Trade Union Un-| The Downtown Unemployed Coun- ity Council pointed out that although | cil has started an intensive campaign the World War was supposedly | to expose the treachery of the Block fought “to make the world safe for|Aid to the workers of the East Side. was raging against the workers of | 100,000 leaflets. On April 9 and 10 this country, the right of free|they will hold tag days to raise nied in the coal fields of Kentucky,| They appeal to [all workers who Pennsylvania, etc. and |that war| possibly can to join in the tag days. struggles of the workers, under cover | the leaflets are distributed. The Block of martial law, and increased misery | Aid is also part of the bosses war Clara Wernick, of the Young Com- | scheme in 1917. munist League, told of the mobiliza-| workers wanting to cooperate in war, of the terrific exploitation of | stations April 9-10: headquarters of the youth in industry, of denial of | workers Ex. cemen’s League, 79 workers. |Club, 11 Clinton Street; Downtown | Samuel Stember, a member of the | Unemployed Council, 34 E. 7th St.; | Bx-Servicemen’s League, pointed out | Side Workers Club, 196 B. Broadway. that the imperialists no longer en-| but simply mobiie eae tops so’ BRONX COUNCIL attack, as the Japanese have done in| United States does in Nicaragua, El| Salvador and other Latin mere | Calls For Fight Against Negro | Force Buro to Give Aid Oppression “7 | to Two Families name of the League of Struggle for| Negro Rights urged the workers pre- | neighbors and shopmates to build up| a tremendous mass defense for the | ond against the murderous national | oppression of the Negro people, for | |and the right of self-determination for the Black Belt. the Soviet Union told of the triumph. | ont march of Socialist construction opening of new giant industrial plants, the increase in production, |Plan. He pointed out that the Sov- | |iet masses were now moving forward | catrying out of the Second Five Year Plan, which would abolish classes in tremendous improvement in the material and cultural conditions of | ful Socialist construction, with its | abolition of unemployment and want, destroy in their criminal plans for armed intervention against the Sov- ea Bee Thousands Cheer Pa-) | rade In Detroit democracy,” today the wildest terror |It intends to flood that section with speech and assemblage brutally de- | funds for these leaflets. would mean further attacks on the|It is of paramount importance that and suffering for the toiling masses. | plan, being similar to Home Defense tion by the bosses of the youth for| the tag days report at the following relief whatever to the young|r. 10th St.; Downtown Workers | Executive Committee of the Workers | Workers Center, 142 E. 3rd St.; East |gage in formal declarations of war. | Manchuria and Shanghai, as the} WINS RELIEF | countries. | saa Mother Bloor, speaking in the} sent to actively agitate among their nine innocent Scottsboro Negro boys, | |complete equality for the Negroes | Marcel Scherer of the Friends of} in the Soviet Union, of the recent the success of the First Five Year| | with the greatest enthusiasm for the the Soviet Union and effect a further the Soviet masses. It is this success- that the bosses are now trying to| iet Union, Negro Section | DETROIT, April 7.— \Five thousand Negro| and white workers) marched yesterday for! jover an hour through | old, had bee nso ill that she weighed its American Premiere at the Aeme|the Negro proletarian district ‘Theatre this Saturday. “Revolt in the|in spirited demonstration Desert’ was taken in remote part| against imperialist war and of Turkemistan, with the nomadic] the Scottsboro lynch verdicts. le of that region as the cast. Th ph eee ,| Tens of thousands of work- picture shows an old and ancient | | form of civilization, many customs |@" lined the sidewalks, cheering the | Ten thousand workers ‘ | de, and habits of their desert life, going | PAT back to antiquity. Much of the wealth |met the marchers at the Grand Cir. of these nomad people is ¢oncen- |cus Park amid a thunderous ovation. | Red streamers and banners stud- trated in their flocks and much of | f their life is struggle for existence, |1°d the entire march, with slogans |against imperialist war, for the de- ‘There are interestin scenes of the i caravan in motion of the desert | {M8 of the Chinese m Rare camps where the women can take | Er arches i = se! ee ee down the simple huts in little time | 8° eke pete ein and pack them on camels—for these | U™ted Sep aEe coy ore Wee AS nomads keep on the move all the Negro workers, of employed and un- time. The terrors of thirst and sand | storms are shown in dramatic se- | quences, primitive metthods of keep- ing house and rites of these backward people are shown in the picture. Into this background of ancient superstition and ignorance comes the young Aina, who represents modern life. In contrast to the desert women with their long trailing garments, ela-| Youth Night at the Needle Trades borate head dresses and vells, she| Workers’ Bazaar, which opened wears an abbreviated skirt, a smock | Thursday at the New Star Casino, and her bobbed hair flies in the wind, | 107th Street and Park Avenue, * The final scenes show the amal-| For fhis occasio nthe Youth Com- (CONTINUED ON PAGE THREE) Needle Trades Bazaar | Holds Special Youth | Night This Evening NEW YORK.—Tonight will be | manent shelter, Treat Unemployed As The militancy and persistence of workers in, the Bronx, led by the Lower Bronx Unemployed Council | forced the Home Relief Bureau to ive relief to Alex Soloma, 532 East 136th Street, after the unemployed worker was evicted in the rain last week. On April 4th the Council forced the bureau to take care of an unemployed elde:!y couple by the ame of Prushonsky. In the case of Soloma, two open ir meetings were held and the workers mobilized for a demonstra- on in front of the bureau. A riot | quad was called, but did not dare to attack in face of the workers’ mili- tancy. The crowd was reay to take the furniture an unload it in front of the Borough Hall when the bureau granted their demands. The elderly couple were evicted from 284 Anns Avenue. Despite the fact that Mrs. Prushonsky, 50 years 75 pounds and was unable to walk. She was brought in a baby carriage to the Unemployed Council. A meet- ing was held and money collected to take Mrs. Prushonsky to the Home Relief Bureau in a taxi. The Bureau was indifferent to the pitiful aspects of the case and re- fused aid. The workers refused to leave the builing. Police were called, who would not arrest the sick old woman because there was no matron in jail. ‘The determined stan of the workers finally forced the police and supervisor to remove the old woman to the hospital and call the Catholic Charities to pay her rent. A sign was placed on the furniture while it was in the street, “Hoover Pros- perity.” A demonstration was held by the council two days later demanding that two old workers, worn out and neglected by the bosses, receive per- On Chain Gang On City Relief Jobs NE WYORK, N. Y.—Unemployed, working on the cities emergency re- lief jobs, are treated as if. they were criminals on a chain gang, workers report. Strict, inhuman discipline is gen- forced, Talking is not permitted, workers caught speaking to their neighbors are punished with a loss of time. A loss of time is a direct way of starving the workers, since every penny off their meagre pay is} Union, locals 20 and 22, membetship, 8,500, also voted in favor of the ref- erendum. Numerous other endorsements from A. F. of L. local unions and lodges of | railroad brotherho | to the office of th® committee daily. bleeding workers of their last nickels | Local 720, United Mine Workers, from | | Staunton, Ill, not only voted in fa- | vor of the referendum, which was initiated by 57 local unions and since endorsed by 50 more, but also in- | structed its delegates to present the | demand of unemployment insurance are coming in | A. F. of L. local unions to the refer- endum proves that the demand for unemployment insurance amongst the workers is nation-wide and that before this referendum is over, it will be established beyond the shadow of @ doubt, that Messrs Green and Woll in defeating the demand for unem- ployment’ insurance at the last con- vention of the A. F. of L. in Van- couver did not represent the workers but rather the interests of the em- ployers. PROTEST LYNCH _ VERDICT TONIGHT Moore and Brodsky to | Speak at Meeting | A mass protest demonstration | against the bloody verdict of the Alabama Sup reme Court in the | Scottsboro case, will be held #tonight | at St. Lukes Hall, 125 W. 130th St., New York City. All Negro and white workers are asked to come to this demonstration tonight where Comrade Moore of the National Committee of the League of Struggle for Negro Rights and Com- rade Brodsky, lawyer for the Inter- national Labor Defense, will talk about the latest developments of the Scottsboro case Admission is free! WORKERS STRIKE IN PARIS SHOE Build United Front Against Lockout NEW YORK—The entire crew of the Paris Shoe Co. went out on strike | yesterday against the lock-out of the | boss. For three weeks the firm schemed in many ways to put over a wage- cut of 20 per cent. The workers or- ganized themselves and declared that they will not stand any more wage- cuts. The bosses, seeing the determi- nation of the crew withdrew his de- mand and recognized the Shop Com- mittee. Immediately it was evident that new schemes would follow. This week all the workers were told to get their tools and get out. The crew answered with a strike against the lock-out. One remarkable feature of this trike is the concrete application of | he United Front of the workers from | below. One department, the cutter, belongs to a so-called Shoe Workers Union, under the name of the Na- tional Shoe Workers Association. The leaders of this outfit attempted to gain leadership of this strike. Ninety-five per cent of the crew, however, after Hstening to a debate between the representative of the Shoe and Leather Workers Industrial Union and the “leaders” of the asso- ciation, decided to join the Industrial Union. But these “leaders” threatened to put their own pickets on and in the event of a settlement, the asso- ciation will demand separate agree- ment for the cutters. These propos- als were repudiated by the crew, in- cluding the majority of the cutters. The cutters joined hands with the rest of the workers to fight together for victory under the leadership of the Shoe and Leather Workers In- dustrial Union. F. S. U. BRANCH AFFAIR The Bronx Branch of the Friends of the Soviet Union will hold a Vec- cherinka, concert and dance Saturday night, April 9th, at Ambassador Hall, 172nd Street and Third Avenue. ATTEMPT BREAK LAUNDRY STRIKE ‘The various bosses of the down- town laundries are cooperating with the boss of the New Style Laundry, at 16th Street and 3rd Avenue, in order to break this important strike. Mr. Sam Cherner, the boss of the New Style Laundry, declared that he would rather close his plant than have any organizatio nin his place. However, he has changed his attl- tude somewhat, bue he is still holding out against the demands of the strikers, because the bosses of many downtown laundries, like the Lion Laundry, at 11th Street between Ave- nue C and D and the Whitehouse Laundry, at 8th Street, are helping him operate his laundry by sending in truckfulls of laundry bundles, The bosses’ association is susing this last method after all their frameups and other vicious schemes had failed to break the strike. The strikers, Negro and white, though inexperienced, when they struck 100 per cent for the reinstate- ment of a fired negro worker, now clearly realize the importance of this strike and they are more determined than ever, now at the end of the sixth week of bitter struggle, to con- tiune vigorously and win the strike. There will be a demonstration and several open-air meetings o nFriday, April 8th, at 2 o'clock. All workers are asked to come to 5 East 19th Street, first fioor, and help ‘these militant strikers of the New Style Laundry win their fight against sweat-shop conditions adn for the right to organize. Demonstrate For Relief In Bronx Employed and Unemployed workers of the Bronx are being mobilized by ‘he Bronx Councils for a mass dem- onstration Saturday, 1 p. m. in front of the Borough Hall. The meeting will demand immediate relief, unem- ployment insurance and protest the closing of the Hom Relief Bureaus. Thousands upon thousands of workers in the Bronx and to rest of New York City are faced with star- the recent decree issued by Tammany Hall and the boss class. vation or are starving already due to The decree ordered that 56,000 fam- ilies in desperate circumstances shall be removed from the relief list and applications should be closed to all news cases. Those still on the lists are to receive the meagerest relief, only enough food to torture their in. The response on the part of the | 1300 Penna Miners On Strike; Work to Spread Ind. Strike BOLTZ, Pa.—Two hundred miners of the Diamond Tmoklers Coal Com- pany are out on strike here. The strike was immediately spread and 100 miners of the Cosgrove Coal Mine Company, in Dilltown, Pa., joined the strike. A Workers Interational Relief nCommittee ad a strike com- | mittee has been elected in Boltz and W. I. R. committees are being formed in the Cosgrove strike. A similar committee has been organ- ized in the Seward section. Work is progressing towards spreading the Indiana County strike into Westmoreland and Somerset TO COLUMBUS Shops and Organi NEW YORK.—The United Front May Day Anti-War Committee, set up at the mass conference of, New York workers organizations, issued an urgent call to all organizations program of action in preparation for the mighty demonstration and par- ade on the International Day of working class solidarity and strug- gle, May First: Counties. METAL WORKERS OPEN DRIVE FOR NEW MEMBERS To Hold ‘Youth Meet Monday, April 11, In New York NEW YORK.—As its share in the T. U. U. C. drive for 25,000 new mem-~ bers, the Metal Workers Industrial League, New York District, is going ahead at full speed with its member- ship campaign, Leaflets for the un- employed metal workers as well as general leaflets for all the workers in the metal industry in this district are being issued and distributed widely. ‘This week about 30 unem- ployed metal workers made applica- tion to join the Metal Workers Un- employed Branch after receiviing leaflets urging them to organize in a joint struggle with the employed. These new recruits will at once go into activities such as holding open- air meetings in frot of the larnge factories each |morning during the hours when hundreds of workers swarm around looking for jobs. A complete check-up of the work done so far in the drive will be made at the next regular membership meeting of the Metal Workers Indus- trial |Leagne, which will be held Friday, April 8, 8 p.m. at Irving Plaza, Irving Place and 15th Street. All members are urged to attend and be o time so tnhat the meeting may start promptly at 8 and end early. A class on Revolutionary Trade Unionism is being started [by the M. W. I. L., the first session of which will be held Saturday, April 9, from 2\pm. to 4 pm, at 5 East 19th Street. A meeting of young metal workers will be held on Monday, April 11th, 7:30 p.m. at “Zukunft” Hall, 31 2nd Avenue between 2n and 3rd Streets At this meeting a report will be given on the tasks of the Metal Workers Industrial League in organizing the youth, and a Youth Section will be formed which will at once get on th- ‘ob to develop sports activities and other youth activities. CONCERT AND DANCE IN BRIGTON A concert and dance will be held Saturday night, April 9th at~ 1113 Brighton Beach Avenue under the auspices of unit 6-9-11 of the Com- munist Party. The proceds of the meeting will go to the Daily Worker: appetit. Yet the banwers still shout for economy. Nottting short of murder- ing ‘the workers through starvation will suit these parasites who sit on their millions and ask the workers to give pennies in the Block Aid Cam- paign. THE THEATRE GUILD Presents UE 00 TO BE GOOD A New Play by BERNARD SHAW D THEA., 52d St., W. of B’ :80 Mats. Thurs., Sat. let during working hours is prohib- ited. The foreman uses dozens of pre- texts to dock the men. The rules are not set. One day one thing is not per- mitted and the next day the workers find a new set of rules are in force, The rulings are left to the foremen who turn into petty tyrants, But the orders for the shifting rules is directed by Tammany Hall with the deliberate purpose of using these pretexts to reduce the cost of relief. Most of the workers have been cut from three days ‘work at $5.50 to two days work at $5 a day. Unable, therefore, to make direct cuts with- out entirely exposing their fake charity schemes, these tyrannical methods are employed to cut the re- so much less bread. Going to the toi- lief indirectly. REVOLT NEW FILM DRAMA FROM SOVIET RUSSIA Beginning Tomorrow (Saturday) Amkino Presents—American Premiere the DESERT The Theatre Guild Presents REUNION IN VIENNA 4 Comedy .By ROBERT E. SHERWOOD, THEA, 45th 1» & |S Ave. ‘Tel. Pe 66100 Martin Beck 7?" Ey 8:40." Mts Th., Sat. COUNSELLOR-AT-LAW SLMER RICE PAUL MUNI! | Ply: Then. W. 45 St. By. 8:20 Plymouth wat. Thurs. & Sat. 2:20 | KC AME BIWAY. & 4ard sr. ZANE GREY (Himseit) Stop the robber war against the Chinese people. Demonstrate on APRIL 6th against im- perialist war. i “South Sea, Adventures” 6th Ave. BIGGEST SHOW IN NEW YORK Res MARLENE DEITRICH in inet, | “SHANGHAI LESTER E x Pp R gE s s” COLE MASS CONCERT — OF THE FRIENDS OF for the benefit of the DAILY WORKER GIVEN BY 11 BRANCHES OF THE RUSSIAN MUTUAL AID SO- CIETY, POLISH WORKERS’ CLUB, AND THE STALIN BRANCH April 9, 1932 at 8 p. m. MANHATTAN LYCEUM—64 EAST 4th STREET Two Halls!—Two Orchestras! gamation of the old life with the new under the leadership of Aina and with the help of agriculturists, the the ” at the Acme Theatre, ., », last day of “Road /On Saturday and Sunday admission mittee of the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union is mobilizing large sections of the young dressmakers and furriers, Young workers from all trades are urged to come and celebrate together with the workers of the needle trades, Admission Friday will be 25 cents. ‘Will be 50 cents, “y P| J rae ” A tense drama of the Nomadic People in Soviet Turkmenistan A Young Communist’ Leads the Reclamation of the Desert and Its Thirsty Soll—Enacted by the Desert People LAST DAY—“ROAD TO LIFE” CME THEATRE {|} BSC Biel a Sun Mth STREET & UNION SQUARE, Midnite Folk Songs Revolutionary Program by the Cartoonist—Chalk Talk. Ballet—Gypsey Tabor. SAereenr —PROGRAM— A. RIBITZKI, accompanir’ by ANNIUTA ::- MARTINOWSKAYA and WASILEWSKAYA -+,- STELLA FARINA & SOLODUKA, brother & sister Ukrainian Songs, MARIA DMITRSHINA, accompanied by piano Balalaika Duo—Folk and Revolutionary Songs. ENTERTAINMENT THE SOVIET UNION Prolet Buhne 1, All organizations are. called upon to rush their pledges towards the May Day struggle fund. Funds are urgently needed to develop the May Day activities. Millions of leaflets are in preparations. Signs, floats, banners, bands of music, effigies, etc. must be gotten ready without delay. May Day buttons and pennants are already ordered. Funds must be immediately avail- able. 2 All organizations, shops, un- ions, mass organizations to issue statements in the press, get out leaflets for wide mass distributions, organize a series of indoor and outdoor meetings among the work- ers in their shops, nationality or neighborhood, prepare appropriate slogans, banners, etc. to carry out the following immediate ! TO MARCH FROM UNION SQUARE CIRCLE ON MAY Ist United Front Committee Calls All Unions, zations to Prepare $. Each organization to make special attempt to penetrate out- side workers organizations .espe- cially A. F. of L, local unions, work- ers benefit and cultural organiza- tions to obtain their affiliation to the May Day United Front. All pledges and contributions as well as for information and addi- tional affiliations should be sent to. the United Front May Day Com- mittee, 50 E. 13th St., 5th floor. To March From Union Square The Committee announced today that all plans are complete for the mass demonstration on May First at Union Square at 12:30 p.m. and for a giant parade from Union Square to Columbus ~Circle along 8th Avenue. The necessary applications have been filed by the committee with the police. x The next meeting of the United coming Sunday, April 10, at 11 a.m. sharp on the second floor at 50 E. 13th St. All members are urged to | attend without fail. This meeting will make final arrangements for the demonstration, and will check up on the activities of all the affiliated or- ganizations. Russian Aid Society to Aid Daily Worker The United Committee of the Rus- sian National Mutual Aid Society. following its policy of uniting the Russian workers in America and sup- porting the workers’ press, today an- nounced its first concert and ball for the benefit of the Daily Worker, cen- tral organ of the Communist Party, U.8.A. It will be held at Manhattan Lyceum Saturday evening, April 9, starting at 8 p.m This affair is arranged under the auspices of the United Committee, composed of representatives front 12 working class organizations, and in- cluding a committee from the Rus- sian weekly militant paper, “Novy Mir” In a statement to the Daily Work- er, the United Committee says that this affair is being held to show the support of the Russian and allied workers to the working class of America—to demonstrate politically that the New York Russian workers, branches of the R.N.M.A.S, the Polish Workers’ Club and the Russian branch of the Friends of the Soviet Union are fighting in the ranks of the militant workers, in defense of the Soviet Union, against hunger, war, unemployment and mass siar- vation ‘The statement says: ‘‘The branches of the R.N.M.AS, at whose initiative the United Committee was formed, came to realize that they should not conduct an undertaker’s office, but rather a headquarters for the support of the workers’ movement, defending the foreign-born, counter-acting the | infamous attacks of the Russian white guards” It continues: “We came to the con- clusion that assistance given only to the press of the Russian language is insufficient, and that we must give Banquet The Tractor Automobile School will give a BANQUET in honor of the 8th Group of Tractor Mechanics | Leaving for the USSR. Sun., April 10th, 8 p.m. Workers Center, 50 E. 13th St.| Interesting Program—All Invited All Proceeds for Proletarian Press (Group leaves Thursday, April 14th) DUNNE—MUSTE DEBATE will be held at the Prospect Workers Center 1157 Southern Blyd., Bronx FRIDAY, APRIL 8th —SUBJECT— What program shall the American Workers follow on the industrial field For the T.U.U.L.—William F. Dunne For the C.P.L.A.—A. J Muste Intern’) Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 15th FLOOR AD Work Done Under Personal Care of DR. JOSEPHSON MELROSE DAIRY VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT Comrades Will Always Find it Pleasant to Dine at Our Place, 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx (near 174th St. Station) TELEPHONE \UNTERVALE 90-0149 RUSSIAN MEALS For Poor Pocketbooks KAVKAZ 332 E. 1th Street, N. ¥. ©. PON nal teats whatever assistance we can afford to he leader of the working class movement in Americathe Daily Worker. The entire Russian colony of New York and vicinity stands be- hin dus to carry this plan out. “All workers who are free Satur- day night can start this movement of the Russian workers off success~ fully by coming to Manhattan Ly- ceum to our first affair. “Long Live the Daily Worker! “Long live the Communist Party, Al” 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! Saturday SEND-OFF PARTY Arranged by Unit 15 At M. SWERDLIN’S HOUSE 2077 Anthony Ave. Bronx To Comrade Masipolsky Who is leaving for Soviet Union Proceeds to go to Daily Worker Come and bring your friends An enjoyable evening promised. BANQUET and CONCERT to be given by SECTION 8, UNIT 9 for the benefit of THE DAILY WORKER Saturday April 9th At 8:00 P, M. At 524 Vermont St., B’klyn. ADMISSION 25¢ CONCERT and DANCE Given under the joint auspices of © W. 0. BRANCH 132—YOUTH BRANCH 401—WOMEN’S COUN- CIL 28 and SHULE 14 of the WO 1013 Tremont Ave., Bronx (Near West Farms) Saturday April 9th ADMISSION 25¢ All proceeds for the Daily Worker, Kentucky Miners and Dress Strike CONCERT and DANCE ‘Will be held under the auspices of UNITS 6, 9, 11 of SECTION 7 Saturday April 9th 1113 Brighton Beach Ave. Brooklyn Musical Program Refreshments ADMISSION 25c All proceeds for the Dally Worker Save the Daily Worker CONCERT and DANCE Saturday Aopril 9th At 8:00 P. M, at 105 Jackson St., Newark Excellent Jazz Band and Musical Program Dancing and Refreshments ADMISSION 35¢ Come and Bring Your Friends Daily Worker Report all Affairs to this column Front Committee will be held this’ t , }