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» age iwo DAILY WORKER, NiW LURK, LUmsDAY, Abiiil, 14 3 SHOT BY TROOPS IN OHIO STRIKE Barri Somers ae: State Orders Miners Shot Va. mine strike he ndred and e stationed ther v are kept in cont: » Goodyear Mine Somers, ation point the attack, ed memt of the Sig- Pe at Cadiz swarms with ister Hotel is under whole country is be- c ‘ol led “by troops. ‘o days the Somers Mine has ortified by a sandbag barricade. Machine gun nests and soldiers with fixed bayonets are scatered through- out the vicinty. Soldiers are gar- risoned in cellars Early yesterday morning seven hundred pickets advancing on the Somers Mine of the Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co., near Adena, Ohio, were met with rifle fire. Three min- ers were wounded. The National Guard received or- ders yesterday to mow down all min- ers who advanced by car or foot near the zone of the Somers Mine. The ‘best marksmen have been picked out for the job. As this report is being written the | enraged and hungry miners are re- forming and rallying for a new ad- vance. The miners demand emphat- ically the right to strike and picket. | At present, all but eight of the) Somers miners are on strike. Only} fifteen men worked in the mine yes- | jterday. These were smuggled into the mine early in the morning. | ‘The Somers miners say to hell with (‘National Guard protection”! They ‘have declared. their solidarity with | the miners in other mines. ‘The war preparations in Harrison County include entrenchments. The soldiers have hundreds of tear gas | bambs and automatic rifles. There | are special bayonet squads and ma-| chine gun detachments mobilized for attack on the miners. Aeroplanes ‘are whiring over head and more| troops are held in reserve in Cadiz. | Despite all this ‘terror the spirit | of the miners has risen. One wo- | man declared that the miners and | their families will be worse than | dogs if they do not get a union. | “They will have to drive us back | with bayonets, said one of the | “to make as work in the Somer mine.” YCL Celebrates 10th. Anniversary with Exhibition Apr. 24-26 The 10th anniversary of the Young Communist League U.S.A, will be cel- ebrated in New York at the Central Opera House, 67th St. and 3rd Ave. on Friday, April 22, at 7:30 p. m. sharp. ‘The celebration will consist of a short program and then a dance till 1 a.m. Comrade Amter will greet the Y.C. L. of its 10th birthday in the name of the District Committee of the Communijt Party. The greetings wil) be answared by the graduation of more tham 50 Young Communists in- | to the Communist Party. In order | to have plenty of time for the dance, | the affair will begin at 7:30 p. m. | aharp. Purther particulars will be printed, | ater. Funeral of Comrade Sommie Weiser to Be | Held Today at 1 P.M. | The funeral of Comrade Sommie Weiser, who was killed in an acci- dent on Sunday, will be held today jab 1 p.m. The body of Comrade } Weiser will be in the Workers Cen- ter, 50 East 13th Street from 10 a. m. until the time the funeral begins. Comrade Weiser was killed Sun- day in an accident at Webster and Tremont Avenues, Bronx, on her way | to the courthouse to bail out com- rades who had been arrested in con- nection with the showing of a W. I. R, movie. Comrade Weiser was a member of Women’s Council 8, and was on the Executive Committee of the Inter- netional Workers Order. The Executive Committee of the ‘Women’s Council calls on all worekrs to attend the funeral. GET-TOGETHER PARTY AT TRISH WORKERS CLUB NEW YORK. — An entertainment and get-together party will be held | by the Irish Workers Club of Greater New York this coming Saturday, April 23, 8 p m. at 2072. 5th Avenue, between 127th and 128th Streets. All workers are Invited. Refresh- ments will be served. The Irish Workers Club will hold its first open air meeting at 139th Street and Willis Avenue, tomorrow %t 8 p.m. The subject to be taken up at this meeting is “The | workers in the revolutionary move- ment.” * | their Spread May Day Daily Worker Thru New he distribution and sale y-five thousand copies ay Edition of the Daily ‘orker must be made beforehand. A hich are not working on April 30, and proper ar- nts to be made by every or- to reach the factories April 29th y Day City Edition will be y, April 28th at 11 p. m. orders including cash to be in to the District Daily Office, fifth floor, not later April 27th, at 2 p. City Ed Thurs n will issue wil correspon- ey and New York. 2 turned in to the later than Satur- ay. It this May Day City Edition should reach the workers of the Metal, Oil, Marine and Chemical factories in our district. This May Day Edition must penetrate new factories and erritories. We have no time to lose Send in your articles and bundle or- now. Advanced cash for the bundles and May Day contributions to be sent in at once so we can know how many copies above the original 35,000 copies of the City Edition we may need. NEEDLE WORKER MOBILIZING FO MAY DAY MEET Call Workers to Take Up May Day in Shops NEW YORK.—At a meeting of the | Executive Council and trade commit- tee of the Industrial Union, elaborate plans were laid for mobilizing the masses of the needle trades workers for the May Day demonstration. It was decided that all trade unions should work out slogans and banners | dealing with the problems confront- ing them in the trade. A large band will be hired by the union for the | needle trade section. Open air meetings are being ar- April 23th. is of utmost importance that sare ders | ranged throughout the market to bring the May Day message before the needle trades workers, Special trade leaflets ang resolutions en- dorsing the United Front May dem- onstration are being issued. ‘The Council decided to issue a special appeal to the members of the Inter- national, of the Joint Council, the Amalgamated, and Cap and Millinery | Workers, calling on them to demon- strate on May 1 together with the revolutionary workers, and not with the bureaucrats who have betrayed everything that May Day stands for. These workers are called upon to join in mass the United Front May demonstration and thus express their opposition to the class collaboration policies, to the policy of injunctions, frame-ups, pursued by the officials of their respective junions, while working hand with hand with the yellow socialist bureaucrats to sell out the conditions of the workers, and to desecrate May Day which is @ da yof mobilization for struggle against the bosses. All workers are called upon to take up the question of May Day in shops and mobilize every needle trade worker te march to- gether with the need] trades sec- tion in the United Front May Day dmonstration. Organizations Urged to Get Material for May 1 Demonstration All the material for May Ist is already printed and the organiza- tions should send at once their re- presentatives to get buttons, leaflets and instructions for the March on May I at the new headquarters of the May United Front Committee, 5 East 19th Street. Organizations should at once get in touch with Comrade Burns who is director of the technical work of the United Front May Day Committee. Do not fail to call for buttons at oncei JOSEPH ZACK, Secretary United Front May Daq Committee. Bronx Unemployed Council Calis for Mobilization Meet NEW YORK. — A mass meeting | arranged by the Unemployed Council | with headquarters at 1487 Brook Avenue w,ill be held Wednesday, | April 20th, 8 p. m., at the Bronx Workers Club, 3882 3rd Avenue. The purpose of this meeting is to mobilize the Bronx workers for a mass demonstration before City Hall on Thursday, April 21st, at 12 o'clock | and before the Home Relief Bureau | of Claremont Parkway and Wash- ington Avenue on the same day, at 10 a, m, All Bronx workers are urged to be present at this important meeting. Out Into the Streets May Ist! The Interna- tional Day of Struggle Against Hunger and War! '7 Scottboro Boys Facing Appeal Legal Murder on May 13 to Workers | | CHATTANOOGA, April 1 ganiger of the Internationak Lak the following letter from the se the death cells at Kilby igned by Andy Wright, the ol is an expression of the mental a alt of their confinement proach of May 138, the date MOORE, BRODSKY, AT MASS TRIAL 'N THE BRONX Thousands Will Jam Ambassador Hall on Thursday Night Comrade Richard B. Moore will deliver a speech full of facts, every | one of them a dastardly crime com- mitted against the workers of the Bronx by Boro president Bruckner, Building Commissioner Flynn and |his aids, at the Open Mass Trial on , Thursday, April 1, at 8 p.m. at Am- bassador Hall, 3rd Ave. and Clare- mont Parkway. Negro and white unemployed work- ers will testify that they have been | denied relief by these officials, who | not only packet tens of thousands }of dollars in official salaries, but are grafting hundreds of thousands of dollars besides. Comrade Carl Brodsky, congress- ional candidate in the Bronx in the coming elections, will be the presid- jing proletarian judge. The mass jury, composed of delegates of work- ers organizations, will deliberately weather the defendants are guilty or not. Workers who participated in re- cent rent strikes of the Bronx will also attend this Mass Trial and will testify how these grafters have mob- ilized the police against the workers rent strikers. | The trial on Thursday will pre- | pare the workers for the big May} Day demonstration to be held on| Union Square, All workers should attend the trial | on Thursday, April 21, 8 p.m., at | Ambassador Hall, 3rd Avenue near! Claremont Parkway. | | | N.Y. ATHLETES HOLD HARLEM PROTEST RUN | bosses Demand Freedom for Tom Mooney and the Scottsboro Boys NEW YORK.—Cheered on by hun- dreds of workers present, the Scotts- boro protest parade through the streets of Harlem ended with a de- | monstration at 110th Street and Fifth | Ave., Ben Tucker, of the Red Spark | A. C., led a field of 39 runners to) win the Scottsboro.Mooney Street:| run on Saturday, April 12. ‘The run, planned under the direc- tion of the Vesa A. ©. and sanction- ed by the Eastern District Counter- Olympic Committee, covered a stretch of approximately two and a half miles. So bruising was the competition that one of the competi- ters, a Negro athlete, collapsed at \the finish, while Ben Tucker was forced to exert himself to~ sprawl | across the finish line the winner. His time was 13 min. 26 seconds. G.| Turkia of the Vesa A. C. came in| second in 13.28, while MacGordon, of the Bronx Park Youth Club, finished third in 13.29. A feature of the rum was the of-| fering of a club prize in the form of a silver cup to the club placing the niost athletes among the first fifteen. This was won by the F.U.P.AC, a} Seareavian Brotherhood. Second | aud third club prizes were won by| the Yorkville W. C. and the Vesa A. C. Individual vrizss were a gold medal to the winner and certificates of merit to second and third to fin- ish. The street run was the second to be held in the Matropolitan Area within @ month, The first was held | ;On March 12 as a protest against | | the continued imprisonment of Tom | Mooney. As in the Tom Mooney | street run, every athlete Participat- ing bore ‘the inscriptions of “Free Tom Money,” “Free the Scottsboro | Boys,” on his shirt, i The run served to dramatized in| the most graphic manner possible the Widespread workingclass protest a-| gainst the lynch decision handed down by the Alabama State Supreme Court in the case of the innocent Scottsboro, boys. The first fifteen to finish and their | clubs follow: Ben Tuckner, Red Spark A.C. G. Turkia, Vesa A.C., MacGordon, Bronx Park Y.C., I. Pecnar, Yorkville W.c. G. Bares, Yorkville A.C. H. Back- lund FUPAC., 8. Bramen, Browns- ville Y¥.C., A. Maki, Vesa A.C, An- tikol, Brooks A.C., W. Carlson, F.U. F.AC., L. Cerkin, "Alco AC., EB. Bik- man, Scandinavian W.C,, S. Bjork, FUFAC., I. Sackoff, Kaytee AC. oe. Wienerich, Red Spark A.C. Prison, Montgomery. list to be made of all fac-| Tortured Three Times by Approach of Death, Boys Depend on Working-Class to Force Their Release é ane Dillon, Southern or- por Defense, yesterday received ven Scottsboro boys confined in The letter is dest of the 7 boys. The letter suffered by the boys as in the - death cells and the ap- the Alabama Supreme for them to burn in the elec- | chair, This is the third time the Alabama | agony Court trie lynching of these innocent young boys caught up in the net of a vi-| cious class and race frame-up—the third time that the boys have been, forced to experience the suspense of seeing the death date draw nearer. | This letter must serve to rally the entire v of a tremendous mass defense move- ment, involving millions of white and Negro workers in the mass fight to save the boys. Kilby Prison Montgomery, Ala. April 12th, 1932. Dear Miss Dillon:—~ “1 certainly hope that I am not bothering you too much or either too troubiesome of course I real- ize you all are doing everything that is possible for we boys and we boys are very thankful for what you all are doing for us. As I realize it takes time and money and things cannot be done as we wish especially two or three things at once, What I wish to say—in you all spare time and chances if our cases go before the U. S. Supreme Court which will remain read (keep— Editor) us here quite a while won't | it Miss Dillon, but hear what I wants to ask you if it's not im- | possible any way at all please try to have us moved back to Birming- ham County Jail so we will have a little room to get exciste (exer- cise—Editor) because this Httle tight place goes awful hard with us here especially in the summer and no room to walk around in here. In confinement of this little tight room so long, really it will soon run a person crazy. No ex- erciste, no kind of joyment to keep your mind together. Miss Dillon honest you really cannot imagine how hard it goes with we poor boys here with nothing to keep our minds together. Of course some- times we have magazines to read what people send us. But they very often runs out. Facts about it I don’t really believe I can put | up with it in here another year be- fore T be gone insane mystelf. As nothing more I wil close. Sincerely, ANDY WRIGHT. Answer soon as possible, FP. 8. Eviction of Ex-Service Man Stayed by Action of N.Y. Jobless Council NEW YORK, N. Y.—As a result of the mass pressure brought to bear by the quick mobilization activity of the Down Town Unemployment Council, the eviction of Louis Vas- solarides, an unemployed ex-service man, from his apartment at 606 5. 13th Street, vented. At the 2nd Street and 2nd Avenue was temporarily pre- | Court House, where he had to ap- pear, Vassolarides was told by the Judge: “I have no use for you Com- munists. If had my way I would not let you stay another hour in the apartment.” However, after the furniture was put back by the working mass of the | neighborhood under the leadership of the Unemployed Council, no fur- ther attempt was made till now to carry on the eviction. Workers are urged to remain on | guard and ready to answer the call of the Unemployed Council, What is going on in the Soviet territories of China? The new pamphlet “Soviet China” will tell you. Ten cent pamphlet. NEW SOVIET TALKIE AT CAMEO WRITTEN AND ACTED BY WORKERS “Golden Mountains,” the Soviet talking picture now at the Cameo Theatre, was written by workers, acted in their factory, and is de- dicated to them. The worker cor- respondents of the great Putilov! tractor factory in Leningrad wrote the material for the scenario at the suggestion of Maxim Gorki, They put into it all that realistic detail of a factory worker's life that makes} this picture so outstanding as a working-class document, In spite of certain shortcomings, manifested particularly in the drag- ging out of certain scenes, the pic- ture is head and shoulder above the claptrap turned out by the capitalist |. studios. A The period iy which the story of “Golden Movatains” is set was one of struggie for the workers in the Putilov factory, and many of the Worker Correspondents remember the six political strikes that occurred there between January and June of 1914. One of these was the sym- pathy strike with the Baku oil works \ have set a date for the legal! ‘ing class to the building! The letter follows: | "| Saturday A,pril 30th, New Star Ca- Workers to Protest Before Bronx Block Aid Office, Today NEW YORK.—A mass demonstra- tion before the Block Aid Office is | scheduled to take place at 1301 Bos- | ton Road today at 2 p. m, Workers of Bronx are urged to be} at the headquarters of the Middle Bronx Unemployed Council, 1487 Brook Ave, near 17lst Street, at 1) Pp. m, URGE MASS PICKETING IN (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) and file of longshoremen, be the only ones to represent them. All during the strike the Negro | ongshoremen stood shoulder to shoulder with tHe white workers in | their determination to win, The | bosses, however, in in attempt to | split the unity of the white and Negro workers, hired both Negro and | white scabs, many of whom did not know that there was a strike on. The Negro scabs were put to work on dock 48. This dock was formerly worked by white workers alone. The | strikers must understand that this | move is a scheme’ to split the unity | of the ranks of the longshoremen. It has been learned that the | shipping bosses are planning a mass | layoff in connection with the wage- cut, Ryan demagogically speaks about the wage-cut but says nothing about the reducing of the wages. At the meeting held yesterday by | Ryan on the waterfront it took near- | ly two hours for Ryan to explain why | his salary was increased from $6,000 i to $8,000 @ year. The best answer he | could give the dockers was that he would be a sucker if he did not take it. Ryan then dragged in a priest who | said God would not help wage-cut- ters. All efforts were made by the I, L, A. officials to muzzle discussion, but workers continued to demand that the strikers elect a rank and file committee. Workers who took the floor and demanded mass picketing to stop the scabs were enthusiastically applauded. The Marine Workers Industrial Union calls on the strikers to take steps at once to take the strike in their own hands by electing a rank and file strike committee and to commence mass picketing before the the docks. |Victorious Strikers of ‘Berger Service at T.U.U.C. Big Carnival NEW YORK. — The- victorious strikers of the Berger Service, Clean- ers and Dyers, will be in full force at the Trade Union Unity Counci Carnival and Ball, Saturday, April/ 30th, at the New Star Casino, 107th Street and Park Avenue, They will do this as .a sign of great appreciation to the Trade Union Unity Council for the assist- ance they received from the council during their strike, This decision was adopted this Tuesday night, at a mass meeting, at which the workers repelled an- other attempt of the company to dis- charge a worker. Come and meet these militant strikers at the T. U. U. C. Carnival and Ball on the eve of May First, sino, 107th Street and Park Avenue. The admission is 50c. HOSPITAL WORKERS CALL SPECIAL MEETING. * NEW YORK. — Preparing both for a mass meeting to elect a dele- gation which will present among others the demand for an 8-hour day at the Convention of the New York State Hospital Association on May 5 to 7, and for the May Ist demonstra- tion, the Hospital workers Section of the Medical Workers Industrial Lea- gue has called a special meeting to take place tomorrow, 8 p .m,, at 16 W. ist Street. All members are urged to come and bring along as many hospital work- ers as they can. What have you done in the half- dollar campaign? ers, which we see take place in the picture, The factory was manufacturing munitions on government order at! j this time—“the big order” referred \to in the picture. Militaristic dis- | |elpline was introduced, and strikes) | Were followed by mass arrests and executions. Soldiers replaced 5,000 workers, but the militant strikes con. tinued. During the revolution the workers of this factory were very active, and Were among the first to follow bol- |° shevik leadership. In the Civil War period they furnished detachment, after detachment for the various fronts, During peace times the factory has been no less active in production, It was awarded the Red Order in 1926 at the celebration of its 126th an- niversary, From such a long fetagi of work- ing class struggle the magnificent story of the development of a simple Peasant has been evolved, is a a tt so \ “DOCK STRIKE , ANNOUNCE CANDIDACY OF FOSTER, JAMES FORD, AMTER AT BANQUET Over one thousand workers and | representatives of Communist units | land mass organizations were present | at a mass banquet Friday night held to greet the fiftieth birthday of Com- rade Amter, District Organizer of District 2 of the Communist Party. The spirit and program of gathering was full of revolutionary enthusiasm and at the same time) it was a mobilization to further the activities to which Comrade Amter has devoted 30 years of hsi life. There were a few very impressive scenes at the banquet which aroused the, revolutionary spirit to its highest tch. These were when Comrade | Browder, Central Committee repre- sentative of the Communist Party, in his very analytical speech, pointing out the immediate war situation and, our concrete tasks, stated that Com- rade Foster, James Ford and Israel Amter will be the Party standard- bearers in the coming Election Cam- paign, with Comrade Amter as can- | didate for Governor of the State of | New York on the Communist ticket. This brought the workers to their feet, singing the International and cheering the announcement with stormy applause, Another impressive scene was when Mrs. Wright, mother of two | of the Scottsboro victims, Andy and | Roy Wright, 14 and 17 years old, rose to speak, Mrs, Wright will tour the European countries to mobilize the workers in support of the strug- | gle against the lynch trial of the the | | Scottsboro boys. The workers pre-| sent cheered wildly and expressed | determination to fight against the mapped out plan of the bosses to | burn the Scottsboro boys in the el- jectric chair on May 13. Among the Speakers at this gathering were Comrade Browder, Gibert, District | Organizer of Chicago, Roy Hudson, organizer of the Marine Workers In-| dustrial Union, and the 70-year old revolutionary leader, Mother Bloor, | from the west, who received an end- Jess ovation and delivered her fiery address. And then Comrade Amter | | himself who in his speech declared! that this banquet is not in honor of one individual, but is an expression of the workers who came here, of their devotion and recognition of the revolutionary role of the Communist Party in carrying on the struggle of the working class and training and developing the revolutionary leaders | of the working class for the over- | throw of the bourgeoisie. Comrade | Amter stressed the immediate tasks | that are before the Party and the re-| volutionary workers, linking up these | | Struggles with the broad Election | Campaign approaching wide masses | of the workers. Comrade Joe Brods- | ky was toastmaster of the banquet. | In the musical program, the W.LR. band participated, the Proletbuhne | | Gave some excellent mas¢* recitations, | | Comrade Phil Bard of the John Reed | Club drew ‘cartoons and created| great enthusiasm among the workers | gathered. Steel Bosses Hide Huge Profits ‘As They Prepare 3rd Pay Cut The United States Steel Corpora- tion officials assembled for a meeting to divide past profits and give a third wage cut to the steel workers were charged with concealing their real profits yesterday. The charge was made by a minority stockholder, Roberts, Roberts stated that the undistri- buted profits of the corporation were more than $1,200,000,000 exclusive of $203,000,000 profit capitalized’as stock dividend but never touched. Roberts insisted that the corporation could pay a dividend of $2 on its common stock. The U. S, Steel had dropped to the ¢2 from the $4 rate a few| months ago. Of course the big sharks imme- TO START NEW TERM ON MONDAY Must Register Now for Classes NEW YORK. — The Second Spring Term of the Workers School will be- gin next Monday, April 25th, Work- ers must register not later than this week in order to get into the Classes | desired. Registration is now taken | at 35 BE. 12th St. 3rd floor. Many classes scheduled for the term are rapidly formed. Heavy reg- istration is especially recorded for- Principles of Communism, Political | Economy, Organizational Principles, Marxism and Leninism. Some im- portant courses, such as Methods in Shop Work, Problems of Shop Nuc- lei, The Struggle Against Imperialist War, Revolutionary Parliamentarism, and Colonial Problems are compara- tively lagging in registration. Work- ers are advised to take up these vital courses. Party and League units, trade unions, and other mass organi- zations, when sending members to should specify these the school, courses for them to take up. A dance has been arranged by the students of the school on Saturday evenin, April 23, at 35 EB. 12th St. to welcome the new students, All stu- dents of the Workers’ School and their friends are invited. Set quotas, start revolution: | ary competition, in fight to | save Daily Worker. ‘Recruit 176 Scabs from Unemployed at Salvation Army At the Gold Dust Lodge branch of the Salvation Army a flop- house where the unemployed workers are given slop by the Salvation Army there are 2,200 unemployed men, The workers; who are forced to stay at this flophouse are constantly intimi- dated with threats of being ejected fro mthelir slop and bed. The Salvation Army utilizing the | plight of these unemployed work- ; ers and the refusal of the city government to give adequate relict to the Unemployed is herding these unemployed to scab on the longshoremen striking on the Morgan line. One hundred seventy-six “re- Tuited” and shipped out Sunday night to do this work. J A. War- dell is teading in the organization of this dirty job. When these workers were “recruited” they were blessed by the priest who visits this flophous. These facts were reported to us by workers living at the Gold Dust Lodge branch of the Sal- vation Arm. RTI EN t diately squelched the protest of Rob- erts who represents the smaller stockholders in the corporation, ‘The announcement of the wage cut which leaked out a few days ago, is being withheld as yet. But, that this cut is practically a certainty was | declared by the N. Y. Herald-Tribune on Sunday which stated that the cut in the leading corporation will be the signal for a huge drive on wages by all companies in the industry. Already the wage rate is only 40 cents an hour. And part time em- ployment is most prevalent in steel which is only operating at about 20 | per cent of capacity production. War Vets Hold Bonus Meeting Tomorrow NEW YORK.—The Workers Ex- Servicemen’s League has called “# mass meeting of war vete' s Wed- nesday evening at-8 o'clock at 25 Montgomery St. This meeting 1s called for the purpose of discussing the bonus issue and to make ar- ‘angements for the mess vet del- egates march to Washington. ‘There will be a motion picture and entertainment both before ere after the meeting. All should make it a point to nay to this important meeting. Admission is free. LEFT WING GETS 700 VOTES IN IL. G. LOCAL 22 Elect Three Left Wing Workers to Executive Board NEW YORK.—Despite the vicious campaign carried through by the Anarchist-Lovestone combination and the Schlessinger gang in Local 22, close to 700 workers voted for the left wing slate and three executive board members, Drench, Hersher and Gold berg were elected to the execu- tive board, This vote shows in unmistaken terms that the dressmakers are be- ginning to see the treacherous role of the various cliques and are lining up in support of a class struggle policy, | against the policy of sellout and frame-up pursued by the so-called progressive administration, together with the Lovestonites, as indicated by their refusel to discuss the frameup and imprisonment of Dave Turner and two other workers. These workers are in prison now and will come up for sentence this coming Wednesday. Dressmakers must raise their voices in protest against the imprisonment of these workers and demand their immediate release. A very important General Foods Fraction meeting will be held on Wednesday, April 20th at 8 p. m. sharp, at the Workers Center. All members are requested to be present. WORKERS sci00.. [A MALISEMENTS THE THEATRE GUILD Presents 00 TRUE TO BE GOOD A New Play by BERNARD SHAW GUILD THEA., 52d St., W. of Bway. Eve, 8:30 Mats, Thurs., Sat., 2:30 The Theatre Gaild Presents REUNION IN VIENNA A Comedy . By ROBERT E. SHERWOOD. THEA. 45th Martin Beck St 2's Ave. Ev 8:40. Mts Th., Sat. Tel. Pe 6-6100 SK MILLION | a) ALL SEATS RESERVED Twice Daly 2:45-6:45 3 Shows Sun. 2:48-5:45.8:45 AN Eves, 50e-75¢-$1,00-$1.50 | All Mats, 50e-75e-$1.00 HIPPODROME™:..; @ 43rd St. BIGGEST SHOW IN NEW YORK Bias “DISORDERLY CONDUCT” Ra Ballyhooligans FANMIE HURST'S eats | Incl. h SALLY EILERS and SPENCER TRACY “The labor movement will gain the upper hand and show the way to peace and socialism.” LENIN. OPENS THURS. EVE S333" HUROK Presents YASCHA YUSHNY'S RUSSIAN REVUE “BLUE BIRD” enue A CONTINENTAL COCKTAIL OF SONG, DANCE AND COMBDY DIRECT FROM BERLIN, LONDON, PARIS, VIENNA Completing Triumphant Coast to Coast Tour CORT THEA, W. 48 ST. Mats. Wed. & Sat. with 1S4 MADISON SQ. GARDEN ing paity ee NOW Doors Open 1 tar SINGLING NG BARNUM Presenting 10,000 MARVELS including BEATTY fonsinericens MAN FROM ee ae Oe OF frmcear edthed UBANGI i SAVAGES took New bape fittes Foatut Circus t) Eler ants 008) ers? er giiohants Congress of FRI aie Adenion tA (ine Seatt) $1 to $3.50 Incl. Tax 6,000 PERFORMANCE ° ct at Nea Ganka re aos Agen Oy Workers’ Clubs Should Advertise in the “Daily” WORKERS! REST AT The AVANTA FARM in @ comradely atmosphere—plain but good fresh food at $12 per wk. AVANTA FARM, Ulster Park, N.Y. _ ob & & & 4 Parkway Cafeteria. The Only Strictly Vegetarian Cafeteria in Brownsville WE SERVE GOOD FOOD A TRIAL WILL CONVINCE YOU 1638 PITKIN AVE, Brooklyn, N. ¥. BANQUETS Near Hopkinson Ave. Phone Dickens 2-7658 Ba kr Bn Lr, LL ERS A CAR WANTED Comrade having car for sale please apply Advertising Dept., DAILY WORKER — 8th floor. 50 EAST 13th ST. N.Y. C. Intern] Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 18th FLOOR AD Work Done Under Personal Osre ot DR. JOSBPRSON Garden Restaurant + 883 RAST 18TH st. EXCELLENT MEALS and SERVICE NO TYPPING ‘Tel. Tompkins Sq. 6-9707 sSgarLkuava Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 199 SECOND AVENUE Bet 12th and 13th Bte. Strictly Vegetarian Food SOLLINS’ - RESTAURANT 216 EAS) 14TH STREET 6-Course Lunch 55 Cents Regular Dinner 65 Cents ~~