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Page Two MINERS TEAR DOWN TROOPS BARRICADES National Guard Stops Children from Going to School Guard Swells to 1000,” State Spends $5,000 A} Day on Troops CARDIZ, Ohio—Eye- witness accounts have been streaming in all day of events in the} war area of Harrison) County, where nearly 1,000 National Guardsmen, with the most perfect killing apparatus of modern warfre, are trying to break the Ohio-West Vir- ginia coal miners’ strike. One man at Somers Mine this morning saw six picked marksmen Joad and fire five to six rounds of munition at an advancing column | of pickets, Another told how miners | broke down two wooden barricades | erected across the highway at either | end of the Somers Mine. National Guard members, the old | “experienced” ones, were heard boasting of the shots they had made | and telling of their killing exploits in past strikes. But teh majority of | the guardsmen, recruited from the} unemployed in Youngstown, Axron | and other Ohio cities, expressed their } distaste at being killers for the coal | bosses at $3 a day. | “Y wouldn't mind some kinds of | duty,” said one trooper, “but I hate | Vike hell to shoot miners.” “Well, we ought to have cleaned ‘ap the whole bunch by charging them with a platoon of infantry.” ‘This from an “experienced” guards- man, ~ “No,?. said another, make them fight all and_all the miners would be against us.” Some repeated what the officars told them: “We're here to protect property.” Meanwhile the miners at the Somers Mine declare that the troops have forbidden the children to go to} school. They would have to cross} in front of the barricades. The/ miners report that the soldiers are patrolling the front with fixed bay- onets. | Discussing the bosses’ cry that the Somers Mine is the best paid in Ohio, one fifty-year-old miner ex- plained: “This mine all winter, until Just lately, was working one and two) days a week. We got about six or) seven days out of fourteen. Then, | before we joined the others on strike, Goodyear jammed up the mine to six days a week and ten hours a day (at the same rate they had previously paid for eight hours). “It's the latetr pefiod that the bosses talk about when they say that the Somers Mine is the highest paid. Our scale is higher han most Ohio mines, but that is no reason for us to forget the miners who are starv- ing and going naked in the other mines,” Conservative estimates from semi- Oficial sources put the cost of main- taining the National Guard here at ove? $5,000 a day. At the average | rate spent in the upkeep of the vari- ous charity soup kitchens, which is three cents a day per person, this fund would give a little food to ap- proximately 15,500 persons a day. Aeroplanes continue to buzz over the’ whole strike area. Shots were fired again Tuesday night in the vicinity of the Somers Mine. Miners state that these came from the guns of the National Guards. ‘The bosses yesterday made a provo- cative atetmpt to fasten the blame on the miners for a “mysterious” ex- | plosion which is said to have oc- curred in Harrison County. | | | | “that would the harder everywhere On May ist the Ameri-| can Workers Started the Fight for the 8-| Hour Day! On May Ist Demonstrate Against Wage Cuts and Unem- ployment! THURSDAY— All members of the International Workers Clad will meet at 350 East Bist Street ot 8 pm. Martha Graham will speak on “The Dance in America” at the Cultural Foram of the W. I. R., at 16 West 2ist Street, at 8.30 p.m. EBs A group of poets will read and discuss re jonary poetry at the Prospect Work- os b,,at 8 p.m., at 1157 Southern ‘Boulevard, Bronx. | English Branch 821, 1. W, 0., will have a regular meeting at 60 Bast 19th Street a0 Ban. Al m Oy) hel sae ration Painters, Hurlem Section. ° 6 West 186th Street ut 8 p.m, Bean , 1. W. Oy will imeet at 50 ‘Bast tath Bt Street, Room 310, at 8 p.m. ‘There will b special CANNONS OR fORS meeting Of the Workers. Film and y League at 16 West 2ist Street a8 | 000,000 being manufactured in the | : : | United States, or an increase of 31 | Petitions demanding the immediate POLICE TRY TO BREAK MEETING NEAR BREADLINE Workers | Pledge to Participate in City | Hall Demonstration | NEW YORK. - The militancy of the unemployed ‘workers and their | readiness to fight for their demands | were evidenced yesterday when the aoe tried to break an open air meeting in front of the Salvation | lary breadline of 6th and 7th Aye-/ nues. The workers from the breadline| protested against the attempt and protected the speakers with a solid} united front In the face of the workers’ militancy, the police did not dare to arrest anybody, but sent in a call for the “riot squad.” ‘The meeting was almost over when the squad arrived. The last speaker | on the platform was seized and placed under arrest. is name is Ralph Major, an American Indian. As soon as he was violently taken | off the platform a worker from the breadline jumped on it and de- | niounced the police brutality. He also | revealed how inside the Salvation) Army Hall the workers are given religious songs as anti-pastos for a} ,dirty cup of soup. The name of this | worker is John Abbot, A large crowd of workers assem- | bled in the meanwhile on the spot | commenting favorably on the activ- lity of the Mid-Town Unemployed | Council and pledging to participate | lin the City Hall demonstration to- | morrow. | Boom and Dispair in Silk Industry, Soviet Erects Mills ; | America Shuts Them | By Labor Research Association | Total output of rayon in the world | in 1931 was 473,000,000 pounds, 144,- per cent over the United States out- ' put in 1930, ‘The industry in this | country is now operating on an aver- | age basis of 60 per cent of productive number of mass meetings will be held | capacity. The rayon capitalists con- | sider this a great achievement. For | in this country as in all capitalist countries, the chief aim of the em- | ployers now is to reduce manufac- turing operations in order to main- | tain prices and profits. In the Soviet Union, on the oth ther | carried on not for profits but to/ supply workers with clothes, the in- dustry is working at 100 per cent | of capacity. A recent report by a) German expert, who is supervising | the installation of machinery in the | Soviet Union, commented on the greater productive capacity being | created in the Soviet Union as one | new \rayon plant after another is} constructed and more and more | workers are employed, Silk manufacturing as well as silk growing in the Soviet Union is also | becoming. The Moscow Worker News | declares that the “crisis has virtually knocked the bottom out of the silk | market in the capitalist countries. | This has resulted in a great curtail- ment of silk production there (from | 30 to 50 per cent in the U. S. A—| L. R, A) while in the Soviet Union silk production has greatly increased Silk growing in the Soviet Union. | like its farming, is collectivized and | state controlled. It therefore car afford to'employ the most elaborate and best perfected machinery for use over vast areas.” | In the United States the silk in- | dustry is floundering in the swamr of profit-seeking competition. Hoover confers with the chief capitalists of the industry, and the retiring head of the Silk Association of America suggests that a dictator be appointed to run the industry. Business papers | call it the “Mussolini trade plan in si which would involve the des- truction of much silk machinery.« | METAL WORKERS’ MEETING TO | BE HELD FRIDAY NIGHT | Final preparations are being made | for the big Metal Workers’ Mass Meeting to be held this coming Fri- | day, April 22, 8 p.m. at Irving Plaza, Irving Place and 15th St. Clarence Hathaway, well-known leader of the revolutionary labor movement in the | U, 8. and at one time a prominent figure in the left wing of the Inter-| national Association of Machinists, | will be the main speaker. The meeting is being held under the auspices of the Metal Workers Industrial League and will wind up three weeks of intense activity in connection with the recruiting drive | of the M.W.LL. It will also be a/ rallying-point to mobilize the metal workers in the New York District for a determined fight against the slash- ing wage-cuts which are raging at) the present time thruout the indus- | try. Wages of workers in a number |of plants have been cut 10 to 30 per | in Manhattan, where a general red- uction of 10 to 20 per cent is being introduced gradually, by starting | with one department and then} spreading it to the rest of the shop, The Metal Workers Industrial League is) a part of the recruiting | | drive, is building up groups of these | workers in the shops and preparing | the onslaught of the Metal bosses against the living standard of the mei) workers |for the support of the Scottsboro |Mass Kentucky Meet to Take Place April 21st in Paterson, N. J. PATERSON, the writers’ delegation to Kentucky, Waldo Frank, Polly Boyden, Ed Hick- erson and Ellen Mack will address a mass meeting here Thursday at 8 p. m. in the Oakley Halj, 211 Market Street. Members of the student del- egation, who were barred from in- | vestigating conditions in the mine fields, will also tell their experiences with Kentucky law. Harlem Youth to Protest Against Lynch Sentence YCL Mobilizes in Har- lem Tonight NEW YORK. — In answer to the jlynch decision of the Alabama Su- | preme Court, the entire New York | District membership of the Young | Communist League will mobilize this | | evening to show the solidarity of the white with the Young Negro work- ers. All the Bronx, Harlem and Down Town Units will mobilize at the Fin- | nish Workers Hall, 16 W. 126th St., at 7 pm. The Brooklyn Units will | mobilize at 1813 Pitkin Avenue, same | time, Twenty-five thousand leaflets will | be distributed for the Mass Youth | Mobdilization at Lafayette Hall, 131st Street and 7th Avenue, on Sunday, | | April 24, 2 pm, when plans for {forming a broad united front com- | | mittee which shall involve the mas- | ses of the Negro youth in Harlem boys will be formulated. / The distribution will cover every | community center, athletic ground, | jyouth club, Salvation Army, Y.M.C. A. and other places where the work- |ers congregate in Harlem, The com-| rades will visit Youth organizations, | mobilize the National Guardsmen, | hold open air meetings and bring the Scottaboro case to the door of workers in Harlem and Brownsville. freedom of the Scottsboro boys will also be circulated at this time. On Saturday, April 23, a large in Harlem concentrating around 135th Street and Lenox Avenue. The comrades will mobilize for these meeting at 6 W. 135th St. On Sunday, April 24, the mass Youth Mobilization will be held at | Lafayette Hall, 13ist Street and 7th Avenue. All youth organizations, | hand, where rayon production is| Negro and white, are urged to come | as a body, TRY TO DEFEAT * DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, APRIL 21, 1932 = ‘Students Who | The students of Columbia Univers- | ity have been victorious in their de- mand for the reinstatement of Reed | Harris who was expelled after back- | strike area and continuous exposure of conditions in the university. | Two weeks ago the students of Co- Club and the National Students Lea- | Sue called the strike. Militant dem- | olistrations and meetings which were | attacked by thick-skilled football players and their hangers-on were backed by 4,000 students and 16 mem- bers of the faculty, From every part | of the country came protests against the throttling of freedom of speech and the right of the students to par- ticipate in working class struggle as the Kentucky delegation did. Nicho» las Murray Butler, the purring paci- fist and liberal at after-dinner speeches, has long had a record of smashing all freedom of opinion in his capitalist educational factory. But | this is the first time that he has been foreed to back down in his dictatorial methods. And this not by dainty | Reinstatement of Harris N. J. — Members of | |ing a student trip to thé Kentucky | |Jumbia Ied by the Social Problems | Struck Force speeches but through militant or- ganization. Already two of the three students demands have been met. The other demand won was for a student and faculty member investigation of the | Junch-room which Reed Harris, as | editor of the student paper, “Specta~ tor”, charged was riddled with cor- ruption. One more demand remains to be fulfilled and that is, a student investigation of the football racket. With continued organization this will also be met. The Social Problems Club issued a statement yesterday in which it points out that “The lesson we have learned is valuable one. When is- sues involving student interests and student rights are concerned the students can win only by organizing andfighting as a unit. Students should organize for future struggle.” Struggle is the answer to the capi- talists in their factories, mines and educational institutions. Disgusted with this so-called “edu- cation” Harris has resigned from the university. | |lief Bureau for registration and Fight for These Demands by De- monstrating Today 1, Immediate cash relief for unemployed on the minimum {basis of $1 a day for single work- |ers and a minimum of $10 a week }for a family and upward, ac- cording to the number in the family. 2. Reopening of the Home Re- immediate relief for all unem- ployed in need. 3. Reinstatement of all workers laid off by the Emergency Work Relief Bureau. 4. No discrimination against Negro, foreign-born and single workers in the distribution of relief. 5. As a guarantee for the ade- quate distribution of relief without discrimination, we demand workers control oer relief agencies than their elected committees. 6. Immediate use for relief funds of the $196,000,000 which is | appropriated by the city for in- terest on loans by bankers, 7. To resume the $231,000,000 STRIKE AT NEW STYLE LAUNDRY The Inter-Boro Laundry Board of Trade Inc., the laundry bosses asso- ciation, which is nothing more than @ racketeer outfit, has realized the | |importance and danger of this New | Style strike. This is proven by the fact, that the Association has filled plenty of strike-breakers and gang- sters. ‘The Association bosses downtown are sending plenty of truck loads of laundry bundles into the New Style \laundry in order to keep the plant |running. The Association is really running the laundry for the boss. This has been easy because the New Style laundry is a small laundry and it has not taken very much money or forces to keep it going. In this way the laundry bosses hope to break the strike, which means 80 much to them. But the Association will find out that these workers, who are out on strike, and the 60,000 Negro and| white workers who are slaving under the most terrible sweat-shop condi- tions, are beginning to realize, that | the only way to stop the bosses at- tempts, to bring them down to the standard of living of a Chinese coolie, is by organizing into a power- | ful fighting industrial Union. The Laundry Workers Industrial Union, which is conducting this first WIR TO SHOW A NEW FILM SOON NEW YORK: "Cannons or Trac- tors,” epic anti-war film to be re-/ leased by the Workers Film and | Photo League of the Workers In- ternational Relief, ture entertainment, It is a tremen- | dous political document, “Liberty,” “Demcracy,” “the pur- suit of happiness,” ¢atchwords with which the bosses try to befuddle | workers—excuses for exploitation— are revealed in all their shabby vypocricy a sthe camera exposes the vulgar ruling class in scenes of mad excess...while workers slave and starve, What has Fascism to offer the working-class? “Cannons or Tractors” gives the answer, Mussolini betsows sisses and medals upon bewhiskerea | cutthroat for efficient murder of workers, Priests in lace and velvet bless flags which rally murderers in ist assault against peasant up- ing. e Ford and the Ford plant where workers are torn to pieces at the belt , . . and workers when Ford is | finished with them , . . physical and mental shipwrecks. Imperialism in the coloniali Chil- dren slaving in African mines, quivering, sobbing beneath the lash and tropical sun. Peace treaties! So- cialists sigm their signatures to “Pere” pacts while battleships slide | down the ways, guns belch death, tanks vomit death and the hordes oi | imperialism march against the Soviet | Union, But workers can fight! Demon- | strations and strike! Police hurled | back before furious workers! Armed thug crumbles beneath the fist of worker, Workers smash through tear gas, police clubs, fire hose and bul- lets. WE DEMAND UNEMPLOY- | MENT INSURANCE! Capitalism decays and prepares annon against the SOVIET UNION. the Soviet Union—no unemployment —no wage cuts. Tractors till collec- tivized soil of the workers! Republic! | Hanmmers ring, the last spike is driven and Turksib is completed! jcent. ‘The latest one is the Rex shop| The answer to “forced labor”—new paper mills in Karelia! New oil wells in Baku, (the one Mr, Hillquit wanted for Mr Deterding) New fac- tories, new clubs, new schools, new | apartments—all for the workers! You can see this picture by ob- taining a membership ticket at the | Workers Book Store, 50 East 13th St W. I. R, branches and at the W, I. R. | for an organizing struggle to defeat | Center, 16 West 21st Street @r at I. W. O, Center, 80 Fifth Ave. New York City. This picture will not be shown at buorgeois theatres. = | 100 per cent industrial strike in the | Iaundry industry, has lined up many | Negro and white inside workers into |the Union, since the beginning of the New Style strike, which proves that these unorganized inside work- lers, who comprise over 75 per cent |of the industry, have taken the ex- ample of the militant Negro and white workers in the New Style waundry, April 24, Fifth | All workers are asked to come to| Avenue Theatre, 28th and Broadway, |° East 19th Street, first floor, and | |is far more than mere moving pic- |nelp the strikers in the New Style | Laundry carry on their activities, in order to win the strike, Classes Are Being NEW YORK.—The classes sched- uled for the second spring term of ene Workers School, which will starv next Monday, April 25th, are being rapidly filled up, Workers must reg- ister this week in order to get into vhe classes desired, A dance and cabaret has been | arranged by the students of the | arranged by the students of hte | school, this Saturday, April 23rd, at 8 p. m. at 35 East 12th St. Seconda Floor to welcome the new students. Admission is 35 cents each. Registration for the new term is now being taken daily from 10 | 8, m. to 10 p. m. at the school office, 35 East 12th Street, third floor. NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES EAST GIDE—BBONK RKO qi FON ||| FROIN WEDNESDAY TO FRIDAY | SIDNEY FOX ‘Nice Women’ At JEFFERSON—Oxtra Feature “LAW and ORDER” with Walter Huston NEW LOW PRICES MATS. 15 Cents || EVES. 25 Cents and Holidays Except Sat., Sun.. EAST SIDE TODAY AND TOMORROW AMKINO PRESENTS Maxim Gorky’s “CAIN AND ARTEM” (The Song of the Old Market Square) BASED ON GORKY'S WORLD-FAMOUS cL, PRODUCED IN THE U.8.S.R, N. ¥- Evictions, ete, ACME THEATRE 3,» UNION 6Q. up the New Style laundry with | | Filled at School | —— en BOSSES TO CLOSE PUBLIC SCHOOL 67 IN MANHATTAN NEW YORK—As. part of the | “Block-Aid” campaign launched by | the bosses and their politicians in| order to have a ptetext for cutting | | oft the little relief that was given to unemployed workers and their starving children, a meeting was cal- led” to prevent the disbanding of Public School No. 67 of 317 W. 52nd | Street, Manhattan.” \ The meeting, scheduled to take | Blace last night, was called by the Public School Association which urg all parents and friends of the chil- dren frequenting this school not to fail to be present. It is evident that the purpose of the Public School Association in cal- ling such a meeting was not that of preventing the “disbanding” of the school which is largely attended by workers’ children, but was instead that of attempting to find a “reason” for the disbanding in the impossibil- | ity on the part of the parents and friends of the children to answer its appeal for support. The workers of that section are ‘whemployed and under mass pressure the school was forced to give free luncheon to their children. Now however the Public School Associ- ation wants to blame the workers themselves if the school. is closed. | All workers of that section are| urged to participate in the mass | demonstration in front of City Hall to demand immediate relief, | TO SPEAK ON “THE DANCE IN AMERICA” Martha Graham, noted dancer, will | speak on “The Dance in America” at the Cultural Forum of the Work- | ers International Relief, 16 West 21st | Street tonight at 8.30. This is the second of the regular Thursday night series arranged by the City Cultural Committee of the | WLR, Other speakers at the Cultural Forum will be Sergei Radamsky on Soviet music, Johua Kunitz on Am- | erican proletarian literature and Al- fred Wagenknecht, National Secre- tary of the W. I. R., on “Culture and the American Working-class.” Carry the Plenum. decis- tons into life! Read the res- olution in the April ssue of The Communist! | \city parks in the workers’ ap ‘OPEN MASS TRIAL jarian jury and court on Thursday, | Started the Fight for the 8-Hour building program fund which was | dropped recently by the Board of Estimate, for the immediate building of workers’ dwellings and borhoods. STEP TO MAY Ist Bronx Grafters on Trial on Thursday NEW YORK.—Borough president Druckner and Mr. Flynn, his right hand man, have to answer very am- barassing questions before a prolet- April 21, at 8 pm., at Ambassador Hall, 3rd Ave. and Claremont Park- way. This Mass Trial, sponsored by the Upper Bronx Unemployed Council, and Section 15 of the Communist Party, will mobilize the workers for struggle against these grafting offi- clals, who deny aid to starving un- employed and their familiés, and prepare the workers for the mighty May Day demonstration. While thousands are actually starv_ ing, Bruckner, Flynn and Co. are depositing in the banks hundreds of thousands of dollars that ‘they stole from the workers. Comrade Richard B. Moore will act as the prosecutor and Comrade Carl Brodsky as the presiding judge. Comrade Gunchuck, organizer of the Williamsbridge Unemployed Coun- cil, will be the star witness, for he had a few occasions to see Mr. Bruck- ner as a delegate of unemployed workers. All workers are urged to attend this very interésting and important open trial on Thursday, April 21, at 8 p.m. at Ambassador Hall. On May ist the American Workers Day! On May Ist Demonstrate | Against Wage Cuts and Unemploy- | Toledo Vets in Bonus, Demonstration; 60 Join Ex-Servicemens’ Leag. (By Mail To Dally Worker) ber of bloody demonstrations took |workers who demanded milk and) BRONX JOBLESS TO DEMAND AID AT P. SCHOOL 42 March to City Hall in Masses, Today The Negro and white unemployed workers of the Bronx, who are de- nied relief by the City, will stage a gigantic demonstration today, Thursday, at 10 am., in front of Public School 42, at Washington and Claremont Parkway. During the past few weeks a num- place in front of this Home Relief Buro. The police, time and again broke up the demonstrations of the bread for their starving children, But the hungry unemployed workers are determined to keep up demonstrat- ing in ever larger numbers until their demands will be granted. Today demonstration is in prep- aration for the City Hall demon- stration at 1:30 p.m, Tonight at 8 p.m. there will be an Open Mass Trial of the grafting Bronx Boro officials, who are deny- ing relief to the unemployed, The trial will be held at Ambassador Hall. Comrades Brodsky and Moore will act as Judge and Prosecutor respectively, All workers are urged to attend the demonstration and the mass trial, Mass Collections May 7, 8, for the Scottsboro Fight The International Labor Defense is mobilizing all of its membership and the members of mass organiza- tions and trade unions for mass col- lections on May 7 and 8, to raise funds to continue the fight against the Scottsboro lynch verdiets. The International Labor Defense, New York district announces that thousands of dollars will be needed to carry the fight to the United States Supreme Court. In addition to this hundreds of dollars will be needed to print hundreds of thous- ands of leaflets and to send organi- zers into new fields to carry the fight to save the Scottsboro Negro boys into every corner of the district. The stations from which collectors will go out will be announced within a few days, Paterson Cases Adjourned to May 16 The cases of Benjmain Lieb and Helen Gershonowitz, two of the five Paterson silk workers charged with murder have been adjourned to May 16. Liem and Gershonowita in add{- tion to being charged with murder are charged with felonious assault. Their trial was to have begun in criminal court at Paterson today, but owing to efforts of the International Labor Defense which is handling the case, an adjournment was secured. 10,000 Mothers Los Lives Yearly in U. S. Thru Lack of Care The lives of 10,000 mothers are lost every year because of the lack) of proper care given them during child-birth, says Dr. Louis I. Dublin of the Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. in an article in the Forum mage azine. In the European countries the rate is much lower. In Denmark only 3.4 deaths per 1,000 is recorded. In the richest country the U. S. rate is 7 per 1,000. Dublin says that there is no rea~ son for this state of affairs. There is @ reason. The American women workers are treated worse than those of other countries, And there are practically no laws enough to control the conditions of work, to give them adequate protection. CONSIDER MERGER OF COTTON MILLS Banks Issue Orders for Wage-Cuts By LABOK RESEARCH ASSN There is more talk of the merger of fine goods cotton mills in New England “into a combination which will lift the industry from the throes of’ depression.” It is stated on good authority that “There is an under~ standing between financiers of Bos- ton and New York as to the plan which will eventually lift a once great industry to the plane it for- merly held’—as a big profit maker. It is reported that there will pos- sibly be three combinations in New England, one including the Insull mills in Maine, and the mills in Rhode Island and Connecticut, and another one to include only New Bedford mills. The bankers apparently see hope of large profits in such an arrange~ ment and the mill owners think “the distressing price situation would be gréatly relieved” ‘The influence of banking inter- ests in the merging process is obvi- ous. It is also admitted to be be- hind the attacks on workers’ con- ditions in recent months. Fibre and Fabric, organ of mill managers and overseers, states editorially that the banks have issued orders to the mills “to reduce stocks, cut wages and in~ stitute operating reductions.” The organ admits that the bankers “are in the saddle and there is no money forthcoming unless orders are obey- ed.” This is a frank declaration of the power of finance capital in tex~ tiles. Out Into the Streets May ist! The Interna- \tional Day of Struggle Against Hunger and War! Workers’ Clubs Should Advertise in the “Daily” Garden Restaurant 828 EAST 13TH ST. EXCELLENT MEALS and SERVICE NO TIPPING TOLEDO, Ohio.—The Toledo Post! | 15 of the Workers’ Bx- Servicemen’s | 4 League held its first outdoor bortus | * demonstration April 16. Over three hundred and fifty vat- | \ erans of the world war attended the meeting and sixty signed applications | for membership in the League. A | number of those who joined the | League were previously members of | the American Legion. AMUSEMENTS THE THEATRE GUILD Presents TRUE 00 TO BE GOOD | | A New Play by BERNARD oe GUILD THEA., 624 St., W. Eve, 8:50 Mais. Thue, Oat 2:40 | | | i The Theatre Gutid REUNION IN-VIENNA |) $s Ave. Ev 6:40. Bite Th., Sat ra re 6-6100 COUNSELLOR-AT-LAW ELMER RICE PAUL MUNI Plymouth Wel reere Avent’ sae gor MILLION, ALL SEATS RESERVED FANNIE HURST'S ons Twice Daily 2:45-8:45 3 Showa Sun, 2:45-5:45.8:45 ‘il Even, 500-750-$1.00-61.50 AN Mate, 50¢-75e-$1.00 Madison Square Garden—Now ‘Twice Dally, inc. Sunday 2 & 8 P.M. INGLNG ARMIN iIRcUS Preventing 10,000 MARVELS ineluding BEATTY fagning nets | 1,000 New Foreign Meatures—-800 Circus | Stars — 100 Clowns — 700 Horse 50 Elephants —- 1,009 Menagerie Animals—World Congress of FRE: Admission to All (Inc. Seats) $1-$3.50 In. tax Child’n und. 12 Half Price Every Aft. Ex. Sat, ‘Tickets ut Garden, Gimbel Bros. & Agencies LAST TIMES TODAY |= | Golden | bs -reed | “GOLDEN MOUNTAINS” fs not only fasoinating, % ite content bi its artint ope, Starts Tomorrow at 10 a. m. “Wild Women of Borneo” SENSATIONAL! WILDER EVEN THAN THE BEASTS OF THE JUNGLE! OPENS rrbeeelCChesy MK Presents YASCHA, YUSHNY'S RUSSIAN REVUE “B vn piv” ste | A CONTINENTAL COCKTAIL ‘st SONG, DANCE AND | COMEDY DIRECT FROM BERLIN, LONDON, PARIS, VIENNA Completing Triumphant Coast to Coast Tour cont A., W. 48 ST. Mats. Wed. & Sat. * Seats to 2 P.M. | Moa to Fri ‘Parkway Cafeteria ‘Tel, Tompkins Sq. 6-707 Sestiava %*« SANDWICH SOLS “LuncH 108 University Place (Just Around the Corner) Telephone Tompkins Square 6-9780-0781 The Only Strictly Vegetarian Cafeteria in Brownsville | i W8 SERVE GOOD FOOD 4 TRIAL WILL CONVINCE YoU 1638 PITKIN AVE, | Near Hopkinson Ave, Brooklya, N, ¥. Phone Dickens ¥-7658 aa ar ar. a. yo ys balf-dollars? 35 East 12th St. N. Y. C. » Principles Political ¢ Communism: Cissses every Economy: Wednesday, 7 to 135 to 10 p.m. 10 pun. instr Advanced Political Economy: Wednesday, Marxivm: Thursday, 8:35 to 10 pun., in: instructor, V. Jerome, Uoninism: Monday, 7 to 8.25, instructor, instructor, , F. Jacobs. }, inst) Eee eieeaie “Against Imperialist W. Colonial Problem: Problems of Shop Methods in shop. Worn: ‘prigay, Ravel ES yurnalism: Mi en: Monday, 8 Dinlectte Sasteriatisms Monday, Public Speaking: Monday, 7 to . inst WORKERS SCHOOL SECOND SPRING TERM APRIL 25th—JULY 1st atructor, A. Markoff; Friday, 7 to's 5 to 10 p.m. day, 7 to instructor Ot 3: Thurs 7 to 8:20, instructor, A. ‘Moreau, 35 to. Fr p.m, Russian (elementary, intermediate, advanced), English, Spanish, ete, REGISTER NOW! Classes Begin Next Monday, Intern] Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 16th FLOOR AD Work Done Under Personal Care at DR. JOSEPRSON SOLLINS’ RESTAURANT 216 KAS 14TH STREET 6-Course Lunch 55 Cents Regular Dinner 65 Cents TONIGHT: 8:30 MARTHA GRAHAM Noted dancer, will speak on “THE DANCE IN AMERICA” at W. LR, CENTER 16 W. 2ist St. Admission 25cents (unless unem~- ployed) TOaT—Pocketbook at Working Woman, and Liberator Affair, If found, return to ‘Workers’ Center. $5 reward. Has your club sent in $5.00 worth of Alg. 4-1199 evening ext 5 Sexescare and Sundays. 8:25, instru , gozin; A ; Friday, 8 7 to 8:25, instructor, Harry Gann structor A, Markoff; Friday, 7 to 6:25, , A. Markoff; Friday, 8:35 to 10 p.m. instructor, A. W. Mills, 25, instructor, I. Zack, Hall. ructor, M. Hymoff. ursday, 8:35 to 10 p.m, instructor, 8. Don. instructor, N. Stevens. instructor to be a ructor, J. Stet ., instructor, G. Lewis. 0 p.n., ‘instructor to be announced, instructor, A. Landy. ructor, ©. Brodsky. DANCE and Students and Given by Students of the. Workers School to Welcome New THIS SATURDAY, APRIL 23, 8 P. M. CABARET ‘Their Friends é 35 E. 2TH ST. N. ¥. ©, ‘Tickets 35 cents each. Obtainable at Workers’ School Office,