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

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Page Two CELEBRATE Marine Union Exposes ILA |/t0 10th ANNIVERSARY OF YOUNG COMMUNIST LEAGUE TONIGHT, CENTRAL OPERA HOUSE Y.C.L. to Celebrate 10th Anniversary Tonight DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 1932 Sellout of N -Y. Dock Strikers NEW YORK. — Joseph P. Ryan, | president of the International Loni shoremen’s Association, and a com~- pany of armed thugs, under the leadership of the well known under- world racketeer Frankie Madden, in- tensified the reign of terror on the west side docks yesterday and were Successful in halting mass picketing which the rank and file of dockers have demanded since the beginning of the dock strike which commenced here last Friday. While several ships of the four lines effected were being loaded by scabs, Ryan and his gang told the dockers that the “strike is in the bag” and that mass picketing is un- necessary. It should be clear to all Jongshoremen that Ryan is not ot to fight the wage-cut, but is merely on the docks to collect dues from the strikers, and thus add to racket, and to sell the strike out Dockers Betrayed in Baltimore The latest reports from Baltimore show definitely that Ryan, still up to his old tricks, is out to help the shipowners slash the pay of the dockers. On Tuesday, April 19, the long- hi his that there “too much unem- ployment to strike.” At the same time Ryan is agreeing to a 20 cut on the Morgan docks in Baltimore, he pretends to was cent be leading a strike against a 10 cent cut on the Morgan docks in New York. Meanwhile the organizers of the Marine Workers Industrial Union, under whose leadership the dockers first came out on strike, are expos- ing the whole sellout scheme through leaflets and orally on the docks and | are call on the workers to mass picket und k and file leader- ship of dockers elected by the strik- ers, “Why don’t Ryan send his gang- sters out to stop the scabs instead of sending them against the men from the Marine Workers Indus- trial Union?” declared one striking Negro longshoreman while discuss- ing the problem of scabs. ll during the strike Ryan’s thugs rted the utmost terror against | members of the Marine Workers Union, but have not raised a finger | against the si At the last meeting called by Ryan | he set up a local for the purpose of | bs. To All TUUC Unions ‘Miners’ Anger Aroused Over | Mass a | ° ‘Organizations, Clubs New Attempt to Break Strike | Organizations, Clubs | | Within a week final instructions | will be issued for the May Day | Demonstration. However, organi- | CADIZ, Ohio, April 21.—The situa-|}'These planes have been continually ; tion continues tense throughout the | patrolling the strike front for sey- | | mining districts here. Further con-j eral days, zations participating in the May! centration of troops around the . demonstration must at once | | Somers mine area was noted este | sing! goetators pais sas jday. Ti i ; ‘; . o vy. i Map snipncersean-at pick been | ofricers issued a statement today get in touch with the May Day| United Front Committee. We can| | augmented by the arrival of an anti- | ’ j aircraft battery, which, according to| “Mich said that all the operators only have an effective demonstra- es tion and march if all material now| | National Guard officers, was brought | wished to reopen the mines. ‘They available at the United Front May||in to shoot down so-called mystery | Subrantect Laleieias pos eee Day headquarters is distributed. | }planes which, the coal operators | eee eatin aienl Sera directed ‘This should be taken very serious-| | claim, are operating on the side of| iS ape e | a “ chiefly to the unemployed miners, ly, Trade unions and mass organ-| | the striking miners. s ae The “mystery” plane incident jg| Who have been standing solid with | - the miners who walked out of the | obviously a provocative scheme on| “ . | the part of the coal bosses and mili-| ines. The guard officers stated ; ,.| that even more troops would be | tary forces, a pretext for intensify- | . | ing the terror which so far has failed | "Ought Into the mine fields. |to crush the militant determination! These plans to combine troops jof the miners to win the strike. | With the unemployed to break the Miners in all sections of the coal | strike has greatly enraged the min- fields scoff at the idea of the “mys-|ers. Although the United Mine tery” plane. Several miners, in com- | Workers officials, working hand in menting on the arrival of the anti-| glove with the armed forces of the| izations are all issuing their own} leaflets, which is very important. | The United Front May Day Com- | mittee, however, has _ buttons, stickers, posters and leaflets, which | must be distributed and sold, We urgently call upon the or- | ganizations to send up their com- mittee and get the material herein mentioned for distribution. At the same ime, the organizations will | receive instructions from the head- | aircraft battery, said that the only) strikebreakers, have ordered all pick-| quarters of the United Front May | aircraft in the neighborhood of the|eting to cease at once, the strikers Day Committee, 5 East 19th Street,| | mines were planes belonging to the|are planning to continue the mass as to the time of march, and| | Air Corps of the National Guard.| picketing at all strategic points. | where the organizations are to | Dreiser Denounces Infamous |Worker Tells Story of U.S. Officers Given Reprimand; Failed Mobilization Call CLEVELAND, Ohio—The recent mobilization call from Columbus, | Ohio, did not go over so well, ac- cording to some of the Reserve officers. Seven thousand Reserve officers were instructed to hold | themselves ready and to report by | wire twice weekly at the govern- ment’s expense, This was during the tense moments of the battle at Shanghai. Discussion among} the officers has brought out the fact that as many as 6,000 were reprimanded for failure to report, | since they did not care to leave |this country for any war. LODGING HOUSES SCAB AGENCIES. NEW YORK.—Ten years of strug- gle against war, hunger and terror j will be celebrated tonight at the Tenth Anniversary of the Young House. A program has been arranged i for the evening to dramatize the de- velopment of the fighting vanguard of the young workers since 1921. The Young Communist League de- veloped directly in the struggles against the misleaders of the Social- ist Party, who betrayed the American workers into war. The Young Com- munist League was immediately com- posed of those young workers who were ready for the revolutionary way out of the bosses’ war, and for sup- port of the Bolshevik Revolution. In the ten years of its exisence it has led many bitter struggles of the working youth, educated leading cadres for the Communist Party; and developed th ebeginnings of mass or- Communist League at Central Opera | | ganization among the young jobless. | and employed workers, in he shops, |in the field of sports, among the | workers children. The program for tonight will sym- | bolize these activities, and deserves the support of every adult and | young worker. Among the interesting | events will be an official graduation of a number of leading Y. C, L. mem~- bers into the ranks of our leader, the Communist Party. Also a large num- ber of’ Pioneers will be graduated |into the Young Communist League. | Among the speakers of the evening are Bill Albertson, Lloyd Brown and I, Amter, representing the district committee of the Communist Party. Dancing to the music of a first class orchestra will follow the program. All workers are urged to participate in this event, which is of historic im- portance to every young worker in New York. Discrimination CALL WORKERS T0 NEW YORK.—The strike-breaking role of he City Lodging House was brought to light yesterday when an unemployed worker had his registra- tion card withdrawn because he re- fused to work on the pier where a strike is now going on. | “All labor must rise to new struggles for the release of Tom shoremen on the Morgan Line | oxtracting money from the dockers. | docks in Baltimore, which are or- /t the elections that followed, the | ganized by the International Long- | men overwhelmingly voted for two| shoremen’s Association, got a cut |rank and file longshoremen and | of 20 cents an hour in wages. The | ciected president and vice-president. | eee ren wes Rene’, (0. aul att se | Ryan, however, denied the worke strike, but meeily aseeaaey ce the right to elect the secretary-treas- | dered them back to work, stating | Wo; Hussy, one of Ryan’s hench- | men, was appointed by Ryan himself | W | R CHILDRENS | for this job, which is the key position | eo ke . aL |in the union. 80 Children Fed ‘At | | The Marine Workers Indusirial| Opening | Union issued a call this morning for | | the masses of longshoremen to take | — | 3 NEW YORK.—The opening of the) Worker Jailed For first Children’s Center of the Work- | * | Protesting Before | the situation in their own hands and | ers International Relief at 450 West | | tions are ing to have bands for | themselves, | UNITED FRONT | MAY DAY COMMITTEE BURO CHECKS FOR RENT REFUSED Bronx Workers To Demand Cash Aid The unemployed workers today are faced with more starvation than |ever. On Monday, April 18th, an un- jin touch with us about the bands Rolph Decision on Mooney, of music. We must determine how |many bands we are o have, how much the organizations can con- |tribute, and how many organiza- NEW YORK.—Theodore Dreiser, , I am confident that neither Governor outstanding American novelist, last| Rolph nor California have heard the | might denounced the infamous deci- | last of this.” sion of Gov. James Rolph, Jr., of Amos Pinchot, New York lawyer | and brother of Goy. Pinchot of Penn- | sylvania whose troops have been used j against miners striking against star- vation, admited that Mooney is the | Victim of a “wicked and cynical |frame-up,” but attempted to cover up he class content of the frame-up. | He said: | ‘alifornia, denying a pardon to inno- | cent Tom Mooney. Dreiser stated: “Slowly but surely this will drive into the consciousness of multitudes in America that law and justice are corporation controlled and directed. and that nothing less than a na- tional change will bring equity for anyone.” | “Rolph’s decision against Mooney | Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler, the) is one of the most unjust and ground- | gteat “liberal,” president of Columbia | less decisions in the political history | | University, refused to comment on/of a generation. The men who are | He said, “I do| responsible for it know that Mooney | | the brutal decision. | | not choose to make any statement.” | was innocent, as everybody else does. | ‘This worker, who refused to ‘declare | his name for fear of further discrim- | inaion, related a story which throws | some ligh on the activity of the City Lodging House of East River Pier. According to this story, which one has no reason to doubt, a worker who is homeless and in dire distress, in order to ge some assistance by the City Lodging House, must first declare his name, his wife’s name if he has any, the name of his nearest ; relatives; etc. In addition he must state his religion and his “legal” dom- icile. After he does all this, he re- ceives a registration card if, upon investigation, it is found out that the applicant has no “criminal record” or that he has no militant past. | Mooney, the Scottsboro boys and all class war prisoners in militant, mass reply to the murderous decision of Governor James Rolph, Jr., of Cali- fornia, keeping the prison doors closed on Mooney, sixteen years in prison,” declared J, Louis Engdahl, General Secretary, International La- bor Defense, that has waged a world- wide campaign for his release. “The International Labor Defense calls on all workers to give its reply to the whole boss class, for which the infamous Rolph speaks, by swelling to mighty proportions the Interna- tional May Day demonstrations, May First. The Mooney issue stands out clearer than ever today in all of its | force mass picketing on the docks |over the heads of Ryan and his | gangsters. 53rd ‘Street was marked with the greatest enthusiasm. Eighty Negro and white children of unemployed workers were given their first e3 perierice in solidarity support when they’'‘teceived milk and sandwiches and ‘Obtained their first copy of | Home Relief Bureau tee | | NEW YORK.—Jacob Rosen, 23- years old worker, was sentenced to |serve 15 days in the workhouse for | {his part in the demonstration held | | last Friday in front of the Home Re- employed Irish worker by the name | of Lonergan, of 630 East 136th Street, | was evicted. The Lower Bronx Un- Bruce Bliven, editor of the New| It was a wicked and cynical frame-up Republic, professed himself as amazed | and still is.” | a jr|at the decision and admitted that| Oswald Garrison Villard, editor of aeageneain tres rea seanted ‘California justice stands disgraced | the Nation, expressed alarm that this in the neighborhood, who went to | before the eyes of the whole world.| naked expdsure of class justice would |“produce an atmosphere of revolu- | tion in America.” He said; the Home Relief Bureau to have this | worker’s rent paid. “The Young Pioneer.” |lief Bureau in Public School 79, 38) Spéaking in the name of the | First Street. Uneniployed Council, Chairman Mc-; Three other workers were found Donald of the Block Committee of | guilty with Rosen but received sus-| in the neighborhood refused to accept | 53rd Street officially welcomed the |Pended sentence. Ail four were held|the check, therefore he woman was| W. I, R. into the territory and called |in jail for five days without bail be-| rorced to put her furniture in storage | upon all workers and their children | fore their case came to Court. land go to the Municipal Lodging | to carry on mass fight for unemploy-| I” sentencing Rosen, Magistrate | House, | Council to look for where the landlord would take the | Home Relief check. Every landlord ment and immediate relief. William ©. Dodge of the Essex | mes | American Crowds of workers clustered about |Market Court said: “If w chad a|, The unemployed workers demand |, i spat |law like they have in Delaware, | tat not only shoud the Home Relief a the door of the Center and many edged their way into the packed room. Vigorous nods of approval and applause climaxed each point in the class struggle program presented by the speakers. Bureau stay open, but the Home Re- | lief Bureau give cash relief, and not | fake ‘checks. |an open air meeting was held on) | 139th Street and St. Ann’s Avenue. | where a prisoner can be sentenced to | the whipping post, I would sentence j you to receive 100 lash Th told the | tn apertment | Foster To Speak At On Tuesday, April 19th, | Premiere of “Cannons | or Tractors,” Sunday | NEW YORK.— William Z. Foster, | secretary of the Trade Union Unity League, wil Ispeak at the premiere | release of “Cannons or) Sunday, April 24, 3 p.m.,| |at the Fifth Avenue Theatre, Broad- | |way and 28th Street, it was an-/ nounced by the Workers Internation- | al Relief. The schedule of showings is an-| nounced by the W. I. R. as follows: “It seems to me that Gov. Rolph’s decision is nothing less than mon- Strous. It has seemed for several | years that there could be no question | whatever of this man’s innocence. I am very much afraid that the deci- sion is marked by the same spirit that | sent two other innocent men to their | deaths—Sacco and anzetti. It will take only a few more cases like this terrible miscarriage of justice, in my | opinion, to produce an atmosphere of revolution in America. It cries out to high heaven for redress. I dis- graces every American.” Thus the great “liberal” editor of Once a worker succeeds in getting | class implications. Rolph’s decision a registration card, he is introduced | ‘© Continue the brutal prison torture | of Tom Mooney, until death, cannot to a bed where he has the pleasure | ® 2 Dra of being kept constantly alert by an be separated from the judicial lynch- RISE TO NEW STRUGGLES FOR MOONEY’S RELEASE ing prepared for the Scottsboro boys, the savage war against the Kentucky coal miners, the lynching of Negroes, the deportation of foregin-born, the feverish war preparations of the Hoover-Hunger government. The growing solidarity of the working- class, however, will grow in strength. Labor will strike back. It will fight jmore militantly than ever for the release of Mooney and all working- class fighters who languish in prison.” DRESSMAKER SHOP DELEGATES MEET MONDAY NEW YORK.—The first meeting of the dressmakers’ Shop Delegate Coun- cil will be held in the office of the Industrial Union, 131 West 28th Street, Monday, at p.m. Shop dele- |gates and chairmen should not fail to attend this important meeting. : army of bloodthirsty bedbugs working under the speed-up system. Then he receives some soup, or what is sup- posed to be soup. “As it appears to me and to many | others like me,” the worker declared, “the Lodging House is merely aj Workers’ Clubs Should | Advertise in the “Daily” screen which has the function of | hiding a regular scab agency. As a} matter of fact no one gets anything | in the Lodging House unless he is} willing to work here and there, on | the pier, for a non-union wage.” | Sesttsboro Protest Meeting in Brooklyn | This Sunday Night! Tomorrow! EIGHTH ANNUAL CONCERT FREIHEIT MANDOLIN ORCHESTRA the Nation attempts to cover up the ARREST A T ADI AN zee hundred workers participated. | X | 1} Police on horsebaék tried to break|1 Pm. 3 pm. 5 pm, 7 pm, 9 pm. Negro and white workers of Brook- | JACOB SHAEFER, Conductor A meeting of the parents of the | children will be held Friday evening, | up the meeting and arrest the speak- until midnight Sunday Workers’ or-| deliberate crime of the ruling class | yn will hold a protest meeting { ‘Intern’l Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 15th FLOOR AU Work Done Under Persons} Care of DR. JOSEPHSON RUSSIAN MEALS For Poor Pocketbooks 6 p. m, at 453 West 53rd Street to establish a new branch of the Work- ers International Relief to carry on the work in the territory and to Mobilize the workers for a sharper Struggle for all demands of the un- Jers. All the workers followed the | ganizations have been asked to in- | | police for about two blocks and the | form their membership of he time | police had to let the speakers go. | of the showings and urged to ask} WORKER ARTIST and railroading to prison and of dental miscarriage of justice, and | by speaking of Mooney’s frame-up | against the Scottsboro lynch verdicts | this Sunday evening, 7 o'clock at Rolph’s decision as if it were an acci- | 1373 43 street, Brooklyn. The meet- | Saturday, April 23rd 4 at 8:30 P, M., KAVKAZ $32 E. 14th Street, N. ¥. ©. TOWN HALL | TORONTO, April 19—On Friday | evening, April 8th, Avrom, young | proletarian artist, was picked up on |The workers are mobilizing for the | Prompt attendance to avoid confusion | m seating. < speaks of it as a disgrace to every | City Hall demonstration on Thurs- : | oe ne| ‘The Workers International Relief American in an effort to conceal the | ing is arranged by the Boro Park Ella May Branch of the Internatina) Labor Defense. 113-123 West 43rd St., New York Solois: Matthew Kahan day. Their spirit is militan, The} workers resisted the police. Evictions are taking place daily. employed. | the street by members of the Toronto The Workers International Relief ted squad, taken in a car to No, 2| | district office as 1 6West 21st Street | | will be open until midnight on Fri-| day, Saturday and on Sunday morn-| Mooney and the toiling masses of urges workers and their organiza- tions to contribute food and funds to | Police Station, grilled and terrorjzed | There were five evictions in the vi- | cinity of hé Unemployed Council. No ; for some time and finally released. the campaign against child misery so that centers can be opened in every neighborhood. . sive Arts Club of Toronto, was/lief Bureau's check. The Lower warned by the detectives not to make | Bronx Unemployed Council is mobil- cartoons for the Labor Defender or | izing all the families to go to the Avrom, @ member of the Progres- | landlord would accept the Home Re- | NEEDLE WORKERS PREPARE FOR MAY DAY NEW YORK.—All active needle trades workers are urged to report at the office of the union, 131 West 28th Street, Saturday, at 1 p.m., to make arrangements for the needle trades Section of the May Day Parade and Demonstration, What’s On— FRIDAY English Branch 615, 1. W. 0. will have @ discussion at 140 Neptune Avenue, Brighton Be: at 830 p. m. Subject “The War Danger.” Oakley Johnson will lecture on “Pro- fetarian Literature vs. Bourgeois Litera- ture at the Tremont Workers Club, 2075 Clinton Avenue, Bronx, at 8 p, m. The Mapleton Workers Club will have a lecture at 6720 20th Avenue, Brooklyn, at Subject: An important meeting of the Tom Mooney Branch, I. L. D. will be held at 216 East 14th Street, at 8 p. m. A rehearsal of the WIR English chorus will be held at 7.45 at 16 West 2ist Street. A very important meeting of the Drag Store workers of the Medical Workers In- dustrial League will be held at 16 West 2ist Street, at 8 p. m. Comrade Talini will lecture on Proletarian Lterature at 1157 Southern Boulevard, Bronx, at 6.30 p. m. Comrade A. T. Cutler will “Planned Economy in the Soviet. Union’ ut Paradise Manor, 11 West Mount Eden Avenue, Bronx, at’ 8.30 p. m. under the Gusplees of the West Bronx Branch of the Ue Oomrade 8. Sklaroff will speak on “War Preparations and the Soviet Union” at 1378 48rd Street, Brooklyn, at & p,m. under the auspices of the Boro Park Workers Club and South Brooklyn Branch of the FSU, A mass anti-war mobilization meeting will be held at Ambassador Hall, 172nd Street and Claremont Parkway, Bronx, at 8p. m., under the auspices of the FSU ‘and the John Reed Club. A fraction meeting Of the food clerks seo- tion of the Food Workers Industrial Union will be held at 8 p. m. in Room 202, Workers Center, 35 East 12th Street, The Friends of” the ‘Soviet Union, Newark Branch will hold its first poen’ mecting | help “The Daily Worker” gave the | in order not to lose thé find lecture at the Newark Labor Ly eiM4. 8. 14th Street, at 8.30 p. m, “The Situation in the | speak on| other working-class papers. Threats of deportation, jail and further ac- | tion against him were made. Toronto | police were no longer content with | attacking the workers’ political and | economic organizations but are now | extending their terror into the fields | of working-class culture and art. ‘The Canadian Labor Defense | League is undertaking to bring this case before the aulthorities and make vigorous protest upon the further en- oachments against all forms of working-class activity . Czech Miners Call Off Strike Winning Release of Arrested (Cable By Inprecorr) PRAGUE, April 20. — Yesterday's | conference of the striking miners of Noerthern Bohemia decided that the | miners should return to work today | having received a promise that the jarrested strikers would be released |speedily and that there would be no victimization in the pits. The strike was under revolutionary lead- ership all the time. were won, Certain gains REIGNERS NEW YORK.— Professor Oakley Johnson will speak at the headquar- | ters of the Yugoslav Club, 131 West | 21st Street, on Sunday, April 24th, |3 pm, Johnson will report on the protec- tion of foreign-born delegation which testified before the immigration com- mittee of Congress. | All workers are called to attend this meeting, PAINTERS APPRECIATE DAILY WORKER NEW YORK, N, ¥.—The workers | of the Hunts Point Painting and | Decorating Co, addressed lowing letter to the “Daily:” “En- closed find $6 as a donation for the | Hunts Point shop workers in their ' strike. demonstration at City Hall on Thurs- ing to enable workers to obtain last | minute membership-tickets for the showing. No seats will be available at the door at time of showing. HAUPTMANN’S REVOLUTIONARY DRAMA “THE WEAVERS” OPENS criminal responsibility of the ruling | class for this crime against Tom America. An interesting program has been | arranged. Cecil Hope, National Negro | director of the I, L. D. will speak on | and Sidney Marcus —Program Includes— the Scottsboro frame-up’ and the Mozart Symphony in D Major, No. Andante (from 5th Symphony) Beethoven world fight of the workers to save | |the boys. A report on the visit of the Eastern students delegation to | | Kentucky will be given by two of the Excerpts from Scheherezade Rimsky Korsakoff Double Concerto in D Minor Bach Carmagnole Konus We Are the Builders Malamet Hathaway To Speak On “May Day” At Leon Next Sunday Forum student ceiegates. An added attrac- | ‘Tickets (all reserved) 75 cents and $i the fol-| —_—— | NEW YORK.—“May Day, 1932”! will be the timely topic at the Work- | ers Forum, this Sunday, April 24, at | 8 pm. at 35 E. 12th St, second floor. | The speaker will be C. Hathaway. | The historical background of May | Day, the collapse of the Second In- | ternational and May Day, the devel- opment of May Day after the war) and especially the tasks confronting | May Day at the present time, will be | |day. Hundreds of workers from the | park are going to the demonstration under the banners and leadership of the Lower Bronx Unemployed Coun- | cil. AT ACME TOMORROW Gerhart Hauptmann’s world famous revolutionary drame, “The Weavers,” | the most impetious of this great Ger- man dramatist’s works, has finally reached the screen under the direc- “UG |Bazaar For “Vida tion of Fredrich Zelnick and will a’ S ¢ 2 3 he Acme rera turday. | »ave its showing at tl Ob Sa i y Theatre, 14th Street and Unior Square,, beginning this Saturday, | -Theatre,Thea- -c NEW YORK, N. Y.—Comrades anc workers who like real entertainment are urged to come to the “Vida Hauptmann attacked the landed | discussed. Workers are urged to at- | Obera” Baaar next Saturday and | gentry and factory-owners of 19th | tend this important lecture and bring Sunday at 1538 Madison Avenue | Centry Germany with bitter vicious- | their friends along. tion will be the presentation of| ‘On sale at Box Office at Town Hall Langston Hughes play, Ssentis bono | seen eer emeeeeene Limited.” A small admission of 15 iT oUaraemeEResrere cents is charged. The rceipts of | the meeting will go to the Scottsboro | The Friends of the Soviet Union is Defense Fund. | co-operating in the first of a series OUT OF WORK. KILLS SELF | Will be held at the Ambassador Hall, : | Claremont Parkway, and 12nd St, SURVELAND, OhiOe-Bimak Wee" ag 2 Aprilia Liston Oak man” er, 45, a roomer at 3043 Cedar Avenue (aging editor of “Soviet Russia Today,” room, shot and killed with a 38 cal-| Oakley Johnson, of City College, iber revolver, according to police.| Joseph Gollom, writer, as well as Despondency over unemployment | John Heed Club cartoonists, will ad- was blamed.—Plain Dealer, dress the meeting. Secretaries of Extn _ | Bronx organizations are being asked (Ukrainian, Hall). Tango, Runba, Apache Dance etc. will be some of* the features of the Bazaar, Do not fail to see and hear | The Peanut Vender” and “Mama | ez.” Help to build the Spanish ness, contrasting the prograss of ma- whines with the unhappy lot of the weavers and deriding the “system” which was responsible for it. Filmed in a manner closely resembling “Po- temkin,” “The Weavers” called forth uproarious scenes wherver shown in A MUSEMENTS \form on Friday and thus manifest | the real spirit of the United front, [of large Anti-War Meetings which | |to send delegates to sit on the plat- | ATTENTION COMRADES! Health Center Cafeteria WORKERS CENTER 30 EAST 13th STREET Best Food Reasonable Prices All in the Struggle Against Polish Fascism Concert and Dance Saturday, April 23rd | | at 8 p. m. 2075 CLINTON AVE., BRONX, N. 3 | Songs by Margaret Larkin and Others Admission 50 Cents gan of the Communist Party, Europe, having been termed “a thinly | veiled document of our own times.” 00 TRUE HIPPODROME The cast of “The Weavers” includes TO BE GOOD Nina Oliyette young star of the|-Some of European’s foremost pene A New Play by BERNARD SHAW musical comedy stage heads the Hip-|@nd screen artists—Paul Wegener, | GUILD THEA., 52d 8t., W. of B'way. podrome stage program beginning| Wilhelm Dieterle,- Theodore Loos, | Bros $180), Bate: Toutes: Rats Saturday with Annnei, Judy ‘and| George John, and Dagny Servaes. Zeke and three Georgia crackers.|The director, F. Zelnick, now in Other stage acts include; King| Hollywood, considers this film his | Brothrs and Culley Harry Foster | Masterpiece, and has appended | Welch, Wally Jackson and Edgar | Hauptmann’s own dedication of the | Garner, assisted by Edith O’Hallissey, | tama to his father on the film, after Col. Fred Lindsay and Jungeland a| Hauptmann acknowledged Zelnick’s fantasy of African’ pastimes, faithful transcription of his tumul- “Scandal for Sale,” the screen| ‘Us drama. adaption of Emile Grauvreau’s novel “Hot News” featuring Charles Bick- THE THEATRE GUILD Presents AL FOR SALE” AT THE ‘The Vhentre Guild Presents REUNION IN VIENNA A Comedy By ROBERT E. SHERWOOD Martin Beck {U%2*, {t" By 6:40. Mts Th., Sat. Tel. Pe 646100 Madison Square Garden—Now ‘Twice Daily, inc. Sunday 2 & 8 PM. EAST SIDE Furnished rooms, comradely atmosphere. 26 W. 18th St. (Bet, 5th & 6th Ave). ‘Two large furnished rooms for rent. Alt improvements, 821 E. 12th St. S. HUROK Presents YASCHA YUSHNY’S RUSSIAN REVUE Help Build the Spanish Organ of the Communist Party, USA! ‘BLUE BIRL ° with ISA KRAMER A CONTINENTAL COCKTAIL OF SONG, DANCE AND COMEDY DIRECT FROM BERLIN, LONDON, PARIS, VIENNA Completing Triumphant Coast to Coast Tou CORT THEA., W. 48 ST. Mats. Wed. & Sut COUNSELLOR-AT-IAW wy With | ‘UMER RICE PAUL Mis “VIDA OBRERA” BAZAAR AND BALL 12 Noon to Midnight SATURDAY AND SUNDAY, APRIL 23rd AND 24th atnian Hall—1538 Madison Ave. (bet. 104 and 105 St.) BARGAINS—ENTERTAINMENT—DANUING DAY AND NIGHT Good Music—Russian Dances—Play by Proletarian Artists’ Group Exhibition by John Reed Club—Other Attractions! Ticket 25 Cents—Combination for 2 days—40 Cents | ford, Rose Hobart and Pat O’Brien is etic We | the film feature. As an added feature,|¥ 45 T DAY! | the Hippodrome will show veal Maxim Gorky’s | Grey in “South Sea Adventures,” “CAIN AN D ARTEM” (The Song of the Old Market Square) BASED ON GORKY'S WORLD-FAMOUS NOVEL, PRODUCED IN THE U,S,S.R. led Feature—W.LR, Presents NTI-FORD DEMONSTRATION’ STARTING TOMORROW. Gerhart Hauptmann’s Revolutionary Drama—"THE WEAVERS” ACME THEATRE jws.s".« UNION SQ. RINGING BARAUM CIRCUS Presenting 10,000 MARVELS includiny BEATTY tions 1,000 New Foreign Features: 800 Stars — 100 Clowns — 700 Horses — 50 Elephants — 1,009 Menagerie |. Animals—World Congtess of FREAKS Admission to All (Tho. Seats) $1-88.5% In. to Child’n und. 12 Hall Price Every Aft, Ex. Sat | Tickets at Garden, Gimbel Bros. & Agencie BRODSKY TO SPEAK ON “WAR | OR PEACE” | NEW YORK.—Carl Brodsky will| | speak in Boro Park Workers Club at | 1373 43rd Street, Brooklyn, this com- ing Friday, at 8 p.m, | | He will speak on “War or Peace” | |and all workers are urged to be there opportunity ted on this impor oF. kvery shop, mine and factory > fertile field tor Daily Worker sul seriptions, of being eluc! jant subject ee at PREPARE FOR MAY 1 fn i | ‘lymouth St iy. sue 's. FRIDAY aN HRS GUA MILLION chert '22 Fethe, bee ATS RESERVED | Admission 250 P\ rsimteaiesasess | SATURDAY 1 Shams Sun. 24 5 SOP Shah | APRU 28 od given hy BARGAIN (SUNDAY PPODROHE",.7: | APRIL 24 4 Admission he HIG J YOUN NEW VOR { rae, Pgs a fh | “DISORDERLY | Combination 8 At | CONDUCT” Ticket T5¢ | With SALLY ELLERS ond SPENCPM TRACY Radio's Ballyhooliy GET READY FOR RED ELECTION CAMPAIGNY The Greatest Affair on the East Side! 3-DAY RED BAZAAR the Communist Party, Section One S--ENTERTAINMENT—DANCING MANHATTAN LYCEUM SURED COLLECT ARTICLES! Bast ord Street Workers Rook= seamen

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