Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
vage 'Two BOSS PRESS WRITER ADMITS PEACE AIMS OF SOVIET UNION, AND WAR MOVES OF JAPANESE) The Japanese are so clearly driv- ing towards armed intervention against the Soviet Union that even the bourgeois press and bourgeois writers are forced to make admis- sions of the sinister aims of the| Japanese imperialists and of the im- minence of war against the Soviet Union. In his column in the New York World-Telegram recently, M. £.| ‘Tracy admits the “possibility of Jap- anese aggression,” the alliance of the | White Guards in Manchuria with | the Japanese, the firm peace policy of the Soviet Union and the respon- | sibility of the United States govern- | ment for the rapidly growing danger | to world peace. On the latter point | he says: “Our government fumed (on the Japanese aggressions in China— Daily Worker), but merely to keep | the record straight.” Speaking of! the Soviet Union's peace policy, he says “Russia has been pretty decent and pretty square throughout this whole controversy. She could have found plenty of preexts for entering Manchuria and precipitating strixe with Japan. The chances are that she could have made a rather favor- able trade with Japan for the divi- sion of Manchuria and eastern Mon- golia between them had she been willing to participate in the rape of an empire. She could have upset jevery vestige of government within China had revolution been her aim. “The fact that Russia has refrained from pursuing any of these courses ought to create a better impression of her poise and stability among out- | siders. She has talked less about idealism, but has done more to show how it works.” MILLER SHOE CO. | PLANS LOCK-OUT To Force A New Wage Cut Upon Workers | NEW YORK.—The I. Miller Shoe | ying over a thousand work- 0 lock out the whole crew We obtained this information from very reliable; sources. The fact is that the cutting | department is not working for almost a week. The sudden “slack” cannot be attributed to lack of orders. It isa fact that the I. Miller orders are made now at the J, T. Cousines, a shoe factory in New York, also at the Y. Miller factory in Carlisley, Pa This lockout is a scheme of the I Miller Shoe Co. to force still lower wages upon the workers. Only re- cently the firm with the heip of its gompany union machinery forced upon the workers a ten per cent cut Not being satisfied with only ten per cent nad noticing the growing resist- ance of the workers to these cnstant ‘wage. cuts the firm plans this lock- out in ordtr to force upon the work- ers starvation wages. ‘The workers, however, are alert. A miovement is going on in the factory to block this lockout attempt, and | for the restoration of the wages. It | fs not at all unlikely that it will come | to a clash. The condition in the fac- | tory, the spy and rush system make | the workers’ lives miserable as hell. | ‘This threat of totally depriving the workers of their meager livelihood, is carried through by the firm will un-/ doubtedly be met with a determined | resistance on the part of the workers. | Irish Workers Club Holds First Open Air Mass Meeting NEW YORK.—The first open air meeting of the Irish Workers Club, | which was organized two weeks ago, | was held at 139th and Willis Avenue, | Wednesday night, at 8 p.m. Over -250 workers ,mostly Irish, en- thusiastically endorsed the call of the | speakers to organize and demand | that the Tammany capitalist gov- | ernment reopen the relief agencies at | once and give adequate relief to all jobless workers, The workers unanimously pledged | to come out on May First to dem- onstrate against the Hoover hunger Program and in defense of the Soviet Union, Many applications for mem- | bership were signed by the workers. The meeting was addressed by Comrades Hays, Collins, White, Mc- Guire, Mullally and Rooney from the Irish Workers Club and Ray from the Unemployed Council. ‘The club meets every Friday night at 2072 5th Avenue, at 8 p.m. This Saturday night the club will hold its first social affair. Admission is free. AYl Irish workers are urged to attend this affair. REED, HARRISON WANT ‘EMBARGO’ Try to Bar Import of Soviet Coal (By Labor Research Assn.) A tariff of 10 cents per 100 pounds The strike at the Paris Shoe, con- | on coal and ¢oke imports has been ducted by Shoe and Leather Workers. | written into the revenue bill, with Industrial Union is now going on the | the help of the democrats, who are third week. Attempts have been made | €@@er to prove that they are just as by the firm to trick the workers with | Tedy as the republicans to help the DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, APRIL 26, 1932 Garner’s Express Co. Hauls Scabs Against N. Y. Dockers’ Strike (By a Worker Correspondent) NEW YORK.—A large number of scabs were dumped here today under heavy police protetction on a quiet corner of 9th Avenue and 14th Street at the elevated station by a closed moving van bearing the name Gar- ner’s Express Moving (every worker | should put this name in his mind) at the time between 5 and 6 p.m. | As every worker knows, the long- | shoremen of the Morgan, Savannah and Eastern Steamship Lines went on strike recently against a new 10 Mr. Ryan, chieftain of the Long- per cent wage cut. This is the way shoremen’s Association, handles the | strike. | Longshoremen, enlarge your picket | line. The Marine Workers Industrial | Union gives you full support to help you in your struggle. Watch every | moving van that comes down to the | docks, It might be loaded with scabs, Look out for Garner’s Express Moving Van. H A MARINE WORKER. HOSPITAL TRIES 10 CUT ON PAY Retreat When Workers | Show Militancy | Last week, in line with the state- / ment in the press that the Jewish Federation was doing everything within its power to reduce expendi- tures, the Beth Israel Hospital ad- ministration took up the question of | reducing wages. Word of these plans to cut the al- ready miserably low wages: reached the workers and in the laundry the workers openly stated that they would refuse to accept a further re- duction in their wages. The fore- man went to the administration and protested that the workers had be- come unmanagable, The hospital management fright- | ened by the fighting spirit of the workers issued a statement that it had never intended to cut wages and | that some “ungrateful” worker was spreading malicious propaganda. The management will, of course, now try to disarm the militnat spirit of the workers in one form or another and then try to put over the wage cut in a@ more indirect form, if possible. ‘The first step in this line was taken ; When the workers coming to break- fast Wednesday morning, found that there was no butter on the table. The excuse being that it was Pass- over. The workers readily under- stood this maneuver and sent a com- mittee to the dietician to demand not only butter but in addition more substantial food for breakfast, name- ly eggs. The demand was granted and oncé more the workers had shown that through their organized efforts it was possible to precent a reduction in their standard and even with a small organization win certain INTELLECTUAL "WORKERS SCORE ROLPH DECISION \Pledge Fight for Release of Tom Mooney NEW YORK.—The Intellectual | Workers’ League, following a special | meeting yesterday morning, wired a | protest to the ‘California governor, | characterizing his decision as a “class | verdict.” The League likened the | Mooney case ‘to the Sacco-Vanzetti | case, and issued a call to intellectu- als to protest against the refusal of | | @ pardon. | “We feel that this case illus- trates,” said Winchell spokesman for the group, “what many people have felt: that justice is bought and patd for in our | courts, and flagrantly so in the case of California. It is high time the intellectuals joined the workers in fighting class issues.” The League’s wire to Governor | Rolph follows: “We charge you with deliberately yielding to financial pressure in keeping Tom Mooney in jail. The utilities crowd which engineered | the Mooney frame-up, plus the other notoriously anti-labor Cali- Taylor, | the date of the affair. | | mittee of the Communist Party, etc. ing the importance of supporting Workers Clubs arranging affairs on Trade Union Unity Council Protests Clashing Affairs ‘The Buro of the Trade Union Unity Council of Greater New York sharply protests against workers organizations arranging conflicting affairs on Saturday night, April 30, the date of the Trade Union Unity | | Council Carnival and Ball, at the New Star Casino, 107th Street and Park Avenue. For months in advance the Trade Union Unity Council has informed the organizations through the press and letters about This date has been set in agreement with the Central organiza- tions of the I.W.O. Central Committee Workrs Clubs, District Com- . These organizaitons have agreed to reserve this date for the Trade Union Unity Council affair, realiz- | | lutionary trade union center, the leader of all new unions, Those or- | ganizations breaking this agreement and arranging these conflicting affairs show in practice that they still do not realize that the building of the new unions and leagues, the strengthening of the opposition | groups in the American Federation of Labor is of primary importance. The TUUC Buro particularly protests against a number of Jewish all class conscious workers to support this protest by corhing in mass to the TUUC Carnival and Ball and in this way exert their pressure against the nartow clanish attitude of these organizations and their leadership towards Trade Union Work, and strengthening the new revo- Saturday, April 30, and calls upon TUUC BURO fornia industrialists, have forced you to call Mooney guilty despite the fact that the trial judge and | Daily Worker will be off the press| and cash for their bundles not later nine of the ten living jurors have declared him innocent, This de- | cision of your will do more than anything since the Sacco-Vanretti | case to-convince the American peo- | ple that under the present econ- — omic system money power runs the | courts. We call upon intellectuals | groups and the party sections are} Worker gave wrong ‘dates and should the world over to join the workers in protesting this class verdict.” PASSAIC STREET RUN FOR MOONEY, Run Prepares for the} Counter-Olympies | PASSAIC, N. J.—Nine worker ath- |letes racing over a six mile course | between Passaic and Paterson last | Saturday, April 23, bearing signs on their backs of “Free Tom Mooney,” | “Free the Nine Scottsboro Boys,” were | of many workers who witnessed the |run.. This run was under the aus- | pices of the Passaic “Ramblers A.C.” and the Paterson “Red Front A.C.” Counter Olympic Committee and was held as part of these clubs activity in preparing for the International Workers Athletic Meet that is going to be held in Chicago this July. In the evening many athletes from dif- ferent clubs were present at a dance where the presentations of the med- als was made, The winners and their time were: greeted on all sides by the cheers | The City Edition of the May Day} Thursday night for distribution throughout New York City, up-state, Long Island and Northern New Jersey. The City Edition will be dated, Friday, Aprfl 29. | All mass organizations, trade union | urged to make all arrangements today! MAY DAY “DAILY” GOES TO NEW YORK ON FRIDAY This Is Correct Schedule—Dates Published Yesterday Were Wrong and tomorrow to place their orders than Thursday, April 28th, at 1 p.m. The District Office of the Daily Worker will be open Thursday till 1 am. and Friday early in the morn- ing. The schedule in yesterday's Daily be disregarded, Election Banquet in Williamsburg, May 21 A workers’ banquet to help the Communist Party in its election cam- | paign was arranged by representatives | of several organizations which met in Williamsburg. The banquet and ball will be held Saturday, May 2ist, in| the Laisye Hall, 46 Ten Eyck Street. ‘The next meeting of the arrange-! ments committee will be held Mon- | day, May 2, 8 p.m., at 61 Graham Avenue, Brooklyn. Workers’ organi- | zations should ¢lect delegates to this! committee ke WIR ANNOUNCES NEW MAGAZINE NEW YORK—A new, popular cul- tural magazine, Workers’ Life, will be ATHLETES JOIN MOONEY FIGHT To Hold Street Runs for Tom Modney NEW YORK., N. Y.—Ninetten dis~ trict and local organizations came together at the Eastern District Counter-Olympic Conference, which was held at the Labor Temple, 15 West 126th St. Saturday, April 23rd, at 3 p.m. and decided to hold, in answer to Gov. Rolph’s decision on ‘Tom Mooney, a series of Tom Mooney Street Runs in every section of New York City as also a series of sec- tional conferences, ‘The conference endorsed the pro- gram of the National Counter-Olym- pic Committee for the boycott of the | | atte scale by the members of the Fin- |publistied monthly by the Cultural) Los Angeles Olympics and for the @ false settlement. But it failed. The workers insist for full recognition of | the right to be an organized crew as the only guarantee that the settle- ment will be carried out in life. Weld Workers’ Red Front with May Day | Daily Worker The brutal, cynical denial of par- don for Tom Mooney, the savage attacks upon workers demanding re- lef in New York City and Philadel-, phia, the increasing provocative acts against the Soviet Union by the Jap- nese butchers, all these events of @ single dey show that the Y have embarked on a world- ‘wide campaign to crush the prowinc workers’ strugeles in preparation for capitalists. Operators in the Goal Exporters’ Association ate opposing this tariff. About 835,000 tons of coal were im- ported during 1931 (including $40,000 tons of British anthracite, a smaller quantity of anthracite from the Sov- jet Union and 176,000 tons of Cana- dian bituminous), Exports, chiefly and this marked would almost cer- tainly be cut off by a Canadian tarift f the United States does place this duty on Canadian and British coal | Senator James Reed (of the Mel-| on domain in y, rn Pennsylvania) Senator of Mississippi and t lemanding a com- acite, out the Treasury Deparisent mus heed the wishes of capitalists who to Canada, | amounted t© nearly 14,000,000 tons) an even more savage program of Seek trade with the Soviet Union starvation and murder. | and refuses to rule broadly against ‘The workers have no time to loss. | MY Soviet product. improvements. This incident showed not only the necessity for the organization of the hospital workers. The wage cutting plans of the Jewish Federation will j Only be stopped by the,organized ef- forts of the workers in the hospitals, this wage cutting policy will take place in every hospital in the city unless the workers organize. long hours and rotten food! Join the | Hospital Worker section of the Meds ical Workers Industfial League, 16 W. Hospital Workers to Hold Meetine Wex | A mass ¢ of bospit ers will be held under the of the Hospital Workers Section o the Medical Workers Industrial possibility but the most immediate | Resist wage cuts, organize against | First Place—Alfred DeCarlo, repre- senting the Young Communist League of Passaic, time, 42 min. 32 sec. Second Place—Steve DeCerho, rep- | resenting the Red Front A. C. of Paterson, time, 44 min. 23 sec. Third Place—Joe Walkowitz, rep- | Tesenting the Red Front A. C., time, | 44 min. 24 sec. Besides demanding the freedom of Mooney and the Scottsboro boys, the run was a demonstration for the re- tease of the five Paterson silk strikers who are now on trial for their lives Department of the Workers’ Interna- tional Reliéf. The first issue will bé out May 1, It will sell for 10 cents a éopy, subscription $1 a year. Workers Life will contain practital material for workers’ cultural groups —plays, songs with music, eave chafts, cartoon outlines for chalk- talks, etc. It will also contain popu- lar features—working-class stories, Poems, sketches, humor, photos, film. The Workers’ International Relief expects this magazine to help every W. I. R. branch, as well as every other workers’ organization, to de- velop mass cultural activity. Work- | ers’ culture can be 2 mighty weapon | in building the workers’ and farm-} on @ framed-up charge of murder, SCOTTSBORO MASS MEETING A mass meeting under the vent speakers, including a ch oy A. Refregier and William Siegel League, Wednesday, April 27, 1932, at will expose the vicious frame-up of | as well as sympath ers’ militant organizations, in build- ing the W. I. R., in drawing in and winning over large sections of the! tellectulais, relief, a mise t t for im r | in raising holding of the International Workers Athletic Meet on July 29, 30, 31 and August 1 in Chicago, Til. ‘The following dates for competi- tion, were endorsed—soccer, to start May 14; swimming, May 13; sectional track and field meets, May 29 and 30; district tratk and field meets, July 3 and 4, These competitions ate to be open. to all worker and student sportsmen To Draw Workers in Trade Union Work A campaign for increased activity among the Finnish workers to draw| them into the unions of the Trade | Union Unity League and to make | | them active workers in the revolu- | tionary trade union movement, was decided upon by the district conven- tion of the Finnish Workers Clubs. Collection of funds for the work of the TUUL must be done on a system- nish Workers Clubs, the convention VETS TO HOLD 2 BONUS MEETINGS To Form New Posts In| Bronx} Yorkville | NEW YORK-~—-The Workers Ex- Servicemen’s League, Post 1, will hold two open air meetings, one at 72nd St. and First Ave. nad the other at Wilkins and Intervale Aves., Bronx. Both meetings will be held ‘Wednesday night, April 27th at 8 p. m. New Posts are to be formed at once in both Yorkville and the Bronx. Posts No. 1 and 2 are co-operating in this organizational work. All vet~ erans, especially members of the American Legion, the Veterans of Foreign Wars nad Disabled American Veterans living in these districts should attend these meetings. Work- ers Ex-Servicemen’s League is the only veterans’ organization today which fights in the interests of all worker veterans. This organization led the fight in the Ways and Means Committee for the full payment of the bonus while other organizations and their poli- ticians betrayed the veterans. We are now planning a march to Wash- ington to force Congress to pay the bonus. Our Branches all over the country report great increase in membership with requests continu- ally pouring in for more posts to be opened. Veterans who wish further information should apply in pérson ov by mail to National Office, W. E. S. L, 79 Bast Tenth St. N. Y. C. Polish Picture . Glorifies Fascist Butcher Pilsudski “The Ten Condemned,” a Polish talking picture now showing at the Vanderbilt Theatre, West 48th St., depicts the upsurge in 1906 of the Polish national revolutionary struggle against the brutal Tsarist regime of Oli Russia. ‘What would otherwise be a re- volutionary document is turned into a counter-revlutionary effort by the glorification at the opening of the picture of the Polish fascist, butcher, Pilsudski. ‘Pilsudsski, while active in the Polish [national revolutionary thoveemnt before the World War has shamelessly betrayed the toiling masses of Poland to the yoke of French imperialism and the big Polish landowners and industrialists. Thousands of Polish revolutionary fighters are today confined and tor- turéd in Poljsh dungeons by this same Pilsudski. To attempt to pre- 4 en nent SIGNATURES FOR N. J. ELECTIONS BEING COLLECTED Prepare for Chicago National Nomination Conference The election campaign in New |Jersey is on. Workers all over the state are busy collecting the signa- tures necessary to place the Com- munist candidates for président, vice- President and also candidates for U. S. senator, 14 congressmen, as- semblymen and freeholders in 11 counties in the state on the ballot. Candidates will be placed in five more couities than last year. Peti- tions have been filed for candidates in the city elections of Paterson, Hillside, Linden, Elizabeth, Atlantic” City and Long Branch. The Commu- nist Party penetrated the latter city last year for the first time, having to battle for the use of the streets. Enthusiastic preparations are go- ing ahead for the holding of nine county conferences between May 13 and 15 from which 30 delegates will be elected to the National Nominat- ing Conference in Chicago, May 28 and 29. On this delegation there will be representatives of farmers from South Jersey (Camden, Ocean and Atlantic County) for the first time. Preparations for the New Jersey State Nomination Convention to be held June 25 and 26 in the Newark Labor Lyceum are also being made. Forward to complete the signature collections to place the Communist candidates on the ballot! Forward to broad mass united front county conferences, fulfilling our qq) of 30 delegates to the Natiorfal Nominating Conference. “ANOTHER LANGUAGE” OPENS AT BOOTH THEATRE “Another Language,” a new comedy by Rose Franken, novelist, opened last night at the Booth Theatre, the only opening of the week. Glenn Anders, Dorothy Stickney, Margaret Wycherly and John Beal pipay tho leading roles. ‘This is the final week of the Elmer Rive comedy “The Left Bank,” at the Little Theatre, after a run of thirty weeks. “Counsellor -at- Law,” the other Elmer Rice play, in Which Paul Muni is starred, at the Plymouth Theatre has decided to reduce prices for the summer. SBaloony seats especially will be at new low prices, with excel- Tent seats at $1.00, $1.50 and $2.00. Top prices for matinees, Thursday and Saturday, will be $2.00, ‘Today and tomorrow are the final two days of “The Weavers,” at the Acme Theatre. This is Gerhart Hauptman’s masterly revolutionary drama of the revolt of the weavers against the wage slavery of the bosses. The same program is featuring the ‘W. 1B. pictures of the “Soldiers’ Bonus Demonstration,” and other scenes taken by the W. f. 8. film men Beginning Thursday, the Acme will present the Soviet film, “Cossacks of the Don,” for a limited run. sent this bloody butcher of the regardless of their affiliations. Par- ticular emphasis was plced on the question of winning the worker sportsmen in the Amateur Athletic Union, YMCA’s YMHA's. Arthur Stein was re-elected as chairman of the Counter-Olympic Committee and Andrew Rasp was elected treasurer. ‘The conference unanimously de- cided to send the following tel of greetings to Tom Mooney: n’ Count ie Confer aployment and in “nce sends you warmest greeting insurance, strengthening every struggle of the vledges continue fight for your un- conditional release. We pledge to |8 pm. at the Labor Temple, 14th St. the nine innocent Scottsboro boys. Only a mass revoiutionary struggle, guided by a mass press, will hurl ‘back the bosses’ gangsters. Our first task must be to get to work at once and build up our mass press. The May Day issue of the Daily Worker will be a decisive step in that direc-| tion. How decisive that step will be, | what the progress of that campaign! will be in the next few months, de- ‘pends upon your action now. Act at once to make the May Day issue a big step forward in the ' workers’ struggles. Send in your bun- die orders today, paid in advance, and SPREAD the Daily Worker to the workers in your shop and in your neighborhood. Friends of the Daily Worker Groups, units, sections, mass organizations, Daily Worker) agents, are your bundle orders tn? Are. they big enough? Be sure you| do everything in your power now to prepare for the struggle. | Spread the May Day Daily Work- er Lay the ground for permanent Spread the increases in future bun- | dle orders. Lay the ground for big subscription increases. Lay Meanwhile the wild statements about “forced labor” in Soviet mines, and Second Ave., New York Gity. | Problems confronting the welfare made by Matthew Woll and the coal} of all hospital workers will be dis-| capitalists, are printed with approval | cussed, and proper action deter-| mittee for the Protection of Foreign in United Mine Workers of America| mined A committee o fthese work- | Born is 799 Broadway, Room 410. All sheets as a part of their campaign to stir up hostile feeling against the lers will be elected from the floor to |present the resolution to the State Soviet Union and left-wing peigal Pome Association convention held in the United States, May 5 to 7. “PROTECTION FOREIGN BORN” The new office address of the Com- mail to be addressed at the above ad- dress. Legal advice will be given in the new office. Phone Stuyvesant 9-4560. Workers in Soviet Union Denounce | Lynch Verdicts The following resolution. condem- ning the murderous frame-up and lynch sentences against the Scotts- boro boys and the traitorous role of | renegade Negroes like Walter White and William Pickens was adopted at Against \Joined By Negro Cot- jton Experts in Protest | against the Negro masses in order Scottsboro 9 —— rs | People in the Scottsboro case; their | collecting thousands of dollars on | false pretense and their refusal to | turn the said money ever to the In- | ternational Labor Defense which has | complete charge of the Scottsboro a meeting of Negro cotton special- | to force them to peacefully accept | defense. — ists and Russian workers in the Sov- jet Union: \ We, American Negro specialists, to- continued segregation, jim crowism, unemployment and death, | The Negro toiling masses of ground for making the Daily Werker | 8¢ther with the Russian and Us-| America must realize that in order ‘@ Teal mass workers’ paper. | What’s On— ‘TUESDAY ‘The Musicians Club is holding the fourth of its series of lecture recitals at the John Reed Club rooms, 63 West 15th Street, at 9 pm. Margaret Larkin and Jim Philips will give « joint recital on American folk | and work gongs. All interested are urged | ‘Owe WEDNESDAY Hospital Workers will have « mass meet- | at Labor Temple, 1 et and ‘Avenue, at 8 p.m. ; | ection Station in the region of Tash- | | kant, Central Asia, U. 8, S. R., join | tp qin servicemen and el | guilty of the crime they have been bak workers and specialists, assem- _ | bled at the club of the Cotton Sel-| the world-wide protest against the legal “court house” lynching of the eight Negro boys in Scottsboro, Ala- bama, U. S. A. We know that these boys aré not accused, The brutal lynch justice, in this horrible attempt to legally murder innocen Negro boys is meant to strike terror into the hearts of | the Negro masses. During this period of hard times | and ever deepening crisis of world bai to emancipate themselves from terrorism, exploitation and oppres- sion, they must organize them- selves, together with the white | workers in revolutionary organiza- | tions, led by the vanguard of the proletariat, the Communist Party of America, a Section of the Com- munist International. The Negroes of America must understand the significance of the fact that the Communist Party is the only organization that fights for the social, political and econo- mic equality of the Negro working class. mechersoomen ‘Teages sit be Made We condemn thé role played by the -Intervale Avenues, Bi pein the white ruling class of | leaders of the National Association cet WE. PRISE. SE. SERS ya Long live the International Labor Defense in its struggle for the de- fense of the working-class, both white and black , Long live the Communist Party of America who is leading in this world-wide protest against the legal lynching of the Scottsboro boys! Long live the solidarity of the white and Negro workers in the | struggle against lynch terror! | EAST SIDE | i | | TODAY AND TOMORROW GERHART HAUPTMAN’s REVOLUTIONARY DRAMA The Weavers Also “THE SOLDIERS’ BONUS DEMON- BTRATION,” Presented by W.LE, ACME THEA’ Mth 8T. a UNION 6Q. toiling masses. | Every organization, every worker, farmer and intellectual is called upon to read Workers Life, to write for it, to order bundles (at reduced rates), and to subscribe. All correspondence should be addressed to the Cultural Department of the Workers’ Inter- national Relief, 16 W. 21st St. New York, N. Y, organize series Free Tom Mooney Street Runs through New York City streets and continue campaign boy- cott Olympic. We worker athletes will not rest until Governor Rolph’s decision has been overruled by mass power of working class and you are free man, Eastern District Counter-Olympic Conference, TRE GUILD Presents THE i be TR TO BE GOOD A New Play by BERNARD SHAW GUILD THEA., 524 8t., W. of B'way. Eve. $:30 Mats. Thurs., Sat., 2:30 The Theatre Guild Presents REUNION IN VIENNA A Comedy .By ROBERT E. SHERWOOD Ev 8:40. Mts Th., Sat. Tel. Pe 6-6100 YASCHA YUSHNY’S RUSSIAN REVUE “BLUE BIRD” with ISA KRAMER A CONTINENTAL COCKTAIL OF SONG, DANCE COMEDY CORT THEA. W. 48 ST. Mats. Wed. & Sat. FARINE RURST'S MILLION, My ets Ses fad Madison Square Garden—Now ‘Twice Daily, inc. Sunday 2 & 8 P.M. RivcuNG Bana Presenting 10,000 MARVELS including BEATTY fionsinericens 1,000 New Foreign Features--800 Circus Stars — 100 Clowns — 700 Horses — 50 Elephants — 1,009 Menagert Animals—World Congress of FREAK: Admission to All (Inc. Seats) $1-$3.50 In. tax Child’n und, 12 Half Price Every Aft, Ex. Sut. ‘Tickets at Garden, Gimbel Bros. & Agencies & 43rd St. BIGGEST SHOW LN NEW YORK eeo| Cts Maange 8 Acts ROSE HOBART aye queue “SCANDAL Cimettesre [FOR SALE” “The labor movement will gain the upper hand and show the way to Polish masses as the national hero of Poland ia brutal insult to the memory of the heroi¢ Polish workers | Adverti Irving Klein — — Thursday, April Intern’) Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 15th FLOOR AU Work Done Under Persons! Care of DR. JOSEPHSON WORKERS! REST AT The AVANTA FARM in a comradely atmosphere—plain but good fresH food at $12 per wk. AVANTA FARM, Ulster Park, SOLLINS’ RESTAURANT 216 KAS1 MTB STREET 6-Course Lunch 55 Cents Workers’ Clubs Should ein the “Daily” | and peasants who gave their lives in the struggle against Tsarism and Polish tools among the big land- owners and industrialists. ii:—Is the Present System Heading for Destruction? — — Affirmative Congressman Hamilton Fish, Jr. Negative 28th, at 8 p. m. ‘ at the JEWISH COMMUNITY CENTER OF YONKERS SOUTH BROADWAY AND GUION STREET TICKET 50 CENTS For Sale at the Workers’ Bookstore, 27 Hudson St, Yonkers, N. Y. UNDER THE AUSPICES OF THE LIBERAL FORUM OF WESTCHESTER COUNTY ATTENTION COMRADES! Health Center Cafeteria WORKERS CENTER 50 EAST 13th STREET Patronize the Health Center Cafeteria and Help the Revolutionary Movement Best Food Reasonable Prices Rational Vegetarian Restaurant e 199 SECOND AVENUE Bet, 12th and (3th Sts. Strictly Vegetarian food Garden Restaurant 823 EAST 13TH ST. EXCELLENT MEALS an@ SERVICE NO TIPPING TWO-ROOM beat {eryate bathe abawere, easensiies ‘Be Pence “Guetsen a7108, ‘aiss7 Ww. dare Yel, Tompkins 8g, «9701