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29 32 Dal; Y WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, ‘TO EXPOSE CHILD Amter to Open City Election High MISERY TONIGHT Conference With His Report MAY 18, 19. —_—_—_—— 'GYP JOB AGENCIES PROFIT ON MISERY Page Two Shoe Strikers Uncowed by Arrests; Spirit Is Ten Per Cent Cut of All Wages on 3rd Ave. Railway The Third Avenue | ——— —_—_— NEW YORK. NEW YORK.—If the police hope struggles, to give financial aid and) — * | Railway wish rane Grollay care ane OF N ¥: JOBLESS Pe aisay fhe Willseany ‘of the shoe | other support Will Compare U.S.S.R. betes Sunday Will Send 75 Delegates to the length Gt” Mantatian and way. up| strikers by arrests yesterday at the! ne seven arrested yesterday at I with America National Nominating Convention rds Yonkers, and runs a fleet of picketing of I. Miller Shoe Co. they | saner shop are: I, Rosenberg, | oo sides, put through a! Hy} haoney Wale $3 for Job That Nets are going to be mistaken. The spirit) J onizer and Ziebel, se ry, of thel new vorE — it orted by| NEW YORK.—The Ci Election) ‘The main report in the first ses-|general wage cut of ten per cent on k ¢ strikers is as high a and| Shoe and Leat a Union: | esa wankers coal i ef that | Campaign Committee is making the | sion will be given by Comrade Israel | the wages of all its 2,000 sinployes Work cers $5 { with a victory already to their credit | «77 now, Theodore Plecan, Minnie : me be. arrangements for the City No- | Amer, district organizer of the Com-| Sunday. It is said the company will SGI n the settlement Monday of Elco| ) in abraham Gefiner, and Har a i munist Party, District Amter will| thus loot its employes of about $ Shoe Co. strike, the fight goes on at gainst | minating Conference to be held Sun- | Workers Urged to Rall y Behind Food Workers All are charged with |oniid Misery and Starvation Cam-|day, May 22 Ke ati iy. | report on the tasks confronting the| 000. These workers are invited I. Miller, Andrew Geller and Parts a Shoes emi n Cam-| day, May 22, at the Manhattan Ly-| orkers in the coming election cam-| get in touch with the Transportation Union to Fight Racketeers et, and cases ar ceum, The Conference will start at ection °Oh tha: TeRae Union" nity shops. Frida / = 3 = ae : paign. Section of the Trade Union Unity ? Sa SL . eae court Frids The sympo i 1 o'clock in the morning punctually F spunett, 6° Mask ae wk The Needle Trades Workers Indus- sees nanen ara a nd all the delegates are urged to be| . THe resolutions committee that will | Council, 5 East (By a Worker Correspondent) t for t The 13 strikers the Pa ; and a | Beds ie Meet hae Ganesan $100 for she shop were given one and two days| ee Union” to be at the New/|on time. This is important since | Pe elected at the conference will draw NEW YORK.—The Hub Agency, 48th St. and Sixth Ave,| sory Ge Se TAaPRbENE Ms Wee | Ps BED Were ven School For Social Research, 66 East| there are so many problems to be|UP @ Plan of work that will be pre- | "fq Conmpaaiate [eth harged ker $3.50 f b. H ked two. 12+ho} bership, veterans of a hundred strike | in jail each. 5 “a wits ace ae eran te ) | sented to the conference for adoption ie fee a worker $3.50 for a job. e worked two ur ces ee stratum of professionals never before| the cont : and will lay the besis for all the Toussaint L’Ouverture | shifts and received $5, or 75 cents for each shift. a Se sie FE ue ap The conference will be split up in- | activities in New York City. A girl worker paid $5 at one agency and worked one day. [touched by working class activities, | Anniversary on Friday | i i gency ‘ Me well as nonorevoluticnary working | 2080 sessions, the first ending at 2] ‘The onference will also clect 75 de- | y They refused to refund her money and she went off dows the Hays Deserts Meeting |P.m. and the second session starting | legates to the National Nominating | class organizations s as Work- | Toussaint L'Ouverture Anniversary | street, crying hysterically. oe at 2045 and ending at 7 p.m. ference to be held hicago. , 3 y man's Circle Branches and A, F ot" . id Ubi je held inChicago. | i be. commemorated Friday, May| Riley's, another agency on Sixth Upholsterers United mH st ies san td ———|20, at 8 pm, at St. Luke's Hall, 125} Ave., is demanding $20 for a job that ( j $2 Yalled by Ky. Miners’ mspesial atiantion! is: being paid to} W. 130th St. This occasion will mark| pays $25 a month and four rooms,| Eront eer a to the destitution of Negro children and ee ( 7 b Mi S the 189th anniversary of the death|a janitor job. | Be Held Tonight ee ae terror against working class children. | ormer Cuban inister vise of ‘Toussaint L.Ouverture, fearless| The Interstate Agency at 46th St, e Held Tonig . Tot hates ec Whitewash Ter. |The symposium will rally additional | Negro slave leader of the Hattian|and Sixth Ave, wants $1850 for a| NEW YORK — Civil Liberties Union pea kers W hitew ash Ter forces to the fight for the lives of the | | hat Machado Gave Order | Revolution. /30 a sonth ob ana ‘S acre | Mae bio. SSB HEP ror: Attack N.M.U.; Declare Walter nine innocent Scottsboro Negro chil |_ William Z. Foster, proposed presi-|the rooms, or in all $23.50 for the |5 or ine anny aig cout Smith “G vod Fellow” ane dential candidate of the Communist | job, It is a superintendency job,| 7 Of the Upholsterers International smith Gt A larye deleyation of parents of jor Ju 10 2 a’ Ss UT LEY | Party, will ve the principal speaker,| Another azency asked for $12 for a| Union and the Furniture Workers 5 ‘i i ; : agrees Neyro and white children has been along with Charles Alexander and|$20 a week job. | Industrial Union will be held tonight f KNOXVILLE, Tenn., May 15, coal operators, sayi ey were | organized throughout the feeding| REAR ES uae Harold Williams of the League of | hese ar Jat 7:30 van. at the Manhattan Ly- : a ‘e but a few of the glaring} m. at the Manhattan Ly “LEE aevere coh a podiad Ascot gr ba Rae fay epee aoa ek epee: Testimony at Trial of of Actual Slayer in Mexico |struggie tor Negro Rights, examples of the growing sharpness | CCUM, 66 B. 4th St \ member of the delegati the 8 only reas at the W.LR. Children’s Center, 45¢ @ The workers of Hariem will be| of the rackete fae phe’ dificiilecot ihe A Baaeeh. American Civil Lierties Union to|were not allowed to speak was be-| West 53rd Strect. This delegation | Confirms Responsibility of Fascist |mobilized, prior to the St. Luke's! significance itd ra aera aa os local are tn steyor Coes z out ne- Kentucky, abandoned all pretense of | cause they didn't realize we were te- | wiil attend the symposium and pop-P Machado Hail. meeting, at 149th St, and Gev- |coming to the Dally Warker seUera|goulations with. tie Loses. tanind fighting for free speech when he,de-| spectable. We are rich, with offices | ularize its results among the work- ERS enth Ave, and will march to the/and asking for guidance in this|closed doors. ‘The Furniture Work eee ee eens sitters [alte is Ge fees a eale Ae tne Midtown West Side poor! That Julio Antonio Mella, Cuban , ponsibility, He sald that at one |St- Luke's Hall. Many organizations, | trouble ers Industrial Union calls on all up- yy Kentucky miners in Middlesborc lize this in time. © asked Us tO/ Trish and Negro neighborhoods < Sundae re i 7 h as the Workers’ Ex-Servicemen’s Ih 7 1 and repudiated it, At the same time |come back, and he meant, it.’ vinpealisin Will beatn ceases | Communist leader slain in Mex- | Cabinet meeting Machado became epee Sah diese Club, Song| Most of these workers are hotel holsterers to rally to this meeting Fi cerk to G Oltil Linsttise wiseting| MILB Gkdareds “tas epenitiee| 0 Wednesday evening, May| 10 at the beginning of 1929, was | “engraged” at a narticle in which |Le8#uc, Trish Workers Club, Sons sng vectaurant workers. ‘These work-|8"4 organize one solid united front in Knoxville, where he altacked the|are doing the best they ean. ‘They |19, ‘The speaker inetude, tire, Ainy| murdered by order of President | Mella called him a “donkey with and ‘Daughters of North Carclin’.|ers properly belong in the Food| @sainst the bosses. This is the only miners’ leadership are really worse off than the miners,| withrow Field, Charles NEES Gerardo Machado of Cuba, is prov- | claws” and dismissed his Cabinet Workers’ Club, St, Lu Organ So-| Workers’. Industrial Union, ‘The | Way ‘0 win better conditions tn the ‘The meeting ararnged yesterday at | because they have heavy responsivili-| MacWeiss, Oakley Johnson and Jos-| °% bY the testimony of Rafael | after saying: “I will silence that ngs eS: nartici. {Union holds a street meeting in the | Shops e meeting ng y | MacWelss, Oakley Johnson and Jos-| tirsiage, former Secretary of th t (ican to {ciety and the I. L. D., will partici- e: <y, was broken up by|ties. The miners live in nice bttle|eph Fre ninkeata’ ae : Bo, former Secretary of the | tongue, even though he goes to ; eq), [lower Forties every Tuesday. Unem- Middlesboro, Ky., was ti 5 eph Freeman, ‘Tickets are for sale| yyy a 4 pate in carrying forwa'd the tradi- | six carloads who} homes.” at the Workers Book Shop, 35 East iii ia hh Russia, | ; ployed comrades should patrol the pies six oad Fk THEE Sa Gi HRSA Ge ee o& Shop, 3 East) ‘This testimoney was rendered by Comrade Mella was shot from |tion of the great Negro leader. lagenisies: Salkce ton’ thes erevaiten ; M_ TRIPS planted a n ield © was no mention by ‘any of 19th Street, and. at the Workers In-|: 4.) see eqceuker of Minkads Wehind aha doubt ever existed | The anniversary was arranged by| g ares | Get in Touch With The thugs nan,| the speakers of the receni strike or| ternational Relief, 16 West 2lst St 20 ie, SHG Ho Coeb’ ever existe fi : eee tom-|, We Should concentrate on a fight) pun DEPA Tr, a : Z - at the trial of Jose’ Lopez Valinas, | in th ‘kers’ minds that th - |the United Front Conference Com-~- ; 2 LM DEPARTMENT, W. I. Be unti] Sunday night to get out of|its demands for better wages, for _ Gy fa agen ik al quences hd 5 ated ROTTS Re area tay by the League of |t® set these jobs for workers at the 21ST ST., N. town or be killed. They stated: | payment in cash instead of scrip, for < denouced by his own wife as the | der was. ordered by Machado, a be wie ter Necro’ Rights. © 10 per cent legal rate, if the worker Sota. acing (0: clean. Wp Sidtlen- | checkwolehness to. aeeedat cn-etive| PHOTOGRAPHERS slayer of Comrade Mella: War’ government, turriaga’s re- | 5truee Negro Ri wants le. WHEL we Mune nae eed ERE ROE STS boro Junction. ‘on weights of ccal, for the removal | IVURS wii T A, Rafael Turriaga sate in | velation does not clear the United . awaken these workers to fighting for | frauds. Before the meeting the National] of armed forces, for the right to| I iinlle BOER: bgp tae a Lend gevernment of its respon- | T iberator Will Be aoe Miners’ Union wired to Roger Bald-| trade outside of company stores, ete. | JOIN PICKETS Ete he EER oe Een Off Press May 24 : rin of the American Civil Liberties|They did not mention the kidnap- | OUE J x Sie eae taeeesd He Workers’ Clubs Should Union asking it to assign a speaker | ping or jailing of strike leaders, or| NEW YORK-—Thousands of work- Cn ocr Cartel aaa ac ae nia te] EW Fone —-vesteiay. om to/[] © ARMY DRIVES FOR ers, Nesro and white, arested:/l! A@yertise in the “Daily agreeing, advertised Arthur Garfield | various miners who were killed by | secon d day of the strike at the Kai-| Us We scores of Negro workers lynched; the y of the A.C.L.U. delegation deputies. : den njian Studio, the Kaiden| endless agonies of chain gangs, penal ucky as @ speaker. Last nig! No Miners Allowed |had a few ads in various papers to| colonies, convict camps, especially in ; was quoted in the local press! ‘The A.C.L.U. refused to allow any| come to studios belonging to -his| Ea « x 2 5 Cp a { ieee ig the South; exposure and resistance] International Solidarity Day ’ as saying thal the N-M.U. had no| miners to testify at their unsuccess- | friends and also to the Photostat on ‘ to the vicious race discrimination Y"') Intern’) Workers Order ; ee eee say Ae te a ful atetmpt to get a federal injune- | 42nd St under the American Legion (By a Worker Correspondent.) service in China for the blood«|@sainst the jim-crowed many mil- Celebration—Carnival DENTAL DEPARTMENT ¥ feMahding an explanation of His| forage: ee cerned eine, hott | ne eee ee Cunltiee|. LOB ANGHTME The five is. obi tnraty peeastias Uhl ENS poor woe | Note Ot Neproek all’ asec areatyr| 80 FIFTH AVENUE de: ne r o Londen, K against having” eir|sent out committees to all these]... recruits for service in China by | and peasant of China, who are rising |@Nd more challenging voice ofr aging | § d J 12 1932 tetomen! sed meeting in Beil County}places and succeeded in preventing | : > - i fe alae : unday, June » doe 15th FLOOR H 3 : the blood-thirsty capitalists, Worker: ves | Protest in our militant class press, 3 Whitewashi Operators, broken up. The A.C.L.U. delegation | anyone from going to work y capitalists. Workers | against capitalism to free themselves 4 Die nina eld br the At tl care a an cate ee aa an cei ry yee to the| #24 eX-servicemen do not be deceived | from slavery and starvation, might be| The printed word must be better At STARLIGHT PARK a adesie ag sees Personal Gare meeti n claime si s i e |: | if oR, JOSEPBSON Civil Liberties Union last night in miners in the court room would be|Kaiden-Kavanjian place saw the|an@_ mislead by the smoke-screen {crushed and defeated. They want |Mmobilized for a mighty counter of-|reasp 77th ST. STATION, BRONX Akt A 1 Hotel here with the : | : jhanded out by the capitalist news- | “natives of the United States.” This | fensive against the savage persecu- | | Andrew Johnson Hote wit detrimental to their chances to get pickets and not only refused to scab, fi i ay tion that labor, Negro and white, has| Showings “CANNON OR TRACTORS” eelegation present which had been! the injunetion, But they asked for|but some of them joined the pick-|P@Pers in regard to service in China | mean to say that the capitalists ex- : : Sport Rabibitions and Gamer | UL 7 ‘ : pa eer . : pete i and the final wind-up of such men if | pect the American born to do this | Suffered too long. Red Pageant and Dancing WILLIAM BELL refused the right to h any meet-| Judge Cochran as an escort through/ets and marched up and down for|” i ‘ A diate task is the winnin, : ¥ OPTOMETRIST and OPTICIAN | ing in Bell or Harlan Counties, Ken- | +> I fields aiid for deputies to a ihe i eae Sibi. chee sent into China. dirty work over in China. They do mt immediste task 15 the Winning | Admission 250 Joint Auspices: | t 2. Sonisibia whttawaanliie |e Rae Ny gs Dag Ns apt ch hae aoe Mie ashe pair re ay rae An article appearing in a capitalist | not want foreigners. ‘The’ parasites | Of tens*of thousands of new readers Workers International Relief | ucky, was a complete wh: SHINE | protect them. ing for the whole day to help ou | . ees Ini of the terror raging in Eastern Ken- | Soha ag Photographic: worker, ie shows |DewSspaper of Sunday May 8th said: | realizes that the foreigners cannot be es ee Lehignl TAs a aaa a Trade Union Unity Council | | ee ag | 8, 8 “Cl s * oii e League of Tuggle for Negri tucky. American Civil Liberties Union Hays Wires. |that the tine has come for all the eee rod is ia USS WIR gun Oren tabbed 2 ae Bs representatives, absolved ihe epera-| NEW YORK.—The Daily Worker| Photo workers to realize the necessity| Sacred the sevet intersting “and |q.rbe: Writer, “any exrsegviceman: | "ine coming issue of The Liberator Spewal Rates to Workers and Families tors and the employers of a jar has received a letter from Arthur|for organization! Help win the native born. It’s just too bad I did) _. oe ‘ | Broadus Mitchell and other speak- | 74° trike! desirale assignment in the army— | not fall into this spider-web. ‘The |! Contain very important material 106 E. 14th St. (Room 21) |! oe eas the economie eause of the| C2ffield Hays stating that while he strike! | is open to a few former army and | Porasites would have e hell of a time {OD {he election campaign, It will be ATTENTION COMRADES! Dameltecagieeet i icp cao ine ont and | W2S in Knoxville he received the fol- | [ae FORE | a 3 of tremendous importance to all Ne- {crrer. They did not bring Ge +s, liowing telegram from Louis Henegar,| HEAR BORUCHOWITZ TODAY pareae Gio ng pa cm ne to lay a smkoe-screen so that I would | ad white ee he te Le to Tel. TOmpkins Square 6-8237 t ntrary, cov t | : } 7 - “ oi the contrars, eo “0 seainet ab-|2ctiNg secretary of the National] NEW YORK—J. Boruchowitz Willl Recruiting Officer, 482 South Main |CCt,tensiod up in tt Hey you! Am- ltive in the struggle for Negro Riehts. Health Center Cafeteria (ele ntark starvation, and that the|MiNers’ Union, southern district: | speak at the Needle Trades Workers! street, Los Angeles, Calif. Appll. Pile age ray eit atene [it Will be out in time for the Chi- ae re ond their agents in county | .#ave just learned of your sched-| Industrial Union open forum today| cants must present honorable als. ar ur fee? ‘The criter doesnt (C280, Nominating Convention of the WORKERS CENTER OPTICIANS J] cera oS ace jailed beat up ana {| wed meeting at Andrew Jackson Ho-|at 1:30 pm. at Bryant Hall, Sixth! Charges and must be between the es i po e writer doesn't | Communist Party, 50 EAST 13th STREET | , a ad deat thele Daders (te! tonight and read your statement | Ave. and 42nd St. His subject is:| ages of 21 and $5 unmarried, with. | 27.0. & © Chins in order to tind | “cong in your bundle orders for this murde w ir let h to keep the miners starving and save money for the coal companies. Lfitehell said: “What those Ken- tur';ians need is education baiiward. The terror is not due to} 4m," economic cause. arthur Garfield Hays, leader of the| nghe 5! ‘ | tes Hays will ak } edition; Jesse Duke, Washington | ‘M/s meeting quotes Hay speak} ye attorney, and other speakers admit ted that the American Civil Liberties Union purpose was to prevent work- ers from rebelling. They are} to press relative to National Miners’ | Union not being authorized to sched- | ule you as speaker at Middlesboro this afternoon. | your statement in view of fact Roger Baldwin, director of the C.L.U., wired |me in answer to invitation you speak | anywhere any time on Civil Liberties. | Wire arrangements for meeting un- quote. Would like immediate ex- | planation ef your conduct.” Cannot understand | “Has the Convention of the Inter- national Decided For a Real Strike | in the Cloak Trade or a Fake Strike | Maneuver Similar to the Fake Strike| How Well worded the above article of 19292” jis. It’s a spider-web to catch the | class of ex-servicemen that jump before ‘hey think. It’s a smoke- screen to get ex-service men to do United Front NYD Conference on May 19 out dependents and natives of the United States, it was stated.” LENIN QUOTATION INSPIRES NOVEL, PLAY AND MOTION PICTURE “We have conquered the enemy be- cause we have won over their work- }ers and peasants dressed in soldiers’ out what an article like the above one means? I can see the other side of the smokescreen merely by reading between the lines. They want unmarried men, \ith- out dependents. How clever! They want me nthat can be led easily and quickly without much fuss into the firing line. They want men that when they are shot and killed, there are no more fuss to be made over them; unmarried and without de- issue immediately, and also your regular order for succeeding issues. Our’ rates on bundle orders are: 1¢ per copy for bundles of 25 or more and 2c per copy on bundles of less than 25. Help the Liberator by send- ing funds. Address letters, donations, subscriptions, etc., to Room 201, 50 E. 13th St., New York City. “The labor movement will gain the apper hand and show the way to Patronize the Health Center Cafeteria and Help the Revolutionary Movement Best Food Reasonable Prices JADE MOUNTAIN AMERICAN and CHINESE HO Harry Stolper, Iné 73-73 CHRYSTIE STREET (Third Ave. Car to Hester Street) 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. Daily Phone: Dry Dock 4-4522 MELROSE i ” dents.—A. G. J. ism.” . g VEGETARIAN Re ORERE BEE. | Hays states that he answered the | uniforms. All working-clags. youth orpatige- | 2° peace and socialism. LENIN. RESTAURANT DAIR BESTADMANT. Duke stated: “We came down here Ang epitiad with a telegram! This statement by Lenin has been| tions have been invited to send de- Open 11 2, m. to 1:30 &, m. Sprarades Will Always Fine PTY ? e 3 whicn stated: responsible for three great modern| legates to the United Front National 5 i ve ut: The workers | er eci: pee 1, eee tand for cuch oppression | “Reference your telegram I never| artistic Soviet works. ‘The first was|Youth Day Conference called for Special Lunch 11 to 4...35¢|] is7 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx and terror and will overthrow our} cherished government.’ Arthur Garfield Hays was intro- duced by Attorney John Randolph Neal as “an ardent supporter of the American government.” Hays flatly stated that “Communists are less en- | made the alleged statement to press lor to anyone else. The quoted tele- | gram to you was correct. I shall see |that press gets the truth. Please | confirms receipt of this.” Hays states also that he immedi- ately informed the newspapers and a novel, “The Armoured Train,” by | Vsevolod Ivanov; the second a play by the same author with the same | title, and now the motion picture, “Siberian Patrol,” which is now, being shown at the Cameo Theatre. Lenin made this declaration at the time which is now depicted in thé film, May 19 at the Labor Temple, East 14th Street. National Youth Day demonstra- tions in New York will be held in Harlem this year, on May 29 and 30, Use the State in the AMUSEMENTS GUILD Presents AROO TRUE TO BE GOOD “Stands with the very great Rus- sian films as ‘Potemkin’ and ‘The End of St. Petersburg’” Dinner 5 to 10.. 197 SECOND AVENUE Between 12th and 13th 3) .55e Chester Cafeteria 876 E. Tremont Ave. r 114th St. Station) © reELEPHo: © IUNTERVALE 8—~9149 4A NEIGHBORLY PLACE TO EAT . a] . rl t th any other |also Walter B. Smith, county attor- a < A New Piny by BERNARD SHAW —Herald Tribune ( + Southern Blyd. L | ( f t aoe, te eerties then ay | vey at teed Gobbler “Siberian Patrol.” It was the period Election Campaign! GUILD THEA., 624 St., W. of Bway. Cerne wre) Ine} Careteria group, because they do not grant) Ys lof: feitavvenitinn’ ti Bevis eae caaal . Eve, 8:30 Mats. Thurs., Sat. Quality—Cleanliness—Moderate Prices liberty to others.” Hays also said:/ But the question still remains: | +5, smotion mctta edd ecifically | 2 ‘AU Warters West F.W.LU Pure Food—100 per cent Frigidatre “Tolerance is the important thing in| Why did Hays not go to this mass | "i7molle vaalataen: wc tie ee = orkers Members }.W.1.U, Equipment—Luncheonette and life; that’s why I don't like the fas- | meeting in Middlesboro, which he ad- 1918 by shares eaek fee ai pH Dacia bone Phe Uheatre Guild Presents — Soda Fountain s cism of Italy or the Communism of | mits he knew was being called for], y open Join the English-speaking group of REUNION IN VIENNA Soviet Talkie with 830 BROADWAY lasts : fers somewhat from the play and|the Proletbuehne! A Comedy ish Title: Pheke THmAIRS. Ve: EOS b Russia. I believe in the American| him? Why did he leave the miners 3 4 ! i c s. we Z |movel, but the line of Lenin's state-} i) you need is enthusiasm to do -By ROBERT B. SHER WOUD Moscow Ai > Near 12th Street % system of democracy. to test free speech rights and him-| kas : | sateen é M: jk THEA. Stage Mit ‘Arm John’s Restaurant Y tts aiers édindiod tenet ult lak: i Teles? jment is carried out. Soviet authori-|your share in the election campaign artin Bee! Ait, the ‘speakers an : |ties were so pleased with Proto-|in the interest of the working class. Ev 840, Mts'Th,, Sat. "Tel EXCLUSIVE SOVIET NEWSREEL SE ts SE NAAS Dee existed in Kentucky, but attempted |zanoff’s direction of this idea that] ¢, to the first meeting on Opening of Giant Soviet Plant A place with atmosphere from the general cam- ome to ie 1B where all radicals meet Lier et brutalities by the employers | ARRESTED FUR | they released the film as part of the| ‘Thursday, May 26, at 8:90, in the| THE TREATED GUILD presente ie (Ge Witte tincey a 302 E. 12th St. New fork ‘ Ka ir government, and excused it | celebration in houor of the four-| Hungarian Workers’ Home, 350 E. BUGENE O'NEILL'S Trilogy Leningrad—Sports in M Stadium apg their gover | teenth anniversary gist St. (This Newsreel_ will not as due to locan ignorance. “Good Felolws.” Mitchell stated: is the only corner in the United States where a man can’t say what he | wants to. It is out of step with the rest of America.” All the speakers, including Hays, highly praised Walter Smith; Bell County prosecutor, and some of the What's On— The Alfred Levy Bi “Bastern Kentucky | WORKERS OUT Report Tomorrow on Kaufman’s Convention PHILADELPHIA, Pa. May 17.— Zipkin, Wollen, Schwartz and Bog- dansky have just been released on $1,500 bail each, and are leaving for New York to tell how Kaufman of the International Fur Workers or- | dered them arrested for appearing at | The Trans-Lux Theatre on Broad- | way this week is showing the follow- |ing short subjects: “Bridge Wives,” |an educational subject; “Medbury in | Africa, ” a Columbia short; “Cat’s Canary,” a Fable comedy; “Babbling Brook” and “Subway Symphony.” Otto Kruger will assume on Mon- day, May 30, the leading role of George Simon, now being played by | Paul Muni, in “Counsellor-At-Law,” Elmer Rice's comedy at the Plymouth Theatre, where it has been playing ceasefully for seven months. Muni will leave the cast to fulfill a motion NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES ASI SIDE—BRONS RKO qyooys 20 a st || a WEDNESDAY TO FRIDAY WM. BOYD and GINGER ROGERS in “CARNIVAL BOAT” At JEPFERSON—Extr: Mourning Becomes Electra Ast Perf. “Homecoming,” 5:30 to 7 p.m. 2nd Perf., “The Hunte: he Haunted,” 8:10 to 11:20 New Prices: $1, $1.50, §2, $2.50, $3 ALVIN THEATRE, 524 St., West of B'way “The strugg! against militarism is an extreme form of the class struggle against war and against the political power of capitalism.” —LIEBKNECHT. LIVE IN A— any other N, Y. C, COUNSELLOR-AT-LAW By with ELMER RICE PAUL MUNI Plymouth jyau"tnure, & sae. 230 Patronize the Concoops Food Stores AND Restaurant 2700 BRONX PARK EAS “Buy in the Co-operative Store and help the Revo- lutionary Movement.” 29 EAS] UTH STREET NEW YORK Vel. Algonquin 3356-8848 We Carry @ Full Line of STATIONERY AT SPECIAL PRICES for Organizations someone BUTCHERS’ UNION | cia ; N y a] focal 124 A MG, OW ot at 524 Vermont St., “ar Ana tipm. | the piel greg seria TheY | picture contract in Hollywood. Kru-|{ win wave” Willeme Mart WORKERS COOPERATIVE COLONY i Ulfwe and Hesiuuarteres MD RS . ns |ger has been playing the George ‘cin kaw oe Comrades—Eat at the Hanor Cemple, (213 tant ith Bteges aeete Se “scusion on the new weeds Simon role for the past four months | 5 Cents || EVES. 25 Cents ¥ . arbi se cibdliniss avasih Joba ona nA “plan will be held | NEW YORK—All fur workers, ir-|in the Chicago company of “Coun- Vices deviate a Bstdady We have a limited number of 3 and 4 room apartments Parkway Cafeteria third Sunday, 1) A> Me . respective of union membership, are sellor-At-Law.” NO INVESTMENT NECESSARY — OPPOSITE BRONX PARE 1 E Employment Bureay vpen every ay WEDaESPAY 638 PITKIN AVENU meee invited t SS tis ‘Thursd: - i - Ma hewse ot isan eso at's pis, at devine Plus to hee TODAY and TOMORROW! 2800 BRONX PARK BAST Near Hopkingon Ave. Brooklyn, WT, ; An YSU. general mass moblitzation witt|{ull reports on the treachery of| HI ¢ ¢) 99 Comradely atmosphere—In this Cooperative Colony you will find » || POPP SPeeryrrerey sve ven se held at Living Place. Mall, 18th St. and Kaufman, McGrady and Woll at the Th Villag of Sin \Wbrary, athletic director, workroom for children, workers’ clubs r ae has eee e ‘resent Geccadnueie International Fur Workers’ Conven- | © e and various cultural activities FIGHT AND STRUGGLE IN THU CITY!—LIVE IN’ TH An epen forum on the election platform 4f the Communist Party will be held at tion Elections for trade board, delegates A aripping story of village life in Russie-—betere and after the Revolution With EMMA CESSARSKAYA, brilliant Soviet artist Directed by OLGA PREOBRAZHANSHAYA. who produced “Cossacks of the Don Saturday 10 Tel. Estabrook 8-1400; Olinville 2-6972 ‘This can be a reality if you join the Prospect Park Workers’ Center, 1167 —~ADNEN ATTRACTION— Vake Lexington Avenue train to White Plains Road and THE GOLDENS BRIDGE COOPERATIVYS CULONy Southern Boulevard, Bronx, at ® p.m. to the executive counell and for or- 1. R. Newsreel—Latest Scenes from the Working Class Front’ Got oft Allevton, “Avenue / if interested, communicate with Pnotographers,csovie PIR igh fp ihe ee taint coches Gag rere Dr. ROSETSTEIN, 285 CYPRESS AVENUE, BRONK without saeipment, ar id to come to|the Needle Trades Workers’ Indus- THE 50? ‘A. M4, to 1 PM, fin re tk to! pm | trial Union will continue from 8 a.m. ACME THEATRE | | ||# SCre sass Office open trom: ® 2, m. to Bp. m. every days BD Ad ‘will be worth your while ‘who to or tight Tepest peraciately to Ohel- to 8 p.m. Wednesday. Vote at the union office, 181 W. 28th St. * 1th STREET & UNION SQUARE Midalle Show Set, mm ta B, me Sand