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ToS ee ew ove wae Bessa hat gov (et Page iwo U.S. Government Orders Fresh|LUCILLE WRIGHT Armed Intervention Aga inst| WILL SPEAK IN |Mass Dri Revolutionary Chinese NEsIESES HARLEM TONITE Warship to Land Mar China, to Block Adv Chinese Red Army i The United States govern ‘ines at Amoy, South ance of Victorious n Fukien Province ment threatening to land Brother of Roy and Andy Wright, Two of Scottsboro Victims NEW YORK. — Lucille Wright, marines at Amoy, South China, in an attempt to crush the young sister of Roy and Andy Wright, revolutionary struggles of the Chinese workers and peasants (0 of the framed up young Negro against the Kuomintang tools of the imperialists. A Washing- boys of Scottsboro, arrived in New ton dispatch admits that the State Department has already | York City today. She is starting a iscued orders to its naval commander at Amoy for this crimi- nal atiack on the Chinese masse national tour, together with Nell Carroll of the National Youth Com- mittee of the ILD. The dispatch reports that the Hoover Hunger government | am. ‘rst meeting has been ar- other imperialist* ro-operate in this a;nects the ‘gands te inove for direct armed inter- voution aguinst the Chinese Rev olvtion. The United States. i and Japan have r 45 the port of Ar Provi indus at up: captured Cities. upported the advance the A both im, the peasants and rs rallying to the omintang. Cliunese dock workers in Shi yesterday set fire to a Japanese which was loaded with to be transported to Man- r use again, e Soviet Un- ion. The ship and its cargoes wer Gesiroyed. The Japanese militarists arrested 30 of the dock workers. At ‘Tientsin. N cl a bomb was exploded in t of a bank in the Japanese con © The Chinese Postal Workers Unicn yesterday issued a call for a nation- wide st ee thousand outdoor Postal einployees in Shanghai im- mediately ‘esponded The local postal s 2 was paralyzed despite employees The strik- the fact that the indo have not yet responded ers charged the Nanking (Kuomin- tang) government with looting the postal revenues and thus endanger- ing the livelihood of the postal em- ployees. They are demanding sweep- ing changes in the postal admin: a tion. A. M. Chaplain, the Postal Commissioner, admitted that the strike is likely to spread to all the other large cities of hCina WORKERS WIN RIGHT TO MEET IN THE BRONX. Hold Mass Rally in Spite of Poitice | Ban | A mass demonstration of over 2,000 | QUT TO WIN THE | LAUNDRY STRIKE workers of the declared that they would | er starve fighting than starve ving for the profits of the bosses. } picketing is going on regu- | In this strike more than ever | The . mob of gangsters are trying to ter- | gro and white, have clectéd delega- | ‘orize the pickets. The gangsters aré | supervised by Mr, Steinhorn, a boss Sterling Laundry and the field | of the bosses racket asso- of thi manager ciation. ne bosses of the Starlight, Pretty, Highbridge and many other laundries | are actively engaged and doing their best in order to break the strike. A special executive board mecting of the union will be held Wednesday, May 2 Avenue and Claremont The shop committees of all 3r Parkway. laundries are instructed to come to cille Wright on the beginning of | he meeting The question of spreading the strike to the insiders of the Commodore Laundry and the laundries of which the bosses are active in breaking the strike, will be taken up at this special meeting. ‘The Laundry Workers In- dustrial Union appeals to all work- ers to help them win the strike. Do not give the laundry to scabs, Ask for a book of the Laundry Workers Industrial Union. Come to the strike headquarters of the Laundry Workers Industrial Union, 1323 Southern Boulevard, and heip to picket. Powers, Communist Candidate and Jailed Leader, W ill Speak NEW YORK. — “Are you one of the 56,000 workers whose families have been refused relief by the Home Relief Bureaus? “Are you one of the 136,000 fami- lies whose miserable hunger charity checks have beén cut in half by the Home Relief Bureaus? “Are you one of the singe men and women who have been denied any rélief whatever by the Home Relief | Bureaus?” ‘These are questions asked by. the h, at 8 p. m. in Ambassador @ workers was held at Washington and Astoria, Long Island, branch of the Clatemont Parkway, where during| Unemployed Council of the workers, ‘the past few weeks all the meetings| in @ leaflet calling them to & mass of thé Unemployed Council were | meeting tomorrow (Wéénesdsy) at broken up, workers slugged and ar-|8 D. m., in Fessler’s Hall, Steinway restéd. This demonstration was held | in spite of the order of the police | according to which the Unemployed | Council will not have any more meet- | ings at this corner. | The militancy of the workers at- tending the demonstration was so evident, tha tthe police did not seem | E. Powers, secrétary of the Building |r. Governor on the Communist Par- | | ty ticket, on the position of the Com- it advisable to attack the workers. | ‘The wifining of this corner means a | \vietory for the workers in their struggle for immediate and adequate | unemployment relief and against po- lice terror. The unemployed councils of the Bronx will utilize this victory for the further mobilization of ever greater number of employed and unemploy- ed workers for the fight for relief and unemployment insurance at the expense of the bosses and their gov- ernments. MWIL to Hold Special Mobilization Rally | Wednesday, May 25 A special mobilization meeting of all unemployed members of the Metal Workers’ Industrial League will be held on Wednesday, May 25, at 2 pm. at the headquarters of the M.| W. I. L. at 5 E. 19th St., third floor. | The question to be taken up at this meeting is the building up of an Unemployed Council of Metal Work- ers that will be capable of organ- izing the unemployed workers in the jmetal industry and unite with the) employed for united struggle against | tvation, wage-cuts and for unem-'legation of workers gathered at 49th | | Street and 6th Avenue made the| | agency return the money. The agen- Iployment insurance. What's On— SDAY The Harlem Progressive Youth Club will| hold its regular dancing class at 9 o'clock at 1538 Madison Ave. |was every worker’s business. and place throughout the United An exhibition of murals and paintings is now on at the John Reed Club, 63 W. 15th St, and will continue through the first week in June, Open from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. | . . Comrade Amter will speak to the Medical | Workers at 16 y. ‘Bist St, at 8 p.m. | wepNesDAY ‘A meeting of carpenters will be held at 1130 Southern Blvd, Bronx, at 8 p.m. | | facco-Vanzetti Branch, T.L.D., will have an important memebership meeting at 702 Tremont Ave., Bronx, at 6:90 p.m. An oxe¢utive meeting of the Workers’ i and Photo Lesgue of the W.LR, will be held at 16 W, dist St. at 8 p.m. Alteration Painters, Yorkville ot, ope its headquarters at 350 ©. P. a im. 1 Section, Bist Bt. | city hall. Workers Force Job and Astoria Bivd. ‘The leaflets have been distributed at shops, at “relief” headquarters, and throughout the neighborhood. | ‘The unemployed and striking shoe workers are particularly invited. Among the speakers will be George and Construction Workers Industrie! League. Powers is out on $3,500 bail and is held for the grand jury be- cause he was among those arrested in the April 21 demonstration at the The demonstration de- | manded the re-opening of the Home ranged in Harlem, under the auspices of the Harlem Youth Scottsboro De- fense Committee. It will be held at Saint Lukes Hall, 125 West 130th St., in Harlem, Tuesday, May 24th, at 8 p.m. ‘This meeting of Harlem youth to Commodore | rally in solidarity with Lucille Wright | and to denounce the vicious death sentence of the Scottsboro boys, will also be a mobilization for Second National Youth Day in Harlem. Scores of youth organizations, Ne- tions to greet Lucille Wright and to mobilize for the fight to free the boys from the bloody clutches of the Alabama lynch-bosses. This meeting, in Harlem, just one month fiom the day the boss-class has decreed that the innocent boys ohall die in the electric chair, will setve to rally the masses of Harlem youth in the fight which ean and! | must free the boys, Workers, young and adult, come to the Harlem Youth Rally for the Scottsboro defense fight! Greet Lu- | her national tour! TURKRAFT SHOP Industria] Union in Fight on Wage Cuts NEW YORK. — On Friday morn- ing a number of pressers envployed at the Turkraft Dress shop, 40-26 26th St., Long Island City, went dewn on strike against a wage cut that the firm wanted to put through in all the departments. The conditions in this shop were so miserable that | another wage cut would have meant | real starvation even while employéd. ‘The workers, most of them new ele- ments who have recently come into the dress trade, reported the shop to the Needie Trades Workers Iridustrial ‘Union. ‘The dress industry today is not lo- |eated only in Manhattan but is spread out to other sections of the city. Tt is necessary that the workers of these outlying sections get the full } support and leadership of thé Indus- | trial Union in thelr struggles. New Issue of “Hunger Fighter” Out; Contains | Important Articles The new issue of the Hunger Fighter, official organ of the Unem- | ployed Council of Greater New York, |is now off the press. Among other interesting and vital articles appears the statement of I. Amter, candidate munist Party on unemployment re- Wef and insurance. As special features of the Hunger Fighter, the paper will carry in every issue a statement of the stand en Relief Bureaus, and extension of re- lief to the jobless. Powers is also the | proposed candidate for Chief Judge | of the Court of Appeals, running on | the Communist ticket. | The meeting Wednesday will strengthen the unemployed council | | ‘in Astoria. Agency to Return | Fee to Young Girl, (By & Worker Correspondent) | A young girl worker paid three| dollars for a job and the Ernest Em- | Ployment Agency at .7th Street and| 6th Avenue refused to refund her| money when she failed to get the job, A worker from the unemployed council saw her talking hysterically to a cop. He refused to help her. The worker from the Unemploy- ed Council talked to her and a de- cy asked what “business is it of your”? The delegation told them it would continue to be. This is the way victories are won by workers— by organized action. A Negro woman worker also gyped at an agency got her money refunded just with a threat of calling in the Unemployed Council. |Election Mass Meet to Be Held Thursday NEW YORK.—An election mass meeting will be held in Brighton Beach at W. Third St. and Neptune Ave. on Thursday at 8 p.m, Last Thursday a ‘‘socialist” shop- keeper organized the youth -in , the neighborhood to ‘break up-a similar unemployment relief and insurance by the different political parties and their candidates running in the com- ing election. The Hunger Fighter is pursuing the policy of sending such question- aires to all political parties, and will print their answers, | This issue with I. Amter’s state- ment will be on sale until June 6 and all organizations and individuals are urged to get copies of the paper. Organizations or individuals who wish to sell the Hunger Fighter are asked to get their bundles of the paper at 5 East 19th Street, top floor. The paper cost 1c and is sold for 2c. ‘Expose the U. S. War | || Makers; ToilersWrite | ||from War Industries | Workers! Rush in your | letters on war preparations || that are being made in the factory where you work. Help to expose the inereased \munitions and war material | |produection that is taking States. | Interview workers in the || war induMries. Send these interviews to the Daily |Worker. Workers from the | [National Guard are re- quested to write to the Daily Worker. These letters will be pub- lished in the special anti-war supplement Saturday. IS ON STRIKE : | NEW YORK.—The Workers’ Ex- |Servicemen’s League (Harlem Post) jis conducting a special campeign in support of a Mass Delegated March to Washington on June 8th. Branch | No. 2, with headquarters at 2072 Fifth | Ave., is making a special campaign | in Harlem securing thousands of [names of Negro and white veterans | signed in support of the Bonus (back pey) March, All Negro and white veterans are invited to join the branches of , the League. Other Branches are located at 79 EB. Tenth St. T he Workers’ Ex-Servicemen's League branches are electing Négro workers to their ¢xécutivé committees and carries out a ine of complete equality of their members. Negro andforeign born ¢an join the League on the basis of Having served in any of the armies of the bosses, and now are willing to struggle for the imme- diate demands. of the veterans for |unemployment insurance and the . BONUS 1 am in favor of cash payment Name Address What are you in 500 Harlem Workers Hear Foster Speak on Toussaint L’Ouverture A very enthusiastic and large gathering of Negro and white work: ers was held in Harlem on Friday, Seventh Ave., from whieh DAILY WORABR, Nw VORS, TUBSDAT, MAY os, 1533 New York Veterans Conduct ve for the Bonus jpayment of the “bonus.” Meetings 1:30 p.m. at 2072 Fifth Ave. ‘The Harlem braéeh of the Work- ers’ Ex-Servicemen’s League is pre- | paring to rally the worker veterans | support the Communist election jcampaign. Comrade James J. Ford, |a Negro worker, ex-seryiceman and |proposeq Communist candidate for Vice-President of the United States, will be the speaker at a meeting | which will be held at St. Luke's | Hall, 326 W. 130th St., Wednesday night, May 25. | A special outdoor meeting to rally | the vets will be held at 125th St. and | Fifth Ave. at 7 p.m, Wednesday night. The drive for signatures in support of the veteran fight for full and tm- mediate payment of the bonus is moving on at good speed. Signatures | | servicemen’s bonus, Sign the bonus ballot below: * of the bonus to all veterans C] I art im favor of a veteran's march té the capitol at Washington Oo State Lo.crseseneeseeeessenereneee new? Send this te: Workers Ex- Servicemen’s League, 1 Uatom Square, Room 715. TO HOLD PROTEST MEETS IN BRONX LL.D. to Fight Terror Let. Loose Against , Workers | NEW YORK.—As a protest against the wave of terror that has been let loose against the working class, the International Labor Defense has re- quested every Branch in the Bronx to hold open air meetings on Wed- nesday, May 26. ‘These meetings are to wind up with a@ mass demonstration at Wil- kins ‘and Intervale Avenues -where the District Organizer of the Inter- national Labor Defense, Carl Hacker, will speak, Food Workers to Hold _ Important Meeting The Clerk's Trade Section of the Food Workers’ “Industrial Union will hold another membership meeting this Wednesday evening, May 25, at 8 pm. sharp at the union headquar- ters, 5 B. 19th Bt. ‘The proets sof re-organization of the different trade committees of the are held every Thursday -night at are rolling in in support of the ex- union is going ahead with rapid epeed; the membership of the union NEW YORK —Several hundred workers answered a vicious edver- tisement published in the New York American in a vain attempt to secure a job. The advertisement called for men © be employed in Panama. At the “Employment Agency” in Brooklyn, 8 Fourth Ave., the workers found out, however, that soldiers, not men, were wanted and that the agency was nothing élse but the United Stetes Army. Several months ago the United States Afmy stated that no men would be recruited. The present re- éruiting drive, condyeted with suth Misleading advertisements and mas- queraded appeals, shows that the ‘United States are preparing for the impending imperielist war on the Soviet Union. Foster to Speak to Dressmaker Meeting, Bryant Hall,Tomorrow NEW YORK—All dressmsakers, members of the Needle Trades Work- ers’ Industrial Union, of the Inter- national or unorganized, are invited to a mass meeting tomorrow (Wed- nesday) night right after work in Bryant Hall, Sixth Ave. and 4ist St. At this meeting the newly-elected executive board and officers installed. bhere will be a full on the activities of the Dress Dept. and concrete plans for uniting members of the Industrial Union, the members of fhe International and the unorgenized workers for a mass or- ganization campaign to organize the open shops and improve the condi- tions of the workers in the union shops. ‘William Z. Foster, secretary of the Trade Union Unity League, will speak et this meeting on the tasks con- fronting the dressmakers. The Dress Dept. of the Industrial ‘Union has arranged a meeting of un- employed dressmakers, to which members of the Industrial Union, of the International and unorganized workers are called upon to come to z ee eee HEE i F i : meeting. All workers are urged to attend the next meeting in spite of the so- clalist hooligans. discuss the problems confronting the dressmakers, what can be done ‘to secure more jobs and relief for the ‘unemployed, ‘ ” taking real interést in ell the differ- MEN WANTED" |isjcecee' <= eS taking place. ‘The food clerks, butchers, fish- workers, are urged to attend their trade section meeting and take part in discussing. the vital changes that arebeing proposed as wel! as the elec- tien of new organizers for the trade section, « ‘This meeting will open promptly at 8 pm, 1. Unempleyment and Social In- gerance at the expense of the stete and employers. As War _ Intensifies The Dally Worker has received F effect, that I could not) you the subscription rate. suspend the sending of per and let me know how Eisenstein’s Great FROM JOHN REED'S FAMOUS eday and Tomorrow—Don't Miss Seeing “10 DAYS THAT SHOOK THE WORLD” OY THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION FEATURES: LATEST W.LR. NEWSREEL ADDED Fine ACME, THEATRE| 80: Probe Reveals Big Graft Flows Into Walker Bank’ |Equitable Coach Paid} for Trip Through Europe “Collect on delivery” is the policy of the Tammany mayor, James J. Walker, according to revelations brought out in the Seabury investiga- | tion now entering its final week. According to evidence already pre- sented before the Seabury committee the mayor récéived a letter of. credit for $10,600 from agents of the Equit-| able Coach Company the day the| | franchise’ was - signed, giving that company monopolistis rights on the Streets of New York. | Rig Graft From Taxi Trust Walker’ also received from J. A | Sisto, broker. $26,535 1n bonds in a |taxi trust before he began pursuing ;% policy favorable to the company in | which Sisto is interested: and, of course, discriminating against and} imposing opvressive police measures | upon the independent taxi men. ‘Walker also got'a $6,000 haul cred- ited to the account of his missing “conf'fential financial agent,” Rus- séll 'T, Sherwood, who ran away to | Me-ieo to avoid anpearine before the | |Seaburv investigation end comnrom- | ising Mavor Walker. The $6.000 was} part of the “cut” in the eraft in- volved in purchasing obsolete street | cleaning equipment Took Trin To Europe With the $10,000 letter of credit from the taxi trust and an additional sum of $23,000 supplied by Rodman ‘Wannamaker, head of the big de- martment store that thrives through paying starvation wares to the thou- sends of women ,and girl workers.) Walker in 1927 visited European cap- itals on one of his numerous “vaca- tions.” Accompanying the Walker party on the Eurovean trip was the presby- terian preacher and alleged historian, Herbert Adams Gibbons. one of the most vicious and notorious defend- ers of imperialist banditry in the world. Adams, in addition to chap- eroning the Walker party through the cabarets of Paris and Berlin, was engaged in managing the Paris con- vention of the American Legion that year. Gibbons is trying to evade testify- ing on matters that may further ex- pose the graft of the Mavor admin- ‘stration, He announces that he will testify only if Walker requests him to do so. Overdrew $10,000 Coach Money On the trip through Europe Walker overdrew the $10,000 letter of credit and the amount, $3,000, was made good by the Equitable Coach Com- pany. ‘The Tammany crook, Senator Hastings, described as a “friend of Mayor Walker,” admitted on the stand that the Equitable concern paid the overdraft as well as the or- iginal $10,000. The senator says that the eash was given to the Eqhitable man by Senator Downing, who was arranging the trip. Downing is now dead. Another dead man, Anson W. Burchard, is said by the Equitable people to have originally planned the financing. ‘Walker is scheduled to appear Wednesday before the Seabury com- mittee and present his version of the flow of large sums of money to his seven or more banking accounts. | “ALONE”, NEW RUSSIAN SOUND FILM AT CAMEO TODAY The heroism’ of a young Soviet girl, sent to teach in a remote she- pherd’s villége in the midst of a wild, primitive land is the story of a thrilling film drama, “ALONE”, which it opens at the Cameo Theatre. Most of this remarkable picture was filmed in the remote Altai mountains, in an actual shepherd's village, with the backward, half- savage nomads as the supporting east. In Russia's bitter winter the picture was made, as the camera fol- lowed the young teacher-heroine and | her pupils to the high mountains wheret hey tended the sheep. and héld school out-of-doors. More than two years was spent in making: this: picture by the directors Trauberg and Kozintzev, who are as- sociated with an experimental film group known as “Feks.” Their best known picture previous to this was “The New Babylon” in which they introduced technique in direction that was radically new. There is deep personal feeling and human warmth in “ALONE”. This’ is cen- tralized in the appealing figure of | Kuzmina, a’ young actress of great talent. The absorbing. story is height- ened in interest by sound effects and @ remarkable musical score by Shos- takovitch composed especially fir the film, SOVIET FILMS IN YONKERS YONKERS, N. Y., May 23.—There will be Soviet Union moving pictures shown in the Workers Center, 27 Hudson St., Yonkers, every Sunday at 8 pm, Next Sunday they will show “The. Black Set Mutiny.” VOTE COMMUNIST FOR: Against Hoover’s wage-cutting policy. Russian Film Epic STOKY OF THE EARLY DAYS Midnite Show Gat, | paign. | funds on the advance of the Japanese pcan (a ees White Guardists Seek Funds for Anti-Soviet Army in U.S, Appeals are being circulated thru|of support from Japan and shows the} the United States mails calling for|derous Czar in the Far East hints! contributions to finance the White | concerted effort in all sections of the, Guardist Anti-Soviet Army on the} imperialist world for a war on the Eastern borders of the USS.R. A/U.S.S.R. copy of the appeal has been pre-| And in order to boost the shattered sented to the State Department in| y, f the f " Washington by Boris Skvirsky, melee shyent poypid tabied ot ade head of the Soviet information bu-| japse of the Soviet economy.” reau in the United States. Skvirsky | protested against this open war c: | rar, aren, rs c=|320 ARRESTED IN *, SPANISH STRIKES; General Strike of army to the Soviet border is signed by a Czarist army officer, General | Dietrichs whose office is at 154 Route | Pere Robert, Shanghai. The appeal reads: “The Russian army in Shanghai Motor Transport needs money for the purchase of| arms, needs our support. Not lec-| Three hundred and twenty work- tures, not appeals are needed, but/ing class leaders in Séuthern Anda dollars. We are obliged to give this | Justa, Spain have been arrested in support and we shall give it. Each| sweeping raids being carried on by $5° is 100 cartridges for Russian guns.| the Spanish socialist-backed govern- Each $5 is 100 shots between the eyes!ment in an attempt to break thé of the Yiddish robbers. backbone of a wave of strikes. Most “Each shot on the boundary of of these arrests are in the towns, Manchuria is a signal for the upris-| twenty-five of which are affected by| ing of the Russian people in Russia, | general strikes of farm workers. a signal for the arousing of the Rus-| Besides thé strikes of these farmt sians in France, Serbia, Bulgaria, a| workers a general strike of all motor signal for the end of the Yiddish yoke. | transportation is so effective that the “Russia is not lost. The Soviet pow-| Spanish government has ordered the er is coming to an end. The factories | confiscat‘on of taxicabs, trucks and are closing down. The Soviet econ-| auto busses throughout the country. omic structure is held together only|A dispatch to the New York Times by the support of German Jews, ly-| States that these trucks will be ing propaganda and finally by our| turned over to workmen's societies criminal laziness. | and to the army which wil loperaté “World events of recent days have them. This indicates that the social« made it possible to begin the forma- |! controlled unions will be enrolled tion of a Russian army in Shanghai. | to break this ‘strike. This exceptional historical fact must} The New York socialist paper, For- be utilized in full measure. ward. two days ago reprinted 2. “Out to the minimum your ex- speech of a Weathe the plate penses, your holiday purchases. Send | “Ccilist party in which he . ised money. in cash or pledge slips in the | ‘he continued support of his group attached envelope addressed to Gen- | *° smash the danger of the left, | ing the Communists. And on eral Dietrichs, 154 Route Pere Robert, | ™¢@” Shanghai, China. Remember that| Friday the Forward heralds these ef. | y 20 cownter-rey- oes ‘ rests by saying that 3 each dollar means twenty cartridges, \ olutionists have been arrested. It een bee micnns -¢: Dew say Cheap is clear that these “counter-revolu- ment; each $100 means a new ma, i chine gun, and each contribution | tonists have been hae ene ; clear that these “counter-revolution- means moral support as well. ists” are peasants who supported the “Down with lectures, discussions, | establishment of the republic because parties and’ poetry. | they were promised the lands of the “Down with concerts, balls, ban- | feudal Jandowners. Like the social- quets and dinners. list governments in other countries “Give money to the Russian army.’ | this promise has been forgotten. The unofficial representative of the| Two days ago a new strike of work- Soviet government in the United/ers at a navy yard in Spain broke States protested. against. the Protec- | out. ‘The workers demanded the tion’ given this scum which seeks to stopping of all lay-offs. Previous provoke a war in conjunction with| strikes of this sort in other naval the imperialist powers. centers of Spain have been success- A week ago a Washington banker | ful. appealed for funds for the White Guardists in Paris, Now this ap-; WORKERS EVERYWHERE RUSH peal for the remnants of.the mur- FUNDS TO SAVE BERKMAN’S LIFE AMUSEMENTS STARTS TODAY! Siberia the Hellhole of Russia! ‘ALONE’ MKINO’S New Sound Film—With a Superb Musical, Score by DMITRI SHOSTOKOVITCH ALL SEATS DAM, tol P.M, Except Sat., Sun. & Hol, 25¢ heatre Gulld Presen' ION IN VIENN Com: Ritu *o MAYFAIR ic 3+ amc SHER woon, ft" FANNIE HURST'S GUILD TATE. eS 1! |) “GYMPHONYet SIX MILLION Ey 6.40. Mts Th., Sat. Tel. Co 5-8229 \,. (First Time at Popular Prices) COUNSELLOR-AT-LAW ELMER RICE PAUL MUN} Plymouth Vhea. W. 45 St, Br, 8:20 Mat. Thurs. & Sat. 2:20 A .By ROBERT B. VOTE COMMUNIST FOR: 4, Equal rights for the Negroes and= self-determination for the Black Belt. Workers’ Clubs Should Advertise in the “Daily” 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 199 SECOND AVENUE Bet. th and 18th Ste. Strictly Vegetarian @ood —————— AVANTA FARM ULSTER PARK, N. ¥. Workers come out for rest and recreation ‘Train rates for holidays $3.75 round trip OUR RATE $1.95 PER DAY ——EEEE Intern’ Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE sth FLOOR 4U Work Done Under Versona) Care | at DR. JOSEPASON COHEN’S CUT RATE OPTICIANS .° Eyes Examined by Registered Op- tometrists—White Gold Rims $1.50 Shell Rims $1.00 x 117 ORCHARD ST., Near Delancey Se rrereenmneenneeeee VOTE COMMUNIST FOR: 3. Emergency relicf for the poor farmers without restrictions by | the government and banks; ex- emption of poor farmers from taxes, and from forced collec- . Hon of rents or debts. -