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Page Two os 1982 PANTS MAKERS BEAT GORILLAS Officials Order f to Attack Crowd | NEW YORK.—A Plece at the meeting called by Pants Makers Trade Board of Amalgamated Clothing Workers in Clinton Hall. The Left Wing 0 sent out a call for members to at- terid the meeting, so everybody w there. Hollander, Catalonetti and Miller, officials and managers of the New York Joint Board, made speeches about “nothing can be done to im prove conditions bécause of the crisi Rank and file workers, among| thém Maykowsky, Paul Risse and Ebért spoke, demolishing these argu- ments with examples of many strikes won récently by the Needle Trades Workers. A rank and file member moved that a committee of 25 be elected from the floor to take charge *of the struggle for better condition and against wage-cuts. It got almost 100 per cent and Catalonetti, standing near the chairman, was heard to say, “To hell with them, break up the meeting A gang of hired gorillas then charged | the workers and got the surprise of their lives. Fighting with fists and chairs, the workers surged forward and gave the gan rs the beating of their lives. The rank and file continue their ms to take oftheir own struggle took the support “Socialist” Lies About ‘Daily Worker’ NEW YORK.—A Socialist speaker at Seventh St Ave., Tuesday, quoted par main headline from the D: of. that date: “5,000 VE LEAVE MUD FLATS” and said, see, the Communists ans are leaving Washington ing homé!” What the whole head- line says is “5,000 VETERANS LEAVE MUD FLATS; TAKE OVER MORE EMPTY BUILDINGS,” just the opposite of léaving Washington. This is typical ‘sentation. of “S.P.” misrepre- What's TRURSDAY ‘Phe Scandinavian Council wil Thyzaday. meet on The Pilm Seetion o: and Photo League to a class in projection 2st &t. at 8 p.m. Harlem 1828 Dramatie Section of the sive Youth Club will tat Alteration Plumbers w gutikern Boulevard at 8 p The West Bronx Branch, F 1130 will_ hold sa import mi ship ineeting at Para- ¢ige Manor, 11 W. Mt. Eden Ave. Bronx, | st pm MHS American delegation to the Soviet Unjon will report at at the Fordham Co $o4th &t.. Bronx, at 8 13, distri: orgs: Speak on the ane the Soviet Branch, F.8.U. 3 Uni A-meeting will be held at the East Side 108 Lexington Ave.. at ng on the 30th Sts. are urged Unemployed Council, ‘the Tem Moone: an. bpen- eting t> protest a Branch, 1L.D. Patersor fréme-up case at Union Square a 8pm Te Jameicn Rranch, LL.D., will hold » jah-eir protest meeting at spm The Office Workers’ Union of the T.U.U.C ili debate with the Bookkeepers, Steno- gers nd Accountants’ Mion of the of L. at Laber Temple, 242 E St. at 8 pm The Drametic Section of th® Harlem Progragsive Youth Club will meet at 1898 Mpdison Ave. at 8 p.m The Friends of the Worker Delogayes, ju Beviet Union. will repert ceup, £. eth St an Bm. Auspices. York Second Av fe Branch, F.S. The West Broms an, importen Parcdige Ma: 1 Bronx, at & p.m Breneh, F.S.U.. v1 The Committee of 2 il bela an oper g Yntervele and Preemon Sts. Fapdy Mi Harlem Progressive Fouth Club wi dev @ membersh, SOR Ave. at $ pm. ¢ Brownsville Worke: the new headqua Terk ave, st 8 pm ‘Phe Cémp Hill Branch, 1.L.D., will mee #2800 Bronx Park Eection , 80. p.m. American work: URion will report re, Slat St. lyn, at 8:30 p.m. under the at and Mermaid thi ®| piece work, under unbearable sweat- | A a Ze: |meeting of the Communist Party for Boxing Makes Prefit; Sharkey Just Had to W CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) me, Sharkey knew he was licked. went over to Schmeling’s corner to congratulate him Then ed Sharkey champion as of risis now, and fight s and referees got to make a lis oo. There isn’t any oney in it giving a decision ac- cording to the way a fight goes. Any. could do that. Besides, now chmeling can challenge Sharkey. But you ought to have heard the crowd boo that decision. Some of them didn’t seem to know that cap- italist sports have to show a profit! They took in half a million dollars on this event LIES AND POLICE PREVENT STRIKE Utica Dressmakers | Bulldozed by Boss UTICA, N. ¥., June 22—Police and! slander prevented 85 young Girls working in the Jack Daniels and Co. ‘PREPARE FOSTER MEETING IN K. C. \Biggest Hall; Miners Meet in Pittsburgh KANSAS CITY, Mo., June In preparation for the Foster mect ing July 8 in Kansas City, the second largest hall in town, the Interna- | tional Arena, seating 3,000, has been secured, It is located on 15th St the dividing line between the Negro and white sections, and is, therefore in an ideal site for a mass inter-| racial turn-out of the workers. To Speak in Pittsburgh | A big election campaign rally of the Communist Party will be held in | Pittsburgh, Kansas, on July 9. It} will be the first time that @ Com-/; munist candidate for a national of- | fice will speak in Pittsburgh. Plan are under way to rent the big hall in Pittsburgh, or else to hoid | the meeting in the Central Publ: Park. Workers and farmers, and | especially miners from all over th Crawford County mining area, and as far West as Wichita, are expected | to flock into Pittsburgh to hear Fos- ter speak. 59 | Foster's Tour | Foster is now on the West Coast. | He speaks tomorrow in San Fran- } cisco, June 24 in Oakland, June 25| dress factory of this city from coming | 10 a. m. Thursday) as, they had planned. These | nging from 15 to 21] Sof age, worked nine hours a day, ys ayweek, for as low as 31] day, under brutal and in-| speed-up. Six girls in the received the highest wages h amounted to $6 a week. The rest received from $2.14 to $3.50 at} the most for one week’s work, at! shop conditions. They also suffered | abusive treatment from Daniels him. | self, who runs this dress factory. The day before the strike was cheduled, Daniels spoke to the girls t the plant and urged them to re- main, promising them a 30 per cent e in pay. This would only amount to about 50 cents @ week in- crease. Offers Small Concession. The next morning, seeing that the girls would not accept his compromise and were determined to strike, he had 30 police and dicks at the plant. The | seargent of police addressed the girls, | and threatened them with arrest and clubbing if they struck. The entire plant was infested with dicks, carrying black-jacks in their hands. Under the leadership of the Un- oyed Council and Young Com- munist League, 500 workers were mo- bilized outside the plant to give the girls assistance in their strike and protect them from police brutality. Police kept the workers moving, but they would not leave the walk in front of the plant. The police started to beat up a Negro worker,| but the workers prevented it. During the ufternoon, the shop committee managed to get the ranks | 2 | of the girls united again, and a strike} 1 was issued for the next morning. aring of this, the boss closed down the plant and through the local pap- ers, he called for 100 more workers shop committee is now busy ing the at struggle BLOODY CLASHES IN GERMANY (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) closed the university and called the Street afterward, and after both sides were reinforced many were injured, in- ding an American student The “Rote Fah official organ of the Communist Party, teday pub- hes a fascist order for immediate inventory of all arms, ammunition possessed by them. Commenting upon this, the paper says that this means a systematic arming of the fascist storm detachments. The soeialist police chief Severing has prohibited a united front anti- cist meet in the Lustgarten, Ber- temorrow, The “Rote Fahne” declares that “thanks to the passivity of the Centre Party, the fascist Kerrl was finally elected presi- of the Prussian Diet at today’s Hundreds Put Back Furniture of Two in Los Angeles, June 27 in San Diego, June 29 in Proenix, July 1 in Salt Lake City, July 3 in Denver, July 5} in Omaha, July 6 in Sioux City, July 8 in Kansas City. New York Workers to Ratify Candidates ;) Tag Days Sat. and Sun. NEW YORK. — The ratification the City of New York, at which the workers of Greater New York will be | invited to express their approval of the National” and State candidates chosen in convention to run for of- fice in the elections this fall, will be held in the Coney Island Stadium | July 9, if was announced yesterday by United Front Election Campaign | Committee. Special Tag Day Calls The International Workers Order, and the Trade Union Unity Council yesterday issued urgent calls to mem- bers and all affiliated organizations to take active part in the tag days. Saturday and Sunday, to raise funds for the State Communist Party El- ection Campaign. A minimum quota of 5,000 collectors has been sct for these tag days by the United Front Election Campaign Committee. The T. U. U. C. will have special headquarters at 5 E. 19th Street on} Saturday on the 3rd floor and on Sunday on the Ist floor. ‘Left Wing, Not Bosses | 7 (Film-Photo League) Two views of Hooverville on the outskirts of St. Louis. Birdseye view (above) The Hooverville postoffice (below). It has been built by unemployed building, tradesmen from scraps of lumber picked up by jobless lumber workers, sheets of tin gathered by unemployed sheet metal workers and empty drygoods boxes brought in by ex-clerks. | PICNIC FOR HUNGER FIGHTER a NEW YORK—The first grand} Real Enemies, ‘Labor” | |pienie given by the Unemployed Chiefs Say at Confab | Council for the benefit of its news- | | paper, “The Hunger Fighter,” will be} | Bebritz, | portation of | workers. \Half Farm Laborers In Alabama Jobless: | girls for another attempt | fights continued for hours | Knocks ‘Back to Farm’ megan | BIRMINGHAM, Ala., June 2 | According to official figures released | by the Alabama Dept. of Agriculture and Industries, the farm labor situ- |ation has become s2rious, the supply of agricultural laborers being 118% of usual while the demand is only |58% of usual which means that there \is at least one farm laborer totally |unemployed for each one at work. The department says: “This condi- tion means that farmers are attempt- ing to do their own work by using the entire family without hiring extra labor. The situation is made worse by the fact that last year 9,000 moved to the farms and only 3,000 left the |farms in Alabama.” This is the ans- wer of life to the “Back to the farm movement,” a demagogic “solution” |for the crisis especially common in |the South. port will be siven at the Labor Tem- ple on 247 E. 84th St. and 2nd Ave. On the same day, another report will be heard at the Fordham Collegiate Club, 261 E. 204 Street, Bronx, and | Friday at 8 pm on Fridav, Sea Gate and Coney Is- land will have an opportunity to hear a report at the Casa D'Amore, 2912 W. 31st St.. Coney Island (near Mermaid Avenue). A special New York Delegation Reception Banquet will be: given on Wednesday evening, June 29 at 7:30) pm. The actual place for this af- fair has not yet been fixed. The Dis- trict Office of the F.S.U. calls upon |all members and others who wish to : : |be present at this banquet, to send | Communist Convention in the reservation forms or to phone 7 +, |the F.S.U. District by Saturday morn- Reports, Philadelphia (%. "85, "es "0 FHILADELPHIA, Pa. June 22.— Pelegates to the National Nominat- ing Convention of the Communist | Election Campaign will report back NEW YORK —The chief “enemy” |held in Pleasant Bay Park July 2.| are the left wing workers in the un- |Take the Unionport trolley from E. ions and not the bosses. ae St. This was the keynote of a con-| ference of leading labor bureaucrats, | Delegates Returning chiefly of the needle trades, held in the auditorium of the International, from Soviet Union to Ladies Garment Workers Union. Speak at Many Meets | Sandwiched into the conference ad | a labor-saving device was to have) NEW YORK.—The largé number been a “memorial” for Charles Stet-/of workers who attend the Friends sky, former manager of the Inter-| of the Soviet Union meetings to re- national Fur Workers Union, who re-| ceive the reports of the delegates | jeently bumped himself off. Since just returned from the Soviet Union only 15 mourners appeared, however." is a clear indication of the growing it was decided to -postpone the “me-| interest in the Workers’ Fatherland. morial.” There are still many meetings Dubinsky, newly-elected chief of| scheduled for various parts of New the I.L.G.W. and Shiplacoff, “impar- | York and Jersey. On June 23, a re- tial chairman” of the bakers, were among the chief speakers at the con- ference, which was devoted largely to |a vituperative attack on the left wing | workers who, despite ceaseless gang- | sterism and terror tactics, continue to expose the betrayals of the right wing bureaucrats. A subcommittee was elected by the conference to work out ways and means of putting into effect the “pro- gram” outlined in a Speech made re- cently by Dubinsky at a banquet given in his honor by his cronies, at which he yowed.a bitter war against | militants in the union. SOVIET FILM NOTES } The Tram, the Young Workers |'Theatre Movement is planning to to a mass meeting of workers in | produce its first film—a picture deal- Parkway Hall, 31 St. and Ridge Ave.,| ing with the danger of war. Eisen- | stein. back in Moscow, has been in- vited to act as consultant in the pro- 'Pennsy Legislature | to Vote Road Bonds, Disguised as “Relief” | HARRISBURG, Pa., June 22,— | Governor Pinchot has called a spe- | ¢ial s¢ssion of the legisiature to start {Monday evening, and take up the fake relief proposals Pinchot and a non-offeial conférence of Republi- can Party bosses have worked out. The chief point in the program is @ $50,000,000 bond issue for road con- | struction—which, if it passes and if the bonds can be sold, will enrich some contractors, but give little to the unemployed. Another proposal of the governor is for cities to make cnererey. loans against unpaid taxes. | duction of the film. ‘The Mezhrabpom film studio an- | 'nounces a contest for the scenario | dealing with the 15th Anniversary of the Soviet Revolution. The follow- ing awards will be made: first prize, 5,000 rubles; two second prizes of 3,000 rubles each’ and three third! HUGE CINEMA COMB! Now BEING BUILT NEAR MOSCOW | The world’s largest cinema com- bine is now undet construction at Potylikha, a suburb of the Moscow. The combine will consist of a plant for the manufacture of motion pic- |ture films, the United kino factory.| spizes of 2,000 rubles each. All scen- studios for the production of sound| sriog must be in not later than July | movies, a cinematography typosraphy | y5¢n, a motion picture institute and dwel- | lings for the workers.. The donaanio:| | tion ts proceeding very repidly and | is almost completed — most of th: equipment having already been in- | stalled. Some 9,000,000 rubles have | been appropriated for the construc tion of the combine | Many pictures are now being film- ed at the studio, which is scheduled to release 26 films this year. Of NEIGHECEHOOD THEATRES EAST SIDE—BRONS | BIG SCOTTSBORO MEETS JUNE 24th’ ‘Ordered De- ported, to Speak in Cleveland CLEVELAND, June 22—Final ar- rangements have been made for a mass indoor demonstration Friday evening, June 24, at Central High School, E. 55th Street, to demand the release of the Scottsboro boys. The meeting will be addressed by Louis Bebrits, editor of the Hun- arian daily, Uj Elore, whom the U 3. Government is deporting to Ru- nania on June 29, B. D. Amis, Ne- to revolutionary leader and District Organizer of the Communist Party, and J. Schiffer, District Organizer, of the International Labor Defense. The meeting will also protest a- sainst the notorious Dies Bill now ‘efore the Senate, aimed at the de- BOSTON, June 22—Boston work- ers will hold a Scottsboro protest demonstration Friday night, June 24 essacre of seven of the nine in- recent Scottsboro boys. A stay of necution has since been granted ollowing the victory of the working- lass in forcing the United States upreme Court to agree to review lynch sentences. The meeting Friday night will take “acé on Tremont and Hammond treets, in the South End—a Negro district. The meeting is organized by the International Labor Defense. On Sunday afternoon, June 28, at \2 o'clock, there will be another pro- test meeting against the continued imprisonment and attempt to deport Edith Berkman, strike leader. Nominate Ann Burlak, Textile Union Leader, For Pawtucket Mayor PAWTUCKET, R. I., June 22—At a representative conference of work- ing class erganizations held in Paw- tucket Sunday, Ann Burlak was nom- inated on the Communist Party ticket. This is the first time in his- tory that the Communist Party has center, In this city some of the most heroic | strike struggles were fought by the textile workers under the leadership of the National Textile Workers Union and Ann Burlak, its organizer. Every delegate present accepted to serve on the Election Campaign Commitee. A wide collection of sig- natures to place the candidate on the ballot has begun. Suitable places were selected for campaign open air meetings. Amusements znd BIG WEEK! Diary of a Revolutionist New Amkino Action Talkie With English Titles —SPECIAL—- The Only COMPLETE Official MAY DAY IN MOSCOW First Motion Pieturo of Russia's Greatest Demonstration SEE STALIN—GORKY REVIEW RED ARMY reco at 25c| NOW! Except Sat Sun, & Hel. OO” LY BWA AMEO #5; Lat oF LAST 2 WEEKS entre Guild resents REUNION IN VIENNA ‘A Comedy Hy ROBERT E. SHERWOOD : THEATRE, 52nd St. GUILD West or Bway Ey 8.40. Mis Th., Sat. Tel. Co 5-8229 /AY & 47th ST. 2 PLM. 35 Tiger and Python In Fight for Life FRANK BUCK’S \BRING'EM BACK ALIVE" | oMMAY FAIR :c: CAMPERS ATTENTION! Army Tents 16x16 and Others Also Camp Equipment —Reasonable Prices— MANHATTAN WIPING CLOTH INO. 478 Water St., corner Pike St. Phone Dry Dock 4-376 militant foreign born |: the date which was last set by the | | Alabama lynch courts for the. legal a candidate in this important textile | Commodore Strike Will Get Support at Shop ( Conference NEW YORK, — De full report on the Commodore Laundry strike will be given at the shop delegates con- ference called to meet Sunday at 11 |a. m., at Ambassador Hall, 3875 3rd Ave., by the Laundry Workers In- dustrial Union, The Commodore Laundry has been jon strike for 5 weeks, during which time, the union has had over 25 ar- rests, with over $25,000, bail, many of the strikers, being framed-up on felonious assault charges, However, the strikers are very determined, to continue the strike, until the bosses give in to the demands of the Shop Committee. FORCED TO DRINK TYPHOID ‘WATE Workers Cut Off from Regular Source KNOXVILLE, Tenn., June 22—Un- employed workers whose water has been cut off by the bosses are being forced to use water that has been banned by the health authorities as being full of typhoid germs. Many families are drawing water from a spring above which is a big sign that reads: “WARNING, AN- ALYSIS OF THIS WATER SHOWS DANGEROUS POLLUTION. IT IS UNSAFE TO DRINK THIS WATER.” The water from this spring passes through a storm sewer, but, despite summer many typhoid «cases were traced directly to this spring, )fam- ilies are being forced by the bosses to drink from it. One woman living near the spring, Mrs. Mellisa Riggs, 205 W. Warren Ave., is quoted as saying: “I'm just an old grandma woman. Our water has been cut off and the neighbors won't let us haye any. I know it's bad water, but what else can I do?” this, and despite’ the fact that last} ‘OHIO. MINERS TURN TO W.LR. Lewis Gang Would Sell Them for a Checkoff BRIDGEPORT, Ohio, June 22—A }committee of the 500 members of lecal 4472 of the United Mine Workers of America, Glen Robin, Ohio, came to the office here in No. 4 Fretter Building, of the Workers In- ternational Relief, to ask for food, They reported that the U. M. W. A. leaders have told them flatly that the United Mine Workers will never give them any relief. The U. M. W. A. is trying its best to settle the strike on the basis of a wage cut and recognition of the union. What do the U. M. W, A. |teaders care if the miners get @ cut, f the companies wiil promise to check lott $1.50 cents per month from the | wages of each of the 20,000 miners jnow striking, and turn $30,000 over jto the district officials every four weeks? ‘The U.M.W.A. policy of no relief it to force the miners back to the mines and start the check-off, Collecting Starts. The W.LR. outlined a program for collection of relief at Glen Robin by local rank and file relief committees working with the W.ILR. The W.LR., sent three of the Glen Robin minérs |to Pittsburgh, where the Pittsburgh |relief branch wil assist them in ccle lecting food, money and clothing. | Food is needed to replenish the five | kitchens the W.LR. now operates in the strike region here, and to open new kitchens. Rush donations! at | HELP PAINTERS PICKET | NEW YORK. — All workers are asked to come to 1130 Southern Boulevard, Bronx, to help picket the painters’ strike at Skaler struce tion Co, at 137 St. and \derson. Ave., Bronx. The boss has been hir- ing gangsters and having pickets arrested. Workers’ Clubs Should Advertise in the “Daily” REGULAR ADVERTISERS Red Star Press (“The Road”) Lucke-Kiffe Co. (Tents) Chester Cafeteria | Garden Restau! bonogtt: 4 wirans John’s Restaurant Harry Stolner Optical Co, Concoops Food Stores Camps Unity, Ki Lerman Bros. (8 Melrose Cafeteria Kavkaz Restaurant Workmen’s Sick and Death Benefit Fund Bronstein's Vegetarian Restaurant Kale Cafeteria Dr. Kessler Czechoslovak Worke s House Avanta Farm Union Square Mimeo Supply Russian Art Shop Dr. * ctotn Co. nd, Nitgedaiget ry) Sehwarty WATCH THE ADS: IN THE DAILY WORKER Cohen's (Opticians) Coco and Spinicelli (Barbers) Dental Dept., T.W.O. Health Center Cafeteria Jade Mt. Chop Suey Wm. Bell, Optometrist Parkway Cafeteria Butehers Union, Local 174 Linel Cafeteri Workers Coop Colony S8i's Lunch Santal Micy Rollin Pharmacy Gottlieb’s Hardware Messinger’s Cafeteria (So. Blvd.) World Tourists, Inc. Golden Bridge Colony Cameo Theatre. Acme Theatre Intern’ Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 15th FLOOR AU Work Done Under Persanal Care of DR. JOSEPRSON COHEN’S CUT RATE OPTICIANS Eyes Examined by Registered Op- tometrists—White Gold Rims $1.50 Shell Frames $1.00 117 ORCHARD ST,, Near Delancey COCO and SPINICELLI INVITE YOU TO ———PATRONIZE—— A Comradely BARBER SHOP 1500 BOSTON ROAD Cerner of Wilkins Avenue IRONX, N.Y. Our work wil ptoese the men, women and the chil¢ren NO TIPS the be ENT ee eT ATTENTION COMRANES! Health Center Cafeteria WORKERS CENTER 50 EAST 13th STREET Patronize the Health Center Cafeteria and Help the Revolutionary Movement Best Food Reasonable Prices DINE IN THE OPEN AIR Garden Restaurant 23 EAST 13th STREET Near Second Avenue REASONABLE PRICES COMRADELY ATMOSPHERE NO Ti TIPPING MUSIC Bungalows and Rooms to Rent for Summer Season Severa! very nice rooms and for rent for the summer season. ati ful farm in Eestern Pennsylvan! an ning water. Electricity, ieieming, figh- inn, ete. Personable rates. mitt cate with A. Benson, ¢.9. Dally Worker. arelows | | | Mike gen" Gaie Rranch st the FS | tassan, 40 Wil ba’ ashe URARSRRA ogee Pana ahY 20 AACR A YOUR VACATION SHOULD BE SPENT IN A UnemployedWomen ‘ $He Concourse Workers’ Club w: pae& 16 silent. Orelovich, director of the PROLETARIAN CAMP ONLY Fg a bead at Walten A’ NEW YORK.—Lucy Smoley of 172 LABOR UNION Combine, in an interview with the “SEO BIG” 9 SANDWICH Pm, Rivington, an unemployéa widow, wad MEETINGS press, stated that fifty per cent of| Phe Meinche Srvc SOLS 4 The Month of June is ideal for vacation in the rade Hatyevey will opesk at the| evicted Tuesday. Five hundred work- all pictures to be produced will be | a gieheia LUNCH Proletarian Camps iting bane Wormers’ Club, 48 Manhatten | ers of the neighborhood, led by the Dressmakers Rast prepare Panty Ahavt a Gee ahs mag apic te aate ay 108 University Place fifth of the entire Soviet cinema out- “ROADHOUSE MURDER” ett Wing Group of IL.G.W. dressmakers Unemployed Council committee, put with Every dollar spent by a worker on rest and vacation must was evicted, le Amter will spepk at the Bill/ Hoy furniture back. calls. open-air mass meetings at noon on| nyt will be produced at this new cen- |} ¥RIC LINDEN and DOROTHY JORDAN (Just Around the Corner) jeywood Branch, I.L.D., $159 Coney Island | 7°" s Thursday at 38th St. and Eighth Ave. and ‘i NEW LOW PRICE; instituti : erates, 8 pm. _ The same thing was done when an| st 35th a. and Cpe Aye. *o aise sa | tre. Aricne HE CREAN Lith, MATS. 15 Cents {| leek, as. Cone Telephone Tompkins Square 6-9780-0781 go to the institutions of our movement | i man |Prosrem for united organizational drive. |now being filmed at the studio ts! : i atte Somntnat my yeation of the Bens a ooced gun aD avietae ‘Drak exit Afinogenov's drama “Fear.” | Stout Fite bee: Sat SEAT GO TO YOUR THREE PROLETARIAN CAMPS inating Co! of 179 E. Second St., 1610 Boston Road, | nionerni Clopk and Dress Cutters Forum. THE CLIMAX OF THE MASS Ben Gold will speak in answer to Dubin- sky on Thursday at 1 Mall, 246° W. 36th St floor. nist, Party at at 6:90 p.m. NOW PLAYING! THE H ASPECTS OF NEW RUSSIA! p.m., at Memorial Discussion from the CIRCULATION DRIVE IN NEW YORK WILL BE Fens, fern peat Branch 615 of the 1.0.0. | Jeguler esting 3189 Con ey | Breokiva, at 8:30 p.m. | |Miners, Farmers, Storm Red Cross TICE? Nitgedaiget :.: Kinderland ;: Unity iy 21, Lw.0., will meet at 11 W. KNOXVILLE, Tenn, June 22— inhee dGini at “Gpactres Reuss ts aise CELEBRATION 6 as ALL CAMPS HAVE UNIFORM RATES a Bronx, at 30 pm. All| “ uss ynity of thé workefs in the industry. ‘4 4 i - a # urged to attend Three hundred starving miners and i PR 1932 ; Sew mab Prtg UW $16.50 Per Week, Including Organization and Press Tax farmers stormed the Req Crogs head- Plumbers ‘ , tN | a engers oy fetes % neve | quarters, this week in LaPelletty,| mytaty Prt, (eee, ite Auseauéd (FIRST EXCLUSIVE SHOWING) THIRSTY’ m and rally a! je Fine ‘3 jum be: o ct Union Mgll Bt, at 8 p.m | Tennessee, demanding relief. After | $outpern Biva al in||] SOVIET CHINESE TROOPS ¢ § NO COLLECTIONS tonight at 8 p.m. thetrade are invited tie id gn at “all f odtter THRILLING STORY OF THE COMMUNIST “SHOCK- BRIGADERS” IN ACTION EXCITING! ENTERTAINING! IN ACTION _ HUNGER PARADE UNCENSORED SCENES OF STARVING WORKERS |PICNIC AUGUST 21st | they were told there was no more “ctup will b ir elubroomh, 2073 Pitts | flour, and they refused to leave, the cops were called to drive them away. Astayasnties leave daily for all camps at 10 A.M., Fridays and Spisety 9 i 4 6 P.M, from 143 6, 108rd St. and the ann Cafeteria, 2800 Bronx Fark You can vse travel by train or boat. All at low eaten, For information on Nitgedaiget and Unity call City offce: Piaget Lousary orkers ry Workérs Industrial Union theo conferénce June 26 1 fae Workers’ rer datogstion to the State) One Negro woman sat down on the Hing Convention wil Fy vith 1813 | ©) oF a of all races and nation- i bstone and called on all the other a WATCH FOR THE DETAILS OF in Ave, Brookly: 4s, in all he t=] er organized or 8-1400 and for Kinderland TOmpkins Square 6-8434 i ‘ a susieiiey | SORE A Teas Beene tone, wee ee i BaewACME THEATRE | THIS MAMMOTH AFFAIR. AT: Jf] | FR oe fe 2.) bag: ; Be 1th STREST & UNION SQUARE PLEASANT BAY PARK ity Office of Camp Kinderland 13 ©, 14th $1. Anto Station Phone Lehigh 4-2882