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Peoples trying to on id Soviet China to struggle to st and ttac of Ja r plans in every adopted unani- demanded ‘ottsboro boys colorful by (See Working Class Lenin } m has nothing to offer S except more un- starvation 1 Browder, sec- the Communist Party, at Memor the proletarian |in the leading role, taking as allies the poor peasants and the oppressed | peoples, such as the Negroes in Am-| erica, and taking advantage of every | weakness or contradiction in the ranks of the capitalist enemies.” Answer To Socialists. “Lenin,” said Hathaway, “brushed aside all such milk and water soci- | alism as that put forward by the Socialist Party of America.” { These Socialists now say, the speak- | er pointed out, that Leninism ap- plies only in “backward, Asiatic coun- tries” but we, the workers of this, the mowt advanced Capitalist im- perialist country in the world see that these slogans of Lenin apply right | here. Hathaway made a thrilling appeal for solidarity of Negro and White, referred to the Scottsboro case com- ing up in a few weeks on new trial, and called on all to take the strug- igle against war into every factory| ning to the teachings | "4 workshop and to the ranks of id the Communist Party|the unemployed. He used the re- bodied in the Soviet | SPonsibility of the Communist Party | pointed: out |in this most important imperialist | t that the capitalist | Country, U.S.A., as an argument for | condemnation and the} €W Tecruits to its ranks, and for nd hatred of the suffer- | ™&SS support of the struggle to save drew forth thunderous|*he Daily Worker. ise from the 6,500 workers that cane Party of Lenin.” med the hall, filling every con-| The tenor of the meeting, of both reivable space. Applause continued | Meetings for that matter, was il- as the speaker developed the argu-|ustrated by the great red banners “Come out, workers farmers,” is the beginning of the third song, by Kisler, a German worker. All the singing made a profound impression on the audience. FIGHT ROBBER WAR ON CHINA CHICAGO, Jan. 22.—Ten thousand | Negro and white workers attended | the Lenin Memorial meeting held, enthusiastically endorsing the pro- gram of the Communist Party for revolutionary struggle against starva- tion and imperialist war, and for the demonstration to be held Saturday, Jan. 28, before the Japanese Consu- late. Bob Minor, representative of | the Central Committee of the Com- was given a tremen- munist Party, Gous ovation. . Unite Against War Move PORTLAND, Ore., Jan. 20. A conference held here on Jan. 19 voted to hold a mass Lenin Memorial Meet- ing on Jan. 25. The conference pas- sed a resolution protesting against the war moves of the U. S. govern- ment in the developing war situation between U. S. and Japan. Another resolution was adopted protesting the in refusing delivery for 100 letters action of the Portland Post Office | ment that as the teachings of Lenin | 0 the walls: per and deeper into the | exploited workers so will| “Join the Party of Lenin, the Com- munist Party, Vanguard of the Work- termination to organize and| 18 Class; Proletarians of All Coun- to overthrow the capitaiist| ‘ties and Oppressed Peoples Unite!” - “ stamped, the post office returned oe | nd "Organize Your Neighbor and] them the day after the conference, Very early the hall began to sit| Resist Evictions of the Unemployed,” | with the marking “address unknown and every organization marching in| 92d “Down With Lynching and Race | or incorrect”. | carrying its banners was greeted with | Discrimination, Full Equality for| SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 22—The applause and cheers, Before the| Nesroes and Self Determination for Youth anti-war week was opened meeting started the sides of the| The Black Belt!” and “Fight Im- speakers’ platform were already| PeTialist War Preparations; Defend covered with t ed banners of the The Soviet Union, Chinese People and organization present. By the time|L@tin American Masses! the meeting opened the hall was| With these were slogans for the packed to capacity and many were | SPeeding of the $35,000 financial drive turned away of the Daily Worker and for mass Mary Himoff, representing the | O'8@nizations and workers to support Young Communist League, addressed | it and for new readers. containing invitations to workers’ or- ganizations and sympathizers for the conference. Despite the fact that the letters were properly addressed and yesterday with the Liebknecht Memorial meeting. Over 300 working class youth were in attendance. Fol- lowing the meeting, the police ar- rested Emil Hanoff, district organi- zational secretary of the Young Com- munist League, on a phoney charge, made several months ago by a stool pigeon by the name of Millikan. the gathering asking of the working| present, what has been class parent the reward to the sons and daughters The meeting was well managed in this respect: it started on time and closed promptly at 10:30, without con- of the working class that have made this country rich today and what has the future in store for them but un- employment “We, the youth,” she e not only part of the working class that will over-| __ throw capitalism, we are also part| The aspirations of the new Soviet of the new generation that will build | ¥0™an to fully realize her equality & new society that will lead the work-| in the industrial field and her strug- aS & new life and a better life,” | 8e against the “hangover” trammels se tans of the Czars’ regime is depicted in the new Belgoskino film, “Woman's World”, wh'ch began its American || Premiere at ‘he Aeme Theatre yes- |terday. Kulak and burocrat, super- | stition and tradition hinder Mashka’s Progress, but the desire to learn and fit hers (Mashka is played by Raisa Esipova.) Pictured in the background of the village with the budding new forms, i) the war between the old and new is fusion of the program or any ap- parent rushing. NEW RUSSIAN FILM SHOWS THE EMANCIPATION OF THE WORKING WOMAN, disenssion ut 8 p.m. at Bath Beach Workers Club, Anxious to learn tractor operation, VOLUNTEERS needed for office work for] Mashka who plays the leading Tole, “430, 80 Bast 11th t,| SDowledge. Not fully aware of its Self Defense in| intricacies she loses control and is Pe oe pega ted thrown off. Anka, a party worker, comes to the rescue and steers the LOUIS ENGDAHL CLUB meets every| Machine away from the brink of a Monday & pm, at 3032 Bainbridge Ave.,| hill but is herself thrown over and irony. injured. When the party functio- naries arrive Mashka ts first suspect- ed of sabotage. However, her inten- tion is explained and she is recom- mended for study at the tractor school. Here the burocrat makes his ap- pearance. Lazy and inefficient he re- clines and orders Mashka to find the vacuum pump. Unable because of her ignorance of machinery, he or- ders her back to the kitchen where, he claims, she belongs. Undaunted, y. Instructor: Paul-| Mashka steals the instruction book educational director of the| and over her cooking pots and baby’s ; crib studies it, though against the op- i position of her husband. Ge atccereakene Onion nvites| The kulak sensing the threat of to ‘its regular meeting/ collectivization orders his wife to pins At 198 Beeond Ave arouse the housewives against the plan. Here one sees the old life with the husband as master. The wife LABOR UNION MEETINGS FURNITURY, WORKERS Purniture Workers Industrial Union rw ‘Trade Unionism free of 6, every Monday night at 8 p. mw. ine Rogers, TUUC. Independ pow an. 26 a OFFICE WORKERS Glass In history of American he at 1:39 ove- 790 elf to progress finally triumph. | Longshoremen Support Move. Street meetings to mobilize the workers for the Liebknecht Memorial were held for several days prior to the memorial. Leaflets were distrib- uted in the neighborhood and among the armed forces. A special leaflet was issued to the Negro and colonial peoples. A meeting held at the Em- barcadero was attended by many longshoremen and seamen. An anti- war demonstration was held, which the police viciously attacked, at- tempting to break up the demonstra- tion by keeping the workers moving and finally arresting several workers. Those arrested are Francis Boswe, John Dias, Loyis Jones and Oden Lee. Score Robber War. The memorial meeting protest resolutions against the ar- rests. A resolution was adopted to be sent to the Japanese Consul pro- testing against the imperialist rob- ber war on China. Two resolutions were sent to Gov. Rolph of California, demanding the release of Tom Moo- ney and that the loans secured by the state from the Reconstruction Finance Corporation be used for real relief to the starving unemployed workers instead of for the establish- ment of forced labor camps to pre- pare the young workers for the im- pending world slaughter. adopted —_————— he calls his family to cry over his body, a similar custom to the Indian of burning the wife with her dead husband, He who has grown rich on the peasants toil is now ousted and he plans revenge. Mashka has now volunteered to work as cook during the reaping season and when the tractor breaks down she leaves the traveling kitchen to repair'the machine. When she re- turns the workers are clamoring for dinner, but instead the food has burned and spoiled. Through her tears she explains that she fixed the tractor, is forgiven and again sent to the tractor school. As is usual in Soviet films, charac- ters are taken from the ranks of the sont meets toni a '|fawns over her husband through fondway, room 303 at Office Workers’) ears of compulsion and the children Palen teadquariers. Class in practical favnaliser being formed, Those interested stand fearfully obedient. When he “e Hiilvern. or leave name tn union office, admits his defeat by the new ideas workers whose life is depicted. Hence the acting {is in their own vein; it is realistic and excellent throughout. E. Daigan is the director —D, L, cover up the stench arising from Tammany’s Harlem Hospital that they even drafted to the Committee one of capitalism's ablest labor-mis- leaders and drunkard, the Socialist, Heywood Broun! Broun, who in his column fn the New York Telegram stated that: “If I were a candidate for high executive office, or judiciary office, I would say, even without being cornered, that I would not now sanction the efforts to enforce the 14th and 15th Amendments to the Constitution of the United States.” Only last Friday, in writing about Angelo Herndon, 19-year-old Nerro boy sentenced to 18-20 years of living death on a Georgia chain gang. Broun called for Georgia to adont Jews ike that of New York where “he (Herndon not Broun of course) mieht onlv be clubbed” for oreanizine Neero end white workers. this same Rrovn is now asked by the N. A. A. C. P. to defend Negro rights! Only One Doctor Ory one of the four Neeroes an the “enmmittee” is a doctor, Ard he fs the hand-nicked Dr, Frnest ™. Jvst, who is not a practicing nhysi- cian hut a zoologist of Howard Uni- versity. The made ottock come W. FL RB. DuRole who the oh-ve-mentinned virinns on the Nearg doctors of Har- aprther memher of the enm- mittee! All the wav dewn the line, the list js » damnable insult to the Negro people. All Enemies Dr, Woltew Lindeaw Niles of Cornel) University Medica] Moliece, which hes exclufled Nerross for more than fif- teen vears: Dr. M. T Finnev of the Neero-hatine Iehns Honkins Univer- city: Geor7s Sehnvler (Nesro) of the N. A.A. ©, P,, which denends mon oneress ta ston the enslovement of Mecrg workers in the Mississippi Fond Control Region: Rev. A. Clav- tan Powell, put on the committee to silence his son, Adam ©. Powell. who made the mistake of preaching a sermon on the need for an investiga- tion, ete., compose this committee, Not Impartial This is the “imnartial secret nves- tigation” the N. A. A. C. P. wishes to make, and not of the doings of the white doctors and Wright, but. as they state in their letter “the quality of work done by them,” that is, the Negro doctors! ‘They offer no in- vestigation of the conditions patients are subjected to or the discrimina- tion against Negro nurses by white supervisors. The N. A. A. C. P. would “inquire” into charges which they themselves know inside out and condone. ‘To the newspapers and the rever- end the letter was simply a confirma- tion of previous verbal agreements and meant. “Lay off the Harlem Hos~ pital stuff: wait for further orders from the N. A. A. C. P. and Tam- many, and we'll be able to save our faces and continue the same old game”! To the doctors the letter was an offer of a bribe of a concession of some sort and a threat of blacklist- ing if they don’t “shut up”! Threat to the Workers To the Negro people as a whole and to the white workers, of Harlem and New York City, the letter shows the dictatorial attempt of the N, A. A. C. P. to cover up the horrible con- ditions in Harlem Hospital and all city hospitals and at the same time exposes the attempt of the N. A. A. C. P. to pose as the “defender of Negro rights.” The N. A. A. C. P. again stands exposed, as in the case of the Scottsboro boys, as the tool of the white ruling class for the oppression of the Negro people. The League of Struggle for Negro Rights and the International Labor Defense calis upon the Negro people and white workers to come to the Mass Protest Meeting at St. Luke's Hall, 125 West 180th Street, Thurs- day, January 26, at 8 p.m., and de- mand of the city officials a real investigation by a committee elected by the people of Harlem. Readers are urgéd to pass this article along to others, after they have read it, especially to people in Harlem, lem Is. 2027 Monterey Ave. NEW YORK.—Three evictions are threatened today at 2027 Monterey | Ave., Bronx, between 178 and 179} St. The evictions are scheduled for 8 a.m., and the unemployed councils, the house committee and the unem- ployed youth council call all in the neighborhood to a mass picket) demonstration at that time and place. | Saturday there was a big mass meeting lasting for hours in front of the house, and most of the neigh- | borhood apparently was there at one time or another, The youth and! members of the Young Pioneers par- aded with picket signs, and evaded attempts of three policemen and a} sergeant to run them in. | to evict another tenant. continue every day at 1041 Brayant. Picket 226 Barrett Street Today; Defy Epstein’s Threat NEW YORK. —The conference of the rent strikers of 226 Barrett St. and the landlord ended without a satisfactory decision because the landlord refused to return the evicted tenant. President Epstein, of the Landlords Association, a “Soctalist” threatened to come Monday morning And con- tinued Epstein, “If there will be any resistance heads will be split.” At a demonstration Saturday night, 500 strikers and sympathizers, pledg- }ed to resist further evictions, and } call on all workers to assist them this Diseased Meat; Vile | morning at 9 am. to prevent the * 1 q threatened eviction. Working Conditions Workers at 234 Berrett St. a few | doors away, have also organized their house and will also strike for lower rents unless their demands are ac- cepted by the landlord. Food Trusts Sell Many workers will remember the exposures by Upton Sinclair in his book “The Jungle.” The book brought into stark relief the vile conditions for workers in the meat industry, the diseased meats (sold to workers), and foreed a “reform” act, the Meat Inspection A “SOCIALIST” LANDLORD NEW YORK. — An unemployed | worker, Davidson by name, with a ensky, Hamilton Fish, and the lead- ers of the Second (Socialist) Inter- national. Joins Enemies of U. S. 8. R. “In utilizing the death of Trotsky’s daughter, which Trotsky has ex- ploited for his own political ends, Mr. Harrison is simply taking this opportunity to join openly the en- emies of the Soviet Union. In attack- ing Stalin, leader of the oppressed masses Of the world, Mr. Harrison is trying to conceal the real object of his attack; the Workers’ and Peas- ants’ Republic. The John Reed Club has therefore decided to expél from its ranks Charles Yale Harrison as a deserter from the revolutionary movement and an enemy of the Soviet Union.” The New Masses, in its reply to Harrison, stated in part: “The New Masses is not the ‘servile mouthpiece’ of any ‘apparatus. The New Masses is a co-opetative organ of writers and artists. interested in the revolutionary movement, as dis- tinguished from Mr. Harrison, who, it now appears, is chiefly interested in his own literary career. “Mr. Harrison's appeal ‘for an or- to sleep and eat with 75 cents car- fare for a week. This was Thurs- day. Well, 75 cents certainly cannot last a whole week when you have to go from place to place to look for a job, since the job they promised me isn’t even in view. I went up there and asked for more carfare to look for a job and told Miss Durkin that I spent my 75 cents for tooth paste, towels, soap, etc. She answered that she couldn't do anything more for me, but gave me a dime when I became insistent. This dime is supposed to last me for fare until Thursday (four days), so I refused to take it. Thereupon this dignified Miss Durkin called up for a cop. Beihg a member of the Y.C.L., I knew it was useless for me to carry on a struggle by myself, so I went up to the Unemployed Office Work- ers’ Association and we are going up in an organized group—with other girls. who have been treated even worse than I have been by the E.W.B.—and we DEMAND, Miss Dur- kin, that you give us $1 a day Which your committee collected from poor workers like myself. Law, to be passed in 1906. Today, about 27 years later, the ; notice from the landlord, Philip Perl- wife and three children living at 366 | Jerome St., has received a dispossess “Consumers’ Research,” a paper published for the bourgeois trade and “not for general release to the public,” carries the following stein, a member of the Workmen's Circle, Branch 248, and living at the same address. The worker owes less than twce months rent, interesting information in the January, 1933, issue: “, ... The Federal Government | Trunk Makers Call does not have adequate funds for the work of inspecting chickens before canning. Some of the firms which have their chickens passed by the U. S. Department of Agriculture, themselves pay the wages of the inspectors (!) . . There is good reason to believe that as to sanitary quality and Meeting to Organize NEW YORK.—On Tuesday evenin? trunk makers held a meeting at 106 Forsyth St. The workers told of their miserable conditions in their trade. A worker, working 35 years in the trade told that his boss wants him to work for $10 a week. A vol- disease conditions, poultry pack- ing and marketing operations are today about in the condition the untary committee was organized tak- ing upon itself the task to mobilize the workers in the shops for a mass meeting which will be called through and before the Meat Inspection | leaflets for next Wednesday evening. Act was passed in 1996.” |The committee appeals to all trupk Does this need any further ex- | makers to come and bring as many planation? workers as possible, AMUSEMENTS wees THE THEATRE GUILD Presents IOGRAPHY” meat industry was before Upton Sinclair published “The Jungle” A COMEDY BY S. N BEHRMAN . and in it INA CLASBE. The combination seems to have been arranged in heaven.” —Gilbert Gabriel, American, GUILD THEATRE Sind St, W. of B'way, Evenings 9:30 Matinees: Thurs. and Sat. 2:30 ANOTHER CAPITALIST LIE NAt SOVIET’S “WOMAN'S WORLD” DISPROVES SLANDER! —American Premiere— Woman's World RELEASED IN MOSCOW AS “WOMAN? tis BELGOSKINO English Titles Soviet Woman in Her New Life — Her Contribution in the Building of Socialism worserss Acme Theatre 1éth Street and Union Square Cont, from ® a.m, Midnite Show Sat. 15 cents 9 A.M. to 1 P.M.—Mon. to Fri. 14TH STREET & 6TH AVENUE (WATKINS-0-7450) G00. $1, $1.50. Eve. 8:30. Mats, Wed. & Sat. 2:30 Eva Le Gallienne, pirector REPERTORY FOR THIS WEEK .ue"(CRADLE SONG” SEATS 4 WEEKS IN ADVANCE Gox Office & Town Hall, 118 W 43d FRANCIS LEDERER & DOROTHY GISH IN AUTUMN CROCUS The New York and London Success oth St. W. of B'way Mats. Wed., Thurs. & Sxt., 2:40 RKO JEFFERSON 48 &. 2 |NOW PAUL MUNI in“I AmA Now at Pop. Pric. 25¢ to 1P.M. ‘MAEDCHEN IN UNIFORM’ RKO CAMEO THEA., 42nd St. & Broadway PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTIZERS DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 Bristol Street (Bet, Pitkin & Sutter Aves.) B’klyn PHONE: DICKENS 2-3012 jours: 8-10 A.M., 1-2, 6-8 P.M, Office intern] Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE th FLOOR AU Work Done Under Versonai Cary PR JOSEPASON White Gold Filled Frames. $1.50 ZYL Shell Frames — $1.00 Lenses not included COHEN’S, 117 Orchard St, First Door Off Delancey St. Telephone: ORchard 4-4520 Garment District 1, W. 0. Brancites, Clubs and Other Fraternal Orgonizations MAKE SOME MONEY WITHOUT ANY INVESTMENT Secretaries Are Urged to INQUIRE at the GARRISON FILM DISTRIBUTORS 720—2th Ave., Room 810 New York City THIS OFFER HOLDS GOOD ONLY FoR THIS MONTH Attention Comrades! OPEN SUNDAYS Health Center Cafeteria Workers Center — 50 ¥. 14th St. Quality Food Responndle Prices JADE MOUNTA IN American & Chinese Restatirant 197 SECOND AVENUE Bet, 12 & 13 Welcome to Our Comrades Phone Tomkius Sq. 46-0554 John’s Restaurant SUECIALTY: ITALIAN A blace with atmoaph Where all. thdicale “meet 924 Broadway NBAR 2ist STREET ve Fugitive From A Chain Gang” nxo MAYFAIR nity INow OFFICIAL AUTHENTIC WORLD WAR FILM Best Food Lowest Prices Added Poature: “NO MORE ORCHIDS” with Carol Lombard and Walter Connolly “THE BIG DRIVE” Diesen SECRETS WITHHELD UNTIL NOW! Garment Section Workers Patronize Navarr Cafeteria 333 7th AVENUE Corner 28th St. Good Food Served Right Farragut Cafeteria 326 Seventh Avy., at 28th St. MENTION THE DAILY WORKER DENIS WHOLESALE AND RETAIL FLORAL DESIGNS A sPecraLry 101 W. 28th St., New York PHONE: LACKAWANNA 4-2470 Au umruaes Mees at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health 558 Claremont Parkway, Breas H PAGE TWO DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, JANUARY 23, 1933 os | ——— SEE —=— _ = = SSS ees eat <= —= — = = a ease | | 4 ry ry ry * ° * i} ent Stri ovement py eads; ickeling oady gainst Evictions | ; 7 | NEW YORK.—Mass picketing today in rent strikes at: i} 7 ‘ ‘ | Avenue A and 1ith Street at 7:30 p.m. and all day against six A 1) 18 0 2 A ad r§ || evictions that will be atempted early in the morning. i . n x KY ae L entn Meetings | 2.—At 2027 Monterey Avenue, Bronx, between 178th and 179th Streets, O ce u e . against three evictions threatened for 8 a.m. j T HOTTER ‘ £ y MEMORIAL MEETINGS PLEDGE TO | Hear New Songs | At 1711 Davison Avenue, 8 a.m., before the house of the landlord W: t [ J S S R F ne | d ° ae | of 1045 Bryant: also mass demonstration before 1041 Bryant, and workers ee | TU er as eee Py oe ; i ’ \ |} an Finel ageant | are called to fill Westchester Court, where four rent strikers sppear today. D ASEH: inc Count | 4 J us nN f | 4.—At 226 Barrett Street, Brownsville, at 9 a.m., to stop eviction of emonstrate in | renee ghia } , . ae esi 999) - } y © Y ici — | NEWYORK. — ‘The pagennt,| © !O0mme emus Today in 4 Evictions | Harrison Exploits Trotsky Daughter's Suicide Soe A ause As “owder ¢ F; away | “Lenin and the Masses” shown at| — risk = ¥ iia Rese - x + Great log pears A oihems - oer y both Lenin Memorial Meetings and vs 1 NEW YORK—The rent strike at To Join Anti Soviet Drive Show Lenin as Leader of Struggle arranged by the League of workers eAaKe ; | 1045 Bryant Ave., (Bronx) continues abeS ; i es gE 88 |'Theatres and Workers Dance Coun-| repares with more vigor than ever. Some} | ae id Beal ick eens rabbit and? eee oe ———_- | Thea ne Sue f ; rare. abt sone time was associated with a number of revolutidnary organizations, has NEW —OV 8,000 Ne k hers, re cil was a brilliant success and marks} : tenants who at first were ashamed i y Saturday night, thundered thelr agreement aa the main spesters, Bromige |® Step forward for this type of ac-| Whitewashing of TOD AY AT AVE Al to pleket are now being drawn in,| been expelled from the John Reed Club “as a deetrter from the revolu- — / se . 4 ‘ ‘ ss 4 . i 8 y mM. yf these rent lonary movement and an enemy of @———————_—__——— in Arcadia Hall, Brooklyn, and Hathaway in Bronx Coliseum, simultaneously | tiVity. s orb Ne: ray ab 10 Anse i ganized protest against the relga of enin’ ti 1 1 7 izi The pageant shows Lenin agitating| * hata strikers have to appear in the West-| the Soviet Union.’ _ < eteiccthrow of besorpang sper ne ape ia cade i among the slaves of capitalism, build-| H it ] Ch es . . AJ] | chester Court to answer summons.! The expulsion followed the publi- isnal tied ie ia sara bery in Applause continued as the speakers gave, from the facts and problems | i 8 corps of organizers even while ospita: AP QOS) Mass Picket Line: All| they src ssnios; sonschter Gapian| eaten im the Capitalist press of a | Mussa’ reveals his political bias, Sethe workers themselves the reasons o— wie 2 ine in exile, sending them out for further —— Day; Starts 7:30 A.M. |8n¢ X. Schulman. ‘The frst three |etter Harrison had sent to the New | Mir, '® that of various eae! ptr for Lenin's declarations that workers| This was the first great mass meet-| work, and issuing his famous slogan,! (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) vo - *"* | ave members of the House Commit-} Masses, resigning as a contributing Boviss campaign ~ The’ POM ‘is should, “Fight against all imperialist | ing of this native ever attempted in|“Turn Imperialist War Into Civil| EES AS SES x ; tee. The fourth one is an unemploy-| editor of the magazine on the ground attempt to cloak his hatred for the war, but if it does come, fight for the | in& of this nature ever attempted in| War” during the world slaughter.! of the Negro people in Harlem, who] NEW YORK.—The Downtown Un-| ed worker with a family of six, whom | that had become the “servile | soviet Union with the humane ana defeat of your own imperialist coun- | Extremely Successful Lenin Meeting |Lenin’s death is symbolized by the| are the subjects for incompetent | employed Council will hold an all| the landlord, Harrison, wants to get| mouthpiece of the Stalin apparatus.” purely personal sentiments evoked by 1 “and “Turn Imperialist War into | In Bronx Coliseum salute by red banners, and after a] white doctors’ experiments, when it | day out-door demonstration today on | Tid of because he sees no prospect of | In his letter he exploits the suicide & mulcide cannot. be. chiara ttetbeds : | Leo Patterson, for the National] moment of dismay, Lenin’s trained] “secured” this committee. Neither | the corner of 11th Street and Avenue} getting any rent out of him. of Trotsky’s daughter to meke @ anything except as cheap and dase 4,000 in the Bronx | Committee of the Young Communist | organizers carry on to the building] did this “guardian of Negro rights,” |B, to resist the eviction of six tenants| There are some tenants here who| vicious attack on the Soviet Union picable.” ri 0 but another | League, a Negro worker, spoke first,| of Socialism in the Soviet Union and give a rap about what opinion the |from 503 East 11th Street who are| have lived there from 6 to 16 years. and calls “for an organized protest : | thousand managed t ze in and|#? Bronx Coliseum, outlining the| the revolution against capitalism in| doctors and nurses fired and forced | on strike for lower rents. The dem-| The tenants of 1049 Bryant Ave., in| against the reign of terror which is { find standing room. Perhaps because | ™#in struggles of the young workers, | other countries—the Socialists trying} to resign might have about this type | onstration will start at 7:30 in the| the same block, who won their strike| now going on in Rugsia. Emergency Work Buro 1 here was too much | Negro and white alike, in the fight|to sabotage all through. of committee. In fact, not one of | morning. last week, are helping these tenants Notorious Adventurer C Il T | i talking during|@gainst starvation and war The massed choruses of the Work-| these doctors or nurses were invited] 41. tenants were ordered evicted| PY_ picketing, ate ee also helping steer Tet ert as a alls Cop to ‘hrow 4 tal during 5 ‘ = a Ms | is a ¥ “4 political adventurer who has recent- the C. A. Hathaway, district organizer | ers Music League, hundreds of yoices,| to be on the committee. ; deem hele hema after « heaving last another rent strike at 1041 fy tosh Ohs GF the ster ied SHAN BF Out Unemployed Girl y 3,000 but it was|of the Communist Party called at-|were well trained. Some of the old] ‘The letter goes on to list as those week in court during which the land- Picket Today. cepunmeee {the yellow Hearst press and hoa been 1 | t least 1,000} tention to the completion of 93.7 per| revolutionary songs and three new Four Out of Eighteen! y lord, George Rosenblum, appealed to! The East Bronx Unemployed Coun- intimately associated with another (By An Unemployed Office Worker) 4 1 unknown | cent of the First Five Year Plan in| ones were given. The “Song of| on the committee, eighteen “distin- the judge to help him oust “rabid; cil, at 616 Tinton Ave. and the pro- literary racketeer, V. F. Calverton, NEW YORK.—When I registered , numbe pe e Soviet Union in four years and} Wrath” by Szabo, Hungarian prole-| guished medical experts and laymen.’ reds” trom the premises. | visional Bryant Ave. Block Committee, around whom ‘all sorts of yenegades |@t the Emergency Work Bureau, I : thousand ned away for « hree months (the whole plan would| tarian, begins: , Only ‘our of these eighteen are Two weeks ago five tennants were ; Call the workers and the mass or-| and enemies of the Communist Party | ¥@8 shown @ lot of sympathy because solute ace have been finished if it had not been “End, end, end their rule Negroes! Not a single doctor of evicted by the marshall, but more | Sanizations of the neighborhood to have grouped themselves. I was wearing torn summer shoes s Organizations. for the rising war danger) as proof | “Wipe out the bloody hangman ..., Harlem is on the committee! There thant 600; Workata. wis Ray present help this morning in mass picketing Tn expelling him, the John Reed | and snow was on the ground at that In cach Grdes: Wher) GBSt Ladin Enew Whee Ne was talks) ocwers lee Seen aber » [are no Negro women or nurses! | forced the police to stand by while | 48d to fill the court room, Club issued a statement, signed by | lime. I was asked my life history mass organizatior ns and work-/| ing about when he laid down over | Sacco-Vaneetti, Scottsboro case.” | There is no representative of the the furniture of the evicted tenants| ‘Today at 8 p.m. there will be a| Harry Alan Potamkin, executive gec-|in about three different places— ers Clubs, etc di in and placed | ten years ago the guiding principles} Another song, “Stand Guard” is by North Harlem Medical Association was carried back into the apartments,.| mass picketing demonstration near retary, declaring: | where I worked, where I was born, their banners as fa rd as they} of the plan. | Lahn Adoumyan, well known for his | (Negro organization in opposition to Mass picketing has been going on| the landlord's house, 1711 Davidson “At the moment when the armies |how many months I owed for rent could get Lenin relied on the Communist| Work with the W.IR. Band and other) the Wright-Conner controlled Man | ne eae es ae eee de. | Ave. ihibertall sing | (and they informed me also that aa Party to carry through this great| Proletarian music organizations. hattan Medical Soeiety), or of the | } ied : 4 : plea sownergd pin deo rages pagans 4 ETE not pay any rent), ete, They Several hundred batty SA anole | « : i ) . | Spite orders from police that mass| Ail workers in the neighborhood are|on towards the Soviet border and y Bey S05 Pied y work he C work, and to lead everywhere to the} “From Atlantic to Pacific National (Negro) Medical Associa ‘ i ve me a food ticket, a pair of Peer soln the. C “goa eed Haat Aton eC) ag . | Dicketing be stopped. called to demonstrate. world imperialism is mobilizing pub- | 8@V is ae Young Com: verthrow of capitalism, said Hatha- ‘ands the warning; workers be-}tion. Instead, there is a representa. this 4 4 its anti-Soviet | Goloshes (my shoes are still torn and received at cact . and described Lenin's idea of ware! tive, Dt. Dean Lewis, of the Amer- aia | _-At the 1081 strike, the landlord, | ie. opinion Harrison comes out with | turned out so that T can’t even walk), | oh me SeBalbtt arty, as one eliminating all op-| “Guns are trained on the Soviet] ican Medieal Association and a doc+ IEE J | Krepple, has not taken action to evict | tive, Mr. Harrison comes out with and & dollat. iy mee. Teh Fesoltitions Land ie Piten re : ‘ t ‘ 1 Abscel . his tenants yet, but a move of that | his slanderous attack on the U.S.S.R. . i peinting out that now: raging unism and maintaining one Bol- Union, tor of the rie! ican Saree nar i eect lacks any time and will|In his statement, incidentally, Mr.| With the food ticket I got mostly j ih the far east and in Latin America,|shevik Theory. “Lenin never lost| “Proletarians, Prepare!” Bi Ree tice deta bs tec ‘ be resisted by the vhole netenber| Harrison is not very original, He is | ll cattned stuff (pork and beans, : that each war shows greedy imperi-| sight of the fact,” said Hathaway, | is its stirring appeal. ciously exelude Negroes! Th M At eee ty treet mestines| merely echoing the Archduke Cvpil, | canned meat, ete.) which made me alist powers trying to club colonial nee the task was the destruction| “Rise up, fields and workshops So anxious is the N. A. A. C. P, to 1S orning | continue every cine at 10dt mera! Pope Pius of Rome, Alexander Ker- | very sick. Now they gave me a place of capitalism, with