The Daily Worker Newspaper, April 3, 1933, Page 2

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PAGE TWO BARRICADES in; BERLIN Printed bry Special Permit: sion of INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHERS, 381 Fourth BY KLAUS NEWKRANTZ ILLUSTRATED BY WALTER QUIRT Avenue, New York City All Workers are urged to read this book snd spreed it among their friends. THE STORY SO FAK:—A group of young workers are gathered in the Red Nightingale, a cafe in the proletarian Wedding district in Ber- lin Which is a meeting place for revolutionary workers. VERAL Communist es and] xttacked three of us!” 2 illustrated papers, neatly clipped| “Quick, to the rese he Above! Alarms of this kind had be e photo-| frequent of late. Apparentl Workers’ | Nazis were working according met here. On| finite plan with the object of terror- a counter with @ case | izing Red Wedding through attacks sehind it a large cup-| on individual worker! containing | rHE OLD COMMUNIST k rt bottles | ( On a © card- | JN the empty room Black Willi went notice was written slowly to the rear and opened the Good Non-Alcoholic Drinks, Window i 10 Pfennigs a Glass “They smoke like chimneys,” he Rat : nod the | Mumbled, emptying the ashtra Behind the counter stood the | and, pushing a few chairs into th r of the Red Nightingale, Black | laces He was aa good-natured | P!4 In the room were a few front s, hoses among them old ployed customers, in his greasy black But the Red } boozing den! If y or did not feel He wore a clean blue cap ‘over white hair. Like many old people, his skin, which lay innumerable wrinkles, grew daily whiter and more ee? wethew che, nes pace ay | ttansparent—perhaps because he was | oe haved cs © eee | eating less and less. The son he lived Bee Oe ee oe or chess. | with had been out of work for almost Of course you were not at the R a year. The old man gave most of | food to his four little grand- children. Children find it more diffi- cult to starve than old people. He | placed his bony hands, knotted with blue veins, on the handle of his stick | and looked across at the landlord. “Willi. What do you think about | this business?’ Black Willi was wiping the counter | it was the wi meeting place in the “Red Alley. A DISCUSSION ‘The roomy passage leading to the small hall at the back of the house | was the meeting place of the young- sters, nearly all of whom were dres ed in the grey uniform of the Red} Front Fighters’ League, and the Jungsturm. A discussion was in full swing, Otto, the leader of the Youth | section, had arrived. “Comrades, nobody can hear if you shout like that.” A young man, stil) in his overalls, roared above the din. Fritz turned on him. “But, Otto—it’s ridiculous. How ean he prohibit the Ist of May de-| monstration after the Transport | Workers have twice voted unani ously for celebrating it? If the trail stop, how can there be work in Ber lin?” His comrades burst out into loud roars of laughter. “Ha, ha, Fritz, aren't you clever, Pritz! Perhaps the Police President | hhasn’t heard of it yet!” Roars of | laughter. “Order, Comrades,” Otto called out in a loud voice. “Don’t just laugh at Fritzi in that silly way. He is| partly right. If the trains don’t run on Wednesday, that would be a vic- tory for us. That gives a different appearance to the town, and the re- ectable people will notice it first Behind the counter stood the with a cloth. He waited a few sec-| g in the morning that something| owner ,0F, the Red Nightingsle, | ts.on. But of course the ban on the : demonstration will not depend on|onds. You were never sure, with old that. Here, let me show you how many of the Social Democratic work- ers still cling to the illusion that the ‘Comrade’ Police President will still change his mind. Just listen to this.” A SOCIALIST PAPER OBJECTS He took a newspaper from his pocket and unfolding it, began to read: “Is Comrade Zoergiebel quite e fact that others be- will demonstrate on faithful old Party who will not allow away their right to unaware of t comrades of oui anyone to take conscious of the fact that his action means a heavy blow to the forty- old May Day tradition of our Isn’t our comrade concerned a little about lining-up with Bulgaria and Jugo-Slavia—the countries where the white terror reigns? Doesn't Comrade Zoergiebel see any other way than the despotic way...?” His audience attended closely to the reading. Some workers came from the front room and stood in the doorway. Otto now held the| paper up high, so that all could| see it. “and who writes that? The socia | Democratic paper in Plauen!” Fritzi looked round triumphantly. | “There you are, what did I say?”| Otto laughed good-humoredly. “One moment, Fritzi, not quite so | fast. Of course many good workers | belonging to the Social Democratic Party think like that! But we should | be fools to imagine that the ‘Com- | rade Police President’ will take any | notice of them. Damned if he will! ‘These ‘Left’ S.P.D. papers write like that because many of their readers think the ban a dirty trick. Right! but in doing so iey keep the oppo- sition within their own ranks. This is the job of the ‘left’ SP.D. We shall see what these ‘lefts’ will do on Wednesday, whether as ‘good Party comrades,’ they will allow their right to hold demonstrations to be ‘taken away from’ them by their ‘comrades’ or not!” “We'll put Kunstler (Berlin Sec- retary of the Social Democratic Party) in the middle,” a worker call- ed out and laughed. REASON FOR THE BAN “Comrades,” Otto continued, “The point is that at this moment neither the S.P.D. nor the Government can tolerate a mass demonstration of a Communist revolutionary character in the streets. That is the reason for the ban, which will certainly not be lifted.” Even now, Fritzi was not quite convinced; though all the rest agreed with Otto. It surely meant something if a Social Democratic paper could write like that! Fritzi had an inner con- yietion that the ban on the demon- stration would be lifted before May Day. He decided to speak to Com- rade Hermann, the political leader of the Party unit, about it. The unit had a meeting tonight at the Nightingale. Perhaps Hermann Would have something fresh. The door was suddenly pushed open, and a girl breathlessly thrust her way through the crowd. On her gréy coat she wore the badge of the Young Communist League. “Otto...” she shouted from the door. “In the Badstrasse the Nazis , ‘ Father Hubner, whether he intended to continue or not. “Well. Father Hubner,” he replied at last, “that’s not easy to say. Only I think that if blood flows next Wed- nesday, it will suit those gentlemen at the top. Otherwise why should they have imposed the ban?” “I STILL CANNOT BELIEVE” The old man shook his head. “No, no, Willi, I still cannot believe it. I am an old man, and I have cele- brated every May Day for over for. ty years, ever since I became an or- ganized worker I have gone on the streets. Willi, I can remember how in 1890 we demonstrated for the first time on May Day with red carnations and ties here in Berlin, outside near the Landsberger Tor. It was such a scare for them that they went and founded the Federation of Berlin Metal Employers, to protect them- selves against the May Day demon- Strations. These gave the police 3,000 marks for ‘services rendered,’ because | they drew their swords against us,— but it didn’t help them any....” He was silent for a moment as if | | concentrating on a problem. “Willi... do you think...that after Wednes- | day money will be given to the Ber- lin Police President for services rendered, too?” And suddenly Father Hubner spat —a thing he otherwise would never do—spat into the middle of the room. His fleshless, trembling fingers press- ed the handle of the stick until the kunckles were white. “But I won't, Willi, I won't stay at home,” he exclaimed with a strangely altered voice. Then he rose heavily, threw two coins on to the table, and limped out without an- other word. “Christ!” the old chap was in a rage. Black Willi looked after him | in amazement, he had never seen th old fellow like that before. Father Hubner had decided to leave the So- cial Democratic Party and join the Communist Party after the bloody | suppression of the rising in Central Germany in 1921. After all, it was no trifle to have been a member of | a Party for over thirty years, the Party which today provided the man who prohibits the 1st of May cele- brations with police terrorism. Angri- ly he threw the cloth under the counter. ‘Damned pigs...!” he mut- tered, and slouched Bening in order to prepare the small hall for the meeting. (To Be Continued) RALLY EAST SIDE FOR GARDEN MEET NEW YORK.—All local and neigh- borhood protest meetings against German Fascism point to a huge Madison Square Garden demonstra- tion April 5th, at 7 p.m. An open air meeting on Monday, April 3, at 7 p.m., at Rivington and Ludlow Streets, under the auspices of the Roumanian Workers Club of New York, to “protest against the race terror and suppression of che revolutionary working class in Ger- many,” will algo serve to rally the people of the East Side for the Garden meet, the leaflet announces. Conrad Bercovici, noted writer, has been invited by the club to address the meeting. DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, APRIL 38, 1933 MANY RESOLUTIONS DENOUNCE | EXPULSION IN PAINTERS? UNION ay 499 Refuses Posit ively toRe toRecognize Oust- | | r of Weinstock; Other Locals Resist NEW YORK.—Resolutions are coming in from all over the country | Purpose. protesting the attempted expulsion of Louis Weinstock, National Secretary Committee for Unemployment Insurance and Kelief and demanding the re-instatement of the 24 militant rank and filers already | ‘The militant workers were expelled on | y in-@—— -- of the A. F. of L. expelled from the Painters Unior trumped up es because thi curred the red of the A. F. of L. officialdom for their activity in behalf of the unemployed. Local union 499, of which Weinstock is a r, is fighting the decision of Executive Board and the Council to oust him, District Local 777 Demands Reinstatement Local number 777 of Newark, N. J. : electing @ committee of five to} tigate the expulsions voted by a large majority to demand the re- instatement of the expelled members a hearing its committee's report.| Locals 1244 of New Orleans, 92 of Pasadena, 632 of West Philadelphia, | | have adopted protest resolutions and | sent their demands to District. Coun- cil 9 and the General Executive} Board of the International Brother- | | hood of Painters. The resolutions | are being sent out through the De-| fense Committee of Locel 499 of which Weinstock is a member. | Revolt Spreads The movement for the re-instate- | ment of the expelled militants has given impetus the struggle ainst the policies of the reactionary lead- | ers in the Brotherhood. Revolt is preading against their recent high-| | handed action in cutting the death} | benefit without submitting it to a referendum, in postponing the con- vention indefinitely, in failing to sub- mit the resolution of Chicago local | 637 to a referendum, although the resolution was backed by more than | 200 local unions, and many other ac- tions against the interests of the membership. | 499 Resists The General Executive Board and| District Council is centering its drive at present against local 499 for its refusal to recognize the ousters and its generally progressive activity in| behalf of the membership. -Threats | to revoke the charter of the local, to prefer charges against the local | as a whole and terrorization of in- dividual members is part of the cam- paign of the misleaders who are ably | assisted by Bruno Wagner, notorious | business agent of the local and left| wing socialist. Wagner pretends to be a fighter against Hitlerism but is helping the fascist misleaders of the District Council to pave the way for | | the election of Philip Zausner, no- | torious grafter under whose admin- istration more than $30,000 was stolen from the union treasury. The Painters locals are showing a spirit of unity and will continue the fight to obtain the reinstatement of | the expelled militants, for unemploy- ment insurance, exemption of dues | |stamps for the unemployed, and honest rank and file leadership in the unions. SPORTS The Labor Sports Union has issued | an appeal to its members, as well as | to all other sportsmen and sports- | lovers, to protest against Hitler’s sup- | pression of the labor and Jewish | sports movement in Germany by at- tending the big protest meeting in| | Madison Square Garden, Wednesday | night, at 7 p.m. BATTLE ROYAL Labor sport fans will get a treat on April 15, when the office boys of the Labor Sports Union will come up against the seat-warmers of the International Workers Order, Youth | Section headquarters, in a champ- fonship slow-motioz basketball game jat a joint affair of the two organi-| | zations at Stuyvesant High School. | Such leading lights as Si Gerson, | George Walsh, and “Muggsy” Scheier, | will defend the athletic honor of the LS.U. functionaries; while Dave | Green, Sam Pevzner, and Joe Dash- | man, will be among the victims of the I.W.O. team. of this game, some real basketball players of both organizations will face each other in an All-Star game between the L.S.U. and I.W.O. FORM BASEBALL LEAGUES Entry blanks for junior baseball teams have been issued by the Junior Department of the L.S.U. The blanks call for the formation of an independent junior league, which will | be run by the teams in it. The age requirement is 16 years and under, Several sections of the city, parti- |cularly Brownsville and Bronx, re-| |port that they are about ready to| form senior baseball leagues. Teams | | wishing to enter should get in touch with the L.S.U. office, 813 Broadway. Stage and Screen | “RIVALS” NEW SOVIET FILM OPENS AT ACME TUESDAY The Acme Theatre, beginning Tues- day, will present a new Soviet pro- duction “Rivals,” for a week’s engage- iment. This is the American pre- | miere of the latest Amkino film. “Rivals” tells a story of the Soviets’ | struggle against superstition and re- action, The picture combines the | qualities of a charming love story | with a detailed insight to the cultur- | al and social advancement in the | | Soviet Union. Here is a film that is | | unusual, the acting and settings ex- | traordinary, and the photography of | the type that are noted in the Soviet productions. “Rivals” was directed by A. Dmitriev from a scenario by |G. E. Grebner. The cast includes many noted Soviet stage and screen artists, headed by K. I. Chugonov, Gleb Kuznetzov, N. V. Furnasoy, A. I. Gromov and O. G. Lenskaya. The Jefferson Theatre is now show- ing Eddie Cantor in his new film, “The Kid From Spain,” and “Rome xpress” with Esther Ralston and Conrad Veidt. Beginning Wednesday | | the screen program Will have two fea- tures, George Arliss in “The King’s | | Vacation” and “Whistling In The | Dark,” with Ernest Truex and Una | | Merkel. stein’s famous motion picture, “Po- temkin,” with a prologue and an epi- logue in English, is now in its New York premiere at the Cameo Theatre. | The full version of the massacre | scene will be shown for the first time | lige the new version. HER TIN SOLDIER” COMING TO PLAYHOUSE WEDNESDAY William A. Brady, | with Frederick Rath will present Rath’s new comedy, “Her Tin Sol- dier,” at the Playhouse Wednesday evening. Harry Ellerbe, seen earlier in the season in “The Mad Hopes,”, will play the “Tin Soldier.” GANGSTERS AND ARRESTS DON’T STOP CARPENTERS NEW YORK.—Despite the threat of an injunction, gangster terror and arrests, the carpenters strike at the Dry Cold Refrigerator Company, 83 Meserole Street, Brooklyn. Four union members were arrested and are held under $1,000 bail on a ‘conspiracy’ charge. Mass picketing is the workers’ answer to the gang- }sters and police, In order to relieve the monotony | A sound version of Sergei Risen- | in jassociation | Injunction Fight Comes to a Head ‘Demonstrate. Tuesday | at Foltis-Fischer NEW YORK. ay, anti-injunction demonstration Tuesday, April 4th, 12) noon in front of the Foltis-Fischer Cafeteria, 34th Stret between 7th and 8th Avenue is being organized | by the Provisional Committee for Struggle Against Injunctions. This demonstration will be against | the pending Foltis-Fischer injunction. The Trade Union Unity Council, the Food Workers Industrial Union, the Needle Trades Workers Industrial | Union, the Shoe Workers Industrial Union, the Unemployed Councils are | mobilizing their membership for the| demonstration. The Provisional Committee urges all workers and workers organizations to send protest telegrams against the injunction to Judge Philip J. McCook, Supreme Court, New York County, New York. Bakery Workers Win Strikes ; Fight Court NEW YORK, March 30.—The | Trubia Bakery, 694 9th Ave. has set- tled with the Bakery Workers Indus- trial Union after a four-day strike, recognizing the shop committee and the union and guaranteeing the union scale and conditions. The Pellegrine Shop at 257 W. 19th St. New York, when faced with the possibility of an immediate strike | | signed the contract with the Bakery Workers Industrial Union for the union scale and hours and union and shop committee recognition, The DiCarlo Bakery, Long Island City, has been granted an injunction against the strike pickets and the union in an effort to stop the fight to reinstate the two fired workers for their membership in the union, After eleven days of militant picket- ing, under the leadership of |the Bakery Workers Industrial Union, the workers of the Aurora Bakery, 2202 37th Avenue, Long Island City, won a settlement from the boss which guarantees union scale and hours, and recognizes the, shop committee and the union. LABOR UNION MEETINGS ALTERATION PAINTHRS ATTENTION! You are urgently requested to attend « SPECIAL MEMBERSH! iG of your [local to be held tonight at 8p. m. at the headquarters of your local. | | } | BROOKLYN For Brownsville Proletarians SOKAL CAFETERIA 1689 PITKIN AVENUE | WORKERS—EAT AT THE Parkway Cafeteria 1638 PITKIN AVENUE | seas Hopkinson Ave. Brooklyn. N. ¥ GARMENT DISTRICT Garment ypleces Workers onize Navarr Cafeteria 333 Tth AVENUE | Corner 28th St. | PATRONIZE SEVERN’'S CAFETERIA 7th Avenue at 30th St. Best Food at Workers Prices \ansnetentininndthchtnanss sana for GARMENT DISTRICT COMRADES Grand Opera Hand Laundry 902 EIGHTH AVENUE, Near 25th, CLASSIFIED | FURNISHED ROOM FOR RENT— ood for one or two—kitehen privilege. Instructions to Party Members; Anti-Nazi Meets SECTION 1 All members of Section to appear | at Section Headquarters, Monday, be- | tween 5 and 8 p. m. Very important. | Rallies on Tuesday 9 p. m. for this| All members of Section 1| must attend their unit meetings 7 p. m. sharp. Open Air Meetings Tuesday 9 7. M. 10th St and and Ave. 7th St. and Avenue A. Rutgers Square Monroe and Jackson. Bieecher and Thompson, Delancey and Ludlow. TO ALL UNITS OF SECTION 2 All units of Section 2 are instructed by the Section Committee to hold their meetings at 6:30 this Tuesday instead of their regular time. Unit meetings to be adjourned in time for all units and the entire membership to mobilize for the fol- lowing central section preparatory demonstrations: All mass organizations in Section 2 are requested by their central bodies | to participate in these demonstra- tions in full force. | Irving Pisce & 14th St. Units 1 and % | 15th St. and Ave. A. Units 5 and 7. Units 9 and 11. nits 13-15 and 17. Unite 2 and 4. 26th St. and @th Ave. Units 6 and dist St. and Sth Ave. Units 10 and 12. Columbus Circle. Unit 14. eth St. and West End Ave. Units 2-16, SECTION 4 | Open Air Meetings—Mon: Yorkville—ssth and Lexington: and First Ave. Lower Harlem—110th and Sth Avenue; 128th and Sth Avenue; 126 and Lenox. and Lenox. | noon 126 and Lenox.) Wednesday 4 p. m, meetings 79h and Pirst. Tand and First. 86th and Lexington. From Hungarian Workers Home, march | around Yorkville to séth and Lexington | subway, SECTION 5 Monday—Open air on unit scale. Tuesdey—Unit Preliminary open March to Wilkins and Intervie. 16ist and Prospect. Ward and Westchester. 199th St. and St. Anne. A7oth and Walton. Washington Heighis. SECTION 6 Parade will start on Tuesday, April 4th at 9 o'clock from ‘Tompkins’ and Har | St. Hart to Sumner Ave. to Broadw: Graham Ave. to Grand St. to Union Ave. to South and St. to Roebling St to south 4th St. ending with central rally at Grand St. Extension. Open Air Meetings Tompkins and Hart 6t. Graham and Varet St. Grand and Union Ave. Union and South and 8. Roebling and South srd Bt. 6) Grand St Extension. And one meeting in the German territory, | which will not participate in the parade. SECTION 7 ¥ ‘79th St. al ‘Tuesday Noon—Boro Hall—open sir rally. | Membership to report a: 78 Myrtle Ave. 11:30 sharp. Wednesday—An open air rally at Boro Hall, 12 noon, to be preceded by a march from President and Columbia. Comrades to report to 240 Columbia Bt. at 11 a. m. sharp. SECTION 8 Monda\ oe Stone and Pitkin; Hérsel and Pitkin; Hopkinson and Pitkin. Teesday Torohlight parade. Starts with mass mesting on Hopkinson and Pitkin. A sp cial truck with loud speaker ar: Parade will march along Pitkin to nies: Along Stone to. Sutter Ave. Along Sutter to Williams Ave. CHURCH MEMBERS BOO OWN PRIEST CLEVELAND, April 2—Some 2,000 workers, mostly parishoners of St. Theodosius Orthodox Russian church assembled in Koteryes’ Hall Friday to hear a debate between Rev. Kapadusdze and the éditor of the Tribuna Robotnitcza on the tecogni- tion of the Soviet Union, voted en- thusiastically for recognition, with but one dissenting vote. Booed down by his own parishon- ers for his attacks on the Soviet Union, the priest fled in rage from the hall with his cossack guard. A direct appeal to the parishoners to join with the Communists in a united front struggle against hunger, imperialist war and for the defense of the Soviet Union was thunder- ously applauded. The Cleveland press carried a half column report on the debate, admit ting correctly that the resolution for recognition was adopted with but one dissenting vote. All Comrades Meet at the NEW HEALTH CENTER CAFETERIA 19TH ST., WORKERS’ So R. CENTER Fresh Food—Proletarian Prices 44 omraaes Meet ai BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant Sie Claremort Parkway Bron DOWNTOWN Comrades meet at STARLIGHT RESTAURANT 117 East 15th Street Bet. Union Square and Irving Place —HOME COOKING —COMRADELY ATMOSPHERE Management: A. Jurich from Pittsburgh Tomkins Sa. 8-054 John’s Restaurant SPROIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere whe all eadic meet 302 E. 1th St. New York ———— JADE MOUNTAIN American & Chinese Restaurant 197 SECOND AVENUE Bet, 12 & 13 Welcome to Our Comrades _——_—_—_—$$—_$_——————————————— nd Workers Welcome at Ratner’s Cafeteria 115 Second Avenue | | portant role as an organ of the Com- | | | It has helped build the unions of the ‘to | Working class in the struggle against | Anti-Fascist. Demonstration Saturday, PREPARE TO JAM GARDEN IN ANTI-NAZI MEET WEDNESDAY; TO ECHO THRU WORLD ‘Revolutionary Organizations sip TE | Endorsements; Workers quarters in Germany. Communist Pa The Central Committee of the Communist Party has issued a state- ment on the llth Anniversary of the Morning Freiheit, its organ ia the Yiddish language. The state- ment follows in part: “During the eleven years of its ex- istence, the Morning Freheit has shown itself to be an instrument of class struggle. In all the struggles of the working class, especially in | the struggles of the Jewish workers, | the Morning Fretheit played an im- munist Party. “The Morning Freiheit has helped build mass organizations to which thousands of Jewish workers belong. Trade Union Unity League, the Inter- national Workers Order and many other organizations. The Morning Freiheit has helped build the mess cultural organizations that prepare the workers for their struggles and heip them in ail their activities. “The Morning Freiheit is one of the strongest weapons in the hands |of the Communist Party and the all forms of chauvinism and nation- Freiheit 11th Anniversary ity Greets nd alism. It is carrying on a ceaseless Struggle against the Zionist .move- ment and its ideology, and against Jewish nationalism, no matter what mask it may assume. At the present time the Morning Freiheit is tear- ing off the mask from the face of the Jewish bourgeoisie and its social reformist allies, who have answered the fascist terror in Germany with a “protesi movement against the | attacks on Jews alone, who have} separated the movement against | pogroms from a general test 2c- | tion against the whole system of fas- | cism, and have in this way weakened | the effectiveness of the protest | against the anti-Semitic outrages. | “The Morning Freiheit has cease- | lessly and effectively struggled against the influence of social reformism, | which is being spread by one of the | leading agencies of the Second In- | ternational—the Forward. The Morn- | ing Freiheit has helped spread among the workers of Am concerning the achievements of the | October Revolution and of mien, in| construction in the Soviet Union, in which the Jewish masses interested.” are deeply | NEW YORK.—One cop said to an- other, as they looked at the Youth “They're bringing them up young, ain’t they.” He was regretting that these young workers and students are developing into fighters for the working clos. But further along the way, as the youth paraded through the East Thousands Attend I. L. D. Seottsboro- | Mooney Meetings) NEW YORK.—Thousands of work- | ers attending a series of mass dem- onstrations held by the New York District International Labor Defense throughout Greater New York on Saturday enthusiastically cheered | speakers who called on all workers | to fight for the release of the nine framed Scottsboro Boys, of Tom Mooney, Sam _ Weinstein, Angelo Herndon and all class war prisoners. The Hitler terror regime was de-| nounced. | The demonstrations were held in| Harlem, in Manhattan, at Columbus | Circle, at Borough Hall in Brooklyn, Organizations Partici- | pating in Raising Funds for the Daily, cWorker a YONKERS, N. Y. } CONCERT & DANCE Westchester Workers’ Center 27 HUDSON STREET SATURDAY, APRIL 8, AT 8 P. M. Good Program—Good Music Admission 25¢ —SSSSSS=————| Ten Days That Shook the World! China Express! Struggle for Bread! Ete. Ete. Ete. OLASSICS OF THE soviET MoviEs— WORKERS’ FILMS yn can now show nominal cost. Information and Arrangements at | District Daily Worker Office 35 EB. 12TH STREET DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 Bristol Street (Ret. Pitkin & Sutter Aves.) B’kiyp PHONE: DIOKENS 2-2012 Office mM ¢ R10 AM, If, 6-8 PASS, Any org them tatern’) Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE th FLOOR AD Wort Bone Under Personas Care 4 PR JOSEPNEOS mes «.... Lenaes not included COHEN'S 117 Orchard St. They’re Bringing Them Up Young: ao Worker's View and ¢ Cop's View | Side, two workers stood watching. One, about 50, was talking, his face animated and his eyes glowing with | excited pleasure: “Ain't it wonderful, all of them young fellows for the working peo- | ple. They’re the ones that count, Joe; their young heads ain't so | poisoned by the rich big shots. ‘They've got plenty pep in them, too. I'm sure glad to see them gtowing up that way!” Along about the same time a leaf- | let was being handed out telling of | the gigantic anti-fascist meeting to | be held in Madison Square Garden, | April 5th. The two workers got leaf- | International Relief Calls for United Relief Drive to Aid the Victims of German Fascist Terror NEW YORK.—Revolutionary organizations throughout New York are mobilizing their forces, members, sympathizers and unorganized workers, to jam every corner of the huge Madison Square Garden, at 49th Street and Eighth Avenue, Wednesday night, in a protest against fascist terror and pogroms that will echo through the chambers of the fascist head- The City Committee of the Greater New York Unemployed Councils en- dorse the mass demonstration of the New York toilers against fascism and the barbarous pogrom campaign against the Jewish people. The strug- gle against fascism is part of the fight against hunger, for the right to live. The fascist terror and pogroms against the Jewish masses is the capitalist method of crushing, the world over, the struggle against hun- ger, of paralyzing the fight for ade- auate relief and unemployment and social insurance at the expense of the rich and the government. We call upon all Block Commit- | tecz, all Unemployed Councils, upon the masses of unemployed workers of New York to raliy to the Madison Square Garden demonstration Wed- nesday night. Fight the Roosevelt hunger miitarizetion and forced labor program, Join the united fight against fascism and pogroms. Sup- port the German work'ng class! CARL WINTER, Secretary. The Workers International Relief endorsement of Madison Square meet calling upon all members, friends and pathizers to come en-mass' to edison Square Garden on Wednes- day evening, is issued together with a call for a united relief campeign to aid victims of German f: . The relief campaign call is di- rected to “American [Federation of | Labor Unions, the Socialist - Party, the Trade Union Unity League, the for Progressive Laber Action” and other organizations including “ail German, Jewish . women and youth” groups. Other endorsements received in- | clude the Shoe and Leather Workers | Industrial Union. The Needle Trades Workers Indus- trial Union’s call to all needle unions and unorganized workers reads in part: “Wednesday's meeting will express | the protest and indignation of the | workers against fascism in Germai | against every manifestation of fi |cism in the United States and every- where it shows its ugly head. Wed- | nesday night’s meeting will be a clar- |ion call to the working-class, to ail | the enemies of fascism to rally their | forces for one united struggle against fascism in Germany, against the per- secution of the workers in the United States, against the lynching and dis- | crimination of Negro workers, against | lets, they looked at them, and the one} misery and\ unemployment, for the who had been speaking said, “I'm | freedom of the nine Scottsboro boys going there, Joe; I'd like to do a little | who have been framed up by the holler'n’ about this stuff in Germany | same dark forces that are responsible myself. How about you, you going?” ! for fascism in Germany.” AMUSE MENTS “GREATEST PICTU ARMORED CRUISER with original scenes of the famous Odessa Massacre never shown before! RE EVER MADE” _| said Theodore Dreiser, Douglas Fairbanks, George Jean Nathan, and Emil Jannings New Version!—In Sound! S. M. EISENSTEIN’ Cy “Potemkin’ PROLOGUE AND EPILOGUE IN ENGLISH— ENGLISH TITLES : CAME WORLD - ACCLAIMED MASTERPIECE BROADWAY & 424 STREET | Now! BEGINNING TOMORROW! American Premiere NEW SOVIET ROMANCE TUVALS” ENGLISH TITLES— AN OUTSTANDING SOVIET FILM Romance—Extraordinary Photography— Acting and Settings Unusual Today—Lest Times—RENE CLAIR'S “A NOUS LA LIBERTE” ‘| womnexs Acme Theatre UMTH ST. AND UNION SQUARE Opening Monday, April 10 John Krimsky and Gifford Cochran 1 present {| The “3-Penny Opera” “REVOLUTIONIZED is the spirit of this classic satirical com- edy with music, suggesting in its vital-| | Sty and timely viewpoint 20TH CENTURY RUSSIA” ‘The up-to-date note is rounded out by Cleon Throckmerton’s sottings, Radical, Vital, Fiery EMPIRE THEATRE, Broadway & 40th St.| | Evenings 6:30. Mets. Wed. & Sat., 2:20 6 MADISON SQ. GARDEN DAILY—2 & 8 P.M. i ATURDAY next Si nares URBAY Ris BARNUM ciRCUS ‘This Year Commemorating RINGLING BROTHERS’ hevanins es thon with 1000 AMAZING, NEW, We TEATURES..-includiog THE DURBAR, Most Sublime SPECTACLE of All Ages BEATTY Battling 40 New LIONS and TIGERS 800 Arenic Stars— 100 Clowns—700 Horses 50 Elephants— 1009 Menagerie Animals— ‘New International Congress of FREAKS. ‘Tickets Admitting to Everything ine A, red $2052.50) 9000 formant i Ghitacon wader 22 Hall Brow Breer A fe SHEETS WOW at Garcons Gtabel Brow: & Biencles 8X0 JEFFERSON 48 8. 4 INOW EDDIE CANTOR in ‘THE KID FROM SPAIN’ Added Feature: “ROME EXPRESS” with ESTRER RALSTON snd CONRAD VEIDT FRANCIS LEDERER & DOROTRY GISH in AUTUMN CROCUS ‘The New York and London Success Tickets from 5c. up. Now on Sats. MOROSOO THEATRE, 45th St. W. of Bw: Eves. #140, Mots, Wed, Thars, & Sat. REGISTER Principles of Cormunism Political Reonomy Marxicm-Leninism Negro Probiems Colonial Problems Trade Union Strategy Youth Froblems Olagses fill up quickly. Don’t wait ti ment. Register right now! jamen ft Off Delancey 36 E. 1th, St, Apt. 2, Watk op, With eomrades, Food Workers Indastrial Union. Adi Phone ALgoi NOW! WORKERS SCHOOL CLASSES IN Pinvere History of the American Labor History of the Ressien Revolution Enviteh-Rusoton Workers School, 35 East 12th Street, 3rd Floor SPRING TERM STARTS APRIL 17th Ore Ai the WY ors Theatre Movertent ill the last week, Avoid disappoint+ Get now descriptive booklet the mquin 4-1199 ~< ee & tl $ iv }

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