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Page Twe DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, APRIL 14, 1933 Food Workers Union BARRICADES) IN BERLIN BY KLAWS MEMARANTEZ ILLUSTRATED BY WALTER OMIRT THE STORY 8O FAR: district i store on the street, is a police spy. The workers of the proletarian Wedding Berlin are preparing to demonstrate May Day, the ban issued by the socialist police chief, Zoergiebel. the worker, Kart Zimmerman, an active member of the Koeslinerstrasse unit of the Communist Party, and Paul Werner, another member of the unit, discover that Petrowski, a man who has opened an ice cream I Printed by Special Permis Celebration Tonight NEW YORK.—The Food Worke' ndustrial Union will celebrate ; Third Anniversary with a concert ion of INTERNATIONAL and ball on Friday, April 14th, PUBLISHERS, 381 Four im Gardens, 506 W. 5and St = . Avoess, Nev. Yor City of this Third boro Verdict 5 = e used for the eee Ad Workers are urged to fficial organ, A demonstration under the aus- ; « : WORKER pices of the Provisional Committee ead this book and spread FOOD. WORKED it among their friends. 1929, despite Anna, wife of | ft severely, Due to t Consulate, 17 Battery Place, in pro-| the organization has b ¢ the imprisonment of the al inc on r tarian leaders, Vivo and front of stores and and to demand guarantees icketing constantl: the for them. pi bs Paul gets Kurt and together they go to the home of Hermann, the political leader of the unit, eee WN the corner of the little room, nesr DOLICE-STATION NINETY-FIVE the window, Hermann had built out of boxes a kind of bookcase. The) center shelf was lined with red paper nd here stood a small bust of Le- n. This was, so to speak, the very dest nin corner” of the Red e bust there were two lets, mostly party re- pamp eakers’ notes and a number arxian scientific books. Jack “John Barleycorn” there. The condi t they were no the typical bookshelf of ler who, as a worker, books but th i spent here nen lamp study the lus Value,” “Cap- “Post-War Im- “Without @ revo- revolutionary I theory—no ‘aph of ¥ an old fr use dto ca table ther W pa doc y often t unit paper s used to call Quite out undings: of ging here h he machine. ck in Petrowski’s shop. their conversation The black scoun- Hermann stood up without saying ent to the window and of a window—a spy in the all course that was to be expected, but the news came somewhat sud- na is stil and listening He Standing at the door said Paul behind him. e turned round, his plan was made. “Kurt, you send two young Com- munis om over the road into the shop should sit down there, as one of them, He They're not to leave has gone. But of the dick course their behavior must not be until obvious. If someone sits in the shop, they can’t continue their conversa- tion. and the fellow will go. Fritz is to look at him carefully. It would be good if one of you had a thorough look at the dick in the street in order | that we know him in future, But carefu}, comreies, the swine must not realize that we have found them out. That's that. I shall go across to old Lederer in number 20, doesn’t he wo: telephones at ‘Mix and Genest?’” “He’s been there for eleven years.” “Don't you think the old man is reliable? He's not 2 party member— | but——” | “TO DEAL WITH THE PHO! Kurt looked at Hermann in sur- prise: “What do you want that old fellow for?” “Man, what do you think? To deal , With the ‘phone, of course!” Her- mann replied iow quick. More this evening. First ‘ive out the dick. But, Paul, he’s not to be touched. Don’t make a mess of the thing!” “Of course not— Hermann, that’s out of the question. Always keep cool!” Paul had regained complete con- trol over himself. His pain had vanished, But he was glad they had the scoundrel. When the three reached the street, Anna was already outside. }men were already arriving | guard moments into the{ | voice of an officer. The men at once | Clicked their heels. |command of the special reserves — | Captain von Malzahn, She was | on her way to Hermann. The police | spy had’ just gone. Hermann looked disappointed. “Now F was some 500 yards from Koes- linstrasse. Service on this beat was no soft job. Disciplinary transfers were more frequent than usual, gen- erally because a policeman had mis- managed some emergency and after that was afraid to go home alone. Some of them were sent here as a punishment; and these were not men to make the street service of the elder policemen any easier. Espe- th when suddenly a small boy |i about six years old came ranning al ally strong men known for their fighting exploits were drafted into he a whenever disturbances were 8 ected. On Monday morning, while it was ds still and k, a truck with straw s the Folt 0 at Workers’ Bookshop. at 8:30 sharp. can MAN PASCISM BY FRED BIEDENKAPP to- night at 8:30 p.m who are going to the freshments st 1904 So, Blvd, man &t., m. Admissio -B, Auspices Unit 19. tonight at 11 W Fraternal Movement in America. Workers’ Club, 2075 Clinton Ave., tonight in_the Soviet Union.” Every Income goes for Morning Frei! W. I. Union, of Solidarity in Support of the Cuban x will be held on Saturday g at 11 o'clock at the Cuban gularly in -Fischer st n organ ras de! nd Ordoqui, arrested several weegs ago, were taken at midnight from their prison cells by the Ma- chado agents and their whereabouts are now unknown. The demonstra- tion is supported by the Communist, an injunction WHAT'S ON 'riday— PROTEST CUBA'S ARREST OF TWO LEADERS AT CONSULATE TOMORROW « Cuban Workers Were First to Protest Scotts- |Call Conference At | Columbia On Negro ‘EXAMINATION OF | j i Student Problems a ARLEM CHILDREN. Eye NEW YORK,-—The Conference “i EXPOSES MISERY. hikan Nogro Student Problems, which will be held at Columbia University on NEW YORK.—Over 200 children and 100 parents, most of them Ne- April 15, 16 and 17, marks the first | roes, attended a Children’s Party| Internationally attempt to solve the many problems, confronting Negro students. |Party and the Young Communist League, the Anti-Imperialist League, Tae National Student League ini-| 7, i baci = oR t of the International Labor Defense, ihe] tiated the conference and has made| 2nd Medical Examination in Har-| £ pie and jas made) tem, Lafayette Hall, qn April 8. This effort to arouse student inter-| ott Sac arranged ty the Workers |Marine Workers’ Industrial Union v |and many other working-class organ-| cst so that the broadest body of stu-/ Tnternational Relief, in co-operation | tsbhors |inations.' Cuban workers were the) den on will be represented. The) with the Provisional Committee Cc first to answer the call to demon-| Yesulting resolutions and subsequent) against Child Misery, The medical | strate against the lynch y activities should establish a basis for! examination of the children, ihe 2 |against Haywood Patterson and united action against academic SUP-| was carried on by the doctors and| rial | Smashed the windows of the Ameri-| Pression. | Nurses of the medical units of the! |can Consulate in a militant demon- “The conference should lay the} Workers’ International Relief, dis-| stration. American workers must basis for united action of both Negro} closed the fact that the majority of | join the demonstration in solidarity, and white students to be directed|the children were undernourished with our Cuban comrades to save the! ageinot the administrative bodies; and suffered from the effects of mal- | lives of their proletarian leaders, and and the s economic and polit-| nutrition. |to demand the immediate release of ical forces responsible for suppre cate Jall Cuban. political prisoners. on and retrenchment,” sald Clydo| gxemincd, vi chien conte ne | John L, Spivak ty Richest WL ¥. Rose elso ‘Come at 1 flight up, 50 Program ¥ 30 P.M. DEBATE Youth Federat 30 p.m. Admission ALL MEMBERS OF THE W.LR. BAND port with lyres tonight at 5:30 at 50 E. By NANCY WOODS NEW YORK.—Manhattan Beach, near Coney Island, is one of New for Brie arr -| York's richest seaside resorts and DOWNTOWN Fao ;| residential section. Here, overlcok- MEETING AT LABOR TEMPLE, 212. ©, the ocean, are many pretentious 14th 8t., at 7:30 p.m. Members, please note| homes, beautiful stone walks, gar- changes! Come ei de and fountains. There is the home of Mr. Green, the dress manu- at Spartacus Club, 269|facturer. Next to it, the palatial | mansion of Mr. Brown, the building contractor. Manhattan Beach, like all rich suburbs, has a backyard—a backyard of starvation, misery, disease. Not five minutes walk back of the Beach “| is Sheepshead Bay, the Negro sec- Intimate Life’| tion. The contrast is appalling. At 908 Adee Ave.| Here, thousands of Negro workers, servants of the rich Mr. Green and the richer Mr. Brown, live a segre- LECTURE ON UNITED FRONT AND GER- W. 25th st. (Bronx) FAREWELL PARTY to two members of he East Bronx Branch of the ¥.8.U. Soviet Union for dancing and re: near Free-| tonight at 8:30 p. fay Ist. Red Players, subway sta, 15c, he Workers’ Liber will speak, LECTURE. REGULAR MEETING of Bi ‘anch 521 T.W.O, Mt. Eden Ave. Pliack of national office will lecture on The W.O. pe aac hoe BUILDING WORKERS TO ELECT DELEGATES TO THE MOONEY CONGRESS NEW YORK.—Delegates to the Chicago Free Tom Mooney Congress will be elected at the general mem- LOUIS LOZOLWCK will speak at Tremont t 8:30 om “The New Art in America and PROSPECT WORKERS' CENTER, 1157 jouthern Blvd., will have a lecture tonight United Front. Speaker: Ben Gold. Worker is invited. Come on time (Brooklyn) | ing Construction Workers League for MASS PROTEST MEETING against fas- Sunday, April 16 at 11 a. m. at Iry- ttresses was being unloaded | cism and persecution of Jews at Bath i at the police-station. An hour later | Beach Workers Club, 1818 éth St., tonignt| 8 Plaza Hall, 16th St. and Irving two special detachments to be ate ce Place. The League will also attend heen joes " (UM ON UNEMPLOYMENT —| i body in readiness from 12 noon ar The Way Out—participants: 8; pr data ir oot tle) Cait | These young men were to accompany the local officers on th routine beats in order to get acquainted with the locality. cl my, mittee Youth Club, 407 Rockaway Ave., Brooklyn. tion Ar- YMCA, Unemployed Association, com-|&t the Bronx Coliseum on April 21 on Homeless, Unemployed Coyn-| Where John Mooney, the brother of Carl Winters and ofhers, at Americen| Tom, will be one of the main speak- ers. il, SPORTS MOVEMENT IN THE SOVIET : ived, | UNION, lecture by George Walsh, at the Bass oe with the ee ees Brownsville Youth Center, 105 Thatford| the forty-two-year-old policeman | Ave. Auspices L.8.U. at 8 p.m ia A | Pam. MONSTER CONCERT AND DANCE by th Wuellner went to the window, He) ney TALLENTIRE will speck on Pelham Parkway Workers’ ear lel at vatched his young colleagues some- | Faritign ig im Oe ner viece Bin’ Riz; Hirsch's Mansion, 742 Lydig Ave., betwe what curiously as they jumped light- i + Auspices Ella Mey) Cruger and Holland Aves. Paul Ward, ly from the lorries. From one car | several large cases apparently of considerable weight were being car- | ried into the house. Wuellner took small notice of these, for the first in the room upstairs. There were young, healthy faces bearing signs of | a certain nervous tension similar to «i a The officer in|! @ compara- tively young man, in a well-tailored, (To Be Continued) ian Workers? Branch, LL.D. Recognition F.8.U. topic. 4s impossible OLUTION IN SOVIET UNION at 2006 70th Bt. Refreshments | der auspi dramatic tenor of the Royal Opers Co., and Paul Farber, famous baritone, will ap- : | pear on the; program. Admission 95 cents. | CONCERT’ AND DANCE will be given by OPEN AIR MEETING, Pennsylvania Av corner Sul Altred ‘Levy Branch KI. HINSDALE WORKERS’ CLUB, ‘tk aie St. Lecture—H. Bari tsboro case Vangetti Branch, I.U.D., for the tein Defense tonight at 1304 South- jivd., near Freeman St., Bronx, A Sac Weil oy COMRADE SKLARS ON CULTURAL REV- |” Announcement (Jamaica) REMEMBER THE ANNIVERSARY OF THE WORKERS OF JAMAICA. Protest meeting TREMONT WORKERS’ CLUB, 2078 Clin- i | agains Pat-| ton % 4 that Wuellner had often noticed dur- | terran, 106-38]| date pen: Coed tine proeriaes. * Benen |ing the war, when fresh reserves | Union Hall St., Jamaice - ber, April 22, |from home were moving into the | o 4 4 geld Carrer Tae te BR ia tte ; ae ster e a front lines at night for the first time. | “ eae ay sult so 3 Workers’ School. Before it's too lete come Front-funk-—it used to be called: Freaky is eae ae peeMenorE: to Room 301, 35 E. i2th St., and register, SUErae Sear of chr biate seats | “Barricades” and ‘folk dances; Negro Quar- | mingles ith a certain’ degree of | tet—spirituals and work-songs. Hot jazz - love of the sensational. bend. Dancing till dawn, American Youth BROOKLYN Federation. 122 Second Ave. ye in ade) ~ — In the corridor rang the incisive door 35¢ OFFICE WORKERS AT ‘und danes, at 323 E. Entertain All income for For Brownsville Proletarians SOKAL CAFETERIA 1689 PITKIN AVENUE AND FAREWELL PARTY, é s Waterfront Long shore ‘Uni | dark uniform—disappeared into the | section a be held tonleht aE Had room of the lieutenant in command. | 410 W. 19th St. Admission 10c, JOHN REED CLUB, 450 Sixth Ave, Chorus of 35 voices will s! et pa nd dance, 9 p.m, to 2 am. « cy 99 Dancing, refreshments, singing, Subscrip- Hcg OO es ik ton ae, ne amen ss eee i pepe tad | Strike “Law” in Court fo) Pree An NEW YORK.—‘Disorderly conduct” —— charges resumed its place as the main weapon supplied by the capitalist) courts to the landlords of New York | to enable them continuing robbing tenants and breaking their strikes. | The Hilly ruling, “outlawing” rent | strikes received with jubilation by the landlords has met set-back after | set-back due to mass resistance and | the admission from courts under the fire of the lawyers of the New York | District of the International Labor | Defense, that the ruling is not a law! but an opinion. | An example of what is happening | the case of two tenants arrested while picke‘ing at 1566 Washington Ave. and cherged with “conspiracy” | and “intimidating tenants.” The| charges are related to the Hilly Tul- | ing. In court, Monday, before Magis- | trate Walsh at 161 and Bronx Ave, | the charge was changed to “disord. erly conduct” when Drainow the In- | ternational Labor Defense lawyer| challenged the other charges, | SHOE WORKERS PRAISE “DAILY” NEW YORK.—‘During our 12 eek strike against a wage cut, only w no one has seen him properly!” He | one paper in English published news | interrupted Anna who at once start-| of our strike and encouraged us, the | ed to tell what she had heard of | Daily Worker” write the workers of | their conversation, “Later, Anna—Come upstairs with | was led by the Shoe Work me. We meet in half an hour up at my place... I must first go to number 20. Bring Otto along with you, Paul. So long.” He slowly crossed the street. It started to drizzle. The lights from the movie signs were reflected in the wet pavements. Behind the rain- spattered window of the ice-cream shop the blue spiral was whirling. Next morning a carefully hidden sideline leading to the second floor was conhected to the thin telephone | wire which ran down the house to the window of the ice-cream shop. Old Lederer was a fine worker! Tt was a good thing that Paul who lived two floors above Petrowski could only hear the conversations be- tween the police and the iceman. ) Otherwise he might not haye been able to resist the temptation of call- ing: “Hello—the 145th street unit of the Ge n Communist Party speak- ing.—God bless you, Mr. Police Presi- gent” ‘ | Corner 13th Street the Paris Shoe Company. The strike | ers Indus- | trial Union. Twenty-five “Dailys” are | now bought regularly in the shop, | The Italian workers who are in the | majozity buy the Italian Communist paper, L'Unita Operaia. The work- ers have also raised funds for the “Daily.” DOWNTOWN | Dy Hellen Restaurant 116 UNIVERSITY PLACE, N.Y.C. STARTLING REDUCTIONS 254 UNIVERSITY GRILL, Inc, BAR sens il , Telephone STuyvesant | | ADMISSION 50c — Tickets at Food Workers Industrial Union, 4 W. 18th Bt. Between 10th and 11th St. uh | BENEFIT “FOOD WORKER’ Good time prom: | Dancing till dawn, Pitkin Corner Saratoga Aves. CAMP NITGEDAIGET BEACON, N. Y. SPRING SEASON REST and RECREATION SPORT ACTIVITIES RATES: $12.50 per week, inc. tax to members of I. W. O. and Co-operative e with a letter from your organization $10.50 per week Cars Leave Co-op Restaurant, 2700 Bronx Park East Every Morning at 10:30 A. M. $2.15 ROUND TRIP FOR INFORMATION call: Estabrook 8—1400 Greet the Appearance of the HARLEM LIBERATOR Inaugural Ball SATURDAY EVE., APR. 15 gacs & Aaciph ALHAMBRA BALLROOM 126TH STREET AND SEVENTH AVENUE ~-Admission 40 Cents— SUPPORT THE STRUGGLE FOR NEGRO LIBERATION, AGAINST) LYNCHING, JIM-CROWISM, VICTIMIZING OF NEGROES THIRD ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION CONCERT and DANCE Food Workers Industrial Union TONIGHT AT PALM GARDEN 206 W. 52nd STREET 1.—ANDRE CIBULSKI in Russian and English Songs. 2—EUGE) NIGOB, Piano Soloist. 3.~WORKERS’ LABORATORY THEATRE OF W. I. R. ina skit specially written for the Food Workers Industrial Union. 5.—-DANCING. Official Organ of the F.W.LU. Has Typical Southern Jim- | Crow “Back Yard” Section * hett and N. T./ bership meeting called by the Build-' Sea Resort of the National Stu¢e:) diate medical attention and hospital! | Service suffering from rickets, after- °| See |offects of pneumonia, bronchitis, | y wy 7 heart trouble, diseased tonsils, etc.| y ote Day 8 Pay to The investigations as to the con- ck 1 Stri ditions in the homes, showed clearly Back Meta Strike, how the Negro families in Harlem, NEW YORK.—At an enthusiastic particularly the unemployed. meeting of the Silver and Holloware | crowded together in unsani ‘tion of the Steel and Metal Work- | heated flats, and are forced Industrial Union that was held| three and four in a bed, Wednesday, April 12, at 35 E. 19th| and six in one room, second | St.. after hearing a report of the Ex-| There was an enthusiastic response | jonly to that inflicted on the Negroes) °¢utive Board on the Cromwell strike,| on the part of the parents and chile |in the South, It is a typical South- the members unanimously voted to) dren present to the appeal made by} lern Negro section in miniature—un-| give one day's wages for ti ppors | Pauline Rogers of the Workers’ In- painted shacks along muddy, un- ©! the st is ternational Relief for a continuation This manifestation of the feeling|° the splendid work which has been the members shows that the) Started in Harlem and for the o : ganization of parents and children strikers with the support of the whole| S4pization of | f 2 membership are determined to carry | for the establishment of a Workers League. James S. Allen Jacob Burck DAILY WORKER Correspondents at Trial |gated jim-crow existence, Joseph R. Brodsky Chief Attorney, I. L. D. | paved streets, Negro children running jaround ragged, barefoot. Within, the o: Joshua R. Kunitz jhomes are bare of furniture, ex: |for cots on which to lay one’s |bones. There is no electricity. Only) on the strike until all of the de- | and Mecca eae Peder and Secretary National Committee for ferosene lamps. Life here is as prim- mands of the strikers are met by| very tse entre ¥ in We’ Defense of Political Prisoners itive as in the days before the “tech- nical revolution. The bosses of the Cromwell and | In Sheepshead Bay also you find Colonial shops are ready to take back | jall the forces of reformism and reac-| aj) of the strikers without discrimi- jtlon to thwart the work of organ-| nation, but insist upon retaining al izing this most oppressed section of number of scabs. The workers de- jthe American working class. There) oiged to carry on the strike until jis a Negro Democratic Club, which! every scab is fired from the shop. provides a jim-crow “democrac; The Unon calls upon all members | billiard balls and crap games, and ee . | Negro churches which encourage sub- 224 pathizers to help carry O0| pastor stokes a mass testimonial and the bosses. ROSE P. STOKES Sam Don | | HONORED TONITE. Acting Editor, Daily Worker NEW YORK. — In honor of Rose Sender Garlin. > mission and tell of a world hereafter | #5 picketing in front of the shops.) concert will be held tonight at Web-| Chairman * 49 Elizabeth Street, New York, and| ©" Fads) Lanes. ‘Negroes are the equal of thus help bring the strike to a vie=| S22 Hall, 119 W. llth St. at 8:30 | But the backyard, Mr. Green and ‘0tlous conclusion, | Re i » Mr. | Rose Pastor Stokes ii | |Mr. Brown, will not long remain the) p-—=———--——____ Ta ea Ge Te ee nee eihares |quiet place it seems. The Commu-| |I.L.D. MEMBERS TAKE at | |nist Party is on the job. | ‘The Atlantic Ocean carresses the stone walks in front of the palatial |mansions of Mr. Green and Mr. |Brown. But one day, another ocean, |a mighty ocean of Negro and white |masses, united in common fight, will {engulf them and their palatial man- sions, and Sheepshead Bay, the bac! \yard, will move in front. NOTICE! NEW YORK.—All members of |the N. ¥. District ILD are urged to, | report to the District Office, Room |338, 799 Broadway, this Friday, 3 p. m., to help carry through the Seottsdero demonstration in Union Square. revolutionary movement for the last 4 |quarter of a century. She was «ROG KLAND rested under the espionage law dur- 155th Street and Eighth Avenue ing the war and sentenced to 10) j years in jail, but mass pressure forced her release. Amongst the speakers tonight will be Clarence Hathaway, New York District organizer of the Communist | Party, Richard Moore, Joe Brodsky,| | recently returned from Decatur, | — Michael Gold, Rose Wortis and, | j ANNOUNCEMENT Rana Trachtenberg will ad SUND A Y TOMORROW |, Dr. Louis L. Schwartz || ‘The program includes dances by| | a | SURGEON DENTIST 1) eer the Red Dancers. Andre) . | a Cibuliski will ‘evolutionary songs. ‘Sat. April 15, 8:30 pm.) | me wou SE it ure | OM ME rotary mes) A PRI 16th am 1 Union Square (8th Floor) Sth Annual Concert)’ 1 Cron savare st» Poor) | : Stage and Screen \Freiheit Mandolin Orchestra JACOB SCHAEFER, Conductor | Performing for the first time in | | Ainerica |The Soviet Balle-—“RED POPPY” | | | | TOWN HALL 43rd Street—6th and B’way | Tickets—5S5c and 83¢ at box office 7:30 P.M. | ADMISSION 15 CENTS UNEMPLOYED FREE Hospital and Oculist Prescriptions Fitled At One-Half Price NOTED PLAYERS IN “RETURN OF NATHAN BECKER” AT EUROPA “The Return of Nathan Becker,” the first 100 per cent Jewish talkie produced | |in the Soviet Union, now showing at the Europa, offers the American audiences an| opportunity to acquaint themselves with | |eeme of the outstanding artists of stage| and cinema in the Soviet Union. David |Gutman, in the title role, will be recalie | for work in “The New Babylon.” | Micholes, a featured player, has earned the | title “merited artist of the republic.” He | |is the director of the Kamerny Theatre. | as well as the settings, em-| thoroughness of Soviet art.| steeped in Jewish tradition and White Gold Filled Frames. ZYL Shell Frames -__- | Lenses not COHEN’S, 117 First Boor | Tetephone: OReh ee 4 NAME COMMUNITY HOUSE IN MEMORY OF MORRIS LANGER NEW YORK.—A “Morris Langer House” and library in the memory of ‘DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY MPR erg e sit ae deeply rooted in Jewish cul-| leader Organizations Partici- [ie na te Meet coues oP ieee at; | the murdered Meade Union ieeder A : ela 107 Bristol St t |nationel minorities in the Soviet Union,| was decided at @ special meeting o! pating in Raising Funds | | F ISTO) SUES “The Return of Nothan Recker” stands 88! Chatham Colony Association, Floral 0 (Bet. Pitkin & Sutter Aves.) Bikiyn an eloouent exami The misic is based| Fo) “Chatham, New Jersey. “4 for th | PHONE: DICKENS Jen Jewish folk songs. 1, . . or e Office Hours: 8-10 A.M. | MENTS SOVIET RUSSIA SPEAKS! SOMIETS § WORKERS ‘Acme Theatre UTH ST, AND UNION SQUARE "¥0 JEFFERSON "$5 & ‘CRIME of the CENTURY’ | with Jean He Added Feat! RACE with LEO CARRILLO AMUSE John Krimsky & Gifford Cochran present The Continental Success The 3-Penny Opera RADICAL! VITAL! FIERY! A Satiric Comedy with Music by Kurt Weill and Bert Brecht EMPIRE THEATRE—Broadway & 40th St. Evenings, 8:30; Mats. Wed. & Bat., 2:30 ‘Tickets from 50c. up. Now on sale. ‘Daily, Worker —~+—— Pesan OS SR US! ‘SPRING FESTIVAL and | Followers of the Trail Camp | WORKERS’ RATIONAL | Saturday, April 15, at 8 P.M.|| LIVING LIBRARY | TREMONT WORKERS CLUB jationary Doctor 2075 Clinton Ave. | | CONCERT and fitern’l Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE th FLOOR AD Work Done Under Veron care First Jewish Talkie From the U.S.5.R. “THE RETURN OF NATHAN BECKER” | All-Star. Jewish-Russian Cast—Music by Len- | ingrad Syniphony Orchestra—English Titles. |EUROPA “1 W.5 2 5¢t0 1 P.M. ‘Mon to Fri Written and conceived from the modern | and progressive worker's viewpoint and | | in his interest. Scientific and true, but E. th Av. plate at Tain en ut! | CONTINUOUS FROM NOON TO MIDNIGHT \SPAGHETTI PARTY | Ro: coomesctaliom, "No't ie outs | > MADISON 5a. OARDIN | Arranged by Unit 7, Section 15 || How Is Your Stomach? RUN, LITTLE CHILLUN! ab) Zande By HALL JOHN: o yy BALL INSON-—CABT of 1 LYRIC, W. 42 St. Tel. Wis, 7-9477, Eve, 8:40 Prices $0¢ to $2, Mats. WED. & SAT, 2:40) 792 EAST TREMONT AYE. Admission 10 Cents \| 12 - | Address Essays on Food, Indigestion, Constipation NOW includis SUNDAYS 80 packed pares, S ‘Send no stamps!) | | | | | a| | | RATIONAL LIVING, BOX | GLING UM STATION M, NEW YORK. | > ip ROS and 5 Ley | COMRADES WRO RAVE BOUGHT See a aUabte Ste oe | FRANCIS LEDERER * DOROTHY _— in | Suits and OQvercoats—know mer your couraves ar raz || AUTUMN CROCUS Conca: iRcU | {| Prices-—Ali performances $1, $1.50, $2 ITH ST. THEATRE, West 8:20. Mats, Wed., Thurs. and ‘This Year Celebrating The Great RINGLING BROTHERS’ GOLDEN JUBILEE ay. | 2:80 Abe Flamm Ev Cooperative Dining Club See hacbexanens nae LLERTON AVENU | | with 1000 AMAZING NEW Worlg.wi be cena Park Ae | [exo ‘King Kong || ree Tiaecine ve, Sama, | BEATTY Battling 40 New LIOKS and TIGERS Liter aia seta ee | $00 Arenic Stars—190 isthsredeephony 142 Stanton St., Near Norfolk | Manufacturing Their Own Clothing | He wants to Bway & 42 St. 9A. M, to LP. M., 25¢ 50 Eirsbants = 1009 Menagerie Animals — New International _Congress of FREAKS Tickets Admitting to Everything (inel. Seats) #1 te!2.50 9s 9000 Fees, te Full and immediate payment of the war veterans’ adjusted compen. tion certificates; no cui in the bility allowances; no discrimi- nation in hospitalization, “NEEDLEWORKERS APPRECIATE. THE LITTLE WATCH REPAIR SHOP 817 SIXTH AVENUE, AT 28TH STREET | et both old and new friends. FINAL WEEK FOR REGISTRATION SPRING TERM STARTS APRIL 17TH WORKERS SCHOOL CLASSES IN ' Organization Principles Public Speaking Revol J Play-writing for the Workers Theatre History of the American Labor TONIGHT AT 8:30—SHARP! Mass Testimonial and Concert IN HONOR OF ROSE PASTOR STOKES [Webster Hall, 119 East 11th Street Fc a a Principles of Communism Political Economy Marxism-Leninism Negro Problems Colonial Problems | DORSHA in Modern Dances Trade Union Stratery Movement ANDRE CIBULSKI in Russian Revoluliencry Songs Youth Problems re I are Revolution RED DANCERS under direction of Edith Segal SPEAKERS: C. A. HATHAWAY A. TRACHTENBERG RICHARD B. MOORE MICHAEL GOLD A. 8. WALLING LEONARD ABBOTT ROSE WORTIS JOE BRODSKY TICKETS: IN ADVANCE, 25c; AT DOOR, Rie; RESERVED SEATS 50c. Tickets on sale at headquarters of ROSE PASTOR STOKES COMMITTEE, 114 West 2st St. 1 flight up—Chelsea 3-9806; also at Workers’ Bookshop, 50 E. 13th St. HARRY WICKS Avoid disappointment. Register now! Get new descriptive bookiet —. at the Workers School, 35 East 12th Street, 3rd Floor Phone ALgonquin 4-1199