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PAGE TWO N. Y. Stri Trade Union News Rank and File Bring Crowd Court to Canpeater Officials Score Shooting of to Court on Charges 2 Left Leaders vem: YORK Y be: Brotherh crowde: as V ndreds of YORK NEW of the United nters and Join members of Locals Distri policie Wednesday agent of t deratic The writ charges t. troom yesterday h hearing until will be held ETING STOPS BOSS DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, APRIL 17, 1933 NEGRO JANITOR IS MURDERED BY | “TAMMANY POLICE Neighbors Visited by NEW YORK. —1 many T day ached out Wed- Ned an { tive atid died in several hours later. at 113 W. 89it id warned all the children ot block against playing in the cel- : of the building which is being the junk. Its hot e dangerovs to chil ashes at r | News Briefs ‘Daily’ Reporter jit TO ACT ON MUSCLE SHOALS April 16. — The Affairs Committee gs yesterday on the ming operations of lectric and nitrate le Shoals. It is known committee will recommend ate companies be permitted t power from that project, | , in case of w will be able to normou fits from this ven- which will eat up hundreds of sf Ts of government | fact that the Military) nunittee handling the! ion of the bill proves that mmunist charges that it is a part of the plans for strengthening the war machine of the United States | are correct, | | WASHINGTON, t the pro i a here for the.conference with Roosé-| velt preceding the arms and world ance Minister, is to leave Ataly the 25th; Finance Minister T. V. Soong, representing the butcher gov- ernment of Chiang Kai-Shek in China, sails Tuesday for Seattle, and 25 rao Chicago Teachers Demand Their P. ay 000 CHICAGO TEACHERS MARCH _ |R. R. Brotherhood Chiefs Permit Roads to Cut Non-Members splitting Ranks of Workers While Companies Prepare Consolidation Plans for January RAILROAD WORKERS’ NEWS CHICAGO, Ut, April 16.—Abandoning the non-union workers on the Illinois Central, the union chiefs have made a deal with the I. C, C. medi- ator, under which the union employes on this road are not to have pressure applied to give five days a month work without pay. This act of the I. C. C. is hailed as a sweeping victory for organized labor, according to the carrent issue of “Labor” official organ of the Railway Unions. Actaally it ts the same policy of dividing the organized from the unorganised which made it S| and suspensions ag novyated. The céllars are piled high] ENVOYS LEAVE FOR WASH- Possible for the reads to ptit over the lact 10 per cent cut and by means of rank and file members n debris and darkened. W INGTON | whieh they hope to put over an additional 10 per cent throagh negotiations 1 keep a fire going on the c WASHINGTON, April 16—Envoys beginning June 15. | during the day to burn s of many nations are on their wey| * * ie ‘untold ‘ s caused “untol¢ | :oam around the cellar, economic conferences, MacDonald The Knife Is Sharpened for Lay Offs se eB ac ae LYNCHINGS BY POLICE left Saturday on the Berengaria; | Hasiti eae | aves Catiatihs aie Herriot leaves Havre today to repre-| . Railtoad consolidation plans will |volls just as effeientiy. At the same presence of the sy “age t France; Guido Jung, Mussolint’s officiatly" wait until next Januaty,| time the bills will go smoothly according to spokesmen he ad- ministration, "An eme-geney supe | H0UBH Congress without opposition stitute calling for a chief railroad co-|from rail labor leaders. “The bill,” ordinator and fifteen regional as- | according to W. W. Atterbury, Presi- sistants authorized to “bring about | dent of the Pennsylvania Railroad ' PIC j out | Premier Bennett of Canada is soon| ’ | economies and elimination of dupli- | “will give to the coordinator the right FROM RECRUITING SCABS | _ d to arrive. Preparations are being] } cating facilities” is slated to 80| perhaps to modify the Clayton Act > STRONG AS N. N. Y.—Militant pick- | Theodore | completed he State Department through. This is the net result of | (the 8 hour bill), and the Sherman ADER SCABS at the Newport isements re- jobs after ed the situation. ure solid. urged to help picket the p and help win the strike. The p is located at 240 Newport, cor- r Osborn Si EANERS SETTLE 19 SHOPS; STRIKE STILL ON With 19 shops s from igning up. Wage Cuts Increase As Crisis Sharpens NEW YORK.—Wage cuts reached h Jevel for the menth end- y 16th according to sta- iled by the Labor Bureau The wage scales in fa g industries were de- creased by another 11 per cent affecting more than 58,000 workers y, while in non-manufacturing indas- tries the cuts ranged from 8 to 15 per is; cent. In es in the number of child workers between the ages of 16 and 17 and growth of sweatshop con- ditions were also recorded. DR. | 107 Bristol Street | | (Bet. Pitkin & Sotter Aves.) BYkiyp | PRONE: DICKENS 2-s012 | | | Olflee Hours: 6-10 AM. 1-2, 6-8 P.mt.| ||! ty | | | Mospital and Oculist Prescriptions Filled | } At One-Half Price | Frames___ $1.30 ite Geld Filled White Geld ee ZYL Shell Frame: | | COHEN : | First Door Off bard not in 117 Orchard St. Delancey St. 4-452 1] || tatern’l Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT al- JULIUS LITTINSKY | | Who liv |r v covered them as they ng out of the window of the in which he lived, He reached | o pull back the last boy going out. pulled him back and his leg was | jeut by the jagged window. He | scampered away, dropping the bag | of things he had picked up in Chap- | man’s room. | The Callahan boy ran home ant i his mother that Chapman had to attack him. She called the lice and a dick, whose name signi- ficantly has not been given publicity, nt to the house. He claimed to mi | toom | t | rounds of the darkened cellar or was | lying on his bed asleep. At any rate was shot in the spine and died r in the hospital. In the hospital he was hounded in last hours of living by Tammany possibility that they will claim he did so. John Schuck, janitor at 111 W. Y9th St, said that he had known Chapman for two yea: he told a reporter for the Daily Worker. “I| | know him and the trouble he has | had with children from other blocks. | |The children on this block do not | try to go in the building, He has a| white wife 2nd two chiléfen. I don't know where they live. Those boys | come over hére and take curtains | | and things from him. He | wrong in b: ng them out. | CHILDREN HAD | BEEN CAUTIONED | Mrs. Koisavelon, mother of Theo- | jdore, said: “I can’t tell her this (Mrs. | | Callahon) but the boys had no busi- noss over there. My youngster ran | when the janitor caught them there. She is too upset to listen right now.” Negro people and white workers, jers. Tammai the blood of victims in the Harlem | Hospital, sends a Negro district at- torney’s assistant to speak at a mass protest meeting on the verdict of | Alabama’s lynch courts. Up in Herlem, mass anger of the | mounts against the Alabama lynch- | y Hall, dripping with | | to the senate for these “discussions” in an effort to) place the United States at the head) | of world reaction and to maneuver | | for place in the sharpening imperial- ist struggles. . eee MACHADO VASSAL TO WASHING- | TON | HAVANA, Cuba, April 16.—Orestes | Ferrara, secretary of state in the! Machado butcher government, is to) be the Cuban representative in the! conference with Roosevelt prelimin- | ary to the arms and economic con- ference in Europe. rau | . ASSAIL LONG AS GRAFTER zens charges Huey P. (Kingfish) Long, senator from that state with personal dishonesty, corruption, graft! and immorality. It has been referred elections committee. | It is a continuation of the fight be- VOTHS IN MICHIGAN IRON MOUNTAIN, Mich—In the | first municipal election they ever par- ticipated in’ the Communist Party polled 30 pér cent of the total votes here last week. The Communist can- didate for mayor received 1138 votes. * LOS ANGELES.—Theodore Dreiser, famous novelist’ has endorsed the candidacy of Leo Gallagher, weil- known working class lawyer for Judge of Municipal Court 10. Gallagher was nominated by workers’ organiza- tions and is endorsed by the Commu- nist Party. . SANTA BARBARA, Cal.—One hun- dred fifty workers gathered at the police station here, Monday, demand- ing the release of four workers arrest- ed for distributing leaflets advocating “Our TEXAS FASCIST | munism among working men.” ican, With What”? Say: Their Signs CHICAGO, April 16.—Massed in a mile-long parade through the loop | district in the heart of Chicago more than 25,000 teachers and their sup- | porters demonstrated for their pay. More than 14,000 of the teachers have | not been paid. Although expected to teach in the schools many of the | teachers are facing actual hunger because their wages have been stopped | -—-~==<<® by the city officials who have looted | the treasury to pay their own gang of | hoodlums who fill city “political” | jobs. Demand Immediate Action. The teachers demanded immediate relief and in full of their back GROUP FORMED in the demonstration. Many slogans were conspicuously | aried on benners and placards in the procession. One of the banners read: “Our Cemetary of Progress— 19,000 unpaid employees.” Workers’ Struggle AUSTIN, Tex.—A state-wide fi cist organization, with headquar' here, is definitely under way in Aus Its Other banners read: “Buy Ameri- can, that’s hot. Buy American with what?” | “Money for banks—nothing for us.” | Mostly Women Teachers. Most of the paraders were women teachers. Many of them were dressed in old, shabby clothes, secause they | have been unable to buy anything| new for two years. During this time pay cays have been less and less fre- quent, with the result that the city now owes the unpaid teachers more than $30,000,000 in back pay. sponsors are two crooked lawy Harold Shelton and Fleming Waters; and an equally crooked produce broker, Solon Walker. Waters, who is serving as secret- ary, is generally known in this city as @ petty racketee: Last year a beating which he gave his wife mare him notorious in Austin. Before he studied law, he served in the United States Marine Corps and was a/ school-teacher in the territory of Guam, There is good reason to believe that the money of Jim Ferguson, who is governor of Texas in every% S| Communist Party, which has been but name, is behind this fascist ven-| more or less localized in Houston, ture. Ferguson has been financing | must build a militant movement of Waters in his petty rackets, and is| the unemployed which will embrace rod eran isaigelPacar enaa the entire state. In connection with ‘The organization of the fascist the “Southern Worker” must be group coincides with the establish- | wigciy spread in this state. ment of an R. F. C. pea-farm near} Sigs Austin and the establishment of a/ ,, hie military concentration camp for the The Chiesgo Mooney Congrem, tho election of workers’ candidates in the coming local election. unemployed in San Antonio. April 30 to May 2, will be a big step To offset this trend of reaction, the | teward my freedom.”—Tom Mooney.) 10,000 Negroes March in Father Devine Easter Parade, But Raise Scottsboro Signs : A F | the fiery words of the railroad labor Cemetery of Progress”, and “Buy Amer- | e j | Act (anti-trust legislation), as far as union chiefs against the consolida- | competition is concerned . .. It wil! tion program of the large number | of men it would put on the streets. | The substitute is quite acceptable to the railroad financiers and banking interests and will enable them to cut down their operating forces and pay- “The most conservative believe the co-ordinator will be able to save the railroads $100,000,000 annually” ac- cording to J. F. Harris, director of the Southern Pacific and of the New per cent pay cut is made, the com- bined savings will be $210,000,000 an- nually. The managements are ex- railroad coordinater. In order to have everything in shape when he steps into his new office, Eastman started a sweeping inquiry by the LC.C, including the effect of wage cuts. “To what extent have operat- ing expenses been reduced .. . since Jan. 1, 1929?” asks the questionaire, “Explanations of the changes should action “in line with Washington's program” according to a statement in the April 13 N. ¥. Times. All but local freight will be diverted from its Staten Island Terminal to the Jersey City yards of the Jersey Cen- tral Railroad. The B. & O. holds 46 per cent control of the Reading Company which in turn controls the Jersey Central. §o this of course is not “consolidation.” But as far as the 260 men employed in the Ar- lingten yard of the B. & O. (to be discontinued), and the 200 men em- bloyed in its marine department (to be discontinued), the effect, we be- lieve, will be the same. We would like to ask Mr. Whitney and the other officials of the Railway Labor Ex- ecutives Association, what they are going to do about immediate relief enable us to do legally what hereto- fore has been impossible for us to do; that is to say: work our various sérvices so that the public will not suffer, but that the railreads them- selves will prosper.” (emphasis ours). Sees $100,000,000 Saved by Rail Czar pected to ask for a further cut of 10 per ¢ent on June 15 but to offer to arbitrate.” Another $400,000,000 would be saved in the repeal of the Tecapiure clause under which the government was to share in railroad Dyers and Pri ve searched around and “seen wages. Twenty-five high York, v 4 u : Se y igh school bands| York, New Haven & Hartford Rail- | earnings over 6 per cent. This clause ed, their efforts to| scmething moving in the dark.”| WASHINGTON, April 16—A peti-| a marched with the teachers. Many| road. . “M i yt fb . " ty tf T A y | road, lost of the railroad people | has never been enforeed, profits in leinent with shops her Chapman was making his| tion filed by scores of Louisiana citi-) W\7{]] Try To Break Up parents and school children Saavohed think it will be $150,000,000. If a 5| good years all being transferred to surplus and dividends. $603 millions was paid ont im dividends alone in 1930, 1.C.C. Part of Wage Cutting Machine membership meeting will ie tH wash their | tween two sets of grafters for domin- | uurpose of this | 2 siam abel ewe t 5:30 pam, at Irving) 55 iru, ns rare adie sh geet 3 ation ef political affairs in the state, cane ie rents via ‘the “Te oa pay ten ead or eee President Roosevelt will probably npr the poste (a) era or ng Place, - “a : Sec I+ 4 iV “ation” | p “ ick Joseph B. Hastman, interstate | discharge of employes; (b) reduc- . ef cases in Brooklyn this year by | Workmens Cooperative Assocation” progress” that is being held in Chi- Pi Pp 5 rs © questions.| ting him to confess. There is a|C, P, POLLS 30 PER CENT | is to “combat radicalism and com- caso this year. commerce commissioner, as Federal | Ons in salaries and wages or changes in the conditions under which em- ployes work; (c) reductions or eeen- omies in serviee; (4) curtatiment of maintenance” ete, ete. The 1.C.C. has been actively aid- ing the “economies and eliminetion of duplicating facilities’ which are to now be made ‘legal” as will be seen from & brief survey of the capi- talist press. B. & O. Steps Into the Economy Game The B. & O. is taking immediate as well as train crews will feel the immediate effect of this decision which will of course be registered in a favorable balanee sheet to the stock holders of the roads in ques- tion. A pooling agreement between the Northern Pacific, the Great North- em and the Union Pacific was re- vealed by Charles Donnelly, Presi- dent of the Northern Pacific, on April 9, when he announced that by this method the number of trains on one route alone had been reduced from 18 to 9 to 6. It is now planned to petition the 1.0.0. to reduce this number to three, one for each of the three roads, How the Chespeake & Ohio was able to maintain its dividend in 1982 was explained in its arinual report, just issued. — $3,400,000 represents WwoRKERS— | 80 FIFTH AVENUE Chavles Chigesan’s wife aud. two for these hundreds of men? “@eductions” of 10 per cent from the kw C feteria | a children are somewhete in the city For some time the Boston & Maine | pay checks of employes; for fd Parkway Ca | With FLOOR still uninformed of the death of | NEW XORK.—As 10,000 Negroes has been practising “economies” of | each locomotive was 4 per 1638 PITKIN AVENUE AD Work one Unter Usesune Brooklyn, N. ¥ of cnt Dr. C. WEISSMAN ~~ GARMENT DISTRICT Garment Section Workers Patronize DOWNTOWN 333 7th AVENUE | Corner 28th St. SPROIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere meet New York where all | 302 E. 12th St tadients PATRONIZE SEVERN’S CAFETERIA JADE MOUNTAIN American & Chinese Restaurant 7th Avenue at 30th St. 197 SECOND AVENUE Best Food at Workers Prices | | Bet. 12 & 13 | Welcome to Our Comrades CON Laundry and GARMENT era H H AVENUE, Near 25th. | | tor Grand Op Workers Welcome at | their breadwinner. He has been murdered by a thug under the pro- tection of a Tammany detective’s badge as certainly as if a mob had lynched him from a tree. lyn. This Negro boy is facing the charged him with a serious crime, |The press in New York has falsi~ fied the accounts of the | fin hes been proven to hi | for which he is he'd by reliable wit- | nesses; who have not been allowed to | testify. The fight for the Scottsboro boys carries with it the struggle against | these “lawful” lynchers of Tammany Hall. |\ABOR UNION MEETINGS A meeting of the Bea Club will be held on M p.m, at Stuyvesant Ca icians’ Ope jay. April 17, 0 , 142 Second Ave- Edward Griffin is in jail in Brook-| bus in the parade displayed a hh Grif- | e been | Devine away from the scene of the crime Scottsboro Boys. | marched in an Easter Sunday patade |in Harlem yesterday, signs were car- tied backing the Daily Worker and the International Labor Defense struggle for the Scottsboro boys. m5 e sign with the slogan “Save the largest parades of Negro workers in Harlem is to a large extent due to the misconception fostered by Father that prayer can free the The purpose of Father Devine is to turn the rising militancy of the Negro masses into harmless (to the lynchers) religious channels. “The movement serves the ruling class in dividing the Negro and white workers and by taking the workers out of struggle and chaining them to their misery. A Negro worker on the sidewalk remarked as the parade passed, “You Boys by only by fightin’.” urged to attend the meet nearest his|the Bronze Studio, 227 Lenox Ave., | neighborhood. Tomorrow, Tuesday, at 8 p.m., a meeting will be held at 15 W. 126 S:., the Finnish Workers Club, Room B. | ing will be held in apartment 4-W. The same night and time a meeting | On Friday meets have been arranged ‘will be held at St. Luke's Hall, 125 | to be held at the Harlem Branch of |W. 130th St. |the ILD. 77 W. 13ist St, at the both at 8 p.m. Thursday and Friday FOUR HUNDRED GREET , RALLY CHILDREN TO | HARLEM LIBERATOR | SCOTTSBORO FIGHT NEW YORK—Four hundred Har- NEW YORK.—Activities in rally- }lem workers packed the Alhambra ing tens of thousands of workers to dance hall to grect the Harlem Lib- | the fight for the Scottsbero boys con- erator, new revolutionary Negro|tinue here. Tuesday night at 7:30 weekly, and to protest the Scotts- | p.m. in the Harlem Y.M.C.A. on 135th boro lynch verdict. | St. in Rooms © and D there will be Juanita Lewis, Negro sculptress, re- | 2 Conference of Harlem children’s cently returned from the Soviet | leaders for planning action of chil- Union, was present and received anj‘iren in the case. Scoutmasters, ovation when her work of Pushkin, | ‘coutmistresses, Parent-Teachers As- f Russian author was unveiled. | ations and others will be repre- fies Le ed. All those connected with any ‘s movement are invited to c- | “o | chil Thursday at 27 W. 98th St., a meets | the kind now to be authorized by law. This was cisclosed in its an- nual report made public April 5. By using the trackage of the Maine Cen- tral this road was able to “cut the mileage of its track by 6.9 per cent in 1932.” Barly in 1933, the B. & M. Boston & Albany railroad, another 4 per cent cut in mileage. Train { t ° Phone Tomkins So. 6-9554 death chair, too. He is innocent of | Scottsboré Boys.” Wednesday Mcets Harlem Liberator, 2149 Seventh Ave.,| discontinued another 17 miles of| for all railroad avart re @ era || John’s Restaurant any crime. Tammany Hall has| The fact that this was one of tne | YM.G.A,, 180 W. 188th St., and at! all at 8 p.m. track by arrangement with the | through re-organizations or dispatchers, track men, signal men, Plas Workers and the Communist Party WHY TRANSPORT WORKERS SHOULD JOIN Seaman - ngton to demand the freedom | leaders in the Railroad Brotherh other - Ratner § Cafeteria “The Chicago Mooney Congress, nyoned many "ieca conterd 025 bebe Tike Wallen; iat MOONEY-SCOTTSBORO road workers. The marineworkers know tlhe conditions on the ships and MENTION THE D. - 116 Second Avenus April 30 to May 2, will be a big step 3s meetings are already uNGer | wo veood Patterson, received UNITED FRONT MEET! blog ei expected from the A. F. of L, bing bre the marine ynions. D E N I 5 . nf he “f toward my freedom.”—Tom Mooney. in Harlem. All workers aFe | mondous ovation for her so: p : i taxi drivers and all transport workers have their full share of wage \ WHOLESALE RETAIN, FLORIST Food Workers: Tngustsiat Valen, REE TSR eS q | which she said, “Zyen if my is| | The Eugene V. Debs Branch of the; “U's and unemployment, But a struggle against these conditions is developing. Unity of all workers in these industries is growing. In the forefront of these struggles are the members of the Communist Party. They ate to be found side by side with other members in the A. F. of L. fighting against the betrayers. Workers in the transport industries: Join the Communist Pafty, - strengthen this struggle to defeat the bosses and thé enemies within our own ranks. Strengthen the revolutionary party of the working ¢lass which fights for the complete overthrow of the capitalist system and the estab- lishment of the Dictatorship of the Proletariat. > Get in touch with the office nearest you or write directly to: Central Oftice, Box 87—Station D, New York, N. ¥. Transport workers: Write us your opinien of the work'of the Oom- FLORAL DESIGNS A SPECIALTY 101 W. 28th St., New York PHONE: LACKAWANNA 0 | LL.D. hes ervanged a united front mass meeting on Mooney and Scotts- | boro at the Workers Co-operative AMUSEMENTS VY FIRDISOH SO. GARDEN | Colony Auditorium, 2700 Bronx Park 2 Test, tonight at 8 p.m. | wice Daily | s di Ss i Ow | | Richard B. Moore bye be ane of hy kers. Socialist rs | Stage and Screen OR Eiatty: Sobek Et Maan ere o. | electrocuted, I will go on with the ILL.D. because it is fighting the fight of my people.” “The Chicago Mooney Congress, April 30 to May 2, will be a big step | toward my freedom.”—Tom Mooney.| All Comrades Meet at the ————— NEW HEALTH CENTER CAFETERIA Fresh Food—Proletarian Prices 50 FE. 18TH S8T., WORKERS’ CENTER: John Krinsky & Gifford Cochran Present The Continental Suecess | The 3-Penny Opera. A Satiric Comedy ‘with Music by Kurt Weill and Bert Brecht EMPIRE THEATRE, B’way & 40th. Eves. 8:30 Mats. Wed. & Tie | SOVIET RUSSI. | promised to appear. A Negro choir | will entertain. Admission free. “TRE MIKADO” 8T. JAMES TH OPENS AT THI roxtaut OMMUNIST NOMINEE. IN| SPRING TERM STARTS TONIGHT WORKERS SCHOOL CLASSES IN Organization Principles Public Speaking Revolutionary Journalism Play-writing for the Workers Theatre History of the American Labor Movement History of the Russian Revolution English-Russian Principles of Communism Political Economy Marxism-Leninism Negro Problems Colonial Problems Trade Union Strategy Youth Problems SOVIETS CAST ‘ . 160,000,000 LOCALE... One-Sixth ofthe World = STARS... Stolin, Garky, Red Army worxers Acme Theatre 11TH ST. AND UNION SQUARE RUN LITTLE = CHILLUN! By HALL, JOHNSON—CABT of 175 LYRIC, W. 42 St, Te 9477, Eve, 8:40 | Prices 50c to $2. Mats. WED. & SAT., 2:40 | Register Now! at the Avoid disappointment. Some classes still open. First Jewish Talkie From the U.S,3.R. “THE RETURN OF NATHAN BECKER” Workers School, 35 East 12th Street, 3rd Floor Phone ALgonquin 4-1199 ingrad ‘Mon to | | | All-Star Jes | ri h Av. , In CONTINUOUS FROM NOON TO MIDNIGHT | JUNIOR DUBKIN and Mrs, WALLACE REID! and Evelyn Knapp. ‘ Celebration RENCLING with 1000 Amazing World-Wide Attractioas Includisg The BUREA,Colnas|Specraeie ASTOUNDING NEW PEATURE! GIRAFFE «NECK WOMEN from BURKA BEATTY Beitiice 40 Rew Lote and TIGERS = 100 oes cs $8 ESE UE. Seo Beneree of PREAMS ‘Tickets Admicting Ling (incl. Seas) #4 0 2.504 evens £3.00, Ingiading tae EPS HOw at Caccea, Giabel Drow. & Aceasien ‘AUTUMN CROCUS fc: Priees—AN performances $1, 51,30, 46TH 5ST. THEATRE, West of B'way fvgs, 8:30, Mats, Wed., Thurs. and Gat., #K0 JEP PERSON 48 St #|/NOW EDERER & DOROTHY GISH in 3! EATRE Milton Aborn will bt Gilbert and MINNEAPOLIS AIDS IN EVICTION FIGHT MINNEAPOLIE, Minn.--The morn- aft @ United Front Wo:kers’ tion Conference ratified the work- ers’ candidate endorsed by the Come we ‘4 <,, Munist Party in the municipal elec- heads igri whieh also includes Meichaea | tions, Morris Karson, candidate for | Hale, Lora Baxter, Robert Allen and Lea Mayor and 8. K, Davis, candidate 4 Blanch. tion which saved a family of six on night. | Aldrich Avenue N. from beizg put out h Arnold, Loretta | paghns strest, n meee 'BRYAN'S DAUGHTER GETS JOB WASHINGTON, April 16—Mrs. Ruth Bryan Owen, daughter of the late William Jennings Bryan, took e ‘The cact 1s headed by S Shea and Sem Wren. JEFFERSON THEATRE James Cagney and Mary Brian head the cast in “Hard To Handle,” the screen f ture at the Jefferson “Man Ht with Junior Durkin and Mrs. Wallace Reid man in the 8rd Ward, tool | an anti-evietion demonstra- | is on the same program. day the Jefferson will p: “Island of Lost Souls, ton, and “State Trooper” JAMES CAGNEY and MARY BRIAN “HARD TO HANDLE” Added Feature—“MAN HUNT” with with Regis Toomey *| the oath of office today as minister to Denmark. She is the first woman | envoy to be appointed by the United States government munist Party in your territory. Communist Party, U. 8. A. P. O. Box 87, Station D, |New York City: NAME Workers, Join the Party of Your Class! Please send me more information on thé Commynist Party. Mail this to the Central Office, Communist Party, U. $8. Ay P. OQ, Box 87, Station 7, New York City