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My te Vavaaidee dyad Losses eanar BAY, JU 1, 195d DRAMATIC SCENES IN COURT AS TOM MOONEY CHALLENGES ENEMIES Portraits of the he Judge, Jur Lav ers for the Defense and the Prosecution O'BRIEN © (by mail).—The cked with workers, police and stool- from the Red Squad JACK By A. » is a stir. Tom Moo- | handcuffed, into this before a capitalist | ge to answer a framed up murder} has for a few days doffed | and left the smell of} ray San a blue suit. Looks His face shines. It remendous victory trial by the world- : his freedom looks confident. And He so. Behind him stand the 's of the world Mooney sits down between his counsel, Leo Gallagher and Frank P. Walsh. Gallagher, International La- | bor Defense attorney, comes from Los Angeles—home of Red Hynes, Amer-| ica’s legalized gun-thug. For years Gallagher has unflinchingly faced | the white terror in the “City of An- gels.” He has been arrested, viciously | beaten, while heroically struggling for the rights of the workers. He was fired from a law rofessorship be- cause of his act ‘Wiry old fire- brand,” sneers the capitalist press. | Judge Ward Judge Louis H. Ward, perfect sym- bol of frame-up justice. Rotund, ar-| rogant, pompous, suave, speaking in a deliberately modified voice to im- press one with the “dignity” of his court, pretending to be neutral—even friendly to the defendant—yet at ev-| ery critical stage of the proceedings, | quietly and diplomatically stabbing} the defendant in the back. Occasionally he throws his head| back on his chair and gazes vacantly | at the ceiling. | He represents justice—the same} brand that framed Mooney and has} kept him in prison for 17 years after cisco paper. “We want this to be a real trial,” he shouted. “Mooney wants the whole world to know that this is a frame-up—that he was framed by police and district attor- ney of San Francisco.” “Motion de- nied,” said His Honor Mooney Defends Self Tom Mooney chose to defend him- self. The judge “warned” him against | “making a fool of himself.” But Moo- mney made good. He proved that he was not only a militant worker, but a proletarian intellectual. His uni- versity was the class struggle. His dormitory was San Quentin. His study chamber a damp cell. It had been 16 years since Mooney spoke in a courtroom. His thick, black hair had thinned considerable—and j turned grey during these years. But underneath those shaggy eyebrows his eyes flashed the same fire. He stands straight as a die—head erect, shoulders back. His voice is firm and resonant—it breaks once—from pent-up emotions that surged within him. Mooney argues vainiy for the pro- duction of all the evidence against him. “The People” refuses and asks for an instructed verdict. It granted. “Not Guilty” Six men and six women bring: in the verdict “Not Guilty.” It flashed around the world—to inspire’ the workers fighting for his freedom Does Tom Mooney go free? No. An almost unbelievable paradox followed. With the verdiet of “Not | Guilty” ringing in his ears, handcuffs | are clapped on Mooney. The court- room and corridors fill with police. jand is back at San Quentin in less than an hour. But the verdict has gone aroun the world. “Not Guilty.” Organize Department Groups ‘The workers always knew that. But =e | committee which |ers and consumers of the East | stilt this verdict vindicates Mooney in | the case against him crumbled t0/ the eyes of millions who didn’t know | STRIKE WON AT FOOD CAFETERIA NEW YORK— “The at 28th yesterday the St Nevarre Cafeteria located at 7th and Ave. was settled victory and for strial Union This cafeteria wa Local 302 of the placed one counte but had neelected t The Food Workers Indus organized the unskilled workers called them out on strike five ago. At the negotiations were present S.| Kramberg and J. Dallas of the Food| Workers Industrial Union and M. Pincus of Local 302 of the AFL. | The basis of the settlement is as fellows: Reco on of the Food Workers Industrial Union. No dis-| crimination against any workers. In-| creases in waves for all unskilled] ranging from $1 to $4 each weekly.| The counterman’s helper who had also come out on strike will work the same number of hours as the Local 302 counterman. After the settlement conference was completed, the workers got together and elected a shon chairman ill handle all grievances and questions. signed vu AFL and days Communist Partv Calls Workers to Bakers Demonstration Thurs. NEW YORK. — The Bakers Local No. 505 has organized a mass demon- stration on Friday, June 2nd, 12 noon, at 66 Allen St., to mobilize the work- Side to help them win their strike. The Communist Party, Section 1, supports this demonstration and eats | upon all members of the Communist | , all members of workers ire- as the members of the local Trade| a Unions to mobilize their forces for} | this demonstration, |OHIO MEET PLANS RELIEF MARCH JUNE 25 | S| CLEVELAND, 0., May 28.—The | enlarged meeting of the State Action| Homeless Workers in the Heart of New York afi Two of the several hundred homeless workers who were evicted by police two weeks ago from a New York “Rooseveltyille”. They had lived in shacks made of tin, old lumber and oil cloth at East 10th Street, in the shadow of the Wall Street pda toy “Queensboro Voice” A Paper for the Forgotten Man | First Issue of | Weekly Off Press Saturday; To Be Struggle Leader and Organizer By GERTRUDE HAESS 4 Letters from Our Readers Some Improvements Suggested for ‘Daily’ May | 12, 1933 | Dear Comrade Editor: I think that the Daily has im- | proved a hundred per cent in the last | eight months. I especially approve the Joss of hysterics, the “united front” attitude in regular stories | apart from editorials, the improve- ment of union news, and growing | ability to “link issues up” skillfully. The increased sub price makes it a | little harder to scrape together, but if | it will be a step in the direction of| making th> Daily self-supporting, I am glad of it. A few suggestions— Put that italic head (Section of the |C. I) in a different place, or put it | closer to the masthead proper. | think that if the masthead were more |compact—less white space—it would | improve the appearance of the paper. | Put more stories on the front page— | cut out some of those two and three | column heads and put more one-col-| umn ones. | I especially like the change from | “the workers must do so and 50,” | “The working class duty is to do so urge workers, concretely, ific things. and | ally spr —A. Manning. Lauds New Features | in “Daily Worker” Hamtramck, Mich. | Editor, Daily Worker Dear Comrade I am enclosing a money order for | $4 to continue my sub to the Daily. |I think this is the 7th or 6th year that I have been a subscriber. I can- not make it for a year’s subscription as there are no funds for that | amount. Without the Daily, I cannot | think where we would be, it is like an | additional pair of eyes that see all |the news of workers’ struggles and | teaches the lessons to be learned. to articles which Setu- | to do NEGRO MEMBERS OF LEGION FORM DEFENSE CORPS FOR RUBY BATES SPRINGFIELD, Mass., (By Mail),—A remarkable demonstration of solidarity between Negro and white took place here last Sunday. When William Zuckerman, district organizer of the Western New Eng- land district of the International Labor Defense, noted several suspicious- looking individuals in the audience at Library Hall, he told three Negro | members of the American Legion who | were present he was afraid of Ruby openly he would not let his organi- Bates’ safety. Before she left, the|2ation support a Scottsboro meeting three had collected 12 more of their | arranged by the LL.D. comrades from the Legion, all in} With Ruby Bates on tour, and uniferm, who constituted themselves a body guard for Ruby Bates and saw her to her destination after the meet- ing. The Springfield meeting was a suc- cess despite the fact that the use| of a church for the meeting was re- fused the ILD. branch, and that George Gordo, president of the local | National Association for the Ad- |vancement of Colored People sought | to sabotage the: meeting by asserting ‘NEGRO WHO WASN'T THERE HELD FOR RAPE OF GIRL WHO WASN'T TOUCHED BIRMINGHAM, Ala.—Willie Wilson, a you | not had a regular job for two years, He used to work for the Bohemian | Bakery. He is married, but being unemployed, he lived with his mother | and sister, and his wife with her people a few blocks away. On the night of May 2, his wife spent the evening with his mother and a little after 10 o'clock he took her®- home. That same night, Mary Ann | give them his gun but she told them Dolan, a white girl about 16 years old,|he had never owned a gun. ‘They | was walicing with a young man friend | 2lso went to his wife and questioned | near a barbecue stand at 4600 Georgia | her. road. They reported that they were The white man and the 1 cam held up at the point of a gun by ®/to the jail. Wilson was eink bee Negro wearing a dark suit and 4/fore them. He was required to say white cap. They seid the Negro|«stick-emvup’ the reught with the man and attacked | nat wruthe Ike Mie etnen sald, the girl and she ran about 100 feet Wilson was then charged with rape away. They said the Negro ran away " when she screamed. She went to ies will be brought to trial on that charge. Hillman Hospitel but was dismissed after being examin¢éd. She was un- | erected with equal warmth are Mrs. | Janie Patterson, mother of Haywood | Patterson, now under senténce of death for the second time in the Scottsboro case, and Richard B. Moore, field organizer for the In- ternational Labor Defense. Ruby Bates, who has just con- cluded a tour of New England, speaks in Paterson, N. J. on Thursday night, Atlantic City on Friday night, and Jersey City on Saturday night. a young Negro, 26 years old, has The white man and girl said the injured. Negro who attacked them wore dark The following night, May 3, two] Pants and a white cap. Wilson never officers, Moster and Jones, went to|OWned a white cap and wore light striped pants the night of May 3. He left to take his wife home in his shirt sleeves. The couple claimed the Negro attacked them had on a dark coat. Wilson’s house and searched osten- sibly for liquor. He was out and when he returned the officers had left. His mother told him of the search. He spent the night at home }and also the following night. Wilson was not identified by them from among others but was brought dust. before them alone. Is Arrested. On Friday, May 5, while he was | the facts. And it will encourage and| Committee held on Sunday, May 21,| “A Paper for the Forgotten Man”—that is the cubtitle for the “Queens- | stimulate a greater mass struggle for| was attended by over 100 representa-| bero Voice,” the first issue of which comes off the press on Saturday, June 3. I think the present arrangement of In a Hurry having the news from foreign coun- Justice Mooney has been in prison for 11| his freedom. The mighty power of| tives and organizers from all parts of | years. He has been in this court about | hundreds of millions of workers from | the state. an hour. But they want to get it over| San Francisco to Moscow—from New | siderable progress in the preparations with—to hustle him back. The court) York to Bombay will yet force open/ for the People’s Relief March sched- decided that it is taking too long to| the gates of San Quentin—will smash| uled to arrive in Columbus on June examine the jury panel. He takes a| hand to speed it up. He refuses to) call a recess. “We will stay here un- | til jury is selected.” The Jury Where do they get them? A patade of business men, accountants, secre- | taries, professional jurors. Are there | no ill-dressed people in San Fran- cisco? Where are the unemployed,| the Negroes, the Mexicans? Although | the prosecutor knows he will ask for | an instructed verdict, he challenges | anyone remotely resembling a worker —it’s force of habit. “The People” Assistant District Attorney William Murphy represents the Chamber of Commerce, Better Business Bureau, Fieishhacker, Crocker and the other bankers. Thicknecked, with a red, humorless face. Murphy, in the name of “The People” refuses to prose- cute the case because “at this time no evidence is available.” Under pres- sute from Mooney, he finally admits nat the reason no evidence is avail- able is that there never was any. “The People’s Advisor—Charles Goff” Nothing could better illustrate the piracy to keep Mooney in prison y trying to make a farce out of this trial after having failed to prevent it keep from producing in court e exhibits and perjured testi- nony on which they tried to hang Mooney 17 years ago—than the fact that sitting at the counsel table and “advising” the prosecutor, was Cap- tain Charles Goff, one of the origi- nal Mooney frame-up crew. Goff was police sergeant and member of the “Bomb Squad” which worked under Fickert and Swanson—two of the chief frame-up artists. Goff has had a. finger in almost every part of the frame-up pie. He arrested Rena Moo- | ney at the time of the street car strike, shortly before the Prepared- ness Day disaster. He was there when the defendants were booked at the police station; he helped frame wit- nesses and arranged the fake identi- fications of the defendants at the po-/| lice station. Goff is a bridge between the two trials—the original frame-up where they produced the fake evidence and the present trial. Before the selection of a jury com- menced, Gallagher demanded that the court sign an order for “foreign” Witnesses (those outside the county) such as Ed Nolan, Israel Weinberg and others. He also demanded that the prosecutor be requested to pro- duce important documentary evi- dence in his possession. Both denied. Plenty of Money for Frame-ups “The County is broke,” remarked the judge. What hypocrisy! They had | um, the whole frame-up system, There was shown con- 25th. Ellis, Former ‘Daily’ Artist; Is Honored at Moscow Show One-Man Exhibit Highly Praised: Now Staff | Cartoonist for Red Trade Union Paper By WALT CARMON. MOSCOW, USS.R—Fred Ellis, noted American revolutionary car- toonist, for years staff artist of the Daily Worker, was given special honors in the Soviet Union, bégin- ning with the formal opening of his huge one-man exhibition at the Mu- seum of Western Art in Moscow recently, before a large invited audi- ence including artists, critics and writers. The exhibit was opened with She speech of Comrade Eels lies. Hungarian painter and secre- tary of the Inter- national Union of § Revolutionary Artists, under whose —_ auspices this exhibit is held with the co- operation of “Trud” (“Labor”) § “Trud”, related how he first became acquainted with the work of Ellis when, as editor of a Red Army paper at the front, he used Ellis’ cartoons from the American press as a political and agitational medi- “I found these drawings and others later in the pages of the smaller papers wherever we went,” he continued. “So that I was well acquainted with the great American worker-artist before we met per-| sonally to become co-workers on | ‘Trud’.” Among other speakers were Alex Keil, Artists of Germany; Charles Ash- leigh, an editor of the “Moscow Daily News”; Walt Carmon, now as- | sistant editor of “International Lit- | erature”, issued in Moscow; Mendel- sohn, author of the recently pub- S| to the final completed drawing. i of importance in the past year. Dey Dee American subject matter is very Unions, on which Prominent: the Scotesboro case, the Fred Ellis is now ELLIS chain gangs, the hunger marches, staff artist. unemployment and many more as- “ ist.” pects of the American scene are bril- ee Le mane yo of | li@ntly shown. Naturally all cap- secretary of the Revolutionary | | | Fred Ellis received an ovation when | he rose to speak a few modest words of thanks for the honors being be- stowed upon him. The exhibition itself is a striking one. Around a huge drawing of the | Paris Commune, the banner in a bold red, are grouped about 150 cartoons and sketches in black and white, done in crayon, pen, charcoal and dry- brush. All these are the work of the |last year and a half. A feature of the arrangement is a display of work ted | at various stages: from first sketches, through work in progress and down | “American Subjects Prominent”. | One wall of the large central room of the museum where the drawings are hung is covered with sketches and ideas for cartoons. The other three walls are covered with political cartoons on practically every event tions are in Russian. A catalogue of the work on display includes a history of the artist and an estimate of his work both in America and the Soviet Union, Following this, a loose-leaf book of 50 selected drawings will be issued in a huge edition, so arranged as to permit workers’ organizations to hang preferred drawings on their walls. Weis s, Proletarian. |Poet, Seriously Ill; Immediate Aid Urged | TUCSON, Ariz. — Henry George Weiss, proletarian poet and writer, for many years a frequent contribu- It is to become a leader and organizer of the struggles of ali sections of the population in Queensboro (Long Island City, Cotona, Flushing, Jamaica, | Astoria, etc.) all the cities which come under the categery of Roosevelt's | popular phrase, which by now he has ® imself thoroughly forgotten — The Forgotten Man. Who Is The Forgotten Man? Who is the Forgotten Man in| Queensboro? It is the worker in any one of the 1,500 factories and swest- shops of Long Island City, who has been blessed by the Chamber cf Commerce Share-the-Work Plan of wage-cuts and speed-up. The “Voice” will help him organize and fight for | wage-increases and job control. The Forgotten Man is the worker | in the war industries there—in the | Sikor: Airplane Co., the Brewster Rolls Royce Plant, in the metal shops—who is quietly preparing for action to combat war when the til is ripe. The “Voice” will help him in this important activity e will champion. it, f ° the awakened- residents , Who realize the such a weapon in their no longer forgotten. Among active are th munist Pa: Financially, pledges and pledges from iza~ tions, have already guaranteed the appearance of the pet five issues | Organizationally, it based On a| broad editorial committee of those | who live and work and siruggle in Queens. Out of this “General Staff,” will grow the smaller editor: which will be directly respo: the daily work of getting the nage onal per out. The res ibility ane The Fofgotten Man is the unem-| however will be in the hands of the ployed and part+time worker, kicked |--General Staff.” close to t out of his tenement home with his | family into the streets, and kept | there by an organized landlord black- list. The “Voice” will show him the | way to the Unemployed Council, who | will help him save himself from evic- | gles and theughts of the Forzotten Man. We greet and support the} “Queensboro Voice.” A Dance to launch the “Queens boro Voice’ nd greet the first issue tion, | will take place Saturday evening, The Forgotten Man is the Negro,| June 3rd in the North: Demo-| living in condemned shacks, suffering | cratic Association, 3530 103rd Street, from discriminations too crushing to} Corona, L. I. Clarence Hathawa bear. The “Voice” will lead him and District Organ support his struggles, together with Party will speak. All workers, all the whites, for social, political, and | residents, all Forgotten Men and economic equality. Women are invited. Subscription 35 The Forgotten Man is the small | cents. truck farmer in the outlying parts, who supplies the New York market with vegetables and fruits, while his own children go hungry and naked. The “Voice” will show him that he must unite with the city workers for @ joint struggle against trusts and employers. The Forgotten Man is the owner of a small home, who has skimped and saved all his life for it, only to have it taken from him by {ore- closure. The “Voice” will show him the real way to struggle to save it, banded together with the rest of the home owners there. The Forgotten Man is the veteran whose family is starving becawie his compensation has been cut ard his bonus withheld. The “Voice” will help him to organize and fight. The Candidate in the Election Campaign In the coming election campaign, |the “Queensboro Voice” will con- | Stantly explain to all the forgotten men, women and children of Queens, who their real leader is—not the demagogic fusion candidate of the powers-that-be, which the Socialist Party shows signs of intending to Jury Is Chief Issue MONTGOMERY, Ala., Ma: Three major grounds for reversal of the convictions of the five Negro Tal- lapoosa sharecroppers are put forth by the International Labor Defense | in the appea! being made to the Ala- bama Supreme Court. The croppers, now in jail, have been sentenced to terms up to 12 years for defending themselves from attack by deputy sheriffs who killed three members of the Sharecroppers Union and injured several others. The sysiematic exclusion of Ne- gyoes from the jury which tried the Negroes in Dadeville recentiy is the cardinal issue raised by the LL.D, jn demanding a new trial. The appeal also charges that the members of the Com- | er of the Communist | TALLAPOOSA CASE BEING APPEALED Negro Exclusion from | plenty of money to frame Mooney. ished novel, “Much Bread”, and Ter- Gallagher jumped to his feet. “His grey hair bristled,” said a San Fran- Western Art. ARRANGE NATIONAL MOONEY TAG DAYS THRUOUT THE U.S. JUNE 19-25 NEW YORK.—Joining actively with the National Tom Mooney Coun-— cil of Action, the International Labor Defense is mobilizing Negro and | white workers in support of the National Mooney Tag Days, June 19-25, throughout the country. Not only is it the purpose to raise defense funds on those tag days, | but mass pressure is to be intensified everywhere to force the liberation of Tom Mooney and Warren K. Bill- ings. At his recent trial, Mooney was prevented from introducing evid- erce to prove the frame-up against him, Local Tom Mooney Councils are be- ing organized in all parts of the country and arrangements made for returning delegates from the recent Free Tom Mooney Congress to make their reporis before united front mass meetings. The Executive Committee of the National Tom Mooney Council of Action, meeting in New York on May 15, named the following officers: Chairman, Charles Bloma, of the A. F. of L. Conference Board of Molders Union; Alex Frazer, of the Progres- sive Miners of America; Vice-Chair- man: A. J. Muste, of the Conference for Progressive Labor Action; Vice- Chairman: William L. Patterson, of the International Labor Defen: Corresponding Secretary: J. B. Ma thews, of the Fellowship for Reco) ciliation; Organization Seereta: Robert Minor, Communist Party: Publicity Secretary: Frank Palmer, of the Federated Press; Treasurer: Ro- ger Baldwin, of the American Civil Liberties Union il? sp aa) novitz, director of the Museum of tor to the Liberator, New Masses, the | Daily Worker and other working class publications, 1s seriously ill here and in need of immediate aid if his life is to be saved. Readers are urged to send money |for Weiss in cash or postal money | orders, to Edwin Rolfe, 25 W. 16th St., |New York City. ‘Dump 200,000 Gallons of Milk In Sewers In Los Angeles LOS ANGELES, May 28—Five| days after Mothers Day, Los Angeles| mothers had to hold mass meetings to demand immediate action from| authorities on relief for their child- Ten, Although 200,000 gallons of milk every month are poured down the | sewer by the Milk Distributors ASs0- | ciation the supply at units of the relief association has been cut so low that most of them give out no milk at all. é If there is a story, editorial or car- toon you think your fellow-workers would be interested in, cut it out and | Paste it up where they can see it, support on the false program of a “decent administration,” but of the fearless, honest, united front candi- date of the forgotten man, whose every problem and every grievance WHAT’S ON Thursday— BRANCH NO. .500, TWO, regular _meet- ing, 50 E. 13th St. Room 204. 8:30 p.m. ‘Talk by ©. M. Renner, "What I saw in the Soviet Union and Germany. OPEN AIR MEETING. A Tom Mooney Br. ILD, on Union Square, 7:30. Speakers, Paul Miller and others. LECTURE—World Affairs, National Student League, (26th and 17th Bt). Friday— CONCERT -- BENEFIT COMRADE HAR- PET, Freiheit Gesang Ferein, J, Schacter, | Conducting. Pierre Degeyter Trio. (Formerly | Nitgedaiget ‘Trio) in new Soviet. Trio, Pierre | Degeyter Club orchestra. Dancing by WIR |danze band. Adm. 36c—with this notice 25e. 55 W. 19th St. 8 p.m. LECTURE—The uth About Tom Mooney and Scottsboro Case, Speakers Pred Bied- enkapp and J. Mil Savoy Mansion, 6392— 20th Ave., Brocklyn. Auspices: West End Section ILD. Adm. 10c. ENGLISH BRANCH OF IWO starting at| Comrade Ollstein’s house, 3801 Mermaid Ave. Brooklyn, All interested invited to attend. THEATRE FORUM ON “1931” play recent- ly produced by Theatre Collective speakers. Jos. Freidman, New Masse Markof, Leonard Mins, 583 Sixth Ave. sharecroppers were deprived of their right to a fair trial when the court permitted prosecution witnesses’ to remain at the sessions so they could hear each others’ testimony as given, while it excluded defense witnesses except when called upon to testify, Another point made is that wit- nesses against the sharecroppers be- trayed the whole frame-up when they materially changed their stories at the trial from those they told at the preliminary hearing, The LL.D. organizations through- out the country are taking part in the mass protests against the share- croppers’ conviction. Telegrams de- manding their release continue to pour in upon Governor B. M. Miller at Montgomery, Al; Forced Labor Workers in Rockford rd Organize, ROCKFORD, - Ti, 3 May 31,—When some workers were not speeding fast enough on a forced labor job, the boss told them to go home and that their grocery order would be cut off. Im- mediately all workers on the job threatened to leave work. The boss Workers School: M. Gomer, Theatre Union! 8. Karnot, LOWT. Workers Lab. Theatre, 42 B, 12th 8 6:90 pm. Adm. I8c, then changed his mind and let these workers continue. tries (on the back page); is great, |and the placing of the editorials is | far better on the front page than on/ the back. Burck is marvelous. I suggest that you put up a folio of his cartoons and have it distributed to all A Rank and File Editorial Committee | workers’ bookstores and give it the} The paper grows out of a real need r and out of the enthusiestic | of | widest opportunity for sale. | Sincerely, |“Men and Jobs” at 14th Street City Theatre mosey In MEN AND JOBS, now bin the City Theatre on 14th Street ial "sale Soviet studios have given us a/ around socialist construc- ' | {am uate eee hoc! the word we have MEN ND JOBS, ads of which strug-|hcerd much in the press Becomes | alive MEN AND JOBS, dealing with the lations of en American engineer to |the Russien workers under him, is id to embody a new approzech both jin sound and visual imagery. Upon its release in Moscow, MEN | | AND JOBS precipitated a violent | conflict in Moscow art circles. Ma- charet claims that the stylized cine- ma technique so widely used in Soviet studios is fast becoming a cliche, par- icularly the photography of ma- |chines as self sufficient images. He ‘holds his work to be a,fresh depar- | ther than things the core of pictures. Many Workers’ Groups in The Workers Dance League win| hold its First Dance Spartakiade | (competition), on Sunday. June 4th. 1933, at 8 pm, at the NeW School New York City. New Dance Group, Red Dancers, Junior Red Dancers, Rebel Dancers (of the Jack London Club, Newark, N, J.), Nature Friends Dance Group, | Needle Trades Union Dance Group, International Workers Order (2 groups), Artef Theatre Dance Group. There will also be solo dances by Edith Segal, Nell Anyon, Mignon Ha&pern, and possibly, Lillian Shapero. | ture in film language, making man | First Dance S, partakiad | for Social Research, 66 West 12th St.,! in_a store in his neighborhood, two officers, Shirley and Bryant, arrested him and took him to jail. That night they weht to his home and ques- tioned his mother. They searched among his clothing and took a dark cap and a lumber jacket away with |them. They asked his mother to ILD WIRES DEMAND FOR SCOTTSBORO BOYS’ RELEASE NEW YORK.—The N. Y. District ILD wired to Judge Horton at De- catur demanding that he release the two youngest Boys on a habeas cor- pus writ hearing which will take place before Horton in Decatur, Ala., IMENTS \crty THEATRE [Hh ernst. (Tel. Tomp. Sq. 6-6578 Today, June 1—1 Day Only "MEN AND JOBS” A Soviet Talkie with English Titles. A ‘iving document of Russia’s rapid strides towards Industrial Recognition! Seviet Russia Solves the Jewish Problem! First 100% Jewish Talkie from U. 8. S. R. THE RETURY OF NATHAN BICKER All Star Jewish-Russlin Cast Dialogue Titles in ~~ English worsers Acme Theatre 14TH ST. AND UNION SQUARE |{—"—" The Theatre. Guild Presents ——, “BIOGRAPHY” A Comedy by S. N. BEHRMAN | The WORKERS’ PRESS FEDERATION | —is arranging the— FIRST INTERNATIONAL PICNIC SUNDAY, JUNE 4th, 10 a.m. Till 10 p.m. At the BRANDT FARM—YONKERS, N. ¥Y. Hungarian Real Gypsy Music — Gypsy Kitchen—Gulyas Working Class Plays — Sports COVERED DANCE HALL — FOREST TICKETS 25 CENTS IN ADVANCE — 30 CENTS AT GATE Take Jerome Ave. Line Uptown, at the last station busses will wait for you BENEFIT:— US ELORE, HUNGARIAN COMMUNIST DAILY CAMP UNITY Wingdale, N. Y. is getting ready to open for the Summer Season —For Information Cai N.Y. Office ESTABROOK 8-1400 Camp Phone WINGDALE 51 Chorus Saturday, July lst—Morn to Midnight STARLIGHT PARK & International Mirst Oless Restaurant Under the Supervision DANCING IN THE GREAT COLISEUM “RED PRESS” “DAILY WORKER” “MORNING FREIHEIT” East 177th FM weil OLISEUM Program: Sport Soviet Movi Exhibition iy First Showing of Indusicial Union pein hats From 8 P.M. TH 3 iON AT an advan at every AM, pe et to be Sebi je catanicatton= NTS