The Daily Worker Newspaper, October 25, 1929, Page 2

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A PREIS ss Page Two CHICAGO FROM NO. PLATTE, NEB. : Thousands to Meet Them at Field (Continued jrom Page One) York fliers, making up in enthus- iasm for what it lacked in numbers. The aviato: thoroughly c experienced rough going on the from Salt Lake City. They were escorted to a downtown hotel by the impromptu committee and tendered an informal recepti CHICAGO, 26,000 workers are ex: come Semy Shestakov three comrades, Bolotov, Ste: and Fufaev, at a reception ar by the Friends of the Soviet Union for Saturday night in the Chicago Colisium. At the landing field also be a mass reception. One of the features of the indoor demon- stration will be the presentation to the fliers of a number of tractors and trucks subscribed by workers of the Chicago area for the workers and peasants of the Soviet Union in Oct, ar there will ‘ognition of the success of the five-year plan. e Land of the Soviets will start for Detroit on Monday. 12 Million Shares Sold In Wall Street Panic; Mergan Buys Lowest: Morgan, Lamont, Cochrane, Mit- chell of the National City Bank, Wiggin of the Chase National Bank Potter of the Guarantee Trust Co. | met yesterday in Morgan’s office, | and gave the signal for a revival | £ buying, thus. checking the col-| lapse that started Wednesday with; 35,000,000,000 stock losses and con- | tinued yesterday with 12 million | shares dumped, considered the worst market crash in history. { Morgan’s advisors had notified him that the time had come to col- lect a good deal of tocsks at low| prices, and that if the panic lasted | much longer, some damage would | be done his own holdings. | Engdahl to Speak At 12th Anniversary | (Continued from Page One) ually being introduced into all indus- tries. There are also certain groups of workers wh work even less than seven hours. “Today, more than 40 years after the Haymarket martyrs in Chicago |} were murdered by the American capitalist class because they led the} fight for the eight-hour day, the cight-hour day has been won by only a very small section of the American working class, while hundreds of thousands of workers in all sorts of industries slave eleven, twelve and | even more hours a day. “Contrast this with the fact that in 1927-28 the average working day in the Soviet Union was 7.71 hours. Contrast this with the fact that under the great Five-Year Plan of | Socialist Construction the average |7* work-day being even further re- duced until in 1932-33 it will be 6.86 Ps hours or 3.03 hours less than the average before the Revolution. is “And remember, all this is taking | place while real wages are rising. | Instead of the wage cuts that are the constant menace of the Ameri- can workers, real wages will be in- | creascd 66 per cent under the Five- Year Plan. “We have c-nditions in certain in- lustries right here in New York City that are almost as bad as they are in the South,” Engdahl continued. “It is because of these conditions tha tthe Communist Party demands ; in its election program the seven- hour day, unemployment, health and | compensation insurance such as the Russian workere already have, and othe ressential improvements. And the Communist election program expresses relentlessly the true role of the employers’ state, where as in North Carolina, and the true role of the “Socialist” and A. F. of L. agents of the employers.” Engdahl will be one of the chief speakers at the big celebration of the 12th Anniversary of the Revo- lutin and Communist Election Rally in Madisn Square Garden Sunday afternoon, Nov, 3. He, as well as William W. Weinstone, candidate for mayor; Otto Hall, candidate for! comptroller; H. M. Wicks, candidate for president of the Board of Alder- men, and other Communist candi- dates will point out the significance of the Five-Year Plan to the work- ers of the entire world and‘will deal on New York workers to show their solidarity with the Russian workers and peasants by voting Communist in the city elections. Tickets for the celebration are on sale at the New York District Of- fice of the Communist Party, 26 Union Square; Freiheit, 30 Union Square; Needle Workers’ Industrial Union, 131 West 28th St., and Work- ers’ Bookshop, 30 Union Square. WANT 5-DAY WEEK. SAN FRANCISCO (FP).— San Francsico metal and building trades workers will ask for the 5-day week. 1 | Poy \gle of the sand hogs. Meeting with DAILY WORKER, N =W YORK, FRIDAY Labor Defense in Illinois District As Mine Fight Sharpens CHICAGO, Oct. [The Chicago of the International Labor Defense, which is leading the fight t the terror drive of the Illi- open shop bosses and courts to Communis Party illegal militnt workers, is making tracts and is setting up nches throughout the etyses Wisconsin and Indiaan, The drive for 5,000 new Labor] Deft members in this district is now in full swing. -In Staunton, in the mining region, Juliet Stuart held successful meeting, attended by ral hundred miners. The miners, who are turning by the thousands to the Militant Na- tional Miners’ Union, after being betrayed by the Lewis and Fishwick is of the United Mine Workers EXPOSE AFL TUUL MASS MEET ~INPLAZA TONITE Toilers Called to Hear| Labor Jury, Foster | district make and jai many ¢ new t of Ilino: (Continued from Page One) tion to render a verdict on the Gas- tonia trial. The labor jury’s verdict | is published, and says the Gastonia} defendants were not guilty, but that| capitalism’ is guilty of hideous crimes in the South. Frank will| have, as an eye witness of the trial, | much of interest to New York work-| ers to relate. Curious Controversy. Members of union in the American nse » looking to the Labor Defense as n of defense in their coming rd LEADERS BETRAY 2,000 SUBWAY MEN. Call Off Strike; Same) Gang Sold Sandhogs to the A. F. L. attack on this criti- A sifike of 2,000 subway workers, |cism. The answer scheduled for yesterday, was killed |Scripps which assures the A. F. I.. aborning by the same gang of offi- that this capitalist newspaper chain) cials that sod out the recent strug-|is for it, but attempts merely t stir) it to enough apparent activity to make it possible to speak seriously for it. The phenomenon of a capitalist lagency begging a labor organization |to be more aggressive can noly be | explanied by the need of the bosses during this period of sharpening} jclass struggle for something with | | which to fool the workers. But the | | workers of New York are invited to} hear all about the plans of the T.| |U. U. L. and its policy of fighting |the boss by organizing the unorgan- ized, by building new and militant unions, and by struggling against) | bureaucracy within the A. F.. L. at} the Irving Plaza meeting tomorrow. Labor Fakers Break Pitt Freight Strike By Refusing Relief) PITTSBURGH, Pa., Oct. 24.—Ef- | \fective support ,of the hundred | portation Tuesday night. Chairman | freight handlers who struck three | Delaney got in touch with the offi- | weeks ago againts the Pennsylvania | cials and the sell-out conference fol- | Railroad was withheld by the Cen- | lowed. jtral Labor Union and the Railway | Clerks’ officials, and this bi ths . | chief instrument in the defeat of the | Plan Anniversary jstrike, but the union misleaders | |would give them no aid. The Penn Mate ior Comey et & however, was forced to {abandon its practice of hiring |through a contractor and employing "\Jaborers by the day. Those active Trenton, 10.—Speaker |in the strike leadership have been and place’ to bi nnqunced | blacklisted by the company. District Two. \ Bedford, M Nov. } Paes Ri; Workers Hall, STRATE. : District speaker,| BERLIN (By Mail.)—Following sunday, Nov.|the appeal of the Communist Party £r Jov. 10,|the revolutionary workers of Berlin Belmont St. |held a great demonstration in the Lustgarten against the robbery of {the unemployed planned by the co- | between President Green and the Seripps-Howard string of news-| papers was bitterly attacked by A. F. L. foficials at the Toronto con-| vention because it criticised them. | But the criticism was that the A.| F. L. was too cautious, reactionary, and cowardly to do naything for the workers, that it was an organization eracy is rotten. the board of transprtation and city contractors yesterday afternon, John McPartin, James Lynch and Joseph Moran, misleaders of the new Sub- way Construction Workers’ Union, Local 68, agreed to “arbitrate” the demands of the men before the chairma no fthe board at “some time in the near future.” The workers’ demands were $6.50 a day for the muckers and common laborers, $9.50 a day and a six-day week for the drill runners, $6.50 a day for concrete workers and $7.50 a day for drill runners’ helpers, an increase of $1 and $2 a day over the prevailing rate. About 75 per cent of all subway workers were involved in the proposed strike, which would have effectively tied up thousands of dollars in city contracts. Contractors, notified on Monday that the workers would walk out unless their demands were met at once, called at the board of trans- District One. ork City, | m,, at 2p. ighth Ave | BERLIN JOBLESS DEMON- | New 8 p.m ntz, ngfield, Mass., Nov. 10, 7:30 p. Th ba | alition government under the leader- ree. ea A‘ Philadelphia, Nov. 8 8 p. m., Labor | ship of the social democrats. stitute Locust’ St.,_ speakers: | | Herbert Benjamin and | RAISES MONEY FOR GASTONIA. CHICAGO, Oct. 24.—At a “Yom Kippur” party given at the home of Comrade Rossin, 7006 Grandon Ave., | . Nov. 8, 8 p. m,, Schanze| th'and Pennsylvania, speak- f. Wicks, local speakeres. | ker, Harry Washington, M, Wicks, local speakers. ; , oil ; % . * $18 was raised for the Gastonia Re- | District Four. lie fand Defense Drive. | Rochester, N._Y., Sunday, Nov. 24,] | Labor Lyceum, 580 a, | ——$——— 2 p.m. J. Williamson, But. Nov Central, Turner Hall, Scott and Third | Ashland Auditorium, speakers, Robert Minor, C. Hathaway and others. 4,8 P.M. 351 Broad-| way. Se Se |" Davenport, Iowa, Nov. 10, 2:30 p. m.! Dintrict Five. |Ave., Davenport, jowa. h, Nov. 10, 2:30 p.m., Labor is SNS 5 Miller St., speakers, Harry District Nine. ana and others. | | puluth, Minn. Nov. 7, speakers, Workers ‘Home,’ Electric and "North |Carl Reeve, Pat “Toohey, Soba pe Superior,’ Minn., . 8, speakers, Aves, E. Pittsburgh. speaker, Pat De-| Superior, Minn. New. 8. s St. Paul, Minn., Nov. 9, speakers, Carl Reeve and Pat Toohey. vine. Arnold, Pa., Friday, Nov. 1, 8 p. m., ; Minneapolis, Minn., Nov. 10, speak- Umbria Hall,’ local Scranton, Pa, A 7 P.M, 508 p Lackawanna Avenue. Speakers Jack | TS Carl Reeve and Pat Toohey. Johnstone, Mike Harrison, J bd nf Allentown, Pa., Nov. 16.—Speaker District Ten. and place to be announced, Kansas C a, Thuradey, Mey. 7 Page aac * District Fifteen, Hartford, Conn., Nov. 8, 7:30 p. m., District. speakers. District Six. Cleveland, Ohio, Nop, 3, 1,2 De Mm. Moose Hall, 1,000 Walnut St.. speak- ers, J. Louis Engdahl, I. Amter and ant Peers Novy, 9, 7:30 p. m. Dis- ha tic sages Waterbury, Conn., Nov. 10, 1:30 p. m., District. speakers. Bie rtat eer ee Stamford, Conn., Noy. 10, 7:30 p. m., phetiolt, Mich. Nov. t, 2 p.m! 4 "Wagenknecht anceland Auditorium, | Woodwar : t. s i and. Forest Ave, speaker, Wm. Z.|mNGY Bou” Conn,, Nov. 10, :7:80)'p. Foster. i a Bridgeport, Conn., Nov. 10, 7:30, p.| * m., Schmiess, | Apeahasat See So. Norwaik, Conn., Noy. 10, 3:30 Chicago, Ill, Noy. 10. 2:30 p. m., p. m., District’ speaker, @ $$$ $$_______—______-» HEAR WORKERS’ VERDICT ON GASTONIA CONVIC- TIONS AND REAL ISSUES OF ELECTION CAMPAIGN MANHATTAN. Sunday afternoon, October 27th, 2 p. m., Laurel Garden, 79 East 116th St. Speakers: J, Louis Engdahl, Richard B. Moore, Albert Moreau, Rebecca Grecht, Abraham Markoff. Tuesday, October 29th, 6 p. m., right after work. Bryant Hall, Sixth Ave. and 42nd St. Speakers: William W. Weinstone, Ben Gold, Rose Wortis, J. Louis Engdahl, Otto Hall, and others. BROOKLYN. Center, 1373 43rd St., Brooklyn, N. Y. and others. Brownsville: Friday, October 25th, 8 p. m., Hopkinson Mansion, 428 Hopkinson Ave. Brooklyn, N. Y. Speakers: William W. Wein- stone, Fred Biedenkapp, Harry M. Wicks, Rachel Ragozin, Alfred Wagenknecht. Williamsburg: Friday, Oct. 25th, 8 p. m., Millers Grand Assembly, Grand St. and Havemeyer. Speakers: William W. Weinstone, Fred Biedenkapp, Joseph Magliacano, Samuel Nesin, Otto Hall, and others. Bath Beach: Friday, Oct. 25th, 8 p. m., Bath Beach Workers Club, 48 Bay 28th St. Speakers: Harry M. Wicks, Ben Gold, Morris Kushinsky, i Coney Island: Friday, Oct. 25th, 8 p. m., Coney Island Workers Center, 2901 Mermaid Ave, Speakers: Moissaye J. Olgin, Hyman Levine, Morris Kushinsky. Speakers: J. Louis Engdahl eb Up the United nia of the Class From the Bot- tom Ubnat the a ; anterprises! Brooklyn Heights: Friday, November Ist, 8 p. m., Tivoli Hall, 20 le Ave. Speakers: Harry M. Wicks, Otto Hall, Fred Biedenkapp. : | TELA TEAR RITTER A OER IE FIRES ETTORE nee AT RUN UMW FAKERS. FROM HALL, 500 | ganizers | and flogged Wells, a fake trial was JOIN NMU BODILY District Convention} j Opens Sunday (Continued from Page One) tent of the split from the company union and the overwhelming support | for the militant N. M. U. will be evident. When the convention ad- journs Tuesday night, the miners of |, Illyinois will ‘have completed their | Sa plans for building a powerful section of the miners’ union in that state, wiping out the false leadership of the old organization, the Fishwick wing controlled by Frank Farring- Federation of Labor who have been |ton, who had openly been in the pay | _ watchnig the curious controversy|of the Peabody Coal Co. for many | Cente 8 years, and the Lewis wing who are now fighting one another in the courts for the control of the funds and property of the union. Initiate Struggle. Linked with the fight to wipe out this leadership and cease paying dues to them, the miners’ convention of labor aristocracy, and all aristo-| will adopt a program of militant} struggle to force the coal companies Green has just received an answer|to stop paying the check-off to the} fakers, and a determined fight for from Robert P./the six-hour day and five-day week, | for the day rate system, for unem-| ployment i:surance and for the con- trol o fthe conveyers and machine: “Build your rank and file conven- tion into a mighty historic gather- ing!” is the slogan in the special Illinois edition of the Coal Digger, | official organ of the National Min- | ers’ Union just received in this dis- trict. And ind--d all the indications here point to that direction, Whitewash Nine Thugs (Continued from Page One) identified by textile strikers as members of the party which shot up a truck load of unionists that had been driven away by armed gangsters from an attempted mass meeting in South Gastonia Sept. 14. Flla May, of Bessemer City, a prom- inent member of the National Tex- | Workers Union was killed on jis occasion. The International Labor Defense has warned the workers from the beginning that Solicitor Carpenter of Gastonia, prosecutor of the Gas- tonia case against unionists who were convicted of murder because strikers defended themselves egainst a murderous police raid, would do his work in this case, too, and see that the companies’ hired maurder- ers were whitewashed. It was hard- ly supposed, however, thgr che brazen insolence of the textile mills would carry them so far as not to even go through the formality of a trial. In the case of the gangsters who kidnapped the N. T. W. U. or- Wells, Saylors and Lell, thi held in which the prosecution and judge assisted the mill atorneys to whitewash the mill owners’ gunmen. The gunmen who were given com- plete absolution today and notified in effect that they could go on and murder at will so long as they kill only unionists are: Fred T. Morrow, Troy Jones, L. M. Sossaman, Larry Bavis, will Lunsfor, W. M. Borden, Jack Car- ver, Horace Wheeler and Theodore Sims. Autumn Youth Dance to Be Militant Festival The Autumn Youth Dance to be given by the Young Communist League at Stuyvesant Casino, 2nd Ave. and 9th St., this Saturday eve- ning promises to be one of the big- gest proletarian festivals of tho season. Besides one of the leading New York Dance orchestras, stacks of food and gallons of liquid re- freshment will be provided, Special entertainment features, inculding exhibition dancing, paper hats confetti and all the fixings will help to make this gathering of young and grown-up militants re- memberable. Tickets are 50 cents in advance, 75 cents at the door, and can be obtained from any League member or at the Workers eCnter. TfHEATRE WORKERS GAIN, BAKERSFIELD, Cal. (By Mail). —The six day week has been won by local stage and movie theatre workers. They formerly worked 7 days a week. Hopkinson Mansion Rail Hlection rally at 423 Ho | Friday night. * Ave, Central Brooklyn El n election rally will 8 p.m fyrtle Ave Brooklyn atend without fail. All comrades | are urged to 20 Agents. section head- , 6p. m, sharp ion 3 Daily arters, 1179 Important bus * Autumn Dance, District 2 of the ¥ L Autumn Youth Ave, and good. food; vr hats; canfe a proletarian on 50 cents in advance; 7 ts at the door. | ’ * th Beach ion Rally. | election at 48 Bay 2 a, Speakers M Pp. Jewish Coney Island Election Rall Indoo ly at Cente id Ave, ( 8 p.m. akers in En, Italian i } Section 5. must report Ave. for the two t and Sunday. Unit 5, Si | at 1179] Meets Monday, Broadway. /CREW OF 51 PERISHES AS. (CAR FERRY FOUNDERS IN LAKE MICHIGAN IN STORM RACINE Wis. Oct. 24.—The | | giant car ferry Milwaukee foun- dered in the storm-whipped waters Jof Lake Michigan sometime during jthe past three days, carrying to their deaths the captain and his jerew of 51 men, it was established | definitely tonight. Nothing was heard of the vessel with 27 loaded freight cars in her hold until today, when bits of wreck- age, a cabin, mattresses, parts of a white superstructure and electric! light bulbs were found bobing about | the lake. Tonight the fate of the 25-year- old ferry was sealed completely when the steamer “Steel. Chemist” found bodies in the storm-tossed | water near Waukegan. Around two of them were life belts marked “SS. Milwaykee.” Coast guard officers said that the Milwaukee probably tipped over when her load of freight cars, clamped to four tracks, became un- loosened and careened to one side of the vessel Build Up the United Front of the Working Class From the Bot- tom Up—at ihe Enterprises! 7 East 42nd Street, New York ence aE ES Uxity Co-operators Patronize SAM LESSER | Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailor 1818 - 7th Ave. New York Between 110th and 111th St: Next to Unity Co-operative Hot Patronize | No-Tip Barber Shops} 26-28 UNION SQUARE @. flight up) | 2700 BRONX P/ & EAST (corner Allerton Ave.) SURGEON DENTIST 249 HAST 115th STREET Cor, Second Ave. New York DAILY EXCEPT FRIDAY Please telephone for appointment Telephone: Lehigh 6022 ie J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Rcom 803—Phone: Algonquin 8188 Not connected with any other office FURNISHED ROOMS 133 East, 110th St, Heated rooms; large and mail; all improvements; near sub- way. Tel. Lehigh 1890. YOUNG MAN DESIRES 1 moderate convenient furtished room, Have radio. Give phi Box A. ; | NEW YORK DRUG CLERKS UNION | CONCERT At PARK PALACE, and DANCE 110th St. & 5th Ave. Tomorrow Night at 8:30 P. M. JOHN C. SMITH’S NEGRO JAZZ BAND! WINTER IS COMING MANY UNEMPLOYED AND NEEDY WORKERS wil with warm clothing by the W. I. R. to be supptied Collect and xend clothing to WORKERS INTERNATIONAL RELIEF STORE * 418 BROOK AVENUE, P! Other stations nt 349 Bedford St, Wilitamab Barb Brighton acl Aven Broekira! Einiiah Workers Gian ‘Ww. Toth aes EESgenth Soe Otties W. 1. ier 848 Broudway, Room’ B12, ek HONE MOTT HAVEN 6654 Communist Workers | Dr.; ABRAHAM MARKOFF | A ti iti Notice! All comrades who pa and coats at the heit Bazaar mus chases by Saturda r Comm nter. oe deposi aily Wot ali for ON CONVENTION Section 5 Red Night. 4 will mobilize at W Aves., tonight d Prospect; 2 Branch ‘Leader of 1919 Strike 3 at —— | in Pittsburg Sunday Labor and F raternal | PITTSBURGH, Pa., Oct. 2 Organizations [Pittsburgh workers will hear Wi liam Z. Foster, general secretary of lthe Trade Union Unity League, at wanted for). mass meeting this Sunday at 2 2. room |p, m,, at Labor Lyceum, 35 Miller St. The mass mecting will open the leampaign for the building of a |strong district of the T. U. U. L Volunteers Wanted. Ushers and usherette ption to Soviet 8. U. office, 175 ete Council 24 Theatre Benefti. The theatre benefit of Council 24, U. C. W. W., will be given at the}* fe A ‘i sees Intimate’ Playhouse this Saturday |in this important industrial section. Ce eS ie, he SE The organization of the tens of thou- date are good for this performance. | Teen nized steel worker € Soltda: Night j|will be part of the campaign. detober 8 P.M F : will speak on the Cleveland At heia’a Soli | _ Foster will speak on he Labor ‘Temple, | Convention. Ahonanes i eee treet. Good program. | workers are expected to turn ow pocrg tions, proletarian |. hear the leader of their great | ace 1919 strike. Faster will also spealt aek catnee on (in Charleroi at the Russian Hall, i /1ith St. and McKeen Ave., Monday, (Oct, 28 and in Cannonsburg, Tues- i8,|day, Oct. 29, at Fulton Hall, East Cannonsburg. yn, this Auspici WwW. W. lay evening, 8 of Council » Dance. | | by N.Y. PAVE WAY FOR EASY GRAFT. a 2 110th St., 8.30] EAU CLAIRE, Wis. (By Mail.)— p.m. ‘Attractive featur ion a one dollar, |Judge. James Wickham has ruled | ie ae hes j See LD |that the Wisconsin Corrupt Prac- ne Bronx workers Youth Club|,« i will give a ball Saturday evening at |tices Act does not apply to the of cKinley e Gardens, 1260 Bos- | go, ei i 2 ton Rd, near 169th St, Famous jazz {fic of governr. The panne meags band. ‘Admission 75 cents. that there is no Heit to the amount Harlem Edue: | ional Forum, cational Forum, Sunday Ss Harlem 139th St. eopen 0 p. m., with a lecture on ialism in the Virgin Isles; U. S. Rule,” by Rothschild Francis. *AMUSEMENTS-|. lof money a candidate for governor imper- |or his backers may spend in a cam- Naval | paign, | The Ww. CASINO 20th St. & Biway, Bvs, 8:30; Mats. Wed. & Sat. at 2:30] FRITZI VICTOR “MLLE. SCHEFF in HERBERT'S MODISTE” 55TH STREET PLAYHOUSE 154 W. 55th St. (Bet. 6th & 7th Avs.) continuous performances from 2 p. m. venings and Saturday Mat. $1 to $3 i ings and § to midnight. Popular prices. Wednesday Matinee $1 to $2 THIRD BIG WHEN Thea aath Bt, W. ot The American Premiere of SHUBERT B'way, Evs. 8 Mats. GERHART HAUPTMANN’S Wednesday and ‘Saturday 2:30 QUEENIE SMITH in the Musical Comedy Sensation THE STREET SINGER ANDREW TOMBES “THE WEAVERS” World-Yamous Revolutionary Drama which tx a bitter attack on the land- | ed gentry and factory owners of Nineteenth Century Germany Filmed in a manner closely resem- bling “Potemkin” | Under the direction of F. ZEFNICK | ee ne en ati eeal Dae teeRCENONE ETHEL BARRYMORE THEATRE ith St. W. of B'way. Chick, 9944 Evgs. 8:50, Mats, Wed. & Sat. 30 JOHN Comedy BIRD i HAND DRINKWATER’S pene anna ree ER rece Pe FULTON W. 46th St. Byes. 8:60 Wed. & Sat. 2:30 Mats EORGE M. COHAN AMBLING The Talk of the Town! ‘CA M EO Wisconsin 3 14th St VIC REPERTORY 6th Ave. 42d ST. & BSWAY tg" -e'9 vgs, 8:30. Mats, Wed, Sat. 2:30 Dynamie—Powertal | 50c, $1, $1.50 Most Mysterious Figure of Modern Times Tonight—“THE WOULD-BE PRINCE OF SINNERS } The Theatre Guild Presents KARL} ANNA GUILD W. 52. Evs. 8:50 Mats. Th.&Sat. 2:40 GENTLEMAN” at—“MLLE. BOURRAT” Tom. Tom, Night—*INHERITORS” BRONX THEATRE GUILD| Sidney Stavro, Dir. Intimate Playouse, 180 St., Boston Rd. es. Inc. Sun. $:45; Mats. Sat. and Sun. FORD 9922 American Premiere of Ostrovsky’s Greatest Comedy “It's a Family Affair” With Singing and Dancing A. H. WOODS PRESENTS— | MOROSCO THEATRE | 48th St West of Broadway Bvgs, 8:50. Mats, Wed. & Sat, 2:50 ELSIE FERGUSON ticfoarama SCARLET PAGES ts Hear the real issues of the city election! Hail the first year’s achievement of the FIVE-YEAR-PLAN Demand the release of the seven victims of the capitalist class in Gastonia, N.C.! | COMMUNIST ELECTION RALLY and RUSSIAN REVOLUTION CELEBRATION Sunday Afternoon, November 3, 2 P. M. MADISON SQUARE GARDEN 49th Street and 8th Avenue Admission: 50 and 75 Cents Tickets Sold at 26-28 Union Square and 131 West 28th Si. AUSPICES: sai. pai PARTY, N. Y. DISTRICT. NOW. ° 1918 1923 Deep revolutionary ‘struggles of workers, deep crises of capi- talism in many countries. De- feat of attempt of’ interven- tion by imp. powers in Consolidation Partial stalk: n of capi- talism. Recovery of Soviet economy. Growth and influ- ence of the Comintern over broad mas Decay of capitalist stabiliza- tion. Success socialist recon- struction, five year plan, in Soviet Union. Sharpening class battles in imperialist coun- tries and colonial revolutions. YOUR EYE p ON3 ° Comrade Frances Pilat MIDWIFE 351 E. 7/th St, New York, N. Y. Tel. Rhinelander 3916 Patronize Cooperators! ~EROXY CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. Y. MELROSE— = VEGETARIAN Dairy RESTAURANT Comrades ‘Will Always Find It Pleasant to Dine at Our Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx ¢ 174th St. PHO NB: TNTERVALD. 9149, RATIONAL {| | Vegetarian ; RESTAURANT: | 199 SECOND AVEI.UE Bet, 12th and 13th Sts, Strictly Vegetarian Food All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 5865 Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 302 E.12th St. New York Advertise your Union Meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City Hotel and Restaurant Workere Branch of the Amalgamated Food Workers 133 W. Slat St, Phone Circle 7830 [7° BUSINESS MEETING] beld on tho tirat Monday of the month at 3 p. m, One Indastry—One Union—Join and Fight the Common nem} Office Open from 9 a, m, to 6 raft FURNISHED ROOMS Now is your opportunity to get a room in the magnificent Workers Hotel Unity Cooperative House 1800 SEVENTH AVENUE OPPOSITE CENTRAL PARK Cor. 110th Street Tel. Monument 0111 Due to the fact that a number of tenants were compelled to leave the city, we have a num- ber of rooms to rent, No security necessary, Call at our office for further information.

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