The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 22, 1929, Page 2

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rage Iwo HOOVER DROPS °3 BILLION PLAN IN CRISIS MEET Open Shop Bosses Plan Wage Cut tiled fromiPage Ofe) spposi- ‘ords of be- and because to imperialist WASHINC mashing dep t the White House arent Hoover Ss much-advertised $3,000,000,001 uilding plan for unemployment, ‘oposed exactly one year ago to- that 4 10 announced that the seri- the present crisis forced he President to call together the hering of capitalist in- sses since the world war. ong the leading union-smash- that Hoover talked with Ford, Julius Rosenwald, Du Pont, Myron C, Taylor nd a dozen others. Later in the day Green and Woll, f£ the American Federation of La- or, talked with Hoover to help the lan to be evolved by the big cor- porations. These labor fakirs are eing marshalled for the wage- smashing drive that will grow out f the conference endeavoring to tem the economic crisis, The sharp decline in steel pro- tuetion will get first attention. Henry Ford reported on the rapid closing down of his shops. and the thousands of Ford wage slaves who e being thrown on the streets. The 3,000,000,000 flop which Hoove now ditching was pro- rosed at a conference of governors n New Orleans November 21, 192 The plan was te slow down build- ng until just such a crisis as is ceurring. However, overwhelm- ng reports from all over the coun- ry that building is over done, as well as the steep drop in building eperations and permits for future nstruction work forced Hoover ‘onveniently to drop his former program. Gov, Ralph O, Brewster, who pre- sented the Hoover plan to the as- embled governors, said it would 6 an insurance against national vanics. Hoover now recognizes that his ‘insurance plen against national ” has flopped and fails to ving it up in this crisis. ‘The capi- ‘alist press maintains a discreet si- ence on the subject, “The release of $3,000,000,000 in mstruction contracts,” said Gov. 3rewster in speaking for Hoover, “would remedy or ameliorate com- ing economic crises with unemploy- ment in the twinkling of an eye.” Hoover has twinkled his eyes sev- crel thousand times since but un- employment grows. In fact, the deep-going nature of the present crisis is acknowledged by the con- ferences of imperialists called in Washington. These conferences for a long tim will continue They exceed in ize the mobi tion of American apitalist economy for the , World War. William F. Green, president of the A. F_ of L., who can always be depended upon to accept any plan ‘rom Hoover to bamboozle the work- | rs, last year gave his O. K. to the wage-cutting campaign and the speeding up of the workers left on the job during the present depres- sion. “The proposal approved by ‘oover is an unqualified endorse- nent of Labor’s program,” said Wil- iam F. Green last year in approv- | ng Hocyer’s fake program, Monday Hoover will take up she ‘uestion of the far-flung farm de. wression. He will also consider the oublic utilities situation and the ‘uestion of further trustification. PLAN TO SPREAD BUILDING STRIKE, (Continued from Page One) ave announced the strike cal] and the houses are being picketed daily. Yesterday those workers who have reen deluded into following the ‘ompany union formed Tuesday by he right wing renegades in the vindow cleaners’ union and the bus eaucrats of the American Federa- ion of Labor reaped the first fruits f the “settlement” foisted upon hem by the betrayal experts. Work- rv after worker came to the office f the window cleaners union and old how his boss had’ thrown him rut because his job had been taken ') a scab, In the Broadway shop, for example, all 17 of the old men found their places taken by scabs with police on guard as usual. is evident, therefore, that many bosses are even refusing to recog- nize their own company union, and are continuing to use the old scabs, many of whom get as low as $25 a week, In all, more than 100 disillusioned workers returned to the bonafide union yesterday. In addition to the meeting tonight, a mass meeting of all members of the window cleaners’ union will be held Monday night where plang for continuing the struggle will be out- Mead, 8. | It} Labor Notes Printers Locked Out. NASHVILLE, Union prin’ have been locked out by the ville Banner for refusal to | accept a piece rate wage scale. Manager James G. Stahlman of the Banner refuses to discuss the use of the lockout, but declares the paper will operate open shop. The lockout occurred imme- liately after the union had invited conferences for a new contract to replace one expiring. Stahlman posted a piece work scale on the bulletin board to replace the flat inion scale, Tenn. CHICAGO, II!.—Alarmed over the unionizing of a thousand ‘workers in 14 pressrooms of the Printing Pressmen and Asssitants Union, the heads of R. R. Donnelly & Sons Co., notorious as one of the worlds larg- es’t non-union printing firms, have sent threatening letters to the of- ficers of three pressmen’s unions. The letter is signed by Thomas E. Donnelly, remembered in labor circles for his chairmanship of the strike-breaking Landis Award Com- mittee. It warns the unions that it has “yellow dog” contracts with its present force and that interference | will result in legal action. Billinkopf Counts I. L. G. W. Votes. A “citizens' committee’ of thiee will supervise elections in the New York locals of the International Ladies’ Garment Workers’ Union | this month for delegates to the Cleveland convention December 2. Roger Baldwin and Arthur Garfield Hays, of the American Civil Liber- ties Union, and Jacob Billikopf, “impartial chairman” (really an agent of the employers), of the men’s clothing industry in New York constitute the committee. WORKERS FIGHT ‘MACHADO TERROR Demonstrate Before Cuban Consulate Here | (Continued from Page One) thrown from windows of Latin- |American consulates and financial offices in the Whitehall Building in an effort to disrupt the demonstra- tion and drive away the large audience which gathered to listen to the speakers. Paul Crouch, editor of the Young Worker, was the first speaker. He told how the colonial workers and |peasants are exploited by Wall | Street, and declared that only the lorganized protest of the workers could save the twenty-three now in Cuban prisons facing deportation. Kee, of the Alliance for Support of the Chinese Workers and Peasants | Revolution, was the next speaker, and told how the reactionary gov- ernment of China is serving the im- perialists and murdering those who! take part in the revolutionary move- ment, Jose Sater, of the Associa- ition de los Nuevos Emigrados Revo- lucionaries de Cuba (Cuban emi- grants) then told in Spanish of the terror against the workers of Cuba by the Machado government. trice Siskind was chairman. The demonstration was held under the auspices of the U. S. Section, All-America Anti - Imperialist League. FIGHTTERROR IN NY. VIGINTY Hackensack 61 Face Deportation (Continued from Page One) the Haitian terror, has been held on Ellis Island on his return from a trip to one of the Latin-American countries, The New York District of the I. L. D. is also handling this case. The I. L. D. is also defending Norton Leonard, member of the | Young Communist League, who was ) arrested while conducting a factory | gate meeting of the workers in the | Independent Laundry, Herzel and | Livonia Ave., Brownsville, Norton was arrested at the behest of the j;owners of the laundry. He is now jout on $500 bail, furnished by the I. L. D., and his case will come up Monday in the New Jersey Ave. Magistrate’s Court. Jacques Bui- tenkant, I. L. D. attorney, will de- fend him. | The Nery York District of the I. jb. D. is intensifying its drive to |Secure 8,000 new members by Jan- uary 1 in order to supply funds and | broader working class support for | these and many other cases, Forty- | eight Bronx workers and 81 work+ jers, including many Negroes, from | Harlem joined the I. I D, yester- day. Delegates’ credentials are coming in from working class or- ganizations for the District Con- ference to be held Sunday, Decem- ber 15, at 10 a, m., at Irving-Plaza, 16th St. and Irving Pl. City Building Work in Phil. Decreases PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 21.—No support to the Hoover building plan can be expected here, On the contrary, municipal build- ing operations will be abbreviated. Mayor Mackey told the city council that all pay rolls must be slashed. Bea-| ' DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER (BEDACHT SPEAKS ‘ON TREACHERY OF “LABOR” GOV'T. | Lecture at W orkers | Forum Sunday M | Soviet Union, wishing “guarantee for the safety of its own imperial realm, while fearing the enlight- |ment scope of the International of | the working classes is one phase of “Labor Governments,” the lecture |to be given on Sunday at 8 p. m. by ;Max Bedacht, member of the Sec- School, 26 nion Sq. What trickery the British Labor Party has played upon the working class of Great Britain will also be jclearly brought out by Bedacht. Registration of the. four new courses just begun at the Workers’ School is still accepted. The courses jare Fundamentals of Communism | (48th class of its kind), given on | Thursdays at 7:00 p. m.; Statistical Methods, given Thursdays at 8:30 |p. m.; Elementary Russian on Tues- days and Fridays at 7:00 p. m., and Intermediate Russian on Tuesdays |an Fridays at 8:30 p.m. The cost jis $8 for the Russian classes and $4 for the others. NEEDLE WORKERS FIGHT BETRAYAL |Building Service Men |to Spread Their Strike | (Continued from Page One) j manner the developments in Boston | and outlined the policy at the Joint Board towards all fake maneuvers | carried on between company union | and the bosses. Discussion followed from the | floor and speaker after speaker de- nounced treachery of right wing pointing out the role they have play- ed in lowering the standards of needle workers in Boston as well as throughout the country and call- ed upon those assembled to fight unitedly and determinedly for an- linger clique as a direct agency of | the bosses and which has nothing in common with the workers interests. Among the speakers a number who had belonged to the union for over twenty-five years and were builders of the International, which has long since become a company union. Among these workers were Rubin Steinberg, Sam Cohen, L. Margolin, Dora "rown, Morris Sar- others. Gold analyzed the struggles of the needle workers for the last three years since the expulsion of the Left Wing by the bureaucrats, pointing |of bosses’ gangsters, courts, police ‘and the “socialist” Right Wing, the Industrial Union not only has sur- | vived, but now challenges this com- pany union and is preparing to write a new page in its history by leading the needle workers in their forth- coming struggles. The needle workers present left the meeting full of enthusiasm and pledged themselves to renew the struggle with more vigor and deter- mination than ever before. |Choke Diggers Strike | (Continued from Page One) |when they appealed to the city au- |thorities to intervene. McPartlan jinterviewed federal labor mediators, 'who are expected to stamp scab wage scales with the official city seal at arbitration proceedings next week, “You won't see us on the picket line because we're too busy with other work,” union bosses told the men at yesterday's meeting. When it was also reported that blacksmiths on some jobs wanted to strike, the excuse was offered that by calling them out a rival union would be given a chance to take the strikers’ jobs, Meanwhile, the Building and Con- struction Section of the Trade Union Unity League is continuing to agi- tate for a mass tie-up as the only means of enforcing the union scale. They urge the men to demand mili- tant strike action at the mass meet- ing called by the A. F. of L. locals at Webster Hall, 119 E. 11th St,, at 1 p. m. Sunday. To Greet Delegates (Continued from Page One) militant miners in Southern Illinois for their fight against the operators and the Lewis and Fishwick ma- chines, the imprisonment of scores of workers in Chicago, Milwaukee, Racine, etc.; the attempt to send | Salvatore Accorsi to the electric | chair on charge of killing a state stooper shortly after the Cheswick demonstration in 1927. Mooney and Billings are still rotting in jail, as are the Centralia IWW prisoners. Particularly important are the sedi- tion eases being developed by the State in Chicago against 26 work- ers. Build Up the United Front of the Working Class From the Bot- tom Up—at the Enterprises! | Why the ‘Labor” Government of | acDonald refuses to recognize the | 1! | { } | | | | {nihilation of the Dubinsky-Schles- | cowitz, Joseph Widrow, Shapiro and i out that in spite of the united front | st. Communist Activities Harlem 12th Year Celebrati The Harlem Section of the ¥ will celebrate the 12th Anniversary of the Russian Revolution with a mass meeting and dance in Lexing- ton Hajl, 116th and Lexington Ave. this Saturday evening. G band, proletarian pla cents. All workers | ary Celebration — | of the Young 1 will be cele- at Workers e, on Sun- by Districts Prominent | gue will banquet pictures demonstration of the} will be} re ae | Metal Workers J raction. Meets Friday night at the Workers da Center. All workers m arty and League metal be present, * * Unit 4F, 5 | Monday ‘r 6. at 129 Myrtle | s * Y.C.L. Upper Bronx Open Forum. Charles Winter will speak on con- | ons of the young workers in the | aiti U A. and in the Soviet Union at | the open forum of the Y.C. Upper | Bronx, 1, this Sunday Admission | free. | Labor and Fraternal) Organizations | U.C.W.W. 6th Anniversary, The 6th Annive y of the U. | W. W. w be celebrated at Stuyve 2nd Ave. and 9th this ning. Living newspaper; resting features. Adami atre 65 W, ing for T. 1 38 ‘and shop paper. able at the theatre or t Unity Cooperative Restaurant, 1800 {7th Ave. . * * Bronx Open Forum. eture by Le 1) the Years in the| : p. m., at 1320 ture by Com, Jakira s Class Terror in| same day, 8 p. m., at Admission free. pa» on Bronx Workers Dance, A concert and dance, arranged. by | the Bronx Workers Athletic Club, | will be hled on Saturday evening at| the Rose Gardens, 1347 Boston Road, eer eh Concert. Office Workers Discussion, The Office Workers Union has ar- jranged a discussion on “Employers Welfare Schemes and the Office Workers,” to led by Benice Michaelson Mon p.m, at 6. Labor Temple, St. 4th All office workers invited. € : * nd 8nd Ave, Jugoslay Workers Ball, Play. An entertainment, ball ‘and play will be given by the Jugoslav Work- ers Educational and Dramatic Club afternoon and evening an National Hall, 321 E, * * Biellese Annual Ball, The Biellese Workers Progressive | Club give its annual ball this Sunday at the Cooper: 642 Hudson Ave., West ta, Proteeds will for of a new headquarters. is ae Directions: From 42nd St. ferry take alisades car to 16th St Harlem Youth Sunday Dance. The first Sunday dance of the Har- lem Pre e outh Club will he held this Sunday evening at the club rooms, 1492 Madison Ave, Lehrman's Jazz band will supply the music, a Gastonin Defense Mass Meet. A mass meeting for the Gastonia defense will be held on Tuesday, & Dp, mm. in the Workers Center, 48 Bay 28th St. Bath Beach. The Gastonia prisoners will address the meeting. Admission fre rge Spiro wil ark Workers Forum, this Friday evening o joe Pact, Hoover and Mac- ald.” Question period and dis- cussion to follow, * t 2 the Anti- give a danee | » $30 p,m. at 301 W. 29th a. pe Downtown Workers Leetur: Co Itan will speak on the right the American Party a Downtown Workers Club, St. at 8.30 tonight. Admission 35 he eee Downtown Club Art ¥ Beginning tonight th be re will an exhibition of work by Com, Fleish at the Downtown Workers Glub, 35 W. 2nd St; On Sunday evening, Fleish will lecture on proletarian art at the club rooms Needle Youth Dance The Youth Section of ed anc the Social Kducational ¢ Loca will give a dance in W Wednesday e ng, Nov. Man J, C. Smith's ore cents. BALLTOAW DRIVE OF N, T.W. Organization begins at home. With this thought in mind, the Na- tional Textile Workers’ Union and! Local New York, Workers Interna- | tional Relief, which together have arranged the huge Textile Workers’ Ball and Carnival to be given in Rockland Palace next Wednesday night, will set aside part of the proceeds of this Thanksgiving Eve affair for an organization drive among the 50,000 unorganized tex- tile workers here. The devastating effects of ration- alization have recently thrown out of employment thousands of New York knit goods workers who keyed up for struggle. No less mili- tant are those “fortunate” enough to be holding down jobs in an indus- hestra, ‘Admission out, long hours and frequent wage | slashes are the order of the day. convention of the N. T, W. U, in Paterson, N. J., on the 28th, when plans for a nation-wide drive against these slave conditions are tion delegates, who are coming from the mill centers of the North, South and East, And to make the ocea- sion still more representative of the WIR WORKERS CHORUS ENGLISH LANGUAGE Now Being Organized Register at Workers International Reljef, New Address: 019 BROADWAY | Johnson, Charles Guynn, and | delphia. | take part in a mass demonstration | cember 9, and a Labor Defense Ba- try where coolie wages, the stretch. | A stirring prlude to the national | to be laid down, the ball will be at- | tended in force by the 250 ‘conven- | oy 1929 ‘STEEL TRUSTIN .|“Winte OHIO CONVICTS 3 OF SYNDICALISM _Y : | Communists Face Ten | ° | Years Prison | ST. CLAIRSVILLE, 0., Nov. —It took but five minutes for a} steel trust jury to convict oy il | Andrews, members of the Commun- ist Party, on charges of “criminal syndicslism” in court here yester- day. The three were arrested on International Red Day, August 1, when the police at Martins Fer attacked a demonstration of 1,000) workers, breaking it up with great | brutality, Johnson, Guynn and Andrews face sentences of ten years each, and the steel trust, as part of the terror! reign being waged against all mil tant workers, has stated its deter- mination to see to it that these workers are railroaded. The state hired as special pros cutor Attorney Walker of St. Clair ille, who had previously offered to get the indictment quashed pro- | |viding the defense would engage |Chested farmer comes. his ser’ for $500, summing up before the jury was a tirade of red-baiting and | incitement to lynching, He called | on the Belmont County American Legion to march on the District of. fices of the party and of the Inter- rational Labor Defense, Attorney Land for the defendants has filed a motion for a new trial. Jobnson, Guynn and Andrews have | beet released on $2,000 bond each. The state, acting for the open shop bosses of Ohio, is attempting to railroad two other members of the Communist Party, Betty Gan- nett and Zorka Yoki under the criminal syndicalism act. Their cases have been continued pending | the cutcome of the motion for a new trial for Johnson, Guynr and Andrews, * . ‘ | PHILADELPHIA, Pa., Nov, 21.— | The reigneof terror by the police, private and city detectives, gang- | stc:s, A. F, of L. scab officials, and “socialists” against militant work- ers continues in Philadelphia un- abaited. Twenty-four pickets, members of the Needle Trades Workers’ Indus- trial Union, were arrested while on picket duty at the Raab Dress Shop, where many other pickets have been | arrested in the covrse of the strike | against this company. In court, the 24 arrested pickets were asked such questions as “Do | you believe in religion; in free love; | do you receive instructions from | Moscow?” | In. the past six weeks over 400 | pickets have been arrested in Phila- | Picketing wiil continue each day, despite the terror, states the Needel Trades Workers’ Indus- trial Union. Pee Dike. CHICAGO, Nov. 21.—Thousands of Chicago militant workers will against the reign of terror here against militant workers, and! ageinst the railroading of seven Gastonia workers and strike lead- ers on Sunday, November 24, at} People’s Auditcrium, 2457 W. Chi- cago Ave. They will hear K. Y Hendryx, Louis McLaughlin, end if the: workers succeeded “in freeing him on bail, Joe Harrison, A dis- trict conference of the International Labor Defense is planned for De- zaar at People’s Auditoritfm, cember 13, 14 and 15. ee cre CHICAGO, Nov. 21.—The trial of two workers, Lombros and Kallas, arrested last Friday as*they were distributing Gastonia defense leaf- leis in front of the Addressograph Plant, will come up on December 20. The two workers were arrested when the bosses called the police. They were held incommunicado un- til 2 p. m, the following day, then charged with “illegal distribution of leaflets,” and released on bail, De- ree textile struggle, Fred Beal and the other six Gastonia victims will be on hand. - Notwithstanding the serious pur- pose of the ball, the dancing alone will repay the workers who turn | out for it, for the music will be. ground out by John C. Smith’s cele- | brated Negro orchestra, and what | that band can’t do to a jazz tune! is nobody’s business. Tickets are now on sale, at 75 cents a throw, at the W. I. R., 799 Broadway, Room 221, the N. T. W. U., 104 5th Ave., Room 1707, and the Workers’ Book- | shop, 80 Union Sq. Organizations are urged to arrange for boxes. VISIT AND BUY YOUR GIFTS AT THE RUSSIAN BAZAAR 17 West 57th St. Painted Toys, Embroidered Decorated Linens, Caucasian Rugs, Samovars, Candy, Paint- ed Cigarette Boxes, and thous- ands of unusual articles at VERY LOW PRICES Everything at this Bazaar has been imported from Russia. Open ’til 8 p. m. The Basnar { Paxt Room 61% Telephone Algonquin 8048 leould get along fine without carnal- | |A victim to the philosophy of the | MAJESTIC y Bound” Another Sex Play; Well Acted EVELYN HERBERT. “To make spiced apples you've got | to go through mental copulation— you're just out of your minds with | sex!” | The outburst comes from Tony Ambler, an outdoor young lady with masculine deviations, when she dis- | covers her guest and a farmer friend romantically spicing apples—and a wicked love-light gleams in the eyes of both, Tony leads in Thomas H. Dickinson's “Winter Bound,” a cur- | rent play at the “Provincetown Playhouse in the Garrick Theatre.” Like the rest of the world at which his character rails, Dickinson seems fairly deep in sex himself. Tony came to the Connecticut farm to lose herself in sculpture and show the world that two women} ly-minded men or thoughts of the | flesh to corrupt their lofty idealism.| Prima donna of the “New Moon, Sigmund Romberg’s tuneful operetta New Woman, her friend Emily Full- now at the Casino Theatre. bright, (well-acted by Marie Goff), | welcomes the chance to escape too. | But in spite of Tony’s repeated urgings that “We’ve got to make | this thing go,” they don't get along | wusie from “Gotterdammerung” so well— he sculptress has ® t00 the Ride of the Walkure, possessiveinstinct. Then the broad-|" "mere will be three numbers There is} much surreptitious love in his cow-/ Ga. night at Carnegie Hall: Sym- shed. |phony No. 1 in C minor, Brahms; Tony quits storming in the end Concerto No, 4, Bach-Brandenburg; and leaves the farm to the lovers. /and the Fire Bird Suite, Stravinsky. Aline MacMahon acts the part |The Mozart “Jupiter” Symphony, and three Wagner excerpts: Dawn and Rhine Journey from Gotterdammer- ung,” Siegfried’s Death and Funeral on with abnormality and yet makes no|yoted to Beethoven. The “Egmont” definite contribution to its under-|Qyerture, and Symphonies No. 5 standing. and No. 6. : Nina Morgana, Metropolitan Opera TOSCANINI’S FINAL CON- |soprano, will be the soloist at the | CERT AT CARNEGIE {fourth Junior Concert of the Phil- TOMORROW. Carnegie Hall under the direction of |Ernest Schelling. ‘The program will Arturo. Toscanini conducts his last contain music of Italian composers. concert of the Philharmonic Society |The numbers include Vivaldi’s Con- until February tomorrow afternoon |certo Grosso, Monteverde’s at the Brooklyn Academy of Music |del Ballo delle Ingrate, Corelli’s Pas- and Willem Mengelberg takes up torale de la Notte de Natale, Balla- the baton on Thursday evening. For|bile from Verdi’s “Otello,” Res- his final program Toscanini offers'pighi’s L’Usignuolo and La Gallina, the “Leonore” Overture No, 3, the and Casella’s Rhapsody Italia, *AMUSEMENTS- LAST DAY! “—a fine Soviet film of Revolutionary Labor at War” —Daily Worker. Praised by BARBUSSE—PODOVKIN—} NSTEIN ) Equal To “POTEMKIN “ARSENAL” Greater than “TEN DAYS THAT SHOOK THE WORLD” Special Added Attraction! “THE SOVIET FLIERS IN AMERICA” a remarkable film showing the enthusiastic receptions given to the Fliers in Seattle, San Francisco, Chicago, Detroit and New York—ALSO THEIR START FROM MOSCOW. FILM GUILD CINEMA Direction: Symon Gould 1) 52 W. Sth St. (Bet. 5th and 6th Aves.) Continuous Daily—Noon to Midnight SPRING 5005—5000 Special Forenvon Prices: Weekdays 12-2250; Sat. & Sun. 12-2—300 and | Mengelberg’s first program Thurs- | program will be repeated on | jwell, and most of the other acting Friday afternoon at Carnegie. Next | is good. But it seems wasted on a|Sunday afternoon’s concert at the | play which occupies too much time| Metropolitan Opera House is de-| | harmonic next Saturday morning at | Danze | ARTEF FIRST JEWISH WORKERS THEATRE IN AMERICA plays at American Laboratory Theatre N. NING PERFORMANCE Sat. Eve., Nov. 30th Also Saturday ing, Sune day Matinee and Evening ‘and Monday Evening with the Great Jewish Revolutionary Play NAFTULI BUTWIN 42¢and Wisconsin SWAY aN T88 ENGLAND'S FInsT | ALL TALK DRAMA | BLACKMAIL WITH DISTINGUISHED LONDON STAGE CAST 44 St. W, of B'way. Evs.8:30 Mats, Wed & Sat, at 2:30/ International Musical ‘Trlumph | By JOHANN STRAUSS “A WONDERFUL NIGHT” —— ETHEL BARRYMORE THEATRE 7th St, W. of Biway, Chick, 9944 | . Eves, 8:60, Mats, Wed. & Sat: 2:30 Wid a aged dt JOHN — Comedy ‘ Sots" by WILLIAM. GROL DRINKWATER’S BIRD N HAND Muste "by JACOB. 8 | Biway & 39th St. Eves. 8:30 ICKETS NOV FoR CASINO Mats, Wed. & Sat, OPENING N : FORMANCK AT 108 E. TH STREET, ROOM 304 NEW MOON SCHWAB & MANDEL’S MUSICAL GEM | Wann EVELYN | aus ‘a nl Y Humene | sux |BRONX THEATRE GUILD Plenty 1,50, $2. §2.50 ata 180th St, ppd Boston Road aT een [Sidney Stavro, Dir. re IVIC REPERTORY 14th st [5th Big Week! Tonigh & Sun, ‘ nk so me ae Ostrovsky's Greatest Comedy aves. 8:30, Mats, Thur. Sat., 2: 50c, $1, $1.50 ‘IT’S A FAMILY AFFAIR” woh TALLINE. Lingeter Ret eonict | Suentar Pires Nov. 36 igh: “MLLE, BOUR ad A new play dealing wit Tome Mat. “PETER PANS a social problem. The Killer Tom. Night—"THE CRADLE SONG" | manner BROOKLYN GRAND OPENING ver such magnificence—xuch lavish spleo such Iuxarioux comfort and beauty! Loew's 1 Kia) another jewel in the crown of | f || SURGECN DENTIST | | TEXTILE WORKERS BALL and CARNIVAL Thanksgiving Eve NEW STAR CASINO 107th St. and Park Ave. “For All Kind of Insurance” (CARL BRODSKY Telephone: Murray Hill 5550 |7 Kast 42nd Street, New York | OCT i Ria Patronize No-Tip Barber Shops 26-28 UNION SQUARE (1 flight up) 2700 BRONX P’ K EAST (corner Allerton Ave.) lt | “SERO x 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. ¥, Comrade Frances Pilat MIDWIFE 351 E. 7/th 82, New York, N, Y. Tel. Rhinelander 3916 MELROSE— . VEGETARIAN Dairy RESTAURANT omrades “Will Always Find it Pleasant to Dine ut Oar Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx (near 174th St. Station) PHONEt INTERVALB 9149, | RATIONAL | Vegetarian | RESTAURANT | | Bet. 12th and 13th Sts, 199 SECOND AVE UE | Strictly Vegetarivn Pood | HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE, Phone: UNIversity 581 Phone: Stuy nt 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A_ place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 302 E.12th St, New York All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx Unity Co-operators Patronize SAM LESSER | Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailor 1818 - 7th Ave, New York Between 110th and 111th Ste, || Next to Unity Co-operative House DR. J. MINDEL 1 UNION SQUARE Rcom 803—Phone; Algonquin 6183 Not connected with any other office Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF,| SURGEON DENTIST 249 HAST 115th STREET Second Ave, New York DAILY EXCEPT FRIDAY Please telephone for appointment Telephone: Lehigh 6022 Cor, DR. MITCHELL R. AUSTIN] ff Optometrist 2705 WHITH PLAINS AVENUK Nei Allerton Ave. Bronx, N, ¥, TH, TABROOK 2631 Special Ap is Made for Comra Outside of the Bronx, Hotel & Restaurant Workers Hranch of the Amalgamated Food Workers, 183 W, Bint St. N. ¥. O, Phone Cirele 7336 ss meetings held the first y of the month at p,m, educa meetings—the+ third a of ae month, a a ht ord mectings=—~every ‘Tuesday ntlernooneat > oiclock. One Industey! One Union! Join and Wight (he Common Enemy! \|Qttice epen from 9 a.m, to 6 p.m 1 PITKIN AVENUBD AT SARATOGA, BROOKLYN OPENS TOMORROW AT 11 A. M, The best from Broadway's stage and screen brought to you in this wonder Program at popular Loew prices, ON THE SCREEN ON THR sTaGn “SO THIS 1S | saci uae age COLLEGE” Lt ROM THEATRE — BROADWAY Theis to Hitep on the | tute. tnt Cute det ee Hf campus Fo-Goldwyn- | wophisticuted revue Mayer's ait-tulking, ‘singing | YALE MOWED. ieternatt venation, The Vithin sereen I entertainer. and Che: Aorevelation in talking per- "a dazzling, dancing 138 Rast 1 ¥ roomay ta cand ait Mah imipeowementes car ‘20h Advertise your Union Meetings here, For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Nept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City FURNISHED ROOMS js; near way. Tel

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