The Daily Worker Newspaper, March 17, 1930, Page 2

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Page Two CHURCHES NOT ONLY BOSSES’ DOPESTERS, ARE EXPLOITERS TOO | | Robber-in-Chief Morgan Gives Big Funds to| His Opium Peddlers “Holy Fathers” Have Big Swag Invested in Stocks and Bonds St h of Wall 340 Income Last Year. Reports $15,000,000 Re Assets $16,923,96 With the: Journal introduces a story nereasing capital owned by Church Corp., of New York. Thi iscopal Church, of which Wm. Manning, now bishop of New Yor! was formerly rector, is the wealthi- est single parish in America. But other organizations in this deno n and in other churches boas o steadily increasing billions of » headlines the Wall St. on the in amount rolling dollar The $17,000,000 of Trin y parish is only a small fraction of the total. 1 Bishop Manning called religious bodies to join of prayer as a protest agains Soviet policy, the Friends of the Soviet Union arranged for the same date a demonstration “against the capitalist preparations for war Church Roman Catholic Methodist Episcopal Presbyterian Church in U. Protestant Northern Baptist Congregational But church buildings tell only part of the s Endowments of church organizations, excluding local churches, are estimated as totalling at least $575,000,000 and probably much more. Most of the church missionary societies have large trust funds. The Protestant Episcopal Church missionary society reports over $9,000,000; the Presbyterian Home of Foreign Boards, about $8,000,000; the Baptist Foreign Mis- sionary Society over $7,000,000; and the Methodist Home and Foreign Boards, over $6,000,000. The church pension fund of the Protestant Episcopal Church, with J. P. Morgan as treasurer and chair- man of its finance committee, now totals over $25,500,000. It started in 1917 with less than a third of that amount. The fund is invested Trin- | on! |the Soviet Union under of * religious campaign.” The cru- of tae churches against Soviet Russia, according to the friends of the workers’ government, is a capi- talist crusade against a socialist re- public, he Pope and Bishop Man- the guise de ning, leading the crusade, not only represent two of the richest re- ligious bodies in the world, but also represent propertied intere: J. P. Morgan, Wall St. and organi capital, the criti y: That American property holdings of the chur ve vastly increased in re d by the| latest U. S. Ss on re-/ ligious bodies. ngs are | now valued at § ,000 as com- pared with $1,676,600,000 in 1918. e billions pay no t More than 50 denominations re- ported property valued at over $1,000,000. Six leading church bo- dies reported immensely increased value of buildings, as follows: Value of Church 1926 Buildings 1916 $669, 746, 780 82,036,763 ‘in the leading railroad and indus- trial corporations in the United States—including the Sante Fe, Bal- timore and Ohio, New York Cen- tral, Pennsylvania, American Tele- phone and Telegraph, American Radiator, General Motors, Interna- ti Corporation, Standard Oil and U. S. Steel. Practically all have anti-union labor policies, and most of them have broken strikes with gunmen, spies and state and private police. Other endowment funds of other church organizations now enlisted in the anti-Soviet campaign, are similarly invested in railroad bonds, telephone and telegraph bonds, mun- icipal, state and government bonds. Investments of the churches also inelude notes secured by real estate, | mortgages, and trust deeds. More and More Toilers Are Unemployed (Continued from: Page One) taat unemployment became wors> during the latter part of Februar; and the beginning of March. This doesn’t look well for Hoover’s predictions of a betterment in 60 to 90 days. In fact, each day follow- ing the optimistic slov by the chief imperialist executive has seen thou- sands upon thousands more workers thrown on the streets without work. Why doesn't the Department of Labor publish its figures on unem- ployment during February? Undoubtedly the facts so over- whelmingly smash the Hoover-Davis lies that the imperialist bosses use the Bureau of Agricultural Econ- omics as a means of crawling out of a very nasty situation. The Bu- reau of Agricultural while making the flat, statement that unemployment is increasing, does not publish any figures, though it undoubtedly has these figures which are furnished by the Depart- ment of Labor. Economics, | Lesten of Committee Hits Whalen’s ‘Lies (Continued from Page One) ers, Whalen wanted to take us for a vide in his police car. ‘We don’t want your friendship,’ said Minor; we want the workers given the right to present their own demands to the Mayor.’ “In order to detract the workers from the main struggle of Work or | Wages, and to belittle the Com- munist and Trade Union Unity League leadership of the mass un- employed demonstrations, the capi- talist press manufactured a fairy tale about Foster and Minor having a wad of bills in their pockets and my buying coffee for them with 45 cents. The first time I knew any- thing about this tissue of lies is | when I read it in the yellow jour- nals where it was manufactured by the distorted brain of capitalist | journalists. The fact is I did not have a dime in my pocket, having been unemployed for some time. | Neither Foster nor Minor had the sums of money the capitalist pa- pers mentioned. The entire stor: pure capitalist propaganda to sling | |mud against the elected leaders of | the mass unemployed movement. In this way the capitalist govern- ment thinks it can hide the glaring | fact that unemployment grows da: DAILY WORKER, N Not Religious Dope One of the former palaces of the Cza now a workers health vesort in workers republic are turned over to more useful purposes for the workers than to house parasites. W. YORK, MO AY, MARCH wie 1980 But Health Resorts PLEDGE Feu IT ON FRB capirauist war PREPARATIONS. Call for Smashing of Capitalist War Threat (Continued from Page One) national secretary of the Labor Sports Union, showed the imperial- ist face behind the religious screen in the anti-Soviet attacks. Joseph Lewis, of the Freethinkers of America, pointed out that the churches who were trying to cause intervention have always supported the corrupt, exploiting elements thra out history. ad ploiters in the Crimea, nion. Palaces in the the Soviet l Then James Ford, national Negro organizer of the Trade Union Unity LAY BASIS FOR USSR DEFENSE F Friends Soviet Union Conference Held The metropolitan conference of the Friends of the So teok place Thurs fa hattan Lyceum laid the basis fo: a firm F,8.U. district in New York, ed on the shops and factor and fraternal organiza- ed to it. 185 workers organizations were represented, their delegates actively ipating in ing down detailed plans for the building up of a strong district or-| ganization and establishing close bonds between the American workers] and the workers of the U.S.S.R. was decided upon a committee of 2! the central body of the district The conference is to be a permanent one, with regular meetings and de- legates from all ganizations, its acti upon the defen the Soviet Union. Plans were made for active par- ticipation of the American worker: in the building up of Socialism in the Soviet Union, tractors and trucks, by unions and shops, adopting factories in the Sov- iet Union and supporting them in carrying out the Five Year Plan, by sending and replacing machinery and parts needed. ity concentrated Mass Protest Meeting to Be Held Wednesday (Continued from Page One) jobless workers have found that | ! when they ask for work or wages, the boss class government meets | them with the terror, with clubs, gas bombs, and machine guns. “It is only through a mobilization of the workers as a class into a solid fighting unit, irrespective of race, creed or color, nationality or sex, organized and unorganized, un- employed and employed, that police brutality can be defeated,” says the T. U. U. L, and continues: “The unemployed question is class question and can only be fought out on the principle of class struggle.” The Answer Is “Struggle.” The statement declares: “There, are two answers to the question, | ‘What are 7,000,000 unemployed go- ing to do?’ One answer is that of the capitalists, given by policemen’s clubs on March 6, and supported in various ways, openly by the A. F. of L. bureaucracy led by Woll, and also by the socialist grouping led by Thomas, Muste, Shiplacoff & |Co., which faintly criticises Woll, the workers Oy American flag, attack the pickets of and recognition of} throwgh sending | eague was introduced. There fol- | per Norman Tallentire, for the Friends of the Soviet Un. Charles Smith,- for. the Asso- ciation for the Advancement of 1h FLOPS N BOSTON Atheism; Hugo Gellert, anti-Horthy aan Count Koroli, anti-Hort! League; Max Levin, for the Icor. When William Z. Foster we troduced, tremendous _ chee greeted his appearance. Foster said hat “religion is the opium for the ae al Union Still | Winning Victories BOSTON, Mass. itccen 16.—The | People;” there is no place for re- company union strike, which has the ‘Ss \ligion in the Soviet Union. The role of the Russian church, as well as hel f s f the bos: is not ea aden Rvs Mag NS that of the Catholic, Protestant and a fake but a fiasco. only proved It was declared Thursday with | Jewish has been to sanction the op- several of the bosses giving the Pre against the laboring masses.” ame away by telling the workers as they locked them out to strike! Foster was often interrupted by until Monday but that they would be tremendous cheering and applause. back then, and that piece work will |‘‘The bosses are trying to railroad prevail. Schlesinger and Dubinsky (us to jail for fighting for the de- and the rest of the International mands of the unemployed workers Ladies Garment Workers gang as | For every one of us that goes to jusual, have arregged the settlement jail, thousands will take our plaze shead of time. to continue and broaden the fight Only a part of the jagainst capitalism and its dope- pshave struck. | vending institutions.” chlesinger’s “strike” and lock-| 41) the speeches were taken down ut prevails in only a few shops. His | erhatim by three stool-pigeon re- imported gangsters, carrying the | orters that Whalen had planted in the hall in front of the speakers stand, Outside, Whalen, in his usual hys- terical manner had not only massed his police force but had stationed a fire-engine truck, though no parade jor other outdoor demonstration had | been planned. Whalen and his cap- “Yight wing” | | the Industrial Union, and the work- rs in the shops where it has already |” won union conditions. The defense has been splendid, and the strong arm squad is beaten. One profes- ional thug stated in court that he came from Brooklyn, italist bosses seem ashiver. Ball At Rockland to Bishop William Montgomery Build Circulation For Brown, who was to have been one of the speakers, could not eome on Labor Unity, Liberator account of ill health and sent his hearty greetings to the meeting. Wm. Z. Foster, general secretary} Other speakers were Hickerson of of the Trade Union Unity League, the John Reed Club, who read a let- and one of the committee of 110,000 |ter from Theodore Dreisser con- in Union Square, pointed out to the demning the anti-Soviet war manen- committee that is arranging the vers, Liberator-Labor Unity Ball to be} A resolution was unanimously , held at Rockland Palace, Saturday, | passed calling on all workers and March 22, that over 1,000,000 work- ‘friends of the Soviet Union “to rally ers participated in the unemploy- to the defense of the first Workers iment demonstrations on March 6 in and Peasants Republic and to pledge the U.S.A., and that they were |their whole-hearted support to the workers of all nationalities and/up-building of the peaceful new races, world of socialism in the Soviet In the South, Chattanooga, Tenn.. Union by the workers and peasants Winston-Salem, etc. Negro and in the U.S. 8. R.” ‘white workers fought side by side for the demands of the unemployed as issued by the T.U.U.L. In dozens of religious opium Foster urged all workers to sup- vending dens, usually called church- port the press of the T.U.U.L. and es, all over the country, small, un- the American Negro Labor Con-' enthusiastic groups listened to win- gress, as a way to organize the dy, whiney preachers rant against masses of workers that answered the the Soviet Union. Pope Pius XI, call of the T.U.U..L and the Com-| fearful that the masses would not |munist Party by militant street dem-! be caught in the imperialist war-net onstrations in every city in this against the Soviet Union, offered !country. Liberator are the voices of the mili-| for the mumbling of a few words tant working class in this country of prayer against and must be given every support,” | Republic. Foster said. Z kd * * oe Religious Lies. * Building “a New System.” “Labor Unity and the | heavenly bribes of 300 days grace | the Workers’ An ,extensive and unusual pro- gram has been arranged at the ball to include Edith Segal and Allison in their famous Black- Edward L. Keen, vice president | for Europe of the United Press, de- | livered a radio speech in London, | Workers ‘Show Their Solidarity at the “Daily” Costume Ball is York workers came en mass > The Daily Worker’s Costume Ball at Rockland Palace last Saturday. The intense interest and appla e given to Comrade Tallentire’s speech | on the role of The Daily Work the class struggle and the necessity of still firmer rooting it in the shops and factories, gave proof of the workers’ solidarity with thei only English paper in this country and their realization of its tremend ous importance as one of their main weapons. The Red Dancers’ earned gener in P Keen, as much as: all Europe was 16 years ago, a war not merely for atheism, but for an entirely new in- dustrial, economic, social and cul- tural system, the most audacious political experiment ever attempted | by mankind.” | John Reed Club For U.S.S.R. | Defense. Theodore Dreiser, Waldo Frank, Floyd Dell, Jim Tully, Paul Green and Professor Franz Boas of Col- umbia University are among the 82 American writers, artists, educators and scientists who have joined a protest movement launched by the John Reed Club, 10 East 14th St., an organization of writers and art- ists, against the present anti-Soviet | agitation. | “The John Reed Club desires to express its doubts as to the purely religious motives behind the ‘holy crusade’ of Pope Pius XI, the Arch- bishop of Canterbury, Bishop Man- ning, E. Rabbi Stephen Wise, and other ecclesiasts. The history of the last twelve years furnishes am- ple proof that important economic and political interests are the real driving force behind this campaign. “The war danger inhering in this situation cannot be overstressed. The last war was fought under the slogan. of ‘making the world safe for democracy.’ Will the next war be fought under the fraudulent slo- gan of ‘making the world safe for religion?’” Smash White Guards. Saturday, a group of white- On ! Sue ee “ARSENAL” The chief players from the Soviet film, “Arsenal,” now playing at the Acme Theatre. | Turgenev’s “A Month in the Country” At the Guild Theatre “A Month in the C Ivan Turgenev opens the Guild Th e on Mond This is pla rst production in this coun- untry,” by try and is the fifth production of the Theatre Guild this season. The play has been directed by Rouben Mamoulian and the settings ex- ecuted by Rayn om the . Dobuazinsky made for the Moscow Art Theatre’s Production. The cast in making her the Guild, Cabot, Nazimova, nee with Diiot Alexander Dumbrille and fir Dudl STORY OF DEVIL'S ISLAND AT PARADISE Ronald Co denned,” the seveen ve air Niles’ sensational novel, “Condemned to Devil’s Island,” is the screen feature | at Loew's P: this week. Th picture of the 1 oners in the infamous French penal | colony of Devil’s Island off the coast of South America, has been authen- ticated in every w: ooler acts as master of e Pi ing of the feature. FINAL PERFORMANCES oF “PETER PAN” AT CIVIC guardists, in order to back the war-| hatred against the Soviet Union, under the guise of the attack of the religious dopesters, planned a dem-| onstration in front of thé Amtorg Trading Corporation, an exporting! and importing organization for the} Soviet Union. The small group of} white-guardists was met by a num- ber of American workers who sym- pathize with the Soviet Union. The attempted slander against the work ers’ minutes. Tell the Advertiser—“I Saw Your Ad in The Daily Worker.” republic was routed in a few, The matinee of James M. Barrie’s “Peter Pan” at the Civie Repertory Theatre today marks the the last performances of this pro- duction in 14th St. this season. |Three additional perform |been scheduled for the Saturday |matinees of March 15, 22 end 29. | Miss Le Gallienne’s decision to bandon this production has arisen rom her desire to schedule the final production of the season, Shakes- |peare’s “Romeo and Juliet,” at the Saturday matinees, after her return |from a two-week engagement Philadelphia. “AMUSEMENTS C AME QO]. i2d ST. & BSWAY American Hicintihs Powerful, STRANGE CASE Of | DISTRICT ATTORNEY || With Brilliant International Cast stirring melodrama Pathe news with color and talk Other Featurettes } A. H. WOODS presonts ALICE BRADY Love, Honor and Betr A Satirt With ROE hea. 1 Comedy 1 WILLIAMS WL St, Woot isconsin | 8 w | Two Workers Caught in the "Baws of the Military Machine!) Radio Pictures Presents HERBERT BRENON’S Masterwork from 3 Arnold Zwoig’s World Read Book Sig) THE CASE OF SERGEANT GRISCHA a with Chester Morris 4 Betty Compson ‘D \ OWI Daly from 10:30a.m. No Advance in Prices 'e among the pris- | ise in “Color | Rythm,” the Capitol Theatre stage | show, which stpplements the screen- | first of |* nees have | in| UBERTY MILL | WORKERS STRIKE FOR LESS HOURS ‘Led by NTW; Against Longer Day; for Raise PATERSON, N. J., March 16.— } ‘The workers of the Liberty Silk Co., } without any hesitation, have struc; ) against the bosses’ scheme of lengths ening their hours from nine to ten per day and from four to nine hours on Saturday. After meeting with the organizer of the National Textile Workers’ Union, a strike committee of four was elected and demands are being presented to the bosses for a two cent increase per yard, for an eight hour day, and recognition of the shop committee. The whole shop, with the excep- tion of two or three relatives of the boss, are on strike and have joined | the union. The spirit of the workers is good and they are ready to fight mili- tantly until victory is achieved. The silk workers of Paterson are more and more beginning to realize that the N. T. W. U. is the only organ- ization of the textile workers that is ready to lead them in their struggles. COMRADES MEET AT— CAFE INTRO 249 Enst 13th Street Near Second Aveaue A QUIET BATING PLACE Regular Meals, Reasonable Prices. ,—MELROSE— VEGETARIAN | Dairy RESTAURANT omrades Wil! Always Fit at Oor UTHERN BLVD. Bronx (near 174th St, Station) |} PHONE :— INTBERVALD 9149. | RATIONAL | Vegetarian RESTAURANT il 199 SECOND AVEi UE Bet. 12th and 18th Sts. Strictly Vegetarian Food eRe eee HEALTH FOOD | Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 6865 seniiemnemmmemaniedaanaeeteetmemtionmeedl Phone? Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: PTALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 302 E.12th St. New York || AU Comrades Meet at | BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronz (DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Rcom 808—Phone: Algonquin 6188 Not connected with any other office | Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST 249 PAST 115th STREET Cor. Second Ave. New York DAILY EXCEPT FRIDAY | It|and talks about the legal right of| Burrough Eltinge in: is in line with Whalen’s deliberate | Whalen to do what he did as a ques-| White” dance, and Duke Ellington's | broadcasted throughout the United 4 geibahtlle iying on the witness-stand, and is|tion of perfecting capitalist law, jorchestra for dancing. | States, in which he declared that ) Mat, Wed. & CONTINUOUS SHOWS by day, and that the future promises still more unemployment for the workers, Please telephone to i Telephone! Lehigh Was ——" Theatre Guild Productions In its statement the Bureau also industries is deepening and is carry- | ing with it the sharpening agrarian | crisis, They say: “To this general picture (of de- cline in steel, auto production, ete.) | should be added the fact that the | prices of both agricultural and non- agricultural commodities have con-| tinued downward to date and that in the past they have corresponded | closely with business activity.” Liberator Asks Workers’ Help (Continued from Page One) the only voice of the working class, out of nearly 400 Negro newspapers, among the Negro masses. Negro workers! White workers! Rally to the aid of the Liberator! | Rush donations to the Liberator, 799 Broadway, Room 338, New City. Save the Liberator and en- able it to continue its campaign of organizing the unorganized Negro workers and agricultural laborers and rallying them to the new indus- trial unions and the international fighting front of the proletariat. London Conference. Help save the Liberator and en- able it to push the campaign for the coming national convention of the American Negro Labor Congress to be held June 6, 7 Mo. Help coganize the International Negro Trade Union Conference for London this July by rushing funds at ohce to the Liberator and enabl- ang it to continue publishing as a weekly collective organizer of the Negro masses! Don't delay! The “need is urgent! For the Liberator to bave to suspend publication at York | 7 and 8 in St. Louis, | part of the capitalist slander against the unemployed workers demanding | Work or Wages. “Whalen, who said ‘I thought I) | would crack my sides laughing when | {the cops began beating up the | workers’, is trying to make it ap- |pear that the committee elected by |the 110,000 workers ran away when | ithe march startéd. This Whalen | does to make himself into a mock | an We did nothing of the kind. We all went right to the center of | the mass of workers in the middle stand when Foster was reporting. | We were right with demonstration | when the cops began beating up the workers, Minor was shoved around | by several cops. One cop admitted | h? was standing right next to me when the committee reported to the | workers and the march started. An- | other stool-pigeon said, ‘I saw the | committee all the time in the crowd. | jI am six feet tall so I could see} them. He hadn’t been wised-up by | Whalen so he didn’t say anything jabout running away.’ We were right in the midst of the fight all the time, and when the cops, after beating up hundreds of workers, broke up the crowd, as the commit- tee representing the 110,000 work. | ers we went right to City Hall and | demanded to see the mayor, were then arrested for wanting “s present the demands of the hundreds ; of thousand of unemployed work- | ers.” | | points out that the crisis in the basic | this period would be nothing less \than a disaster. Rush your dona- ition today to the Liberator at a | |new address, 799 Broadway, New York City. Then get busy mobili |ing other workers to come to the aid | jof the Liberator. Show your soli- | |darity with the Negro massés. Help | ithe Liberator! and not as a class question.” The T, U. hand, points out that “court proce- dure is only a continuation of police} terror,” and demands organization, ‘demonstration, struggle, both econ- omie and political, through the mili- tant unions and through the organ- izations of the unemployed. Labor and Fraternal, Organizations Paris Commune Mass Meeting. vi Sentral Opera House, d Ave, § p.m. Speak- nd others, Mi 67th ers: Theettnl. y and e Nadia chit ‘oletaria Civic Harlem Grand, Ball. Of Italian Workers Club, Saturday, March m., at’ Clairmont Hall, 62 s meert, dance, Jazz, Bi Annual Dance. ‘i ‘Tehdered by Followers of the Trail, if he @ W. 111th “For All Kind ot aaa St. : CARL BRODSKY ‘Telephone: Murray Hill 5550 |7 East 42nd Street, New York 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. ¥ U. L., on the other} the tales of persecution of religious | adherents in the U. S. S. R. were 4| 2 lot of hocum. Keen said the big je in the Soviet Union is the tre- mendous efforts for the accomplish- | ment of the Five-Year Plan. “Russia is today at war,” Communist Activities des report | at section for speck! ls All un Monday | ih said work, * Witilamsburg Ys é. .L. Open Forum. Ponight 7.30 _p at Grand § Extension and els eyer St, * wi iMiamsburs. YC. All comrades, report |. m. at 68 Whipple St. WORKERS’ CENTER BARBER SHOP Moved to 30 Union Square EREMEIT BLDG.—Main Floor | tonight, 6.30 | Unit Meetings Tonight. Unit 46, Section 6, 6.30 p,m: rt , Section Unit |M |p. {4,8 p.m Phone: LEHIGH 6382 International Barber Shop | W. SALA, Prop. || 2016 Second Avenue, New York (het. 103rd & 104th Sts.) Ladies Bobs Our Specialty Private Beauty Parlor “Special for Organizations” C. M, FOX: 2 UNION SQUARE Stationary and Printing Stencils, mimeograph paper, office supplies. 10% Reduction for Daily Worker Readers. Saxophone Taught Suite 413 RED HOT MUSIC iy DAN BAKER “THE CHEF OF HOT TUNES and his ORCHESTRA Entertalsers for 1088 Bronaway Roseland Bldg. 25% REDUCTION TO CITY AND UNION WORKERS Cirele 1699 Have Your Eyes Examined and Glasses Fitted by WORKERS MUTUAL - OPTICAL CO. under personal supervision of DR. M. HARRISON Optometrist 215 SECOND AVENUE Corner 13th Street NEW YORK CITY Opponite aay York evs and ir Infirmar; ‘Telephone Hayvenant 3836 Special Rates to Daily Worker Readers. W. I. R. CLOTHING STORE 542 BROOK AVENUR Tolephone Ludlow 3003 Cleaning, Pressing, Repairing High Class Work Done Goods Called for and Delivered All profits go towards strikers and their tamili SHOW YOUR SOLIDARITY WITH THE WORKERS! Opening Tonight at 8:30 THE COUNTRY A MONTH IN By IVAN TURGENEV E GUILD Ww. Mts.Th.&Sat. “THE APPLE CART” | By Bernard Shaw | MARTIN BECK 43th, Street £8 Av. vee, 8:20, Mate. ttn and Saturday at 8: 30 2:30 2:30 force the gigantic struggle for and the forces hi SAVAGE!———ROMAN Acme Theatre ': Continuous Verformances Daily » DA. M. tO 5 POM. D5 ¢ Beginning Saturday, March Now Playing! 2Xt2% FIRST TIME AT POPULAR PRICES! “ARSENAL” The film epic of the Ukrainian Revolution, depicting with amazing “GREATER THAN TEN DAYS 1 —Added Atiraction— “The Wild Heart of Africa” After 5 Py 22 eR, 8 presents a new ld Ogden Stewart PLYMOUTH j, ‘Th. 45th st. ¥ of Bway | ats. pad 'Sate 240 hurs, | CXIVIC REPERTORY 1th st | Eyes. 8:30. Mats. Thur., Sat. | De. $1. $1.50 HE OPEN DOOR” and N WAVE THEIR WAY? THE LEVIN RPSEY “wom | Tom, Nish ntral betw by Pett AT SHOOK THE en the Bolsheviki WoRLD” TICI——THRILLING! ON Bont iden St, Bowe roadway ai ve. sau RB A.M. to Midnight. Prices: from sm, 3 Set. and ‘3 pS an day 3de AGMENT OF AN Bb | 3y6naa Jlevesunua | DR. A. BROWN Dentist —— 301 East 14th St., Cor. Second Ave. ‘Ave. | ‘Tel. Algonquin 7248 2:30 } | Dr. M. Wolfson Surgeon Dentist 141 SECOND AVENUB, a Phone, Orchard’ i “ In case of trouble with your teeth come to see your friend, who has long experience, and can assure you of carefal treatment, Hotel & Restaurant Workers ki td of ihe eel groan na ie Phane Chelsen “at usiness, mee: Monday of the Montana oe me ie dey jonal meetines—the. ied Loard” meetings every eee afternoon at pacers aaa One batt] One U: Fight the one, tony dui oe Ottice cpen from 9 a. m. to 6 Meets itt in the moni ‘Third Union “Label Brena! We Meet at the— Fresh COOPERATIVE CAFETERIA 26-28 UNION SQUARE Vegetables Our Specialty Advertise your Union Meetings hove. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City

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