The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 1, 1930, Page 4

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Page Four DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1930 McDonald Charges 12,000,000\Civil Liberties Unemployed in United States WASHINGTON, D. C., Oct. 31 —j Statements by Premier MacDonald of | England that there are 12,000,000 job- less in the United States received Practically no space in American newspapers, and would have passed unnoticed if they had not been an- swered. The U. S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, riled because the British rival impe! m had the goods on tiem and because they were ca lying by even as big a liar as Mac- Donald, rushed into print yesterday to deny that there were more than the 2,500,000 shown in the fake census count. | Dr. Leon E. Truesday, chief statis- | an declared that any other esti- nate than this low figure was “only ue’ esdale saw fit to overlook not only the Daily Worker estimate, based on its intimate contact with the starv- | ing workers, of 8,000,000 jobless, but the confession of the chief director | of the census that there were prob- ably about 9,000,000 out of work though on! 2,000,000 unemployed, ’} the ad: n of Rybicki, welfare tment head of New York City ere alone there were 800,000 j s, in one city. Truesdale over- looks the fact that three of the cen- sus ict heads resigned in disgust at the honest way the census of the unemployed was taken. | Yesterday, on the same day the U. S. government statisticians began | Down With Charity, Fight for Insurance (Continued from Page 1) already begun resisting evictions by; carrying back the furniture of evicted | workers and posting pickets to pre- | vent evictions. Walker had ten of these workers | arrested, but the landlords of Harlem think twice before proceeding with | | evictions. Only the determined resistance of Communists Lead Struggle. ‘The Communist Party is the lead- ers of all struggles for unemployment relief. The Communist Party pro- poses the enactment of the Unem- ployment Insurance Bill as the mc to squirm, Professor William M. Leierson, economist of Antioch Col- lege, speaking to a middle class gathering at 2 West 64 St., declared that his figures showed about 7,000,- 000 out of work. This is a figure con- siderably higher than the bureau of labor statistics lie. I Can >, hed ® [ATTENTION VOTERS | AND RED WATCHERS | 1. Vote early. | 2. The Communist Party is | fifth (fifth row) on the New York | State ticket (Row E). 3. Pull handle in front of every |candidate with a Hammer and | Sickle above his name, then close |the machine. 4. Do not vote for any other} | candidate. If there is no Commu-| | nist candidate for a certain office, |leave that space blank, do not | touch the handle of any other but | the Fifth row. | 5. It makes no difference how you were enrolled during registra- | tion. Vote Communis | 6. Watchers must display their | | badges to encourage working vot- ers. | 7, Do not allow the democrats, | | republicans, or “socialists” to in- terfere with the voters. 8. Watchers must stay in the | | tactless way in which Tammany) Vote Communist! Bust Union Blow at Gastonia Boys is Socialist Trick, Says Foster, Resigning dict—you set yourselves to raise a hue and cry against the victims of jall their principles when faced with) Ee and to establish our own] ;@ concrete problem; now, the Civil| class in power, to make impossible} Thomas’ Treacherous | that verdict, because they escaped | Liberties Union has gone the way of| the repetition of Gastonia. Attack on Workers! | | (Letter From Foster To The Civil | Liberties Union.) American Civil Liberties Union. Gentlemen: Your action on the} Gastonia case (reported in the New| York Telegram of October 30th) taken together with interviews given | to newspapers by spokesmen of the Civil Liberties Union some weeks ago, | demonstrates that your organization | has placed the question of civil liber- | ties in a secondary position, and that first place is now taken by the poli-| | tical interests of Mr. Norman Thomas | {and his kind. It is quite evident | that these decisions were dictated by | the “socialist” Thomas, whose role | (together with his party) is to divert | |the indignation of the masses away| from the murderous capitalist state and against those who are fighting | capitalism, primarily against the) | Communists. | At a moment when even a decent| “liberal” (no one, of course, expects the Civil Liberties Union to go be- |yond the bounds of “liberalism”) would necessarily be intent upon one | single purpose—namely, to rouse popular protest and indignation | against the infamous Gastonia ver- from capitalist class vengeance. Attack On Workers. Not content with this fundamental betrayal of civil liberties, the Civil| for capitalism, but the unrelenting| have summed up your attitude in the| ture for the record, without enthus- | Liberties Union attempts to interpret this escape as an act of the Commu- nist Party (although the individuals composing the Civil Liberties Union know better). And the Communist Party is “warned” that until it gives “adequate guarantees” that it “will not support or tolerate” bail jump- ing that the Civil Liberties Union will do everything it can to prevent any Communist from getting bail in the future. “Adequate guarantees,” you have already made clear by your news- | paper interviews, means that you de- mand that the Communist Party | shall physically seize the escaping prisoners and turn them over to the police; or, since they have escaped to the Soviet Union (the only land where persecuted workers can find asylum), that the Communist Party shall put a demand to the Soviet Union to deport these workers back to the United States. You attack the Soviet Union because it, alone of all states of the world, maintains really, in earnest, that old institution of “liberalism,” the right of asylum. The world has long been accus- tomed to witness “liberals” abandon | all “liberals.” But the Communist | |Party has nothing but contempt for| | such a demand; it is not a policeman | Bonds or Lives? | Your Mr. Pinchot is reported to} wisecrack: “Gentlemen prefer bonds.” It would indeed be a tragedy if the Civil Liberties Union should lose any | of its bonds in the fight for civil liberties; it is a tradition of Amer- ican “liberalism” that the only cas- ualties in this fist should be the) lives and freedom of Communist} workers. The Civil Liberties Union, therefore, finds nothing unfitting in calling a special meeting to adopt motions against the Communists; in- deed, it has a special enthusiasm for such a meeting, which I am informed was “the best-attended meeting in its history,” many faces appearing which had been absent for years. | fighter against capitalism and all its| policemen and servants. And the} Soviet Union, we can assure you, will never close its doors to a worker | fleeing from capitalist “justice”; your demands in that direction are just as effective as Hoover's demands that | the Soviet Union abandon the build-| ing of socialism. Contemptible Lies. Particularly contemptible are your | charges in the press that the Gas-| tonia boys are being held in the So- | ; Viet Union against their own will. | | You know quite well that they acted entirely as free agents in going there, as well as in staying there. No one,| and no organization, has made their | decisions for them. But your out- rageous slander is designed to sup- port the capitalist propaganda that | “an American jail is to be preferred | to Soviet freedom,” and a sly offer |to the refugees of pardon and ma-| | terial rewards if they will only return | and speak along these lines. The Communist Party has not ad- | At the same moment, in California, seven young Communist union, or- ganizers were in prison serving sen- tences of 42 years for calling a meet- ing to organize agricultural workers in Imperial Valley—a little fact which seemed not to arouse any in- terest among all your “gentlemen who prefer bonds.” If the Civil Lib- erties Union has acted, or in the fu- | vocated and does not advocate bail- ture acts, upon the Imperial Valley jumping. Our business is to organ-| case, it is safe to predict that this ize the working class of this country| will not be “the best attended meet- to smash the class “justice” of capi- ing in its history,” but will be a ges- 15,000 MARCH ON SACRAMENTO, Communists and Soviet JOB } AGENCIES Union Will Never | Force Return of Fees; Aid Boss’ Police Seven Are Arrested SACRAMENTO, Cal., Oct, 31— iasm and without any effective ac-| rive thousand jobless workers march- tion to help the fight to release those | oq on the unemployment agencies splendid boys in California who are) here yesterday, following two parades condemned to rot their lives away ang a demonstration by 10,000 before ih Folsom and) San Quentin. |the city hall at which demands for Foster Withdraws Name. |immediate relief were read to the mayor. ot ee el allowed ny, Cheering enthusiastically for the name to stand on the list of exect-| unemployed Councils, for the Trade tive committee members of the Civil| tion Unity League, and for the Liberties Union. I wanted to SuP-| Communist Party, the masses of job- | port every organization which con-| jess compelled the job sharks to re- tributed, however indirectly, to the} turn fees collected from unemployed | struggle against the brutal oppres-| go. jobs which did not exist. sion of American imperialism. But qj The whole capitalist class is in am forced to the conclusion, by your| panic, The day and night, shifts of actions on the Gastonia case, that’ the police department were mobilized you are no longer seriously engaged | heavy guards with machine guns and | in the fight for civil liberties, that! gas bombs were placed at all police | you have become a tool in the hands! stations and public buildings, the | of Norman Thomas and his party of | Communist Party offices were raided, | apologizers for capitalism, and that/and seven were arrested. Among | the workers have nothing to expect| those arrested was M. Daniels, Com~- from you in the way of assistance in| munist Party district organizer at their desperate struggle against capi-|San Francisco, who -had led the talism. I therefore withdraw my/ march on the city hall earlier in the name from your executive committee and from membership in the Civil Liberties Union. A great crowd marched on the police station, demanding the release of the unemployed leaders. The demonstration before the em- | ployment agencies was addressed, Very truly, (Signed) W. Z. FOSTER. JAILING JOBLESS ROUSES WORKERS Tammany Beats Re- treat in Case of 23 NEW YORK.—Shocked at the) | judge Murphy exposed Tammany’s callousness towards the jobless by sentencing 23 unemployed workers to be finger printed like criminals and | sent to prison for 30 days for vag-| | Yancy, Mayor Walker has come out| | with a statement “regretting” it. The Polling places until the vote is counted, copy the figures and re- port to the campaign headquar- ters (Algonquin 5707). RED RALLY IN effective immediate relief for the misery of the unemployed workers. The Communist Party rallies the workers for determined and syste- matic struggle for immediate Unem- Ployment Relief and the Insurance Bill. | | workers will stop evictions. | | | Insurance Not Charity. With 800,000 unemployed in New York the vague plans of charity will not even begin to solve the problem. | court of special sessions then ordered | CALL FOR STRUGGLE ON POLISH FASCIST TERROR NEW YORK.—Brutally oppressing the working class and poor peas- antry, clubbing, shooting and gassing the unemployed, sending military punitive expeditions against Ukrain- jan workers and peasants, who dare| to revolt against the double, economic and national, yoke of the Polish landlords, the fascist government of Poland at the same time is prepar- ing the war against the Union of So- cialist Soviet Republics. To organize this support of the revolutionary struggle in Poland, as well as the fight against the Polish- American fascists who control to a Election Rally and Dance Sat. Night at the Harlem Casino GREAT PAGEANT FOR NOVEMBER 7 Tens of thousands of Spanish- \Foster, Minor Speak, |in tatin-america are now turning to | Revolt Anniversary |ida Obrera” the Spanish weekly organ of the Communist Party of a |America for leadership in their NEW YORK.—The Thirteenth ANn-| struggles, From all parts of this niversary of the Bolshevik Revolu-| country, California, Arizona, Texas, Hon will be celebrated at the New| colorado, ete, letters are coming | York Coliseum Friday evening, Nov.| every day asking for the Spanish 7, with a huge, colorful, revolutionary | paper and demanding that this paper |Pageant under the auspices of the/ take active part in their every day |Communist Party of U. S. A. the} i re conomic struggles, From Cuba, Workers International Relief and the | Ganon ey Workers Laboratory Theatre have} Columbia, Porto Rico, etc., workers | BIG VOTE STEAL. (Continued on Page Five) Instruct fons to. Ina Effect Given Paid subs will give us a 6-page paper. Send them in, “For All Kinds of Insurance” (CARL BRODSKY Telephone: Murray Ail] S55¢ 7 Kast 42nd Street, New York NEW YORK, Oct. 30—“After all, it is the vote counted and not the |vote cast which decides the elec-| tions,” such is an excerpt from a] letter sent by Gov. Roosevelt to all;} Cooperators! Patronize |democratic election inspectors, in ; preparing Tammany’s perennial vote jeee CHEMIST This time the prepared programs. The Freiheit , el are writing and stating that this| _ vote thievery is paper is becoming the political leader | directed against the Communist Par- 657 Allerton Avenue © | done after election day. _ HARLEM SUNDAY them released. large extent the organizations of Walker probably does regret the| Polish immigrants in this country, a incident—such things should only be | CoMference will be held this Sunday, Walker had | Nov. 2, in Manhattan Lyceum, 64 Nessin, Lealess and Stone beaten up| East 4th St., 10 a, m. All delegates and arrested when they appeared in| @re requested to come on time, as |the Board of Estimates open hearing | the conference must be ended be- Oct. 16 to present the demands of the | fore 2 p. m., in order not to inter- jobless for immediate relief; relief |fere with the mass meeting for the to be money intended by ‘Tammany | Protection of the foreign born in |for the bankers and the police, but | Central Opera House in the after- Singing Society is preparing a revo- lutionary singing program. Foster and Minor will be the main speakers.| he management of the paper is Voice your support of the workers . iti | . trying by all means to secure the jof the Soviet Union, building social-| necessary funds to continue the pub- }ism under the 5-Year Plan! E Oice | lication. One of these means is to- | your condemnation of Fish, Woll and night’s “Election Campaign Rally | the “socialist” party, which is call- and Ball” which is to be held at the | ing an anti-Soviet conference for] pary i lem Casino, 116th St. and Lexonx Nov. 9! March together with the| ave workers of Moscow and Leningrad on} pesiges doing a good act of class of the working masses in those coun- tries. Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. Y. | will vote Communist this year. | = ° | Communist Watchers. | | Great efforts are being made by | | the district office of the Communist | Party to have as many watchers as | possible covering the polls in impor- | tant working class sections. Watch- ers are urged to be vigilant all day and counter Roosevelt's vote stealing instructions by a close check-up. | ty and the thousands of workers that DEWEY 9914 — Office Hours: A. M. - M9 P.M, Sunday: 10 A, M.-1 P.M. DR. J. LEVIN SURGEON DENTIST 1501 AVENUE U ' Ave, U Sta., B.M.T. At East 15th St, BROOKLYN, N. ¥. The need of the hour is Unemploy-/ To Support Fight on | the case is being managed so that the | Noon. the day of the 13th anniversary of| scitdarity those attending will have ment Insurance. | Unemployment Insurance can only | be secured by relentless and deter- | mined struggle. An important part of this struggle is the election cam- paign. | Lynching, Hunger Negro and white workers of New York City will rally this Sunday afternoon to mass support of the real sentence will come after a rail- roaded trial without a jury—and only | after election day. | | Vote Communist. | The greatest indignation prevails | to turn in names of 34,355 heads of families, and reports of many child- ren between 4 and eight years of age in want. The city committee in charge of ‘ | Communist election program for real | among the workers and unemployed | “ynemployment relief” has done ‘h bote fc y ‘ = Seamgey ie eae | unemployment insurance and a mili- | at Murphy’s ruthless jailing of the nothing but put out a plan for con- 7 tant, uncompromising struggle jobless and all sorts of civic groups solidating the charities already ex- Unemployment Insurance. Demonstrate for Unemployment} Insurance on Union Square Novem- | ber 3rd at 5 p. m. Vote for Unem-| against the bosses lynching terror | recognize it as a mistake—just be- isting. and against the entire vicious cap- italist system which breeds unem- | fore elections. The jobless and | | workers should show they see the | church has proposed to his followers ) It’s an age of mergers. Bishop Manning of the Episcopal ployment Insurance Struggle on No- | ployment, imperialist wars, race hat- | point by piling up a big Communist | a plan to take advantage of the sit- vember 4th at the polls. | ' | take place at 3 o'clock at the Renais-| for unemployment relief, and for Celebrate the 13th Anniversary of | the Soviet Union on November 7th at | sance Casino, 150 West 138th St., cor-| real unemployment insurance. the Bronx Coliseum. Party Activities, Attention Workers of Bay Ridge and South Brooklyn Red Flection Rally, Finnish Work- ers 764 40th St., Brooklyn, Sat- urda vember.1, 5'p. m. Speakers in h and English. Youth Elec- tion Rally, Sunday at_7 p. m. Aus- pices Y.C.L. South Brooklyn Unit, 132 15th Street. + This Saturday Night is the Night! Election Campaign rally and ball for the benefit of ‘Vida Obrera” Spanish weekly organ, C. P., at the Harlem Casino, 116th ‘St. and Lenox ve. Admission 50c., 75¢, at the door. American jazz and Latin American dances will blend in making a pleas ant evening. Bring your friends along. Build the “Vida Obrera!” Labor and Fraternal Harlem Prog. Youth Club At 1492 Madison Ave, will hold a dance this Saturday night, 8:30 p. m. Open Forum in English Bronx Workers Club, 1472 Boston Rd., Branch, 8 p. m. Lecture on “Ed- ucational System, Proletarian and Capitalist.” Discussion to follow. Admission free, t v “Pretty Scandal” Seviet Film Given by LL.D, Koruin Branch and the W.LR. at the Hungarian Workers Club, 785 Westchester Ave. Branch. Admission 50c. in advance, 60c. at loor. * Hungarian 1, “Money,” by Gold on Sat., at 8 p. m. at the Hungarian Workers 850 E, 81st St. Admission 50c. . . Yorkville Br. Latest Soviet Films Will be shown at the Blue Bird Theatre, Saratoga and Livonia Ave., Brooklyn, Saturday midnight. Ali proceeds for Morning Freiheit. Ar- ranged by Br. 72, LW.O, Tickets at Box Office from 10.30 on, the night of the performance. Piet enlae" Needle Trades Workers Ind. Union Has arrangd an affair for Dec. 4 and requests all workers’ organiza- tions not to arrange anything for that date. ‘a « * United Council of Working Class Women, Council 8 Is celebrating the fourth edition of its wall paper with a concert and vecherinka at 1622 Bathgate Ave., Saturday, Nov. 1. All proceeds for the Election Campaign of the C.P, a ee Newark An election returns dance in which all comrades and sympathizers who hay been active in the election cam- aign of the Communist Party, will ‘ake place at the Workers Cener, 93 Mercer St., Tuesday night, November 4. Admission, 35 cents. | All Members Workers Camera League Meet Saturday, 1 p. m. to take photos of the “Vote Communist” race of the Y.C.L. at headquarters, 10 EB. iith St. Bring a camera if possible. Don't fail. ‘ Fe Rehearsal for Nov. 7 Pageant londi lov. 3, 8 p.m. fan! Lyceum, 66 E. Fourth St. erience necessary. We must have workers, ‘ red, lynching, etc. The rally will ner of Seventh Ave. Among the speakers will be J. Louis Engdahl, candidate for Lieu- tenant Governor of New York State; Herbert Newton, National Organizer of the American Negro Labor Con- gress; Leonard Patterson, candidate in the 2ist Assembly district; Sam Nessin, leader of the Unemployment | Councils who was brutally beaten by Mayor Walker’s Tammany thugs for presenting the demands of the unem- ployed Negro and white workers. An additional attraction will be the showing of films of workers dem- onstrations. Engdahl to Speak At Astoria Tonight Tonight at 8 p. m. Comrade J. Louis Engdahl, Communist candidate for leutenant governor of New York State, will address an open air Red Rally at Astoria, 2nd Ave. and Dit- mars Road. NEVIN BUS LINES 111W. 31st (Bet. 6 & 7 Avs.) Tel. Chickering 1600 PATLADELPHIA HOURLY EXPRESS SERVICE $2.00 One Way $3.75 Round Trip Chicago ..........$20.50 Los Angeles ...... 55.50 Pittsburgh ....... 9.50 Washington . 5.50 Baltimore ........ 4.50 Cleveland . + 12.50 Boston .. 4.00 Detroit ... 15.50 St. Louis - + 22.50 Lowest Rates Everywhere Return Trips at Greatly Reduced Rates “MAINE TO CALIFORNIA” AU Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx | vote, for the party that fights now | Meanwhilenothing is being done | by the Tammany government or the bosses even to carry out its proposal to provide jobs or relief for 10,000 of New York’s 800,000 jobless. The police going through a farcical enumeration of the unemployed on their beats, have even so been forced ALL ALLERTON INHABI- TANTS AND CO-OPER- ATIVE HOUSES Buy your bakeries in the well- known bakery which is a strict §, union shop affiliated with the Food Workers Ind Wendrow’s Bakery 691 Allerton Avenue, Bronx Gottlieb’s Hardware 119 THIRD AVENUB Near 14th St. Stuyvesant 5974 All kinds of CUTLERY ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES MAZDA Bulbs Oor Specialty. 29 EAST 14TH STREET NEW YORK ~ Tel. A! uin 3356-8843 We Ca: Full Line of STATIONERY AT SPECIAL PRICES for Organizations Eyes! Scientific Examination of eye glasses—Carefully adjusted by expert optometrists—Reason- able prices. 1990 LEX. ave] 609. Wii ST Wea Me uationand get some cheap building work done on churches. YOUR FOOD will do you more good if you eat under conditions of QUIET There is Comfort and » Protection in CLEANLINESS Eat with people who | have the wit to know that q Foop ana HEALTH| are RELATED COME TO THE CRUSADER (SELF-SERVICE) Restaurant 113 EAST FOURTEENTH ST. (Near Irving Place) Vegetarian RESTAURANTS Where the best food and fresh vegetables are served all year round 4 WEST 28TH STREET 37 WEST 32ND STREET 225 WEST 36TH STREET Sy6naa Jleve6unna DR. A. BROWN Dentist 801 East 14th St. Cor. Second Ave. Tel. Algonquin 7245 Tel. ORChard 8783 DR. L. KESSLER SURGEON UVENTIST Strictly by Appointment 48-50 DELANCEY STREET Cor, Eldridge st. NEW YORK Red October! And meanwhile, on e “3 an opportunity to have a very enjoy- Nov. 4, vote for every candidate hav- | ype evening. There will be interna- jing the Hammer and Sickle near his/ tional dances, with musie furnished name! Vote for no other candidate! by the Red Star Jazz Band. Candi- ENLIST IN THE AUTOMOBILE PARADE VOTE COMMUNIST! Y.C.L, BRONX UNIT 4. Tomorrow will be a young workers Red Sunday in the Bronx. All Bronx | YCL comrades are instructed to re-| port at 9:30 a. m. at 1400 Boston Road. DR. J. MINDEL | | Boom 803—-Phone: Algonquin 8188 | Not sonnected with any Workers having trucks or automo- | biles are called upon to enlist in the | Red parade this afternoon and even- | ing. Call at the Communist Cam- paign headquarters, 35 East 12tn St., [AMUSEMENTS | other office 7>-MELROSE—, * VEGETARIAN Dair RESTAURANT om: 1:00 p. m. Philharmonic Symphony, KLEIBER, Conductor METROPOLITAN OPERA HOUSE THIS SUN. AFTERNOON at 3:00 Soloist: JOSE ITURBI, Pianist WAGNER—BEETHOVEN— TCHAIKOVSKY Carnegie Hall Ne 6, 8:45 ARTHUR JUDSON, Mer. (Steinway) FIRST PERFORMANCE given by the RUSSIAN COMMUNIST PAPER “NOVY MIR” at Manhattan Lyceum TOMORROW Russian Play “The Career of a Minister A Comedy in 4 Acts ‘The best Russian actors are Participating Dancing After Spectacle Admission 75 Cents HIN GA With GERALD Produced by sCAMEO “EAST IS WEST” with LEW AYRES—LUPE VELEZ Edw. G. Robinson IVIC REPERTORY beer J boc, $1, $1.50. Mts, Th. & Sat., 6th Ay. EVA LE GALLIENNE, Director lay Mat.....“ROMEO AND JULIET” Tonight THE GREEN COCKATOO" and “TRE LADY FROM ALFAQUEQUE” Soats¢wks.adv.atBoxOff.&T’nHall,113W.43 THE QUEEN OF COMEDIES LYSISTRATA 44TH STREE Tomater of Bway Eves. 8:40. — Mats. Wed. & Sat., 2:40 300 Balcony Seats, $1, All Performances De ceil tilt i ir lcchahietrbe “UP POPS THE DEVIL” A Genuine Comedy Rit with ROGER PRYOR Boulevard Cateteria 541 SOUTHERN BLVD. Cor. 149th Street Where you eat feel at home. 25% REDUCTION TO CITY ARTHUR HOPKINS Presents TORCH SON New drama by Kenyon Nich THEA, 45th Street P Lymouth West of B'way Eves, 8:40, — Mats, Thurs. & Sat. 2:30 ~ NINA ROSA New Musical Romance, with GUY ROBERTSON, ETHELIND TERRY, ARMIDA, LEONARD CEELEY, Others MAJESTIC THEA., 44th, W. of Broadway Eve, 8:30. Mats. Wed.&Sat. 2:20. Chi 2600 THE GREEKS HAD _ A WORD FOR IT Have Your Eyes Examined and Glasses Fitted by WORKERS MUTUAL - OPTICAL CO. ander personal supervision of AND UNION WORKERS DR. M. HARRISON Optometrist 215 SECOND AVENUE Corner 18th Street NEW YORK CITY Opposite New York Bye and " Bar infirmary , Telephone Stayvesant 8830 A, Soe Ee Pon! Amine. A Theatre Guild Production ~— | RE, breaker Ix an epic of hunted men. . , ameful truth laid naked in a burning drama as deep ax the soul of the world, DU MAURIER and exceptional cast 42ND STREET and Broadway len Will Always Find ft Pleasant ¢o Dine at Our Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx (near 174th St. Station) HI PHONE INTERVAL Boonen! 6RATIONAL UBSCRIPTION MAT. TUESDA | Vegetarian RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVEi.UEB Bet. 12th and 18th Sta, Strictly Vegetarian Food HEALTH FOOD | Vegetarian _ RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 5865 o14s. LSWORTHY’S amazing story ‘of this a BASIL DEAN | NOW! || ‘Sohn’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere ‘all radicals —on the sereen— where meet 302 E. 12th St. New York “SCOTLAND YARD” with Edmund Lowe—Joan Bennett—Ernest Torrence Advertise your Union Meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 50 East 13th St. New York City Phone: LEHIGH 6382 ‘nternational Barber Shop ‘M, W. SALA, Prop. 2016 Second Avenue, New York (bet. 103rd & 104th Sts.) Ladies Robs Our Specialty Private Beauty Parlor NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES RKO—ALWAYS A GOOD SHOW! RKO ACTS Anatole Fried- land’s 12 o'clock Revue with Marty May Marion Sunshine Dainty Marie and Co. La Marr and Boyce Frank Chapman Crystal Trio WED. | Strangest to FRI. Picture 3 Ever Blmed émecks oy ALL TALK |Broadway/ & SOUND Airy, Large Meeting Rooms and Hall TO AIRE Suitable for } ctings, Lectures and Dances in the Czechoslovak Workers House, Inc. 347 E, 72nd St. New York | SAM H. HARRIS Then., 42d St. W. of B'y Evening 8:50, Mats, Wed, & Bat, 2:30 Oscar Stat \ aid Orcheeiee Telephone: Rhinelander 6097 Syd Moore House 4Pe Shake dor ere ROOMS Gwyane & Co. OM "9 855 EAST 1 STREET, Apartment 51 t.* THES. Ye SILVER HORDE | | Sinaie or aoubie, “eeee, Apartment St. Nov.$-11, with EVELYN BRENT |! ™An-comrade or couple: All convoaimness, Call after 7 p. m,

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