The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 6, 1930, Page 2

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y Page Two DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1930 . x S ‘ Boss Vote Promises Become THE ADVENTURES OF BILL WORKER — Contracts — aaa apc | Mass Wage Campaign of Wage Slashing Takes Big Spurt'| After Elections; New Ones Every Day; Organize and Strike! | CONFERENCE AT IRVING PLAZA _ON DRESS STRIKE Delegates Meet Today to Plan Big Struggle dress strike NEW YORK.—The conference meets today at 7 p. m. at Irving Plaza Hall Called by the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union, it will have delegates from shops organized by the union, dele- gates from open shops and shops still held by the Internation3l Ladies’ Garment Workers. The Industrial Union calls on all open shops and company union shops to send repre- sentatives to the conference. The Industrial Union invites all active and militant workers, members or not, to attend the conference. Cuts, Layotfs' NEW YORK. — What the workers can expect from the promises of the bosses after elections is graphically shown by a letter written to the De- troit News, signed “G. M.” It tells of | 7,000 men laid off in an automobile plant the “owner of which was one of the men who told Mayor Murphy a few weeks ago that he would do all} he could to help the unemployed.” | Murphy has been getting the workers | | to rely on these promises to keep the | | workers from fighting for relief. | | New Cuts. | Every day new wage cut reports come in. The end of the elections, as | admitted by many of the leading bos | ses, is a signal for a drastic continu- | ation of the drive to slash the wages | | of millions of workers. | 4 HUN Deeds oF ale = ARE THANKFUL THAT THERE I5 AYO Commun Is™ Yesterday the Daily Worker re- | ported a series of these wage cuts| ‘which followed election. Now we have some more, which show the trend, and what can be expected by HIT INJUNCTION! In Omaha, Neb., the Cudahy pack- | me 3 ing plant, introduced the 5-day week, Mass Violation Today Colorful Pageant to Enthuse Masses at Coliseum on Friday NEW YORK.—Probably one of the biggest and most elaborate pageants that ever took place at a revolution- HATTERS SMASH _ PAYCUT PETITION )Negro and White | Comrades Attacked | By Tammany Thugs NEW YORK, Nov. 4—Monday night two young workers, a Negro youth and a white girl, were at- 3,000 CHEER (BLACK EYE FOR HOOVER; HAS LOST CONGRESS | RED SPEAKERS NEW YORK.—The democrats won | the state election by 700,000 plurality, and in New York City won most of ‘Ignore Lies of Repub-. ary demonstration in New York will The unemployed dressmakers will meet at 131 West 28th St., at 2 p.m today to elect their delegates to the conference, and to work out plans to mobilize the unemployed for the Per cent effected great dress strike. The copper workers have gotten | Double Sentences Terrible Speed-Up. two or three wage cuts already. But| Yesterday ten workers already The conference will hear a detailed | the bosses do not stop there. The | S*tVing from ten to 30 days for dis- report on the situation, particularly | Quincy and Painesdale Copper mines, | °Fderly conduct, arrested on the Zel- the facts of the terrific and growing so-called independent, have just |S€en line. were up in Special Ses- speed-up in the industry. In many, posted notices announcing another 10 |S!0nS for trial under Paragraph 600. on the basis of 5-days pay, though | At Noon: 34th St i 3 ¢ ot, the workers are supposed to produce | as much as they did before. This is | i - a direct wage-cut of from 15 to 20] (Continued from Page 1) | This demonstration Thousands of workers are | "sted dozens. | will be a real one. tacked at 6th St. and Third Ave. by | li BE k < | the judicial and other offices. Mor- a Tammany ward heeler and two de- | lean Pakers | row’s victory in New Jersey is almost the only republican gain, nationally, in an election that went generally against them, leaving control of Con- gress very much in doubt. Hoover prosperity was no argument this year, and masses of discontented workers and farmers, not yet radicalized enough to vote Communist, tried to give the faker, Herb Hoover, a black eye by sending democrats to office. ELIZABETH WORKERS TO CELEBRATE NOV. 7 IN RECORD MEET |Friday night when the 13th anniver-| Left Wing Leads Big’ tectives leading a gang of thugs. | |sary of the Soviet revolution will be Fi | : , NEW YORK.—At a Red rally at ight on Floor | ‘The girl comrade was struck over , celebrated. g& lthe hand as she warded off a vicious |8th Street and Third Avenue, Mon- pas of workers, red dancers, | NEW YORK, Nov. 5—Amidst sus- | blow intended for the head of the |@ay night, 3,000 workers cheered the | pepeasee dicesta ne pa ee es | tained cheering, local 8 of the United | young Negro worker. message of the Communist Party and | Workers Tahoewiacs Pavone ;| Hatters voted down the proposed} The comrades reported the attack militantly demonstrated their sup- Theater. “Turn Se aioe? ay ahd wage-cut proposals of the bosses by/at a Red meeting at Tenth Street | Port of the struggle for social in- | . A 189 to 34 at a tense meeting that.|and Second Avenue. Immediately SUrance and the Communist expose the name of the pageant, will portray | e i |the fights of the rising exploited ana |/#5ted from 3 to 6.45 p. m. two comrades volunteered to return |0f the bosses by driving out a bunch cases in New York, which will be per cent wage cut which brings the |THOSe whose sentences for disorderly | netrayed masses, the fight between |. called upon the Petition of the|to the corner. One, Frank A. Parra,|Cf republican bunkshooters who fail- had expired were still held in jail, |Mansion Hat shop where the bosses | and the other a comrade whose name | ing to win the workers to their meet- cited at the conference, the workers copper miners’ wages to the average | capitalism and socialism and the ris- ‘ : : are forced to produce nearly twice as starvation level of $15 per week. At | 2M all are now held pending trial | ine power of the Soviets on one-sixth | 224 oftcials forced the men to sign |is not known, were attacked by the |iné had resorted to attacks on the | the petition, the membership in over- | same thugs upon sight of their “Vote | Communist meeting. ay : ‘ing (Dec. 1 on the Paragraph 600 charges. | much per workers as in 1925. The) the same time the bosses are laying ; - |of the globe. ex ; 3 report will give a general plan of or-| off hundreds of men. | This means not only double punish- | Foster to Speak on ‘Blectiew eee number. smashingly repu- | Communist” buttons. | ‘The representatives of the bosses | diated any wage cut acceptance.| ‘The comrades were refused treat- jparty tried to work up chauvinistic | v . ns fi ment for the same picketing, but it ganization of strike preparations, for! The function of the A. F. of L. is | Comrade William Z, Foster who y discussion and adoption or amend- to keep these facts quiet. The boss |%/S0 means the added persecution of | was the candidate of the Communist |=70™ besinning to end, the left wing ment at the Mount Zion Hospital, | Sentiments among the crowd on the| ELIZABETH, N. J., Nov, 5—The members led the offensive. When} pecause the comrades were unem-|asis that the flag was not hanging! Thirteenth Anniversary of the Rus- ment. press is not reporting the wage cuts. |Peé held for a long time in Jail | party for governor of New York State | @ 3 : ‘The dressmakers working in shops Only the Daily Worker points out | “iting trial. | will talk on the building of socialism |e and again the officials sought | pioyed and could not pay the fat fees |StTaight from the platform, but when | sian Revolution will be celebrated in whose bosses belong to the Affiliated this new attack against the entire | In addition, seven other Zelgreen in the Soviet Union and will. sum up | Weck to interrupt shouts from the | gemanded. the Communist speaker answered|the Standard Oil, Singer Sewing, Association are very much aroused | workingclass, which proceeds with the j pickets who have not yet been sen- the results of the election campaign. _— silenced them. Several of the thugs were badly that the flag’ represents exploitation | Public Service owned city of Eliza- ie ds treachery of the I. L. G. W.| tremendous srowth of unémplayment. tenced had their cases set also for | The Freiheit Singing Society, over | Left Wing Leads Fight damaged. and starvation of the workers, lynch- | beth, N. J., Friday, Nov. 7, at 8 p.m. chiefs whose secret sell out agree- Workers! Anseee Dec. 1 in Special Sessions, on Para- | 399 strong, is preparing a program of Leading the attack against the) ing, ete., the crowd cheered so lustily | at the Russian Workers Home, 408 ment with the Association was ex-| The workers’ answer must be de- graph 600 charges. wage-cuts proposals left wing mem- that the republican faker gave up all| Court St., under the auspices of the ber pointed out that the union of- hope of misleading these workers and | Communist Party. They also will be | posed a few days ago by the Needle |cisive, it must be given now! Or- | held over three weeks in jail waiting ficials took no stand at the meetings, departed. Prominent working class leaders | revolutionary songs. s t . f OF | seal, | Demonstrate against Fish and Trades Workers’ Industrial Union. ganize shop committees! Strike a - ‘These workers realize more and more | against wage cuts! Join the Trade | orkers in the first batch are: but behind the backs of the workers will speak at this celebration, espe- were giving aid and comfort to the John Galsworth ’ ‘ca ” cially of the successes of the Five y's “Escabe On Cameo Theatre Screen Paid subs will give us a 6-page paper. Send them in. | Thomas, Woll and Hoover! Demon- strate against all the enemies of the the fact that the I. L. G. W. bureau- | ynion Unity League, the revolution- leee er ee Boereceze, AN- | soviet Union! Show your solidarity | 4 : cracy is working against them and ary Jeader in the struggle against teal Hee fatalie Leroy, Gregory | with the Soviet workers building so- |bosses in hindering struggle against Year Plan of Socialist Construction for the bosses. They are indignant | wage cuts! One wage cut now, means | ve Geneve Mociero, M. De- | ciatism under the 5-Year Plan! Mo- | the wage cuts. Afric, secretary of the in the Soviet Union. The Lithuania also at the attempt of the officials | more to come later on. This is the Bauer : nley Fonti and George |piiize your shop mates for the cele- |Jocal, try weakly to defend himself ) Singing Society of Elizabeth will sing to raise dues right in the midst of experience in every plant where wage a = n the second batch are: and expressed himself as grieved that \ revolutionary songs. Every worker this unemployment period. These |outs have been made. Smash the boss |“78e!0 Blanca, Morris Mocino, he was personally attacked. \is urged to make the celebration a |bration of the 13th anniversary of | workers will rally to the dress strike. | qrive against wages and living con- advance 25c, at the door 35c. Many of the workers who previous- ly, under pressure of the bosses and The talking movie, Galsworthy’s victs working in a fog, planting po- demonstration of Workers Solidarity in the defense of the Soviet Union union officials, were half-heartedly | “Escape” appears now at the Cameo’s for the cut, came out solidly and| Theatre. The scene and the com- sharply against it when member after | pany” is English, the photography tatoes, the hero is shown making a | break for liberty. He manages to| stay out a couple of days by means against the imperialist war-mongers. Admission is free of charge. FSU MEMBERSHIP cop ‘FOUGHT LAUNDRY BOSS member hammered at it. Jobless ‘workers! Make a living |Lee Tucker, Joseph Brooker, MEETING TONIGHT BULDOZE UNEMPLOYED | NEW YORK. — An unemployed | John J. Ballam to! worker finds a cop about the last Speak | person in the world to whom to con- fide his troubles. Perhaps that ac- counts for 19,000 stalwarts finding NEW YORK—John J. Ballam, ies; than one jobless family each in| newly elected national secretary of their tour of New York tabulating the Friends of the Soviet Union, who | distress. Only 13,222 families were has just returned from an extended reported as needing aid. stay in Soviet Russia, will speak at a special membership mass meeting “Charity workers are bad enough, tonight, Thursday, Nov. 6th, on the but god deliver us from the cops,” eve of the 13th Anniversary of the W8S the sentiment of one worker in- Russian Revolution. The meeting | terviewed by Federated Press, and will be held at Manhattan Lyceum, ®choed by many others. “Here's 66 East 4th St., at 7:30. All mem- What happened to me. There was a bers of the FSU are urged to bring oud rap on the door. Then in strode | their shop mates and friends. a tall, well-fed cop who gruffly| The local secretary, Harriet Silver- man, calls upon all shop delegates, fraternal organizations and unions to was unemployed. “I wasn’t anxious to tell him I) attend and turn in their greeting haven't had a job in six months. Be-| yonkers as a result of evictions for | cards in order that the signatures fore I could answer though, he may be immediately included in the | Stunted, “Well, T guess you don’t need | lutionary Museum in Moscow as a Telief,” and went out, slamming the | cop census Takers WARN JOBLESS OF FAKE POLICE AID Bosses Seek to Rotind Up Militants NEW YORK.—The police registra- tion of unemployed in New York | City, conducted by Tammany Hall as a pretense to helping the jobless, is but the beginning of a campaign to keep close tab on all sections of working class population where mili- tant activity is developing as a re- sult of the economic crisis, warns the International Labor Defense. International Labor Defense calls upon the unemployed to refuse the asked whether anyone in the house Tammany police this information, | that will be used against them. In New York City alone defending not being able to pay rents and the clubbing of evicted women by the police when they show any resis- Red Album to be sent to the Revo- | 400r.” | tance, has become a serious’ prob- | symbol of solidarity and friendship | between the working class of this| The usual reaction of an unem-/ jem to the I. L. D. The unemployed ployed man’s wife when she sees | situation is becoming more tense as | HAS TO FIGHT IN JAIL NEW YORK.—F. Williams has just been released from Raymond Street jail after a month of hell. While in jail he was made to clean toilets. All fhe prison trustees tried to pick fights with him to get him etra time, and finally one got so bad Williams punched him so that the trustee was taken to Kings | County Hospital. Williams was compelled to shovel coal then until | midnight. The sentence was given for re- |sisting the boss and his gangsters |who attacked the Coney Island | | Laundry meetings last August. Four | |were arrested but the case was dis- | missed. The boss picked a quarrel with Williams on his way home, and during the fight the boss went down so hard he fractured his skull. Williams was in jail one month awaiting trial, then served one month and is paroled for three. ‘JOBLESS CHARITY country and the workers and peas- cop coming into the house is terror. | ants of the Soviet Union. Some fear thei: man has gotten into | nnn nnen end |trouble or an accident. Either the Card doorbeil is. unanswered or she tells Party Activities, ithe cop there is no one unemployed All notices for this column can be run only for three days includ- ‘at her place, in order to get rid of him as quickly as possible. ing the date of the affair, due to the enormous amount of notices handed in. DEFENSE LEADERS the winter months are approaching. Deputy Commissioner of Hospitals municipally owned clinics and hospi- tals have had 1500 more cases every day than the daily average last year. Free clinics, Fay said, have had 147,- 000 more cases in the last six months than in all last year. Workers, their wives and children, are slowly starv- ing to death and come to these char- ity institutions in a condition almost beyond belief. On the admission of Fay reported that the twenty-six! TS A WAGE CUT \Emergeney Committee Slashes Pay One Half NEW YORK.—Thousands of wage earners are being employed through “charitable agencies” at the rate of $3 a day, for which they are ex- pected to do a full day’s work. This | The vote indicated that many of the Manson Hat workers that were forced into signing the petition, were against the cut. Re-instate Worker Carried on a high wave of enthu- siasm the hatters voted by 146 to 52 to sustain the decision of the vigil- ance committee of the Shafferman Hat shop to re-instate a discharged worker and fine the foreman $50 for discharging the worker. MEMBERS TO MEET Discuss Reorganizing On Shop Basis NEW YORK.—A general member- ship meeting of the New York Dis- trict of the International Labor De- fense to formulate plans for a shop and factory form of organization has been called for Thursday evening, Nov. 13, at Manhattan Lyceum, at 8 p. m. Because of the intensified persecu- tion of workers that is taking place in New York it was found neces- sary by the National Executive Com- mittee of the LL.D. to re-organize from a territorial form to a shop and factory basis in order to perform more efficiently in defense work. The tentative Eight Month Plan as out- lined in the Daily Worker will be LABOR DEFENSE shows a not too successful attempt | to copy some of the best features of the Sovkino technique, but at that is way ahead of the native Hollywood product. aristocrat, an official in the World War who escaped from a German | prison, but doesn’t succeed in staying letarian, at least in New York, would death in the police station for doing. After effective scenes of the con- The story is that of an English | | of assistance from every upper class woman he runs into from a judfie off |duty, and from an Espicopal minis- | ter from whom he claims the ancient right of church sanctuary. The action is good and the picture jis interesting in individual scenes. ; It’s only class line is rather anti- labor, though not very definite. The out of an English prison. He favors | whole thing is rather a glorification | | the fox in a fox hunt and afterwards, | of the “sporting” instinct of the Brit- | is sent up for accidentally killing a |ish ruling class. It is a typical pro- | cop who was abusing a street walker. | duct of teh liberal bourgeoisie, human | | He gets five years for what aa pro-|and humanitarian, dedicated to the | Cooperators! have simply been third degveed to| pretty good fellows, better than their | S E R O Y idea that the parasites in society are laws or institutions: a completely muddled philosopsy—V. S. JOHN GALSWORTHY’S ‘CAMEO 42ND STREET and Broadway "ESC APE” AMAZING HUMAN DRAMA | NOW! With GERALD DU MAURIER AND EXCEPTIONAL CAST—PRODUCED BY BASIL DEAN Theatre Guild Productions ELIZABETH, ‘| THE QUEEN 1. Bd. Eve, 8:40 GUI Mate. Th.asai, 240 ROAR CHINA and 46/10:30 A.M. LOB “EAST IS WEST” !PE VELEZ—LEW AYRES hated; » Robinson THE QUEEN OF COMEDIES THE GREEKS HAD | B'way|Daily from | | selling the Daily Worker. Write 50 | East 13th St. N. Y. C., for details, “For Alt Kinds of Insurance” Telephone: Murray All 555¢ 7 Kast 42nd Street, New York Patronize CHEMIST | 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 8215 Bronx, N. Y. DEWEY 9914 — Office Hours: 9 A. M-9 P.M. Sunday: 10 A, M1 P.M. DR. J. LEVIN | SURGEON DENTIST 1501 AVENUE U -Ave, U Sta., B.M.T. || At Hast 15th St. BROOKLYN, N. ¥. | DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Reom 803—Phone: Algonquin 8188 | Not connected with any Sele other office j—MELROSE—, Dairy agsracnane jee “Will Always Find Tt (ARL BRODSKY is a direct wage cutting schedule. discussed, and a basis for future | The money comes from a commit- | Labor and Fraternal work will be laid. Plensaat (o Vine at Oar Piece. the commissioner the crowding of MARTIN BECK THEA. A WORD FOR IT |] 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD. het 45th St. 'URGE NEW PLAN these places has become a problem. All notices for this column can be run only for three days includ- ing the date of the affair, due to the enormous amount of notices | handed in. | Pa hh ie “Young Defenders” will hold an open forum on “Russia Today" which will mark the first in a series of educational forums. Sunday, Nov. 9, at 4 p. m., at 1400 Boston Road. Dancing afterwards. eer saat | Tryouts For the New Revolutionary Theatre. will be held at the John Reed Club, 102 W. 14th St., top floor, Thursday evening, Bp m. “Lightning” will be the first production. U.C.W.C.W. Lecture on ‘Child and Adult Education.” auspices Council 21 at thelr Center, 261 |) Utica Ave., Brooklyn, Thursday, 6 p. m. "Admission free. Ba tee j All Members Brass Band | must appear at the final rehearsa for the Pageant Thurs., 7.30 p.m Manhattan Lyceum, 66 ©. 4th layers must be at the Bronx Colise- um, -Nov. 7 at 7.30 p.m. ‘ in held this 108rd St. Thurs., Rep at 6 p.m, t. Presence ed, Sa Branch 1. L. D. uM 5 Thurs.. 6:30 p.m, at.132 EB. 26th lembers must attend. Bae A Meeting of the Workers Camera ue Mill take place Thurs. 7:30 p. in. at 10 EB) J7th St. 2nd fioor. Workers 4 sted are urged to come. A 4 * Dance Under Aunpices of Anti-Fas- t Allinnece doe Hi Big Protest Campaign Requires Shop Form NEW YORK.—Laying the founda- tion for a reorganization of the In- ternational Labor Defense from its present territorial form to a shop and factory basis where the workers will organize defense brariches for their struggle against the boss class, a ten- tative Eight Month Plan has been formulated and proposed by the Na- tion Executive Committee of the I. L. D. The date for its completion has been set for June, 1931, the sixth anniversary of the organization. In preparation for the increased activities and growing membership of 1|the Internstional Labor Defense, the Eight Month Plan outlines a program of proposed work on the injunction fight going in New York, the strug- gle against lynching, deportations, (many of them actually legalized murders), sedition and anti-syndi- calist laws, the Atlanta “insurrec- tion” case (soon to come to trial), the Imperial alley workers, with sen- tences of up to 42 years, and many others. To carry this program through suc- cessfully general membership meet- ings have been organized throughout th and 1iith tae elst Allin of N. A. *" Harlem Section will be held Sat. & p.m, at 2011 Third Ave., bet. 110 St. Admission 35c, the country and set for the week when the Haymarket Martyrs were Hundreds of millions of dollars a |year are spent by the city of New York, but the hospitals for the car- |ing of workers who suffer as a re- sult of unemlpyment are not even} thought of and when an unemploy- | ment committee comes to the mayor | with demands for action they are beaten and clubbed into an uncon- | scious state and then arrested for disorderly conduct. To avoid a general tound up of unemployed workers, the Interna- tional Labor Defence is calling upon all its districts and branches for mass protests against any registra~ tion and finger printing of workers, | and advises the unemployed not to| register in order to avoid jails and deportations. executed in Chicago. J. Louis Eng- dahl and Sam Darcy will attend these meetings to discuss with the I. L. D. membership and its sympathiz- ers the Eight Month Plan. Engdahl will be in Boston Nov. 9 and 10; New Haven Nov. 11 and 12, and in New York City on Nov. 13. Samuel L. Darcy will be in Phila- delphia Noy. 10; Pittsburgh Nov. 11 and 12; Chicago Noy. 13 and 14; St.) Louis Nov. 15 and 16; Cleveland Nov, 17; Detroit Nov. 18 and 19 and tee made up chiefly of bankers, with a few business men such as Owen D. Young, democratic politician and chairman of the board of the Gen- eral Electric Co. This Emergency Employment Committee was organ- ized early in October, with Seward Prosser as chairman. It has since rented a whole floor in the tower of one of New York's newest sky- | scrapers, with office accommodations for upward of 60 people, who hold daily conferences on the unemployed. So far, activities have been confined to drawing up plans and giving out long press releases. No money had been made availabl efor the unem- ployed up to Nov. 3. But the com- mittee determines policy for the Emergency Work Bureau, set up by the charity societies. Cut $2 a Day. William H. Matthews, chairman of the bureau, recently circularized all the churches, settlements, health centers “and similar institutions” in New York City, offering them labor at $3 a day to do work outside their regular budget. 75 accepted the offer w'p'iin three days. This labor is sup- plied from among the unemployed who apply to the charity societies for relief. Work done is to includé painting and general cleaning up, says Mat- Buffalo Nov. 20. thews. The ordinary rate for such At the Manhattan Lyceum meet- ing, J. Louis Engdahl, general sec- retary of the International Labor De- fense will discuss with the member- ship the proposed Eight Month Plan. Charles Nemeroff, district secretary of the I. L. D. will outline the prob- Jems confronting the New York membership. “SOLIDARITY” APPEARS “Solidarity”, the magazine of the Workers Intenatioaushdl bA i* Workers International Relief is now for sale. This issue, a November “Thirteenth Anniversary of the Rus- sian Revolution” number, ” attractive than ever before. ‘The farm situation, unemployment, the South, the life of the miners, pages of pictures, are among the fea- tures included in this issue, | price_is five cents, The Datly Worker swings the angry masses into the red ranks. Join the 60,000 drive. Send subs! Bundle orders! day. IN ATTRACTIVE FORM appears with new articles, new writers, more ‘The labor in New York, he says, is $5 a A COMEDY BY ZOW AKINS SAM H. HARRIS West of Broadway Eve. 8:50, Mts. Th. & Sat, 2:40 ‘Then., 42d St. W. of B’y | Wed. & Sat. 2:80 _ (near 174th St. Station) | |] @HONB:— INTERVALB Evening 8:50. Mats. 43rd St. and HIPPODROME {3°44 00 BIGGEST SHOW IN NEW YORK SCOTLAND YARD » 6th Av. ngs | (VIC REPERTORY ** st |") soe, $1, $1.50. Mts. Th. & 8: EVA LE GALLIENNE, Director Tonight oe eccese, “SIGFRIED” RKO with Edmond Lowe, | Tom, Nigh “ROMEO JULIET” ACTS Joan Bennett, and | Sea: dv. atBoxOft.&T 11,113 W.4d Er Torrence | GAR WALLA! PLay ON THE SPOT with ORANK WILBUR and NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES ———————— ie nd Paid. subscriptions wi!l solve the financial crisis of the Daily Worker. Join the drive for | 60,000 readers. per Bakers Maker&Redford Gwynne & Co. o 4 Pep | RKO_ALWAYS A GOOD SHOW! RATIONAL Vegetarian | RESTAURANT H 199 SECOND AVE, UB 1 Bet. 12th and 13th sts. Strictly Vegetarian Food EDGAR WALLACE FORREST, rHpA. TEFFERION HEALTH FOOD “UxTRA, MATE ELECTION DAY | — eee 1) WE strange Vegetarian ——— % ieture. LYSISTRATA “Sasi (ites | NTN ooranee THE mMIT YOU HEAR ABovuT Marty May 16 weeks on ALL TALK Phi UNI sit 5868 44TH STREE THe | “Dainty Mare |Broadnay? & fouND ssutdlalabael ed Bytstietty Gasca aA ait Pectorrtonees feed To Sp MaRS nk Chapman ’ i | “Crystal eto John’s Restaurant ‘UP POPS THE DEVIL SPECIALTY: TAUIAN WisHES A Genuine Comedy Hit A piace with atmosphere with ROGER PRYOR Prospects 161 9% 5 irs sd radicals meet MASQUE 45th St. ™'etnince at 8: resin ia 102K. 12th St. New York Mats, Wednesday and Saturday 2:30 and Orchestra _— EXTRA MATINEE ELECTION DAY Ls 5 Moore Advertixe your Union Meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept 50 East 18th St. New York City

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