The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 14, 1930, Page 2

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| @heap, docile labor in an advertise- et cane Xote Sie ta she "i section. Page Two DAILY Ww ORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1930 Martial Law = Down in Cuba; Masses Seeth With Revolt Two Newspapers Shut Down; Bloody Machado Police Kill Woman; Communists Are | Active in the Struggle HAVANA, Nov. 13.—Fearful of the | growing mass unrest, and the re- peated bloody demonstrations against the fascist regime of Machado, mar- tial law has been declared through- | out Cuba. The immediate excuse for the sus- pension of all “constitutional rights” by a decree published by Dr. Jesus M. Barraque, secretary of justice. was the “accidental” killing of Mercedes Barbarossa by a stray bullet as she watched a student’s riot Wednesday night. Since Machado’s police are heavily armed, and have orders to shoot to kill, the stray bullet un- doubtedly came from Machado’s cops and was meant for the demonstrat- ing students. El Pais and Diario de La Marina, two newspapers, were shut down to- day on Maachado's orders. Several weeks ago at a specially arranged function Machado issued a statement declaring that his regime was sound and popular. This was his attempt to cover up the seething revolutionary spirit throughout Cuba Cuba is in the worst crisis in its history. Literally tens of thousands of workers are starving. Hundreds of peasants and their families are roaming the countryside begging bread. There have been ferocious battles. Dozens of Communists have been killed by Machado and scores are rotting in his vile jails. | tionary spirit of the masses, by ap-/ The tremendous drop in the price of sugar has brought wrack and ruin to the Cuban masses. | The Nationalist leaders have been attempting to temporize the revolu- pealing to so-called “insurgent” Sen- | ators in Washington for intervention | under the Platt Amendment to oust Machado and put them in power to do Wall Street’s bidding. Some of them have made alliances with Bri- tish imperialist interests against Ma- | chado. But the great rank and file of the Nationalist forces have been itating for a battle against the) Machado regime. | The Communist Party in Cuba has| been actively organizing the workers | to come out with the demands of the working class and poor peasants. It is agitating within the trade | unions, which have been declared il- legal by Machado, to strike against | wage cuts and to demand bread. The unions, under Communist leadership, | are coming out more and more into| open struggle despite the vicious ter- ror of the Machado regime. The Communist Party is illegal in} Cuba, but has been carrying on ac-| tive work. Membership in the Com-| munist Party, in the eyes of Ma-| chado, and his Wall Street puppets, is a death offense, hundreds of Com- | munists having been murdered dur-| ing the past few years by Machado’s | orders. (ihe 2 EIR | Wall St. Journal “Destroys” Marxian | NEW YORK—The growth of So- cialist Construction in the Soviet Union, amidst the bankruptcy of the capitalist system, so strikingly brought out by the present world crisis, is forcing the capitalists to face the issue of Communism or Capitalism. The Wall Street Jour- nal, organ of the bankers and para- sites in its Nov. 13th issue contains a feature article entitled “Socialism” | by Thomas F. Woodlock, which is an} Hoover Gives Thanks CHICAGO, Nov. 13—On the same, page with the plea of Pres. Hoover | that we thank god that we are not| as other nations, the Chicago Daily News carries the story of the death of a 19-year old girl from tubercu- losis. i $15 Average Wage for WASHINGTON, D. C—Of 4,425 white women employed in Florida in- dustries in the autumn of 1928, and studied by the Women’s Bureau of the Department of Labor at the re- quest of the governor of that state} and the Florida League of Women | Voters, 3.4 per cent earned less than $5 per week, 20.2 per cent $5 and under “$10, a week; 26.4 per cent $10 Contractors Beat Do BOSTON, Mass.—Contractors are utilizing the unemployment crisis to | hire workers at low wages. Manual | workers on city work here are re-| ported to be paid 50 cents an hour Steel Mills Use YOUNGSTOWN, Nov. 13.—Hoover's | stagger system is being put into! Practice here by the Carnegie Steel | Co. as “unemployment relief.” This | concern normally employs 7,000 men. | About half are unemployed- now.! They are “dividing up” the work, ac- tually inflicting a big wage cut on Danville Strikers Hold DANVILLE, Va.—Despite the fran-, tic efforts of the United Textile Workers misleaders to end the tsrike | of the 4,000 textile workers here, the workers are holding out against great odds. The gas is shut off by the city- owned gas works. Evictions are threatened. Picketing is going on in bad weather. Philadelphia Bosses Give $57,000 for “Relief” PHILADELPHIA, Pa. — Mocking the growing miseries of the more | been reported in Michigan, | they won’t have to pay anything for ideological attempt to destroy the} Marxian spectre and allay the fears | of the coupon clippers. | Woodlock resorts to the hoary andj} bewhiskered trick of setting up a} straw man which he lables Marxism | and then simply tears it to pieces! to his own and his parasite readers’ satisfaction. Nevertheless Socialist construction speeds on in the Soviet | Union and the world revolution gains | strength from day to day. | for Jobless Miseries Police answered a call, found a} widow and her four daughters, aged | | U, 16, 19 and 20. All were unem- | ployed. There was no food, no fuel, | a candle for light. They were} huddled about the bed of the dying! girl. The police called a physician but the girl died before he arrived. | Florida Women Toilers and under $15 per week, 24 per cent 15 and under $20 per week; 13.3 per | cent $20 and under $25 per week, and | 7.8 per cent $25 and under $39 per | week. The medium earnings were $15 | per week. Weekly hours for these white women workers were not lim- ited by law, and it was found that while 37.3 per cent of these women | worked 54 hours a week, while 30 per | cent worked less than 9 hours a day. | wn Workers’ Wages instead of the 621% cents called for | by contract. Wages as low as 18 cents an hour | for construction road workers have Stagger System all workers. The U. S. Steel Corporation sub- sidiary here is carrying on the same stunt. The steel mills are doing all they can to make the workers bear the burde nof unemployment so that unemployment insurance. ing Out Despite UTW The bosses are aware of the fact that with the U.T.W. ready to knife; the strike when the workers’ resis-| tance is worn down they can starve the workers back to work. A mili- tant struggle under leadership of the National Textile Workers’ Union was declared by Wm. Murdoch, secretary, to be the condition for a victory over the bosses. their dependents here, the city ciun- cil passed an appropriation of exactly than 250,000 unerfiployed workers and Australian Miner: SYDNEY, Australia—Wages of coal Miners throughout Australia have been reduced by 12% per cent—on the pretext by the coal barons that the higher wage rates prevented them @isposing of th output. For several $57,000 for “relief”! s Get 1214 P.C. Pay Cut ness of trade and widespread unem- ployment in the industry. Since the rates have been reduced there has been no increase in trade, despite the lowred selling price of coal. If any- thing, the position is worse now than before owing to the prevailing econ- years past there has been great slack- Advertise French-Canadians as Cheap Labor ‘QUEBEC, Canada—The French- Canadians workers are offered as omic crisis. A booklet is sent upon request which advertises the profits that THE "ADVENTURES OF BILL WORKER TMADE. THis Aiasoy iLL MADE THis CLUB So 9] (1 BUILT THis sAIL So Ss 1 HIS ALai2n4 ai CAN BE WANGED Over | — Damn Good French— DWE BEAN By THE Bosses |i eh ner I Ee eo —OF THE Way Ast MAYNARD WOOL MILL SHUTS; TO CUT WAGES ALSO Announces I i aspibee) Will See 20 P.C. Slash To the Daily Worker: The only mill in Maynard, Mass., ownec. by the American Wool Co., an- | nounced through the newspapers that it will shut down for two or three weeks and on the opening will | give the workers a 20 percent wage | cut. This mill formerly employed 1500 | workers. Today 500 are working part time. Two or three days a week earn- jing an average of $8 or $9 per week. Some of the workers in this mill are dues paying members of the; United Textile Workers. 30 workers aying dues to this union surely thought this union would come to their help in this hour of need. Pres- ident MacMahon came to speak to a | meeting approved by the bosses. The leaflets for this meeting were distrib- |uted in the mills. The company ob- | viously not fearing the words of wis- | dome of the president of this “labor union”. To this meeting 300 workers came. MacMahon told the workers that they must accept the wage cut. That the bosses are having a hard time (hard time! what about the workers?) and that the workers must help them out. 20 percent wage cut for the work- | ers in Maynard means actual starv- ation. The workers are very dissatis- fied and are not so willing “to help *he bosses”. ealed to the N. T. W. U. for aid. ‘ast Sunday evening a, small group meeting was held in the Russian hall. There were 35 workers. Some of them |spoke urging organization. Stating | conditions were so terribly bad that | unless the workers organize the en- tir' working class population would | starve. The workers depend for a living on this one mill. Immediately some of the workers volunteered for a committee to get a hall and arrange a meeting. The keynote of the meeting will be “Organize against wage cuts and Lay-Offs.” The meet- in takes place Friday, November 14, at 7:30 p.m. There will be speakers in the Finnish, Polish and English language. Edith Beckman, Labor and Fraternal Bronx Open Forum st ube prroapest, “Ave, near St, Sunday, Nov, 16. at § p.m. “Youth in Industry.” tra, aa Elizabeth, N. J.. Attention! _Vetcherinka and entertainment to e opening of Elizabeth Work- nter, 106 B. Jersey St., Sunday, Admission 50 cents. Saat 149th Sub- fee The Young Liberators and the Amer- fean Negro Labor Congress Of South Brooklyn meet tonight at 511 Baltic St. at 8 p.m. All work- ers, Negro and white of this section who are sincerely against lynching and all forms of race discriminaton are urged to come. ae ee. Medical Workers to hear report Dele- gation to the Fifth R.LL.U, Congress At the méeting to be held Wednes- |day, November 12, 8 p. m. at 16 W. 21 St. All medical workers are urged to hear the report from the Red In- ternational of Labor Unions. « Open Forum in English At the Bronk Workers Club. 1472 Boston Road, Sunday, 8p .m. Subject: “American Imperialiam and its role in Latin American, Colonies. The Workers Camera League Of the W.LR. meéts Thursday, Nov. 13th, at 7:30 p.m, at our new head- Guatters, 181 W, 28th St., first floor. Final ‘artangements will be made for the Exhibition and Dance to take place Saturday, Nov. 15th, at Irving Plaga, Irving Place and 15th Bt. at 6 pm, Admission 15 cents. ture On “Religion” and the Class Struggle.” This Sunday, October 16, at 8 p. m., Workers Center, 105 That- ford Ave. Brooklyn. Counell No, 5 W.C.W. Will give a lecturi banquet on Sunday evening, Nov. 16, at 8 p. m., at 2901 Mermaid Ave. Coney Island. Admission 26 cents. "| “Workers Journalism and Photography” Will be the subject at a lecture at Labor Defender Photo Group, 7 ra 1th St, Friday evening, Nov. 14th, at 8 o'clock. All comrades and sym- pathizers are invited. Comrades who are unemployed ene wish to help in the work of the 1.L.D. should call at the ILD District difice, 799 Broad- way, Room 410, Needle Trades Workers solldarity an ft AP'S Negro Department N.T.W. i iN take pase Saturday evening, p. m., November 15, at the Unity Cooperative Youse, 1800 Keventh Ave. Music, Retreshme Admission 6c. All Workers, Neato, Spanish, white are invited. await the bosses who would establish their factories in i section, * é ret ar opunitton he Warers Aca gta Re- ust Pant the United Council of Work- ‘lass Women will meet tonight, ,, ° A group of workers ap- | Needle Fraction Meet Sat., 2 P.M. |) NEW YORK —A general frac- tion meeting of all Communists in the needle trades will be held Sat- urday, at Irving Plaza Hall, at 2p, m. All must be there. (COMMUNIST VOTE | GAINS IN MASS. 356 in Cambria, Pa.; New Hampshire Thefts} | | JOHNSTOWN, Pa, Nov. 13.--The | official reports of the Communist vote lin Cambria county are: P. Cush for senate, 235; F. Mozer, for governor, | 178; S. Lee for lieutenant governor, | 276; F. Note, for secretary of interior | affairs, 276; C. F. Jones, for judge of superior court, 291; P. Muselin, for judge of superior court, 356; Max Silver, same, 283. Gain In Mass. BOSTON, Mass., Nov. 13.—Returns from 215 cities and towns of Massa- chusetts out of 35, the total, show that Eva Hoffman, militant woman Communist candidate got 6019 votes, the highest single ward being her own, with a vote of 500 for her. In the vote for governor Canter, the Communist candidate, got 3,463 this year, whereas in the same cities in 1928 the vote was 2773. This is a | gain of 2 per cent in the guberna- torial vote, and about 100 per cent in the Hoffman vote. The biggest gains were in Boston jitself, where the vote grew from 662 in 1928 to 1208 in 1930. The vote in Brocton this year is | 185, against 139 in 1928. The vote in 72, New Bedford, 253, Haverhill 107. jan these are for Canter. Steal N. H. Votes. CONCORD, N. H., Nov. 13.—The Concord “Patriot” reports 274 Com- munist votes in New Hampshire, a gain of 98 since 1928. However, there was vote stealing in New Hampshire. Organize Unemployed Councils to fight for unemployment insurance! JOBLESS LEAVE MUSTEITE 100 JOIN THE COUNCIL NEW YORK —A thousand unem- ployed workers at the fake city agency on Lafayette St. were listen- ing to a Musteite talk through a loud speaker yesterday. But when Sadie Van Veen, of the Unemployed Coun- cil came down and began to talk, without the advantage of mechanics, the crowd left the Musteite and came over. The fighting program of the Unemployed Council made a real ap- peal to them. Many followed the speaker up to 27 East Fourth St., headquarters of the Unemployed Council, where another meeting was held and a hundred of them joined the council. 8 p. m., at 10 Bast 17 Street, to com- plete Arrangements for the joint ba- zaar_o be held January 2 3, 4, at the Star Casino. LL.D. Mase, Membership Meeting. Thursday, November 13, at Man- hattan Lyceum, 66 Bast 4th Street. ngdahl awMl speak for the N. E., J. Brodsky will speak on “Workers self defense in court.” Nemeroff will report for the District Comm, Dis- cussion by the membership will fol+ low. Meeting Wilh atary at 8 pm, * NEW JERSEY Jersey City Workers interested in taking courses at the Workers Center, 337 Henderson St. (one flight up), should register at once at the above address, Fees for each course (12 evenings) $2, Unemployed fee. Come up and taike it over, Friday night, Perth “Amboy The first class in the Fundamentals of Communism, held at the Workers School will begin this Saturday, 3 Pity’ oft 208 lm St. and will cons inue on Saturdays at the same time and place, All workers are urged to attend. Party Activities, Shon Paper Conference Sunday, Nov. 3 m.. ‘Workers Ail functionaries responsible for shop Daper work expected to be present. yaaa Seclton 4, Attention Special meeting Unit Daily Worke agents Thursday, 8.30 p. m. at 30: Lenox Ave, abies urgent. . Sam Nenstn to “avenk At Wast New Sede rotkere Club, Wednesday, Nov p.m, at 524 Vervont Ave, Subseci—tbeve antag Springfield is 103, Revere 66, Lowell | ‘Hatter Union Officials Call Police in Pay Try to Split Solidarity of Trimmers, Trimmers Protest Rises; Must be Organized NEW YORK. — Officers of the United Hatters of North America still maneuvering to force the hatters | to take a wage cut, called in the pol- ice last night at the meeting of Lo- cal 7, the trimmers’ local (girls), in or‘er to prevent them from hearing | what a committee of the men (local | 8, finishers) thought about the schenie. Both Local 7 and Local 8 recently voted down the proposition of the of- ficers and bosses that the New York shops cut wages “in order to meet outside competition.” The officers got the idea that the | trimmers’ local could be bulldozed by a speech by Michael Green, president of the U. H. of N. A. at their meet- ing last night, and then it would be easier to force the men in line. The finishers in Perfect Hat Shop| elected a committee of three, and committees of five were elected at each of Frank Katz Hat Shop, Hutt & Wasserman, and Kurtz & David- man to go to the trimmers’ local | meeting and tell them that the men); were against the cut, that it would not make more work, for the outside shops would cut too, and that it would only mean less wages for everybody. When the committees arrived, they elected a smaller committee of one from each shop committee to go in and ask for admittance and a chance to speak. Green arrived, saw the committee ou‘cide, and ordered its members not to even try to get in. A few minutes later police began to arrive, three in all. When the small committee tried to go in, Green, the police and Min- |nie Teitelbaum, the secretary of Lo-| cal 7 came out and ordered them away. “Go to hell, mind your own business,” yelled Minnie, and the cops threatened to arrest everybody in the committees. mittees be admitted, and the ma- chine began to yell, “We can take CA Re LockED UP He Boyer wren HEY WANT AAE OUT |Care of ourselves,” Girls inside moved that the com-} “T MADE Tas By Boss7h BED AT Tee Cut Maneuver a clear attempt to array the locals one against the other, though they are both parts of the same union. When the girls insisted on having their motion voted on, Teitelbaum | called in the police. Most of the girls rose and surrounded those the cops were trying to throw out. The police were sent out, and the same thing happened again, they were! called in again when it was again demanded that the motion to admit) the committees be voted on. Green For a Wage Cut. Green made a speech, in favor of wage cut, although he started out, by | saying that he did not come to talk} for it. He ended his speech, “Now that is all I have to say. You can| adjourn the meeting and let them all go to the devil.” The sentiment of the girls and the committee from the men was, “This is outrageous. We pay dues to those | guys and they use the position and| funds we give them to call out the} cops on us!” No vote was taken inside, and the} situation is about the same, except! that the workers, girls and men, have had a good lesson on the necessity of standing together against the wage cut plans of the officials. Next Step. The committee members will report | back at shop call in the shops that! elected them and ask for resolutions | protesting the action of the officers. At the meeting of Local 8, Wednes- day, the matter will be brought up. The hatters are going to get a wage cut unless they organize to fight it. “Fight Against Wage Cut” Committees must bé built up. It) would be a good thing if the shop committees elected to go to the Local! 7 meeting were to be made perma-| nent, and should be joined by other committees from other shops. The trimmers should also elect conimit- tees and act in conjunction with the | _ men. INDIAN MASSES MOURN ON DAY OF CONFERENCE Capitalist press reports tell of thou- sands of Indian peasants and work- ers, starving and this, parading in mourning through Indian cities at the moment of the first session of the Indian Round Table Conference of Imperialists in London. The pa- raders only paraded, they did not re- | volt. They were still in the grip of Gandhi's paralyzing “non-resistance” doctrine. But in London rajas and maha- rajas, diwans, khans, gaekwars, and hosts of other silk clad, jeweled and gorgeous parasites met and dined and applauded the king on his golden’ throne in their midst, and all pro- | tested their loyalty to the empire in as subservient terms as did Premier Lloyd George the “laborite” himself. The masses of India know that no- thing good will come out of that) conference. The speeches delivered on the) opening day are marvels of dullness | and todying, and not once was men- | tioned even such a moderate term as | “dominien status,” which many of the | Indian delegates are pledged to de- | mand. None ofthem want independ- ence. Only the Indian workers and peasants want freedom from the bru- tal imperialist rule. The Daily Worker melts a million steel wills into one battering ram to #mash the boss system. On to 60,000. Be a Daily Worker worker | employment Insurance! daily. . AMTER SPEAKS TONIGHT ON BOLSHEVIK REVOLT NEW YORK.—There will be a lec- ture by Israel Amter, recently re- leased from six months in prison for leading the March 6 jobless demon- stration, at the new club rooms of the Boro Park Workers Club, 1373 Forty-third St., Brooklyn tonight, at 8 p.m. The topic is “Thirteen Years of the Russian Revolution.” The Speaker is particularly qualified and very able, Come and hear of the tre- mendous successes of the greatest revolution the world has witnessed 80 far. Out of a job? Got spare time? You can earn a little money and take a crack at the system by sel- ling Daily Workers. Come up and we will explain. 35 East 12th St. Reject Charity! Fight for Un- For » Gooa Ment and Froletarian Prices Ent at, UNIVERSAL CAFETERIA Cor. 11th St. and University Place (Special Room for Conterences) INTERNATIONAL Photo Exhibition and Dance RED DAxcans OF W. 1. R. G PICTURES Saturday, November 15, 6 p. m. IRVING PLAZA sides | Macs, - ‘Gant ‘St. Iminsion ‘ents Wonk ene’ aC CAMERA Tasee WwW. rR. ‘W. 26th St, First Moor NEW BRUNSWICK |@ real struggle to get immediate un- i Tonteh at By RYAN WALKER. I MADE THis Gon So AFELLOW WoRKER I Cou Bayonet S07 a LD BE SHOT BY ON THe BOGES ORDER] Parnow Ay FRENC BUT Youd A MAN ISA Damn Foon: Dee poss ALTERATION PAINTERS T0 MEET TONIGHT AT 8 P. M.| NEW YORK.—Speakers from the Trade Union Unity League will ad- | dress a mass meeting of unorganized alteration painters tonight at 8 p. m., at McKinley Square Garden, Boston | Road near 169th St. Their topic will be the need and forms of organizing to stop the terrific unemployment, lov’ wages and bad conditions among the painters, hit as hard as any in- | dustry by the crisis. All painters are invited. JOBLESS INCREASE, Call Mass Meet for Monday Night NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J., Nov. 13.| —Unemployment is growing from} day to day in this city. Johnson & Johnson, medical supply manufactur- | ers, lay off 25 workers weekly. ‘The | General Cigar Co. is installing more | machinery to speed up the workers, | and by Christmas they announce) many now working will be out of a job. The Int'l. Motor Co., which for-, merly employed 1,200 workers, ~now has only 175. Lefkowitz Leather Co., only a few weeks ago had 300 on the job. At present there are only 60; and these 60 were given a 10 per cent wage cut. The Unemployed Council in New Brunswick has called a mass meet- ing for Monday, Noy. 18, at 8 p. m., at Workers Home, 11 Pdum St., to mobilize the unemployed for struggle to get rNief. The “Hungarian Her- ald,” a fake liberal sheet, is trying to fool the unemployed, telling them | that anyone under 40 can get a job. The Unemployed Council will ex- pose these fakers and mobilize for employment relief, as well as to fight | for the Communist Party Unemploy- ment Insurance Bill. 60 P.C. LAYOFF, 10 | P.C. CUT, SUICIDE, ROBERSTON, WYO. Organize 6g: Figt ht This Misery! (By a Worker Correspondent) ROBERTSON, Wyo.—A 60 per cent layoff and a 10 per cent wage cut for those remaining on the job and one suicide, this was the greetings to the workers of the/ Standard Timber Co. said to be owned by the officials of the Union Pacific Railroad, a few | days ago. Many workers who were unable to make their living under the former | scale are subject to more misery and starvation. Many of them are in debt to the company from $25 to $100. Steep Food Prices. ‘The company runs a commissary and we are charged such an unreas- onable prices for all groceries. Potatoes are $6 a hundred pounds while farmers are giving them away. Ham and bacon are 50 cents a pound, and have been in storage probably Since the civil war. Eggs are 50 cents a dozen and a pint of canned milk 17 cents. Fellow worker Charles Mattson committed suicide slashing his throat. Mattson was a class-conscious worker | but I suppose that’ he ‘broke down | under this, rotten bosses system. Burial was’engineered by the county coroner in an old dog fashion such as can be expected from this parasitic system. How long are we workers and farmers going to stand for these in- sults. We fought in 1917 to save the Wall Street bankers millions. Now it is up to us to pull the trigger to save millions of workers from misery and starvation. Write to the Provisional Cam- paign Committee for Unemploy- ment Insurance, 2 West 15th St. New York City, for information on the unemployment insurance fight! AMUSEMENTS VIC REPERTORY 34‘ St. 6th Av.) Evenings pi 30 | 1 600 $1) 32,80 Mts, The & Sat. 3:30 ALE wheel Director Theatre Guild Productions ELIZABETH, THE QUEEN GUILD Mite" tn.geat, 340 New Musical Roma GUY ROBERTSON EY, Others MAJESTIC THEA, sith, W. of iroudway Eva, 8:30, Mats. Wed.@sat. 2:20. Chi 2600) THE GREEKS HAD ‘A WORD FOR IT A COMEDY BY ZO AKINS SAM H. HARRIS Thea., 42d St. W. of B'y Evening 8:50, Mats, Wed. & Sat. 2:30 EDGAR WALLACE'S PLAY ON THE SPOT with Ling Re and AN. ¥ WONG EDGAR WALL AChR. Me rage TH A 49 W, of Bly. Bvs, 8:50. Mts, W. & 8. 2 THE QUEEN OF COMEDIES LYSISTRATA THE HIT YOU HEAR APOER 44TH STREET ATE Eves, 8:40, — Mate. Wed. & Sa’ 300 Balcony Seats, $1, All Perforinance: “UP POPS THE DEVIL” A Genuine Comedy Hit with ROGER PRYOR — 45ch Sec hgee E ot Bey MUSIC AND CONCERTS FOR THE BENEFIT OF Tickets in Advance 50 Cente ENTERTAINMENT and BALL — SATURDAY, NOV. 15 at NEW HARLEM CASINO, 116th ‘St. and Lenox Ave. Given by the Esthonian Worker Club, Sports Section . A VERY ATTRACTIVE SPORT PROGRAM HAS BEEN ARRANGED LABOR SPORTS UNION At the Door 60 Cents FOR BETTER l/- albino ks MEN'S AND YOUNG MEN'S Suits and Overcoats go to PARK CLOTHING CO. 98 Avenue A, Cor. Sixth St. VALUES IN Philharmonic Symphony TOSCANINI, conductor Carnegie Hall, This Sun, Aft., at $:00 Bach—Respighi—Beethoven—Brahms Carnegin Hall, Wed, Eve., Nov. 19, 8:45 day Aft, Naw, 21, at 2180 Soloist: ALEXANDER. SILOTI, Pianist SCHUBERT—LIS8Z7T Program 16 Hail, Sat. Eve, Nov. 22 at 8:45 rookyn Acudemy of eg day Aft., Noy. 28, at cH UBINIMODART--STRACES ARTHUR JUDBON Met. (Steinway) perriccbvrdbertntee eens An erm vahbrnshd aump Tara. i, fitn, Hive, Nov. 16, at 9:80 REAT RUSE MAN SINGING AC’ Victor Chenkin brit — Artists Service, iar sth ics | Carn ROAR CHINA MARTIN BECK THEA. 45th St. West of Broadway Eve, 8:50. Mis. ‘Th. & Sat, 9:50 HIPPODROME = 434 St and BIGGEST SHOW IN NEW YORK LOWELL SHERMAN RKO in RKO Radio's ACTS | ‘THE PAY OFF’ with Marlon Nixon NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES RKO—ALWAYS A GOOD SHOW! J eat Ave, RKO ACTS Bud Harris@Van Wm.Seaburt&Co. Wm. ginunds Aslunan's Alabamians Bernard & Henri Smith & Hart 108 Fraxero Prospecté ioist, RKO ACTS Frank © Chayahan Colet enevieve Thin eat 46th St. GLOBE & Bway fios8 SECOND WEEK THE CAT CREEPS with Dilvan Tashman, ied y mond kett, "Nell ‘Jamilton CAMEO 420 St. |NOW & B'way AMOS ’N’ ANDY Je “Chock & Double

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