The Daily Worker Newspaper, April 21, 1931, Page 2

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Pace Two DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, APRIL 21, 1931 “TIBERAL” P Mining, Hail the Pittsburgh Marchers On Way Police Swarm Altoona Hunger Fighters Grow in Numbers On Way TYRONNE, Pa., April 20. — The state hunger marc s who started from Pittsburgh Saturday are pas- sing through a series of industrial and mining towns, meeting with en- thusiastic response from the ‘work- | and gaining recruits as they go. ng. Delegations elected to join | mar he mployed workers of the smaller towns are swinging into line, and| armed camp as hundreds of hunger | mass meetings are being held. ‘The marchers stayed last night in INCHOT FILLS CITY WITH COPS AS MARCHERS NEAR TT Steel Towns}1,500 Reading Workers| | sides. Give Hunger Marchers Huge Send-Off Lines of March Unite Mass Demonstration in Harrisburg Today PHILADELPHIA, Pa, April 20.— There were few seasonal gains this year in employment, says the Phila- delphia Reserve Bank report. Em- ployment decreased one per cent in the state during March, the report shows. | HARRISBURG, Pa., April 20. hers from the jobless and | qnis city, the state capital of Penn- | sylvania, has been turned into an marchers approach it from both State troopers fill the streets, nd the roads around are under close Coupon. They proceeded to Altoo- | nah, which they found the mayor had filled with armed men to keep| them from meeting there. A dele-| gation went to the mayor and de-| manded the right to march through | and hold a meeting, but the mayor} denounced them as “undesirable be- | cause unemployed.” Over a hundred | police met the marchers and escort- ed them to the outskirts of Altoo- | neh. | Ten delegates joined the line of| march, and a very successful meet: | ing was held in Johnstown. At Por-| tage, they marched through the city | and held a successfyl mass meeting, | and more delegates joined. | The spirit of the marchers is ex-| cellent, and organization is in fine | shape. These marchers will reach Harris- | burg about 6 p. m. today, and will join there with the marchers from Philadelphia, Chester, and Reading and the Anthracite, ready for the big | demonstration tomorrow at 11 a, m. BAN THURINGIA COMMUNIST MEETS Socialist Support the Hindenburg Measure (Bable By Inprecorr) BERLIN, April 20.—Yesterday the Thuringian government issued an order concerning the carrying out of the Hindenburg emergency decree throughout ‘Thuringia, instructing the police to prohibit all open air meetings, and demonstrations of the Communist Party. Only small meet- ings indoors will be permitted. The police have been instructed to permit meetings and gatherings of all other political organizations with- out hindrance. The emergency or- der, therefore, applies exclusively against the Communist Party. This order was impossible without the consent of the Socialists. To Show “Soil” In Yorkyille Saturday NEW YORK—One of the newer Soviet films, of great significance and beauty, will be shown Saturday, April 25th, at 347 East 72nd Street, fram 6 p. m. to 11 p. m, by the newly or- ganized Yorkville branch of the Workers International Relief. The film, “Soil” deals with life in a backward peasant village, and the conflicting forces of the new and old. Here the three types of peasants are shown, the poor, middle peasant, and the kulak, in their response to the new life. The end of the picture is watch. Nevertheless, over 200 hunger marchers coming from the eastern end of the state and about the same number from the coal fields and steel mills of the western end will meet here and tomorrow at 11 a. m. and will lead a big demonstration before the state capital. They will elect a committee to send in to the reputed “liberal” governor Pinehot, who won his office on a pledge to take care of the unemploy- ed, and who, instead, mobilizes his state police against them. The whole hunger march and its demands will be further backed up | by great demonstrations in all Penn- sylvania cities on May First, intzrna- tions] Jabor day and international day to demand unemployment relief. The hunger marchers rally the masses in all the towns they pass through for the May Day demonstra- tions, and point out that these dem- onstrations are to support the de- mands which the marchers present. Million Jobless. The committee of the hunger marchers will tomorrow notify the state government that there are 1,- 000,000 out of work in Pennsylvania, that evictions are going on whole- Sale, that hundreds of thousands of miners and others work only from one to three days a week, that the cities do little or nothing to feed the starving. They will point out that in contradiction to the prom- ises made by Governor Pinchot when | he wanted these jobless to vote for| him, not one cent has been approp- | Tiated by the state to relieve the) misery of those without work, while | $2,5000,000 is being used for military | affairs. For six portraits of state| functionaries $4,500 is being spent. | The hunger marchers demand ail | such funds for the starving. | The demonstrations held in each town the marchers go through, and the one in Harrisburg tomorrow de- nounces the terror of the coal and/| iron police, the Pinchot demagogy, | the arrest of TUUL representative Everett in Harrisburg, the legal| lynching of nine Negro young work- ers in Alabama, and eall for with- drawal of U § troops from Nicara- gua, rae Ske | LEBANON, Pa., April 20. — The Philadelphia, Reading and Allen- town delegations of state marchers | united last night. This combined delegation now totals over 200. The! marchers are full of determination. | Fiftee1 hundred Reading workers | at @ lively meeting wave the march- | ers a send of and invited them to| stop and hold more meetings on their | return from Harrisburg. An open air | meeting is being held in Lebanon. | THE ADVE NTURES OF BILL WORKER EF Mow, Every Bopy for 4 WAGE cyyt/ | Iwaaer \ ooze. GREEDY WANTS 120026 Tue AFOFL blabkers| WANT JoRS iy CHINESE LAUNDRY WORKERS STRIKE /12 Plants in Frisco Are Tied Up; Organizing SAN FRANCISCO, Cal., April 20.— Eleven more Laundries are struck by Chinese laundry workers who joined the strike called by the Sa Fook jLaundry Workers Union. In reply to the Tung Hing Tong( the association of the bosses) the striking workers aceused both the Tung Hing Tong and the Chinese Six Company which acted as mediator, of being respon- sible for breaking the agreement which was reached as a result of the last strike. This agreement provided jamong other things for Sunday off jeach week for the wovkers and only 12 hours on Saturday For nine months this agreement was kept but |in the last few months all were forced | to work 15 hours a day including Sat- }urday, and 10 hours on Sunday. | At a membership meeting of the union held last night at strike head-. quarters the strikers unanimously voted to continue the ‘strike until it jis won. The speakers told of the |terrible conditions which existed. in |the shops, the long hours and the |starvation wages, which has injured jthe health of the workers. The chairman of the si com- mittee Hong Min Soo, eimphatically declared “The 15 hour day for the Chinese Laundry workers must go.” To the accompaniment of an enthu- siastic outburst of cheering he de- clareG that the workers would build their union to such sirength as to guarantee better working conditions. Three more Chinese pickets have | been arrested and are released on bail. They are Fong Wah Soo, Tom Hong Lock, and Hau. The bail was provided by the International Labor Defense. The “Six Companies” referred to above is a unique organization, a fed- erated body of representatives of the six leading family groups in San inated by the merchants. It has at Worker Church Mem- bers Back Protest On ‘Scottsboro Frame-Up | Boke ELIZABETH, N. J., April 20.—The congregation of the New Zion Bap- tist Church last hight vigorously ap- plauded. Comrade Edwards, heading a committee from the League of Struggle for Negro Rights, when he called upon them to rally to the de- fense of the nine young Negro vic- tims of a court room lynching in Scottsboro, Ala. The worekrs present in the chureh gave full support to his proposal that the congregation send a tele- gram to Governor Miller of Ala-! murderous | bama protesting this frame-up. The League of Struggle for Negro Rights will hold a mass protest meet- ing in this city this coming Thurs-| day evening at 106 E. Jersey St. to) further mobilize the masses, Negro legal lynching of these youths, and for militant protest demonstrations |on May First. » Persecutions in El Salvador Presidential decrees to do away with all working class organizations in El |Salvador were put into effect on March 20 by Araujo, the new tool of | American imperialism. On the same day, a mass demonstration of the | Federacion Regional Obrera was bru- | tally attacked by the police, and the | following workers were beaten and | | arrested: Jose Centene, Carlos Gal-| vez, Barlome Velasquez, Isable Farjan, | Jose Le Mejia, Carlos Guardado, Ra- |mon Rios and Luis Diaz. All these workers were sentenced | to ‘bread and water,” and beatings. Claudio Perez, Andrez Perez, Brau- lio Lopez, Juan Lopez, Juam Lemus, Hector Mena and Benita Pura were arrested and a mass demonstration of the Anti-Imperialist League was prevented by the police in Santiago de Texacuangos, El Salvador. | times been the actual government of \the Chinese quarter, and maintains |Francisco’s Chinatown, and is dom-|a permanent court of arbitration for ‘all disputes among the Chinese. ‘SOUTHERN SLAVE LANDLORDS HELP TOOLS CELEBRATE 50TH ANNIVERSARY OF TUSKEGEE By WILLIAM L, PATTERSON. The fiftieth anniversary of Tuske- gee Institute, the jim crow technical school founded by Mr. Booker. T. Washington with the financial sup- j exploitation of the workers, black and white, Dr. Jones brazenly said: “Races must not think raciaily and separate- (Tas 1S. CAILDS | WELFARE Day “FARE and white, for struggle against the) Meet Red Pepper on the | THAT WILL Fe (TOR US Kips Say, Bi, Thar Buwey OCFTRIPE WaAN'r UNION _ SQUARE FoR CHILDis WELFARE DAY, MAY [ST You ARE THe ONLY GUY EveR Do ANY THING, Square on May Day! ‘GRAFT IN HANDLING OF | PROSSER COMMITTEE FUNDS |Split Rock Road Job’s “Czar” Gloated Over'| Chance to Fire Negro He Thought Was a Communist; On Four Payrolls Himself (By a Worker Correspondent) NEW YORK.—An article was writ- carried them on payrolls at Balond’s request when those numbers were ten some time ago in refernce to the | ealled in the morning. “Little Jack” Prosser work on Split Rock Road | was an innocent victim of circum- in Pelham, pertaining to Leonard F, | stances, Boland, who was a slave driver over; yen Miller of Zbrowski Mansion, | men and considered himself the czar, j and the 28rd St. office, could not and whose dislike for Communist was | prove anything against Jack, but it unexcelled or anyone else, with the | was thought he knew too much and exception of himself, | no doubt he did. He was assured of The “czar” was on three different | being reinstated if he could prove | payrolls of the Prosser Committee | himself innocent and he d id,tbehu and also was carried on the eity pay- | himself innocent and he did, but he | roll for three days at $16.50 giving | never came back to Split Rock Road. him a total of about $75 per week. | The “czar” did not remain to exon- Why didn’t the Mayor's Relief Com- | erate him of the false charges and mittee give some poor needy man/ the “czar” has not been seen since. that three day's work and the $16.50) It is reported Germaine had start- inorder to put bread and butter on | ed an investigation against the Pros- his table? | ser people and what will be brought How Boland would laugh and gloat | forth in graft and handling of funds | over it as he used the whip hand| will be aplenty when he talks for a over the eight hundred or more men | certain committee for the State, as he working for the Prosser Committee | has thrown a bombshell in the Pros- during the week at Split Rock Road, | ser works. a and how he would laugh and gloat) It is reported that Germaine is over it, as he was having his whiskey | ready to testify on the graft and in his coffee in the shaek (the office | mishandling of funds and is trying stove, while the men went out to work in the zero weather! One cold morning he had a dis- pute with a worker and called two policemen to drive him off to worke and the “czar” gloated over his whiskey and coffee in the shack after it. ‘Was the ‘ezar” afraid to do it without the aid of two blue coats? Yes, he was. Another incident was that of a colored worker on Split Rock Road. The “czar” though the Negro was a Communist, but had no proof, and got a policeman to frisk him, but finding nothing he told the man he was “fired,” and for no good reason at all, for the man was a good worker. Took Too Much That crowd of the “czar” was bound to crumple sooner or later for | Boland was drunk three-quarters of | the day, and reports were fast cir- culating to that effect. At last he was discharged flat, for three reasons. He had been accepting graft through different sources. He also had put $5.50 men of the city payroll to work the balancing three days. He had these checks distributed to his friends. They were only working 3 days but with these checks they would be getting paid for the full six, getting $16.50 from the city and $15 from the Prosser payrolls. Men | on Split Rock Road where the men | checked in and out) and hugging the | to add some life to the investigation of the Prosser Committee. | Jersey State Trooper Tortures A Prisoner TOMS RIVER, N. J., (By Mail). — A prisoner’s wrists were exhibited to! court in Toms River. They were swollen. “The state trooper put manacles on so tight, they swelled up,” the witness testified. “Then he| knocked me down over the bathtub} and hit me over the head. The chief) of police at Point Pleasant struck me in the mouth with his fist.- I was) cut and told them they might as well | make a good job and be done. I was! hit on the head and knocked down! so hard I broke the stool on which 1} landed. This was done while I was handcuffed.” | Judge Gallagher made no comment hen the man finished the story. MILNE’S MYSTERY FILM, “THE | PERFECT ALIBI,” AT CAMEO THEATRE A. A. Milne’s mystery play, “The | Perfect Alibi,” which played for two | seasons at the Charles Hopkins| ‘Theatre, as been made into a talkie| by Radio Pictures and is now on view at the Cameo Theatre. The film version was made in England by Basil Dean, noted British stage | topics, 80TH ST.—Jack Osterman; Adelaide | Se are ny nS | Hall, Ward and Van and Gloria Lee| Asainst evietions, for rent requc- | and the Harris Twins. Wednesday | tions! ‘MEET FOR SOVIET DEFENSE THURS: FSU Membership to | Meet April 23 | NEW YORK.—With Briand, Frenen Foreign Minister and notorious backer |of interventgon plots against the | Soviet Union, persisting in his. plans for organizing a so-called economic (actually a political and military) united front against the first work- ers’ republic, the need for building a strong organization of the Friends of PROTEST PARADE IN HARLEM SAT. the Soviet Union in the stronghold of Smash Seottsboro Le- "© steater than ever, It is for this ¢ | teason that local New York, Friends gal Lynching Jof the Soviet Union, is taking steps cercipaen to reorganize the local completely | NEW YORK.—To mobilize the|and has called an open membership. workers of New York for united| meeting, to be held this Thursday, struggle against the Scottsboro | April 23, at 8 p. m. in Webster Hall, frame-up and court house lynching] 119 E. 11th St. of nine Negro youths, a protest pa-| The formulation of a constitution rade will be held in Harlem this/ the establishment of local branches Saturday afternoon. land the adoption of a plan of action The parade will start at 3:30 from | will be among the chief tasks of this 1140th St. and Lenox Ave, and will | meeting. proceed down Lenox Ave. to 116th | St., turning east to Fifth Ave. and | down Fifth Ave. to 110th St., where | a protest demonstration will be held. | In preparation for the parade and Friday night’s mass protest meeting at St. Luke’s Hall; 125 W. 130th St., a number of street and factory-gate meetings will be held in Harlem this week, The parade will serve both as an immediate protest against the | Scottsboro frame-up and for the mobilization of large masses for the May Day protest demonstration in Union Square. Need Vehicles for May Day | | All Party members and sympa- thizers who have trucks, cars or || motorcycles which can be used for May Day should register at the headquarters of the United Front Committee, 16 W. 2st St. Telephone Chelsea 3-0962. \ ' | | Michael Gold, one of the editors of the New Masses, who recently re- turned from Soviet Russia, will speak {on "What I Saw in the Soviet Union.” Not only members, but all other friends of the Soviet Union are urged to attend. Admission is free. Defense Branch Has Program of Meetings NEW YORK.—Steve Katovis branch of the International Labor Defense jis setting an example for all other VAUDEVILLE THEATRES | branches with its program of outdoor 58TH ST.—Uncle Joe Laurie isthe | Meetings. One will be held this eve- chief stage attraction. The bill also;Ding at Seventh St. and Ave. B inchides Bradford, Crisham and Van |There will be another ‘Thursday at Alst, Ann Codee, Frank DeVoe and | 14th St. and University. All speakers the Monroe Brothers. Wednesday to | @te from the braneh itself, and the Friday: Peter Higgins, tenor; Harry | Scottsboro legal lynching and at- J. Conley, Birnes and Kaye, the} tempts to frame five Paterson work- Spanglers and Bentell and Gould, _| €f to the electric chair are the mair to Friday: Miss Marion Sunshine, Larry Rich and company, Phil Rich and company and the Reed Brothers ——PATRONIZE—— and Edler. A Comradely BARBER SHOP 1500 BOSTON ROAD Corner of Wilkins Avenue BRONX, N.Y. 86TH ST.—The Havana Casino Or- | chestra, Roscoe Ails and Thelma White. Wednesday to Friday; Lil-| lian Roth, Seed and Austin and) Frank De Voe. ‘The screen features at the above theatres are Bert Wheeler and Bob Woolsey in their latest comedy, New Members To Be |ly, but humanely; not as a race, but | Port of the landlord class of southern | “Cracked Nuts,” “ms Meets at 8 p.m, one of unforgettable strength. Ad- mission will be thirty-five cents for adults, and ten cents for children. ‘The growing Yorkville branch meets every Monday night at 347 East 72nd Street. Proletpen and John Reed Club Exhibit NEW YORK.—An exhibition of proletarian painting and sculpture by members of the John Reed Club and Proletpen is now being held at 106 E. 14th Street, at the John Reed Club headquarters, There will be a program of discus- sion, Jectures and music on Saturday and Sunday, April 25-26. Admission is 25 cents—all proceed- ings going to the Morning Freiheit, What’s On— TUESDAY— Open Nite in the Downtown Youth Branch T W 0, 34 FB. 7th St. Dancing, Games. Adm. free. All downtown young workers invited, . . WEDNESDAY . “May First” Lecture Will be given by Mary Adams, re~ cently returned from the Soviet’ Un- fon, at 8:30 p.m. at 1622 Bathgate va. ugder the auspices of Councils an et ‘ Building Maintenance Workers 1 i Union Fraction Be on time. Place, WE. 12th St; Fixec. Comm. Workers Exservicemen’s 1 5 4 vengue Na following Unit 24 with 8 members, ym. at Headqua Tinportant that pvery member be | Many of the units are over their present. ¥ e i quota of 5, but the majority of the THURSDAY units are bélow their minimum quota 1 Brn of 5. ne ? meets at 6:30 p,m. . 26th St “My Impressions of the Soviet Union” Pate tid Bo sith st, Auspices Friends . Auspices F ot the Boviet Gnton, ‘Kass, free, Bring woe irlends. nenthagt ‘Webster | ber of Section 5 must get busy in his shop, factory, union, etc, and get in Publicly “Initiated” NEW YORK.—During the present “Lenin Recruiting Drive,” Section 5, District 2, secured 83 new members from shops, factories, offices, unions and other mass organizations. During the drive we were able to organize one shop hucleus, which can be regarded as the greatest achieve- ment in the drive. Out of the 83 new members 8 are Negroes. Considering the fact that in the past the whole section had only 3 Negro comrades in the Party, on this field we also can recotd some results. But by and large, taking the re- cruiting campaign as a whole on a section scale we must say that the results achieved up till now is every- thing but satisfactory. In order to stimulate the campaign, the Section Committee decided that ll new Party members secured dur- ing the campaign will be publicly initiated at a Monster Demonstra- tion, to be held on Friday, April 24, at Ambassador Hall. At this meeting representatives of the Central Committee and of the District Committee, as well 9s of the Bection Committee will greet the new members and welcome them into the ranks of the revolutionary var.guard of the American proletariat. The units of Section 5 are engaged in revolutionary competition. At the present time, Unit 24 {s leading with 10 new members. Unit 6 is closely There is still time “to cateh up and surpass,” 80 every unit, every mem- Slave holders who but a few short years before struggled desperately to forcibly extend slavery on a national scale, and by the northern indus- trial class which under the leadership of the republican party fought to crush the slave system of economy because it diminished the profits of that class, was held at Tuskegee, Alabama, April 12. Dr. Jones, the son of the man who was chaplain for General Robert E. Lee, was the chief speaker. To put it more clearly, we might say that a son of the Christian who did the | praying for the extension of the old form of slavery prayed at this anni- versary for the continuation of the new form of slavery. Scarcely 50 miles away, in Scotts- boro, Alabama, the class of which Dr. Jones has the “honor” to be a member, was legally lynching nine young Negro workers whose only crime was that they dared to fight for their lives and to rebel against the system of Jones's class, a system of ignorance, starvation, unemploy- ment and lynch law, At the same time, Dr. Jones, with brazen hypocricy told these young Negro students that the ideal and dream of the republic was that all races and all castes and all classes Shall have a fair chance to achieve the best in life. Dr. Moton was pro- claimed by Dr. Jones to be the “in- carnation” of this ideal. Yes, Dr. Moton, the man who was sent by Hoover to choke the rising spirit of revolt in Haiti and to prevail upon these people to slavishly accept the degradation heaped upon them by American imperialism, is the “incar- nation” of liberty and freedom--the liberty and freedom of the ruling class to continue its enslavement and ary elements into the party of Lenin ‘the most advanced, most revolution- s) paraape! ater ore Ree OS Ea Se Te in the U. 8, into the Communist | as a people.” This outburst of hypo- crisy in the face of the growing ter- ror of the ruling class that ruthlessly | jails, mobs, and kills revolutionary | workers who, under the leadership of | the Communist Party and the revolu- | tionary trade unions, are struggling to unite the black and white workers lot America; this is the jim crow school where Negroes and whites are not permitted to sit together in the auditorium; this in a state many of the parks and libraries of which bear the sign, “No dogs and niggers al- lowed!” Surely there is no more brazen, no more despicable hypocriti- |eal ruling class than the slave land- Hlords of the south ‘and their tools | who are praying for the perpetuation of their system of unemployment and starvation. ‘The day will come, and soon when the militant young students of the white schools in the south, will join the ranks of the revolutionary work- ers and advance to the barricades to overthrow this pernicious system of slavery and of mob violence. Then will Tuskegee have an anni- versary, the first anniversary of free- dom, celebrated under the free gov- ernment of the black and white workers of America, an anniversary that will mean not the perpetuation of slavery as -this anniversary does, but the birth of freedom, Certainly the celebration of the fiftieth anni+ versary of jim crowism under the slo+ gan of democracy raises the ques- tion—“Whose democracy is this?” The Jegal lynching in Scottsboro gives the answer. Cooperators’ on the Prosser payroll would find other positions and Boland, in the meantime, could collect these checks and turn them over to his friends, and Boland alone was the only one and screen director, with a cast in- eluding such performers as Warwick ‘Ward, star with Emil Jannings of “Variety,” Robert Loraine and C. Aubrey Smith. to Tuesday, Our work will please the men, the women and the children and Wednesday to Friday, “Woman Hun- gry,” with Lila Lee in the leading role, | Special Prices to know of the checks. Fight lynching. Fight deporta- | to Daily Worker | Lets Another Get Blame ~ Use your Red Shock Troop Lust ion of foreign born, Elect dete- wh Sica | Mr. Miller, of Zbrovski Mansion | €very day un your job. The worker) gates to your city conference tor BANDAGE or (dyiision office of the Prosser Com- eke you will belp save the Daily | protection of foreign born. P WOLF & COIN Fo to mittee.) who had charge of all Bronx = i INC Prosser Com- J . * Aivisled) payee bg Henpisronl 1499 Third Ave.) 70 Avenue A learning of these checks and not be- eT tink | Bet. ¢ & B te. ing returned to the 23rd St. office. 8p. m.! Open Eves 8 p.m. he “czar” cried like a baby it was NEW YORK CITY Hoae, and as he left dragged his SPECIAL LADIES’ ATTENDANT assistant, Jack Germaine, through the Theatre Guild Prodaction —— : a mire with him. Jock Germaine Get BN aac gt el Married | Syed # oc, Nor ened oT Ce HEALTH FOOD NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES By BERNARD SHAW | Lust Week , GUILD iis the a sat |) Vegetarian Resteurant Yast Week Miracle at Verdun By HANS CBLUMBERG Martin Beck "\"ct nner 8:40, Mts, Th. EAST SIDE—BBONS BROORLTR THEATRES — a eeemnemnannmnnnnnannn ae 1ST TIME IN BROOKLYN PLETE DF LUXE SHOWS FIVE COMPLI (2 B9] EDNA FERBER’S GREAT NOVEL COMES TO LIFE ARR with Richard Dix, Iréne Dunne Estelle Taylor, Edna May Oliver DIO'S SUPER PRODUCTION and RKO Vaudeville CIVIC REPERTORY ' st; 00 Soe, $1, $1.80, Mats, Th. & Sat, 2 EVA LE GALLIENNF, Director feat se Mal 118 We sare sere LIONELL ATWILL T we sient witness * KAY 8TROZZI-FORTUNIO BONANOVA TRE, 46th, W. of Biway lOROKCO THEA’ oem 9:60 Matinees Wed. and Sat, 2:30 A.W. WOODS Presents ARTHUK BYRON Five star FINAL sf Ota: 1 ie electric and alive” ‘Five Star Final is electr 'N CORT THEATRE, West Lt asth Brogings $160 Mats, Wed. | | Admission to all—inet -Btreet ad Bat, 4109 “s CIRCUS Presenting for the First Time in N.Y. TRON NERVED BE, OLYDE ATTY Alone in Steel Arena with 40 Ferocloun perfor's Lions and Tigers Orland-Mara Sensation—-1000 New Foreign Features—800 Circus Stars—100 Clowns— 1000 Menagerie Animals, Congress of Freaks. 1600 MADISON AVENUE Phone University aes “Phowe Stuyvesant S816 Jobn’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all een radleals 302 EB. lth St. New York seats, $1 to $3.50, inel. tax—-Children under 12 Half Price livery Aft, exc. Sat. Tickets now selli at Gurden, 49th & 50th Sts, Box Offi Gimbel_Bros, Agencies. seoenntonensnnenennnnnamneten MELO. wexarsenetin|| Rational Vegetarian With Balt J Fane | Harle, Restaurant ETHEL BARRYMORE THEATRE 199 SECOND AVENUE Bot 13th and 18th Ste, Strictly Vegetarian Food 47th Street West of Broadway Eves, 8:50, Matinoes Wods and Sat. 2:30 —_—_— R TCAMEOROW O 42 nd STREETS BWAY A. A. MILNE'S: Sensational Success “The PERFECT ALIBI” Advertise Your Union Meetin; Here. For information Write The DAILY WORKER Advertixips Department 50 East 3th St. New York Oty

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