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Page Two Foster Speaks! New Brunswick Which System Do You Vote For? J., May 8.— and terror, NEW BRUNSWICK, In spite of gll diffi the Communist P: ballot for <ity. ele: candidates. A ma rally will be held Su , at 8p. m. in Workmen's Circle Institute, with William Z. Foster, Richard B. Moore and John Ballam speaking. Foster is the leader of the frist demonstrations against unemployment in New York last year, and was sen- tenced to and served six months in jail for it. He is general secretary of the Trade Union Unity League, and was the leader of the great steel strike in 1919. Moore is a leader of Negro workers as well as white, and Bagllam is the Communist candidate for governor of New Jersey, Communists Lead Struggle ‘The Communists have led the un- employed and employed workers in Now Brunswick in a whole series of strugefes during the last year. Five hundred New Brunswick workers took qxt in the May Day demonstrations year, the workers fed the hunger going to Trenton, and gave recrutis to their ranks. ‘There are 5,000 jobless here. There @re more women than men working {m the shops at present, and they get about half the wages the men got. the General Cigar they are treated than cattle. Young workers work in this city from dawn to ten at night, ‘There are, lay-offs, general shut downs, and increasing unemployment. ‘The conditions of those who still have Jobs get worse and worse. dé appears on the | ar here with two]r indoor election jr What a Record loners ‘on their ‘d of absolute for the job- speeded and wage cut women workers, or workers. When the their delegates to y commissioners for the for unemployed sent the meeting of the ci to demand that some provision for them be put in the city budget, the the Neg city government refused to hear them. It framed up one of the hun- ger marchers. It tried to break up their meetings. The Negro workers are most bit- terly exploited on the job, most mis- erably treated when unemployed. The present city commissioners have done nothing for them. But now, just bé- fore election, these commissioners ex- press in words, not deeds, the great- est friendliness to the Negro workers. The “Independent” candidates are no better. They run’on fake issues Sunday movies, closing the speak- easies, lower taxes. Vote Communist! What is this tc the wrokers? They are getting so little they can hardly attend movies, their homes are being taken away on mortgages if they ever owned a home, and taxes more or less will not change that. When election day comes, the work- ers should hemember all these things. Support the candidates of the Party that has really fought on the workers’ side! Vote for the Communists! Vote for Elizabeth Berduk and Jo- seph Toth for commissioners! SCOTTSBORO PARADE MAY 16 Defense Conference on May 17th NEW YORK.—Scores of workers’ organizations in New York City are busy mobilizing their forces and other workers for the Scottsboro pro- test parade in Harlem on Saturday, May 16, which will precede the United Front Scottsboro Defense Conference to be held on May 17 at the Finnish Workers Hall, at 15 West 126th St. Many open air metings will be held throughout the city between now and the 16th to mobilize the white and Negro workers for an immense dem- onstration in Harlem. The workers are determined to resist any attempt of the police to stifle their protests against the Scottsboro outrage as was done on April 25 when Tammany police, @operating with the southern boss lynchers, attacked a demonstra- tion on Lenox Ave., clubbing white and Negro .workerg and arresting several. All organizations are urged to speed through their ‘election of delegates to the conference on May 17. The con- ference will begin at 11 a. m. sharp. At 6 o'clock there will be a banquet, at which Mrs. Wright, mother of two of the boys, will be the main speaker. What’s On— SATURDAY Freihelt Gesangs Farein (Will celebrate the eighth jubilee With the performance of the oratorio, “Two Brothrs,” social poem, at Car. negie Hal. C5 8 ie Socea-Vanzetti Spring ance and Entertainment The affair originally planned for March 28 will take place at 569 Pros- peet Avenue. Those holding tickets for the origina affair can use them ths Saturday, ee Jom A Dance ‘Which IS_a dance! Everyone who enjoys dancing to good music shoud come to the Workers Club, 795 Fush- ing Ave, auspices Young Communist League. ete ® Mayflower Ball Given by the Harlem Prog. Youth Club at the New Harlem Casino, 116th and Lenox Ave. Good Negro jazz band. eg Intwor Branch 401 WO Entertainment and dance at 8 p.m. at 2061 Bryant Ave. Admission 2ic. Part of proceeds to National Youth Day. eee Brownsville Youth Branch TWO Surprise entertainment and dance. proceeds for NationaF Youth Day wili held at 8 p.m. at 1844 Pitkin Ave. Admission i0c, All young workers and, students invited. . Z Farewell Party Given to Comrade Honcharko at & p. m, at 2056 W. 13th St. All com- rades of units 4 and 10 are to come and bring their friends. Proceeds to Bath Beach Workers Club. . Dance at Czechoslovak Workers Club At 347 Bast 72nd St. Eight-piece jazz band, “Moonlight Serenaders.” Auspices English Youth Branch Slo- vak Workers Society, | . Proletcut of New York Hike to Palisades. Meet at 10 to 10.30 a” m. at Dyckman St. Ferry. Bring food, fare. All invited. m Counel of UC of WW Social evening at Labor Temple, 243 E, 84th St. at 8 p,m. Good pro- gram. Al welcome, | * At 8.30 p, m, at 2027 Washington Ave., Apt, 24. Proceeds for National Youth Day. House Party YCL Unit 5, By Attention, Elizabeth, Linden, } The Spartacus A.C. ark Newark will hod a dance to raise funds for sport equipment and National Youth Day. Good orchestra. At 106 E. Jersey St, Connell _5 Coney Island. meets at 2921 West 32nd St. at 8:30 p. m. May Day , Festival, Admission 26 cents, SUNDAY” " *. The Young Defenders. will hold an outing and row boating ex- gursion. Meet at 8:30 «. m,. 1400 Boston Road. Bring lunch, fare; special entertainment prepared, SG RES Women’s Council 25. Meets at 2480 66th St. at $:30 p, Spring Festival. Admission 26 cents, re amen ie Music Lovers, Attention! A most unusual concert at 2700 Bronx Park East in, auditorium at 8:15 p.m. Admission 36 tents, * m, Open Me t Bronx Workers 3472 Boston bd | “Serial of the Menshevike,’* ) New Liberator Out On Monday NEW YORK.—The next issue of The Liberator, organ of the League of Struggle for Negro Rights, will be out on Monday. This issue will contain many im- portant articles on the latest de- velopments in the fight of the white and Negro workers to save the nine Negro boys being rail- roaded to the electric chair by the Alabama landlords and capital- ists. It will also contain many other articles of interest to white and Negro workers. Orders for copies should be sent immediately to. the offices of The Liberator at 799 Broadway, Room 338, New York City, JERSEY DEFENSE CONFERENCE SUN. Fight Scottsboro and Paterson Frames Collection Stations Scottsboro, Pater- son Defense, Sat. NEW YORK.—The following are the stations for the house-to- house collections for the defense Scottsboro, Ala., and Pater- J., cases, to be held today (Saturday) and Sunday by the New York District of the Interna- tional Labor Defense: E. 4th St. 799 Broadway, Room 410; 64 W. 22nd St. 8lst St.; 353 Lenox Ave; 569 rospect Ave.; 1400 Boston Road; 2700 Bronx Park East; 81 Graham Ave., Williamsburg; 136 15th St., Williamsburg; 122 Osborn St., Brownsville; 118 Bristol St., Brook- ly 534 Vermont St., Broo! 140 Neptune Ave., Brighton Beach. Collectors should report 9 a, m. at the nearest station, SMASH FRAME-UP ON WEISSBERG Kaufman, Hissed By Fur Cutters Ends Meet NEW YORK. — Isidor Weissberg, organizer of the Needle Trades Work- ers Industrial Union, was tried and acquited yesterday by a jury before Judge Nott of the General Sessions Court, Part 8. Weissberg was de- fended by Jacques Buitenkant. Weissberg was arrested on June 2, 1930, by an agent of the International Ladies Garment Workers Union and framed -up on a charge of felonious assault in the usual manner of Schlessinger. All the witnesses were Schlessinger’s henchmen, but the frame-up was so clumsy that all the witnesses broke down under the cross examination of SBuitenkant; they contradicted each other and proved themselves lfars. It was evident that the whole case was built up as an at- tempt to jail Weissberg, because he was an organizer of the Needle NEWARK, N. J., May 8—The or- ganization of a big mass movement to save the five Paterson, N. J., silk strikers, and the nine Negro boys in Scottsboro, Ala., from the electric chair will be the chief task of a state-wide conference of the Interna- tional Labor Defense to be held here Sunday at 10 a. m. at 90 Ferry St. ‘The conference will lay plans for many city conferences throughout the state of New Jersey, to culminate with a mass delegation to the state capital about the middle of June. Another conference will also be held about that time. Sunday's confer- ence will also strengthen the organ- izational machinery through which tens of thousands of Jersey workers must be mobilized for the smashing of these two vicious frame-ups. * i ve N. ¥. Seottsboro-Paterson Conference May 17, Under the joint auspices of the New York District of the Interna- tional Labor Defense and the City Committee of the League of Struggle for Negto Rights a conference for the defense of the Scottsboro and Pater- son cases will be held in New York next Sunday, May 17, at 10 a. m. in St. Luke's Hall, 125 W. 130th St. The conference will conclude with a big defense banquet at 6 p.m, All work- ers’ or other sympathetic organiza- tions, both Negro and white, that want to help defeat these two legal lynchings are urged to send delegates, Ex-Servicemen League Holding Street Meet in Harlem Tonight NEW YORK.—The Workers Ex- Servicemen's League held a success- ful outdoor meeting on Thursday night at 125th St. and Fifth Ave. This Branch, No, 2, which has re- cently been formed, is holding an- other meeting at the same Place to- night at 8 p. m. All ex-seryicemen are urged to make it their duty to be there, The branch, although newly organ- ized, now has a total membership of 120 worker ex-servicemen, ILD Holds Dance for Scottsboro Defense The Sacco-Vanzetti Branch of the ILD and the Young Defenders are holding a dance and musical pro- grem Saturday, May 9, at 8 p, m, at 569 Prospect Ave., Bronx, to raise funds for the defense of the Scottsboro nine, At this dance a new branch of the Young Defenders will be initiated as an answer to the prosecution of the nine Negro boys. All young work- ers in the Bronx are urged to at- tend this affair and get in touch with the campaign for the defense of the Scottsboro boys, ‘Trades Workers Industrial Union and because he was engaged in organizing the dressmakers for improvements in their conditions. The frame up was so thoroughly exposed that the jury had to bring @ verdict of “not guilty” after de- liberating for only 15 minutes, Another Trial DAILY WORKER, NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J., May £ —It is very important at this tin that the women workers of Ne Brunswick should understand t platform and issues of the vai candidates who are running for office of Commissioner in the Ci Elections which take place on Ms 12th. The women workers are the mos exploited section of the working clas: they have to work long hours fc little pay. In most cases they are the sole support of their families their husbands, fathers and brother have been forced out of their job by the present economic crisis which the workers of New Brunswick feel so sharply. They are forced to go into. the industries of the city and take the places of the men workers for less than half the wages formerly paid to the men. Their working con- ditions are horrible, as for example, in the General Cigar Factory, where the women workers have to work in rooms with hardly any ventilation, the smell of the tobacco and lack of air cause many of the women work- ers to faint at their work. A few years working under these rotten conditions together with the dust from the tobacco which they inhale all day long are the reasons why so many of these women workers get corsamption and other diseases. The corrtitions in the other factories of the city are just as bad. The Bosses Offer Regardless of the miserable con- ditions under which they have to work, the bosses are day by day adding to thei rmiseries by a sys- tematic campaign of speed up and wage cuts. In spite of knowing of these things the bosses candidates ignore them, they have nothing to offer the work- ers of New Brunswick but the pre- sent system of unemployment, speed- up and wage-cuts. In contrast to the conditions of the women workers of New Bruns- wick and in fact the whole capital- istic world, compare the conditions under which women work in the only country where the workers and pea- sants have contro] of the govern- ment. In the Soviet nion the women workers receive special consideration. ‘They work only seven hours a day with a five day week. Tuesday, Jack Shneider, organizer of the Industrial Union, is going to be tried at the General Session Court Part 8, also on framed up charges of felonious assault. Fur Cutters Revolt The Fur Cutters of Local 104 of the Furriers’ International (company union) met night at the Rand school. The furriers at this meeting followed the example set by the furriers at the other Local meetings and joined the general revolt against the Kauf- man cliques and Kaufmanism as a whole. From the very outset of the meet- ing, the fur cutters let it be known to the burocrats that they intended to take things into their own hands. As soon as the secretary got through reading the minutes of the Joint Council, the cutters, almost unanim- ously rejected all the minutes on the ground that the nieeting of the Joint Council was illegal so long as it re- tained in its membership, I. Begun, whom the workers voted to remove. Kiss Kaufman Kaufman, president of the Union and self appointed manager of the Joint Council then arrived at the meeting. He was at once met by tremendous boos and hisses. This provoked the several gorillas who were the only supporters of Kauf- man at the meeting. They rushed towards the workers and attempted to assault them, but the situation has gone far beyond any possibility of gorillas terrorizing the furriers, ‘The whole meeting rose and chased these gorillas back to their places. Seeing that the workers were de- termined to carry through what they wanted and seeing that the workers would select their own election and objection committee to control the elections, Kaufman jumped to the platform and in a histerical manner shrieked that he would not allow the furriers to repeat the history of 1925 (in 1925 the furriers placed the con- trol of the Union im the hands of the left wing) and he thereupon de- clared the meeting adjourned, and taking all his henchmen with him, ran out of the hall. The cutters went out with the determination to deve- lope the fight of the rank and file furriers and to bring this fight to the shops for better conditions in spite of Kaufman and his cliques. Scottsboro Forum in Brooklyn Sunday NEW YORK. — The Brownsville branch of the International Labor Defense and the Brownsville Work- ers Club will hold a joint open forum on Scottsboro this Sunday evening, at 8 o'clock, at 118 Bristol Street, Brooklyn. All workers are urged to attend. “CIMARRON” AT CAMEO THEATRE TODAY Radio Pictures_adaptation of Edna Ferber's noyel “Cimarron,” with Richard Dix and Irene Dunne in the Je roles, will be the screen at- traction at the Cameo Theatre begin- ning today. Having just completed a run of nineteen weeks on Broad- way “Cimarron” tells @ story of the early West. Other principals in- clude: Estelle Taylor, Edna May Oli- ver, William Collier Jr. and Roscoe Ates, with a supporting cast of some five thousand extras, ‘That means that in a five-day week of 120 hours only 28 hours are de- voted to work as one day out of the week is a day of rest. Every possible safety device to pro- tect the lives and health of the work- ers has been installed. ‘Women workers who are about to become mothers get two months off before and after child birth, with full wages during this period. Be- sides this, they receive full medical attention with the doctors, nurses and hospital expenses, being paid by the government. After they resume work, during the period necessary for nurs- ing the child, the mother is given time off every two hours, so that EvaLeGallienne toVisit Moscow Art Theatre The Civic Repertory Theatre, un- der the direction of Eva Le Gallienne, will re-open its sixth season in Sep- tember, 1932, Five new productions will be made. These will be “L’Aiglon” by Rostand, with Miss Le Gallienne as the Duke of Reichstadt; a new English adaptation will be made of the Rostand play; “Alice in Won- derland” with a special musical score; Shakespeare’s “Macbeth” and “Gruach,” a new play by Gordon Bottomley. Two more plays will be given, an American comedy and a Greek tragedy to be announced later. In addition to the new productions, there will be a constant revival of old ones, At the conclusion of this, her fifth season, Miss Le Gallienne will take @ year’s holiday. This is due to her desire to gain a perspective on her five years of management and to allow her to study present theatre conditions in Europe, especially so in Russia, with a special visit to the Moscow Art Theatre, The fifth sea- son of the Civic Repertory Theatre will end on May 9 with a perform- ance of “Camille,” one of the popular plays at the Civic Theatre this season. NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES EAS] SIDE—BRONX 8 KO ACTS Doors Open Dally A. M. at le Spec. Early Bird price 25¢ Except Sun., Hol. Prospects 161%, Frank De Voe sina 2 RON MAN! doe Mendi n ‘Two Rorellas | by the author of LITTLE CAESAR Lovejoy Dancers| “#* JEAN HARLOW ROBERT ARMSTRONG CHAMBER MUSIC CONCERT in the auditorium 2700 BRONX PARK EAST Sunday Evening, May 10 at 8:45 sharp EMINENT SOLOISTS, WOODWIND QUARTET in an unusually fine program ADMISSION 35 CENTS ee New Furniture for Sale—3 rooms com- plete, 198 &. 7th St 3rd floor, Room 14. NICE ROOMy-Al improverente—212 Ky 20th Grammercy Park ‘St, Apt, 9 near New Brunswick Women Workers! Which System Do You Vote For! NEW YORK, SATURDAY, MAY 9, 1931 she may nurse her child. The fac- ries maintain day nurseries, where ecial nurses are in charge of the uldren, taking care of them during ae day, and assisting the mothers every way possible to raise healthy ad happy children. The working others of New Brunswick who slave 1 the factories all day not knowing vhat care their children are getting an realize what a great help Shis S for the Women Workers in the Soviet Union. Each year all workers receive 2 weeks vacation, and in cases where the work is dangerous or un- healthy, 4 weeks, with full pay and also transportation to and from the place to which they decide to go to spend their vacation. There are nu- merous other special privileges which the women workers of the Soviet Un- ion receive. The Communist Party stands for these conditions. In this city elections, the Commun- ist Party endorses 2 candidates of the working class, 2 workers who stand on a fighting program; for equal pay for equal work, and equal pay for women workers. One gan- didate is a cigar worker herself, has been exploited in a cigar factory for 14 years, These workers candidates pledge to carry on a fight against wage cuts and speed up which is now taking place in every factory and where the women workers feel it most acute. Only by active support of the men and women workers Ne- gro and white will we be able to strengthen our forces for our de- mands, Women workers! Side by side with men! Vote Communist! Vote for your interests, and the interests of your families. For Commissioner vote for Joseph Soth and Elizabeth Perduk. FILE PETITIONS IN JERSEY COUNTIES NEWARK, N. J.—Swinging vigor- ously into the local election cam- paign in Northern New Jersey, the Communist Party is going ahead fil- ing petitions for many local posts. Petitions for 12 assemblymen and 3 board of freeholders: members will be filed in Essex County. Petitions for freeholders and gen- eral assemblymen will be filed in the following counties in several ‘days: Union, Hudson, Mercer, Bergen and Passaic counties, Preparations are being made to file the petitions for the candidacy of John Ballam as Communist Party candidate for governor of New Jer- sey. Party members and other workers engaged in the campaign are urged to turn out Saturday to ensure get- ting the required number of signat- ures. Further, all petition lists must be turned in to section headquarters in Newark Sunday evening at the very latest, in order to file the pe- titions Monday, A truck and auto parade through the streets of New Brunswick will be held Saturday evening to awaken the interests of the local workers in the issues confronting them. Preparations are under way for a State Ratification Convention for June 14, Volunteer Research Workers Wanted To save the life of the nine Ne- gro workers sentenced to the elec- tric chair in Alabama it is neces- sary to do a certain amount of research work. Report immediately to the National Office of the In- ternational Labor Defense, 80 East th St., Room 430, New York City. Help Needed in the Daily Office Come on up to the Daily Worker office for a half hour and help fold and insert 800 bulletins which MUST go out today. In addition, we would appreciate any assistance in filing some letters which have been accumulating for two weeks. Just take the elevator to the 8th floor, 35 E. 12th St. and ask for the Circulation De- partment. 19 SOUTHERNERS JOIN ALA PROTEST Wire Gov. Miller Ask- ing New Trial NEW YORK.—Arising directly our of the campaign carried on by the International Labor Defense and the boys in Alabama, 19 white Southern- terday sent a telegram of protest to Rev. W. Russell Bowie, rector of Grace Episcopal Church; Professor George Mitchell of Columbia Uni- versity; Prof. Louis MacDonald and Prof. William L. Nunn, both of New York University; Margaret Flenni- ken, National Board Y.W.C.A., Ele- anor Copenhaver, Industrial Depart- ment National Y.W.C.A., George Britt of the New York World-Tele~ gram staff; Dorothy Gray, writer; and Miriam Bonner, instructor in Vineyard Shore School, West Park- on-Hudson, N. Y. ‘The telegram declared, in part: “The undersigned Southerners now residing in New York urge on you such action as is permitted by law to secure a new trial for the eight boys, the youngest 16, the oldest 20, convicted at Scottsboro of rape on two white girls and sen- tenced to die July 10. We urge this in view of these undisputed facts: “The trial was rushed without time for adequate defense, the boys being arrested on March 25 and tried twelve days later. The court refused a postponement. The boys were represented only by an attor- ney appointed by the court and by a Chattanooga lawyer, unknown to them, selected by a ministers’ as- sociation, Others who signed the appeal are: ‘Carolina Price, 38 Perry Street, Jane Dickey, Jean Paxton and Ruth Mar- tion, all of 600 Lexington Avenue; Helen Sullivan, 330 E. 52d St.; Bran- son Daniels, 38 Perry St.; Maude Goodwin Nurk, 31 Tieman Pl.; Lura Ketchie and Mildred Collins, Vine- yard Shore School; Walter Wilson, 214 E. 10th St. Social Poem of —8th Jubilee— Concert of the Freiheit Gesang Farein (300 Singers) WILL PERFORM THE ORATORIQ “TWO BROTHERS” Music by J. L. PERETZ J. SCHAEFER” with a SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA JACOB SCHAEFER Conductor A group of exclusive new songs (For the first time) MISHA CEFKIN Conductor Saturday Eve. May 9 “at 8:30 p. m. sharp Carnegie Hall 57th Street and 7th Avenue League of Struggle for Negro Rights | Tickets 75 cents, $1.00, $1.25—To be to free the nine framed-up Negro|S0tten from members of the chorus, “Morning Freiheit” ers residing in New York City yes- 12th Street and on Saturday at the office, 35 East Carnegie Hall Box Office Governor B. M. Miller of Alabama, | eee Signers of the appeal include the | iii Ereeerey IDEAL BUSINESS SCHOOL 14th St. at Second Ave. New York Tel: Tompkins Square 6-6584 Day and Evening Stenography—Bookkeeping Typewriting—Secretarial Individual Instruction 29 EAST 14TH STREET NEW YORK Tel. Algonquin 3356-8843 We Carry a Full Line of STATIONERY AT SPECIAL PRICES fer Organizations TRY THE NEW KYMAK Fermented Milk Sold at Your Favorite Restaurant Made by— KYMAK MILK PRODUCTS CO. FRANCES SEBEL Soprano Soloist = Sa a YOUR FOOD]. will” do you more good if you | eat under conditions of QUIET — | t There is Comfort and 4 | Protection in ' « CLEANLINESS Eat with people who have the wit to know that FOOD and HEALTH are RELATED COME TO THE CRUSADER (SELB-SERVICE) Restaurant 3 EAST FOURTEENTH ST. (Near Irving Place) MELROSE DAIRY VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT Comrades Will Always Find It Pleasant to Dine at Our Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD. Bronx} * (near 174th St. Station) TELEPHONE INTERVALE 9—9149 t Phone Stuyvesant 3816 Jobn’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 302 E. 12th St. New York Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 199 SECOND AVENUE Bet, 12th and 13th Sts. Strictly Vegetarian Food ‘HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian Restaurant 1600 MADISON AVENUE Phone University 6865 Alu Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx 4 NEIGHBORLY PLACE TO EAT Linel Cafeteria Pure Food—100 per cent Frigidaire Equipment—Luncheonette and Soda Fountain German Writers Next Subject in Lectures ‘The next of a series of lectures on post-war literature by E. B. Jacob- son at the Workers School will deal with the workers of German writers. Cooperators’ Patronize SEROY CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook $215 BRONX, N. ¥. 830 BROADWAY Near 12th Street The lecture will be held Saturday afternoon at 3 p.m, at the Workers School, 50 East 13th Street. Wasserman’s ‘World Illusion,” ‘The Goose Man, Hauptman’s ‘The Isle of the Mothers,’ Thomas Mann’s ‘The Magic Mountain,’ E. Toller’s ‘Man of the Masses, ‘Machine Wreckers,’ Franz Werfel’s ‘The Goat Song,’ and many others will be discussed. Intern] Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 1 UNION SQUARE 8TH FLOOR All Work Done Under Personal Care of DR. JOSEPHSON Use your Ked Shock Troop List every day un your job. The worker next to you will help save the Daily Worker. § AMUSEMENTS | ———"Theatre Guild Production" LAST WEEK By BERNARD SHAW W. 52nd. Eves, 8:40 GUILD sia ths a sat 3:40 A uew play by MELO @ENRY BERNSTEIN With Basi {Mana | Farle RATHBONE | BEST |LARIMORE ETHEL BARRYMORE THEATRE. 47th Street West of Broadway 160, Matinees Wod. and Sut. 2:30 “Five Star Final ts Eve tric and alive” A. H. WOODS Presents ARTHUR BYRON * F ive star FINAL CORT THEATRE, West of 48th Street Evenings 8:50 Mate. Wed. and Sat. 2:30 VACATION : — Beautiful Mountain Views, quiet resting place, good food, $13.50 weekly—Avanta Farm, Ulster Park, New York. 2: CAME! (0 fond STREET& BWAY EDNA FERRUR'S GREAT NOVEL CIMMARON 3y6naa JleveGunuya DR. A. BROWN Dentist 301 EAST 14TH STREEL (Corner Second Avenue) Tel, Algongnin 7248 Vegetarian RESTAURANTS Where the best food and fresh vegetables are served all year round 4 WES1 28TH STREET 37 WES1 32ND STREE1 225 WES! 36TH STREET We Invite Workers to the BLUE BIRD fel. ORChard 3783 DR. L. KESSLER SURGEON DENTIST Strictly by Appointment 48-50 DELANCEY STREE1 Jor. Eldridge St. NEW YuRK CAFETERIA GOOD WHOLESOME FOOD Fair Prices / A Comfortable Place to Eat 827 BROADWAY With RICHARD DIX & IRENE DUNNE CIVIC REPERTORY '#th 8. etn * Evenings $:30 Soc, $1, $1.60. Mats, Th. & Sat, 3:30 EVA LE GALLIENNE, Director Today Mat. - “PETER PAN’ Tonight “CAMILLE! Seats in Oftice and Town Hall, 113 W. 43rd Street LIONELL ATWILL = T HB SILENT WITNESS wi KAY STROZZI-FORTUNIO BONANOVA MOROSCO THEATRE, 45th, W. of B'way Eves, 8:50 Matinees Wed. and Sat. 2:30 6th Ave HePPopRone °°’; BIGGEST SHOW LN NEW YORE Srcxs |Subway Express With JACK HOLT “IL LAVO SATURDAY MA Tickets: 35 cents (in advance) Grand Concert and Ball for the benefit of the WORKERS SCHOOL AUDITORIUM 35 EAST 12TH STREET, NEW YORK, N. Y. RATORE” | Y 9, 1931, 8 P. M. At the door 50 cents Phone: LBHIGH 6382 ‘nternational Barber Shop M. W SALA, Fi 2016 Second Avenue, New Yort (det 18rd @ 104th Star Ladies Robs Our Specialty Private Beaty Parlor Gottlieh’s Hardware 1189 THIKD 4VENUB Near 14th St. Stuyvesant 6974 All inde of ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES Cutlery Our Specialty SOLLIN’S RESTAURANT 216 EAST 14TH STREET 6-Course Lunch 55 Cents Regular Dinner 65 Cents Kavcaz Restaurant (Formerly Poltava 257 KE, 10:h St.) 334 EAST 14TH STREET Between 1st and 2nd Aves, Phone: Tompkins Square 6-91) Between 12th and 13th Sts. Patronize the Concoops Food Stores AND Restaurant 2700 BRONX PARK EAST “Buy in the Co-operative Store and help the Left Wing Movement.” JADE MOUNTAIN American and Chinese Restaurant Open 11 a. m. to 2 a. m, 197 SECOND AVENUE Between 12th and 13th Street SOL-ART STUDIO 101 E. 14th Street Around Corner of Klein's) Pacsnert Photos $1.50 PER DOZEN | MADE IN 10 MINUTES | '