The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 4, 1931, Page 2

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" Page Two at attancitiets Mili 5 ,000 Workers Elect Delegates BOSSES’ THUGS To the National Hunger March BEAT UP MANY | Pledge Fight on Starvation; to Demonstrate Today for Relief; Mass Hearing Nov. 5 Five thousand workers assembled 3 day afternoon at Union Square at the call of the Unemployed Coun- c After listening to the speakers from | council, the workers accepted with great enthusiasm the plans for the National Hunger March to Con- They selected 20 delegates to the City Labor Conference which will be held on the 22nd of November for the final preparations of the Hunger Mar A good proportion of the delegates are Negro workers. Resolutions protesting against dis- | crimination against Negro workers, n born workers and young and for relief were passed ly ndid spirit of the workers found expression in their readiness to | support the activities for the National Hunger March, Although all of them have been unemployed for a long time, they contributed to the fund for | the Hunger March. Thirty dollars was collected at the demonstration fo: the hunger march. The 2nd de- tration was held at Rutgers Sq in the afternoow 9 elected to the i@mor were Conference for the 22nd of Novem- ber. gThe workers booed the Socialist sign at the “Forward” building op- posite the square, They expressed rmination to carry on the fight f immediate winter relief and for | unemployment insurance. | A third demonstration was held at 5 pm. in the afternoon at Jefferson and Monroe streets in the heart of the Negro section of the lower East Side. The street was packed with workers. y women were leaning ers filled out applications for the East Side Unemployment Council. The Down Town Unemployment Council is organizing a big demon- | Stration today at 12 noon in front of | | the City Unemployment agency at Leonard and Church streets. The Unemployed who are waiting in line there will put forward the following demands: 1, Free carfare to the agency and | back. 2. Pree lunches for the unemployed waiting at the agency. 3. Opening up of all public build- | ings for all unemployed. 4. No discrimination against Negro workers, foreign born workers and young workers. The demonstration will send a com- mittee to invite officially the City Commissioner of Welfare, Taylor, to the Public Hearing by the unemploy- ed of downtown which will be held on November 5 at Manhattan Lyceum. Besides commissioner Taylor, all City official and representatives of the City charity organizations will be in- vited to come there. Dozens of work- ers from the blocks, bread lines, flop houses, registration lines and City | employment agencies haye already signified their willingness to testify at the public exposing the entire sys- | # Negro Communist .watcher, Te-| cont’ tramed up Scottsboro boys fac- tem of driving unemployed workers to mass starvation, disease and death will be exposed at that mass hearing. J. Louis Engdahi, National Secret- ary of the International Labor De- fense will be judge and chairman of the meeting. The jury will consist of, representatives of the unions and other workers organizations, Unem- ployed will act as persecutors. All the windows. About 50 work- | workers are urged to attend. SERIO AND GRACE AT MOHEGAN 14th ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION NOV. 6th | NEW YORK.—Guido Serio, mili- | cision and secured the right of vol- | tant Italian worker who was re- cently saved from deportation to} fascist Italy, and Jim Grace, one of | the outstanding leaders of the miners’ struggles in Harlan county, Ky., will the chief speakers at the celebra- untary departure to the U.S.8.R. for Serio. Both Serio and Grace—the latter one of the many Kentucky miners indicted on charges of criminal syn- dicalism—are now touring for the mn of the 14th Anniversary of the Russian Revolution, to be held in hegan Colony, N. Y., this Friday, |New York District of the Interna- | tional Labor Defense. On Monday, | November 9, at 7:30 p.m., a farewell ember 6, at 8 p.m. | banquet will be given for Serio in The celebration will also be a fare- | Newark at 5 Belmont Ave. This will well to Serio, who is sailing shortly | be under the joint auspices of the for Soviet’ Russia. After a fight of a | TL.Dy,and the United Councils of year and a half the International | Working. Class Women. Other fare- Labor Defense with the support of | wells are being arranged for Serio, to tens of thousands of workers, recently | wind up with a big banquet in New forced a reversal of the original de- | York on November 29. Ancestors Fought in 1776; Faces Death by Starvation LOUIS, Mo., Noy. 2.—Telling , y her ancestors fought in nearly the American wars and helped} up the United States while she faces starvation and dog-like ment from the charity fakers, Joe Annakins of 1525 N. Ninth ent the following letter to the nemployed Council here: “Dear Sir I am riting to let you know I am an american & on the virg of starvation in my one land of my forfathers who fot to free country in 1776 & lost too andfathers & uncles in battle they were interpeters & were sh officers in the War of 1812 & now there children and evandchildren are left here to starve and be throne out in the cold by | i other nations in our old age, I ‘Get Material for Red am 62 years old & have spent my |Week Collection Now! best days doing good for this na- | tion & and to be thrown down by the Providence & the Welfare of St Louls I was out on a vacant lot the first snow that fell last year for three weeks & am clost to it again the 25 my rent is up & we have no way to get it, Have not had only 6 weeks work since March, 1929. I went to the Provident for aid, Tey told me to go to the Dr. & get a blud test before they could do aney thing for me. The Dr. said it's food and work you people want go home I got medison to take after meals but I have no meals so what am I to do now I have a bad case of heart trouble there are 3 in my family.” . 5 In connection with the call of the | Workers International Relief and the Hunger March Committee of the | Unemployed Council, printed in the press of November 3rd, the WIR calls | upon alll organizations, workers’ Workers Fx-Servicemen'x League | °1Ubs, to immediately send their rep- witt nota eran Be 1, ‘ | Tesentatives to the Workers Interna- 25th St." and Sth Ae, 8 p.m. Members | “0nal Relief to get their material, must attend, Speakers are requested | instructions, collection boxes, and to to be on time, " | at once begin the Red Week, to off- Forniture Workers Industrial Union Set the campaign of Al Smith in wil} hold a membership meeting | tonight at 108 EB. 14th St, 7:30 p. m. forcing workers to pay the bosses’ * bi © | charity. % WRDNESDAY ‘THURSDAY ‘Tom Mooney Br. ILD, | | RED WATCHERS | Capitalists Fear the | Growing Revolt of Workers The following instances of gang- sterism with the aid of the Tam- many police, in addition to the open | fraud that is being perpetrated by the boss politicians, are evidence of the growing fear of the bosses of this city that the workers are supporting the Communist Party more and more: At 1723 Madison Avenue, Matthew, | Candidate of the Party and a watch- | jer at the election place, was beaten } up by cops and gangsters and thrown | out. | | Hammie Snipe, a Negro comrade, | sent as wateher, was ejected from the same place by the Tammany gang- sters inside the polling place with the remark that they wanted “no nig- | gers” there. A delegation of workers went down and wrongly compromised upon a white comrade acting as | watcher. As soon as this was dis- | covered by the section committee, an- | | other delegation went back with Comrade Snipe. Snipe went in and | functioned and the gangsters and the | cops had to keep their hands off. At 114 West 137th St., Campbell, | marked that each voter was told by } | the boss politicians to yote Repub- lican or Democrat. Campbell pro- | tested and was thrown out by the | cops and the gangsters. A delegation of workers put Campbell back on the | | job as watcher. | At 1267 Fifth Ave., the curtain was continually opened with the chair- | man of the Election Board looking in. | The Communist watcher protested | and a policeman threw him out. | Some more Tammany cop gangster- | ism. 7 West 111th St., a Spanish comrade acting as watcher was | thrown out by gangsters with the | police actively cooperating. At 29 East 104th St., the Party is altogether off the ballot, although there is a candidate for Borough | President, Assemblyman and Alder- | man running in the District. | At 117 St. Nicholas Ave., Matthew, | a Communist candidate, is not on the | ballot. In Brownsville at Saratoga Avenue, Cor. Dover Street, and at P.S. 148, Riverdale Ave., the Communist can- didates are off the ballot. At llth Street near East River, 1 West 115th St., 113 East 101st St., 400 East 100th St. (P.S. 99), the ma- chine doesn’t work at the Commun- ist row, and all that the Tammany, Republican and Socialist watchers ean recommend is “Vote for another ticket.” These are the maneuvers that the boss politicians of this city are carrying out in order to keep the Negro and colonial workers of Har- jjem from voting for their Party, the | Communist Party. | FSU MEMBERSHIP THURSDAY NIGHT Soviet News Reel and Reports NEW YORK.—The general mem- bership meeting of the Friends of the Soviet Union to strengthen the or- ganization and to make preparations for participation in the 14th Anniver- sary Celebration of the Russian Rev- olution at the Bronx Coliseum, will be held at the Manhattan Lyceum Thursday, Nov. 5, at 8 p. m. The immediate danger of capitalist intervention in the Workers’ Father- land makes it of vital importance for every member to attend this meeting and to bring along his friends. There will be an activity and finan- cial report of the last six months, by Ray Ragozin, the District Sec’y. A report on the Internationa! Situation, and the immediate war danger will be made by the national secretary of the Friends of the Soviet Union, Mar- cel Scherer. Open discussion and questions will follow all these reports. A new Soviet news reel will be shown at the end of the meeting. 1 have an indoor meeting to- | ow night at 108 B. 14th St. 7:30 | Important matters to be taken | WER pa 3 Metal Workers Industrial League, will hold a special meeting of the executive committee at 5 HB, 19th Bt. Members are requested to attend. at Drug Clerks Attention! The Medical Workers Industrial League will hold a meeting at 108 E, 14th St, 8 p. m. Panay work; take up the struggle against workers and peasants of the Soviet Women's Council Lectare. will be held in the auditorium of Workers’ Cooperative, 2700 Bronx pitalist theories of “planned economy”; November Issue of “The Communist Is Ready The November issue of The Communist makes its a) ppearance to- day. It isa 14th USSR. anniversary issue. The articles in this issue analyze the deepening of the crisis of capitalism in this country and throughout the capitalist world; take up the current problems of mass social-fascist tendencies, against ca- and analyze the successes of the Union in the building of Socialism, No Party member or revolutionary worker should permit himself or ‘her- self to.be without this issue. The contents is as follows: baie What Means the Fourteenth Anniversary of the Revolution? By Kast, 8 p.m, Juliet Poyntz will on’ “Women in the Coming | Robert Minor, ees Some Problems of Mass Work, by Earl Browder. TWO Youth Meets, . iba hid tomorrow night aa tol] The March of the Revolution, by Wm. Z. Fosetr. 1 ;—Intwor Br. 401 at Set Bryant The Struggle for the Masses, by A, Lozovsky. g i. 1 nv | o attend. i A ae Bee 404 will ae 0p. m. The Latest Phase of the British Crisis in its Reverberations in the 1109 45th St., Brook scussion | United States, by Alex Bittelman, 1 the 14th Anniversary of the Rus- stim evolution to be held, All young workers and students invited, i Gensonhurst 409 at 2006 70th St., | 5 All wéleome, Spartacus uth Br. 408 at 1 Fulton Ave,, Mid- Village, Long Island. + eo September 29, 1971. The Present Struggle in Cuba, THURSDAY Mirsky. Juliet Poyntz Speaks | on the “Woman on the | in the auditorium of ‘operative, 2700 Bronx Admission 15 by A. Landy, the Workers rie Rast, at 8 p.m. ts hake « « every member of the Party is given Workers Defense in Court AS Wi) be the tonle of a lecture to| Individual workers and comrades can get The Communist by sénding be held nt 1610 Boston Rd. wt 8:30 25¢ to Workers Library Publishers, City. p.m, Comrade Taub of the ILD will wpeak, All workers invited, ste The World Credit Crisis Is Growing, Leading Editorial from Pravda, | Capitatist Theories of “Planned Economy”, by Harry Gannes. | The Philosophical Discussion in the C.P.8.U. in 1930-31, by D. S. Cultural Compulsives or Calverton’s Latest Caricature of Marxism, District, Section and Unit literature agents should see that their orders are placed immediately for this issue of The Communist and that Jt 0 sw ane tm by O. Rodriguez. the oppertunity and urged to buy it. P.O, Box 148, Station D, New York ¢* . DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1931_ od ‘9 Communist Leaders Tried; Canadian Masses to Protest Bennet Gov’t in Attempt to Crush Revolution- ary Movement to Put TORONTO, Canada, Nov. 2.—Nine Canadian Communist Party leaders faced trial today in the Ontario Su- preme charged with being members and officers of an unlaw- ful association and seditious con- spiracy, The court rooms were crowded and police and detectives in large groups patrolled the city hall court. neighborhood. Norman Summerville is counsel for the government and Hugh MacDonald for the defense. The motion of the defense to quash the indictment was defeated. Par- ticulars of the indictment were de- livered to the defense counsel for ex- amination. The prisoners were re- fused bail for the next 24 hours to! Court, NOT GOING TO PRAY BUT T0 FIGHT, SAYS MOTHER OF 2 SCOTTSBORO BOYS ‘Mrs. Wright Cheered in Hoboken Mass Meet Returning Soon to the South HOBOKEN, Nov. 3.—Mrs. Ada j Wright, mother of two of the inno- ing electrocution in Alabama, spoke here last week and received ‘an en-| thusiastic reception. The meeting, | which was held under the auspices of the League of Struggle for Negro Mounted police patrolled the | WORKER BEATEN Thru Hunger Regime prevent their appearance at a protest demonstration today. Special correspondents of workers and the Finnish daily, Vaupas, was excluded from the court. Defense conferences are being held in many cities and a nation-wide workers’ | jury has been elected for a prole- | | tarian verdict. Printers of the leaflet for the To- | ronto demonstration, to be held to- | day, were charged with contempt of | court and summonses are being is- | sued for all those responsible for the leaflet. Thousands of workers are | preparing demonstrations on a na- | tion-wide scale tonight against the | terror drive to outlaw the Commu- | nist Party by the federal, provincial | Bellevue Hospital At @ spontaneous mass picket dem. onstration on Sunday night, a work unconscious for the past 24 hours. Hi refuse to name. This is a duplica Steve Katovis, was shot while picket: ing a Bronx food market. The dem UNCONSCIOUS AT CRUSADER STRIKE White \Red Builder Dying in. er who was selling Daily Workers was | through the legal lynching of Willie ‘so severely beaten that he has been | Peterson, the Ku Klux Klan and the lies in Bellevue Hospital with a po- liceman stationed at his bedside and if he recovers the police will attempt | her to turn over the case to a firm to frame him on a charge which they | of lawyers selected by the Klan and tion of what happened last year when onstration at which the worker was beaten was the second of teh day. The ‘Terrorizes Wife of Peterson Klansmen, Negro Reformists Threaten to Lynch Negro Woman Unless A She Changes Attorneys & D., she was visited by a group of BIRMINGHAM, ah, No, 2.—In their efforts to eliminate the mili-| white Klansmen and Negro reform< ~|tant mass defense policy of the In-| ists who threatened her with lynch- - | ternational Labor Defense and carry | ing if she did not at once turn over |the case to the lawyers of their choice, Roach & Johnson, Under pressure of the terror, Mrs, Peterson notified the I, L, D, that Roach & Johnson would handle the case, even though she knew of the close connections of J, 'T. Roach with the firm of Roderick Beddow, N. A. A. C. P., attorney in the Scottsbore case, who is defending Dent Williams, le | Negro reformists, working hand in glove, have brought pressure to bear upon the wife of Peterson to force the reformists. Mrs. Peterson had previously signed an agreement with the I. L. D. to defend her husband, an unemployed | brother of one of the dead girls, and |sick miner who is the latest victim Gt the hoseent: athemnate-ty eaine’ a | Who almost murdered Peterson in his 8 P| cell when officials permitted him to a : ‘lier one passed without any some innocent Negro worker in con- | and municipal governments. earl | smuggle a revolver int prisos | trouble. |nection with the murder of two so- |Guring an “interview” sith eebren The Food Workers Industrial |ciety women last August 4, Mrs. | are known as ‘Reds.’ I didn’t know what a wonderful organization and/ how you fight for us Negroes. I sure-| ly learned a lot here in the North. | police department. “Last week we were up in Newark.) We were going to speak in a church. | And the preacher he said that he/| would not let us speak because we) 250 Ibs. and has a very fat nose. Union which is leading the strike is calling upon all workers’ organiza- | tions to demand that those responsi- jble for the brutality of the hired representative she would trust no one gangsters and the police be called to | but the I. L. D. to handle the case. ‘account. Since the beginning of the | When it became known that she had + | strike last week a number of workers ? |have been beaten. ‘There is one gang- | ster stationed at the door of the Cru- sader cafeteria on 14th St., who is | particularly well-known. He has been | used by the bosses in many strikes and works hand in hand with the He is about 6 feet tall, heavy set weighing about | Another worker, John Russo, was | arrested at the demonstration and Peterson hunted for the office of the |, 70¢ 1. L. D. has answered this at- |I. L. D. several days: When she | ‘©™Pt of the Klan and the Negro re- {finally found it, she-told the I. L. 1p, | formists to betray Peterson with an intensified campaign among the white and Negro workers in this city. 15,000 leaflets have just been issued turned the defense over to the I, L. exposing the frame-up from the time of Peterson's arrest, to the attempt | to murder him in jail, right up to the CALLS A MEETING of the bosses. The leaflet exposes the traitorous role of the Negro re- formists, and links up their present betrayal with their betrayal of the 9 Scottsboro boys, their attack on the Camp Hill croppers whose union meeting was murderously shot up by Alabama land owners. The leaflet iTo C Irganize. Council | of Unemployed | Rights was well attended. Many / workers joined the L. S. N. R. and| the International Labor Defense. Mrs. Wright, who is soon returning to the South, used the meeting as an occasion to thank the militant work- ers, white and Negro, who have were Reds. He says to me, ‘Sister, say that the N.A.A.C.P. is defending the boys.’ And I says, ‘No, it is a lie’ He wanted me to get up and! tell a lie that the N.A.A.C.P. is de-| fending the boys. “T used to pray a lot in the church. | tried yesterday morning even though | he didn’t have a lawyer, When a law- yer did arrive he forced a mistrial to be declared and the case will be brought up again in Yorkville Court day, November 5, at 8 p. m. A membership meeting of the Fur- | niture Workers’ Industrial Union will |be held at 108 East 14th St., Thurs- |calls for a tremendous mass protest against the efforts of the bosses and their tools to push through the legal lynching of Peterson under the pre- text of “defending” him. on November 10. The question of the strike against | the lockout at the State Parlor Suit |rallied to the mass fight to save the | |9 boys. Mrs. Wright said: “Dear Friends and Comrades: “I guess you all know me. I am |the mother of two of the Scottsboro boys—Andy and Roy. I am sorry | that. I didn’t know about your won- derful organization many years ago— | even twenty years ago. I didn’t even | know about it until after the boys | were arrested. You know that you| EXPEL COMMUNIST. GIRL FROM SCHOOL Was Active in Leading | School Struggles NEW YORK.—Rose Tekulsky, 18, | Young Communist, of 1034 St. John Ave., the Bronx, has been expelled from the Morris High School because school officials discovered a Young Communist League book in her purse. The expulsion is the ‘result of her leadership last year in the activity of the students for better conditions in |the lunch room and class rooms. Upon registering this: year, Rose |was made to sign a pledge saying | that she would not enter any Com- munist activities in the school. | Merely having a Y.C.L. book in her however, was considered purse, |“crime” enough to have her expelled. Sam Strong, head of the youth de- partment of the International Labor Defense, is organizing Morris High |School students to defend the right Jof Rose Tekulsky to. attend the schools. Marine Workers Force |German Consul to Pay Strikers’ Fare Home PHILADELPHIA—The seamen of the German ship, Holger, who struck recently against a wage-cut and were replaced by scabs hired through the Seamen's. Church Institute of New | York, would have been left on the Philadelphia beach to starve had it not been for the mass pressure ex- erted by the Marine Workers’ In- dustrial Union NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES EAST SIDE—BRONX Wednesday to Friday —On the Sereen— Leo Carillo JEFERION RKO 8 acts 8) Milt Douglas Marion Hardy & 11 Ala- bamians George McKay Barr & LaMarr Radio Stars Surprise Jamboree Adelaide Walt | Osear Lorraine | Daro and Costa Revue Maurice Vincent Lee, Port and Dotty With Noah Beery Mary Brian A NEIGHBORLY PLACE TO BAT Linel Cafeteria Pure Food—100 per cent Frigidaire Equipment—Luncheonette and Soda Fountain , 830 BROADWAY Near 12th Street All I knew was to pray. But they | | didn’t even let us speak on the steps | of the church. They say ‘Get off those steps.’ Yes, I used to pray a lot. One of the sisters says to me, ‘Sister Wright, pray for your boys!’ Yes, I used to pray. said, ‘pray?’ FURRIERS T0 VOTE FOR JOINT COUNCIL, the meeting. | to the growth of the organization an: \Co., Brooklyn, will be discussed at | The union pointed out that the outcome of the strike was important urged all furniture workers to be Tel. Stuyvesant 9-5557 If no answer call Stu. 9-1500 4 (24 hour service) And she says, ‘Don’t you know that prayers are the keys to heaven,’ and I says, ‘I don’t know, sister, because TWhave never been there” “Prayer won't help me or the boys. They would have been dead in July— Nov. 4 Wednesday, Elections All Day on NEW YORK—Registered furriers | were urged to take part in and elect | CARL BRODSKY “ANY KIND OF INSURANCE” 799 Broadway New York City | present at this meeting. ° | All unemployed furniture workers, |members and non-members of the | Furniture Workers’ Industrial Union, are urged to come to the headquar- ters of the union at 795 Flushing ‘The HOMICIDE) = but they didn’t die. Why? Only be- cause of your wonderful organization. And I want to thank you all for your |help and how wonderful you have |treated me. “I just hate to go back |to the South. “Now I am going back to the South and I am going after some of those old preachers. They used to say to me, ‘Sister, have you got a dollar for | the church’? But when they ask me | for a dollar now maybe they'll hear something they won't like. “So,” comrades and friends, I’m going back to the South, not to pray. I'm going back to Fight! And I'm going back to my girls, and especially | the boys I must see in the South. “And I want to thank you all for | how wonderful you have all been to me. And I'm going to tell all of them down in the South about your won- derful organization. The preachers never told me anything—never taught me anything. You have taught me |lots. I used to believe in the church, but that is finished. I believe in you. And I’m going back to tell them about you and not to sit down and pray, but to fight.” |rank and file workers to the Joint | Council at elections to be held Wednesday, 167 West 29th St., first | (iser,-theventire day-watil 9am. in| ce eee aE es Do Ave., Brooklyn, Wednesday where an unemployed council will be organized. LT TEI a leaflet issued by the Rank and File Opposition of Registered Workers. ‘The leaflet says in part: “Elect the most capable and class conscious workers to the Joint Coun- cil, who will be able to carry through the program of unity above the heads of the traitors. This will help to |make an end to the program of ex- | ploitation, unemployment, hunger and need, boss terror and clique domina- tion of the furriers.” Millinery Workers to Hold Membership Meet A millinery membership meeting will be held on Thursday right after work at the office of the union. At this meeting there will be a discus- jsion on the strike conducted by the | union at the present time against the Robinhood Hat Co., 65 W. 39th St., the mobilization to fight the injunc- Patronize the AND Restaurant 2700 BRONX PARK EAS1 “Buy in the Co-operative Store and help. the Left Wing Movement.” HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian Restaurant 1600 MADISON AVENUE Phone University 4-081 Concoops Food Stores Dr. MORRIS LEVITT SURGEON DENTIST Southern Blvd. cor. 176th St., N. ¥. Phone: Tremont 3-1253 Special low prices for workers “SEROY 652 Allerton Avenue O1-2-7584 BRONX,N, Y. Intern’! Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 1 UNION SQUARE 8TH FLOOR AU Work Done Under Personal Care of DR. JOSEPHSON Phone Stoyvesant 8816 tion, and plans for organization work during the coming season. AMUSEMENTS 3y6naa Neve6unua DR. A. BROWN Dentist 3% EAST TH STREEI | THE THEATRE GUILD PRESENTS EUGENE O'NEILL'S Trilogy ‘Mourning Becomes Electra’ Composed of 3 plays “HOMECOMING,” “THE HUNTED,” “THE HAUNTED” AH 3 pinys are presented om same day, commencing G15 sharp. Dinner interm! sion one hour at 7. 36. nee performances, P, 2 Orch, & Mezzanine, TICES Balcony, $5, $4, $8 and $2. | (INCLUDES 3 PLAYS.) GUILD THBEA., 52d St., W. of B'way (Corner Second Avenue) 42 nd STREET & B'WAY NOW | Tel. 1248 Algongain 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 “TERRA MADRE” (The Motherland) An Italian Romance With English Sul “Represents the American ‘Theatre At Its Best,” Atkinson, N.Y, Times 29 EAST 14TH STREET | NEW YORK Yel. Algonquin 3356-8843 We Carry a Full Line of THE LEFT BANK + Mant. $1.00, $1.50, 82.00 | By ELMER RICE Little Sat. $1.00 to 32,50 ‘The Group Theatre Presents The House of Connelly By PAUL GREEN Under the Auspices of the Theatre Guild Martin Beck jt as Aue Mat. Thurs & Sat, Penn 6-6100 | EVERYBODY’S WELCOME ‘The new’ musical comedy hit, with FRANCES WILLIAMS OSCAR SHAW ANN PENNINGTON, ALBERTINA ‘HM GIRLS & BALLET; OTHERS SHUDERT Thea, 44th St., W. of B’w’y Ey. 8:30, Mts. Tues. (Elec. Day) & Sat. Then, W. 44th, Nights $1-83 | w JULIAN WYLIE’S PRODUCTION STATIGNERY AT SPECIAL PRICES for Organizations ‘ : BUSINESS SCHOOL DAY AND EVENING GOOD COMPANIONS Ry J, B. PRIESTLEY | and EDWARD KNOBLOCK | From Priestley’s Famous Novel Company of 120—16 Scenes MATH ST. THEATRE, W. of Br'dway Ey, 8:40. Mts. Tues, (Elec, Day) & Sat. 6th Ave. HIPPODROME®:';:%:. BIGGEST SHOW IN NEW YORK begedons LEW AYRES Commercial—Secretarial Courses ACTS in incl. | “SPIRIT OF Individuab Instruction brent NOTRE DAME” Open the entire year Uth St. at 2nd Ave. N.¥.C. LIVE IN A— We have a limited number Take Lexington Avenue. trai Office open ier: 2 a. m. to irday 10 a. m, WORKERS COOPERATIVE COLONY NO INVESTMENT NECESSARY — OPPOSITE BRONX PARK 2800 BRONX PARK EAST Comradely atmosphere—In this Cooperative Colony you will find a library, athletic director, workroom for children, workers’ clubs and various cultural activities Tel, Estabrook 8-1400; Olinville 2-6972 Get off Allerton Avenue ‘TOmpkins Square 6-6584 Bet, 12th and 13th Sts, Strictly Vegetarian food MELROSE || _DAMRY ceomasien Comrades Will Always Find It Pleasant to Dine at Our Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLYD., Bronx (near 174th St, Stytion) INTERVA! LELEPHONE ooley JADE MOUNTAIN American and Chinese oweue tae Special Lunch 11 to 4...35¢ Dinner 5 to 10... .55¢ 197 Second Ave. Bet, 12th & 13th Sts, = WORKERS’ of 3 and 4 room apartments Telephone HArlem 17-5150 RESTAURANT, ALL OCCASIONS in to White Plains Road and ||. WworKERS ORGANIZATIONS of New Jersey are asked to keep every day; 9 a. HEADQUARTERS— LABOR TEMPLE 15 WEST 126th STREET POOL ROOM, STHAM BATH, SWIMMING POOL, HALLS FOR RENT FOR Hoboken, New Jersey Nov. 28th Date Open | | Hoboken Daily Workers Readers Club | Will Have Its First Annual Dance Advertise Your Union Meetings Here. For Information Write to Advertising Vepartment The DAILY WORKER 50 East 13th St. New York City BUTCHERS’ UNION Local 174, A, MO. a, Wet Utfice and Headquarters: Labor Cemple, 243 XM Street Room u ery (iret and oA M. Regular meetinns third Sunday, 1) Employment Bureau open every aay ater All Comrades Meet at r BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Cleremont Parkway, Bronx } in Order Eliminate I. L. D. | 4

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