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Page dak dts City Unity Council Calls for Active Support of N at’lMarch ‘TAILORS MEETING DAILY, WORKER, NEW _YORK, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1931 (CALLS FOR FIGHT Revolutionary Trade Union Movement in New United yore In Shops|| onsibility, Call Says York Has Much Resp< NEW YORK.—The Trade Union Unity Council yesterday issued a statement addressed to all members the revolutionary union, members F. of f opposition groups inside the of L. locals and to all suppo! of the Trade Union Unity Leag calling for active support of the Na- tional Hunger March, December 7. The statement follows “Comrades and fellow workers “Only three more weeks are left be- fore the National Hunger March, The revolutionary trade union movement n New York has a great d BRAMHALL FILES FACT THAT WHITE | IS BOSS GRAFTER Ex- Mayor . White Was| : Bribe-Taker and | A Boss Servant | LAWRENCE, Mass., Noy, 10.—One of the opponents of Samuel Bram- | hall, Communist candidate for mayor | of Lawrence, is a former mayor named William P. White. This White was once before mayor, was convicted | of taking bribes, and served a term | ; in prison. To expose the character of,| the capitalist agents slated for office in Lawrence, Bramhall has filed with the clerk of the Board of Registrars | following formal objection: ‘{ Samuel Bramhall, a qu: yoter of the City of Lawrence, do| hereby object to the name of William P. White being placed upon the offi- cial ballots to be used at the next) preliminary election to be held on! Tuesday, the seventeenth day cf No- vember, 1931, for violations of his oath of office, while holding the of- tice of mayor of the city of Lawzence “ges of accepting inoney filing of city appointments. ‘Comon decenecy and the moral | forbids, and the city charter in Section 10, ragraph in the ‘pe- age | atement cf? cai- dates’ which clearly indicates tha candidates must be men of good character. Sections and 48 and the Oxth of Office further in- cates that the name of William P.} ould not be placed upon the | the next preliminary elec- | What’s On— || WEDNESDAY Med Will hold at 7:30 en 108 BE. 14th | se be on time. * St. Beach Women's Council dan “educational meeting | jeptune Ave,, at 8, Tople | Red Pront Band Will meet at the Hungarian Work- ers Home, 350 B, Slat St, at 6 p.m. Prepare tér November 31 | The Friends of the Soviet Union aii telt s meeting at 12 eons Bt. tonight at 8:30 m,. for the Anti- War De- Maree Na-| to dpeak. Auspices, Prospect Park B., FSU. | Workeis Ex-servicemen’s League, Branch 1 Will hold an open air meeting on 86th Street, between ard and Lexing- ton Aves., 8:30 p.m. All speakers to Feport at headquarters at 7 p.m, | W.LR. Band Rehearsal Will }1e held at Chernishevsks 122 2n@ . (bet. Tth and 8th at 8 Club ts.) WSU Downtown Br. Will have a reguiar mei meeting at the Manhattan 1; 66 EB, 4th St, 3 p.m, Preparatic for the November ai Anti-War De- monstrations will take place. All workers are urged to participate. sine 8 rship | | Cotehrate Russian Revolution & meeting t6 celebrate the 14th Anniversary of the Soviet Union will be held at Hunts Point Palace, room #@, 963 Southern Blvd. Bronx, at 3 p.m, Discussion on the Manchurian Situation and preparations for the November 21 demonstration to take place, ee ‘War Danger ‘Wit? be the subject of Harry Ray- mond's lecture at the Brighton Beach ‘Workers Club, 140 Neptune Aye., at 8:30 p.m, All workers are invited, ‘TAURSDAY Greek Comenden, Attentio A general membership meetin, of all Greek Party members will be held at the Workers Cnter, 35 E, 12th St., 7:90 pom, | Progressive Youth Club ave & special meeting at 1492 Madison Ave., at 8:30 se FSO, Italian Branch Will show the Boviet Newsree! at the first meeting of the Williams: burgh Branch, Workers Center, 795 Flushing Aye. Brooklyn, at &' p.m Preparations forthe Nov. 21 demon- | trations to tale place. Workers In- vited, | hk ae Steve Katovis Br. TLD Wi}t hold an open air meetitg at bth St, and Ave, B, 8 p.m. Niele Scehaae PnIDAY Steve Katovix Br. ILD Will hold an indoor meeting at 257 1. 10th St, 8 p.m, All workers invited. pian ‘Tremont Workers Club Will hold @ lecture by Joe Paas at the John Reed Club on “Revolu- fonary Literature” at the new Club- 2075 Clinton Ave. near 180th « ye 8 Proaneet Workers Center WI" hold Weture by Comrade | Hngern! on “Recent Bleetions and | ihe, Wer, Danger” at 1187 Southern Riva. & ' R | pathizer | Bosses | Guard | disorders ;| ances and public dis | that the attack on the workers at jhome is a step towards imperialist | war. | the government with to live real and sym- ipate in industry tes to the ce and march- will be elected. TUUL members pate the of huge ington in well as form mployed councils consisting of A. F, of L., TUUL and ized workers of one trade or , Wherever possible, roduce resolutions in the | A. F. of L. locals condemning the | | decisions of the last A. F. of L. con- yention against unemployment insur- | ance. Calling upon the locals to sup- | port the National Hunger March by electing marchers and sending dele~ gates to the November 22 conference. 4. The unions and leagues must raise $1,500 for the support of the} Hunger March. signed @ must get over the top. Do not wait Each union was as- till your next union meeting, report | immediately to the TUUC office, for | ‘ammunition”—boxes, coupons, but- tons, credentials and leaflets. 5. mrery. _TUUL member must ac- | ate in the Tag Day for March on November 28 the Hunger and 29. 6. TUUL other | itiative in proposing to the organi- members belonging to organizations must take the in- zation to send a delegation to the November 22 conference. 7. The TUUL members and sym- must become organizers for the mass welcome of the out of town hunger marche nd off of the ci ORE CAR Guards| Ready for Winter . Against Jobless Order CHICAGO, Il].—On the occasion of |the 14th Anniversary of the Russian local office of the , at 1413 West 18th | St, “issued a cement condemning | Shesmobitten ton of the Illinois Na- tional Guard, and urged the workers to fight for immediate cash relief and unemployment insurance at the ex- pense of the bosses state. The statement came as a result of the announcement by leading military authorities that secret plans |had been evolved providing for the mobilization of the Illinois National “for the control of domestic riots, industrial disturb- stating Revelution, th The statement goes on to say, “this is another one of the long chains of facts proving that war is being prepared against workers’ Rus- sia, Fourteen years after the Rus- sian Revolution the war-makers are | taking the final steps for the declar- | ation of open warfare on the Work- ers Republic. It is significant that which declares it cannot feed ths ctarving, unemployed workers ana their families, yet has funds for military purposes. The Na- tional Guard is mobilized not only | in preparation for war on the Soviet | Union, but also for an attack on the | workers at home. The bosses intend to turn this winter's snow red with the blood of starving and eyicted workers. As usual the Negro workers will be sought out for special terror. The bosses are not satisfied with the murder of three Negro workers last August. With organized resistance the workers must meet this wage- cutting, starvation offensive of the ‘bosses, “The National Hunger March to Washington on December 7 must be made a high point in the struggle for social insurance, against starya- tion and against the brutal terror of the bosses.” Mass anti-war meetings will be held throughout the state on No- vember 20 and 21. Simultaneously with similar meetings throughout the U. S. These demonstrations are be- ing organized under the following slogans: Down with the Hooyer-Layal Sec- ret War Pacts. Defend the Soviet Union. The workers want no war! They want immediate relief and unemploy- ment insurance, Not a cent for imperialist war! Every penny for immediate unem- ployment relief and insurance! Joint Workers Committee against imperialist war! No funds for police terror! All funds for unemployed relief! GERMAN POL! JPPRESS COMMU: iT WEEKLY. BERLIN.—“Das Neue Volksblatt,” a Communist weekly in Magdeburg, has been suppressed for two months by the police Build a workers correspondence group in your factory, shop or neighborhoed. Send regular letters to the Daily Worker, A minimum quota and we} | Against Boss Attacks With nearly 300 tailors filling the Royal ange Hall, Brooklyn, one of | a the meetings of member ted Clothing Sol Hertz, E. Oswaldo and Dominic Flaiani call for a united front among | the men’s clothing workers in a fight | | on wage cuts, and the company union | | agents of the bosses. j The tailors showed their support of the demand that the Hillman ma. chine be forced to pay unemployed insurance out of the fund established | years ago and which has be: source of revenue for the bureaucr’ and not the jobless in the trade. Many right wing workers present | the meeting expressed a strong | sentiment for a united front of all tailors on the basis of struggle against wage cuts in the shops. KENOSHA JOBLESS FIGHT FOR RELIEF | at Police Break Up Meet! At City Council | (By a Worker Correspondent) KENOSHA, Wis.—On Monday No- vember 2, the Kenosha Unemployed | | Council presented demands to the City Council of Kenosha, for imme- | diate relief for the starving unem- | ployed. The City Manager, O’Brien, refused a permit to the workers to | gather in front of the city hall when | the delegation presented the de-| mands, and the police used this as | an excuse to attack the workers, ar- resting 9 and using tear gas bombs | to disperse the crowd. In spite of | this attack the workers forced the | release of all except 3 of those ar- rested, these being held by the police | because 2 of them were from out of | town and the police wish to make it | | appear that the crowd was entirely | “outsiders.” The “brave” American egionnaires broke several “windows in the Workers Center after all of j the Unemployed Council members | had gone to bed at home and thought | that they had broken up the organ- | ization of the workers, The workers of Kenosha are con~ tinuing with their organization; 31 | applications were gotten at the pro- test meeting the night following the | demonstration of 200 workers where a report of the delegation who vis- ited the city council was also made, At the present time the demonstra- | tion can be seen \to have had its effect upon the bosses who are giving more and better relief to many work- ers, in four or five cases twice as| much as formerly two or three who | were repeatedly refused have been [even relief since the demonstration. We workers of Kenosha know that this is only a stall, used by the bosses | to keep us from organizing and fight- ing. We will continue to organize and fight harder than ever until we haye won real relief from the bosses of Kenosha and unemployment in- surance at the expense of the rich, —J. S. | Many ‘Nat Turner Meetings In New . York This Week NEW YORK.—The district office of the League of Struggle for Negro Rights announces the following mass | meetings in the New York district in connection with the commemora- tion of the centenary of the death of Nat Turner, heroic Negro revolution- ary leader, Staten Island, 226 Broadway, Tues- day, Nov. 10, at 8 o'clock. Gilbert Lewis Group, 417 W. 53rd St., Wed., Nov. 11, 8 p.m. Great Neck, L. I, 25 Mitchell Ave., Wed., Nov. 1., 8 p. |m. Nat Turner Group, Lafayette | Hall, 15 W. 131st St., Nov. 15, at 3.00 p.m. Brighton Beach, 140 Neptune Ave., Nov, 16, at 8pm ~ “PHILHARMONIC ‘The Philharmonic Program which Erich Kleiber will conduct tonight at Carnegie Hall has been changed. The program follows: Kaisermarch, Wag~- ner; French Horn Concerto, Soloist: Bruno Jaenicke, Strauss; “Rosenka- valier,” Waltzes, Strauss; Four Ger- man Dances, Mozart; Three Hun- garian Dances, Nos. 3, 10 and 1, Brahms; Waltz, “Spharenklange,” Josef Strauss, “MARRIAGE FOR THREE” OPENS AT BIJOU TODAY. “Marriage For Three,” Elmer Har- ris's new play, will have its premiere | tonight at the Bijou Theatre. Verree Teasdale, Jessie Royce Landis, Ter- }ence Neill, Frederick Perry and Lolita | Lee head the cast, Ethel Barrymore returned to Broadway last night at her own thea- tre on West Forty-Seventh Street, in | Sheridan's comedy, “The School For Scandal.” Fritz Leiber is announced to return here on November 16th at the Royale Theatre in a series of Shakespearian plays, Helen Menken, William Fav- ersham, Tyrone Power, Pedro de Cor- doba and Whitford Kane are in the cast, Paul Green’s play of the South, “The House of Connelly,” now cur- rent at Martin Beck Theatre, will be transferred on Nov. 16 to the Mans- field. “Reunion In Vienna,” a com- edy by Robert E. Sherwood, the next Theatre Guild productionH, is sche- duled for the same date at the Mar- tin Beck. Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne play the leading roles. | | Boards of the unions and leagues | | Committee has completed its investi- | [Important M Meeting | TUUC Council to > te Held Nov. 12th An important meeting of the Trade Union Unity Council will |take place Thursday, November |12th, at 7:30 p.m, at 5 East 19th | Street, the a fed The two main points on enda will be: | The application of the dec!-| of the Pittsburgh TUUL A March. | Delegates who fail to show up to this meeting will be removed from |the TUUC, and the organizations they represent will be urged to |eicet new delegates. } Members of the report on the Hunger Executive | | discussions with workers. - are also invited to this meeting. | “Smash Frame up of Harlan Miners” IF ight to F ‘nish on Boss} Terror Needed in Harlan, Ky. HARLAN, Ky., Novy. 7.—Declaring that the struggle for the rights of the workers, the right to assemble and organize, for the self-defense of the miners, as well as for the right to distribute the Daily Worker, would go on more energetically than ever, after the Dreiser investigating committee leaves, the International Labor De- fense, through its representative here, George Maurer, issued the following statement: The International Labor Defense, whose organizers have been arrested and terrorized in Harlan County and in Kentucky, will continue the fight | for workers’ rights after the Dreiser | gation. It will especially organize and rally the workers and sympathizers in a struggle for the right of self- defense against the attacks of the company thugs. The holding of open, public meet- ings, under the auspices of the In- ternational Labor Defense and the National Miners’ Union, which takes place in $traight Creek today and in Wallins Creek, Kentucky, on Sunday, will be continued from now on in an effort to gain for the miners the right of free speech, free assemblage, the right to organize and picket against starvation. The International Labor Defense calls on all miners, as well as other workers and sympathizers, to rally to and support the International La- bor Defense in this struggle for the basic rights of the workers. All effort will be made to mobilize mass support to break down the vicious frame-up murder charge against Burnett and fifteen others now in prison at Mt. Sterling and Winchester, Kentucky. These eases are coming up for trial at the begin- ning of the Noy. 16 term. This rep- resents a vital period in the struggle against the murder reign of the Har- jan coal barons, The existence of eight criminal syndicalism cases egainst miners whose only “crime” is either reading the Daily Worker, belonging to the International Labor Defense or the | National-Miners’ Union, or aiming to | organize these workers’ groups, | Proof that the terror in Harlan County is unabated. The Dreiser Commitiee brought out the fact that a vicious attack is directed by the coal operators and the county authorities against the distribution and sale of the Daily Worker. The International Labor Detensg will lead the fight for the right to circulate the Daily Worker and other workers’ papers which are @ powerful instrument in the struggle of the miners against the damnable conditions of starvation and disease exposed by the Dreiser Committee. We demand the immediate cessa- tion of the operators and government terror in Harlan County and Ken- tucky, We demand a complete in- vestigation on the part of the state government, of the collusion of the coal operators and government offi- ciels in their outrageous attempts to legally murder these innocent min- ers, We demand the removal of of ficials responsible for this frame-up in the courts. We demand the right of self-defense to miners who must have the right to protect themselves against the murderous attacks of “the law” and of the company guards, both in the hands of the coal op- HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian Restaurant 1600 MADISON AVENUE Phone University 4-081 JADE MOUNTAIN AMERICAN and CHINES: RESTAURANT Open Th a om. fo bet on, om, Special Lunch 11 to 4...35¢ Dinner 5 to 10.. .55e 197 SECOND AVENUE Between 12th and 18th Sta, Intern] Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 1 UNION SQUARE STH FLOOR AD Work Done Under Personal Care om DR. JOSEPRSON SL caadganeunenmeieeamttieeemacemement is | | exterminating | both inside and outside the Party, as | one of our candidates was a colored | the time of the elections, | volutionary movement in Alliance, O. |\Platform. Reaches the [REVIEW GAINS OF PARTY IN CANTON Homes of Workers CANTON, O.—Reviewing the weak- nesses and the achievements of’ the Communist Party in the recent mu- nicipal elections, a statement is: by the in reaching the masses of workers and unemployed, A platform of practical immediate demands for the workers, and ap- proved by them, reached into 10,000 | homes accompanied in many cases by ematic distribution over two folder con- As days of an eight page taining the munist Party and pictures of its can- didates took place, “By using the pictures of our can- didates we made a great stride in white chauvinism, comrade.” ‘More Activity Now Two Unemployed Council branches were established as a direct result of Communist election work and now are .active. “We .have -noticed. a change in the workers attracted to the Party, more militant and enthu- siastic than in the past," the state- ment says in part. The election campaign was closely linked up with all Party campaigns | and made the central one up until At Massilon the candidate sup- ported by the Party on an indepen- dent ticket turned out to be a drunk- en traitor who was publicly thanked by the Republicans for. helping them win, Alliance Vote Weak Because of the weakness of the re- the two Communist candidates did not get much support. Leaflets were distributed. The Republicans put forth a Negro demagogue to fool the Negro works! At New Philadelphia the Unem- ployed Council under Communist | Party leadership put up four can- didates for city council and distrib- uted fourteen hundred copies of the Party platform. Lack of a unit of the Party to guide the work is the | chief shortcoming in New Philadel- Party tells of the gains made | platform of the Com- | L L. D. Fights jnounces that it is using every legal jand mass organization measure to save Orphan Jones, 60 year old |Negro farm hand from bei il- roaded and ly lynched,” in a | Worcester or adjoining court. Ades, who, as the I. L. D. lawyer Milliners Strike lega \Hold Affair Thursday to Aid Strikers The strike at the Robinhood Mill- inery Shop is standing firmer than ever. The referee appointed to sit at the hearing in connection with the application for an injunction made by the Robinhood has not yet issued his decision, although it is a week since the hearing is over. Clearly, the bosses, the Amalgamated, and their other agents are manouvering and cannot come to a decision in face of the fact that the Industrial Union has declared it will not recognize the injunction but will fight and violate the injunction by mass picketing. On Thursday night, Nov. 12, there will be an affair for the benefit of the strikers wh oare now on strike for the fourth week. The entertain- ment and party will take place at the new union hall, 131 West 28th Street. There will be a fine program, dancing and refreshments, Admis- sion is only 20c. All workers are urged to come to this affair which will be a union “get together” and at the same tmie as- sist the strikers. The mass picketing conducted so far has been very effective. In order to prevent the issuance of the in- phia. 12-Year Old Newsboy. | Selling Worker Is | . Beaten and Arrested | Harold Brown, the 12-year old newsboy, who sells the Daily Worker at the B, M. T. Union Square station yesterday was beaten and arrested by @ policeman because the boy in- sisted on selling the Daily Worker and resisting the cop's cowardly at- | tack upon him, The police judge tried to bullodze | the worker's child who showed a py fighting spirit against the nis” thugs thruout, Though ay tried to tell that he was struck first and.that he only a 12- year old child, tried to defend him- self, the judge bellowed “shut up.” When he was released Harold was threatened by the same policeman “if I catch you selling the Daily Worker again I'll break your neck.” But Har- old, @ militant worker's child, who understands the role of Tammany police who beat children, will contin- ue to sell the Daily Worker, erators. ‘We call for aid through the Inter- nationat Labor Defense to the wives and children of all mine strike pris- oners in this Kentucky coal region. We call on all workers and sympa- thizers to suprort the above demands. NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES EAS SIDE—BRONX RKO gio Gdti TET Lester Allen | Wednesday to Friday —On the Screen— LilyDamita “The Woman Between” ‘With feck. St, John Bros. 0. F eMaaTR Clift Cranet and and Co, LESTER VAIL Patronize the Concoops Food Stores AND Restaurant 4700 BRONX PARK EAS! “Buy in the Co-operative Store tnd help the Left Wing Movement.” AU Comranes Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant Claremont Parkway, Grons junction, and to insyre a successful end of the strike, we appeal to all needle trades workers to come to the picket mae at 65 West 39th St., at 8.30 | am, Cloakmakers of N.2.W.LU. Meet Wednesday Cleakmakers, members of the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union, will meet on Wednesday, No- vember 11, at the office of the union, 131 W. 28th St., right after work, Knitgoods Membership Meeting Thursday, at 7:30 A membership meeting of the knit- goods workers will be held Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the office of the union, 131 W. 28th St. The follow- ing order of business will be taken up: Election of a new trade executive committee; recommendations for an additional organizer; and a detailed Plan for organizaitonal activities in Preparation for next season, Give your answer to Hoover's Program of hunger, wage cuts and Persecution! Committees NEW YORK.—Despite the furious | attack of a lynch-infiamed mob upon its attorn rd Ades, and two representa Mays ard Os- | car Rabovsky, in Snow Ma., the| International Labor Defense an- Is Still Strong Brazen Court Denial of Rights to Jones’ | Attorney Ades Demands Right As Counsel to See Negro Farm-Hand—Jones Defense Being Built retained by Jones, has been fighting for a change of venue to Baltimore, | has been met by the attempt of Judge of the Snow Hill Court, to prevent him from defending Jones. Instead, an attorney appointed by the court, F. Leonard Wailes of Salis- bury, has been granted a petition for | change of venue to Cambridge, very close to Snow Hill. The trial was set for November 9th, but will probably be pestponed, The International Labor Defense ‘s that with lynch mobs milling the streets and packing the court rooms, no jury can be found that would dare give anything but a death | sentence to the aged farm worker either in Snow Hill or Cambridge. | Ades has received and published in |the Baltimore press a written re- | tained signed by Jones, saying, “I do not desire any other attorney.” So intent was the lynch mob in Snow Hill on preventing Ades and Miss Mays, and Roboysky from filing their motion for changing the trial to Baltimore, that they crowded, around the I. L. D. representatives, shouting “Lynch them! Kill them!” Miss Mays was bruised in the back and on the arms, Ades was clubbed and punched on the head and Robovsky received an injury resulting in in- ternal bleeding of the eye. Attorney Ades has filed an appeal in the First Circuit Court before Chief Judge Patterson for an order enforcing his right as counsel to see Jones. If this is not granted, the I. L. D. attorney will get out a writ of mandamus from the Baltimore courts. I a telegram of protest to Gov. Ritchie, the I. L. D. demands a change of venue for Jones to Balti- more, all rights, including a workers’ jury, half of them Negroes, The telegram demands the right of work- ers to bear arms for their defense against lynch attacks and immediate dismissal of the fake charge against | Helen Mays, and immediate safe re- | ease of Orphan Jones. A mass meeting of Negro and white workers will be held in Baltimore on November 14th. Meanwhile the I. L. D. is building up Jones defense com~ mittees in cities throughout Mary- jand, Jewelry Workers Meeting Tonight at Labor Temple NEW YORK.—Hundreds of Jewel- ry workers are walking the streets hungry, unemployed for over a year. The membership meeting tonight, Wednesday, at Labor Temple, 14th Street and 2nd Ave. will take up the situation, and prepare a mass meet- ing to demand unemployment relief and social insurance. Many workers who were laid off after working a couple of months are now in danger of a cut ol they are called back! This situation will be fken up at the meeting, and John Steubbin, or- ganizer of the Trade’ Union Unity League will make an interesting re- port on the Pittsburgh Conference of ‘the TUUL on the National campaign. against wage-cuts and unemploy- ment. AMUSEMENTS hi GHEATRE GUILD prenents KB O'NEILL’S “Trilogy Macias Becomes Electra’ Composed of 3 plays “HOMECOMING,” “THE HUNTED,” “THE HAUNTED” Commencing at 5.15 sharp, Dinner in- termission of one-hour at 7, No Mat. GUILD TH! 52d St, W. of Biway The Group Theatre Presents. The “House of Connelly PAUL GREEN aac the Auspices of the Theatre Guild Martin Beek JO ¥ 2", $58 Mat. Thurs & Sat, Penn 6-630 “Represents the” American ‘Theatre its Best,” Atkinaon, N.Y. Times THE LEFT BANK Li By ELMER RICE I Thea, W, 44th, Nights $1-$3 JULIAN WYLIE'’S PRODUCTION IC Wea. Ma GOOD COMPANIONS Sat, 81.60 By J. B, PRIE and *eDWARD KNOBLOCK “From Priestley'’s Famous Nove} Company rof 120-16 Scenes 44ATH ST. THEATRE, W. of Br’dway Eve. 81:40, Mats, Wed. & Sat. 2:40 TEAMEO K ° iCAMEONOW EGINNING TODAY Auikentte War Pictures’ of All Fronts “HEROES ALL” COUNSELLOR-AT-LAW B ELMER RICE PAUL MUNI Plymouth frac rhare, @”'set! 3338 Oth Ave, (& 48rd St, BIGGEST SHOW IN NEW YORK wie awe“ BAXTER 8x: ‘The Cisco Kid’ CODEE! With Edmund lowe UNFURNISHED APT.—438 E. 13th | St, 3 rooms, electricity, bath, hot water, reasonable rent, Inquire Santo, ate 5. LIVE IN A— We have a limited number Office open from: 9 Sotarday 10 WORKERS COOPERATIVE COLONY of 3 and 4 room apartments NO INVESTMENT NECESSARY — OPPOSITE BRONX PARK _ 2800 BRONX PARK EAST Comradely atmosphere—In this Cooperative Colony you will find a Ubrary, athletic director, workroom for children, workers’ clubs and various cultural activities * Tel, Estabrook 8-1400; Olinville 2-6972 Take Lexington Avenue train to White Plains Road and Get off Allerton Avenue rasan, 6 Mees m. to 5 p.m TEL, STUYVESANT 9-3557 CARL BropskY ANY KIND OF Insurance 799 BROADWAY, N.Y.C. Pn | D. W. Readers Club Meets this Thursday Eve., Nov. 12th 1931, 8 P.M, All Readers of D, W. Are Welcome At WORKERS CENTER 511 FIRST STREET Hoboken, N, J. Wm. Z. Foster Waldo Frank SYMPOSIUM Sun. NOV. 22, Afternoon MAXWELL STUART FT, SMITH WEBSTER HALL FRIENDS OF THE SOVIET UNIUN Cooperators’ SEROY CHEMIST 657 Allerten Avenne O1-2-7584 BRONX, N. ¥. Dr. MORRIS LEVITT SURGEON DENTIST Southern Divi. cor, 176th St, N. ¥- Phone: Tremont 3-1 Special low prices for workers Phone Stayvecant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicale meet 302 E. lth St. New York Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 199 SECOND AVENUB Bet. 12th and 19th Ste, Strictly Vegetarian F008 MELROSE DAIRY fisracnant BESTAURANT Comrades Will Always Find 80 Pleasant to Dine at Our Place, 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD, Bronx (pear 174th St, Station) PELEPHO! INTERVALE 90-0169 4 NEIGHBORLY PLACE TO EA1 Linel Cafeteria Pure Food—100 per cent Frigidaire Equipment—Luncheonette and Soda Fountain 830 BROADWAY Near 12th Street ©. Gdeal BUSINESS SCHOOL DAY AND BYBNING Stenography—Typewriting Individual Instruction 14th St. at 2nd Aye. N.¥.C. REDUCED RATES For Daily Worker Readers 29 EAST UTH STREET NEW YORK Tel, Algonquin 3356-8848 We Carry @ Full Line of STATIONERY AT SPECIAL PRICES for Organizations Advertise Your Union Meetings Here, For Information Write to Advertising Department — The DAILY WORKER 50 ast 13h Gt. New York Oity BUTCHERS’ UNION Loca) 174, 4, MO. & B. W. of BM, A, Office and Headquarters: Labor Temple, hdl td Mth banat) Me Tela Ws, SE Me Employment fae open every @ey WORKERS’ HEADQUARTERS— LABOR TEMPLE 15 WEST 126th STREET Telephone HArlem 17-5750