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

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) _ Fee Two DAILY r WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1931 Sunday’s s Conference Must A What's On— LANDY SPEAKS ATT)ie Jeor Ball And Rally Fight for Insurance <== —= WORKERS FORUM Held Tonight 8 p.m. Brownsville Banquet 4 a ; i Wil Ko MeSH ee ee | The big Icor Ball and Carnival, one | sa htan taraeeee . 30 p.m, Com- An important lecture at the Work- | of the biggest affairs of the sam . ers Forum, conducted by the Work- | will be held tonight, Noy. 21, 8 p.m. | | ers School, will be given by A. Landy, | at the 165th Infantry Armory, 63 |member of the editorial staff of the | rexington Avenue. Workers’ Movies in the | WORKERS CENTER | “Fragments of an Empire” Newsreels from the Soviet Union | Saturday, Noy. 21 |S P.M. 38 E. 12th St. Adm, 26c FILM-PHOTO LEAGUE OF W.LR. ONE TOURS WAY AT LOW RATES HOLMBERG S.S. TICKET AGENCY 2 EAST 125th ST. NEW YORK CITY Agent of Intourist State Travel Bureau of the Union of Soviet ROUND TRIP OR Foster, Amter, Minor, Raymond, Jailed For March 6 Demonstration, Call For Intensified Struggle For Relief “Strike Strates be the subject of a lecture by de Michael Obermeier at the rtacus Club, 801 West 29th St Daily Worker, this Sunday night, No- | | Socialist Republics TEL, STUYVESANT 9-5857 NEW YORK—A stirring call to| ference tomorrow at Stuyvesant Ca a Se nant ee ber 22, at 8 p.m. at the School An extraordinary program of en- s peer eraknss Gal wre ey poviets [din ET Race Ai aeee ts he EAL SORES, | Auditorium, 35 E. 12th St. 2nd floor. | tertainment has been prepared. A CARL ‘ad of New York to make the City Labor Conference Sunday a mass mobiliza- tion for the National Hunger March and for the fight here for immediate relief, has been issued by the com- mittee that served prison terms be- cause it represented the first great unemployment demonstration in New York, March 6, 1930. The members of the committee are: William Z. Foster, I. Amter, Robert Minor and Harry Raymond. Their statement reads: “Today more than ever the workers of this country need unemployment relief and insurance. The crisis is getting deeper, this meaning more unemployment, more hunger and starvation. “On March 6, 1930, 110,000 workers assembled in Union Square and marched to City Hall in the demand for unemployment insurance and re- lief. Today with more than 1,000,000 unemployed in the city of New York, and nearly 12,000,000 unemployed in the country, the need of unemploy- ment insurance has — The con- rallying point for a gigantic struggle for insurance. The rank and file of the A. F. of L. is repudiating the position of the fascist leaders of the A. F. of L., who at their convention in Vancouver supported the starva- tion program of Hoover and Wall Street. The workers must unitedly demand unemployment insurance at | the expense of the government and| the bosses and must be prepared to fight for it. | “The U. S. government, which is leading in the war against the Soviet Union is spending $1,000,000,000 for war—but it refuses to grant one The war against the Soviet Union is penny for unemployment insurance. on—and the starvation government of Wall Street hopes to recruit the| starving American workers for this war. | “All out to the Labor Conference! “Make our demands resound thru- | out the country! “Organize to fight for our demands | in the shops, unions, fraternal organ- | izations! ‘Forward to the struggle!” MASS SUPPORT FOR LABOR CONFERENCE, TOMORROW (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) Local 107, elected three delegates to} the City Labor Conference. | Proof of Starvation. Evidence of the starvation and lack | of relief for the workers of New York | is contained in figures just issued by the Social Service Exchange. It] states that an average of 5,000 names | was registered daily during Novem- ber, representing 5,000 individuals and families who apply for help every day. The extent to which these un- employed workers are being “as- sisted” is revealed in the reports of the welfare agencies whose task is to “provide shelter and food for the un- employed.” In August, 1931, the Association for the Advancement of the Conditions jot the Unemployed Councils in Har- |lem, Williamsburg and the Bronx, unemployed workers testified that | they had applied to the “charities” | months ago, had heard nothing, and | were now destitute and faced with eviction. | The Unemployed Councils have un- dertaken to press demands for imme- diate relief for some of the worst cases. They have already secured money, food coupons and rent by sending class-conscious delegations_to tell the agencies some unpleasant truths about workers’ conditions dur- | ing unemployment. At the same time the Unemployed Councils realizing the pitiful inadequacy of these agen- cies, are fighting for winter relief of $150 for each unemployed worker, and $50 additional for each de- } will perform pid_a joint social Catovis 2nd Ave young worker ‘are invited dents e Bath Hench | Workers Center, A ert and dance w y 28th St, 8 p.m ‘entral Committe eee Ar ill FSU—Dowtown Branch, will give a banquet at the Sollin’s Dining Room, 261 East 14th Street. | Aamission $1.00 Ae eee Young Communist League. will hold a dance and entertain- ment at 669 Prospect Ave. Admis- sion 35 cents, All young workers | “ are invited, : Joint Concert will be given Communist Part: of the Workers Cooperative, Bronx Park East, 8:30 p. m, Dane ing till morning, Admission 35 cents, : 8 . nd Ball. Section 5 of the} in the auditorium Brownsville Workers Center. wil Ihave a Proletarian Banquet at | 1844 Pitkin Ave. at 8 p.m. The Artef | Tickets 50 cents, Lh ee | SUNDAY Marine Workers Fraction. Nov. 22nd at 11 a.m, at orkers Center, 35 East 2th’ St. | All” comrades, employed or unem: | | Ployed are asked to attend, . * Soviet Syuipontans, will be held at Webster Hall, ‘10 | B, 11th St., 2 p. m, under the auspices | of the Friends of the Soviet Union. Foster, Waldo Frank and R. Tread- | well to speak, | American Youth Clab. | wil Ihold a dance at 78 ‘Thatford | Ave. Brooklyn, 8 p. m, All invited, | Adee acs Brownsville Workers Club, will have a discussion on_ the “Manchurian Situation,” at 118 Bris- tol St, 8 p. m. m | the Fundamentals of Communism, will start Nov, 22nd at the Finnish Workers Hall, 109-26 Union Hall St, Jamaica, Long Island (near school). BE ae * Course in ‘Trial of Heywood Broun, will be held at 1492 Madison Ave, Nov, 22nd, 7:30 p.m, Admission free. Wo ane Harrison George on “Thanksgiving” | wil Ibe the interesting talk to be | given at 63 West 15th St., 2:30 p. m. All workers are i nvited to attend. | ree hace SUNDAY | “Manchurian Situation’? Will be the subject of a talk at the Bronx Workers Club, 1610 Bos- ton Road, at 8:30 p.m. Siskind to speak, oo 8 Y CL Hike Will be held to Tibbets Brook by unit 6 Bronx, Meet at Woodlawn- Jerome Ave. Subway station, at 11 Bring lunch, The topic will be “The Decay of Cap- italist Culture.” An interesting and searching an- alysis of the manifestations, the eco- | John Reed Club artists will figure nomic basis for the decline of cap- | | prominently on the program. i} 1 be held | italist culture at the epoch of im-/ “| perialism and proletarian revolution | The development of | the bell and carnival, told of its cam- | will be given. | proletarian culture under the gigan- tic Five Year Plan in the Soviet Un- | “A JEW AT WAR” AT NEW ROYAL ‘THEATRE | young Jew Beginning tomorrow and continu- | ing until next Thursday, the New j double brass band of fifteen musi- | ion will be also illustrated as a sharp | UP Biro-Bidjan as a Jewish Socialist | | contrast. 2700 | Royal Theatre, Southern Blvd. and }thought, and accordingly joins his | | Jennings St. Bronx will show the | fellow-workers in the reconstruction | “ | Soviet film, “A Jew At War.” This is| of Soviet Russia. The film is syn-| | the latest cinema production from the | chronized with Russian and Jewish U. S. S. R. and it illustrates the | folk melodies: i cians will furnish the dance music. | A specially arranged program by | ‘The Icor, in calling for support of paign in raising funds to help supply machinery and technical aid to build | Sov! ‘iet Republic. who realizes that the | things of old in his small town are | not in line \#ith current economic | [AMUSEMENTS | LABOR Ou A New 32 Page Popula: Monthly Organ of t CELEBRATE THE BIRTH OF THE NEW tDec. 15th UNITY rand Directive Magazine, Official he Trade Union Unity League at the BANQUET AND ENTERTAINMENT ‘Manhattan Lyceum, Saturday, Dec. 5th 66 E. 4th Str ary Labor Admission 50 Cents Good Program with Prominent Leaders of the Revolution- eet, N. Y. C., at 7 P. M. Movement Present! $1.00 With Dinner THE THEATRE GUILD presente EUGENE O'NEILL’S Trilogy Composed of 3 plays presented on 1/day | HOMECOMING, THE THE HAUNTED Commencing at 8:30 sharp. Dinner termission of one hour at 7, No Mats GUILD THEA.,, 524 St. W. The Theatre Guild Presents REUNION IN VIENNA A Comedy -By ROBERT B, SHERWOOD THEA, 45th ‘ Martin Beck si. a's ave Eve. 8:40 Mats. Thurs. &Sat.2:40 The Group Theatre Presenis The House of Connelly By PAUL GREEN Under the Auspices of the Theatre Guild Eee MANSFIELD Wytiptast Byes8:30 Mats. Thurs, & Sat.2:3! epresents the American Thentre At Its Best,” Atkinson, N. ¥. Times THE LEFT BANK By ELMER RICE ot Bway | j|ETHEL BARRYMORE | | Mourning Becomes Electra’| the scHoor. FOR SCANDAL | ‘Thea, 47th W of HUNTED | KE way, Ev. 5.40 | | Beisel ratity | Sheridan's Immortnl Comedy Mat. Wed & Sat | PHILIP MERIVALE CYNARA | A. LANDY Will Speak at the WORKERS FORUM Conducted by the Workers School This Sunday, Nov. At 8:00 P. M. . 22|| School Auditorium 35 E. 12th St, Second Floor “The Cultural Decay of Capitalism” Questions ADMISSION 25c Discussion WITH Henry Phoebe = Adriane S?RPHENSON FOSTER ALLEN ROSCO THEA, 45th W. of B’way, <8, S145, Mats, Wed. & Sat., 2:30 JULIAN WYLIE’S PRODUCTION GOOD COMPANIONS By J. B, PRIESTLEY and EDWARD KNOBLOCK From Priestley’s Famous Nove} Company of 120—16 Scenes 41TH ST. THEATRE, W. of Br'dway Rove. 8:40, Mats, Wed. & Sat., 2:30 g i CAME © 42 md STREET & SWAY TINO PATTIERA SOVIET WM. Z. FOSTER MAXWELL STEWART | 2pm. Tomorrow suNpay SYMPOSIUM WALDO FRANK F. TREADWELL SMITH WEBSTER HALL 119 East 11th Street, New York Admi-sion 25c with this Advertisement FRIENDS OF THE SOVIET UNION BRopskY Insurance 799 BROADWAY, N. Y.C. Dr. MORRIS LEVITT SURGEON DENTIST Southern Blvd. cor. 176th St. N.Y. Phone: Tremont 3-1: Special low prices for workers SEROY 657 Allerton Avenue O1-2-7584 BRONX, N. Y¥, | Intern] Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 1 UNION SQUARE 8TH FLOOR Ali Work Done Under Persona! Care of DR. JOSEPHSON Whone Stuyvesant 381\ John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHED A. place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 302 E. 12th St New York MELROSE DAIRY VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT Comrades Will Always Find it Pleasant to Dine at On Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLYD., Bronx (near 114th St. Station) TELEPHONE INTERVALE 0100 Rational Vegetarian Restaurant | Formerly Metropolitan Opera Tenor in “FRA DIAVOLO” Italian Operetia EVERYBODY'S WELCOME | The wie | First Bronx Showing | FIVE — DAYS — FIVE Beginning Tomorrow A Jew at War) (Direct from U. S. Soviet Russia) || of the Poor accepted for help 218| pendent; for unemployment insur- families out of 1216 who applied. The ance equal to wages; free rent for C. O. 8. undertook responsibility for| the unemployed; free. lunches and 306 families out of 1584. Of 2146 | clothing for children of the unem- families who appealed to the Catholic | ployed. Charities, 191 families were taken on.| Unemployed workers! Demand work | The S. S. A. is helping 109 families |or wages! Fight for unemployment out of 885. What is happening to)insurance! Insist on immediate re- the rest of the families? The “char- | | ef! Join the Unemployed Council ities” don't care! At open meetings | | of your district! - To Demonstrate for Ohio, Detroit Hunger Marchers . “Fasciam ad the War Danger” Will be the topic of discussion at a meeting of the WESL, 79 B, 10th St. Adm. 10e, Unemployed free, ‘Thea, W. 44th, Eves. 8:50 Mats. Wed. &. Saturday, 2:40 | 199 SECOND AVENUE Bet. 12th and 13th Sts, Strictly Vegetarian food JADE MOUNTAIN AMERICAN and CHINESE RESTAURANT Open 11 a, m,. to 1:30 a. mm, Special Lunch 11 to 4...35¢ | Dinner 5 to 10...58¢ HOLLYWOOD CAFETERIA NOW UNDER WORKER MANAGEMENT PATRONIZE AN EATING PLACE Little Yorkers Ex-Servicemenw reague, || New Royal Theatre Harlem Branch |] So. Blvd. and Jennings Bronx Will hold an open forum November | ‘akc ie at 2 pm., at 27 West 126th St., | the “War in Manchuria.” Discus- on,to follow, All ex-servicemen in ited, new musical comedy hit, FRANCES WILLIAMS, OSCAR SHAW, ANN PENNINGTON.HARRIETT LAKE | SHUBERT Thea., 44th St., W. of B'w'y | Eve. $130, Mats. Wed. & Sat, 2:30) Oth Ave. HIPPODROME @'s:75:. BIGGEST SHOW IN NEW YORK K JACK HOLT and IN THE GARMENT CENTER The Food Workers Industrial Union GOOD FOOD AT REASONABLE PRICES 335 West 35th Street. New York e | NEW JERSEY Hoboken The English and Italfan branches of, the Interna 1 Labor Defense hold a meeting at which Jim oe will speak on the “Terror in ie Coal Fields” at 511 Ficst St, at S pam, at the Workers Center, * 191 SECOND AVENUE Between 12th and 13th Sta. acts | RALPH, GRaves incl. |A DANGEROUS | Poodlen DA DANCE DANCE For the Defense of the Italian Communist Paper | Synchronized with wonderful Russian and Jewish Music | Unemployed Council Hanneforé AFFAIR ‘ BULLETIN. | urtlay sav the Workers. Genter. aati z IL LAVORATORE Patronize the NEW YORK.—The National Executive Board of the Labor Sports = ‘"i"st St. Unemployed and part time EAST SIDE | _ FRITZ TYRONE rower = 7 Union enthusiastically endorses the National Hunger March on Wash- | “°"<°"S *7° called upon to attend. LEIBER MENKEN POWER | ‘DAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 21, 1931 | Concoops Food Stores ington, to demand Congress grant immediate winter relief and unem- ployment insurance to the starving jobless. | The. Labor Sports Union declares that unemployment cheats the | workers ef what little sports and recreation they ordinarily have. The | From 8 p, m. to 2 a. m. at the 1 CASINO William Viola Pedro de| Faversham Roache Cordoba/ And a distinguished Company in AND Restaurant "2100 BRONX PARK EAS1 COUNSELLOR. AT-LAW 2EMER RICE PAUL ‘MUNI | NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES EAST SIDE—BRONX a NEW HAR? | | TONIGHT AT 8:30 | 5 L.8.U. takes upon itself particularly the task of organizing trained and RKO gions ood (7 ae Ma TNarm aset: au0 || & SAT. EVENINGS HAMLET 116th Street and Lenox Avenue || @isetplined marching on the way to Washington, and of raising fands ogee FRIDAY yy || JOHN SMITH'’S NEGRO ORCHESTRA ||I,, ; for the march by » sport festival at Dyckman Oval, New York, Sunday, EAST SIDE ohbtotale ULIUS CAESAR | || “Buy im the Co-operatwe Nevember 29th. SATURDAY MATINER Tieket 35¢ Ai the Door 50c Store and help the Left The MERCHANT of VENICE | Wing Movenent.” ots. Two Great Soviet Films DETROIT, Mich. ove 920. bend ci —RKO A the dereenc | Evgs. $2 50 to 50c; Sat. Mat. $2 to f0e ‘ Ne A huge anti Royal ba | Today and Tomorrow ‘ale Thea thew. of Bway C1 914 | war and Support-the-National-Hunger- March| demonstration will be held at Grand Circus} Park, Wednesday, Nov. 25, at 2p. m. under the auspices of the Communist Party, Unemployed Councils and fraternal organizations of Detroit. The demonstration will expose the leading role played by the U. S. government in supporting the Japanese occupation of Manchuria and other imperialist war preparations against Workers and Friends of the Daily Worker Come ot the Hoboken Daily Worker Club Dance Saturday, N ov. 28 At 5:30 P.M. ADMISSION 25 CENTS Italian Band; | once | Ruth Chatterton. | Joe Freed & Co! in TRANSPORT OF FIRE |A Dramatic Tale of the Revolu- tion of 1905 We Invite Workers to the BLUE BIRD CAFETERIA GOOD WHOLESOME FOOD | |MUSIC — CONCERTS) Philharmonic-Symphony ERICH KLEIBER, Conductor BROOKLYN ACADUMY OF MUSIC Sanday Afternoon, Nov. 72, at 3115) Schubert—Mahler—Necthoven Haydn—Johann Strauss Bennett hreck De Voe | Three Chaneys Mardo & Gee. Fri Workmen’s Circle Hall 110 Grand St., Hoboken, N. J. MUSIC BY OUR FAVORITE MONDAY AND TUESDAY Hisenstein’s Film Triumph! the Soviet Union. RKO Acts— TOSCANINI, Conductor | Fair Prices A Committee will present demands | Airy, Large | “ONCE A 10 DAYS THAT SHOOK ee Chace Wet ae as te A Comfortable Place to Kat tw the Murphy, city government for | 0. tz THE WORLD Soloist: ADOLF BUSCH, Violinine $27 BROADWAY immediate relief for. the thousands | Meeting Rooms and Hall) |st=. ese ” MRERTHOVEN WAGNER WW I N T E R T oO U R § | of starving unemployed, for free food, | Ss : L ADY Pe uatve Weeeking eon ot tere } ; Yotween 19th and 13th Ste, ‘Wagner-Schumann-Franck-Brahms SCHELLING, Conauctor Carnegie Hall, Sat. Mn., Nov. 28, at 11 Children’s & Young People's Concert SERIES No. 1—CONCERT No, 2 Program Illustrating “Clarinets a Arthar Judson, M; ‘Washington of the National ‘ae Suitable for Meetings, Lectures and Dances in the Czechoslovak Workers House, Inc. 347 E. 72nd St. New York Telephone: Rhinelander 5097 to the U. Ss. s. R. Weekly Sailings on First Class Steamers Complete Tour Prices As Low As $155.00 , SEE THE FIVE YEAR PLAN IN OPERATION— ' THE KREMLIN—LENIN’S TOMB—FACTOR- IES—SOCIAL CLUBS—THEATRES—OPERAS WORLD TOURISTS, Inc. 175 FIFTH AVE., N. Y. — Phone: Al-4-6656 Mecca Theatre 14TH ST. AND AVENUE A, Mats. Z25C venta The Voice of Mill Workers Reaches Broadway! Steel ANEW Rovolt ! 2 JOHN PLAY OF ¢ WEXLEY Author of “THE LAST MILE” “As tense as ‘The Last Mile’... Written in a sober white heat .. Good drama and good theatre as well” PERCY HAMMOND in N, Y. Herald Tribune. Times Theatre (et oon (West of B’way) Lives. #1 to $3, Thurs, Mat, $1 to $2.00) Sat, Mat. $1 to 92.50 BRING THIS AD TO BOX OFFICE and obtain 2 tickets for the price of one | HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian Restaurant 1900 MADISON AVENUE Phone University 4-061 Except Sunday Demonstrate for the Defense of the Soviet Union! at the BIRO-BIDJAN “ICOR” were | Carnival - TONIGHT (165th Infantry Armory| | 68 Lexington Ave., New York (Between 25th and 26th St.) “John Reed Club” In nm Special Artistic Progeam Double Brass Band—Special Features Bar and Buffet ADMISSION 50 CENTS Ne Hat-Oheeks Requ’r: jasnoons” ‘Steinway Piano) Alm. 4-9649 Strictly by appointment | Dr. L. KESSLER SURGEON DENTIST S33 BROADWAY Phone: Lehigh 4-1812 | Seite 1007-1008 Cor. 14th St. | Cosmopolitan Hardware || 4u Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Heath Restaurant 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx D MB. FEL Extraction Specialist 851 East 162nd Street Corner Prospect A’ One block from Prospect “Avenue Subway Station Phone: Klipatrick 5-b088 New York Buy Your Daily st the Following Tools, Builders’ Hardware, Stands CUTMANSTEIN Bi Riverdale tye LESCHS LIVE IN A— WORKERS COOPERATIVE COLONY We have a limited number 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 brary, 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 Office open from: 9 n,m. to S p.m every dart mam to Saturday tt om to 8 p,m Numtes T1 Riverdair Ave, ZACCIO 280 New Main J. FRIEDMAN" 144 Nepperha.n Ave, cor, School St WEINERS 1b Mer ‘ picicto 2 Popiar St. A NEIGHBORLY PLACE TO £A1 Linel Cafeteria Pure Food—100 per cent Frigidaire Equipment—Luncheonette and Sods Fountain | SOLLIN’S RESTAURANT 216 EAST 14TH STREET 29 VAS! 14TH STREET NEW YORK Algongum 3356-8848 « Full Line of YP ATIONERY AT SYECTAL PRICES ter Orgenizations et ~ MWe Carrey 830 BROADWAY Near 12th Street 6-Course Lunch 55 Cents Regular Dinner 65 Cents CO BMT & ME OR BNO NER ¥ a FOND

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