Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
All Out for Red Sunday in Daily Worker Subscription Drive All Workers Join in Red for Daily Wor RED SUNDAY 5,000 This Sunday is the Daily Work r campaign for L MOBILIZATION members and sympath zers to can- workers’ homes to spread the aily Worker, to tell e workers about the aims and activities of the tionary press. the Daily criptions for Worker, Mass unemployment, wage cuts, po- ice, lynching and deportation ter- ror. and the increasing war plots sses make it vital for all work- ers to maintain a solid united f Subscriptions too the D: the worker: Sunday Worke t ly tog to help The following Red. Sunday, Come w t 1p one of are for Worker | d to get sub-| your friends | these stations this | wor Called to Sunday Drive ker Subs! me a am. BROOKLYN: 61 ham Ave. Villian 36 15th St., So Brook- 28th St. Bath Beach; Boro P: 2921 West y Island; 148 Neptune Brighton Beach; Pitkin Ave. | Brownsville. Av 1310 Southern Bivd, 2072 5th Ave. 301 West 29th St.; 26th St.; 142 East 3rd St.; atown Workers’ Club, 96 Clinton and BRO HARLEM: DOWNTOWN opher St 569 Prospect Road; 22 E WOE East Side Workers’ Club, 202] ¢ Broadway. NEWARK: 121 Springfield Ave. PATTERSON: 205 Patterson St.; 60 on St PERTH AMBOY: 308 Elm st. JAMAICA: 109 26 Union Hail St. JERSEY CITY: 302 Henderscn St “Bring the Daily Worker into eve: ’ home.” PAINTER tS CALT MASS } MEET G Left Ww ing’ Croups Send Out Call Teciaring that the membership of the Jecals are unemployed and Di revtey, Left 271, 442, 490, 499, 848, 892, 905 and 191 sent out a call for a Printers oss Meeting, rday. December 1%. 2 p. m. at Irving Plaza Hall, Irv- ing Place and 15th St 8 eighty percent of painters union that the rict Council is in a state of bank- Wing Groups of Local A leaflet issued se”s in part: for the meeting “Tt is no secret that the bosses as- sev‘ation and the independents do not pay the union scale and have no ur‘on conditions on the jobs.” “The council is in a state of bank- ruptey. The deficit is over four thou- sand dollars and their only solution 4s more taxes on the membership.” “The membership is leaving the or- ganization in masses; one part drops out of the union because they are unable to pay their dues, due to the fact that they were unemployed for a long time.” Official Movies of Hunger March to Be Shown This Sunday The official moving picture of the great National Hunger March will be seen in premiere release at the Star Casino, Sundey, December 20, at 1:30 p. m., reveals the tremendous necessity for the newly established Workers Inter- notional Relief Medical Unit, of Hunger Marchers whose low vital- ty and undernourished conditions are typical of the physical depletion of millions of unemployed workers re- ceived first aid from the Workers In- tev ational Relief Medical Unit which aceompanied the march. This valu- able service is touched upon in the ep'7 moving pieture of the great hun- ger trek. A} least a dozen workers were so pokpned by the charity slop handed @mt by the “benevolent” rackets at Washington and Baltimore that they Fequired further medical attention upon their arrival in New York. The Workers International Relief has placed several of them in hospitals for special care. 18,000 Dutch Workers Strike Against Cut 18,000] spinners and weavers in thirty-one Dutch factories have walk- ed out on strike against a wage cut. The workers rejected a compromise plan which would have forced them to accept part of the wage cut im- mediately and the rest within a short time. The strike is expected to be bitter and last for a long time. Barbers Open Forum Thursday On Trade A Barbers’ and Hairdressers’ Open | Forum will be opened Thursday, De- cember 17, 9 p. m. at the Workers Club, 122 Second Ave., with the topic “The Present Situation in the Barber Trade and the Next Step.” Forum speakers will deal with the the shops, racketeer officials of the union, mission is free. wage cuts in Ad- n Workers’ Club lecture at 1684 66th St., p.m. Workers? Ex-Servicem League, Branch No. Will hold a general membership meeting at W. 126th St. at 8:30 All members p.m. attend, re requested to ee ee Gene VY. Debs Branch, LL.D. have 2 lecture on the Man- Situation at the Workers? tive, 2700 Bronx Park East, at 8 pm., by Comrade Engdahl. TO eee WLR. Band Rehearsal to be held at the Cher- nishevsky..Club, 122 Second Ave, (he- tween 7th 8th Sts,), at which Executive Committee will be elected. So Pas “Art In the Soviet Union” Will _be the subject of a lecture by Louis Lozowick, secretary, John Reed at the Irving P' Trving Pl. sth St. at § p.m. are invited. All workers oo we Sub Drive On! 18! “Daily” by Jan. Beat goal i # ’ Indrstrial Leaeue 107 Street and Park Avenue, | © a Scores sneral_ membership , 18th St, at 8 pm, aw Plumbers Section, T.U.U.L. Is to have a meeting at 108 Fi. 14th g 8 pm, Membere requested to Say ey | Frenttvre Workers’ Union Will hold a membership meeting at 108 BH, 14th St. at 7:30 ».m. Prev- aration for Hunger March Reception Ball to take lace Dee, 19 Tem weaaes alee Bu Meeting to be held at 108 ‘S Adth St. at & p.m. | All invited. e € Internstional “workers Order. Br 500 Members renuested to attend a meeting to he held at the Wor'erst Center. 85 EB. 12th St. at 8:80 p.m, rtant, * e¢ Yonth Civb iz to be held tor Harlem Pro«re! Imnortent meet s tonight at 140 0 p.m, eptune Ave. at's ‘All members urged to attend, 28 ‘omen In 176th St. w. 1 the Coming Vomer War? to be held at 1079 Tiffany St, Breex. ae ue John Brown, 1. will i an interesting educa- tional night at 399 Warren St, Brooklyn, at 8 p.m. et '@ Attention! Comrades are needed for parts in the Pageant for the Eighth Anniver- f the Daily Worker, The first is to take place at the ’ Center, $5 E. 12th St., Fri- Dee, 18, at 8 o'clock shar; cate diaies day, Mail Subscriptions Barly? : 1400 | t and the | DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, DECEMBER i, 1931 | 5 woh, 4 Po a aati \ |MARCHERS WILL REPORT TONITE ST. LUKE'S HALL Parlem Nevro, White Needle Workers Are Invited Especially NEW YORK.—The Needle Trades Workers are active in the movement o win unemployment insurance and | immediate relief, | A meeting of; unemploved needle trades workers living in Harlem, Ne- | gro and white, will be held today at 1:30 p. m. at St. Lukas Hall, 125 W. 130th St., to greet the Hunger March- | ers from Harlem. All Negro and white | Workers are invited. Eunice Bates, | National Hunger Marcher, will report. N. Epstein of the Fretheit editorial staff will speak on “The significance of the Hunger March” at the open forum of the needle trades workers today, 2 o’clock at the auditorium of | the union, 131 W. 28th St. Tonight, the unemployed knitgoods workers will hear the report of their | delegate on the National Hunger | March at an open meeting at 795 Flushing Ave., Brooklyn, right after Rape Tonight at 8 p. m. Hunger March | delegates will report to Bath Beach workers at 48 Bay 28th St. The Furniture Workers Union meeting tonight at 7:30 p.m, at 108 East 14th St., will hear the report of the Hunger March delegates. Lozowick to Lecture jon Soviet Art Thurs. Louis Lozowick, Secretary of the John Reed Club, will lecture on ‘Thursday, December 17th on “Art and | Artists in the Soviet Union”, at 8 p. m., in Irving Plaza Hall, 15th Street and Irving Place, Lozowick has re- cently returned from a trip to Soviet | Russia, where he made a detailed study of Soviet Art in its various |phases. Lozowick brought back data, which shows clearly that in spite, of all the difficulties and setbacks, the advance in this particular field of Soviet endeavor has been enormous, Vote for Left Wing Cloakmaker Candi- dates in Loe. 1 Election NEW YORK. — The Left Wing Group of Cloakmakers of Local 1, International Ladies Garment Work- ers, calls on members to support the left wing candidates for local office in the election today. In this local a struggle has been going on for the past months, be- tween the left wing group, fighting for rank and file control, against class collaboration, police and a real struggle to prepare for a strike at the expiration of the agreement, the fake progressive, Anarchist Lovestone LULA VOLLMER’S “SENTINELS” COMIN’ TO BILTMORE THEATRE | Conference for the Protection Foreign Born in Directives peesal The New York District Com- mittee for the Protection of For- eign Born sent out the following directives for delegates to the con- ference: “The Conference for the Protec- tion of the Foreign Born will be held this coming Sunday, Dec, 20, “AM delegates are requested to be in Manhattan Lyceum, 66 E. Fourth St. not later than 10 a.m., so that we can finish the con- ference on time. “That all delegates take along their credentials and also fill out the questionnaires that will be distributed at the entrance to the conference, “In case any delegate cannot be present at the conference the dele- gate should make it his business to get a regular substitute dele- gate.” MASS PICKET SHIRT FACTORY 200 Paterson Strikers Find Cops for A.F.L. PATERSON, N. J., Dee. 15—The 200 ironers and starchers who struck against wage cuts and lay-offs over three weeks ago in the Manhattan Shirt factory here, have now affi- liated withthe Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union and mass picketing has begun. There were two picket lines yesterday and picketing started again full force this morning. Today the police called aside Mi- chael Kauker, one of the strike lead- ers, and the sergeant advised him emphatically to “have all these men join the A, F, L. union.” Kauker told the police the strikers had joined the Needle Trades Work- ers Industrial Union and would stick to it, and were not asking the police for advice about how to organize. When Kauker reported this incident to the meeting later in the day of practically all the strikers, they de- nounced the police and pointed out that police support for the A. F. of L. shows it is not for the workers, The strikers are holding a mass meeting to which are invited all operators, cutters, shipping clerks and other trades, Thursday, 7,30 p. m. in Lithuanian Hall, Lafayette and Ridge Streets Paterson. They are making every effort to spread the sirike to the other departments in the Pater- son factory, and to other factories of the same company. There are around 600 men employed in all departments of the Paterson shop. Labor Defense Assails Misscuri Legion for Its War on Workers NEW YORK—A call to Missouri workers and farmers not to be in- timidated by the state posts of the Batchelor, Dare and Carpenter will present Lula Vollmer’s new play en- titled “Sentinels” at the Biltmore Theatre December 28. Ben Smith; Owen Davis, Jr.; Elizabeth Love; ‘|Laura Bowman; Wayland Rudd and Katherine Tracy head the cest, Martin Wolfson, the young actor who plays an important role in “Counselor-at-Law,” Elmer Rice’s success, featuring Paul Cuni, at the Plymouth Theatre, has just received an invitation from the Soviet Goy~ ernment to visit Russia and stave several American productions. Wolf- son, just before entering the cast of “Counsellor-at-Law,” had travelled in Russia, studying the theatres there and had staged “The Front Page” in Moscow. The chief acts at the Hippodrome this week are Johnny Perkins as- sisted by Ruth Petty; Galla-Rini and his Sister, radio entertainers; and the three Neal Sisters. Other acts include; “Moxie,” Charles Prelle’s talking dog; Paul & Nini Ghezzi; Jack Pettet and Buddy Douglas; the Lee Gails, dancers, with Burns, Mori- arity and Burns and Peggy Sinclair. with Bill Boyd, James Gleason, Rob- ert Armstrong and Ginger Rogers. DEMONSTRATE 8th Anniversary of the American Legion was issued today by the International Labor Defense. In a letter to Governor Henry 8. Caulfield, the IL.D. demanded that the legionnaires be stopped from threatening with physical violence workers and farmers who are organ- izing to fight starvation and unem- ployment. “The Paul §. Killingsworth Post 897 of the American Legion at Ash Grove, Mo. has adopted resolutions calling for the violent suppression of working class activity in this section,” says Grorre Maurer, secretary of the Labor Defense organization in this letter. “Workers and farmers in your state suffering from wage cuts, unemploy- ment, bankruptey and starvation be- cause of low crop prices are being intimidated by these former army of- ficers who pledge themselves ‘to use the training that made us eligible to membership in this post to pre- vent the distribution of literature or the making of speeches in this city that has for its purpose the substitu. tion of any form of government to replace the one under which we live’. “The Legion’s can’t about chang- ing ‘the form of government’ is noth- “Suicide Fleet” is the screen feature | ing but smoke screen under which they will feel free to crack heads and shoot at workers or farmers who re- fuse to submit to starvation in siJ- ence.” ee “In one word. you reproach us with intending to do away with your property. Precisely so: that is just what we intend.”—Marz, MEET TONIGHT FOR UNITED DRESS STRIKE Committee of Rank and File to Renort ; 4 Shops Out Now NEW YORK.—The general mem- bership meeting of dressmakers, cal- led by the Industrial Union. takes place today, ot 6:30 p. m., at Webster Fe, 119 B. 11th St, The latest dey- elopments in the dress trade, plans to combat the wage cutting campaioen which is becoming more miserable from day to day, will be taken up. A report will be given by the rank and file committee, elected at the last membership meeting to bring about unity between the members of the A. F. of L. and the Industrial Union members and the unorganized work- ers, for preparatjon of a mass United Froht strike under rank and file lead- ership, The Industrial Union mem- bers, who elected this committee will hear a full report at Thursdays meet- ing. Plans of the trade committee for an immediate drive against open shops will beethoroughly discussed and acted upon at the meeting, Dress- makers from all crafts are called upon to attend. Despite the dull season, the Indus- trial Union is conducting a number of strikes against wage cuts, for union conditions, In the dress department. strikes are now going on in the following shops: London Dress, 245 Seventh Ave. Berman & Smith, 213 W. 35th St. Lyon Dress, 145 W. 30th St. W. R. Dress, 253 W. 26th St. All dressmakers are called upon to assist the workers on the picket line. Call Harlem Needle Workers to Meeting Tomorrow Evening NEW YORK. — Colored and white unemployed needle workers of Har- lem are called to a mass meeting this Thursday evening, Dee: 17, by_ the Unemployed Council of the Needle Trades Industrial Union. The meeting will be held at St. Luke's Hall, 125 West 130th St. The call for the meeting points out: “This is the third winter of. the hard times, Unemployment is greater among the colored needle workers. It is more dificult for them to get a job. When they do work, they are paid only from $5 to $10 a week. “The emergency work relief bureau openly discriminates against the col- ored workers. Needy cases are neg- lected. In the majority of cases, col~ ored workers get no relief and are left to starve.” Two Soviet Films to Be Shown for Benefit of Kentucky Miners Two popular Soviet films will be John Reed Club to. Exhibit Original Burck Cartoons NEW YORK—The original drawings of the best cartoons by Burck, which have appeared in the Daily Worker in the past few years, will be on exhibition at the John Reed Galleries, 63 W. 15th St., every day for two weeks, be- ginning Jan. 1, from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. and 8 to 10 p.m. Most of these drawings have been published in the revolution- ary press in every country throughcut the world, This is the first opportunity for,the workers in New York to observe the full power of Burck’s work in the original, as a good deal is lost through the process of reproduc- tion, All drawings in the ecolelction will be on sale at whatever price the worker wishes to pay, the money going to the Daily Worker. Incinded in the exhibition will be some of the work of Reginald Marsh, COME TONITE TO CONFERENCE FOR FURRIER UNITY Help Picket Fox Shops; Dogskin Workers to Celebrate Victory NEW YORK.—A joint call forthe fur workers unity conference to meet tonight right after work at Webster Hall, 119 Fast 11th St., has been is- sued by the Joint Council of the International Fur the Fur Department of the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union. The call states: “There must not be a single fur worker who will starve.” It says: “The united front of the furriers must be strengthened. All fur workers must be united into one powerful union. All fur work- ers, right wingers, left wingers, re- gistered, non-registered, Negro, white come to this mass conference, Come on time!” Picket Fox Shops The fur department is still carry- ing on the strikés against I. J. Fox of 20 W. 36th St., and Fox & Weiss- man of 36th and 5th Avenue, in sym- pathy with Philadelphia strikers. All furriers working in the locality are asked to help picket, Dogskin Workers Celebrate The dogskin workers, who during the past few months have been in the forefront of the struggle for bet- ter conditions and have carried thru a successful strike, {winning better conditions, will celebrate their vie~ tories at a Victory and Unity Hall, tomorrow, at Manhattan Lyceum, 66 Fast 4th St. All needle trades work~ ers are invited. The program will include a con- eert, the Artef, the singer Kaplan, the Ukrainian Chorus of 40 singers, and others. There will be dancing till early morning. , | Shown by the Film and Photo League of the Workers Internatonal Relief for the relief of the blacklisted min- A PROLETARIAN MUSICAL ACHIEVEMENT THE FREIHEIT GEZANG FAREIN jointly with the ers of Kentucky now organizing for & strike against starvation and terror. Workers are urged to see “Isdenbu” B film story of the rescue of the tribe of Goldi hunters by the Red Army in Siberia, This will be shown on Fri- day, Dee, 18, 8 p. m. at the Labor Temple, 245 East 14th Street, SHEET METAL UNION TO ELECT A meeting for nomination of offi- vers of Sheet Metal Workers’ Union, Local 28, will be held Thursday, Dec, 17, at 8 p.m. at Arlington Hall. ‘The by-laws of the union call for the at- tendance of every member at this meeting. “Art and Artists in the Soviet Union” By Louis Lozowick Secretary JOHN REED CLUB TONIGHT December 17th, at 8 P, M. at IRVING PLAZ. 15th St. & Irving Pl, (FRIENDS OF SOVIET UNION) (799 Broadway) THIS | ip la 20 CENTS ADMITS YOU! “The labor movement will gain the upper hand and show the way to peace and socialism,” LENIN, Workers and by |> Prove Industrial Union Policeman Brother of SW YORK.—Testimony yesterday and the day before in the trial of Jack Schneider proved one of the most brazen frame up attempts the Kaufman gang hese ver tried. And they have had some experience, fore and after Mineola days. P dent Koufnian is dictator in. the In- ternational Fur Workers, The trial is in General Sessions, No, 9, It will go to the jury today. Schneider, organizer for the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union, is charged with felonious assault, the claim being made that he stabbed Julius Nudelman, one of the Kauf- man gorillas on August 8, 1930, when a great crowd of furriers drove out of the market the “committee” of 13 thugs sent with Nudelman to beat up fur workers, Schneider brought the defense tes- timony to a close yesterday by taking the stand, substantiating the state- ments of defense witnesses that he was on the subway at the time of the fight, and only heard about it later. Schneider told of the many historic frame-up attempts by. the company union officials, and of the mass movement of fur workers for his own release, He exposed the In- ternational for its fight against the workers, Bribery of Witnesses The first witness called by the pro- secution was a member of the inter- national named Halperin, On cross examination by Defense Attorney Jacques Buitenkant, Halperin ad- mitted that Lukie and Schindler, of- ficials of the International promised him $500 to swear he saw Schneider cut; Nudelman. ‘KAUFMAN’S WITNESSES ADMIT BRIBERY; CRUDE FRAMEUP ONSCHNEIDER Organizer Not At Scene of Stabbing; Workers Demand Release Boxer Tunney Is City Representative on Perjury Gang Schneider's protest finally forced him to exclude Rosenfeld, who was open- ly coaching Nudelman to point out Schneider. He admitted that he hed Schneider fingerprinted and booked for felonious assault before there was any formal complaint, and that he “tore up the illegal finger prints and had legal ones: made,” The workers in the court room showed such hatred for Turney thet three were not admitted when the second sessions started, Changed “Identification” Harry Siegel, working in the shop before which Nudelman was. stab- bed, testified how at that time Nud- elman pointed out a totally different person as his assailant Siegel testi- fied Schneider was not on the scene. Various. witnesses testified that the International's lawyers coached pro- secution witnesses and told them what to say on the stend. FIVE THOUSAND DAILY WORKER 12-MONTH SUBSCRIPTIONS BY JANUARY) 8th! MASS PAGEANT For Daily Worker Affair JANUARY 5rd Rehearsal: | FRIDAY, DEC. 18, 8 P.M. WORKERS CENTER, 35 BE. 12 ST. We need hundreds of Players! | Come and help! Bring your whole organization along! Nudelman himself admits he -has been getting $59 a week ever since August 8, paid to him by the Kauf- man gang. Solomon Chaikin, called by the defense, is a furrier working former- ly at the same table with Nudelman. He testifies that he visited Nudel- man, and the latter told him that Schneider wes not the man who stab- bed him, but that the Kaufman of- ficials are paying and want him to testify that it was Schneider. Nudel- man told Chaikin many times how he got $5 for each act of thuggary for the Kaufman clique, and invited Chaikin to come along sand “earn an easy dollar,” There were a nuthber of witnesses to Schneider's absence from the scene of the fight, among them members of the Kaufman “committee” itself, That Tunney Family The frame up was spartially con- cocted by Detective Tunney, brother of the boxer Gene Tunney, and this dick was badly damaged on the stand during cross examination. He ad- mitted that he and an underworld character named Rosenfeld took Schneider to be identified hy Nudél= | man in the hospital, and that AMUSEMENTS THE THEATRE GUILD presents EUGENE O'NEILL'S Trilogy Mourning Becomes Electra * | Composed of 3 plays presented on Iiday HOMECOMING, THE HUNTED THE HAUNTED Commencing at 5:30 sharp. Dinner In- termission of one hour at 7, No Mats. GUILD THEA,, 52d St, W. of Bway The Vheatre Guild Presents REUNION IN VIENNA A Comedy .By ROBERT ©, SHERWOOD. Martin Beck THM», 4" Bye. 8:40 Mats. Thure.&Sat.2:40 The Group Thea. Presents 1931— CLAIRE & PAUL SIF'TO! hace *Ausplees of Thea, Gull MANSFIELD W's pve Eves 8:30 Mats. Thurs.& Sat.2:30 COUNSELLOR-AT-LAW ny S with ELMER RICE PAUL MUNI Thea. W, 45 St. Ev. 8:20 Plymouth wave hare, & Sat. 2:20 EVERYBODY'S WELCOME ‘The new aualeat net hit, with) FRANCES WILLIA osc. A * SHAW ANN PENAINGTON HARRIETT LAKE SHUBERT Thea,, 44th St. W. of B'w'y Eve, 8:30, Mats, Wed, & Sat, 2:30 A SENSATIONAL INNOVATION! A new type of nature film from U,S.S.R, ‘KILLING TO LIVE’ A drama of animals as they struggle for food and sxibtanicn,. Russian Close-up wietoree. "ot "Malin end 3 CAMEO ss, xanr & BROADWAY ee Soviet “Forced Labor”—Bedacht series in pamphlet form at 10 cents per copy. Read it—Spread it! |] O1-2-7584 —See!— “IGDENBU” strusste. of Gold! Hunters in the Siberian Wilderness ‘ Unusual Soviet Film Friday, Dec. 18, 8 P.M. At Labor Temple 14th St, and Second Ave. 4 Proceeds: Kentueky Miners Sponsored: Workerw Int'l Relief Dr. MB. FELSEN * Extraction Specialist 851 East 162nd Street Corner Prospect Ave. One losis from Prospect Avenue Subway Station Phone: Kllpatrick 5-5028 Phone; Dry Dock 4-4522 Harry Stolper, Inc, oe OPTICIANS ~nom coy mined 19-18 CHRYBTIE tracert Cor. Hooter Te, mo York International ‘Workers’ Order 657 Allerton Avenue BRON, N. ¥. Intern’l Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 1 UNION SQUARE . atH FLOOR AD Work Dene Under Perseval Care >» ot DR, JOSEPHAON ‘MELROSE DAIRY fyerateant Eitarane’ ta Dine st Our Plas W791 SOUTHERN BLVD, ‘Brom “ (near 114th Sasson fELEPHONE INTERV LE e010 Te, orker Negro and White Workers Invited to the Dory USA. First Annual Ball Given by the FREIHEIT MANDOLIN ORCHESTRA IN A NEW SOVIET ORATORIA “KEIN EINTZIKN SHPAN” Dail Sunday, January 3rd Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 199 GECOND AVENUE Bronx Coliseum WORDS BY PERETZ MARKISH L e of St 1 for N 0 Mets 18th One 18th Oe, ik 2 P. M., 1932 East 177th Street , MYSIC BY JACOB SCHAEFER eague o ruggie eg Fe ree eee] Strictly Vegetarian food” . i SATURDAY EVENING Rights —PROGRAM—— : mewwrwemmnmnnnamnmmamen Sit DEC 19, 8%. |) pavers vou Union Moots Pageant:—*Trial of the Yellow Press,” International Chorus g DECEMBER 19th Tal io ane HARLEM C A § IN 0 Here. For Information Write to | Red Dancers—and many other features ADMISSION 35¢ WITH THROW AWAY 25¢ Advertising Uspartment The DAILY WORKER 13th St. New York Olty CARNEGIE HALL ADIMISSION 50c, t5c, $1.00 and $1.25 100 W. 116 St., Lenox Ave. Music by OK Rythm Kings