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Pexe Two DATLY WORKER. NEW The Untermeyer Bank Plan; A Brazen Tammany Swindle By BR. YOUKELSON The Daily Worker today publishes conerete proof that the so-calle ntermeyer Plan for re-organizin; defunct Bank of the Uni tes is simply another link in nam of brazen swindles by wh the Tammany machine and crooked bank directors are trying to keep the tens of thousands of poor working class and small depositors, who lost everything they had when the wank crashed, from getting their money back. First t was Max D. Steuer, mem- ber of Tammany’s “board of stra- tegy,” who was going to “protect the interests of the people” and secure the return of all the plundered money. When Steuer’s shell-game became too exposed to fool anybody, another Tammany luminary, the wealthy corporation lawyer, Samuel Untermeyer, was brought in as a new messiah. the On Dec. 16, 17 and 18 Untermeyer nserted Jarge advertisements in the bourgeots Jewish-language press, ad- dressed to “the stockholders and de- of the closed Bank of the States, in which he de- That his plan, known as the of United States Liquidation nk poration, would pay 100 per cent all depositors. That the plan has bee by the State Banking ate Banking De; 2 ed Untermeyer ent on the ANTI-FASCIST BALLY TONIGHT Pinot of Woll, Fish YORE mister ssol: ovement a large the Anti- Miance of North attan Lyceum, 66 FE. 4th St ¢ Ttalian wo! inning boi Mussolini 2 and voiced the bitter ng the s r who jumped on the b! when he visit and scorn of the workers of t A. to the fascist regime in O. Spartaco, who will speak at meeting, w tenced for this ious protest by the ‘liberal Pinchot government, now out bail pending appeal. Another will be G. Siskind of the unist Party, Mario Sarni, na- secretary of the Anti-fascist lance, and Cino di Bartolo, mili- inion organizer. e¢ Downtown Branch nds of the mass meeting on Frid 16 E. 1ith kins will’ sp e Soviet Union of the Soviet Union will } \ regular meet tion Painte 1 be held membersiiy 1m Branch, 1.f1) 1 bel exington Ave. a op Downtown Br en will have a by LW.0. t and Branch 6% digeussion and t rs’ Club will hold g at Glass and Lieberman Hall, jrd st, and Third Ave., Broo y orker delercate from the Soviet t MS, aay e Section Executive of the LL.D. Bronx Section will meet at 8 p.m, at 1400 Moston Rd, Bronx. es bits 4 The Harlem Progressive Club will hold a special membi moeting e* 1492 :30 pm. Youth rship Madison Ave, at | that are needed for the plan must | positors.” -| Shares of the Liquidation Corpora- Sinister i| ‘| Soviet. Unio ~— rganization which has litant fight for say- | er “The Superintendent, after care- ese fal consideration, has taken only those steps which are necessary to provide an opportunity for the Proponents of the plan to de- velop it. “When the plan is in final form, satisfactory to the Superintendent, HE MUST AND WILL SUBMIT If TO THE SUPREME COURT FOR APPROVAL.” Will the Unrtermeyer Plan return to the depositors the full amount of the money they lost, as claimed in the ads in the Jewish pres: Untermeyer himself has denied it! In an interview in the Jewish Day of Dec. 19 (the day after his third ad appeared) he said “I would of course like to guar- antee that the depositors will get back every cent that they had in the bank, but I am unable to do Bank of United States Depositor 80 East llth Street, Room 540 New York City. Rez Gentlemen: on Mr. We have your letter of for approval. At such time, we SWINDLING WORKER DEPOSITORS AODMCaE ALL GPFICIAL COMMUNICATIONS TO THE SubEeINTE G y YORK, FRIDAY JANUARY 22, 1932 Bunting Dipartnent. MRANEM Orrice #0 Cenrax SyhaET January 13th, 1932. 's Committee, Bank of United States in Liquidation January 5th, in which you have expressed your opposition to the Untermyer Plan with regard to the Bank of United States, in Liquidation. The Superintendent, after careful consideration, bas taken only those steps which are necessary to provide an opportunity for the proponents of the plan to develop it. When the plen is in final form, satisfactory to the Superintendent, he must and will submit it to the Supreme Court feel certain, the Court will provide ample opportunity for depositors to be heard. that.” | In other words, Untermeyer calls ore veer rays himself a liar. a nr The U rmey Plan has another August Ihlefeld; Jr., interesting feature: Untermeyer is Deputy Superintendent to “recover” the depositors’ y by—swindling more money out. to float his so-called Bank of United | es Liquidation Corporation. Eigh million dollars, in fact. Where wil ry) he get it? Just leave it to this in- J , genious Tammany buccaneer! He tates in is ad “Five of the eight million dollars & PRINCE PLANT Call On “Workers to Organize in MWIU (By a Worker Correspondent.) WORCESTER, Mass.—The Reed & | Prince Mfg. Co., on Cantibury St., Worcester, Mass., gave the workers in the shop a 10 per cent wage-cut last week. At first the workers took this wage-cut without hardly a mur- mur, until a call (leaflet) was dis- tributed by the Trade Union Unity League last: Monday, This leaflet pointed out to the workers to organize and fight against the wage-cut. ‘The workers got to- gether in the shop and talked about. getting together and call a strike on the following Monday. ‘The bosses, seeing the step taken toward action against the wage-cut, were forced to give in—otherwise give the wage-cut back to the work- ers. come from the stockholders and de- And further on “in order that the Untermeyer Plan may be put into effect, the depositors should immediately buy plan for the relief of revealed as a m of even those sums which they managed out of the bank directors. et, pure and simple, with ecfis for Tammany and mself. Untermeyer, itter tears over the fate | 400,000 depositors, is finding is weeping highly profitable. For ing his racket, he got as a fee a mere $62,000. Evagy statement issued by the jon must be O. K.d by Un- at so much an O.K. The| |typing of a single letter in Unter- | movers office cost $218. The and business tute the overwhelm- of the Bank of United | tors must not be fooled le-scheme, “which © effort of the bosses to put: hole. burden of the crisis on the They can recover the mil- from m only in one yy organizing in. the Bank of ited States Depositors Committee and for the return of their committee is demand- t only that the depositors be every cent they put into but also that all those to} e for the including the superintendent of the State Banking it, Joseph R. Broderick, be | secuted and punished. cent to the Unter- Support the struggle of the Bank of United States Depositors Committee! Jof the | small ‘The workers won their first vic- tory over the bosses—but the bosses are preparing to give the workers a wage-cut by April 3. ‘This time in another way, by giving a cut in each and every department ‘separetely, one department at a time Therefore, the’ workers must also continue their: good work by organ- izing in each and every department. We must have a permanent organ- ization within the shop to retain this victory and stop future wage-cuts planned by the bosses. The Trade Union Unity League calls upon the workers to build a strong union, the Metal Workers’ In- dustrial Union, affiliated to the T. U. U. L., under your own leadership, in your own shop. Organize today. The T.U.U.L. address is 52 Belmont St., Worcester, Mass. TRY PARTY AND men who consti thi crash, meyer Plan! Lenin Meet In New | Brunswick Tonight |EAGUE MEMBERS FOR SEDITION To Prepare Fight On| Sesse Hu nger Program | PHILADELPHIA, Pa., Jan. 21—~ Harry Roth and John Adams, x3 membre NEW BRUNSWICK, Jan. 21.—The embers of the Communist Party Lenin Memorial meeting in New and the Young Communist League, Brunswick will be a demonstration | ware cre OM Meda Pee t the ey Seca | were both arrested at an election be ne anal gc “| campaign meeting in Chester last Mayor Morrison refused relief to| summer. an unemployed woman with a family |..They are charged on eleven counts ildren. The Community Chest | of the sedition law, including one of Foreign Born and | membership in a seditious organize ‘| Negro workers on the registration|tion. They are being tried by the line in order to discourage them from | openly vicious anti-labor judge, Mc- | applying for relief. | Dade. who sentenced Peltz and Hol- The Lenin Memorial meeting will} mes from one to twenty years on be a mobilization of the workers for | the same charges. Tuesday's demonstration at the Com- The is i nternational Labor Defense is ait for the demands of the | conducting the defense and is begin- j n | ning an anti-sedition campaign and is ee ae . ' this Lenin Memorial meeting | preparing for such s conference to the workers of New Brunswick will memicnd the the Gatehie sdes/ene | take place some time in February. and egains; the bosses’ | vor preparations. T..0.C, FRACTION CALLED TO crkers of New Brunswick dem. THPORTANT MEETING te at the Lenin Memorial meet- | All members of the T.U.U.C. Frac- day, 4 22, 8 p. m., at the| tion must be present this Sunday, orkmen's Circle Hall, 53 New St. | Jan. 24, at 11 a.m. in the Workers’ Against starvation and war for the | Center. Some very important prob- defence of the Soviet Union. Bill | lems will be discussed. Greoner will draw cartoons of the Son Union, Carl Winter, one of ers of the National Hunger AT HIPPODROME farch, will be (he main speaker. | The stage’ show at the Hippodrome | beginning Saturday will have Larry Rich and his company of forty play- ers, topping the eight act vaudeville bill. James Dunn and Sally Eilers, stars of “Bad Girl”, are presented in their newest screen effort, “Dance Team.” “The Lure of the Ring”, a screen record of the battles of Jack Dempsey, Max Schmeling and Jack Sharkey, is an added film feature, and is having its first New York | | onst | | y | JAMES DUNN IN “DANCE TEAM” | “CAIN” IN ECON CAMEO Cein”, which tells of a man who ean eway from civilization, remains ‘ the Cameo Theatre for a second engagement. “Cain”, written d by Leon Poirier, was jproduced on the island of Noisse Be Jin the South Seas. Georges Million. neted, French cinematographer, ac- WEEK AT compseled the expedition and made | showing. bis motion picture studies of the life} Larry Rich presents Cher!, Phil of the modern Robinson Crusoe,| Rich, Miss Toma Genaro, south Thomy Bourdelle plays the title role | America’s dancer. Others on the and Rama-Tahe, a native of the is- Jands. interprets the part of Zouzour. the island mate of Cain. The dia- logue in “Cain” is in English, vaudeville program are the St. John Brothers; Alice Adair, England Ong, and the three Salt and Pepper Shak- ers « a SEND CRUISER TO SMASH STRIKES IN SPANISH CITY Socialists Approve Pol- icy of Strong Army Rule CARTAGENA, Spain—The Span- ish government, which includes the socialist party in its make-up, has ordered the sending of a destroyer to Barcelona in order to assist the army and police in smashing the strike going on there. Premier Azana has admitted that the strikes all over the country have created a serious situation and he intends to send all arrested strikers to the Spanish colonies. In several towns the workers have succeeded in driving off the militia which the republic inherited from King Alfonso and cauturing the ar- mories. The workers are seizing small towns In different parts of the country. The tide of revolution is rising throughout, Spain and once more the socialists’ are showing that. they stand on the side of the capitalists. ‘The government appealed to the As- sembly for a vote of confidence on its “strong arm policy” and got an almost unanimous vote. There are over 100 socialists in the assembly: DRESS BOSSES | PLAN LOCKOUT Must Unite Ranks for Real Fight NEW YORK.—The plan for a lock- | out was worked out at a meeting of the dress bosses. This shows the character of the strike planned by Schlessinger. The Industrial Union states that only the dressmakers themselves can have a real strike. At a meeting of the dress contrae- }tors held on Tuesday, Jan. 19th, at Pennsylvania Hotel, Dudley Field Malone, whom Schlesinger has help- ed to bring in as czar in the dress trade, explained his program, which shows clearly the fake that Schles- inger nad the Lovestoneites are plan- ning against the dressmakers, Malone states that the first step must be a lockout by the dress con- tractors. The lockout, he states, will be directed not against the workers, but the jobbers. His next proposal is the establishment’of a joint coun- cil of all factors in the trade, in- cluding Schlesinger, of course, so as to bring about loser collaboration between the bosses and the company union, These were the outstanding points at the meeting and clearly exposes the plans for the fake strike of Schlesinger. In a statement Issued by the In- dustrial Union and the United Front Committee they point out that the dressmakers can expect nothing from these fake maneuvers, that only the dressmakers themselves by uniting their ranks can take up a rea] strug- gle for union conditions. It is there- fore necessary to intensify the mob- ilization of the workers in the dress trade and to prepare for a real mass conference on January 30th. The United Front Committee car- ried through some very successful open air meetings in the dress mar- ket, in which they discussed with the workers the program for a real strike and the strike demands. | Held Over by Public Demand | Today, Tomorrow, Sunday New Russian Film Masterpiece “TROIKA”’ Veaturing OLGA TSCHEKOVA and HANS SCHLETTOW and Moscow Art Theatre Players A heart throbbing drama of olt Russ'a—Russian Folk Songs and Dancing ACME THEATRE 14th Street and Union Sq. Continuous Performances es Kentucky Miners and Wives | Here to Aid Relief Drive NEW YORK.—A delegation of miners and their wives arrived in New York from Bell County, Kentucky, yesterday to take part in the Kentucky-Tennessee Striking Miners’ Re- lief Campaign of the Workers to representatives of the press New York Charity Abuses Workers Demanding Relief Foree Some Relief ; Re- sist Effort to Divide Negro and White NEW YORK. — Workers of the | Down Town Unemployed Council, 134 | E. 7th St., applying for aid at the offices of the Charity for Helping the Poor, were met with considerable brutality, and rato and alien dis- crimination. Particularly vicious was the atti- tude of Mr. Matthews, manager of this charity. The twenty families that went for aid were forced to wait three hours. Then, some of the fam- ibes got a reeint fer three do:'ars; Others of those relief at in grocery bitls. present were told to get Public School ‘9. Negro workers present were sep- arated from white workers and were last to be given, any aid. Alien workers, also, had difficulty in get- ving any of the scant relief. A few werkers received as low as $1 in grocery relief which is supposed to last a week. “A young girl present, waiting for relief and being nervous and hungry, began to walk around the office. Matthews, much peeved by the work- ers’ solidarity in denouncing this fake charity, picked on this girl worker and claimed she was spying on his records. He called in a po- liceman to have her arrested. The workers resisted this obvious frame- up and then this tool of the bosses tried to attack the girl. BOSS WEAKENS IN LIONDALE STRIKE PATERSON, N. J.,:Jan. 20.—The Strike Shirt Company has issued calls to all the workers of the shop, the oper- ators, packers, cutters, shippers, re- cefvers, etc., to join the pressers in| one united fight against the wage cuts spreading through the shop and for higher wages. The committee met with Sanders, one of the bosses, on Monday, who showed how much he feared the strike by offering concessions. states the Strike Committee, “our committee refused to accept this first offer. The committee refused saying that they can not make a living even at the present prices.” They de- manded increases to 50 cents and 60 cents 2 dozen instead of 35 cents and 38 cents. The committee pointed out that resentment shown by the operator against the wage cut by quitting was wrong as ‘The wage cut cannot be defeated by quitting but by joining the strike.” The committee called on the work- ers in the different departments to bridge their separation, so desired by the bosses, and join the pressers for @ victorious strike against the mis- erable wages, the tyranny of the boss, Genarro, and for an organization that will prevent the bosses from doing what they please with the Liondale workers. The Needle ‘Trades Industrial Union is leading the strike, The strikers at the Manhattan Shirt Company in the froning department are giving their fullest cooperation to the Liondale strikers. DRESS TRADE ATTENTION All Party members in the dress trade must be present at a fraction meeting this Saturday, Jan. 23, at 12, noon, in the Workers’ Center. Some very important questions concerning the dress strike will be discussed. AMUSEMENTS | THE THEATRE GUILD presen EUGENE O'NEILL'S Trilogy Mourning Becomes Electra Composed of 3 plays presented on 1\day HOMECOMING, THE HUNTED THE HAUNTED Commencing at 5:30 eharp. Dinner tn- termission of one hour at 7 No Mats GUILD THEA, 52d St., W. of B’way The Theatre Guild Presents REUNION IN VIENNA A Comedy By ROBERT B. SHERWOOD Martin Beck Joh, 402 Eve. 8:40 Mats. Thurs.Sat.2:40 COUNSELLOR-AT-LAW By With ELMER RICE PAUL MUNI Plymouth jint’'rbars, a’ snc 20 “We are pronouncing in good faith the words ‘the dictatorship of the proletariat’ and we shall make ther ® reality.” today they voiced their fighting determination to continue the strike Committee of the Liondale | “But,” | International Relief. Speaking | and to win their demands. | “Smoky Joe” Lawson, a white strik- | ing miner from Arjay, Bell County, said: | «t's been a goin’ bad with me here of late. I worked.on a Fri- day for the first time in two weeks. The boss told me I could work Sat- urday, and I told my wife to send me in a warm dinner since I hadn't | | but a small bite to eat for quite a spell. She went into the office to get scrip and the bookkeeper said she couldn't have non. She sends my bucket into the mine with a note in it saying she couldn't get no serip and for me to quit work and come home. “My leg was cut off in the mines | during the speed-up during the war. I didn’t get but half of my compensation. And that a little bit each month. Now I won't scab and they say they won't never work me no more since I've got but one | leg. What shall I do now without a leg and job? Fight! That's | what I'll do. “I have two cfiildren. I had five. The eldest died of flux. Two | others died at their mother’s breast because she hadn't milk enough for them; she was starved. I'm fightin’ till we win.” James Wallace, Negro miner, and his wife, Annie May, from Four Mile, !Bell County, Kentucky, told of dis- }crimination against the Negro miners | by the company officials and of the |determination of the men to smash it. Negro Discrimination. | ‘Wallace summed up saying: “Here's j@ working man eating a little fat |back, corn bread an’ black coffee | without nothin’ to sweeten it. Along comes the boss and says, ‘Say, I wish |I had your appetite.’ Atud the work- er says to him, ‘You got all the mines, the mills, the machines and .money, and now you want the only thing I've got left, my appetite.’” Arthur Campbell and Ruby Camp- | bell, miner and wife from Arjay, told about their four room shack and the eleven who live in it. The rain pours jin and the wind blows through. |They walk a hundred yards to a | pump which freezes up every cold | spell. No movies, no radio, no enter- tainments, no social life. The chil- dren are without shoes. All are ; Tagged and hungry. But they're in the union and determined to win! | Floyd, Woolum, Arijay, Bell County, | | world war veteran who got no bonus, | ltold of the drab, dreary life in the | mining camps. Edward Engle, also from Arjay, made a stirring plea for strike relief. All were indignant over being j forced to give $2 out of their starva~ |tion wages for a doctor they’ didn't | want nor trust. “He's just 2 pill| carrier who don’t know nothin’. 1| | sprained my knee—pushing a car up a steep grade. It swelled up and the doctor said it was ‘miner’s knee’ and that I’d better look for another job because I was hurt so often,” said Wallace. ‘The miners will attend the United Front Delegate Conference at the |Manhattan Lyceum, 66 East 4th St., j1l a. m, Sunday, Jan. 24, and the |New Jersey United Front Conference jat 75 Springfield Ave., Newark, N, J., |8 p. m., January 29, These confer- ‘ences must be attended by delegates jfrom all working class fraternal or- ganizations, musical, athletic and so- cial clubs, language orgs. trade | unions, both A. F, of L. and T.U.U.L., |to carry forward a program of relief |which will answer the plea of the |miners for “just a few crumbs of \bread, just a handful of beans for our hungry kiddies, and we'll fight to the very last man!” HOBOKEN LENIN MEET TONIGHT HOBOKEN, N. J.—Sadie Van Veen | will be the main speaker at the Lenin | Memorial Meeting called by the Com- |munist Party of this city tonight, at '8 p.m., at the Workers Center, 511) | First St. This is the first Lenin Mem- | orial Meeting arranged in Hoboken. | | All workers are urged to come to this important meeting. Admission free. PHILIP MERTVALE IN CYNARA WITH Henry Phoebe Adriane STEPHENSON FOSTER ALLEN MOROSCO THEA., 45th W. of Bway, Eves., 8:45. Mats Wed. & Sat. 2:30 EVERYBODY'S. WELCOME. umedy bit, with J we TLLIAMS, t ANN VINGTO: SHUBERT The ARRITT LARD S20, Mi Eve. nd St. All Seats CAMEO Sheer to1 ran, 20 He Hehelled Against Society “CAIN” THE STORY OF A MODERN ROBINSON CRUSOE! 6th Ave. HEPPOPROME S15: {to make workers take a ten per cent Socialists Hit Snag in Attempt to Cut Garment Workers Pay CLEVELAND. O.—Yellow “social- ist” misleaders of the International Ladies Garment Workers Union here have been having a hot time trying wage cut and like it. Although they have succeses in buldozing some of the locals into accepting this the boss- es have replied by demanding a 20 per cent wage cut and the abolition of an “unemployment fund.” Last year the workers took a ten per cent cut to build up this fund. So far only two of the shops have signed the agreement with the union, but the terms were not made public, It is charged that since it was a complete sell-out the officials are afraid to let the workers wnow just how bad they really are. So far, in spite of strike threats, shops which haven't signed the agreement are working and local union officials have left for New York to “study” the industry thcre. UNION TONIGHT NEW YORK.—Roy B. Hudson, H. M. Wickman and P. Baum, the worker delegates who have just re- turned from the Soviet Union and have been reporting to workers throughout the city, will report to the workers of Brooklyn Friday evening, Jan, 22, at 836 Franklin Ave. at 8 p.m., under the auspices of the Pros- pect Park Branch of the Friends of the Soviet Union. All meetings at which these worker delegates reported were successful. The American workers are so deeply interested in what is going on in the Soviet Union that very ofet there are questions asked for a period of an hour and a half. ‘The organized Scandinavian work- ers in New York City, who have re- ceived a Red Banner from the Red Pulitoy Shoe Factory, are holding a special mass meeting at which these delegates will speak. All| Scandinavian workers, all American workers and all workers living in the neighborhood of 53rd St. and Third Ave., Glass and Lieber- man Hall, Brooklyn, where this meet- ing will be held, are invited to hear the truth #@bout conditions in the Soviet Union. This meeting is held under the joint auspices of the Friends of the Soviet Union and the Scandinavian Workers’ Club, IMPORTANT CAFETERIA FRAC- TION MEETING TODAY A very important meeting of the Cafeteria Fraction will take place Friday, Jan. 22, at 8 p.m. in the Workers’ Center. All comrades must be-present. : =< ¢ CONFERENCE TO SUPPORT FISH STRIKERS, FRI. Another Shop Settles With Union; Two Jailed, Frame-up NEW YORK.—A conference in sup- port of the Fish Workers Strike, which has been in progress since De- cember 2, involving 95 shops and 150 workers, will be held at the head- quarters of the Trade Union Unity Council, 5 E. 19 St., January 29, at 8 p.m. Although the strike has been in progress for six weeks the strikers are showing even greater militancy and are still solid for their demands for a 51-hour week and a minimum wage of $25, The bosses, in an attempt to break the strike, have resorted to the infamous injunction forbidding the workers from fighting for their demands. They are trying to take away the most elementary rights of the workers to organize and strike. The right to strike must be upheld. Workers in masses must smash the injunction. Support of the fish work- ers’ right to organize is the fight of all workers in New York City. Work- ers in all unions and mass organiza- tions are urged to elect delegates to the conference Friday night. All ex- ecutive committees of unions should see that delegates are sent from their organizations to support teh right to strike in New York. The two fish strikers, Dave Ash and William Ginzburg, got two days in jail on a framed assault charge. The case was tried in the Sixth Magis- trate Court. The latest reports show that B. Kushner, 908 Intervale Ave. has settled with the union, BREAD STRIKE MEET TONIGHT NEW YORK.—To prepare the fight against the attempts of the bakery bosses of Brighton Beach to raise the price of bread again, following the successful consumers strike, the Wo- men’s Council and the Rank and File Strike Committee have called a mass meeting for this evening, January 22, at 8 o'clock, at Ocean Parkway Hall, 3034 Ocean Parkway. A complete report will be made on the latest developments of the bread strike. A plan will be proposed to compel the bakery bosses to maintain the present prices of bread and rolls. All workers in the Brighton Beach section are urged to attend this im- portant meeting. Intern’) Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 1 UNION SQUARE 8TH FLOOR All Work Done Under Persona! Care of DR. JOSEPHSON 657 Allertop Avenues 01-23-7584 BRONX, N. ¥. Shave or Ha'r Cut Reduced Rates for Unemployed (With Couret! Card) “Co-operative Barber Shop 344 BAST NINTH STREET (Bet. First Av a Ave. Ad Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 198 SECOND AVENUE Bet. 12th and 18th 6te. Strictly Vegetarian food MELROSE D. AIRY VEGETARIAN BESTAURANT Comrades Wil) Always Find 8¢ Pleasant to Dine et Our Place, 1187 SOUTHERN BLVD. Bronx (near 174th St Station) KPHONE INTERVALE 89140 NEGRO WORKERS WANTED to act in SCOTTSBORO PLAY | Arouse protest and raise funds for the SCOTTSBORO BOYS Attend Meeting Friday, 8 P.M. 799 Broadway, Room 337, N, Y. C. Or cail STuyvesant 9-5439 ‘ WORKERS! Newark, N. J., rally to the 8tl, An- niversary of the DAILY WORKER! Saturday, Jan. 30th, 7:30 P.M. 53 BROOME STT., Newark, N. J. —Program Lat yg Fah dad IN NEW YORK 8 crs |JOHN BARRYMORE The Mad Genius Incl. is Sa Red Dancers Prolet Buehne Newark Mandolin Orchestra —Speaker— BILL DUNNE, Editor, Daily Worker Admission 25 Cents All working class organizations of | See Who Advertises in Your Own Daily ARTEF (WORKERS THEATRE) Tel. TOmpkins Square 6-5181 Office: 108 E. 14th St., N. ¥. Announces Premiere of “HIRSH LECKERT” Historical Revolutionary Dramas By A. KUSHNIROW -BENO SCHNEIDER +..M. SOLOTAROFF Sunday, Jan. 24, 1932 (Afternoon 2:30—Evening 8:30) At HECKSHER THEATRE Fifth Ave. bet, 104th and 105th Sts. Tel. LEhigh 4-3545 Two performances Every Sun. Unity Cooperative Membership Meet ‘Will take place tomorrow January 22 at 8 p.m. Workers Center ROOM 304 ere NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J. rp natin DEMONSTRATE AGAINST WAR— FOR UNEMPLOYMENT RELIEF LENIN MEMORIAL MEET Friday, January 22, 8 P.M. at WORKMENS CIRCLE HALYL NEW STREET —German Prolet Buehne ropper Will Draw Cartoons of the Soviet Union Main Speaker—CARL WINTERS Lender of Hunger March to Wash, Admission 35c—Unemployed Free AUSPICES: Communist Party of New Brunswick ANY 51.50 OR $1 INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHERS BOOK WITH ONE 12-MONTH SUBSCRIPTION TO THE DAILY WORKER ———