The Daily Worker Newspaper, October 18, 1932, Page 2

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PAGE TWO \ ‘COME T0 COURT TODAY AT 1:30! free Workers Arrested At Demonstration for Sam Brown Release NEW YORK.—Over 200 wor i Avenue pom in sol- yes- Second St. terday to fill the cou idarity with the 22 workers arrested Saturday at the demonstration be- fore Judge Aurelios home. Several thousand at that time demanded the release of Sam Brown, Negro worker and leader of the unemployed who was sentenced to six months by this adge and were attacked by the po ice, They fought back quite cessfully, but 22 were arrested. Many of those t 10 get the court room yeste were fense witnesses Witnesses Driven Out. e court room was surrounded b; and no one, as al- in the police efense tzba ings in the declare “the seemingly with makes a erheys Genounced cours, ‘nh nduct of he consent ¢ 1 impes art declares orney ed nur imi asi ted oF tode at Witn- p. M., Not to be s but to come up attorneys and be ready their fellow workers on a orrested workers, Hub- ith f 090 bail. $ char held on 2 2 More Arrested at Doriman Picket Line * Y¥.—Three yy mor. ried | ng tment of the Indusiria! | ership t ed, calls or tine mass pi je to igre at 7:30 a.m., Wednesday morning: The strike has been holding solid for| two weeks | et | Printers’ Open Forum Called for Tonight An open forum of printers, mem- | bers of the New York Typographical Union No. has been called for tonight at 7 p. m. at Manhattan Lyceum, 66 East 4th Street, by the Amalgamation Party, to discuss the referendum on the proposed wage cut to be held this Wednesday. inion Stops Wage Cut) In Fairway Laundry NEW YORK—T! i Crotona and tried to bluff it workers into accepting a wage cut, ‘but yielded at the last nday. d for a rid settles the Laund Industrial Union and the nilttee. A: meeting of cn ‘Thur: 8p minute, | nference Worker: | shop com-| e Reichstag Deputy to Speak Here Tonight, SEES | The coming Reichstag election on | November 6 will be discussed tonight ac 8 at the Labor Union Temple, fon Bast 84th Si.) by Hugo Graef,; Communist Reichstag deputy and | of the International of | y Veterans and War Vic- free BROWNSVILLE CTION | WATCHERS j NEW YORK—A meeting of those} who volunteered to act in Browns-| ville as watchers in the co! fidn’ Will be held at 8 p.m., at 1813 Pit lym, Priends and sympathizers in Brownsvile are urged to attend this meeting. | Those volunteering for this work are urged to apply at once to their respective mass organizations or to the N, Y. State United Front Com- munist Election Campaign Commit-| tee, Room 506, 50 E. 13th St. What’s On— All comrades who have borrowed cuts or| mats from Dally Worker over 5 days e rrcgt, return them immediately—or all quests im future will be ref WEDNESDAY Harlem Youth Dance, at Witka Club, 22: Va 1dsth Bt. Good music, Admission 35 cents. Daily Worker Chorus will hold rehearsal, £:20 p. m,, at 106 E. ave invited to join 1th Sty All workers Labor Union Meetings LAUNDRY WORKERS A meeting of the Laundry Workers’ In- dustrial Union will be held Thursday, Oct 20, at 8 p.m., at the Union Nall, 260 E. . 196th Bt, A detailed report of the Pair- way settlement and the activities in other laundries will be given. TRE 4181" wing of the new Soviet Film. “Thw more | are POLICE DRIVE DEFE SOME MORE “DEMOCRACY.” | CAPITALISM. RA George E. Powers Workers in Juhns town Hear Red Candidate Demand Jobless Relief JOHNSTOWN, N. Y¥., Oct. 17.— king before an enthusiastic work audience here Friday night, George Powers, Communist candidate for| Chief Justice of the Court of Appeals, urged workers to form commit- | tees in every department of the fac- and to organiz2 the {-time and unemployed work- ers into committees to lead | the struggie for relief and for enact- ment of a federal law calling for un- | state. of the workers in Johnstown Mos'! either unemployed or working parttime. Workers in the glove end leather factories which form the backbone of local industry have re- ceived several wage cuts. Powers rned the workers against the officials of the A. F. of L. who are now carrying on a campaign for new members in the glovemakers un- ion, in order to mislead them. IRPSEY DOLL, STRINF SPREADS Masses Pi Shop in Rain BULLETIN rat Regal; As we ro te press we receive | rews that 5.999 werkers have inst | demonstrated befere the Rege! Doll here in support of the Fy ease | TRENTON, N. J., Oct. 17,—In the | pouring rain the workers of the Regal { Doll Company who went on strike | for a 30. per cent increase in wages carried through a mass picket dem- enstration in front of the factory. Workers from all three shifts were on the picket line. Over half of the 800 workers, which is the total number employed in the shop, are out on strike and more are | joining the ht which is led by the | Trade Union Unity League. Many of | the workers were foreibly locked in| the shop by the employers in an at- tempt to keep them from joining the strike. The local press has already} unched into a campaign of lies and landers in an attempt to confuse the workers and demoralize the stri Although the local newspap- ers have announced that the Mayor’s Committee and the Chamber of Com- merce will take a hand in settling the strike, the workers understand that this is a move of the bosses to defeat them. The spirit of the strike is very militant. Fearing the spread of the strike, the police, at the behest of the bosses arrested three strikers on the picket line. Leading the strike is a rank and file strike committee 1 which was elected by the strikers. Workers in |Trenton in other industries have |shown their sympathy with the Regal workers and good fight The Regal Doll Company operates are supporting their |about four months a year, from Sep- |tember to January. It employs over | 700 workers, mostly youth, about 50 per cent of whom are women.and |girls. The conditions in the shop are among the worst of any factory in the state. Girls work 56 hours a week for as little as $2.50 in wages. The average wage of the girls who are week workers, the fastest in the shop, is $6 for a 56-hour week. Mar- ried men with families to support slave 60 to 70 hours a week for $9 and $10, about 15 cents an hour. 2 BOLT “MODEL JAIL” WALLKILL, N. Y., Oct. 17— Thomas Smith and Peter William- son, who had recently been trans- Friday, Saturday end Sunday all fay &n@ evening at Fifth Ave Playhouse, Broadway und 28th St., is Yor benelit of Marind Workers’ Industrial Union, ‘ ferred to this so-called mode] prison from Sing Sing, have escaped and are now being hunted by the police. . from South River, N. J. ani bid PRESS CHURCH S DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1932 WITNESSES FROM TRIAL OF 22 WORK ERS MOVIES Th voting Communist es caerTausm Too MANY WOR COMMUNISTS . RULE“EM oF F <+HE By Quirt KERS ING OVER TO / A OK. CHIEF - ~ HERE'S FLonioa— ONO I'LL SEE WHAT 3 Cano in COURTS Oppositon Groups in Union Called to Conference, Thurs. NEW YORK.—A conference of all opposition groups in unions with re- actionary leadership is called to meet at 7 p. m., Thursday at Manhattan Lyceum to discuss questions of policy. | Correct united front tactics, inde- |pendent leadership of struggles, and |the organization needed to carry out |these tactics, are especially up for discussion at this meeting. The meeting is called by the Trade Union Unity Council, which state: |that various opposition groups have been urging such a conference for |some time. Industrial Unions affiliated with jthe T. U. U. C. are held responsible |for bringing to the conference the jopposition groups in their industries. PLAN STRIKE IN DRESS INDUSTRY YTWIU Meet Calls for Activity in Shops ¢ Concentration on the organization of the dress trade for early struggle against unbearable conditions the keynote of the proposals of Sun- day’s and yesterday's sessions of the national convention of the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union, jheld in New Star Casino, 107th St. and Park Ave. The convention opened Friday night. The lively discussion revealed that most of the delegates were united in the cpinion that a mass struggle against the wretched conditions fois- ted on the workers by the fake strikes and maneuvers of the treacherous Dubinsky, Hochman and Lovestone ginning of the next season. The suc- cessful shop strikes in the dress trade that have already been carried through by the Industrial Union must be regarded as only a begin- ning, the delegates felt. Trade Conferences. Sunday evening and all of yester- day were occupied with trade con- ferences and meetings of the con- vention committees, At these con- ferences plans were worked out for immediate activity in every trade. The Credentials Committee re- ported through its chairman, Men- cher, that 270 delegates are present at the convention. Of these 205 are from New York; 29 from Philadel- phia; 14 from Boston; Chicago; one from Califqmnia; six a num- ber from scattered places. Stachel Speaks for the T.U.U.L. Jack Stachel, assistant national secretary of the Trade Union Unity League, greeted the convention Sun- day morning in the name of the T. U. U. L. to which the Industrial Un- ion is affiliated. Stachel declared of the union was the successful fur strike it conducted, which blasted during an economic crisis, Stachel the theory that strikes cannot be won ridiculed a leaflet spread at the con- vention by Trotskyites and declared that the difference between the Trots- kyites and the Lovestoneites is that the latter demand that the workers return to the traitorous International Ladies Garment Workers one at a time, while the Trotskyites demand that they do it all together. Stachel showed that the problems which face the union now can only ve solved by basing all union work on the shop. The organizational weakness of the Industrial Union and of the opposition groups in the re- actionary unions, he declared, is due to the fact that their work is not carried on in the shop om the basis of the immediate needs of the work- ers. Stachel called for the estab- lishment of real inner union democ- racy and the drawing in of the broadest rank and file masses into the work of the union. Emphasize Shop Work. In the discussions Sunday after- noon many delegates participated, nearly all emphasizing the need of basing all activity in the shop and calling for immediate work in this direction. |_ Today's sessions will be held in Irving Plaza, 15th St. and Irving PI., starting at 10 a.m. Hold Affair Oct. 22 for There will be an_ entertainment and dance for the benefit of The Working Woman on Oct. 22nd, at the Workers Center, 50 East 12th St., 8 p. m., under the auspices of the Women and The Working Woman. Prominent artists of the John Reed Club will deliver a chalk talk in addi- tion there will be excellent entertain- ment and a jazz band. The comrades are assured of a good time, Comrades are urged to keep this date open and arrange no other affairs for this night, was | cliques must be launched at the be-| nine from | that one of the main achievements | ‘The Working Woman’ United Council of Working Class | (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) Jas to what plan should be adopted | for subway financing. Either plan, of course, led to the 10-cent fare, and even State Controller Tremaine let out the fact that “it was just a fam- ily quarrel.” But Tammany’s family | quarrel has been settled, with the rep- resentatives of the two groups of bankers, Berry and McKee, in full control of the situation. ‘The silence of the Tammany bloc {during the public hearings on the 1933 budget on Thursday and Friday had indicated that McKee’s program of slashing cuts in education, wages and unemployment relief had been jaccepted by the whole Tammany gang. This became a certainty when Controller Charles W. Berry released to the Sunday papers the “ultimatum letter” sent to him by the bankers. J. P. Morgan Behind Moye. J’ P. Morgan & Co., the National City Bank and the Chase National Bank were revealed as the forces be- hind the Tammany program. Their threat that no more funds would be advanced to the City Administration unless the budget was cut, was merely a subterfuge to give Tammany an alibi. What the letter really proved was that already, behind the scenes, Tammany had agreed to the full pro- gram of the bankers for crippling the schools, cutting the wages of city {employees and slashing the already, |muderously inadequate unemploy- ment relief. The short-lived disagreement in the Tammany camp was the differ- ence of opinion between those respon- sible for corralling the votes and those directly responsible for carry- ing out the dictates of the bankers. The vote-getters, Curry, MeCooey, Aldermanic President Mahon, Hoster- berg, etc., were fearful of the carry- ing out of the budget deductions be- fore elections. The revolt of the po- licemen, firemen and teachers against the “voluntary” warned them of an impending revolt |against Tammany, and they accord- ingly pleaded that the “economy pro- gram” be delayeq until after elec- tion when, regardless of the budget, wholesale dismissals and reductions could be made, similar to the dis- missal of 1,600 workers from the De- partment of Sanitation last January. The bankers and their representa- ives, McKee and Controller Berry, however, refused to wait. It was Tammany’s job to get the votes, how- ever it could. Meanwhile the mar- ket value of city bonds in the hands of the bankers was decreasing, and the only way to raise their value was immediate budget cuts. Tammany was provided an alibi by the “ulti- matum letter” and by the fact that the spokesman for the budget cuts, Acting Mayor McKee, is not a candi- date for election. To the first proposed cut of 10 per cent in the wages of all non-civil service employees, McKee has now added the demand that the other em- ployees — clerks, police, firemen, teachers, etc.—accept a “voluntary” cut of 6% per cent. Both groups of employees, especially the latter cate- gory, have already suffered wage- euts through “voluntary” contribu- tions to the “work relief fund,” which Tammany has turned into a pork- barrel for its own use. The whole burden of “school relief,” the feeding of starving school children for which is on the shoulders cf the rank and file teachers, Since in most cases city employzes support their unem- ployed families, further wage-cuts will reduce them to the starvation level, Hit At School System. The drastic cuts contemplated in the appropriations for education will make a tragic absurdity of the whole school system. At Friday’s public hearing on the budget, a number of school teachers pleaded tearfully that the already inefficient school system would collapse altogether if classes were permitted to grow any larger and teachers were further overbur- | dened. One teacher pointed out that in the existing classes of fifty pupils |Women’s Council Lead \Victorious Fight for Movie Price Reduction j | pbs | BRONX, N. Y.—Under the lead- ‘ership of the local branch of the United Council of Workingclass Wo- |men, the Boston Road Theatre at Boston Road and Wilkins Ave. was forced to reduce its price from 25 cents to 15 cents, The theatre had announced the picture, “Daughter of Her People” would be shown for 15 cents, but when a large crowd came the price was boosted to 25 cents. A large demonstration was called, which held its ranks in the face of cops riding on the sidewalks in auto- mobiles, and:the reduction was finally won * wage-cuts had} the city administration takes credit, | Tammany-Republican Board Cuts City Budget at Expense of Citiy Employes and Jobless Workers (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) ;and more, it takes 15 minutes of the hour merely to cajl the roll. A young unemployed worker demanded that the Board of Estimate rescind its Plan to drop all adult continuation schools. He pointed out that the 6,000 unemployed adults now attend- ing these schools would have no place else to go if the schools were closed. An elementary school teacher warned that it was impossible even to teach reading and writing in the over- i piviieigg classes. To all these pleas, Acting Mayor McKee cynically an- swered, to the accompanying approv- ing nods of the rest of the Tammany leaders: “Well, education isn’t everything. Education has to stop some time. We are carrying on classes in stenog- raphy and the like for adults. We did it because we had the money at one time. Now that we propose to stop it, we are attacked. -It is my belief that if pupils are more than 14 years old we have gone too far be- yong American ideals in education. We are pampering and softening boys and girls. Let’s stop this nonsense.” War On Education. This open declaration of war on education, and especially on educa» tion over the age of 14, means sharp curtailment of all educational facili-~ ties, particularly of agult schools and of the city colleges, ich may even be closed down. ~ Other welfare activities will suffer equally, Even such a smaili item as $25,000, the wages necessary to keep the playgrounds open in three bor- oughs, was cut out of the - budget, while the same sum of money is spent on ten assistant sergeants-at-arms for the Board of Estimate! One of the most corrupt divisions of the city administration is the De- partment of Sanitation. Its dozen top officials should be engineers, but not of them is. Commissioner Schroeder gets $22,000, the two as- sistant commissioners, $17,500, two deputies $12,500, and so on down the line. It was revealed that this year’s cost of maintaining horses for the department, only 21 of which are admittedly in service, was over $800,- 000. Yet while these huge sums are wasted in graft, 1,600 needed work- ers in the department were fired in January for “lack of funds!” Biggest Cut In Relief. But the worst attack of all will be on relief. As the Sunday Herald Tribune euphemistically put it: “The city pay rolls are giving investment interests less concern than the finan- cing of unemployment relief, which the Emergency Work and Relief Ad- ministration has estimated will re- quire $30,000,000 in the next six months.” Since? the city payrolls for any one month is more than $26,- 000,000, the “concern” of the bank- ers over $30,000,000 relief for six months means, simply, an attempt to starve the unemployed workers alto- gether, Norman Thomas praises Controller Berry as “the watchdog of the treas- ury.” He certainly watches the treasury—for the bankers. CUT RATE OPTICIANS WHITE GOLD TILLED FRAMES..51.50 TYL SHELL FRAMES... 1.00 Defies Move to Prevent Registration Already the determination of the ca- pitalist politicians in New York to prevent workers from voting Com- munist has materialisszed in a bold attempt to eject Milton Stone, Com- munist Candidate in the 14h Sena- torial District, from Public School 71, ith Street between Avenue B and C, when Stone was recognized when he appeared to register. “He is a Communist,” shouted one of the officials at the registration board when Stone entered. When he tried to register, he was asked “Who is the president of the United States, “Mr, Starvation and Company,” Stone answered. A policeman then was called by the politicians to evict Stone who subsequently was permit- ted to register nevertheless because of his militant attitude. “The crass action in trying to pre- vent Stone from registering is only one of the numerous indications that the capitalist class will do its utmost to prevent workers from Voting Communist on November 8th,” the N. Y. United Front Communist Elec- tion Campaign Committee stated to- day. It is absolutely necessary that comrades, friends and sympathizers volunteer to act as watchers on election day to see to it that the workers’ votes for the Communist candidates shall be counted.” Finnish Women Call Demonstration to Expose Social Fascist A large protest meeting will be held tonight at'8 p.m. in front of the social-fascist hall at 127th St. and 5th Ave. to protest &gainst the anti- working class tactics of Helen Hayes- Lantto, who will speak in the hall at that time. Helen Hayes-Lantto is the organ- izer of the so-called Women’s Coop- erative Guild. The boss character of this Halonen organization is pointed out by the Finnish Working Women’s Club, which is calling tonight's dem- CAPENTERS’ AID WANTED The Unemployed Council of Greater New York calls for carpenters to vol- unteer one day’s work in the office of the City Council, 10 East 17th St. Bronx Tel. LUdlow 7-039 Established 1905 Ht. A. BLUM, Opt.D. OPTOMETRIST Se 24 East Mt. Eden Avenue New York SPECIAL RATES WITH THIS AD COMRADES, PATRONIZE Morrisania Stock Farms, Inc, GRADE “A” DAIRY PRODUCTS 883 Tinton Ave. Bronx, N.Y. HOSPITAL PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED 30% OFF Manhattan %ptical Co. 122 HESTER ST. Between Bowery & Christie, N.Y. Open Dally from 9 to 7 ‘Fel Sunday 19 to 4 ATCEVTION COMRADES! Health Center Cafeteria WORKEKS CENTER 50 EAST 13th STREET tronixe. the Health Center Cafeteria and help the Revolutionary ent 'T FOOD REASONABLE PRICES EAT AT THE ROYAL CAFETERIA 827 BROADWAY . Between Ith & 15th Sts.) Royal Dishes for the Proletariat OUR WORKERS MEMBERS OF F.W.1.U. WILL BE HELD BRONX We call upon all Organizations to keep this day free Classified COMRADE REQUIRES services of young girl comrade to take care small family of 0, Board and salary. Write Colien, care of Daily Worker. Garment District — WORKERS PATRONIZE CENTURY. CAFETERIA 154 West 28th Street Pure Food —Proletariam Prices DAILY WORKER 9th ANNIVERSARY DECEMBER 31st NEW YEAR’S EVE. COLISEUM ARRAIGN SOUTH RIVER STRIKERS 14 Charges on Relief Chairman; High Bail NEW YORK.—The 27 workers who were arrested because of their act- ivities in the South River strike plead- ed not guilty Friday morning in Quarter Sessions court, New Bruns- wick,- before Judge Adrian Lyon. Although bail was put up for all the workers the officials refused to, release 6 of them. Victor Ploskon, one of the 6 still being held was re- cently railroaded to 2 years in the State Prison. His father Stanley and his brother Victor were two of the arrested workers. The Ploskon fam- ily are at present threatened with evic sion. The bail for the arrested workers was unusually high, ranging in most cases from $5,000 to $10,000 and 132 charges were trumped up against the defendants, 14 Charges On Relief Chairman Al Truskowski, who was the chair- man of the W. I. R. relief committee which distributed food during the strike and after, has 14 charges against him. The courts are deter- mined to give him a maximum sent- ence and have refused to release him ‘on bail. Some of the charges against Al ‘Truskowski are obstructing an offi- cer, inciting to riot, unlawful assem- bly, malicious mischief and assault and battery. Fred Litz, 20, has 11 charges against him and was placed under $10,000 bail. John Kucharski, 20, has 10 charges against him one of which is “atrocious assault.” Most of the defendants are extrem- ly young, ranging in age from 16 to 20. Some of the boys’ fathers are also involved. ‘Try To Whitewash Police ‘The court made an effort to con- ceal the fact that the company dicks, shot the 9-year-old Rojek boy, killed during the strike. During the shoot- ing Mr. Muffet, from the Labor De- partment in Washington was negoti- ating with the bosses of South River ELECTRICIANS LOCKED OUT TO Should Elect Strike «Committee; Mass Picket the Jobs # electricians NEW YORK.—Union are locked out in New York. The employers demand reduction of wages from the $13.20 scale. They demand the wages be cut to $9 a day for old work and to $12 for new work. There are 6,000 members of local No, 3 of the International Brother- hood of Electrical Workers (A.F.L.) here, though only part were working before the lock-out, which started yesterday. The electricians voted down the two scale system and all reductions unanimously at the last meeting. They want to struggle militantiy against the wage cut. The officials of Local 3, however, are doing nothing to make it a real struggle, The officials are passively submitting to the lockout in order to force upon the men a demoralized retreat. The situation, however, is by no manner of means hopeless, if the electrical workers themselves take it in hand, by turning this lock-out into @ real strike to save the $13.20 wage scale, Elect Strike Committees. There should be elected at once rank and file strike committees, at each job, with a central city strike committee to lead the struggle. The officials should be compelled to de- clare a strike until the bosses with- draw their demands for the wage cut. ‘There should be active mass picketing at all jobs. No Secret Negotiations! The membership of the union should be especially careful not to let the officials of the union carry on negotiations with the bosses with- out the presence of the city strike committee, and no agreements should be signed without being ratified by the membership. Otherwise, the offi- cial will probably sign up for a $12 or lower wage scale, and then sit back while the employers pay what- ever still lower wages they want to. The following demands are vital, and should be written into the con- tract: Retain the present wage scale of $13.20 a day! Elect job committees to safeguard the wage scale! NEW RUSSIAN CLASS The Workers School has organized another class in Advanced Russian, to be held Tuesday at 8:30 p.m. Regis- ter at the office 35 E. 12th St., 3rd floor. to sell out the strikers. ‘The arrested workers revealed the fact that they were beaten in jail, and that the officials threatened to use baseball ‘bats in an attempt to force them to turn state’s evidence. Abraham Isserman, an I. L, D., at- torney represented all the defendants. DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 Bristol Street (Bet, Pitkin & Sutter Aves.) Bkiyn PHONE: DICKENS 2-301 Office Hours: 8-10 A.M., 1-2, 6-8 P.M. Intern’! Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 15th FLOOR AD Work Done Under Persons) Care “ot DR, JOSEPHSON AMUSEMENTS THE DAILY WORKER SAYS— “‘China Express’ Is a Mth STREET & ONION Vv .ToT STH BIG WEEK ‘GOONA-GOONA’ WATCH FOR SOVIET ISTH ANNIVERSARY = FILM WAY 41ST. CRESTWOO! with RIGARDO CORTEZ—KAREN MORLEY PWBE Dsity 10.2 P.M. 25e— 11 P.M. to clone Shc ‘THE THEATRE GUILD presents THE Goop EARTH dramatized by Owen Davis and Donald D: from the Patitver prize novel by Peart GUILD TRA. W. of Broa Eve. 8:58. Mats, Thursday @ Snturday 2: THE GROUP THEATRE presents ~ SUCCESS STORY By JOHN HOWARD LAWSON Maxine Elliott’s Thea, 39th, E. of B'way fvs. 8:30 Matinees Wed. & Sat. at 2:30 SEE AND HEAR!—NOW WITH SOUND! Starting Today—For One Week wary ACME THEATRE Revolution On Wheels” i Exe, Sat, & Sun, 1S5C iw. to 2 Pam. SQUARE Midnite Show Sat. Cc OUNSELOR-AT-LAW >. WITH BY PAUL MUN] ELMER RICE PLYMOUTA THEA. W. 45th. LA, 4-6720 Eves. 8:30. Mats. Thurs. & Sat., 2:30 AMERICANA‘, tang “An intelligent and with & grand sense of hemor” ‘arland, World~" ‘am, SHUBERT THEA., 41th st., Wot Be Byes. 8:30. Matinees Wed. & Sat. at ARTHUR HOPKINS: oe R ENDEZVOUS by BARTON MacLANE BROADHURST Thea., 41th St., W. of Biway Eves. 8:45—Mats. Thurs. & Sat. 2:30 Stop the billion-dollar subsidies to the trusts and banks. Immediate ‘unemployment insurance at the ex~ pense of the government and em- Ployers, I | ee, CUT THE WAGES | } | —a } of

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