The Daily Worker Newspaper, October 21, 1932, Page 2

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PAGE TWO PRNTERS VOTE DOWN WAGE CUT JOB CONTRACT Executive Council Had Told Them to Accept; Members Defy It With the v from 302 in New York small on the vote stood 4, E for a wage cut Right Back at Them | This turned to be a boomerang | for the bosses and their the union. Voting in favor of st or lockout rather than a w ontract were 3,528, agair Officials Order Acceptance The union involved is the Inte’ mil tional Typographical Union, and its} Loca] No. 6 of New York. The execu: tive council, the international r body of the union, distributed | he ballots one of the most ’=xthsome documents, a mass of employers’ propaganda for the wage cut and| threats of assessments and defeat if the members did not accept the con- tract. The international office told the members cutright to accept the} contract. It was in defiance of this) that they voted down the wage cuts.) Militants Oppose | ‘The Amalgamation Party, the mili- tant organization of rank and file printers, declared when the negotia- tions first started, for no wage cuts, no abolition of priority, for a five- day, 40-hour week without reduction in pay. It distributed leaflets Monday and Tuesday before the voting on) Wednesday, urging printers to vote down the cut and exposing the trick- ery involved in the ballot. This leafiet undoubtedly had much to do with the defeat of the cut. Part of the officials of Local 6 have made a gesture of opposition to the cut. But they have taken no steps| to prepare a strike. This the mem-| bers will have to do now themselves. Notices of lockout may appear an: day now. The Printers League (em- ployers) posted such notices some days ago, then withheld action pend- ing decision of the referendum. ‘The newspaper printers’ wage scale has been sent to arbitration, against the protest of a large section of the rink and file. The voting Wednes- d2y was on the book and job scale Labor Union Meetings) viet Film, “The and Sunday all| Fifth Ave, Playhouse, | St., is for benefit of strial Union. ng at 28th In P°-NTERS i 2 Alteration Union of Local} 2 of 1440 East New York Ave. will hold | 2 open forum on Sunday at 1 p.m, All and fellow workers are invited. i be she: yolley’ ef tae wate. | free. Painters’ 1 comrades who have borrowed cuts or} from Daily Worker over 5 days agp| eturn them immediately—or all re~ s in future will be refused. us Rehearsal, 8 p.m. at 122 Ih invited. ‘Tremont Workers’ Club cation in the Soviet Un Jacobson, 8:30 p.m. at 2 Lecture: "Speaker Clinton Ave. Edu- Eli Bath Beach Workers’ Club—Lecture: . jU. U. L. versus A. P. of L.; Speaker Pred G. Biedenkamp; 8:30 p.m. at Bath Beach Workers’ Club. Red Sparks A, C—G P.m. at new clubrooms, (near Sutter Ave.) I. W. O, Youth Br. 405 “What's Happened On Broadwa | jAl Saxe of the Workers’ Laboratory The- | Jatre; at 108 E. 14th St, Room 301. Ad-| mission 10 cents. | Meeting—8:30 3 Sheffield Ave. iscussion: | ae Be George L., holding ticket No. 38 for the| “Gaitery of Women" bought at the P: Bausar, will get the set of books if he re- | ports t» the Young Worker Office at 50 E.| 13th 8f., 8th floor. ; | W. f. R. Chorus—Rehearsal—1:30 p.m, at 122 Second Ave. All invited. | “WASHINGTON A “PRODUCTIVE” MEETING FOR HENRY FORD WAGES LOWER - LGOT I I'VE Cur THAN 1913 LEVE To BE MAKING TROU RIS COMING AND THE MPLOYED AND E YORK, FRIDAY ,OCTOBER 21, 1932_ —— NOW IF THE UNEMPLOYED ARE FIGHTING FOR RELIEF AND THE EM- PLOYED ARE STRIKING AGAINST WAGE CUTS, — WHAT'S THE ANSWER? MPLOYED BLE FOR TeA RE a (Ge y¥ By Quirt EXCELLENT.’ THis Has BEEN “A PRODUCTIVE MEETING, COMMISSIONERS 4 os/ =o os ea = me = an = —_ -— ENDORSED BY 500 Symposium Favors the C. P. Candidate | NEW YORK.—About 500 workers | nding a recent election sympo- | sium, held by the 13th St. Block| Committee, passed a resolution en- ‘sing the candidacy of Rubin Shul- | for the State Assembly from the | th District. Republican, Socialist and Democrat candidates, invited to present their views at the symposium, failed to show up, Shulman being the only one to appear. The en- dorsement of Shulman was unani- mous. The workers in the 13th St. neigh- borhood, many of whom are Negroes, know Shulman for his participation in the struggle against evictions of Negro and white workers in that district. He has also partici- pated militantly in the fight for free milk, and has led demonstra- ‘tions of workers in front of the Home Relief B reau for immedi- ate relief. Some of the demands which the 13th St. Block Committee adopted when endorsing the candidacy of Shulman were: No discrimination against Negro or foreign-born workers in administra- tion of relief; a free milk station on 13th St.; repeal of all eviction law: $10 a week immediate cash relief for needy families, and $3 additional for each dependent, Active In Union Work. Shulman, a capmaker by trade, was forced to work in an open shop in 1913, when the Millinery and Cap- makers’ International Union, A. F. of L., refused to take him in as a mem- ber. Shulman, however, organized the workers in his shop, the New York Manufacturing Co., and forced the union to accept him and the other strikers as members. In 1915 he became organizational committee R. SHULMAN | manager of the union and was in- strumental in admitting 1,500 work- ers into the union in that year. In 1917 Shulman refused to do work in his shop on supplies for military pur- Poses. In 1919, Shulman was expelled from the Socialist Party for his rey- | Olutionary activities, Recently Shulman led a struggle against the Dairymen’s League and| forced the Milk Trust to give free milk to needy children in the 13th St. neighborhood, MERRY-GO- ROUND” OP! FAIR SATURDAY “Washington Merry-Go-Round,” a film version of the book published by Liveright, and which characterizes Washington, will have its first show- ing at the Mayfair Theatre on Sat- urday. The film version is by Max- well Anderson, Jo Swerling and Eu- gene Thackwray, and was directed by James Cruze. Lee Tracy, Con- stance Cummings, Alan Dinehardt and Walter Connelly play the lead- ing roles in this Columbia picture. The Jefferson Theatre beginning Saturday will present a double feat- ure program, “This Sporting Age,” with Jack Holt and Evalyn Knapp, and “The Last Man,” with Charles Bickford and Constance Cummings, Wednesday to Friday the films will include “Isle of Paradise,” a story | of the island of Bali, and “The Crooked Circle” with Ben Lyon and Zasu Pitts, CITY ELECTION NOTES Progressive Workers’ Cluture Club of ‘Williamsburg—Lecture: “Government and |! ==—=—=—=—— the Crisis.” Speaker: S. Wiener; at 264| FRIDAY. OCT. 21 | Bedford Ave. (near Penn St.). All work-| 25th St. and Ave. A, 8 p.m. Speaker ers and students invited Miller. “eee ae 15th St, and Ninth Ave. 12, noon! Chinese Vanguard—esatr: | Speaker to be announced. Night—Elaborate program; 187th St, and Cambrelling Ave. Speak Lyceum, 66 E. 4th St. ers: Peter Starry A. Severino, Rossetti and | ce | Pallone. Communist Perty, Sec, 5—M. Olgin and HN. Sheifer will speak at Election Rally, 8 'p.m., at Elsmer Hall, 284 E. 170th St, I. 'W. ©. Br. 521—Meeting—8:30 p.m. at 11 West Mt, Eden Ave. All workers in- vited, | Bridge Plaza Workers’ Club—I, Amter will speak on ‘Fifteen Years of Bolshevik Rev- olution” —8:30 p.m. at 285 Rodney St. Bast Bronx Br, ¥.8.U.--Lecture: Liberties in the Soviet Union. Speaker: Portell—8 Pm, at Ambassador Hall, 172nd St. and Third Ave. Karl Marx Br, P. 8, U.—Open-Air Meet- In¢—158th St. and ‘Broadway. Speaker Bend. | iliemsburg Br, F, S$. U.—Lecture on “Mow the Soviet Union Has Bolved the Na- Monal Problem.” Speaker: Adolph Maurice; at 207 South Fifth st 3 ae Boro Park Br. F. 8. U.—Lecture on “The Second Five Year Plan.” Speaker: Liston M. Oak; at Dolor Palias, 4214 14th Ave, Felix Salmond, cellist, will play at the first Artists’ Recital at Wash- {ngton Irving High School this Sat- trday night Fordham Road and Walton Aye. ers: J. Schiller and A. Dranow. Allerton and Cruger Ave. Speakers: Rose Chernin, Benj. Levy, Richard Ford and Isaac Stammler, Bleecher and McDougal, 8 p.m. Speaker: Miriam Cullen, Monroe and ‘Jackson, 8 p.m, tason, ndoor lecture Speak- Speaker; 8, { Irish Misleader | Tries to Incite || Hatred of Races | | (By An Irish Worker) | Recently I attended a meeting of the “Irish Amer Independent | Political Organization” at Innisfail | Hall 56th St. and Third Avenue and all I heard was one appeal after another for the Irish to organize along race lines for the purpose of snatching jobs from other workers. Charles F. Connolly, Editor of the weekly “Irish Echo,” under whose guidance the organization was formed enumerated the races here which he claimed are robbing the Irish of jobs. He used such names as “dagoes,” “whops,” “niggers,” and ‘“spics.” After declaring that the Irish American Political Organization was thoroughly “democratic,” Mr. Con- nolly informed his audience that he had a strong-arm squad of 200 to carry out the orders of the “Execu- tive Committee.” Anybody asking “improper questions,” he said, would be “thrown out of the window.” This was the sort of “democracy” fostered y the organization, which appar- ently is officered by disgruntled Tam- manyites and G, O. P. politicians. By making capital of a few needy cases helped by these politicians, the organization tries to cover up its real aim of stirring up nationalistic con- flicts among various workers, It is the duty of all class-conscious Irish workers here to go into the ranks of this organization and defeat the at- tempts to teach Irish workers to hate Italian, Jewish, German, Negro, Spanish and other workers. CIVIC REPERTORY THEATRE TO OPEN SEASON WITH “LILLIOM” Eva Le Gallienne and her group of players, the Civic Repertory Players, will open their sixth season on Wed- nesday evening, Oct. 26, at their Fourteenth St. Playhouse with Mol- nar’s “Lilliom.” Joseph Schildkraut and Eva Le Gallienne will again play the roles which they created when first presenteq in 1921. The large cast includes Walter Beck, Beatrice Terry, Leona Roberts, Beatrice de Neergaard and Paul Leyssac. Soccer League Schedules ‘The Metropolitan Workers’ Soccer League, affillated with the Labor Sports Union, of- ficially opened the 1932-33 season on Oct, 10. About fifty teams have entered, in- cluding 12 new teams. ‘The following are the new additions to the league: Turino, Mexican Workers, Ecuador, Sport Club Fichte, two teams each, and the Scandin- avian Workers, Union De Chile, Macabee, Independent Youth Club, one team each. ‘The league is considered the largest ama- teur soccer league in the United States. Seven of the eight nine Negro teams in the M.W.S.L, as against race dis- crimination and for equal rights for the Negro athletes, A campaign for more soccer facilities and against the payment of fees for the use of public grounds will begin Saturday, Oct, 22, when a committee will present these de- mands to the Educat Commissioner of Schedule of soccer Sunday, Oct. 23: A Division ‘Turino vs. Italian Workers. Juventus vs, Spartacus. Olympics vs. Red Sparks. Fichte vs. Italian Americans. Scandinavian Workers—Bye. B1 Division Red Sparks vs. Macabees. Esthonian Workers vs. Mexican Ecuador vs. Prospect Workers. Hebrew Workers vs, Union De Chili. B2 Division Italian Workers vs, Neckwear A. C. Harlem Progressive vs. Independent Y. C mal Department and S. games to be played ‘Held in All Sections of City as Big Election Rallies to Be Campaign Enters Final Round Board Member Would Train No More:Teachers NEW YORK.—Right in line wit! FRIDAY’S RALLIES—Downtown Section 1 will hold an indoor lec- ture this Friday evening at the Downtown Workers Club, 11 Clinton Street, with Arthur Stein, candidate in the 11th Congressional District, as main speaker. Outdoor Torch Rally The torch parade organized by Section 1 for this Friday will begin at 4th St. and Ave. B, at 7:15 p.m. and will culminate in a central rally at 10th St. and Ave. C. Speakers, Rubin Shulman, candidate in the 6th Assembly District, and Abraham Markoff, candidate in the 14th Con- gressional District, Helen Lynch, candidate in the 8th Assembly Dis- trict, will act as chairman. Meetings preliminary to the central rally will be held at 8th St. and Ave. C, with C. S, Friedman as speaker, at 6th St. and Aye. B, with Joseph Porper, candidate in the 14th Senatorial Dis- trict, speaking, and at 2nd St. and Ave. B, with J. Sirota, speaking. ‘ West Side Section 2 will hold preliminary meetings this Friday, 7 p.m., at 25th St. and 9th Ave., with Leslie and Helen Allison as speakers; at 52nd St. and 9th Ave. with Keane and Am- broze as speakers, ~From those meet- ings the line of parade will be up Sth Ave. and will culminate at 39th St. and 9th Ave., at 8:15 p.m. Harry Fielberg, candidate in the 5th As- sembly District, Lerner and Moses will speak at the main rally. Three Rallies in Bronx Preliminary meetings this Friday evening will be held by Section 5 at Ward and Westchester Avenue with Goodwin as speaker and at 161st St, and Prospect Ave., with H. Klein as speaker. These meetings will con- verge at 163rd St. and Hunts Point Square for the main rally which will be addressed by Henry Shepard, can- didate for Lieutenant Governor of New York and by Carl Brodsky, can- didate in the 23rd Congressional Dis- trict. Frederick Welsh, candidate in the 22nd Assembly District, will speak at a rally this Friday evening at 146th St. and 7th Ave. Moisaye J. Olgin, candidate in the 24th Congressional District, will speak at an election symposium to |be held this Friday night by Section \5 at Elsmere Hall, 284 E, 170th St, Nathan Schofer, candidate for As- sembly in the 2nd District Bronx will be chairman. Amter, Hathaway in Brooklyn Israel Amter, candidate for Gov- ernor of New York, will be the main speaker at a rally held this Friday evening by the Bridge Plaza Workers Club at 285 Rodney St. Clarence A. Hathaway, candidate in the 3rd Con- gressional District, will address an indoor rally at the New National Home, 261-7 Driggs St., Green point. Sixteen mass organizations will par- ticipate in the Green Point meeting. Weinstone in Jamaica An indoor meeting this Friday evening at 148-29 Liberty Ave. Ja- maica, will be addressed by William. W. Weinstone, candidate for the U, S, Senate from New York, Markoff at Lavenburg Home Abraham Markoff, candidate in the Italian American vs. Fichte. Juventus vs. Red Spark. Spartacus vs. Pirates A. C. Maple F. C. vs. Dauntless. Ecuador—Bye, C1 Divi Hinsdale vs, Olympics. Brownsville vs, Turino, Prospect vs. Hero A. C. C2 Division Red Spark ys. Oaribs F. C Adriatic vs. Mexican Workers. Dauntless A, C.—Bye. All the first mentioned teams are the home teams. Home teams must secure fields and notify the league and their oppenent on or before Oct. 20. Team managers who do not notify the league by mail should come up to the office at the above address, Each team on |should apply for permits every week, re- gardiess whether they are a HOME team or not, as these permits can be used by the league for any teams scheduled who could not secure one. Clubs are urged to send in the names and addresses of their referees, so that they can be notified and assigned to games. Any teams that are not in the above schedule, have failed to pay their dues or affiliation fees. In order to be eligible to play Sunday's games, the players must be registered with the league, Registration cards are now available at our office. For Y at Manhattan Workers’ | Club, 48 Sheriff St., at 8 p.m. Speaker: L. Schwartz. Subject: “Youth and the Elec- tion Campaign.” information write or call at the office at the above address. You can phone between 6 and 8, THE CO RNER STORE Operated by B. L. & M. DEPT. STORES, Inc. WE CARRY COMPLETE LINES OF MEN'S, LADIES AND CHIL- DREN'S FURNISHINGS : ALSO WHITE GOODS, BLANKETS, SHOES AND LEATHER CLOTHING EVERY PURCHASE A BARGAIN 125th STREET, CORNER 5th AVENUE NEW YORK CITY Special attention given to workers and groups leaving for Soviet Russia Soviet China Night Friday, October 21st AT 8 P. M, DANCE AND ENTERTAINMENT, CHINESE MUSIC — GOOD * DANCE ORCHESTRA Manhattan Lyceum 66 E, 4TH ST, Vickets 30c; In advance at door 35¢ Brooklyn Concert and Dance GIVEN BY 1.W.0O, BRANCH 615 Saturday, Oct. 22nd At 8:30 P.M. 8159 CONEY ISLAND AVE. BROOKLYN, N. Y. PROCEEDS FOR DAILY WORKER Classified j .cnmace (acted, A. Ze c/o Daily Workers rhare with Address In order to intensify the Communist Election drive and to bring the Communist program before larger masses of workers, party sections in New York will held indcor lectures as well as outdoor central rallies this weel- end. @ Mayor McKee's declaration a few days ago to the effect that children over 14 had better be at work than going to school, comes a statement now by Christopher C. Mollenhauer, of the school board, that closing: of the teachers’ colleges would be bene- ficial. “Even if conditions become normal in the near future, it will take ten years to absorb all the teachers now on our. waiting list,” he said. “We have an enormous oversupply of teachers, and there is not the slight- est need to continue to train addi- tional ones. It isn’t fair to train them for jobs that don’t exist.” Broom Makers Go Out On Strike in 10 N. Y. And Brooklyn Shops NEW YORK.—Sixty broom makers of the ten broom shops in New York and Brooklyn quit work Wednesday and went out on strike for the follow- ing demands: Recognition of the Furniture Work- ers Industrial Union, a 44-hour week, equal division of work, with no dis- crimination, security on the job, and a 10per cent increase in wages. « Furniture workers are called to come down to the strike headquarters at Galileo Temple, 17 Montrose Ave- nue, Brooklyn, at 7:30 in the morning to help the strikers picket the shops. 14th Congressional District, will be the main speaker this Friday even- ing at the Lavenburg Home, 123 Goerck St. Patterson in Sectoin 15 This Friday night's rally by Sec- tion 15 at Claremont Parkway and Washington Ave., will be addressed by William L. Patterson, Communist candidate for Mayor, B. Barkin, L. Hoffman, James Steele, candidate in the 4th Assembly District, and by Joe Kiss, Nessin, Olgin Will Be Speakers at Showing Of New Film, “41st” The W.LR, announces today that all its machinery is being put into motion to help raise funds, food, clothing, etc, for the National Hun- ger March, As a first step the W.LR. is ar- ranging a showing of the new Soviet Film, “41st”. All workers are called upon to attend the premier showing of this picture on Friday, Saturday and Sunday; Oct. 21, 22, 23 at the Fifth Avenue Theatre on 28th Street and Broadway. Added features of attraction will be a short address by M. J. Olgin, at the midnight showing on Friday night. Sam Nessin unemployed lead- er of New York who has just re- turned from an extended stay in the Soviet Union will likewise speak on the successive days. VOTE COMMUNIST Unemployment and Social in- surance at the expense of the state and employers. ‘Garment District WORKERS PATRONIZE CENTURY CAFETERIA 154 West 28th Street Pure Food Proletarian Prices CHINESE VANGUARD DANCE Tonight the Chinese Vanguard, rey- olutionary organ in Chinese language, is holding a concert and dance affeir .at Manhattan Lyceum, 66 East 4th Street, The Palace will present an-all cir- cus bill beginning Saturday, Most of the sawdust stars were gathered from the large circus shows both here and abroad and include May Wirth and her riding family, Erma Ward, Tiny Kline, Ed and Jenny Rooney, Rob- inson’s elephants, Christianson’s stal- lions and a large group of clowns. Bronx MEET YOUR COMRADES AT THE Cooperative Dining Club ALLERTON AVENUE Cor, Bronx Park East Pure Foods ee ATIEYTION COMRADES! Health Center Cafeteria WORKEKS§ CENTER 50 EAST 13th STREET Patronize the He Center Cafeteria and help the Ber jonary Movement BEST FOOD REASONABLE PRICES EAT AT THE ROYAL CAFETERIA | 827 BROADWAY Between 12th & 13th Sts.) Royal Dishes for the Proletariat |] OUR WORKERS MEMBERS OF F.W. Proletarian Prices Saturday, October 22 AT 8 P. M. SECTION 15 — Communist Party — BRONX CONCERT - DANCE 1610 BOSTON ROAD ~—Admission 25¢— WHITE GOLD FILLED FRAMES_$1.50 ZYL SHELL FRAMES. 1.00 HOSPITAL PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED 50% OFF Manhattan ptical Co. 122 HESTER ST. Between Bowery & Christie, Open Daily from 9 to7 Sunday 10 to 4 ALL PROCEEDS FOR THE Wee DAILY WORKER. Tel. Orchard 4-0230 STARTING TODAY! Three Days Only AMERICAN PREMIERE Soviet Film The ‘ 4 qs 28th Street and Broadway Theatre Admission 35 centeContinuons 9:30 AM. to 11:30 P.M, Also LATEST SOVIET SOUND CARTOON LATEST SOVIET NEWSREELS SPECIAL—“America To-day Newsreel” FULL PROGRAM: ENTERTAINMENT and DANCE FOR THE Working Woman Saturday Eve. October 22nd, 8 P. M. WORKERS CENTER—50 E. 13th St. Joint Auspices: The “Working Woman”, United Councils of Working Class Women ADMISSION 25 CENTS CONFERENCE FOR DAILY WORKER Mass Circulation; Big- ger Paper, Needed New ways to make the Daily Worker into a mass newspaper of the working class will be discussed at the Third Dailv Worker Conference to be held at 10 a.m., Sunday, No- vember 12, at Stuyyesant Casino, 142 Second Avenue, the New York Pro- visional Daily Worker Committee an- nounced last night. All mass organ- izations, including unions, leagues, opposition groups, unemployed coun- ceils and neighborhood and block committees are urged by the com- mittee to send delegates. » More than 600 worker corresyon- dents throughout the United States are now sending news to the Daily Worker, although there still, accord- ing to the committee, is a great deal of room for expansion. And one of the most important subjects to be discussed is how to enlarge the Daily ‘Worker into a six-page newspaper, so that the news of all mass organiza- tions and their affairs can be given the proper space; which is impossible now. Foster's “Toward Soviet America” with yearly subscription. WERE JAILED IN THE SAM BROWN To Sentence 11 Today 10 Tommorow The New York District of the In- ternational Labor Defense has urged ‘all workers to turn out at 9 a.m. to- day to the demonstration in front of the Essex Market courtroom, Sec- ond Avenue and Second Street, when’ convicted by Judge Farrell on Wed: nesday, Oct. 19 on the perjured tes- timony of police and stoolpigeons for participating in the demonstration last Saturday, protesting the jailing of Samuel Brown, Negro worker who |was railroaded to six months in jail |for demanding relief for the unem- ployed. Tomorrow 10 others will be sentenced. These innocent workers were. not jonly viciously beaten and but were denied bail and forced to remain behind bars until they were sentenced. The Tammany Judge Far- rell on Tuesday and Wednesday completely ignored the testimony of dozens of workers and the LL.D. at- torneys and convicted the 22 innocent workers on the basis of the clumsy and unsupported lies of a few cops and stool pigeons. ile the hearing on Wednesdey was going on, Milton Stone, Com- munist candidate for Senate in the 14th senatorial district, addressed the workers outside the courtroom and denounced the attack on the Sam Brown demonstration as part of the drive against the starving unemploy- ed. Workers, demonstrate today at Essex Market Court for the release of your arrested comrades! INVITE ALL PARTIES TO BROOKLYN SYMPOSIUM All political parties have been in- vited to send representatives to a symposium arranged by 16 workers’ organizations of Williamsburg for Friday, Oct. 21. The symposium will be held at the new National Hall on Driggs Ave. between Manhattan and Graham at 8 p.m. DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 Bristol Street (Bet, Pitkin & Sutter Aves.) B’klyn PHONE: DICKENS 2-3012 Office Hours: 8-10 A.M., 1-2, 6- Intern’ Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 15th FLOOR All Work Done Under Personal Care of DR. JOSEPHSON STARTING TODAY A Sequence to PRODUCED IN THE U, 8. SEE AND REACTION “The Last Insult” THE DEVELOPMENT OF RUSSIA'S CHILDREN! THE BIRTH AND GROWTH OF THE YOUNG PIONEER THE PIONEER IN THE HOME, SCHOOL, ETO. THE PIONEER IN HIS STRUGGLE AGAINST SUPERSTITION ENACTED RY THE YOUNG WORKERS THEMSELVES AMERICAN PREMIERE “Road to Life!” 8. R, BY MEJRAPOMFILM The Worker's Mth STREET & UNION ACME THEATRE Exe. Sat. & Sun. | USC 0 im. to 2 PM. Midnite Show Sat. SQUARE OWA There's Always A Better Show at RKO Up With the Shades on Washington! Adaring expose that dares to tell the truth. .... SHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND” A Columbia Picture SATURDAY i MAYFAIR Broadway at 47th Street WATCH FOR SOVIET 1TH ANNIVERSARY FILM THE THEATRE GUILD presents THE GoopD EARTH dramatized by Owen D: Donald Davis from the Pulitzer prize GUILD THEA, 52nd 8:30, Mats. Thursday & Saturday 2:80 THE GROUP THEATRE presents SUCCESS STORY By JOHN HOWARD LAWSON Ine Elliott's The of Bway Guild a workers correspondence group in your factory, snup or nelghborhood, Send regular letters to the Daily Worker. Principles of Communism—Treee Hours from 3 to 4:30 P. M. Register Now! THE WORKERS SCHOOL Announces the Opening of Four Day I'm Clesses in FOR UNEMPLOYED AND NIGHT WORKERS ONLY THESE CLASSES WILL START. OCTOBER 24TH Unemployed free if recommended by organizations for activity ADVANCED RUSSIAN—Evewy Tuesday at 8:40 P.M. Forther information at WORKERS SCHOOL—35 E. 12th St., N.Y. C. OUNSELOR-AT-LAW WITH BY 6TH BIG WEEK PAUL MUNI ELMER &ICE ‘GOONA-GOONA? | Pexmourn mHra., Ww. Gin, LA. 4-cr20 Eves, 8:30 Mats. Thurs. & Sat., 2:30 , New Revue Hit! AMERICANA‘: 22285 “An intelligent and tuneful revue with a grand sense of humor.” —Garland, World-Telegram, SHUBERT THEA. 4th St, W. of Bway Eves. 8:30. Matinees Wed. & Sat. at 2:30 ARTHUR HOPKINS presents Ren DEZVOUS by BARTON MacLANE BROADHURST Thea., 44th St., W. of B'way Eves, &:45—Mats, Thurs, & Sat. 2:20 aca he “SOMETHING WORTHY OF RESPECT, Y¥, Amel BR. 1-0) N. LYCEUM Theat Bygs. $1.00 Union Strategy—Political Economy Rates for Night Workers $2.00 Tel, ALgonquin 4-1199 11 of the 22 workers arrested on’ Oct, 15 will be sentenced. They were Demonstrate at Court Today for the Release of 21 Workers jailed, ~ | AMUSEMENTS | | The Young Pioneers In Action! = AAA ERIE

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