The Daily Worker Newspaper, October 26, 1932, Page 2

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TAMMANY FREE SPEECH BAN SMASH CONFERENCE ON OCT. 30. ae f or ie Past Side Council Defies for Hunger N 10 PLAN LOCAL RELIEF FIGHT Urges Organizations to Send Delegates corner of The cor ference was call a by the Tova nal Committee for W Re r Be Sure viclcgaca : Attend United Front Relief Conference All workers’ organizations, their executive committees and officers are urged to make sure that dele- gates are elected in all branche to attend the Conference for Wi ter Relief, Sunday, Oct. 30, at/ | 10:30 a.m., in the New Star Ca- sino, Park Ave. and E. 107th St If no meetings are to be heid be- fore Sunday, delegates must be assigned by leading committees or | functionaries and instructed to re-| | port the results of the conference| j to the membership. ae ting 60 locals of A. F. .F. of L., 50] fraternal organizations and 40 or-| ganizations affiliated with the Un-| employed Council of Greater New | the crowd to answer the following | York, as well as the Council itself.| A complete plan for local struggles | against wage-cuts, evictions, for im-| miediate cash relief, for shelter for the homeless and against the vicious ‘job-sharing” system and lay-offs, will be worked out at the conference. The provisional committee urges all workers’ organizations, whether or); not they meet before Oct. 30, to be| sure to arrange for delegates to at- tend this important conference Needle Workers! Help! Mass Picket Dorfman | Plant This Morning! | NEW YORK. —all needle workers, | | particularly knit goods workers, are called to a mass picket line at the Meyer Dorfman plant, 218 Bedford, Brooklyn, this morning and this eve- | ving. Help the strikers win union conditions here. “Student Review” to Be Ready This Week YORK.—The November is- > of the Student Review, which will this week contains an article } 1 “Removing the Academic c by Oakley Johnson whose re- t from City College of ¢ e"puision i has precipitated several trations. Wednesday U. member: eve on Com who have tee at report at been in the office of ‘ E. uth 8st Peom 330, he Russian d to 4049] The hall is} onable rates. Brownsville Workers’ Club—Ratification Meeting—at 1440 East Ne wYork Ave, Good speekers. | Flatbush — Workers’ — Club—Memtbership | meeting—at 8:30 p.m. at 1207 Kings High- | D.—Regular Tremont Ave 6 Celebration 50 E. 13th Workers urged to ta take part . ; | Daily Worker Chorus—Rehearsa]—8:30 | pm., at 15 EB. Third All workers invited. Labor Sports Union—Meeting of District | Council- P.m. at 108 E. 14th St. Sports| digectors and students for Training School | urged to attend. Ball Tremont Wort in . &t 2075 Clinton room Dancing Ave. ehearsal, New members Harlem Prost Youth Ciub—Open- {¢ Meeting: es meet nt 1838 Mbdison Ave., Te Hekosh Wo Club—Membership | Méstine—8 p.m., at 15 F. Third St. Cor rade such as bosk- interested’ in athle' soccer and ethatl, are welcome. Labor Union Meetings | DOPING WORKERS Tndependent Housewreckers’ Union hold a special meeting tonight at 8 at Manhattan Lyceum, 66 E. Fourth nnértant duestions in connection with ¢ job and further action, R orker iM hold 2 Friday night, Oct. 28, at erm, 66 E. Fourth St. Dan- ‘ ts and special features will | nission is 40 .cents. AroaAt, WORKERS * Metical Workers’ League calls “on ; and tinemployed hospital work- * to the meeting tonight at 8:30 W. 21st St. to discuss the hat Political Party Shall f sudorse in the Com- > enTERS | The Ci'y Council of the Alteration Paint- Decorators’ and Paperhangers' Union Greater New Ye . With the co-operation oll the locals, 18 arranging the first ‘ory Ball and Concert, to be held Sat- ayy Dec 3, at Webster Hall, 119 EB. 1th | the s|Pean Dixon, ED; RELIEF Cops; ; City. Wide ** Tarch Sought WORKERS REFUSE, TO END. MEETING! Police Threaten Them But Pet Socialists The East Side Unemployed Coun- cil, whose tempo ‘s are t 519 Second Ave hrough the police won a free eak on Madison Sq the Tammany | {eians, who for the past have barred and broken | ngs on Madison Sq. of the Unemployed Councils, Party and revolutionary mass organ- Socialist Pa This action of the corrupt Tammany machine exposes once again the role of the Socialist Party as the tool and lackey of the bosses, Open Meeting Tuesday at noon four members of the East Side Unemployed Council set | up their platform and began a meet- ing on Madison Sq. When a cop ar- rived and tried to stop the meeting, | the workers demanded the right of free speech. The cop made the lying | statement that no one is allowed to speak on the square. When the work- ers insisted that the Socialist Party has been holding meetings there reg- ularly, the cop denied this ang or- j dered the workers to adjourn the| meeting. The chairman of the meeting im- | mediately called upon the workers in three questions: 1—Did you see the} Socialist Party meeting here yester- day? 2—Do you believe in free speech? |3—Do you want the Unemployed Council to speak? T..he crowd of 500 workers an- swered all of these questions with a joud “aye”, and the chairman pro- ceeded to introduce the next speaker, who exposed the fake “socialists” and explained why all workers shduld sup- port the Communist Party. Workers Win The cop left with the threat that he would call the riot squad. But al- though the Unemployed Council con- tinued the meeting for three hours, riot squad did not ar- rive. This shows once again how the workers can defeat the bank- ers’ government and police by solid- arity and militant qetermination. At this meeting the workers con- tributed $5 for 250 copies of the Hun- ger Fighter. The East Side Unem- ployed Council announces that it will meet again on Madison Sq. on Fri- day evening, October 28, and calls upon all workers to come to the sup- port of the meeting. “LILIOM” OPENS TONIGHT— “TELL HE RTHE TRUTH” THURSDAY “Liliom,” Molnar’s drama, will open this evening at the Civic Rep- ertory Theatre. Joseph Schildkraut and Eva Le Gallienne will play the Toles they created in the Theatre Guild production. Other players in- clude Josephine Hutchinson, Beatrice Terry, Charles Ellis, Leona Roberts and Donald Cameron. “Dangerous Corner,” by J. B. Priestley, will have its premiere at the Empire Theatre on Thursday evening with ,Colin Keith-Johnston, Mary Seryoss and Bar- bara Robbins in the cast. Anthony Young's play, geon,” “The Ser- will have its delayed open- }ing on Thursday at the Belmont. This is the first production of the Mirror Players, a new group. “Tell Her the Truth,” a musical version of the comedy, “Nothing But the Truth,” by James Montgomery and Frederick Isham, opens Thurs- day at the Cort Theatre. The play- ers include John Sheehan, Jr., An- drew Tombes, Lillian Emerson and Raymond Walburn, John Van ODruten’s comedy, “There's Always Juliet,” will be re- vived by the Shuberts at the Ethel Barrymore Theatre on Thursday with Violet Heming and Roger Pryor in the leading roles. “Carry Nation,” by Frank McGrath, |@ play about the prohibition advo- | cate, will have its premiere here on Saturday night at the Biltmore The- atre, with Esther Dale in the chief ial CITY ELECTION NOTES ESDAY, OOT. 26 Georgias Church, 8 p.m, 24th St. and Second Bay Parkway and 68th Viadimir and L, Golosov. 1373 43rd St. Speakers: and Milton Weich. 66th St. and 18th Ave, Scherer and B. Elias Brighton Beach Ave. St. Speakers: A. J. B. Wirkulla Speakers: Hannah and Seventh st. Speaker: I. Pinkson, F East Side Workers’ Club, Clinton and East Broadway at 8 p.m. Speaker: H. Bellinson, Henry and Pike St. at 8 p.m, Speaker: 8, Mason Seventh St. and Ave. C, 8 p.m. Speaker: Markoff. A 13th St. and Ave. B at 8 p.m. Speaker: ay and Fulton Ave. M. Rich, Jack Morrison, James Steele and Jacob Schultz 174th St, and Vyse Ave, Speaker: BL. Hoffman ahd Benj. Levy, candidate Seventh Assembly District, and Joe Fox, Allerton and Cruger Ave. Speakers: J. Schiller, Rose Chernin, Sixth Assembly Dis- trict candidate, and E. Breslaw. ‘Tremont and Prospect Ave. Speakers: M. E. Taft, Peter Starr, Sam Gonschak, can- didate 23rd Senatorial District. Wilkins and Intervale Ave. Speakers James Steele, candidate Fourth Assembly District; B. Larkin and Abraham Dranow. Lydig and Cruger Ave. aninounced, Speakers to be VOTE COMMUNIST Unemployment and Social In- surance at the evrense ef the state eand employers. {POST | PRI “| large majority, speech fight for the right | Communist { | rectly with Morris Hillquit in carry- jing through this program he said. In DAIL MS Ww ORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, oc TOBER ee 1932 TERS? PAY CUT NOTICE and File Must pare Struggle tank YORK. cent w le notices of a cut on day work a 3 on nigh age f others, today The notices will dec inning with the fise: n most shops, the contract which the | bosses proposed, and which the ex- | ecutive council of the International , Typographical Union ordered the New | |York membership to accept, but which they voted down by over- whelming majority in a referendum | ja week ago. | In voting down the proposed con- | tract, the printers voted on another part of the referendum ballot, that they preferred strike or lockout to the contract. Printers Must Act. | Local officials of the union, who | have made‘a pretense of fighting the | wage cut but have not prepared for | strike action, said yesterday that they | were trying to get President Howard on the long distance telephone in In- dianapolis, but could not reach him. In a previous case, President How- ard ruled that mere posting of wage | cut notices was not “an overt act” and that the union was defied only when actual short pay was given— | which, if this delay tactic is used this time, may mean a week or ten days. The rank and file wants to fight the wage cut. Now is its time to pre- pare its own struggle! Dowtown Unemployed | Parade Tomorrow for Communist Candidates The Downtown Unemployed Coun- | cil will hold a parade tomorrow | | night to start from Seventh St. and} Avenue A. This parade is an elec- tion parade to support the Commu- | nist Party and the candidates in the} | lower East Side. The Downtown Un- employed Council endorsed the Com- munist Party because this is the only Party that struggles for the unem- ployed for immediate relief and for | unemployment insurance. 4 One of the speakers will be Milton Stone, Communist candidate in the 14th Senatorial District, one of the leaders of the Oct. 16, 1930, Unem- ployed Delegation when Mayor Walker said, “When do we serve ice cream?” and ordered the police to/ club the delegation and to jail them. On Oct. 27, at 8 p.m., there will} be an indoor meeting at Stuyvesant Casino, 142 Second Ave., to ratify the candidates of the Communist Party | ang to rally the workers to vote Com- | munist on election day. 3,000 APPLAUD RED CANDIDATE, |Block Midtown Street at Rally | |. More than 3,000 workers blocked | 36th St. between Eighth and Ninth Aves. today at noon when they assem- bled to hear William W. Weinstone, Red candidate for the U. S. Senate, as he gave the Communist election program and discussed the situation | of the needle trades workers in the light of the election campaign Wein- stone pointed out that the workers in the needle trades industry have been severely hit by the crisis. He recalled the Governors’ Com- mission in 1927 which proposed to “stabilize” the industry by carrying through a process of reorganization which gave employers the right to} fire, which speeded up production and | which established larger productive units. But instead the workers were driven to the lowest level. Sweat shop conditions became general in the in- dustry. On top of that has come the crisis which has made the situation of the needle trades workers unbear- able, he explained, The A. F. of L. headed by members of the Socialist Party had worked di- fact Roosevelt, Lehman, A. F. of L. officials, and socialists, together with the New York city government under Walker, constituted one block with the manufacturers against the needle tredes workers, When, therefore, Hiliquit says he is opposed to wage cuts, the sincerity of the Socialist position can be found in the wage cuts, speed-up arid sweat shop conditions which they helped to bring about, Weinstone pointed out that the Communists in the Needle Trades in- dustry had worked side by side with the rank and file workers to oppose these conditions as they are today fighting against capitalist attacks. Weinstone showed that the collapse of the needle trades industry as the collapse of capitalist industry gener- ally called for a change in the entire system. This could be brought about only by class struggle. To work co- operatively with the employers as the socialists and the A. F. of L. chiefs had done, brings only a worsening sit- uation. The working class has the power to fundamentally change the whole system of society by establish- ment of a Workers’ and Farmers’ Government, by taking over the in- dustries and establishing the seven- hour day and social insurance and by a whole program of reconstruction on the basis of a Workers’ and Farmers’ Government —lift themselves from their present misery, Weinstone said. PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA The Philharmonic Orchestra, un- der the direction of Arturo Toscanini, will give their next concert at Car- negie Hall on Thursday evening. The program: Mendelssohn's Symphony in A major (“Italian”, Busoni's “Berceuse Elegiaque” and “Rondo Ar- lecchinesco”; Strauss’ “Don Juan.” This program will be repeated on Friday afternoon at Carnegie and on Sunday afterncon at the Metropol- Patterson Speaks Tomorrow Exposes Moon, Poston Lies Slanderers of ppear and Debaie Their Charges Challenges | To é * NEW YORK.—Wi yer of New York will the: nd Theedore Poston shou |. 125 West 130th ids of ihe Soviet Union, he the film “Black “To Henry Lee Moon, “To Theodore Poston: “In the Amsterdam News and Seviet Union. been abandoned, not true. | rights for Negroes in America. “Furthermore, the entire film race lines have been smashed. the truth of the matter.” of them to come at that time end place and debo‘e on their ” was abandened” beans the Seviet Union where the THE CHALLENGE. Patierson’s challenge to Moen and Postion is as fellows: have appeared under your name making certain “You have charged the film of Negro life, | which you and twenty other American Negroes went to Moscow, “You charge that the reason is, that the Soviet Union has aban- doned its championship of the oppressed peoples, has allowed itself to | be influenced by American race prejudice, and permitted American engineers to persuade it to abandon the film ‘Black and White’ with | | the hope, as you express it, of gaining the recognition of Americe. | “But all the facts as I know them show that these accusations are Moreover, the capitalist press, which sneers at our people and is one of our worst enemies, has seized with joy on your statements | | and is using them in an attempt to discredit the Soviet Union and to | | break down the growing struggle of Negro and white workers for equal such outstanding leaders as Langston Hughes, leading Negro poet, Lor- | en Miller and Louise Thompson, have stated in unmistakable language that your accusations are untrue; that the film ‘Black and White’ has not been abandoned, but postponed until next spring; that technical difficulties alone led to its postponement; that, furthermore, the con- tracts of the group have been fulfilled to the letter. “The film group as a whole has charged you with spreading false statements against the Soviet Union, which is the only country where “I therefore challenge you to meet me in debate on Thursday, Oct. 27th, at 8 p, m., at St. Lukes Hall, 125 W. 130th St. | Harlem and the Negroes of America in general are entitled to know Baviee Union | articies charges against the | | in many other newspapers, lack and | group except yourselves, including | | The people of Big New. Program for Nearing Will Debate Pioneer Rally, Sunday William. L. Patterson, Communisi | candidate for mayor, and M. J. Ol- gin, Communist candidate for Con- gress will speak at the main celebra- tion of the 12th International Chil- dren’s Week, October 30, at 2 p.m, at Central Opera House, 67th St, and Third Ave, Something new and exciting is be- ing prepared for the celebration by the Young Pioneers. A new play de- picting the lives of the child laborers and children living off Home Relief Buro; a Pioneer Kitchen Orchestra of | over 50; new songs, and a new mass recitation written by Harry Allen Po- | tawkin, “Lead Us, O Workers”, which shows the Pioneers at their best. Tickets are only 25 pennies in ad- vance and 35 cents at the door. Chil- dren: a penny-a-piece and six for a nickel, > Help Force Release South River Victims; Attend Mass Meeting The campaign conducted by the | International Labor Defense to fight terror in South River, where the | workers are fighting against starva- tion wages, will go along into full swing at a mass meeting tomorrow at Webster Hall, 119 E. 11th St. at 8 p.m. ‘The International Labor Defense calls upon all workers to come to this meeting to protest against the arrest of many strikers and to demand their immediate release. The meeting will be addressed by Ben Gold of the Needle Trades and by Carl Hacker, organizer of the LL.D. Mary Gal and Helen Brodskin two South River strikers, will also speak at this mass meeting. MMTH STREET NEW YORK Tel. Algonquin 3356-8843 We Carry a Full Line of STATIONERY AT SPECIAL PRICES for Organizations 29 EAST HEAR WALDO FRANK, ELMER RICE, MALCOLM COWLEY, HUGO GELLERT, JAMES RORTY EUGENE GORDON, JOHN HERRMANN, DONALD HENDERSON, EARL BROWDER SYMPOSIUM on “Why We Vote Communist” Tonight on U.S.S.R. NEW YORK. — Professor Scott Nearing, who has recently returned | from the Soviet Union, is debating with Dr. William P, Montague, pro- fessor of philosophy at Columbia Uni- versity on the subject—“Has Soviet Russia Found the Only Way Out of the Crisis?”—at the Irving Plaza, 15th St. and Irving Pl., at 8 p.m. Scott Nearing, who has recently traveled through Europe, was pres- ent at the Amsterdam Anti-War Con- gress and also spent some time in Germany, as well as in the Soviet Union, HATHAWAY DEBATES O'NEAL TONIGHT Clarence Hathaway, Communist candidate for the 3d Congressional District, will debate James O'Neal, so- cialist, on election issues, tonight at Masonic Hall at Woodside, L. I., un- der the auspices of the, Woodman Sick and Death Benefit, Branch 44. Monday's issue the Daily Worker etroneously stated the debate would be in Masonic Hall at Astoria; be- cause of a typographical error, DEBATE held under the auspices of FRIENDS OF THE SOVIET UNION NEW YORK DISTRICT “Has Soviet Russia Found the Only Way Out of the Crisis?” Yes— Prof. Scott Nearing Just returned from the Soviet Union No— \ Dr. Wm. P. Montague tf Philosophy at ‘olumbia University at IRVING PLAZA Irving Place and 15th Street Wednesday, Oct. 26 AT 8 P. M. ADMISSION 50 CENTS TICKETS IN ADVANCE AT FRIENDS OF SOVIET UNION, 799 BROADWAY, ROOM 330; ALSO AT THE BOOK SHOP 50 EAST 18TH STREET. Ee | Woods in New Move to. The union was served with pap2rs Monday evening. The affidavits pre \sented by the boss and the notorious; labor-bater, Woods, consist of the} |to go scabbing at the Diana. |on account of the firm’s | slipper workers at the Irving Plaza, SEEK TO ENJOIN DIANA STRIKERS Fight Shoe Union NEW YOR: ‘The Diana Shoe Co. off Av Brooklyn, has begun e to get cut an injunction once ; rst the Independent Shos | ion in 1929, and which trving to apply to the the Shoe and Union. | company ent strike led by Leather Workers’ Industriel same Hes as in previous injunctions. The strike is in full swing and the ands solid in their readiness ht for equal division of work, | against a lay-off and wage-cuts, for the right to be organized under the banner of their Industrial Union. The shoe manufacturers’ scab agency, the Board of Trade, uses a detective burenu at 50 Court St. to fool workers through advertis2menis The Kingston Slipper Co. was de- clared on sirike yesterday morning refusal to le prices on new work with the iP committee. The shop is lo- cated at 584 Broadway. Preparations are in full force for the mass meeting of all shoe and j Irving Flats ang 15th St. New York City, at 7 pm. Thursday night. Bi¢ Crowd Expected Tonight at Election Dance, Webster Hall ‘The Dance and Cabaret being held tonight by the Independent Commit- tee for Support of Foster and Ford, at Webster Hall, promises to dupli-, cate the unprecedented attendance of last week's banquet, it is already evi- dent from the sale of tickets. John Howard Lawson, John Herr- mann, Joseph Freeman, Sidney How- ard, James Rorty and the John Reed Club and other internatiozal’ known writers, artists, playwrights and in- tellectuals haye reserved boxes. The cabaret will include an unusual entertainment: the first recital of new original “Depression Ditties” with guitar, by Margaret Larkin; Bobby Lewis of the Group Theatre in Po- litical Satires; Negro tap dancers and wandering minstrels; Oriental music cycle and other features. Joseph Free- man will be master of ceremonies. Clarence Hathaway, campaign manager of the Communist Party campaign, will speak on “Election Campaign Issues Confronting Pro- fessionals, Intellectuals and the Working Class of America.” Tickets are 75 cents in advance on sale at the headquarters of the Inde- pendent Committee for Support of Foster. and Ford, Room 340, 799 Broadway, phone Gramercy 5-5443. Tonight! DANCE & CABARET WEBSTER HALL 119 EAST llth STREET q < VERNON ANDRADE'S HARLEM ORCHESTRA < Entertainment Features: FIRST PUBLIC RECITAL OF ORIG- INAL “DEPRESSION DITTIES” By MARGARET LARKIN, NEGRO TAP DANCERS AND WAN- DERING MINSTRELS. JOHN REED CLUB ARTISTS, ETC, Garment District SERVE queen TO HEALTH SEVERN’S CAFETERIA 7th Avenue at 30th St. Best Food at Workers Prices At COOPER UNION—suNDAY, OCT. Both Tk P.M, A NINTH ST. and FOURTH AVE, fe. ¥. ©. Only Meeting Under Leag: Groups for Foster fe nd. Ford This will be the only election mi held under the auspices of th Professional Groups for Foster Admission 25¢ — Reserved Section 506 & $1 TICKETS AT Washington Square Bookstore, 27 W. 8th Bt. Dauber and Pine, 66 Fifth Ave, John Reed Club, 68 W. 15th St, _Workers Book Shop, 50 E. 13th ‘st. __ Bronx Brooklyn WORKERS—EAT AT THE Parkway Cafeteria Peed PITKIN AVENUY Brocklyo, N. ¥ Clarence Hathaway John Howard Lawson Joseph Freeman 4 INDEPENDENT COMMITTEE FOR SUPPORT OF FOSTER & FORD 799 BROADWAY Room 340 Phone GRamercy 5-443 ‘Tickets 7he in advance — $1 at door On sale at headquatters—also at Workers Bookshop, 50 East 13th St. and other centers {ntern’l Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT ‘80 FIFTH AVENUE loth FLOOR AU Work Uunw Under Versonal Care UK. JOSEPABON ‘Communist Candidate , {Industrial Union, which William L. j ilized the hundreds of scamen who| 'have been thrown out of jobs by the | “economy” |Mass Farewell for for Mayor to Address| Seamen This Noon NEW YORK.—Hoover's refusal to} see the delegation of 10 seamen who made specific demands for relief of unemployed marine workers will be one of the chief points for discussion at a meeting of the Marine Workers’ Patterson, Communist candidate for Mayor of New York City, will address Wednesday noon on the waterfront. The Marine Workers’ Industrial Union announced that it has mob- program of the bosses, to hear Patterson explain why seamen are ignored in their demands for the right to work by the capitalist class. Red Aid Delegates The International Labor Defense has arranged a mass farewell for its delegates to the Fifth World Con- gress of the International Red Aid Thursday, October 27, at Webster Hall, 119 E. 11th St., at 8 p.m. This farewell will be utilized to con- tinue the campaign of the Interna- tional Labor Defense to fight capi- talist terror. The meeting will be addressed Carl Hacker, national organi: of | the International Labor Defense, one of the delegates to the world con- gress. WEINSTEIN TO SPEAK The Brownsville Branch of the In- ternational Labor Defense is arrang- ing an affair for the benefit of the Weinstein Defense to be held on Wednesday, October 26, at Brcowns- ville Youth Center, 105 Thatforg Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y., 8 p.m. BUNDLE ORDERS FOR SPECIAL 15th SOVIET ANNIVERSARY EDI- TION MUST REACH THE DAILY WORKER BY NOVEMBER FIRST! FIGHT GROWS ON ARMORY THEFT Workers Urged to Aid In Harlem Picketing The fight is growing to get back the wages stolen from the Negro and white workers at the 69th Regiment Armory at 143d St. between Lenox and Seventh Aves. Workers of all mass organizations, especially mem- bers of the Unemployed Councils, the Workers’ Ex-servicemen’s League, and the revolutionary trade unions are urged to report at the Workers’ Cen- ter at 650 Lenox Ave. to distribute Jeaflets and take part in picketing in the struggle against the thefts in which Tammany Hall and American Federation officials and the contrac- They enthusiastically appluded him Workers employed in construction at the 60th Regiment Armory were forced to turn back $2.90 of their pay every day, which was divided up by A. F, of L. and Tammany officials and the contractor. When some work- ers protested, the union delegate re- ported them to the contractor, who fired them. A hearing was held last Saturday by Prial, Comptroller Berry's assist- | ant, which was obviously intended to whitewash the officials. The hearing will be continued next Saturday. Meanwhile picketing is going on ev- ery day at the armory, and noon hour meetings are being held every day at 143d St. and Lennox Ave, All workers are urged to join and also to wire pro- \| tests to Comptroller Berry against the unfair hearings . PURSE FOUND AT SCOTTSBORO MEET Found, purse with money, at Scottsboro demonstration in Union Square. Apply to 2700 Bronx Park East, Apt. X-34, in the morning, 7,000 paid-in-advance bundle or ders by November 1, ANNOUNCEMENT. Dr. Louis L. Schwartz SURGEON DENTIST ‘Announces The removal of his office to larger quarters at 1 Union Square (8th Floor) Suite 843 Tel. ALgonquin, 4-9805 DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 Bristol Street (Bet. Pitkin & Sutter Ayes.) B’kiyn PHONE: DICKENS 2-3012 Office Hours: 8-10 A.M., 1-2, 6-8 P.M. 7TH BIG WEEK ‘GOONA-GOON A’ WATCH FOR SOVIET 15TH ANNIVERSARY FiLM YEAI “WASHINGTON BWAY i MERRY-GO-ROUND” LEE TRACY end CONSTANCE CUMMINGS Daily to 2 P.M. Me~11 P.M. co close S8e pa American Premiere—Now Pisying The Cultui 1 Revolution in the U.S.S.R. THE || LAST INSULT ‘The revolt of Russia's children against superstition and reaction—a sequel to ‘Road to Life” THE N. ¥. TIMES SAY “The Soviet producers bave sent over a worthy companion film to ‘The Road to Life’... is tin instructive worsers Acme Theatre 11th Street and Union Square JEFFERSON Wednesday to Friday—2 Features “ISLE OF PARADISE” Romance of Island of Bali Vth Street and 3rd Ave. ‘THE CROOKED CIRCLE’ with Ben Lyon and Irene Purcell cmc REPERTORY 1: st.estn av. ) acc WA, 9-1450, 500, $1, $1.50 Evs. 8:30 Mats, Wed. & Sat. 2:30 EVA LE GALLIENNE, Director 6th YEAR opens wea. Eve. 8:00 LO Me eee THE THEATRE GUILD presents THe GOOD EARTH dramatized by Owen Davis and Donald Davis from the PULITZER PRIZE NOVEL By Pearl §. Back guttp get band ¥. of Broadway MEN MUST FIGHT “SOMETHING WORTHY OF RESPECT. . . LYCEUM Theatre, W. 45th St. BR. 9-0546 Evgs. $1.00 to $3.50 Mats. THURS, & Sat. MERICANA‘:,; “An intelligent and ‘ta a grand se —Garland, SHUBERT THE, Eves. 8:30, Matinees Wed. & Sat. at 2:30 THE GROUP THEATRE presents SUCCESS STORY By JOHN HOWARD LAWSON Maxine Elliott's Thea, 39th, E. of B’ fvs. 6:30 Matinees Wed. & Sat. at 2 OUNSELOR-AT-LAW wit BY PAUL MUNI ELMER RICE PLYMOUTH THEA. W. 45th. LA, 4-0720 Eves, 8:30. Mats. Thurs. & Sat., 2:30 se BUNDLE ORDERS FOR SPECIAL 15th SOVIET ANNIVERSARY EDI- TION MUST REACH THE DAILY WORKER BY NOVEMBER FIRST! Phone Tomkins Sq. 6-9554 John’s Restaurant SPWCIALTY: ITALIAN 1 4 pl with #fmonp! where all radicals vw 302 E. 12th St. New Yoru ATEE (TION COMBADES! Health Center Cafeteria | WORKEKS CENTER 50 EAST 13th STREET Patronize the Health Center Cateteris and help the Revolutionary Movement REASONABLE PRICES OPEN SUNDAYS LIDO DELL’ EAST Italian Restaurant 325 EAST TH STREET New York City COMRADELY ATMOSPHERE JADE MOPNTAIN American & Chinese Restaurant 197 SECOND AVENUE Bet. 12 & 13 Welcome to Our Comrades PuRITY QUALITY SUTTER Vegeterian and Dairy Restaurant 589 SUTTER AVE. (Cor. George) B'ktyn LIVE IN A— itan Opera House > WORKERS COOPERATIVE COLONY We have a limited number of $ and 4 room apartments NO INVESTMENT NECESSARY — OPPOsITE BRONX PARK 2800 BRONX PARK KAST Comradely atmosphere—In this Cooperative Colony you will find library, athletic director, workroom for children, workers’ clubs and various cultural activities Hstabrook 8-1400; Olinville 2-6972 Take Lexington Avenue train to White Plains Road and Get off Allerton Avenue ee. Office oped trom: 9 a. a, tu & pom Saturday Won. m, to 5 p.m, Sunday very day; 9 a, m. (o 5 p.m. GET YOUR RESERVED iru NOW] Speakers: WM. Z. FOSTER for the 15TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION of the RUSSIAN REVOLUTION and FINAL ELECTION SUNDAY. NOVEMBER 6, AT 7:00 P. M. MADISON SQUARE GARDEN 50th Street and Eighth Avenue pletion of RALLY COMMUNIST CANDIDATE FOR PRESIDENT I.-AMTER CANDIDATE FOR GOVERNOR H. SHEPPARD CANDIDATE FOR LIEUTENANT-GOVERNOB Pageant of the Successful Com First Five-Year Plan WORKERS CHORUS OF 500 W. I. R. BAND Admission with this coupon 35 cents. At the door 40 cents. free tickets issued by the Unemployed Couns cils.—ONLY 1, PURCHASED AT 50 EAST 13th STREET, Unemployed admitted with 500 SEATS AT $1.00 TO BE

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