The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 1, 1932, Page 2

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PAGE TWO 200,000 BRITISH SPINNERS START STRIKE STRUGGLE Reject 8 Per Cent Pay Cut Agreed to By Union Heads {ANCHESTER, Oct. 31 With 70,000 Lancashire cotton spin- ners already striking this 170,000 already pledged to walk out end the possibility that the rest of ) morning, | | Front | | ie D THE 5 gAVED NAT \ON oar [yr SAVED: EW YORK, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 195 2 VOTE FoR e~F ROOSEVELT ~ Y TARVAT| J a SEporrAtioN=—| he 200,000 will soon be out—the sec- one great battle against mill wage | cuts started todas The 200,000 weavers who struck against a wage cut in August, were sold out by the union leaders in Sep- tember. They went back to work with a wage cut, not quite as large @ cut ,Jhowever, as the employers de- aanded before the strike The leaders of the Spinners Fed- ration, mostly Labor Party (the brother of the Norman Thomas party n the U. S.) henchmen, ied to do heir selling before the strike started. The employers demanded a cut of a shilling, eight pence half penny per pound. The union leaders held con- ferences long enough to prevent a joint strike of the spinners and the weavers, then agreed with the em- ployers on a wage cut of one shilling, THAELMAN CALLS -FOR BIG RED VOTE |Week-End_ Political | Collisions in Germany (Cable by Inprecorr) | BERLIN, Oct. 31—Speaking before a giant mass meeting in Munich, Sunday, Ernst Thaelman, leader of the Communist Party of Germany, | Writers’ Group Pledges Support} of W.L. Patterson NEW YORK.—A group of writers, including Malcolm Cowley, one of the editors of the New Republic; Edmund Wilson, literary critic; Isidor Schnei- der, Louis Colman, author of “Lum-| ber”; James Rorty, poet, and Countee Culien, Negro poet, issued a joint statement yesterday, in which they amid thunderous theers and applause, | pledge their support in the New York six pence half penny on the pound. | assailed the leaders of the fascist and | That is a reduction of 25 cents on| socialist parties and appealed for the | cach $3.28 in wages or about eight | formation of a revolutionary united | per cent wage cut. . | front, | The rank and file of the union, | ; seeing this wage cut as the opening] The vast crowd arose and gave the | wedge in a series of cuts voted down | Communist leader a resounding ova~ | the agreement submitted to them by | tion when he called for all votes for their union officials, and the strike | Communism next Sunday. started. Rail Strike Looms. The railway unions have already rejected all and every wage cut of- fered them by the owners. The Na- tional Wage Board is now reported about to announce a ten per cent cut for railway workers. It will bring a strike. The board must give a de- cision before Christmas, according to the British law. WHITE RUSSIANS SUPPORT HOOVER Demonstrate Against) Them, Nov. 12 NEW YORK.—A group of Russian white guardists have organized a New York Republican Club for the sup- port of Hoover. In the “Rusakaya Gazetta’—New York white guardist paper of, Sep- tember 2nd, 1932—there is an arti- cle by N. A. Melnikoff, which reads as follows: “Which of the two presidential candidates (Hoover and Roosevelt) can give better support to our Rus- sian demands and upon whom can we rely more for aid in support of our Russian hopes and expectations? In the person of President Hoover, we find a definite opponent to rec- ognition of the Soviet Union and one who understands well the Russian psychology and Russian character. by personal experience in the pre-revolu- times and what it became the domination of the Bolshe- to acquaint the workers nese white guardist activities snd organize to combat them, the Friends of the Soviet Union is hold- ing @ mass Anti-White Guardist Demonstration on Saturday, Nov- 12 at 2p. m. at 7th Street and | All working class organ- | are asked to join along the east side with ban- iS. U. of their intentions. Cops Attack Linel Cafeteria Strikers NEW YORK.—Hundreds of food workers, massing yesterday at the Linel Cafeteria, 830 Broadway, where | a strike has been in progress for the past number of weeks under the lead- | ership of the Food Workers Indus- trial Union, were viciously attacked and beaten up by uniformed thugs. A worker, T. Keene, was given a vicious beating by the police and was taken to the hospital. J. Gonzales, another food worker, was arrested: The boss, working hand in hand with the police and courts, invoked an old injunction which was taken | out in 1929 against the Amalgamated | Food Workers, To date, 35 workers | have been arrested. On Thursday, October 27, four were sentenced in Special Sessions Court to 30 days in jail. The cases of the other 31 will soon come up for sentence. The cafeteria department of the Food Workers Industrial Union will continue this fight at the Linel Cafe- teria against the injunction and until union conditions have been estab- lished. Equal rights for the Negroes and self-determination in the Black Belt. Need Watchers at Polls to Guard Communist Votes @§ watchers in polls and passing out literature near polls, N. Y. State United Front Communist Biection Campaign Committee an- mounced today. Volunteers, should apply at once to Section 1, at 96 Ave. C; in Section 2, at 56 W. 95th St.; in Section 4, at 200 w. 198th St.; in Section 5, at 569 Prospect Ave.; in Section 6, at 61 Geaham Ave.; in Section 7, at 1108 45th St. Brooklyn; in Sec- t'on 8, at 1813 Pitkin Ave., and in Section 16, at 1200 Intervale Ave.; #1so at Room No. 506, 50 W. 13th| | Si. Section 2 will hold a watchers’ meeting on Monday, Oct. 31, at 8 hte at the Jugo Slav Hail, 131 W. ist ae * in the and slogans and to notify the | Political collisions occurred through- out Germany during the week end, in which two were killed and many | | wounded. Fierce fighting broke out lin Hamburg between fascists and | anti-fascist workers. On Saturday | fascists fireq on a group of Reich- | banner workers, killing one and seri- ously wounding another. Workers compelled the police to arrest the | murderer. On Sunday the fascists fired at Communist workers, wounding 4 | worker named Schwartz. The police | thereupon sided in with the fascists, | attacked the workers, and shot a | worker, Boroviski. In Duisburg workers and fascists | collided, the fascists firing and killing ‘a thirteen-year-old school boy, Hoff- man. Other collisions resulted in a crop of injured and many arrests. '1,800 Defy K. K. K. | Threats Come Hear Shepard in Brooklyn NEW YORK.—Between 1,500 and 1,800 workers attended an open-air meeting in Borough Hall, Brooklyn, |Saturday, which was addressed by | Henry Shepard, Communist candi- York, in defiance of the Ku Klux Klan, which flooded the district with leaflets against Communism and with | the threat, “Communism will not be tolerated; Ku Klux Klan Rides Again.” In the audience were many | Negro workers, This district has been marked by jraids on foreign-born workers, and lmany workers are being held by |Doak’s Labor Department for depor- | taitons into fascist countries. Shepard stressed the suffering of the Negro and foreign-born workers, and urged unity of all workers in their struggles for the right to live and against deportations. Bronx Brass Foundry |Workers Continue to iStrike Against Cut The moulders of the Bronx Brass Foundry are still on strike, deter- mined to carry on until the bosses wtihdraw the last wage cut, which amounts to $3 a week. The strike is on for the fourth week and the bosses could not get enough efficient scabs to turn out the work, | due to the fact that the rank and file |of the Moulders Union Local 87 of | the American Federation of Labor are in_ solidarity with the strikers. The Metal Workers Industrial Union calls upon all members and sympathizers to help picket the shop every morning. The shop is at 137t’s Street and Fifth Avenue, Will Present Program of Sports Events at Election Meet Friday An election rally and sport carnival has been arranged by the Labor Sports Union, together with the In- dependent Committee for the Election | of Foster and Ford. This rally marks | the first attempt to bring the Com- |munist Party program before thou- sands of young workers in boss-con- | trolled sport organizations. Earl Browder, National Secretary of the Communist Party, will speak. | The program for this affair will include workers defense sport exhibi- |tion in the form of boxing bouts, wrestling bouts, jiu jitsu exhibitgpns, ang other events. The rally will take place this Friday | evening November 4, at Manhattan More volunteers sre urgently| | Lyceum, 66 Bast 4th Street. Admis- needed to help safeguard the! |sion is only 35 cents. Proceeds will Communist vote Noy. 8 by acting| | 0 to the election campaign, Two Evictions Fought ‘by Workers of 2nd St. Under the leadership of the |Downtown Unemployed Council, Second St. between Ave. B. and C., jin one eviction the workers forced the landlord to move the family’s furniture to another house, and | forced the Home Relief Bureau to | pay the rent. In the second eviction, while the | workers were returning the furniture to the workers ‘house, about 50 cops arrived in riot cars and mercilessly attacked the workers, beating some so severely that they are now in a a 's car date for Lieutenant-Governor of New| City election to William L. Petterson, Communist candidate for Mayor. The statement issued by the group points out that “conditions in New York City reflect in a concentrated manner the misery of the masses throughout the United States,” with the number of unemployed workers at 1,150,000, with evictions and sui- cides increasing because of intoler- able conditions among workers in the city. Special emphasis is iaid on the condition of the Negro population in Harlem, where 60 per cent of the workers are without jobs and where the rate of infant mortality exceeds that of any other district in the city. Only the Communist Party is pledged to make great changes in the present situation, “which is a result of the capitalist sysetm,” the writers’ joint statement declares, “The nomination of William L. Patterson .. . is symbolic of the sin- cere and effective effort of the Com- munist Party to unite both white and Negro workers in their common strug- gle for establishing a new society based on the ownership by the people of municipal and national resources, and based on the equal opportunity to work.” The statement concludes with: “We, therefore, pledge our support in the New York City election to the Communist Party and its candidate, William L, Patterson, and call upon all educators, writers, engineers, so- cial workers, artists, architects and intellectuals in general residing in New York City to join us in this) move to form a ‘William L. Patterson Committee.’ ” Harlem Outdoor Meets for Election Drive A series of open-air election meet- ings will be held in Harlem this week to bring before the Negro workers in this district the Communist Election Program and the Communist program for uniting Negro and white workers | in their common struggle for relief in | this crisis, Lawrence Campbellt, candidate in the 20th Senatorial District, A. Wil- liams and Fitz will speak at a meet- ing which will be held Wednesday, 1 pm., ,at 142d Street and Seventh Avenue. At 4 pm, on the same day, Elinor Henderson, candidate in the 2ist Congressional District, will speak at 124th Street and Fifth Ave-| nue. She will also speak at 7 p.m. at 140th Street and Seventh Avenue. Sam Nessin will speak at 7 p.m., at 138th Street and Eighth Avenue, while A. Williams will be the main speaker at 7 p.m, at 137th Street and Lenox Avenue, Job Grievance Group Wins More Victories NEW YORK.—The Sixth Ave. job Grievance Committee reports more victories in its fight against the job sharks. In a recent case, a worker who was married and had several children had paid the Herald Tribune Employ- ment Agency $8 for a “steady job” at $60 a month.. After working a few days he was laid off. The agency refused to return his deposit. He applied at all possible sources to get his money returned but failed, Finally he remembered the job grievance committee, from’ a leaflet in his pocket. The committee sent a committee of five with the worker to the shark, and in 10 minutes the committee got the money. In another case a worker paid 75 cents as part deposit. The job lasted only a few days. Members of the job grievance committee got his money back from the shark in 15 minutes, Weinstone at Food Union Election Debate NEW YORK.—Tomorrow night, Wednesday, at 8:30 p.m. at the Irving Plaza at the corner of East 15th Street and Irving Place, William W. Weinstone, candidate of the Com- munist Party for United States Sen- ator from New York, will point out why all food workers should vote the straight Communist ticket. Ex-Magis- trate Goldstein will present the posi- tion of Tammany Hall and the Dem- ocratic Party. The Republicans and Socialists are also expected to have their representatives on hand. William Albertson, editor of the Food Worker, official organ of the Food Workers Industrial Union and Communist candidate for State Sen- ator from the 12th Senatorial Dis- trict, will act as chairman, Daily Worker Chorus Meets Wednesdays The "Daily Worker Chorus” meets every Wednesday evening at 8:30 at KRAMER GUILTY OF CHAUVINISM Workers’ Jury Votes) Expulsion NEW YORK.—Nat Kramer, old Communist Party member, was found guilty of white chauvinism at a work- ers’ mass trial held Sunday at Am- bassador Hall, 3861 Third Ave. The following are the decisions of the workers’ jury as to Kramer: | Boss terson, ADMIT CHILDREN | STARVING HERE Patterson Charges made by William L. Pat-| Communist Mayor, at a meeting of the Citizens Budget Commission in Carnegie Hall last week that the politicians are will- ing to starve workers’ Report Proves) Charges candidate for | children in ranks of the Communist Party. the mass be expelled from them also. to perform the following tasks: a) 1. That he be expelled from the 2, That the jury recommend to organizations of which Ralph Kramer is a member that he 3. That after his expulsion he is order to protect the interests of bankers gained special significance when a report made public Sunday by the Emergency Relief Committee | stated that more than 20 per cent of children attending public schools in New York City suffer from bad food That Ralph Kramer shall is- sue a statement to be publisheg. in all Party press admitting his white chauvinist errors and pledging him- self to overcome them. b) That Kramer will undertake to sell at least 25 Liberators of every issue. c) That he shall become active in the Third Ave. and Claremont Ave. Parkway Negro section of the Bronx and be made responsible to build up a strong Branch of the L.S.N.R. fighting for the daily struggles of the Negro workers in that territory. a) That he shall be in the fore- front of the struggle for the release of Jimmy Ford, young Negro’ Pioneer leader arrested for his participation in front of the Bronxdale Swimming Pool and sentenced for one year im- prisonment by Judge De Lucas, In arriving at these decisions the jury also came to the conclusion that it is not Comrade Kramer alone who entertains white chauvinist tenden- cies within the Party and the labor movement. We therefore call upon the Party to initiate and conduct a fearless and most persistent fight against all manifastations of white chauvinism in the ranks of the Party, and hunger. Hillquit, who spoke at the same meeting, made no mention of the plight of workers’ school children in this city, nor did he demand, as did Patterson, that the rich be taxed by | providing free lunches for school children. According to the report by the Emergency Relief Committee, 160,000 school children were examined, and! of these 22,748 showed effects of malnutrition, or 3 per cent more than in the winter of 1929-1930. The Com- | mittee admitted that these conditions | are caused by unemployment. | In preparing the 1933 budget for New York City, Tammany not only failed to appropriate funds for un- employment relief and for clothing and food for school clildren, but in response to pressure by Wall Street made cuts in the appropriation for care of crippled children, Tammany was roundly scored for this by William L. Patterson in his address at the meeting helq by the Citizens Budget Commission, while Hillquit, the Socialist, and Pounds, the Republican, ignored the entire question, On the eve of the Soviet Union’s clothing and hot ranks of the working class. COPY STATE OF WISCONSIN CIVIL COURT Of Milwaukee County Uniawful Detainer Summons Served < 71037 Sh en AL.B 0 U Plaintiff's Attorney Soe coe “Cudahy Enterprise, Cudahy, Wis, This is an eviction order signed Al Benson. who sent us this wrote: “It might that we are inventing things,” unions, mass organizations and in the Fruit of the S. P. Tree by the Milwaukee socialist sheriff, Milwaukee workers be a good idea to photostat it, and put it alongside the enclosed story, to answer the cry of the socialists triumphant 15th Anniversary, Hillquit lodged a masked attack on the work- ers’ government in a speech made in the Rand School, quotations of which were published in the New York Times yesterday, in which he declared that New York City is “being ruled by a dictatorship of bankers more insdiious and despotic than the Communist dictatorship ruling in Moscow.’ Hillquit, who failed to at- tack Wall Street at the budget meet- ing in Carnegie Hall, adds proof of his enmity against the working class by using his staunch friend, the capi- talist press, to put the Workers Gov- ernment in the Soviet Union and Wall Street in the same category. Patterson, who made a study of the minority. race problem in the Soviet Union, has been a consistent and constant defender of the Workers Re- public, CIVIC REPERTORY THEATRE “Liliom,” by Molnar, in which Jos- eph Schildkraut and Eva Le Gal- lienne play the principal roles, will open the second week's program this evening at the Civic Repertory Thea- tre. The play will be repeated on Wednesday and Saturday evenings. Other plays of the week include “The Three Sisters,” by Tchekov, on Tues- day and Friday evenings; “Camille,” Wednesday matinee and Thursday night, and “Peter Pan” on Saturday matinee. Nov. 3 Deadline for Greetings to Soviet Union Thru “Daily” Workers and organizations have until Thursday, Nov. 1, to send heir gretings to the 15th Soviet Anniversary edition of the Daily Worker. Rush all greetings immediately! Get your club or branch to send its organization greeting! Make the November 7th edition of the Daily an expression of your solidarity with the workers and peasants of the U. S. S. R.! Labor Union Meetings METAL WORKERS ‘The Metal Workers’ Industrial Union has invited the candidates of all political par- tles to present the platform and program of their respective party at @ symposium to be held on Friday, Nov, 8 pin, at Irving Plaza, 15th St. and Irving Place. The Communist Party has notified the union that it will send ©. A. Hathaway, || national campaign manager, to the sym- posium. Admission is free, oe LAUNDRY WORKERS The Laundry Workers’ Industrial Unton has arranged an election symposium to discuss the issues of the election campaign for Sunday, Nov. 6, at 11 a.m, All political parties have been invited to send repre- sentatives, ‘The symposium takes place in the Union Hall, 260 E. 138th St., corner ‘Third Ave., Bronx, Intern’! Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 15th FLOOR AU Work Done Under Persona) Care of DR. JOSEPASON Attention Comrades! OPEN SUNDAYS Health Center Cafeteria 15 Hast Third St. All workers are inviter Workers Center — 50 FB. 13th St. Quality Food Reasonable Prices EAT AT TRE ROYAL CAFETERIA 827 BROADWAY Between 12th & 15th Bts,) Royal Dishes for the Proletariat OUR WORKERS MEMBERS OF F.W.1.U. COH Eyes Examined by Registered Optometrist Attendance 117 ORCHARD STREET (First door off Delancey) Hospital Prescriptions Filled EN’S e Big Increases in N. Y. Evictions Shown by Report NEW YORK.—A large increase in evictions of unemployed workers in New York for September, 1932, as| compared with September, 1931, is re- ported by Frank J. Taylor, Public Welfare Commissioner, who admitted that the only thing the Home Relief Bureau proposed to do is to move families to worse rooms unfit to live in, or to engage in @ pretense of con- ferences with the landlords so as to lull the worker into a sense of se- curity while the marshal gets ready to throw out the furniture. The budget of th: Home Relief Bureau, Taylor said, is “limited” in regard to rent payments. Landlords filed 27,387 dispossess petitions last September, as compared with 17,859 in September, 1931. Only by a militant struggls, through organized block committees and un- employed councils, will the workers put a stop to these evictions. And only the Communist: Party maintains a day-to-day struggle against land- Jords who through unemployed work- ers out. Fight evictions. Build strong block committess. Vote Communist on Nov. 8 RALLY VETS FOR WOULD COLLECT DUES BY FORCE | Barbers’ Local 560 Officials Threaten NEW YORK.—Barbers Local 560 have not been paying dues because they get no results from their union membership. When the organizers appear at a shop, they never even ask what wages a man is getting, but just demand the dues. Secretary Seafitta and Organizer Travellj called a special meeting on October 27 at 1301 Boston Road. Only 50 appeared for the meeting. Both organizers spoke, “If you don’t come across with dues some members will get hurt. Tell your friencs that, too. We will collect dues by force, If everybody gets in the way, they wil get hurt too.” This last remark was to prevent anybody from taking the floor against them. One member did ask: “What about conditions in the shops? “This we'll see about later,” said the officials. They claimed that they had not been paid their salary for the last few weeks, because not enough dues came in, but they added: “Now we'll get paid plenty for it.” ‘The dues are $2.50 a month if paid the first, and $3 after that. (A. F, of L.) has 600 members. Many | McKEE REFUSES TO HEAR JOBLESS AT OPEN HEARING Watches Cops Attempt to Eject Stone, Ends 7 Minute Session NEW YORK.—Mayor McKee at an open hearing on the 1933 budget yes+ terday afternoon refused the floor representatives of the unemployed, watched as police try to evict the del. egates, and finally adjourned the meeting in order that the delegates should not be heard. He closed the hearing seven minutes after opening it. Milton Stone, one of the delegates and Communist Candidate for Sen« ate in the 14th Senatorial District, arose during the 7-jminute “public” hearing, and started to voice the de- mands of the jobless. “You're unheard,” the chubby may- or said. “Sit down,” the cops chimed in. But Stone held his ground, until McKee desperately ended the hear- ing. In the meantime, the cops had dragged out Sol Harper, Negro ex- serviceman, from the front benches in the hearing room which were “re- served for city officials.” Harper is on the executive committee of the Workers Ex-Servicemen’s League. McKee's conference with bankers in the morning, however, was held in secret and lasted four hours, The Unemployed Council delegates tried also to participate in this conference, |but were refused admission by the | police; quite obviously because the mayer and the bankers were secretly bergaining away the rights of the jobless and the small-salaried city employes. The representatives were sent by the United Front Conference for Winter Relief, held yesterday with almost 500 delegates representing about 62,000 workers in nearly 300 working class organizations. Later, in the evening the capitalist press announced that the bankers had “refused to grant a loan of: $30,000,000 for relici.” Unemployment and Social = surance at the expense of the state and employers. ANNOUNCEMENT Dr. Louis L. Schwartz NOV. 4th MARCH Many Meetings Called | For Today | The veterans are rallying through- out the city today in several mess | meetings in preparation for the | march to City Hall Nov. 4th to de- mand cash relief from the city for veterans ex-servicemen and the un- employed. Vet Recruiting Stations Post 35 of the Bronx has established a recruiting station, and will conduct @ parade of veterans throughout the Bronx today. Next week other Posts will establish recruiting stations and on Wednesday, Nov. 3rd, the veterans will hold a mass meeting in one of the downtown institutions rallying the veterans to demand that the Board of Estimate pass a resolution against the Hoover Bloody Thursday act. Conference Nov, 13 The veterans are planning a Big Mass and Delegate Conference on Nov. 13th, at which time final plans will be made for the march to Washington. In the meantime Wal- ter Trumbell and other National Or- ganizers are carrying on an intensive campaign in the New England States in the Middle West, and in the Middle East. Garment District WORKERS PATRONIZE CENTURY CAFETERIA 154 West 28th Street Proietarian Prices Pure Food Classified WANTED COUPLE OR GIRL to share ap- artment in Bronx. Come to talk it over at 1954 Unionport Re: Apt. 6F, (Bronx ion), or ask for M. K., Box ith floor, GO E. 13th Bronx COMRADES, PATRONIZE GRADE “A” DAIRY PRODUCTS Morrisania Stock Farms, Inc. SURGEON DENTIST Announces The removal of his office to larger quarters at 1 Union Square (8th Floor) Suite 803 ‘Tel. ALgonquin 4-9805 DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 Bristol Street (Bet. Pitkin & Sutter Aves.) B’klyn PHONE: DICKENS 2-3012 Office Hours: 8-10 A.M., 1-2, 6-8 P.M. AMUSEMENTS There's Always a Better Show at R.K.O. AYFAIR 33% 40 St. “WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND” LSE TRACY end CONSTANCE CUMMINGS [WHE Daily 00 2PM. 35¢—U1 P. M. co clove Se 7TH BIG WEEK ‘GOONA-GOONA’ WATCH FOR SOVIET 15TH ANNIVERSARY FILM uy R.K,O. Thrift Books and Save 10% CC OUNSELOR-AT-LAW me. WITH PAUL MUNI PLYMOUTH THFA., W. 45th. LA, 4.6720 Mats. Thurs. é& Sat., 2:30 MUST FIGHT | MEN A Vital Play “IT I8 A STIRRING PLAY’—N. Y. SUN LYCEUM Theatre, W. 45th St. — BR. 9-0546 Bygs. $1.00 to $3.50 Mats. THURS. & Sat. What Is Your Section Doing for the Daily Worker's Circulation Drive? BY ELMER RICE) ‘THE THEATRE GUILD presents THE GOOD EARTH dramatized by Owen Davis and Donald Davis) from the PULITZER PRIZE NOVEL By Pearl S. Buck GUILD THEA., 52nd St., W. of Broadway 50c, $1, $1.50 Evs, 8:30 Mats. Wed. & Sat, 2:30 EVA LE GALLIENNE, Director Tonight, Wed. (a LILIOM? ‘Tues. & Fri. Eves. R-K-O JEFFERSON 1 &. TODAY TO TUESDAY—2 Features Vani ity Stree’ g with CHARLES BICKFORD REGINALD 6; . > Haye Strange Justice “Vigorous and invigorating entertain ment. Full of color and rhythm.” SHUBERT TMEA., 44th St., W. of Bway Byes. 8:30. Matinees Wed. é& Sat. at 2:30 AMERICANA‘ nats <N. Y. SUN Good Balcony Seats at $1, $1.50 and $2.00 THE GROUP THEATRE presents SUCCESS STORY By JOHN HOWARD LAWSON Maxine Elliott’s Thea,, 39th, 5. of B'way | Bvs. 6:30 Matinees Wed. & Sat. at 2:30 AT ELECTION N Tuesday, November CLARENCE Will analyze the results of the steps in the struggle of the workers. 883 Tinton Ave. Bronx, N.Y. for the CELEBRATION and HOSPITAL TH Write Gold Filled Zyl shel Lense: Manhattan HESTER ST. 122 Between Bowery Open Daily from 9 AND OCULIST PRESCRIP- (ONS FILLED AT 50% OFF Sunday 19 to 4 Frames Optical Co. & Christi to7 N.Y, FINAL ELECTION MADISON SQUARE Orchard 4-0230 15TH ANNIVERSARY RUSSIAN REVOLUTION SUNDAY. NOVEMBER 6. AT 7:00 P. M. 50th Street and Highth Avenue JADMISSION 35 CENTS Meet the Communist Candidates and LISTEN TO ELECTION RETURNS At IRVING PLAZA HALL . 15th Street and Irving Place Manager, National Communist Election Campaign THE IGHT DANCE Sth, 1932 at 8 P. M. HATHAWAY Elections and outline the next WITH THIS COUPON 2 CENTS| LT IIE MEE ATEN ERT GET YOUR RESERVED SEATNOW | Speakers: WM. Z. FOSTER COMMUNIST CANDIDATE FOR PRESIDENT I. AMTER WM. PATTERSON CANDIDATE FOR pletion of RALLY Admission wi GARDEN ceils —ONLY door 40 cents. free tickets issued by the Unemployed Coune GOVERNOR CANDIDATE FOR MAYOR Pageant of the Successful Com- First Five-Year Plan WORKERS CHORUS OF 500 W. I. R. BAND th this coupon 35 cents. At the Unemployed admitted with 1,500 SEATS AT $1.00 TO BE PURCHASED AT 50 EAST 13th STREET, — Eve. 8:30, Mats. Thursday & Saturday 2:30) (IVIC_REPERTORY 45.400, 4%. 14th Bt. &

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