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PAGE Two Amter, Nessin Speak. on Communist Program 4+HURSDAY DAILY WORKER, yasee a anal Today in Cloak Market LEADING COMMUNISTS SPEAK AT MANY ELECTION MEETS TODAY, Debates at Harlem Y ae Club and Italian Pro-| letarian Club; Outdoor Meetings le |] | are “Will Stand with Auto Workers in U.S.S.R. in Defending. Workers’ Fatherland” NEW YORK.— Continuing its intense activity in the final lap of the election drive, the various sections of the New York State United Front Com- Call for Watchers To Guard Communist | Votes at Elections || NEW YORK.— urgently safeguard the Communist vote, the} | | United Front Election Committee | nounced today in a statement | a ‘PIC KET MEYER | DORFMAN TODAY! Strikers Ww il] Fight De- spite Injunction HITLER FORGERY IN GERMANY Swindles, Murder Grow Before Elections watchers | order to! needed in NEW (Cable by Inprecorr) only will the politicans}|the Meyer ‘ BERLIN, Noy. 2.—As, the date of Voters before election| | Wednesday trike head- | the general election approaches press at 101 Grant St., voted to|swindles and street collisions are i 1 masses and call on all work- | creasing. The National and Fascist » picket Meyer Dorfman | Press has published a forged docu- Is they will do} possib! to eliminate) r the Communist candi r the votes are c quarte to ers munist Election Campaign Committee will hold a series of outdoor and in- door meetings today and Friday, with leading candidates of the Communist Proved by past ex- te of the temporary injunction a- | Party as main speakers. 3 ea ahsaniscns | , attempt to steal or} st picketing. Leaders in the] Needle Trade Rally fe pbs e | throw out, the Communist vote, | Trades Workers Industrial a noon’ dag waite wil 1a to- | Hall, Third Ave. and Claremont Park- “Tt is necessary that every Party| | Union spoke at the meeting. Among | day in the cloak manufacturing cen- | ¥#Y; 9% 8:30 p.m. tonight with Sam | | member and sympathizer should be} /them were: Joe Rappaport. Charles ter, 29th St. between 7th and eth |Nesin at main speaker, d for November 8th to| | Nimeroff and Sarah Chernoff. Aves., with Israel Amter, Gub | Italian Workers Symposium ate in the work of safe- keting took place today as us- | torial candidate, and Sam fesin, An election symposium will be held Communist vote. Five were arrested. A total of | leader of the unemployed, as main | ‘night, 8 p.m. in the Italian’ Prolet- aff of the Interna-| /73 have been arrested since the speak ages arian Club, in Galileo Temple, Mont- zed| | strike started four week ago. They Moisaye Olgin Banquet rose Ave. between Lorimer and Union ecial “Broup of law to give| have all been paroled. Deportation | «| An election banquet will be held for |4ve. Clarence Hathaway, candidat 1 protection to wo voting| | charges are being brought up against | in the 3rd C. 1 District jen November 8th and to e: |watchers. All those volunte candidatein District, this Moisaye Olgin, Congressional the 2 represent the Commi ction ing ‘at 218 Bedford St, in | ment supposed to be a “secret circular of the Communist Part executive Central Committee” contai. ig de- tailed instructions for a Bolshevist insurrection on November 15th. The Knitting Mills, Sarah Chernoff. Hearing on the in- | | junction is Monday. in Golden Gates Garden, 1 German, Hungarian Meet | polactin) aiteas Gaon moe Three Wage Cuts ton Road. In addition to 0) George Siskind will be the main ha tor other won aaa ‘The 150 strikers are as determined Browder, candidate in the eaker at an election meeting of at ones to the following] |S ever to force the company to res- gressional District, will man and Hungarian workers of | | section headquarters “| \eind the last three wage cuts, to} banqueteers. Previous to rkville this g in the La ection 1, 96 Ave. C: Section 2,] |shorten the hours, to recognize the | quet, Olgin wlil address an election West 25th Si Section 4, 200 |shop committee and the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union, meeting at the Verband Cooperative Watchers Meet Thursday . 135th St.; Section 5, 569 Pros- Houses in the Bronx, Volunteers to act as watchers on | | pect Ave.;; Section 6, 61 Graham|| The employers of knit goods mills Shulman at Zukunft Club y will meet this evenin | Ave.; Section 7, 1109-45th St.: supporting the Meyer Dorfman Rubin Shulman, candidate in the |in Section 1, at 96 Avenue C; in sec- | |S 8, 1813 Pitkin Ave.;; Sec-| n with a leaflet, purporting to 6th District, will be the | tion 7, at 1109-45th St.; at 8p,m., and | | tion 15° 1200 Intervale Ave. Vol-| ned by a “Committee of Ten.” main s this evening in the|in Brighton Beach, at 3159 Coney Is-| | unteers can apply also to Room ten are is not stated and the Zukunft Club, 31 Second Ave land Avenue | 506, 50 East 13th § St. bosses want it thought they are work- Hyman in Williamsburgh LE Were Wa rte | ers. But the leaflet is from the em- Louis Hyman will be the main |ployers. It holds up the old bogey speaker at an election meeting to- PICKET SUPREI ME yy BRIEN | Ei that better wages won here will cause night in Williamsburgh Mansion 17 the mills to move to New Jersey, It ‘urners Workers Club Meet _| mentions two mills, Seabord Fabric An election meeting today, at 8:30 and Rubycraft, which signed agree- pm, at the Turner Workers Club, 940 Morris Ave., Bronx, will be ae eddre: by Nathan naffer, can- District 4th sembly 2 in the on Workers Wide Support ction Symposium Harlem Progr Youth Club will hold an elect 2 its headquarters, Ave., is evening, 8 WASHINGTON, D. C., Nov Negro and white representatives of orggnizations totalling more than a! Sar. quarter million members will march | hunger march to demand side by side in a picket line before the Protest cutting off of what United States Supreme Court Monday, 10 2. m. on behalf of the nine innocent Scottsboro Negro boys, | front struggle ag: even of whom have been condemned |fer unemployment insur: to death, William L. Patterson, na-|against the starvation tional secretary of the International jor it is a demonstration of tens Labor Defense, announced today Prospective picketers include a del- ly prominent | Negroes facing legal lynching relief t Par- i peak at this E. Taft will present mn. candidate in the trict, will speak ith St. and rally, calling on workers for ce, fist Congr tonight, @ ialist cet war, or to demand release 1 egation of nation t ] also | Writers of the National Committee for|of the demonstrations. in Union Sq dat noo» today at 137th St.|the Defense of Political Prisoners,!ate against the strike breaking in- and 5th Ave.; today et 3 nm. at 142nq| Which numbers in its membership | junctions of Tammany judges; some St. and 7th Ave. and at 139nd St. and| Theodore Dreiser rwood Ander- mobilizations to fight wage cuts on, and Waldo shops vill visit the head Major Erne: demanding “ The Scottsboro lynch verdicts were | ¢ it Oc- Lmox Ave. at 8 p. Women’s Council Rally n’'s Coxnel will ssador | oo reviewed by the Supreme Cot 9 |tober 10, “The Supreme Court,” Pat-| scale against ell who fight for relief, | What's On— terson said, “has withheld its decision |erainst Negro discrimination or a- due to political expedienc: He | gains’ stagger plan wage cuts. He is Y a! Mateebas pointed out {hat withholding the de- | rromising the banker rulers of New CITY ELECTION . panquet tor | cisions was‘a decision in itseif—a|York that his government will feed Second Ave., at Comrade St pm, Ad Alabama rulin; The silence of the | cig ims it has a bev wor Same in Other Cities Supreme instead broad impartiality. built abou. ginning to will of the ruli gton Ti at 8 p.m. Comrades meet at School 16th St DIE WORKERS. “DEFEAT POLICE poay. eir neighborhoods, poned. send 5 plans. O'Brie Workers Bensonhurst pat My at COURT NOV. 7TH ROOSEVELT PLAN Scottsboro Protest Has Calls for Police to War little they next | Were getting, or it is a Communist | , united st wage cuts and and m. itself, thousands of workers against imper- Some | or other in- ¢ down to O'Brien e threatenine is terror on a wide decision to further the plans of the clubs and bullets to the hungry this 1 to fasten lynch | winter instead of food. He is prom- ng deportaticn end arrests to for- ops and for relief amon Ld the bread ram shows | ments with the N.T.W.LU., and then tnoved. , It forgets to mention that the union follows them to New Jer- sey, and compels them to keep their agreement there. | Fear Organization The leaflet also attacks the Com- (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) | munists, the best leaders of the work- ing class, and threatens, “Once you} join it (the Communist Party) you | “or have no chance of getting a job any- | where.” But the workers know that | ‘strong organization is a better way | |to keep their jobs than just doing | what the boss wants, Furthermore, | a worker of any political opinion can join the Needle Trades Workers In- dustrial Union. of PLANS MARCH AID Mobilization and preparations to render medical aid to the National Hunger Marchers when they go to Washington, will be discussed at an |urgent meeting of the Medical Aid Unit of the Workers International Relief, tomorrow at 8.30 p. m. at 146 | Fifth Ave. Doctors, nurses, dentists and druggists, who are members of the unit, as well as sympathizers are urged to attend. of NOTES THURSDAY. NOV. 8, 1932 Election Rally Thursday, Nov. 3, at 1013 Ave. at 8:30 p.m. Main speaker Levy, candidate of C. P. for As- , [definite p! 1 life of] Acainst this onen t almilar nA. D. Admlasion tree, ; the country me Court is | t ¢ threats of the Mi ohiedn con- . @ist St. at 8 p.m. Speaker: & weapon of fir rence of police chiefs, the Commun- | Stevens ruling class. The Pasescalia ton ee 1 Oth St, and 6th Ave. at noon, Union g¢ Communist League Demonstration St. and Ave. A at 8 p.m. Speaker: 1013 E. Tremont Ave. y, candidate in 7th As- , and other candidates. ‘Tremont Aves. Speakers: Berger, J. Schiller and Rub’ 4 Intervale Ave. Speakers: Lillian Ross and Ruth Glasser. and White Plains Rd. Speak- Alfred Sultan, Richard Ford, Leo Ta-| 3 | n's | &t., Brooklyn—Thursday night at 8:30 p.m. < ans i SSE REET | Be ene SMe 2000 Beat, Off Riot tt j, James Btecle, Dave Do | Middle Bronx U. moved from 1487 x a e Brea Are. 10 439 © Squad; Hear Amte1 Would Fascize Youth ("tiasbougal are Bleecker at 8 pm. Spenk- . OBri . his later | ¢s: M. LeVers. M. Cullen. Bronx Section ; | Ludlow and Delancey St. at 8 p.m. Speak- Working Women Forming solid ranks, about 2,000 |@nd appeal to the youth es- | er: Harry Beilinson. at a = Needle Trades Workers gave battle! spore to a part in enti- ome atten Sonbea Pitt St. at 8 p.m. Speaker: a3 ove eaking i tone. Soviet Union, speaker. turned aside squads of police who |™ le was speaking to| St. and Ave. A at 8 p.m. Speaker: ‘ tried to stop an election meeting ad- |Young men and women guests of the | z, Joe Counell 27 open-air meeting t at ed by Isreel Amter, Communist | T@mmany chief Curry at Hotel Astor,} ‘Tenth St. and Ave. C at &@ p.m. Speaker: eorgia Av oe te gine ss land calle he: of ome | R. Shulman. “Ogata ber ss ndidate for Governor of New York, |®nd called on them to “Join some | RUMIEMD. 4 ave B at 8 pm. Speaker: m aA 8th St. endtth: Avene, Wedne: | political organization” and “form an|, Th St. sn pwntown U. C. has 38th St. and 6th ss ‘ % Geventh St. to 95 Ave. B, noon, The police department ;2*™my of support to the government | ‘i4tn d Ave. A at 8 p.m. Speaker: cee he tides of Communism and | B. Casanov. called the riot squad into action, but | ®#ainst t Seventh St. and Second Ave, at 8 p.m. SF thee Moped cont so formidable and militant was the |Sccialism now rising in the country.” | sever 1. Behwartz solid chain of workers cround the |, Give {ote aneer oo e De atic | ““tath Ave. and 43rd St. Speaker: Mf. atform from which Amter spoke |? 9rty Ma as ydeaosstodl Bike Poke | with more organization and more| Kings Wighway and 14th St. Speakers: P thet the cops were helpless. Amter. defended bv spoke for about an hour during which he opened a sharp fire on Herbert Lehman, Democratic candidate f -| Governor, who recently helped c* throvgh a 2 cut of 10 per cent on | the cloakma struggle, |the National Hunger March! auspices Jim © mirsion 10 cents. Open-air electior meet Thursd at 8 pue., cerer Steinway Earl Browder, candidate in th? | Revolutienery, No aie Congressional District, and Louis Hy- | p man, addressed an audience of about] NEW YORK—Under the leader-| 500 fur workers Wednesday noon in| the fur center. The meeting sched- | uled to take place at 39th St. and 7th Club, white and Negro workers this city will commemorate on Nov. Ppetial mesting Ba and Hairdressers | Ave. was brutally attacked by police. | the 101st anniversary of the murder | Teeque ai Workers’ Center, 80 E. 13th St. The workers dispersed by this attack, | of Nat ‘Turner, herole Negro revolu- BE ES) Pam Thursday night puecuion of vallied at a nearby location and there | tionary leader, by the slave owners of ¢ sg * stood their ground against the police | Virginia, aideq by the United States cae x és who were prevented from stopping | Government. aD Tan Stanbatias taceun, 20 B Fourth || | either Hyman or Browder from| The memorial meeting will be held | Bt, at # p.m. Admission, 50 ‘cents. peaking. at 8 o'clcok p. m., November 11. sha pen by a big Communist vote, | ci Rake }by active preparations in support of | reir, To Honer Memory of Nat Turner, Negro 11 ship of the Harlem Negro Workers | in and J. Gabin. 86th Bt. and 21st Ave, H. Lichter Speaker: J. Zaga- Attention Comrades! OPEN SUNDAYS Health Center Cafeteria Workers Center — 50 E. 13th St. Quality Food Reasonable Prices of 11, | wa7°¢ SANDWICH SOLS “LUNCH 103 University Place (Just Around the Corner) Telephone Tompkins Square 6-9780-0781 Party Executive of the Central Com- | mittee is a non-existent body and the document is an utterly idiotic forgery. The “instruction” were immediate! recognizable as a forgery. The Na- tionlaist press then sprung a new “sensation” declaring that the recent | ases of robbery and violence in-| cluding murder were actually the | work of Communist terror groups | seeking to replenish the Communist treasury although there is not the| faintest evidence offered to support | these contentions. Two Workers Killed ‘The two workers who were shot in| Hamburg on Sunday, Schwarz and| Boroyski died in the hospital yester- day making a total of three dead. Today there were fierce collisions between workers and fascists in Ham- burg with heavy shooting. Twelve were wounded including several Fas- cists. Following the collisions police cordoned the workers quarter making | mass raids and arresting over 200. Following the fascist triple murder | during the week-end the police did nothing. Navy Officer Sentenced Officer Kurt Spital was sentenced to three years hard labor by the Su- preme Court at Leipzig yesterday. He had been charged with high treason, supporting an anti-state organi- zation, insubordination, conducting Communist propaganda in the Ger- man Navy. Two Workers Jailed lfor Picketing During! Housewreckers’ Strike As a result of a strike called by the Independent Houseworkers Union property of the National Biscuit Co., | two workers were arrested orl Monday for picketing and were brought for a hearing before Magistrate Hulon Capshaw, imported from the South to sit at Jefferson Market Court. | against vicious exploitation prevailing on the job and the dragging down of wages from $1.35 an hour to 20c an hour, ‘The judge was most arouseq when | he was told by the bosses that the union has for its organizer a Negro worker and also when he saw the emblem of the union, depicting the} unity of the white and Negro workers. He convicted the workers, and held one of them, James Ptakoff, for in- vestigation. ‘The International Labor Defense is | Providing legal assistance in the case and the Independent Houseworxers Unin is asking all workers ‘organi- zations to protest against this vicious anti-labor sentence. Against capitalist terror; au™ forms ot suppression political rights of workers. against of tne r, WILLIAM BELL OPTOMETRIST 108 E. 14th St., near 4th Av. DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE sth FLOOR AU Work Done Under Versona! (: of DR. JOSEPNSON OHEN’S Eyes Examined by Registered Optometrist ii 117 ORCHARD STREET (First door off Delancey) Hospital Prescriptions Filled HELLEN’S RESTAURANT 116 University Place CORNER 13TH ST, NEW YORK CITY Intern’| Workers Order 4| |time ago | this employers’ association. |N, T. W. I. U. at once began moving | avenue. | time to have the fund administered against the Frank Morris Excavating |in this country, and that they are The workers on the job struck | fighting for the interest of the work- | | Union Gets Agreement Fur Bosses Will Pay) Jobless Ingurance, NEW YORK, xe Fur Trimmers Assocation (employers) has agreed to the demands of the fur department of the Needle Trades Workers Indus- trial Union to establish an unemp! ment insurance fund of one per cent of the payroll, to be paid entirely by the employers and to be distributed | by committees of emloyed and unem- | ployed fur workers. Further negotia- tions with regard to increasing the sums to be contributed by the em- To Visit Commissioner workers representing the Unemploy- ed Office Workers’ office of Frank J. Taylor, OFFICE WORKERS | fet. irving Plaza DEMAND RELIEF AND High School Tonight | Rank and File leaders of the last Bonus March will tell how to force the immediate payment of the sol- diers’ bonus, at a veterans’ rank and file rally at 8 p. m. tonight at Wash- A delegation of unemployed office lege ales inter oe dpving Negro and white ex-servicemen, their wives and their buddies, are | urged to come to the meeting, “Shall we demand our bonus now or wait until 1945 and get nothing,” the call 1 i V | Taylor Today Council, tomor- will call at the Commis- | ow at 12:30 p.m. ployers will be held next July, “if conditions do not improve.” The N, T. W. I. U. furriers some won an agreement with |sioner of Public Welfare, 50 Lafay- jette Street, to demand $1 daily cash | |relief of all unemployed office work- Without |eTs, regardless of race, color or creed. letting it remain a mere paper con-|Other workers so desiring may join tract, as is the case with agreements | the delegation by attending a meet- obtained by the right wing unions, the|ing at 11 am. tomorrow at 94 th to have the details of the contract | worked out ang the victory won by| In the name of thousands of job- the furriers secured. |less office workers in New York, the This is the first time employers | council has addressed a letter to have b-en made to contribute the total| Commissioner Taylor demanding to cost of insurance and at the same/|be heard tomorrow . Demands for | agency service for office workers and the elimination of racketeering agen- cies, for free food, clothing and she)- ter for jobless office workers, for jobs and for no discrimination, is to be |presented by the delegation, in addi- ie to the demand for $1 daily re- | lief. Hoover Attacks USSR, | Amter Will ill Answer It | NEW YORK—The New York Dis- tele of the Friends ,of the Soviet ; inion give its reply to Hoover's Election Campaign Committee, I. Am- | stateme! ter, candidate for Governor on the ian Wesel e cee | Communist Party ticket declares, that | pepeame edi a on Thursday evening, Nov. 3, at Irving’) “In replying to the State Teachers | Piaza Hall, 1 Association in New York, Mr. Dono- | place at 8 p. se Rolahed and Irving | - van and Mr. Lehman have shown clearly that they do not understand! Hoover stated that the Soviet Union what the education of the children | WaS responsible for the World Crisis. | means. They both declare that there | Israel Amter, Communist candidate should be a free education and a/| for Governor of New York State has competent and adequately paid | accepted the F. S. U.’s invitation to teacher . . .. Our children will re-|Teply in an address on the Hoover- ceive the best education if taught by | British “attack upon the Soviet Union. ‘competent teachers.” by the workers, DONOVAN, LEHMAN FLOUT HUNGRY Communists Demand} Lunches for Children NEW YORK.—In a statement is- sued yesterday by the United Front for the rally asks. HEAR ELECTION DEBATE TONIGHT Tonight at 8 p.m, Rubin Shul- man, Communist candidate from the Sixth Assembly District, will expose the fake programs of the Democratic, Republican and Socialist parties at a symposium at Irving Plaza Hall. This symposium has been arranged by the workers of 14th, 15th and 16th Streets, and all workers are invited to attend. Although all the parties have been invited, so far only Judge Goldstein, a former magistrate of New York City, has promised to appear for the Democratic Party. Admission to the symposium is free. NEW ISSUE OF LITBERATOR The new issue of the Liberator whcih is just off the press contains jthe following interesting features: An Appeal of the Ford-Foster Com- mittee for Equal Rights: An Appeal to American Negroes. Franklin D. Roosevelt's Career of Negro Suppression. A Poem by Langston Hughes. From Serfs to Rulers—How Soviet Russia Freed the National Minorities by Liston M. Oak. Rush your bundle orders to the Li- berator office, Room 201, 50 East 13th St., at once. Is it not a fact that President Hoo- | Ver on May 1, Child Health Day, de- clared that there are from six to ten million children who are under- nourished in this country? Is it not a fact that Governor Roosevelt stated only a few weeks ago that there are six million undernourished children ANNOUNCEMENT Dr. Louis L. Schwartz SURGEON DENTIST Announces The removal of his office to larger quarters at 1 Union Square (8th Floor) Suite 803 Tel. ALgonquin 4-9805 fainting from hunger at their desks. If this is the case we ask what is the 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, use of talking about “free education” and “the best that can be provided for the children in this country?” Therefore, the Communist Party, ing class and its children has car- ried on a struggle against the starva- tion of the children in the schools. ; The Communist Party is demanding | tree lunch, food, clothing and shoes for the children; unemployment re- liefy and insurance at the expense of the bosses and the government. I. L. D. MOVIE “The End of St. Petersburg,” will be the motion picture shown, and re- freshments will be served, tonight at 8.30 p. m. at the new headquarters of the Harry Simms Branch of the I. L, D., 1207 Quentin Road, ‘Brook- lyn, N, Y. Admission 15 cents. Garment “WASHINGTON = GO-ROUND* UR TRACY ond CONSTANCE CUMMINGS Daily to 2 P.M. 38011 P.M. co close $5 STH BIG WEEK ‘GOON A-GOON'A” WATCH FOR SOVIET ISTH ANNIVERSARY FILM Buy B.K,0. Thrift Books and Save 10% Biyhegee stags ak “LAW ean ; . PAUL MUNI Bouts ‘RICE ‘MEN MUsT FIGHT |“IT IS A STIRRING PLAY”—N, | LYCEUM Theatre, W. 45th St. BR. 9-0546 | Evgs. $1.00 to $3.50 Mats. THURS. & Sat. Mth St. & | R-K-O JEFFERSON ‘st 4 WEDNESDAY to FRIDAY—2 Features with EVELYN ‘The Crusader’ BRENT vw, My Pal the King’ MERICANA auyi2% ur with PHIL BAKER & Company of 80 International Barber Shop |) 123 WEST 28th STREET Near N.T.W.LU. Building Y. SUN Garment Section Workers Patronize Navarr Cafeteria 333 7th AVENUE Corner 28th St. —— Starting Tomorrow (Friday) New Soviet Film American Premiere “ANUSH” (The Armenian) An enchanting ture of this known country the U.S.S.R. worxers Acme Theatre 14th Street and Union Square Last Day—“TROIKA” (IVIC_ REPERTORY 14 5¢-40n 47. 50c, $1, $1.50 Evs. 8:80 Mats, Wed. & Sat. 2:80 gE Director Tonight Seats Four Weeks in Advanc and Town Hall 118 W. ard st a Sat. E THE THEATRE GUILD presents THE GOOD EARTH dramatized by Owen Davis and Donald Davis from the PULITZER PRIZE NOVEL By Pearl 8. Buck GUILD THEA., 52nd St., W. of Broadway Eve, 8:30, Mats. Thursday & Saturday 2:30 THE GROUP THEATRE Presents SuCccESs STORY By John Howard Lawson of Biway 2:40 Cooperative Dining Club ALLERTON AVENUE Cor, Bronx Park East AT f ELECTION N Tuesday, November Pure Foods Clasisfied WANTED COUPLE OR GIRL to share ap-| artment in Bronx, Come to talk it over it Unionport Apt OB, (re for M. K., Box | floor, 50 E. 13th! Proletarian Prices LARGE LIGHT ROOM IN BRONX—All Im- ments. With comrades. East 169th near Boston Road. See A. W., Daily 8th floo BEAUTIFUL FURNISHED ROOM—Light, 2 Will analyze the results of the steps in the struggle of the workers. windows. With comrades. 136 East 17th St., Room 21, |MMBADMISSION 35 CENTS SHUBERT THEA., 41th St, W. of B’way| Maxine Elliotts Thea., 39h, E. B ronx Eves. 8:30. Matinees Wed. & Sat, at 2:30|Evs. 8:40 Mat. Wed., Sat & Elec. MEET YOUR COMRADES AT THE ‘Meet the Communist Candidates and' LISTEN TO ELECTION RETURNS THE IGHT DANCE 8th, 1932 at 8 P. M. | At IRVING PLAZA HALL 15th Street and Irving Place | CLARENCE HATHAWAY Manager, National Communist Election Campaign Elections and outline the next WITH THIS COUPON 2 CENT! 5TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION SPEAKERS: ‘ WM. Z. FOSTER PAGEANT OF THE COMMUNIST CANDIDATE FOR PRESIDENT SUCCESSRUL COM” | , |,AMTER _| WM. PATTERSO bees 4s : CANDIDATE FOR GOVERNOR | FIVE-YEAR PLAN DMISSION with this coupon 35 cents. At the door 40 cents, admitted with free tickets ONLY 1,500 SEATS AT $1.00 TO BE PURCHASED AT 50 GET YOUR RESERVED SEAT NOW CANDIDATE FOR MAYOR issued by the Unemployed Councils, Ww. Unemployed E. 13th ST, — LG RA EE Ee WORKERS’ CHORUS Madison Square Garden “tisnin"sven of the RUSSIAN REVOLUTION and FINAL ELECTION RALLY 50th Street and Py 4