The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 9, 1932, Page 2

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PRESS FIGHT FOR SCOTTSBORO BOYS Demand Opeck-Orloff Release at Pa. PITTSBURGH, Penn., N huge ‘mass meeting be here jn celebration of t victory will take the fo demonsiration which signal to the workers here fight for the eight vic! terror is only begi: intensified until fin: tional release of the § a is secured. The meeting wil place on November 10 Walton Hall, 220 Pittsburgh. The principal will be William Patterson, y of the I. L. D. and Communist candi- | ate for Mayor in New York City. | Demand Opeck-Orloff Freedom. ‘The meeting will also demand im- mediate release of the two miners, Opeck and Orloff who are to be tried on November 21st on charges of mur- der. Ofrloff's wife will speak at the | meeting, and workers will be asked to attend the trial in mass to sup- port the defense and protest against this attempt of the mine companies to legally murder two militant work- ers. Resolutions are to be passed | demanding the immediate release of ‘Tom Mooney and other |class war prisoners. Hunger March Issue | Of Daily to Appear | Saturday, Nov. 12th | On Thursday, Nov. 17th the Daily Worker will appear in a page special edition on the National Hunger March, containing a com- plete map of the route as well as leading articles and directives on tho March. | It is of the utmost importance | that every employed as well as| | unemployed worker get a copy of | this issue of the Daily Worker in order to guide him on this tre- mendous march on Washington for winter relief, to take place Dec. 5th | at the opening of Congress. District Daily Worker agents as | well as all workers’ organizations |are asked to place orders imme- |diately for extra bundles of this \issue. Wire orders without delay | | as the time is short! | 26 FACE MUTINY CHARGE | HALIFAX, Nova Scotia, Nov. 8—| ‘Twenty-six Spanish sailors will arrive here prisoners of the Nova Scotian government, slated for trial in Spain for mutiny. They were fishermen and crew of the Spanish ship Euskalera and refused to work when they were} not given enough drinking water. Workers Organize New, Correspondence Group. “The New York Workers Corres- pondence Group,” to meet at 8 p. m. every Monday at the Pen and Ham- mer Headquarters, 114 West 121st St., has been formed by a group of| workers, in order to coordinate such acivities. The new group will work to develop new and larger cadres of worker correspondents, as well as to organize those already thus engaged. Labor Union Meetings UPHOLSTERERS ‘A merabership meeting of the upholsterers | will be held tonight at 7:30 p.m. at the es' Industrial Union, 818 Broadway, near 13th St. DRESSMAKERS | An important meeting of shop chai delegates and active members of the dress trade has been arranged for Thursday right after work, at the o:ce of the Union. The main p ot business ‘at the meeti tion of the coming str trade, FURRIERS ‘This coming Thursday a m workers will be ployment fund and the future completely unionizing of the asso shops will be discussed and definite pl desided upon. All fur are calle upon to come to this im F | WHITE GOODS WORKERS | An importi membership meeting white goods will be ers hel ‘Thursday at 7 p.m. at the offi Union, 181 W. 28th St. At this meeting | & new trade committee will be eelcted many other important probic will discussed. All comrades who + in the underwear trade should come to this meet- without fail. Labor Sports SOCCER RESULTS The following are the results of ML gdibwas Pager Its Of | of strikers from the Dorfman Ki the soceer games played over the |; Mil. will) be. Held’ this vcard weok-end by the soccer teams of the | pont ee “Miller’s Grat Labor Sports Union: \s bail periph aide A Juventus, 2; Red Sparks, 0 Spartacus, Olympic, 1. | Torino, 0; Italian American, 0. | Italian Workers’ Club, 3; Falcon, 3. B | Maccabees, 4; Ecuador, 2. Palonio, 1; Red Sparks, 0. Spartacus, 3; Neckwear, 1. Juventus, 2; Fichte, 0, Hl Maple, 2; Pirates, 0. | c CWonial, 1; Hero, 0. Juventus, 2; Hinsdale Wkrs. Club, 1. Mexicen. 0; Red Sparks, 0. What's On—- WEDNESDAY Volunteer Help Wanted Friends of the Soviet Union need volun- for addressing envelopes, inserting, all dey. Call 799 Broadway, Room 330 rker Chorus Rehearsal at 18 E. Third St. at 9°30 p.m, All workers urged to join, N. Y, U. Social Problems Club meeting Subject: Revolution.” ‘Washington Square College FRIDAY 16th Anniver- Room 806, All invited. Armistice Day Anti-War mass meet ‘Webster Mall, 119 , 11th St. Speak SPREAD THE “DAILY” CO Meet |* |there will ‘| watchers had been e. “| JOHN REFD SCHOOLS STARTS | NOVEMBER 1 The John Reeq Club Art School IN NEW YORK NOVEMBER 13! SHOE WORKER THE DAILY WORKER On mber 13 there will be held suprort | | | es rt c t 10 a.m. a ethods », 142 . the shoe workers have found | in the Dail tauncnA su) porter in the f against the s er a n example tho role the last he Daily Wo! the “Constitu- * the Un- vities of tional E ion and the str’ rid of this most v ious stool-pigeon agency In inst injunctions the Da in its pages. | through articles and editori: help- | ed to open the eyes of the wor! to the role and connections of political machine, police and the bosses. We find that not only sui but it also serves as an organizer az advisor in the course of struggle ahd courts | Unfortunat connection he- tween the U shops and close enou the Dail Union wh to improve the Daily Worker by plying to paper inform about the activiti organization. It must help to br into the shops to build up a corr shop co! ondents so as to bring the “Daily” closer to the needs of the workers in the shops. and to en-} able it to give them timely advice. is the Unic ‘The coming conference on Novem- ber 13 will have to solve the } blem of maki ‘Daily’ the | paper of the shop workers and at the same time Feln in raising the political lev Shoe wor the vember 13! eg: to onference on No- Entertainment to Aid| Hunger March, Sunday at Stuyvesant Casino NEW YORK.—Along the line of} the National Hunger March, when the | columns make their way over moun- | tains that will be icy around the time, | between towns, on long stretches of | road, warm food, blankets, shoes, are} ary to keen the marchers, whose | nee has been kened by the suffering of four years of the crisis in good condition. Field kitchens to take along with the March must be s cured. tional Relief members, all parents whose children have gone to the WIR camps, are being mobilized for the work of getting these necessities through the solidarity of the workers, by a meeting and entertainment, to be held Sunday, November 13th, at 1 o'clock, at Stuyvesant Casino. All other workers are invited to attend. Movies of the first Hunger March to Washington will be shown, musical numbers presented, For the children freshments. Mass Action Keeps Watchers at Polls| NEW YORK.—In Harlem a truck- load of Negro, white and Latin Am- erican workers went throu t trict and wherever the led in again. The politic: this in dismay but could do nothng n the face of such mass action. At 117th Street between Lenox and Fifth Avenue a Communist watcher was beaten up and ejected from the second school year on Mon- 14th, in ouarters at 450] Sixth Avenue, and will institute a new| program of coorerative project work which will be directed by such well cnown artis's as Stuyvesant Van Veen William Seigel, Anton Refregier, William Groprer, Hugo Gellert and Adolph Dehn FOR DORFMAN STRIKERS A concert end ball for the benefit nd St. | of Soviet Russia Tod: In New York all Workers Interna- | * ZA THE DAILY FIGHTS BOSS — £LECT Lapa 79 THE GHLY CONFE: RENC Ei F.S.U. Magazine Tells of Issues in Don Levine Suit In its October issus, “Soviet Rus- ia Today” published a review of Isaac De recent book, “Red moke,”” characterizes it as ie worst trash of all the anti- Soviet propaganda produced by Isaac Lev a nt d absence of al y 18 pen could pro the the it against ons, Inc., in 0,000. Th? compl t the review of his bo: plaintiff up to pubi hat it injured his r w referred to, quotes sev- nts in Levine's book, lin's regime brought | the Russian standard of living below that of China and India.” It is well known to the of “Red Smoke” and to the Editors as well as to the re- both many honest studen of sources of the’U. S. S. R,, within and outside the cour such statements are wholly Could Not Get Wages; Gets Help From Griev- ance Committee The Sixth Avenue Unemployed Council has forced’ the boss of the H. and H. Cafeteria, 1409 Sixth Ave., to pay $14.42 in wages which he tried 0 steal from a worker. The worker s employed originally at $67.50 monthly, and was to be paid onthe lst and 15th of each month He began rking Oct. 14 and on 2 he quit because of the speed- system and increasingly severe up exploitation and abuse by the boss, who said he could get plenty of work- ers to take his place at cheaper s. The boss gave him a check for $27 and told him to return “four days later” for the remainder of the money due him. When the worker returned he was told to “come back tomorrow.” When he returned the next day, the boss said to com? back “on the 15th of this month.” The worker then learneq of the Sixth Avenue Grievance Committee, 58 W. 38th St., third floor. When he explained what had happened, a delegation of called upon the boss of the H. & Cafeteria and compelled him to cash the check he had given and to p the balance of the wo "s wages. wal “Anush” at the Acme, A Film of Armenia, Old and New, Colorful There's a good r on 14th St., a Soviet film from A\ menia, produced by ‘menkino”. It i “Anush”, which is the name of the pretty girl, daughter of the Jeech-like money She gets ng fine with a hard-riding herds- man working for her father, and the herdsman gets along fine with Anush’s brother, until they trip over the cless line. It isn’t thought proper by Anush’s father that she should marry a sheep herder, nor that the shepard should throw Anush’s brother in a wrestling match. The play is full of meuntain sce: ery and beartifrl rains. with t! usual excellent photography. It ts full of colorful pageantry of coun- try dances, weddings, bull fights, etc., In the end the /brother - murders Anush’s lover, and “That is the tale the old women tell”, about the times of last century, ys the lecturer in a museum, to a new generation of 2 Armenian youth, “They were all netty bourgeois’, says ‘one of the boys, and picture cleses with the admonition: “Live, Children, but er, in Brookls not as we did V. 8. NY. oP. NE Trade Ur at 1pm. union fa’ conference. THe New York conference {s in preparation for the great national conference of representatives of sev- eral hundred A.F.L, union locals, which will be held in Cincinnati, Nov. 22, The 52nd convention of the AFL. will be meeting there at the same time, and the unemployment insurance conference will demand it endorse the Workers’ Unempioy- ment Insurance Bill. The New York Conference, how- ever, is also to plan an intensified fight for immediate city relief, and Robert M. Lovett, Stember, Simons, Mc- Parlend, Joseph Brodsky, etc. Also film of Anti-War Congress fake up the problem of the unem- ployed AFL. union members, fagod » Unemployment Conference of Locals Sunday Will Plan Fight for Relief Here, Fight the Suspension of Members. Unable To Pay Dues YORK.—The New York Conference, called by the A. F. of BL. Committee for Unemployment Insurance nd Relief, will meet mber 12, at Irving Plaza. Each local union or group in a local unemployment insurance at the exrense of the employers ard the government, is invited to elect from two to five delegates to this ~ with suspension for non-payment of dues. The Committee says: “Most of the unions nowadays do not do anything to obtain relief for their unemployed members, On the contrary, oppose such vitally neces sary measures as unemployment in- surance. At the same time they ex- pect to enforce dues payments and assessments as in prosperity days. Only a few of the better situated or- ganizations extend any kind of sol- idarity help to their members and this is in danger of being cut down or eliminated altogether.” at the P| MERTING AGAINST. WAR FRIDAY 11th To Launch World Con- ress Program NEW YORK.—A mass meeting of kers and intellectuals under the lauspices of the American Committee |for the World Congress Against War, to be held Friday night, Noy. 11th at Webster Hall, 119 East 11th Street, will constitute one of the first steps in he carrying of the plans of the | World Cong Robert M. Lovett SS. of the Chi University will head the list of speakers. A film of the World Congress at Amsterdam, in jon will be shown as part of an Jextensive program prepared for the meeting. ° The Committee has recently been enlarged in order to prepare a broad basis for an extensive campaign in defense of the Soviet Union and against the danger of a new im- perialist. war. (500 Protest Attack Of Oscar De Priest On Chicago Workers CHICAGO, Nov. 8—Defying the police ban five hundred workers dem- onstrated today at 35th and State St. near De Priest's real estate office against his bloody attack on workers at the Blackwell Memorial Church Oct. 25. Thomas and Poindexter were arrested at the Church, Today two white workers Watney | and Siedler were arrested. De Preist | refused to face the workers in order to explain his stand on Scottsboro, the p2yment of the bonus, unemploy- ment insurance, social equality for the Negroes. The speakers at the demonstration were Newton, Congressional candid- ate in the first district; Jackson, a friendly candidate in the Third Dis- trict, Poindexter, congressional can- didate in the Second District. Housewreckers Union Calls All to Report Conditions on Jobs NEW YORK.—The newly formed Independent House Wreckers Union states that wages in the industry now are down to 20 cents an hour, having been cut to this point from the $1.25 to $1.35 formerly paid, largely through the treachery of the officials of the old union, Local 95 of the Hod-Car- riers and General Laborers (A. F, L.) The Housewreckers point out that no provision against accidents is being made now, because if a man is killed, the boss can always get another for 20 cents an hour. It calls on housewreckers to send representatives from each job to the union to report conditions and make plans for struggle. It urges them to elect a committee of three on each job to conduct the strikes. Housewreckers Union headquarters are Room 232 in 799 Broadway, i | I Corporatiens Take S.P, Stand on Race Equality OKLAHOMA CITY, Okla—The Oklahoma Gas and Electric Co., the First National Bank and Trust Co., and the General Electric Supply Co., and other big corporations have gone | into the business of distorting the writings of Marx in their frantic ef- forts to turn the workers away from the revolutionary path of class strug- gle carried on by the Communist Party and the revolutionary trade unions. | In an advertisement signed and paid for by these corporations and tied in the Oklahoma Federation- sheet published by AFL. mis- lers of labor, workers are warned Ib st joining the party that fights | cial equality for Negro and white | Economic equality {s all right, the | advertisement states. but as for social | equality, that is “not Marxian,” That is in accordance with the line taken by the Socialist Party, which is the faithful agent of the big bosses in splitting the ranks of Negro and’ white workers. The Socialist Party also stresses (in words only) the need fer “economic equality,” while it either ignores-the need for “social equality,” or fights against it as in the case of its opposition to the demand for “self determination for the Negroes in the Black Belt.” COUNCIL MOVES The Downtown Unemployed Coun- cil moved to new headquarters at 96 Avenue B, corner of East 6th Street, one flight upstairs. NAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER SCOTTSBORO MASS RALLY FRIDAY Nov. 11th Meet to Spur | on Fight NEW YORK CITY.—With the tre- mendous victory won in saving the lives of the Scottsboro boys by forcing the U. S. Supreme Court to grant a new trial, the International Labor Defense will hold a Rally on Friday, Nov. 11, at St. Luke's Hall, at 125 W. 130th St., it was announced at the I. L. D. headquarters. M. Stern, district organizer of the International Labor Defense, an- nounces that “mass pressure con- ducted by the I. L. D. is vindicated in spite of Socialist Party leaders and the heads of the N. A. A. C. P. who fought against the mass pressure de- fense and who diq their bit to rail- road the boys.” At a socialist rally in the Abyssin- jan Church, Panken and Crosswaith declared that it was the Socialist Party that saved the Negro boys, The Nov, 11th Rally will expose the Socialist lies and rally the work- ers ¢0 continue the struggle to force the final release of the Scottsboro young workers. Open-air meetings and motor pa- rades will be staged all over Harlem, rallying the workers to crystallize the partial victory and continue the mass pressure. All workers are urged to attend the Rally. Come Help Picket Diana Shoe Company! NEW YORK.—Four more strikers of the Diana Shoe Co. were arrested ‘Thursday morning, and many work- ers were clubbed by the police dur- ing a demonstration at the Diana factory, 70 Wycoff Ave.,. Brooklyn. A solid mass: picket line marched by the factory, Without any warn- ings the cops at the orders of the Diana bosses charged the demonstra- tors with clubs and fists. The vici- ousness and the brutality of the po- lice, however, did not scare the work- ers away from the strike zone. The strikers are determined to continue militant demonstration and keep a watchful eye that scabs do not en- ter the factory, in spite of the in- junction. The Shoe and Leather Workers Union calls upon the shoe workers to show up at Stanhope, cor. Wycoff Ave. at the strike headquar- ters every morning and help win this strike. Alteration Painters Strike 2 More Shops NEW YORK. — Brownsville . local of the Alteration Painters Union has declared strikes against H. Doniger, 648 Franklin Ave. Brooklyn, and D. Kriemsky, 320 Empire Blyd., Brook- lyn, A total of 14 men are striking, for increased wages, no sbeed-un, re- cognition of shop committee, all, hir- ing through the union, and better job conditions. The new militant union has won many of these small strikes in the first four months of its existence. Czar’s Jewels Link Me- Cormicks With Whites CHICAGO, Ill.—Jewelry valued at $1,032,348 was left by the late Edith Rockefeller McCormick, a former member of John D. Rockefeller’s family. Much of it once had been a part of the Czar’s crown jewles, brought here when the United States gave refuge &nd financial and mili- tary aid to Russian nobility in an et- tempt to overthrow the workers’ gov- ernment. LL.D. CALLS ON MEMBERS TO HELP “It is absolutely necessary that all I. L. D. members report to the Dis- trict Office immediately to do special work in connection with the Scotts- boro decision. Intern’! Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 15th FLOOR Work Done Under Persona) Care ft DR. JOSEPMSON | aD 9, 1932 Attempt to Ter NEW YORK.—The ational Ex- ecutive Committee of the Workers’ Ex-Servicemen’s League today called upon all workers to support the national drive for new members ‘and help in organizing the Second Bonus March to arrive in Washington De- cember 5th. upon the workers’ organizations to support the bonus marchers with clothing, funds and other necessary help in the fight for the immediate payment of the bonus. In New York the drive for funds and for immediate demands of th2 veterans for relief from the city will start Noy. 11, Armistice Day. On| day the yeterans of various or- ganizations will hold a large Bonus Parade, demanding ¢.11 war funds for the unemployed and the payment of the bonus. The parade will start) at Union Square at 10 a.m. | O32 wae KALAMAZOO, Mich. Nov. 8— Desperately trying to stifle the grow- Call for Food, Clothing to Aid Washington Bonus March Vet Leader Hicker Kidnapped and Beaten in rorize Veterans The committee called} and thrown into a cr ing movement for the second Bonus Ma | ch on Washington, Police Com-| joner Chapman ed th Kers’ “| zer, him over to a gre’ midnight. Kicker ¥ is severely kicked ek outside of | the city. Others were arrested for) holding a meeting at which the so darity of Negro and white vets was | urged, But this terror has not| stopped the mobilization for the| march, Form Women’s Auxiliary, ST. PAUL, Minn. Nov, 8—A women’s auxiliary of the W.E\ was fromed here on Noy. 3. ‘This made up of veterans’ wives, vicewomen and Gold Star m je A constitution was drawn up. | Each member pledged to bring a new one to the next meeting and to work for the Bonus March. Now Cellecting From Fur Bosses For The Jobiess Insur. Fund NEW YORK.—In accordance with the agreement between the Needle ‘Trades Workers Industrial Union and the Fur Bosses Trimming Associa- tion, contracted last year with_re- gard to the unemployed insurance fund, the bosses will begin payments this week. The firm is to contribute an additional 1 per cent of the entire payroll. The fund is to be adminis- tered by the workers through the union. The agreement further pro- vides that the money should be col- lected by the shop chairman, who are to turn it over to a committee in charge of the fund. The workers pay nothing. The Industrial Union therefore calls on all shop chairmen to begin col- lecting the money. This applies not only to the shops of the trimming as- sociation, but independent shops as well. Take Children; Say Parents “Radical” | Nathan Trachtman, nine year old son of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Tracht- man of 80 East 10th St. was wrested from his parents by the Children’s! Aid Society and taken to the Chil- dren's Home on the grounds that his | parents were not to bring up chil- dren since they were both radicals and allowed their child to’ associate with the Negroes. | The International Labor Defense in coming to the aid of the bereaved Parents characterizes the case as an- other attempt of the boss class to segregate the Negro workers. Protest at Home of Judge Who Put Child | in Prison One Year | James Ford, a young Negro worker was sentenced to one year in prison for taking a picture of the Jim Crow Brondale swimming pool, in order to expose it in the workers’ press. This | is just another attempt of the bosses | to intimidate the Negro workers and | keep them from fighting for their} rights. ‘ Show your solidarity with the Negro masses and come to the mass meeting on Friday, Nov. 11, 8 p. m. at Ambas- } sador Hall, Third Avenue and Clare- mont Parkway. Admission is free. On Saturday, Nov. 12th, 3 p. m. a demonstration will be helg in front of the judge’s house at 477 East 220 St. SPEAKERS WANTED! NEW YORK.—All who were speak- ers in the Communist election cam- paign are asked to come to the office of the Workers’ International Relief, 146 Fifth Ave., third floor, Friday at 6 p.m. for w in the preparations of the National Hunger March. PRINTERS FACE _ BRAZEN SELLOUT |Officials Try To Put 'Over Employers’ Seale NEW YORK -In spite of the fact the membership voted over- Imingly in favor of strike action in case the employers violate the scale nd existing union conditions, the of- ficials of Typographical Union No. 6 ting to put over the em- The scale which was already rejected by the membership is being clothed in new phases in order to fool the membershrip into acceptnace. Vir- tually the new proposals endorsed by the officials offer the same ‘wage cut of 17 cent and the introduction of the 48-hour week. These proposals are being sent to a referendum which will be voted on Thursday, Nov. 10. Mr. Hewson, the local president, as a militant and opposed of Mr. Howard, the the propos: | International president, is leading the sell-out scheme. The Amalgamation Party, the mili- tant group within the local, has issued a call “to reject these damnable pro- poeals,” defeat the referendum, and to fight for the maintence of the pres- ent conditions. ‘The Amalgamation Party is call- ing an open Forum to discuss these proposals and invites all rank and file workers of all groups to come and participate. The Open Forum will take place today at Manhattan Lyceum at 8 p. m, sharp. \Betrayed in N.Y. Bomb \Frameup; Ask ILD Aid Sodaberg, Trager and Bunker, ma- rine workers framed up on a charge of bombing a ship sentenced up to 20 years in Sing Sing a few months ago denounced the renegade defense com- mittee of Lovestonites and Trotskyites who defendeq them and appealed to the International Labor Defense to carry on a campaign for their release. Sodaberg, in a letter to the I. L.D., denounced the renegade defense as one which tried to profit, for their own ends, by handling his case. He further states that they handled his case as if it was a crimnial case and did not, as is the case with the I. L. D. put it on a class struggle basis. The I. L. D. will carry on a militant cam- paign for the release of these marine workers. ANNOUNCEMENT Dr. Louis L. Schwartz SURGEON DENTIST Announces The removal of his office to larger quarters at 1 Union Square (8th Floor) 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. Suite 803 Tel. ALgonquin 4-9805 AMUSEMENTS RED SOCIAL given by I. W. 0. BRANCH 500 (International Workers Order) Saturday, Nov. 12 . At 8’ P.M. to be held at COMRADE RADAMS- KY’S STUDIO, 66 Fifth Avenue Entertainment Refreshments ADMISSION 35 CENTS Garment District Thrilling! Amusing! American Premiere Amazing! New Soviet Film ANUSH, (The Armenian) A BEAUTIFUL LOVE STORY OF NATIVE LIFE IN SOVIET ARMENIA +. Genuine at- § tion in the "y. TIMES : TH cers Acme Theatre Lith Street and Union Square SERVE YOURSELF TO HEALTH SEVERN’S CAFETERIA ith Avenue at 30th St. Best Food at Workers Prices Y “ATR MAIL| th Ralph Bellemy — Gloria Stuart Daily to 2 p.m. 35c—11 p.m, to close Sic Classified LARGE LIGHT ROOM IN BRONX—All Im- provements. With comrades. East 169th St., near Boston Road. See A. W., Daily Worker office, 8th floor. Attention Comrades! OPEN SUNDAYS || Health Center Cafeteria Workers Center — 50 E. 13th St, Reasonable Prices Quality Food Imnorters of Soviet Candies SPECIAL with this ADVERTISEMENT Odessa Fruit Chocolates 4 LB. BOX FOR $1.00 M. RICHMAN 145 _E. HOUSTON ST. NEW YORK AGENTS WANTED—Tel. ORchard 4-7778 Phone Tomkins Sq. 6-9554 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with ntmonphere where all radicals meet 302 E. 12th St. New York JADE MOUNTAIN American & Chinese Restaurant 197 SECOND AVENUE Bet. 12 & 13 Welcome to Our Comrades Dr. WILLIAM BELL OPTOMETRIST 106 &. 14th St., near 4th Av. 29 EAS! 14TH STREET NEW YORK Tel. Algonquin 3356-8843 We Carry as Full Line of STATIONERY AT SPECIAL PRICES for Organizations FURNISHED LIGHT ROOM—Wanted; all improvemen’s, Write F. B., ¢/o Daily ‘Worker. Brooklyn WORKERS—EAT AT THE Parkway Cafeteria 1638 PITKIN AVENUE Near Hopkinson Ave. Brooklyn, N, ¥ PURITY QUALITY SUTTER Vegeterian and Dairy Restaurant 589 SUTTER AVE. (Cor. George) B’klyn LEARN ‘her RUSSIAN MRS, 30 East Oth Street Brooklyn, N. ¥. ‘Telephone SLocum 6-8702 LIVE IN A— We have a limited number 2800 BRONX WORKERS COOPERATIVE COLONY of 3 and 4 room apartments NO INVESTMENT NECESSARY — OPPOsITE BRONX PARK PARK EAST Ath St. & R-K-O JEFFERSON 1% 8+ 4 WEDNESDAY TO FRIDAY LAUREL AND HARDY IN ‘PACK UP YOUR TROUBLES’ ADDED FEATURE ‘OUT OF SINGAPORE’ ‘AT LAST! The Powerful EPIC OF LABOR Amazing! Powerful! Thrilling! Agua Du — Minimum of Dialogue ameradschatt (COMRADESHIP) Tears down artificial boundaries set by the capitalist system! Ist Ww. til EUROPA sin's. 25¢ hoon Continuous from 10:30 a. m, to Midnight There's Always a Better Show at RKO 2000 Years in Bali 9 Weeks on B’ way It Must Be Good! CAMEO: eae Ruy RKO Thrift Books and Save 10% 2nd OUNSELOR-AT-LAW ina, ¢. WITH BY PAUL MUNI ELMER RICE PLYMOUTH THEA. W. 45th. LA. 4-6720 Eves. 8:30 Mat@ Pues. & Sat., 2:30. MEN MUST FIGHT A Vital Play “IT IS A STIRRING PLAY’—N. Y. SUN LYCEUM Theatre, W. 45th St. BR. 9-0546 Evgs. $1.00 to $3.50 Mats. Tues. & Sat. New Revue Hit ‘AMERICAN aie PHIL BAKER AND COMPANY OF 80 SHUBERT THEA., dith St. W. of Bway Eves. 8:30 Matinees Tues. & Sat., 2:30 THE GROUP THEATRE Presents SuCCESS STORY By John Howard Lawson Elliotts Thea., 39th, E. of Bway Mats., Tues. and Sat., 2:40 Maxine Evenings, 8:40. (IVIC_REPERTORY 14 s¢-90th ay. Mats. Wed. & 8: 130 LIENNE, Director wi MAT.-THURS. EVE. “LILIOM” WEDNESDAY EVENING, “CRADLE SONG” Seats Four Weeks in Advance at Box Office and Town Hall, 113 W. 43rd St, 50, $1, $1.50 Evs. 8: EVA LE 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 Comradely atmosphere—In this Cooperative Colony you will find » library, athletic director, workroom for children, workers’ clubs and various cultural activities Tel, Estabrook 8-1400; Olinville 2-6972 Take Lexington Avenue train to White Plains Road and Get off Allerton Avenue 10S p.m. every day 10, m. tof p,m, Sunday W. W. WEINSTONE wit! report at DAILY WORKER CONFERENCE SUNDAY, NOV. 13, at 10 A. M. Stuyvesant Casino, 142 Second Ave. All Delegates from Party, Shops, Trade Unions and All Other Mass Organizations should report at 10 AM. Sharp |

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