The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 10, 1932, Page 2

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_ PAGE Two “ALL N. Y. LOCALS ASKED TO SEND THEIR DELEGATES Have Elected; More Will Follow; Will Resist Suspension NEW YORK—Many A. F. of L. 1s have already answered the call | ne New York A. F. of L. Com- | mittee for Unemployment Insurance, | to send delegates to the Unemploy- ment Conference to be held Satur- ovember 12 at 1 p.m. at Irving Hall. The conference will NOT be on Sunday, as published in the Daily Worker, ag a result of a typo- cal error. | 7 Locals Already | following A. F. of L. locals | t in the cred s for their | Locals 2717, 2090 and 1164 e Brotherhood of Carpenters, | 499 and 121 of the Painters, and local s OPT The the Carpen A. F. of L. locals and groups | ediately es for elect from this con k Conf ference wil up the question of the members who faced w pension from the as well as no visible means for themselves and their unions of support families. Send credentials York A. F. of L. Committe for employment Insurance. This conference, besides mi: plans to support the National ‘erence of A. F. of L. lo ing Nov. 22 in cinnati, will make plans for relief struggles in New York by A.F.L. members. National Corference Nov. 2 Tne National Conference on Un- employment Insurance in Cincinnati wili unite the struggle of the rank to the New Un- and file members of A.F.L. unions! yor real insurance. It will surely not tisfied with the plans for local at is pro- ion. The A F. of L. is meting in Cincinnati at the same time as the Conference on Unem-| Insurance, iN discuss m pi vers and their 2 ‘The New York Comm go at a confere and has secu 800 other lo’ gram of stnteais for the Wor! Unemployment Insurance Bill, § bill which the last nger March presented to congress, nd which the coming Notional Hun- Maxeh will also present rehearsal at St., Brooklyn. 2006 Come on time. a 70th invited Club class on social 21 East Tremont up) ave, Bronx tone “fig ing at Office Workers’ Union meeti 14th pm. at the Labor Temple, 242 E St membership 11 W. Mt Discussion on t Bronx Br. F. 8. U. ceting at Paradise Manor, n Ave., Bronx, at 8 p.m. a in Soviet Union r help wanted to adi public be- Unemployed Council 66 Osborne St., Brownsville hearing at 8 p.m. und Blake St, Brooklyn. tween Sutter ai program of action on relief will be adopted. All invited. D. 8: Tea Party- for All invited, eting at Ave., Bronx Club lecture. All FIGHTING VET” ne new issue of “The F vet,” of- ficial organ of the W.E.S.L., be ready at 2 p.m. y for all Posts to obtain copies in Room 715, No. 1 Union Square Will the comrade who bo! gold penknife at Madison Sunday night piease Daily Worker Office on Tyeglasses igon Square Garden rles Liebman, 314 Powell FRIDAY Armistice Day Anti: Weorter Hall, 119 E. Uth St Robert M. Lovett, Stember, Simons, Parjand, Joseph Brodsky, ete. Anti-War Congress. Labor Union Meetings JEWELRY WORKERS A special, membership meeting freld Thurs@iy night of the Jew s Industrial Union at 6 p.m. at 80 E 1th St. Unity with other organizations will be discussed. DRESSMAKERS The Left Wing Group calls on dress- makers to come to section meetings at 8 pm, tonight. ‘The section meet Speakers: Me- Also film of will be meetings will take place in the following places: Bronx, Ambassador |, 3875 ‘Third Ave.; Brownsville, Skol- Mansion, Pennsylvania and Levonta ves., and in Coney Isiand. At the last meeting of the Executive Board, the Blustein-Zimmerman adminis- tration, instead of taking up the real ‘proviems of the dressmakers, decided to bring recommendations for new splits and New schemes, through which they aim to nie and expel the active dare to challenge their treacherous ‘aliip. ‘The Left Wing Group of Local 22 has Josuied a leaflet calling on the dressmakers 19 come to these section meetings, to vote for the proposals of the Left Wing, to pre- pare for ® united struggle together with {ia@ members of the Industrial Union for betier conditions in the trade, irmen and Delegates Meet Union Office hop delegates and ac- i Ed of the unfon, 131 W, 26th St., 6th 0 ‘The main point on the order of Bt this meeting is the discussion ‘on the prospects in the coming season, the b> ett of @ strike, mass drive, eto, s favoring unemploy- take | National | 7:30} workers | sence em AMOR ASANTE Sc nit on Saturday R LaNd- “THE DEFENOANTS WERE ‘9 fo SCTWALLY N DANGER OF M08 VIOLENCE’ Roooy, QUwse LAP: ‘Gy County ADEQUATE COUNSEL. Justice BUTLER- DEFENDANTS Wad POINTED, eutLer “(F THERE HAD BEEKLACK OF PREPARATION, TRIAL COUNSEL COUID GAVE ASKED “ ITISTOBE GOPED PREDIUDICE Fron EITHER SIDE MAY BE KEPT OUTOF THE WEW TRIAL,” RE FOR, POSTPONMENT?, TNTERNATIONAL. PROTEST or WORKERS LED BY THE COMMUNIST PARTY AND THE TLD, FORCED THE S COURT DECISION — NOW CORE THAN EVER MUST WORKERS FIGHT FOR FREEDOM OF SCOTTSBORO By Quirt | UPREME Goys. f Election of Anti-Bonus Roosevelt Spurs Vet March N. Y. Veterans Prepare for Mass City Parade On November 11th ‘ Special! All Posts of the Workers service Men's League and other | mass roganizations meeting to- night, Thursday, are called upon to elect worker and veteran dele- gates to the Veterans Rank and File Conference to be held this Sunday November 13, at 2 p.m. at Irving Plaza, 15th Street and Ir- ving Place. NEW YO! —Le: an a month remains before the second army of world war vets arrives in Washing- ton to demand the cash payment of the bonus. Since Sept. 23-25 when the national conference of was held in Cleveland, nun col conferences and struggles epare the march. president who i the cash payment a new challe: nt for the de nk and file confer- place in order to pr The election of oppc pledged of the the v ratified b ill be u passing of 14 ig of the s still un- on to an As usual 2 al | will start from Union Square at 10 all the enemies of the veterans are appealing for a c ‘ation of Armis- tice Day completely ignoring the major interest of the veterans today. The bonus parade in New York A.M. ‘These include besides the one cal- } ling for immediate bonus payment othe: calling for: All interest charges on certificates to cease, all interest deducted from loans already made including the transportation loans a nced the bonus marchers to be added to the balance due. No rowing of Negro veterans in The funds for the vets needs are to be raised by surtax on {| industries, inheritance tax, all funds which are being used for war prep- arations and the Reconstruction Fi nance Corporation funds being given to aid the bankers. The bonus march will reach Wash- ington on December 5. All workers’ organizations and in- dividual workers are asked to send food, money and clothing to support the veterans who will be on the road during the winter. Veterans Central Rank and File Committee. The ad- dress is P. O. Box 38, New York City. | | In response to the city-wide call issued by the New York Provi | Daily Worker Committee, the Gen- Jeral Executive Board of the Needle |Trades Workers’ Industrial Union | vesterday led upon all needle trades work: to elect shop dele- | gates to the City Daily Worker Con- | ference to be held at Stuyvesant Ca- sino, 142 Secong Ave. at 10 a.m. this |Sunday. ‘William W. Weinstone, ed- | itor of the Daily Worker, will be the main speaker at the conference. The statement of the G. E. B,, ad- dressed to Men's Clothing Work |Cloakmakers, Furriers, Whitegoods, | Knitgoods and 41 others employed in the needle . reviews the tre- mendous role that the Daily Worker | plays in all the struggles of Ameri- can worke! nst the bosses and their r and goes on to Jenumerate the specific points in which the aid and guidance of the “Daily” has proved to be indispen- | sable to the militant needle trades workers. “The Daily exposes the treacher- |ous role of the A. F. of L. and the Socialist bureaucracy in the labor | movement. It carries the revolu- tionary message of the class struggle, |educating the workers, teaching them the policies and tactics of the struggle against the boss c! je Re lcarries on the fight of the workers jon every front. | “In the struggle of the needle always on the side of the workers | against the boss, against the A. F. of L., Socialist bureaucrats, and against persecution by the police and the courts. The Daily exposed the fake strikes of the Hillman, Shlesinger, Zaritzky outfits. The Daily, through its columns, helps to organize and mobilize the needle trades workers in their struggle to “Urge Needle Trades Workers to Elect Their Shop Delegates | General Executive Board of Union Points Out | | Role of “Daily” in Strikes isional | fakers and to build the united front | trades workers, the Daily was and is! NOV. ie j your revolutionary press which helps rid themselves of the company union ; of the workers to struggle for the workers’ interests. The Daily helped the Industrial Union organize, carry on and win the strikes of the fur riers, the fur rabbit dressers, the dressmak the knitgoods, etc. “The General Executive Board of the Needle Trades Workers’ Indus- trial Union urges the needle trades workers to participate in the con- ference of the Daily that will be held on Sunday, Nov. 13, in Stuy- BUILD THE DAILY WORKER: vesant Casino fer the purpose of building and strengthening our Daily Worker. Elect delegates in your shop and authorize them to represent you at this conference. “Needle Trades Workers—build you build your class struggle union and revolutionary movement in this country. Take up this matter of the Daily in your shop at once.” VOTE INADEQUATE $30,000,000. RELIEF Real State Relief NEW YORK. — Election returns indicated that the vote to issue state | bonds to raise $30,000,000 for unem- ploy relief had carried by about seven to one. The amendment proposing to build | recreational facilities in the public forests was defeated. The Communist Party supported both these proposals, as affording some unemployment relief, but at same time pointed out that they ve only an insignificant amount compared with what is needed. There are 2,500,000 jobless in the state. The bond issue will not immediately pro- | vide anything— the bonds have to be sold first. But even if immediate- ly ready, this $30,000,000 would give each jobless worker and his family only $12 for the whole long year of starvation. It is totally inadequate, almost an insult. It would provide food for about a week, and leave nothing whatever for rent, gas, light or clothing. Only the struggle of the jobless 2498. Won thig $90,000,000 sop, and the Y. Jobless Can Win! the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Furriers Meet Tonight On Distribution o f! Uemployment Fund NEW YORK.—All fur workers are invited to the mass meeting called by Union tonight in Cooper Union. This will be something new in labor history. The furriers have, for the first time, foreed the employers to establish a fund, without expense to the workers, for unemployment relief. They did it by their splendid fight, under mili- tant leadership of their Industrial Union. The meeting tonight will hear a re- port on the unemployment fund and will elect a committee to distribute the fund; also will decide when the distribution is to begin. The meeting will also discuss the situation as far as the Associated shops are concerned and to mobilize all the furriers for de- cisive struggle for complete unioni- zation of the Associated shops. Shop Nuclei! Streets Units! Elect Delegates to the New York Daily Worker Conference Sunday, Nov. 13, 10 A. M, at Stuyvesant Casino, 142 Second Aye, fight must go on now for real gains. New York workers should give full support to the National Hunger March, ai 45 West 126th St, New York, N. ¥. JOBLESS WRECK UTAH WAREROUSE Destroy Garbage Given Them As “Relief” SALT LAKE CITY, Utah—En- raged by starvation rations and rot ten food handeq out by the City’s Central Relief Warehouse, 1,000 un- employed workers, led by the Unem- ployed Council, invaded the ware- house and destroyed much of the food which was unfit to eat. This militant action followed after amass demonstration in front of the Cham- ber of Commerce building, where a delegation of the unemployed made demands upon the city authorities that the warehouse containing the rotten foog be closed up and mea- sures be taken to insure immediate and adequate relief. On hearing the report of the dele- gation that the city agency, headed | by Commissioner Quinn, refused to take any steps to relieve the situa- tion, the workers marched upon the warehouse. Provoked by the attacks of the warehouse staff, the workers took possession of the building and | nailed it up after destroying the rotten supplies, Oscar Larson, leader of the Unem- ployed Council, and nine other work- ers have been arrested on riot charges. The capitalist officials will now attempt to imprison militant workers, and this, so far, constitutes their only answer to the unbearable |conditions under which the weem- ployed workers of this city find themselves. Steps are being taken to defend the arrested workers against frame-up convictions. “KAMERADSCHAFT” AT THE EUROPA AN EXCELLENT FILM “Kameradschaft” (Comradeship), a “Nero Production” by G. W. Pabst and now playing at the Europa, is an excellent film of a mine accident on the Franco-German border, and of the sudden realization of the in- ternational solidarity of labor in the face of fire in the mine, the common enemy, It has its faults. Yt blurs the class lines, and shows the French and German mine managers co-operating, with their miners, to save the French miners, though to be sure under some pressure from the German min- ers. It implies that there is a nat- ural resentment between the work- ers of the two nationalities, extend- ing even to the children playing— which is nonsense. Such nationalist feeling as does exist is the result of the capitalist propaganda, and this is not brought out. There are fine scenes of the un+ derground workings; and incident- ally, the French-German mines seem to be much better timbered than Am- erican coal mines. Even so, the film- ing of underground fires, of the cea- seless struggle to isolate the fire, and its bursting through one barrier after another, finally trapping a group of French miners underground, is well shown, The German miners are played by Germans, particularly brilliant work by Ernst Busch, Alexander Granach and Fritz Kampers. They speak German in the film. The French miners are played by ‘Frenchmen, vutstanding being Daniel Mendaille snd George Chalia, who speak French in the production, The wo- men’s parts are negligible except in the unnamed mass of miners’ wives. A fine picture despite its defects. —V. 8. Attention Comrades! OPEN SUNDAYS Health Center Cafeteria Workers Center — 50 E. 13th St. Quality Food Reasonable Prices %*° SANDWICH SOL 8 LUNCH 103 University Place (Just Around the Corner) Telephone Tompkins Square 6-9780-9781 More Greetings for 15th Soviet Birthday THESE GREETINGS REACHED THE “DAILY” TOO LATE TO BE INCLUDED IN THE SPECIAL ANNIVERSARY EDITION ”° DISTRICT FOUR Newark, New Jersey ‘CTION 9, LONG ISLAND SEC. 7, UNIT 18, NEW YORK I PETE SHIYNAK New York, N.Y. I. W. 0. BRANCH 19 New York, N, Y. ESTHONIAN WORKERS and YOUNG WORKERS CLUB New York City FINNISH WORKERS CLUB Milinary Workers Expose Zaritzky, Demand’ Action | NEW YORK.—A letter written by members of the Millinery Workers Union, addressed to one of its leaders, Max Zaritsky has just come to light although it was written some weeks CONTINUE FIGHT ON GYP AGENCIES Two Arrested Workers Get Suspended ago. The letter accuses Zaritsky of * Sentence making a “secret yellow dog agree- ees, ment” with the bosses and demands| NEW YORK.—After serving one immediate action. The letter directs attention particularly to the condi- tions existing in the Bellin's Hat Co. Lish Hats and Morris Schacter & Co. “During the last ‘strike’ you failed to tel] these workers that your ‘union’ conditions meant that they would be- come actual slaves who would have to toil 12 long hours a day at 20 cents an hour and less. You promised them a 40 hour week, 8 hour day at $1.00 an | hour. You never told the workers | that you sold them out as slaves, that you sold out the ‘strike’ and that) your ‘gentleman's agreement’ was | merely a bill of sale,” reads the Jetter in part. day awaiting trial two workers ar- rested while picketing the Efficiency ‘Agency at 1151-Sixth Ave. received suspended sentences, These two workers, one a Negro member of the Sixth Avenue Griev- | ance Committee, were in a picket line which sought to force the shark agency to return a-fee of $3 taken from a baker on a $20 a month job. The baker, one of those arrested, worked two days receiving two dcl- lars. He went back and demanded the fee saying that he was hungry. This was refused. The Sixth Ave. Grievance Com- Oakley Johnson, New Secretary, Anti-War Congress Committee Oakley Johnson, recently dismissed | Bedford St., by the reactionary City College ad- ministration because of his support of the Liberal Club and his uncomprom- erialist war and on behalf of working cl ising stand against im: tivity, ac- is the new Secretary of the American Committee for the World HECP PICKET THE MEYER DORFMAN Fight Injunetion! Go to Strikers’ Affair! NEW YORK.—The 150 Meyer Dorf. man knitting mill strikers, fighting three wase cuts and picketing in mas- ses in the face of a drastic injunction and about 80 arrests so far, yesterday sent out a call to workers to come help them picket this morning. The fight against this injunction, and the cut it protects, is the fight of every worker in New York. For the support of the Meyer Dorf- man strike finances are badly needed, |The strike committee is giving a con- cert and ball. Saturday, Nov. 12, af Millers Assembly, 318 Grang St. Brooklyn, with a good program and @ jazz band to raise funds for the ission is cnly 35 cents. Dorfman mill is at 218 Brooklyn. Strike head- quarters of the Knit Goods Section of the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Unicn, leading tl ggle, are at 101 Grant St. Strike demands are for withdrawing of the last three wage cuts, recognition of the union anq of the shop committes. Ths Congress Against War. Malcolm) *‘Tikers are standing firm, at each Cowley, New Republic editor and|™eeting renowing their pledge to car- member of the group of fifty promi- nent American intellectuals who sup- is now the ‘Theo- ported Foster and Ford, Chairman of the Committee. Gore Dreiser is Honarary Cha: As part of the re-organizing work involved in the preparations out the plans of the World Congres: to stop the impending imperialist war | against the Soviet Union, the Ameri- can Committee is being considerably enlarged. Members are: Lola Mav- erick Lloyd of Winnetka, Illinois; R. Lester Mondale, pastor of the Uni- Illinois; tarian Church in Evanston, irman. to cai ry on the strixe’and mass picketing, injunction notwithstanding. \To Tell Experiences in the Soviet Union Louis Hyman, chairman of the General Executive Board ef the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union who recently returned from a year’s stay in the Soviet Union, ‘will give his first lecture in the Browns- ville Youth Center, 105 Thatford Ave. L. U. ASKS O'BRIEN CONFERENCE Cc. York City committee of the Ameri can Civil Liberties Union for an earl; O'Brien's announc:d upon “radical agitators.” ker, wrote the mayor-elect that the com: letter of Nov. 2 regarding his atti tude toward free speech. NEW YORK—Election of John P.| O’Brien as mayor was followed yes- terday by a request from the New| conference on the question of Mr. | intention to have the police department wage war Miss Las- | chairman of the committee, | mittee had not had a reply to its mittee which has scored many vic- tories against these gyp agencies will intensify its work in answer to these arrests. Officials of Local AFL Moulders’ Unisn Help Smash Strike) NEW YORK.—Jerry Keating, busi- ness agent of Moulders Local Union 87 of the A. F. of L., and other lead- ers of the union, sent scabs to break a strike of workers at the Bronx Brass Foundry, the strikers stated to- day through the Metal Workers’ In- dustrial Union, which led the strike. y | Walter R. Sassaman, a teacher in the Walden School, and Ali A. Hassan, New York engineer. Others include S. J, Stember, delegate to the Con- gress from the Workers Ex-Service- men's League; J. C. McFarland, dele- gate from the Marine Workers In- dustrial Union; Joseph Brodsky, ILD lawyer and delegate from the Inter- national Workers Order;; Ida Dailes, organizer of the Chicago Anti-War Committee and Professor Margaret Schlauch of New York University, delegates to the Congress. CONFERENCE OF DANCE GROUPS The Dance Council of the Workers Cultural Federation will be organ- ized at a conference Sunday, Novem- corner Pitkin, on Friday, Nov. 11, at 8 p.m., cn “Fifteen Years of <ite Soviet Union.”- He will speak under | the auspices of the Dressmakers’ De-~ fense Committee which is carrying on the defense of four dress pfisoners. oners. WIR Moves to New Headquarters The Workers’ International Relief |has moved to 146 Fifth Ave. Phone ~ No. Chelsea 3-9561. All funds for the Hunger March should go to the Joint Hunger March Committee at this address. Women to Celebrate. | Ninth Anniversary NEW YORK.—The New York: and vicinty United Council of ‘Worknig- class Women will celebrate: its ninth anniversary on Frdiay, Noy. 18, 8 p. m, at Irving Plaza, 15th and Irving Place where a concert will be given. “With the struggle for unemploy- ment insurance in unity with the workers as its major activity, the Women’s Council will fittingly cele- brate the ninth year of its existence | on the eve of the National Hunger | March which we are preparing for,” Rose Nelson, Secretary of the Council declared in stating the importance of the celebration. ‘The celebration will mark the be- ginning of a membership drive, and will be greeted by leading revolution- ary leaders. The rank and file members of the A. F. of L. local, however, helped the tikers and expressed their solidar- y Unemployed workers also co- operated, The strike. was against & wage-cut, which the bosses put over, despite the sharp resistance of the workers. “We recognize,” the workers in the foundry said, “that we committed a} mistake by not lining up the Negro workers of the shop for the strike from the very beginning on. This mistake is one of the main reasons | why we could not defeat the wage-, cut.” Garment District William W. Weinstone will give main report at the Daily Worker Conference on Sunday, Nov. 13, 10 | A, M. at Stuyvesant Casino, 142 Second Ave, | Intern] Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE Uth FLOOR All Work Done Under Wersona) Carr at DR. JOSEPRSON Garment Section Workers Patronize Navarr Cafeteria | 333 7th AVENUE Corner 28th St. International Barber Shop 123 WEST 28th STREET Near N.T.W.L.U. Building Classified LARGE LIGHT ROOM IN BRONX—All Im- provements. With comrades, Fast 169th St., near Boston Road. See A. W., Daily ‘orker office, ath WILLIAM BELL | OPTOMETRIST | 106 E. 14th St., near 4th Ay. comrade, Whit- (8th Ave.-13th FURNISHED ROOM—For com>, 12 Gansevoort St. St.). Cheap. FURNISHED ROOM—Call at 338 E. 13th St., Apt. 18, rear, Pete Koseff, Bronx COHEN’S MEET YOUR COMRADES AT THE Cooperative Dining Club ALLERTON AVENUE Cor. Bronx Park East Pure Foods Proletarian Prices eyes Exemined by Registered Optometrist in Attendance 117 ORCHARD STREET (First door off Delancey) “Hlospital Prescriptions Filled Revolutionary Workers in New York 40 YEARS OF MAXIM GORKY’S REVOLUTIONARY LITERARY WORK under the Auspices of the Jewish Buro of the Communist Party and the Jewish Workers’ University This Saturday Eve., Nov. 12, 8:30 P.M. MANHATTAN LYCEUM, 66 East 4th St. INTERESTING PROGRAM INCLUDES: M. Olgin M. Epstein A, Baboy Waldo Frank Michael Gold Gropper Artef Prolet-Pen Freiheit Mandolin Orchestra ADMISSION 40c — Tickets obtainable in office of the “MORNING ber 13, at 63 East gates ‘from approximately 20 dance groups, and roi the revolutionary tend, llth Street. Dele- tural Groups! ups sympathetic to movement, ‘will at- ANNOU! Dr. Louis SURGEON DENTIST Announces The removal of quarters at 1 Union Square (8th Floor) Suite 803 NCEMENT L. Schwartz 107 Bristol (Bet. Pitkin & Sutter Aves.) B’klyn PHONE: DICKENS 2-3012 his office to larger Office Hours: Tel. ALgonquin 4-9805 Mass Organizations! Clubs! Cul- Send Delegates to % the City Daily Worker Conference at Stuyvesant Casino, 142 Second Ave., Sunday, Nov. 13, 10 A. M. DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY Street 8-10 AM., 1-2, 6-8 P.M. AALISEMENTS R-K-O JEFF WEDNESDAY TO FRIDAY LAUREL AND HARDY IN ‘PACK UP YOUR TROUBLES’ ADDED “OUT OF SINGAPORE’ ERSON 1th St. & Brd Ave. FEATURE Ralph Bellamy B’WaY a A4Y'ST. 7 —~ Gloria Stuart Daily to 2 p.m. 330-11 p.m, to close 55¢ AT LAST! nwo. CAMEO ,t'ting The Powerful ICAN = at Weeks in and Town Hall, Advance a Box Office 113 W. 43rd St. Su American Premic DAILY “ANUSH” (The Armenian) nil film of Soviet Armenia, old worsens Acme Theatre Mth Street and Union Square Etiotty The: Mats., ‘TI Maxine Evenings, 8:40, :e—-NOW PLAYING’ THE GROUP THEAT CCESS STORY By John Howard Breaking a 9-year Cameo Record s EPIC OF LABOR “GOONA-GCONA” ie 9TH CAPACITY WEEK Amazing! Powerful! OUNSELOR-AT-L ana Thrilling! C SAR oe YEAR hages4 4.4 — Minimum of Dialogue |PAUL MUNI EL MBER RICE PLYMOUTH THEA., W. 4: LA, 46-8726 ameradschatt Byes, 8:30 Mats. Tues, a Sat., 2:90. (COMRADESHIP) MEN MUST FIGHT Tears down artificial boundaries A Vital Play See: PE ee consitaloh erate! “IT IS A STIRRING PLAY—N, ¥. SUN EUROPA iisin'S. 25 soon {| i Sh00" to. $30 Mase Tues & Bay Continuous from 10:30 a. m. to Midnight romaine jew Revue PHIL BAKER AND COMPANY Oy 8 80 Presents Lawson woth, BE. of Bway ues. and Sat., 2:40 THE THEATRE THE Goop WORKER. y Pearl GUILD mich ae BE W.W. WEINSTONE witl report at DAILY WORKER CONFERENCE SUNDAY, NOV. 13, at 10 A. M. Stuyvesant Casino, 142 Second Ave. GUILD presents EARTH dramatized by Owen Davis and Donald Davis from the rey rages be ser gi All Delegates from Party, Shops, Trade Unions and All Other Mass Organizations should FREIHEIT”, or at JEWISH WORKERS UNIVERSITY, 108 E. 14th St. report at 10 AM. Sharp * ae

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