The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 21, 1932, Page 2

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TWO DA PAGE THOUSANDS WILL | MARCH INTO BIG COLISEUM MEET Workers Mass Nov. 29 To Support National | March Demands y YORK y on the nds to the ger The meeting evening, sides the is the New England x and the hundreds of New 1g them at t e of the Brit: e an rch will ¢' f the great s gle in London. There ll be a program of ent Iso. 's’ organizations he Colise. n with the roup cf th to Tele- na- the general laws, T. U. Convention, wise become effec strike out ¢ ld oth hich wo tive on Jan. 1 the “rid:r” which ays: “Where a subordinate union has adopted w, or has in effect a contr ding for a| five-day week, no further reduction} of the work week may be ordered by yote of the union, nor shall special | assessments for out of work relief be levied in excess of one per cent of earnings.” Provision for the 4-day week is also contained in the pro- posed amendment. rwhelmingly voted for Lo- ularize other locals to endorse the amendment as changed. A fund of $1,000 was voted for this | fight. Only by a very narrow ma- jority did Hewson retain in his hands the control over the expenditure of this $1,000 he local meeting voted $15,000 to help the lockeq out employes of La Prensa (the Spanish language news- paper here) start an opposition JAIL NEWARK POLL OFFICIALS NEWARK, N. J., Nov. 20.—Fol- lowing the theft of poll books and ballots from the Hall of Records and the City Hall early Wednesday morn- ing, while an investigation into elec- tion frauds was going on, resulted in the arrest yesterday of 28 minor elec- tion officials. The investigation was brought about by Repjublican poli- ticians following the discovery that the Third Ward of Newark, usually Republican, returned only five or six votes to the G. O. P. in one district and several hundred votes to the Democrats. f Techni up of y Theatre at 7 p.m. at 42 E. 12th A. Refregier of John Reed | meeting of Alteration Painters at at new headguarcers, 4215 Third corner Trei ve, Discussion on Mareh SPecia Ave., Hunger Public hearing conducted by Unemployed ‘Counett New York at 813 Hinsdale ave invited Mrs, Dried- down to ask her being evicted 1 Buro N. | bating teams, but the crowd refused | AILY WORKER NOVEMB EW YORK, MONDAY, ER 21, 1932 ANOTHER TOILER TELLS HIM ! HOW FORTUNATE YOU ARE TO LIVE DURING THIS vw ay ra €R¢ WE GAVE THE GREATEST ART, SCHOOLS, SCIENCE BATH TUBS WEALTA — a aN VEALTH/ THEN WHY HAVE MY WAGES RECN Cur IN HALF. WE THIS ER GOING TO SEE By Quirt LL, 1M GLAD TO LIVE IN Q@ Because YOU ARE Tue BIGGEST OFFICES WORKERS LAAHON UN Tae WworLo! ORLOFF-OPECK |Housewives! A TRIAL ON TODAY! Give Food to Hunger March! Miners Face Hanging Do It When You Market! Stations Are Set Up for Militancy Where You Leav PITTSBURGH, Pa., Nov. 19.—The| NEW trial of Orloff and Opeck, militant | New York's working class have been ners, on a framed| asked to remember the National| in the death of a| Hunger Marchers when they go to| ‘yellow dog” *mine guard, will take | buy food for their own families. | y in Morgantown, W. Va.| In a call issued jointly today by mine guard oc- | the National Hunger March Commit- YORK.—The housewives of | led by the|tee, the Council of Working Class| ‘A. but the reactionary | Women, the Workers International the union have deserted | Relief, the International Workers | these two miners. | Order and the Focd Workers Indus- will rally at atrial Union, all housewives are| of the | Strongly urged to ask their grocers, of | butchers, delicatessen merchants and | Other food dealers to contribute y of the miners, |Camned goods and other staples to the Hunger March commissary. Deliver at These Stations The Supreme Board of the Croatian | Fraternal Union and the Russian} such goods, according to the plan National Mutual Aid yesterday re-| outlined in the call, should be de- onded to the urgent appeal of the | jivereq immediately by the women | L. D. for immediate financial aid} yn ‘solicit them, to temporary re- | the defense, nizations and . ERRLOLE. Haves ale individu: urged to immediately lished at: Manhat- o George Martin, I. L. D., wire fi tan, Food V rs Industrial Union, | care Postal Telegraph, Morgantown, |4'wr teth St. Workers Center, 35 E. | W. Va. or the disirict office, 606 | i2th st, in the store on the street | Lyceum B'dg, Pittsburgh, Pa. ha Gooner in jlevel; Bron erative colony at 2700 Bronx | for Seamen Show Way stations | marchers; sk Grocers to |RELIEF HEAD RUNS FROM VETS | Legion Heads Try To Disrupt Bonus March | NEW YORK.—Fearing to face the | e What You Get Brooklyn, Manhattan and the Bronx are being prepared. The locations of | unemployed veterans who were de- these will be announced later in the| manding cash relief, Mrs. Stock- week, hauer, head of the Home Relief Bu- reau at Public School No. 150, Chris- topher and Belmont Aves., Browns- ville, ran away from the bureau out- | 5 - side of which a demonstration of vets | pared to supply 50,000 meals for the fodk lacs geHleniny: qioraingy “phe | 12,000 cans of sardines, | EY demonstration was organized by Post 300 pounds of | : : Ex-Servicemen’s Need Lots of Food The National Hunger March Com-} mittee estimates that it must be pre- | 2,000 pounds of cheese, q a ‘ cottee: 500 pounds of sugar, 2,000 cans | 75 of the Workers’ of beans, 16,000 apples 2,000 pounds of | League. preserved meats (ham, corned beef,| When a committee of eight, elected | salami, liverwurst, bacon, bacon),| by the demonstrators, appeared to} 2,000 cans of preserved fruits, 2,000! present the demands, they were told | lemons, 2,000 cans of evaporated milk! no one was in. They forced their are needed. way into the office and found it Do What London Did empty. They were told that Mrs. The statement of the committee | Ero on the ‘question of relief and announcing the: ‘city-wide. ‘food col- would be back at 3 o'clock. When | gg enit Perindon, suf-| the committee retuned at 3 they| fering under even greater economic | Wer informed that Mrs. Stockhauer | pressure than the American workers, | YOU not be back that. day. Another demonstration is being or- were able to supply 25,000 food pack- | | “7 ; ages to the British Hunger Marchers | ganized for next week, when Mrs. | | vil Med to lis- 3 E | Stockhauer will be compelled | in one day. Tt is imperative that the | ton to the starving vets’ demands, it workers of New York make an even | } ‘ is announced. better showing for their own Hunger | s stareliete” While in Brownsville the Home | zi | Relief Bureau is cutting off until To, Wine Reliet in| Fight with Y.M.C.A. Jennings Laundry | *. Pa | Strikers in Victory CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) | | NEW YORI while the chairman was stunned by| pings Laund: the first man’s onslaught, and de-| nounced today. scribed the National Hunger March| ‘The laundry bosses were forced to and its demands: $50 federal winter | settle under the following conditions relief and unemployment insurance, | (1) that all workers are to be given and called for support for the march, | pack their jobs; (2) that the strik- to the evident approval of the 150/ ems are to be paid for the time of seamen present for the debate. |the strike; (3) that laundry drivers | Crowd Votes for Real Insurance. | are to be paid according to the av-) When voting began the chairman | erage earnings during the past four | wasted as much time as possible on | weeks, because routes were consider- | the relative merits of the two de-| ably damaged during the strike; (4) recognition cf the shop committee to} to let him leave out the question of|the extent that all complaints, | unemployment insurance at the ex- | changes in the conditions affecting | pense of the boss They voted 143| the workers, must be made only for that kind of insurance and only 7| with the workers’ consent. against it. And sentiment with that | crowd is all for the National Hunger March. Victory for the Jen- | strikers was an- | | | More Open Hearings. A half dozen open hearings on hunger took place in New York Sat- urday and Sunday, and will be re- ported in the Daily Worker soon. | Tonight there will be a hunger hearing arranged by the Manhattan Borough Committee of Action for Winter Relief, in charge of prepara- tions in is borough for the National Hunger March. The hearing will be at Irving Plaza Hall at 8 pm. All) workers are invited and the city offi- cials are challenged to come and de- fend themselves. The Unemployed. Council calls an} ns hunger to'take, plac | Lahr heading the large cast. open hearing on hunger 2 place | HA Hesndeiy ity heey in Colonial Mansion tonight at 8|,, 2ne Darister. by : ‘ + 8/is scheduled for the Masque Thea- pm,, and invites all workers of the | tre this evening. The players include neighborhood. Robert Leslie and Emily Ross. Tonight also there will be another; “The Dubarry”, an operetta by open hearing at Galileo Temple, 17| Rowland Leigh and Desmond Carter Montrose Ave., Brooklyn. |from the German of Paul Knepler | Stage and Screen “FITREBIRD” OPENS TONIGHT— “DUBARRY” TUESDAY AT COHAN “Firebird”, a play from the Hun- |} garian of Lajos Zilahy, opens this evening at the Empire Theatre, pre- cented by Gilbert Miller. Judith An-| derson, Henry Stephenson, Ian Keith | and Montegue Love are the chief players. es George White's “Music Hail Vari- eties” will have its premiere Tuesday | night at the Casino Theatre with | Harry Richman, Lili Damita and Bert Tomorrow there will be a hearing| and I. M. Willeminsky, with a score at St yvesant Casino and on Wed-| by Carl Millocker, will open Tuesday there will be another at | night at the George M. Cohan The- t Church, W. 36th St. jater. The cast is Hoaeieis Pass | Moore, Howard Marsh, inson. POR Tan Ont Baie Daron) "| eeinic Me Seta On Wednesday there wil be S|” “jecchosee’, & play Of We 0's, OF} March to the Home Relief | sack Black and Bessie Beatty, will _Vorkers will assemble at | have its premiere at the Vanderbilt St. and Ave. A at 10:30 a.m. | Theatre on Thursday evening. Marie proceed through the lower | senny, Carleton Macy, Dodson de to the Home Relief Bureau | mitchell and Barry Macollum head at Spring and Elizabeth Sis. to pre-| the cast. sent demands of immediate relief for | ‘The Schwab and De Sylva musical the starving workers of lower Man-/| comedy “Take a Chance”, will open hattan. ‘There will be hundreds of|on ‘Thursday at the Appollo Thea- ving cases brought to the Home |tre, Nacio Herb Brown, Richard Relief Bureau that day which have | whiting and Vincent Youmans, com- been refused previously by the graft- | posed the score. The chief players in- ing oficials. he workers will be| clude Jack Haley, Ethel Merman, led by the Downtown Unemployed | Jack Whiting and Sid Silvers. Council. All workers are called by} The Shakespeare Theatre at Jol- the Downtown Unemployed Council | son’s will present three new offerings to assemble at Seventh St and Ave.| this week: “The Comedy of Errors”, A for what promises to be the largest | en Monday;; “The *ferchant of Ve- Hunger March ever held in Lower | nice”, Wednesday, and “As You Like | Manhattan at 10:30 a. It” on Saturday evening. McKEE--BANKERS’ CHOICEFOR MAYOR. By GEORGE E. POWERS (OSEPH McKEE is being groomed | by the Wall St. bankers, the man- | viacturers and business men for next | of New York. Why? Becausé, | Tammaryy Hall served the putting through their Program by smashing + lines and unemployed ‘ations, Tammeny Hall was | too openly cor | rupt id too expensive, The bankers and bosses want to) maintain the} / same brutal) Tammany Hall policy of police terror against workers, but} want cut - price | rates for the) job. The split) with Walker) and Tammany ongp. sgezuption | MCKEE , ‘was tgo big and the gps. Bren while Walker was in of Tammany caused more and more of the workers to lose their illusions about capitalist “democracy.” For More Relief Cuts McKee at the recent New York Chamber of Commerce, meeting was acclaimed by the bankers and bosses as their hero as the one who will put th: h the job of starving the orkers MORE CHEAPLY than ‘ammany @an do it This, of course, means MORE CUTS IN RELIEF FOR THE UNEMPLOYED. On September 10 the mass pres- sure of thousands of unemployed workers demonstrating before city hall compelled McKee to receive the | delegation of the unemployed. At the same time this gave him an oppor- tunity to pretend that he favored a “liberal” attitude towards the work- ers. McKee's own record gives the lie to all these pretensions, As acting mayot in Walker’s absence, McKee City Hall, McKee endeared himself to the bosses by actively taking part in ordering the clubbing and jailing of the unemployed, This is proven by the minutes of hearings the magis- trates’ court in cases growing out of the April 21, 1932, city hall unem- ployed demonstration. SHARED IN POLICE ATTACKS. | These minutes show that Deputy Inspector McAuliffe stated on the stand in my own case, that the rea- son he refused to admit the unem- ployed delegation was that on April 18 or 19, McKee and Judge Andrews, Walker's secretary, both instructed him mot to admit the unemployed | delegation under any circumstances, | No doubt, an important reason for not bringing this case to trial, still | pending, was this exposure of Mc- Kee's share in the bloody police at- tack on the unemployed on April 21. ‘This, and other instances, expose the real McKee program of forced |Soviet John Reed Dec. 5 those who have been getting two days’ work a week, in other parts ‘ot the city the bureau is trying to Opera to Feature | tiris: the National Bonus March to Washington by offering ex-service- Memorial Friday mn by men city jobs if they will stay away. ie hhe first time |One Worker received such an offer | Se aero ee from the relief bureau at 297 Fourth in this country of the Soviet John Ave., and a duplicate of the card he eed opera, “Ten Days That Shook | filled out was sent to the American the World,” will be one of the chief Legion in Weehawken, N. J, This features of the John Reed Memorial, | indicates the true role of the Ameri- to be held this Friday, Nov. 25, at can Legion misleaders despite the 8:15 p.m., at the New School for fact that at their 19: convention Social Research, 66 West 12th Street. they were forced by pressure of the rank and file to go on record for The memorial has been arranged by the John Reed Club. payment of the bonus. CALL JOBLESS MUSICIANS All unemployed musicians who wish to go on the National Hunger March to Washington December 5, with the band of the Workers’ Inter- national Relief, are urged to get in touch immediately with this organ- ization by telephoning Chelsea 3-9561. P. & H. CLOTHING CO. WORKERS NOTE Will a delegation of the 75 work- ers who sent an unsigned letter to the Daily Worker on Nov. 5 please come either to the Daily Worker, at 50 E. 13th St. or to the Neddle Trades Workers’ Industrial Union, at 131 W. 28th St., and give more par- ticulars? We have been trying to investigate this situation, but need more details. Christmas Eve. December 24th 9? 4 Rockland Palace AUSPICES — COMMUNIST PARTY end YOUNG COMMUNIST LEAGUE KEEP This Date OPEN! ' Editor, Daily Worker, Automobiles Needed For Child Delegates | Leaving N. Y. Nov. 23 The starving children of New York | are electing their delegates to go to Washington, D. C., on Thanksgiving. Thirty child delegates are expected to leave New York on Wednesday at 1:30 pm, They need automobiles to transport them to the capital and back. The Joint Committee of the Young Pioneers and the Unemployed Coun- cils appeal to all <orkers who have automobiles which can be used for | | | SCOTT NEARING “roxicxr (Monday), at 8:30 P. M. on “The First Fifteen Years of . the Soviet Union” the trip, to report to the Unemployed at the Councils of Greater New York, 10) INSTITUTE FOR ADVANCED East 17th St., as soon as possible. EDUCATION, 17 Irving Place Gasoline and ofl will be paid for. CIVIC REPERTORY THEATRE. ‘The program of plays to be pre- sented by Miss Le Gallienne’s com- pany this week at the Civic Reper- | tory Theatre, will include “Liliom” tonight and Thusrday evening, and Wednesday matinee; “Dear . Jane” Byes Examined by Re in Attendance 117 ORCHARD STREET (First door off Delancey) Hospital Prescriptions Filled Tuesday and Saturday evenings; “Camille” Wednesday evening; “Cra- dle Song” Friday night, and “Peter Pan” on Saturday matinee, tatern] Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 15th FLOOR AUD Work Done Under Personas Care of DR. JOSEPNKON LABOR UNION MEETINGS POCKETBOOK WORKERS A meeting of unemployed and part-time employed pocketbook workers will be held this Tuesday, Nov. 22, at 1 p.m. at Irving Plaza Hall, Irving Place and 18th 8t., in order to elect delegates to march to Wash- ington. Phone Tomkins Sq. 46-9554 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with nfmon where al} radicals meet 302 E. 12th St. New fork Labor Sports Public Meet Tonite To Expose Brooklyn “Relief” Btreaus NEW YORK.—So-called “unem- ployn-ent relief” stations and bureaus in the c their bulldozing tactics at the expense of starving . workers, women and dren, will be thor- oughly exposed at a public hearing to be held at 8 p.m. tonight at Galileo | Temple, 17 Montrose Avenue, corner | of Union Avenue, Brooklyn. The Unemployed Council of Wil- | Hamsburg, with headquarters at 61 | Graham Avenue, invites all workers | to come, and also challenges “the supervisors of the Home Relief Bu- reaus and the aldermen of Williams- | burg and Borough Hall “to answer | the charges and exposures made dur- | ing the hearing. Admission is free. | Functionaries’ Training School | To Open Nov. 25th | The New York district of the Com- munist Party is opening a full-time district functionaries’ training school. The school, which begins on Novem- ber 25, marks an important stage in the struggle to overcome the serious lack of trained functionaries and to develop fresh forces trained in the theory and practice of Leninism out | of the mass workers in the ranks of the Party. The carrying through of this ma- jor political task, the District Train- ing School, must meet with tha sup- port of all mass organizations. The Training Schools must become a per- manent and regular institution in} the Party. | All organizations that pledged to| contribute to the maintenance of the} school are urged to make their pledges good without delay. POCKETBOOK WORKERS’ DANCE The Pocketbook Workers’ Rank and File will hold a dance on Satur- day evening, Nov. 26, at the Workers’ Center, 50 EB. 13th St. Harlem's Fa- mous Negro Jass Band will supply the music. Importers of Soviet Candies SPECIAL with this ADVERTISEMENT Odessa Fruit Chocolates 4 LB. BOX FOR $1.00 M. RICHMAN — 145 EF. HOUSTON ST. NEW YORK AGENTS WANTED--Tel. ORchard 4-178 1 Bronx omrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Claremont Parkway Bron — Au Garment District Good Food Served Right Farragut Cafeteria 326 Seventh Ay., at 28th St. Mansion DAIRY RESTAURANT 147 WEST 27TH STREET Near ith Avenue UNION RESTAURANT Garment Section Workers Patronize Navarr Cafeteria. 333-7th AVENUE Corner 28th St. Brooklyn WORKERS—EAT AT THE Parkway Cafeteria 1638 PITKIN AVENUY Near Hopkinson Ave. Brooklyn, N. ¥ JADE MOUNTAIN American & Chinese Restaurant 197 SECOND AVENUE Bet. 12 & 13 SOCCER RESULTS METROPOLITAN WORKERS’ SOCCER LEAGUE A DIVISION Red Sparks, 5; Fiehte, 0 Juventis, 3; Falcon, 2. Olympic, 2;° Scandinavian Workers, 0. 7 a) ‘ Turino, 1; ‘Ytalian Workers, 1. Welcome to Our Comrades Prospect Workers, 2; Union de Onild, 2. B DIVISION Maple, 1; Kacudor, 1, Attention Comrades! Dauntless, 2; Juventis, 0. OPEN SUNDAYS Health Center Cafeteria Workers Center — 50 EH, 13th St. Independent Youth, 2; Red Sparks, 0. Italian Workers, 2; Italian-American, 1. Neckwear Workers, 1; Prospect Workers, 0. € DIVISION - Hero, 2; Olympic, 1. unton de Chi rater, 1. PURITY QUALITY SUTTER Vegeterian and Dairy Restaurant O89 SUTPER AVE. (Cor, George) B’ktyn Classified WANTED—Vurnished room Downtown sec- tion with comrades. 8. B. ¢/o Daily Worker WANTED—Furnished room, $8 weekly, near Workers Center. See 8. Haynie, Dally Work- er Fditorial office, between 6 and 7 p.m, JAGHT ROOM IN BRONX—All Im- provements. With comrades, Fast 199th carried through the brutal Welker | starvation of the workers, employed { Needle Tradex. C. Downtown WE ers, v Piehte, 2 Quality Food Reasonable Prices ij Hinsdale, 0 ESTELLE SMITH FUNERAL TODAY Protest Murder of This | Negro Worker! NEW YORK.—Today at 1 p.m. all workers,. and particularly all un- employed workers, should come to the mass funeral of Estelle Smith, at Harlem Workers Center, 650 Lenox Avenue, near 143rd Street. This is not only a tribute to a fine comrade, who fought the battle of all jobless workers, but is a demonstration of solidarity by Negro and white work- ers in the struggle against the brutal discrimination against Negro jobless which murdered Estelle Smith. It is a demonstration against the capital- ist hunger system, symbolized in the death of its latest victim, Estelle Smith. Mrs. Smith was a Negro working woman, mother of two small children. Her husband was arrested and jailed while fighting along with other job- Jes workers for relief to this family. Relief was so inadequate that Mrs. Smith went half-starved to Fordham Hospital to have her third child. She was doused with cold water after birth of the child, and left to freeze in an open room. She was dis- charged when far from well, and in a few days was back in another hospital and died. The jobless charge that she was murdered not only by starvation but by brutality. TAMMANY PLANS. TEN PER CENT CITY WAGE CUT Workers! Demand That Bankers Pay! No Wage Cuts! NEW YORK.—Secret meetings of the majority faction in the Tammany Board of Aldermen have worked out proposals to slash wages of city em- ployees 10 per cent, and to fire large numbers by consolidating depart- ments. This scheme goes to Tammany leader Curry, and then will be jam- med through the board of estimate by machine tactics, according to present plans. Essential to this scheme is the pas- sage by the Legislature of amend- ments to the civil service laws, al« j lowing the su legally safe- guarded wages of this class of work- ers, teachers, street cleaners, fire= men, etc. to be slashed. May Not Pay at All. But the gang has another little trick. They may simply refuse to pay one month's wages on the ground there is no money. Already, inspired articles appear in the press saying that probably there will be no money for city wages in December. Not one of these aldermen and none of the capitalist papers, however, suggest that instead of refusing to pay city workers, the city government refuse to pay interest on the debt held by the bankers. Interest and payments on this debt amount to about $200,- 000,000 yearly. Naturally in such a situation the Jobless will get what they fight for, and no more. The Hunger March Wednesday on the Home Relief Bu- teah, the popularizing of the unem- Ployed demands for relief at the ex- pense of the bankers and not at the expense of the city workers, must goon. The jobless must support the low paid city workers in their fight against the pay cut. WORKER WRITERS MEET NEW YORK.—Reading and collec- tive criticism of Worker Corre- spondence will be the feature of the next meeting of the N. Y. Worker Correspondence Group, to be held tonight at 8 p.m. in the Pen & Ham- mer, 114 W. 2ist St. All workers are urged to bring correspondence relat- ing to the activities of their shops, units or unemployed committees. Ste near Boston Bond. See e Woy Daily Worker office, 8th Ge ANNOUNCEMENT Dr. Louis L. Schwartz SURGEON DENTIST Announces DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 Bristol Street (Bet. Pitkin & Satter Aves.) B’klyn The removal of his office to larger quarters at 1 Union Square (8th Floor) Suite 803 Tel. ALgonquin 4-9805 PHONE: DICKENS 2-3012 Office Honrs: 8-10 A.M., 1-2, 6-8 P.M. AMUSEMENTS THE THEATRE | ‘THE GOOD EARTH’ GUILD Presents sraoonsonnoentty Dramatized by OWEN DAVIS and DONALD DAVIS From the PULITZER PRIZE GUILD THEATR 52nd St, W. of Broadway,, NOVEL by PEARL S. BUCK Eve. NEW SOVIET SOUND FILM with English Titles “FALSE UNIFORMS” HARRY ALAN POTAMEIN 58: the MOSCOW NEWS says: “<Palse Uniforms’ is certainly a most outstanding Soviet adventure film and will no doubt be enjoyed especially side the Soviet Union since adven\ speaks for itself and requires no in| preter.” emorabienes! 4 its yarn is assured by ¢ unvaeiliating point of view that s the rest of the Soviet kino: class struggle.” SPECIAL SOVIET NEWSREEL :CAMEO 42ND STREET AND BROADWAY em” 25¢ ey 2 Big SOVIET FEATURES TODAY—LAST TIMES ‘ROAD to LIFE’ ALL TALKING DRAMA OF RUSSIA'S “WILD CHILDREN (English Titles) EXTRA ADDED ATTRACTION “FOREST PEOPLE” ENGROSSING STORY OF NATIVE LIFE IN LITTLE KNOWN SIBERIA PRODUCED IN THE U.S. 8. R. worsees Acme Theatre 14th Street and Union Square Cont. from 9 a.m.—Last show 10:30 p.m. (IVIC_REPERTORY 44 5t-scth ar. WA, 98-7450, 500, $1, $1.50 Evs, 8:30 Mats. Wed. & Sat. 2:30 EVA LE GALLIENNE, Director Tonight, Wed. Mat, & Thurs. Fve. “LILIOM” ‘Tues. and Sat, Eves. EAR JANE” Seats Four Weeks in Advance at Box Office and Town Hall, 113 W. 43rd St. COUNSELOR-AT-LAW | i WITH BY PAUL MUNI ELMER RICE PLYMOUTA THEA. W. 43th, LA. 4-6120 Evenings 8:30; Mats., Thus. and Sat., 2:30 poaleeiectnta SA ARNIS PUTADARTAES 77 ‘The Powerful EPIC OF LABOR 2ND WEEK! MRADESHIP (Kameradschatf) “An excellent fil EUROPA 5sin's noon Continuous from 10:30 a, m. to Midnight THE GROUP THEATRE Presents ‘SUCCESS STORY By John Howard Lawson Maxine Elliotts Thea,, 39th, E. of B'way Evenings, 8:40; Mats., Wed. and Sat., 2:40 New Revue Hit AMERICAN with PHIL BAKER AND COMPANY OF 80 SHUBERT THEA. 44th St., W. of B'way Eves. 8:30 Matinees Thurs. & Sat., 2:30 Broadway rxo MAYFA at 47th St. Richard Dix — Ann Harding IN THE PICTURE OF THE YEAR “THE CONQUERORS” Dally to 2 P. M, 35¢ 11 P. M. to close 55¢ R-K-O JEFFERSON th st. « Are. TODAY TO TUESDAY—® Features EDWARD G. ROBINSON in “TIGER SHARK” - “VIRTUE” with CAROL LOMBARD and PAT O'BRIEN District Training School Ball under the AUSPICES of the COMMUNIST PARTY DIST. 2 Thanksgiving Eve., Wed., Nov., 23, 8 P.M. at MANHATTAN LYCEUM HALL, 66 E. 4th Street — ADMISS! KON 10¢ ——

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