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PAGE TWO oe & Shockin Basis of Mare Cases of Hunger HUNGER HEARINGS \ pquoversviece, My, > beave Nov. 47 dohuitenth Fon aterdam 4 ROUSE JOB hes on Home Schenettady 7 Leave Now te FAN L DIATE STRUGGLE | PICKET BUSINESS: Earl Browder to Speak at John Reed Memorial ADMITS BIG RISE || Stage and Screen at New School Friday | WIN RENT STRIKE | Williamsburg Tenants NEW YORK.—Zarl Browder, mem- ber of the Central Committee of the Communist Party, will be one of t Relief Bureau, Boro Hall Ruthless Discriminatio n Against Negroes; March Today on Brooklyn Relief Bureau East Side Workers March Friday on Home Relief ; Meet at 25th Street and First Ave. BULLETIN workers will march and demonstrate for YORK.—East Side ief and no discr mination, at ad Elizabeth Sts., today. a The mar id Ave. Council A. at 10:30 a.m. YOR | Collect Food! Get Trucks! For Nat'l Hunger Marchers NEW YORK —The } Hunger Marchers must be {they need trucks with wi reach Washington. All w | should ‘collect | cheese, coffee, tea, | Stocers and markets same to these stations ‘ore, 2700 Bronx Park ers Center, 35 East 12 | St., in store on street level; WIR {146 Fifth Ave; Food Workers | Industrial Union, 4 W. 18th St. | Notify any of these station: loans of trucks or cars for | Hunger March. deliver and didn’t think it necessary to appear before a gathering of Negro and white workers in dire circumstances, although registered letters were sent Tequesting their presence d stand upon relief. Children Losing Teeth. Mrs. Ozarko, a mother of a fam- ily of six, was refused relief time and time again by the Home Relief Bureau. A Negro widowed mother of 5 was discriminated against and_ refused relief. One of her children’s teeth are rapidly crumbling, due to a defi- ciency in his diet. Nicholas De Louisa of Navy St., a father of four children, has been a worker in New York City for twenty years. He has been unemployed for | one year. Desperate, he atetmpted to kill his children to silence their | cries for food. It was only when these workers organized with others | in their neighborhood under the| adership of the Unemployed Coun- | il were they able to demand and receive relief. Marcel Scherer, the main speaker for the Unemployed Council, who ex- posed, in his speech, the tactics of the city in starving the workers who demang relief, asked the audience if they intended to take up the fight for these workers and others whose cases were presented that evening. His appeal was answered by great shouts of “Yes, Yes!” The workers decided to meet again at 61 Graham Ave. today at 10:30 a.m. and march to the Home Relief | Bureau to present the cases that need relief. A resolution was drawn up condemning the Home Relief Bu- reau and the city officials. for the discrimination practices against Ne- gro workers and the delays in the de- livery of relief tickets to those who are supposeq to receive regular felief. Four delegates to the National | Hunger March were elected. | To Boro Hall Monday. A delegation representing thou- sands of unemployed workers of Brooklyn will present their griev- ances to Borough President Hester- berg on Monday, Nov. 28, at 12, noon, at the Brooklyn Borough Hall. Borough President Hesterberg, as a member of the New York City Board of Estimate, was told in a letter addressed him by the Brook- lyn Action Committee for Winter Relief that Brooklyn workers hold him responsible for voting for appropria- | tions for relief. The delegation will present their demands for: 1, Adequate cash relief in the sum | of $10 per week for each family of two, plus $3 for each dependent and} $1 per day for single workers. 2. Armories and public buildings | = now empty to be thrown open to house homeless workers. 3. Three tons of coal for all un- employed—distribution to start at} once. 4. To stop all discrimination against Negro and foreign-born! workers. | 5. To endorse the demand of the National Hunger March to Washing- ton for $50 winter relief and unem- ployment insurance. 6. To provide transportation to Washington for the Brooklyn Hunger Marchers. 7. To make appropriations for work in the parks and other public | works projects. * East Side Hearing. One hundred workers from the middle East Side of New York at an/ open hearing held under the aus- pices of the East Side Unemployed Council Monday night unanimously endorsed the nominations of Ferno, a | young Italian worker, Clark, from the Municipal Lodging House, and Robertson, an unemployed ex-ser- yiceman, as their delegates in the} National Hunger March to Washing- | The workers related many stories of families starving in their blocks, | It is led by the Downtown Unemployed the Home Relief Bureau, at Spring ch forms at 10 a.m. at Seventh St. ° evictions, refusal of relief Home Relief Bureau, and 4 conditions among the children. Mem- of the rec 'y formed 16th St Block Committee described whole I es where starvation was appa- rent in every family in the house, The workers, many of whom were | present for the first time at a meet- | ing of this kind, vigorously applauded the report of the Unempioyed Coun- cil, which had forced a landlord a few hours previous to the meeting to return $22 in back wages to an evicted janitor and the report of the 16th St. Block Committee, which had secured relief for an uremployed Spanish family. Supervisors Fail to Come, Although Fagan, supervisor of the | 5ist St. Home Relief Bureau, and} Dempsey, District Assemblyman, had been invited, they failed to appear) to answer the demands of the work- | ers and to hear the workers’ voice their endorsement of the National | Hunger March ang the March to the | Ossineng Gonet) Touphkeep sie Beaces HeNevna 1 Ce ae mie } Segre WALTER WHITE CORNERED, RUNS N.AA.C.P. Secretary Dodges Questions Home Relief Bureaus on Friday, No- NEW YORK.—After a half-hour | facing eviction. | vestigation within two days. Immediate cash relief for all | 420 West 120th street, under the aus-| vember 25. lecture in which he tried hard to min- The workers will assemble at 10 |imize the importance of the Scottsbor a. m. on 25th St. and First Ave. to|case, saying that “it is just another present the following demands to the | case to many colored people,” Walter Home Relief Bureau: | White, secretary of the treacherous 1. families. 2. Payment of rent for all families | hall when workers and studen‘s in | audience questioned his statements 3. Immediate registration of all | and denounced the boot-licking policy needy families not registered and in- | of his organization. The meeting took place at the Horace Mann Auditorium, 4. single and homeless workers. pices of the Social Reconstruction So- 5. No discrimination against Ne- ciety. gro and foreign-born workers in| In spite of the desire of the audi- granting relief. |ence to have all questions answered, All out on Friday, at 10 o'clock, at |@nd to hear Joseph North, editor of 25th St. and First Ave., to help the | the Labor Defender, speak on Scotts- East Side workers win these de- | boro the officials of the Social Recon- mands! | struction Society informed Mr. White oe that he “need not answer questions” Williamsburg a | and then cut Joseph North off after The Youth Branch of the Unem-|he had spoken for three minutes, on ployed Council of Williamsburg calls | the lying pretext that “meetings have an open hearing particularly for un- | to end at 10 o'clock.” When the au- employed young workers and chil- | dience demanded that Joseph North dren of jobless workers and their | continue, the officials began to switch parents, Priday, at New Royal Pal- | Off the lights. ace, 16-18, Manhattan Ave. St 1 St | Struggle Starting What’s On— | Over Demands in the WEDNESDAY | “Gold Dust Lodge” Rehearsal of Daily Worker Chorus at 16 — E, Third St. at 8:30 p.m. All workers are] NEW YORK.—The workers in the | Lustea bon ht Se | Gold Dust Lodge are trying to organ- | Concert and Dance of American Youth | zo a committee in spite of the ter- Club, 407 Rockaway Ave. Brooklyn, Thanks-| rorism exerted by the grafting Sal- siving Eve, Admission ‘16 cents, | vation Army officials, | Dance of Tremont Workers’ Club, 2075| Under the leadership of the unem- | Clinton Ave. Good music. | ployed council at Sth Ave. One hun-: ote dred and fifty workers assembled and stated the rotton conditions existing in the Lodge. They decided to form | @ delegation to present their demands | for improvements. | Some stool pigeon squealed that the workers were going to present their demands and the leaders were iso- | lated and kicked out of the lodge to the cold night at 10 o'clock. Those in the lodge are not terror- ized however and are forming a com- mittee to go to Commissioner of Welfare Taylor's office to demand | their reinstatement and the compli- Masque Dance of Youth Section, I.W.0., at Irving Plaza. Special attractions. Ad. mission 35 cents with Daily Worker ad. 40 cents at dood Children’s Veeherinka arranged by Chil- dren’s Branch No. 11 of R, N. M. A. at 1538 Madison Ave. at 7 p.m. Lecture by Scott Nearing at Jewish Cen- ter, 687 Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn, at 8:15 p.m. Subject: “The Capitalist Way out.” | in Lecture given by F.S.U. Yorkville Br. at | 243 E. B4th St. at 8:30 p.m. Speaker: Prof. | Stephen 8. Graves on “Education in Soviet | Union.” | Debate auspices F. 8. U., N. ¥. District: “Is the Soviet Government Justified In Its | Campaign Against Religion?” M. J. Oigin, | affirmative; Rev. J. L. Matthews, Negro| to participate in ¢ preacher, negative. Stuyvesant Casino, 143 at the Home Relief Second at 8 p.m, he demonstration Bureau today. Seviet Film Proceeds Membership meeting Flatbush Workers’ Club at 1207 King's Highway at 8:30 p.m. All Invited. | Go to Hunger March Membership meeting of Women’s Coun- cils, Br. 21, at Workers Center, ie] a ” ee | film which will be presented at the Meeting of Sacco-Vanrett! Br. . b. D. at| Fifth Avenue Theatre, 28th St. and oO dlecierion’ Ave» Bronx, st 8:30 p.m.| Broadway starting November 28 for . the benefit of the National Hunger March to Washington. Dance at Union Workers’ Ce: Prospect Ave. at 8 p.m, nter, 801| . Dance-Concert given by Followers of Na- ture at Stuyvesant Casino, 142 Second Ave., at 8 p.m. Benefit Fretheit. Membership meeting Building Main- tenance Workers’ Union at Finnish Work- ers’ Hall, 15 W. 126th St. -t 8 p.m., sharp, oe Dr. WILLIAM BELL OPTOMETRIST 106 E. 14th St., near 4th Av. Meeting of the Committee of 80 of Vet- " Rank and Pile Committee Greater York at 154 W. 20th St. at 7 p.m, ors Phone Tomkins Sq. 6-9534 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A pince with atmosphere where all radicain meet 302 E. 12th St. New York {ntern’l Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT. 80 FIFTH AVENUE 15th FLOOR AD Work Done Under Persona! Care of DR. JOSEPHSON JADE MOUNTAIN American & Chinese Restaurant 197 SECOND AVENUE Bet, 12 & 18 Welcome to Our Comrades Attention Comrades! OPEN SUNDAYS Health Center Cafeteria Workers Center — 50 E. 13th St. Quality Food Reasonable Prices 9} Food checks for all starving | National Association for the Advace-| |ment of Colored People, ran out of | | ance of the demand of the workers. | ‘The jobless also pledged themselves | (OFFICE WORKERS T0 ACT TODAY \See Taylor; Demand) Daily Jobless Aid | NEW YORK—Two plain clothesmen visited the headquarters of the Unem- | ployed Committee of the Office work- |ers late yesterday afternoon and an- nounced that Commissioner Taylor would receive the delegation of unem- ployed white collar workers on Mon- | day instead of today as requested. The Unemployed Committee declares that the delegation would carry through the program as originally planned, pointing out that this last minute shift in Commissioner Taylor’s sche- dule is nothing but another scheme to discourage the growing struggle of unemployed office workers for the | Tight to live, Demand $1 A Day The delegation representing thou- |sands of office workers demands one dollar a day in cash relief; the con- | version of hospitals and other insti- tutions not in use into sleeping quart- ers for the homeless office workers; and the establishment of free employ- ment agencies, All employed and unemployed office | workers are invited to attend the pre- | meeting immediately following that at one o'clock, 50 Laffayette St. Don’t Work Tomorrow, Legal Holiday, in the Needle Trades! NEW YORK.—Thursday, Nov. 24, is a legal holiday for which every fur worker is to be paid and not to work. The Fur Department of the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union calls on all active members to come down to the market Thursday morn- ing and stop off all those who are | forced by the bosses to come to work. A similar call has been issued by the other departments of the Industrial | Union not to work on Thanksgiving Day. Read the Daily Worker every day | for National Hunger March news | and directions, | Garment District | | SERVE YOURSELF TO HEALTH “SEVERN’S, | CAFETERIA ||7th Avenue at 30th St. Best Food at Workers Prices Classified | LARGE FURNISRED ROOM—for rent in Bronx, E. 109th St. near Bostou Rd. ‘W. A. c/o Daily Worker. Brooklyn WORKERS—EAT AT THE Parkway Cafeteria 1638 PITKIN AVENUE Near Hopkinson Ave. Brooklyn, N. ¥ SUTTER Vegeterian and Dairy Restaurant 589 SUTYER AVE. (Cor. George) BYklyn LEARN RUSSIAN MRS. R. 30 East 95th Street Brooklyn, N, ¥. Telephone SLocum 8-8782 29 EAST 14TH STREE? NEW YORK | Yel. Algonquin 3356-8843 We Carry a Full Line of DAILY WORKER ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION December 31 NEW YEAR’S EVE, Concert—Ball STATIONERY AT SPECIAL PRICES for Organizations oN vi Block Increase NEW YORK.—A complete victory wes won, when the tenants in a rent | '° strike. against the landlord of 235° went to| Moore St., ‘Williamsburg, New York and picketed the land- lord’s business og Sixth Ave. The landlord whnted to raise rent als, but the tengpis the raise. The landlord used the tricks and disruptive tactics he could, tion, police terror and evictions. The House Committee countered with picketing and publicity. Open- | E. 13th St, air meetings were held daily. Signs were placed in every window. Then the landlord went to the Home Re- lef Bureau and the Bureau threat- ened to cut off the relief of four families. The Unemployed Council of 61 Graham Ave. which helped the strikers in every possible way, mob- ilized a committee and picketed tho jJandlord’s business on Sixth Ave. The Sixth Ave. Unemployed Council helped. e Although the landlord told the committee that the affair was in the hands of his attorney, he finally did meet the House Committee on Mon-|a mass demonstration of all unem-| day morning and granted the follow- ing demands: No increase in rents, regular service, go to the Home Relief Bureau and say that he had nothin, striking families, The strikers are now mobilizing | other families in the neighborhood and building a strong block com- mittee, in order to keep the ‘gains they have won. answered Mim | | by organizing 100 \per cent against all | including personai, intimida-|},. the National Student League Tri and the landlord to| port of the crude trickery and dis- @ against the | practising in regard to the work of jspeakers at the John Reed Memor- ial mecting to be held this Friday evening, Dec. 25, at the New School for Social Research, 66 West 12 8t. Other s; vs will be Joseph F: man, author of “The Soviet W Michael Gold, and Gran s, well known left-wing lite critic. Prof. Oakley Johnson will act s chairman, | Sergei and Marie Radamsky will selections from the Soviet John On the program will | Ss. | Reed opera. vil | Tickets at 50 cents each can be} bought at the Workers Bookshop, 50 | JOBLESS NEEDLE PROTEST TODAY New Dicrimination in Red Cross: Jobs NEW YORK—The Needle Trades | | Workers Unemployed Councils broke joff their interview with the Gibson | Committee yesterday and called for) | ployed workers today at noon at 36 | St., and Eight Ave., to hear the re- | | | crimination the Gibson outfit is | Red Cross Cloth. The Unemployed councils will lead the jobless workers themselves down ‘to the Gibson Committee office at 70 Pine St. right from the noon-day demonstration, to demand that dis- present for the first time in the U. |’ a | crimination in hiring for this Red *: : 5 Jailed for Helping | Cross work and wage cutting on it | shall stop. Nat'l Hunger March| Stalled for Weeks. The Gibson crowd have kept the NEW YORK—Ni y .| unemployed needle workers stalled ses’ politicians in SN ais enn off for weeks now, while holding one help the delegates of the unemployed confernece after another. Meanwhile who are marching to Washington to plans are on foot to accept the Am- demand relief, but they actively work | *!gamated and Inter’l Ladies Gar- to prevent the workers from taking |™ent Workers’ program for heavy care of their marchers. wage cuts, and the only jobless One unemployed worker, Julius | WOrkers hired are through the Wo- etna while collecting ‘for the | men's Trade Union Club. lunger March y Se was seized by a ameter DANCE FOR DISTRICT TRAINING two days in jail. 5 SCHOOL TONIGHT Another worker had his box, con-| NEW YORK.—A dance will be held taining 39 cents, confiscated by the | tonight for the benefit of the district Police. training school of the Communist Party, at Manhattan Lyceum, 66 =. 4th St. A Negro jazz orchestra, rev- Olutionary dancing by the Siegel} ‘group are among the attractions ar- ranged by the program comunittee. | | | | LABOR UNION MEETINGS CARPENTERS A meeting of all carpenters of Greater | New York will be heid on Wednesday, Nov. 33, at 8 p.m., sharp, at 1818 Broadway, near 1th st. | The theeting ts called by the Independent Carpenters’ Union for the purpose of send- “Is the Soviet Govern- ment Justified In Its Campaign Against Re- ligion?” YES—®M. J. Olgin ing delegates to the National Hunger Marchi | babe la ch as a a gh | to Washington, il NO. All carpenters, members of the Union, ca | a Well ag non-union members, are invited. Rey. John L. Mathews NEGRO PREACHER WED., NOYV.23, 8 p.m. HEY-HO! TONIGHT! | A jolly Comradely time |] STUYVESANT CASINO for all at the \|f 142 Second Avenue, N. Y. §!! | ADMISSION 33 CENTS MASQUE D ANCE ||} Auspices: Friends of the Soviet f}/ Union, New York District TICKETS may be secured at F.8.U. District Office, 799 Broadway, Room 830 and at Workers Book Shop, 50 ath St, N. ¥ given by Youth Section—I. W. 0. THANKSGIVING EVE. | NOVEMBER 23, 8:30 P. M. IRVING PLAZA IRVING PLACE & 5th STREET Special Attraction | Workers Laboratory Theatre (WIR) | in the— | i | We'll See Them Thru With 50,000 Meals! (THANKSGIVING EVE.) Wed., Nov. 23, 8 P. M. given by Tremont Workers Club 2075 CLINTON AVENUE | DANCING TILL DAWN TO GOOD BAND ARCHIES RED HATTERS Admission with this ad 35c. at the door 40c. Hoover is trying to break the Hunger Merch by starvation. Officials all over the country have been ordered to deny food and shelter to the Hunger Marchers. ANSWER IS City-wide Food Collections from now until Deceméer 3rd! When you shop for your own family remember the Hunger Marchers. Ask your grocer to contribute to the Hunger March commissary—canned beans, milk, fruit, apples, lemons, cheese, meat, anything that will keep. Rush your contributions immediately to one of the following stations: Concoops Store, 2700 Bronx Park East. Food Workers Industrial Union, 4 W. 18th St. Workers International Relief, 146 Fifth Ave. ‘Workers Center, 35 E. 12th St. (in store on street level). HUNGER MUSTN'T STOP THEM! | 50, $1, $1.50 Rs, 8:80 Mat & Su TALKIE, OPENS THURSDAY AT ACME THEATRE ‘Capitalist Data Show | Wide Starvation NEW YORK.—An increase of over 74 per cent in the number of chil- - | dren of New York City suffering from starvation in 1922 as compared with the number suffering from starvation jn 1927, 1928, and 1929 in indicated in the figures for the first nine months of 1932 issued by Shirley W. Wynne, health commisstoner of New York. The health commissioner pointed out that malnutrition, (sickness from starvation) ts particularly acute in Manhattan and the Bronx. “In the first: nine months of 1932,” says the commissioner's report, ‘227,- 366 school children were examined by the school medical inspectors and 40,290 of these, or 17.7 per cent, were found to be suffering from malnutri- tion.” For the entire years 1927, 1928 and 1929 the rate was 13.5 per cent each year. “The increase began promptly in 1930, the first year following the be- inning of the present economic con- tions, the rate rising to 16.1 per cent. The following year it jumped up another point to 17.1 per cent. “The figures for the first nine months of this year show that the inerease has continued and that in Manhattan over 25 per cent of the school children examined are found to be suffering from malnutrition.” REFUSE FORD VISITORS NEW YORK.—Pioneers of the Bob Minor troop appealed yesterday for workers’ organizations to protest the exclusion of white visitors from see- ing James Ford, jailed for taking pic- tures of Jim-Crowism at the Bronx swimming pool. Ford is held at the House of Refuge on Randall's Island. Only Negro relatives are permitted to see him, a Pioneer was told by the authorities a€ the Island. | “Road To North,” the Industrial | Revolution of the Soviet North, lat- jest Amkino talkie to, reach America, will have its American Premiere on Thursday at the Acme Theatre, The” picture is a humanized document of the Industrial Revolution in beai!- tiful Karelia. The director has here portaryed by the stark, desolte Artic regions of the Soviet Union and shows how the workers have rehabiltated this barren land and made it an or- ganic part of the country's economi¢ life. In “Road To North,” which was created under the guidance and after investigation by the Academician, |Fersman, of the Soviet Academy of | Science, is a tense dynamic record of the work and place of the Artic | republics in the Soviet Union. The | picture gives a complete cross s¢c- tion of life here presenting the lum- | ber industries, the fishing and Can- ning industries, the aluminuim mines, the Hfe of the lumber jacks, the fishermen, the miners, the camps and living conditions disproving striking- ly the charge of forced labor which the enemies of the U. S. S. R, have |brought again and agein in its ac- cusation of “dumping” against the Soviet Union. The true facts are |here, blended into a dramatic story and told‘ with engrossing skill. On the same program the Acme will present the latest Soviet Talk- ing Newsreel, showing the Interna- | tional Youth Day, when thousands | of boys and girls from all over the | world, appeared in athletic com- | Petition in Red Square, and other | engrossing items and scenes from the } OSs: S. 5. R. ‘The Trans-Lux Newsreel Theatre, which has been closed for alterations and enlargements, reopened last night with a combined program of shorts and Paramount, Universal and Pathe newsreel. The house now has 4 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 DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 Bristol Street (Bet. Pitkin & Sutter Aves.) B'kiyn PHONE: DICKENS %-3012 Office Hours: 8-10 A.M., 1-2, 6-8 P.M. seating capacity of 500. = | AMUSEMENT® NORTH” “TURKSIB"— a Soviet “THE BREAK UP” ACME THEA lith STREET & UNION 8 Last TIMES TODAY The Worker's Is Soviet Russia Using Forced Labor !!— STARTING TOMORROW (Thursday) — AMERICAN PREMIER# Amkino’s Latest Talking Production With English Titles "ROAD TOT lia—the Lumber and Fishing Industries ‘HE Industrial Kevolution of the Sov- iet North--Showing Beautiful Kare- Aluminum Mining, Etc., Etc— Masterfilm—English Titles (Razlom)—Engrossing Soviet Drama EVA LE GALLIEN! ‘Today Mat.“LILIOM’ Thursday Eve. _“LILIOM"” Seats Four Weeks in Aévance at Box Office and Town Hall, 113 W. 43rd St. IVIC REPERTORY % 5.20 Ae. | WA, 9-7150. | 30 Mi. 2 P.M. TRE | 15ei.t%.02% QUARE Midnite Show Sat. ano CAMEO (7 TODAY — VAST TIMES “FALSE UNIFORMS” | Becinning Tomorrow — Werld Premiere |“WITH WILLIAMSON UTUMN CROCUS A ‘The New York and London Success with Franets Le: and Patricia Collinge MOROSCO THEATRE, 45th St. W. of B'way Evs. 8:10. Mts. Thanks’s Day & Sat. at 2:40 THE GROUP TRIATRE Presents CCESS STORY By John Howard Lawson Maxine Elliotts Thea., 39th, E. of B'way Evenings, 8:40; Mats., Wed, and Set., 2:40 ‘THE THEATRE GUILD presents THe GOOD EARTH Dramatized by O/Davis and D. Davis from the Pulitzer Prize Novel by Pearl 8. Huck GUILD THEA., 52nd St, W. of Broadway Eve. 8:30, Mats. Thursday & Saturday 2:30 MERICAN PHIL BAKER New Revue Hit with AND COMPANY OF 80 SHUBERT THEA., 44th St., W. of Biway Eves. 8:30 Matinees ‘Thurs. & Sat., 2:30 BENEATH THE SEAS” Broadway |rKo MAYFAIR Sry, | | Richard Dix — Ann Harding | IN TUE PiCYURE OF TizZ YEAR “THE CONQUERORS” Dally to 2 P. M. 35e 11 P. M. to close Sie R-K-0 JEFFERSON 14 pety WEDNESDAY TO FRIDAY—2 Features | GEORGE ARLISS ta “A SUCCESSFUL CALAMITY” “GOLDEN WEST” with George O’Brien and Janctt Chandler | The Powerful EPIC OF LABOR SRD WEEK! 'OMRADESEIP (Kemeredschet!) “An excellent tilm."—-DAILY WOR! EUROPA #3,%. 25¢ mt ‘S5th St. Continuous trom 10:30 a. m. to Midnigin C OUNSELOR-AT-LAW| 224, wits BY A PAUL MUNI . ELMER RICE _ PLYMOUTH THEA. W. 45th. 8720 Evenings 8:30; Mi | | | 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 —— ADMISSION 40¢ —— Workers Cooperative Colony 2800 BRONX PARK EAST (OPPOSITE BRONX PARK) AN IDEAL RESIDENCE FOR WORKERS’ FAMILIES SEVERAL APARTMENTS AND SINGLE ROOMS AVAILABLE NOW Cultural and Athletic Activities SPECIAL ORGANIZED ACTIVITIES FOR CHILDREN UNDE EXPERT SUPERVISION Library, Kindergarten, School, Clubs Lexington Avenue train to White! Office open daily Plains Road. Stop at Allerton Avenue ‘Station, Phone BStabrook 8-1400 Baturday Sunday 10 a.m, to 2 p.m. Mass Send-Off and Ratification Meet- ing for the Natio nal Hunger March BRONX COLISEUM 177TH STREET, THE BRONX TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 7:30 P. M. GREET THE NEW ENGLAND AUN- GER MARCHERS at this Mass Dem- onstration? JOIN IN RATIFYING THE DEMANDS of the Hunger Marchers for $50 Winter Relief and Federal Unemployment In- surance. EAR THE REPORT of the New York Delegates to the National Hunger Mareh. BUY YOUR TICKETS NOW at the following places: Workers Bookstore—30 East 13th St, Workers International Reliet—146 Fifth Ate. Bronx Co-operative—2700 Bronx Pk. B.