Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
i AG E rwo DAIL YW fORKE NEW YORK, FRIDAY, NDY EMBE: OR 25 1932 N.Y. VETS IN BIG RELIEF AND BONUS MARCH TO CITY mALL TODAY ne WINTER SELIEF, j INI Is w PPR if class Meet at Stuyves1 t High New York intend to Hall and} Square at 10 peting will be militant Re: to © for 1—Ten dollars cash weekly mployed married Veterans and mst Negroes ra day for all un- single yets, Negro and employed white. ing of all tax-exempt uch as the Seamen's M. ©. A’s, ete, for to sleep i t—-The appropriation of $100,000,000 for cash for the unemployed, inc! veterans. be furnishing of free trucks ¢ benus marchers to Wash- nag Wad. 6—The passing by the city gov- ernment of a resolution demanding the immediate payment of the bonus in full. All veterans’ relief to be ad- ministrated by a committee of rank and file Negro and white workers. Workers Back Demonstration With 100,000 ex-servicemen unem- ployed in New York City, with thou- at least ter relief ding the forced to sleep in and miserable of the Hoovervilles and Camp it at 78th St., and the Hud- er, today’s demonsi {ll be support the ci yed, will show fon of the ex-servicem: them relief a to force The il also rally the vet- us March the National Bor The } Kee has promised to be n the vets arrive at 1 p.m Board of 2:ing till the following Frid: to dodge the vets. A co hite veterans will ¢ Tonight big bonus meeting will be held ht at 8 o'clock at Stuyvesant h School, First Ave., and 15th St. rans, their wives and children, and all workers and sympathizers are d to attend. Among the speak- ers will be Aunt Molly Jackson, the fignting miner’s wife who played a leading role in the Kentucky mine i da, which began yester- , to provide trucks, food and funds the Mew York bonus marchers continue today and tomorrow. can be secured at| 127 W. 125th St.; senth St., the Bronx; Ave. and 537 Hopkinson Ave., msville. is for the “Fighting Vet,” organ | ¢ ex-servicemen, and for the Ar-/| 2 nents committee of the Na- ional Bonus March should be sent to Bo 3, Station D, New York City. tor a FRADAY Lecture Beach Workers’ Club, 3139 Coney Island Ave. Subject: “Five Year Lecture Boro Park Worke: , 1373} d St. Speaker: P. Ra Masses | jc. 8:30 p.m. Leeture Uni ers’ 801 Pros- pect Ave. Speaker: Dr. B. Lieber on “Com- munism—Faseism In German: ‘Lecture Americ Browns- Labor Lye St., lyn, Spee n “Ger- Russtan and esure America 133 tenkant of LL.D. Fon the Se Youth Club eorge Powers on Lecture Harlem 3¢.8:30 p.m. Speaker “Results of 1932 Election: Progressive Llection and Ratification meeting of youth éelegated to National Hunger Maret af Progressive Workers’ Culture Clul Sumner Ave. (cor. DeKalb), Brooklyn, at 8:30 p.m Lecture Prospect Workers’ Center, Southern Blvd. at 8 p.m. Speaker: Hyman on “15 Years of Soviet Rule.” 1157 Lecture Y.C.L. of East New York at 551 Alabama Ave, Brooklyn. Speaker: Marcel | Séherer on “Comparison of Youth of Soviet Union With Youth of U.S.A.” 8 p.m. ‘Workers’ club, 2075 Speaker: Richard B Lecture Tremont Clinton Ave, Bronx. Moore on men: Elections. jure TW. O, B 4 at 11 W. Mt Buén Ave. at 8:30 p.m invited. Bance and vend-off for N. Y. Delegation to National Hunger March at Manhattan Lyeeum, 66 FE. Fourth St., at 8 p.m. Tick- es at door, 35 cents, In advance, 25 cents at Workers’ Bookshop, Wikeacihl dance group. st, 40 W. 3h Bt rt 6 p.m. Instructor former pupil Mary 2 Recruits wanted. Question Box, at Bath Beach Workers Club, 2273 Bath Ave. No admission, 8:30 pan, rae SY nd Youth Club at 380 Grand All members must attend, Meeting Red Spark Athletic Club, 333 field Ave., Brooklyn, at 8 p.m. Young adult workers invited to join club. Meeting Workers’ Zukunft Club, 31 Sec- tad Ave, at 8:20 p.m. Election delegate » National Hunger March, Prominent ‘peaker. All invited. | Ogen Air Meeting at corner BF. 17th St. Kings Highway at & p.m. Auspice: fatbush Workers’ Club. In case of rain sme to 1207 Kings Highwoy. Meeting Playwri7 fitonp at Workers’ ts Growp and Directors bgp os Bk Bnestre, <2) 119th St, at 8 pam. All invi raise ‘Bteve eee Br, oe ie D. at 15 | ‘Thiet Sar heir demands. | 122 Se- | Louts | “Results of American and Ger-| | "tan : Open Hientaus Bring Out Cases of Starving Children; March Monday on Boro Hall NEW YORK.—Shocking cases of hunger and utterly inadequate re- Vei, in many cases no relief at all, which were found through the Middle East Side Open Hearing on Starvation, Monday night, will result today in St ties, bur ‘TO DEMAND C \SH March Today on Home Relief WORKER BURNED | Volunteers Wanted; | INGER HEARING Buro With Hunger Evidence IN METAL PLANT. Important Work for the Hunger Marci IN AQUNT VERNGN ’ ¢ S 2 NEW YORK.—Kive hundred vo Eleet Five Les encil, Washers, Hace} 23%, ars wanted fer apecin work Ps coer i Mass Lavof: in preperation for the National for Marc Mass Lay off Hunger March. All unemployed a workers eSpecially are requested to VERNON, N, ¥.—Mayor Les- come to the headquarters of the Bateman, Commissioner M. D. City Unemployed Councils, 10 East 1ith Street. head of the police fo: the Majestic Metal Special- ous ine Hermes x Var 200 " ned when the stenvil-washing ma- | |— and Comm! . ses bei ith a bi jobless and part-time workers wee ) were found guilty to back up their demands, to the Home Nelef Bureane = (chine, cn which she was. working, | — of sarving and freezing the unem- “me U ed aa cata See oe |exploded late Wednesday. She wa ploved workers of Mt. Vernon, at a a Sead to assemble ot aneh 6: and ————] | instantly enveloped in flames and | workers’ mass trial held at 421 ‘South eat A | x ran screaming through the shop to 8th St. The verdict was unanimou' st AV h with g E : Hitet Ave. today) end “gaarch: with | 117 Cities te to Feed the office. The company refuses to ’ 1, voted by the meeting of over 50, in- ¢ Bureau. | and House Marchers | | have any sick or accident room for } J cluding Negro and white, native and 00 Negro and white workers a its workers. A short time later the foreign-born eee with little chil- with their wives and children packed! | go great is the momentum of | |St- Vincent's Ambulancs called for dren participating into the rooms of Tremont Workers | | the mass movement behind the ber, The meeting s opened by Lucio Express ‘Solidarity ; Filleppos, who hod been arrested for Club, Bronx, on Sunday and held a| | Hunger March that one city ad-| | The explosion created panic among With Jobless distributing leaflets calling the meet- er hearing. A jury of 15 was| | ministration after another Js com- | | the hundreds of workers in the place, eae ing. : | pelled to fly in che face of the||in which dozens of girls became _. A riage | io Full a at th Months Without Work federal government's request to| | hysterical or fainted. In addition, _. WASHINGTON, D. C., Nov. 24—| | hucle, Tilleppos charged, that, the One after another the workers “discourage” the hunger march- | | (he elevator, on instructions from the |EMdorsement by farmers’ mass meet- 1 He up and told how. they have gone for! | ers and to furnish shelter and/ | boss, failed to stop on ‘the floor, to Shes ood farm organizations for the! ited that white he was in jail his mo hous work, and | food for the marching conting-| | prevent. workers from leaving. De. |National Farm Relief Conference | eo companions were two Ne eke out 9 , from crumbs | ents as they pass through their | | 2 gases tail ss rte eason but to discoura ero A pt (onal aoe [one yp B | | spite all the panic, Izzie, the worst | ee ae are ations: Whose lead. | Tested for no reason but to discou ations from other source: always fac- Seventeen cities throughout the) | 41) ing eviction, always facing the cut-| | country have thus far promised vA score of children were examined | | seller and food. ‘They are Pitts- | | |during the hearing by Dr, Lutinger | | DUrsh, Cleveland, Toledo, In we: apolis, Baltimore, Oklahoma City, Decatur, Til, ‘o testified that every one of them | | Terre Haute, Ind. aS St e Invtrition, the would ha ; |and then do three hours work sawin: Reread frog, malnutrition, the’) | piantramek, Mish, ‘Sante'Fe, New |:| “cur, terete eg aeencdl Blatt Boome, Mianeapolle Rocce one Mal: Hun Alel Of oebod | cienti for ation. posal tay Wis., Rock | | Washers. These, in addition to the ; elegation of three was elected| | °2 00} Ja Crosse, t Ko | entire crew, are facing a mass lay- | MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., Nov. 24—jin return, — i e open hearing to go with | Springs, Wyo. Pittsburgh, Kan.| | te within’ the next three week:,|TWenty-one farmers’ delegates from| The meeting voted the following] Zunger Marchers to W | New Rochelle, N. ¥., Davenport, | hen the season is over, Right ‘now | the whole territory around her2 got | additional decisions: Towa; Utica, N. ¥., and Bloom- | ‘ | 1—To elect 5 delegates to the Na- | | ington, Tm, the foreman in the place, asked: to your places; go to work.” Mary Diaz was making only ves a machine on which she was Senin | time, Sundays, and even on Thanks- Negroes from demanding relief. One Negro worker told of how the so-called “Citizens’ Unemployed Bu- reau” headed by Judge Jacob A. Bern- | stein and Mrs, Barrow, forced un- employed workers to wait for hours “What's | the excitement, girls? Get back | TS OPPose the conference. The con- ference meets here Dec. 7-10 and will Place demands in congress for mora- e | torium on taxes and farm debts, for | | real farmers’ eet, enc *k and has two dependents. together in Minneapolis on Monday, workers are forced to work over- | took part in the welcome to the Na- | tional Hunger March. 2—The election of a committee to giving Day they workeg all day. tional Hunger Marchers, and, ex: | mands cf th The Metal Workers’ Uulews 8 p, | Cept for several arrested, left on thei eee food, ee ey clo‘hing for ch, and the ¢ 1 1th St, is issuing a call to the Ma, WaY toward Washington on Tuesday, | the hunger marchers ti rittee of the club pledces it] IMISEFUCEIONS £0 ie omg oe tes) hoe aad 3—To form a Mt. Vernon Unem- Roy aise "98 coal sia gies a Lt i jestic workers to organize against the ployed Council, and food besides worl Hanger Marchers Youth & Brookiyn ors a chil- dren ¢ are called to! ao eee ing conditions | FY] Meeting Tonight at of Jobless Council NEW YORK —Instructions for all elected delegates from New York City to tne National Hunger March, and ¥ a call for an imrortant final check- |, ™¥ uw meeting of the Unemployed Coun- ba November 27, at 12 noon, to} ered. No delegate is officially jelected until he is ratified at the ratification meeting which will take | place at 2 p. m. the'same day at the | same place. ide: lect 2.—All names of Hunger Marchers | in coming 1. and low wages in the shop. Children Delegation Will Report Back to gether wth their parents to hear the delegates. Saturday a parade of children au adult workers, led by a large band will march through the east side. | |Three open air mectings at 2 p. m. Elect N. J. Delegates. off which threatens every | ker, and also against the syesd-up CLINTON, N. J., Nov. 24.—Farm- ers from all over this part of the|Famimany Offers Food! state met he: ¢ the ll of the Wert dency Deity Union we-oen |Thanksgivicg: Clubs|! Hungry Ww ho Accepicd ing with the United Farmers’ Protec- tive Association, and elected deiec- | , gates to the National Farm Relief} NEW YORK.— “Police attacked sey- Meeting Here, Sun, ©*rence. eral thousand starving men, women| | Particularly noteworthy was the | @nd children who had come b; in- Bio yare Vatelars PTF point developed by the farmer, Vitation of the Owasco Democratic | EW YORK.—A large Arad meet- | Chelborob, who pointed out that in | Club to its headquarters at 132 West | to hear the report and to greet | fighting for higher farm prices, lower | i!8th Street Wednesday night, to - | free Thanksgiving dinners. were 121 gs i H children’s hunger delegation re- | prices for the city workers should be ‘ 2 | cmitoyed Coane of Great New {turning from Washington, will be|an object, too. Let the food trust ee ee oe a cu sane ea : E rhee nee held Sunday at the Downtown Un- in between cuts its profits some, he ;Ne Promised “Thanksgiving dinners” | them, todemand| 1—ayl dele-ates for the National | ©™Ployed Council, 96 Avenue C at | said, eee con a head Poe a cheer The demonstration Hunger March are to be at Irving |> P. ™. Los pee ce or epureey, Bel ane ihe RETTIOOa! Nos san: Irving Place and sth Ste |. Children from all the schools on Calamity In Mid-Wr< Pi oeeehs RURy Dermne Saety, “Sn oyed Council has al- | the east side are being mobilized to- their “hosts,” called thé cops: and DES MOINES, Iowa, Nov. 24—) ti “py |, |erdered the attack. Several children | Henry A. Wallace, editor of Wallace's | were almost crushed during the on- | Farmer, told a banquet of bankers | slaught of the officers, yesterday that tax sales and mort- |————__ | gage foreclosures threaten calamity in the Middle West unless there is wise planning.” He had very’ little | ||] HOSPITAL AND OCULIST Pri TIONS FILLED AT 50% OFF eo = ft i} re Jt » Natio nd the organizations electing them Tacs! ‘Gua mettle te se ton Se definite to offer except a hope that | iN Hang ger Pol Dee 5 | be at the office of the Unem-|and Ave. B, another at Rutgers |S0me kind of limitation of crops Va + 9! ployed Council, 10 East .17th St, by | Square. ‘Thece tea mint converge on | through “volunteer allotments” and | — ¥ YORK—A 1 news tiem in. 8 4p, m. Saturday, Nov. 26. {a 7th St. and Ave A meeting from | Some kind of pric2 fixing could be | All delegates should have their ntials written if possible on the | stationary of their organization, with | them when they come to be regis- If your credential has been you should get a duplicate vbiication a New | committed suicide ause he could | not earn more than 50 cents a day. This is an example of the terrible| tered. misery and privation suffered by taxi| sent in, | drivers on the job. Blacklist, lay-offs| from the secretary of your organi- and many other petty persecutions |Zation. Delegates elected at meetings make the life of an unemployed driver | Should bring a credential signed by | miserable, the chairman of meeting. B At a special meeting of the Taxi! 4—Every organ‘zation which elect- | Drivers Union. a talk on the hunger! ed delegates to the National Hunger |march was enthusiastically applauded. | M Fu the reh is urged to have at least one | Sts., where they will all march back to| Worked out. Rutgers Square. Wage Cut in B’klyn fp of the Newport Parlor Frame Co. on Write Gold Filled Frames 1 Zyl Shell Frames Lenses Not Included Maahattan ‘Yptical Co. 122 HESTER ST. Between Bowery & Christie, Open Daily from 9 to7 Tel, Sunday 19 to 4 Orchard S150 $1.00 The National Hunger March de- | mands $50 Federal winter relief and ten dollars additional for each de- pendant, wniture ‘Workers Strike Against A Y 4-0220 eAT AT THE ROYAL CAFETERIA 827 BROADWAY SROOKLYN, N. Y¥.—The workers infern'] Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE corner of Newport and Walkins Brooklyn, went out on strike ¥ av e 0 Between Ith & 13th Sts.) Those present elected two taxi drivers! representative at this ratification | against a wage-cug of 10 to 15 per Roval Dishes for the Proletarist 3 @ “present special dem of em-| meeting. pare |] OUR WORKERS MEMBERS OF FLW. th FLOOR |ployed and unemployed taxi drivers | ‘E S x |[ AU Work Done Coder Personal Care ogy tole 8. f The business agent, Mr. Shootin, = =| Ait “SOR REAEDS | a ee ee | tar day boxes, fil forced, under pressure of the ma | butions and oth ers, to call the strike, The | Importers of Soviet Candies Meet to Demand A meeting of the full New made at Irving Plaza Sunday at 2) strike is under Local 1204 Brother- SPECIAL with this ADVERTISEMENT Altention ©: Filipino Freedom ” tebiess comet Meets Tonight [Re mcarenters| District Counett. | Odessa Fruit Chocolates |] GPEN SUNDAYS NEW YOR! 24—A_ mass | City Unemployed Council will take ub | new SeLTAGEL LY AEC RES Poet are Bet | Health Center Cafeteria |meeting which will elect egates | at its last meeting before the Hun-|on the workers to elect their own M. RICHMAN | ia a baat |from the Filipino Unemployed Coun-| er Marchers leave New York the | strike committee which will sracen || W2,E: HOUSTON st. New vox ||| W jeil to the National Hunger March, | final detailed plan of action for New| hicketing of the shon, ganize | AGENTS WANTED—Tel. OR. pe rae ete | 4 \ H |and at which demauds will be raised | York City during the time that the | © § 08: SHON, SLORDABE iat | for the immediate and unconditional | March is in Washington and imme- | by scabs and organize a sympathy strike | _ ialist League, Froilan Lopez of the| at 7:30 p. m. sharp at 10 East 17th Philippine Unemployed Council and| Street. All councils and city bodies independence of the Philippine I: diately upon their return. This meet- | lands, will be held tonight at 31 At-| ing will also serve as a final check up lantic Ave, Brooklyn, 8 p. m8. on all preparations for the Hunger| , "ed the Daily Worker every day Speakers’ at the ‘meeting will be|March: Sa tereage HE BONUS MARCH William Simons of the Anti-Imper-| The meeting will be held tonight HE HUNGER MARCH | pt v AV others. The meeting is arranged un-| and trade unions are urged to make HE FARMERS’ MOVEMENT der the auspices of the A. I. L., the | @ good mobilization for this meeting. Unemployed Council and the Marine | Ali local councils are to send their | Workers Industrial League. regular delegates, the organizer or At a supper given by the A, 1, L,| secretary of the council and one Wednesday night, resolutions were | other leading member of the Coun- | C adopted demanding the release of the | cil. All city bodies and trade unions | 30 sentenced leaders of the wor‘.x-s| %re urged to see that a responsible and peasants and the immediate and | leading member of their body at-| complete independence of the Philip- | tends this meeting. pins Islands. the wood carvers. for National Hunger March news Pure Foeus ARE REPORTED COMPLETELY AND TRULY IN THE MEET YOUR COMRADES AT THE cooperative Dining Club ALLURTON AVENUE (or, Bronx Park East Proletarian Prices iNew ark V heat Saturday Hold an Open Hearing on Hunger in your neighborhood; invite all jobless and part time workers and SUBSCRIBE NOW! Classified keep a record of their evidence for So. Nn wer Vicli: ms | NEWAR: —In behalf of LARGE FURNISHED ROOM—for rent in Bronx. FE. Seainst the starvation _system. w. 169th St. near Boston Rd. General Subscription Rates: A. 6/0 Daily Worker, jthe persecuted workers of South| River, some of whom are in prison, | |the South River Defense Committee | |of the Newark I. L. D. is pres: enting | @ Mass meeting and concert at Kreu. gers Auditorium, Newark. tomorrow at 8 p.m. Ben Gold, of the Needle Trades | Workers Industrial Union, will be the main . spéaker. CAMP NITG Open for the Indian Si The best time of the year for rest, hi The hotel is equipped with steam heat Come and enjoy the exhilarating atmos comfort while building yourself bac! The same reduced ra’ What is your organziation doing for the National Hunger March. If it isn’t doing anything yet, write the Daily Worker. | Autos will leave from Bronx For information telephones LABOR UNION MEETINGS $12.50 PER WEEK EDAIGET ummer and Fall iking, games, social recreation and all modern facilities. phere of the late fall season in k to health, 86m Year; 83.50 for 6 Months 00 for 3 Months; Tse 1 Month mi $1.00 a Year MANHATTAN AND BRONX: | $9.60 a Years $5.00 for 6 Months $1.00 1 Month Address Mail to: DAILY \WORKER, 50 East 13th Street, New York City | We'll See Them Thru With 50,000 Meals! il tes will prevail Hoover is trying to break the Hungur March by starvation. Officials all over the country heve been ordered te deny food and shelter to the Hunger Marchers, Co-onerative as usual ESTABROOK pa | BUILDING WORKERS Unemployed bricklayers, ¢: DAILY rpenters, elec- t ns, iron workers, glaziers, laborers, painters, plasterers, plumbers, _riveters, teamfitters, housewreckers, ete., including journeymen’ and helpers, are called on to come to a mass meeting to be held this Saturday afternoon 1 pm. at Labor Temple, 14th St. and Second Ave., for the Purpose of forming a Building Trades Re- Hef Committee, TICKETS 40 CENTS Meeting Office Workers’ Union at Labor | TICKETS IN ADVANCE 40 CENTS ( Temple, 241 E. i4th St., at 8 pm. Allan Johnson will speak on’ “National Hunger ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION. December 31 NEW YEAR’S EVE, Concert—Bali ANSWER IS ' City-wide Food Collections from now until December ord! WORKER 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 Stere, 2700 Bronx Park Fast. Food Workers Industrial Union, 4 W. 18th St. Workers International Relief, 146 Fifth Ave. PRESS FUND 20 CENTS CLUDING PRESS FUND) | March,” * 6 ss ie John Reed Memorial at 8 p.m. | Séhool for Social Research, 66 W. at Me 12th St, BRONX COLISEUM, E. 177th STREET Workers Center, 35 E. 12th St. (in store on street Jevel). NGER MUSTN’T STOP THEM! “Road te t! eo | | “Forced Latcor”’ Lies) MARCH THROUGH Amkino the Soviet Govern-| Al] Out Saturday and nd now at the Acme Theatre, Soviet Union's answer to the | Sunday tof capitalist propaganda which esonts the Soviet Karelia. "N= | (CONTINUED “PROM PAGE ON: region as a frozen hell with led neasants” werkine under the ash, cutting timber and dying like | mit Hunker to stop this National | Hunger March? camp conditions shown| Will you permit Jack of transporta- film are up to the best es-| tion to delay the marchers, or make tablished in the American Pacific | it impossible to reach Washington? Northwest in the hey-day of mili-| Will you permit the marchers who tant union action there. in 1917-18,|are expesed to cold and hunger to That means they are the equal of|remain stranded on the road? the best ever known in the cap-| Asncwer this! Give now! Intensify italis’ world, and about twice as good | tine collection for funds, food and as anything knevm now in the cap- | Cioining! Continue the collection at | Saturday and Sunday, Nov. 26 and husky lumberjacks | 27, nourishing meals in @| Bying all the money on hand to well lighted dining room, amused by | the office of the Joint Committee at radio and lectures as they eat and| 44g gifth Ave rest. You see a bed for every man, none of these American three high | “muzzle loading” bunks. ‘The rooms | are Kent clean and the bunks are | kept clean and the bunks are made |1/ ting of a hall in Washington for by women—evidently the lumber- | the convention of the Nesional Hun- jacks have their women along, and | ef March, delays the sending out | the hideously un-natural semi-mon- | Of funds for the delegates on the astic life of the lumberjack in the | Toad. Lumber in this You sce the eatine heavy Money in your possession delays | the arrangements for trucks for the |New York Delegation, delays the American camps is unknown to See the marchers through to them. i | Washington! The trees are small and some of | a Te the dangers. like “high topping” one tegen” | Call Unemployed in ~ Ww }jack are unknown to the Soviet ers. Clothing is heavy and | Building Trades to n. The mest modern’ tools, Attend Mass Meet r says for “falling” the trees, | r | are in use. The saw mill machinery] ew yORK.—About 90 per cent of jis* modern, and there are safety | building trades workers are jobless guards to let the saw mill worker | ang thousands are facing starvation, keep his fingers. In American saw- | the Provisional Committee of Unem- a man feeds his fingers one or | ployed Building Trades Workers ‘wo af a time into the machinery | stated yesterday. | until he is finally fired to starve | with his hands only stumps. The committee announced a mass Psi eo se ty meeting on haere at 1 p. m. at We Are Marching" among your |trades’ Relief Gommittee will be shopmates and neighbors. formed. DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 Bristol Street (Bet. Pitkin & Sutter Aves.) B’klyn PHONE: DICKENS 2-301 Office Hours: 8-10 A.M., 6-8 P.M. ANNOUNCEMENT | Dr. Louis L. Schwartz SURGEON DENTIST Announces i The removal of his office to larger i} quarters at 1 Union Square (8th Floor) Suite 803 Tel. ALgonquin 4-9805 | AMUSEMENT Is Soviet Russia Using Forced Labor!! American Premiere—Amkino’s Latest Talking Production — NOW! ‘There's always a better show at RKO 2ND BIG WEER! RICHARD DIX and ANN HARDING “The Conquerors” The N. ¥. American called it “a fit suc- cessor to the immortal ‘Cimarron.’ nko MAYFAIR Nna'h at 47th St. Daily to 2 35e—11 p.m. to close Se Buy RKO Thrift Books and Save 100, 14 St.&6th Ay. (TYIC_ REPERTORY % 51-00 ay 50c, $1, $1.50 Evs, 8:30 Mats. Wed. & Sat. 2:30 EVA LE GALLIENNE. Director |) Tonight “CGHADLE SONG” | Sat. Mat. .__.. “PETER PAN’ Seats 4 weeks in advance at Box Office and Town Hall, 113 W. 43rd St, “ROAD to NORTH” THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION IN SOVIET NORTH of the workers in Soviet Karelia —The lumber and fishing industries— Aluminum mines—"Shock Brigaders” at werk and play—Homes of the workers, ete., etc. | | |] A Film You Can't Afford to Miss! | —Added Extraordinary Attraction— Latest Talking Soviet Newsreel Showing International Youth Day, ete. worsens Aeme Theatre | 14h Street and Union Square |} Cont. from 9 a.m.—Last show 10:30 p.m. CAMEO are | “WITH WILLIAMSON BENEATH THE SEA”) i AMERICAN AUT JMN CROCUS PHIL BAKER oe oa AND COMPANY OF 80 trieta Cel ee rig THEA., 44th St., W. of Bway 2:30 20 th St. W. of Bway | ves, 10, Mis. Thanks’s Day & Sat. at 2:40 | PVCS 8:20 Matinees Thurs. & 5: | Righaokc ie -AT-LAW | E PAUL ‘MUNI ELMER "ICE PLYMOUTH THES. W. 45th. LS. 4-6720 Evenings 6:30; Mats., Thus, and Sat., 2:30 New Revue Bit vith E GROUP THEATRE Presents Success STORY John Howard Lawson Maxine ENiotts Thea., 9th, EB. of B’ Byenings, 8:40; Mats., Wed. and Sat., ‘The Vowerful EPIC OF LABOR | SRD WEER! | IE TREATRE GUILD p: | ae ‘Tur GoopE ARTH intitle id “An excellent film.”—PAILY WORKER EUROPA tin", 25€ Mon Continuous from 10:39 a. m, to Midnight | | the Puliteer Prise ‘Novel by GUILD. THEA, Sind St. We Lye. Mats. Thursday & Saturday For Benefit of the Hunger Marchers A Splendidly Acted Film Drama of the Civil Wa: RED AND WHITE with LEONIDOFF at the 28th St. and Bway Theatre FROM Noy. 28th to Dec. 3rd INCLUSIVE Popular Prices—L5e., up to 12 o'clock Mass Send-Off and Ratification Meet- ing for the National Hunger March BRONX COLISEUM 177TH STREET, THE BRONX TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 7:30 P. M, GREET THE NEW ENGLAND HUN- GER MARCHERS at this Mass Dem- onstration! JOIN IN RATIFYING THE DEMANDS of the Hunger Marchers for $50 Winter Relief and Fe surance, TICKETS 25 CENTS PROMINENT SPEAKERS Auspices: Joint Committee for Support of the National Hunger March — HEAR THE REPORT of the New York Delegates to the National Hunger BUY YOUR TICKETS NOW at the following places: Workers Bookstore—s0 East 13th St, Workers International Reliet—146 Fifth 1 Unemployment In- | "Ave. Bronx Co-operative—2700 Bronx Pk. B. i i] \