The Daily Worker Newspaper, December 5, 1932, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

PAGE TWO 13,040 RED IN COOK COUNTY VOTE | Beat the Socialist Negro Wards CHICAGO, County Ele count, gives I vote of 13,040. vote for Thomas is 32,000. incomplete total yote fo ator is: Cot t cand Socialist vu 8. Sen- for candidate, | Presidential incomplete hh Comm Two of these neighborhoods ived 1,137 v ceived 818 votes and the 150. These votes are quite and show very clearly tt gro workers have no u: Crow Socialist Party In Ward 20, Foster votes and Thomas 174, and in W 26 Foster received 28 votes Thomas 218. The second ward gave the Communist Party the la | number of yotes of any ward in the} city. Tabulation of votes, ward by| ward, shows that in petty-bourgeois | sections the Socialist Party received quite a heavy vote. Big Increase. The yote for the Communist Party in 1982, with 13,040 votes, is a big increase over the vote in this county | in 1928, when it had 1,928 votes. In view of the coming spring aldermanic elections in the city of Chicago the task of the Communist Party, on the basis of a united front from below, is to win workers who voted for the Socialist Party in the Presidential elections and workers who yoted| Democrat and Republican to yote| Communist. | Down State. In Washington County. 8 Co: munist votes were counted, the firs’ ever counted here. There were 117 Socialist votes. The total vote was about 7,900. In Perry County, votes were counted. In Jackson County, 18 Communist Socialists the Jim 13 Communist votes were counted. There were about 130 Socialist votes. These three counties are mainly agricultural, but all have some coal mining, especially Perry County, whieh has extensive strip coal mines. | The vote shows that the Com- munist Party has a foothold. There were probably some more votes not counted, judging by previous elec- tions. Not a single Communist meeting was held in these three counties and only a little personal contact done} and a small amount of literature| spread. Both the St, Louis Post Dis- | patch and the St. Louis Star and Times, which are widely read in this district, gave reams of publicity to the Socialists and supported them editorially. “We Demand” First Children’s Pamphlet Is Out Reviewed by JOHN ADAMS “WE DEMAND” by Helen Kay, | issued by the National Committee of the Unemployed Councils and the Young Pioneers of America. Price 2 cents. P. O, Box 28, Sta., One hundred or more Ic. & rT Story of “Anyboy and Any~ gitl Anywhre” is an important ‘weapon in the arsenal of the fight- ers against hunger, the working- class. ‘This is a primer for children that is really understandable by them | and presents the answers to their questions about unemployment in | their own language. Its introduction mentions that it ‘wag issued on the eve of the leaving of the children’s delegation to Washington. That little group of “Young Marchers” that has made history in the struggles of the un- employed, Its widest distribution will aid in the organization of chil- dren and through them their par- ents in the comming struggles of the winter. It is woven around the death of Freeman Violette, Jr., of Albany. Freeman was a veteran-owrker's son who died in his classroom while the champion of the “forgotten man” was campaigning and delud- ing workers on how he would over- come the crisis if they would only put their trust in him. Freeman was a school child in Albany, the capitol city of Roosevelt’s state! The explanation of capitalist overproduction is so simply brought in that no child will fail to grasp it. We hope that every revolution- ary worker and his organization will order this pamphlet immedi- ately and thus guarantee the next of the series in the fight against, child misery, hunger and labor. Circulate it widely among child- ren. The failure to mobilizee wide struggles of children has been one of the weaknesses of the unemploy- ed struggles so fer. Thus the pamphlet is also a aie for adult workers. Read it learn the language and thoughts of the chil- dren! EXPOSE ESTELLE SMITH MURDER “The murder of Estelle Smith” is one of the feature articles in the special hunger march issue of the Liberator, now off the press, It con- Porc many other, interesting ures,» 317} ¢ Who Needs Relief? MRAORS CAPITALIST AND THEIR CHILDREN DO NOT NEED RELIEF-THEY HAVE THROWN THE BURDEN OF THE CRISIS ONTO THE WORKERS DECEMBER 5, 1932 | ) 6 a5} i i THRU WAGE CUTS, UNEMPLOYMENT AND SPEED-UP WITH THE HELP OF WC1.GREEN AND GIS KINO — Ol = SO’ FEDERAL = §(F WINTER RELIEF 6 AND UNEMPLOY MENT INSURANCE, a aa of To US iy Z, | i AT THE SAME TIME THEY ASK THE UNEMPLOYED To UVE ON WORDS GND MISERABLE CHARITYGt4¢. a day) "FORCE HOSPITAL TO TAKE WORKER Starvation Cases Here} Expose McKee Dies 4.—Cases of | tion and ness coming to the | n of Daily Worker con- to expose the miserably in- city “relief” system, NEW YORK, ent tinue adequate less and unemployed worker | who-collapsed on the street was taken | to the headquarters of the W. I. R./ Ave. This organization r a city ambulance and de- manded of the ambulance doctor, Dr. Monroe, of the Belleview Hos- | pital, that the worker be taken there for aiment, Although the man was obviously | in a serious conditi the doctor stated that the hospital is over-| crowded with emergency cases and} that he is continually “bawled out” | for bringing patients there. Ambulance Forced to Take Worker The worker, who was in such a| condition that he could not speak | coherently, was finally taken in front of the ambulance where a crowd| quickly gathered. The by-standers | seeing the critical condition of thi men, expressed their indignation and | forced Dr. Mohroe to take him into| the ambulance. Several Weinstein Trial Set For Tomorrow In Bronx County Court NEW YORK, Dec. 3,—Sam ,Wein- | stein, the framed-up furniture’ work- er who is being charged with man- slaughter developing out of a strike that took place in Brooklyn, is coming up for trial at the Bronx County Court, Arthur Avenue and Tremont, Tuesday, December 6, at 10 a.m, Workers are urged to attend the trial. Various organizations are respond- ing to the call of the I. L. D, to raise funds to cover the immense cost of the defense. The workers of the Hinsdale Youth Center, 313 Hinsdale Street, will hold a mass meeting and concert on Saturday, December 10, at 8 p.m. for that purpose. DRIVE 10 EXPOSE TORTURE SYSTEM LL.D. Shows Its Link! With Scottsboro NEW YORK.—A_ nation-wide ampaign to publicize the exposure | f the horrible torture system of hain gangs in the South, as re- vealed in John L, Spivak’s book, “Georgia Nigger,” now being pub- persons | lished serially in the Daily Worker, is 800 HOSPITAL WORKERS FIRED Foreign-Born Kicked Out by City BULLETIN NEW YORK.—The Department of Hospitals has announced that it has fired 800 foreign-born em- ployes. They will be replaced by native-born workers at reduced wages, Commissioner J, G. Willlam Greef announced. re Ae NEW YORK.—Twenty-five foreign- born nurses at the Bellevue hospi] psychopathic department were nott- wanted to accompany the sick man, | being launched by the International | but were not allowed to ride in the ambulance, Workers who followed the ambul- ance found on their arrival at the Bellview Hospital that the sick man had been dumped out at the gates, without being taken in. A crowd that gathered around him as he lay on the mission to the hospital, but no med- ical attention could be secured. When | asked why he took the sick man into the ambulance in the first place, Dr. Monroe replied that he wanted to get away from the crowd, The Un- employed Council took up the fight in this case, and the man is now in the hospial. Family Denied Relief At about the same time it was re- ported to the Daily Worker that M. Cushing, an unemployed worker with his wife and two children, had spent the night riding in subway trains, having no other place to stay. They had been turned down at two relief agencies on the grounds the “family is too small” to warrant relief. Daily reports of this kind expose the statement made by McKee last Wednesday that “no one needs to go hungry or homeless” in this city. A. C. W, Still Helps Bosses Cut Wages NEW YORK.—While Hillman and the other officials of the Amalga- mated Clothing Workers of America are making fake gestures of ‘“de- manding wage increases” from the bosses, they are at this very time showing in practice that they are just as much as ever in league with the bosses who keep forcing wages down, At the Brotton Hall Shop, 140 Fifth Ave, 25 to 30 workers were thrown out of their jobs, and, with the permission of the A. C. W. offi- cials, the work was sent to Amalla Cosana, 692 Broadway, where it is being done at much lower wages. At the Change Shop, 381 Broome St., the boss has owed the workers $700 in wages for some time, but the union has taken no steps to collect the money. STUDENTS STRIKE HITS JIM-CROWISM Fight Expulsion of .2 From Ark. School MENA, Ark., Dec. 4.—Thirty-four students went out on strike against the expulsion of Henry Forbes and Jack Copen, Communist students who have been leading thé struggle at the Commonwealth College for the right of Negro students to join the school. The strikers represent 75 per cent of the student body. Commonwealth College is a liberal labor school controlled by a self- perpetuating association and located near Mena, The association owns the property and lays down rules for the conduct of the school, During the past few months the students have forced the association to adopt a more radical program for the school. The expulsion move came when the students demanded admission rights for Negro students and the right of the students to par- ticipate in the conduct of the school, The expulsions are an attempt to stop this pressure from oelow. TROOPS ATTACK STRIKERS OVIEDO, Spain, Dec. 4.—Several strikers were wounded-as a result of attacks made by troops against them. Circulate the pamphlet: “Why shopmates and neighbors. 4 \ sidewalk demanded his ad- | | Labor Defense, William L. Patterson, | national secretary of the organiza- | tion, has announced, z | “The ultimate victory of the Negro and white workers in the Scottsboro case,” Patterson said, ‘depends upon | the intensification of the fight of the | International Labor Defense against the national oppression of the Negro | people in all its forms. The case is | not in any sense an isolated one. To frustrate the plans of the white southern landowners to lynch, by legal or ordinary means, the nine Ne- gro boys in the Scottsboro case, the workers must fight against the entire system of which this frame-up is only part. “Appeals to the government au- thorities and to the other fosterers of this torture system will ‘certainly not be sufficient to eradicate, or even to permanently modify it. They will be completely inefective unless they are backed by mass pressure. Any ap- proach to the struggle based upon il- lusions of obtaining ‘justice’ and ‘fair | Play’ only creates the same illusions as are fostered by the misleaders and | by their open capitalist supporters in | the Scottsboro case, and serve the | objective purpose of continuing the oppression of the Negro people.’ The I, L. D, campaign will include lecture and slide tours of the north and south, together with other means of arousing mass pressure and mass jTesistance to these torture instru- ;ments of the southern slave-hunters. Legislature at Special |\Session Plans to Cut | Wages All Over State | | SYRACUSE, N. Y., Dec. 4—The special session of the state legisla- ture, which Acting Governor Leh- man has announced for Dec. 9, is being called not merely to put over big wage-cuts for New York city em- ployes, but, for workers in other cities throughout the state. This was made | clear in a statement issued last night | by Lehman, who came here to ad- | dress a linner of the State Conserva- | tion Association. One of the largest groups to be effected will be school teachers, At the same time Lehman also stated that, despite the constant in- crease of mass misery and starva- | tion, the question of unemployment and veterans’ relief would not be taken up. The special session of the legisla- ture has been called at the behest of the Wall Street bankers who con- trol the New York city, as well as the state government and who are de- termined to slash at least 10 per | Some from the wages of low-paid | civil employes while the unemployed |are left to starve. The big demonstration for winter relief in New York City on Tuesday at noon will protest against this Wholesale wage-cut drive, which has the backing of Roosevelt and the entire Democratic Party. ——-——______ ROLPH “THROUGH WITH MOONEY” SACRAMENTO, Calif., Dec. 4.— Governor James Rolph, Jr., tool of | the big open-shop bosses who want |to keep Tom Mooney rotting in San Quentin jail till he dies, declared to- | day he was “through with the Mooney case.” The workers of the world are, |however, not through with the | Mooney case; they are rallying be- | hind the campaign of the Interna- | tional Labor Defense, determined to} |force the release of this great labor | martyr. | MORE ANTI-JEWISH DEMON- STRATION WARSAW, Poland, Dec. 4.—Polish students continued their anti-Semitic demonstrations today and threatened new pograms against the Jews as reprisals for the death of two Polish students. Police tried to keep up ap- pearances by holding the demonstra- tors in check, but it is an open secret, that the fascist Pilsudski government fea-| We Are Marching” among your | is supporting these anti-Semitic out- breaks, fied Saturday that their services would not be required after Decem- | ber 25. Many of the workers affected have been undergraduates for seven and | eight years. Formerly those nurses | living outside of the hospital received | $125 per month, and those living in the building $90. Now all will get $80 monthly, regardless of where they live. A new requirement to help lay-off both native-born and foreign-born is that each must have at least two years of college besides being a high school graduate. Nurses in other departments will be notified today either that they are to be laid off or are to receive a eut in pay. Nurses might look at what has happened to general help who have been there a number of years. Many-receiving $80 a month were laid off and rehired at $30 per month. A meeting will be called this week for the nurses to come to and plan resistance to the lay-offs and the wage cuts which the lay-off makes possible by splitting native and for- eign-born workers. The nurses should demand no lay-off and wage cuts and hiring of more nurses to stop the terrible strain wnder which the staff is now working. At the same time that nurses are being fired, sick workers have been coming to the Daily Worker to tell how they are being turned away or thrown out of beds when they are yardly able to walk, with Bellevue Hospital giving as the reason that there is a lack of facilities. “WALK A LITTLE FASTER” OPENS TUESDAY, ST. JAMES THEATRE “Whik A Little Faster,” a new revue, with sketches by 8, J. Perl- man, lyrics by E. ¥. Harburg and music by Vernon Duke, will have its premiere at the St. James Theatre (formerly Erlanger’s) on Tuesday night, The cast includes Beatrice Lille, Clark and McCullough, Evelyn Hoey and Bernice Claire. "The ‘Theatre Guild production of “The Good Earth” will open on an extended road tour on December 26, with a three weeks engagement in Chicago. ‘The Owen and Donald | Davis dramatization of Pearl 8. |Buck's novel will tour under the | auspices of the American Theatre '80 MORE FARMERS G0 10 CAPITAL Demand Moratorium, on Taxes, Mortgages MARSHALTOWN, Iowa, Dec, 2— {Eighty farmer delegates for the Na- \tional Farm Relief Conference in | Washington Dec. 7-10, started Wed- nesday from this city. Most of the delegates in this group come from | Nebraska, North Dakota and Mon- tana. | ee # No Forced Sales. The National Farm Relief Confer ence will meet in Washington Dec. 7 to 10, with representation from all the farm states, some 33 state dele- | gations being already assured. The delegates are all elected at mass meetings called by the United Farm- ers League or local bodies on @ uni- ted front basis, or are elected by the rank and file of such farm or- ganizations as the Ferm Holiday Association, Farmers Union, Grange, etc, whose leadership oppcses the conference, The conference will work out a list of demands centering upon those of @ moratorium on payment of taxes and mortgage debts, no foreclosures or tax sales, and real relief without relief or discrimination, for the ruined farmers. The demands will be presented to Congress, . SIOUX CITY, Ia. Dec, 2. — The} northwestern column of farmer dele- gates to’ Washington reached here Monday afternoon from Sioux Falls. The delegation had held a demon- stration in Sioux Falls to demand the |release of Alfred Long, sentenced to 30 days for leading the farmers’ Strike movement there. Four hundred and fifty assembled here to greet the farmer delegates at a meeting held Monday evening. Speeches of welcome were made by Pete Legget, farm strike leader in Towa and by Secretary Orville of the Sioux City unemployed council. The delegates had a dinner pre- pared for them with food collected by the unemployed council here. There will also be a mass meeting '“Annoyed” at Workers | city who are suffering from real dis- Charity Dope Peddler Who Want Cash Relief | There are 800,000 workers in this tress, 800,000 city “unfortunates” whom “we” should help as we would our neighbor, Harvey D. Gibson, chairman of the Emergency Unem- ployment Relief Committee, said) sweetly to 200 block chairmen at al substantial luncheon recently at the | Hotel New Yorker. Mr. Gibson confessed he felt at first ashamed going around asking | workers for money, but that he was pretty hardened to it now, and in| fact has come to believe that he was doing the workers a favor. The fourth winter of the crisis has made it dreadful for the capitalist landlord of New York, John D, Rockefeller, Gibson said. Rockefeller has thrown $300,000 the committee's way, and the Rockefeller Institute $750,000, which is only half last year's donation, Mr, Gibson also said he was deeply annoyed because impoverished work- ers spurn the food tickets and the inferior food at the Municipal Lodg- ing House, and want cash instead, The committee is suffering from a “sinking spell” because it is not col- lecting the money it expected to, he also revealed. Not through the miserable boss charity peddled by Gibson, but through organized struggle for re- lef, on a city, state and national scale, will the unemployed win their demand for the right to live, Unemployed Council Forces Restaurant To Pay Back Wages | NEW YORK.—The Lower East Side Unemployed Council, with headquar- ters at 196 East Broadway, has just forced the restaurant boss at Malicho, on Grand St., to pay Mike Zadansky, 626 East Fifth St., the $19 back wages that he had refused to pay, Zadansky made a contribution to the funds of the Council for the con- tinuation of its work. Zadansky pointed out that other workers, whose pay had been held back by Malicho, who had filed suit in the courts, but so far the cases have not come up, and the charges the workers had to pay in the suit have almost amounted to the sum due them. On the same night the Council | forced this payment of back wages, it stopped an eviction at 183 Madison St., putting back the furniture that had been thrown out. All unemployed workers are urged to report at any time to the Coun- cil's headquarters to assist in the in- | creasing work of organizing the work- | ers against evictions and persecution by the bosses. COOP REDUCES RENTS AGAIN. NEW YORK.—The board of direc- | tors of the Workers Cooperative Colony has reduced rent $1 a room, The board has reduced the rents | three times. The membershin cf the colony in both houses at 2700 and 2800 Bronx Park East voted to con- tribute the first month’s reduction to the Morning Freheit. Importeés of Soviet Candies SPECIAL with this ADVERTISEMENT Odessa Fruit Chocolates 4 LB: BOX FOR $1.00 M. RICHMAN 145 E, HOUSTON ST. NEW YORK AGENTS WANTED—Tel, ORcharé 4-7778 Hospital and Ocolist Prescripti At One-Half Prict GF DR White Gold Filled Frames. $1.50 ZXL Shell Frames ~~. + 91.00 Lenses not included COHEN’S, 117 Orchard St. First Door Off Delancey St. Telephone: ORchard 4-4520 Filled tatern’) Workers Order OENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE th FLOOR AD Work Done Under Persona! Care of DR, JOREPRSON Phone jae Sq. 6-554 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A piace with atmosphere where nll 302 E. 12th St. radicals meet New York JADE MOUNTAIN American & Chinese Restaurant ~ 197,SECOND AVENUE Bet, 12 & 13 Welcome to Our Comrades Attention Comrades! OPEN SUNDAYS Health Center Cafeteria Stage and Screen 1 AM A FUGITIVE FROM A CHAIN GANG, a Warner Bros. picture, | directed by Merven Le A re- | view by David King (Workers Film and Photo League), E advertisements in the capitalist press, the billboards on the fences around vacant lots and the front of the theater that is showing “I Am a Fugitive From a Chain Gang” will sizzle with the producers’ and exhib- itors’ screams that here, at last, is a picture that tells the whole truth, exposes a vile practice to the public eye. But just as you've been fooled by “truth about sex” films coming out of Hollywood, so you'll be fooled by “truth about government and jus- tice” films coming from there. When the film shows the chain gang, it’s shown only as a stage for our hero, and more falsely, as a single injustice having no connection with our otherwise pure, beautiful and justly administered courts and government. Neither do they show you the truth of a whole class and a whole race persecuted and oppressed by this noble American institution. Our hero, white and good-looking, re- turned from that romantic World War, begins to whine idealistically about the lack of romance in his factory, escaping from his “hamper- ing” routine to ride the rods up and down the country, until a mistaken crime in a carefully unidentified state lands him in a chain-gang, where we | are privileged to see the mental and physical tortures he, as a sensitive individual, undergoes there. He es- capes, rises in the world to the post of a skilled and wealthy engineer, is betrayed, returned to the chain-gang (some more mental and physical torture), escapes again, leaving the film dangling in the air, an unfin- ished statement, less than a half- | truth. Where do we see the corrup- tion of the courts, the maneuvering of the politicians and bosses who fill the gangs with workers who protest, Negroes who demand their rights? No, we're not allowed to see any of this because it’s not relative to the distressing adventures of Paul Muni, Paul Muni does not play the part of a Negro, so’we are shown none of the facts available in Spi- vak’s book, “Georgia Nigger.” The part the Negro race plays in the film | is a curious one. We are led to) suppose that a Negro's life in a| prison camp alternates between sing- | ing songs and sweating picturesque- | ly. Nothing is shown of the separate quarters for Negroes, special punish- ments (tortures), lynching or casual murrders of Negro prisoners, Paul BRAZIL, PERU IN NAVAL CLASH U. S. Pushes Sham “Peace” Moves Behind | Scenes Brazilian warships are reported to have clashed with Peruvian war ves- sels on the upper reaches of the Amazon River. One Peruvian vessel was sunk. The Brazilian Goyern- ment is rushing troops to the Peru- vian borders near the town of Le- ticia, where Colombian and Peruvian troops are engaged in one of an increasing number of undeclared wars raging over wide regions of the crisis-torn capitalist world. The Bellanca Aircraft Corp. of Wilmington, Del., is filling an order of ten military planes for the Bra- zilian Government. U. S, munition makers are rushing orders for Co- Jembia and Brazil, as well as for Bolivia in its undeclared war with Peru, for Japan in its robber war on the Chinese People and for the butcher Nanking Government in its war on the revolutionary Chi- nese masses. ’ The Brazilian-Peruvian nayal clash | is another step in the extension of | the undeclared war between Peru and Colombit. The government ‘of Ecua- dor recently mobilized troops against PROTEST. SHARK’S ROBBERY OF $40 Call Demonstration at Muller’s Today NEW YORK.—The License Bureau still allows the brigand Muller Agency, 1173 Sixth Ave., to continue rébbing the workers. Since last year the Muller Agency has had 14 work- ers of the Sixth Ave. Job Agency Grievance Committee of 58 W. 38th St. jailed for interceding for robbed workers. Last Friday a worker reported he had been sent out on one of those fake jobs of the Muller Agency which was supposed to pay $50 a month, and for this the Muller Agency took $40 down, and was to take $10 the first pay day. The job did not ex- ist and the shark refused to return the money. The’ Sixth Ave. Commit- tee has called a demonstration to be held at 11 a.m. this morning in front of the agency, The Sixth Ave. Job Agency Griev- ance Committee has just forced the Hanover Employment Agency, 1247 Sixth Ave., to return $9 taken from Nancy Lee, homeless telephone oper- ator, for a job which netted her $8, ‘The agency charged $11 to provide a job paying $60 monthly as tele- phone operator at the Georgian Apartments, 168th St. and Broadway. The girl was fired because she be- came ill on the job, She slept three nights in the 50th St. bus station, on subway trains and in the streets, The agency refused to give back her fee until “The Fighting Sixth” com- mittee picketed the place. Other Victories. Other victories of the grievance committee include the return of $5 to a worker by the Academy Employ- ment Agency, 1251 Sixth Ave. This worker went to work as a vegetable man at 577 Fulton Ave., Brooklyn, but found that the job had been misrepresented because he had to do cooking, dishwashing, etc. A com- mittee of 7 made the job shark come across. “The Fighting Sixth” also recently forced the Public Service Employ- ment Agency, 1233 Sixth Ave., to re- turn $7.40 in fee and carfares taken from Sylvia Tomanelli, 701 E. 175th St., and Alice Runner, 345 43rd St., Brooklyn, The committee also forced the Peru, Brezil and Chile announced their intention to protect the “neu- trality” of Ecuador. The conflict re- ftects the present extremely sharp struggle between U. S. and British imperialists for markets, Academy Employment Agency, 1271 from Alfred Bohmke, 346 E. 8th St., for a job which lasted only a week at the Radio Coffee Shop, 849 Tenth Ave. DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 Bristol Street (Bet, Pitkin & Sutter Aves.) B’klyn PHONE: DICKENS 2-3012 Office Hours: 8-10 A.M., 1-2, 6-8 P.M, 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 AMUSEMENTS (IVIC_REPERTORY 4 50e, $1, $1.50 Evs, 8:30 Mats. Wed, & EVA LE GALLIENNE, Director Tonight and Fri. Eve, ——— Tues, and Thurs. Eves. —— AUTUMN CROCUS FRANCIS LEDERER in MOROSCO THEATRE, 45th St. W. of Biway 20h Ay. 94450. 8 | se of the Serfs —— Against the Czar! | NOW PLAYING ||| Seviet Sound Film with English Titles ‘FALSE Christmas Eve. December 24th bP Rockland Palace AUSPICES — COMMUNIST PARTY ff] | end YOUNG COMMUNIST LEAGUE §]| | KEEP This Date OPEN! Garment District Garment Section Workers Patronize Navarr Cafeteria | 333 7th AVENUD Corner 28th St, with DOROTHY GISH Evs, 8:40, Mts, Wed, & Sat. at 2:40 Su TRE GROUP THEATRE Presents CCESS STORY By John Howard Lawson THE THRILING ADVENTURES OF THE UR Tat Exclusive Showing {|| #venugs 8:40: hata Wed. aud Sat, 30 THE HUNGERMARCH]| 5, CAMEO airy, Demonnitallins: A OTe 38. Country “WITH WILLIAMSON si ~ ” nd fa Acme Theatre| oe BEAT > Wer 14th Street and Union Square Cont, from 9 a,m.—Last show 10:30 p.m, Broadway 7 MANY EATR Aina CONSTANCE BENNETT in*ROCKABYE” "0 JEFFERSON 1" . «NOW yona., ‘SMILING THROUGH’ SHEARER with FREDRIC MARCH & LESLIE HOWARD Added “THAT'S MY BOY” Feature with RICHARD CROMWELL New Revue Hit AMERICAN si PHIL BAKER 4§?, compa SHUBERT THEA, 44th St. W, of B’way Eves, 8:30; Matinees Wed. and Sat. 2:30 Read the Daily Worker every day for National Hunger March news and d'rections, Celebrate th The Nes Anniversary Good Wood Served Right Farragut Cafeteria 326 Seventh Av., at 28th St, Mansion DAIRY RESTAURANT Daily atorker , New Year’s Eve SATURDAY, DECEMBER 3st, 1932 Meet the New Year With a 147 WEST 27TH STREET Near 7th Avenue UNION RESTAURANT au omrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’'S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Cleremont Parkway Bron> Brooklyn WORKERS—EAT AT THE to welcome the delegates back from Workers Center — 50 E. 13th St, Quality Food Reasonable Parkway Cafeteria 1638 PITKIN. AVENUE GRAND CONCERT & BALL Excellent Program and Double Brass Band Orchestra BRONX COLISEUM PRESS FUND 20 CENTS ADMISSION 40 CENTS Buy Tickets in Advance and Save 20 Cents WORKERS ATTENTION! Only Cafeteria in Garment Garmegt District Above 34th St. employing members of the FOOD WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION Managed by the ber well-known Mr, Grul 257 W. 37TH ST. ST. Near Hopkinson Ave, Brooklyn, N. BRUNSWICK CAFETERIA QUALITY FOOD AT WORKERS Fifth Ave., to give back $2.10 taken - = canine 8 —— ,

Other pages from this issue: