The Daily Worker Newspaper, December 16, 1932, Page 2

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at aceasta soit SEAMEN PICKET FINN CONSULATE te BIG ; HARLEM MARCH SATURDAY PAGE Turn Stool ~ Scottsboro 2a, Refused Relief Unless Pigeons ued for a really big mass de- All W. a What’s On— Lecture Eden 933. Sheff Ave. aor Union Meetings DRESSMAKERS on NEEDLE CHOTOORAPIIC otographic 4 t w. aturday at the Red AY 19th TWO DAT = The von Wedel Laboratories NEW ROCHELLE. N.Y eer Clinical, Bacteriological, Pathological, Chemical and Serological Examinations December 6, 1952. eamen The following ie the report on the Special Milk Examination ae em: neffe for Mre.S. %. Burnham, 799 Broadway, New York City, op Mepecimen received on December 7, 1¥3z: Pet Solids Total not fat solids s dard Plate Count rie Per ce. ) juars Botsle of Milk ‘Markeo Bdge Hill Farm 16,000 n within the next few days consul changes his atti- | mass demonstrations ul to furnish a house Finnis men | Laboratory report, showing milk of the Community Exchange, dis- tributed to hungry children of the unemployed at Croton, in Westchester, one of the richest counties in the world, has only one-half of 1 per cent butter fat, instead of the 3 per cent and over of good milk. work. | Meet Today in Croton : COPS HELP FIRE re:| Children Get. for 7 FOREIGN BORN CROTON-ON-HUDSON, N i ° | Dec. 15-A mass meeting to ema 200 Discharged at Bellevue Hospital rs Groups in rade ork he : 8 pm. in Italian Community Hall, ons.| on Brook St., Croton. A bottle of the milk now being by the NEW YORK.—Officials of Bellevue al ic institution, called in the police today to drive out of | their jobs 200 foreign born employes. | Hospital heads are discriminating gainst them, firing them to make oom for native born, they say, hough there is no particular evid- dished out Von Wedel laboratories in New Ro- chelle. The signed result sheet of | the laboratory shows that this milk | has only half of one per cent butter | fat in it, instead of the three per .| cent which is the lowest limit al- lowed by law in milk that is sold. To get the milk that thin, it | would be neeessary not only to skim |it thoroughly, but to put water in| it too. The law provides a minimum | of solid content in milk of 12 and a| half per cent. But this milk has sboro ical Scot ing hired. By this act officials hope to split the native and foreign born and prevent unity for a common fight. Those discharged include 30 nur- ses, and many orderlies, that is, they are the lowest paid employes. Many of them have records of long ser- on the line of : se : nd Lenox Ave.,| only 8 and one-tenth per cent solid ea ve firing is to be completed matter. Such milk as this is worth- | PY Jan. ?. less. There is much indignation among all grades of both native and for-| “I wouldn't feed such slop to my eign born workers at the hospital ” said a Peekskill farmer who af ‘s Three of the cops are stationed in . “tb : the employes’ dormitory, one is at | , mother of two ot has less nourishment than the skim- | the main gate and one is in the in- speak. Mrs.| med milk I usually feed them.” | formation office. A sergeant is in| returned from leneree, cs FORCE TAYLOR TO Cultural Groups | to = PLEDGE SHELTER | Hovor Gorky Dee. 2 workers | mass strug- | y in the discrimination and op- The massing of the proletarian cultural forces of New York at the —, Struggle Grows:Began Gorky Festival at Central Opera « House, 67 St. and 3rd Ave., Fri., Dec | at “Hooverville” | 28 wili'be under the auspices of Rev- | -| \ wrig boro boys Rates | olutionary Writers Federation to| NEW YORK. — The fight of the |celebrate the publication in 1932 of | workers evicted from the “Hoover-|Gorky's first short story “Makar ‘ille”’-on West 39th St. has already |Chudra” and the beginning of Pt ed some results. About 50 who |renowned literary revolutionary ac- ‘| Pagers there were evicted Tues- | tivities. day and 16 arrested. They sent a} John Dos Passos, Mike Gold, Mois- | committee Wednesday to Commis-|saye J. Olgin, Grace Lumpkin and sioner of Public Welfare Taylor, de- other leading American writers will manding use of the vacant New York |speak. Tickets can be obtained at | Hospital or public buildings. | headquarters of Revolutionary Writ- | Jers Federation, 114 West 21st Street Late Wednesday .a statement ap- | peared in the capitalist press that the city’ would open empty school buildings or other buildings for the | homeless unemployed. Between Wednesday night and Thursday morning, many workers’ | mass organizations on the West Side | flooded Taylor with telegrams, de-|have its premiere tonight at the | manding housing for the homeless. | Winter Garden, |_A much larger delegation went to} produced by Universal Pictures, eh Torr| Taylor's office yesterday, represent | “afraid to Talk” is said to follow in . sta jing West Side unemployed. They | practically every gripping detall ha saw one of his assistants, who said | fast and harrowing story of KE He | the Municipal Lodging House on East | tin, who was brutally aundabed td {| 26th St. would be open’ to all the | protect an underworld leader from |homeless without discrimination. charges of murder. Eric Linden and "| Later yesterday a big delegation was | sidney Fox are featured in “Afraid ,|on the way to .the Municipal Lodg- | to Talk,” which was adapted by Tom | ing House to see whether these pro- | Reed from the play by George Sklar | mises were true, |and Albert Maltz. Many homeless jobless workers are | directed. Othe players in the cast ng the West Side Unemployed | include Tully Marshall, Louis Cal- se in| Council, at 454 West 37th St., which (hen, Robert Warwick, Mayo Methot _and Berton Churchill. of Na League All and Ht umen Ne- at the ith “Maxim | |“AFRAID TO TALK” OPENS AT WINTER GARDEN TONIGHT “Afraid to Talk,” the movie ver- sion of “Marry Go Round,” the ex- pose of crooked city politics which met so much opposition last year in |opening at the Avon Theatre, will Latest Their Bt., at APIT i rALISM us. MECCA AUDITORIUM sath St., 6th and 7th Aves. s' Club, 1610 aw in the wall by P. Novick “ YOMMUNISM _ FRL EVE. DEC. 16, at 8:15 ere Conte Gane ite and) HAMILTON FISH, Jr. vs. SCOTT NEARING eld ROGER BALDWIN, Chairman ‘ Tickets 85¢ to $2.20 incl. Tax at Mgt. Ernest Briggs, Times Bldg. BRyant Harlem || New Masses, 799 Brondway Stuy. 9-1967 9-6780; Workers Bookshop 50 £, 13th St. on Ave. Workers’ Club. ‘The Outlook of the the U. 8," by J. LOUIS ENGDAHL cee" Mass Memorial Meeting Roca? acta SUNDAY, DECEMBER 18th, at 7 P. M. BRONX COLISEUM 177th Street and West Farms Road | — Speakers — | MRS. ADA WRIGHT—Mother of two of the Scottsboro | Boys. WILLIAM L. PATTERSON—National Secretary LL.D. CARL HACKER—National Organizer I.L.D RICHARD B. MOORE—National Field Organizer 1..D. EARL BROWDER—Member Secretariat, C.P.U.S.A. AUSPICES: Int’l Labor Defense ADMISSION 25 CENTS Take 7th Ave, 180th Bt. or Lexinfiton Ave. al for Lenin Memoria! mittee calls et on Satur to take up the coming | > dress shops. Comi RADES UNEMPLOYED ‘committee of the Needle Trades meets this afternoon Full reports on fur- Gibson Committee | itons and for relief. | WORKERS Workers’ League of the T. | will open its new headquarters St. with a House Warming Deo. 17, at 8:30 pm. Splen- | 1 will be given, and dancing. ! 241st St. train” Kes ence that many native born are be- | IR LY WORKER, NEW YORK, F POCKETBOOK JOBLESS ACT Hold Demonstration; Bronx Report Tonite NEW YOF on mediately after uesday a report on the Hunger March, @ mass of jobless pocketbook work ers elected an executive committe: demonstrated in front of iquarters of the Gibson Com- Force Job Promises They forced the Gibson Committee ze the executive commit- to prom: pocketbook worke tbood un- employed coun The mass meet ing was sponsored by the Unemploy- ed Council of Greater New York. The new pocketbook executive committee of 25 will meet Priday at 2 p.m, at 80 East 11th Street. Work ers are invited to report also on a! day at the unemployed council head- | | quarters, in room 240, 80 East 11th | St. between 11 a.m. and 2 p.m. Bier Bronx Meet Tonight “The meaning of the Hunger March” will be explained at a mass meeting tonight at 8 p.m, of workers in the Lower Bronx at the local un- | employed council headquarters, 525 | East 139th St. Two march delegates, | Magnuson and DePriest, will report. | | Admission is free. rheage fae | Welcome March Affair NEW YORK.—The National Hun- | ger Marchers from the Bronx will be welcomed home and given a chance to report to workers at an affair arranged for them Saturday at 8 p.m. at 1400 Boston Road. ‘London Hunger March |Leader Sentenced to |Two Years in Prison (Cable by Inprecorr) LONDON, Dec. 15.—Sidney Elias, chairman of the unemployed work- ers movement in Britain, was sen- tenced yesterday to two years im- prisonment on a charge of inciting to the commission of seditious acts fectly legal instructions and suggest- ions concerning the development of the struggles of the unemployed workers against the capitalist hun- ger offensive. i ‘IDR. JULIUS LITTINSKY |) 107 Bristol Street i} (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 808 ‘Tel. ALgonquin 4-9205 Tonight at 8:30! CONCE RT To Welcome. COMRADE JACOB SCHAEFER lon his return from the Soviet Union ‘CENTRAL OPERA HOUSE 67th ST. and THIRD AVE. —Program— Freiheit Mandolin Orchestra L. MALEMUT, Conductor ‘Freiheit Singing Society. A, ABRAMOWITZ, Conductor New Soviet Songs Edward L. Cahn) anpRESS BY COM, J. SCHAEFER | | Com. Schaefer will also conduct the | chorus in several numbers ADMISSION 40 CENTS VV | furnish- | in letters written from Moscow. The | letters contained nothing but per-| | Mn Lin Ly Mn ht In new classical and popular numbers | RIDAY, BER 16, 193 iis ECE 3 THREATE iS BI ow AT GERMAN C. P. Schleicher Program on Radio Broadcast Call forSelf- Discipline at Nearing Debate A debate between Prof. Sc ing and Hamilton Fish, member of the U. S. Ho tatives from New Ze r 5 place tonight at 8 o'clock at BERLI Dec. 15, ecce. Temple, 55th St. between 6th | Matic speech by the Chancellor and 7th Avenues. While Prof. N on the authority Gencral Von 8¢ ing does not sp the ons Party, he will present his own view| Schle defended Hindenbur of the Communist position against | against by faSe Gener the capitalist position as repres: | Litzmann at the opening of the n by Fish, A large attendance of work- | Reichstag, and praised the disered- | ers is expected. ited Von P: He hypo A report has come to the Daily | denied he te torship ¢ Worker that police agents that have long cooperated with Fish his various well-known fantastic reac- tionary schemes have formed a plan to bring about a disturbance among the audience at the debate, with the upposed objective of provoking an | program, Its main aim, he pri incident’ ‘justifying’ police repres- | was to secure work for the t sions and preventing a clear expres- | rowing unemployed army. sion of the audience's view. ide the constit C. A. Hathaway, district organizer | masses with the statement that all of the Communist Party, yesterday requested the Daily Worker to re- mind all workers sympathetic to the 1 revolutionary cause of their class | #nnounced that they must guard against any | Wes against | such provocation, bearing in mind | Order” and th that a strictly orderly and disciplined | the Communist Party with the gfe. meeting 1s to the workers’ interest, | aration that the government would and that anyone starting a disturb- |N0t hesitate to take the ance in this meeting can only be a eesckaa against the party. “unruly _eler of the Reichswebr n He ted that progr: in the m of the new government rep- resented a continuation of the Papen economic ad: ended, and He swept the mas moment uninteresting. ing drastic me turbers of law and} of the ights | for | All Out to Prevent Eviction at 1433 | Shallottee Street | Rally today at 1433 Shallotte St.,| the Bronx, in the morning, when Mrs. Shapiro, the landlady, will at- tempt to evict one of the 17 tenants | cert arranged by the Freiheit Man- in the house who are on strike for|dolin Orchestra and the Freiheit cheaper rents. | Singing Socicty tonight, at Central The tenants are refusing to\ pay | Opera House, 67th t near 3rd until the rents are reduced. The) Avenue. Schaefer will lead strike is under the leadership of the | chorus in a few numbers and will Shallotte St. Block Committee of the give his impressions of the Soviet Unemployed Council, Union. conclusion of his speech to all na- tionalist elements to co-operate to support the government. HAEFER GREET! The workers of New York 1 come Jacob Schaefer, proleti | { Hospital and Oculist Prescriptions Filled | At One-Half Price | N.Y. DAILY WORKER CITY COMMITTEE will meet if] SATURDAY, DEC. 17 2 P. M, 50 E. 13th ST. ROOM 309 81.50 $1.00 White Gold Filled Frames... ZYL Shell Frames Lenses not included COHEN’S, 117 Orchard St. First Door Off Delancey St. Telephone: ORehard 4-4520 intern’) Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 15th FLOOR Work Done Under Personal Care of PR, JOSEPHSON CHRISTMAS EVE. SATURDAY DECEMBER 24 | ap District Training School GRADUATION BALL Auspices:— Communist Party and Young Com- munist League Rockland Palace |) 155 TH STREET & 8TH AVE. | Aitention Comrades! OPEN SUNDAYS Health Center Cafeteria Workers Center — 50 E. 13th St. | Quality Food Reasonible Prices ——<——————— Importers of Soviet Candies SPECIAL WITH THIS ADVERTISEMENT 3 Ib. Box Russian Candy 4 DE LUX PACKAGE Mail Cheek or Money-Prepaid | M. RICHMAN, 145 E. Houston St. New York, N. Y. AGENTS WANTED—Tel, Orchard 4-778 CAMP NITGEDAIGET BEACON, N. ¥. The Only Workers Camp OREN, ALL YEAR—HEALTHFUL FOOD, REST, RECREATION SPORT AND CULTURE All Winter Comforts—Steak Heat—Hot and cold running water in every room WORKERS ATTENTION! $12.50 PER WEEK Phone—EStabrook 8-1409 Camp Phone—Beacon 731 Only Cafeteria, in Garment District Above 34th Street employing members of the MET YOUR COMRADES AT THE ALLERTON AVENUE Cor. Bronx Park East Pure Foods Proletsrian Prices | | | | | | | | Automobiles leave daily from COOPERATIVE RESTAURANT, 2700 BRONX PARK EA ‘Entertainment and anee | FOOD WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION TONIGHT AT 8 P. M. PARADISE MANOR 11 West Mt. Eden Ave. Bronx ADMISSION 85 CENTS West Bronx Branch, F.8.U. Auspie Managed by the well-known Mr, Gruber BRUNSWICK CAFETERIA 237 W, 37th STREPT 227 W. 37th STREET QUALITY FOOD AZT WORKERS PRICES ‘THE DANCE CARNIVAL OF THE YEAR! Program: TENTH Literature Coupon | Morning Freiheit COSTUME BALL SATURDAY, DECEMBER 17th, 1932 at BRONX COLISEUM—177th Street, Bronx UNITY DOUBLE BRASS BAND ORCHESTRA ANNUAL | FREIHEIT SINGING SOCIETY WORKERS’ CLUBS CHORUS MASS DANCE LABOR SPORTS UNION (Marches, Drills, Pyramids) “ARTEF” (IN MASS SCENES) TABLEAUX COSTUME PARADE 10c. — Admission . 39c. utional rights of the | Piet issues, including constitutional, | were | | German | police agent. } While threatening the | —_—_ | working class and its leader, the) Communist Farty, he appealed at the composer and conductor, at’ a con-| Cooperative Dining Club} AU pew BRONX COLISEUM We orkers Chorus to Sing New Song at Engdahl Meet Sun. | W YORK—The Workers Music ¢ Chorus constituting five hun- ker singers, will participate edahl Memorial Meeting at | Leag dred wor! in the § the Coliseum on December 18, at 7 p.m. | An entirely new group of revelu- | tionary songs are being ppared for this important Memorial Meeting. Together with this chorus of five voices, the W. I. R. band ting of forty trained musicians, ; the new revolutionary fun- | eral dirge. | SAM DON TALK SATURDAY | On Saturday night, Dec. 17, at 8} |o'clock, Sam Don, of the Agitprop | department of the Central Commit- | tee of the Communist Party, will | Forum, Delegates to Workers | Center Banquet, Jan. 8 The Provisional Committee of the Central Committee of the C, P. of the U. S. A, is arranging a banquet which is to take place Jan. 8, 1933, in'the Workers’ Center, 35 E. 12th St., second floor, for the benefit of the Workers’ Center. All revolutionary organizations, «rade unions, trade union groups, party units, are urged to elect dele- gates to this banquet and to send their contribution with the delegates in order to enable us to save the | Center. speak on “The End of Capitalist Stabilization” at the Workers’ School 35 1B. 12th St., second floor. General admission is 25 cents. For students of the Workers’ School the admission is 20 cents, plus students’ card, All are urged to come early to avoid being turned away. THE WINTER AFRAID sternest The Winter Garden dares to present the film version of “Merry-Go-Round”, GARDEN IS NOT to TALK! | the most discussed stage play of the past season. at 8 p.m. We hope w appoint you Be sure to it may neve the | Your ‘first | chance! A Univers: TULY MARSHALL MATT McHUGH We intend to open this picture tonight e won't be forced to dis- see this picture tonight— r be shown again! chance may be your last ‘AFRAID TALK’ a] Super-Production with | ERIC LINDEN SIDNEY FOX | | LOUIS CALHERN | MAYO METHOT ROBERT WARWICK KING BAGGOTT | Tonight 8 p.m.—Winter Garden—B'way & 50th St.—Continuous Starting Sat, 10:30 a. m.—35c to 1 p. m. Ex. Sun.—Midnite Shows EISENSTEIN’S Film Epic! “OLD and NEW” —Added Feature— HUNGER MARCH EXTRA SPECIAL DNIEPERSTROY, US.S.R. Soviet Union Celebrates Opening of World's Largest Power Dam—Millions of People in Parade—In Sound workers ACME THEATRE ate'union sa. | ran snow 10130 Pa fly IC REPERTORY ER’ ORY x: te ‘There's always a better show at RKO Evs. 8:30 Mi: LE GALLIENNE, Sat. Mat. Wed. & Sat. 2:30 , Director Alice in Wonderland” | “DEAR JANE” | 23h | THEATRE Presents 3RD ONTH | Je, $1, $1.50 gE THE GRour CCESS STORY » By John Howard Lawson Elliotts Thea., 30th, E, of B'way 340; Mats, Wed. and Sat., 2:40 | Maxine | Evenings, | ead FRANCIS LEDERER & DOROTHY GISH in| TUMN CROCUS The New York and London Success | MOROSCO THEATRE, 45th St. W. of Bway | Evs. 8 ts, Wed. & Sat, at 2:40 Bio THE THEATRE GHEY Presents GRAPHY A comedy by 8. N. BEHRMAN 2d St, West of Bway | Vane Notte | ia Feature: “THE CRASH” | Mats ves. CHILDREN 15e 200 Arwara: 100 “THE | SPORT PARADE” The sport racket exposed In a heart-throb drama packed with thrills! with JOEL McCREA Marian Marsh--Wm. Gargan AN RKO-RADIO PICTURE OF COURSE! rxo MAYFAIR or Broadway at 47th St. Daily to 2 p.m. 85e—11 p.m. to close 35¢ Buy RKO Thrift Books and Save 10% nx.0.C AM E Opresawsy NOW! “VIRGINS OF BALI" 25e. to 1 P.M. Monday to Friday RKO JEFFERSON es - 2 INOW RICHARD BARTHTLMESS in “The Cabin in the Cotton” Added i “THEY CALL Yt SiN” Feature with LORETTA YOUNG Dail Concert ry) | I. W. 0. SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA (M, Stillmen, Conductor) SERGEL RADAMSKY Soviet Tevor | INT’L CHORUSES | FREIHEIT SINGING SOCIETY Saturday, ADMISSION 40 CENTS EARL BROWDER, Speaker Year’, Ey, | BUY TICKETS IN ADVANCE and SAVE 20¢ orker Derty USA NEW DANCE GROUP and others NEGRO AND WHITE DOUBLE BRASS BAND ORCHESTRA DANCING TILL MORNING Dee. 31 PRESS FUND 20 CENTS —

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