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_PAGE Two CARPENTERS WIN AT. GREENBAUM SHOP; OTHER STRIKE VICTORIES; IT CAN BE DONE EVEN IN CRISIS! Wage Cut Smashed by Militant Carpenters’ Union; Equal Division| NEW YORK.—The strike in the Greenbaum Carpenters’ Shop, a large shop, has been settled with a vietory for the workers and the in-| dependent Carpenters Union. The strike was called Dec. 27. The boss was compelled by the solidarity of the workers to sign an agreement) with the union for six months, with the following demands granted: 1. To withdraw the wage cut of $1 a day. 2. To recognizé the shop commit- tee, which is to represent the inter- ests of the workers in the shop. 3. To recognize the shop chair- man as the representative of the In- dependent Carpenters Union and to grant equal division of work. 4. No firing without the consent of the committee and shop chair- man. 5. No discrimination for activity. 6. That a duly authorized repre- esentative of the union shall have ac- cess to the shop at the time of work- ing hours to investigate condi- tions in the shop and safety devices. This agreement is to be in force} for the next six months’ period end- ing July 4, 1932 This agreement was Greenbaum and the o: Independent Carpenters The Inder Carpenters ion has convinced through the uni der the leaderst Union Un- the workers that | w ‘$ un- ant un- | p of a mili ion it is possible to stop wage cuts eve and win union conditions in| such a crisis as prev: The Independent Carpen has headquarters at 818 Broadway office hours from 6 to 8. A gen meeting will take place Jan. 11 where a city council ele n and discus- sion on by-laws will take place. FRIDAY BANQUE opening N: Slovak Workers Ho All invited. 8 p. REUNION of 7 tion of Hunger at 8 to b of ten lectu RALLY of Circle, | 4nd St. and , at 8 p.m Speakers, Levin ust back from Washington. A | Auspices, Section 2, C. P. MEMBERSHIP meeting, Flatbush Work- Kings Highway, 3:30 p. m MENT, Dance ¢i Council, Refreshments. y Bloomfield of Work- Oppression of School, 1349] at 8:30 pm. | Gold at Bridge) Bkiyn. | Michael Plaza Workers Club, 285 Rodney St., LECTURE by Subject: “Proletarian Literature.” LECTURE by Dr. Liber on “Adjustment— Physical, Mental and Social.” at Prospect Workers Center, 1157 Southern Blvd., Bronx. Come early. | LECTURE on “Religion and the Labor} Movement” at the Grand Youth Club, 380 Grand St., at 8:30 p. m. LECTURE by Lou's Hyman, Chairman of | Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union at Bronk Workers Club, 1610 Boston Road Subject: “The Truth ‘About the Soviet ‘Unton.” LECTURE by Israel Amter on “Commu- nism and the Negro” at American Youth Club, 407 Rockaway Ave., Brooklyn. LECTURE by Phil Rahv at the Browns- yille Youth Center, 105 Thatford Ave., cor. Pitkin. Subject: “Trotsky the Renegade in the Picld of Culture.” at 8:30 p. m. ¢ Brighton h, at 8:30 “Revolutionary Art and the Artist of Past and Present.” LECTURE by Com. Maklikano on “The Role of the C. P. and the Cless Struggle.” nhattan Workers Club, 48 Sheriff St., LECTURE by Clarence Hathaway at Tre- mont Workers Club, 2075 Clinton Ave., Bronx on “The End of Capitalist Stabili- zation.” LECTURE by John L. Spivak, author of “Georgia Nigger” on “The Chain Gang in the South” at Ambassador Hall, Third Ave.| hear Claremont Parkway Station. Adm 25 cents. Unemployed 10c. Arranged by ‘Upper Bronx ILD. Sadie Van Veen, chair- an: 8 p.m. | E by Robert Minor on “The End| of Capitalist Stabilization” at Harlem Prog. Youth Club, 1538 Madison Ave. CTURE by Sam Don on “The World Crisis and the International Situation” Bath Beach Workers Club (new eadquar: ters) 1818 86th St. MEETING of Weinstein Defense Commit- tee at 799 Broadway, Room 340, 6 p. m. shi All members must attend HIP meeting of Tom Mooney Branch ILD at 818 Broadway, third floor, at 8p. m. Come and join us! | through mutual agreement. mor of ponsible was spread ag: | “MEN AND JORS” K-) A. Mach: | compl “| Berlin Staatsoper; -| present “The Mummy,” Strikers at 15 W. 39 Force Right to Use | Passenger Elevator NEW YORK—By striking, the workers in 15 W. 39th St., a 15-story building, have defeated a new rule that would have forced them to ride | the dirty, freight elevator. They will use the front elevator, as usual, un- der the terms of the settlement yes- terday. Those in the building are millinary workers. A large crowd of them as- sembled early yesterday morning to picket the building, as they had done the day before when they went on A cop was present to keep them “From blocking the sidewalk.” But before the picketing started the building bosses surrendered. The strikers could use the passenger ele- vator, they announced. Under the defeated rule, the passenger elevator would have been reserved for “buyers only,” and similar gentry, including the bosses | The blame for the new rule was | ced upon the landlord, after the | t ‘ory of the workers. jiord had tried to e in two other bt ce @ Si dings in the jood, but had been defeated | SP cree ection D: ATL Vg WORKER, NEW JAILS SCHOUTEN, ATTACKS DAILY’, Judge Goes Wild Over| Exposure of Frame-Up ‘Threatens Relief Cut vy YORK ntencing Grovert | n, unemployed marine worker ned on an assault charge, to four nths in the work house, Tammany Judge Collins in Special Sessions Court under a heavy police guard yeste’ launched into a lying ti- rade agajnst the Daily Worker, The mass protests of New York workers ringing in his ears, and fear- ing an appeal of the case which | would expose the frame up, Collins did not dare pass sentence anywhere near the maximum of three years. | He denied the request of Fanny Horowitz, International Labor De- fense Attorney, for a retrial, brazen- ly denying statements he made dur- ing the trial prejudicing the jury. “I would have the editor (of the Daily 'Worker) arrested for contempt of court if I didn’t want to make a martyr of him,” said the honorable e referring to his vicious attacks against marine workers which the Daily Worker published. He quoted | freely and indignantly from the Dan | Davis exposure of the frame-up trial. The International Labor Defense | will appeal the case, The Marine Workers Industrial | Union and the Waterfront Unem- ~~ pa Nas Governor Lehman, whose mes- sage to the legislature proposed less relief and more profits. F ioht behfaea Plan to Make Money for Boss by Relief Cut (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) hem to workers’ mass all instances. Some workers pointed out, how- ever, that both the bosses and the d were together responsible, The ru- | the landlord alone being res to counteract the bosses, after victorious strikers returned to work, they Tt was explained | th: after all the “freight elevator” | ling was for the benefit of the] bosses. | | Stage and Screen | | i IN SECOND WEEK AT THE CAMEO Soviet med * the new has been accla ting many | sound film technique, remains for a second wee! at the Cameo Theatre, where the ¢ ture has been attracting much at- tention. “Men and Jobs” w ret and te’ Socialism is be! Five Year Plan s directed by the story of, under ow th ‘an engineers. The American eer speaks English and thru- the remainder of the dialogue te English sub-titles are sup- erimposed. Radio City Music lat] continues | a second week with the program headed by De Wolf Heyper, Weber Fields, Vera Schwarz, of the Harold Kreutz- berg and his ballet; Ray Bolger; the Tuskegee Choir and others. he Animal Kingdom,” with Ann Harding and Leslie Howard, will re- main a second week as the screen feature of the new RKO Roxy The- +| atre. The Mayfair, beginning today, will with Kar- joff in the chief role. Other players include Zita Johann and David Man- ners. The opening bilt at the Palace Theatre, under the return policy of vaudeville and pictures, will be head- ed by Ken Murray, Helen and Mil- ton Charleston, Cherry and June Preisser, “Cookie” Bowers, Irish Kirk- white and Erroll Addison. The screen feature is “Rock-A-Bye,” with Con- stance Bennett and Joel McCrea. “KAMERADSCHAFT” CONTINUES AT THE ACME THEATRE Due to the enthusiastic response of the public to the popular-price showing of “Kameradschaft” or “Comradeship,” the management of the Acme Theatre is holding the film for a second week. The Pabst film presents a vivid picture of the life and struggles of the miners. (hae dear PUT ON REVOLUTIONARY PLAY SUNDAY; “DAILY” TO BENEFIT A revolutionary three-act play in Russian, “The Mutiny On A Cruiser” will be given this Sunday, Jan. 8, in Manhattan Lyceum, 66 E. Fourth 8t. The action takes place on a French cruiser which is sent to Indo-China waters in the interests of French im- perialism. The performance is given under the auspices cf the united committee of 11 branches of the Russian Na- tional Mutual Aid Society, the Stalin Branch of the Friends of the Soviet Union and the Polish Workers Club. It will be followed by a dance. The doors will open at 4 p.m. Admission is 40 cents and 40 per cent of the proceeds will go to the Daily Worker. The United Committee STALIN BRANCH, F.S.U. and at MANHATTAN LYCE (Burevestnick) will give a Revo! THE MUTINY VICH-LUGANOFY | DOORS OPEN 4 P. M, RUSSIAN NATIONAL MUTUAL AID SOCIETY arranged a Special THEATER PERFORMANCE & DANCE SUNDAY, JANUARY 8, 1933 For the Benefit of the Communist Press ; 40 Per Cent of the Proceeds for the Daily Worker ‘The central group of the Russian Workers Dramatic Circle very successful in the U.S.S.R. as well as other parts of Europe A Three-Act Play in Russian under the direction of L. KOPEL- DANCING AFTER THE PERFORMANCE During the intermission Russian dishes can be obtained. of 11 Branches of the POLISH WORKERS’ CLUB UM, 66 E. 4th St., N. Y. lutionary Play which has been ON A CRUISER and N. NIKULIN. ADMISSION 40c |required for the winter months. | York will be unable to provide t | reached its limit. ed Council will continue their of | milit ‘ant struggle in spite of this at- ciass| tempt of the Seamen's Church In- ind | stitute and the big ship owners be- oe to smash their fight for the rankest cause oposed by Lehma is class legislation 4 JOBLBSS COUNCIL IS ORGANIZED | Fighting Program for Downtown Group NEW YORK.—The Downtown Un- jemployed Council has been recog- nized and the Executive Committee out the number in this state. He sa 1d. 1,500,000, “with a f of unemp it is “between has elected the following members |for the Council Buro: secretary, 2 Friedman: organizer, Klein; registra- relief, but neglects to | secretary, Cachionne; “Hunger ion, as Hovkins d that 100,000 | * agent, Gray; and financial more need helv. edless to say,| secretary, Gordon. even the hichest figures given by| preparations are being made to Lehmen and Hopkins are too low. “Lehman meets problem of ma op with the | flat statement: “I am informed that | at least $4,000,000 2 month will be It of New|* launch a vigorous drive to carry out the following program: A mass registration drive, with 2,000 new members by March 1 as the objective. 2, An anti-eviction campaign demanding the repeal of the evic- tion law. 3. A campaign to force relief for single workers who are now being ignored by the relief agencies. A mass movement to bring nis tremendous is obvious that the State amount of money.” Later he says ‘The strain on State, local and pri- vate resources has, however, at last, | We are forced now to look to Washington for assist- 4. ance’.” about reductions in rent through Hathaway declared that while| rent strikes. there is no objection to federal re- The first rent strike is now in prog- aa Reale oe Be e Ves | ress at 501-3 East 11th St., with ten- a! i State retiet also. | ants on the entire both to be administered by elected beens 0 eee committees of employed and unem- ployed workers. He pointed out that what Lehman is doing is simply to wash his hands of the blood guilt of destroying by starvation whole thou- sands of unemployed workers and to simply make the appeal to the fed- eral government his use. “Even clearer is Lehman's program | of saving money for the New York capitalists at the expense of the workers, when it comes to schooling,” said the Communist District Or; izer. “Lehman uses many wortls of ‘regret’ about the depriving of chil- dren of education, but he says, ne- vertheless: “Last year the state was compelled by the condition of its treasury to fotego the annual incre- ment of state aid for education. Sim- ilar action must be taken this year. This in itself means a reduction of educational aid per pupil.... Sub- stantial further reductions in the present amount of state aid may mean an actual exclusion of some of our children from the classes. If ¥ find it actually unavoidable to re- commend such cut, I shall do so,” “And the fact that this and his other anti-worker proposals spring from a desire to save the profits of the capital ” continued ha- LE NI N MEMORIAL Meeting into the struggle. | “fs seen by Lehman’s statement: ‘What the state deducts from its contribution must not be spent by the locality itself as a substitute for state aid, Such a result would sim- ply be a tax transference and not a tax saving, A tax transference would lead to an increase of already bur- densome real estate taxes within the localities.’ “Lehman is interested in saving | the profits and rents of his bosses,’ said Hathaway, “and in this respect he is like Mayor O’Brien, who stands for the 10 to 30 per cent LR.T, wage cut put over by Tammany judges the wholesale discharge of foreign born hospital workers, the 6 to 39 per cent wage cut for city employes. All this shows that the Democratic Party administrations are openly! breaking the promises the Demo- cratic Party, even these same indi- viduals, made _to provide relief and save wages. Increased struggle by the unemployed and employed work- ers of all political opinicns and or- ganizations must be the answer to this cynical starvation program of Lehman. SAT., m 21, 1933 7:30 P.M. MANHATTAN and BRONX BRONX COLISEUM EAST 177TH STREET BROOKLYN ARCADIA HALL 918 HALSEY STREET (near Broadway) ADMISSION: 35 Cents. With This Coupon 30 Cents Auspices: Communist Party, U.S.A., District No. 2, 52 E. 13th St. SAVE THE HOME OF ALL REVOLUTIONARY ACTIVITIES Elect Delegates to the THIRD ANNUAL BANQUET of NEW YORK WORKERS CENTER JINDAY, JANUARY 8th, 1933 at 7 P.M. At the WORKERS CENTER—35 B. 12th St, 2nd Floor SPEAKERS—Farl Browder, J. W. Ford CHAIRMAN—Joe Brodsky PROGRAM — Yosel Kotler, Bill Gropper Both members of the John Reed Club PROLET;BUEHNE ADMISSION 40 CENTS ; Manhattan workers the meeting will| YORK, FRIDAY, JAN UARY 6, Lenin Calls for Fight on Hunger; Memorial Jan. 21 NEW YORK. — Written in hours when decisive struggles were ap- proaching, Lenin’s clarion call to ac- tion against the “Socialist” betra: Kerensky, and Czar Hunger is es- pecially timely no’ For it is also} a clarion call to American workers | to wage a relentless struggle against | hunger here. | “Things have come to a state of | mass unemployment,” wrote Lenin | in an article, “The Threatening Catastrophe and How to Fight It.” “Think of it: the country is suffer- ing from a lack of commodities: the country is perishing from lack of products, from lack of working hands at a time when there is a sufficient quantity of food and raw materials——and still, in a country like this, at a critical moment Ike this, mass unemployment has de- veloped! ... “And yet, a very small amount of attention and reflection tis sufficient to convince one that there are means of fighting the catastrophe and the famine, that the means of struggle are perfectly clear and simple, perfectly realizable, per- fectly within reach of the people’s forces, and that those measures are NOT being undertaken ONLY AND SOLELY because their realization would infringe upon the immense profits of a handful of landowners and capitalist The workers of New York will pay a fitting tribute to the deathless leader of the world’s tollers at the | Lenin Memorial Meeting on Satur- day evening, Jan. 21. For Bronx and | be held in the Bronx Coliseum, 177th | St. and West Farms Road; for work- ers in Brooklyn, in Arcadia Hall, 913 Halsey St. Judge Allen Grants “Mistrial” in Case of Kaplan and Gang NEW YORK.—Judge Allen in Gen- eral Sessions Court on Wednesday | declared a mistrial in the case of Samuel Kaplan, former racketeer president, and 21 other officials and members of Local 306 of the Motion Picture Machine Operators’ Protective Union of Greater New York. The defendants were up on an in- dictment of coersion issued about a year ago on charges by nine rank and file members who were expelled for demanding an accounting of funds which Kaplan and his gang | had stolen. The farcical aspect of the whole trial was shown clearly by the fact that the prosecutors, the defense at- torney, as well as the judge himself all agreed to a mistrial; thus again postponing the case of racketeer Kap- lan and his pals. Judge Allen had} sustained objections by the defense | against testimony injurious to Kap-| lan, but even this form of Tammany | protection was rendered unnecessary, when the whole bunch, prosecution and defense, agreed to call it a mis- trial. The entire sell-out was so raw that the capitalist press “sof#peddied” 193 i 10 TRY MEMBER FOR CHAUVINISM Finnish Federation to! Hold Meet Sunday | NEW YORK. ation has called a meeting of the en- tire membership for this Sunday at 2 p.m. at 15 W. 126th St., to take up the case of one of the members, Mrs. Kirkland, who has been denounced j by the educational committee of the Federation for hey action in regard to Negro workers, Mrs. Kirkland, who runs @ room- |} ing house at 25 West 126th St,, tried to keep two Negro workers from en- tering the house when they went to see B. Sklar and his wife—two of her white roomers. fter the Negro workers left, the landlady told the roomers that they must move, say- ing: “You cannot stay here if you have ‘niggers’ coming to see you. I have nothing against you, but I wont have ‘niggers’ in my house.” She refused to take the next week's rent and told B, Sklar and his wife that they would have to move. In- stead of doing that, these workers decided to make a fight against this jim-crow practice, and appealed to working-class organizations, among them the Finnish Federation, of which the landlady is a member. Blames Socialists The Federation at once called || Mrs. Kirkland before the Educational } Committee where a decision was made to bring the entire matter be- | fore the membership. Before the Committee, the landlady stated that she took the stand she did because “Church and Socialist tenants “ob- jected to Negroes coming into the house. ‘The landlady, however, met with a unanimous vote of condemnation. As the Finnish Federation supports | the fight for equal social, economic | and political rights of the Negroes, | and fights against segregation and all forms of oppression of the Negro people, it is expected at Sunday's | meeting that the entire membership | will take a stand against Mrs. Kirk- land, and her actions, as the worst and most vicious example of white chauvinisin. ‘The Finnish Federation will carry on a relentless fight against all such cases, as was done in the Yokinen case, where a mass trial of August Yokinen, Finnish worker, took place, because of his discrimination against Negro ‘workers. Chalk TalkCompetition, at J.R. Dance Saturday Chalk talk competition in which leading revolutionary artist will participate, will feature a dance and entertainment to be held at the John Reed Club, 450°Sixth Ave., near 11th St., this Saturday evening. The win- ning chalk talk will be filmed by the Workers Film and Photo League for exhibition throughout the country, it is announced. Other features are announced on the story of the “mistrial.” the program. Admission is 25 cents. PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTIZERS TONIGHT DR. LIEBER Wilt Lecture On “ADJUSTMENTS” PHYSICAL, MENTAL, SEXUAL & SOCIAL Prospect Workers Center 1152 SOUTHERN BOULEVARD FRIDAY, JAN. 6.. REMEMBER OUR CONCERT & DANCE TOMORROW NIGHT AT OUR CENTER Attention Comrades! OPEN SUNDAYS Health Center Cafeteria Workers Center — 50 E. 13th St. Quality Food Reasonable Prices FRANK SUSSMAN, Ph. 6. Doctor of Pharmacy “YOUR DRUGGIST” 501 POWELL STREET Cor, RIVERDALE, BROOKLYN, WN. yY. ‘Tel. LOUISTANA 9-7258-7441 MEET YOUR COMRADES AT THE Cooperative Dining Club ALLERTON AVENUE Cor, Bronx Park Bast Pure Foods Proletarlan Prices Send in your bundle orders for Lenin Memorial edition of the the special Ninth - - Anniversary+ DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 Bristol Street t. Pitkin & Sutter Aves.) 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 4-9805 White Gold Filled Frames_______$1.50 ZYL Shell Frames ————. 91.00 Lenses not included COHEN’S, 117 Orchard St. First Door Off Delancey St. Telephone: ORehard 4-4520 intern'l Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE With FLOOR AU Work Done Under Perrone? Care at DR. JOSEPHSON SPECIAL WEPM TINS ADVERTISEMENT 3 Ib. Box Russian Candy | DE LUX PACKAGE........ Mall Cheek or Money-Propald M. RICHMAN, 145 E. Houston St. New York, N. Y. Daily Worker Jan. 14. | OPEN ALL. YEAR—HEALTHFU | every City Phone—EStabrook 8-1400 RESTAURANT, 2700 CAMP NITGEDAIGET BEACON, N. Y. The Only Workers Camp SPORT AND CULTURE All Winter Comforts—Steam Heat—Hot and cold running water in $12.50 PER WEEK Automobiles leave daily from COOPERATIVE AGENTS WANTED—Tel, Orchard 4-778 L FOOD, REST, RECREATION room Camp Phone—Beacon 731 ] BRONX PARK BAST —The Finnish Feder- | § Importers of Soviet Candies ||) Workers Show Their Anger to Buro That | Starved Two Babies NEW YORK. — Police yesterday rushed to protect the Home Relie Bur 25th and Benson Avenues, Brooklyn, from the indignation of w ers after the crime of having ved to death two bebies of Frank ametti, jobless worker of 1864 Bath Avenue. The cops drove off several hun- dred men and women who came to protest the burea of food to the ba ‘Two demonstrators, both women, were ar- rested, This local relief bureau on the day before had been instrumental in hav: ing a lecal undertaker steal the body of the last Fiametti baby who starv- ed. The workers had planned @ mass funeral. Superintendent Miller of the bureau, however, explained that such a funeral would have “aroused” the neighborhood too tly. Leaders of the Catholic St. cent De Paul Society paid the un- dertaker for snatching the baby's body away from its parents and the other workers. COOLIDGE, LABOR Calvin Coclidge, thirtieth president of the United States, died at 12:45} yesterday at his home in net ton, Mass. He had been at his |law office in the morning app ar- 4 ently in good | health, but after i arriving at his ‘| home suffered a as heart attack which caused his death, He died alone, his wife discovering the body after her re- turn from a shop- ping trip at 1:15 p.m. Coolidge had but one conviction— that was his hatred of workers and his willingness always to help capi- talism prey upon the poor. He was at the time of his death a member of the railway commission, along with Al Smith, which with the aid of the reactionary officials of the railroad COOLIDGE Vin- | ENEMY, IS DEAD. ‘WARN AGAINST. MILTON STONE Expelled from C. P. As Unreliable NEW YORK. —Milton Stone, of New. York City, has been expelled from the Communist Party by its . New York District organization as an ,| unreliable, irre- sponsible and un- trustworthy indi- vidual, and all workers and work- ers’ organizations are warned against him. He is said to haye been a postal worker, but has | been unemployed for several years, | and has beert active in the Unem- ploved Councils since 1929, In the tecent elections he was even a can- didate on the Communist ticket for assemblyman in the 14th A. D. While engaged in the preparations | for the National Hunger March last Fall, he was rep: d to have made a | number of provocative statements and to have backed up a suspicious indi- vidual against the protests of other workers, On account of this he was instruct- jed to stay in New York (instead of going with the Hunger March to | Washington), which instructions he | outwardly accepted, but nevertheless followed the Hunger Marchers up to | Baltimore. He was seen by the Hun- |ger Marchers in Newark, Elizabeth | and Trenton, and every time he said | that he was returning to New York at once. Milton Stone Worst of all, he was seen also in | Wilmington standing before the | building where the Hunger Marchers spent the night, and where a heavy police cordon kept all civilians on the | move and away from the building. | He has been charged also with ir- | responsible handling of funds. Description: 5 ft. 6 inches tall, weighs about 190 pounds, stocky, of | pudgy appeurance, wears glasses. unions beat down wages of workers through an intensification of the Hoo- ver stagger system and paved the way for further railroad wage cuts. AMUSEMENTS OF THE HUMAN DRAMA HOW THE 5-YEAR PLAN WAS COMPLETED! MEN x JOBS Amkino’s Latest ‘Talking Film (with Added English Dia- logue—All Titles in English) SAGA OF AN AMERICAN ENGINEER IN RUSSIA Special Soviet Newsreel Showing GORKI, LENIN’S WIDOW, ete. ne tolrM. Fre (IVIC_ REPERTORY "$1478 Av 50, $1, $1.50 Es 0 Mats, Wed. & Sat. 2:30 EY. ‘A LE GALLIENNE, Director Sat. Eve. - “THE THREE SISTERS” Tonight — <eeaDEAR JANE” FIRST TIME AT LAST TWO WORKERS’ PRICES! DAYS Ask Any of the Thousands|} Who Saw ‘Kameradschaft ‘Comradeship’ (All English Titles) See What A Mine Disaster Means! THE worxers Acme Theatre 14th Street and Union Square Cont. from 9 a.m.—Last show 10:30 15 cents 9 A. to 1 P.M.—Mon. to "ert ‘There's always a better show at REO IT COMES TO LIFE! Buried Alive—Brought Back to Lige Again 3700 Years Later! KARLOFF ‘THE UNCANNY IN “The MUMMY” RKO MAYFAIR Broadway at 47th St. Daily to 2 p.m. 36e—-11 to close 35¢ Buy RKO Thrift Books and Save 10% THE GROUP THEATRE Presents UCCESS STORY wees By John Howard Lawson Elliotts Thea., 89th, E. of B'way 8:40; Mats, Mon and Sat., 2:40 Maxine Evenings, t FRANCIS LEDERER & DOROTHY GISH in AUTUMN CROCUS ‘The New York end London Success MOROSCO THEATRE, 45th St. W. of B'w: Eves. 8:40, Mats. Mon., Wed. & Sat., 2:40 2KO JEFFERSON 8. # NOW Robert Montgomery and Tallulah Bankhead in “FAITHLESS” Added “CENTRAL PARK’ Feature with JOAN BLONDELL BioGRAPHY A comedy by 8S. N. BEHRMAN GUILD THEATRE, St., West of Bway Eve. 8:30. |. & Sat. THE THEATRE GOLD Presents at 2:30 Armenkin 28th Street (FIRST SHOWING IN THE U.S. A.) “THE LAND OF NAIRI” (SOVIET ARMENIA) January 13, 1933, at 7:30 P. M. FIFTH AVENUE THEATRE ADMISSION 30 CENTS FOR THE BENEFIT OF THE DAILY WORKER AND PANVAAR o Production and Broadway “PRO _ ART PROGRAM COSTUME BALL SATURDAY EVENING, JANUARY 7, 1933 at MANHATTAN LYCEUM. 66 E. 4th ST. LETPEN” —AND— + Admission 40 Cents ‘Lit. Coupon 10 Cents — »