The Daily Worker Newspaper, January 19, 1933, 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 HOUSTON SAY! = NO MORE HELP FOR JOBLESS | Pocketbook Workers Driven Away By Cops | NEW YORK.—At a meeting of w »mployed pocketbook workers “uesday at Irving Plaza, it \ided that they go to the *ommittee at 297 Fourth iemand work or relief, especial Pjehose unemployed pocketbook w TS who registered and had al! seen investigated. Houston Phones Refusal W Arriving at Emergency Unemploy- ment Bureau, 75 work picketed outside, while a committee of five attempted to see Mr. Houston, assis- tant director of the Bureau. ive Were at first stopped b: letectives and police. [STRUGGLE AGAINS PROVOCATION Workers’ Enemies re | w n ele- re ma ny Ri must be and they and ex- posed, held ter New er ot the wors lecting money organizat: spicable swir > has been ¢ and wo! ions Wworkers, advised Houston to talk One of the committee on the tele- Phone. The conversation consisted Of flat refusal on the part of-Houston #0 do anything for the unemployed Pocketbook workers. Police Drive Workers Away To this unsatisfactory answer Workers retaliated with cont Picketing and Houston, afraid te ‘them, finally sent down Stating that he has no money Cannot {help the wor 60! taneously he sent for “Sf who drove the po away with their “The Whole ‘The letter with w answered the demand fo felief was wri been Work Bureau sta ton had scrawled rs “Gentlemen, This today to all unr tells the whole story” is the Tegret to he more mon promises, “the city deeply in help are tr. by which iur nished.” And in the » interested” « L Story" a. 288 ed the money he col- wats aie Bin Bm es Be8 as it h Hl E a eviction dai ily Workers do now? that they, the ommittec Out jobs so that it wil lget that a meeting pocketbook work Ways and n unemployed of tl must continue their demands for peeeyment | nce. WEINSTEIN TRIAL, *9330 A.M. IN BRONX F ‘Called Hero After War | | unemy their only They of Tr R4HGRRBS BSERP S + Bosses Attack Him “¢ _ NEW YORK —Sam Weinstein, fur- 4 Biture worker who is to be today in the Bronx County ‘Tremont and Arthur Avenue, at 9:30 @m., after being framed on an assault and manslaughter c! y Bosses fearing his militant ®gainst their viciou: ff and wage- cutting schemes, now called a Ane is “thug” by the Socialist and capitalist press. When Sam Weinstein was fooled into fighting for Wall Street during the world war, the local papers of Schenectady called Corporal Wein- Btein the town’s “hero.” Now that | Weinstein has seen through the boss System of murdering workers on | battlefields and starving them at home, the representatives of capital- | ism, the Socialist Party,through their paper the “Forward,” characterizes | Weinstein as a “murderer.” ‘The | Tammany-controlled Bronx Home News keeps pace with its socialist . contemporaries and in its January | ferent name (Thompson), 3 )*2ith issue label Weinstein a “thug.” | He is a light-colored Negro, ‘about ¢oaster the war this worker jwas|35 years of age et, 5 inches tall, Jaudetl (with words) by the same sys- | 294 weighs about 160 pounds. tem that would today send him to| their dungeons. The following is an} excerpt from “The Story of a Ma-| _ chine Gun Company, 1918-1919, cor “piled by Major W. G. Andrews with the assistance of and for office’ )men, and friends of the 107th In- | fantry, Machine Gun Company. tried to join the Party under a dif- All work tions are BROWN of Ch where he came from Detroit at beginnin and Ti., | the | y the © hy the American Expeditionary Fore - ne Gat Se Par- | “Corporal Sam Weinstein, “His traveling back and forth be-| “Divisional Citation. Chicago, Detroit and Cle | “Throughout the action of this company he rendered most helpful * services. In the attack at the Hin- tion lea government’ | mpted an iny ndlady it rking for the is 1 denburg line, on September 29, he n: About 40 y maintained fire under most unfay- | feet, hes; slim; 1c circumstances, protecting the long nose piercing eyes flar of a forward trench which glasses); plexion light been taken by friendly troops, | hair, | from 2 very shallow position, | P. S, GREEN (Greenbaum) ot § advance thereof, at great risk | Minneapolis, Minn., previously said to own safety. In later oper- ie been in the workers’ movement | near St. Souplet and vicinity | in Seattle and Spokane, Wash., has | courage and gallantry were a | been exposed by the Workers Ex-ser- a “great incentive to men of his own | vicemen’s League (Post No. 19 of ” | Minneapolis) as a racketeer, petty- ‘Weinstein militantly fought the Tay-off at the Muskin Mfg. Co. Now swindler and very. suspicious individ- “has two charges placed against nual, He disappeared from Minneapolis felonious assault and man- | With funds coliected for the “Fight- The assault charge dr Vet” and with other organiza- nal funds has told all kinds ot stories bout himself: that he is a million- , that he has been an old r of the Socialist Party, etc. up to twenty years. Both are | ® long sentences. It was only in to require Sam Weinstein to in court for these two melt @ small case against him was on December 29, 1932. E long » is about 5 feet 3 inches tall, | Weinstein was once, along | #0d 5 about 150 pounds; Jewish | lions of other workers, forced type; ks broken English, also Jewish and Russian. workers, Today he is fighting Suet can ac ree” his own class; he has thrown “NEWS FLASH | his bravery with the struggle of the workers against the whole boss sys- teni. That is why they are so ‘anxiously trying to frame him. _ In a statement today the Interna- tional Labor Defense, which is fight- this vicious frameup, calls upon | workers to ans TAYLORVILLE, Jan. 18, —Twenty-two striking min- ers indicled by grand jury on frame-up charge of mur- der, all held without bail. Immigration authorities at- tempt to deport forcign- | tions of the bi | Committee and correct support of t | out that the group headed by meeting. They (the United members) devided to go there. soon as Manna, Fisher got wind that th | ted Fronters, the tic order was not to let them in. The blockers who were there went way, with a distastftil feeling in are not any better.” 5 In spite of their revolution: | phrases, the progressives are mis DAILY Wi ORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, ; " Early Morning Evictions, F ranklin Ave. Mass Picket Today | Demonstrators in :| Brownsville Force | Relief Concession | (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) ce and ling polic the unemployed seeking ; Militancy The demands the demand for re ing especially of three job nel ess leaders arrested at the o of | two week A2C adopted by the | mass meeting, the biggest ever seen | n this p militancy of but use not att ait wd, dic more ; comm. Burea the r ief then cut Concessions But the Bureau sup: seen the rising tide of wc i began to make cc agreed to “consid police in Bu- | 17 cg | at 226 Barrett INERY LOCAL ECTION TODAY, ff ite ant Blockers brov ht a col never at was us undermine | n to | an Squarely milite United tinuov and use her and at their tail the lat val, Max Engel. Having been or less conr ed in the past wi th oS Minted Shae Ae aes | some ‘of “the we with them that cha of militan- | cy which belongs to the United Front | lone, Fis have blockers but and to the Mannas nothing to offer submission to the bosses and noi) struggle, What should one think of the “pro- gressive” Fisher, who ar A shouting to the blocker: ky did a monstrous ng by appoint- ing organizers instead of allowing an election and then tells the officials that “they have a right to override the will of the majority, if they do not agree with its demands, even if to do that they would have to as- sume dictatorial powers oo day last week Fisher and Engel. was to their mouth, a feeling of disgu: distrust. onge of them they practic S the ing the w ing the officials to carry through their destructive policy of betray this election every blocker the entire slate of It. is In should yote for the United Front Committee. a vote for a rank and file leadership | crests of all that will defend the ir blockers. It is a vote of struggle and not LABOR UNION UPHOLSTERERS tion of Furniture Work Ms a Ing of Upholsterers ers Industrial Union upholsterers, members tonight at 7:30 p.m. tors, 818 Broadway, all non-member Union Headquar~ to hear financial report and preparations for C his family | hastily stuffed bod: lon § He essives’ Ex xposed Duti |1,500 Demonstrate Too Late; All Out Early Today to Picket! | NEW rkers of the trated trated But they should come m. the marshall came! Twenty t9a h a riot ounded into the s out bombs. The extension of ti that made no lord or the ma: to defend the st tempts of the s For Charlotte St., evicted ved back as a re- sult of a victory in the rent strike there a couple of days ago. Then m: n nd YORK. — Fifteen hunidred | ghborhood demon- nd picketed ne: rly all a 1377 and all workers a and demonstrate early, Yes-| wagon full of po-/ th artment of J of eight, erence to the land-/ hall. | In spite of the police thr crowd grew steadily after the ev aw hiie yesterday cheering in front a the 1 ing on Franklin St forr St. Cc ed 170th t of his ho & crowd, rd called, ‘ ide and the ce, The "00 Boston Road and a‘)} workers’ milit anizations ini this sec e in Ave ers an ale ak this demonstration Youth Unemployed nmittee hanged on a gallows expressed approval | Skunk” ice attacked and cut down the) then gave Mr. away c lass and | s of Speakers | CONTINUED FR 0 20 he block, 500 ar the fur ched back to the mass meet- the an effigy ‘apl ion call for mass ly this morning and all day, OM PAGE ONE) | show up a rganizations. Committee has no dis-j h the comrades of the} g Workers Club in their| ist the failure of speak-| t meeting: is two-fold, I first to the method of ass’ that ibility n of speake! up bef to assure Paes falta inap of the complaint. by the William: ce sed. m mee ‘he District welcomes such reaction on the part of the workers and will | all necessary take vent recu ments. secondly to the e 2 or as used by the District Office} lack of of a number of comrades to assignments of nun ‘ods the ich is assumes respon- Ing more ¢ in th and definitely check- re the meeting is to take the experience with 1 from the District ical elin S, such as tho: urg Wo! At the same time the District wish- anna jes to call to the attention of the com- eine of the various ¢lubs, on their leaflets without as- | ig from the district the abil- ity of these speakers to speak on the Before such 5 are made the comrades | get in touch with the dis- | trict office in order to be assured of | the attendance of the speaker at the | measures ‘ances of such disappoint- | PREMIE RE OF AMKINO'S wi N’S WORLD” AT CME THEATRE FRID. Women under Amkino have its American premiere at the | on Friday. ture is a product of the Belgoskino told with the gusto of peasant art. revolves around four a modern r; Mashka, a Village girl anxi- ous to learn tractor Acme Theatre studios and ts ness tory Anna, trovitch, hes, atativ restrain it and live the forest, the —all_ combine World” youth and the tterns of production under “Woman's Jaud the best plebut a Front, for all: mitiii and mombers of at 11 pm. in. aw lony, 2700 Bronx r of United Hatter 5 avd Hairdi 115th of the Harlem ting the Soviet pi e from creatt situations. sant couples at their s. oil, youth, leading rs and “tnternationa meeting tonight at 8:30 p.m. Goons of e theme of “Woman's World,” the whi icture, op Of afuilne MARMERS AND HAIRDRES PRS Rsv fo knitenods: Melcher and thr ecured an} Kaplar in a police wa- | "the poe booing both Kaplan to which me com- | were the District has assigning The pic- girl and tion; the chairmen of the Kolk- of the new vil- and Uliana, nt woman burdened by poverty | children. of the picture docs not ing. live people The young pea- rendevous in 2 jubilant dances, nd objectively help- | colorful Ukrainian peasant costumes to make a glamorous story of love and | The problems of | Soviet life are set against the eternal | love and song. | has complete Eng- “Woman's journalists a_ signed statement, World”: s showing mar new AKERS walked nd { ew him gas| y, but} mas by newly ir of the} an. ket- | 1 t is due ignment respon- made. mber of he selec- mination | se made | Club. etc. the} an- to pre-| rule is ich will Pe- a poor the in | ‘One of | ‘Hall, r support + dec’ the Bronx, bringing at the same time | be played on Satur UA! en AY; pon 2027 Monterey Ave; Evictions Threaten Mass in House; Force | NEW YORK Ail | out this morn- ing to picket the 2027 Monterey Ave- It is expected two nue rent strike! evictions will be attempted today. ints are on ike. Take the Third Avenue “L” to Tre- mont Avenue, walk 179th St Monte the mids Strike struggles of the city. house committee and by the neighborhood is being roused. | Landlord's Plot aay * asso n, which Tu y held a meeting and practi red war on all the tenant: the house owners’ Tammany all into conference to secure riot ete., of police to help in ari employed workers, thehir children to sleep in the street: ! ing her out 1, who innocently asked he: | is this Mr. lady to evict-you?” The Unemployed Council knows al about Katz. 2027 Monterey Avenue and his ten. ants are getting ready for acti inst his high rents. He wants to terrorize his own tenants. PROKOFIEFF SOLOIST WITH PHILHARMONIC Serge Prokofieff, the Ru poser-pianist, will be the soloist the Philharmonic Orches | at Carnegie Hall under the direc | cf Bruno Walter. The prograr [oreaplens? Prokofieff; 1 in C minor, hms Symphony, Pr bier” and the Overtur chen von Heilbronn” by Brahms. T! f's to “ lnegic. On Sund: at ern: cents on each copy. Apply imme- | negie. Sunda a farnegie, | Giately at Br vay. Pfitzner's Overture, Brahms sym- | nly ee eee Seu. Bong nay pheny and Pzokofieff's piano con- certo will be the program, with Pro-|Gyeek Workers Club ofieff as the soloist. Saturday morning, at Caregie,| Opens New Quarters Ernest Schelling will conduct the MISE ey cert. The program will be devoted to Brahms, cenien; Attention Comrades! OPEN SUNDAYS Health Center Cafeteria Workers Center — 50 E, 13th St. Quality Food Reasonable Prices We Now Meet at LEVIATHAN CAFETERIA 924 Broadway NEAR 2ist STREET Best Food Lowest Prices Discussions two blocks to eet and one block east to Avenue, and you will be in ef what is apparently de- The furniture was chucked out so| veloping into one of the big rent that much of it was broken. Police were equipped with tear tenant had s The strike is led by the tenants’ the Cam- berling Avenue Unemployed Council Branch. open air meeting before the house An open-air demonstration was} and heard a stirring call to mass re- held before the house yesterday and| sistance to evictions by Organizer has just joined the wives and One tenant who got a letter order- of the house went to | court, and was sent to the city mar- “Who Katz who tells your land- He owns a house near n landlady of 2027 to evict in order THURSDAY n com- on ‘Thursday night and iriday afternoon Piano Concerto No. 3, opus 26, Prokefieff; Symphony ‘Kat- Pfitaner will night at Car- Philharmonic at the Children’s Con- in commemorating Brahms | PATRONIZE OUR ABDVERTIZERS NEEDLE JOBLESS FIGHT EVICTION Relief to Act NEW YORK. —Throngs of unem- } ployed furriers, summoned to his aid by the Nee les Workers Un- employed Council and of neighbors called by the Brighton Beach Un- emploved Council filled the house at 3026 Nathan St. Brighton Beach, yesterday, and for a long time pre- vented the eviction of I. Eiden, an unemployed furrier and his family. Police reserves kept pouring in un- til the cops outnumbered the dc- fenders, who nevettheless held an Hoffman of the Needle Trades Un- employed Council. In a series of struggles with the nolice, three demonstrators, one of them William Kaiser, a leader of the fur workers, were arrested. They are out pending hearing, Monday, in West Eighth St. Court. But the demonstration forced the Home Relief Bureau to rush out a man to rent a new apartment for Eisen, and he and his family has a place to sleep, thanks to the solid- arity of the workers: Landiady Refused Relief Check Previously, mass presstite on the Home Relief Bureau had forced them 1| to pay for food, gas, electricity and rent, but the landlady refuscd to ac- cept the rent check, and the pre- ent struggle developed out of her insistence on eviction. The Brighton Unemployed Council is distributing leaflets for a meeting tonight at the headquarters, 3159 Coney Island Avenue. The central slogan of the housewives and jobless of the neighborhood is “Not a single family in Brighton or Sheepshead Bay must be allowed to starve or be evicted.” Jobless—Help Sell ‘Soviet Russia Today’ NEW YORK.—Unemployed work- ers are wanted to sell “Soviet Russia Toda There is a profit of four NEW YORK, N. Y.—The Spartacus »! Greek Workers Club has opened its new headquarters. The address is 269 West 25th St. DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 Bristol Street (Bet. Pitkin & Sutter Aves.) B’klyp ! PHONE: DICKENS 2-3012 | otrce Hours: 8-10 A.M. WILLIAM BELL OPTOMETRIST 106 E. 14th St., near 4th Av. {ntern! Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE Brooklyn AMSEURG WORKERS FAT AT ALE CAFETERIA 285 BROADWAY, BROOK il For Brownsville Proletarians SOKAL CAFETERIA 1689 PITKIN AVENUE, lth FLOOR AU Work Done tinder Persona) Care of DR JOSEPASON PRESCRIP- SPITS TIONS FILLED AT 50% OFF White Gold Filled Frames Zyt Shell Frames 51.50 31.00 Bronx Mott Haven 9-749 DR. JULIUS JAFFE Surgeon Dentist 401 EAST 140th STL"ET (Cor. Willis Ave.) MEET YOUR COMRADES av THe Cooperative Dining Club ALLERTON AYVENUB Cor. Bronx Park Bast Pure Foods Vroletarian Prices Garment “| District Lenses Not Included Maashattan ‘optical Co. 122 BESTER 8T, Between Bowery & Christie, NE. Open Daily from 9 to 7 ‘el. Sunday 19 to 4 Orchard 4-0280 I. W. 0. Branches, Clubs and Other Fraternal Organizations MAKE SOME MONEY WITHOUT ANY INVESTMENT Secretaries Are Urged to INQUIRE at the| GARRISON FILM DISTRIBUTORS e%—7th Ave. Room 810 New York City THIS OFFER HOLDS GOOD ONLY ror THIS MONTH SPLENDID LARGE Hall and Meeting “Rooms TO HIRE Verfect for BALLS, DANCES, LECTURES, MEEVINGS, Ete. IN TEE New ESTONIAN Garment Section Workers Patronize Navarr Cafeteria 333 7th AVENUE Corner 2ath St. International Barber Shop work: 123 WEST 28th STREET Near N.T WLU, Building WORKERS HOME 27-29 W.115th St., N.Y.C. Phone UNiversily 4-0165 SANDWICH SOLS LUNCH 103 University Place (Just Around the Corner) Telephone Tompkins Square 6-9280-MK1 Lenin’s Defense of Marxism Just As Useful Today Lenin dealt smashing blows to dis- tortionists rx. With specially concentra , Lenin attacked and exp , chief leader of the infamy of the Second (“So- cialist”) International, cloaked under the guise of “socialist” theory. What he said applies to the new distor- tionists who are busy today. In his preface to “The Projetarian Revolution and Kautsky the |Rene- gade,” Lenin mentions that “a num- ber of articles publisshed by me in the course of 1914-1916 in the Sotsial-Demokrat and the Kommu- nist, issued abroad, dealt with this subject” (of Kautsky’s break with Marxism). Lenin similarly dealt with Kautsky in several additional works written before the October days of of 1917 (Socialism and the War, Imperialism as the Last Stage of Capitalism, The State and Revolution). Amongst the many Kautskian ab- surdities exposed, the subject of the Paris Commune and the role of the Proletariat in this first of proletarian dictatorships assumes central im- portance. Kautsky had written a pamphlet from which Lenin quoted him, called the Dictatorship of the Proletariat. “Why,” moans Kautsky, “should the rule of the proletariat necessarily receive a form which is incompatible with democracy?” Lenin tore into this basic, bour- geois-democratic conception of social forces. But Lenin did more, He ripped a Marxist maskfrom off a lib- eral face, from off Kautsky’s face, from off the face of all inspired Marx-distortionists who have had or still have their headquarters in or near the Second International. “One may,” said Lenin, “argue in a Marxist, in a Socialist way, tak- ing as a basis the relation between the exploited and the exploiter, or one may argue in a Liberal, in a bourgeois-democratic way, taking as a basis the relation of the ma- pority to the minority. . when history is placing on the order of the day the ques- tion df the life and death of age- long privilege—at this time to talk about majority and minority, about pure democracy, about the super- fluity of the dictatorship, and equality between exploiter and the exploited—what bottomless stupid- ity and philistinism are needed to do it! But, of course, the decades of comparatively ‘peaceful’ capi- | rHurspay ecting of Post 2, Servicemen’s League to- GENERAL mem Harlem Workers ©: night at 8 p. m. at 127 W. 125th St. All members and Harlem veterans invited. MEMH SHIP and educational meeting of ILD Joe at 109 E. 26th St. one flight uj GENERAL inem ) meeting of Laun- dry Workers Industrial Union tonight at 8 p. m. ut 260 B, 128th St. corner, Third Ave. Bring Union Books. MEETING of Branch 500. 1WO tonight to vote on special referenduin ising un- employment fund. Ali must be at this met FRIDAY LAOTURE by Michael Gold, edit Present Trend of American Lit- , 8:30 p. m., Jan, 20th at 2034 Ocean Parkway. pices Bill Haywocd resentative of Tom Brighton Beach. Aus- r.. ILD. Personal rep- joney will act as the y Charlotte Todes on “The Friday night, Jan. 20th at New Lots Wo! Club, 771 Sack+ man. St., corner New Lots, Brooklyn. LECTURE by Israel Amter on “Manchur- ituation,” Friday, Jan. 20, 8:30 p.m. at Auditorium, 2700 Bronx Park East. Ad- mission 15 cents. Expect Brazil to Join Columbia-Peru Clash Columbian wa: hips sailed yester- day afternoon from Brazil up the Amazon River to engage Reruvian warships and troops. The Brazilian governinenj has huge war forces” ip the region’ and is expected to take part in the undeclared war which re- flects U.S.-British rivalries. SIGNS OF WAR TENSION Emphasizing the growing tension in the developing war situation, the Po- lish Government yesterday condemn- ed six alleged spies'to death. It was hinted that’ the spies were in the service of Germany. talism, between 1871 ang 1914, had accumulated in the opportunist- minded Socialist parties whole Augean stables of philistinism, imbecility and mockery.” A number of great memorials aré being held this year. That of the Paris Cominune will be celebrated in March. In the same month, the 50th anniversary of the death of Karl Marx will be noted with extensive programs. On the approaching Sat- urday of this week, however, here in New York, two large memorial meet ings in honor of our great comrade, Lenin, will be held. Readers are asked to follow announcements which appear elsewhere in these pages for details. AMUSEMENTS STARTING TOMORROW (Friday) “WOMAN’S WORLD” topax “ZWEI MENSCHEN” TIMES: ~ (TWO SOULS) SOVIET WOMAN IN BER 10 THE BUILDING OF whe Worker's LE Continuous from 9 a.m—Li THE WOMAN’S SIDE OF THE 5-YEAR PLAN! NEW LIFE, MER CONTRIBUTION SOCIALISM IN THE SOVIET UNION! ACME THEATRE| 15 ith STREET & UNION SQUARE AMERICAN PREMIERE! RELEASED IN MOSCOW ‘“WOMAN* Produced in U.S.S.R. by BELGOSKINO (ENGLISH TITLES) Classed by the Press as one of the Outstanding Films of 1952 9 AM, to 1 P.M, © Monday to Friday ‘Midnite Show Sat. ast Show 10:307 p.m. fIYIC_ REPERTORY 451-60," 50s, $1, $1.50 Evs. 8:30 Mats, Wed. & Sat, 2:30 EVA LE GALLIENNE, Director ‘Tonight i “LELIOM” Friday Eve. - “CAMILLE” Now at Pop. Price. 25c to1P.M. ‘MAEDCHEN IN UNIFORM RKO CAMEO THEA., 42nd St. & Broadway FRANCIS LEDERER & DOROTHY GISH IN AUTUMN CROCUS The New York and London Success MOROSCO THEATRE, 45th St. W. of B'way Eves. 8:40. Mats, Wed., Thurs. & Sat., 2:40 B THE THEATRE GU-LD Presents A comedy by S. N. BEHRMAN GUILD THEATRE, 52d St, West of B’way Eve. 8: Thirs. & Sat. at 2: B I G NIG HT MAXIME ELLIOT’S Thea., 39th E. of B'way Eves. 8:40; Mats. Wed. and Sat. 2:40 RKO JEFFERSON “ id INOW “EVENINGS FOR SALE” with Berbert Marshall and Sari Maritza Added “MANHATTAN TOWERS” Feature with MABRY BRIAN exo MAYFAIR ring Now OFFICIAL AUTHENTIC WORLD WAR FILM. “THE BIG DRIVE” SECRETS WITHHELD UNTIL NOW! Under Direttion of "Roxy NOW AT POPULAR Prices Inavio city? 50th Sf and 6th Ave. | on Screen George Arliss) In “The s ‘King’s Vaeation’|| pueny ‘tingpom” and spectacular and a new type: stage show of stage show S5c Mon. to Fri, /ADMEISSION: 435 Cents. With This Coupon 30 Cents Camp Nitgeda SPECIAL PROGRAM Sneaker! HA! LENIN- MEMORIAL MEETING IN CAMP THIS WEEKEND (Editorial Staff of Daily Worker) Special Week-End Price $2.10 (tax included) : Cars will leave from Co-operative Restaurant on Sat. 10 A. M. and 3 PM. SPECIAL EXCURSION ON N. Y. CENTRAL ie Metin SAT, wan 21, 1933 7:30 P.M. * MANHATTAN and BRONX BRONX COLISEUM EAST 177TH STREET BROOKLYN ARCADIA HALL 918 HALSEY STREET (near Broadway) Auspices: Communist Party, U.S.A, f © o pistrict No, 2, 52 E. 13th St. iget, BEACON, N.Y, MUSIC RRY WICKS

Other pages from this issue: