The Daily Worker Newspaper, January 21, 1933, Page 2

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od in SUFFER . : . * 2 Lenin Memorial | “Similar Graft STUDENTS edle Unemployed NAACP Tries Hide or. suuius urtinsky|| Garment & : Other Cities,” Cries ‘ Show Up “Christian : ; 107 Bristol Street ety] | fa ; ic or RIC ||| Charity,” Get Relief | Horrors ; istrict | Meetings Tonight Indicted L. I. Mayor 1v0U | rity, e le ospl CH) (Bet. Pitkin & Sailers Aor) kip |] - , —— bs age PHON! DI is 2-1 2 ———--— = —" SATURDAY | cea e MINEOLA, L. I—-Frank Frankel, NEW YORK.—The militant Needle} Govan FROM PAGE ONE) |||ottice tours: #-10 A.M, 1-2 a Carlet AeGunaee 7 TRrokiia) | cconrmwe D FROM PAGE ONE? r of Long Beach, has been in-/ Young Workers Are|Trades Unemployed Council won reliet e Loot Se | julently paying out ra for many workers yesterday in the cy, t S of Red Front and Youn t leery OPA ering y funds. In al Factea Slash : x hospital workers to em- ° ALL. MEMBERS of rent sod See will speak at the Bronx Coli- and transfering city fur es ne Affected by Slash face of refusals by “charity’ organi- ent pane iy hci in the Navarr Cafeteria all, 918 Halsey ke BMT Jamaica| seum meeting. proba y Frankel wou ave ‘ : % s i ihe to Haisey Station, gant iva pastes ce the | able to get away with this had not! ew yoRK.—Young workers and |™*U0P polly i aaa chr antoet die: 9 r ofthe nr caoshont ait win bk, et | Communist Party, and Mary Himoft, | {06 funds gotten tied up in the Lone| aienis wil sulfer most. as the| Mrs. Basso, who was destitute and||Bospltals in the lty without dis- 333 7th AVENUE : Mh rs to go to Arendis Mal” | forthe ¥. OL, will speak at A? Dac Tria COM Win oreat Y cutting $2,508,000 from the | without an home, was turned down by| ‘fimination or iets melee prveeaee Corner 28th st. Ws CONCERT-DANCE at Hall piediralhe keh his political embar 1 York City school budget | the Associated Catholic Charities and Pi gcc dpe eisai data Sot BROADWAY 16 cents. Gc Lena Davis will hehe Sik Hea alee ae it 193 oy De one eet jored by a priest in the latter's! or forced to rect™n “=m o Seite (067-160% Cor t4er st fk ead eee aan Long Beach alone testified to| Raucation, : | oftice. Hospital, with 7 @’scr'm New York WORKERS PATRONIZE o ¢ aca tke 5 | PY lf. According tO} me tarcest ite aout of -| The N. T, Committee pointed out | **4inst West Yniiens. \ : mass organizations, : a The largest ftem is a cut of $776, he N. ee oul : ; ; ¢ | unfons, fraternal orders, sports and Bon hae he bea funds | 00, PY Tequiring teachers absent the sort of relfef this organization BR ATL a ney Aiea CENTURY CAFETERIA ° ; | veterans and cultural clubs, etc,,| “Other cities have had their funds| from duty to share in the cost Of |-nanded out’ and asked them whether | M0 ; aie real 5 sth S (Bronx) have endorsed the Lenin Memorial | Similarly handled, yet no other of-) substitutes. It has been reported|this was an example of “Christian |®0¢ one of the four forced to resign. 154 West 28th Street ficial has been indicted.” The doctors were info: med of this bit meetings and called on their mem- the | Charity. Aiaoriniinatl p Foi | bers to attend them. Included in| Thank you, Mayor Frankel! Thank ill sooner come to school | shee don tare Basen ea eens iainetian Be dibdlialornelalatint eri! => sareh | this list is the Unemployed Council | you for being so frank! somewhat ill t main at home}, Lean Pate are eens Aarti qyyoe ats A, MTT TPM OF 1| of Greater New York, which say EAE SNE) and lose part pay. The tion Bureau and got | mailed Je | Ur. wWTLhin i 1 “ iW h | iF | Ree eatin! Uwe or > better trent-|ctmeny. 914 obromernisn Good Food Served Right thes lisata ashadie Jac ket the Falke Sonnet avitsion Rill gerne je fabs Sah we'd (c6 F Ith st. mar dth Av “| masses victoriously |" uprooted * as a result of holding four instead Social Service, 104 De a dele een Farragut wesi| eliminated the basic causes of St ° k N ° of five nightly sessions a week for Wad. SOPCeRe YO BEIE. Sil or IAN (icon eee oh gee misery, hunger, unemployrr and Yl ers v co! e young workers eager for education. Unemployed single worker, Miss J. | 207 West SAR aoa 1 ip “y e-| war—the czarist-capitalist system of | ° A saving of $215,000 will be affected |Silverman, after refusing to give relief] Feeling runs high in Harlem and , ajeteria Russia. Hillman Sellout as a result of closing the teachers|for another worker because “he was|all over the city against the whole | Intern’ Workers Order s SUNDAY met an loyed oat nt : | eae eats he schools will b pesca aad bebo San eee ai cag lo OUNTAL DEPARTMENT 326 Seventh Ay., at 28th St. ions of unemployed masses through- ear my Conditions in the schools wi e} The edie Trades Unemployed fas — (Manhattan) out the capitalist world are battling AyS ) mucl rse than’ in th ast witl oil 2 demanded and relie: The L. 8S, N.R. calls upon every | s0 FIFTH AVENUE t Lalis a Atl f Ss - ch worse than'in the past with | Council elso demanded and got relief pL. S. NLR. P 3 at 4 oF wor day night, Jan.| against hunger and starvation in| Amal, Member De | the slashing of $362,000 for r " Paul William, forcing the Home| worker who has the time to come lath FLOOR AE ON Sts). O'Sanized revolutionary fighting de- mand Control of | replacements and improvement f Bureau at 125th St and 2nd] to the Workers’ Center at 650 Lenox 4 . OSCAR’S Rei) tachments. The by the va ‘ 4.4] lowering of fuel costs by $125,000/ Ave. to give the relief immediately] Avenue, near 142nd Street, a'l day |{ av work vou + udev ver Care Se Ad-} guard of the proletariat—champioi Their Own Strike will mean that many students are|“right over the counter.” today to assist in the distribution Pat LUNCHEONETTE of the demands of the hungry masses ~—the Leninist-Communist Parties. “We must,” continues the statement, | “follow the teachings of Lenin in our ; Struggles against misery and starva- | going to find their classrooms mighty | cold next winter. 50 Per Cent Cut Pay Cut. Substitute teachers of New York | schools have been hit by a straight | The Council won relief for 12 other | workers at other bureaus. of leafiets announcing the protest meeting on January 26th. | JOSEPASON | | NEW YORK.—Charging that the Hillman leadership of the Amalga- mated is selling out the strike, rank and file members of the Washable 131 W. 28th STREET IN TRE N. T. W. I. U. BUILDING Attention Comrades! OPEN SUNDAYS tion and unemployment; we must | Jacket Union Local 169 warned the| fifty per cent wage cut effective| 3 SO i . 7” . hi 2 Chick 4947 —L leam how to make our struggles | membership that unless the strike is| after February 3. ‘The cut wopks in Health Center Cafeteria C. OOMBATELY -A7sloleoa ie aaa lastingly effective. Our fight for! placed into the hands of a militant| the following fashion: sub teAchers Ut 3! LY avy everyday needs of relief, for shelter, for unemployment insurance, for im- rank and file strike committee, there| NOW receiving $30 a week will share Workers Center — 50 K, 13th St. is little chance for success. their class with another sub in week-| AJVIC REPERTORY 1 st.46& Av | | Quality Food Reasonable Prices FAN RAY CAFETERIA betegus Ganditiens, sia bo cosre iro narsesbagiii ve offi. | IY alternates. They will be asked to) ———_- WA, # 7450, ar oy, * anecaay 3 y |tensifed today because of the crass |, 76, strike was settled by the offl-| “co-operate” with each other. If they | 8.814150 fw, ka) Mats wea. 6 sae eat ||| Moscow coat Woman's = 156 W. 29th St. New York indifference of the ruling class to our | V&S Defote it began. the members| ao not “co-operate,” that is come in or EVA LE GALLIENN! . ‘ODAY MAT.,._.... during the week they are supposedly | TODAY MAT... .—... off, they will no doubt find the prin- charged, and stated further that an agreement was signed before the plight, because of its cutting down on relief appropriations, its discrimina- JADE MOUNTAIN |; THE WOMAN’S SIDE OF : at} tion in giving relief—in short, its |Stike which guarantees the contrac-| cipal a hard person to get along with.| FRANCIS LEDERE! THE FIVE-YEAR PLAN! American & Chinese Restaurant ‘ ; 98| total failure to adequately provide | ‘TS one-third proceeds from the or-| They will. have to scab on the $6 a| AUTUMN CROCUS |]]-American Premiere — 197 SECOND AVENUE . *-| for the suffering million and a quar- | 9S: day sub when a regular is absent. | ‘The New York and Londen success ||| ¢¢ WOMAN’S WORLD ” Rerase ae Cooperative Barber Shor ‘ Admistion. toc | ter unemployed and their families in| The manager of the union, Bern-| The teachers are preparing to fight | monosco THEATRE, (sth St. W, of Bw ‘ . whieh ; "| New York, stein, the workers declare, rode} this attack of Tammany and the| Eves. 8:40, Mats. Wed., ‘Thurs, & Sat., ee RELEASED IN MOSCOW AS Welcome to Our Comrades 169 WEST 29TH ST. ngage id “We must, while we struggle for around with Krasny, the manager of | bankers. The fall term will see teach- THE THEATRE ro" " Presents | (Near 7th Avenue) Produced by BELGOSKINO English Titles the Contractors Association and also with Max Gittleman and other con- tractors urging the bosses to co- operate in what the workers claim is relief and unemployment insurance, not overlook the sinister plans the ruling class has in store for the un- employed millfons. These plans are ers in this classification getting $15} & week straight unless this move is| smashed, he Mozart B Pls BioGRAPHY A comedy by §. N. BEHRMAN GUILD THEATRE, 524 West of B'way Eve. 8:30. Mats. Thar: & Sat. at 2:30 50c Haircut and Shave NO WAITING — — 6 BARBERS ‘WOMAN’ Soviet Woman in Her New Life — Her Contribution in the Building of Socialism one Tomking Sq 4-255 Patterson, Labor Defense ¢: 2 y. Internationa Subject: The the Scottsboro Case E—Louise Thompson nizer of Newro film group “Black and White” speaks this afternoon at 4 p. m. at Harlem Forum 650 Lenox Ave. At this workers will answer the sland Soviet Union by Poston in At and other All Harlem comrades} invited 1 LECTURE by Milton Howard on well to Reform at regular 3: lutionary Write: St, at 8 p, LECTURE by dents Going Left” tonight at Steve Ka- soa Brench ILD, 15 East Third St. Adm. ree. LECTURE by Grace Campbell, organizer of FSU on “New Education in Soviet Union” at Open Forum of PSU Harlem Intl. Branch, 227 Lenox Ave., near 123nd St., this after- noon at 6:30 p.m. No admission. FORUM of Harlem Progressive Youth Club at 1538 Madison Ave., at 2:30 p.m. Subject: How the National Question is solved in the USSR. Speaker: Cabot. No admission. FORUM of Yorkville Workers Club, 243 BE. 84th St. Labor Temple, at 2:30 p.m. Subject: The Revolutionary Student Move- ment and Workingclass. Speaker: Donsld Henderson. NATURE FRIENDS HIKE to White Plains, meet at 180th St. station., Boston and West- chester R.R., at 8:30 a.m. Fare 70 cents. Leader: Ruth Matthes. Automobiles meet trains at White Plains at 9:30 a.m. Walk- ing time four hours. FOLLOWERS OF NATURE HIKE to Silver Lake, Staten Island. Meet at South Ferry, 10:30 a.m. sharp. " OFFICE WORKERS UNION HIKE to Tib- bets Brook. Meet at Mosholu Parkway at 9:30 a.m. Downtown comrades meet at Health Center, 50°. 13th St., st 8:30 a.m. ce jawn-Jerome Line 3 oy to Moshelu INTERNATIONAL CONCERT-DANCE FOR SECTION ONE COMMUNIST PARTY THIS APTERNOON AT 4 P.M, AT MANHATTAN LYCEUM, 66 E. 4TH ST. SPLENDID PRO- GRAM INCLUDING DANCING AFTER CON- CERT. ADMISSION AT DOOR WILL BE 35 CENTS; WITH TICKETS 25 CENTS. ARRANGED BY 12 WORKERS CLUBS. COLORLITE DANCE at Harlem Progres- sive Youth Club, 1538 Madison Ave., second floor tonight. Negro jasz band. Admission 25 cents. (Bronx) STRIKE COMMITTEE of Rent Strike Movement calls upon all Bronx ‘Workers $0 support the tae day this morning at 10:30 @M. Credentials and boxes will be at 1400 gad Rd. Benefits mass rent strike, Feb, FILM SHOWING at Concourse wi Club, 1349 Jerome Ave, at 8:30 pm One red movie: “The Struggle for Bread.” Also Ed. Royce speaking on the “Role and Significance of Revolutionary Press.” Adm, 15 cents. Unemployed 10 cents. PARTY given by Unit 18 at 1149 Stratford Ave. Dancing, entertainment free eats. Ad- misrion 15c. 8 p.m. SLASS in “Principle sof the Class strug- @ie” from 4 to 6 p.m. Dance at 8 p.m. All workers invited. Address: Workets Center. 1157 Southern Bivd. DANCE - ENTERTAINMENT at Tremont Workers Club, 2075 Clinton Ave., near 180th St. “Special jazz band and extraordinary Provram at 8 p. m. CLASS tn balireom dancing ut Concourse Workers Club, 1349 Jerome Ave., this aft- ernoon at 1 at 3 pan. CONCFRT-DANCE given by Unit 17, Bec. 6, C.P. at Schule 12, 1334 So, Bivd., between Preeman and Jennines at 7 p.m. tonieht. Lenin nietht at Bronx Workers Club, 1610 Boston Road. V. J. Jerome will sneak on “Lenin the leader of World Revolution.” Also splendid program including unveiling statue of Comrade Lenin. DINNER followed by Concert and Dance by Unit 7, Section 5 at 6 Pm. at ‘Forest Ave., Bronx. Admission 25c, 6 p.m cee) (Brooklyn) DANCE riven by Brihton Progressive Club, 129 Brighton Beach Ave., tonight at Far book by John Chamberlain Allen Taub on “Our Stu- p.m. Class in public speaking nothing less than the bloody horrors of another more ghastly and great- er imperialist war! “Undeclared wars are raging in the Far East and Latin-America, where | tens of thousands of toilers are being ; slaughtered in the interests of the American and foreign imperialist powers. “It was Lenin who first taught us how to struggle against hunger and imperialist war. It was through Lenin’s teachings that the workers | and peasants of czarist Russia freed themselves from hunger and misery and established the Soviet Union, which today knows no unemploy- ment. It is building Socialism. It 1s struggling heroically against great odds in beginning its second Five- Year Plan, while the ring of the im- perialist war-mongers tightens around it—threatens it! “We hungry millions must resist the new world-war plans of the American imperialists, while we struggle for our every-day relief needs. We can follow Lenin’s teach- ings effectively if we fight against these war plans, that would turn the starving unemployed millions of America and the rest of the world into cannon-fodder, for blood- and profit-thirsty imperialists! We urge all employed and unemiployed to rally in defense of the land that knows no unemployment—the Soviet Union! Increase the fight against hunger and war!” Lenin Memorial meetings in New York are scheduled as follows: at Bronx Coliseum, 177th Street; speak~ ers, C. A. Hathaway, Leo Patterson; chairman, Lena Davis. At Arcadia Hall, 918 Halsey Street, Brooklyn; speakers, Earl Browder, Mary Himoff; chairman, Charles Alexander. The pageant, “Lenin and the Masses,” will be shown at both halls; arranged by League of Workers Thea- tres and Workers Dance Council. Choral sections of Workers Music League will appear in revolutionary song recitals at both places. Bands are arranged for. Time of both events, 7:30 p.m. Save 5 cents admission fee by using coupon on advertisement appearing in this issue. Otherwise admission is 35 cents. Directions—For Arcadia Hall, from Brownsville, Rockaway Avenue trolley car or Ralph Avenue trolley to Halsey Street; from Borough Hall, Lexington Avenue elevated line to Halsey Street; from Coney Island, Brighton and Borough Park, take B. M. T. to Canal and change for Jamaica Line to Halsey Street. Manhattan Lyceum Hall For Mass Meetings, Entertainments Balls, Weddings and Banquets 66-68 E. 4th St. New York LABOR UNION MEETINGS @ pm. DANCE viven by Boro Park Workers Clvh, 1323 43rd St., tonight at 8 p. m. Coloriite €, DAN Bath Beach Workers Club, ‘Beth St. . m. with good bend. Music group meets 10 to 12 a.m. Sunday morning, Dramatic frown 12 to 2 p. m. in afternoon. HOUSE PARTY at 2006 Benson Ave.. Ant. of ©. Kahn at 7:30 p.m. Arranged by Unit 12, Section 11, C.P. All Bath Beach workers invited. at 8 PARTY and Dance given by Alfred Levy Branch ILD at 524 Vermont 8t., Brookiyn., at $ pm. No admission. at Willlamsburg Workers Club, 43 Manhattan Ave. Speaker: Herbert Ben- leader of Unemployed March to . Subject: The Communist Par- ty_as the lender of the working class. LENIN MEMORIAL MEETING tonight at § p.m. at Workers Center of Jamaica, 148-29 Liberty Ave. Speaker: Geo, Powers. No admission. FORUM at Workers Center, 1613 Pitkin Is Tech- Alfirmative—Geo. J. Sinnott, Engineer Columbia University. ton Howard, Author-Lecturer. College Forum. Admission i5e. FORUM at 2006 70th St., Brookiyn, at 8:30 p.m. Speaker: Comrade “OPEN Sorteort. Subject: Proletarian vs. Bour- “orm Culture.” All invited. No admission. FORUM of the Shoe Workers of 4 le this tnorning at 11 a.m. at 149 Pa Ave. Bklyn. Comrade Ziebel will ie ne on “End of Capitalist Stabilization and Tasks of Revolutionary Unions.” rite Tatar (Newark, N: J. OPEN FORUM at IWO Hall, 347 Spring- OFFICE WORKERS Office Workers Union Hike to Tibbets Brook, Sunday. Meet at Mosholu Parkway, 9:30 a.m. or at Health Center, 50 East. 13th St., at 6:30 2m. Woodlawn-Jerome Ave. line to Mosholu Parkway. NEEDLE TRADES Silkowitz and Stamper will address mass meetin of Coney 7" 11 cl 7k and dress m ab 1p Ave. Needle Trades Open Forum at 11 a.m. Sunday in Middle Bronx Workers Club, 3882 Third Ave. ‘Wagman of Committee of 100 will speak on Left Wing Groups program and Colow will speak on dressm: unity drive, at Open Forum, 313 Hinsdale St., Brownsville, 11 a. m. Sunday. FURNITURE WORKERS Furniture Workers Industrial Union runs a class on Trade Unionism free of charge for ail its members, every monday night at & p. m. at 818 Broadway. Instructor: Paul- ine Rogers, educational director of the ‘ruUC. Be hae MILLINERY WORKERS Open forum auspices of Millinery United Front, for all millinery workers, capmakers and members of United Hatters, Jan. 22, at 11 p.m. in auditorium of Co-operative Colony, 2700 Bronx Park East, Top! ger of United below Bergen St., Newark at 3 afternoon. Subject: “The Fight Against Hunger.” No admission. Auspices Workers School of Newark, eee +. Sunday at 2709 Mermald} a fake stoppage. Proofs of the strike sell-out are said to be increasing. Already the union officials have “accomodated” the bosses by permitting workers to return for completing unfinished work. At the same time, while the strikers are fighting for a 25 per cent wage increase, the Charley Bittari (De Lux Shop) in Newark has settled for 15 per cent. Some of the shops, with the tacit approval of the officials, cut wages by 7 per cent before the strike began in order to be able to make fake the smoke screen of an “increase.” The rank-and-file committee urges | the workers to turn the present stop- page into a real strike by demanding settlements on the basis of 25 per cent wage increases and union rec- ognition. ILGWU Cuts Wages at Gordon & Schuval Shop NEW YORK.—The manager of Gordon & Schuval, 99 Madison Ave- nue, silk underwear shop, notified all his operators Thursday night: “You must take a 20 per cent wage cut.” The I. L. G. W. U. was notified and came down and fixed it up for a 10 per cent cut, though the workers wanted to strike. of Jamaica. e at 148 29 Liberty Ave., Jamaica, L. I. NEW DAILY WORKER BUSINESS OFFICE PHONE NUMBER NEW YORK.—Workers, and or- fianizations, take notice! The new District Daily Worker business office phone number is ALgonquin 4-1754. The Office is on the ground floor, 35 East 12th Strect. To turn in news continue to use the number ALgonquin 4-7956 or come to the eighth floor, 35 East 12th Street, or 50 East 13th Street. FOR BALLS, BANQUETS, WEDDINGS Stuyvesant Hennington Hall Hall 140-142 Second Ave. New York City 214-216 Second St. New York City CATERING FOR ALL OCCASIONS Airy, Large Meeting Rooms and Hall TO HIRE Suitable for Meetings, Lectures and Dances in the Czechoslovak Workers House, Inc. 347 E. 72nd St. New York Telephone: Rhinelander 6097 Gottlieb’s Hardware 119 THORD 4VENTE Near 14th St, Tompkins 8q. 6-8547 All winds of ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES Cutlery Our Specialty Jamaica Daily Worker | Chorus Rehersal, Sun. JAMAICA, L. I.—Folowing the ex- ample of New York City the workers of Jamaica will come to the first hearsal of the “Daily Worker Chor They will meet Sund: The time is 2:30 j. m. sharp. All workers, both men and women are urged to join this chorus and help establish a strong English singing chorus in Jamaica No previous ex- settlements during the strike under | perience is necessary. An organization meeting of this chorus was held a week ago at which 18, half of them Negro workers were present. llth Annual Ball Followers of the Trail , WEBSTER MANOR lth STREET & THIRD AVENUE Saturday, Jan. 28, at 8 P.M. GOOD BAND AMERICAN AND RUSSIAN DANCES Admission 49 Cents Our Camp Is Open All Year Pleasant Atmosphere—Proletarian Prices PEEKSKILL 2879 YOUTH CONCERT EXTRAORDINARY t NEW DANCE GROUP NORMAN PLOTKIN, Concert Pionist LW.O, SYMPHONY QUARTETTE “CHARITY,” a Play DR. KRUPPS, American Spectalist Soviet Satire with that American Touch IRVING PLAZA 15th St. & Irving Place SUNDAY, JAN. 22, at 2:30 P, M. ADMISSION, 25c. WITH THROWAWAY, %0c, Auspices YOUTH SECTION, I. W. 0. ENGAGE AN EXPERIENCED Dance Orchestra REASONABLE RATES—Call any tim until 8 P. M. Drydock 4-4831 —— CONCOURSE WORKERS CLUB will show an uncensored movie: “THE STRUGGLE FOR BREAD” Sunday, Jan. 22—8:30 p.m prepared for the Daily Worker, This movie will be shown for the first time. It depicts the ‘class struggle in recent years in vivid and interesting colors. 1349 Jerome Avenue, Bronx Jerome Ave, Line—170th St. Sta, Admission 15c.—Unemployed 10c. WILLIAMSBURG WORKERS EAT AT KALE CAFETERIA 286 BROADWAY, BROOKLYN | OFFICIAT, AUTHENTIC WORLD WAR FILM The GROUP THEATRE presents NIGHT IG workers Acme Theatre B By DAWN POWELL Uith Street and Union Squi Cont, from 9 a.m. Midnite Show Sat. 15 cents 9 A.M. to 1 P.M.--Mon. to Fri. 39th E. of Bway and Sat. 2:40 Now at Pop. Price. 25c to 1P.M. MUSIC ‘MAEDCHEN IN UNIFORM’ RKO CAMEO THEA,, 12nd St. & Broadway KO JEFFERSON 1 St. # (NOW PAUL MUNI in“I AmA Fugitive From A Chain Gang” Added Feature: “NO MORE ORCHIDS” with Carol Lombard and Walter Connolly INow rxo MAYFAIR Philharmonic Symphony | WALTER, Conductor Metropolitan Opera House This Sunday Afternoon at 3:00 Soloist: SERGE PROKOFIEFF, Pianist egie Hall, Fri. Eve., Jan. 27, at 8:45 Special Concert Soloist: LOTTE LEHMANN, Soprano BEETHOVEN—WAGNER PROGRAM Tickets now on sale at Carnegie Box Office ARTHUR JUDSON, Mgr. (Steinway Piano) Cari Bway at 4ith St “THE BIG DRIVE” SECRETS WITHHELD UNTIL NOW! Concert of Music of Soviet Russia SAT., JAN. 28, 8:30 P. MNEW SCHOOL, 66 W. 12th SERGEI RADAMSKY AND LEAGUE OF COMPOSERS QUARTETTE TICKETS: 50c, 75¢ and $1.00, can be obtained at NEW SCHOOL, and DAILY WORKER, 35 East 12th Street John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmoxphere where i) eadlenix meet bal E. 12th St. New fork Bronx FREEMAN CAFETERIA Formerly the R. & M. 1291 WILKINS AVENUE NEAR FREEMAN COMRADELY ATMOSPHERE 29 EAST MTH STREET NEW YORK Tel. Algonquin 3356-8843 We Carry a Fall Line of STATIONERY AT SPECIAL PRICES for Organizations DAYLIGHT BAKERY—RESTAURANT 711 Allerton Avenue (Near Woolworth’s) FRESH BAKING 4 TIMES DAILY Special Attention to Parties and Banquets KATZ & MARKUS, Managers Mott Haven 98-8749 DR. JULIUS JAFFE Surgeon Dentist 401 EAST 140th STRUET (Cor. Willis Ave.) SPLENDID LARGE Hall and Meeting Rooms TO AIRE Perfect for BALLS, DANCES LECTURES, MEETINGS, Etc IN THE New ESTONIAN WORKERS HOME 27-29 W.115th St., N.Y.C. Phone UNiversity 4-0165 Brooklyn WORKERS—EAT AT THE Parkway Cafeteria 1638 PITKIN AVENUE Near Hopkinson Ave. Brooklyn, N. ¥. BROWNSVILLE WORKERS PATRONIZE WORKERS SCHOOL FORUM WILLIAM PATTERSON NATIONAL SECRETARY, INTERNATIONAL LABOR DEFENSE WILL LECTURE ON '“THE MEANING OF THE SUPREME COURT DECISION ON THE SCOTTSBORO CASE” on SUNDAY, JANUARY 22nd, AT 8 O'CLOCK East 12th Street —Second Floor ADMISSION 25¢ QUESTIONS DISCUSSION Students of Workers School Admitted for 20 Cents Plus Student’s Card To Make My Bread by GRACE LUMPKIN The Maxim Gorky Award Prize Novel Commenting on the award MICHAEL GOLD wrote the Revolutionary Wwrit- er’s Federation, "Undoubtedly the best choice the committee could have made.” of ‘TO MAKE MY BREAD’ as the best proletarian novel of the year.” Has won the endorsement of the entire radical press. Included in lists of the best novels of the year by THE NEW REPUBLIC, THE NATION, THE BOOK- MAN, THE NEW YORK HERALD- TRIBUNE BOOKS and other leading literary magazines. Read the Best Proletarian Novel of the Year $2.00 at All Bookstores MACAULAY PUBLISHERS LOUISE THOMPSON wrote: “I should like to congratulate the Revolutionary Writers Federation upon the selection \ PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTIZERS Camp Nitgedaiget, seacon, n. y. LENIN MEMORIAL MEETING IN CAMP THIS WEEKEND SPECIAL PROGRAM Speaker: HARRY WICKS (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 P.M SPECIAL EXCURSION ON N. Y. CENTRAL MUSIC Subscrike Now to Soviet Periodicals for 1933 ‘PRAVDA’, ‘IZVESTIA’, ‘“EKONOMICHESKAYA JIZN’, ‘ZA INDUSTRIALIZATSIU’ Each $10.00 Per Year ENGLISH PUBLICATIONS: . Day-to-day Developments in the USSR & How Foreigners Share in Them 2 ROOMS FOR RENT—Apartment sharing Weekly Edition, 6 iss. a month—per year Published by the USSR, per year Daily edition, 28 iss, a month- $8,0Q Chamber of Commerce h ‘ive USSR In Construction $5.00 Years In Four $1.50 All-Picture Monthly per year Pletorial Charts. Special SEND SUBSCRIPTIONS, INQUIRIES, REQUESTS FOR CATALOGUES FOR SOVIET PUBLICATIONS, BOOKS, MUSIC, MAPS, ETC., TO 8. A. tor MEZHDUNARODNAYA NEW YORK Between 28-20b Sts. Moscow News $3.00 Quarterly Review $200 per year The Struggle for Soviet Travel tuustratea, 6 iss. « year $1.00 per year Bole .aeseseiserien ta 268 Fifth Ave. v aotetsctrs A MKNIGA AVENUE CAFETERIA 426 SUTTER AVENUE (Cor. Powell St.) Classified proposition, kville. STEAMHEATED APARTMENT for couple to take over, licht, airy, semi-furnished, will cost about $10 month; or will sell furnish: ings very reasonably.—DELL, Apt. E-1, 419 East 12th Street. HEINEN, 531 E, 88rd Street, For Brownsville Proletarians SOKAL CAFETERIA 1689 PITKIN AVENUE Workers Cooperative Colony 2700-2800 BRONX PARK EAST (OPPOSITE BRONX PARK) has now REDUCED THE RENT ON THE APARTMENTS AND SINGLE ROOMS CULTURAL ACTIVITIES Kindergarden; Classes for Adults and Children; Library; Gymnasium; Clubs and Other Privileges NO INVESTMENTS REQUIRED SEVERAL GOOD APARTMENTS & SINGLE ROOMS AVAILABLE Take Advantage of the Opportunity. Lexington Avenue train to White Plains Road. Stop at Allerton Avenue Station, Tel. Estabrook 8-1400—1401 Oftiee open daily Friday & Saturday Sunday 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. 9 a.m. to 5 pm. 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. LENIN MEMORIAL Meeting SAT., JAN. 21, 1933 1:30 P, M. MANHATTAN and BRONX BRONX COLISEUM EAST 177TH STREET BROOKLYN ARCADIA HALL $18 HALSEY STREET (near Broadway) Auspices: Communist Party, U.S, District No. 2, 52 E. 138 Seon” E ADMISSION: 35 Cents. With This Coupon 30 Cen‘s

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