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YAILY WORKER, ! NEW YORK, W EDNESDAY, MAY 10, 1933 Page Two RENTS FOR ALL JOBLESS FAMILIES, SINGLE WORKERS! WORKERS! COMPEL THE CITY TO IMMEDIATELY PROVIDE ADEQUATE RELIEF AND TO PAY BARRICADES Printed by Special Permis- RELIEF AGENCIES DRIVE CHILDREN ROOSEVELT’S $500,000,000 RELIEF | INTO ALLENTOWN SWEATSHOPS PROCRAM TO KEEP 17 MILLION i N B & PR L | | sion of INTERNATIONAL EDITORIAL ‘NO! TE —The fol a PUBLISHERS, 38! Fourth lowing article is the second of a Avenwe, New York City. series on the conditions of the child UN E M PLOYED WORKERS STARVING | sweatshop strikers in Allentown from first hand investigations made by a special reporter for the Daily Worker. BY KLAUS NEWKRANTZ ILLUSTRATED BY WALTER QUIRT All Workers are urged to road this book and spread it among their friends. Even This Sum Dwindles to Half; “Government’s Own Figures Show THE Wedding, in Berlin, demonstrate May the Socialist Police Chief, Zoergiebel. tacked by the police. Shots cri in the distance. Tt began at the Wiesenstrasse cor- ner of the alley. Stones crashed into the street lamps whose glass panes | fell to the ground with a loud clatter. Lamp after lamp was extinguished. | At the top of the gas pipe a small | blue flame burned between the bro- | ken panes. These the workers kept | burning to prevent the gas from es- | caping. As far as the old-fashioned type of low lamps were concerned, | young fellows simply climbed up and | turned the gas off. The ring of dark- | mess spread further and further around the barricades, so that soon | only large, clumsy silhouettes were | visible in the faint blue light of the | approaching night. About eight o’clock shots cracked from the Nettelbeckplatz and soon | came nearer. The rolling noise of heavy police lorries in rapid motion. Excited shouts rank through the al- ley. Doors slammed. The lights in the windows went out. The blinds of the “Red Nightingale” rattled down in} front of the windows. Someone ran across the street and disappeared in | a cellar entrance. Then all was quiet. Empty and grey thé alley lay si- lent behind the barricade. The mo- tionless air smelt of Spring and pov- erty. Noiselessly a broad, white flood-| TORY THUS FAR: The workers of the proletarian Day, 1929, despite the ban issued by The workers’ demonstration is at- “Shoot . . . you cur!” shouted Thomas. “Like this . . . see?” Peng - Peng... peng... peng. He emptied the drum through the bro- | ken window. “Emil of number 5 is lying down | there ... do you hear? . .. Now the time has come . . . Boys . all who | have guns must use them . . . other- district, | By HELEN KAY. ‘The situation in Allentown, and t whole of Pennsylvania, and anywhere else where there are these sweat ops is based upon lack of relief It is this driving whip of starvati | that forces the children into the fa tories at so early an age. And it is this same whip which keeps them at their job day in and day out, hour upon hour, for the mere penny pit- tances, called wages. Vhat are the conditions in Aller town? Of the total population, 92,51 Jeight thousand are unemployed, which amounts to more than one- third of the working population. In practically all of these where the children are at wor the vicious at shops, these ch dren are the sole support of the fam- | ily In Allentown recently the milk re- jlief received a 50 per cent cut, and on July ist all the present relief in | the Pennsylvania area is to be cut off, and no further plans for relief have been issued by the state thus far. Sweat Shop—No Relief instances in | wise we are finished. . . .” | orities, in giving aid to these sweat | shop keepers. | It was the local officials themselves | with the cooperation of the local Behind the window stood "Thomas. Power and Light Company who | brought the sweat shops into this area A bullet} The Pennsylvania Power and Light | bounced from the edge of the wall|Company and the Northampton |in front of him amidst a shower of |Chamber of Commerce themselves brought the D and D sweat shop and weat shop’s better than no ¢ all,” claim the local of- Young pickets before the Adelphi shirt factory, an Allentown sweat- |ficials, “When they work for two) shop. Most of these young strikers are the sole supporters of their | |and three dollars, and down, we don’t) famities. Older brothers and sisters cannot get jobs. | |have to give them relief.” And that brass oe 2 STS TLES A Aco ot jis the theory behind the local auth-' necticut, and can shift production|that in .-cny places forced the chil-| within a day’s notice. Many of them| dren into the sweat shops. | don't have to pay rent, due to the! ‘he older brothers and sisters, splendid co-operation of the Chamber] fathers and mothers of these children, of Commerce. Some were even given| many skilled and efficient workers, long term exemption from taxes. | cannot find jobs, and cannot live on And so with the advertisement ot | the amount of relief issued, and so “cheap and contented labor in our| they must send these 12 and 13 and beautiful Lehigh Valley” these mush-/14 year old children into industry. room and fly by night plants took! Here is the case of one family. od the | | 8on for a we That Bill Does Not Care Even for Minimum Needs of Jobless BULLETIN. sent it to the The House of Representatives formally passed the Roogeyelt “relief” measure today and White Hoiise for his signature. NEW YORK.—With the approval of the House and the signature of Roosevelt the $500,- | 000,000 “relief bill” will become law. | in reality it amounts only to half that sum. one-third of their relief expenditures. |on the relief expense of the pi The balance of $250,000,000 is reserved Lk: an 1 “emergency’- . |fieient funds after | bined sum of its own and the| federal government, only then are additional funds to be given from this emergency. Reports from governors and Roose- | velt’s government statistics show how ridiculous the “relief bill” is in taking care of the minimum néeds of the 17 million unemployed. Governor Pinchot of Pennsylvania estimated the needs for the month| of November 1932 alone as $9,348,000.) This for the 63 of the 67 counties. | He Said that the state will raise 28 per cent of this amount; the remain- ing 72 per cent has to come from federal funds. On Pinchot’s rélief the) miners in Pennsylvania live on Red) | Cross flour. Relief in important cities as Pitis- burgh do not exceed 90 cents per per- . But Roosevelt says that not 72 per cent, but one-third will be given to the state. What will) | this mean to the unemployed who are bounced around by the “liberals, the com-* : While the press speaks revious quarter. of a $500,000,000 relief bill, The federal government is to give to the states This one-third to be given every three months based Where a state has insuf- Adnntusion by 6c Dispossess Only” to Meets Called to Wage Fight on Evictions “The Home Relief Bureau Owes Rent, Not Us,” Say Jobless on Trial Friday NEW YORK.—Two mass meetings to which admission will be by dis= Possess notice only have been announced by the Upper East Side and Down- | town Unemployed Councils. There will be one point on the order of busi | ness, “the struggle against evictions.” The meeting called by the East Side Council of 519 Second Aye., will Led | neld Thursday night, 8 p.m., at Irvings ——— Plaza, 15th St. and Irving Pl. The! ing them. other called by the Downtown Coun-' A proposal of united front action cil, will be Friday night, 8 pm. at; Made by the Unemployed Councils Manhattan Lyceum, 66 E. 4th St. of Greater New York to the central Unemiployed from block commit-j body of the Association of Unem- tees, house cominitteés and neigh-| Ployed was accepted by them Monday borhood assemblies, will come with) night and a committee was elected to meet with similar committees from light swept across the empty space | plaster and hit the ceiling with a| root and sprouted forth in all the! car Kalbach is 17 years old. He can-!as Pinchot and Roosevelt. their eviction notices. From reports aoc from the corner of the Pankstrasse.| crack. He turned round, somewhat | others into Northampton. The pow-| siory of the sweat shops of the early not find a job. But his little sister) The relief expenditures for only | ®t the councils there are so many dis- the Unemployed Council, the Works Like a cold finger of light it crept | calmer. er company has a big “industrial de-| Gays of capitalism. we oe raokee old, is a striker from! gx ane in dueteiet Merce ee ¥ | possesses threatening in their section| ers’ Committee on Unemployment haltingly up the house walls, along| “Where is Kurt Zimmermann? |Partment,” whose sole purpose is to the Adelphi shirt factory. There are z that the halls should be filled with | and Workers Unemployed League. the entire alley. Everything was in deathly silence. Only the white, hard light ate its way up the walls and strayed to the roofs above, shrouded in the first shadows of a starless night. Then | the floodlight was pointed directly | at the wide, high barricade. Behind it Jay the enemy. Tt was so quiet that the low, sharp command came like a sharp iron missile. Hundreds of shadows crouch- ed down and the piercing sound of a rifle fusilade shook the air. The echo reverberated from the walls and rolled on through all the streets of Wedding. THE ATTACK BEGINS The game had started. Salvo after salvo rang out. A stone smashed the searchlight. A few convulsive flashes—then the white eye was dark. Like dancing sparks the fire | flamed from the mouths of the car- bines. Whirring, the leaden bullets crashed against the walls of the houses from which the plaster fell heavily to the ground. They hit the | sheet-iron sides of the dust-bins with a loud boom, ricocheted from the heavy iron in a sort of tross-fire. The whole alley seemed like a grey motionless monster whose gigantic | body had to be pierced thousands of | times, before it would stop breathing. | Suddenly the loud shriek of a wo- man came from one of the houses. It was swallowed up by the incessant noise of the guns. The same mo-| ment a second searchlight flared up | from the Reinickendorfer-Strasse on | the other side. Its vibrating ray re- vealed blue clouds of dust and pow- der smoke above the barricade. The police attacked from both sides at once. They shot at each other across the barricade without, | in their mad fright, noticing what | they were doing. Each side believed | the shots to be those of the enemy. The dark shadow of a man ran at | @ crouch through the triangle of the | barricade. Suddenly he stopped, bent forward, tore open his jacket and | collapsed gurgling. Then there was | silence. He lay quite alone on the asphalt between the three barricades over | which the bullets swept from both | sides. From a smashed window above | someone had noticed. It was the same window through which the shining | barrel of a repeater was now prot- ruding.—A short flash of fire—Peng! | It was the first shot fired from the | alley | Behind the window stood Thomas, | who, till now, had taken the arms | trom everybody carrying them. His | face was as calm as ever, as he drew | his hand with the revolver back a | little, aimed and shot again, aimed hot. Tt contained six bullets. | ‘Then he reloaded with his bandaged | hand, went to the window in the ad- joining room and shot again. Only | onee did he turn when he heard | scmeone who had rushed into the Cark room, and was calling for him, An unattached young worker. At thet moment the white search- Tight fixed the wall of the room and fell on the terrified face of the young man. One—two seconds, then it swept on. Mad fear was marked on the distorted mouth of the boy. Hospital and Oculist Prescriptions Filled One-Half Price White Gold Filled Frames. ZYL Sbeli Frames a Lenser not included | COHEN'S, 117 Orchard St. First Door Off Delancey St. 4 WILLIAM BELL OPTOMETRIST 106 K. 14th St., near 4th Ay. inform manufacturers of the advan- | Where is Paul?” in the Lehigh “In number 3, I think.” tages of cheap labor “You go there—climb over the wall | Valley area, where so many thousands and |Cannot find jobs. Most of the sweatshop owners also shops in New York, and Con-! |in the yard—you understand! | tell them: not to stop anyone—who have | “Am... bu... lance!” From the}. | flat above his a woman screamed | out of the window. “Whoever has anything must shoot!” The boy ran out of the room. Biichd Be Continusd.) ) NEWS BRIEFS | More Election Gratt Trials. NEW YORK, May 9.—The sixth trial in the series of more than 100 indicted for New York election frauds started yesterday in federal court. The defendants are charged) with making a false canvass of the voters in the Second Election District | of the Ninteenth Assembly district. They are Bernard Picus and Mrs. Question of Relief Keynote of Chil- | dren’s Plight It was due to the threats of cut- ting off of relief, of evicting the work- ers from their homes, if they did not send the children into the factories | year were as follows. These figures The father is ®/ are based on the needs for May, 1932. |12 in the family. | truck driver, and has been unem- | ployed for several years, They are New York . - 875,000,000 | “on the relief,” and at the present| Philadelph Pittsburgh $20,500,000 | time are getting $7 from the Emer-| Cleveland and Toledo ......$7,000,000 Besides the} Boston .. ..... ...... ‘$14,000,000 | gency Relief Bureau. relief income, the only other income! For these six cities alone there is |in the family of 12 is that of the 15-| 9 need of $116,500,000 a year. (This | year-old girl, earning at the most $3 a week, for which she works fifty- is in round figures). With increased unemployment. With tens of thou- four hours a week and more, With NO) sands of additional families in need ae lof relief, this amount is about Virginia, who works in the Adelphi | Goupied. |plant, and ts an extremely pretty itl ““pcvording to Roosevelt's relief bp ioidiheghey abel tte i bill, 50 per cent of the total amouni \“You can earn more by jwith them than by going out working in the| lloted is needed for these six cities How about the millions all factory,” the boss urged her. She | alone. slapped him in the face, and was| over the country? |fired. Her mother was forced to} What does the “Relief bill” mean? again go and plead with the boss to] It is another of Roosevelt's tricks in- take her back, as the family needed tended to hide the fact that the gov-| | the money she brought in. As a “ ae cial” favor, the boss rehired her. |made life so miserable for the au| | ed in spite of hunger and home she} | will not aid the unemployed. The iy ieke camesboalsops cared ea right to live was forced from Hoover 6 es by continuous struggles, demonstra- | eames for prostitution. Hunger, and) tions and hunger Sh oe Pg a9 tight ernment refuses to take care of the “| immediate needs of the unemployed. jfear of a roof over the head of a The Roosevelt hunger government) | rors” | Near Hopkinson Ave. Meta Melling, democrat members of the board, and Mrs. Emily Freidman and Lucy Verdon, republican mem- bers. There were 25 intentional “er- in the returns. Only the smal- ler fry have been tried in the election Steals which resulted in thousands of votes being stolen from the Commu- nist Party and placed to the credit of | Tammany. There were other cases where republican votes were given to the democrats and vice-versa, accord- ing to the particular candidate the Tammany machine was supporting, Eee atin Landlord Ends His Life. NEW YORK, May 9.—John Kum- mer, owner of the four story building at 393 East 153rd Street, jumped from the roof to his death last night. He | was despondent because of unsuccess- ful attempts to collect rent from ten- ants. Hi ae fe Worker Falls to Death, NEW YORK, May 9.—Louis Grun- ner, 65 years old, of 2615 Jerome Ave., the Bronx, fell to death yesterday from a scaffolding at 413 East 78th Street. WORKERS—EAT AT THE Parkway Cafeteria 1638 PITKIN AVENUE Brooklyn. N. ¥ WORKERS PATRONIZE CENTURY CAFETERIA 154 West 28th Street Pure Food Proletarian Prices ~ DOWNTOWN JADE MOUNTAIN American & Chinese Restaur: 197 SECOND AVENUE Bet, 12 & 18 Welcome to Our Comrades eo! Phone Tomkins Sq. 46-9554 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmonphere where all en = 302 K. 12th St, New York 28 EAS! I4TH STREKS NEW YORK ‘Tel, Algonquin 3356-8843 We Carry a Fall Line of STATIONERY AT SPECIAL PRICES for Organizations ~~ |wous job of listening to the child Pickets outside the “D. & D.” sweatshop in Northampton, near Al- | lentown, Pa. Inez, the third girl in this picture, is a 15-year old. | striker, and earns $1 a week; no one else in the family of eight is work- } ing except a brother on part time. Mrs. PinchotCapitalizes FORCE JOB SHARKS on Child Misery in TO RETURN FUNDS) Vote Catching Drive NEW YORK.—Frances Keane, a| | woman worker, succeeded, with the ALLENTOWN, Pa., May 9$.—Be-/| militant assistance of the Sixth Ave. cause she was unable to make ar-| Grievance Committee, the Pighting rangements to be photographed on} Sixth, in forcing a job shark at the! the picket line of the child sweat- | Crystal Employment Agency, 1240; shop strikers on Saturday, due to the| Sixth Ave., to return $5 to her after! rain, Mrs. Pinchot made arrange-/ sending her to a job that lasted one ments with photographers and news- | day. paper men to return on Monday! Kine had to borrow the money) morning. The Paramount Movies| in order to got the job in s private] plan to photograph her dressed in red nursery which the agent said would| perading with ragged child strikers, $40 a month, She spent $2.40 in| Leaving in her limousine for the|carfare to reach the nursery. After) week-end at the Gary Towers in Mil-| working one day she found the food | ford, Pa., to rest up after her stren-| pad, no heat and a dismal room to! sleep in, on top of which she got a! touch of pneumonia which foreed her | to quit. In addition the boss refused to pay her for the day's work. co] __._ | strikers’ testimony at the hearing, Mrs. Pinchot felt satisfied to have! put over this excellent vote-catching campaign, This area is not a Pin-| chot area. The show ef “sympathy” | for the strikers by Mrs. Pinchot will Stand Pinchot in good stead in the Reader! Get a friend er neigh- | bor to subscribe for the ‘Daily!’ |® pretty lean bacon, too.” vestigation committee asked a fi family forced this worki ing mot to plead with a boss to take hi | daughter into the factory. | insurance is the weapon to gain the) It’s a Lean Bacon At the Atkins plant, a young girl reported the boss would come down from New York and turn the power off to make a’ speech to the girls. And for three hours he would tell these starving girls. how expensive it is to keep up a maid, and an apart- ment, and that they must work bard- er and faster. “And,” the girl re-| ported, “my father he ain’t working.! and my brother ain't either. And I got to. bring the bacon home, id it’s It's. common talk that ever the girls at Bernstein's took a eut the boss got a new car. He never had ene before. | One of the members of the “in- teen-year-old dark-haired child, can't understand why your mani | let you do it.” Mary Fluger. for that | was her name, retorted, “She didn’t want me to do if, she had to.” Many of the little girls go home) crying, because of the beatings, and | insults, and the abuse hurled at them | Jin the shop. “But, what can the mothers do. We got to eat. And they are bringing in a few pennies.” “What do you do with the sweat in sweat shop?” ealled out a young striker to Freezer watching the picket line go by. “That's my profits,” he answered simply. Those children who are still strik-| ing have their parents behind them, | and they too come onto the picket jlines. While it is true that most of | the shops are again working and many of the children who came out) on strike returned to the factories. | | still the exploitation will force strike after strike to flare up again. The keynote of the struggle « ehould | be: Adequate relief for the unem- ployed families; State support of ee children; abolish mill slav jobs | at union conditions for the adults in| the shops. next elections, but it will do nothing | for the child strikers. DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY BOOK 107 Bristol Street (Bet. Pitkin & Sutter Aves.) B’kiyn PHONE: DICKENS 2%-8012 Office Hours: 8-10 A.M., 1-2, 6-8 P. | PIATNITSKY’S MEMOIRS PRE- } VIV2D PICTURE OF REV- OLUTIONARY MOVEMENT Memoirs of a Bolshevik, by O. Piat- nitsky, which has just been issued by International Publishers, adds anoth- er important book to the series of historical works by the “Old Bol- sheviks.” The author {s at present one of the leading members of the Commu- nist International. He began his rev- clutionary acitvities in 1896 while serving as an apprentice in a tatlor's shop. His memoirs, therefore, cover the whole period of the deyelopment of the revolutionary moyement in Russia from the first scattered Marx- ist circles to the revolution in March, 41917, He presents a vivid picture of the . persistent and patient work of the Bolshevik: working underground, withstanding repeated arrests and ex- ities, and working doggedly toward {ntern’l Workers Order || DENTAL DEPARTMENT | 80 FIFTH AVENUE 15th FLOOR AV Work Done Under Versone) Cnre of Dr. C. WEISSMAN Write hi is int dest WANTED~-Cheap 1 Write Obrana 387 E. tind St... NOTES their objective. ©. Piatnitsky also participated in the work of the German Social-Dem- ocratic Party in the decade before the war, While in Europe he worked in close cooperation with Lenin who was then on his “second exile,” fighting against the opportunists in the German Party and the Second International. This is a fit companion volume to A. Badeyev's The sheviks in the Tsarist Duma, which was recently published by International. In the latter, one sees the Bolshevik deputies at work in the last of the tsarist par- liaments, linking up their every move with the organization work going on among the masses. It is this latter phase that is especially stressed in Piatnitsky’s book. Board edition, #1 at workers’ bcok- shops or direct trom International |. ba ishers, 381 Fourth Avenue, New| « against the Roosevelt hunger gov- ernment, a continuous struggle for immediate relief and unemployment needs of the workers. Stage and Screen SSS “Shame” at sth Ave. Theatre The motion picture “Shame” pre- sented at the 5th Avenue Theatre, and 28th Street, offers a glimpse into the life of the typical | since | Soviet factory community, one of the | bvigades of_ the vast army, whieh in shops and fields is fulfilling the Five- Year Plan and building Socialism in | the USSR. The story deals with the attempt of the workers of a turbine factory to fulfill their “counter-plan,” the voluntary quota of achievement set by the workers themselves beyond the quota of the Five-Year Plan. The work is hindered by a flaw in the construction of a disc in the turbine, a flaw of which the bour- geois engineer is awate, but for the purpose of sabotage does not men- tion. On the day of completion of the turbine when everything and every- one is reafly for celebration the en- gine does not work and the flag of | Shame is hung above the machine. Because the life of the factory is | the life of the workers the story is vibrant and alive. There is an undercurrent of the youthful, vigor- ous love of the young engineer and | his wife. The failures and victories of the factory are expressed in the } Personal relationships of the work- ers. An interesting contrast is achieved besween the vigorous Work songs that accompany the constructive work and planning of the workers, and the decadent nostalgic sonks to which the reactionary Prefesser plans his Cisker-ebveigdonaer Schemes, 8. “Forgotten Men” Qpens This Friday at Rialto “Forgotten Men,” & war spectacle with world's fourteen warting nations will have {ty World's, premiere qbawine et the Miaito ae film from entre on day. ‘the saagtment at the Rialto will New York, the film being eago for a run during the Hor id's Pair, New Soviet Film “Horizon” Opens at Europa Tomorrow “Horizon” (The Wandering Jew), new Bo- viet Phatoplay,, wilt page is its American pre- eat miere at the Europa re tomorrow. “Horizon” deals ig) the at of a sensi- jew who 18 mostly ed tive, dreamy Russian hear the petagcution of bis pecgle under th Ozarist regime, He comes ‘Ameries, om Jists in the American ihe 8 be wi Saver bis division to Re nonin Arniag Jn. srebenes iad (vee ing he % ] pogrom,” tively mike hie AN Comrades Meet e new fatherland in the gouey of his birth, tthe new Russa. reeted by Kuleshov an ‘are played by Nikolai Bat ov, ma "Road to Lite", ahd Elena Kustnina, star of 2 the only showing in greater || at ohi- idol un realize rt he has found rei fe NEW, workers. “We Don't Owe Rent” | A trial that will focus the attention | of every worker denied relief by the} Home Relief Bureau will take place Friday, 10 a.m., at Madison St. Court, | 264-Madison St. Twelve unemployed workers on | 12th St. between Avenues A and B, denied when they received dispossess notices that they owed rent to the landlord. They told the judge that they were charges of the Home Re- |Mef Bureau, “the Homie Relief Bu- reat! Has us on their list and assiimed responsibility to pay our rent. It is |the Home Relief Bureau who owes the rent, not us.” Representatives of the Downtown Unemployed Council will be in court with the workers. Propose United Front | United Front actions between the | Unemployed Cotincils and other un- employed organizations are being ‘negotiated to unite the workers against the desperate conditions fac- “Don’t ‘Wait? “BEyichions are taking place today, every moment, workers are hungry now,” say the councils to the un- employed. “We ate endeavoring ‘o establish a united front of all un- employed organizations, but moan- while your heeds cannot wait. We must fight. for relief now, we must act whether the leaders of these or- ganizations agree to a united front | or not. Mass at the relief bureaus is the councils’ call, stay there uniil you get relief, organize on your blocks, form anti-eviction committee- defeat the Tammany hunger edict. Starvation Takes Toy Mender NEW YORK.—‘Papa” Brenhardt, a homeless worker, known to the children of Greenpoint for his toy~ mending for them, died yesterday in the Kings County Hospital of starva- tion. He was found Monday night on the steps of 84 Gerry St. : AMUSE MEATS oe a eg PHEATRE 14TH ST. add IRVING PLACE Presents AMKINO’S “CHINA EXPRESS” FRIDAY, MAY is For One Day Ont; ENGLISA Sie Fangvenour 8:38 to 1 A. Mie 1900. mit nea ALL SEATS 1bc| | Associate Py tviae GEO. BANCROFT “LADY and GENT” ley j | } \| | | LAST 2 DAYS | — UDOVKI | in “The Living Corpse” Bese gn TOLSTOVS “REDEMPTION” Also “SOVIETS ON PARADE” & MAY DAY DEMONSTRATION wormtrys Acme Theatre MTR ST. AND UNION SQUARE || AVON Foremost Soviet Film of the xear | English Titles t “SHAME ec te ‘bare ee ‘Be IN. ¥. Rivay & 28 8 | [The MASK AND THE PACE | { By LUIGE boa ong ‘rich. Bia Bt We of eras Ev. 8180; Mat, Thur.,Sat.2:0 BIOGRAPHY A Comedy by 8, N. BEHRMAN ‘Thee. ‘Bt, W. of Bway 3 Mat. Thur., Sat. 2:90 GUILD by W. Somerset By. PEGGY WOOD AND BRNEST TRUEX in Best SELLERS A NEW COMEDY MOROSCO THEATRE, 45th, W. of Biway Eves, 8:80; Matinees Wed. & Sat. at 2:40 Russian Lessons FREE! Complete LINGUAPHONE Course Station WEVD (1300k—281m) First Lesson Tuesday, May 16th, 0-5:45 P.M. Also Thursday, Mag 16th, 10;:16-10:30 P.! Free Correspondence Assistance Enrelt now—! 4 in your mame to WEVD Broadway at 44th Street, N.Y. TELL YOUR FRIENDS | j= AMERICAN PREMIERE ———— TOMORROW AT 11:30 A. M. A Burning Problem of the Ages Dares to Be Answered THE JEW! oere ie AMKINO’S Proudest Achievement “HORIZON” ((THE WANDERING JEW) Starring Bataloy (of ‘Road to Life’) Dialogue Titles in English EUROP. 154 West, 55th Street Cont. from 11:30 a.m. 0 JEFFERSON'S “ae * NOW, Marjorie Rambeau sngpentey, Jordan m™m “STRICTLY PERSONAL” ROuAND TouNa CEMEVERYE KomiN ane. xKo CAMEO ¢ 42nd “7100 IN BUDAPEST” LORETTA YO CULTURAL Lexington Avenue Station, Tel. Estabrook 8-1480—J401 be B. Workers Cooperative Colony 2700-2500 BRONX PARK BAST (OPPOSITE BRONX Park) has now REDUCED THE RENT | ON THE APARTMENTS AND SINGLE ROOMS Kindergarden; (1: for Adults and Children; Library; Gymunstwm; arse tebe and. Other Privileges NO INVESTMENTS REQUIRED 3JEVERAL GOOD APARTMENTS & SINGLE ROOMS AVAILABLE Take Advantage of the Opportunity. train to White] Office open daily Plains Boag. Step at Allerton Ayenue| Fridey & Saturday HEALTH CENTER CAFETERIA ACTIVITIES 9am, to 8 pm. ave. to 6 pm. 10 am. to 2 pm. ‘Stnday at the ism sv. WORKERA