The Daily Worker Newspaper, July 10, 1933, Page 3

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GOVERNMENT -PLANS INTERVENTION | AGAINST CLOAKMAKERS’ STRIKE Labor Advisory Board p With Hillman, Meets | Today to Help Bosses Put Over Piece Work NEW YORK.—Government intervention, under the Recovery (slavery) act, to put over piece work in the cl yesterday, in a statement by Samuel of Cloak, Suit and Skirt Manufacture: Gen, Johnson, head of the N ready, Klein said, to step in to pre-®& vent a strike of the 30,000 cloak- makers for week work and better working conditions. Oloakmakers in the recent referendum voted over- whelmingly to insist on week work under any circumstance. A general meeting of the cloak- makers has been called for tomorrow to lay plans for a strike of all cloak- makers. The Labor Advisory Board of the Recovery (slavery) adminictration has rushed plans for a meeting this morn- ing to consider how to make effec- tive Gen, Johnson's sir’ke-breaking threat. The board sent a telegram to Sidney Hillman, prestdent of the Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America and a member of the board, to be sure to attend this meeting and help them with his wide strike- breaking experience, Meet Tomorrow Noon The Cloak Department of the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union is calling a member-*‘~ meet- joak and suit industry was threatened | Klein, head of the Industrial Council | ‘tional Recovery Administration, was | ‘SLAVE CODE IN FURNITURETRADE SETS §9-16 WAGE Abandoning Talk of 30-Hr. Week in Slav- ery Act CHICAGO, Jul} 7—Each new slave code that is prepared for ac- ceptance by President Roosevelt in- creases hours jare abandoning _talk of a 30-hour week, The latest code to be an- nounced is that of the National Re- tail Furniture Association, repre- senting 200 be in the furniture trade | The furniture code provides for and shows the bosses | ing of cloakmakers, Tuesaay at 1\@ 48 hour week, with a “minimum” o'clock, at Bryant Hall, 6th Ave. and | pay schedule ranging from $9 to $16 42nd St. At this meeting the leaders of the Cloak Department of the N.T.W.1.U. will discuss with the workers the decisions for week work, and how the decisions of the cloakmakers: can be carried through into life. All members are urged to be present. Call on Furriers for Picketing this Morning NEW YORK.—All active furriers are called upon by the fur depart- ment of the Needle Trades Workers’ Industrial Union to come to the union office on Monday morning, from where the furriers will go in or- ganized manner to picket the shops. The scab Joint Council, together with the manufacturers, are becom- ing more and more disappointed over their failure to club the fur- riers into submission, They have hired a new gang who are again in- vading shops under contro! of the N. T. W. I. U. and trying by force to get them into’a scab union. One of the shops invaded Saturday was| and Eisman.} About 15 gangsters invaded the shop, , and | Anfanger, Zaltaman among them two prostitutes, after considerable resistance on the part of the workers, succeeded in taking them down, When they reached the street, police met them and asked if they wanted to go to the Joint Council. The workers re- plied immediately that they would not; have anything to do with -it. They..were. sent. back to work, but. not one of the gangsters was arrested. WORKERS GET RUBBER PAYCHECKS (By a Worker Correspondent) IRVINGTON, N, J.—I work at Me- tuchen, N. J. Under the Roosevelt administration there were not sup- posed to be any more bank failures, But the biggest bank in New Bruns- wick went flop on June 22nd. It wiped out my bosses’ commercial ac- count entirely, leaving me and sev- eral other workers with one or two rubber pay checks on our hands that cannot be cashed. a week. This is similar to the code | in the dry goods and department |stores, already in the hands of |General Johnson, administrator of the industrial “recovery” act. ‘The 48-hour week, while stated as }being the maximum, will be the basis for the extension of hours of work, while the “minimum” pay will be used to keep wages around the $9 and $16 level. The $16 scale is set for adult workers, family men, employed in cities with a population of 1,000,000 or over, while the adult workers in jsmaller cities will get a wage of from $11 to $12 a week. The wage of young workers below 18 is set at an average of $9 a | week. ‘AL. of L. Fur Heads “Censure” Dreiser But Dare Not Face | Open : Hearing NEW YORK.—The A, F. of L. of- |ficials of the defunct International | Fur Workers’ Union have issued a | “censure” of Theodore Dreiser, fa- | mous American novelist, for Dreiser's | condemnation of the gangster tactics by which the A. F. of L. officials, together with the bosses, the police | and the Socialists, have attempted to smash “the militant fur department of the Needle Workers’ Industrial Union. These A. F. of L, officials did not }dare to face an open hearing, and now confine themselves to snarling “censure” at an honest writer who was moved by the facts brought out at the hearing in Labor Temple to express his sympathy for the mili- tant fur section of the N.T,W.LU. MCKINNEY, Tex. July 9.—More than 200 workers of the Texas Tex- tile Mills won a reduction in hours and wage increases ranging from 15 per cent to 35 per cent in a short strike. ‘ BEACON, New York City Phone EStabrook §-1400 Camp Phone Beacon 731 (INOLUDING TAX) CARS LEAVE FOR CAMP from 2700 Bron: Plains Road Express, to “Liberator” Week Spend YOUR Vacation in Our Proletarian Camps NITGEDAIGET Vacation Rates: $13.00 per week Friday and Saturdey 10 a, m., 3p. m., 7 Stop at Allerton At ROUND TRIP: to Nitgedaiget . All Comrades Meet at the WINGDALE New York | UNITY Proletarian Atmosphere e Healthy Food e Warm and Cold Showers Bathing Rowing Athletics Sport Activities | e | Newly Built Tennis Courts in Both Camps WEEK-END RATES : 1 Day. . $2.45 2 Days . 4,65 (ineluding tax) x Park East every day between 10-11 9,m.; m.—Take Lexington Avenue White $2.00 Unity ..... $3.00 NEW. HEALTH CENTER CAFETERIA E. 13TH ST, WORKERS’ CENTER ——— | week. DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, JULY 10, 1933 Gathered in Washington Square, Rochester, N. Y., where more than 6,000 Negro and white workers are striking against wage euts on | city and country relief projects, this group of strikers pledged themselves to carry on the struggle until their demands are granted. trike Salute Given by Rochester Workers o * be only 10 per cent above the same _ Shoe Workers Prep By HY KRAVIF Passage of the National Industrial Recovery Act finds two drives in | progress in the shoe industry around |New York City. On the one hand, \there is the organization campaign of |the Shoe and Leather Workers’ In- ‘qustrial Union. In 1932, this union led some 2,000 workers in strikes against I. Miller & Sons, Inc., and Andrew‘ Geller, two of the largest shoe employers, as well as in a num- her of smaller shops. Opposed to them are the forces |marshalled by the Shoe Manufactur- {ers’ Board of Trade. This employ- jers’ association, like similar agencies |of the bosses, has secured injunc- \tions against strikers, recruited scabs, strikes, But it has goné even fur- |ther, compelling its members to be |secured by bonds and, in the event of organized workers forcing an em- ployer to sign an agreement, he would forfeit thousands of dollars to the | association. In this way they have |attemtped’ to maintain the open | shop. Shoe Bosses for Recovery Act | Meeting in New York City at the Hotel Commodore, on June 16, the Board of Trade gave its approval to Roosevelt’s N. I. R, A.; to the ad- | ministrators that had been selected; and declared for a national organ- ization with a national committee and city committees who would de- |termine prices. They spoke vaguely |of “wage increases.” What they mean by wage increases |is seen in the recent restoration by |I, Miller of a 10 per cent cut. BUT, | this follows cuts of approximately 30 |per cent in the past year and a half. |The writer was shown pay envelopes |of aster in this plant covering six ' weeks during April and May, 1933. ‘The six weeks’ average amounted to | $13 for a 55-to-60-hour week. A 10 per cent “increase” therefore would amount to a mere $1.30 for this worker, or but one-third of the. total reductions inflicted on Miller work- | ers since 1932. | The extent to which earnings of shoe workers as a whole have de- clined can be gleaned from the 50 per cent drop in payroll totals re- ported in the four years from March, 1929, to March, 1933, by the Monthly Labor Review. There are numerous instances of actual weekly earnings which are but 30 per cent of the 1920 level, according to union officers. About one-third of the 30,000 shoe workers in this vicinity are totally unemployed and another 40 per ce: are on part time, that is, two and three days’ work a week, it is fur- ther reported. To Raist Prices. But the employers have other anti- labor plans. At present they are holding back the starting of work with a view to raising prices 25 to 30 ufacturers with material are already getting from 15 to 40 per cent more for their products. As can be seen POCKETBOOK TO NEW JERSEY JERSEY CITY, N. J., July 9—A strike of pocketbook workers in all union shops in New Jersey was de- clared yesterday following a mem- bership meting of Branch No,‘1 of the New Jersey International Pocketbook Workers Union, at its headquarters at 173 Webster Ave. The strike follows the walkout in which oyer 1,000 pockethook work- ers are now engaged in New York against the bosses’ lockout and for wage increases and a shorter work To spread the strike to the open shops in New Jersey, a meeting of employes of open shops has been called for Monday morning at 10 o'clock at 173 Webster Av. Pocketbook workers are also out in Philadelphia, Bridgeport, and in Montreal, Canada, it was reported at yesterday’s meeting. It was pointed out that some of the union workers formerly earn- |kept blacklists and otherwise broken /. ' turn for wages, giving them “permis- sion” to sell and keep the proceeds providing the company were released from wage claims. The workers in- dignantly rejected this proposal and are now fighting it with the union's assistance. Company Union—Old Weapon Another vicious employers’ weapon is the use of spies and company unions, as in the case’ of I. Miller. from this, the toll will be taken from the x workers and farmers who are “by far the largest section of con- sumers of shoes, To insure such profiteering the Board of Trade has set about to or- ganize the employers on an even larger scale. Thus, for example, a branch of the industry in which the} bosses have hitherto not been organ- | ized—the slipper manufacturers—is now preparing the path with thefull|In the Miller plant workers are co-operation of the government. |foreed to undergo a probationary As in the textile and clothing in-|period or “examination” when hired. dustries, minimum wages are in the|They are thoroughly “investigated” process of being worked out. and should a stool-pigeon find that Schemes to Defeat Union. they are militants, participating in Other tricks are being resorted to/the workers’ struggles, they are fired under the present measure. Some/at a moment's notice. At the H. Ja- employers are announcing bankruptcy plans, others are threatening to go jout of business or to “re-organize,” | By such means, they think to rid themselves of organized workers, One firm, N. A. Paris, Inc., tried to make a 70 per cent wage settlement under | jsuch a scheme. The Shoe and} Leather Workers’ Industrial Union| ‘fought this and succeeded in gaining} unnecessary under the act, and if ‘the full 100 per cent pay due the|they want to join a union it must workers. Another concern tried to}be a “bona fide” union, make the workers take shoes in re-|fide” unions, of course, the efficient spy system is in effect also. Workers cannot leave the plant with- out passes. Bosses Want A. F. of L. Union Foremen and other bosses’ agents are trying to put over the National Industrial Recovery Act propaganda by telling workers that unions will be mean SHOE UNION ENDORSES TRADE UNION DEFENSE CONFERENCE JULY 15 NEW YORK.—Endorsement of the July 15 Conference in Defense of | Trade Unions, election of delegates from the slipper and other departments of the Shoe and Leather Workers Union, and a $5 contribttion in support of the meeting is announced by the Provisional Committee in Defense of Trade Unions, The Provisional Committee, which sponsored the call for the Webster Hall meet on July 15, = + _ is composed of American Federation | the hearing confirm its charges that lof Labor locals,cand Trade Union|the slavery act is a weapon of a Unity League and independent trade | Conspiratorial kind against militant union and labor groups. |workers. The drive against the left Plans of action and unity of work- | Wing union is an effort to re-estab- ers and their organizations in de-| lish the A. F. of L. union in the fur fending the interests of labor against | industry, which the employers know the anti-labor provisions of the Na- | Will help them to intensify their. ex- tional Industrial Recovery Act will | Ploitation. mark the high spots of the confer-| Workers in New York City and ence. The election of delegates to/| Vicinity have had their eyes opened the meet is proceeding, with repre- | wide as to the supposed beneficial sentatives already chosen by needle | effects to. them of the slavery act trades workers, food workers, metal by the struggles of the furriers and workers, painters and iron workers | the laundry workers. The Laundry and plumbers. etl Association is attempting to Role Of Slavery Act Exposed | dictate the policies of the Laundry Simultaneously with this announ- | Workers Industrial Union so far as are to Fight ‘Recovery’ Act Conference in Defense of Trade “Unions to Meet New Offensive of Employers cobs & Son factory in Brooklyn, an| By “bona| cement come the revelations arising | out of the open hearings now going | on at Labor Temple on the fur in-| to call for the removal of the present militant leadership under penalty of not signing agreements. The federal government gives official sanction to of this money was supposed to have gone as “work loans” to provide work for unemployed railroad work- ers. But actually most of this huge ———————— eee HIRING OF FEW HUNDRED RAILROAD WORKERS STILL LEAVES MILLION JOBLESS Page Thres | “Recovery” Act Used to Turn Huge Sums Over To the Railroads The flurry in the hiring of a few)this all. Under the term: hundred railroad men here and there | Reco Law, “New types ¢ ¥ and the talk of business gains leaves | me which would add to the ef- the basic economic situation un- | f ney of the rajlroad system: jchanged. There still remain nearly | understood, would be among projects | 1,000,000 unemployed railroad mento recelye special mention.” Thus |who have been dropped from the!under a bill “to create employment” |roads in the past several years, |the government obliges the rail em- Freight moved by Class I roads in|ployers by assisting them to me- the first four months of this year, for|chanize their roads further so that example, was‘12.4 per cent thar for|more men can be laid off. (And, ine the corresponding period of 1932. And |cidentally, since this announcement | Eastman, Dillon & Compan ‘Con- made, Wall Street brokers have fidential, for Customers Only” release | been advising clients to buy shares of June 20 remarked: “After seasonal | of ilwey equipment companies. adjustment” of railroad car loadt Treasury Woodin's “they are scarcely better now than « Foundry Co. would in the first of April and not as good |be exy i to benefit The Wall as last fall. Carloadings comparisons! Street Journal reports thi despite with last year have been steadily|four years of economic crisis, the |improving only because last year was tanding railway equipment com- |steadily growing worse.” “have managed to preserve The Shippers’ Regional Advisor strong financial po- Board estimates that in the th n quarter of 1933 freight traffic will| Rail Bankers Pay No Income Tax While Employers Get Tax Reduction period last year. Hearings at Washington brought The R. F. C, Again out the fact that Otto Kahn, J. P. Announcement of a $6,000,000 loan | Morgan and their wealthy associates to the Great Northern Railway by! got around payment of income the Reconstruction Finance Corpo- taxes, but railroads in which these ration brings the total of govern-|men and others of their class are |ment funds pumped into railroads interested reap the benefit of tax ™ |to about $340 million, A good deal reductions. Thus a recent federal court ruling saves the Central Ra‘l- road of New Jersey, $2,717,920 and the Lehigh Valley Railroad and two associates $1,126,642 in State taxes sum went to repay or retire bank~- for 1932. And the New York Cen- ers’ loans, tral, in which Morgan interests have Take the Pennsylvania Railroad |considerable influenc has just which has received nearly $29 mil- asked that the $37,775,000 assess- |Sueh unions as the Boot and Shoe/tion from the R. F, C., of which|ment on its Grand Central property Workers’. Union, affiliated to the/ amount $9% million has been repaid|be reviewed, contending that the American Federation of Labor. Lo-/|during the last two weeks. At the ,actual value of the property was not cal O, in New York City, has not) same time the $600,000 remaining on more than $30,400,000 more than 250 members, according tothe road’s $2 million “work loan” ap-| The most recent hearings men- most optimistic reports. \plication has been cancelled. ‘The tioned above revealed the fact that This A. F. of L. union, which acted | Wall Street Journal commented that as a scab recruiting agency during|“the proportion the refund bears to the 1929 lockout, now has an agree-| the total loans to carrier from the ment with one employer, Cohen, who|R. F. C. is small... .” But the R. | himself forces the workers into the|F. C. directors say about these small junion, “Trade union democracy” in|repayments that “this action may be |Local O is effectively demonstrated | indicative of an early return of the |when we see that these workers have|railroads of the country to private |no voice or vote in their national or-| financing’—“an objective which we |Sanization, the affairs being admin-| (the R. F. C. directors) believe to Kuhn, Loeb & Co., Kahn's banking firm, made a profit of $5 1-4 milllions from underwriting the Pennroad Corp., a holding company which it assisted in setting up, and that the Cleveland ca’ Frank T. Tap- lin, headed a up which in 1929 sold the Pittsburgh & West Virginia Railway to the Pennroad Co. at a profit of $11% million to Taplin and jistered by top leaders from the na-|be an essential step of recovery to|his family. And these are but a | tional office the transportation systems of the |few of the high spots of financiering Industrial Union Battles for Union | country.” whereby wealthy bankers and ¢ Contrasted to this is the new Shoe| Lifted out of the dumps insofar as and Leather Workers’ Industrial| profits are concerned by virtue of Union, organized in 1981, an out-| Roosevelt's continuation of the growth of the former Independent| Hoover policy, the railroad owners, Shoe Workers’ Union which was|the Morgans, Van Sweringens and crushed after the employers’ offen-|Vanderbilts are to go on merrily sive of 1929. This union has pre-| plundering the roads. | vented discharges and firing of work-| Just what there is to the repay- jers, and has won a number of other|ment is told by the Wall Street }gains, as in the Eleo Shoe Manu-| Journal which admits that “it would facturers and other strikes. The|have been possible for the Pennsyl- union was prominent in the united|vania to pay off the entire $28,900, front established between unorgan-|000 R. F. C. loan at one str ized and organized workers of two| Without borrowing a nickel.” The unions at the Artistic Shoe Co., Ine. | low interest rate of .25 per cent on |It has also prevented wage cuts in|*ime deposits given by New York Jone of the key factories which sets | banks, which made it no longer pro- |the pace for other employers, and | fitable for the Pentisylvania to hold | thus saved hundreds of workers from|0Mn to part of the R. F. C. money, | Wage reductions. was oe cause of the road's “gen- | In the slipper section of the indus- | TOS!ts |try workers in some of the largest| an Mi ighaeer of interest calls to |plants are now organized ready for aie the fact that the R. F. C, re- |struggle at the opportune moment|@uced interest rates to railroads Junder the union’s lead, The Shoe| {0M § per cent to 5¥e per cent and \and Leather Workers’ Union has now | Subsequently to 5 per cent Now comes |about 1,500 members with a follow-|‘R@ announcement that under the | Public works section of the National jing of an equal number. At present} ‘ atic efforts are being exerted to organize | $5 Sno gue 008 wee hog att 8 a |the hitherto unorganized shoe repair | ‘, workers, particularly in the I. Klein Pusan Tee Spemeace By am |shops where skilled workers earn @/ ine’ interest rate will bef tip |top of $22-24, while wages of $11, $12 | -sduced—to four fo ie the jgnd $14 a week are most common. |tenefit of the rail owners. Nor is Seventy hours a week is the rule in the Klein shops, working Saturday pitalists reap million: out paying income ta: 000 railroad workers ployed, hundreds of thousands st fer wage-cuts and countless others undergo speed-up or layoffs. Reign of Teror Against Miss. Negro RR Worke: 7 Killed A reign of terror against Negro firemen on the Mississippi section of the Mlinois Central Railroad by Ku Klux Klan elements has taken a toll of 15 Negro rail workers. Seven |were murdered, shot in cold blood; an equal number were shot and wounded and one was flogged. Hiltoh |Blutler tells the st of each case in the Nation, July 12, 1933, of which the following is typical “A lighted flare lured Wilbur An+ derson, Vicksburg Negro fireman, to his death. His engineer stopped the train in the southern yards of Vicksburg to investigate the warning signal. Wilburn climbed down, and as he did so the flare went out. A shotgun was fired at close range, and the Negro dropped dead, his jhead blasted almost entirely from |his body Butler's story contains jone of the more horrible pictures of intimidation of Negroes that has yet |been uncovered. The entire cam- jpaign is part of the drive to expell | Negro rail workers from their jobs. and go w while. 1; remain wner nights and all day Sunday, | | Not in New york alone, but in | other important shoe centers through- | out the country have shoe workers} conducted splendid struggles, start-| Jing with the Auburn and Lewiston, | Maine, strikes in the fall af 1932. | | Under the aggressive leadership of |the Shoe and Leather Workers’ In-} |dustrial Union, shoe workers are) girding ‘for battle against the ex- oiting bosses, who expect to carry hrough further attacks on the work-)| ers under the protection of the Re- American Premiere of Soviet Russia's Great Masterpiece “26 COMMISSARS” The Struggle of the Baku Workers in the Civil Wa The DAILY WORKER says: picture is to be » spect | AMUSEMENTS i} otev, Kalinin, Voroshil | Red Army, Young Pion: 5, millions of Two Great Soviet Features—2nd Big Week —_, JUST ARRIVED FROM MOSCOW MAY DAY CELEBRATION in MOSCOW SEE Moscow celebrating, Stalin, Mol . Bi per cent. Wholesalers supplying man- | STRIKE SPREADS yi: dustry situation. Friday's hearings brought out the fact that the fur manufacturers had broken off nego- | tiations with the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union upon an- ee eee iy aus cade |and trade unions who have not al- This revelation was made | Potash and eight other furriers| tne provisional Committee in Defense and leaders are now out on bail} |of Trade Unions, Room 637, 80 E. after their arrest on July 5 in the) yy St, New York. united front campaign of police, em- ployers and the A. F. of L. to drive these maneuvers of the owners under the recovery (slayery) law, the Pro- visional Committee charged. With fie conference of July 15 covery Act. In line with this, the) union’s joint council, meeting on; June 22, whole heartedly endorsed a resolution to take part in and sup-| rt the Conference In Defense of ‘rade Unions to be held at Webster |Hall on July 15. This conference, called by trade union and labor groups, will be the center of the cam- |Paign of militant labor to protect the izations against the Roosevelt Recov- ery (Slavery) Act. workers from the militant union of their own choosing into the Inter- national Fur Workers Union of the A. F. of L., Horace M. Kallen of STAGE AND SCREEN rights of workers and their organ- | | | the New School for Social Research the investigation committee | a gee which includes the noted novelist, “John Ferguson” To Be Re- ‘Theodore Dreiser, who called the vived at Belmont Theatre A. F. of L. furriers union practically Toni ight “non-existent.” A Sarenment: © St. John Ervine’s drama, “John out that the facts made public at | Ferguson, will be revived this eve- onspiracy | The Provisional Committee points | ning at the Belmont Theatre by Wee and Leventhal, with Augustin Dun- can heading the cast. Other players include Barry Macollum, Lucy Beau- mont, Edward Favor, Angus Duncan of \ wichita es e é (and P. J, Lang Sti play was agra reaped e tress cepart-| ally produced by the Theatre Guild , | Gent fine aut trees, Wontery TAG at the Garrick Theatre in 1918 committees and active workers to come to| The Theatre Guild has acquired & inceting on Wednesday, July 12, at §|two new plays: “They Shall Not Die,” | by John Wexley, which deals with the Labor Union Meets partment is Calling a meeting of the Cos- tee Tatlors tonight, right after work, y n auditorium of the Needle Trades Industrial Union 131 W. 28th 8t., to discuss immediate preparations for « strike for the coming season, ‘The trat retook a i vee he forint 1° wage scales and other . lee a Workers Scottsboro case. and a first play by Code at the hearings in Washington, to be| Tillman Breiseth, titled “As We For- held short NEW K.—The Costume Tailors De- recalled for his play, “The Last Mile,” | which was seen on Broadway about scheduled for the coming season by the Guild are going to be presented as a Workers’ Ceditine Tailors Meet Tonight |give Our Debtors.” Wexley will be YOR! two seasons back. Both scripts are Viki Baum’s new play, “The Divine ing $48 a week are now working for ‘as little as $11 a week. 4 ) » | “26 Commissars” Remains At| Acme for Second Week | “26 Com-| The new Soviet film, | | missars,” now in its first American | showing at the Acme Theatre, will be |held over for a second week. The picture, which is a gripping story of la true episode of the Civil War when | the English invaders attacked the {workers of Baku 4nd murdered their !26 leaders. The film is based on one | of the most popular plays of the Mos- leow Art. Theatre repertoire. | | The same program has as an added | jfeature the May Day Celebration in} Moscow, giving some intimate scenes | ‘of the great celebration in Red| | Square and showing close-up scenes- \of Stalin, Kalinin, Budenny, Molotov, the Red Army, the Young Pioneers | and a massed band of 1,400 musicians. | { een gg, oa anaaaeaeaamanenineniae neem me (English Tit | Square, Massed Band of 1400 Musicians worerss ACME THEATRE (ri. rQuame Extra; Exclusive Showing of Jimmy Mattern’s foreed Landing in Soviet Russia RKO Jefferson Mth St. & | Now MUSIC MARION DAVIES and OMSLOW STEVENS Tiblum CeNcsesi; ue in “PEG 0’ MY HEART”) Phitharmonie-Symphony Orchestra Added Feature:—"EX-LADY” with = | Lewisohn Stadium. Amst. Ay. & 188 Bt. BETTY DAVIS ané GENE RAYMOND Willem yan Hoogstraten. Conduetor EVERY NIGHT at 4:30 —| PRICES: 25e, 50¢, $1.00. (Clrele 7- = 7575) GRAND OPENI Attend Open Air Theatre Nearest Your Home Barnes Airdrome Bronxdale Airdrome Allerton and Barnes Aye. Pelham P’kway and White Plains Aye. Community Airdrome 222nd STREET and WHITE PLAINS AVENUE Lowest Prices in Neighborhoods —;—;—:— Adults 150; Children 10c PREMIERE PRESENTATION—Extra added attraction—Sharkey vs. Carnera; Official Fight Pictures Together with Regular Performance Enjoy a Good Show in the Open-Air Hospital Prescriptions alt Pri Filled | ce DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet. Pitkin and Sutter Aves., Brooklyn PHONE: DICKENS 2-301 Office Hours: 8-10 A.M, 1-2, 6. &YL Shell Prames —.—-.- > Lenses not included COHEN’S, 117 Orchard St. First Door Off Delancey St. Telephone; ORvhard 4-4520 Intern’) Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT ay 80 FIFTH AVENUE STH FLOOR All Work Done Under Personal Care of Dr. C. Weissman Are You Moving or Storing Your Furniture? || CALL HARLEM 73-1058 COOKE’S STORAGE 209 East 125th St. board has worked out # series | py, , ’ caesar bias Drudge,” adapted by the author and| The Jefferson Theatre is now show- | is Be ea of) demends, whieh include yi John Golden from Miss Baum’s|ing “Peg ©’ My Heart,” with Marion | Special Low Rates to Comrades |) . S ay brea ie | (Classifled) Merchant Tailors’ Associatiot ‘The de-|novel, may come to Broadway early|Davies and Onslow Stevens in the “ _ aL mands which will be worked out at this| next season. The play is being tried|chief roles. “Ex-Lady,” with Bette| Go to see every subscriber when his) ——————-————— — orgy bayer oeg pe Rgrenctn ih thay out this week at the Cape Playhouse, | Davie and Monroe Owsley is on the| subscription expires to get his re-| Furnished Room, light airy with Come Recovery Act will start in Washington. Dennis, Mass. same program as an added feature. | newal. rades, 382 Bast 19th St, Apt, 6 r i ae

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