The Daily Worker Newspaper, October 4, 1933, Page 5

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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1933 rage rive Ben Gold, Red Candidate for President of Board | What Saturday Evening Post | ™ 6 M4 ’ |WHAT | of Aldermen Has Record of Over Fifteen Years Cash Does to an ‘Open Mind A The Eminent Dr. Will Durant, Philosophy Prof.,, WoO RLD! | of Ceaseless Struggle for the Needle Workers. Gets Baliea Up in His Lies About the USSR y JESSIE LLOYI the Ru n wor n is sti By Michael Gold |Arrived in New York tory, The future looked a Pine and | Participated in First! win purant. simon , . ee | brighter un reportet Yr § 2 7 n sew Tap- 7 ath Fi $1 The Empire Is Slippin; as Immigrant Voy {and it was discovered that 1 Mowaves ‘un Pogues te otk Big Fur Strike at | * P' ipping in 1910 too short to reach the cutter’s table. e in the industry Age of 15 } Or ITHOUT a doubt, British imperialism is not as hale and hearty as “geese {I an sen aeatl j vehicle of political leadershiy m 8 4 it was before the war. The old lady of Threadneedle Street (where This is the first of two articles ater, +old Tecoliects, he was ap- | Shih. as aititan the banks are located) is developing many ailments. | Ben Gold, {f the best-loved | Prenticed to a tur shop and the areal i nd A aphasia without a tle, of Be aen Gol e New York needie | difficulty. presented itself so the boss | } aces oe bret 0d | cng: sidewalks of New Xone over patie: Mraeaieia € In Ireland she has had to clap her agents Cosgrove and Duffy into joir decided to start him as an operator, | Siste ( ; ; c vorkers, and now running . 5 ; | minute vas the civil n the famous Tretyakov Gal- Veh) fascist uniforms. That company union known as the Irish Free State is pred a Se ihe Board of Al. | THIS was Ben Gold's introduction a ae A ag chee nd leds iat aan, nee | not working out so well; the workers are beginning to see through it, as | germen on the Communist ticket | ‘he fur SAE SLRS Ere Cae beaks. to. troau cops and 5 azines, newspapers | they always do eventually through every form of company union. in New York. pegs the fur has’ been flying ever | 7 ti ngs, 14 ing new hich to br are covered ‘with the union. then, probably Dut it, that he could leave the ranks of those work- ers, on strike or in the-shop. eels in the | The strikers won important con-| en Senne | cessions ng recognition of the | is union, and for a while there was|from o peace in the industry, Gold took ad- | pleasure vantage of this peace and increased! There | Wages which the strike won for him | eyery pz to catch up on his education. in Rus: g your attention telling you that out this auto, se sock-garters, en skin on the foot to a vital factor in the soul. Tough, All Right! ‘6 Durant, is to be e has offered it ver disc nent.” Yes, the ate offers 1o! m loans at 2 per to any group of workers who can the funds, to build co- rtment buildings, with and bath for each apart- 8 tough, all right! es for children of working e to Durant just another he home. But what home z of? The worker's home, metimes n mother must ge out, y play alone with matches where the oldest girl has me from school? No, Du- king of a middle class nice big yard and plenty And it is not the Bolsheviks g this home, which always beyond reach of the ma- y of the human race. Coneén- trating capital has turne ing to Hudson) out of it in recent Sg bist All for “Post” Profits At any rate Russian women are to give their children the su- h other youngsters, rience and training in th habits for which even wealthy in America are willing to Tn India the sacred Ghandi has been fasting as usual, but the younger ‘ But even at that, it was no cinch. |Socialist lit the Hindus are commencing to believe that the armed British forces are By PHILIP STERLING Gold recalls that there were no power quite insensitive to. this kind of thing, and would rather have Hindus s Z ,| Machines in those days and that it} Abo fast and be passive.than fight. 4 HOSE who know Ben Gold May) required a supreme physical effort to| 15, the fi resent hearing him mentioned! tum the foot pedal. Ben’s father |du In the ‘Near East there is trouble with the Arabs; they were roused during the war by that great mystic and British imperialist, Colonel Lawrence, They were given many promises, and they shed blood for England on the basis of these promises. Now Colonel Lawrence is trans- lating Homer, and the Arabs are left holding the bag. fact that McKee is now being bally- They are restless. The whole empire is restless, it is falling apart |jooed for Mayor, brings certain like an old wormy boat. |parallels to mind. f A British cruiser in port is the Norfolk, a trim three-stacker mount- , When Jimmy Walker was Kicked | ing eight 8-inch guns in four turrets. She is flying at her fore the red |out of office to save the Tammany highly touted. for and white flag of.a. Vice Admiral who commands the West Indies station. ieee Feet bate vanes vital 4 If you heard his name, you would find it hard to believe that the |((Tammany style) to New York Empire is Slipping. It’s such a long, solid, ancient name, the kind of (City. He is honest, fearless, capable, name muggs like us and our children or grandchildren couldn't ever hope /two-fisted, said the newspapers. Mc- for. We have to get along with a surname and a family name, but a |Kee proved these claims by taking a ‘ fe i 7 king British aristocr: erally has a com) nam knock wn {high-powered soft-snap of a bank i like a club, eC Ga Pies cick job at the ‘very moment he realized \that Boss Curry had become tired of Well; are you ready? Here's the name, as reported in full by the /ietting him play Horatius at the New York Times. The commander’s name is: Bridge. Vice Admiral the Hon. Reginald Aylmer Rantouly-Plunkett-Ernle- What's all this got to do Fen Erle-Drax. What's that, you in the rear, you're hard of hearing? I'll |Gold? Nothing, save bs se aha repeat it tor you; the name of this great boojum who fought under Beat- |i8 everything, as an Parties ges ty at Jutland, is Vice Admiral, the Hon. Reginald Aylmer-Rantouly- | McKee was suppose Plunkett—(are you there)—Ernle—oh, hell, let’s just call him Reggy and great deal . be done with it. His wife probably calls him that; women are too darn 15 Years’ Ceaseless Struggle sensible to warm up the toast and make the coffee in the morning and Soft-spoken, lion-hearted and then yell up the stairs: “Breakfast is ready, Hon. Reginald Aylmer-Ran- |armed_with the’ experience of ea toul-Plunkett-Ernle-Erle-Drax and so forth. No, they just growl, “For |15 years’ ceaseless struggle agains u i ” labor-racketeers, strikebreaking. po-| CHRON Thee, Rome Sewn and et tt eaey! lice and needle-trades. bosses, . Ben’ Gs “a * }Gold lives as a reproach to Dedanta 7 ELL, it’s a solid enough name. But Vice Admiral Reggy isn’t feeling |@Md cowards who declare that tite v1 lass govern - itself. | quite too solid these days, His empire has the pip, and it’s begun rant er nucaite, ee be offered to affect. him, too. He had a terrible day in New York. First he had |in. evidence as conclusive proof that | to exchange pleasantries with General Nolan and Admiral Stirling of the | the working class produces from its | American forces defending the city of New York from the Japanese, |own ranks men who are far more | Then, after this chore was over, with his rheumatism bothering him, | capable of governing any commu- anda certain boil in a delicate spot beginning to buzz, the Vice Admiral |nity, than the professional politi- was draggéd. off: to:see Mayor O'Brien. us cians who are doing the job now. It is” 5 i " | Ben Gold is one of* those immi- ; It is‘the diplomatic duty of a British imperialist to treat influential grants who came’ to tiiis: country to Irishmen ‘as if they. were his equals. But Admiral Reggie found it hard escape the persectitiori and poverty) < to talk.to the Mayor. The Giants’ baseball team had just been calling, which dogged him in’ his native land. 4 and the Mayor, who-is somewhat deaf, dumb, blind, and feeble-minded, |But when he discovered that’ perse- BEN but otherwise e-% normal Tammeny politician, at first mistook Vice |cution and poverty were the lot of j Admiral Reggie fora baseball player. | American workers, too, he found in “mph; = himself the kind of honesty which a That, was & Wonderful Ay you caught last Tuesday at the Polo |soseoh V. McKee could never pos-| paid the boss ten dollars for taking establishment of most of except the ‘st Strike en Gold was lin the same breath with Joseph V. McKee, former president of the Board of Aldermen, but the fact that | Gold is a candidate for the office which McKee recently held and the home, shrie royed A Rare Confession | Telling the story of these early fur union struggles from which he feels it impossible to divorce his own early life, Gold sat over his coffee and con- fessed something with a self-depre- cating smile: “My family wanted me to be a |lawyer, and I fell for the idea. It decided that I should go to a private | school in the evenings to prepare my- self for college entrance. I was all | ¥! ; set for a nice respectable profession |®@0d scien | when the war broke out, but while 1|@"0ther page, | continued going to school for a while, the war sent my mind far from any St d ‘ ‘ought, of law school. SZ: "ree | “Who could avoid thinking about age and Screen | the war?” Gold asked with the vagu- jest suggestion of a shoulder shrug. “Right Bells | Especia ly as it got closer and closer | dr Co |to America. In school we students) @rama Co. | talked about little else. On the job of} Theatre; New Jed H. |course, it was the main topic of dis-| «pient Bells,” the E )Susejon for me. and the rest of my | gy ma of the sea by P | European immigrant fellow workers. are barefaced fib Nizhni Auto when it nev cialistic fore into R braries speeded up labor pr stion, roductivity of re with of h | A Socialist Betrayal h 5 Mst (Gold had joined | Hudson Theatre on | Party by this time) 1|Clive will play the |felt that we here must do something, | Other players include everal hundred dollars 6 ‘yéer, but this feeling dian’t find expres-|™ann and e waiting lists for exist- sion in action until the United States | “Spring In dy by|ing n et entered the war. Then we organized |Gtegorio Mar E le of the innuendoes on the Student League for the Repeal “The Cradle nt makes his “Fost” Brus |of the Conscription Act hersal a8 Great Oper bic “And in this organization.” says Metis in shan ad ea Venta ee a eget .s fa ing on which no one ever | Gold. “I received my first demon s to work; but the world leader- which it once held is gone.” Yet omehow the opera house did get nice ite for the September open- as it does each year; and- its ttested by bour- The gorgeous beauty and ° detail of Boris Godumey— Chaliapin—might have Over Mos- » Shown at the n, Hoy , 0 be a mat e and Rabino- | Grounds,” smiled the Mayor. |sess—the kind of honesty that makes| the apprentice into the shop. Ben | witz, v.ove Cold was an operator an dual to decide by t i i Theatre is Saray hence bnad had he tarried to “What, what?” spluttered the Admiral. “O’o ever ‘ad mentioned ja man stick to the social class in| worked six weeks for nothing and assistant shop chairman. idman won the day, too, and the Pa yar pee i Bache me that? My good man, I despise polb.” which he was born. after receiving three dollars a week| Ben’s youth didn’t stop him from | efforts of the Student League for |‘ Mos- & tine chapter, 6s 12 Jt eae ar iy desire to put himself right verybody, Durant admits, he g—after imagining y after horrorfor the great pub- { Gazing into his third cup of coffee| for several weeks, he was fired to | activity onthe picket line and in the hs ts Mianghly teactiiet Theclgnee oa tie Meegae aoe tata Gold sat in a restaurant and dis-| make room for a new apprentice.|Strike halls, although, probably, i Pa, 7 cussed his early life with almost mi the minor rackets |@id save him from. several beatin: had a long'converSation about duck shooting. Neither had ever shot a duck, | pachful neaioton: which is charac- se Aen yoeatiagtaveds used to ex-|2t the:hands of-police when he. ¥ 1 of the Conscription Act nm end.” ganization | red parachutes ty, Fadical who.was lrty “4 }wvas dissaived, e: i | ecm cle Haak i eT os ¢ So re * but it seemed to be a safe subject. They bored each other completely, until | teristic of him when he’ is not dis-} ploit-the-vast supply-of immigrant | arrested. - He pais t inek folie 8 | dete his oppo: iithoee care Ae : ees the sguictore dg Bio Sass @ reporter for the-New York Times saved the Admiral, but Only for some- |cussing unionism and politics. labor. Bén ‘remembered’ that, too, | Port at home, either, during his first | ¢q 4, realized that he was plac- rae i strike. Hise hieneeit In ies: Gade ia Ionger, yet thought it good. Hdhing ‘worse, & Born In eonrayne : Joined Fur Union in. 1912, |" His father, who might sometimes | 2% bi it that didn't alter his | wen opera iid bby pa ive lpi sin 2 : ae ngs * 4g 4 “I was born ina small town in| 4 |have neglected to wake him on work- t ‘ xcept dnso-| cow ASS Of ENB. BE OS~ - i; year later, however, he was |! bd i thoughts or his conduct, except Anso-| cow parachute jumping school assia’ rien Oh, Tiiem Reporters Cel ree queatiening: ait Wan taue.| back in: the fur industry, a fairly|!né days, spared-no efforts to rouse |tar as he decided definitely and fer-| The Soviet nove eel cee Em= fitebie in the sainwer tae : i i ted under questioning. “It was Rus-| skilled mechanic at the age of’14,|Young Ben in time to gct to the|vently that he did not want to be @| bossy pe thrill to every [teen and decolakion with: eaune ne » JUS reporter was an intellectual, from a very intellectual rag. He wasn't sian territory then, and by the time ‘The conditions in the fur and needle |Picket line early. |lawyer, The rush of events made him | wor n the work of the | regaled “Post” readers—except to him going to ask Admiral Reggié the banal old tabloid questions, which 1 Was seven years old, no one who/ trades industries under which Gold, A Proletarian Education |aware ‘that he wanted to stick to his | g, personally? ae ei li ’s de ii u never vary, and always want to know merely whether New York girls have Howie Gee toe geersticre’ prettier ankles and chests than London girls. even at the age of seven. | “Gi have \cpecitng a (ae) oftiee: No, this reporter had come ready for real business. British Vice-Ad- | “I was exposed to political discus- ye eee Rus Fir coor ie ee dee aa Se re Ee mirals with names like that don’t often drop in at City Hall in September. |sions at an early age because MY/ workers, This ferment resolved ‘itself,| many: school books. : Deep called unto deep. Noblesse oblige. The reporter spent all morning in fate Be tickers aa saiave dn ne in 1912, in the organization of the). And what he learned in that -. a speakeasy, reading up on British history and H. G. Wells, and Sir Josiah pga Wits, . the ewe Ab aden, fur workers union under Socialistbrought into active play that hon- Stamp and the like, and thinking and thinking about questions to ask, bes = “ S| leadership, At first there. was only|-esty and courage which makes a man corps which existed in-many cities J a whi x \ He-was weHyprimed when the historic hour struck, and.he, the un- /as a precaution against the armed Small : group "headed by “Isidore | stick to the class.in which he was known reporter, set forth for City Hall to sacrifice himself for God, coun- jattacks of the ‘Soyuz Russky’ or “try and the New York Times. the ‘Black Hundred’ as they were Jk vor . City editors have a peculiar passion for the correct spelling of names, \sonta, ape Rubee eae ce so the first thing was_to get this out of the way. The name, as most of my | died in 1905 of injuries she received little readers will remember, was Vice Admiral the Hon. Reginald Aylmer- |in a student demonstration which | le-Erle-Drax. was attacked by Cossacks. | His wiist limp-atter writing this down, his frame shaken by tense emo- |,, “I learned some valuable lessons tnniaa 5 Neg i |, With ft | _. tions and hiccoughs, the daring explorer and martyr for the New York leans one conan eae Liat like hundreds of others, was victim-| ar no time since his arriyal in New | C!@83 and fight for its interests. There | ized the first moment he set foot|york did youne-Gold have time to|®7e better ways of doing that than commit Pere. | vc. AMUSEMENTS D BIG WEEK! t yourself DAILY WORKER. ve works form the Mus- .D TRIBUNE. s s vq | for, oll “What’s On” notices up to 3 lines. Wednesday Teil Wat ake, tak A GORKI CONCEPTION (ENGLISH TITLES) rismime dente ke Also: “MOSCOW ATHLETES ON PARADE. a ACME THEATRE Utrenswae | Musue shor ‘se Times then asked his historic question: didn’t notice his wrestler’s shoulders... Jie Ml en a] Sumner Avenue, Br tf = SS ES BEG “Admiral, you command five cruisers and two sloops for the West In- /“For one thing, the Jewish self-de- |}: SSS°enarrs™ oe , RANTO CLABES for beél: t th ree dian station, Will you tell me what you do with them?” fense corps enlisted. in thelr ranks) “pon Tar S “PROGRAMS WJZ—760 Ke Bronk Workers Club, 889 Prospect, Avenue I T T BE 562 BROAD STREET arb appers Russian, non-Jewish workers. “That . woh n> | "5 ry p.m. . NEW R N. ° Diimfoundea tHB-Vice Admiral stared at the man. Such a question | Rumen, non-dewish workers. | That pana ai 7:00 P. M.—Amos ? Andy Ea Sane ig ARK, N. Juz aad never been: askedof an admiral. on me in later years.” WEAF—660 Ke. TiS —Ray Meatherton, Genes ito; wal-| , MEETING. of Unemployed Omce Workers | — SRS SAREE GR SIAL ae aor r “What we do?” he repeated, leaning against the statue of Civic Virtue, Came to New York in 1910 00 F. Meoharile tend, comedian;| e200 Fann ‘| fig"something about Jobs at Tabor "Temple, STARTING TOMORROW “Uh-huh,” sneezed the sly reporter, tickling Mayor O’Brien in the ribs. | From 1905, during the first Rus-| . Male Quartet 8:00-No. 9 Fear Street—Sketch de iia en Sa gi) THE FIRS TIDDISH ‘TALK d p RMI ee oudaa cede . — FIRST ALL YIDDISH TALKIE “What.we do?” aaulled the Vice Admiral, his eyes taking on a strange | #i4n e the Gaid famliy, ta whe F30ckam and Abner Hit 86 Srey ral 2a aalnbaghlaes REHEARSAL, of Daily Worker Chorus at| MADE IN RUSSIA glare. “What we do—what we do—” ta was ete of tina Oianen. cod. | ae ee coe satan | 2:00 Romlan Symptinnty “obolr 166 E. lth St, at 3 p.m. ‘ sgh 9:30—-Presiae Re velt and Patrick Car- if f THE JEW’S ANSWER TO HITLER! It-was iike-that fable of La Fontaine. Somebody asked the centipede | tinued to live under increasing poli-| 8:20—Lyman Orch.; Frank Munn, ‘Tenor | GCE ROCs Aaatercing National Cathos| LECTURE by Grace Hutchinson on “Na- which legs he used first in walking with his thousand legs. The centipede | tical persezution and poverty. By a| *°,1foubadours Orch.; Helen Hayes and lic Charities Convention, Hotel Waldorf-| tional Minorities and the Race Question in John Beal in Scene From Nicht Flight bike towne ala tates temnplereaa mel ae: oe y arey began to think about the matter, and got so confused he never was able to | supreme financial effort, the family| 9:30—Conrea Thibault, Baritone; Reisman| 19.4\Grt%, prado, Tenor; Concést Oren. | hath Gen at 6 os, ee ces Yorkville: Be, THE RETURN OF in. pa finally made its way to New York. orth. j 11:00—Hillbilly Songs ¥.8.U. Admission free. ‘i ” ‘ia Es oe 7 Then began a perigd of job-hunt- | {0:00-Gorn Cob Pipe Club its—The Poet. Prince Rea wie aes NATHAN BECKER ‘What do we do——” O, this American barbarism, to put such a ques- ing, work, dismissal and more job-|iuos=Dave orc 11:30—Denny Orch. Thursday ‘ took S _ tion to a British admiral of a long ancestry. “What do we do—” hunting for young Ben and the rest | 11:15—Harris Orch. apg ig cic eran ep | DAILY. WORKER Volunteer ‘SMembershtp | soir aera . Bub bldod will ell, and it certainly told in the Admiral, At first he was of the ou, : a bean teteig Sine, donk Ss me * + | Meeting, Workers Center, 38 F. 12th Bt., at! Hroughout ~ groggy, but he pulled himself together and like a thoroughbred, answered ‘You know what it’s like,” Gold | 14:05 a. M.—Bernie ‘Orch. . WABC—860 Ke. | LAST TIMES TODAY! the reporter firmly:~: ‘ sap dt Reap ills Bae a Fe panko ie pee? a0 P. M—atart ia Masse Oranhicatian Downes! LA MES AY! : “whi , ” “ " . wi = 5 $F. il—Sket ‘ P; Wha do we do? Well,” he explained, “we go about showing the British | fovies, pocketbook factories, millinery WOR—710 K eae rea oe enn “Soviets on Parade” and “Potemkin’ flag, and-try to cheer_up the British colonies in varlous parts.” shops, earning two and three dollars cy Le ene oreek apeeatink owe scio; Offered at Harlem | ores “. ab Brats Bi ae eel aaa 8 “Do they need cheering up?” another barbarian Yar:ee asked, a week for 50 and 60 hours of work. P. M.—Sports—Ford. Prick Harriet Lee, Contralto Workers School Continues Daily and Sunday, 1 to 11 p. m.—Popular Prices “¥es,-indeed,”::said the Admiral. “I think everyone needs cheering 4 sisi bt Br nae lag aie sore and Ted sketch Sao—albert, Spalding Violin; Conrad ‘Thi- - el pence canserewenrs wr waren r a f other jobs put together, but T had RooDetectives Black amd: Biue—Mystery| 9:0 ey res OTe codman| ggNEW, YORK —A course specially) THE THEATRE GUILD presents JOE COOK in Nobly. answeréd, general, but was it war? Would Nelson have answered | to ften beca: “Drama PEM TL hoor Oe man set aside for members of the Commu- (BUGENE, O'NEILL'S NEW PLAY Ege = Z hs then At the Seeanine Ar the ne | SAR SSUYy Joawe acd Menlo ware, soogs | 91 tn itineMooes: Paige Orch, |Miat Party and the Young Commu; | “AB WILDERNESS!” |¢¥O0LD YOUR HORSES thus, or Clive, or the.Prince of Wales? Despite your long proud solid name, ras Sanate Leap he" IONE | Siahney Dealcon dala. Resest-akerh”| Piccsons aa WIR ene nist League, known as “Organiza- with GEORGE M.COHAN ‘A, Masoal oewaeeg on SU eee = site you a.defeatist. about the British Empire? Well, well, you might have | © precedes le war, Wy wrerion sree | PERO; Obman | 10:00—Wa. ae ag EH Xtc Richman, | tional Principles,” is offered at the | GUTL, ge eg . Winter Gard B'way & 50th St, ept up a stoic gentlemanly front, and not spilled it all to a reporter. After , 200 Short for Cutter’s Table Macy end Smaile, Songs 10h nncander "Weolinsttctoen Grier |Hariem Branch of the . Workers “0d aot Se inter Garden gys. 8:30, mats. all, every empire is entitled to a few secrets, What if some Irishmen other ‘After @ year of this kind of] 9:39 samo as WJZ” 10:45—Concert Orch.; "Evan Evans, Baritone | School, 200 W, 136th St., corner Sev~ - Thursday and Saturday at 2 than that deaf and dumb Mayor had heard you? thing, my father had made some 0—Market and Halsey Street Playhouse| 11:15—News Bulletins enth Ave., Room 212-B, Registration pha Pathe ina 4 Reece friends and it was decided that one| 11:00—Time; Weather 11:30—Davis Orch for the first term of the Harlem CITY AFF A IRS -RADIO CITY MUSIC HALL— a ait til! Queen : amsay lonald hear about this, Ad- | of these friends was to get me ap- oe Ce oh cam one: Branch, which opened Monday, -is | SHOW PLACE of the NATION miral. Giving away. secrets, that way, you rascal, youl Prenticed as a cutter in @ cloak fac-! 12:00 Robbins Orch. 1:00 Light Oreb, = 2 still going on, BEING HELD FOR THE ||] 2inectien Rear. Opens, Tite aoe “ANN VICKERS” with IRENE DUNNE 4 t “Roxy” show a5e to 1 pmmtbe to 6 (Ex. Sat. & Bum.) RKO Greater Show Season ——| en an penn . WE Yi BENEFIT OF THE | The Old “Hearts and Flowers” Act : “i eo Dail yorker A31m, You Must Give saci vo ; » AG vy i “ UP THIS STRIKE! KNOow't'd 0O OCT. 5th: || ®S° Jefferson Mt st. & | Now. Film showin f “Land of Lenin’ ANITA PAGE and ALAN DINEHART™ @LL I ASK 1S dat YOu ana he “sirugele tor Bowne.” ABO: |) in “HAVE LIVED? , ney St., Brooklyn. | also “THE IMPORTANT WITNESS” with jURGESS DON'T Go BACK TAERE AGAIN | NOEL FRANCIS and DOROTHY BI OCT. 6th: | 2 Fs “Will the N.R.A. Bring Prosperity?” ‘ot HIT! Lecture by Phil Bart, of the Daily || | “The Power and the Glory” Worker, given ‘by the Lawrence p Balers ‘Br. ELD. at 2419 66th et RKO CAMEO wert Base Brookiyn. apr ts F040 Fsust Look aT THIS! AND ALL BECAUSE You | MISUNDERSTAND IF you wow'l ®O SUCG A SIMPLE DIDN'T po ANYTHING! THE WORLD FOR vou- GUT LCan't Stay Away FROG? 1 THE STRIKE Now ! Max Bedacht, Central” Comm.’ Com- munist Party, will lecture on “Hitler After 9 Months in Germany,” at Brownsville Youth Center, 105 ‘That- ford Avenue, Brooklyn. SCOTT NEARING © Will start a course on * Current Events ~ THURSDAY, OCTOBER 5, AT 8:30 PM. Admission 50 cents, Institute for Advance Education, River= side Drive and 103rd Street. OL 2-1700. “Wil, the N.R.A. Bring Prosperity?” lecture by n Howard, of the Daily, Worker, given ‘by the Ella May Br. LL.D, at 4109 13th Avenue, Brooklyn.

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