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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1933 Page Five |Marx-Lenin Exhibit to be Shown in | ' WORLD! By Michael Gold “The Old Stamp Collector ERO, as you have been told a million times, was so artistic that he played his fiddle while Rome burned, This week many new conflagra- tions took place in the burning-up of the bourgeois world. President Roose- velt, for one thing, announced the further devaluation of the dollar, a huge wage-cut in effect. _... While his latest incendiary act started a lot of lovely new flames in the stock markets of the world, the President developed @-cold and went to bed. “He took the opportunity,” says the New York Times, “to assort some of the thousands of stamps that have been added to his collection ‘since he came to Washington.” » Now it can be told! He is really a stamp collector at heart, just as Nero was a fiddler, and not an emperor. King George also collects stamps, As did his cousin, Czar Nicholas the last. The upper class aristocratic set of New York has taken up roller skating, and the Prince of Wales has started a fad of top-spinning among his boy friends, ‘While the masses die of hunger in all the cities of the capitalist world, while war hastens nearer and nearer, the upper class goes about its accus- tomed trivialities, feeling smug and secure as Marie Antoinette. Some day Aistorians will record with amazement this strange item in the New York ‘Times about Mr. Roosevelt's stamp collection. . . . The Price of Bread prices keep rising in America. Food has gone up over 20 per cent st dn the past six months—a fact of great and tragic importance when one realizes that there are still over 15,000,000 unemployed, with relief being sBut off, Wages have lagged far behind the increases in cost of food. Ac- -@ording to all figures, actually less food is being eaten in America this year of Roosevelt than during Hoover's last year. The A. & P. Grocery chain, .dor instance, reports a decrease in sales over last year running from 6 to 13-per cent. No regime has long survived when the cost of food rose beyond the Teach of the masses. Paste that in the stamp collection, Mr. President. $15,000 a Year ‘OMMUNISM is being inaugurated in what was once Russia, a primitive -and medieval land. Machine industry had not been developed under the Czar. The Soviets had to build from the bottom. But in the United States, ‘where there is already a machine industry for mass production, it would be possible, under Communism, to guarantee every citizen the equivalent in living comforts of what can now be bought for $15,000 a year income. This statement is made by no less a person than Corliss Lamont, the banker’s son, in his interesting diary account of the trip he made with Mrs. Lamont through the Soviet Union. Yes, one does not need to exaggerate the benefits of Communism to the vast majority of the American population—it can be figured out in cold statistics. The machinery already exists to give everyone $15,000 a year. All that is now needed is that this machine system, really a public utility, be taken out of the hands of private profiteers and turned over to the community. One of the reasons why the Soviet Union has made so many sacri- fices for peace, swallowing insults from Japan and Germany, France and the Chinese bandit-generals, is that every month of peace means another step forward to the day when the Soviet productive system is perfected, and it will be possible to give every Soviet citizen the comforts and human dignity of a world of security and abundance. In a few more years it will be possible to demonstrate that Communism feeds and clothes the great masses more efficiently than ever did capitalism. Even today there is no unemployment in the Soviet Union, and everyone eats, which is more than one can say of the United States. Soviet Recognition IAT feminist lady and lover of labor, Miss Frances Perkins, must have @ queer sense of humor. As soon as it was announced that there might be recognition of Soviet Russia, our liberal Secretary of Labor Perkins an- nounced that thousands of Russians would now be deported back to the USSR. They are being picked up whenever they go on strike. This is one of the forms of persecution that made Hoover so unpopular. We were told when Roosevelt was elected that such cruelty would be eliminated, but it is stronger than ever. ge The immigrant is told he must not have no voice in the nation. He must work for rotten wages, build the railroads and dig’ the mines and “make the steel. He must keep his mouth shut. Almost half of the Ameri- ean working class is foreign-born or of foreign parentage, and you can’t fhake such a great mass keep its mouth shut. It’s been tried and doesn’t ‘work. Deportation to fascist countries means death to many workers. Miss Perkins actually sentences thousands to death with her quiet terrorism. ‘The case of Frank Borich is an example, He was a leader in the strike of the Pennsylvania miners in the mines owned by the Steel Trust. Mr. Roosevelt is helping to break this strike by knocking off leaders like Frank Borich. ‘ By fiat of Miss Perkins, the brave and self-sacrificing fighter of work- img-class justice, Frank Borich, has been seized for immediate deportation te his native land, Jugo-Slavia. =<" This means death, If you think otherwise, read » little account of the torture of workers in Jugo-Slavia in the last New Masses. It was smuggled out of the country and translated by Louis Adamic, the well-known writer. Jugo-Slavia is not as well-known as Germany to the wolrd; the fascist regime there has not been interrupted in its medieval orgies of blood and torture by world opinion. But the stories that come from there are fully ‘as incredible for horror as those from Hitler’s sewer. If Frank Borich is sent back and murdered, the blood guilt will rest on the government at Washington. But we must save Frank Borich; one way 4s.to flood the liberal Secretary of Labor, Miss Perkins, with bitter words 4 , telegrams and letters, saying it is wrong to deport working men because they have formed @ union, wrong to murder working men who hive joined a union! Helping the Daily Worker through Michael Gold. “Contributions received to the credit of Michael Gold in his Socialist competition with Dr. Luttinger, Edward Newhouse, Helen Luke and Jacob Burck to raise $1,000 in the $40,000 Daily: Worker Drive: TOTAL TO DATE ... By PAUL NOVICK \N October 9 the New York Times announced on its front page the passing of Morris Hillquit, National Chairman of the Socialist Party of the United States and ‘its represen- tative at the Congresses of the Sec- ond International since 1904. Presi- dent Roosevelt, in a message from Washington, sent his condolence. The Governor of the state of New York, Herbert Lehman, in a state- ment issued from his sick-bed, de- plored the passing of a citizen of “un- usual usefulness.” Ing the life of Morris Hillquit was of “unusual usefulness.” Im~ migrating here from Riga (at that time Russia) in 1886, he soon be- came active in the Socialist move- ment in New York. The party—at that time the Socialist Labor Party— was dominated by immigrants from Germany, the pioneers of the So- cialiss movement in the United States. The traditions of the bour- geois revolution of 1848 which brought over the first big wave of German immigrants to the United States, were still alive here, as were the opportunist teachings of Ferdi- nand Lassal. It was this element who in 1901 were mainly responsible for the establishment of the Social- ist Party in the United States, after @ number of splits in the sectarianist Socialist Labor Party led by Daniel DeLeon. A group of Jewish Social- ists, mostly immigrants from Russia, under petty bourgeois leadership, was also represented at the convention in 1901, as well as the Debs groups (the so-called Social Democratic Party), who were endeavoring to establish “socialist colonies” in capitalist America. . Hillquit, who had already attained fame as a capable lawyer, became the leader of the party. One of his first acts of “usefulness” was the struggle against the movement for Industrial Untonism, which was inaugurated in 1905 by DeLeon and Debs. That struggle eventually led to the expul- sion of William D. Haywood and other revolutionists from the Social- ist Party. Posing as s “Marxist,” Hillquit kept the Socialist Party on a steady course with the line of the reform- ists of the Second International. Ap- pearing as an opponent of Samuel Gompers he steadfastly supported the American Federation of Labor led by Gompers, both as leader of the Socialist Party and as the paid legal advisor and guiding spirit of the A. F. of L. unions in the needle trades in New York, particularly the International Ladies Garment Work- ers Union. oe hie T THE congresses of the Second International in Amsterdam (1904) and Stuttgart (1907), Hillquit “dis- tinguished” himself by introducing a resolution for the restriction of the immigration of the “backward” (yel- low) race into the United States. Having been defeated at the con- gresses Hillquit had a similar reso- lution passed by the convention of the Socialist Party in January, 1908, which was in line with the anti-im- migrationist policy of the reaction- ary leadership of the American Fed- eration of Labor. However. it was not until after the world war broke out that Hillquit became “unusually useful.” After maintaining a position of pacifist “neutrality” up to 1917, Hillquit sharply changed his position as soon as it became known that the United States was about to enter the Euro- bya conflict. In a prominently fea- ured interview in the New York Times of Feb. 11, 1917, Hillquit de- clared: “If the armies are raised by con- scription, of course, we will have to serve as other citizens. I do not be- eve that the Socialists will advocate any general industrial strike to han- dicap the country in its war prepa- rations and I do not believe there will be any such strike. I know of no instance in any country where we have tried a general strike either to Prevent or to end a war.” Hillquit thereby served notice upon the government of the United States not to take seriously the anti-war talk of the Socialist Party. He as- sured the Wilson administration two months before it declared war on Germany that the Socialist Party will do nothing to handicap the adminis- hinge: in its war activities and that Party, aroused general re- sentment among the membership. Hillquit immediately caught wind and again made a sharp turn. At the convention at St. Louis, in April, 1917, it was no other than Hill- quit who presented the anti-war reso- lution on behalf of the majority of the Committee on War and Militar- ism. In that resolution the 8. P, de- “the whi i Brite ta 'The Role of a “Citizen of Unusual Usefulness” MORRIS HILLQUIT placed himself as the champion of that resolution. The decisions of the St. Louis convention were sabotaged and betrayed from the moment the convention closed, The representative of the party in Congress (Parlia- ment), Meyer London, as well as other leaders, including, of course, Morris Hillquit, violated that resolu- tion in spirit and in letter. The So- cialist Jewish Daily Forward, which was violently pro-German, became violently anti-German, while Hillquit all the time continued as a member of its publishing association. The anti-war struggle raised by Debs was not to Hillquit’s liking, and subse- quently, in 1920, when Debs was still a prisoner for his anti-war activities, it was only through mass pressure that the opposition of Hillquit to the nomination of Debs as the party’s presidential candidate was overcome. Cher ve T THAT time Hillquit was already involved in a bitter struggle against the Left Wing, which in 1919, split away from the Socialist Party. At the | Te! convention held in Chicago, where the split occurred, the Hillquit leader- ship, through unscruplous manipula- tions and with the aid of the police, succeeded in maintaining control of the convention, although the Left Wing, which fought for joining the Third International, constituted an overwhelming majority of the mem- bership. In that period Hillquit was extremely useful to the capitalist class by doing his utmost to stem the tide of the revolutionary movement in the United States. The Socialist Party, which in 1918 attained a membership of 120,000, was reduced to a comparative handful of 6,000. Hillquit, who in the years of 1917-1920 was forced to conceal his venom, now came out openly as the foe of the Soviet Union. At the inves- tigation of the infamous”Iiusk Com- mittee, Hillquit declared his.readiness to shoulder arms in case the United States were “attacked” by -the Soviet Government. He is the father of the statement that the Octobér Revolu- tion was the greatest calamity which happened to the socialist movement. He was active in collecting money for the counter-revolutionary Menshe- viks, and one of his last acts to that effect Was to send out an appeal as the treasurer of an “Emergency Com- mittee for Russian Social Democratic Victims of Hitler Terror.” In that ap- peal which came in response to a cablegram by the Menshevist leader, Abramovitch, Hillquit termed the So- viet Government a “terrorist dicta- torship.” In 1931 Hillquit was chosen by a group of former czarist oil magnates to start proceedings against the So- viet Government. And one of the outstanding documents in the heri- tage of the leader of the Second In- ternational, Morris Hillquit, is a pa- per filed by him in one of the courts | of New York complaining that the Soviet Government acquired the oil fields from his clients “unlawfully, illegally and by force.” Sa ine 'UCH was the man Morris Hillquit, the Scheidemann of the Socialist Party of the United States. It was only due to the low theoretical level of the socialis; movement in the U.S. A. that he figured as’ its theo- retician. He was the author of a superficial “History of Socialism in the-U. 8.” (370 pp.) and a few pam- phlets written in support of reformist socialism, against revolution. His pamphlet, “Socialism Summed Up,” he presented to the above-mentioned | Li Committee as proof that the Socialist Party does not stand for revolution. Like Scheidemann, Hillquit was not liked by the membership of his own party. Hillquit was a lawyer for rich capitalist corporations, himself a rich man, & respectable citizen and a re- spected member of the New York Bar Association. One of his last deeds as leader of the S. P. was to visit Presi- dent Roosevelt at the White House in Washington (together with Nor- man Thomas) in support of the N.R.A., which was hailed as a “so- clalistic” measure. No wonder President Roosevelt and other representatives of Yankee cap- italism were grieved by the death of the socialist leader. On Oct. 11 there appeared in the Nrw York Times a statement issued by the Merchants Ladies Garment Association, an asso- ciation of the worst exploiters in the needle industry in New York, ex- pressing “deep sympathy at the pass- ing of the great social leader and ex- ponent of the rights of the people.” The Hoover-organ, Herald-Tribune, of the same date contained a state- ment of another manufacturers’ asso- ciation, the Industrial Council of Cloak, Suit and Skirt Manufacturers, “its profound sorrow at the death of Morris Hillquit, a dis- tinguished leader of contemporary American life, whose constructive achievements shall constitute an en- during monument to his memory.” Thus spake the exploiters. A citi- zen of “unusual usefulness” to the capitalists passed away. Students Dance Group To Give | Eight Dance Recitals Students Dance Recitals announce @ series of eight dance recitals to be given at the Washington Irving High School. The following artists will appear: Friday evening, Nov. 17, Edwin Strawbridge; Saturday even- ing, Dec. 2, Ruth St. Denis in a Lec- ture-Recital; Saturday evening, Jan. 6, Dorsha; Saturday evening, Jan. 20, Elsa Findlay Dancers; Saturday even- ing, March 10, Ruth Page; Saturday evening, March 31, Martha Graham; | Saturday evening, April 21, Doris} Humphrey and Charles Weidman. A season ticket for the 8 Dance Recitals is $2.50 to workers, students and pro- fessionals, and can be obtained at the office of the Students’ Dance Recitals, 32 Union Square. ‘Vote Communist! Elect Minor! Vote against all the capitalist can- didates, who serve Wall Street! More | Relief! Vote for Higher Taxes for | the rich and elimination of taxes for | the workers and small home owners! Make the rich pay! Vote the Com- munist ticket! TUNING IN TONIGHT’S PROGRAMS WEAF—660 Ke. M.—Recovery Party Campaign Talk —C. F. Coe 7:15—Billy Bachelor—Sketch 7:30—Lum and Abner 1:45—The Goldbergs—Sketch $:00—Jalta Sanderson and Frank Crumit, 8 9:00—Bernie Orch. 9:30—Ed Wynn, comedian; Vorhees Orch, 10:00—Lives at Stake—Sketch 10;30—Beauty—Mme, Sylvia 10:45—Robert Simmons, tenor; Sears Orch. 11:00—Current Events—J. B. Kennedy 11:15—Meroff Orch, 11:20—Davis Orch, 12:00-—Vallee Orch, 12:30 A.M.—Childs’ Orch, on ae WOR—710 Ke. 7:00 P.M.—Sports Ford Prick 1:15—News—Gabriel Heatter 7:30—~Terry and Ted—Sk ‘comorote ‘Oren Seat Sargent, songs .; Jean , " Prank agg tener iS—Recavery Paty, Campaign Talk 00—Jack Arthur, songs; pny Ohman and Ar- 9:15—Tom Blainc,.conge 9: Eechoes 8. 10:15—Current Events-—Ha Bugens 10:30—Eddy Brows,” vicliny Syaphery. er Report Read Oreh. WJZ—T60 Ke. 7:00 P.M.—Amos'n’ Andy T:15—Default and Its Remedies—Mayor James M, Curley of Boston; David M. ‘Wood, attorney 7:45—Dog Chet—Don Carney 8:00—Crime Clues :30—Adventures in Health—Dr. Henry Bundesen 8:45—Billy Hillpot and Scrappy Lambert, songs 9:00—Alice Mock, soprano; Edgar Guest, Men of Darine—Dramatic sketch 10:00—To be announced 10:30—Haloween Fantasy—Musical sketch :45—Labor Problems of the NRA—William Green, president, American Federation of Labor; Senator Robert F. Wagner of New York; Walter Teagle, president, Standard Ot cf New Jersey 00-—-Leaders ‘Trio 5—Poet Prince }0—Whiteman Orch. 00-——Harris Orch, A.M.—Sosnick Orch, ewe ta WABC—860 Ke 7:00 P.M.—Myrt and Marge 5—Just Plain Bill—Sketch | greedy and jealous, Discusses Problems of Drama | leading artcile in International | has just been received here. Other features deal with “Piscator’s Thea- tre,” “The Poetic Drama” (its place | in proletarian culture), “The Theatre | of International Action” (a revolution- ary professional theatre of France), “The Theatre of the Paris Com- mune” (telling how the workers of | Paris made Use of the theatre during } the first workers’ dictatorship), the Moscow Central TRAM (Theatre of | Working Youth), and a long and careful study of “The Jewish Thea- tre in the U.S.S.R. abundantly illustrated. International Theatre sells for 15 cents a copy—in bundle orders to/ orga tions and bookshops, 10 cents | a copy—and can be had from work- ers bookshops, dramatic organiza- | tions, and directly from B. Blake, | League of Workers Theatres, 42 E. 12th St, | TH | By IRVING LERNER | THREE THIEVES, a screen com- | edy, directed by J. A. Protozanov; & Merjrabpomfilm, U.S.S.R., pro- duction; presented by Amkino Corporation at the Acme Theatre; with the following cast: E. Llin- sky, A. Ktorov, A. Klimov, O. Jin- | zniva, P. Prozorovsky. oer An example of the type of film Russia is no longer making is pre- sented at the Acme Theatre this week. “Three Thieves” was made by Protazanov in about 1925 or 1926. That was the year of “Potemkin.” But “Potemkin” is as dynamic and vital today as it was in 1926, and “Three Thieves” is only an unim- portant and sometimes amusing “sa- tire.” Its technique is primitive and it abounds in stylized acting. “Three Thieves” represents a per-| iod in the history of the Soviet cin- ema when the directors of the “old school” (Protozanov, Jeliabuski, Gar- din, Kuleshov, etc.) derived their pic- torial inspiration from the German cinmea plus the exaggerations of | the Moscow Art Theatre. This film has all the faults of theatricalism, which were gotten rid of, to a certain extent, in “The Festival of St. Jor- gen” made by Protozanov in 1930, By showing that the banker is a thief, only on greater proportions than the petty and the “high class” crook, Protozanov attacks all of the institutions of capitalism. Plutus, the banker and arch criz *, 4-- fool, who is robbed by the “Gentleman Thief,” Art Dod- | get.. By some) tars Jods wmier | buddy, Jerry Diggers, the petty thief, | is blamed for the robbery of Plutus’ three millicn. The trial that follows is satire in large and broad strikes. Its execu- tion is similar to the tial scene in Paramount's satire of some years ago, “The Beggar on Horseback.” At the trial the prosecutor stresses the point that the sacred right of private prop- erty is the important issue—not the three million, Diddles manages to escape with Dodger’s help. The film en?s with what is called an ironic touch, Diddles, now a rich man (having finally gotten a share in the thre NEW FILM || | million), traveling in Italy, has a poor beggar arrested, not for stealing his gloves, but for “the sacred right of private property.” If the film seems unusually jerky in spots, it is not the fault of Pro- tozanov, but the N. Y. State Board of Censors, Tuesday POLITICAL Symposium on City Election issues, Speakers: ocrat; Irving E. Herz, Pu: nist; Rice, Communist, S4th St, at 8 p. SPECIAL MESTING of all members of ends of the Soviet Union at Irving Irving Place, near 15th St. member of the F.8.U, mu Wednesday LECTURE on “Youth and the Election" by Irving Herman, District Organizer of the Y.C.L. at the East Side Workers Club, 165 E, Broadway, N.Y,C., at 8.15 p.m Proceeds i , Brooklyn, NOTICE BRONX! On November 11, Sat- urday evening, at 2075 Cling Avenue, the Tremont Progressive Club will present: ‘The Little Guild String Quartet, Aida Girls, “Heil Hitler Play" by the Theatre ef the Workers School, Negro Worker Songs and Spirituals, and ‘the ‘(Necessary Eyil.” Re- serve this date, Philadelphia, Pa. GENERAL meeting of all members and sympathizers of the Philadelphia Workers International Relief, ‘Thursday evening, at 473 N. 4th Bt. Very urgent, THE COURT IN KEEPING Witd> THE PRINCIPLES OF JUSTICE AND DEMOCRACY CAN FING WO REASON Way THE DEFENDANT, JAMES MARTIN, SHOULD WOT ACT as His OWN. DEFENSE — DESIRES To BUT THE CouRT Wit THE WELFARE OF THE DEFENDANT IN MING OuT THE DawGERS To TUE OEFENDANTS, CASE BY THis POINT T ALSO WARN THE DEFENDANT OF THE SERIOUSNESS OF assity- (NG TAS POSITION. WE WanT NO TOKE MAE OF Yuis COURT, ANTTHING (N THAT DIRECTION AND Tu CITE by QUIR1 DOFS THE DEBENDANT STILL DESIRE To act as HIS OWN CounsEL ? Seutasin. wikis International Theatre No.5 | cludir NEW YORK.—The Marx-Lenin ex- hibition, prepared for the fiftieth an- niversary of the death of Karl Marx, will be on display at the Worke: School, 36 E. 12th St., on Sunday, Nov. 12, from noon until evening, In |the evening at the regular Sunday night forum H. M. Wicks will deliver | lecture on “The Historical Role of | Marxism.” | To Be Shown At Workers’ Club | Every day thereafter up to and in- fonday, Nov. 19, the exhibi- n consists of twenty large tion, whi | panels depicting the life and eels K.—“Problems of Style | tles of Marx and showing the prac-| Cincinnati and continue West and EE AUPE beaten is tho subject of a | tical application of the revolutionary | North, where arrangements are be- principles of Marxism from. 1847 Theatre No. 5, the new issue which | down to the present, will be shown | tures. at the larger Wo: out Greater Ney Clubs through- York. The places | Workers Clubs, Cities Thruout U. S. j and dates will be announced in a | few days. i Part of Nation-Wide Tour The 5 toured | throughou s, The | nation-wide Boston, | where it v for three days, Nov. 5, 6 7 h a lecture oy | some phase of M -Leninism b§ H. M. Wicks each .evening of the three days. It is being booked for New Haven for Nov. 8 and 9, and for Philadelphia on Tuesday and | Wednesday, Nov. 21 and 22. Following that it will be shown in Baltimore, Washington, Pittsburgh, | ing made for the exhibition and lec- In a number of places de- | bates are being arranged with prom- inent opponents of Marxism. Stage and Screen “Thunder On The Left” To Open Here Tonight “Thunder on the Left,” a drama- ” ‘The articles are | tization by Jean Ferguson Black of | | the Christopher Morley novel of the | Same name, will have its opening on} Tuesday at the Maxine Elliott Thea-| tre. James Bell and Hortense Alden are featured, Others in the cast in- clude Louis Jean Heydt, Eleanor Audley and Otto Hulett. “It Pays To Sin,” adapted by Luis O. Macloon and George Redmond from Johann Vaszary’s comedy, will have its premiere on Wednesday night at the Morosco Theatre. Lead- ing players include Jane Starr, Leon Waycoff, Victor Sutherland, Jean Benedict and Martin Burton. The Second Avenue Theatre is now presenting “Germany Aflame,” a new Yiddish play by Ossip Dymow, a dra- matization from his own novel. The | cast is headed by Samuel Golden- burg and Joseph Buloff. The bosses don’t support the Daily Worker. Its support comes from the working class. Have you done your share to help the “Daily?” Rush your contribution to the “Daily,” 50 E. 13th St. N. ¥. City. Short Wave Club |To Give Radio Classes |Monday and Thursday | NEW YORK.—The Workers’ Short | Wave Club will hold its classes on |Mondays and Thursdays of each | week at 8:30 p.m. at Claremont Park- , Bronx. Workers with short- urged to listen in on (Moscow broadcast) every night between 8 and 11 p.m. on 50 meters, and every day between |2 and 6 pm. on 35 and 50 meters. | The educational broadcasts are in English; Russian misic is played. Workers who listen in are re- quested to send reports to the Short Wave Club, enclosing a log of the stations they have received, both in the Soviet Union and other coun- | tries. | { MUSIC |“Norma” To Be Presented By Chicago Opera Company The Chicago Opera Company at the Hippodrome will open this week's schedule this evening with “Lucia di Lammermoor.” Other operas of the week include: “Caval Rusticana” and “Pagliacci” on ‘Tuesday; ‘Tl Trovatore,” Wednescay; “Norma,” Thursday; “Faust,” Friday; “La Tre- viata,” Saturday matinee; “Aida,” Saturday night, and “La Forza del Destino,” on Sunday evening. AMUSEMENTS rm dicted to MAMMON worship! RKO Jefferson 14» 3. & | Now BETTE DAVIS and LEWIS 8. STONE in Bureau of Missing Persons Also: “THE MASQUERADOR” with RONALD COLMAN and ELISSA LANDI “THREE THIEVES” Produced in the U.S.S.R. by Mejrabpomfilm - Views of LITVINOFF in Action (English Titles) Special ) Soviet Newsreel, Added ind other scenes Featu Also: HENRI BARBUSSE interview FIRST AMERICAN SHOWING jons, morals and men, in # society ad ACME THEATRE 4TH STREET AND UNION SQUARE Cont, From 9 AM, MIDNITE SHOW VERY SATURDAY JACOB BEN-AMI in “The Wandering Jew” | 25enon dard. || *°CAMEO SS ;-RADIO CITY MUSIC HALIL— SHOW PLACE of the NATION Direction “Roxy” Opens 11:30 A.M. LESLIE HOWARD in “BERKELEY SQUARE” aad es grat “Roxy” stare 350 OPENS TONIGHT AT 8:30 P. M. SEE for the first and only time on any suppressed material of “Qui Viva Mexico” also: EISENSTEIN’S “Thunder Over Mexico” Sie Street Plarbouse Qo til 8 pm, Just East of 7th Ave. Con. 12t01z The Daily Worker fights Fascism. Fight for the “Daily” with your dollars. Rush all funds to save the “Daily.” THE THEATRE GUILD _presents—. EUGENE O'NEILL’s COMEDY | AH, WILDERNESS! with GEORGE M. COHAN W. of Bway ‘Thur.,Sat.2:20 MEDY WITH MUSIC # The School for Husbands with Osg of PERKINS—June WALKER || EMPIZE 230 8:40; Mat. Thur.,Sat. JOE COOK in HOLD YOUR HORSES A Musical ae Suen ae Winter Garden “re tn. usta Thursday and Saturday st 2:30. EN MINUTE ALIBI A New Melodrama “Is herewith recommended te the highest terms.”—Sun. ETHEL BARRYMORE THEA, W. 47th B¢. Eves, 8.40. Mats. Wed.Sat., 2.40, OHI, 4-3839 MASS M Spea HENRI BARBUSSE DR. FARRY F. WARD J, B. MATTHEWS Auspices: FRIENDS OF THE EETING to Celebrate 16th Anniversary of the Russian Revolution and to Demand Unconditional Recognition of the Soviet Union kers: ROBERT MINOR HERBERT GOLDFRANK PHILLIP JAFFE Chairman—LISTON M. OAK WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER Ist, 8:00 P. M. at WEBSTER HALL, 119 E. 11th St., N. Y. G SOVIET UNION, N. ¥. District The Little Guild String Quartet A New Program of Chamber Music eee ‘The Theatre of Action A Play by V. J, Jerome ene Lithuanian Aida Girls Sextette Dramatized Songs of the Prole- tarian Revolutions eee Workers Dance Leag: ee John Reed Club, William Seigel see Negro Songs of Work and Struggle editor-in-chief New Dances Represented by Carl Brodsky, chairman CULTURAL SEVERAL GOOD APARTMENTS Lexington Avenue train te White Plains Read. at Allertem Avenue Station, Tel. brook 8-1400—1401 Workers Cooperative Colony » 2700-2800 BRONX PARK EAST (OPPOSITE BRONX PARK) has now REDUCED THE RENT ON THE APARTMENTS AND SINGLE ROOMS Kindergarden; lasses for Adults and Children; Library; Gymnasium; Clubs and Other Privileges NO INVESTMENTS REQUIRED Take Advantage of the Opportunity. The Daily Worker Delegated BANQUET SUNDAY EVE., NOV. 12, 1933 At 8 O'clock Irving Plaza Main. Hall E. 15th STREET and IRVING PL, WORKING CLASS ORGANIZATION ELECT YOUR DELEGATES TODAY ADMISSION 75¢ ACTIVITIES & SINGLE ROOMS AVAILABLE Office open daily Friday @ Satatday junday 9am. to 8 pm 9 a.m. to 5 pm. 10 a.m. te 8 p.m.