The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 2, 1933, Page 5

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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1933 Page Five The World of - ; A Song for Election Day TO SMASH THE HOL “Daily” Carrier Gets Customers’ Donations the Theatre By HAROLD EDGAR There can be no doubt that by comparative Broadway standards, “Ot Thee I Sing,” and even its sequel “Let ‘Em Eat Cake” are superior musical comedies. But to say this is not enough for most of the up- ratory Theatre porn itive play * Cost Your Yore | Elsa Alsen and Paul Althouse} “Almost eve - written by the Workers Labo! ; ‘ r Words by Oscar Saul | | Walter, will presen‘ morrow afternoon | Randall Thomp: Soloists with Philharmonic |” Sunday The Philharmo: chestra, under the By Michael Gold town critics. “Of Thee I Sing” was 2 in E minor, T - ? no ordinary show with funny lines, % . by Bach-Weiner and . that inane ‘An Honest Man ; Plat opt geet asta diner ro all the same on atl things you a-gree To every question that you ask, the answer seemsto | Mestica by Richarc the fine pause are many good reasons why every worker should yote for Bob | tribution” to American drama, yea, 5 | ebiail ee aising of Minor for Mayor of New, York City. One of the simplest is that Bob |a work of art! And some of our | prese ese f d Minor is the only candidate who can be proved to be An Honest Man, ery should have known =e ey ‘There was much excitement earlier in this campaign. At first it looked r, jo! in the chorus. . . roRnat a f as if a great landslide of indignation would turn the Tammany grafters There i a certain type of show~ be Selemen, LaGuardia, O'Brien+ McKee Danas ana duet i, out of office. They feared it themselves, and thelr Board of Strategy took )man in Poke ga baer ue the Tannhauser fro . some desperate measures, one of which included the nomination of McKee | j n.or of his cote aia rad ex,| Who cuts the workers’ throats to | To smash the hold—the bosses | VOTE COMMUNIST for cash re- ae to split the opposition vote. tent of always being able to guess fill the city treasury? haye—on him and you and me, | _ lief and children’s lunches free! 6 Apes ie But as the campaign cotitinues, each day turning up a buried chunk | how far he may exceed the bounds Who keeps the bankers happy and | To smash the crooks that share | VOTE COMMUNIST to smash the | 7 ne cee meena, of capitalist filth, the voters more and more sink back into the chronic | o¢ their conventions in regard to sub- the poor in misery? the graft of crooked Tammany, | N.R.A. no-strike decree! Ha , res Ww H AT'S ON cynicism that most Americans feel about elections. Which is what elects | ject matter without in the least dis- Who fights against insurance with | VOTE RED against the parties of | VOTE COMMUNIST to smash the "Ann Pro 5 U. , 4 F ‘Tammany, | turbing thelr fundamental, and still the charity? sa police brutality, ; tools of bosses’ treachery— The Curti ( I believe I am truthful in reporting that recent conversations I have Loi rey point of view. Thus,| § McKee. cade ne bi eral TaGeartin, O'Brien Mast opines ipod ae deg ed we Ba RS SCHOOL. nd ublic places reflects a growing feeling | When customers are beginning ‘f a or a workers’ victory! 1 U to take Ae fn heard on Now York virects ant inp Le sh to tire of conventional triangle plays, me Sr ee D 7 ‘Ad ire of Worke of betrayal. “They're all crooks and politicians,” is the common sentiment. And so a choice is being made of one of the crooks on the familiar theory of the lesser evil. The American voter has not yet learned to cast his vote for the political principles:in which he believes. He votes for the candi- date he thinks will win. It is one of the aberrations of the blind pragma- tism of the American mind++John Dewey's philosophy in action. . * ° A Little Inventory s 4 ET ws examing briefly the four capitalist candidates for Mayor of New | Yentlonally danlvabone an Dest — treating, York~—the Honorable O’Brien, the Honorable La Guardia, the Holy Joe tees By HELEN KAY warealone Uses, bw Petubing/ aside, petitive: Susinags which: 1k\ as-yet! |(oram of C McKee and the Sacred Solomon. he writes or produces a homosexual play which is basically the old tri- angle play with a new turn. Or he realizes that the mother as an ob- ject of sweet sentiment is beginning to bore his audience, so he brings forth a mother as conventionally perverse as the old mother was con- gled patriotism in relation to war might make an audience uncomfort- ARTICLE It “Business Is Business” Say Mr. and Mrs. Thomas to Explain Girls’ Firing ‘ the exposed conditions and speaking of a “highly competitive business.” in the midst of a capitalist system at a time, when Haydn, Schuber ers School, 35 E. 12th St. Thursday 3, erxism, 15 Friday Nov, 3, from 8.20 to 10 ican Strikes, 18 Mon- numbe dor Achron will give his pis Of O’Brien there isn’t much to say. Just another old Tammany hack— | able, so he writes a pathetic or hu-| mug ik ih ks Noe one of those dumb, respectable, good Catholic Puritans, blessed by his god | morous war play proving that sol- Thomas's tea room is boiling over.| Mr. Van Clute was himself a so-| She herself has not yet succeeded seen ad Room, with everything but brains and a conscience, who for a century have been jdiers are only human after all, He| ne steam raised by the firing of | cialist, and his letter spoke to Mr.| in breaking even.” 4 Gee eae 500 20. Srotetten Ce the front for Tammany. How does this organization live? Where does its | understands that the best way to|/youise and ‘Frances Dunlap, two| Thomas as one friend to another.) Mr. Thomas has val: come to is ; tat Fe tose Arecte Ot ard at the Pen and tremendous graft come from? Everybody in New York knows the answer— a te agent is by a daring | vaitresses who served tea at 71 Ir-| “I know I have told you |the defense of his v Not the | "°"q “Until now Ihave not broken | Hammer, 1 W. aist Bt. at, £20 Dim. the Tammany revenue comés ‘from houses of prostitution, from pusheart | Novelty; daring Because some other | ving Pl, has caused many of the| enough,” reads the conclusion of | champion of the two girls throw®| even in the tea 1 Teving re- | Aim. 258. Ones Yorum follows lee peddlers, from the salaries of every little city employee, be he street- pacares though 4b Nivea sigs honest men and women with social-| the letter. “I know I don't have out of employment without even a! ceived neither rent nor pay. My | cently expelled by the 86- cleaner or fireman, from the industrial bosses in the form of strike insur- | titude quite acceptable to the theatre- ist leanings to boil over with ques-| to urge you to look into this and | day's notice, in daughter F: 25 worked for even or food ne oe iene ance, from city contractors, ete. Every worker is taxed by Tammany on | goer in his home, it has not yet tions, | do something about it. After all j wit no t Bia less than any of t itresses and m ai 165 E. Broad each moving picture he sees, each pair of shoes he buys and glass of beer | found expression on the stage. In It resulted in one of them, afriend| one does not have to plead with | champion of the ww nor tt for t the same hours. ‘ of Louise and Frances Dunlap, Wil-| you. All that is necessary is that “generous” lady who wes so kind as| « change the| for ‘t he drinks. The workers know !t; the workers in the main, detest this organ- short, such a showman will sell the ton Van Clute, writing a long letter you see a miserable situation and | to keep the e job. meant to| the Reco ization of cheap, pious racketeers. Tammany could not exist a minute were | bourgeoisie anything including dy- to Mr. Norman Thomas explaining) I am sure that you will do your | Me nO vit Pusion, f° Mr. Thoma: e, turned the | run Pp arity, but I ve LL.D, meets a it not for its political machine, perfect and fool-proof, after a century |namite, and the bourgeoisie, as it ” pies Be atts: » Hastie debe ah apt ys. | . STEV : decays, prefers to buy dynamite if it what had happened in the tea room.! best to alleviate it. letter over'to his wife to answer. I| had hoped I aevouinely 8 pm. at a0 eid Wnie quote her letter in full: helpful to un of fat spoils. ‘ j is ranteed to smell and act lik ” = ae : > 4. | lect ¢ by H, T, Taians So there is nothing ew about O’Brien—he is the same old Tammany | 10 oy, np ©/“Ags Well As Can Be Done”’—Norman Thomas: ‘My cear Mr. van Civte: to us or work, Evie | Weir, lyn. Adin. free. dummy and office-boy of John F. Curry, the boss, familiar as a dose of IDHIg dita: Obtard: Off tHB eatizn Mr. Thomas has given me your | dent : ailed in this and I} ‘rid poison ivy; ; in “Of Thee I Sing.” For all its Ietter to him about the Dunlaps and | Will now he taxe only those) Friday Charles Solomon the Sé¢ialist candidate is as typical. The Abe Cahan | jipes at the existing order’ it never LEAGUE FOR INDUSTRIAL DEMOCRACY ie ten aod aed) > it does| experienced.| party, Dancing and Refreshments st —Rand School machine—is also a vested interest in its own sphere. So- | once betrays a point of view dif- yess! bring up honest que: and b¢ their ann ne ps a itth Ave., 4 cialism was once an honest. movement which thousands of New York | ferent from the average American— Tienes: emt e eeen bewe Joe Coy cause I REALLY LIKE THE GI®! ) Satis- | MeyMPOSIUM on City 1 @ITANE-| tional Students Taeens, FOF workers gave their blood and sacrifice to build. Today it is the property of a little group of cynical job-holders. Solomon's record, from a working-class viewpoint, is a shameful one. He was the attorney for the bosses in the strike of the food workers a few a i Migs Sh ls madness of our political life has its October 5, 1985 which you years ago, and-got out the anti-labor injunction which resulted in -the tragic side or that its folly might ower have not been ac tely informed. and Louise, murder of a picket, the brave Greek worker, Steve Katovis. 2 ° * * that means the good Democrat or complains There is Republican—when he about politics and graft. no hint at any moment that the become sense if our whole economic structure were altered. The clever- Tor we one 506 Kast loth Street, Bow York City. Telaghones Algonavie 4:6965 OBIECT, Eaeeoton tr @ new socil order bed on oon oot fr prot were being fired) to answer them. an} | tions are of details of gosh belongs to the section of the Socialist bureaucracy which works | ness that marks “Of Thee I Sing” and would p with Tammany. Hall. He has been proven to have received Tammany | is greater in degree but not dif- Deng Mv. Yan Clute: | happy at that kind of work. sreft in the form-of receiverships, and other favors, His platform cannot | ferent in kind from the usual Broad- I bave turned your letter-over to Mrs. Thoas who appreciates | ere not _happy, way hocus-pocus, here-today-gone- Thomas, we agree. Does it Pari be distinguished from La Guardia’s or McKee’s. to be the liberal candidate in this campaign. So we are being told by such crusaders as Heywood Broun, Oswald Garrison Villard and Benito Mus- solini. The Italian dictator has chosen to decorate his New Yorker ad- mirer, La Guardia. Maybe this doesn’t mean a thing to our New York liberals, but it means a-lobto the Italian Fascists of New York who are voting en bloc for La Guardia. La Guardia started withca great liberal hurraw, with a great burst intention than to provoke a mo- mentary guffaw. The proof of this is the kind of audience it attracts, the kind of praise it wins, and the Pulitzer Prize. But another and more con- clusive proof may be found in “Let ‘Em Eat Cake,” now playing at the ditions in my om office. It seeus in the midst of « capitalist systen in changing that system. can be done in « highly competitive business which is as yet unorganised Yet succeeded in hreaking even. She is, I know, interested just as I an to me that she is doing as well as et time when she hersélf bas not 7 Many of the Socialists.in- the other wing favor La Guardia this year, won ee ge audi- Soe Sore reat Oe sey tose Rete: OF loupe yo Detacstins Shak more than a year to learn to wait} only o} aes ” teri ay nf ences, is the kind of cleverness - on tables?) oe io A and their attacks are mostly centered on McKee. La Guardia is supposed that leads nowhere and has no other she is responsible for her business just as I am responsible for can- ‘Gides a coclallat-acckety work pee ‘ ers should be fitted to their jobs | + will have to re- | ; quire 2 competence of service.” | and every business (Is that. why the girls Mrs, Thomas, so that they could fit} into socie' ter socialism arrived? | Where are th going to eat now?) | { “This competence the Dunlaps | ere fired,| — ip of the Communi. (THE END.) on Satu USEMENTS_ AM of free demagogy. But réalém is setting in and Ogden Mills has just | j, rial Thea’ | Bi Sie ase ee i endo:sed Mr. La Guardia, 48@ Mr. La Guardia has accepted the endorse- lati hy Caken carrion fix Sincerely yours, | felled to ee aren fmcorige| DA ment. What have the Heywood Broun-Villard crusaders to say to this? | satire of American politics from the Baie 3) Bee eal ee cat a tias oes | ae ener Manel ey alt Ogden Mills, if some of you.don’t remember, was Herbert Hoover's right | crisis of one presidential adminis- nN ws | rae aaah he ge | —Morning Freiheit. THE ATRE hand man in financial matters—a Bourbon of the bourbons, one of the old torics and strike-breaking aristocracy, tration to the “revolution” of the next. “Let "Em Eat Cake” is a mu- sical comedy about revolution! And | | Many of the customers have | stopped coming to 71 Irving Place | Tearoom, because of the firing of MTH STREET AND UNION SQUARE Cont. From 9 A.M. “THREE THIEVES” Of Joe McKee there is little to be said. He is a clumsy thief, put up : | fl hss x ie in this amazing finale of revolution| He recited the conditions which; His illusions about Norman m Coming FOR 4 DAYS ONLY by Tcmmany to divert some of the “liberal” votes from La Guardia. McKee | ¥. ‘set the al Tneasure of the | the two girls found. He told of the| Thomas were indeed great, But it| the Misses Dunlap, pa a eeren | Tomorrow 9 | MIDNITE sHOW did not take him long to become dis- | MAnager was quite satistie P|] Limitea RIOTS’ | ever" sarenpay is @ rabid Catholic of the type that would like to destroy the public schools in favor of the parochial school. He was for many years a cog in the whole enterprise. The reviewers were disappointed long hours under which the girls were forced to work, of the inhuman illusioned, as did Louise and Frances who worked for Mrs. two girls. | “I want to assure you: | Engacement ‘THE PAT Tammany machine, and undoubtedly, still is their undercover provocateur. |in “Let 'Em Eat Cake.” They found | Wage, $2 per week, of the hard work, | Dunlap, a chelate ta ie oe gee ——— | 5 2 | Whatever he is, this campaign has revealed the depths of his Jesuit con- | its second act soggy and tiring. They |f the terrible bossing of the man-| Thomas, “socialist,” so says her hus- | : A ae Me ook ste pic RKO Jefferson 1 s- # {Now || JACOB BEN-AMI in sciousness. are right, but they do not analyze| ger, of the demands for servile} band. eres has ae and | GARY COOPER and FAY WRAY in “ Ja i Jew” | allezi Oe Mea. Pope to show the schedule of hours and ot i e andering om . . the cause for this sudden drop into | allegiance, ’s. Thomas’ own} A copy of the Thomas letter ts| wages.” i“One Sunday Afternoon RKO CAMEO "ES: | 2507222 S&B w'y | “2Coon.toF ri. Bob Minor OBERT MINOR was born and raised in Texas. For ten years he was the most powerful and famous cartoonist in America—the star of the painter, He ceme into raditalism through his youthful horror at the the doldrums. The cast is the same as before; the expertness of the authors has not diminished and the appetite for their brand of fun has words, “If you don’t like it you can get out.” He was quite surprised at Mr. | ‘Thomas’ answer. He had appealed printed herewith. His letter clear defense of long hours and mis- erable pay, forced on the working girls employed by his wife. is al that justify the fact that the) \$ ere fired without notice, and | without pay? Does that justify that | while the blue buzzard hung in your with D “BRIEF MOMENT” E RAYD adied feature: CAROLE LOMBARD and GE’ RADIO CITY MUSIC HALL—||)—7Ae SHOW PLACE of the NATION EUGENE O'NEL AH, WILDERNESS! Pulitzer organization. He was self-taught, a former carpenter and sign ae Teagan page Teena on ae to Thomas, as a socialist leader and| “It seems ¢o me,” says Mr. | Window, and while the girls were/|| Direction “Roxy” Opens 11:20 A.M. unease, ct, Ley fat Cake” in|, humanitarian, and he was an-| Thomas, “that she is doing as well | 0'king for you, that George in the || CONSTANCE BENNETT | with GEORGE M. CONAN persecution of colored mien in his native state. Bob was earning some $200 a week on a St. Louis newspaper, but threw it up to fight against the impé¥alists who plunged America into the World War. i‘ Bob was arrested for his energetic anti-war activities in the battle zone in France and held f ourt martial. He has been in many such perils. He has fought for tt,rights of the Negro and the rights of the working class for the past tWénty years. Yes, Bob Minor has had a crowded and varied history, one of un- its second part, is that the authors haven't the slightest knowledge or feeling about the thigg they are kidding. In order to make an effective wise- crack you and your audience must know, something about the subject of the crack. This audience and these authors are familiar with the presidential campaigns (though we may doubt whether they really know swered by Thomas defending low as can be done in a highly com- | TUNING IN ‘ked from 12 noon to 9:30/ worked from 7 am. to 4 p.n.| day and received $11 a week? “2, At the opening of the tea | room I consulted union represen- tatives and met their scale of wages and hours, offering to have the place unionized and to pay the dues | myself for the girls. IT am now sugesting to union people a “ris AFTER TONIGHT” GUILD ey'si2o,” matcthar, sat Roxy” stage show & Sun.) in and a great 36¢ to 1 p.m.—5 MOLIERE’S COMEDY WITH MUSIC || The School for Husbands with Osgood PERKIN Thea June WALKER y & 40 St..8iv. at. Thur.,Sat.2:40 ‘ | EMPIRE ‘EISENSTEIN IN MEXICO’ || soe coox in Sensational revelations from the formerly FOLD YOUR HORSES suppressed material of “Qui Viva Mexico” ‘A Musical Runaway in 24 Scenes compromising struggle for the working man. He has led many demon- | anything about them!), they are = ALSO) BRICENG TRIN”: strations of the New York unemployed, and was clubbed by Jimmy Walker's fanltae with the existence of Werte TONIGHT’S PROGRAMS WJZ—760 Ke sd eee ee aaa fe EISENSTEIN 8 sll Wanter’ Garden Hiway & 50th &t. police and given jail terms, vice-presidents, they are familiar WEAF—660 Ke wine 8. se echenehonaes TE ere, Muk Thanieg, Prances|| ocean, OUT Mexico™ |) Warcesy cna einiay 308, Heywood Broun, failing any other political arguments, has lately | with gabble and gossip about war| 4.99 p mountaineers Music U1S—The Three Musketeers—Sketch does not know this. She knows that mone OF can wees || ALIB —— : EN MINUTE ALIBI charged Robert Minor with being “a stuffed shirt.” This has been enough to convince Broun that La Guardia was preferable. One does not need to answer such charges; this is the logic by which high school flappers debts. So thelr jokes about them in “Of Thee I Sing,” based on that disregard of politics common to most Americans and so emblematic 7:15—Billy Bachelor—Sketch 7:30—Lum and Abner :45—The Goldbergs—Sketeh 8:00-—-Vallee Orch; Soloists 9: sain Henry Show Boat; Charles 7:30—-Michael Bartlett, Tenor; Alfred Lust- garten, Violin 8:00—Captain Sketch 8:30—Adventures in Health—Dr. Diamond’s Adventures — Herman there was no union, and no union wage. She knows that you told her | and her sister that “You don’t have to join a union, I'm doing right by! A New Melodrama “Is herewith recommended | tm the highest terms.”—Sun, ETHEL BARRYMORE THEA., W. 47th St. On Saturday the Daily Worker has | 8 pages. Increase your bundle order pick their favorite movie heroés, een Sent é a Yet a “stuffed shirt” doesn’t lead unemployed parades on city hall; Se An Gertioen oeenriien pice sone etic enny. fom, THRO Sat 4o—Revelars Quartet Peg ae siciigen ta gs Mouth. | for Saturday! | Bees. 8.40, Mats, Wed, Sat, £40, OHI, 4-2830 4 “Let 7 4 i .| 9:00—Death Valley Days—Sk ‘3. My - ENS a stuffed shirt doesn’t go to Welfare Island jail for the cause of the hungry | successful jokes. But in “Let ’Em seman Orch,; Deems Taylor, Nar o_ieing Bee aad etch ET ie G8 prem ed ar pire Al rare ma ‘ aeares and homeless; a stuffed shirt doesn’t give up a brilliant career as a bour- geois artist and devote his life to the working class and the Negro; a .stuffed shirt doesn’t run foreMayor on thé Communist ticket. Vote for ‘Bob Minor! ene ‘The clear and burning* honesty of Robert Minor is a precious thing Eat Cake” the cracks are about dic- tatorship, international politics, rev- olution, and for these things the au- thors and their audience have not even a common background of fa- a Philo, -Soprano off Orch. 0—L.icdriguera Orch. 00—Relph Kirbery, Songs 12:05 A, M,—Calloway Orch. 12:30—Dance Orch. Canadian Exchange Program 0-—Archer Gibson, Organ; Mixed Chorus 11;00—Skating in the Park—Description of Scene in Central Park our attitude and there is no dis- crimination as to color, The hours, | wages and conditions are iden- tical. My waitresses have told me they like Miss McBride and there | Organizations: Elect Your Delegates Today! DAILY WORKER 2ssee! Workingclass Delegated ; jobody can claim for atiy of the political hacks and faded courtesans miliar jokee—so the latter part of WOR i . 12:80 A.M.—Ds Oreh, is harmony between her and my pesca ata tie who oppose him. vote for Bob ea ean bars ” a a ot the t of the show] 7:09 P, M.—spo: cue a “ : i steals taecs ea beth a JING PLAZA MA HALL, E. 15th St.sIrvi PI J e . <The failure o! e rest of e shot 1:00 P.M. Ford Frick | elcome colo’ sts.” B\ £ . . . A vote for Minor is worth a hundred votes thrown away on the mean- | will sober the produced and authors ie were-oebria Meatter . WABC—2860 Ke Some more pectin noble con-| IRV G A er Tying ingless dummies of capitalist politics. A Communist vote is a warning to the capitalists that the masses are losing their patience; that the enough to make them discontinue their “revolutionary” flights—and 7:30—Terry and Ted—Sketch 1;43—Talk—Percy Waxman 8:00—De Marco Sisters; Frank Sherry, 7:00 P.M.—Myrt ahd Marge 1:18—Just Plain Bill—Sketch | descensions, Mrs. Thomas. You ut-| terly disregard the fact that Miss) ——_—__—- PROGRAM—— 1, Clarence Hathaway, speaker . Carl Brodsky, chairman starving want bread. A Communist yote is a threat; a fist shaken in the | for this we should give thanks. If, ‘Tenor 7:30—Jeannie Lang and Paul Smail, Songs; | McBride forces the Negro workers in| K " faces of the heartless rich'by a gaunt proletarian mother at whose skirts | however, they should desire to learn | S15 Little Old New York—Harrison Grey| _ Denne Ore. os your tea room to address her as “Yes |{ 2 Little Guild ‘String Quartet 6, John Reed cine ble Seigel ‘ privately the answer to their ques- 8:30—Campaign Issues—Nathan Straus Jr.,| 8:00—Elmer Everett Yess—Sketch ma'am or No ma'am,” a_ typical || 3. Workers’ Dance League 7. Negro Songs and Recitations tug hungry children, and in ‘whose dry breasts there is no milk, only revo- lutionary iron and gall. Vote for Bob Minor! delping the Daily Worker through Michael Gold. / $5.00 Anonymous, Traverse City . 1.00 E. Witemann 05 M. Brill at the Acme. Beginning Friday “The Patriots” will return to the theatre for a limited engagement o Aleichem’s “Laughter “Thru Tears," Amkino’s Yiddish Talkie Coming To Acme “Laughter Through Tears,” by Sho- pm Aleichem, oes a ind playwright, @ talkie, wi tave its first American showing at he Acme Theatre on November 11, The picture, which was produced in he U.SSR., 1s an Amkino film, re- sased here by Worldkino. This is he second Yiddish talkie to come rom the Soviet Union, The first, The Return of Nathan Becker,” was irst shown here a few months back, nd proved very popular. The’ film + based on Sholom Aleichem's riginal story, “Motel Payse Dem shazen’s.” . ‘This is the final day of “Three thieves.” the Soviet film now playing four days. “Broadway Through A Keyhole written by Walter Winchell, is tr new film at the Rivoli Theatre. Cor stance Cummings plays the leadir role, Other players include Pa’ Kelly, Russ Columbo, Blossom See and George Ratoff. ‘The Cameo Theatre is holding “I. Wandering Jew,” a Yiddish talk’ over for a second week. Jacob Be’ Ami, noted Yiddish and English ¢ tor, plays the leading role. “I Loved A Woman,” with Edw: G. Robinson and Kay Francis, is t current film feature at the Pal Theatre, The vaudeville bill is he ed by. Res'ta and Ramon, Ea Bianco @hd his orchestra, aad Jo Sargcae tion about the proletariat, we invite them to come down to us and be informed. Or, if they prefer, we might send up a carload of one- syllable literature and distribute it to their audiences so that they might yet something substantial out of the $4.40 they spend to see the show. JIM MARTIN Recovery Candidate, President Board of Aldermen 8:45—Lone Star Rengers 9:00—Jaek Arthur, Songs; Arden, Plano 9:15—To Be Announced 10:30—Reeovery Party Rally at Academy of Music 30—-Chitds Orch. 12:00—Robins Oreh, Ohman and " Brooklyn :15-—Singin’ Sam '30—Hall Johnson Singer; Hopkins Oreb. 9:00—Pusion Campaign Rally, at Madison Square Garden 10:30—Phil Regan, Songs 10:45—Concert Oroh.; Gladys Rice, Soprano sNews; Jones Orch. 00-—Nelson Orch, AM.—-Lucas Orch. :00—Light Orch, Southern slave-driving attitude. You) forget that your manager helped you} to fire the girls when they did not) obey her every command. You for-) get that your manager tried to shame | the girls in public for speaking to Negroes on equal terms. Your atti- | tude of tolerance to the Negro is 4 Lithuanian Aida Sextette 8. Theatre of Action NOVEMBER 12, 7:30 P. M. CENTS SUNDAY EVENING, ADMISSION 75 Workingclass Organizations: Elect Your Delegates Today! Y LADIES ANP GENTLEMEN IT HAVE PRESENTED THE STATES CASE AGAINST TAMES MARTIN - Twrt PRoo- THat CASE AWD ASK YOU TO MEET OUT THE PUMISU MENT! Getting Hotter ao onan cern cotton tama smmnameatigd!

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