The Daily Worker Newspaper, December 27, 1933, Page 5

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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WED? SDAY, DECEMBER: 27, 1933 By Michael Gold The Tragedy of a Chow /ERE’S an anecdote told me by # friend who is a house painter: I. haven’t.bad much work these past two years, as you know. building trades are flat. No new house are going up in New York, and the landlords do few repairs on the old ones. . When there's @ job occasionally, the racketeers at our A. F. of L. focals hand it on to their own lobbygows for a split. Just the-same, I manage to pick up a few crumbs. The An ‘old buddy of *, mine lives im Westchester and now and then does contracting on small } «"40bs. When he needs a helper, he gives me the break. Three weeks ago he landed something good; a job to repaint a 14-room “country. home. belonging to some Wall Street big shot. One of those fake English manors, with oak quarterings, antique furniture and iron work, Just the usual-mail order palace out of Sears Roebuck, The lady of the Hdtise has been hanging around us a lot, “directing “ws.” Such women have a, lot of idle time. They get sick of movies, motor- “ing, beauty parlors, their husbands, and even boozing. House painters at work seem to give them a new thrill. to watch us and chatter at us all day. This one is the ustial millionaire’s bride; flabby and calcomined, with the haughty air of a cheap Hollywood bum trying to put on the ritz. A forty-year old wreck of. a flapper with a selfish face. She claims to be an invalid on. something, but that's just an alibi for laziness, I guess. She looks beefy enough to me. ‘They like Lots of Trouble in Paradise Y bd lady heres us stiff, télling us her troubles. They all do. Besides her famous’ Opérations, she has a dog to fill her life. It’s one of those brownish-red chows, a sulky mutt with a mean hard eye like a cop's. Nobody is their frlend—they never trouble to bark, they just bite. But the Lady is:proud of this lousy dog. It has a pedigree, and has won a prize at a show: The: way she talks about it, you'd think she’s its mother. Maybe she is: I can’t: tell. Anyway, ail this past week she’s been upset over the mutt. to the reason.and tell me if it don’t make you want to puke. It seems*that though the dog is a female, the lady has never wanted ip to Have pups. It would: make a mess, she says, besides, the mutt might Jose its girlish figure. "So whenever she (the mutt) gets in heat she is bandaged up and locked in a room away from the bad boys. This system has gone on for three years. A few months ago, however, Something went wrong... It.seems Friend Husband had taken the mutt out. for a walk and it broke its leash and ran away. The father and mother went wild, ‘They telephoned the police, advertised, offered rewards. It-must have “been very tough. I and my buddy almost bust out crying, hearing her (the Lady) tell it. Then, thank christ, they found the mutt. It had wandered across the railroad tracks into one of those slums so often hidden behind millionaire’s suburbs. ‘The. chow had strayed to the home of a jobless carpenter living on county relief. It seems his Kids had a dog too, one of those floppy yellow hounds kidsure crazy about. “Well,” Says:the Lady, “we were alarmed at once. We were, of course, thankful to have-our dear Li Hung Chow restored to us, and we gave the man a reward, but what'sf his own dog? “Was it a male? We asked him. Yes, it was a male, he said. Had it by any unlucky chance had ‘un affaire’ with our darling Li? The man didn’t Know, being one of, those unshaved persons not interested in the finer things of life.” Listen . The Fate Worse Than Death ‘© LI was taken home to her lamp chops and cream and silk blankets. “Weeks passed, and the ‘unhappy parents worried and worried. The Suspense was awful. Poor father couldn’t keep his mind on his burglar * . Oi business and was always phoning home from Wall Street for news. Mammy went into her 2ist- nervous breakdown. » ‘Then, last week, the horrible truth came out. Yes, Li had met the ‘fate worse than death. ‘She had lost her honor. She had slipped on the banana peel of Sex at Jastgone the way of all flesh and sinned, sinhed. In other words, the mutt Was pregnant. I Started to'kid the Lady while she was mournfully telling us this, but my buddy winked and. warned me not to. I got his point—this was too serious.. The Lady might get sore and fire us. Times being so hard, we slapped on paint and patiently listened all that week, trying not to snicker, Tt sure was-a meledrammer. How that Lady carried on. Thinks of it, a pedigree chow having an affair with a common yellow mutt! Some- thing drastic had to be.done. She asked our advice many times a day, and we tried “to ‘act sythbathetic and not laugh. Finally a dog doctor was called in, He had a Vandyck and a black _ satchel, and looked like Bill Shakespeare. The Lady had him in the libary for almost an hour. Bill was trying to persuade her about some- thing, talking slow and pompous in a bass voice. And she was acting up, squeaking in her hysterical voice. ‘They came out, at last. She’d been crying. Moping her eyes, the Lady told us the fatal news. It would be awful, she couldn’t bear to think of « her darling chow on a bed’ of pain, but it was the lesser of two evils. We went on slapping paint and trying hard not to snicker. All that. week was full of excitement, The dog was taken one day to the hospital; It came back in a private dog-ambulance, attended by a good-looking nurse in white,.who stayed at the house for several days. Life was arranged for that dog—telephones muffled, quiet everywhere. The Lady popped in and out of the sickroom, taking the mutt’s tem- perature or feeding it- French chocolates. Even Oaddy stayed home one morning with*baby;"when he should have been In Wall Street. You've got to remember it’s a mighty serfous business even for an aristocratic smutt—this having an abortion. 5-Month Course in Photography leadership of its own instructor. As far as limitations of space and time will permit, the students will carry on the work themselves. The work will be conducted on a_ practical rather than a theoretical basis, and to Begin Jan, _NEW “YORK = The | The Filtti ahd Photo has announced a five-month ee i elementary still photog- fe pein f _Friday ‘evening, Jan. aa oh which will cover the follow- toples: ~ Study of the camera etka light and sensitive ma- taking terial, oA pictures, develop- ment, print and enlarging, etc. .Each, ev there will be a dis- ‘ussion, lecture..and demonstration : entire (lass, atter which the will be linked up with the actual taking of pictures by the students. It is planned to have famous pho- tographers at the school from time to time to give the class special talks on different aspects of photography. Students need not have equipment or previous experience, although it is expected that they will secure a cam- era and take tigre after the work of the course has begun. Classes will be held Friday evenings 8:15, at the Film and Photo e's headquarters at 116 ve., near 28th St. Registration is now open on the following evenings: Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday from 8 to 10. ,Young Pioneer Looks Forward to Jan. 6th Issue of the “Daily” NEW YORK. Not only adult workers but also workers’ children are looking forward to the 24-page, tenth anniversary edition of the Daily Worker, which will be issued on Jan. 6th. The following letter is from a young Pioneer living in Chicago: Dear Comrade Wditor: — We would like to renew our sub for the Daily Worker, but dad isn’t working just now. He is a hat operator and may go back to work the middle of January, Because we have no money now and would like to renew our sub, I am asking a favor of the Daily Worker to continue our sub. I am a young Pioneer. We find we need the Daily Worker in the house every day. We give the ‘Daily’ to the Negro janitor, and he and his kids read it. I read the Daily Worker is getting a new press, and so in honor I am sort of drawing a little cartoon that I hope you print. It’s about war. ‘The boss holds it in surprise for the worker, but the worker with R, We WAVE fcr Seance berries Oy PrerisR MINTO west the Daily Worker is go.ng to beat him. I hope you like it, and print it. I hope you send me the Jan. 6th issue. I like the Daily Worker yery.much. I liked the serial story. ‘S. S. Utah.’ ‘Always Ready,” Milton Kostin. New York. Daily Worker: Dear Editor:—Enclosed you will find $1 to help towards the $40,000 Daily Worker Fund. This is my sec- ond donation, for in my first I prom~- ised I would send more. Sincerely, AN ARCHITECT. Greet the “Daily” on Its Tenth Anniversary January 6th! E was a seared look in his grey eyes as he looked into the car win- dow to answer our questions. The look of eyes that have been scorched by many deeply painful sights. I have seen such a look in the eyes of war veterans who had to calous them- selves outwardly against uncounted shocks, “T’m going home,” he said. “Home ta Jonesboro.” He named a little town that hugs the foothills of the Caro- lina Blue Ridges. His face showed dismay when we said we were turning off at the next crossroads, already within sight. “I sure do wish you folks were going my. way,” he said. He half hesitated as he. took his hands from the car door, “How far have you come today?” “Been walking all morning from Statesville. Got off the freight there early,” Statesville was twenty miles away. “How far is it to Jonesboro?” “About nine mile. I sure do wish you folks were going that-away.” It was getting late. It would take him the rest of the afternoon—“eve- ning,” as they say in the South—to get home, unless he was lucky enough to get a hitch on this back-country road. It really was not so much out of our way to give him a life for some of the nine miles. “Well, now, that’s mighty kind of you,” said the boy when we made room among the camp gear for him. * 6 8 LOOKED to be about 23, with curly blonde hair that was almost kinky, face was tanned and smooth. Maybe he was younger than he looked. A friendly face that rip- pled into a smile as he settled back on the seat and laid his overall roll beside him. He wore gray pants and a@ roughneck sweater. As we rode, he told us bits of his story. He had been a finisher-hand in a southern blanket mill up to ten months ago. He was one of 600 work- ers, working 12 hours a day, 60 a week, until the lay-offs began. “You're migra Bees can get along!” the bossman told him. That “get along” had a double of this. agg bey had thought himself ‘I was aiming to get married at master” he told us softly. and strong, wee Steel workers club building at t West Siberia, U. 8. S. R. Where Soviet Workers Rest and Staats he Kutnetsk Steel Plant at Stalinsk, From Mosco PART Iv. There are 338 udarniks among the 619 workers at the Kuznetsk Coal Preparing Plant and the Coke Ovens in Stalinsk. More figures for those bourgeois editors who shed crocodile tears because there is no incentive to work in the Soviet Union. We meet with these udarniks in @ large room that is covered with charts and diagrams, Here is the janism of a rifle. cross-section of an aeroplane motor, There the heart, liver and lungs of a tractor. Next to it the mech- The udarnik is not only a student of technique me he. is also prepared to defend In an informal way they tell us] of their life here. Comrade Boshorin says: “Don’t have any illusions about us. We have great diffi- culties as well as achievements. There is so much that we have in- herited from the old way of living that we haven't got ma of yet. “There's still the feeling among us that we are working for private owners, not for Socialism. All of us do not guard the machines as our common property.” Other udarniks have good reason to complain. Food products are not always up to standard. At times they are not plentiful enough. Lots of room here for improvement. “After all,” they say, and quite cor- rectly, “the best and plenty of it w to Siberia Udarniks in Steel By WALT CARMON is none too good for in heavy industry Then there is the an ar fast, changés, almost re hasn’t even béet ‘time y the mud huts standing ont of them from where the ave moved. But the sted) giant named after Stalin grows faster. Every day new workers are drawn off the steppes of” Siberia, sometimes out of nomad tribe. Homes must be pro-. vided for all of them. All, these difficulties have not been.,solved- yet. The way to Socialism is not lined with beds of roses. Nor is it.made up of manufac- tured heroes, The: man people. Take Yurov. Yurov Is Mastering Technique Yurov came here a year ago from the little town of Slavgorod, near Omsk, He managed to éke out an existence between farming and repaiting the shox of neighbors. There’s a twinkle in hisseye when he tells this. He can appreciate the humor of it now. He joined the Red Army in 1930. released after three months’: serv- ice. He returned to his . village, where he was a handy -man to teach a class in manual training at the village school. Then he became forest warden of his village: He wanted to farm, but his horse went Jame. About this time workers in his town; so he took to the road. “Started with a little money but it gave out long ago. At first I rode buses, then hitch-hiked and rode the freights, I worked when I could. Went to Chicago and then west. Did a little cafe work in Los Angeles. Work- ed last baking for a relief station in Houston, Texas. “The bums likéd me. When they’d come in and ask for food, I gave ’em enough for two meals,” Did he never think of himself as a.“bum’—nor of the other “bums” as jobless workers like himself? “Missed some meals myself, not many.” “Guess some weren't always what you wanted?” TWO OUT OF A MILLION By ESTHER LOWELL Nothing to do in the little mill]I made up my mind when T left, I never would ask them for money. But once or twice I came mighty near tt: “There sure were a lot of folks gn the roads. Men and women, too, and line with the cops and eativny dicks. “I was always ‘trying to get“tiome’,” he explained. “They'd arrest ‘others, He had heard that the blatiket mill now under N.R.A. Hoped he'd get “You bet not,” he laughted wryly. “But I never wrote home for money. back his job. No organizatjon mes- sage had ever reached him.; , TUNING IN al jl cl | TONIGHT’S PROGRAMS WEAF—660 Ke. 7:00 P. M.—Shirley Howard, Songs; ‘Trio 7:15—Billy Bachelor—Sketch 7:30—Lum and Abner —The Goldbergs—Sketch ‘00—Bert Lahr, Comedian; Olsen Orch, 0—Wayne King Orch. 9:00—Troubadours Oreh.; Actress 9:30--Phil Duey, Baritone; Reisman Orch. 10:00—Hillbilly “Music 10:30—National Forum 11:00—Elkins Orch, 11:15—Jesters Trio 11:30—Bestor Orch. 12:00—Harris Orch. 12:80 A, M.—Sosnick Orch, WOR—710 Ke 7:00 P. M.—Sports—Ford Frick 7:15—News—Gabriel Heatter (0—Terry and Ted—Sketch 45—Talk—Harry Hershfield ‘00-—Detectives Black and Blue—Mystery Drama 5—Billy Jesters, Kay Francis, Jones and Ernie Hare, Songs 0—Handel’s Oratorio—The Messtah :20—Pauline Albert, Piano hy Miller, Garfield Switt, Songs; ‘Orch, Shackley 10:00—De Marco Girls; Frank Sherry, Tenor Events—Harlan Eugene Read 11:00—Weather ‘Report 11:02—Moonbeams EL gaan eas : A oma from Chicago Hi i HI i, WJZ—760 Ke~ 7:00 P. M.—Amos ‘n’ Andy 7:15—John Herrick, Songs 7:30-—Potash and Perlmutter 7:45—Hollywood—tIrene Rich 8:00-—Silent Bombshell—Sketeh | 8:30—Dangerous Paradise—Sketch 8:45-—Red Davis—Sketch SOLS. 9:00—Warden Lewis E. Lawes 20,000 Years in Sing Sing—Sketch; Sing sing Prison Band 9:30—Concert Orch, 10;00-—-Bgon Petri, Piano; Symphony Orch. 11:00—Anthony Frome, Tenor 11:30—Madriguera Orch. 12:00—Molina Orch. 12:30 A. M.—Scott Oren. Fe ; WABC—860 Ke. = 7:00 P. M.—Myrt and Marge ‘7:15—Just Plain Bill—Sketch 7:30-—Travelers Ensemble 1:45—News—Boake Carter 8:00—Green Orch.; Men About. Zayir Trio; Vivien Ruth, Songs 8:15—News—Edwin ©. Hill 8:30—Albert Spaiding, Violin; Gdutna Thi- bault, Baritone; Voorhees Orch. 9:00—Philadelphia Orch, 9:15—Stoopnagie and Budd, “@éméedians; Vera Van, Contralto; Renard; Orch. Burns and. Allen, 9:30—Lombardo Orch.; Comedy 10:00—Waring Orth. 10.30—News Reports 10:45—Warnow — Orch.; Songs 1stb—Modern Male Chorus 11:30—Nelson Orch. 12:00—Little Orch. 12:30 A, M.—Hall Orch. 1:00—Redman Orch. Gertrude.» .Nieseri, a yurt of some, are real.hur « He was» but somehow, they always lét’me go.”| was running three eight-hour, shifts; village were being recruited for the | New Kuznetsk Steel Plant. He | jumped at the chance. He doesn’t know why He just wanted to see. And he a hard job at i ning, here the heat coke ovens. He nall doors over the | Charging L i feed acai to the later he alves, h Yurov tech- furnaces at Kuznetsk steel now. A third will is is in print hich is being built re being trained. Yt n, When he com- will be in in Blast Fur- four an 2 month too much?” we urs a day over the nd then four hours at night in hool is no cinch. “Well,” says Yurov, “my work | leaves me 16 hours a di I can | easily spare four of them.’ Does he like it here bette | He answer |} without jon. In the village his hour were } mever certain. No. his meals. He | fixed windo boots. repaired ee full meals a day. And he looks as if he could enjoy them. A healthy color to red cheeks, in a ising above two broad should What's Fascism? Only one thing bothers him. He reads the f alright. But this questi what is it? He kn { What it is. He k friend of his.” But ing under worker 4, and all this seus Of course, he 1c ber. “Wait till I kno™ more shoul it,” he says. He's maswsring years of technique crowded into only a few months. When hé has that “by the tail,” then hell study ‘his question of politics which is both- ering him a lot. Yorov has a wife and a three- Id boy. He says there’s no Yurov, udarnik at the Coke Ovens of the New Kuznetsk steel plant named after Stalin, is leap- ing over a couple of hundred years of human progress in a few years. Yurov is now marching towards So- cialism. (To Be comnawee? He | in going back to his village. | Stage and Screen | “The Wooden Slipper” And| “Oliver Oliver” To Be Offered Here By Wiman | Two new productions are an- nounced for next week by Dwight Deere Wiman, They are “The Wooden Slippers,” a comedy by amson Raphaelson, with Dorothy Hall, Ross Alexander, Cecilia Loftus and Montague Love, which will open at the Ritz Theatre on |Jan. 1, and “Oliver Oliver,” a comedy by Paul Osborn, which is scheduled for the Playhouse on Thursday, Jan. 4. Alexandra Car- lisle, Ann Andrews, Tom Chalmers | jand Bretaigne head the cast of | “Oliver Oliver.” | Pierre Watkin, Fred’ Forman, | Philip Huston, Hilda Spong ot Constance McKay will play im portant roles in “Whatever sessed Her,” the farce by wick Nevin, which aque Broadway in January. “The Throne Of The Gods” And “Dassan” At The Cameo Of The Gods,” film (dealing with t Jongsong, the highest of the Himalayas in Central | Asia, is the principal screen fea-| |ture at the Cameo Theatre. On the same program, the Cameo is | showing “Dassan,” a visit to the | penguin island of the same name. | Eddie Cantor’s new film, “Ro- | man Scandals,’ story by George S. Kaufman and} Robert Sherwood, is being pre- |sented by United Artists at Rivoli Theatre. _ Others in the cast include | Ruth Etting, Gloria Stewart | David Manners and Verse Teasdale. | dale. | Greta Garbo’s newest produc- | tion. “Queen Christiana,” a Metro- | Goldwyn picture, had its premiere last night at the Astor Theatre. is N. Behrman did the adaptation |and dialogue |are in the suppor | The short subj Gj Auspices F. ’ screened from the | Page Pive United Front Supporters Aid | Party Training School WEW YOREK—The United Fron | Supporters raised pre for the Com munist Party National Trair School at a house p held De 16. The same group has contrib- uted $37 to the su: ng fund ©} the Workers Center, and has ordered 800 copies of the special anniver~ sary edition of the Daily Worker. | WHA CELABRATE THE 10TH DAILY WORKER | ANNIVERSARY ON SATURDAY, DEGEM- BER 30 from 8 P. M. to 2 A. M., at the Bronx Coliseum. SEE AD FOR PROGRAM TS ON REGISTRATION is now going on for the Harlem Workers School, 200 W. 135th &t | Room 2138. | Wednesc | SUSAN WOUDRUFF hor and lect . ecture on “'M Russia,” at 167) Auspices, Prospe< | speak on the Histor |of the Soviet Union at the Labor Temple Auditorium, 14th St. and and Ave. Aus- | pices F.8.U., N. ¥. District and Downtown Br. This is the first of a sertes of, five lectures. Admission 2 SARAH RICE w on “Women and Children in th Union” at Broadway 209 dway, at 8:30 pam J. ARCH will speak on Russia's History” at Labor | Seth Bt. at 8 p.m, Auspices “16 Years of Soviet Temple, 243_E. Yorkville Br. “ ‘GLARTE, 904 W. Sth St. Lecture’ in |Prench, “Peut on organise Is production | sous ein systeme capitaliste’ by Rene Boine {at 8.30 p.m. OPEN FORUM at Tom Mooney Br. LLD., 108 E. 4th St., Room 202, Speaker, Paw Miller on Current Events, Thursday VETERAN! Mobilization Rally of Work |ers Exservicemen’s League, Post 1, B. 15th St. at 8 p.m a 703 In ae STORY of the Scottsboro Tries Brodsky on Prid ol, 7 E. 18th Bt District LL.D. Tickets 30c 1 Workers Book Shop, 50°E. 13 |810 Broadway, Rand Book Shop, 7 "2. Street. isth Lux Theatre this week include “Love in Tents,” a Smith and Dale comedy; Rubinof and his orchestra with Jean Sargent; a | John Gilbert, Ian Keith,|Silly Symphony cartoons “Pied | Lewis Stone and Elizabeth Young] Pipe.” The newreel includes ng cast. “Headlines of 1933”. and other ects at the Trans-| news items, AMERICAN PREMIERE! a IRAGES 99 FEDO OR OZEP’S “ Prench Talkie with English Titles ‘Brilliant Performance s\P the manner of Risenstein or Pudovkin.”—Herald-Trtbune. Added Feature-<l6th Anniversary Celebration in Moscow ACME THEATRE De PARIS With STREET & UNION SQ. Rush your orders for the Jan. 6 Tenth Anniversary issue of the Daily Worker, 24 Pages. The big- gest and best Daily Worker in the history of our paper, He asked us to stop at a modest bungafow in one of the small towns we passed, but here in North Caro- lina it stood out as nicer than usual. “My sister lives here. She'd be glad even some with children. Mostiy|to fix you up some supper, if you'll men on freights. I saw 250,an one| Stay awhile.” train coming from Kentucky. inta]. Nobody was in; so we drove on. Tennessee.” “Tm surprising my folks,” he said. Md * . 1 “I didn’t write. Won't: you come YW did he avoid arrest?, Had a/along in with me and I know they'll fix you up something to eat?” That’s southern hospitality that you don’t get at the big white houses where landl and bosses live. We declined and left him to walk up the short hilly street alone. “Boy, I’ve learned more since I left 10 months ago than I ever learned before,” he declared before he left. The smile was mirthless, ringed with italism’s million homeless youths in} [the richest iand in the world. lmoDAY my friend came arketing. “Say, a big boy in overalls, hunch- ing up with cold, just asked me on| the street: in from | ?? When I showed him, ‘Right ’, he said: ‘I don’t like your New much’, “Where are you from?’ I asked | him. “Tm from Montana’, ‘Where are you from?’ “‘Oh, from far away’, I told him, ‘trom Russia’. I might as well have said the moon. “Took, I got my grandfather’s shoes on’, he showed me. “There's nothing for me on the farm. I came ‘here looking for work and can’t find none. Gee, I hate to ask a woman, but I’m hungry’. he said. the painful memories of one of cap-| ‘Where's your subway,} So I told him I didn’t) ——THE THEATRE | EUGENE O’NEILL’s COMEDY AH, WILDERNESS! with GEORGE M. COHAN | | ‘Thea.. 52d St., W. of B’wa; || GUILD ny's's0 iaats.Thurs.a800530 MOLIERE'’S COMEDY WITR MUSIC The School for Husbands s—Jt .Wed., Thur. &Sat, MAXWELL ANDERSON’S New Play MARY OF po ee with HELEN PHILIP HAYES MERIVALE MENBEN ALVIN ‘Thes., 52d St., W. of B'way Roland YOUNG and Lai Ev.8:20.Mats.Thar.&Sat.2:20 HOPE CREWS in “Her Master’s Voice” Plymouth a ce ines Bae THE ANTI-WAR PLAY 'PEACE ON EARTH by the authors of “MERRY-GO-ROUND” KYLE CRICHTON says:—"Daring, ‘Truly Dramatle, Important.” Civic Repertory Theatre, 14th St. & 6th Ave. Evenings 8:45; Mats. Wed. & Sat, 2: WA, 9-7450. PRICES: 300 to $1.50. || The 8-Page Club GUILD | presente——«\| BKO Jefferson ith s. & | Now ar8 Ave, MAX BAER & MYENA LOY In “prize Fighter and the Lady” ‘SWEETHEART OF SIGMA CHI win SUSTER CRABBE & MARY CARLISLE —RADIO CITY MUSIC HALI~—, est ae Aver Show Place ef the Nation Direction “Roxy”. DOLORES DEL a «FRED ASTAIRE in “FLYING DOWN TO RIO”) at 13:35, 2:44, 5:31, 8:18, & “Roxy's” Supreme 's" CONSULT 7 B. WARANTZ General Insurance Broker 19 KB. Ith STEEET, BROOKLYN Opens 14:54 e.m. For Honest Insurance A vice TEL: ESP. 5-0938 CARL BRODSKY All Kinds Of INSURANCE 799 Broadway N.Y. ¢ STuyvesant §-5557 FOR REST, QUIET CAMP NIT BEACON, N, ¥. Hot and cold running water in 60 steam Come for the Week-end—You Cars Leave Daily at 1 2700 BRONX PARK EAST Come Away From the Noise and Rush of the City food—See the newly decorated social and dining ALL THE SUMMER FUN WITH WINTER COMFORTS Sports—Parties—Lectures, etc. ‘trun by their own class—workers and , land no starving idle poor. 10; “He looked it, too; so what could jI do? Give him a talk and tell him }to go to the Unemployed Councils, yes, but he’s hungry now. So I gave ‘him what littie change I had.” Two homeless youths from the mil- lion or more from factories and farms to whom we must bring a message of hope—the Workers’ Unemployment Insurance Bill, organization of work- ers and farmers to fight for bread now. Homeless youth whom we must teach to unite and fight for a nation SATURDAY, 8 P.M. TO 2 A. M- farmers — with no stuffed idle rich SERGEE RADAMSKY Program of Songet by QUIRT Soviet Repul 4, Tartar—Dance Song 5. German DAILY WORKER with LAHN ADOHMYAN Surprise Program DANCING TILL DAWN baran—Hail Axerbié- 2 Caucasian—Endee, Mende Dania fo We Haye Established Red Soldier's Proletarian Marching Song CHORUS THEATRE OF ACTION in a AND A LITTLE FUN AT GEDAIGET PHONE. BEACON 731 heated rooms—plenty of tasty, nutettions hails. Will Want to Stsy the Week! Rates: $14 per week (includ. press tax); $15 for I. W. O. and Co-Operative Mombers 730 A, M. from Co-operative Restaurant TEL.: ESTABROOK 8-5141 _—_DAILY WORKER ANNIVERSARY DEC, 30th AT THE BRONX COLISEUM WEST FARMS ROAD, MIKE GOLD, Chairman 17th ST. Admission tm Advance ~ At the doer Press Fund Frsd Get Your Tickets Imme- diately at Workers Book Shops: 50 E. 13th SI lym (in the Cooperative Barber Shop) Literature Dept. I. W. 0. 80 Fifth Ave, Literature Dept., Needle ‘Trades, 181 W. 28th St, And at the re Worker 85 E. 12th sf M. 8. OLGIN, Editor “Fretheit,” Will Bring Greetings CLARENCE HATHAWAY EDITOR OF THE DAILY WORKER, SPEAKER

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