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2 d A ony > Workers’ Organizations Res d Five ie DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1929 Dye Workers Endang:red in Pe Huge Blaze Sula MASS ARRESTS IN 316 DRESS PICKET DEMONSTRATION Workers Defy Police;| 26 Shops Pulled | (Continued from Page One) failings and of deportation, which | many police shouted, could not pre- vent the strikers from picketing till they got good and ready to eall a halt and march down to the strike halls, | In at least a dozen hallways of the | big skyscraper factory buildings lo- | cated on 36th, 37th, 38th, 39th Sts. | and on Seventh Ave.,were to be seen | a semi-circle of police crowding and | shoving into the small areaways, the svituieenes | Tabor and Fraternal Organizations A fire which the owners refuse to explain and the workers say originated from inadequate fire pro- tection, destroyed the factory of the Hsco Dyeiny Company at N. 14th Street and Nassau Ave., Brooklyn. Above, ruins after the blaze was extinguished. Zimmerman Arrested. | After confinement for an hour or aA t oe eek Binur (1 Bevionay: : rested strik-| United Council 17, Brighton Beach. |brary is open every Friday evening |subject of the second of 2 nore in hallways, the a | Rose Rubin will lecture on “Rosa |from 8 to 10 p.m. |four lectures by Prof, M A A “blac ers were jammed into “black! puxemburg,” 8:30 p.m, Friday * berg, M the § Marias” to be taken to jail. Evenjunder the auspices of Council 17, Club; 1032 Prospect A United Council of Working Women, toe ries of ure Labor Temple Poetry Forw The Labor Temple Poetry rum the machine-gun rict- 927 Brighton Beach Ave. Comrades|Will be -held on Thursi evening, Downtown Workers Club Gives “Seab wagons” were called to carry heavy|are asked to bring friends. 15 p. m., at the Labor Temple, 242 | | peg ae Mth st. | " will be given by * 48 Yugosiav Workers Club. The Yugoslav Workers Educational | and. Dramatic Club has arranged aj Workers Club, a Progressive Butchers Banquet. loads of strikers to jail. | A Rage | Internitional Labor Defense Bazaar. | Stepping to the front of one of} ‘The annual bazaar of the Interna- Second St. these “riot wagons” which are not! tional Labor Defense, New York dis- = j trict, will take place March 6, 7, 8 | conc Ly s ig enclosed, but are open trucks,|/9, 16 in New Star Casino, 107th S neert, vee, Sigg lone: Sak at ; Celebrating the opening of union Charles 'S. Zi i M Bhd Park (Ava Make cobacionaetbh- | Scea entcuny enwon l, 321 W.|neadquarters at 314 E. 9th St, the harles S. Zimmerman, Manager of and Parl Auies come into. the ote Goch Wud danohig “which tellowa, we ercweee Butchers and Poultry m. and dancing, which follows, at) Workers’ Union will hold a banquet the Dressmakers’ division of the In- iH Cone Avan * dustrial Needle Workers Union, called on the strikers crowded in| with him to sing and cheer. This was immediately done and the roar | of traffic on that industrial strect | was drowned out by the cheering fice, 799 Broadway, Room 422, and help us with the preparatory work. | S jat the Downtown Workers Club, 36 Garlin, Magi ‘Talk Sanday. Le Maras or Sender Garlin and A, B. Magil, both of the editorial staff of the ‘Daily, Worker, will speak at the n | Forum of the Workers School, 26-28 Union Square, Sunday evening, 8 p. m. Garlin will speak on “Some Bour- | "and Magil will | needed. oie * Fretheit Chorus Annual Ball, ‘The annual ball of the Freiheit Singing Society will take place Fri- day, Washington's Birthday, at the Manhattan Lyceum, 66 E. Fourth St. International Women’s Day Rehearsal. _Rehearsal for pageant of Interna- tional Women's Day will be held Thursday, 6:30 p. m., Room 603, 26 Union Square, About 100 women are Aaa ne geois Literary Critic strikers. Metro Workers Soccer League. | discuss “Modern Revolutionary Po- | Olen ¥4 | The Metropolitan Workers Soccer | etry.” | _Freiheit Symphony Orchestra. Members of the Young Pioneers ,eague will hold a ball on February * * * | iheit Symphony Orchestra of America, a Communist children’s | 23 at the Leese tt fe E. 116th rvice Culture Club, Bronx. se tonight, 1292 Southern St., basement. organiza-| “Vy tions are asked not to arrange any /|Span conflicting dates. | ball Saturday, March 9, Rose Gar-| iRT STE LE GOES ON den, 1347 Boston Road.’ The chorus [will participate in the concert pro-| | gram. | id " } | | s Christopher rad and a Jew?" Columbus a/Blvd., near will be the jtion, reeman St. Subway Sta- organization, appearing early on the picket line, added tremendous en- thusiasm to the adult workers there and became a severe pain in the neck to the flood of police who were) rushed into “he district. Arrest Children. Unable any tonger to endure the songs and yells, the police arrested the groups of children and confined them in hallways. Afraid of the} public anger their arrest might/ &¢ 4 , F , 2 . and Broadway, Sunday evening, arouse, the police finally released|March 31, 8 p.m.’ All organizations Known Facts | most of the children. | Please keep this date open. | Bronx, ier aoe | Freiheit Singing Society. The Bronx section, Freiheit Sing- ing Society will hold a concert and | * Entertainment, New York Drug Clerks. The New York Drug Clerks Asso-! elation will hold an entertainment and dance at Leslie Gardens, 83rd Cover Many Cities Reed Tells Some Well Soldier-Communist to! KIDNAP YOUTH: USE SRD DEGREE |Threatened With Long | Term; Quizzed i} | | FLINT, Michigan, Feb. 18.—Fol- lowing the kidnapping of a work- er’s son, William Stec, 13, by private | police of the Buick plant in Flint! and his retention for a day, the! \International Labor Defense has |taken up the fight to expose the Fo Buick Company and the Flint police, ¢ William, together with his older brother John, had gone to the gates | of the Buick plant to sell copies of |W’ the Buick Worker, a .workers’ pa-| |per, to the men as they were ar-| riving for the days work. William | ara Herbert Zam will speak. |Was noticed by a company spotter | who immediately took him into cus- |tody and brought him into the em- ployment office of the Buick Motor |3 Company where he was kept for hours, riddled with questions, in-| | timidated, and finally taken to a po- |lice court from where he was sent |to the Reform School where he was |told he must stay. He was released |after nine hours. Raid Boy’s Home. : i ( he In the meantime city detectives 133 W. cist St. working hand in hand with the | Buick detectives entered the home of | |the Stecs without a warrant, and | |searched the house. They took with | 5‘, | them personal letters and papers to jand arrested a worker rooming in| | the house, who was released later. | The I. L. D. is taking up the); Worker” |case and will shortly hold a mass |s; |meeting in Flint to protest the ac-| tion of the company police in kia-| napping a child and searching a worker’s house without a warrant. is Union Square, m, © a ie Enst N. ¥. and Brownsville Y. W. L- Units of the Young Workers Les Daily Worker will be given by Se tion 7, day night, Feb. 40th St. for the benefit of the Daily Worker | League, funds of the Daily Worker and Span- Workers Party Activities LETTISH SOCIETY March Ww Section 4 Imperial Friday Audit Night Workers. by 60-4 TO SEND FUNDS A special meeting of the Night eRe rkers will tomorrow St. Matters of eit he importance will be taken up. Lower Bronx Open Forum. must come at 2 ailure to appear will measures to be “Youth ssed at it, Y. functionari and the Press’ ock sharp. disciplinary the foru hh, Dance 3D, Meets. | » Williamsburgh. h sec- turday, 6 M oon Bagi Social, Y. W. will meet tomorrow.) ae SF, 3D ; 101’ W. 27th St. in hold’ a Other Organizations Urged to Take Part 5 Dally Benefit. anquet will be given Section “Hunger” giver ction 5, Thursday night, 715 1. follows * Working class organizations are St, Bronx, Concert and dance ‘Upper Bronc’¥. WW. iL. forum k (lie ECE Rea en The Upper Brong . Wa te tatam |Peginning to respond to the call sent Garin, Magi) Talk Sunday. will discuss, “Youth and the Indus. |out by the Provisional Committee Wicd Co ee es tant EN Sretan ora, nt > 1400 | egeinat fancier to mippury the In- editorial staff of eG Dee, oe ie ry ternational Anti-Fascist Congress to vill speak the Open ; Sa ‘ orum of i Workers School, 26-28 | fon 2A, be held the middle of March in Ber- lin. The preliminary American con- ference will be held in New York this Friday at the Labor Temple, + the | lth St. and Second Ave. will Units 1 9, Bronx 30 Wilkins Ave. * Sunday evening, 8 p. Garlin will speak on “Some Bour- | erary Critics” and Magil will “Modern Revolutionary Po- | 8 Union Square. * “Young Worker” Dance and Enter- s Li uss One of the organizations support- ing this campaign is the New York Lettish Educational Society, which and Brownsville gue The East N. Y. Workers Center, * hold a joint Liebknecht Mem- orial meeting Frid Re Ads ¥. W. L. Dress Strikers’ Dance, | has sent a check for $25 to help fi- Wetiina Bly eee Foor gs ere ney a : =e ntertainine nt the nance the work of the campaign and 4 2 benefit of young dress strike I ing, field othimperialist League, |be given by Downtown Unit 2 wna (to send delegates to the Interna- will ariem Unie 1 of the You <= | tional Conference, i s (Communist) League, § Want Novo x Wis 10th St. =| e appeal sent to the labor or- ‘The East N. Y. Unit of the zw Ss | * * * tions was based on the men- will hold a “Build the Young Work- jeux GP, See te » which fascism represents r” camarader! Saturday 8 p. m., A general meeting of Nucleu: b which fa mm bo glee ‘ee hes 3 Hinsdale St. Brooklyn. Section 4, will be held today, at j Working cla organizations—the ° p. m., 60° St. Marks Pla destruction of trade unions in Italy, Dally Worker Dance, Section 7. A dance for the benefit of t GAC IMPLICATION OF DOHENY DEATH Attorney, Family Cover the annihilation of working class po- litical parties and fraternal organ- izations, etc. “The fact that fascism is one of the greatest dangers to the Soviet Union,” this appeal, “and that the capitalist countries are encire- ling the Soviet Union with small fas- cist states entirely independent on the larger powers for their existence, is an appeal that no class-conscious working class organization can re- sist. A campaign to combat fas- Washington's birthday, F 22, Finnish Hall, 764 rier Pee Subsection 3B Social. Subsection 3B will hold a social Amalgamated Food Workers Hall, Saturday. ier see Harlem Y. W. L. Dance.. The Harlem unit, Young Workers will hold an_ entertainment | nd dance Saturday. Units are asked | Oil Connections cooperate. wast New York ¥. W. L- | (Continued from Page One) |cism is of vital interest to every The Bast New York unit of the/ reason being food poisoning. His worker and every organization to W. L, will hold a “Build the Daily | death stopped one line of investiga- Which he belongs.” | tion, Workers’ organizations are asked | Doheny's “Black Bag.” to endorse the campaign and send Edward L. Doheny and his secre-|contributions to the Provisional ‘tary, Hugh Plunkett, were killed Committee, A. Markoff, secretary, hand Negro. papers will be given| Saturday by bullets from the re-|Room 604, 1 Union Square. camaraderie Saturday, 30 p. m. 313 Hinsdale St. oy cee Section 4 Daily Dance. Entertainment and dance for the Ar attorney has been retained in| Flint to push the case against the |Buich and the city police. eee he (EDITOR’S NOTE: Our special | correspondent now in Flint, Wal- | | ter M. Trumbull, will report fur- ther details and the development | of the case. A special article by ‘Mayor, Ministers and | K.K.K. Stop Sovkino volver of Plunkett. Plunkett was a} former chauffeur of the Doheny in a more precarious position, and family, who carried Edward L,| Was heard quarreling with Doheny, Doheny on his trips with “The Lit-| Jt. Sets ae mu the im % : tle Black Bag” around about the| men were together in Doheny’s bed- Film in New Jersey country. “The Little Black Bag,” room, in the absence of witnesses, —_ evidence in the Teapot Dome oil| Plunkett shot and killed Doheny. (Special to the Daily Worker) | swindle trial showed, went on one When he was trapped later, by the NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J., Feb. | occasion to Secretary of the Interior] arrival of other persons, Plunkett | also shot himself. Sliding from nder police hands | again and again, Irving Potash, hyad | of the general picket committee, led the reformation f each picket line) after a police attempt at dispersal. | The long line deliberately went | into 38th St. to which picket lines were closed hitherto, to test their legal right to picket those shops as well. They succeeded in parading) thru those blocks and were rewarded | by the sight of many workers in cloak shops and settled dress shors opening windows to applaud the) marching strikers below. | The capitalist evening press, in re- porting the inspiring demonstration | of working class militancy, unable to | give credence to the statements of | the right wing company union heads | that there is no strike, nevertheless tried to antagonize public opinion} against the workers, thru other means. In a highly ridiculous man- ner, the papers announced that) “traffic was tied up from 59th St.| to Battery Park for hours.”. This! is an obvious incitement for police | violence against further picketing. Women Will Rally. The United Councils of Working Women will express their solidarit; with the striking dressmakers marching thru the halls where the stiikers meet with various slogans. This demonstration will take place | tomorrow afternoon, Feb. 20. All council members must participate in the demonstration. They should! meet at the Workers Center, 26} Union Square at 12:30 p. m., tomor- | row. * Quotas Set for Drive to Make Young Worker | a Weekly Newspaper) The National Executive Commit- tee of the Young Workers (Commu- nist) League has issueti the final quotas in the drive for the establish- ment of the Weekly Young Worker, The following is a list of the sub- scription and money quotas set for each district of the League: District 1, Boston, 500, $300; Dis- trict 2, New York, 1,500, $500; Dis- trict 5, Philadelphia, 500, $300; Dis- trict 4, Buffalo, 50, $25 District 5, pittsburgh, 375, $75 District 6, Cleveland, 250, $250; District 7, De- troit 10z, $60; District 8, Chicago, 500, $890; District 9-S, Superior, 750, $250; District 9-M, Twin Cities, 50, $30; District 10, Kansas, 200, $100; Pristrict 12, Seattle, 160, $50; Dis- trict 18, 150, $75; District 15, New Haven, 100, $75, . It urges all young workers to give the Young Worker Drive a boost. to rush donations and send subscriptions to it at.43 East 126th St., New York City. SCOTCH MINERS FIGHT CUT. GLASGOW, (By Mail).—Scottish mine owners have threatened to lock | out members of the Colliery Engine- men’s Association because they Inter-Racial Dance. An inter-racial dance, for the bene- | fit of the Negro Champion, Daily Worker and the Obrano has been a ranged for Friday evening, March 22 at Imperial Auditorium, 160 W, 129th ¥ * * * Office Workers, ‘The Office Workers’ Umon has ar- runged a dance for Washington's birthday eve, Feb. 21, at Wehster Manor. Sympathetic organizations are asked not to arrange any affair for that evening. £55 Oh ee Millinery Theatre Party. The Millinery Workers Union, 43, has arranged a theatre party for March 20, Fraternal organizations are as! d not to arrange conflicting dates for that evening. sow Progressive Group, Local 38, I.L.G.W. | ‘The Progressive Group, Local . L. G. W., will have a booth at I. L. D. Bazaar. Members and s: pathizers are urged to collect ar’ cles. Send to Ida Katz, Bazaar Co: mittee, Unity Cooperative, 1800 Ave., City. 3 hi e ees Weak) Workers Laboratory Theatre. The Workers Laboratory ‘Theatre will produce its one act play, “March- ing Guns,” an episode of the miners’ struggle, without charge Yor any Party unit, trade union or fraternal organization a Write Sy , Brooklyn. y affair they ar- van Pollack, 1409 a Bee Needle Trades Workers Dance, Left wing needle trades workers will attend a concert and ball given by the T. U. EB, L. branch of Local ¥, Workers Center, March 2. Jazz band. ee ee Harlem I. L. D. Meet. The Harlem J, D, ‘will meet today, at 8 p, BH, 108rd_ St. ‘Tallentire will tal on Defense Work in the U.S. A, a oe Council 8 Concert and Ball. A concert and ball will be given by Council 8, United Council Work- i Women, 8:30 p, m., Saturday. ay Ragozin will talk. A com- edy by Tchekov will be produced, Proceeds to Needle Trades Workers’ Industrial websites * * Downtown English I. L. D. Branch The downtown English branch of the I. L. D, will meet tonight at 8 o'clock in the Labor ‘Temple, 14th St. and Second Ave., Room 32, eae POE | Experanto “SAT” Group. The workers Esperanto group “SAT” will meet Friday, 8 p. m., at 108 14th ‘The Esperanto’ li- USSR Lowers Taxes of Poor and Middle (Wireless By “Inprecorr”) MOSCOW, U. S. S. R., (By Mail). —A decision on the single agricul- tural tax and the reduction of taxa- tion of the middle peasantry has been passed by the Central Execu- tive Committee of the Soviet Union, the highest governmental body in the country between the meetings of the Soviet congresses. The new act mentions measures by seven million nectares and in- crease the crops by 3 per cent. taxation ahd alleviations are pro- vided for middle peasants who in- crease the area under cultivation and their crops. the revenue from agricultural taxa- have refused to stand for a cut of 8 shillings a shift in wages. The proletariat, the lowest stra resent soclety, cannot SLAVE KILLED AT THE BELT MANITOWOC, Wis. (By Mail).— The right arm of John Novak was torn from his bolly at the shoulder when his hand was caught in a con: veyor belt at the Reiss coal docks here. The injury was fatal, Peasants in New Act! | taken to extend the cultivated area | Thirty-five per cent of the poor), peasantry are entirely exempt from | }, By this enactment tion is reduced to 875 million rubles. dier stationed in the Hawaiian \Islands, has been toured by the United States section of the All- America Anti-Imperialist League to well known facts about the prohibi- tion spy service have achieved the jofficial status of the Congressional |Register as a result of the present \debate of Senators Borah and Reed of Missouri over the prohibition en- ‘forcement act, the Jones bill, pro- viding more severe penalties for violators. Borah, tho defending prohibition, ‘spent much of his time eulogizing | Reed. eer 3 \istie conquests. Won't Expose Senate Lawbreakers. | “ nite in the Hawaiian Islands, he Reed began his second day of \speech-making on this question by l|assuring the worried senators that he was only joking when he threat- jened Saturday to announce the jnames of senators who violate the jlaw. “I may ave made mistakes in my life, but I have never sunk to the low level of .a prohibition in- |former,” said Reed. Reed declared that there was more \drinking than ever now, and that the prohibition spy service was cor- rupted with graft, so much so, that lif he were to give all the instances he knew, he “would be here till the cocks crow in the morning.” “Pussyfoot” Briher. Reed stated that investigations be- fore senate committees showed that | Wayne B. Wheeler, head of the Anti- Saloon League, “preferred force” in jhis advocating of prohibition. Reed \said that “Pussyfoot” Johnson wes lon the payroll of the Anti-Saloon |League for $18,000, and was a con-! fessed liar and bribe giver. | Reed declared that “women have been hired and sent out to lure men \into rooms. “These agents have set their traps; in hotels. They have hired poor bellboys to get them liquor. All this is done beneath the white cloak lof purity.” | Machine May Make Thousands of Shoe Workers Jobless BOSTON, (By Mail).—Machinery by which shoes can be manufac- tured without stitching to attach the soles to the uppers has been in-| vented and is being adopted by the shoe manufacturers, with the result that thousands of shoe workers are | faced with unemployment. | the service and tell the meaning of limperialism to the workers in the oppressed colonies and semi-colo- nies of the United States. Steele has travelled in Peru, Pa- |nama, Mexico, Hawaii, Japan and other countries and by his personal experiences in these countries is well the soldier Communist who was sen- tenced to 40 years for his Commu- |nist activities, and who is now ex- | ecutive secretary of the Anti-Imper- ialist League. Steele became an ac- tive member of the Hawaiian Com- munist League, acting as one of its organizers. In addition to his ser- vices in the Amcrican army, Steele army for a time. On his tour he jingo organization. Steele will speak in the following cities: Chicago, Feb, 22; Feb. 24; Toledo, Feb. 25; Cleveland, Feb, 27; Pittsburgh, March 1; Wash- ington, March 8; Baltimore, March \4; Wilmington, March 5; Philadel- phia, March 6; Chester, March te He will also speak in New York, Patronize No-Tip Barber Shops 26-28 UNION SQUARE (1 flight up) 2700 BRONX PARK EAST (corner Allerton Ave.) Unity Co-operators Patronize SAM LESSER Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailor 1818 - 7th Ave. New York Between 110th and 111th Sts. Next to Unity Co-operative Hou Automobile INSTRUCTION TAUGHT. Complete Course $10, until license grantedy also private and special Instruction to Ladies. ‘AUTO $45. Longwood Empire Scuoot avenue, Bronx INTervale 10019 (Cor. Prospect Sta.) Spend Your Winter Vacation at the Cooperative | Workers’ Camp Nitgedaiget BEACON, N. Y. — Phone, Beacon 862 RATES: $17.00 PER WEEK OPEN ALL YEAR CITY PHONE:—ESTABROOK 1400. WASHINGTON, Feb. 18—Some| John Harvey Steele, former sol- | \1g.-When ministers, speaking for| Fall, with $100,000 in it for Fall. Trumbull on the kidnapping will Lisa businessmen, in this Ku Klux Klan- | And after Fall got the money, Tea-| appear in the Daily Worker in a few days.) Comrade he ordered the Sovkino film, “Ten| and other oil leases to the Sinclair- \speak on his personal experiences in! became acquainted with Pau! Crouch, was a first sergeant in the Mexican | will reveal the inside facts of this | Detroit, | Peru Demands a Port | | in Tacna-Arica Plan to Divide ing in a local theatre, banned. showing of the picture was stopp ‘the same night. |ports from those intimately ac-| the Sovkino production, came to t quainted with the Tacna-Arica af-| theatre after work in the evening, |fair, indicate that on the part of|they found that it had been tak ment of the dispute between Chile | place. land Peru over the two provinces will‘ be had by present efforts to divide] ‘the territory, giving Tacna to Peru) and Arica to Chile. i WAGE SLASH 'OR CARMEN BOSTON, Mass. (By Mail). | Union streetcar workers have been that all talk of definite terms is | fect on May 1. infested city appealed to the mayor, | pot Dome, Elk Hills, Salt | Days That Shook the World,” show- | | Territory | The film had been advertised be- | forehand and was to run for a week. SANTIAGO, Chile, Feb. 17.—Re-|But when workers, anxious to see) Seyuainted with their new imperial- |Chile, at least, m satisfactory settle-|off and something else put in its | News from Peru, however, while| notified by the Fastern Massachu- giving a note of harmony with the|satts Street Railway Co. that an- | general idea of a settlement, state! other cut in wages will go into ef- Frances Pilat MIDWIFE 351 E. 77th St., New York, N. Y. Tel. Rhinelander 3916 Doheny interests went thru the de- partment of the interior. Had Grips On Doheny. | | Plunkett received amazing and | rapid promotion. From a chauffeur} he became a “private secretary” | house servant of the Doheny fam-} ily, with unusual privileges. He he ed All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S he seemed to have some hold over the Dohenys. Lately he was said to be se VEGETARIAN HEALTH RESTAURANT 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx ) MELROSE . VEGETARIAN Dairy nustacnant Comrades Will Always Find tt Pleasant to Dine at Our Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLYD., Bronx Tel.: DR¥dock 8880 FRED SPITZ, Inc. FLORIST | |] NOW AT 31 SECOND AVENUE | (Bet. Ist & 2nd Sts.) Flowers for All Occasions 15% REDUCTION TO READERS OF THE DAILY WORKER premature and that matters of ar- ‘rangement are not yet near an end.| Peru is understood to be desirous }of a port for exit and entrance to! the products of Tacna, without pass- | 185-187 EAST BROADWAY ling through Chilean territory. | NEW YORK |] JOSEPH E. ERON, Principal THE LARGEST WELL AS OLDEST SCHOOL Brooklyn, Newark, Paterson, New | Haven, Hartford, Boston and other | | cities. A complete list of these, with dates, will be announced soon. to prepare oneself for admission to college. ERON SCHOOL is registered REGENTS of the State w York, It has all the right a Government High Schoo’ Call, Phone or Write for Catalogue! NEW COURSES BEGAN JAN, 28st " REGISTER NOW! Our 25,000 alumni are our best witnesses, GaP Phone: DICkens 1096. Blue Bird Studio “Photos of the better kind.” 1598 PITKIN AVE., Cor, Amboy St BROOKLYN, N. ¥. ot TELEPHONE: “CONCERT AND DANCE FOR THE BENEFIT OF THE DAILY WORKER. Arranged by Branch 4, Section 5, W. P. A. Will be held on WASHINGTON EVE., THURS., FEB. 21 at 1330 WILKINS AVENUE, BRONX. Program: String Quartet, Piano and Violin Recital, Singer, and many other musical attractions. Refreshments! Dancing! Admission 35 Cents. SECTION 7 Dance (Washington’s Birthday) ADMISSION 50 CENTS Eron School AND BEST, AS to learn the English Language; by of ORCHARD 4473. Daily Worker FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22nd, at 8:30 P. M. at Finnish Hall, 764-40th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. 174th St. Station) INTERVALE (nea PHONE 9149. Cooperators! Patronize E. KARO Your Nearest Stationery Store Cigars — Cigarettes — Candy 649 ALLERTON AVE. Cor. Barker, BRONX. For a Real Oriental Cooked Meni VISIT THE INTERNATIONAL PROGRESSIVE CENTER 101 WEST 28TH STREET (Corner 6th Ave.) ETERIA ATION ROOM Dam, to 12 p,m ¥ REC Open from Ss 1. || “For Any Kind of Insurance” ARL BRODSKY Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A. place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 302 E.12th St. New York hb Irelephone: Murray Hill 5550 7 East 42nd Street. w_York Cooperators! Patronize || ——— Seer: S E R O Y des, Patronize CHEMIST The Triangle Dairy Restaurant | 1379 Intervale Avenue BRONX 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. Y. Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST Office Hours: Tues., Thurs. & Sat. 9:30-12 a, m., 2-8 p.m. Sunday: 10:00 a, m. to Please Telephone Appointment 249 EAST 115th STREET Cor. Second Ave. New York Telephone: Lehigh 6022 DR. J. MINDEL SURGEON DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Room 803—Phone: Algonquin 8183 Not connected with any other office MEET YOUR FRIENDS at Messinger’s Vegetarian and Dairy Restaurant 1763 Southern Blvd., Bronx, N, Y. Right off 174th St. Subway Station ‘p.m. for We All Meet at the NEW WAY CAFETERIA 101 WEST 27th STREET NEW YORK Advertise your Union Meetings here. For information write to Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 199 SECOND AVEI:UE Bet. 12th and 18th Sts. Strictly Vegetarian Food The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City Hotel and Restaurant Workers Branch of the Amalgamated Food Workers 183 W. Sist St,, Phone Cirete 7336 BUSINESS MEETINGS] 1d on the first Monday of the HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE: Phone: UNIversity 5865 pond to Call for Anti-Fascist Conference This Friday ' ‘BUICK BOSSES | | {