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P are Two ete aeons aren a UNISTS IN. FAND ON GIL (J iM Want Arms for Fight on actionaries Ns web ot walent Me Me, late nes e pet- as allowed the to fight inst masses. It is ion and sabo- A Letter from Marx s which tion today, and and peasants, forthwith t all available equipment. be tely to the organiza- gether with the fed- ed loyal to the a insure protec- e territories and citie: by the reactionary and the immediate the federal army, liminating ail elements inimical to the interests of the working class new in the administrative ap- s of the government, and ituting them with represen- chosen by the workers and organizations. immediately h the dissolution of the “iarge landed properties, e bulwark of reaction, ibute the land and ag- ricultural machinery to the peons and the peor and landless pea- sants, ” To establish workers’ con- trol in the factori mining camps and other industrial enter- prises, particularly in the oil fields; to organize factory com- mittees composed of the most rev- cluticnary elements of the work- ers, which shall supervise produc- tion and see to it that all the rights and guarantees of the working class arc insured. “5. To demand that in all cities and villages, theatres, schools and cinema houses be put at the dis- posal of workers and peasant or- ganizations, in order that they may hold meetings clerical rebellions and all the ele- ments which overtly and covertly support the armed revolt. Also, that all the printing plants of the governments and the reac- tienary papers shall be placed a the disposal of the working class, to enable them to print throw- aways, manifestces and othe: ur- gent propaganda literature. “6, All reactionary associa- tions, such as the League for Re- against the | (NOTE.—The following is a script of the above letter of farx to Swinton. It is of inter- st for its estimate of the role of Henry George in the labor move- ment, as well as for the fact that it is written in very good English, which Marx spoke almost like a native.—Editor.) * * June, 2, 1886, 4i Maitland Park Road, London, N. W. Dear Mr. Swinton: I need hardly recommend you the bearer of these lines, my ex- cellent friend, Mr. Hartmann. I send you through him a photo- gram of mine; it is rather bad, but the only one left to me. As to the book of Mr. Henry George, | I consider it as a last attempt— | to save a capitalistic regime. Of course, this is not the meaning wns, Main, Ha pls teresa Geles c= Uh Mek | of the author, but the older dis- ciples of Ricardo—the radical ones—fancied already that by the public appropriation of the rent of land everything would be righted. I have referred to this doctrine in the “Misere de la Philosophie” (published in 1847, against Proudhon). Mrs. Marx sends you her best compliments. Unfortunately her illness assumes more and more a fatal character. Believe me, dear sir, Yourse most sincerely, KARL MARX. The “Vierick” was so stultified at his arrival in the United States that he confounded my friend En- gels with mfseif, and transformed my compliments to you as those of Engels; he did the same with regard to another American friend of mine by whose letter I was in- | formed of the quid pro quo. ligious Defense, the National Syn- dicate of Agriculturists, and the Knights of Columbus, shall be dis- banded and declared illegal. At | the same time the properties (par- tienlarly landed estates and houses) of all the elements which, in the capital and in the states, direet the clerical revolt shall be seized in favor of the people. | “7. In order to effect this and | to insure the compliance of these | points, as well as the general de- mands of the workers and pea- sants in-the cities and villages, | there shall be organized WORK- ! ERS’ and PEASANTS’ COMMIT- TEES AGAINST THE REAC- TION. Organize Fighting Squads. “Comrades, workers and peasants of the republic! If the reaction tri- umphs, all the enemies of our class will triumph. It is necessary to or- ganize! It is necessary to organize our forces, it is imperative to or- ganize fighting squads against the reaction. If the petty bourgeoisie coes net want to defend the inter- its of reaction, it should march ith the workers and peasants. | United, the workers and peasant: are the greatest and most powerful \force in the country. “Only a united bloc of workers \and peasants will be able to save |the country from a new proionged |and bloody civil war. Only the | workers and peasants will be able |t~ reconstruct the economy. of the coun.-y, not for the benefit of the cepitansts, but for the benefit of SOMETHING NEW HERE Needle Trades’ Raci al Character Change By HARRISON GEORGE - The needle trades unions of New York have been composed tradition- ally of Jewish workers. But things are changing in this as in other re- spects, ; Not only Italians and Ne- groes are now entering or have al- veady entered the clothing industry, but the growing population of Latin Americans find a field in garment, fur and millinery and the number of these Latin-American, Spanish- speaking workers is constantly growing. This places before the members of the National Needle Trades In- | America of any importance, even the most timid, appeals to the masses |in frankly revolutionary terms. | The New York needle workers, therefore, and indeed all workers who are militant and revolutionary, \find a ready acceptance as comrad \by Latin-American workers in this cosmopolitan city. And “La Vida Obrera” invites them to attend to- night’s “Sandino Ball” at 109-111 E. 116th St., Lexington Hall, where not only a most unique and inter- esting entertainment of Spa dances and native songs of the con- tinent beyond the Rio Grande will fall the oppressed and exploited | masses of Mexico. Only a govern- ment of workers and peasants will | |be able to guarantee peace and | bread, land and liberty. - |’ “Workers and peasants, unite! | Against the reaction, against the re- | ‘tionary generals and governors, ‘against all those who betray the | |working class! Long live the work- | ers’ and peasants’ bloc!’ Long live | |the workers’ and peasants’ govern- | jmnent of Mexico!” | __ (Signed) } |CENTRAL EXECUTIVE COMMIT- | TEE OF THE COMMUNIST | PARTY OF MEXICO. REVOLT AGAINST Presser Club Steps Out to Fight Traitors (Continued from Page One) | however. that despite announcing its |veadiness to fight the Hillman-R: jman administration, the Pressers’ Club disclaimed connection with the organized left wing, behii are the overwhelming the membership. In addition to this the club adopted proposed measures, which show that their fight will be merely one of pressers only against the administration, saying that the few hundred club membership can stop the industry if Hillman at- tempts reprisals. In discussing this occurrence, the Delegates Conference deplored such an attitude on the part of the lead- ers of the Pressers Club, They criticized it by pointing out that an isolated fight by a single craft egainst the entire mobilized Hill- man machine would in all likelihood be crushed. The followers of the Fressers Club were called upon to join the Shop Delegates Conference, a broad rank and file movenient that \seeks to mobilize the entire mem- bership for the struggle against Hillmanism. Warn Workers. The left wing workers cailed on the workers of that craft, to criticize an attitude sponsored by club lead- DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, MARCH 16, 19: 10th ANNIVERSARY OF FOUNDING OF C.1. By M. JABLONSKI. whole course of development of the Ten years have passed since the |Communist International. The two |best representatives of the inter-/are, therefore, inseparably associated | national revolutionary proletariat,|/not only by reason of the fact that jrallying to the call of the Centra! they both, by their very existence, |Committee of the Communist Party deny the whole capitalist world in jof the Soviet Union, gathered gether in the Red C pital of the geoisie by the dictatorship of the rst workers’ State to lay the foun- | proletariat and the bourgeois system c.tions of the “new revolutionary of exploitation by the system of so- International”. cial construction; they are also the They were not numerous, these jrepresentatives of a uniform process foreign delegates to the first world!of world revolution, for every cla: conference of the Communists, who!struggle, irrespective of the par- stocd for the platform of Bolshev- ticular country or part of the world ism; | -t the ideological force with in‘ which it breaks out, is governed which they were supported made the not only by the domestic conditions whole capitalist world quake. For of the particular country but chiefly this was the power which arose out by the state of the fight waged by /of the imperialist war and of the world capi::lism against the Soviet October Revolution, which, in con-|Union, as the stronghold cf the revo- |sistently triumphant advance, won lutionary proletariat of the whole over the vanguard of the working | world and as the outpost of all op: class, who defended it with great pressed end exploited peoples, sacrifice and suffering, with ti.2/ This also means that whoever blood of such fighters of the prole- fights for the basic principles of the} tarian struggle for emancipation as Communist International must also| |Rosa Luxemburg, Karl Liebknec:.: fight for the Soviet Union, and, | and thousands of unknown heroes. Conversely, the whole history of the, The days from the 2nd to the 7th ii1ternational labor movement shows} of March, 1919, on which the first that all who oppose the October Re-| Congress of the Comintern sat un-;Volution must be regarded as the der the chairmanship of Lenin and worst enemies of the Comintern. An proclaimed the battle-cries of: the ilustration of this indisputable fact world revolution, are an important is that every renegade from Com-| date in the history of humanity. |munism, every deserter from the! * * kad Comintern, is a manifest adversary | of the Soviet Union and the worst | of calumniators of the Proletarian| Power. | The class fight of the, proletariat in the whole ‘world took on new forms, forms of the real revolution- | to- « posing the dictatorship of the bour- | ¥' Holds SEWER GRAFTERS, _ olds War Post “FOUND. GUILTY" At Once Arrest Paino, Papal Knight The jury in the @ quickly found y Jr., who is Borough | ey’s campaign man-| ager, and Alfred L. Levin, a politi- cal worker, whom his lawyer charac- terized as “not a bright fellow.” They were accused by Harvey of offering him a bribe of $10,000, ad- vance payment of a total of $200,- 000 to be put up by the sewer con- tractors’ ring. They charged Har-| vey was framing them. Paino Admits Graft. | Berg and Levin told the court that Harvey accepted the money, and used it to try and stop publicity | about his joining the Ku Klux Klan. | They said it was campaign contri-| butions, not a bribe, and came from | a sewer man named Angelo Paino. Paino admitted giving the $10,000, He was arrested last night, four hours after the verdict. He is a rich sewer contractor, and was. made a Papal Knight by Pope Pius. sterday rank H. Berg, President Ha Col, Patrick J. Hurley of Tulsa, Okla., appointed assistant secre- tary of war in the Hoover imperi- alist cabinet. The following is part of an arti- cle on Marz, written by Rosa Another charge against Harvey developed out of the trial testimony, | as summed uy by the defense at-| torney, Uterhardt. Harvey’s account | books, which are held by the court,| indicated that Harvey had failed to| “ . - ” declare large campaign contributions (EUC Investigation Is f | Trades -HILLMAN GROWS lary insurrections against inter- \national capital. It assumed fresh fundamental content, represented by |the conviction that the task of over- throwing the bourgeoisie and de- stroying the bourgeois State is no longer a more or less distant future \dream but an actuality on the order lof the day. In a word; the chang- Jing of the fundamental forms of the | proletarian fight and the changing \of its main content was summed up and expressed in those two leading | principles laid down by the first | Congress in its resolutions: the prin- leiple of the dictatorship of the pro- letariat and of the Soviets as its form, as the form in which demo- eracy for all workers, is most prac- tically and concretely realized. In these two principles or, rather, in this one single principle—for the |Soviet Power is the realization of | proletarian dictatorship—ties the |fundamental historical significance of the Communist International, “its |place and its role” in the fight for \the emancipation of the working class and of the whole of humanity from economic exploitation and po- litical bondage. In his famous art- icle “The Third International ‘and Its | Place in History” Lenin points out \the insoluble relationship between the founding of the Comintern and the creation of the Soviet Union, the common path of the fight which | must be followed by them to achieve |the overthrow of world capitalism. In this connection Lenin says: “Formally the III. International was founded at its first Congress in March, 1919, in Moscow. And the characteristic feature of the | IIL. International—its vocation to fulfil Marx’s testament and con- vert it into life, and to realize the eternal ideals of Socialism and of the III, International found ex- pression from the start, for the new, the third, . “International Labor Association” immediately began to coincide in a certain measure with the Union of the Socialist Soviet Republics.” Lenin supplements this thought in the following explanation: “The international federation of the parties, which command the most revolutionary movement in the world, i. e. the movement of the proletariat for the overthrow of capitalist dominion, now has a special and, as far as its com- pleteness is concerned, an unpar- alleled basis: several Soviet Re- publics, which embody on an inter- national scale the dictatorship of | the proletariat and its victory over capitalism.” Pa ase When Lenin wrote these lines the Hungarian Soviet Republic existed eracy for the working class, demo-| | vorder, to exploitation and subjuga- * * * | to the Board of Elections, as the It is quite unnecessary to give ex- |law requires. amples. The whole course of the de- “Harvey Stole $250.” a Bar Associaticn grievance com- mittee trial now. Contract Miner Dies in Blast; Another Injured TAMAQUA, Pa., March 15 (UP). —One man was killed and another probably fatally injured in a gas ex- plosion in the No. 8 colliery of the Lehigh Coal and Navigation Co., at Nesquehoning, near here this after- noon. Tony Hotsko, of East Mauch Chunk, was dead when rescue work- | ers reached him and George Mitzer, of Nesquehoning was so badly in- jured he was not expected to live. Both men were eontract miners, velopment of all renegade groups} «phe corrupt practices act re- gad. Seer Winey ha ween oe igaites that every contribution must Pp 5 : ” : i that in the end every fight against |“uput’’ pavers scesant books the Comintern leads to a fight) snow one $100 check accepted from against the pore Anion and to @'a corporation and then listed under barge pel ia es rep another name in his campaign lis “Leftward” deviations from the Com-| EW distinct crimes are constituted.” inten proved Shia Indiagmtably, om-| Another check, one for’ $250 from For, as Lenin pointed out, the dose cde Brae ies Wena ery splits which today take place within the labor movement are no longer “Harvey stole that money,” Uter- the same as they were in the past, SAE Cah catale tet ive for instance, like the splits which Caper Siion ae hia took place before the war in social ewe Cemocracy and among the anarchists, Pocket and that's the man ‘hose ie ally meaning ‘of our historic #8i"8¢ all the probabilities.” epoch: “for or against the prole-| Sie = tarian dictatorship.” __ JudgeWinslow’sFriend, ie interpretation of this simple) . formula is; “for or against the Com- Stepson, Are Disbarred intern; for or against the Soviet} Union.” There is no third. | Federal Judge Thomas D. Thach- On the occasion of the tenth an-|¢r sitting on proceedings to disbar niversary of the Comintern all hon-| Federal Judge Francis Winslow, ac- est revolutionary proletarians, all|cused of participation in a bank- cppressed and toiling masses, in cele- Tuptcy graft ring rendered a deci- brating the founding of the Commu- Sion yesterday to disbar E. Bright nist World Part}, which is destined | Wilson, Winslow’s favorite bank- to put an end to the whole capitalist TuPtcy receiver, from practicing law. It meted the same punish- tion, -will remember that the Soviet/ment on Stewart Eaton, stepson of Union is a child of the Comintern| Winslow. Evidence showed that liti- and that it was only under the slo- | gants in Winslow’s court showered gans of Leninism that the Russian Valuable gifts on Eaton. proletariat was able to complete its} The two friends of Winslow face emancipation. They will remember that the Communist International is also a child of October. Only then! will they fully realize that it is only! under the banner of the Comintern | tiat the révolutionary proletariat can | defend its “homeland,” “the home-| land of all toilers,” and that the world dictatorship of the proletariat, the world union of Socialist Soviet republics, can only be realized under the banner of the Comintern. For the world-historic significance of the III. International lies in the fact that it began to translate inte reality the great slogan of Marx, the slogan which epitomizes the century- | old development of Socialism, the slogan which is expressed in the idea of the “dictatorship of the pro- letariat.” Charge City Building Plans Part of Mayor’s Re-electionCampaign Steamship Tickets on All Lines and All Classes; Booking to All Parts of the World; Money Transmission. ROUND TRIP TICKETS AT REDUCED RATES! Authorized Sten G USTAVE EISNE }D. ‘Ticket Age { The extensive city building pro- gram, embarked upon within recent months, is considered by political ob- servers, to be part of Mayor Walker’s bid for re-election. Tam- | All Walker Promises When a delegation of parents of children attending P. S. 119, Ave. K and E. 88th St., Brooklyn, protested lagainst overcrowded and filthy con- |ditions at the school before Mayor | Walker yesterday, the only satisfac- tion they got from the visit was a polite assurance from the smiling “Jimmie” that their complaints |would be “investigated.” | R. F. Brand, spokesman for the vey for his campaign, but never! group of more than 50 mothers who| figured in the list, he pointed out.|made their charges to the board of | estimate, declared that children “He!were being herded together in the! cellar of the school where classes were conducted near a lavatory. | “The school is a menace to health,” |he stated. “There are not even lock- jers, so that on rainy days our chil- dren are obliged to shiver in the ‘class rooms in wet clothing.” | \Film of Dress Strike lat Big Food Carnival, ‘Dance Temorrow Nite, | Hundreds of New York workers will go on the picket line with the ldressmakers tomorrow. night. Not literally, of course, but just as real- listically. Because hundreds of work- lers are going to see the first show- ing of a moving picture of the big dress strike at the Food Carnival and Tance to be held at 8 p. m., tomorrow at the Workers Center, 26-28 Union Sa. This film is only one of the many features planned for this unusual a‘ fair. A film of the famous election |parade held by the Communist Party in New York City last November will also. be shown. The Food Carnival and Dance, iwhich is being held under the aus- | WHEN YOUR BACK | SEEMS BREAKING Dackaches arising from s| often mean kidneys need help. Aid them by avoiding meats, spicy foods, liquor, and take Santal Midy capsules. Theyalsohelpirregular, ing or reclining | sranty og burning pessgceand night rising from’ ness, enuine , bear sig- nature of LOM Reet “ LPP? Aivdvuggists have them, Pe ladder weak- wae | ACTIVE NEEDLE WORKERS CALLED To Call at Union; Open Forums Begin Sunday The active members of the Needle Workers Industrial Union, working at all branches of the trade, are called by their organization to report at the Joint Board head- quarters, 131 W. 28th St. at 9 o’clock this morning. Special work of extreme importance will have to be carried out. The N. W. I. U, is now in the midst of preparations of plans thru which it aims to unionize the industry. Another announcement made by the New York Joint Board offices tells of a series of open forums to be held in the residential and industrial sections of needle trades workers, where the lessons of the recent sue- |cessful dressmakers strike will be | discussed. The first of these open forums will take place tomorrow, Sunday. morning, at 10 o’clock, at |Hunt’s Point Palace, 163rd St. and Southern Boulevard, Bronx. | . * * | Miller Goes to Phila. PHILADELPHIA, March 15.— J. Miller, for six years the leader lof the Boston Capmakers Union, and wh? was ousted from his organ- ization when the reactionary Zarit- | sky clique in contro lof the Inter- {national Cloth Hat, Cap and Millin- ‘ery Workers Union, began the ex- |pulsion of left wingers, has been jsent by the national: office of the | industrial union to take the post of | Philadelphia organizer for the union. |Here only a few days, he has al- |ready begun to organize many acti ities for the Philadelphia organiz- ation. Conference Wednesday The Philadelphia Joint Board is- |sued an announcement calling all labor organizations to a conference for this Wednesday evening at 39 No, 10th St., to mobilize all sympa~- thetic forces for a campaign to build the new industrial needle |trades upion, pices of Section 1, Communist Party, and the Downtown Section of the Young Workers League for the bene- fit of the Daily Worker, will be what lits name implies—there’ll be plenty lof food and plenty of dancing. Also plenty of good jazz music. A beauty contest for both men and women will also be one of the features. AAAAAAAAAAAA a Tour Chance to See «. OvEET RUSSILEA TOURS FROM $385.00 The Soviet government welcomes its friends and will put all facilities at your disposal to erything— your own opi greatest social experi- ment in the History of Mankind at first hand. World Tourists Inc. offer you a choice of tours which will ex- actly fit your desires and purse Don’t dream of going to Russia— make it a reality ! Write immediately to WORLD TOURISTS, Inc. 175-5th Avenue, New York, N. Y. | Tel. ALGonquin 6656 a snes deesaininaasipatimmmmemmmmansataereaed VVVVVVVVVVVY PRESENTS side by side with the triumphant;many chiefs were reported to be Soviet State of. the Russian prole-|considering another candidate, and tariat, and in this strengthening of |the mayor is busy piling up a “rec- the foundations of the international |ord ” which is supposed to strengthen revolution, in this extension of its|him as a candidate, and head off 1133 BROADWAY, N. Y. C. (Corner 26th Street) TELEPHONE: CHELSEA 5080. “THE MARCH OF THE MACHINES” —a powerful and rhythmic close-up of modern ‘“civili- left wing adherents of the Shop| | given to the fact that the Commun- ist International is not only a child and creator of the world October, the proletari: of world history will have to gather. olutionary world party possesses a firm foundation in the existence of the Soviet Republics, confirm and further develop Marx’ thought that the proletariat attains the greatest degree and the highest form of the | intensified class struggle only when the workers of individual countries is, the clearest expression was |°ther contenders. of the October of 1917 but organizer | Bridge, the $100,000,000 Staten Is- the final vic’ of | Manhattan building program, Mayor bs aden eiieepe Pig ye sub ppaldtg Jimmie. thinks it is all right to work (or in individual countries) forms city carpenters under the wage scale. the center about which all national|This situation would have brot a and class conflicts of the new epoch|Strike this week, had it not been The words of Lenin, that the rev-|cil officials, many of whom are now But while forcing thru plans to survey the $32,000,000 Tri-borough land tunnel, and the $150,000,000 sabotaged by Building Trades Coun- on the city payroll. Olvany Quits Because of TammanyDissension Former Judge Olvany resigned as leader of Tammany Hall yesterday. Read ing | Reading and studying if —AND ON THE the sensational successor film gui zation” produced by Eugene Deslaw, a Russian director “LOOPING THE LOOP” KRAUS of “Caligari” fame in an original and striking characterization... CHARLIE CHAPLIN in “A DAY’S PLEASURE” 52 West 8th St., bct. 5th & 6th Aves., Continuous, Popular Prices Sat. and Sun. noon to midnite—Dally 2-12 p. m—SPRing 5006-5000 Coming: Aelita: The Revolt of the Robots—the Russian “R.U.R.” “The most remarkable film of the machine age ever produced” —snys L’Humanite, the French Communist Daily SAME PROGRAM— to “Variety” with WERNER and ld cinema EXPLORE RUSSIA! See How A Workers Government Works! Free Russian Visas Every tourist covered by Mability insurance—free — Stop-over Privileges COMPLETE TOUR AND RETURN give all a pleasant evening, but dustrial Union the duty of approach- ing’ where the needed solidarity between i these workers and. organizing them into the union. It poses the question as well of doing away with other than English in the conduct of union business, as English, how- ever incorrectly spoken, must be the common language of a union com- posed of diverse nationalities: The Spanish language paper of the Communist Party, “La Vida Ob- rera” (Workers’ Life), has done its t in rallying the Spanish-speak- < workers to the recent and to membership in the enary union. To Latin- revolutionary unionism strange. nor terribie. every union in Latin- | Jewish, Italian, Negro and “regular | Americgnos” of the needle and other |industries may be sealed in a social | way and as it should be for genuine internationalists. Tickets may be bought in advance lat the Workers Center, 26 Union | Square; the Spanish Workers Cen- ter, 55 W. 113th St.; Unity Co-op- erative, 1800 Seventh Ave., and at the Negro Champion, 165 W. 133rd laid the Spanish Communist paper, |and this is reason enough for every class-conseious worker to attend. But, besides that, it will be worth twice the price in enjoyment. , | St. The proceeds of this affair will |! ers, which seeks to enlarge the Pressers’ Club membership, so that it can request an independent char- ter from the national organization. Unity avound the left wing pro- gram of the 40-hour week, abolition of all forms of speed-up, abolition of piece-work and the check-off sys- tem, etc., was urged on the follow- ers of the Pressers Club as: the only way to oust the corrupt Hillman machine, j the same time tute and the ultimate wer which nan cent middle-class lety had com- menced to elnbornte an a menny of its own emancipation from fendal- fam, and which full-crown bourgcolx noclety had. f! iy transformed ‘into a menns.for the enslavement of lal by capital—Marx, | a bps Ua ak Oh RAE ey succeed in seizing the power. It.is|He gave ill health as a-reason, but your eyes are in good con- only then that the victorious prole-| there have been constant rumors of dition is a pleasure. If, ruling class, can ruthlessly suppress all r exploiting class in its country and at the same time develop its leader- ship among all workers among the oppressed masses. This victory of the proletariat in one country (or in individual countries) forms the center about which all national and world history will have to gather. * 6 «@ For this reason the creation and tariat, holding its position as-the| wide dissension in the “Tiger’s” in- tance. on the part of the}Tammany fell down. on delivering class conflicts of the new epoch of|film Company of the German Gen- the existence of the first proletarian|and Dutch groups, have merged to into|state in the world arise from the|the extent of exchanging patents “ot Isame causes as the existence and the|and dividing the market and p however, they are defective or strained, it is drudgery. A pair of rest glasses will relie’ the strain and keep g00d eyes well. jj terior, beginning about the time the vote to Smith. It is surmised that Mahoney may be the next boss o7 the most famous election machine. WORLD MOVIETONE MERGER BERLIN, March 15.—The Klang- OFFICE OPEN FROM 9 4..M. TO9 P.M. Formerly Polen Miller Optical Cow OPTOMETRISTS — OPTICIANS 1690 Lexington Ave. Corner 106th . % C. eral Electric Company’ and the Tocis Syndicate (movietone), which in- cludes already the American, French WEEKLY SAILINGS 100 FIFTH AVE. New York, N. Y. IF YOU INTEND TO BUY RADIOS, PIANOS, PLAYER- PIANOS, PLAYER ROLLS, RECORDS, OR ANY MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS, BUY AT “SURMA’S STORE at 103 Avenue “A” - At Least Cost $375 “2 - —- — — No pears AMERICAN-RUSSIAN TRAVEL AGENCY, Ine, Albert F. Coyle, President NEW YORK CITY (Bet. 6-7th Str.)