The Daily Worker Newspaper, April 19, 1929, Page 5

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YORK, FRIDAY, APRIL 19, 1927 ASCISTS READY TO TAKE VIENNA MANHATTAN Youth Club Dance, The first spring dance of the Har- , veclare Intention to Youth Club will be ‘b ison Ave,, near 102nd Set Up Dictatorship St, tomorrow, 6: bs m. Downtown Workers Ball. VIENNA, Austria, April 18— y 1 : ascist organizations today are pre- | by the, Downtown, Workers Club jring for a sudden thrust against i} * ‘y ‘. 2 present paralyzed Christian so- Harlem Youth Hike. at alist government of Chancellor} The second hike of the season will ine be given by the Harlem Progressive IDSs |Youth Club Sunday, starting at 9 a. m. from 1492 Madison Ave, near The leaders of the fascists, en-| 77 %t. ‘enched in the Heimwehr, are per- ctly open in their threats to arch against the present govern- ent or any other and substitute a a6 3 Yonkers Forum. D. Benjamin, assistant director of the Workers School, will speak on st: “Is the American Work the subject: “Is inerloan Wore FS ip. ing Class Backward?" poe ia Sees |e Cisorum,. 262. Warburton Ave., Yonkers, Sunday night. y i * * * ioston Catholic Jury Jersey 1. L. D. Meet. A mass meeting to organize Hudson County into an active branch of the International Labor Defense will be held Sunday, 2 p. m., at the Ukrain- fan Hall, 160 Mercer St., Jersey City, N. J. Speakers in two languages. American Negro Labor Congress Protest Meet. . rotest against the killing o' Henry” Clarke by his white school- mate, a meeting will be held under the auspices of the American Negro Labor Congress and the Young Work- ‘inds the “American ‘ragedy” Is “Obscene” | BOSTON, April 18. — Vicious \ssachusetts puritanism and prud- | van true to its past form today nen a Suffolk county jury found onald S. Friede, New York pub- ther, guilty of the charge of sell- ig an obscene book after deliber-|ers (Communist) League | at St. ing for an hour and 25 minutes, | Lukes Hall, 125 ‘W. ,130th Bt, pa * Jday, 8 p.m. April 22. Harol iser’ - jams, of the Negro Department of The book was Dreiser's Ani tne Communist Party, Willians Bur- merican Tragedy,” which Friede|;oughes, of the A. 'N. L. C., Leo vid to a policeman here April 16} Grant, president of the Harlem Inter- ipi racial Club, Charles Alexander of the precipitate a test case. Thomas | VW. “c.'L., John Owens, recently . Lavelle, defense counsel, indicated | returned aise Pe, Southern mextile Fi i Strike, Richard B. Moore, of ter the trial that he would carry | Titiem ‘Tenants League, F. Steele, 1e case to the state supreme court. | secretary of, the Eastern District of Among those who testified at the the Labor Sports Union and Harry ii Bis n, of the Young Pionee: ‘ial were Clarence Darrow and| Visenm® reiser himself. ‘America, and J. Louis Engdahl, act- ing editor, Daily Worker, will speak. oa 8 Soviet-Armenian Ald Dance. A dance will be given. by the Downtown Branch of the Committee smallpox on India Boat \llege Bombs for Boris LONDON, April 18.—Forty-five ases cf small pox have developed mong the former passengers and Palms, 135th St. and Broadway, at 8 p. m, tomorrow. Tickets may be had from the Armenian Workers Club, 105 Lexington Ave., or the Hogs Club, 146 E. 28th st. Fretheit Singing Society. ew of the liner Tuscania which! ‘The Sixth Jubilee Concert of athe ack ii i Society will be held Saturday, May ocked in Liverpool from Bombay, | Society wi See einer 18, at Carnegie Hall. and Jacob Schaefer wit conduct. * * adia, Apri! 2, Arthur Neville hamberlain, minister of health, an- yunced today. He said there had 2en seven deaths. Inasmuch as the useania arrived 17 days ago, hamberlain added, serious risk of widespread epidemic has passed. e 300 “contact” cases among the 0 aboard the ships are being vis- :d by medical experts daily. Freiheit Mandolin Orchestra. The fifth annual concert of orchestra will be held Saturday, 8:30 p. m., at the Town Hall, 43rd 8t., be- tween Broadway and Sixth Ave. * the Engdahl_at Unity Cooperative. J, Louis Engdahl, recently returned from the U. 8. S. R., will speak on “Building Socialism in the U.S. 8. R.” 8:30 p. m, Sunday, at the Unity Co- operative, 110th St, and. Seventh Ave. * Harlem Eduentional Forum, Richard B. Moore, president of the Harlem Tenants League, will speak on “The Ideals and Tasks of | the American Negro Labor Congress” at the Harlem Educational Forum, 169 W. 133rd St, 3:30 p.m. Sunday. SAT Club Hikes. rganize I. L. D. in Hudson County at Newark Meet Sun. The organization of an active} The club will hike to “Thousand rt i Fountains” Sunday at 9:30 a, m. ranch of the International Labor | Sect at igoth St. East Side subway efense in Hudson County will be | station. iscussed at a mass meeting at the | krainian Hall, 160 Mercer St., Jer- | xy City, N. J., at 2 p. m. Sunday. Carl Hackert, national organiza- ion secretary of the I. L D., will} Erle R peak in English, A Ukrainian; paxton Hibben Memorial Film. i i : i A moving picture of the funeral seat ayo Ve: ene ayes age services of Paxton Hibben in Moscow, U. S. S._R., will be shown at the | Hibben Memorial meeting at the Labor Temple, $:20 p.m. Sunday, a A under the auspices of the Paxton WASHINGTON, April 18.—Harry | Hibben Memorial Hospital Fund oil baron,| which is arranging the establish- Sinclair, millionaire hose Teapot Dome leases brought | ™ent of a model children’s hospital 1 the biggest graft scandal known | __ pogo Cue U. S., was today appealing to the | | BRONX S. Supreme Court for a rehear- \fa ces Pee Nae ee & ee ee cane Gas ee ‘Seats Nerine an lecture gn etted him the only jail sentence he | “What Is Happening in, the Sovie: ceived in the whole affair, a 90) Upion2" at Hunts Foiny vate etday, ay term and $500 fine. | April 26. é % 4 | international Labor Defense Festival. | A concert and dance will be given by the Sacco-Vanzetti Branch of the cay. ces “Die Naturefriende.” The English section of the club Group to Tuxedo and Ranapo, Meet at the Chambers St. Ferry of, the R., 4:30 a. m. Fare, $2. “Seer ice | SINCLAIR ASKS REHEARING Every class struggle is a politi- ‘al struggle—Marx. a AAAAAA AAA AACA AAA To TOOLS DOWN! DAY VvVvVvVvYV VvvVvVvVv Against Imperialist War! — Organize the Unorganized! Celebrate the International Labor Holiday at the : Bronx Coliseum, East 177th St. WEDNESDAY, MAY FIRST , (doors open at 4 p. m.) Splendid Program DIXIE NEGRO CHOIR will singe Negro 7 Labor Songs GUILD DANCERS in a special MAY DAY BALLET ' Nationally Known Speakers Auspices of May Day Labor Conference of Unions and Fraternal Organizations; Communist Party, U. S. A., New York District. y Flower Ball will be given | to Aid Soviet Armenia at the Royal) | will attend the hike of the German | Fraternal Organizations LABOR DEFENSE I, L. D, at Rose Garden, 1347 Boston Road, tomorrow, 8:30 p.m, Dancing, mandolin quartet, musical numbers| will feature the program, | * 8 * Bronx Workers Athletic Club, A hike will be held Sunday to White Plains. Meet at 8:30 a, m,, |1847 Boston Road. j | cate ea | | Taxt Union Dance. | A dance for the benefit of the| | {Taxi Unionist” will be given by| | Taxi Chauffeurs’ Union of G._N. Y. at Hunts Point Palace, 953 So, Boule- yard, Monday night, April 22, | BROOKLYN J} Engdahl Talks on U, 8. 8, R. J. Louis Engdahl, acting editor of the Daily Worker,’ will lecture on “Socialist Construction in the U. 8. 8, R.” before the Boro Park Workers Club, 1373 48rd 8t.,, EE | cheb, 2 rd St, at 8:30 p, m. a fa oe Anti-War Meet. A mass meeting in protest against | preparations for imperialist war will | |be held at 8 p. m, tomorrow at the| | Brownsville Workers Center, 154 | Watkins St., Brooklyn, Fred Bieden- | |Kapp, of the Shoe Workers’ Union, | Harold Williams, of the Negro De- partment of the Communist Party, | Charles Zimmerman, of the Needle Trades Workers’ Industrial Union | and Walter Trumbull will speak. ‘Marching Guns,” by the Workers Laboratory Theatre, will be pro- | ced, | 6 ingle ce Postpone I, L, D, Lecture, Browns- ville. The lecture by Juliet Stuart Poyntz, | national secretary, International La- | \bor Defense, at’ the Brownsville | Branch of the I. L. D. has been post- phoned till Wednesday, April 24, | * * . j Needle Union Benefit. | The Needle Trades Workers’ Indus- trial Union will benefit from a con-| |cert and package party to be given | by the Workers Culture Club of Brownsville at 154 Watkins St., to- | morrow night, | Bae Lae Council 20 U.C.W. ' A concert for the benefit of “Icor” pees bre duke by the Council Satur- | | day, 1 at 31 St., | | Bropiion: 3 Hinsdale St., | ° . > | Sanger at Council 25, U.C.w.w. Margaret Sanger will’ lecture ‘on | |“Birth Control” before ti | |tonight, at 205 Central ye. ceeds to the Daily Worker, e 8) 8 council Pro- Marmor Lectures, c. Marmor will lecture’ tives |the 17, U. C, Beach Ave., 26. on “Mo- | of Freedom and. Reaction. in New Literature” before Council . .W., at 227 Brighton 8:30 p,m, Friday, April (Brutally Beaten While | :|Marine Workers League, who vAILY WORKER, NEW BAILS SEAMAN Distributing Leaflets John Morgan, organizer of the was mercilessly beaten and _ arrested | when he attempted to do work among the crew of the Standard Oil tanker William D. Archibald, was released late Wednesday night on \queta thro: MANHATTAN | Party Members, Notice! | Tickets for the May First demon- stration at the Bronx Coliseum may be had at the District Office. Finan- cial secreta hould secure their section machinery | nt at once. ‘The Ellias poster will be ready April 12. flets for distribu. | tion in shops will be ready April 21 Sections and units should organize machinery accordingly, Comrades are the pageant reh 2 p. , at the Workers Cen Union quare. Further informat from Di Santo at the District Office. * * * $1,500 bail furnished by the New| York District of the International pa Labor Defense. Morgan went aboard the tanker, |which was at Robins Dry Dock, on! time during the day. April 11. He was just about to dis- tribute the Marine Workers Voice, | organ of the Marine Workers League, and the Labor Defender when he was attacked by the watch- man. So valiantly did Morgan de- fend himself that the watchman was |. A compelled to beat a retreat and to call the ship’s officers. A group of jofficers attacked Morgan, beat him| severely and then chained him by the hands on the deck, They called detectives who finger-printed him, put him thru an impromptu third degree and then arrested him on a charge of felonious assault. When he appeared in court, the I. L. D. was immediately called in and thru its attorney, Jacques Buitenkant, at once started proceed- ings to lower the bail. On Wednes- day the I, L. D. finally succeeded in having the bail reduced to $1,500 and Morgan was released for trial at some later date. The reduction was secured in spite of the strong opposition of lawyers for the Stand- ard Oil Company of New Jersey. In bonrgeots society, Hving labor is but a means to increase ai lated labor. In Communist eccumulated tabor is but a to widen, to enrich, to prom: existence of the laborer.—Kar) Mcrx (Communist Manifesto), Sc eatare Si Waser obs Ui WUTC fe NEU ca he RUSH PLANS FOR “MAY DAY PARADE (Continued from Page One) |Go ahead with your preparations.” | Flyn assured them that the commis- | sioner would sign the formal permit | blank when presented. Get Ready to March. upon all labor organizations to be ready to mobilize its membershpi, | | paign. The line. of march is to be as fol- then south on Fourth Ave. to 1th! St., east on 10th St., past 51 East | 10th St., and the Independent Shoe | Workers Union, to Third Ave, south on Third Ave. to Astor Place, west | on Astor Place, to University Place north on University Place to 15th St. west on 15 St. past the head- quarters of the Architectural Iron, and Bronze Workers Union, north} on Fifth Ave. to 21st St., west on| | | West 21st St., Needle Workers In-| | dustrial Union, to Seventh Ave.,| north on Seventh Ave. to 28th St. past 131 West 28th St. and south to Union Square, food workers coming | down to meet the parade from dist | St. | Grocery Clerks and Butchers Unite. | A new union will be born on Inter- | national Labor Day when the amal-| gamation of the Retail Grocery, | Fruit and Dairy Clerks and the Pro- | gressive Butchers Union of Greater New York, now in process, is rati. fied and the new strong industrial organization goes in a body ‘from | their joint headquarters to atend the | May Day celebration of the Com-! munist’ Party of America in the Bronx Coliseum. The new name for | the amalgamated union on which a committee is now working will be | announced at that time. Plans for the amalgamation of the | two left wing unions have been in progress since last Tuesday when a joint meeting of the executive boards of the clerks and butchers recom- mended the step. Tecommendation was followed by visits of a commit- tee from each union to the other’s headquarters. Win at Three Shops. Immediate results from the amal- | gamation move were aparent today when the unions forced the settle- ment of three food shops in Brook- lyn and one butcher shop. Twelve striking clerks picketing Gingold’s Fruit Market 22 E. 170th St. and the Burland Fruit Market, the Bronx, were arrested yesterday. The pickets were taken to the Sixth Magistrate Court on charges of assault. Nine of them were freed, three, A. Goldfarb, M. Faber and A. Horowitz, being sent to the work- | house for three days. Harry . Rosenzweig of the fake United Hebrew Trades outfit today caused the arrest of D. Rarow, clerk in the Selz store at 9 E. Moshuler Parkway, the Bronx, for picketing. Rosenzweig, wh owas thrown out of the Retail Clerks Union for graft- ing, then stuck up a sign in the store window saying that the place was settled. Picketing by the left wing union is continuing. Sam Heller, another faker from the United Hebrew outfit, like Ro- senzweig trown out of the left wing union, yesterday caused the arrest of four clerks picketing a store at | 65th St. and Bay Parkway, Brook- lyn. The strikers, S. Goldstein, E. Novick, J. Sandler, and A. Jacobs, \of the RAYON STRIKERS DEFY INJUNCTION ELIZABETHTON, Tenn., 18.—The 5,000 strikers who April came rising against the breach of con- tract granting them wage raises and better conditions in the Glanz | The parade committee is calling |stoff and Bemberg mills here are|~ PITTSBURGH, April 18—(U.P.) maintaining their picket line. The two companies of state militia | 88 well as unorganized workers in lent to the employers by the gov-|pany that the company has taken preparation for the huge May Day ernor of Tennessee and first swornjover on long term leases the Cherry parade, surpossing even the splendid! in as deputy sheriffs, have now been} Valley blast furnace plant cf the turnout in the last election cam-|re.sworn as state police and are un-|Iianna Furnace der the direct orders of Adjutant General Boyd, who has announced lows: Start at 1 p. m. at Union Sq.,'that the injunction against picket- Company at Sharpsville, Pa. ‘ing which was issued by a local judge during the strike a month ago is still effective, Warrants were issued today for | the arrest of nine striking workers {entola | for violation of this injunction. They|try—V. I. Lenin (“Left” are: I, Z, Morgan, Jarvis Kite, Sam Hall, George Arwood, Clate Simerly, L. C. Range, Paul Mays, Cody Led- ford and Robert Cole. Hearings | 21st. St. west on 2ist. St. past 16 | were set for two o’clock this after- | noon. Dan Taylor, first vice president United Textile Workers’ Union, the right wing organization which tried to prevent and betray the strike, was also charged with violation of the injunction. Chicago to Hear Talk on Soviet Education CHICAGO.—Lecture will be given by Dr. Carlton W. Washburn, Super- intendent of Winnetka Public Schools, Chairman Trade Unionists Dejegation to Soviet Russia, on cducation in Soviet Russia, Sunday May 12th, 2 p. m., at the Commun- ity Center, 1835 N. California Ave. The event is arranged by Womens’ Club Jewish Non-Partisan Workers | Schools, Chicago. Our own age, the bourgeois age, is distinguished by this—that it has simplified class antagonisms. More and more, society is splitting up into two great hostile camps, into two great and directly contra- posed claxsex: bourgeoisie and pro- letariat—Marx. tas> FROM FACTORY TO YoU! HIGH-GRADE MEN’S and YOUNG MENS SUITS From $12.50 to $25.00 PARK CLOTHING STORE 93 Ave. A, Cor. Oth St. N. ¥. C. lee ets unteers For May Day Wanted. District Office urgent rs to help in prepara- y Day Demonstra- w. York Coliseum ked to report at any tions for tion at ‘omrades are * arr ie Section 1 Membership Meet, Plans for the T. ‘onfer- ence will be discus mem- bership meeting at 6 p. m,, tonight, * Committee Conference. Negro Distric plans for rence to outline will be held at Room Union Square, Friday, April r tion directors and Ne- sentatives are urged to Nae ee | Ask Wolfson To Repo: | Gene Wolfson, of Unit 6F, 2 sked to report to M. Bass, uare, immediately, Action will be ‘on failure to’ report. the York , to 9 Workers Cen- fourth floor. Day cel-b Coliseum will prations be held tonight at the , 26 Union Square, l _ BROOKLYN Anti-War Meet. May An anti-war meet under the aus- pices of the Party, Y. W and | the All-America’ Ant t League will be held at the Browns- ville Workers Center, 154 Watkins St. 8 p. m., today. Cwatt ks: need ks On U.S.S.R. Soviet ain discussed by J. Louis ing editor of the Dé 8 p.m, Friday, April 26, befor tion 8 at the’ Brownsville Workers Center, 154 Watkins St ~ * 2, International Branch 2, § Monda: The branch meets 2: at 8 p. m, 56 Manhattan Hoffer will talk on “Leninism.” * 8 Contest Dance. A contest ball to greet the Young Workers (Cemmunist) League and the Women’s Council as winners of the banners from the House Com- mittee at the last dance will be held at 56 Manhattan Ave. Saturday, May 4. | Cade, ees? ¥. W. C. L, Spring Dance, The Williamsburgh section of the give a will spring dance gue urday, April 27, at 56 Manhattan Ave. Brane! “The Signif First 0: y" will : Mankin Hins' , Monday, April ‘City Engineers Voting Win Minimum Wages A statement issued by Marcel E.| Scherer, organizer of the Union of Technical Men, yesterday charges \that the distribution of increases to 1200 engineers was in effect a fake |distribution. Information has been| passed out from the commissioners’ | officers that increases have been given to all of the men. This is not so, says Scherer. Only 200 re-| ceived increases and these are men who for the most part should have received these increases a year ago. Immediately after learning of the increases granted to some of the |men a committee of representatives jfrom each office and floor of the board met at the headquarters of | jthe Union of Technical Men and jdrew up a vigorous protest. | The men at the meeting decided to immediately distribute a ques-| |tionaire to the 2,000 engineers em- ployed in the Board. This ques- onaire will determine how many | | jout last Monday in spontaneous up-|men are ready to enter into an im- |mediate walkout. | CONSOLIDATE COKE IRON. CO'S | |--Announcement was made today |Ly the Davison Coke and Iron Com- Co., at Leetonia, Ohio, and the Claire blast furnace plant of the Reliance Coke and Iron The Dictatorship of the Proletariat ix the fiercest ané most mereiles« | war of the new class against Its more powerful enemy, the bourgeoisie. whose power: of resistance increases after its overthrow, even Commu- nism». Meet your Friends at GREENBERG’S Bakery & Restaurant 939 E. 174th St., Cor. Hoe Ave. Right off 174th Street Subway Station, Bronx All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S VEGETARIAN HEALTH RESTAURANT 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx | —MELROSE— Dairy ansravnaxt omrades “Will Always Find It Pleasant to Dine at Our Place. || 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx (near 174th St. Station) |] PHONE: INTERVALE 9149. MEET YOUR FRIENDS at Messinger’s Vegetarian | and Dairy Restaurant 1763 Southern Blvd., " ox, N. ¥ Right off 174th St. Subway Station Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 199 SECOND AVE] UE Bet. 12th and 13th Sts. | Strictly Vegetarian Food | COOPERATORS! PATRONIZE M. FORMAN Allerton Carriage, Bicycle and Toy Shop 736 ALLERTON AVENUE (Near Allerton Theatre, Bronx) Phone, Olinville 2583 Hotel and Restaurant Workers Branch of the Amalgamated Food Workers 138 W. Sist St. Phone Circle 7330 TSF BUSINESS MEETING held on the first Monday of the month at 3 p.m, Advertise your Union Meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. ADMISSION 50c; 25¢ Through Your Organization, are out on $1,00 bail each, Their trial is set for April 2c. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNI versity 5865 For # Real Oriental Cooked Meal VISIT THE INTERNATIONAL PROGRESSIVE CENTER 101 WEST 28TH STREET (Corner Oth Ave.) RESTAURANT, CAFETERIA RECREATION ROOM te 12 pom Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 > John’s Restaurant || SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES ‘ A place with atmosphere 1 where all radicals meet | 302 E.12th St. New York || “ Delegates to “Disarm” |magistrate set bail at $5,000. The|gyn Form of Strike to Conference Evade the Terms of Soviet Union (Continued from Page One) a technical opinion as to whether the commission was competent to act. | The Soviet leader addressed the commission at length on the three! fundamental principals of his pro-| ject. “The purpose,” he said, “ is to oblige the commission to pledge it- self in favor of reduction of arma- ments ‘instead of limitation. The latter is not disarmament. The pur- pose also is to oblige the commission | to agree on a method for disarma- ment. “Personally, I see only three pos-| sible methods. First, an individual | one where by each state fixes. its own reductions; second, permission | for the disarmament conference to fix arbitrarily the reductions of each} state; and third, the Soviet methods of applying an impartial criterion for each state. I insist that our method is the only effective and) practical one and insist that the commission vote on it.” | TO BURN 16-YEAR-OLD BOY BEDFORD, Pa., April 19.—Har- vey Feathers, a 16-year-old youth | was sentenced today to die in the \clectrie chair, by Judge Thomas F.| Union Sq., and the “Daily” is re- Bailey for a man killed in a holdup. Willis Feathers, 25, a deaf mute and brother of Harvey was sentenced to life imprisonment, for complicity. loceasions, was found guilty of Communist Activities [MORE WALK-OUTS [ Frances Pitat MIDWIFK 351 E. 7/th St., New York, N. Y Tel. 6 Rhinelander 35 IN FOOD STRIKE Men Defy Writs; Six Shops Settled | (Continued from Page One) ieased on $500 bail each by Magis- DICkens 1096 Blue Bird Studio tas? Phone “Photos of the better kind.” SS PITKIN AVE., Cor. Amboy St. trate Henry Goodman in the 57th BROOKLYN, N St. Court, ‘They will be tried to- | morrow. Brutalities Continue. “For Any Kind of Insurance” Ruthless attempts to crush the strike by pelice and hired thugs continued. One worker was seized by police cutside the Globe restaur- ant, dragged inside, and viciously attacked by private detectives be- fore being taken to the 20th St. Station and charged with disorderly | conevet. Four other workers were arraigned before Magistrate Abraham Rosen- bluth in Jefferscn Market Court; two were discharged and two held on $100 bail each for trial April 24, Of those arrested previously, Albert Rescigne, 19, 2361 Fi vey who was beaten unconscious on two | dis- orderly conduct by Magistrate Rosenbluth and given a suspended sentence, Harry Milton, 22, of 107 West 122nd § was ntenced to five days in the workhouse. This is | the second sentence, Milton having | just completed a term of five da before his second arrest cn the | ———— ——————— picket line. rles Torrorson, 27, ] pr, ABRAHAM MARKOFF of 1502 Cr Park, East, was POM GRORIDENTEGE fined $10. Fourteen others weer ad- Journed. (CARL BRODSKY Murray Hill 5550 East 42nd Street, New York Telephone Cooperators! Patronize SERO Y CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue Bronx, N. Y¥ Estabrook 3215 DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Room § Phone: Algonquin 8183 Not connected with any other office 249 HAST 115th STE Cor. Second Ave. hours: M a.m 2 Tues., ‘Thurs & to § p.m 10 a, m. to 1 p.m, hone for appointment, Telephone: Lehigh 6022 to Greet Duncan Dancers With Great Enthusiasm (Continued from. Page One) lutionary Russia” that have delight- ed working class audiences thruout the country. As on the previous appearances | of the Duncan Dancers in this city, Patronize | No-Tip Barber Shops “Impressions of Revolutionary Rus- | 26-28 UNION SQUARE (1 flight up) sia,” which are vivid recreations of 2700 BRONX PK EAST the revolutionary struggles of the Russian working class, made a tre- mendous “hit.” Two new numbers (corner Allerton Ave.) have been added to this series, /[ (nity Co-operators Patronize “Young Guards” and “Pioneer March.” SAM LESSER Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailor 1818 - 7th Ave. New York Between 110th and 111th Sts. Next to Unity Co-operative House Tomorrow night another program of great interest will be presented. | Performances will also be given Saturday afternoon and evening and Sunday afternoon, after which the Duncan troupe will return to Mos- cow. | The farewell performances of the Duncan Dancers are being given by special arrangement with the Daily Worker, Tickets are on sale at popu- lar prices at the “Daily” office, 26 Tel.: DRYdock 8880 FRED SPITZ, Ine. FLORIST NOW AT 31 SECOND AVENUE (Bet. Ist & 2nd Sts.) Flowers for All Occasions 15% REDUCTION TO READERS OF THE DAILY WORKER ceiving a percentage on all the tick- ets it sells. No worker should miss the farewell of these unusual chil- dren of the Soviet Union. Demonstrate for World Labor Sol~ idarity May First at Coliseum. “BUILD THE UNION” VVIVVVVFVVVVVG Bargains in Lamps Ornamental Iron Candy Raincoats Leather Goods Umbrellas Shirts Ties Stockings Vases Japanese Goods Leather Sportwear Carpets Russian Art Goods Cloaks Dresses Oriental Dried Fruit Jewelry Grocery Mens’ Clothing Books Millinery Caps Knit Goods Slippers White Goods WILL BE SOLD AT PRICES FAR BELOW THEIR VALUE AT RETAIL Today, Tomorrow, Sunday at the STAR CASINO, 107th Street & Park Ave. Dancing Daily & & 4 & 4 fe Ay hy Ay hy hy br Ln Lr, a hos fs Restaurant in Lower Hall Come Direct from Work and Enjoy A Good Supper at the Bazaar.... Ee

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