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cage Two FILIPINOE COMMUNI AGAINST CAL. TERROR S JOINING STS’ FIGHT Scores of Filipino and Mexican Workers Join- ing Agricultural Union and Party NTWU ORGA | MARTIN DEFIES DEATH THREATS Shows Wilmington Mill | | Protest Meeting Against American Legion |"tt!kers Need of Union Terror Held Last Tuesday in Frisco SAN FRANCISCO, Cal., Feb. 10.| dreds of workers attending, and —Reports from the area where the | twelve workers joining the Commu- employers’ | nist Party. thugs have been waging a murder- American Legion and nus crusade against Filipino worker: vec weeks, Siate that scores of Fi At the end of the demonstration, the workers marched to the Work- CHARLOTTE » Feb. 10.— Dewey Martin, ¢ organizer of |the National Textile Workers Union, jarrived safely in Charlotte, Friday, jafter having been threatened with |lynching in Wilmington, where he jwent to offer help of the union to strikers in the Delegado mills. NIZER with Wall Stree | (Continued from Page One) bourgeois farmers Senator He said? |the dreams and plans for the pol tical control of the country not see how the situation can fa to alarm every thoughtful citizen. “Any attempt to elevate whol | families to pos: t ould be r ted.” |talist political machine but merel expresses the resentment of thi farmers and small business men, Norr so sick a |stepped aside at the will of Hoove Norris | attacked the appointment of Hughes. “Perhaps the extent of | are | | known only to the president himself or his political managers, and I do| ons of public con-! ers Center at 145 ‘turk St., carry-| ing banners. There Ella Reeves Bloor, touring the country for the International Labor Defense, spoke M pino and Mexican workers are j ing the Agricultural Workers’ In- dustrial League and the Communist Party in Watsonville, Castroville and Salinas. ! A hundred applications have al- ready been received by organizers of the Trade Union Unity League and of the Communist Party throughout the valley, where an active campaign | is being conducted. A protest demonstration last Tuesday night, against the murder | of Steve Katovis, and against the American Legion fascist attacks on the Filipino workers, was held at Third and Minna Street, with hun-| cisco, Oakland, and Los Angeles. pas, one of the Filipino leaders of | °” the agricultural workers’ strike re- cently conducted in Imperial Val-|V4S ley, also spoke. | Last Sunday night, Harvey Campas, recently from Imperial Valley strike. | meetings for Filipino Further defense are after ar Afterwar being held this week in San Fran-| Called strike committee, which also | threatened artin was iving in town. He was tol independent, leaderless striki bound to fail The next morning Martin went to and|the mill to join the picket line, but the strike|the strike committee, really domi- field, spoke at the Workers Center |nated by the skilled workers to a well-attended meeting on the /not called for mass picketing. They Back Down. Martin met the So: him, but backed adil had | down “INVESTIGATE” NO IMPROVEMENT DEATH OF 231N HARD TIMES Dangerous Anthracite|Hard Facts Refute the Mines Passed by Strike | (Continued trom Page One) ground, The Paisley Co. ran the mine at Valley Camp, Pa., a gas- filled trap, which blew up last year with great loss of life. ee a @ WILKES BARRE, Pa., Feb. The United Mine Workers, with International Secretary Treasurer operators in the three U.M,.W. an- thracite districts to renew the con- tract which expires Aug. 81, The U.M.W, officials will surely accept the demands of the operators for| steel production during February. | either an open wage cut, or a con- tinuation of the present concealed wage cutting by swindling miners on weights, and in other ways. Some -f the miners are just de- manding the removal of Umpire James A. Gorman of the anthracite conciliation board, others realize that the whole arbitration system is fatal to workers interests. Inspectors O. K. Death Trap. Mine inspectors are systematically overlooking infractions of the safety code in the pits, This is reflected in growing profit statements for the hig companies and growing casualty lists for the coal diggers, as well 2s a lower payroll, Protests have been forwarded to Goy, Fisher and to Walter Glasgow, state secretary of mines, but to little avail. These concern substantiated accounts of mine law violations and the refusal of mine inspectors to meet grievance committees, Smaller mines in both Luzerne and Lacka- wanna Counties are also accused of shocking disregard for the state 8ty 7, 1930) indicates things are | were injured, but although the po- | laws enacted for miners’ safety, The U.M.W. makes some gesture! that “Valley mills await rise in| the at present against these conditions, when hard pre: file, but does nothing about it in reality. More and more the anthra- cite miners look to the National Miners Union to lead the struggle which all see must come about the first of September. Nominees for Office in NTWIU Appear Today to Decline or to Accept The Needle Trades Workers In- dustrial Union states: “All candidates who were nomi- nated for paid officers at the last meeting of the Council of Shop Dele- gates of the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union are called upon to come to the office of the union, 131) week of work, just $12 for my| West 28th St., today, February 11,|/family, and here I got to go job/| right after work, if they did not do so yesterday, to appear before the Special Committee elected by the Executive Council to state whether they accept the offices for which they were nominated. The commit- tee will begin meeting promptly at |Jouder, and seeing this, the shark! ip. m. The nominees are the fol- towing: “For Manager—Beruchowitz, Zim- d by the rank andj Lies of Hoover (Continued from Page One) Ber is skeptical of the present | steel production, and hints that it is merely adding to the vast over- | production of commodies already | Says the Annalist Feb- | existing. ruary 7, 1980): jup of raw stocks not immediately |required for orders.” | Also, this same paper points out |that there will be a lessening in |They state: |“ a eel Rather oddly—and it will be| ‘The 1,L.G.W. thugs failed in every particularly interesting to S€€| case, Not only were they driven whether expectations are veri- | ‘ ‘4 is fied—sentiment in the (steel) in-} | dustry, as reported by the ‘Iron | Age,’ seems to count on a relaxing jin the demand for steel in Febru- ary, as compared with the demand in January.” The January auto | based on the tremendous efforts of ithe bosses in this industry to ob- tain all orders possible at the De- | cember auto show, was 300,000 |units, as compared to 422,538 in January of 1929--a drop of 122,538 units or about 85 per cent. Ford, |who has been boasting about his increased production put out 6,000 ears instead of his promised 8,000 }per day. |. Hence, referring to the steel jmills in Youngstown, which suppl: |most of the steel for th> Ford Co. the Journal of Commerce (Febru. not speeding up so well and state | Ford Motor production.” A Visi to a Job Shark’s Office (Continued from Page One) morning. The shark is annoyed at having to disgorge the fee, so he continues to lecture and curse, but eventually he has to cough up. | But they is more trouble in the {men’s room, and our vamp-trainer is called out of Eden. This time |the complaining voice is shrill |with the weak intensity of hunger, (outraged and thwarted. “I want ;my money back, I paid you $8 for | that job, last Monday, and here |they laid me off already. Just a ie man, indignant over his wasted hunting again. I paid for a job, land I want my money back.” The shark tries to quiet him, for such outbursts are bad for busi- ness. But the man only shouts | outshouts him, outargues him, out- leurses him. With a final grand “There is just a possibility, how- Thomas Kennedy in charge, is al-|€Ver that a substantial part of this | ready holding meetings with the |imcreased production is for building | production, | when they saw Martin was ready to defend himself by force of arms if necessary. This strike committee brought the judge and the bankers into the strike to effect a settlement. They were | instrumental in sending*Martin no | tices to his room, “If you value your | life, leave,” written on the backs jof N,T.W. circulars—‘‘An appeal to |action”—which Martin had distrib- juted by hundreds about town and to} the strikers. Martin totally ignored the threats, and left only after pointing out to the strikers how fatal the present tactics and strike leadership were |to the strike. Workers Sweep ILGW | Thugs From Streets (Continued from Page One) where the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union has already won| union conditions, often after a mili- tant strike, and trying to impose the company union by force on these workers, | pell mell out of the shop entrance | and out of the neighborhood but in| | addition a lot of shops that were | running open shop or where the fake | | “strike” (lockout) was in effect} “taken down” in earnest by the | workers, led by the N.T.W.I.U., and |in some cases victories are already ! won, settlements signed. The Industrial Union calls on al) workers to disregard the fake settle- ment that is being made now by the bosses, the I.L.G.W. and the state, and to carry on victoriously the| strike, the real strike, for the 40- | hour week and union conditions, led by the rank and file strike commit- |tee, under the direction of the | Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union. The fight in the streets was with- ut serious casualties to the work- rs. A number of the gangsters | \lice in every case took sides with | gangsters, and clubbed the determinedly and so well, that the gangsters alone were badly hurt. | Gangsters fleeing from the first clash, at 370 West 35th St., where the N,T.W.1.U. has won conditions | right and left among the passers by | While doing this, one gangster, I Gera-Lepka gang, fractured the} skull of Jacob Rothenberg, man-| ager of the big dress firm, Anna} | Scheer-Rothenberg, and: the boss | died in the hospital. Askenars was arrested, and the capitalist press is trying to say he was a nist”! Arrest Only Workers. not one single gangster, although | they were the ones to attack, but \instead took up Pearl Kleinmann, ‘Nathan Kitzes, David Zechtzer, I. | Koenigsberg, and Sam Kaplan, The |Jast two they charged with felon- ious assault. This fight was only one of sev- eral, in all of which the thugs were defeated, and was typical of them j all, di | to leave town by nightfall, but re- on the Gastonia textile workers and |f¥Sed point blank. Instead, he spoke EMERGENCY MEET Illinois miners’ struggles. C, Cam-|t® Several workers who agreed that | s | el | Without a fighting union back of “ON STRIKE HELP | : Electing Delegates to W. I. R. Conference i} -| The New York branch of the Workers International Relief, 799 ganizations to elect delegates to an Emergency Conference For Strik Relief, to be held Feb, 20, 7 p. m.,| at Irving Plaza Hall. The statement of the W. I, struggle, symbolized by the murde! recently of Steve Katovis, while at tending a strike solidarity meeting. Many Need Relief. The conference will work ow ways and means of giving workers’ | relief to those engaged in a whole} series of struggles: the miners’ | strikes, the shoe strikers, the nee dle trades workers, whose real struggle begins with the fake peace } | of the company union in that indus. the New York try to close shoe strikers’ relief stations, the workers must re. Broadway, calls on all workers’ or- R. points to the sharpening of the | TOWOMENS MEET FOR DRIVE Reception at Station ./ and Workers’ Banquet The Women’s Eastern Conference orris himself is part of the capi- of the needle trades, arranged by y|the Needle Trades Workers Indus- e | trial Union for the coming February 15 and 16, at Irving Plaza, has charged that Taft was not |aroused a great deal of interest the press announced but | amongst the women workers in the x ;needle trades, particularly those potted” 10 times | in order to make room for Hughes. working in open shops, who recog- | nize the need for organization. Reception and Banquet. The committee in charge is receiv- ing reports that a large number of | open shops in all eastern centers are | preceeding with the election of dele- | gates. ; is also expected that a| | large mber of Negro delegates | will be present at the conference, |The delegates are urged to make reservations for the women’s prole- | \tarian banquet, to take place on Saturday night, February 15. | Arrangements are being made to | give a reception to all delegates out of New York as they come in at the station, Every needle trade shop at New York and vicinity, Philadelphia and vicinity, Boston, Baltimore, Newark where women workers are employed |_dressmakers, furriers, cloakmak- ers, men’s clothing workers, milli- ners, shirtmakers, underwear work- ers, children’s dress and custom |dress workers, wrapper and kimona workers, boys’ blouse workers, hand- kerchief workers, tie makers—are all called upon to immediately elect their delegates and send in their . |credentials to Rose Wortis, 131 West 1 jon St., New York City. e r it - Milwaukee, Boston, etc. try, coming Paterson — silk} . | strike, and others. | Push Jobless Fight | While the Tammany police inj ee. (Continued from Page One) - | others last Friday at one of three spond with even more relief. Ways big meetings, has been released on will be found to extend it to the | $7,500 bail. strikers. New and even more bit- ter struggles are in sight, and the jcriminal code. Fred Beal, who was | W: I. R. calls on all tg prepare for | recently arrested while them. FRISCO WORKERS SCORE TERROR Form Jobless Council During Arrests SAN FRANCISCO, Cal., Feb, 10. —A big protest meeting in Work- ers Center Hall last night gave de- fiance to the American Legion and fruit and vegetable ranch employers’ persecution of Filipino workers, With the police present, but unable to dampen the enthuslasm of the | workers for united action by Amer- |Defend Right to ican and Asiatic agricultural work- | Previous reports stated | that they were held under the U. 8. “speaking to workers’ of the Pon- |tiac, Michigan, unemployed move- ‘ment, is still in jail. ae et Flint Workers Or,anize. | | FLINT, Mich. Feb. 10.—Under |the auspices of the Trade Union) | Unity League and the International | Labor Defense, a meeting against |the vicious Criminal Syndiealist | | Laws will be held on Thursday, Feb. |18, at the Odd Fellows Hall, 71344 |S. Saginaw St. The workers here| \have suffered under the lash of Gen-| {eral Motors justice as in Pontiac. This meeting will mobilize the workers for a struggle against this| vicious Criminal Syndicalist Law ;| Which attacks the militant organiza- tions of the working class, and it)| will be part of the campaign to or- | | ganize the Auto Workers in Flint, * oe. | Organize Jobless. | NEWARK, N. J., Feb, 10,—David ers, American, Negro, Chinese, and| Rosen a young worker of this Filipino speakers called on all work- | city, is in ers to join the Communist Party | charged with “ and the Trade Union Unity League and struggle. Five in the audience joined the} workers, these militants fought so|Communist Party at this meeting. Marie Prohor was arrested for dis- to tributing Communist leaflets Filipino workers yesterday. Organized Council. The mass meeting took up the| in a number of shops, were des-| question of unemployment, and or- perate in rage and fear, and clubbed | ganized an unemployed council. The | meeting was preceded by an unem- , | ployment demonstration in China- | ing Askenars, a member of the | town, at which 5 Chinese workers They were freed on were arrested, bail raised at the mass meeting. The unemployed council arranged for a series of demonstrations and mass meetings. “ A mass meeting organized by Commu- | Pilipino workers in Oakland (just across the bay from San Francisco) was addressed by C. Campos, a The police broke into the fight | leader in the Imperial Valley strike, at 370 West 35th St. and arrested | and J. Studevant, Oakland T. U. U. L. organizer, on the attacks on the Filipino workers and the great agri- cultural laborers’ strike in southern At this meeting, three Filipino workers in Oakland indus- California. tries joined the T. U-. U. L. Olgin to Lecture on “Menace of Zionism” gesture he leads the man to the | | wall, where a copy of the New! | York state law on employment | merman, Gross, Potash, Portnoy. “Secretary - Treasurer — Portnoy, The defense committee of the N. T. W. I. U. was reinforced yester- Prepstein, Baraz. “Business Agents—A. Wise, Weissberg, Goodman, Gross, Ku- lrinetsky, Steinzer, Zweiben, Trach- tenberg, Blecker, Shechter, Zim- mermann, Halpern, Pinchevsky, Edith Cohen, Migdal, Rose Medoff, Disenheuse, Nelson, Zirlin, Kara- sick, B, Pinchek, Jack Goldman, Krawetz, Kelkin, Potash, Newman, Signer, George Weiss, Sarah Rosen- | berg, Rose Prepstein, Kochinsky, Schneider, Winegradsky, Schiller, DeFazio, Doroshkin, Scheir, Dorner, Pearlman.” Office Union to Hold Dance. During the last two years the Of- tice Workers Union has been suc- cessful in organizing 500 in New York City. At the beginning of each year it starts a renewec organization cam- paign. Its third annual dance to ve held Feb. 21 in Webster Manor, iith St. between Third and Fourth Aves., N, Y. C., will help to boost. “he drive. |agencies is conspicuously framed. \“You see? If a man is discharged within a week, he is entitled to his money back. After that the agent is not responsible. Is it our fault get out, or I’ll call the police on His great lazy slouch of an assis- |tant, who has not much intelli- gence, but is perhaps retained for just such occasions, eases the be- trayed one out. Law is law, and its ways are mys- terious. All he knows is, $8 is gone forever. And where is he go- ing to get a job next? Noticeing that the law also con- tains a prohibition of the practice of splitting fees with employers, I ask him whether he ever does it. “Why, you have to do with the big employers—hotels and such. Com- petition is so keen in this business, that if you don’t they just go to some other fellow who will—and one hotel means a lot of jobs.” if you don’t give satisfaction? Now | you for making a public nuisance.” | What can he do? | | day morning by several hundred | workers who came up to Industrial | Union headquarters, 131 West 28th | St., and volunteered, | Shop Delegates Meet. A special meeting of the shop of the Needle Industrial Union |has been arranged for Thursday, | February 18, at 7:30 p. m. in Irv- ing Plaza, 15th St. and Irving Place. |The special order of business will | be a report on the present struggle in the dress trade, and mobilization of all forces to intensify the cam- paign to organize the open shops. All delegates are urged to be pres- ent at this meeting without fail! LOCK-OUT 3,000 BERLIN DRIVERS. BERLIN, Feb. 10.—Over 3,000 out of the 9,000 taxicab drivers of this city were locked out today by the bosses. There were several clashes between the workers and |scabs who attempted to run the \ taxis. i delegate council | Trades Workers’ TAXI nationalist’ outburst The resentment of the working class as recently provoked by the in Palestine, inspired by the Jewish financial and land-owning iftterests is to be the | subject of the lecture to be given ‘by M, J. Olgin, editor of the Morn- ‘ing Freiheit, this Sunday, Feb. 16 _at 8 p. m., at the Workers School, 26 Union Square. Admission to the lecture is 25 cents. Woll to Be Rand School Lecturer; The socialist party “labor insti- tute” to be held at the Rand School has invited Matthew Woll, chief red baiter of the A.F.L., vice president of the A.F.L., and acting president of the strike-breaking na- tional civie federation, to instruct them on February 20. Woll has ac- cepted, 2. A cefain amount of resentment is expressed by some rank and file members of the socialist party, hon- Officials’ Smother A 1] Protests, jl under $6,000 bail, | citing to riot.” The | courageous nature of such a charge | |is seen in the fact that all he was “guilty” of was the distribution of DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1930 aerer |Expose Hughes Ties PICK DELEG ATES I Music Notes | Shoe Workers Join in t : | Unemployed Struggl makes his | Alton Jones, pianist, appearance recital at Town Hall this (Continued from Page One) evening. He will offer a group of) ana enthusiastic promise By the shoe |Hendel and Haydn, the Schumann | \o.yor to participate in the world- | e « will appear mod third conce Alberto vening, playing the hata in B flat m I nd the Li odie Esp gnes de Mille, as arker and Warren sive her postponed dance » he Martin Beck Theatre, Jay evening, February The Musical Art Qu in Town Ha Leonard, on |Fantasy, a group of Chopin and @) wide unemployed demonstrations of group of Debussy. tti, Italian pianist, n Town Hall Thursda: Sgambatti Preludio and Fugue, and Chopin So- ynion, on the magnificent shoe face or, a group of Rhap- sted by Frank will al at speakers on their determination to ednes- Feb. 26. Organizer Lippa spoke in Italian, Martha Gold on the tasks of the women workers in this strug- , Alexanderson, president of the tories, owned by the workers and run for the benefit of all workers, without unemployment, in the U. S. S. R. from which he has recently returned, and many rank and file carry on the struggle to a victorious en While General Manager Bieden- speaking, the pickets left, ruary 18, will include only two i works, a Haydn and a Beethoven minute, to go out to the daily ._ | quartet. struggle. ‘ In “The Virginian,” Owen Wis- ee ical Period. ter’s tale of the, west, which is be- ‘ c ae i ‘ beietie sae ing shown this week at the Paradise Labor I raternal The coming weeks are critical. and Pitkin Theatr “A MAN FROM THE RES- TAURA Due to the heavy atte ! appreciation p! AT 2N of ” CONT U AVENL D lance ai the audience t Second Avenue Playhouse is continu- ing the showing of the Soviet hoto Man From the Restaurant,” The A.F,L. Boot and Shoe Workers’ Union says it will enter the field after the contracts expire, March 1, but as the bosses have already broken those contracts, nobody ‘« thinks the A. F. L. ean do anything in t future. It has alrealy tried and failed. JE nd | line. RL ld The bosses must get orders and start work soon, or the Easter seag sqn will close’ The union, its mem! ternn 1 Revolution- ary Posters, a Exposition 1 on tour, for) devote all of their time to th |and factory. | |for three more days—Monday, Tues- | day and Wednesday. On the same | program the Second Avenue the- tre is showing another worth-w hile | film, entitled “Evolution.” “The New Babylon,” another So- | viet film, which created quite a fur- ore when first shown here, will be | the chief screen feature beginning Thursday and continuing through Sunday. Communist School, Trains for Revolution (Continued from Page One) and women, including young and|' Negro and Oriental workers. The courses taught are all worked out with the idea of giving the stu- {dents an intensive training, that will | |immediately assist them in organ- ization work, and in developing other | organizers. These students have their fares and expenses paid by the party, and but part of the regular cur is work in the evening cons of active participation in leading committees in the New York. strug- gles. The first session was devoted to an addr to the students by lead- ing Communist Party comrades, and | instructors. Central Committee of the party] spoke of the revolutionary aim of | the school, of the necessity of a core | rect theory, and of penetration by the party into every industrial town | Other speakers discussed the re- lation of various subjects to the end in view, which is the organization of the Communist movement and} the establishment of a new society, | the methods of study, the technical equipment and arrangements of the tive courses. at, nion Square 5th Workers tarting this week Unit 2, Section 4 Tuesday, oom. 6. S$ p.m Tuesday, ( Unit 8, Seetion 4, Tuesday, 8 p.m. 886 Le cducational. Unit 2R, Section 1. Meets now ‘Tuesdays 8 p. th St m Max Bedacht, for the|'"” Fraction. Thursday n t © present. will be there. Roll call. One. nurstay at Mo ‘ VEGETARIAN * Dairy RESTAURANT Section 1. urades Will Always Find tt Tonigh nent discu 4th St Wedn rid A 1 sd: ict Representy E. 102rd St Agents. leaflets among the many unemployed | of Newark, calling them to organize | jn the Council of Unemployed. | Sam Nesin, International Labor | Defense organizer of New York dis-| trict declared today that the I.L.D | will defend to the utmost the right| of ‘workers to organize the unem- More and more. up into two great into two great and directly contra- posed classes; bourgeoisie and pro- letariat—Marx. estly deluded by the pretension of its leaders. They want to know why this war monger, and notorious re- actionary is to appear before them as one of their leaders. The socialist officialdom says lit-) tle, but points to the close collabora- |tion of Woll with the socialist lead- ers in the I.L,G.W., the International Fur Workers Union, the United He- brew Trades and other company) | unions headed by socialists. \ PHOTOGRAPHS AT THE STUDIO OR YOUR HOME Bertin Photo Studio 454 THIRD AVENUE Near Sist St. ij ‘New York City CALEDONIA 6766 Special Rates for Organizations Workers, Patronize RELIABLE | MUSIC COMPANY Majestic, Victor and other Radios also PIANOS and VICTROLAS Expert Repairing full line Spanish and Russian Records 1808 Third Ave,, near 115th St, 1393 Fifth Ave. near 101st St. NEW YORK CITY Tel. Atwater 0402 A Theatre Guild Production™"¥ “METEOR” By 5. N, BEHRMAN GUILD _W. §% Bva. 3:60 Mts,Wed, &Sat.2:40 IVIC REPERTORY 14th st | Eves. . Mats, Wed., Sat, 2:30) SI. $1.50 Director CORPSE” PAN” N DOOR” & HEIR W § Ww ay, Eves. at 8:50 Mats, Wednesday and Saturday 2130 | A. H. WOODS Presents | “RECAPTURE” A Love Story by Preston Sturges Author of “Strictly Dishonorable” Ethel Barrimore Theatre 47th Street, West of Brondw Eves, 8:50. Mats. Wed. & Sat. 0 CA MEO . & BYWAY af American Premiere Startling Wuropean “CAUGHT IN *AMUSEMENTS>|| NOW | Strictly Vegetarian Food Wisconsin 8 Drama of Crookdom ployed. A Newark attorney has been | DC BOth St. ( Heteslie ap Ptdey M 2 wd hired to defend Rosen in court. Lsetcgaaged nae aif {$ THE BERLIN Phone: UNI versity 5868 om peaae The Chocolate Soldier’ | UNDERW = ts. dintingnished by OW ith CHARLES PURCELL with Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 has simplifica ct Alice MagKenzie and Roy Cropper | NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES PITKIN Pitkin Avenue Brooklyn “onx © OUTDOOR TALKING CLASSIC ALL “VIRGINIAN” vith GARY COOPER PARADISE Grand Concourse RICHARD ARLEN, 91 | |] 202 B. 12th St. determined to win, has a splensy 1 chance for victory all along the line. . “For All Kind of Insurance” CARL BRODSKY Murray Hil) 5550 |7 Kast 42nd Street, New York Telephone || Cooperators! Patronize SEROY CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. ¥ W. I. R. CLOTHING STORE 542 BROOK AVENUR Telephone Ludlow 3098 Cleaning, Pressing, Repairing High Class Work Done Goods Called for and Delivered All profits go towards strikers and their families. YOUR SOLIDARITY WITH THE WORKERS! sHuow WORKERS’ CENTER BARBER SHOP Moved to 30 Union Square ©REIMEIT BLDG———Main Floor ,-—- MELROSE — leasant to Dine at Oar Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx hear 174th St. Station) NE:— INTERVALE « PHO 9149, RATIONAL Vegetarian RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVE: UE Bet. 12th and 13th Sts. HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. | John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet New York All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health ° Restaurant 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Death Takes a Holiday A comedy about life. with PHILIP MERIVALE 133 SECOND AVENU PLAYH © EAST SID MOBY rE Rcom $0%—Phone: Algonquin 6188 Not connected with any other office ei HUSTON Stage Shows—Hoth Theatres trom CAPITOL THEATRE. BROADWAY Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST 249 EAST 115th STREET Second Ave, New York MAILY EXCEPT FRIDAY vl telephone f tmem' ee Retepuaner Lehigh Oost E THEATRES Cor, MW OSTREDT Hy Popular Demand “EVOLUTION” Beginning Thursday, February 13—*THE NEW BABYLON” Eat at— COOPERATIVE RESTAURANT 26-28 UNION SQUARE Service—Self-Service (FRESH VEGETABLES OUR SPECIALTY More “A Man from the Restaurant” —ON THE § Days—The jet Photoplay Advertise your Union Meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City AME PROGRAM— Hotel & Restaurant Workers Bs rena sit we Bae eee Ne Fee a 2274 Phone CI po dd lg Teeny wy rhe first Monday of the month at Hducational meet: * itd e