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tote bhi DATLY WORKER, NEW YORK, eee FEBRUAR: | tn) Xvou YOUNG SHOE WORKER TELLS Calls All at. Werman Shop to Organize \By a Worker Correspondent) While we workers of the Werman shoe Factory in Brooklyn slave for 9 hours a day for wages between he measly sums of $12 and per week, our boss, Mr. Werman, is naving a nice time in Florida en: joying “prosperity” on the money which he squeezes from us. While he is gone his three sons are sub- stituting for him in speeding us up. When we complain to any of these | WwW an triplets about our low wages and rotten conditions, they always tell us that it is enough fo any worker to get $18 per week! They have a very able assistar n Sam Reeder. He is the foreman. Sam Reeder is a very wise guy. He used to be a chopper getting $20 a week before he became a dele- gate in the union which used to be in our shop and when a strike was mee called here, Sam betrayed it and was bought off by Mr. Werman. Now he is our foreman and getting | 375 a week and two week’s vacation — every year with pay. He is the of- ‘icial gangster of our shop. He eats up anyone who distributes eaflets to us, as he has done re- ntly to members of the Young amw League who issued three eaflets to us and held a very in- eresting open air meeting for us a few weeks ago. YCL Exposes Reeder. It certainly gave me a whole lot f pleasure to hear speakers point Reeder out on the corner and call im a yat and every other name. They have a peeding us up and gyping us out f a couple of minutes every day. | You have to sweat with piece wor > make an extra cent and even hen not everybody has a chance to ork piece work. Many young vorkers have to work for veek wi overtime and with Sam Reeder driving them harder and sarder. They gyp us out of 5 min- ates every day | very morning at anch time by ringing the ainutes ahead of time. Even after we have been exploit- dso, many of us get laid off. We must get together and form a shop committee which will fight under he leadership of the Independent | Shoe Workers’ Union, a militant eft wing union, which is at present | eading a number of strikes all over the city for better wages and con- ions and which will lead the fight against the skunks, Sam Reeder and the three Werman Sons. We must fight for the following conditions: Minimum wage of $25 per week | for all young shoe workers; aboli- tion of piece work; no discrimina- | tion against young workers, equal) nay for equal work; four weeks va- cation with pay for all young work- ringing the bell 55 and even at bell 5 ers under 18; forty hour, 5-day | week for all wo: six hour 5- day week for all sung workers under 18, AFFAIR TO HELP PARTY SCHOOL. Bill Gropper, Morris Pass, car- toonists in Communists papers, and | other well-known proletarian artists | will discuss proletarian art and how | t affects the workers, at the Contest Symposium, to be held Sunday, February 16, 8 p. m., at the Co- operative Auditorium, 2700 Bronx Park, East. Proceeds go to the Na- tional Training School of the party. Labor and Fraternal Organizations All income affairs, such ax bazaars, sinnees, concerts, ete, for which or- ganizations desire publicity in this be paid for at the rate a xinge insertion, $2.00 tor three insertions. xpace al. lowed at rate fx a imum of ‘ive nex with five words to ench ine. A total of words, * oxposition tatern tional Revolution- ary Posters, Of Workers Esperanto Group, 2 cnion asa Sth floor, till Feb. 2 * * ILD Steve Katovin Branch. Meets Thursday, A Nighe ‘in Japan. February 15, at Japanese Workers’ ind, 7 East 14th St. Auspices Work. rs’ School Sports Club. Admission 35 ents, Part proceeds Daily Worker. Intern. We nisin Dar Chorus. Participation of all women union avers ureed, Rehearsals Thursday m., Workers Center, 4th floor, tarting this reek Brighton ‘Bench Open ities Of Workers Club, Friday, 8.30 “27 _Briehton Beach Ave. ‘situation 4 the Needle Trades. %e Admission free. mreweariite pe Wittamsburs Doug-~ lnss Memmortal. Tonight. § p. m., 105 Thatford Ave. ear Pitkin. Prominent speakers 100d nar nee free. Brownsville Stringplayers, And Harmonium players report 105 Thatford Ave,, 8 p. m., ask for Shones or Harper. Orchestra of A.N.L.C. be- ing organized. * * « Painters Mase Meeting. For all smoreanized painters, Fri- day, 143, 1038rd St, Pring your 12 a} 2 P.,m- at Center, | sont Hak rom USS WORKERS HONOR Report Seamen BOLIVIA TRADE William Z. Foster, general sec etary of the Trade Union Unit League, just returned from th Soviet Union where he studied « se range the work of the Fiv Year Plan, will tell New Yor) orkers tonight in Central Operu Jouse, how the Workers State is rrying through its marvelous nstruction program, ending wi- employment and industria the country, on the basis of « seven hour day and five day week. ng Company Union Gives Up 40 Hour Week! (Continued ee Page One) Industrial Union and a real 40-hour week is in sight for the workers who are ready to fight for it. All the attempts of the LL.G.W. gangsters to raid the shops won by the N.T.W.L.U. were repulsed yes- terday, as they have been all through the fake strike. There were several sharp clashes, and the work- ers put the gangsters to flight. The Executive Council of the In- dustrial Union was meeting last night, preparing further struggle. | ice way here of|A great mass meeting for all the | |locked out and sold-out workers will | be held very soon, the N.T.W.I.U. office stated yesterday. Thursday, at 8 p. m., Plaza Hall, a special shop delegates council meeting of the N.T.W.LU. will be held. All wor! needle trades work- ers, es , are called by the In- | dustrial Union to meet in its offices, 131 West 28th St., this morning, at 8 p. m., for dee! important work. Exploited Workers in | _ Laundries Organizing (Continued from Page One) school children, to be lectured by | the boss. Persecute Negroes. The Negro workers, barred from ; the skilled trades by the A.F.L., and forced in great numbers into the un- healthy laundry work, are forced to | buy uniforms. The national runs a cafeteria, } where Negro and white workers are not allowed to eat together, and the |food is rotten, only chopped meat, only canned vegetables, and as only a few cafeteria workers are hired, jthe lunch time is spent waiting in| line. Much Sickness. | Occupational diseases are com- mon: Workers in the washing de- partment wear rubber boots, but their whole bodies are wet and they | suffer from the chemicals used. At the steam mangles girls frequently faint from the heat. Sanitary con- |ditions are horrible. Organize in T.U.U.L. | But the laundry workers are wak- jing up. Many shop committees are formed, and the Cleaners and Laun- dry Workers’ Industrial League, of | |the Trade Union Unity League calls jon all to join, to fight for an eight- |hour day, five-day week, minimum wage, two rest periods a day, un- employment and sick insurance paid for by the employers., and admin- istered by the workers, and an in- | dustrial union based on the shops. A conference of the Cleaners and Laundry Workers’ Industrial League is called to meet March 1, in connec- tion with the T.U.U.L. Metropolitan Area Convention. French and Polish Workers Fight Police | (Continued from Page One) reaching the Town Hall where they demanded work or maintenance. In Vioclavek the unemployed receive no unemployed support from the government. In Warsaw the Communists or- ganized a demonstration of workers {dismissed from the Skoda works which produces munitions and war material, The demonstration took place in front of the Polish War Ministry. According to official figures un- employment increased by 17,000 from the 4th to the 11th of January and the total official figure is now 223,000. Unemployment has in- | ereased particularly in the textile, | mining, building and metallurgical | industries. At a delegate meeting of the tex- |his master, and to suppress a slave DOUGLAS, NEGR © REVOLUTIONIST Tncompromising Rebel Fighter Continued Flom. Page One) proves that those are most ibused who can be abused with the sveatest impunity. Men are whipped itenest who are whipped easiest.” Frederick Douglas became one of ne foremost Abolitionists of his day and all of his life fought for the liberation of the Negro masses. With his uncompromising stand on any question involving the advance- nent of his race Douglas stands head and shoulders above the pres- ent-day, hand-picked, middle-cla: Negro misleaders, tools of the whi capitalists, who folloy the leader. ship of Booker T. Washington. These present-day misleaders, in order to deceive the Negro masses, hold up Lincoln instead of Douglas as the fighter for the emancipation of the Negro race. To fight against this the Negro workers should cele- | brate Douglass’ birthday instead of j Lincoln’s. These Negro traitors nee | conveniently forget the revolution- | |ary role of Douglass, and as a | means to mislead the Negro work- jers, they utilize the fact that he supported the Republican Party | | which was a “progressive party” in | 1860, but which today is the princi- | pal instrument of the oppression of | the Negro masses by the white rul- ing class of this country. Frederick Douglass hated all| !forms of hypocrisy and fiercely ex- | | posed the hypocritical role of the} jchurch in condoning slavery. In a! e tion with Henry Ward Beecher, a famous religious bunk-! {shooter of that period, he stated: “T am done with your church, your in Irving christianity and its hypocrisy. They | quarters 3782 Woodward Ave., De- | jhave given your country over to} slave catchers and your church sanc- | tions it as a devine institution.” Douglass was never afraid under | any circumstances to speak his opin- | ion of the white bourgeois leaders. In giving an estimate of Lincoln | {upon the occasion of the unveiling | |of the Freemen’s Monument to Lin- | coln on April 14, 1876, he said: | “He (Lincoln) pre-eminently the | white man’s president, entirely de- voted to the welfare of the white man. He was ready and willing at any time during the first years of his administration to deny, postpone and sacrifice the rights of humanity in the colored people and promote the welfare of the white people of} this country. .. . To protect, defend | and perpetuate slavery in the states where it existed. Abraham Lincoln was not less ready than any other president to draw the sword of the nation. He was ready to execute all the supposed constitutional guaran- tees of the United States Constitu- tion in favor of the slave system anywhere inside the slave states. He was willing to pursue, recapture and send back the fugitive slave to rising for liberty, though his guilty masters were already in arms “against the government.” Douglass apparently believed Lin- coln devoted to the interests of the) white race as a whole. Whereas, the fact is that while entirely de- voted to the interests of the Norh- ern capitalists and Souhern slave holders, Lincoln did not give a tink- er’s damn about the interests of the white industrial wrokers of the| North or the poor white population | of the South, Lincoln was the president of the white industrialists and slave hold- ers, until the conflicting interests of | the former finally forced him re- luctantly to abandon the slave hold- | One of the first tasks facing the new Negro industrial proletariat, which is today increasingly taking over the leadership of the masses from the treacherous intellectuals and stock promoters, is the fight; against these illusions and against jthe Lincoln myth and for the re- viving of the revolutionary tradi- tions of the race and the honoring of its revolutionary heroes. Communist Activities Section One. Unit functionaries meet Section Or- anizers or correspondent Section ‘unctionary, for instructions, before unit meetings, a, 4 Bulld the ar 4 Pra zy and Dance. Saturda: 8.30, at, Italian workers Giub 414. i se AUB ican Unit 4", Bection 4." Praceeds Daily Worke |nission 36 cen\ id Il Lavoratore., Ad- * Metal Fraction, ‘Thursday night, Mg bititdah Sq. * Section 4 Unit “panty? — Thursday, Feb, 13, 7.30 ms, 836 Lenox Ave. All Unit DW. agents must be present. District Representa- tive will be ida Roll call. Section One. Mass meeting, Thursday at Manhat- upon all locals of Auto Workers | union: Burn to Death n Muenchen An unknown | number of seamen jwere held on board the North Ger- man Lloyd lines Muenchen until too | late for them to escape, it was re- | \ ported yesterday. The Marine Work- | | ers? League, 28 South St., is investi- | gating. The capitalist press lost interest in the number of killed as soon as it was ascertained that the of petty-bourgeois liberals to save | militant workers, all | the employers under the guise of | and all members of the Young Com- | first class passengers were taken ofi he boat first, and were all safe. and that the shio’s officers were safe One fireman, at this writing, un- known was blown overboard and lichael Gibney of Engine Co., 24, has a dislocated shoulder, and four other firemen are known to | have been injured. | Josephine Gherke, a stewardess, was injured. The ship had only arrived yester- day, loaded with phospate, alumi- num, ammonia and silver nitrate, with a fire in Hold No. 6. The 118 steerage passengers were kept on board until the first class were all ashore, and the first ex- plosion from the fire came before the lower paying German immi- grants were allowed to leave the | ship. There were five explosions. | then the ship was pulled into the | North River, so as not to injure the | dock, and pigneds to sink. AUTO WORKERS PLAN MEET Fight Unemployment and Speed-Up DETROIT, Mich., Feb. 11.—The | National Provisional Committee ae the Organization of a National In- | dustrial Auto Workers Union, head- | san | troit, has issued a call for a national convention of auto workers. All locals of the Auto Workers Union are to send three delegates each; all shop locals of ten workers are to send one delegate each, and an additional delegate for each 25 workers or major fraction thereof; all organization committees are to |send one delegate each. The conference will be held in Detroit, meeting at 3 p- m., March 8. Demands: The National Provisional mittee says: “The Provisional Committee calls Com- Union, all shop committees, all or- ganized and unorganized workers to get together to discuss the call for the conference and to elect delegates to the conference on the above pro- gram and the following demands: “1.—General wage increase and a minimum of $40 per week. Against wage cuts. 2—A_seven-hour day week. 8.—For unemployment insurance. Full wages while unemployed to be paid out of the profits of the bosses, and administered by the workers. 4.—Against the speed up system, for regulation and reduction of the rate of speed on the belt and along the line. 5.—Abolition of all discrimination against our Negro fellow workers. 6,—Equal pay for equal work for all women and special protection | of women. 7.—A six-hour day for all young workers; equal pay for equal work. 8.—Abolition of the bonus and |i piece work system. 9.--Establishment . and enforce- | ment of safety and sanitary regula- tions by the shop locals of the) day and five- 10.—A five-hour day for danger- ous and unhealthful operations with compensatory pay. 11—No night work and abolition of overtime.” The call for the conference an- alyses the failure of the A. F. of L. to do anything for the auto workers, urges all unemployed to organize, and participate in the unemployment demonstration on February 26. POLISH TEXTILE STRIKE WAGE CUT. (Wireless By Inprecorr) WARSAW, Feb: 11.—Ten thou- sand textile workers struck yester- day at Bielitz against wage cuts, jeal | Koutepoff UNIONS VOTING © GENERAL STRIKE "(ag Days Fe ‘eb. “92+ 23 | Build Fund for Giant | Struggle in Silk Mills Tag days in New York, Febru 22 and 28, also in Philadelpt Boston and other cities, at dates to be announced soon, will swell the | rike and Struggle Fund of the National Textile Workers Union, it Strike wae a Blow at)was announced at the union head- the War Danger (Continued from Page One) “preventing trouble” and “sympa thy” for the workers, have offered | to mediate before the strike is actu- | ally made effective by calling th | workers off the job. The demands of the workers the following: The eight-hour day, a minimum | wage, abolition of contract labor, ‘double pay for night work, abolition | of night work for children, a general | wage raise at all factories and in- dustrial plants of 30 per cent, medi- and first-aid equipment and treatment, and free sanitary service in factories; recognition of labor | union delegates in mills, and full | amnesty guarantees for workers ar-| rested or imprisoned as agitators or organizers. Editorial Note—The Red labor unions of Bolivia, a part of the great }and important revolutionary trade ‘union movement of Latin America| rganized only last May at the) Montevideo Congress, by the action | above noted in the La Paz cable, | jare striking a real blow at the war | danger threatening between Bolivia and Paraguay. Thru the Montevideo trade unicn confederation of all Latin American unions, the Bolivian unions have a firm proletarian agreement with their comrades in Paraguay, and | their joint revolutionary action upon their own bourgeoisie, such as the strike demands above are a surer | guarantee against war than all the | bourgeois treaties in the world. DEPUTY CALLS FOR USSR BREAK (Cortinued from Page One) statements by the Soviet Ambassa-| dor Dovgalevsky that he knows nothing of Koutepoff's disappear- ance, and that the Soviet Union has nothing to do with the matter, the capitalist papers continue personal attacks against Dovgalevsky, at- tempting to incite raids of white guards on the embassy. * A a Look For Koutepoff in Portugal. LISBON, Portugal, Feb. 11.—The | search for Koutepoff has spread to) Portugal. Four men were held aboard the German steamer, Feher- man, as suspects in the kidnapping of Koutepoff. There is no evidence against the arrested men, the but) Portuguese police are working with] the French detectives who have is- sued all sorts of fairy stories about | disappearance, Advertise your Union Meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq.. New York City Hotel & Restaurant Workers Branch of the aa Workers, 14 W, Phone Chiesa 2274 Business meetings held the first Monday of the month at 8 p, ¥ Educational meetings—the Monday of the month. Executive B meetings—every Tuesday afternoon a 5 o'clock. One industry! One Union! Join and Fight the Common Enemy! Office vpen from 9 a, m, to 6 p. m [PUTCHERS’ UNION||| Local 174, A.M.O.& B.W, of NLA Office and Headquarters: labor Temple, 243 6 s4th se, oom 1 Regular meetings every ‘iret and hitd Sunday, 10 aA. M Bmoloyinent Bureau open eves __day at 6 P.M —————_—__ ______ AMALGAMATED £00OD WORKERS the mont third Aj Bron, Ask tor aker’s Loca) 164 vel Jerome 70u0 Union Label Bread! MIDWINTER CARNIVAL v Arranged by Section wuvvvuvuvvuvTTF 5, Communist Party ROCKLAND PALACE, 155th St.-8th Ave. SATURDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 15 | quarters, yesterday. A list of stations where boxes and other material for collectors be obtained is being worked out, All Communists munist League are urged to help in the collections, The Strike and Struggle Fund is \part of the preparations of the union for a great silk strike coming soon are jin Paterson, and which is certain to | lhe spread to other silk centers of |the country. Conditions in th jand dye hou: |the workers are so anxious to im- prove them, that this strike will |soon be announced. \“Paragraph 600” | Wholesale in (Continued from Page \up at Millers at different d Strike One ) times, land with a variety of charge: | Duress showed his prejudice against | Habor very plainly, ing and | threatening the defendants, telling them they were likely to be deport- | jed, imprisoned, etc. Without evi- dence, even against the evidence of |the policeman who admitted that Jeverything was quict until Miller leaned out of his store, he sentenced one picket to $10 fine. One picket bail—he had been out on his own recognizance. yer Markowitz, former {assistant district attorney, and one of the witnesses for the prosecution is the cheap gangster who ealls| jhimself Pappick. Pappick |he is a member of Local ¢ Clerks (the right wing union, not |the Food Clerks No. 17 of the Amal- | gamated which has the strike on at | Millers, where Steve Katovis was shot). This is a fine combination jof labor hating judge, Tammany politician, the underworld, bosses and the socialist clique. The striikers will continue to | organization campaign. and was held to special sessions on $500 | | The real prosecutor here is Law- | Tammany | picket both shops and extend their! \Unity League Calls Third Mass Meeting of NewYork Painters The T Union Unity Leagu has beg rade | the tens of thousands New York. The T.U.U.L. has con sidered the desperate situation the building trades in gene! | in the painting s The T.U.U |calling meetings bee: has _ recently of ction. and program of The fir: Jan, 17 in painters present, the League, the others will soon com too. Manhattan with 1 jon Jan. 31; 36 new members wer taken in, all ready ganizers for the League, to fight th and their agents, the bureaucrats. The next mas meeting will be held 8 p. 1 Feb. 14, at 143 F lem. All painters are urged to come.) making n a campaign to organize! of painters in| ] ection in particular. unorganized painters and has worked out a policy mass meeting was hel 48 of these joined The second mass meeting was held to become or- ALT. Friday, | Alcatra: st 103rd St., Har- ‘SENDING PORTER IN ILL HEALTH TO JAIL IN EAST Continue Brutality on Class War Prisoner n The U. S. Government is continu- ing its torture of John Porter, mili- ! tant young worker, who, while a (i) soldier in the U. S. Army in 1927, fought heroically for the New Bed- ford textile strikers, and was im- prisoned in the government army i! dungeon for his militancy. e After serving the greater part of his two and a half year sentence in | Leavenworth Military Prison, where he received treatment of the most brutal sort, Porter was shifted to the military prison in 3 Calif Constant Porter's a. shifting around was health, already and bring their fellow-painters to | nearly ruined by prison brutality, | the mass meeting. Unemployed Mass Mee Tomorrow at 11 A. M wo | Porter protested on this account | when the miltary authorities threat- ened to shift him again, this time »|to an eastern prison. The Interna- tional Labor defense took up the e, All unemployed workers are in- | fight for Porter. vited to the unemployment meeting Word has been received by the I. lat which Sadie Van Veen, secre- |], D, that Porter, whose term ex- tary of the Unemployed Council will | pir and | now held a prisoner on the army tell of the present situation, the active steps being taken by th council to force the bosses to giv work or unemployment felief. Th meeting is tomurrow, at 11 a. m. is at the end of this month, e | transport Cambrai, which left San e Francisco January 29 for Bayonne. @ | Porter had previously told the I.L.D. that he feared that the military jsharp, in the Workers Hall, 1179 | jailers would beat him on shipboard. Broadway, corner of 28th St. It is | ealled by Seevon 2 of Listrict 2) Write About Your Conditions of the Conmunist Party | for The Daily Worker. Become a NOYEL LITERARY PAPER. The Rational Vegetarian Restau rant, 199 Second Ave., is making practice of printing articles on th following subjects: science, ture, al ee fare, This is called the ‘ Dig the | litera- , philosophy, and current events on the back of its daily bill- ‘Rational .” All patrons who frequent | 7 # restaurant are asked to con- Worker Correspondent. | “For All Kind of Insuranee” (PARL BRODSKY ‘Telephone: Murray Hill 5550 ast 42nd Street, New York a ie | | th |tribute articles, reviews or short) ~~— EMR stories. | ei ee es Cooperators! Patronize | Build the United Front of the S E R O Y Working Class From the Bottom i CHEMIST Up—in the Industries! A Theatre Guild Production "4 “METEOR” By $. N, BEHRMAN GUILD_W- 6% Bvs. 8:60 Mts.Wed.&Sat.2:40 59th St. & 7th |JOLSONS’ orn Seat ‘The Chocolate Soldier 1 CHARLE Alice Mackenzie | ELTINGE The: lene weanelans and A. H. WOODS Presenix PUK ud Roy Cropper A Love Story by Pre: Author of “Stri 47th Street, West of Bron Eves, $:50. Mats, Wed. & Si 2:30 Death Takes a Holiday A about life. { wit IVALE comedy PHILIP BIRD THEATRE Brownsville 413s | Every Thursday, Friday & Saturday Latest Amkino Films from Moscow ‘Wa ‘TWO DAYS’ j WEEK CONDUCTORLESS SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA CARN 2 WALL Friday Eve. wary 21, at S24 Soloist Oe) RABINOFF BLUE Tickets $1, $2, $3 at Box Office and at 22.1. bth St Steinway Piano EAST SIDE ND. “RECAPTURE” Ethel Barrimore Theatre| Wish onsi 8 CaO Wd ST, & BWAY Premiere Drama of Crookdom tling European “CAUGHT IN THE BERLIN IVIC REPER TORY the 6th Av Sat. 2 ce s, §:20. Mats. Wed. c. $1. $150 NE, Director RN DOOR” and LL HAVE NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES THE Big 2” PARADISE Grand Concourse Bronx | Loew PITKIN Pitkin Brookiyn Avenue CREENS TDOOR JASSIC ON BOTH 2 GREAT ALK “VIRGINIAN” with GARY COOPER MARY BRIAN, RICHARD ARLBN, WALTER HUSTON hows—Both Theatres trom OL THEATRE. BROADWAY Ont own axe. the alahed | by mrseals aj up into into two great hnd di poned classes: bourgeoisie and pro- | tetarlat--Marx. THEATRES AVENUE PLAYH © U $a. 138 SECOND AVENUE, CORNER EIGHTH STREET By Popular Demand @ More Days—The New Soviet Photoplay “A Man from the Restaurant "| —ON THE SAME PRQGRAM— “EVOLUTION” Beginning Thursday, February 13—*THE NEW BABYLO NOW ze, thix—that ft | 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. ¥ W. I. R. CLOTHING STORE 2 BROOK AVENUR Telephone Ludlow 3098 Cleaning, Pressing, Repairing High Class. Work Done Goods Called for and Delivered All protits go towards strikers and their families. SHOW YOUR SOLIDARITY Wirth THE WORKERS! n WORKERS’ CENTER BARBER SHOP Moved to 30 Union Square FREMNEIT BLDG.—Main Floor i P Phone: LEHIGH 6382 | tnternational Barber Shop M, W. SALA, Prop. 2016 Second Avenue, New York (bet. 103rd & 104th Sts.) Ladies Bobs Our Specialty Private Beauty Parlot EGUTARIAN ESTAURANT Always Fin 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD.,, Brons r 174th St. Station) INTERVALBD 9149. PHONB RATIONAL Vegetarian RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVE: UE Bet. 12th and 13th Sta. Strictly Vegetariin Food HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE, Phone: UNI versity 5865 — | —— Phone: Stuyvesant 8816 | John’s Restaurant |] SPECIALTY: fTALIAN vISHES e with atmos; whe: all radicals Fest || 302 6. 12th St. New York All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Cloremont Parkway, Bronx a tan Lyceum, ; “A NIGHT IN JAPAN” MEMBERS AND FRIENDS OF THE WORKERS SCHOOL SPORTS CLUB WILL SPEND “A NIGHT IN JAPAN” SATURDAY, FEB. 15, AT THE JAPANESE WORKERS CLUB, 7 EAST 14TH STREET. AN| UNUSUAL PROGRAM HAS BEEN ARRANGED. DANCING TILL 3 A. M. JAPANESE FOOD IN PLENTY: ADMISSION 35 CENTS. ON SALE, ROOM 6, WORKERS SCHOOL. PROCEEDS DAILY WORKER. “4% Unit 5, Section 7. Wednesday, 8.30 fe m., maid Ave., Coney Islat al, “Leninism gnd War. Arbelter” Affair. German organ of Communist Party, Saturday, Feb. P. at Labor Temples 343 Bast sath sc fellow wor eae te i Bor robek Park 1.1.0. Thuraday, £30 p, m., 137% 48rd St., Brooklyn. tile workers in Lodz it was pointed out that not only the unemployed, but also the employed textile work- c ers were suffering privation on ac- count of the fact that the employers were exploiting the crisis in order to depress wages on a mass scale. Program: FREIHEIT MANDOLIN ORCHESTRA in new selections, ANNA SAVINA from the Moscow Opera SMITH’S NEGRO BAND DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 2901 Mer- Education- 1 UNION SQUARE com 803—Phone: Algonquin Not connected wit th a 7. other sfftee Mk a tele, 45 ee Bath Bt Tick oct REVS UR wi; BUILD THE PARTY CONCERT AND DANCE |} aaeanaanee pcre a Bee ade aki sae Saturday Night, February 22. nena Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFE : Bronx Free Open Ampbassedor Hay! SET Fond Ave guspicee Section § Communist Party and Left- Wing Bakers unions. aworkere Minion. Admission 50 cents, SURGEON DENTIST + qoe MMT Rrondway line and get off at Lorimer Rt Mer CONCERT AND BALL. ‘ COOPERATIVE RESTAURANT ITALIAN WORKERS CLUB 26-28 UNION SQUARE 240 roach eta! 314 East 104th Street Cen een ornnen * rowenta nme F2t _Atterton Auspices Unit 4, Section 4, Communist Party | Service—Self-Service Hii tee excerr vainat Sua Steugele.” ‘Louls A’ Baum, | Proceeds DAILY WORKER and IL LAVORATORE — Admission 35¢ FRESH VEGETABLES OUR SPECIALTY: T iit