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age avo el ih di inert NATIONAL BOARD OF T.ULUL. CON- CENTRATES ON COUNCILS, METAL! Cat! Anti-Red Meeting esses te bassnaeney Tease vents Geka Usted Larcasasnant iy ated Red Baiters, Labor Fakers, Paytrioteers NEW YORK—All the local red} baiters, all the labor fakers that can Rearranges Forces to Build Organizations of te ranied together by the church and| Unemployed; Calls Metal Executive Stachel New Assistant Sec’y-Treas.; Schmies| !ers against unemployment, starva- Goes Into Metal Field; Miners to Meet | NEW YORK.—Concentration of or- ganization of the unorganized into/ Industrial councils, along with the drive for signatures for the Workers Unemployment Insurance Bill, the fight for local demands, hunger marches, and mass meetings, was de- elded upon here at the recent meet- tpg of the National Board of the ‘Trade Union Unity League. | ‘The Board decided also, in this phase of its continuous campaign to organize industrial unions the work- ers still on the job, to concentrate for the net couple of months espe- tially on: first, the metal industry, | atid secondly, on the mining. As part of this special concentra- tion new forces are being sent into the field. John Schmies, who has) been assistant general secretary- | treasurer of the T. U. U. L., is to be} sent into the metal industry as an} organizer. The board elected Jack) Stachel to fill the office Schmies | vacates. | Jobless, Workers Together. ‘The organization of the employed and unemployed proceeds simultan- eously; both must be organized to| give fighting power to the workers in their strikes against wage cuts and| their fight against speed-up and worsening conditions, The unem- ployed need the employed workers in their fight for insurance and relief. ‘The board proposed to the National | Campaign Committee for Unemploy- | ment Insurance Feb. 10 as the date for the presentation to congress of the unemployment insurance bill and/ the mass of signatures of those de-| manding its passage. A committee of 150, representing all industries and cities, elected at great mass meetings | in the first part of January, will] | Z. Foster, general secretary-treasurer carry bill and signatures to Wash-! ington. On Feb. 10, simultaneously with the presentation of the bill, mass unemployment demonstrations | in all cities will demand its passage. Call To A. F. L. Locals. The series of city conferences of} delegates from workers’ organizations to outline the signature collection | campaign and to organize the fight | for local demands is. still going on,) and the National Boafd of the T. U.| U. L. voted to make an especial ef- | fort to explain the bill to locals of | the A. F, L. and urge them to be} represented at the conferences. The National Board calls for spe- cial meetings over the week end of the national executives of three of its most important affiliated bodies. One is already in process: the general executive board of the Needle Trades Workers’ Industrial. Union. This board meets Thursday and Friday here, and goes on to Philadelphia for sessions Saturday and Sunday. Miner, Metal Boards. The other two are meetings in Pittsburgh over the week end of the national executive boards of the Mine, Oil,and Smelter Workers’ In- dustrial Union, and of the Metal Workers’ Industrial League. William of the T. U. U. L. will attend the | sessions of both the miners and metal workers. The National Board voted for! actual organization work in the build- ing trades, and for a.continuation of the fight in the railroad industry for | a real six-hour day, without wage cut. The National Board of the T. U. U. L. sagreed to meet every second month, and to bring in for these | meetings all out of town members. U. S. TRY DEPORT! |2 Showings of “Man With Camera,” USSR Film Given By WIR) CHINESE | STUDENT T. H. Li Active Against) ; Imperialism NEW YORK.—T. H. Li, & Chinese Teyolutionary student, who was ar- | rested by the immigration office in New York three weeks ago, was threatened with deportation by Am- eriean imperialism into the hands # thé-murdercus Chiang Kai Shek ef the first hearing of the case last | St., NEW YORK.—-Two showings of he “Man With The Camera,” one of the best Soviet pictures, will take | place today at the Workers Interna-| | tional Relief center, 131 West 28th first floor. | The first showing will be the first | of a series to take place every Satur- day afternoon at 4 p. m. for working | class children, The admission will be | en cents only. It will be one of the| means of drawing the working class | children closer to the WIR Scouts, a, | Guido Serio,” other patriotic organizations will | come together on Jan. 9 to talk about | the “Red Menace” as represented in | Communist leadership of the work- tion, wage-cuts and other manifes- tations of boss Americanism. The meeting is called by a com- mittee which includes such notorious enemies of the working class as Mar- tin W. Littleton; Cardinal Ha represented by Rev. E. R. Moore Bishop Manning, also having a rep- resentative in the person of Rev. | Robert E. Wood; Louis A. Ames, Sons | American Revolution; Dr. 8S. Bainbridge, commander- of the Military Order of Wars. of the William general Foreign DEMAND SERIO BE RELEASED ON van Health Is Bad: Ws Jailed Since May NEW YORK—A demand for = immediate release on bail of Guido | Serio, militant leader, who is being held for deportation to Italy while his case is being heard by the upper federal courts was made today by the International Labor Defense through their attorney, Carol Weiss King. | Serio, who has been imprisoned | since last May for his anti-fascist activities in Italy and the United | | States will be bailed out if the work- ers will make the demand in form of | mass demonstrations and force the Department of Labor and the federal courts to grant this demand, accord- ing to a statement made this morn- | ing by the International Labor De- fense. When Serio was first arrested his bail was set at the impossible figure | of $25,000 over the vigorous protests of many organizations. The Inter- national Labor Defense now demands | his release on $1,00€ “We must secure the release of | reads the LL.D. state- ment,” not only because his health | is bad, and he cannot fuly Irecover | junder the miserable conditions on | Ellis Island but because the boss class cannot be permitted to jail workers | and keep them there at their free will. We must fight and protest and 1 demand that Guido Serio should be freed and freed immediately.” et aee meetings are being ar+ ranged i in various sections of the United € s and even in European | countries avainst the terror carried | Ey working class children’s organization. | | on by the ruling class of the United | Gey. After Li had strongly| phe second showing will be 8 p. m., | maintained his full right of stayin where the admission will be 25 cents. | in this country on the ground that | Roljowing the showing will be a dis- | he is a government student belonging | cussion to be led by Sam Brody of to the Chinese Educational pee the Workers Film & “Photo League, | 1 at Weshirton, D. C., that now he! on the picture. The floor will be is attending some technical college! open for discussion for everybody. in New York approved by the mi The showings are arranged by the sion and that his revolutionary! w, F, & P. L. of the Workers Inter- | siugg:e against imperialism and its | national Relief at 131 West 28th St., | lackeys, the Chinese militarists, has| Lack. 4 — 0640. Write or phone for by no means affected his student} injormation about this working class; status and his scholarship, the hear- ing wes “postponed” for two weeks. . H. Li has been very active in| the revolutionary struggle working- Coss ot the colonial people and | ac-irst inverialism. This is the | reos-n why he was arrested and is in| aration for the hunger march Jan. 8 uJ FOR JOBLESS INSURANCE! imminent danger of being deported | to Chiarg Kai-Shek’s government for | ereet tion. While the American imperialists; are now taking time to lay a legal ‘and illegal basis for Li's deportation, | the working-class in this country must rally together to demand the immediate release of Li and to fight | against deportation and all suppres- | sion measures against foreign born workers and revolutionary. BABSON SEES CRISIS LASTING A LONG TIME :: BABSON PARK, Mass., Dec. 26.— Roger W. Babson, stock-market sta- tistician and self-styled economist who every once in a while makes aj Stabyat predictions, now comes out. with a very gloomy forecast for! American eapitalism. In a special ar- | title on the outlook for next year | § Babson s2:'s: “I doubt if 1931 will average in its | © entirely bette: than 1939.” He goes on to say that there “may |‘ be” a recovery in 1932. But then he | adds: | “The crucial time will come with the presidential nominations in the early summer of 1932, a date which, trom, @n cconomic viewpoint, is not so far ahead.” Bobson, who usually believes capi- telism is resy and on the eve of prosperity, this Lime is forced to ad- init that the workers are faced with at least a year or two of the starva- tion they have suffered for the last 14 months. Priestly Speculators Lost Pickings in the Stock | ret Crash © New YORK. sty speculators are-vamong the sheared in the stock market collapse, according to postal who are “investigating” the activities of Trustee W. Clark of the “Church of the Strangers,” 309 | 4 ee acct zie bres relieve organization. | PREPARE FOR HUNGER MARCH | BROOKLYN.—An unemployed mass meet will take place tonight at 312 Colombia St., Brooklyn, in prep- States. Lil Andrews at Harlem Workers Forum Sun. Lil Andrews, one of the criminal | syndicalist defendants in Ohio, will | be the speaker this Sunday at the Harlem Workers’ Forum, at 309 Lenox Ave. Her subject will be “Youth and War.” The forum. begins at 3 o'clock. All workers are urged to attend this in- | teresting discussion. LABOR AND FRATERNAL ACTIVITIES An 8-Day Drive For the New York Workers Center. and for the printing press has been authorized by the Central Com ‘The drive will open. w on the 11th of January and will ¢ tinue with a bazaar for seven da’ We urxe all organizations not to range any affairs during this drive, The Red Banquet. |to greet the Central Committee the Communist Party of the U. on the oceasion of the moving into | the new Workers Center, will be held at the center, 35 EB. 12th St., Sunday. Jan, 11, 8 p. m. All workers’ organ- jons are urged to élect two dele- es to this banquet. Speakers will be Foster. Minor, Browder, Bedacht. representatives of the revolutionary press and workers’ ofganizations. ot | A rr i ae0% Bronsville Workers School Opes Foram, 105 Thatford Ave., B’klyn., Sunday Dee. 28, “Youth in Industry” Al Kap lan. “Questions, Diseyssien, ee tre Concert and Picture “Two Day iven by the Workera-Center of Sunday, 6 p.m._at Ukral- . 160 Meércér St, Jersey Chjldren 1 nnd fall Temple. 17-19 Mon- Beklyn (four Blocks trem near Lorimer St.) Saturday | Bye. Jan. 17, 7 p. tm. fot tne benefit of Il Lavoratore, Italian Weekly, ore gan of the ©. P. Admissio Pleage Keep this date open. sane Committees of an_vnited Couneils of Working Class Women must be% Mfure to attend the meeting Sa. 2 p.m.. a the office of he W. I. R., 13) W, 28th St. Russian Mavic to be shown Sunday, Jan. 4th, at Tta- lian Workers Center, "Bhi Third Av. (Bet, 410th and 111th $t.), Benefit of Il Lavoratore, Contribyion ase. Richard Moore wen Speak on the League of Struggle for Negro Rights, Its Aims and Purposes, Sun- day, 8:30 p. m. in the auditorium of the Workers Co-operative Colony, 2700 Bronx Pk. B. . eee Solidarity Dance Dec, 27th, Saturday-‘evening, at 8 DP. m, at 208 Lenox Ave. Mar- gains Jazz Band. Admission” 25 ce Harlem Section C. P: LL.D. . Ella tg Fire Br. and F.S,U. Will show a 4 ace ataris of R sian and Jewish workers life in 1905, Ternovy — Kush. At Manhattan Lyceum, 66 BE, 4th St, Jan, 5th at p.m, a ee nckage Part: Workers Center, 35 E, 12th St Concer and Dance Arranged by Units 1 and 4 of Sec- tion 1, his Sunday, 7 p. a 134 #8, Th St. for the benefit of the Daily Worker. Everybody invited. Ad- mission 25 cents. Be) New Years Eve Red Rally and Dance given by Sect. 2 C P Wed.. Dec. 31 at | Bryant Hall 6th Ave., bet. 4ist and 42nd Sts. Snappy music, Adm. 50¢, in advance; Tbe at door. | Membership Meeting of ‘the Bronsville | Workers Tenant League will be held Sunday at 2.30 p. m., at 1844 Pitkin Ave. All workers who are interested in building up a Ten- | ants League are urged to attend. . ee Membership Meeting of the Bronsville and Alfred Levy Brs. of the TLD will be held Monday st 7.30 p. m, at 118 Bristol St. B’klyn. Members of both branches are urged to be present at this important meet- ing. Concert and Dance Section 5 New Years Eve. at 569 Prospect Ave., Bronx, snappy music. . . Daily Worker Conference Saturday 3 p. m. Units and sections | must be represented. ter, 33 B. 12th St. Workers Cen- CBR SBR Dally Worker Anniversary Affair All workers organizations are asked to get blocks of tickets for the af- fair to be held Saturday, Jan, 10th next year at St. Nick's Arena. Ex- eellent concert. Adm. 50c and 75c. oe mets A Sunday Eve Dance in Harlem Sunday nite at 7 Prog. Youth Club, 1492 Madison Ave All workérs are invited to attend. (eee aN The Downtown nnd Easts Side Workers Clubs have arranged a concert and dance for Saturday Eve, at 11 Clinton S for the Ne: plete prog: ‘The First Meeting To erganize an Enelish sneaking branch of the Bronx Worker it Club, 1472 Boston Rd. will take place Sun- day, 5:30 p.m, All young workers and adult English speaking workers are urged to attend. 4 Attention Brighton Beach Workers! An peat forum will take place Sun- day, 8 p. m., at the Workers Center, 140 Heptang Ave. Open discussion. Brighton Beach Unit cP. Famot Soviet Film Mad 7h of Freedom” will be shown Ne rs Eve at 308 Lenox Ave, at ¥ ie m, Dancing afterward, General Membership Meeting Of Working Women’s Councils at Mon- me Aas Box tT tak ea aera Be Sa Tp. m, a 184 East ith | day night, p.m. Markoff will eak on “Roar China.” Organiza- tonal Hueations will be taken up. Given by Coune' 0, 93, it 2008. ani St. Brooklyn, Sunday at p.m, |SALLY BATES & ALB: | Plymouth 7 p.m. at the Harlem | ‘Trades Strike. A com-; n has. Been arranged. | LECTURE ON FIVE- YEAR PLAN SUN. Markoff Will Speak at) Forum NEW YORK —A. Markoff, assist- ant director of the Workers’. School, recently returned from’ a ten-week stay in the Soviet Union, will speak at the Workers’ Forum next Sunday | Mass meeting for Sunday, Dec. FOR REGISTRA- night, Dec. 28, at 8 p. m., on “The|at 8 p. m., at the Union Hall, 206 WORKERS. Five Year Plan and Imperialist| Paterson St | TION War.” | ‘The purpose of the meeting is to BEST Comrade Markoff had the oppor- tunity of studying the Five Year Pin PATERSON WOMEN WORKERS MEET |Delegate to R. I. L. U, | Will Report | RSON, WN. J. PATE J.—The Paterson | Local of the National Textile Worl ers’ Union is arrainging a Women’s 28th, hear a report of the International Women’s Conference held in Moscow in actual operation. He traveled ex-|in August and to consider plans for REDUC tensively in the U. S. S. R.. visited| an ors onal campaign to draw FE factories, mills, mines, gigantic state | the women workers into the ranks of and colelctive farms, new workers’| the union and to take up a struggle homes, etc. Comrade Markoff will against wage cuts and unemployment also deal with the imperialist war ne speakers wil be Anna Corn- preparations of world imperialism) blatt, delegate to the conference, against the Soviet Union and the re- cent trial of the counter-revolution- ary leaders of the so-called ‘“Indus- Hite an ie This is re will at- is therefore “viable a come early. MR AMUSEMENTS | Sadie Van Veen and Gertrude Ack~ a The chairman of the meet rade Salzberg. All women d working women of other trades are urged to attend this meeting. 119 East Ilth St, Tickets advance, $3.00 By mail from PLAYBOY, Telephone St Costumes NEW YEAR’S EVE ARTISTS’ COSTUME BALL PLAYBOY’S FETE FUTURISTE CUBIST COSTUME CARNIVAL IN GREENWICH VILLAGE At Webster Hall—Wednesday Evening DANCING AT 10—TILL DAWN December 31 At door, $5.00 32 Union Square uyvesant 9687 Oblizatory ‘Theatre Guild Productions ELIZABETH, THE QUEEN GUILD ¥:, 884. Bes. 8: Mats, Fri. & Sat 2:10 Moves to Martin Beck Thex F rirz LEBER IN SHAK FAREAN REPERTOIRE: | Mat. Today ..“MERCHANT OF VENIC ROAR CHINA MARTIN BECK 7H West of Broadway Evs, 8:50 Mts, Fri, & Sat. 2:50 NINA ROSA New Musical Romance, with GUY ROBERTSON, AEMIDA, LEONARD CEE MAJESTIC THEA. , Mats, “UP POPS THE DEVIL” Comedy Hit with ROGER PRYOR, | RT HACK MASQUE 45th St. Thea. 7. of 8 Evenings at 8:50 Mats, Friday and Saturday 2:30 EY, » 44th, W. of Broadway Rri, & Sat, 2:30, Chi. 2600 ARTHUR HOPKINS presents “THIS IS NEW YORK” | | 4 new comedy by Robert EB. Sherwood | with LOIS MORAN THEA. 45th STREE? West of B'way Evenings 8:10 — Mats, Fri, & Sat. 2:30 Evenings 8:30 4 B0c, $1, $1.50. Mats. Th. & Sat, 2:30 ies Dec. 29 i LAST WEDK ‘g y ETHELIND TERRY | Others | a4 DAESoE, Zig SO.QNOM TRAIN COURSES INSTRUCTORS 35 East 12th Street Markoff rece TODAY At W. I. R. Office, 181 W. All Committees Elected at Women’s Councils, W. I. R. Branches, Industrial Union, Workers Clubs, I. W. 0. Branches and all other Working-Class Organizations Should be Present to this Important 1D SPRING TERM NOW OPEN NEW CLASS ROOMS 'ORKERS SCHOOL x FOR CLASS STRUGGLE SPECIAL COURSES FOR TRAINING FUNCTIONARIES WRITE FOR CATALOG TELEPHONE ALG. 1- 1199 Questions and Discussions Admission . . « « MEETING OF ALL VOLUNTEERS TO January 2-3-4 BENEFIT: Dressmakers Strike Fund Unemployed Hunger Marches Children’s Camp of W. I. R. NEW STAR CASINO 107th St. and Park Ave. Will be Held Today, 2 O’clock Meeting Today at 2 O'clock WORKERS’ INTERNATIONAL RELIEF 25 Cents Sunday Forum, Dec. 28, 8 p.m., Irving Plaza ntly returned from the Soviet Union, will speak on the Five-Year Plan and Imperialist War JOINT BAZAAR 28th St. NEEDLE TRADES WORKERS’ INDUSTRIAL UNION UNITED COUNCILS WORKING-CLASS WOMEN Ig, St. Playhouse Con, Noon to Midnight Pop. Prices THE DREAM WALTZ Also LAST RECORDS of ANDREB th Ave. Playhouse 66 Fifth Avenue. Con. 2 P. M. to Midnight. Pop. Prices “ZWEI WELTEN” (TWO WORLDS) A Drama of the Comrades Don’t Forget! GIVEN BY THE LODZR BALL LODGER BR. 24, I. W.0. Wednesday Evening, Dec. 31, 1930 IVIC REPERTORY 14 st.. tn av. | EVA LE GALL NE, Director COMEDY THEATRE — PRICES $1—$3_ ‘Today Mat. ROMEO 3 D JULIET) fist EF. of B’ ats; Thur. & Sit., 2:30 | Tonight . RIED Evenings (Including Sun Seats¢wke.adv.atBoxOff.aT” mHaluiisW, 43 Dec. 30-31, Jan. 1-2-4-6. Russian-Austrian Frontier The Actor-Managers, Inc., present RUTH Draper (New Year's Eve) At New Star Casino 107th St. and Park Ave. | in her Original Character, Sketches PROGRAM CHA vith BETTY COMPSON, LEE TRACY and ALAN HALE LOB Bway and es 48th Street | Daily From 10:30 A. M. yee ity AUNT. AMES (20 se & Broadway |} Carnegie Hall, Thurs. Jan. 1, 8:45 Friday Afternoon, Jan, 2, at 2130 SHE na WHAT BROOKLYN ACADEMY OF MUSIC Sunday Afternoon, Jan, 4, at 3:15 E WANTED ‘ AMMARTINI—HAYDN— MUSIC AND CONCERTS | TOSCANINI, Conductor ‘This Sun, Aft., at 3:00 e., Jan, 8, at 8:45 (Stud.) —ROUSSEL—DEBUSSY BERLIOZ Carnegie Hal & Next §: FRAN | Philharmonic Symphony IMASINI—SIBELIUS—MARTUCCE THUR JUDSON Mat, (Steinway Piano) Vegetarian Cooperative House Rooms and-Donee Stud Creative Comrndes' FRIENDS OF NATURE G1 LEXINGTON AVE, (near 3ist St.) Caledonia 5-8669 RICHARD MOORE For Negro Rights, it’s aim and purposes | Sunday, ‘In the Auditorium of the Workers | Cooperative Colony, 2700 Bronx Pk. E. CONCERT - DANCE Refreshments Arranged by Units 1 and 4, Sec. 1 for the benefit of THE DAILY WORKER Sunday, Dec. 28, 7 P.M. 134 EAST 7th STREET Admission . . 4 . 25 Cents — | 2016 Second Avenue. New Yor! | Will speak on the League of Struggles | Dec. 28, 8:30 P. M.) NO-TIP ” OLEKTIV “BARBER SHOP 433 E. 9th Street, New York City | om vhone LEHIGH 6382 ‘terpotional Barher Shor MW SALA. Prop. BRONX WORKERS FORUM E. ROYCE OF THE WORKERS SCHOOL Admission is FREE MORNING FREIHEIT COSTUME BALL | Will speak on Education, Capitalist and Soviet at the BRONX WORKERS FORUM, On Sunday, Dec. 28, at 8 P. M. Saturday Eve:, January 24 at Madison Square Garden TICKETS IN ADVANCE 75 AND 50 CENTS MORNING FREIHEIT 35 EAST TWELFTH STREET, NEW YORK (het 108rd & 104th Sted Ladies Robs Our Specialty Private Beauty Parlor | | |] Tel. ORChara DR. L, KESSLER Comrades, Patronize CAFE EUROPA 317 EAST 13TH STREET, (Near 2nd Ave.) Clean Wholesome Food. SURGEON DENTIST , Strletly by Appointment 4%50 DELANCEY STREET ildridge St. NEW YORK bone Serres ed Gottlieb’s Hardware 119 THIRD AVENUB Near 14th St. Stuyvesant 6974 All kinds of ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES Cutlery Our Specialty Sy6naa Jlevedunua DR. A. BROWN Dentist 401 Bast 14 St. Cor. Second Ave Suitable for l/* Airy, Large Meeting Rooms and Hall TO HIRK and Dances in the Czechoslovak Workers House, Inc. 347 B, T2nd St. New York Telephone: Rhinelander 609% fOR BETTER VALUES IN MEN’S AND YOUNG MEN'S Suits and Overcoats go to PARK CLOTHING CO. 93 Avenue A, Cor. Sixth St ‘tinge (actures SHOWCARDS and BANNERS — WINDOW SIGNS For Organizations and Others L. BLUME 339 EAST 82ND.STREET | Send a Pesteard for Quick Service DAILY WORKER DANCE Saturday Dec. 27th at Workers Center 105 THATFORD AVENUE BROOKLYN, N. Y. Proceeds for $30,000 Emergency Fund—Arranged by Section 8, Unit 3, Communist Party | Cooperators! SEROY CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. Y¥. DEWEY 9914 » Cftiee, Hours: A. M.-9 P, % Sunday: 10 A. Met P. DR. J. LEVIN SURGEON DENTIST 15301 AVENUE U Ave U Sta., BMT. At East 15th St. BROOKLYN, N. ¥. DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Ri 08-—-Ph 3 Al “"Not connected with any (RATIONAL Vegetarian | RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVEi.UB Bet. 12th and 18th Sts. Strictly Vegetarian Food HEALTH FOOD 4 Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 5868 i Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: YTALIAN A. pl with ones Where all’ radicals mest 302 E. 12th st. “New York a Advertise your Union Meetings here. For information write ta The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 80 East 13th St, New York City 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Breas (near 114 eHOND INTERVALD AU Gomrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 658 Claremont Parkway, Bronx Patronize the Concoops Food Stores AND Restaurant 2700 BRONX PARK EAST “Buy in the Co-operative Store and help the Left Wing Movement.” YOUR FOOD will do you more good if you eat under conditions of QUIET There is Comfort and Protection in CLEANLINESS Eat with people who have the wit to know that FOOD and HEALTH are RELATED COME TO THE CRUSADER] (SELF-SERVICE) Restaurant 113 EAST FOURTEENTH ST. (Near Irving Place) ~ 8-DAY BAZAAR TO HELP MAINTAIN THE NEW YORK WORKERS CEN- TER. COLLECT ARTICLES AND SEND TH5M TO THE CENTER, 35 E. 12TH ST,, N. ¥. FOR THE 8-DAY BAZAAR WHICH WILL TAKE PLACE FROM JAN. 11 TO JAN, 18. LARGE CORNER BEDROOM, three wins dows facing ‘k sultable for two—2700 Bronx Park Apt, E-5i, ES 8-3061 M4 worker aala)e adders (ANTED—Fusaished resem fasly Weems Basi “ns