The Daily Worker Newspaper, May 22, 1931, Page 2

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Page Two STATE AUTHORITIES IN N bosses’ of New s and will no doub' for adop-} tion sys- | second e studies of un- ployment ational Guid- n the public schools s acting as the em-| directing children | trades most need of Rochester | four employ- | e he city n Kodak of Rochester which has vicious policy of re | ing in the past few months, was LENIN BROCHURE. ON WAR READY! meee | Tells of Role of Social] Betrayers | ‘The War and the Second Inter- national” has just been issued by International Publishers as volume 2 in the Little Lenin Library, in which many of Lenin’s important works are included. Like “The Teachings of | Karl Marx,” with which the series | began, the new book is well printed and bound in heavy, colored cover paper. It sells at 20 cents. This volume contains the es: ‘The Collapse of the Second Inter- national,” and the first official de- claration of the Central Committee, written by Lenin. In this the at- titude of the Party on the nature of war is stated, and the imperialist de- signs of each of the participating governments shown. It is here that the slogan “turning the imperialist war” was finally formulated Against Super-Imperialism. ‘The Collapse of the Second Inter- national” was written in 1915 and is a thorough analysis of the causes which led to the betrayal by the Jeaders of the International at the outbreak of ‘the war. Lenin’s sharp polemic against Plekhanov and par- ticularly against Kautsky’s theory of ultra-imperialism, make this essay a classic Marxist study of imperial- ism and the role of a revolutionary proletarian Party during an imper- jalist war. The lessons of “The War and the Second International” are particu- larly apt at the present time in view of the threatening war, Again ‘the Second International plays its role with the labor movement, at- tempting to delude the masses into a support of the bourgeoisie and to neutralize the class struggle during the war period. “The War and the Second Inter- national” may be ordered from the Workers Library, Publshers, 46 E. 13th Street, New York, who’ will also be glad to send a complete list of books and pamphlets of interest to workers. What’s Qan— FRIDAY Bronx Branches, Eriends of the Soviet Unton Meet at McKinley Sq. Garden, 1258 Boston Ra. Pe Sere 2 Workers Laboratory. tre Are planning # StotisWéroe Play, Workers, Negro and white, are need- ed. Rehearsals take place Mondays, Thursdays, Fridays, at 8.30 p. m. at 151 Wst 28th St. ee | ‘Tremont Workers Club At 749 Crotona Park West will hear a lecture on the “Truth About "AML workers Workers Club At 2921 W. 32nd St, will hold a lecture on the “Struggle Against De- portations and Uynchings” at & p. m. Admission 15¢. #5 ah ee Volunteers Coney Isiand Are wanted by the L1.D. National Office, 799 Broadway, room 430. If you can type, or have an hour or two to spare, come upand help in Scottsboro work, Mi M. Hi v ‘ ens leeting and On the Beattsbers case Frat 74 Har- Jem Prog. Youth Club, 1492 Madison Ave. (102n4 St.) at 8.30 p.m. eb, i ° nm open air t Voice yor Protest against the Scote- boro frame-up! Council 2 a _lecure on the “Im- portance of Organizing Working Class Women” at 8.20 p.m. at 2480 66th St, Brooklyn. ¥ oong Will have Paterson Section School Banquet The fiv etetile workers just bailed out of jail will speak at the Sec- {lon 11 Week and Schoo) Banquet at & p, m. at 205 Paterson St. Paterson, N. (J. Interesting program; enter- tatnment, eo ee Metal Workers Ind. Lea, Meets at 8 p.m. at is Weed! e ist St. Bill Dunne speaks on “Soviet Union,” * NEW JERSEY. Paterson The five tetile workers recently bailed out of jail will speak at the of Section 11, Week and School on May 28, 8 p, m. at 205 Paterson St. Interesting ententain- ment, all workers are urged to come. et FRIDAY Dance of Jamaica Unit , Will be held at 8 ps m. at Union Hall St. Proceeds to National Youth Day, Beas Lecture at Brighton BBeach Workers ch At 140 Neptune Ave. at. 8.30 p.m. on “Struggle Against American Im- perlalism in Nicaragua.” eau 26 ro to _ Steve Katovis Branch 1LD Wilt have a ver: important meet- att p.m. at 819 F. 18th Bt, Apt. in o4, You should be there, we rewell Party gen by the Alfred Levy Branch ILD at 24 Vermont’ 8t., Bklyn. to Comrade Cohen, leaving for the Boviet Union. Admission free, Sew {means of production, ean there be a directly supported by John D. him- self! Stewart opened the discussion by remarking that during the de- pression of 1914-15, Royal Mecker, who was then head of U. 8, Buro of statistics, declared: “During the time of the Romans, the Unemployed were given bread and cireuses—while to- gay - they are getting bread and one of the first supporters of this “benevolent” plan It is clear that Roosevelt pro- poses to” substitute for Unemploy- ment Insurance, this company union benefit scheme. Stebbins plainly stated “this individual company Un- employment Benefit plan is best for the employers during the next few yea: In this plan, the workers must contribute 1 per cent of their earnings while the bosses contribute 2 per cent of their entire payroll lan of Unemployment Bene-| Benefits begin only after workers | re employed in the plant for one year, and only after 3 weeks’ unem- ployment. The maximum allowed is 13 weeks of benefit. If, however, during this period a worker is laid off, he is compelled to wait another three weeks before the so-called benefit begins. And to cap the climax when do you think this brilliant idea is to go into effect? Three years from now—after Jan- uary, 1933! Tammany Hall and the other reac- tionary parties, socialists included, let the unemployed starve! The Women's Trade Union Strike Breaker. The role of the labor fakers in the conspiracy of class collaboration was played by Rose Schneiderman, secretary of the Women’s Trade Union League. A faithful lickspittle of the bosses and their fascist agents, the A. F. of L. leadership. Schneiderman, has been rewarded for her service as a strikebreaker, by the Governor himself, who re- cently appointed her to the Com- mission on Prison Industry. To find out “what labor is doing now to alleviate the present situa- tion,” Schneiderman sent out a questionnaire to the International unions of the A. F. of L, Those in- cluded were the Typographical Union, the Electrical Workers, Ma- chinists, Printing Pressmen, Jour- neymen Barbers, Plumbers, Paint- ers and Decorators, Rallroad Train- men, Street & Electric Railway, Ex- pressmen, Carpenters, Stonelayers, and others. In the Men's Clothing industry where the Hillman gangsters rule, a similar type of company union benefit plan has been in operation for six years, The Typographical Union was reported as having paid League out $91,000 in Unemployment Bene- | fit in April, and this would have been more but for the fact that the workers in the newspaper branch of the trade had decided “voluntarily to go on the five day week, thanks to the willingness of the employers to agree to an equal division of work,” added Miss Schneiderman. ‘The solutions proposed by Schneid- erman to the burning question of unemployment, wage-cutting, mad- dening speed-up, and hunger are es follows: (a) The 5-day week 8-hour day. (b) Ratification of the Child Labor Amendment. (c) ‘limit fro school attendance, to 16 (@) National system of Unem- ployment Exchanges. fe) Some guarantee of a fixed yearly employment— another class collaboration policy such as is car- ried’ out at the Proctor & Gamble’s soap plant, where she says “the workers are a happier lot.” And (f) the most important of all: A National Council for Industrial Planning, since in the opinion of this traitor to the workers, “there are enough brains among the indus- trial leaders to meet this situation.” Miss Schneiderman would place the whole burden of the crisis which finds 10,000,000 jobless and starving in a land of plenty, on the backs of the workers and would crush any attempt of the workers to fight back, to strike or struggle even for the crumb of Unemployment Insurance from the state. Challenge of Soviet Union. Butu even this one time yellow socialist, Miss Schneiderman, tool of capitalism, cannot escape the chal- lenge of the Soviet Union, and con- cluded her remarks by pointing out. the startling anomaly in the land where the workers and peasants rule, where three are no idle stary- ing workers, where the dynamo of the Five Year Plan wiht its gigan- tic output makes the capitalists of the world tremble. Think of that, says the lady, “while here where we have the raw materials and the workers and everything that is necessary for a happy and peaceful and good life, here we are struggling because we have too much—it shows that some- thing is wrong! Yes, we reply, something is de- cidedly wrong, and all the long vange “planning” the bosses talk so much about these days will not and cannot overcome the steady capital- ist decay with its cancer of unem- ployment. Only in the Soviet Union, under a workers’ and peasants’ gov- ernment, where the workers own the Planned economy—not under the capitalist system whose sole interest is to protect private property. Rockefeller's Control The last speaker at this session was Bryce Stewart, the representa- tive of the Industrial Relations Counselors, Inc., a Rockefeller outfit, ee In the meanwhile, says} the compulsory age/ THE ADVENTU FRIDAY, MAY _—— — pea gst seen ste een OF BILL WORKER DAILY WORKER, NEW YOR RES | | | ON A“TRIP THROUGH YH: Couey EVERY whee | You WILL FIND MIDDLE | | & Se EVERY WHERE YOUNG Boys IN Searct OF WoRK Foor-SORE AND TIRED THEY REG FOR A RIDE ‘To THE NEXT “Towns renet’s Sy Y HOw Tht CRIPPLED MEMBERS THERE 15 No BEGGING Road Work 15 EMPLOYMENT OPEN, AEGROES SEENAT WORK ARE FROM CORMICT Campy ; ARE BEING, FIND WorK, —On the Road— ABOUT THE ONL Ye ONLY 4 MARYLAND, KENTUCKY _ANI VIRGINIA THe Da SKETCHES made ALONG TdE Roan IN PENASYEVANIA ) es, YOUTH DAY 10 | GIVE ANSWER "—TOWAR MOVES Amter Calls for Wide Mobilization The maneuvers of 672 military planes over New York on Saturday will receive a fitting answer from) the thousands of young workers at the National Youth Day demonstra- | tions, to be held in 5 cities on May 30th and 3ist. Amter Supports Youth Day. Comrade I. Amter, district organ- izer of the Communist Party in New York, has issued the following state- ment, supporting National Youth Day and calling upon all young workers to demonstrate on May 30th. The statement follows: “National Youth Day is a mobil- ization of the revolutionary youth of the country for struggle against the economic crisis and the imperialist war danger. The imperialist world is feverishly preparing for war on the Soviet Union. The socialists, who profses peace, are in the van- guard in these preparations, while the fascist leadership of the Amer- ican Federation of Labor, who to-/| day are forced to hypocritically echo the crying demands of the 10,000,000 unemployed and the masses of | workers suffering from wage cuts | |and speed-up, are at the front in | aiding in the war preparations. | | Memorial Day will be used by the | | war patriots for stirring up more! war fever. The young workers, who | will be the cannon fodder in the | coming war, must be mobilized against the impending slaughter. | National Youth Day is the day for | that mobilization. All hail to Na- | | tional Youth Da: | ‘Shipper Workers Are Locked Out | Antonoff ~ Slipper Co. Is Picketed NEW YORK—The 25 workers em- ployed by the Antonoff Novelty Slipper Company of 71 Green Street. New York, have been locked out by the bosses for no other reason than to prevent the workers from ofgan- izing their forces against further | wage cuts. | The lockout followed a conference | May 15, between a committee of the | workers from the shop, a union rep- resentative and the bosses. The workers at this conference had pre- sented the union's agreement in- cluding the demands of the workers and another conference was to take place the following Saturday to dis- cuss the agreement. On Friday, however, the bosses locked them out and the workers answered with a strike. The shop is at a complete stand- still and, as usual the bosses have the police on the job and are adver- tising for all kinds of help. It is, therefore, important that every shoe and slipper worker give every pos- sible aid to the workers on the picket line every morning and eve- ning. The workers demand the recogni- tion of the Shoe and Leather Work- ers’ Industrial Union agreement and an adjustment of wages and prices based upon the wage scale existing before the last wage reduction. NOTICE! All members of Loca] 905 Painters are called to a special meeting to denounce the fakers of district coun- cil 9 by voting to keep Rosen and Bogarad in the union, tonite, 8:30 Pp. m., at Hunt's Point Palace, 163 Street and Southern Boulevard. an soup!” “That is about as far as the Unemployment solution has gone,” declared Stewart, At last the re- presentative of big business had the sense to admit the failure of the capitalist system “to control the eco- nomic structure.” He also objected to calling Unemployment a plague or Police Arrive Too Late to Stop Jobless Stopping Eviction FRAME-UP TRI IN HARLEM MAY 26 NEW YORK.—The Down Town | Branch of the Lower Manhattan | Council of the Unemployed went down to 196 Henry Street yesterday and put back on the fourth floor the furniture of Peter Zosleski, a laborer with three children. He was evicted. He had been without work for a year. The police came down, but the furniture was already back. Frimmerman, of 116 East 4th St., appeared in court yesterday on a charge of unlawful entry because the jobless had put his furniture back. There were a considerable number of members of the council there to sup- port him. The judge told him to get out by Tuesday, but the council has organized the tenants to see that he stays in. The usual open air meeting will be held at Leonard and Church to- day at 11:30 a, m. Knee Pants Makers Throw Out Officials Committee Takes Over | Office; Some Dangers NEW YORK.—The committee of 25 elected at the membership meet- ing Wednesday of Local 19, knee- pantsmakers, of the Amalgamated Clothing Workers, to take over the administration and tie the can to the clique that has been grafting off the local, went down yesterday morning to the office and put out the paid officials. The officials, who had forbidden the meeting which unseated them, tried also to hold the office, The committee informed Blumberg, the manager of the joint board, that all paid and unpaid officials of the local stand ousted, and that arrange- ments are being made for new elec- tions. Blumberg was forced to agree that the action of the local meeting was legal, and that the committee should inform the board of directors of their action and ask for immediate elec- tions. Kneepantsmakers should be warn- ed that Hillman and Blumberg and Co. have not changed, they are mere- ly taking time to work out some scheme to fool the members and foist on them another staff as bad as the last. The members must be on the watch to reject any proposals of the Hillman clique to appoint officials from above, and should go through with the demands of the workers voted at the meeting, for an nime- diate election, controlled by the workers themselves, and that the committee elected should organize it- self to defend the interests of the workers in the shops, to siop wage cuts, to stop further introduction of piece work, and to immediately or- ganize relief for the unemployed. \ Workers V ictimized By Garvey Reformist NEW YORK —The trial of the four Harlem Negro workers who have been framed up in the most outrageous manher on robbery |charges will take place next Thurs- day, May 26, in General Sessions Court. Allan Taub, attorney of the New York District of the Interna- tional Labor Defense, will defend them, The four workers, Arthur liams, William Campbell, David Warfield and Sam Brown, were framed up at the instigation of the notorious Negro faker and betrayer, “General” Grant, Garvey reformist leader. Williams and Campbell, ar- rested about two months ago, have been out on $1,000 bail each. War- field and Brown were arrested about ten days ago and taken to the |Tombs with four charges against |them: robbery, grand larceny, felon- |ious assault and receiving stolen goods. Exorbitant bail of $10,000 was ;set for each of them, which the |I. L. D. has sueceeded in having re- duced to $2,500. Efforts to secure the release of the two workers on writs of habeas corpus have thus far proved unsucucessful. The frame-up of these four work- ers, who have been active in. the League of Struggle for Negro Rights in Harlem, is a blow struck at the L. S. N. R. at the very moment when it is seeking to rally the Negro masses behind the campaign to save the nine Scottsboro boys. Only mass pressure of the workers will defeat this frame-up conspiracy of the Tammany-U. N. I. A. alliance. Wil- LEO CARRILLO AT HIPPODROME Peter Higgins, tenor, heads the stage show at the Hippodrome this week while Leo Carrillo is seen in the principal role in “Hell Bound” the screen feature. With Carrillo in this Cruze production are Lola Lane, Lloyd Hughes and Ralph Ince. Others on the vaudeville bill are Don Zelaya, Bud and Frances Craig, Fred Ardarth and company, Hector with his gang, Al Birnes and Viola Kaye, Nellie Arnaut with her younger brothers and the Andressens. Mary Pickford in “Coquette is the special morning film showing at the hippodrome this week. “Le Mystere de la Chambre Jaule,” an Osso production filmed in France, will be the next attraction at the Highth Street Playhouse, beginning Friday, Marcel L’Herbier directed “The Mystery of the Yellow Room” from Gaston Leroux detective story. NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES BAST SIDE—BRONX Wed. to Fri. MURDER done ina | “A SON OF THE LAND” ON CAMEO SCREEN TODAY In accordance with the “Five-Year Plan,” Russia has chosen the cinema as the most thorough and powerful method of reaching the people and influencing them to use improved EXPRESS villages. There are also special films showing the advantages of big-scale farming over small individual farms and the value of the construction of moders up-to-date dams in sections where the land would otherwise be barren, Gottlieh’s Hardware 119 THIRD AVENIR Near 14th St. Stuyvesant 5074 AD Binds of ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES Cutlery Our Specialty Intern’l Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 1 UNION SQUARE aTH FLOOR All Work Done Under Personal Care of DR. JOSEPRSON COCO & BASS INVITE YOU TO ——PATRONIZE— A Comradely BARBER SHOP disease as had the previous speakers, indirectly therefore suzgesting that ‘ something. ¢an be about the AssUe, i Cooperators’ Patronize 1500 BOSTON ROAD SEROY Corner of Wilkins Avenue CHEMIST bicabie TB SDRe 657 Allerton Avenue Our work will please the men, the Mitabrook 921K BRONX, ¥, %. women and the children {reaches the unemployed, or to vote methods in construction and agri- on Lidia 12 Un ! sat hate ae cultural technique. With this thought psi chee. AAMATORS RATER in mind, many cultural films, such Warlocks | A thrill jolt with ‘47th Street West of Broadway as, “The Harvest Campaign,” “Use| | Plizabeth Brice! y 4 CK HOLT Eve: 50, Matinves Wot, and Sat., 2:30 Selected Seeds,” and “The Prepara-| |¥ultoy & Parker i A tion of the Soil for Spring Corn,”| | Virginie Bacon auare GILBERT and SULLIVAN have been released in the Russian| | Cirillo Bros, halon eaeaa pemeing ci CUTTERS TAKE UP BALLOT TODAY To Discuss Orloffsky Clique’s Referendum NEW YORK.—Tonight, right atter work, there will be a mass meeting of clothing cutters, Local 4 of the Amalgamated, at Irving Plaza Hall, 15 Street and Irving Place. The purpose is to discuss the proposal for referendum, on continuing the ten per cent assessment “unemploy- ment relief” very little of which for a 36 hour week, 36 hour’ pay, together with a standard of produc- tion which will guarantee the bosses against any increase in the cutting cose in all cutting rooms. ‘The proposition as it !s made by the Orlofsky, Abe Silverman cliques. is like, “heads I win, tails you lose.* If the cutters vote for the 36 hour week, simultaneously they vote for a standard of production which is eventual piece work, all cutters must oppose that. Should they vote for the 10 per cent assessment, then Or- lofsky will continue to pocket the money for himself, and his gang, and the cutters will gain nothing from. this funds any more than they have in the last 20 weeks of pay» ments from the 1,400 cutters. There is no other way of voting on the balt lot, but for either one of the two proposals. Don't Announce Meeting The office of Local 4has sent out a letter with a sample of the refer- endum ballot to all cutters, inform- ing them that the referendum will take place on May 28. However, they ommitted announcing this Fri- day’s meeting to discuss the refer- endum, because they do not want a big meeting of the cutters, for fear that the cutters will have the proposal, which was once accepted at the local meeting, of the unem- ployed cutters, for the immediate in- troduction of the 40-hour week, to work 36-hours, in order to share work with the unemployed, and to abolish the 10 per cent assessment which amount to 4 hours work and NEW SOVIET FILM! Needle Union Backs : National Youth Day NEW YORK.—At the last meet- ing of the Executive Council of the N. T. W. I. U. it was unanimously decided to endorse the National Youth Day, May 30 and 31, The In- dustrial Union is calling upon all young workers in the needle industry to make this their day and to join with the militant young workers of the other industries in a mighty protest against militarism and war. ENGDAHL IS FREED IN SEDITION CASE Judge Aids Prosecutor Put Over Case MONTREAL, Canada, May 21 J. Louis Engdahl and Bella Gordon here today on charges of sedition after a two-day trial. The prosecu- tion tried desperately to convict, aided by the court. They introduced a flood of old pamphlets and liter- ature, including Engdahl’s pamphlet on “Sedition,” the Atlanta pamphlet, “Death Penalty,” “The Story of Im- perial Valley,” ete. In charging the jury, Judge Wilson said that even criticism of courts could be considered as sedition. The “not guilty” verdict today is considered a good precedent in the fight against sedition. Seven others arrested at an un- employed meeting and a Lenin me- morial meeting also face these charges. BILL DUNN SPEAKS TONIGHT Before the Metal Workers League, 16 W. 21,Street, 8 p.m. On conilition of the Metal Workers’ here compared with the workers of the same industry in| the Soviet Union, which now goes for Orlofsky and his gang. All cutters are called to the mass meeting right after work to fight for the unemployed cutters’ proposition going on the referendum ballot. AMUSEMENTS REBUILDING THE EAST! AMKINO PRESENTS A SON THE A STIRRING DRAMA OF THE EAST—THE STRUGGLE RE- TWEEN MAN AND NATURE— THE OLD WAY AND THE NEW OF LAND DEPICTING THE AGE OLD oI ] RS FOR BENEFIT OF ALL PRODUCED IN THE U.S.8.R. BY SOYUZKINO CAMEO 42ND STREET and BROADWAY (WIS, 1789) POPULAR PRICES A oew play hy BENKY BERNSTEIN MELO Cnet “PINAFORE” “Thrift” Prices Ev". 9% te $2. Wed. to Mats. 50¢ to $1. Sat. Mats. 500 50 Brlnnger’s Thea. W. 44 Sf. Penn, Evenings 8150 OPENS 7068 atxe'r GONDOLIERS SEATS NOW Read the “Young Worker”. 1 NOW HiPPODROME °°.) BIGGEST SHOW LN NEW YORE RICHARD ARLEN IN “Gun Smoke” | ibe vas “Five Star Final is electric and alive” A. H. WOODS Presents sissies ARTHUR BYRON ™ Five star FINAL CORT THEATRE, 6TH MONTH Evenings 8:50 Mats, Wed. and RKO ACTS West of 48th Street 2:20 ROBERT MINOR will speak on \ 4 “THE SCOTTSBORO CASE” TONIGHT (May ATS P.M: on 22nd) at the WORKERS FORUM—WORKERS SCHOOL AUDITORIUM ; 88 EAST 12TH STREET 2nd FLOOR WORKERS SCHOOL SUMMER TERM Only a few prs left for registration! Register now! BIG GAIN MADE _ BY COMMUNISTS __ INBRITISH VOTE Campbell Polls 5.219 As Against 1,525 LONDON, May 20.—The by-elec | tion at Ogmore gave the Communist Paryt the best results yet recorded }at any election. Comrade Camp- bell, Communist Party candidate. | received 5,219 votes, compared to 1,525 votes at the last general elec- |tions. The Labor Party candidate | polled 19,356 votes compared to | 21,900. The Labor Government was | forced to appeal for Tory and Lib- leral support, and they declared the reason for this move was the fight for “constitutionalism against revo- | were acquitted in Kings Bench Court | lution.” The vote in this election indicates the increasing revolt of the Welsh Miners against the Labor Government and its policies. . BERLIN. May 21. — A general strike in the Berlin Traffic Trust , Was threatened by the workers be- | cause of their refusal to accept the | arbitration decision of the bosses. This decision provided for wage cuts jand the workers therefore decided | to carry through the strike ballot Red Lists Advance. The Workers Council election at Reichsport gave the reformist lists | 11,722 votes as compared to 14,401 | of the last election. The revolution- ary lists showed an increase in votes. The Communist Party candidate re- ceived 62,014 votes as compared to 3,969 at the last election, The fas- cists, however, received the very low | vote of 237. The telegraph workers | gave the red lists an overwhelming majority. VEGE-TARY INN BEST VEGETARIAN FOOD MODERN IMPROVEMENTS $3.00 PER DAY—$20.00 PER WEEK P. 0. BOX 50 BERKELEY HEIGHTS, N.J. PHONE FANWOOD 2.7468 R2 Take fernies at 23rd istopher. Barclay St, St., or Wr ‘Tabes to Hoboken, to Jersey Berkel VEGETARIAN DAIRY RESTAURANT Comrades Will Always Find st Pleasant to Dine at Oar Pince. 1187 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx (near 174th St. Station) TELEPHONE INTERVALE 90149 ‘Lackawanna ley Heights New Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 199 SECOND AVENUE et, 12th end 19th Bte, HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian Restaurant 1600 MADISON AVENUE Phone University 5865 Phone Stuyvesant 9816 Jobn’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all redioals meet 302 E. 12th St, New York The DAILY WORKER Advertise Your Union Meetings Here. For Information Write to Advertising Department 50 East 13th St. New York City FOR RENT—Small sunny frontroom telephone, clevator, $5, 94 Hamilton Place. Apt. 6-D 187th St, Bway. Sub, —— PEURSKILL—ttoom for season Junél— Oct. 1; aecomdating two persons, bath, cleetricity, meals optional; one hour Ny ¥. Central, Yorktown Bus to Croton Ave, walk 14 mile—F. L, COHEN, RFD No, le ————__ WILL LEAVE THIS country therefore wish to dl of all mp petvate. sern ulated mi tae also instru low price—Call J. PYSH, Gere Kops Ave Apt He yin w

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