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DAILY WORKER, _NEW YOR! _ THURSDAY, JUNE 18, 1931 U.S. DELEGATION TO SOVIET UNON TO MAKE TOUR TO COAST, OF MILITANT Mass Demonstration fo r Them at Irving Plaza, Friday; Tell of Visit to USSR NEW YORK—Having just re- e Soviet Union, the n delegation which visited J. S. S. R. on May Ist and after, deliver its report at a mass dem- tion arranged at Irving Plaza and Irving Place, Friday, t 8 p.m. Julia Stuart . who return from the Soviet | will also speak. The} Poyn’ Union recently. meeting is under the auspices of the |} Union. delegation will tour} , going north Friends of the Soviet e of the n an aut to Pacific Coast tails on meetings will out by the Nat Office of the} F. 8. U. | ‘The five who are to tour the coun- | y and tell about their visit to the Soviet Union each gave a statement | Daily Worker. They are as| the onal ‘The most impressive reaction got as a mechanic from this ie said McCorckle, a member of Ci penters’ Local 125 in Los ‘Angeles, | 4 chairman of the delegation, “was | to observe the power in the hands} of the working class. It is mani-/ fested in every direction. It con-| trasts with the degredation of the | workers in the capitalist lands.” | Replying to the fascist “plan” an- nounced by Matthew Woll, John | Lourie, secretary of the delegation, said: “The Russian workers are fighting for peace. They are par- | ticularly active in putting over mal Five Year Plan successfully. military activities of the imperialist | were evident wherever we went. Matthew Woll is now stirring up more war preparations. It is going | to be the task of our delegation, | touring the country, to expose the | war plots and to call on the workers | to defend the Soviet Union.” “They are putting over the Five | Year Plan,” said J. E. Snyder, an-| other of the delegation, members of | rs’. Union Local 417 in San} sco, Calif. They connect up| industrialization with collectiviza- tion. Some of the large undertak- ings were completed in 21-2 instead | On— | What's THURSDAY | Downtown Unemployed Counct! Open-air meeting at Seventh St. and Ave, A at 7:30 p.m \ + we Women’s Councils 6, 15 and 9 Will observe the departure of Com~ for the Soviet Union e Ave. Bronx, at 8:30 . All workers are invited to come. Steve Katovis Branch LLD. Will hold an open-air meeting at § p. m. at Bast Tenth St. and Sec- ond Ave Tiiustrated Leteure on Five Year Plan | tn Williamsburg. The achieve- ments of the Five Year Plan will be illustrated at a lecture at 8 p.m. at 785 Flushing Ave., Brooklyn, by M. Sherer of the Workers’ Internationat | Relief t ripe re: | Young Defenders No. 3 | Meeting at 8:20 p.m. at 257 B. Beatty St. Myra Page on Mooney-Billi and Imperial Valley. reer ee Sacco-Vanzetti Branch LL.D. Open-air meeting at 8:30 p.m. at Wilkins and Intervale. x 8 epwaevine Branch 1.L.D. Meeting at § p.m. at 118 Brigtol St. Yorkville Hungarian Br. LL.D. Meeting at & p.m. at 347 EB. 72nd St. Mooney, Billings and Imperial Valley cases will be discussed. ara ew Barbers’ and Hairdr: rn ee ‘Wilt be held at 9 p.m. at 60 B. {8th Bt., 2nd floor. . International Labor Sports Club Will meet at its new headquarters, aa7 ©. 12th St, at 1 BD p.m. Printing Workers’ Ind. Lengu Will meet and discuss the i ‘uv. — at 7:30 p.m. . 2st e pe SEN Open Forum To which alf jewelry workers are invited to come will be held at Bry- ant Hall, Sixth Ave., near 42nd St., at 8 p.m. Subject: “What Can the Unemployed Jewelry Worker Do?” + Jamaica Youth Br. I.W.0. 412 Meets at 8:30 p.m. at 109-26 Union St. Kane on “How Bosses Try to Control Workers’ Minds.” » * Brownsville Branch LL.D, Holds an open-air meeting at Hop- kinson and Pitkin at 8:30 p.m. Re Br, 405 Downtown Youth Br. 1.W,0. Meets at 134 BH. Seventh St. at $:30 p.m. Bob Turner will speak on “Soviet Union.” * The Bepetanto Group Will meet at 86th Street and Fifth Avenue for continuation of begin- nets class and report of Cultural Federation Conference. In case of rain meet as usual at 350 E. Sist St. Painters T.U.U.L. Meet at 1400 Boston Road at 8 P.m. After business meeting discus- sion on Scottsboro Case. Cea MO | General Membership Meeting Of the Painters Section of the Building and Construction Workers Indystrial League will take place at p.m. at 16 West 2ist Street. Questions on general and local elec. tions will be taken up. Come on time. * doe Hi B: Meets at 6:30 p, * * ch LL.D. at 132 W. 21 Bt. Werkers Ex-Servicemes_ Leagu: Branch No. 2 will hold its regular meeting at Pythian Hall, between 125th and 124th Streets, at 8 p.m. BR, RE Bast Side Workers Cin! Important nari ed Will take place at 196 E. 40 p.m. i meetin a Bway. at , Oe SRS Boro Park Workers Club and 1L.W.0. Branch 7: 1873 43rd Street, Brooklyn, will zive a lecture by Harry Raymond on “The Daily Worker and the Am- érican Working Cl at 8:30 p.m, Proceeds to the Daily Bleed aa » * Concert, Vetcherinka yer Dance Will be held under the auspices of Section 3, Communist Party, at ‘Serpt Molot” Hall, 122 2nd Avenue, Proceeds to Daily Worker, CW Tee Given Unit 7" Section 30: a lon at by ats BS Beats Sh wine |here in this | under the nner system.” | reaching the Daily Worker. | forced to write about of five years. Every factory we vis- | ited the workers showed intense en- | thusiasm. You could see it in their} wall papers—everywhere. We will try to instill a little of that enthus- | iasm into the American workers on our trip across the country.” “Collective farming in the Soviet Union is putting farming on a big- ger scale, in the interest of the farmers, than anything I ever saw} country,” said Julius Meisenbach, a Montana farmer who went with the delegation doing like the Russian farmers did.) There is no chance for the American farmers to make good any more _ BLOCH FIRES FOUR MORE OF HIS MEN) Capitalist Press Owner Shown to Be Liar NEW YORK. — Four more men were laid off recently by Paul Bloch, owner of a number of capitalist newspapers, according to reports This I will tell) Seattle and) the American farmers, when I travel) De-| through the country and get. back | be sent| home, that their only salvation is in| owner of a chain of lying sheets) recently laid off 25 of his men in| | the editorial, advertising and other | offices, after making glowing speech- | es about prosperity: Bloch had many times bragged | that he would never lay off his men | or reduce wages. Hardly had he | gotten these words out of his mouth, | as well as other reams of usual) “prosperity” lies, than he slashed wages, fired many men, and is now | working with a skeleton staff—all of | | whom shiver in their boots fearing | that their turn will come next. | Some of the porters and janitors | laid off by Bloch had been working | for his newspapers for from 20 to| | 40 years. They were thrown onto the streets to starve with Bloch’s/ | glowing words about “the future | prosperity of the country,” and “real | | Americans never would fire workers,” ringing in their ears. The-men still left on the job are| “prosperity | | just around the corner,” never know- ing when they will join the bread- lines themselves. An ‘effort is being made by the Trade‘ Union Unity League, 16 West 21 Street, to organize a news writers and journalists’ league to fight against the murderous conditions on the capitalist newspapers, wage cuts, and wholesale layoffs. COSTLY RENT Bronx Tenants to Meet Friday, June 19 BRONX, N. Y. — Spurring the struggle against exorbitant rents, es~ pecially Negro workets, the Bronx Tenants League and Unem- ployed Council have called for a neighborhood meeting of Claremont Parkway and Third Avenue tenants, Friday, June 19, at 8 pm. at 1622 Bathgate Avenue. Describing the conditions of the homes which the landlords |charge from $30 to $32 a month the Tenants League in conjunction with the or- ganized tenants of 3874 Third Ave. have draw up the following de- mands: Reduction of rent equal the rent paid by the white workers in the next house, amounting to $25, reg- ular hot water service, clean and sanitary conditions of the house and apartments. ‘The tenants at 3874 Third Avenue ‘were ordered evicted within five days and now have re¢eived another sum- mons to pay a full month’s rent or have it garnished their wages. A leaflet to be issued by the Te- nants League tells why the tenants are fighting to lower the rent: “One of the tenants makes $15 a week working if a hotel and hie wife makes $30 a month doing housework. ‘They have 4 children. After they paid their rent last month they had no monéy for food for mote than a week.” DAILY WORKER ENTERTAINMENT Sunday, June 2ist—8 p. m. at 118 Brownsville St. Arranged by the Brownsville Culture Club ADMISSION 25 CENTS Proceeds for the Dally Worker Daily Worker Outing to HUNTERS ISLAND SUNDAY, JUNE 21, 1931 [FIGHT FRAMEUP A. F. of L. AND BOSSES LINE UP | AGAINST FOOD WORKERS UNION FOOD WORKER | Juror Said He Ought} To Be Jailed for Being A Striker NEW YORK. — — Members of the Food Workers Industrial Union, af- filiated with the Trade Union Unity | League, are rallying to the defense of the militant food worker, Napo- | Jeon Moratias, who has just been convicted on a framed-up charge of | ¥ as| an aftermath of the Zelgreen Cafe- | second degree felonious assault teria strike last year. Moratias was found guilty by a jury of businessmen of breaking a policemen’s little finger. After a farcical rtial one of the jurors ap- proached the food workers’ lawyer and said, “Whether Moratias guilty or not he ought to be in jail because he is a striker. I ought to know because I have 300 men work- ing for me.” The penalty for second degree fe- | lonious assault, is from 2% to 5] years. A statement issued by the Mora- | tias Defense Committee of the F.} W. I. U. declares the trial a typical example of capitalist justice and urges all militant workers to come| to the aid of this food worker who faces a five year sentence simply be- cause he picketed during the Zel- green strike. The statement declares in part: “The A. F. of L. which worked with | the owner of Zelgreen’s cafeteria during the strike, and actually was/ the direct cause of the strike, is now | working with the capitalist courts to send Napoleon Moratias to jail! for five years. Moratias’ only crime is that he marched on a picket line.” Police Get Pay to Break Bread Strike NEW YORK. —That the master bakers association is paying the po- lice hundreds of dollars for “pro- tection” against the strike for lower | | bread, rather than lower the price |of the staple, was brought out in| | police court with the arrest of four |More active women picketers, yes- | | terday. ‘Tillie Fisher, Mollie Licht, Fanny Finkelstein and Lola Fine, all mem-; bers of the United Council of Work- ing Class Women, and the latter, the | leader of the bread strike, were ar- rested while actively picketing be-/ fore the baker shops. The first two were fingerprinted and sentenced to two days in jail or $5 fine on a charge of “disorderly conduct.” The fine was paid so the militant women could continue the fight. The case of Fanny Finkel- stein was dropped. Lola Fine was held for trial for June 23rd and bail of $100 placed against her. case will be heard at the police court at 18ist St. and Bronx Park. Fearful of the spread of the strike | the bosses have resorted to police terror in an attempt to break the strike. Police are receiving direct orders to. arrest certain active pick- etezs and it is known that it is at the behest of their immediate super- ior who receives the “protection” money. A mass protest meeting against! police terror in the bread strike will be held Friday, June 19, at 2075 Clinton Ave., near 180th St. at 8 p. m. Attacked Worker Held in Big Bail NEW YORK. — Sam Krasnopols- key, @ members of the Food Workers Industrial Union, is being held in $7,500 bail on a felonious assault charge after he was attacked and stabbed in the shoulder by three A. F. of L. gangsters in front of his brothers home. As Krasnopolsky was about to enter the hallway leading to his brother's home, the three thugs leaped on him and stabbed him three times. Dur- ing the course of the attack one of the gangsters was stabbed in the ab- domen and is now in. the hospital in a dangerous condition. The wouided gangster is also charged with assault. Williamsburg Workers!— ATTENTION! Daily Worker Affair SATURDAY EVE, JUNE 20 at 8 P.M. at 61 Graham Ave., Brooklyn Good Program. Arr. by Sec. 6, Unit 2 All proceeds for the Dally Worker VEGE-TARY INN BEST VEGETARIAN FOOD MODERN IMPROVEMENTS $3.00 PER DAY—$20.00 PER WEEK P.O. BOX 50 BERKELEY HEIGHTS, N Meet at 9:30 a. m. ane Bryant Ave., Bronx, N. Y. ranged by See. 5, Unit 11. BREE Re com Renee PHONE FANWOOD 38-7463 R2 Take ferries at 23rd_St., Christo &t., Barclay St., or Madson bee te Baitroad Heights, New serser is} The | | By GRACE HUTCHINS. | NEW YORK.—Philip Rothberg, “socialist” and organizer of Local 338 |ot oe Retail Dairy, Fruit and Gro- y Clerks (A. F. of L.); Alexander | tara “socialist” and general organ- | izer of the A. F. of L., the United | Hebrew Trades and the employers’ | organization, the Independent Retail | Fruit Merchants’ Association, with a | lawyer to represent them, are lined [up in a solid front against the Food | Workers’ Industrial Union in the in- junction case (Local 338, Rothberg s. the Food Workers’ Industrial Union, Weissman), now being tried in the N. Y. County in the Bronx. There is no jury. Judge Black alone hears the case. Jacques Buitenkant, lawyer the left wing union defendants, cross-examined scabs and bosses brought in as witnesses for the A. F. of L. union till they squirmed in |the witness chair and were forced | to admit the agreement between em- ployers ok the A. F. of L. to Sag WOMEN DELEGATE, |To Be Held Thursday, | June 18, at 8 P.M, NEW YORK.—The Women's Delegate Conference, called by the Women's Department of the Trade | Union Unity League will be held on | ‘Thursday, June 18h. The purpose | of this conference is to discuss plans |and methods of organizational work in the shops where woiren are em- | ployed. The deiegates (vcn. organ- ized and unorganized shops will speak about | Shops and how they can best organ- | ize their ranks to fight for better | conditions. | At this conference the women es organized shops will speak of their experience, and what they have gained through organization. Thru this conference we will be able to | work out a program which will be a | guide to us in our work in the shops, | which will help us to approach our problems correctly. Delegates elected | or selected, women workers of organ- ized, shops are urged to be present. After | the discussion there will be a mov- |ing picture showing. Remember, to-/| day, June 18th, at 131 W. 28th 8t., 7:30 p. m. Workers Correspondence is the | backbone of the revolutionary press. Build your press by writing for it about your day to day struggles. Concert and Social Eve | SATURDAY EVE, JUNE 20 at 1622 Bathgate Avenue BRONX, N. ¥. | Arranged by Unit 18, Sec. 5 C. P. | Proceeds for the Daily Worker CN eee! QUIET FURNISHED ROOM—Sublet cheap, East 19th St. Phone During Day, Shaw or Dunne, Stuyvesant 9- 8637. SPARTACUS Concert and Dance Unit 4 Sec. 2 Communist Party for the Daily Worker at 301 WEST 29th STREET SATURDAY EVE, JUNE 20 Admission 25c, Proceeds for Daily Supreme Court | for} ‘SHOP CONFERENCE) Shop | the conditions of their | unorganized and A. F. of L.| UNEMPLOYED IN the food workers’ union. A little cringing rat of a scab named Sol| Maslinoff claimed he had been for a long time a member of the A. F. of L. union while working at the Sun Market where the Food Workers’ Industrial Union called a strike in! February, but admitted that he/ worked 11 hours a day and 15 hours on Saturday in a market that was supposedly under “union conditions.” He was forced to state that many workers at the Sun Market were not members of the A. F. of L. union | and that it was not therefore an A. |F. of L. union shop B. Shwie, employer and ex-presi- | dent of the racket known as the In- | dependent Retail Fruit Merchants’ Put Up Barricades In| Mainz (Cable By Inprecor.) employed demonstrations took place in Mainz yesterday. Clashes took place with the police and barricades were erected. Many were injured, including numerous women. Industry in the Rihr district has adopted a drastic anti-workingclass program and is demanding the go: ernment carry it out Association, came to the witness| provides: |stand with jaunty confidence and| Abolition of unemployment sup- | claimed he had never heard of the) port, except in special cases of bit-|' left wing strike against the fruit dealers in 1929. Under Buitenkant’s cross-examination he was forced to admit that he had met in conference with other employers at the time of the strike to discuss the strike sit- | uation and to form his organization. | No receipts were ever issued for memberships in this racketeering as- sociation, ee tne, | ab. cemmers. Defeat \Misleaders Move to When Buitenkant read clauses of | the contract between the employers’ iPut Over ‘Wage Cu t| NEW YORK.—The rank and file | ter need; abolition of all existing wage agreements, and cuts in wage: reduction of direct taxation increa and an increase in indirect taxation, which would fall heavier on the} workers. A worker wounded during the col- | lisions in Solingen last week died in the hospital today. | association and the A. F. of L. union | agreeing “to protect the employer against any other labor organization jin the same line of trade,” Shwie claimed to be ignorant of the agree-j; | ment he had signed. Confused and | | stammering, caught in one lie after another, he left the witness stand. | yo. | This test case of an injunction) At a meeting of Local No. 7, Miss taken out by an A. F. of L. union! peitiepaum, the local secretary, urged ergs nies reget ted the workers to vote to accept a 10 class. Th grew out of. the spirited per cent cut in wages. The work- | strike and organizing campaign of | | the Food Workers’ Industrial Union | " |found this A. 'F, of L, Local 338 | org. ‘The majority of the workers ready and convenient weapon against voted against the cut. The men fin- the wotkers’ own union. ishers pledged to stand solid with Clerks in Spirited Mass Violation. | the women workers in Local No. 7. A temporary injunction, taken out) There will be a meeting held next by the A. F. of L., to prevent the left} priday, in which the. A. F. of L. wing union from engaging in any! fakers will again try to hoodwink activity whatsoever has now held for | the hat trimmers into accepting the more than a year. Decision in this) oyt, | case will set a legal precedent as to) defeated yesterday an attempt of the bosses, through their lackeys, the A. F. of L. officials, to saddle another wage-cut on the hat trimmers of New into voting to accept a 30 per cent GERMANY BATTLE. COPS; MANY HURT | “BERLIN, June 17.—Powerful un-/ The Chamber of Commerce and} The program | of the Hat Trimmers Local No. 7) ers, who had already been fooled! URGE WORKERS TO RUSH FUNDS FOR RELIEF OF THE STRIKING MINERS NEW YORK.—The New York Dis- "beans, potat potatoes, lentils, peas, smoked trict Penn.-Ohio Striking Miners’ | meats and canned milk. A depot Relief Committee was formed on|for food has been taken at 240 East | Saturday, June 13th, under the joint | 9th St., New York City. | auspices of the Workers Interna-| A Special Milk Fund will be raised | tional, Relief and the Trade Union|to furnish milk for the sterving Unity League. Their headquarters | children of the miners, and for this | will be at 799 Broadway, Room 614. | purpose the Young Pioneers will be called in to show their solidarity with the striking miners’ children | The committee has launched the | widest possible campaign to brin |reliet to the striking miners, an |PY collecting funds tor them. workers’ fraternal, union, social and| 4 Speakers Buro of one hundred fifty is being formed to conduct an open air meeting every night.and to take up collections at each meeting. On Saturday, June 20th, a func- | tionaries meeting of -all fraternal, A committee of sixteen, represent-| trade unioh and affiliated organiza- ing the Unemployed Council, the| tions will be called in order to en- Women’s Council, the International | jist every group of workers into | Workers Order, and the various | solidarity support of the striking |trade unions affiliated with the} miners. Only in this way will we Trade Union Unity League, actively | defeat the starvation program of the | participated in the program |bosses and help the miners on to Special emphasis will be laid on| victory. Rush funds to: District | gathering of food. The most de-|Penn.-Ohio Striking Miners’ Relief sirable foods’ for this purpose are, Committee, 799 Broadway, Room 614, ‘HIT JIMCROWISM BY COMPANY UNO INT WIU Reinstates Negro Worker NEW YORK.—In the shop of Pomelton Fur Co., 210 W. 29th St., the company union in the course of its racketeering business in the fur trade, forced the workers out of the shop by terror, and extorted a few dollars from each of them. This is an old story in the fur trade, but in this shop a Negro worker, Joseph Christen, was em- ployed. He has been @ nailer for the past 8 years and had been an employee of the firm for several weeks. When the workers were dragged down to their office, the agents of Kaufman ruled that all workers can go back to the shop after paying a few dollars, but not the Negro worker. He cannot go back to work. ‘The Negro worker came to the of- fice of the Needle Trades Workers’ Industrial Union with his story. The | affiliated organizations, will be ral- | ‘lied to bring an effective and im- | mediate relief to the miners, their wives and children. YONKERS ‘DAILY’ CLUB IN MEETING tood Lively Session, Good Attendance | YONKERS, N. Y. — Attracting 150 workers from Ossining, N. Y., White PPlains, New Rochelle and Mount | Vernon, the Yonkers Daily Worker Readers Club held its second meet- ing June 14 William Hunt spoke of the Daily Worker and its role in the workers’ struggle. Lowrie, of the May 1 dele-| gation to the Soviet Union gave his impressions of the workers land. A film “The Old and the New” was | presented by the W. I. R. for the club | members. Literature and subs for the Daily Worker were secured and money raiseq for the Scottsboro and Pat- erson defense. The affair pleased the club mem- bers and talk of another one was general. A committee of five was elected to present concrete program of activities for the club. ( whether or not the temporary in-| junction is made permanent, allow- | j ing an A. F. of L. union the legal right to stop organization work by | a left wing union. Left wing clerks | AMUSEMENTS representatives of the Industrial Union went up to the shop with the worker and reinstated him, and will be ready to defend him on his job against any efforts of the Kaufman in mass violations have been arrested | by the hundred on the picket line, and 200 clerks, mostly in the Sun. Market strike, are now under indict- ment for violation of this injunction. SEE SOVIET RUSSIA SMASHI SUC AMKINO | The 9- YEAR PLAN LECTURE given by the BORO PARK WORKERS CLUB Friday, June 19th, 1931 1373-43rd St. Brooklyn N. RUSSIA'S REMAKING—A THEA., 47th St. & Bway CENTRAL MATS. “If you want to see @ vivid film-talkie exhibition of what is going on in the Soviet Union, see the Five-Year Plan.” — DAILY WORKER. gang to throw him out again. ING ITS WAY TO SOCIALISTIC CESS PRESENTS SOLLIN'S RESTAURANT 216 EAST 14TH STREET 6-Course Lunch 55 Cents Talking Film (In English) Regular Dinner 65 Cents Daily at 2 50e to $1.00) at 8:45 50e to $1.50 Incl. Sunday EVES. —Subject— Communist Press vs. Capitalist Press | —Speaker— Al Garrick of the Daily Worker —ASK LECTURE given by the’ I. W. 0. BRANCH NO. 521 Friday Evening June 19th 1645 Grand Concourse, Bronx | —Subject— Communist Press vs. Capitalist Press | Speaker:—J. North, Editor of the Labor Defender “WHAT ARE WE DOING IN RUSSIA?” AMKINO PRESENTS THE BLACK SEA MUTINY A tense and dramatic story of the eventful days in 1918 when the French Sailors of the Black Sea fleet rebelled against their officers PRODUCED IN THE U.S.S.R. BY >CAMEO MELROSE BESTAURANT Comrades Will Always Find 1 Pleasant to Dine st Our Place. 1187 SOUTHERN BLVD. Brenr (near 114th St. Station) TELEPHONE INTERVALE 9—0140 ED THE FRENCH SAILORS Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 199 SECOND AVENUE Bet, 128th and 13th 6te. Strictly Vegetarian food UKRAINFILM 42ND STREET Beginning ands. 110) | This POPULAR PRICES HEALTH FOOD Friday at the “SERP Proceeds for the Dally Auspices:—Unit Number 4, ADMISSION 25 CENTS. of 5% CONCERT “VECHERINKA” and DANCE FRIDAY, JUNE 19th, 1931 | 122 SECOND AVENUE, NEW YORK CITY Admission 25 cents. Arranged by Section 3, C. P. —Daily Worker Concert and Dance— SATURDAY JUNE 20 AT 8:30 P. M. SPARTACUS HALL 301 WEST 29TH STREET, NEW YORK STOCK UP FOR WEEKS TO COME Buy in Cooperative Stores and Help Save the “Daily” Save the DailyWorker SAVE THE DAILY WORKER AND SAVE MONEY CONCOOPS FOOD STORE and RESTAURANT 2700 BRONX PARK EAST ii ws at a a vot r ay Last Day MOLOT” HALL 6th Ave. BIGGEST SHOW IN NEW YORK LEW AYRES IN ‘Up for Marder’ with Genevieve Tobin Worker and Pioneer ACTS RKO “NOMADIE” Ap interesting film jaunt through Denmark, Sweden, Norwa Vegetarian Restaurant 1600 MADISON AVENUE Phone University 8865 and Germany WORKERS— EAT AND DRINK THE BEST AT THE LOWEST PRICES PURE FOOD LUNCH NORTHEAST CORNER 13th ST, & UNIVERSITY PLACE Phone Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES 4 place with atmosphere where all radicals meet New York 302 E£, 12th St. Section 2, Communist Party All Proceeds to the Daily Worker CAMP UNITY, Autos leave from 143 E. 103rd St. 10 a. m. and 6:30 p. m. and The comrades are requested to 8TH FLOOR THURSDAY 18 CAMP. KINDERLAND ; AN Work Done Under, Personal Cure FRIDAY JUNE 19 i Prepare for the outing to Camp Kinderland of all schools and SATURDAY 20 ; Branches of the I. W. 0. Ail registrations must be in the 7 years of age and the total income on CAMP W! Revolutionary any of these four camps GO ON YOUR VACATION TO ONE OF OUR Proletarian Camps Information for all four camps can be obtained at 32 Union Square. Room No. 505. — Telephone STuyvesant 9-6332- WINGDALE, N. Y. for the camp remain behind. The 20th of June (week-end) fi CAMP NITGEDAIGET, BEACON, N. Y. Boats leave for the camp every day from 42nd Street Ferry Good entertainment—DANCES at the Camp MONROE, N, ¥.—On beautiful Lake Walton—Swimming—Boating, ete. A return ticket to Camp Wocolona is only $2.60 ‘Take the Erie Railroad. For information about 330 { Se are ee RT ah Stuyvesant 9-6: . every day at 10 a. m., Fridays at Saturday, 9 a. m., and 4 p. m. Intern’] Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 1 UNION SQUARE come on time, in order not to + $2.50 per Day office a week in advance—Children over will be accepted. * a L?, Gottlieh’s Hardware » 119 THIRD AVENUB Near 14th St. Stuyvesant 5074 All Binds of ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES Cutlery Our Specialty OCOLONA The DAILY WORKER Advertise Your Union Meetings Bere. For Information Write to Advertising Department 50 East 13th St. New York City Entertainment.