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Page Two Red Rally Oct. Humbug of Boss ‘Investigation’ Communist Candidates to Deal With Election | of Capitalist Parties Maneuver: NEW YORK.—At the final central Election Rally and mass meeting to be held by the Communist Party New York District on Thursday eve- ning, Oct. 29, the leading candidates of the Communist Party will expose the humbug of the Seabury Tam- many investigations and the graft and corruption which are par® and parcel of the capitalist system and its parties. The Communist Party candidates will deal particularly with the So- cialist Party’s actions in connection with this election maneuver of the bosses’ parties and will present the | proof to the workers that the So- cialist Party officials are, in deeds as well as words, no better than the racketeering politicians of Tammany Hall and the Republican Party, that today, the socialist party and its yel- DRESSMAKERS PLAN ACTION United Front Commit- tee Outlines Program NEW YORK. — The Dressmakers United Front Committee has worked out the following plan to mobilize the workers for a real struggle at the expiration of the agreement. 1. Immediate preparations for a united shop conference to be held on November 14. All workers of the dress industry are called upon to im- mediately take up the question of the conference and to see that this conference is really representative of all the shops in the dress trade. The purpose of the conference will be to lay down a definite policy of action for the expiration of the agreement 2. The committee has already divi- ded itself into unity block commit- tees whose purpose it shall be to stimulate the organization of united front committees in the shops for immediate struggle against wage cuts. Meetings to be held in all the | centers of the dress industry. 3. To develop a broad campaign | among the unemployed dressmakers and organize the united front unem- ployed council for all dressmakers. 4. Open forum of dressmakers to be held every week. The first_forum is Wednesday at 341 W. 36th St., at . 7 an 29 Will Expose oon Been ( (Conmidveo? On ECIOE To Go Tee SOVIET UN cory FoR Noy 7TH Ceceprar; ort THEY ARE Going ; low leadership is the most dangerous enemy of the working class since they | mask behind revolutionary speeches of AONWAWAY | and betray the workers into believing THis HAP per we iyitery their policy is to “purify” the cor- | ne ei mene oii ruption of the capitalist parties. Workers in shop and factory, in| union and fraternal organizations, are urged to spread the news of this | expose of the Seabury investigation | and to cooperate with the sections of the Communist Party in the various | boroughs in going from house to/| | house to call on the workers to at- tend the meeting on October 29 and to vote Communist on Election Day. There will be a special house to house mobilization for this purpose | next Saturday and Sunday, Oct. 24 | and 25. Workers are urged to immediately register to act as Watchers on Elec- tion Day. This should be done_im- S00 IVA Pion YOU ony at feurR DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1931 URES OF B €_WITe Me) MO TL Hee “THe oat AN tour’ *Co mediately as all Watchers must re- ceive the proper instructions in ad-| vance in order to know how to fight for the interests of the Communist Party at the polls. Do not wait for| the last moment! Register now at Jobless Seamen to Meet at South and Whitehall Tonight | HOLD BIG MOONEY a a oa ME OUT- ILL WORKER AND Soil OF WORKER f~ WHO Ate ON THE AN Ve Communist Election Watchers Must Give Names In at Once! —The Kids Stow Away — OeLeGATION | 4, | Goon | eo B for PGR Cintas 7, \ el By RYAN WALKER BY Gmeanes! 4) AL LiKe To Ger away Feom. PLUCK! Come 7A HAT Kir co Bd Lock ifr ZNO SLIP eT es - WATCH OUTAL ft) HERE for. & Ly & CAPTAIN 1 MN out INDICTMENT PRE (To BECoNTUNVED ~ Money Intended For Package to USSR Is BANQUET FOR : a your section nearest where you live. You will be informed when to come to the next meeting to receive in- | structions. Every worker who is a citizen and who is sympathetic to the Communist Party and every Commu- nist Party member is expected to give time on Election Day to act as NEW YORK. — The provisional | committee of the Seamen's Unem- | ployed Council, which has establish- | ed its headquarters at 23 Coenties Slip, calls on all seamen and long- shoremen to rally to a mass meet-| MEET IN NEWARK | Demand Release Class War Prisoners All Workers who are citizens are wanted to act as watchers on Elec- | ton Day! Register at once at the | \nearest section headquarters where | yom live: NEWARK, Oct. 19—Plans for an|| 1) 142 E. 3d St. N.Y.C. intensification of the campaign to|| 2) 301 W. 29th St, N.X.C. | | | | | ing and demonstration tonight at 7} free Mooney and Billings, the Harlan a Watcher to protect the interests of | {revolutionary workers against the gangsters and the paid repeaters who will be on hand in all polls to rob| the Communist Party of its votes. ‘We must be properly prepared to handle this situation in advance! Register at once to act as a watcher! o'clock at South and Whitehall Sts., | where speakers from the council out- | taken in the struggle for unemploy- | ment insurance and immediate re- | lief for the seamen. ‘The seamen will put forward their | demands for free beds, meals and | | clothes for those on the beach. The | | Seas. IMPROVE DEADLY | shipping commissioners and steam | | boat inspectors must be forced to! WAR ARMAMENTS enforce the manning scale in order | | to give all the seamen an equal ‘Is Part of Imperialist | men will demand that the Seamen's | Institute reduce the room-rent and | stop the practice of charging for checking the sailors baggage. The) BALTIMORE, Md., Oct, 19.—Muni- | Council has arranged to use a loud tion makers, high officials of the War | speaker at the meeting. Depa:tment and some 5,000 specta- | tors ; sterday witnessed the in- creased efficiency of modern death- | dealing armaments at the 13th an- nual meeting of the Army Ordnance | | Association at the Aberdeen Proving | chance to get a ship and to stop the | graft of charging for a job. The sea- | War Preparations INSANITY GROWTH committee so as to help spread out the work There will be a meeting of Bronx dressmakers Thursday at 8 p.m. at Ambassador Hall. A meeting of the mass Propaganda Committee of all departments of the needle trades, cloak, dress, fur, mil- linery, men’s clothing, whitegoods, etc. will be held at the office of the union Wednesday night right after work. Active workers are also called upon to come to this meeting. AT ROBIN HOOD Industrial Union Stand Forces Action NEW YORK—The operators of Cohen & Kaplan (James S. Duncan), now Robinhood Hat, have joined the trimmers on the picket line. The N. T. W. I. U. called its members on strike immediately, but it took Spec- | tor and Zaritzky almost a week to decide to permit their members, the operators, to go on strike in protec- tion of their jobs. The N. T. W. I. U. proposed a united front between all the workers in the shop to pro- tect their jobs and forced the com- ny union officials to permit the Operators to go on strike. While the officials of Local 24 forced a number of their members to scab on the N. T. W. I. U. mem- bers who were on strike at the Rosen and Engel shops a couple of weeks ago, today the trimmers, members of the N. T. W. I. U., are picketing side by side with Local 24 members. aye ers e i \40 Per Cent Increase in Racine-Kenosha | Sikat, Communist candidate for | congress in the First District of | crease of 40 per cent over the (ee vote for governor. The in- | In Communist Vote | RACINE, Wis., Oct. 18.—John | Wisconsin, got 502 votes, an in- crease was greatest in Kenosha | |and Racine, the industrial sec- | tions, where the Communists | have led many struggles recently. | ‘The total vote cast for all par- | ties was light there are 59,000 vot- | | ers and 33,000 never went to the | | polls at all. | | Thomas J. Amlie, the La Fol-| |lette man, won the election with 14,295 votes. The “Socialist” Party candidate, Bouma, got 7,183 votes, a big ine ce for them because many supporters of the extreme conservative, Blanchard, defeated | by Amlie in the primaries voted | Socialist to vote against Amiie | | again. The “Socialist” Party campaign | Was largely a demagogic appeal to {small business men See | | Potash, S. Resnick, M. Rosen. The first meeting of this commit- tee will be held Wednesday, Oct. 21, at 6 p. m. at the office of the union, 131 W. 28th St. Do-not fail to come. DAY Saceo Vanaetti Branch d an important meeting to y night at 1610 Boston Road , at 8 Dp. All members re quested to attend THURSDAY | TUUL, Plumbers Branch Will hold a special membersh | meeting at 108 HB. 14th St, Octobe | 22, at 8 p.m, New plans of work w | be presented, Members must atten without fail, ° |speaking before the Wayne County | | Grounds, Maryland. 1 pm. | ‘The display of armaments showed 5. All chairmen of the block units | the improvement of all kinds of to meet: together with the executive | guns, from hand rifles to 16 inch sea |coast guns and increased power in | destructiveness, mobility and firing aim. | | A staff correspondent of the Her- | |ald-Tribune stated the function of | the Ordnance Association and of the | meeting. | | “The Army Ordnance Association — | is composed largely of the indus- | | trialists who would become the na- | | tion's munitions makers in the | | event of another war, The tests | were held for the purpose of show- | ing them the Army’s latest develop- ment in ordnance, firing actual charges on tested ranges, where the effect could be observed with scien- tific precision.” | | That the next war will be no gay| | Picnic for aviators was demonstrated in the use of a new 3 inch aircraft | gun. Firing range is found by use of | an electrical detector and each single | “un fires 25 twelve pound shells per minute, A towed target at the prov-| ing grounds was’ thoroughly riddled | and proved the effectiveness of the | new guns, | The feverish rush for armament | improvement coincides with the building of 16 new Navy bombers as! part of American imperialist war) preparations. | FURRIERS ELECT T0 BUILD UNION Trade Committee to) Lead Struggles NEW YORK.—At the membership meeting of the furriers held on Wednesday, Oct. 14th, the following trade committee was elected to lead the struggle of the fur workers for union conditions in the shop and to mobilize the workers for the building | of one union in the fur trade. | | Ray Epstein, Birnbaum, Parness, M. | Fleishman, Rubia Gelman, H. Krav- | itz, Litwin, Clara Meltzer, H. Pesech, Rothman, Sherman, J. Winogradsky, Sam Burt, M. Boerum, Jenny Cohen, |Erlichman, Goldfinger, Johnson, H. | Katz, Lipman, M. Lang, S. Mensher, IS DUE 10 CRISIS '200 Patients Admitted | in Detroit Asylum BROOKLYN, N. Y., Oct. 15.—Ad- | mitting that worry is causing an enormous increase in insanity thru- | out the country, Dr. Charles Mayo, | famous head of the Mayo Clinic at Rochester, Minn., said that fully one third of the persons hospitalled in the United States are in one or an- other stage of insanity. Dr. Mayo} spoke before the 21st annual congress | of the American College of Surgeons now in session in this city. | “We pass throuch more of the | wonders of life in forty years than | was possible for the people in the past. The world has moved ahead so fast as regards material civili- zation that man has almost, for the moment, got behind in his power of adaptation. .Every other hos- pital bed in the United States is for mentally afflicted, insane, idiotic, feeble-minded or senile persons. That's worry. It is worry that | breaks down the brain, not work as | such. .The rapid pace leads many | to desire to drown their sorrows in drink. “There is an enormous number of people who are almost fit for the | asylum. Many people live to an age when they are dependent and senile. Only 5 per cent of our peo- | ple, at the age of 65 years, have in- dependent means. I would rather | die when my brain fails than to live on,” Dr. Mayo said. A clue to the cause of increasing lunacy was given by Dr. Thomas K. Gruber, general super’ntendent of Eloise Hospital in Wayne County, Michigan (which comprises Detroit) Board of Supervisors last week. Dr. Gruber reported that insanity in the county was growing so rapidly that all available space for such cases in| the county hospitals would be filled | by February 1932. Reporting the talk given by Dr. Gruber, the Detroit Times of October 3, says: “He said strain and undernour- ishment were the two largest causes of the spread of the afflic- | tion. He sald 200 cases had been | admitted in the past month. “Needle Worker” Just Off Press Tells How Furriers Win Strikes Every student of the class struggle, every worker, should get a copy of the “Needle Worker,” which is just off the press, and read of the splen- did struggles of the victorious fur workers’ in a united front from be- low and with the leadership of the Needle Trades Workers Industrial ‘inion. The analysis of the strike completely anihilates the treachorou arguments of the American Federa- ‘on of Labor that the workers can. ot win by taking the strike int | velr own hands, that workers wi’ | ot struggle in times of depression | Amboy at 308 Elm St.; Elizabeth at | |69 S. Park St.; Passaic at 743 Main | now since the Union is rapidly de- | clining, having lost nearly 100,000 hat strikes cannot be won at time f crisis, or that the unemployed will miners, the Scottsboro boys, the Pat- erson five and all other class war line the organizational steps to be! prisoners were made at a-conference | | Sunday afternoon in Newark at 37/ 16th Ave., called by the International | Labor Defense. The conference elect- | ed a committee that will visit every | working class organization in Newark, | seeking to enlist them in the cam- | paign and preparing the way for an- | other conference on much broader | scale to be held Nov. 29. At this con- | ference delegates for the National | Hunger March to Washington will be elected. The conference decided to hold an international affair on Noy. 21 at 190 Belmont Ave. in order to popularize the achievements of the I. L. D. and| to unite the various organizations for | the Mooney-Harlan-Scottsboro-Pater- | son campaign. It was also decided | to arrange a farewell banquet Nov. | 9 for Guido Serio, militant Italian worker, Who has just been granted the right of yoluntary departure to Soviet Russia after a long fight led ‘by the I... D. Throughout the month of Novem- ber a series of demonstrations will be held to rally the workers for the fight to free all working class fight- ers nowin jail. Sunday's conference in Newark was the first of a\series of Mooney-Har- lan-Scottsboro-Paterson conferences in New Jersey. This Saturday, Oct. 24, at 2:30 p. m., a conference will-be held in New Brunswick at 11 Plum St. Oct, 25 at 2:30 conferences will be held in four other cities: Perth Ave.; and Paterson at Turn Hall, utcheson Steals (ld Age Pensions Stops Payments; Has Grip on $1,000,000 NEW YORK.—William Hutchinson General President of the Brother- hood of Carpenters, has sent out an order to the locals to abolish the Old Age Pension for 3 months. The pension gives 15 dollars a month to every member that is over 65 years of age and 30 years in good standing. ‘The general office paid the pension by getting a special pension tax of 25 cents a month from the members | thru the locals. We are still paying the tax, but members since 1928 and the General Fund of the General Office is shrink- | ing fast, the Hutchinson machine wants to use this money for fat salaries and its grafting expense bill which amounts to $25,000 per month. These grafters have over a million dollars in the Old Age Home and Pension Fund, they know that stop- ping the fund at this time will mean more misery and starvation to thou- sands of workers, The Carpenters’ Section of the Building and Construction Workers Industrial League, affiliated to the Trade Union Unity League, calls on carpenters to smash this starvation scheme of Hutcheson and demand the pejcion be paid. Reduce the salaries of the officials instead! De- mand that unemployed members be exempt from paying dues! Demand that locals be exempt from paying per capita! Join the carpenters’ sec- tion of the T.U.U.L.! W. I. R. BAND REHEARSAL. The W. I. R. Brass Band will \rehearse in preparation for Nov. 7 | celebration, on Thursday, Oct. 22, at 8 p.m. sharp, at Manhattan Lyceum, 66 E, 4th St. All workers playing band instruments are urged to come. “ab upon the employed. Read the “Needle Worker” and see ‘ow this movement completely ex- soses the treachery of the Socialis’ ‘arty and the pitiful Lovestoneite: The “Needle Worker” is printed ir ‘ree languages, English, Jawish anc Italian. 3) 35 E. 12th St, N.¥.C, 4) 19 W. 29th St. N.Y.C. 5) 569 Prospect Ave., Bronx. | 6) 61 Graham Ave, Brooklyn, | 8) 118 Bristol St, Brooklyn. 9) 109-26 Union Hall, Jamaic: ) 196 15th St, Brooklyn. L* | FUR OPPOSITION CALLS MEETING Demand Ousting of Dictator Kaufman NEW YORK.—The vank and file opposition group of the Joint Council of the International Pur Workers has issued a call to the furriers in which they explain that militant struggle has forced Stetsky to resign from the Council and to declare his | Council morally and © financially bankrupt, The establishment of a new dic- tatorship of McGrady and Kaufman, the call explains, must be fought by the furriers even with greater deter- | ‘the opposition group is calling a mass meeting of registered fur work- _|ers Thursday, right after work, at} Webster Hall, where they will de-| mand the resignation of Katfman, the turning over of the administra- tion of the Council to the rank and file committee, an investigation of | the books both of the Council as well as of the International. All registered fur workers are called by the opposition group to come to this meeting to discuss the situation and decide on definite action. ~ Kaufman, now crowned dictator with the approval of the bosses of the International Pur Workers, and president and secretary of that or- ganization, has given a sure sign that he is planning something especially dirty, He has begun to issue state- ments that he loves the furriers, and that “his arms are open” to them. | This traitor has just finished insti- | tuting the 100 hour week at Syden & Denis and other shops, has legalized contracting, has ruled by use of the Irving and Meyer Shapiro gangs, has supplied scabs during the strikes for July raises—and now he invites the fur workers to join him! Election Campaign in Bronx Intensified in the Last Few Weeks All workers of the Bronx should follow closely the program which the Election Campaign Committee has worked out for the few remaining weeks before election day, Novem- | ber 3. Every Saturday at 6:45 p. m., open air meetings will be held throughout the Bronx. Either watch the papers for street schedules or else come to 569 Prospect Ave. Each Sunday will be Red Sunday. All members of the revolutionary mass orgdnizations and of the fra- ternal organizations should be at 569 Prospect Ave. at 10 a. m. each Sun- day. Thousands of workers must be influenced to vote a straight Com- munist ticket. Only by an intensive house to house canvas shall we ob- tain the best results on November 3. HANS EISLER'S MUSIC IN . “THE SONG OF LIFE” Hans Eisler, foremost proletarian composer of Germany, whose song, “The Commintern,” has just been published by the Workers Music League of New York, composed most of the incidental music for the sen- sational German film, “The Song of Life,” which start’s now running at the Cameo Theatre. This film was directed by Alexis Granowsky, form- erly head of the Kamerny Theatre in Moscow. Eisler wrote The Song f Werk” and “The Song of the First Sry” for this film. His composition, ‘The Commintern,” has proved very opular in Soviet Russia, where 30,000 opies have been sold, according to the current New Masses. ‘ | boro boys, will make a ten day tour and a direct election move to placate the tens of thousands of swindled depositors of the Bank of United | States, the Grand Jury suddenly re- | turned indictments against Joseph Broderick, state superintendent of banking and 29 directors and officers \of the defunct bank. ba | The Bank of United States direc- | |tors and officials were closely con- | |nected with the Tammany political | machine. As‘such Tammany factions (feared that unless some sop was thrown the depositors numbering so many thousands Tammany would be | compromised in their eyes. | The indictment charges conspiracy and neglect of duty. Broderick and the 29 Bank of United States offi- cials will not be arrested, it was re- ported. Indications are that the rigged up play will be quietly shelved after the November 3 elections. MRS. WRIGHT TO TOUR N. J. CITIES | | Demand J Release of Scottsboro Boys NEWARK., Oct. 18.—-Mrs, Ada Wright, mother. of.two of the Scotts- of New Jersey cities to develop the mass defense movement which alone can free the 9 innocent boys, framed | up by the Alabama boss courts and facing the lectric chair. Mrs. Wright's schedule of meetings | is as follows: | Elizabeth, Oct. 17; Orange, Oct. 19; Elizabeth, Oct. 20; Newark (Friend- ship Baptist Church) Oct. 21; Linden, Oct. 22; Newark, Oct. 23; Paterson, Oct. 24 and 25; Newark Oct. 27. | Several dates are still open, and workers who wish to arrange addi- tional meetings for Mrs. Wright are asked to communicate with F.E.A. Welsh, 121 Springfield Avenue, New- ark, N. J. YIDDISH ENSEMBLE GROUP TO PRESENT “THE GOLEM” ‘The Yiddish Ensemble Art Com- pany will open their season at the Civic Repertory Theatre on Thursday evening, November 5, in “The Golem” by Levick. This will be the first time that this well-known play has been done in Yiddish in this coun- try. When the Habima Troupe played it, it-was acted in Hebrew. Egon, Brecher will direct “The Golem.” ELECTION MOVE) Stolen by N-¥- Firm’ FSU DELEGATES a SEEN te |formed that a certain International | Tiger Again Gives Self Package co, at 1 Union Sq., which | + claims that it sends food packages to a Whitewash | the Soviet Union, is carrying on frau- NEW YORK.—Reflecting interne- | Went business. One worker paid them $8 to have | cine struggle within Tammany Hall | ee : such a package sent. A few months Negro Miners’ Wife Going to USSR In addition to the delegation thai sailed Saturday for the Soviet Union there will be two additional delegates, later he received a letter from the rr, 0 will sail this Wednesday, Oct USSR which stated that the food | AP Me He eee oa hadn't arrived. On complaining to gelegation in Berlin, Germany. the company he was told that the) One of the delegates is a Negro Soviet Union refused to let the pack-| woman worker from Pennsylvania, age in because duties hadn't been | 4 e the wife of a striking miner who has paid. They then offered to refund | actively participated in the miners’ $2.75 of his $8. | strike, and is one of the leaders of Th Am-Derutra, the only official |the Women’s Auxiliaries. The other Soviet package agency in America, | delegate is a railroad worker, com- told the Daily Worker that all duties | ing from Detroit. have to be paid before a package! The Friends of the Soviet Union leaves the country. Obviously the In- lis arranging a Farewell Banquet for ternational Package Co. is trying to| these two delegates, and also for the rob those who deal with it. \active workers in the F. S. U. who ELECTION RALLY jquet will take place Tuesday, Oc- Engdahl to Speak. at | tober 20th, at 9:30 p. m, at .Sollins | Restaurant (Private Dining Room) Cooper Union |at 216 EB, 14th St. N. ¥. The cost jfor this supper will be 50 cents only and we invite workers and friends to attend this Banquet. There will also be a musical pro- | gram. with mass singing, and recita- j Mona: All: these who wish to aitend NEW YORK.—The Neédle ‘Trades ; the banquet will just have to phone Workers’ Industrial Union member- | Stuyvesant 9-2698 for reservations, ship will hold an indoor election | for there is limited rocm. You can + campaign meeting to endorse the| Phone for reservations up to Tues- Communist Party on Wednesday Oct. 21, at Cooper Union. ei} J. Louis Engdah!, Communist can- didate for Congress in the 7th Con- gressional District, Bklyn., .will pre- sent, the platform of ‘struggle for the | Communist Party in the present elec- | tion and the: immediate major de-| mands for unemployment relief. The Communist candidate will also make. clear the difference between the Communist program for imme-| | diate relief for the starving Jobless |, workers of New York as against the | Socialist Party proposals which all class conscious workers must re- pudiate. The meeting will also in a measure be a mobilization call to prepare for the hunger merch to Washington in| December, | CHAUVE-SOURIS OPENS THURS- | DAY AT AMBASSADOR Nikita Balieff's three acting, sing- ing and dancing companies, with a wholly new Chauve-Souris, open ‘Thursday night at the Ambassador Theatre, under the sponsorship of Morris Gest, featured number. of Baleff’s three-part program, will in- clude Pishkin’s “The Queen of Spades.” Helen Kingstead, recently seen in “The Greeks Had a Word For It,” will appear in the role of Liza in support of George Hayes, the well-known English Shakespearean actor who has the role of Hermann. — SET wo Great Directors Offer ALEXIS GRANOWSKY’S “SONG of LIFE” (Das Lied vom Lebe: "“Granowsky makes every social value, He shows us the world we live in and that no one can exist alone. An artistic triumph.” — Die Welt am Abend—Berlin, ?>CAMEO 42nd BRO. AMUSEMENTS Film On Cameo Program === S. M- Eisenstein’s A Sentimental Romance (Sound Film in Russian) ST. and | ALL SEATS 3 5 ic A Theatre Guild Production “HE” By ALFRED SAVOIR Adapted by Chester Erskin W. 52nd. Eyes. 8:40 GUILD Mts. Th, & Kot 2 Last Week The Group Theatre Presents The House of Connelly By PAUL GREEN Under the Auspices of the Theatre Guild Martin Beck THEA... 45th St, & 8 Ave. Mat. Thurs & Sat, Penn 6-6190 MAE VEST ‘The Constant Sinner’ in Be ‘Th tion, Thea. 45th W. Biwy. ves 8:40. Mts. Wed. & Sat. 2:30 ROYALE AD. .Y|To1P.M. By J. B, Priestley & Edward Kno- block, Fro Priestley’s Famous Novel pany of 120-16 Scenes '. THEATRE, W. of Br'dway Matinees Wed. & Bat. 2:30 EVERYBODY'S WELCOME ‘The new mi ‘al comedy hit, with FRANCES WILLIAMS OSCAR SHAW ANN PENNINGTON, ALBERTINA RASCH GIRLS & BALLET; OTHERS SHUBERT TI 44th St. W. of Biw'y Even, 8:30, Mi e Wed. & Sat., 2:30 a ah a naa Soviet “Forced Labor”—Bedacht’ series in pamphlet form at 10 cents per copy. Read it—Spread it! day at 3 p.m. Mae tatinntb 2 at. <. “Tran$port of Fire” SOVIET PICTURE A Wl be shows in Brownsville OCTOBER 20th, Sist TIFFANY THEATRE On Chester and Livonia ; Arranged by 1.W.0, SCHOOL BROWNSVILLE No. 8 Continuous Pertormance Dr. MORRIS LEVI SURGEON DENTIST TT Southern Blvd, cor. 176th Phone: Tremont 3-1 Spectal low prices for N.Y. | Intern’ Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 1 UNION SQUARE 8TH FLOOR All Work Done Under Personal Care of DR. JOSEPHSON "SEROY 657 Allerton Avenue 01-2-7584 BRONX, N, Y. Vhone Stuyvesant 3816 Jobn’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISRES 4 place with atmosphere where al) radicals meet 302 &. 12th St. Restaurant 199 SECOND AVENUE Bet. itth and 13th ste, Strictly Vegetarian food MELROSE DAIRY f22eTanan RESTAURANT Pleasant’ to” Dine ‘si Gor’ Place. 1987 SOUTHERN BLVD. Brons (near 174th St. Station) FELEPHONE INTERVALE 9—o140 SOLLIN’S RESTAURANT 216 EAST 14TH STREET 6-Course Lunch 55 Cents Regular Dinner 65 Cents Advertise Your Union Meetings Here. For information Write to Advertising Uepartment The DAILY WORKER 30 East 18th St New York City Sa YOUNG WOMAN te take care of ebil- _firen by day in Co-operative house. Also stay evenings, Estabrook 58-3061,