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Page Two _DAILY WORKER,NEW YORK, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1931 Demand City Feed Marchers in Baltimore Many City and County Demonstrations Going On; Struggle for Local Demands Increases The 1,500 representatives of the 12,000,000 hungry unemployed, who go to Washington in a National Hunger March starting around the} first of December and culminating at the capi- tal city December 6 and 7, can be assured by} the activities of the organized jobless in the cities along their | route that they are to have From city after city news arrives of local struggles for immediate winter relief, rising to a high pitch as preparations | are made to welcome national hunger marchers from further | (CONTINUED ON PAGE THREE) METAL WORKERS SUPPORT HUNGER MARCH CONFERENCE! vith more than 2,000,000 unem-| ployed worker veterans starving and in need, the National Executive Com- | mittee calls upon the working class s only the latest of many A. F.| veterans, and working class organiza the country| tions to support the organization of which have repudiated the starvation | Branches of the League in their re- of Green and Woll and other | spective sections and districts. Full information will be contanied in a call to be issued soon. Many of the | Councils of Unemployed have veter- ans, who are members, and other or- ganizations, trade unions, ete., should request their veteran members to | communicate with the National Of- fice.” (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) nemployment insurance to be ad- tered without discrimination.” The National Office of the Work- Bx-Servicemen’s League, 79 East | h St., N. ¥. City, yesterday issued he following statement rood. WORKERS ( ONVENTION. ORDERS TURN TO BIG SHOPS Campaign to Organize Unemployed; Change Constitution. to Give More Initiative here a strike of 2,000 workers| "which | recently took place, in Ward's where EW YORK. trial Uni Convention t been held, marks an impor-|a deyortment strike forward in strengthening | called, i: Nabisco and other large ne ofganization of the militant food | food plants. The organization of the v3 under revolutionary leader-| unorganized into the militant food | nip and preparing the way for de-| workers’ union is the basic task con- nined struggles against the bosses’| fronting the union. The union has of wage cutting and the gen-/| thus far failed to emphasize work in lowering of the living standards| the big factories resulting in a mem- the food workers through greater | bership composed of workers from the ing up, longer hours, part time | small shops. the stagger system and unem- | ‘Unemployment. ployment The question of the unemployed The convention is the first since | food workers was given serious atten- the Food Workers’ Industrial Union| tion and the convention decided that Was organized in 1930. Prior to the|the unemployed must be organized conyention an Eastern United Front | into food workers unemployed coun- Conference of food workers was held|cils, that a system of relief to the where the delegates from the A. F. of} unemployed be established and great- L, food locals, the Amalgamated Food | er attention be given to the question Workers groups and from the unor- | of forcing the bosses to provide jobs ganized shops and the unemployed | for the unemployed through the sys- discussed plans and methods for| tematic organizing of new food shops. building a united front movement | smong the food workers. |tions of the convention was the The convention further clarified the| problem of the inner life of the vtharacter of this united front move-| union. The new structure which is ment and discussed thoroughly the| embodied in the draft constitution tele of the union in initiating and | presented to the convention for adop- building up a powerful united front} tion will eliminate a certain top- Based on concrete demands of the| heaviness which existed in the past for, workers to uphold their union} resulting in the too great centraliz- enthusiastic support. | was recently | One of the most important ques- | contitions and fight the continued attcks of the bosses and the A. F. of iL. down the standards of the workers. To The Big Plants! Lhe convention pointed out espe- | cially the importance of making the turn to the big shops where already strikes have broken out showing the readiness of the workérs to revolt against the starvation conditions being imposed upon them. The convention stressed the neces- sity of throwing the most energetic forces into building committees in What’s On— NOTICE Changes Headquarters The WLR. office will be located from now on at 16 W, 2ist St, Work- oe ir eanies tions asked to take no- FRIDAY West Bronx Br., FSU T, ¥. Tat of the editorial staff of jhe’ Vanguard Press will speak on Manchuria at Elsmore Hall, 248 E. 170th St. Bronx, 8 p.m. = fe Councht of Workingelass Women Will celebrate its Big! Anniver- sary at the Irving Plaza, 15th St. and Irving Pl., 8 p.m. Red Dancers and the Prolet-Buhne All workers invited, to perforin. Bio Se ¢ Youth Club Harlem Progre: Will meet at 1492 8:30 p.m, Young ents invited. Tremont Workers Club Will have a lecture on the “Role | “TRANSPORT OF FIRE” OPENS AT of the Trade Union Unity League” in the Lawrence strike at 2075 Clinton Ave. (near 180th St.) 8:30 p.m. a Red Sparks Athletle Club Will have a general membership meeting at 380 Grand Nov. 20, at 8 p.m, Plans for futu etivity to be brought up, “Phe World Today” WUL be the topic Club, 78 Thatford Ave., p.m, “Class War In Kentucky” Will be the subject of a talk Harry Gannes, member of the I orker editorial staf: indleted for Criminal the Prospect Workers Center, Southern Blvd., 8 p.m, eye Syndicalism, a: Rill Haywood Br. ILD Will have a lecture on the “Negro at 140 Neptune n the Class Strugel » § pm, nen free, Mapleton Workers Club Will hold lecture on Trade Un- fonism at 1684 66th St., Brooklyn. Bd- ward Brandt to speak, Adm, freq and A. F. W. officials to break | Madison Ave., at workers and stud- of a lecture by Car) Brodsky at the American Youth Brooklyn, at 1167 ing of work and in bureaucratic methods of work. The new structure was thoroughly | Giccussed and after amendments was |edopted by the convention. It was ratified at a membership meeting of the food workers on November 16th. The convention also recommended the broadening and strengthening of | the leadership by changes in person- nel, the establishment of language departments and special departments | devoted to the organization of wom- jen, Negro and young food workers | and the development of a broad pro- | gram of educational work to raise | the ideological level of the member- ship and the building of an apparatus to make the Food Worker, the union's official organ, a mass paper. Int’! Song Festival In Newark Saturday. An International Song Festival will be held in Newark, N. J., tomorrow (Saturday) at 8 p.m. at the Labor Lyceum, 190 Belmont Ave., under the auspices of the Newark Section of the International Labor Defense. The Lithuanian, Hungarian, German and Freiheit Choruses will participate, as well as the Ukrainian and Freiheit Mandolin Orchestras. Admission is 35 cents and the proceeds will go to strengthen defense activities in New- ark: MECCA THEATRE SATURDAY. The Soviet film, “Transport of Fire,” will be shown at the Mecca Theatre beginning tomorrow and continue on Sunday. This picture ‘was screened from a story by a | Soviet writer and portrays the life and activities of the revolutionists of | 1905 and their underground transpor- | Tuesday the Mecca Theatre will pre- jsent John Reed's history-making film, “10 Days That Shook The World,” made in Soviet Russia by Eisenstein. This is a forceful tale of the October days of the Revolution. TAG DAYS FINANCE CAMPAIGN FOR JOBLESS INSURANCE, | tation of firearms. On Monday and | |SUBURBS BACK HUNGER MARCH | CONFERENCES |Two A.F.L. L. Locals Aid| Rochelle Preparations NEW YORK:— Intensive prepara- | tions, gaining support in American Federation of Labor locals, in the | militant unions, in workers’ organiza- tions of all sorts and among the or- ganized unemployed bids fair to make a huge success of the preparations in suburbs and small towns around New | York for the National Hunger March. Plumbers’ Local 209 (an AFL. union) of Yonkers has completely en- dorsed the Hunger March, and has adopted a resolution scoring the A.F.L. Vancouver convention for com- jing out against unemployment insur- ance. They did this at their last meeting held in Yonkers Labor Tem- | ple, November 17. They are sending delegates to the New Rochelle, N+ | City Labor Conference on prepara- tions for the National Hunger March. | The Conference is Sunday, at 10 a.m. at 22 Church St., New Rochelle. Local No. 188 of Yonkers, of the United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America (A.F.L,) adopts the same course as the plumb- | ers, and sends three delegates to the New Rochelle City Labor Conference: Much support has been gained for two other City Labor Conferences for the same purpose, each to be held November 22 at 10 a.m. One of these is for all of Queens County, and will meet in Finnish Hall, 109-26 Union Hall St., Jamaica, L. I. The other is for all of Nassau County, and will meet in Ukrainian Hall, Uniondale Ave., and Front St., Hempstead, L. I. CONFERENCE FOR WRITERS CENTER To Be Held Sunday, December 6th NEW YORK. Upon the initiative of the John Reed Club, the Proletpen (Yiddish writers) the Hungarian } Proletarian Writers and the Hungar- |ian Worker Correspondents a confer- ence to form a federation of the rey- olutionary , writers of. all nationalities will be. held. Sunday, December 6, 10:30 a. m., at the Workers Cultural Center,. 63. West, 15th. St. In a letter calling for the confer- | ence the Writers Federation Commit- tee points out the need for a center | for exchange of experience and com- mon problms. The letter made clear that the new center would not inter+ fere with any of the present activi- ties of the writers’ organizations but would coordinate and stimulate such activity. Revolutionary publications called upon to elect delegates and | worker correspondents to this confer- ence. FIGHT JAILING OF COLORADOYOUTHS Hold Protest. Meetings, Circulate Petitions DENVER, Colo—Protest meetings are being held and petitions circu- lated by the International Labor De- fense here and the Young Commu- nist League to save Sol Greenberg and Michael Shantsek, 19-year-old workers, from twenty years in jail under the anarchy-sedition law. Greenberg and Shantsek were ar- rested at Fort Logan last summer when they were about to distribute leaflets to boys at the Citizens’ Mili- tary Training Camp. They were beaten by officers, grilled by Legion- naires, held incommunicado and in- dicted under the anarchy-sedition act passed during the height of the Pal- mer anti-red hysteria. At a recent hearing, trial was set for Feb. 3. The prosecution declared openly the boys would be tried for Communism. SEND DELEGATES TO CITY LABOR CONFERENCE. THE are| Jou Saicaiad LSNR Group Calls Protest Meeting for Tonight A mass protest meeting is being | called by the Jean Dessaline Group of the League of Struggle for Negro | Rights in Brooklyn, at 1813 Pitkin Ave., 8 p. m. sharp, Friday, Nov. 20. This meeting is to protest against |the outrageous treatment of Negroes jin the Saratoga Laundry. Workers | of Brooklyn, Negro and white, are urged to support this mass protest meeting in defense of Negro rights. ‘The Lee Mason LSNR Group of the Bronx is calling a Nat Turner Cen- tenary meeting Friday night, Nov. 20th, 8 p. m. at Ambassador Hall, 3875 Third Ave., between Claremont Parkway and 172nd St. The topic will be “The Tradition of Nat Tur- ner.” A. Revor and Harold Williams will speak. FORCE ACTION ON SCHOOL FREE FOOD <’|Red Hook Worker Gets A Letter NEW YORK.—Activities in the public and high schools carried on among the working class children by the Young Pioneers of America are |forcing the school authorities to act on these children’s demands for free hot lunches and clothing for poor children, In Red Hook in Public School 78, the Young Pioneers of America have | carried on work amongst the children in this school and have circulated free food petitions and magazines un- til they have actually forced the Dis- trict Superintendent to the point of writing a letter to the Re@ Hook unit of the Young Communist League, asking that “false” rumors should not be spread about starvation and misery. The letter says: “T have just read your first column article in Vol. 1, Noy. 3, of the ‘Red Hook Young Worker.’ Inasmuch as you say that the purpose of your paper is to give people the true facts, I am writing to correct the statement which you make as wholly unfair and untruthful concerning P. 8. 78. “The records for relief work car- ried on under the supervision of my prédecessor are in this office. They show that since December Ist of last year $1,065.77 worth of food has been given away to pupils and their par- ents in order that the children might be in condition to attend and receive instruction. “This- term, with the continued warm-weather, the relief has not been as large t6 date although the total since October 19th is $87.61. “These facts are at ditect variante | with a statement that you published saying that no free food has been given since last Thanksgiving.” In answer to this letter, the Young Pioneers are conducting a campaign to expose the starvation and misery, which the children of Red Hook have to undergo. Each child, according to the figures given above, got no more than $1.51 for the last year, ard only 11 cents for the last 2 months. A delegation of working class par- ents and children of P.S. 78 will visit Superintendent Arnold next Saturday | and will expose his letter to the par- ents and children of Red Hook. A letter has been sent by the Young Pioneers to Arnold exposing this let- ter and pointing out that really noth- ing was done for the children to keep them from undernourishment and starvation. TWO CLEVELAND WORKERS FREED Mass Protests Stop Frame Up CLEVELAND, Nov. 19. — The trials of Nevels, white worker, and Out- right, Negro worker, charged with as- | sault to kill as an outgrowth of the police massacre Oct. 6 of unemployed Cleveland workers, resulted in a ver- dict of no tguilty today. The verdict is the result of the tremendous mass pressure by thou- sands of Cleveland white and Negro workers who denounced the arrest of these comrades as a frame-up and demanded their release. The two workers had been held in jail since October 6, WM. Z. FOSTER T. U. U. Le MAXWELL STEWART Moscow NEWS" GET YOUR LOCAL TO ENDORSE { THE NATIONAL HUNGER MAKUH. a ” SOVIET SYMPOSIUM sun. AFT. Now, 22 WEBSTER HALL 119 East 11th Street, New York Admirsion 25c with this Advertisement FRIENDS OF THE SOVIET UNION ENTERTAINMENT and DANCE Friday, November 20, at 8 P. M. At PARK PALACE 5 West 110th Street (Near Fifth Ave.) WALDO FRANK NOVELIST F. TRFADWELL SMITH COLUUBIA UNIVERSITY 2 P.M. Given for the benefit of “Empros” The Greek Communist Weekly —GOOD PROGRAM— Dance Until 1 A. M. Admission 50 Cents MASS PICKET AT FORD DAM; 200 OUT ON STRIKE I. L. D. Organizer Is Arrested MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., Noy. 19.— Mass picketing was carried out today at Ford Dam, where 200 workers are striking against wage-cuts put over by the United States government. Wednesday night rocks smashed car windows of scabs. One cop was injured in the battle. A member of the Unemployed Council was arrested on the picket line. Two workers bringing bail were also arrested ‘Thursday morning at the court house, One of them was Tom Foley, district organizer of the International La- bor Defense. ‘The newspapers are preparing a frame-up, claiming Communists fired shots on the picket line at Ford Dam. The shot was fired by the police or provocateurs, Waldo Frank Says Soviets Advance Will Speak Sunday at| Symposium NEW YORK.—Waldo Frank, novel- ist and critic, who recently returned from the Soviet Union, today issued the following statement: world today which is being governed “Russia is the one country in the in the interest of humanity—the one country whose efforts are sincerely directed to the material, intellectual and moral welfare of its people. Whether one agrees [with all the methods of the Russians is not the point. The point is that the Rus- sian state is sincerci; devoted to the cause of mankind, and that every other government in the world, with- out exception, is as exclusively de- voted to the property rights of a privileged few at the expense of man- kind. The true nature of the gov- ernment of the United States is plainly revealed by the fact that while it refuses to recognize Russia, it officially welcomes a man like Grandi, the representative of the des- potism of fascist Italy.” Prank jis to take part in a sym- posium on the Sovtet Union; together with Maxwell Stewart, formerly asso- ciate editor of the newspaper pub- Engineers “Moscow News,” F.°'Tread= will Smith of Columbia University, and Wm. Z. Foster of the Trade Union Unity League, under the aus- pices of the Friends of the Soviet Union. The symposium is to be held Sunday afternoon, November 22nd, at: Webster Hall, 119 E. 11th St., New York at 2 p. m. “A DANGEROUS AFFAIR” AT HIPPODROME. Jack Holt and Ralph Graves are co-starred in “A Dangerous Affair,” the new Columbia Picture having its first New York showing at the Hip- podrome this Saturday. The story, a mystery thriller, is by Howard J. Green. The vaudeville bill is headed by Poodles Henneford, Willie, West and McGinty, Burns and Kissen, and Joe Herbert with his Southern Per- sonalities. “FRA DIAVOLO” AT THE CAMEO TODAY. Tino Pattiera, former Metropolitan Opera Company tenor, returns to New York in the leading role of “Fra Diavolo” (“Brother Devil”), the new Italian operetta, which opens today at the Cameo. The opera based on this story is one of the Italian clas- sies, It was authored by Auber and the libretto was written by Scribe. Guiseppe Becce conducts an orches- tra of 120 musicians in this film, which was directed by Mario Bon- nard. EAST SIDE Two Great Soviet Films SATURDAY AND SUNDAY TRANSPORT OF FIRE Dramatic Tale of the Revolu- tion of 1905 MONDAY AND TUESDAY 10 DAYS THAT SHOOK THE WORLD Mecca Theatre 14TH ST. AND AVENUE A, Mats, and 25¢ Evening Except Sunday The Eighth Anniversary of The Daily Worker Will be held at The COLISUEM January 3rd, 1932 Working class organizations please keep this date clear! lished in Russia? fr “the: American} | ip series in pamphlet form at 10 cents (Celebrate 8 Years A concert and celebration to be held tonight at the Irving Plaza, 15th | St. and Irving Place, 8 p. m., will usher in the ninth year of activity of the United Council of Workingclass Women. George Siskind and Rose Nelson will be the speakers of the evening. Admission 50 cents. NEWARK HUNGER HEARING TODAY Jobless Council Finds Babies Starving NEWARK, N. J., Noy. 19—A pub- lic hearing of starvation cases will take place tonight at 8 p.m, in the Russian Home, 53 Broome St., New- ark, N. J. The Unemployed Councils of New- ark in canvassing among the unem- ployed workers in the neighborhoods, especially in the Negro sections, found actual starvation. Babies and chil- dren of unemployed workers are ac- tually dying from hunger and under- nourishment* The councils have issued a state- ment charging the city officials with class families. It invites these offi- cials to come to the open public trial and answer charges before the work- ers of Newark. All working class families are urged to attend this open public hearing and learn of the starvation that ex- ists in this city. There will be a jury of workers representing various work- ing class organizations who wiit hear the cases of destitution and deliver a verdict against the system that starves the working class children, Admission will be free. Fish Workers Meet Sunday to Fight for Union Conditions The Fish Workers Section of the Food Workers Industrial Union has issued a call to all fishworkers of New York and Brooklyn to attend a mass meeting on Sunday, November 22, at 2p.m., at 5 E. 19th St. (headquarters of the Food Workers Industrial Union). The object of the meeting is to prepare for the struggle for union conditions and recognition of the union. There will be a report of the Ex- ecutive Committee of the union and all fish workers are urged to attend, of Women’s Council | the crime of starving the working | RAIL BOSSES AND UNION HEAD PLAN 10 P.C. WAGE CUTS /1,200,000 Railroad Men Are Affected | | NEW YORK.—tTwenty-one_presi- dents of railroad unions are now | meeting with the leading officials of | the big railroads preparing to work out a 10 per cent wage-cut to be handed out to 1,200,000 railway work- ers. The meeting between the mis- leaders of the railroad brotherhoods and the railroad executives is taking place in secret, but the railroad bosses already have the assurance that these 21 fakers will go the full length in helping them put over wage-cuts. A 10 per cent wage-cut on the rail- roads would turn $250,000,000 over to the railroad bosses for profits and dividends. Realizing the fact that the railroad workers are ready to re- sist wage-cuts, the 21 railroad union officials have offered a mise” to the railroad magnates. That the railroad bosses expect full co-operation in the wage-cut drive from the 21 railroad union presidents is indicated in a story run on the day of the meeting by the Journal of Commerce, This Wall Street sheet said: “Increased confidence in an early agreement between railway execu- tives and the leading labor unions was expressed in railroad circles here yesterday on the eve of the inauguration of the national parley which begins today between repre- sentatives of these two groups.” i} ‘Jobless In Building Maintenance Work to Hold a Mass Meeting To take up the problems of unem- ployed building maintenance workers, the Building Maintenance Workers’ Union, in a leaflet issued to porters, elevator operators, janitors, handy men, engineers, firemen, window cleaners and office cleaners, has called a mass meeting tonight, at the Manhattan Lyceum, 66 East 4th St. Pointing out the need for such a meeting the leaflet says in part: “The Building Maintenance work- ers are among the hardest hit in the present crisis due to the fact. that tens of thousands are flock- ing to this line of work from other indtstries. Those who are em- ployed haye to endure wage cuts, speed-up and are liable to discharge at the mére_wish of the boss, thus _. HOLD OPEN HEARINGS AND! LET THE. JOBLESS EXVOSE HUNGER. being added to the huge army of unemployed.” AMUSEMENTS THE THEATRE GUILD presents EUGENE O'NEILL'S ‘Trilogy Mourning Becomes Electra Composed of 3 plays presented on I/day HOMECOMING, THE HUNTED THE HAUNTED Commencing at 5:30 sharp. Dinner in- termission of one hour at 7. No Mats. GUILD THEA., 52d St. W. of B'way The Theatre Guild Presents eeu NON IN VIENNA Comedy .By ROBERT E, SHERWOOD. THEA. 45th Martin Beck st. @"s Ave. Eve. 8:40 Mats. Thurs. &Sat. The Group Theatre Presents The House of Connelly By PAUL GREEN Under the Auspices of the Theatre Guild MANSFIELD 9°93 fit" S Eves 8:30 Mats. Thurs.& Sat. |ETHEL BARRYMORE The SCHOOL FOR SCANDAL Sheridan’s Immortal Comedy Ethel Barrymore ‘Thea, 47th Wet way, Ev. 8.40 Mat. Wed & Sat PHILIP MERIVALE Henry Phoebe Adriane STEPHENSON FOSTER ALLEN MOROSCO 'THEA,, 45th W. of B’way, Eves,, 8:45, Mats. Wed. & Sat, 2:30 JULIAN WYLIE’S PRODUCTION GOOD COMPANIGNS By J. B, PRIESTLEY and EDWARD KNOBLOCK From Priestley’s Famous Novel Company of 120—16 Scenes 44TH ST. THEATRE, W. of Br’dway “Represents the American Theatre At Its Best,” Atkinson, N, Y, Times THE LEPT BANK be By ELMER RICE Little Thea, W. 44(b, Eves. 8:50 Mats. Wed. &, Saturday, 2:40 Soviet “Forced Labor”—Bedchat's per copy. Read it—Spread it! Eve. 8:40, Mats. Wed. & Sat. 2:30 R sCAMEONOW TINO PATTIERA Formerly Metropolitan Opera Tenor in.“FRA DIAVOLO” Italian Operetta fh Ave. BIGGEST SHOW IN NEW YORK KAKO , ELISSA LANDI and Lionel Barrymore in THE Yellow Ticket ACTS Incl. SYLVIA CLARK The Voice of A NEW PLAY OF Eves, 81 to 83. “As tense as “The Last Mile’... white heat .. Good drama and g PERCY HAMMOND in N. Y. Herald Tribune. Times Sq. Theatre ‘Thurs. Mat. $1 to $2.00; Sat. Mat. #1 to 82.50 Mill Workers Reaches Broadway! Steel REVOLT! By JOHN WEXLEY Author of “THE LAST MILE” ritten in a sober theatre as well” 42nd STREET (West of B'way) BRING THIS AD TO BOX OFFICE “compro- | LL.D. Plans Farewell Banquet for Machado and Serio, Noy. 29th NEW YORK.—The workers of New York will bid a stirring farewell to two valiant fighters for the toilers of this country at a banquet on Sunday, November 29, for Guido Serio, Ital- ian worker, and Eduard Machado, Latin-American worker, who are leaving for Soviet Russia. The ban- quet will be held at 6 p.m. at Irving Plaza, 15tn St. and Irving Pl. Both workers were recently saved from death or long imprisonment at | the hands of the fascist hangmen of two countries, Italy and Veneguela, as @ result of the mass protest organ- ized by the International Labor De- fense. The Department of Labor was forced to reverse its deportation or~ ders and to grant them the right of voluntary departure to the Soviet Union, The New York District of the International Labor Defense is ar- ranging the farewell banquet: Tick- ets are 50 cents. One way to help the Soviet Union is to spread among the workers “Soviet ‘Forced Labor,’” by Max Bedacht, 10 cents per copy. Workers’ Movies in the WORKERS CENTER 6) Fragments of an Empire” Newsreels from the Soviet an Saturday, Noy. 21 35 E. 12th St, Adm. 26¢ rivers -PHOTO LEAGUE OF W.LR. TEL. STUYVESANT 9-5657 B CARL RODSKY ANY KIND OF Insurance 799 BROADWAY, N.Y.C. Demonstrate for the Defense of the Soviet Union! at the BIRO-BIDJAN “ICOR” Carnival- BALL SATURDAY NIGHT November 21, 1931 165th Infantry Armory 68 Lexington Ave., New York (Between 28th and 26th St.) Double Brass Band—Special Features Bar and Buffet ADMISSION 50 eek No Hat-Checks Required Dr. MORRIS LEVITT SURGEON DENTIST Southern Blvd. cor. ree St N.Y Phone: Tremont Special low prices for ravers Intern’] Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 1 UNION SQUARE 8TH FLOOR AU Work Done Under Personal Care of DR. JOSEPHAON Phone Stuyvesant 381 Jobn’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: (ITALIAN DISHED a place with atmosphere 302 E. 12th St New York MELROSE DAIRY VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT Comrades Will Always Find ft Pleasant to Dine at Our Place, 1787 pd rirerriee BLVD. Brenz 174th St. Station) TELEPHONE. INTERVALE O18 Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 199 SECOND AVENUE Wet tith and (3th Ste, Strictly Vegetarian food Advertise Yuur Union Meetings Gere. For Information Write to Advertising Uepartment and obtain 2 tickets for the price of one The DAILY WORKER 50 East 18th St. New York City