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| ' .-“Youth need healthy sports, age wu Demand Jersey County Aid LN the J obless, Mass Demonstr ebion in to Back Delegation Bef NEW BRUNSWICK, N A delegation from the Ur Councils of Middlese: here Tuesday, Dec. to at 3 pn attend the open hearing of the cov 29, ty commissioners (called here “B of Freeholders”) budget for 1932. ‘The jobless delega € that instead of turning over $700,( to the bankers as interest nad bond payments, this money go to the e of the unemployed in this ind county. ‘The amounts scheduled fo bankers amount to nearly < the county budget 12,000 Jobless. Lewis Compton, director of Board of Freeholders admits on are in the coun etory cities of P Brunswick, Carteret bridge, and South River, 12,000 un Of this number, 1,785 uner from or State in the form of get food from their which amounts to $3 or respect $4 dollars per not 12,000, allt handful of them. Committees to pr the F ing on the Budget on Tu be elecied at and nd relief for a mere demands to Frénch and New vs| ers there lot the Bankers N New “Brunswick Dec. 29 ore County Board Un 101 mployed Fayette \ Tr ‘oom t t Bayard sre the 7 th he County Record New Bruns- earing on the held is a small one nore than 100 persons. n the ¢ ittee asked per- sion to hold a meeting on the Plaza in front of the building on 1esday, to inform the workers of demands of the Unemployed answer of the Free- buck, was passed from e to the other, until the committee y referred to the Counsel i the c County, a certain Edmund Hayes who is also County Chairman of the Democratic Party, to find out from him gathering is allowed on the This lawyer answered that, “We will not allow any “mobs” to as- semt on the Plaza. If you bring we will throw every one of hem inot jail.” But the workers and jobless work- aim their right to use the Pub- lic and plans are going ahead to have such an outpouring of work- Tuesday when the Public Hearing on the Budget takes place that neither the police, Mr. Hayes, e will dare to “throw aning the unemployed jali.” All out » 4 Workers! to the Public Hearing on the County Budget, Tues- \4 p.m. at County Record Build- ing, New Brunswick, N. J. to de- mand appropriations for Unemployed Relief, and not appropriations for the bank NEGRO JOBLESS STORM AGENCY siormed the Holms Welfar siation office to demand p relief. They went in heavy rain and filled ti nuous shooting ands for food, wood, coal and yung. The 2d them out peared and asked for all their name and addresses. The agency officia declared they had nothing to give The spokesman for the committee ‘wented to know what became of the $400,000 supposed to have been al- Yotted Queens County for relief. The officials said the jobless would have to ask Hoffman, of the ency Relief Committee about-that, Individuals in the committee step- | ped forward and told of their own starvation and that of their families. | Negro workers told how they were discriminated against in distribution | of what relief is given out. More police came, and finally drove | out the committee and arrested Wil- | liam Anthony, the spokesman. He 4s under $100 bond, to appear in court | January 4, outside. | merg- | Ele ct Left Winger As Business Agent of Carpenter Local NEW YORK. — The elections in Local 2717 of the United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America. affiliated to the A. F. of L., held at | the reguler meeting place of the local Brooklyn, gave Wolenchick, left didate for business agent 295 votes against 116 votes for Feldman, | the socialist party man. Raskin, a petty labor faker got 72 votes, and K the present business agent got rom men he promised jobs. | Wolenchick is elected and the entire! local administration is left wing now. | wing ea: | eS eta YESTERDAY’S SOCCER RESULTS | NEW YORK.—Yesterday the Me- | tropolitan Workers Soccer League | played nine games at Dyckman St. | Oval. ‘Three of these games were for the benefit of the Young Worker. | The results of the various games are | given below: | Division A:—Olympics, 2. Red | Sparks, 1; Tico 4, Neckwear Workers |0; Spartacus 1, Italian American 0; | Division B, American 2, Cfotona 1; | Harlem Progressive 3, Gordon F. ©. 1; | East Side Workers 2, Neckwear Workers 1; Division C:—Red Sparks | 4, Prospect Workers 0; Hebrew Work- ers 1, Dauntless 0; Needle Trades A. C. 1, Bronx Workers 1, DAILY WURAHR, NEW LURK, MONDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1931 Decuments of Chinese Soviet to Appear Tomorrow Historical documents from the First National Soviet Congress of | China will be pubtished in tomor- | row'’s Da Worker. These docu- ments Include a Manifesto from the Pro ional Government of the Soviet Republic of China to the workers of the whole world. Every worker should make sure of read- Order your | today. ing these document [copy of the Daily START NEW YEAR’ WITH BIG DRIVE IN DRESS TRADE Oreanization p2ien by Ind’l Union to Pr epare Strike Worker NEW YORK. —The Dress Denart- ment of the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union making exten- sive preparations to begin the organ- ization drive in preparation for the dress strike immediately after Ne Year's. The dec’ membership meeting of dr: for the formation of a m: organ- ization committee being carried out. Numerous complaints from shops have come in to the office, and with the aid of the Industrial Union, these shops will be declared on strike for better conditions. A number of strikes are in progress at the pre- is to picket these shops, especially this morning, so as to bring about a speedy settlement. The following are the striking shops: W. Dress Co., 159 W. 27th St. London Dress Co., 245 7th Ave. W. & R. Dress Co., 253 W. 26th St. A special complaint office will now be opened to take up the complaints of workers from open shops. What’s On— | MONDAY Women’s Counell, Nos. 9, 7 H. Gorelick, r ed from the Soviet Union, will give a talk at 808 Adee Ave. at’ 8:30 p.m. ia Bast N. ville LL.D. ‘Will hold nbership meet- ing at 118 Bristol St, at 8 p.m, All members requested to attend, oe eae To hold two mass meetings toni at the Tremont Workers’ C Clinton Ave, Bronx, and the Auditorium, 336 W. 36th St. rae . School Next class to be held in Room 203 at 50 EB, 13th St. at pm. Joe North to speak on Educational Work and the Labor Defende ‘o* 8 ‘ Committee Meets tonight at 5 E, 19th St,, third floor, at 8 p.m. * * Workers’ School mbly to be held to- St.. thi floor, at will sp Fall ts requested to attend, . * * General term stude Metal Workers’ Industrial League Will hold its re neeting tonight 8 pm, Roll up thousands of Daily Worker subs in the fight azainst wage cuts. Cam-| n of the general’ smakers | open | sent time in the dress department. | Active dressmakers are called upon} NEW YORK. — The Unity Com- jmittee of the Joint Council and the |Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union met last Wednesday night to plan the program of joint acticn in defense of the workers’ interests. In |a declaration issued, the committee tasks 1. To wilite and organize all fur- |riers in one mighty united front of ers to carry on the day-to- [ene conditions. 2. To strictly enforce union con- ditions won by the furriers as a re- sult of the courageous 17-week strike ‘of 1926. 3. To carry on a struggle for jobs for the unemployed and for an un- employment fund. | 4. To stimulate the organization of shop committees in all fur shops to carry through the program of the united front of all workers in the shops. \Feiows Hears | Hunger Marchers iBenjam in Addresses | Enthusiastic Meet An enthusiastic meeting was held in Manhattan Hall, Yonkers, Friday evening by the Unemployed Councils, Westchester County. The National Committee of the Councils reported on the Hunger March and the policy regarding -the fight for Unemploy- ment Insurance and Immediate Win- ter Relief. Comrade Herbert Benja- min, secretary of the National Com- mittee of the Unemployed Councils, H the main speaker, told the 250 work- ers who attended how the Hunger | March affected the unemployment | ia om in the United States and | the benefits to be derived from it. He | also refuted the lies of the capitalist press, who tried to belittle the March by comparing it with Coxy’s undis- ciplined, unorganized march and the well-planned National Hunger March which had a definite program for the relief of the unemployed, that is, the Workers’ Unemployment Insurance Bill, which the Marchers demanded the enactment of by Congress. He repeated the challenge to Matthew Woll to defend his charges against the Hunger March and Unemploy- | ment Insurance before an audience }of workers. Comrade Benjamin ended his speech by showing the | necessity of obtaining signatures in factories, A. F. of L. local unions, unemployed workers and farmers, of all races and nationalities for the 100 per cent endorsement of the Workers’ Unemployment Insurance Bill, also emphasizing the need for mass demonstrations and meetings Feb. 4. | Other speakers were Comrade Phil- lapa, Yonkers’ delegate in the Hun- ger March, and Sol Harper, Negro | delegate, who is a member of the | Ex-Servicemen’s League. Dr. Bauerburg of Yonkers showed how Hunger Hoover's starvation of workers caused many fatal diseases among their offspring. By A. HARRIS swim- ming, excursions, physical training of all kinds,” said Lenin in a letter to Clara Zetkin. ‘The desire on the part of the youth to throw, jump, swim and climb, act- ivities that are found in modern ath Jetics, is instinctive, coming down to us from the efforts of primitive man to preserve and maintain himself And what the youth indulge in prac- tice they must necessarily most talk talk ebout. Our comrades are vexed at this. ‘They are of the opinion, and rightfully so, that much of the talk of sports is taking the place thought about the class st However, the fact is that the youth do indulge in sports and they con tinue to think about it regardless of the vexation of our comrades. In this the capitalist class makes every effort to have them keep their mind on sport The boés class promotes every organi- zation that promotes athletic activity If one is to estimate the support that the comrades give to the L, 8. U., one is inclined to believe that the comrades are taking their revenge for their vexation out on the L. 8. U. Only a few of them consider the L. S. U. from the viewpoint of class struggle. Many of the camrades con- sider the I. 8. U. however, as an or- ganization of athletic freaks who al- ways building their muscles, enter- taining in tumbling, building pyra- ds at large meetings, or supplying “ong arm men for demonstration icket lines. tt wing organizers have treated J. organizers as youngsters that to be talked to but not considered usly. An organizer in*Detroit re- yd an L. 8. U. representative with “ring mea mass organization and ton I will recognize you.” An organizer in Cleveland, when esked for the loan of 10 cents to get ® L. S. U, organizer to a most import- ant meeting several miles distant, be- came angry and demanded to know what right the L. 5. U. had to ask for fuch a loan, In Lawrence during the extile strike our National President ‘ Hed Kkidded as to his right to be in he strife teirisory organizing sports- hen who were on strike, The L.S.U. of uggle. ' ‘ The Class Struggle and jis never called into conference by the fraternal organization of the left wing, and are seldom given the floor in serious meetings wherein the should find a place. The comrades are not the only ones responsible for these mistakes, the L. S. U. too is at fault. Had they made a sharper turn to mass ‘work and had they organized mass thletic meets they would have made a greater bid for recognition, Our left wing com- rades’ narrow policies in their own ranks reflects itself in the miscon- ceptions they have of the sports Movement. They continually ignore the possibilities for sports movements in their ranks. They refuse to accept the L. S. U, movement as one with @ political foundation. The L. S. U., however, does not ac~ cept these rebuffs as final. They need the support of every organization in their coming campaign and therefore present the. following elementary facts to help convince the comrades, The L. 8. U. struggles are not iso- lated from any struggles of the work- ing elass. To prove this consider the following: A}! athletic organizations, gyms, excepting the L. 5. U., are in the hands of capitalist groups or their henchmen, in groups that are led by the Socialist Party or the 1.W.W. The Bord of Directors of the factories, mills and mines are identi- cal with those who are the Bord of Directors of all play institutions of members of the Board of Directors of a typical Y.M.C,A.: (The National rganization has influenced 26 mil- lion youth) of Youngstown, (Ohio; J. C, Argetsinger, General counsel of the Youngstown Sheet and Tube Co., B. F. Fairless, Executive Vice- President of the Republic Steel Co., Roy Welch, Treasurer of the bhatt ed town Sheet & Tube Co, The typical Settlement House and Foundation, was founded and is at present conducted by the guiding hand of August Hecksher, a promin- ent financier and director of the Crucible Steel Co. Consider the typi- cal Board of Education of a typical American city (Detroit, 1920) which has as i m-ibers a banker, an ex- who is also a member of the cit’s Vigilance Committee, and a doctor who is a prominent reactionary. Con- sider the official sports movement which is headed by Avery Brundage, General MacArthur, General Henry, etc, (Avery Brundage played a pro- minent part in breaking the building trades strike in Chicago in 1919). Consider the sponsors of the Inter- national Olympic games th&t will be held in Los Angeles in 1932, (Hoover, the secretary of war and the secretary of the navy are the respective Hon. PPresident and Vice-President of the games). Consider the Sportsmanship Brotherhood with Mathew Woll as President, Marshall Field, Hugh Freyne and Otto Kahn as Board of Directors. Consider the Tournaments that are conducted by the Chicago Tribune and the N. Y. Daily News, Graphic, American Legion, Rotary, Kiwinis, Elks, Moose and Chambers of Commerce. (Note: The Socialist and I.W.w. henchmen Palm and Urtamo were kicked out of the L, 8. U. for preach- ing ing neutrality in class struggle). The above considerations will help the comrades to understand that the enemies of the working class have their fingers in every pie. The bosses control the sports activities of 99 per cent of the worker sportsmen, and they don’t have it for the benefits of the workers as is proved by the fact that some of the unemployed workers come from the fectories that are owned by the above mentioned mem- bers of the Boards of varibus sports organizations. ‘The physical condition of the min- ers, textile workers and steel workers, the farmers, the cotton pickers, etc., the bulk of the working class and farmers is such that comment re- garding them is breaking into the front pages of the capitalist papers. The working class, in physical make- up and health, is degenerating. How can perfect health be possible under the present conditions of wage cuts, speed-up and the stagger system of work? The working class cannot re- gain thelr health in one hour of gym period a week when they are cul 3 tremely ay clubnén gnd insur- ance Riatadeh an owner of @ hospital “~~ to the battering of und ment, speed-up and worry every olaex the Labor Sports Union hour in the week. Health under ca- pitalism is impossible, The L, S. U's. purposé is not pri- marily to build health, although they make every effort to have the work~ ers retain it, but the recognition of the instinctive athletic demands of the working class to organize sports for workers within their own class and to make the workers conscious of the class nature of athletic system of America. The play instinct is there, and the class conscious workgers must recognize it ang utilize it as @ means for organizing workers. Some important struggles in which the L. S. U. participated were: the Pittsburgh vicinity where the official football organization was in the hands of a brother of Pat Fagan of the United Mine Workers of America and which was being used as a pro- paganda instrument to help break the N. M. U. leadership of the miners. The L. S. U. organized with the sup- ort of the miners a soccer league that helped split many teams from the U.M.W.A. grasp; in Detroit many of the members of the Uuto Workers Union came from the ranks of the L. 8. U. The fight for free gyms for the unemployed is one of the major activities of the L. 8S, U..throughout the country. The L. S. U. conducts schools to schools, workers are taught organi- zation of workers as well as thletic technique. broad united front conference for a of the united front Anti-Olymptes is, release of Tom Mooney, whose endorsement we have for the meet; no discrimination of Negroes; mass participation of thletes; participation of Soviet athletes. We are out to make this counter Olympic meet the biggest athletic gathering of workers that has ever taken place in this country. With the help of the comrades of the left wing this can be made possible | Red Sparks commented in the | Daily Worker about our having put ,en long pants. The comrades must ‘nelp ue hold them up itself the following immediate! le for better working and | baseball league organized by the’ develop instructors and at these | They are initiating a, counter Olympic meet. The platform | IF ‘urriers’. Unity Committee Issues Program of Struggle 5. To organize a conference of all shop unity committees which will tak riers into one class union, 6. No agreement between the bos- ses and the Kaufman clique shall be recognized. Only the furriers shall have the right, through their elected representatives, to conclude an agree~ ment with the bosses. Such agree- ment only to become valid after it hes been approved by the workers, 7. To submit the whole program for the United Front to a referendum vote of all furriers. PICKET ROBIN HOOD HAT SHOP! Send Scabs portant mass picket line is called for this morning at 7:30 a.m. in front of | | Robinhood Hat Shop, 65 W. 39th| | St. out here to maintain better condi- tions, the Needle Trades Workers’ | Industrial Union immediately called | out the trimmers, its members. The operators were mainly members of the Zaritsky Cloth Hat, Cap and Millinery Workers’ Union. They were locked out when the bosses made an agreement with the Amal- gamated Clothing Workers, the Hill- | man officials to furnish scabs. ‘The Industrial Union proposed | that the operators and trimmers make it a joint strike. This Zaritsky opposed. ' Now Women’s Wear and the Forward announce that Zaritsky has made peace with the Amalga- mated. Zaritsky will now send scabs against the trimmers. ‘The Needle Trades Workers’ In- dustrial Union announces that the strikers will keep up their fight until every one locked out is reinstated. TANNERY STRIKE IN WAUKEGAN, ILL Come to TUUL. for Help ‘in Walkout WAUKEGAN, Ill, Dec. 27.—“The Tannery Company here has a strike situation and in one department 100 per cent went out on strike against a new efficiency system of piece work. Forty-eight in all walked out. The company hired scabs, but it takes about six months to break them in on the job, so consequently it’s hold- ing up the works of the other de- partments. About forty strikers came to the Workers’ Hall, asking us for help—workers that never seen-us or never been at the Workers’ Hall. A long meeting together with the Un- employed Council was held” to or- ganize for struggle.” ‘The Trade Union Unity League of Chicago immediately dispatched Nels Kjar to the strike area, * NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES EAST SIDE—BEONX RKO cio Sood RKO ao an Halperin Johnny Perkins Neal Sisters Lee Gall Ensemble Cater Brothers Paul and Nino Today to Tuesday —On the Screen— “SUICIDE Ghezzt 199 With Prospect reise, BILL BOYD —RKO Acts— Anatole « Robert Friedland’s Armstrong 20th Century Revue James Gleason Irving Edwards Lyons & Snyder ‘The Agemos Other RKO Acts Ginger Rogers up. the question of uniting all sale Zaritsky Has Agreed | NEW YORK. —An especially im-| When the operators were locked) DELEGATION TO USSR TO ACT AS F. S. U. in National Tour The while i tional s y of the Trade Unions of the Republic | of Dagestan. The delegation reports that shock brigaders who are not ac- tive ang fail to produce r its “fake Udarniks” do not retain their title nor privileres long—therefore, in their role of internatioral’' shock brigaders ‘they have entered intd Socialist Com- | netition in riving the renorts of their tour and building a mass F. 8, U. The delerates who are going to seven*different districts in a national tovr for the FSU have pledséd them- selves to stimulate activity’ in all] branches, to build FSU branches in the factories, to further the recruit- Americ ing drive for 10,000 new members by | the first of May which they made as a pledge to the International Secre- of the FSU and to push for- d the drive for the new magai tari | 100, 000 circ ation by the end of 19 | They realize that the most intens' | work must be done in order to inst the election of 50 workers from ba: industries as delegates to the May 1st ‘elebration, | The delegates pledge themselves to serd in weeklv reports on the result | of their activities which will be. for- | warded to the Russian workers and |have proposdd that the end of their |2 months tour they [should report upon the results of their activities and thet a special meeting in connec- tion with some of the major cam- naigns of the FSU be arranged for this purpose.» This is the first deleration which has returned from the Soviet Union which has entered seriously into So- cialist competition and set itself defi- nite tasks. Mrs, Lynch, one of the delegates, wife of a Négro miner said that in order to carry out our pledge we must not only speak at mass meet- ings ‘but must go into the homes of the workers and info the factories and make real efforts to bring to the American workers the glorious achievements of the Russian workers in building socialism, ..“We are pronouncing in good faith the words ‘the dictatorship of the proletariat’ and we shall make them SHOCK BRIGADERS| | Pladoe to Build a. Massier | these organizations. The celebration of the 8th Anni- versary of the Daily Worker, to be held at the Bronx Coliseum, Janu- must attract tens of thousands of workers. This mass affair for the paper of the masses, the Daily Work- er, can only be @ success if the mass organizations of the working class are fully mobilized to participate. This means that publicity for the Jubilee must be carried over into all It must be made a point in the discussion or on the order of business of all the meetings | of these bodies in the few days that remain, ® The conferences now being held to puch circulation, sales and subscrip- tions to the Deily Worker must take up as one of their mest important tasks the rallying. of thousands of workers for attendance at the 8th Anniversary celebration of the ‘Daily Worker. So far this has not been done. On Sunday Section 1 of the Party had its conference. What was done there to help make the Jubilee a success? Today, Section 2 of the Party holds its Daily Worker conference. Its task is clear. A real plan of work PROTEST CRUEL POLISH TERROR! NEW YORK. “Demonstrate at the Polish Consulate, 151 East 67th Street, Saturday, Jan. 2 at noon against the Polish terror, for the) freedom of Poland's political prison- | ers, for the defense of the Soviet Union, against the lynchers in Po- land and the United States!” begins a leaflet distributed throughout New York by the International Labor De- fense. The LL.D. points out that a ten- year terror has raged against the workers in fascist Poland, and that it is getting worse. Pogroms against the Jews are comon, the Polish ty- rants seeking thus to distract the people's attention from their exploit- ation by Polish landlords and capit- alists. “Only a few days ago,” says the LL.D., “when the workers throughout Poland demonstrated against the preparations of the Polish govern- ment for war on the Soviet Union, seven railroad workers in the city of Barakvitvhi were hanged—lynched — by the Polish fascists. And in an- other city, Tamarshow, two workers were court martialed and sentenced a realjty.” LENIN. to death,” AMUSEMENTS 3UILD presents BILLS Trilogy THE THEATR EUGENE 0° Mourning Becomes Electra Composed of 3 plays presented on Iiday 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 Biway The Theatre Guild Presents REUNION IN VIENNA A Comedy By ROBERT EB. SHERWOOD. Martin Beck st'a"s ave. Eye. 8:40 Mats. Thurs. Fri.&Sat. The Group Thea, Presents The House of Connelly By PAUL GREEN Under Auspices of Thea, Guild on Thea MANSFIELD 33°2,822,5' Eves 8:30 Mats, Thur: jat.2:80 PHILIP MERIVALE aN CYNARA WITH Henry Phoebe = Adriane STEPHENSON FOSTER ALLEN MOROSCO PHHA,, 45th W. of B’way, Eves., 8:45, Mats. Wed. Fri, & Sat, MUSIC George T. Bye presents the Juilliard School of Music Production of pack BEANSTALK A fairy opera for the children ORCHESTRA of Conducted |by ALBERT STOESSEL 44th St. THEATRE, West of Wway, vgs. 8140, Matinces’ Wedd Sat.2:40 AND THE COUNSELLOR-AT-LAW By With ELMER RICE PAUL MUNI .W. 45 St. Ev, 8120 Plymouth Mine "rnars: & Sat. 2:20 OPENS TUES., DEC. 29 SEATS JOE ZHLLUS Production of PAPAVERT An Up-to-date Comedy By CHARLES K. GORDON VANDERBILT Thea. 48 St.H.of B'way +80, Matinees Every Day Mass Organizations Must Work for Coliseum Jubile+ EVERYBODY'S WELCOME The new musical comedy hit, with FRANC! OSCAR ANN PENNINGTON, ARRIETS LAKE SHUBERT T 44th St., W. of Brw'y Eve. 8:30, Wed, & Sat, 2:30 “FRANKENSTEIN” The man who made a monster COLIN CLIVE—MAE CLARKE JOHN BOLES—BORIS KARLOFE 6th Ave. . migra en SHOW IN NEW YORK 8: scrs | “Frankenstein” Incl. x. WIRTH The Man * Who Made a Monster Workers’ Correspondence is the backbone of the revolutionary press. Build your press by writing for it about your day-to-day struggle. i 2 P.M, Sunday, Januery 3rd _ Pageant TRIAL OF THE YELLOW PRESS 8th Anniversary Daily. Barty orker USA for drawing in all working class ore ganizations for mass attendance at the Coliseum on January 3 must be drawn up. These organizations must respond without special appeals. The various language organizations, the Internae tional Workers Order branches, F.S, U. branches, all youth organizations are the foundations on which can be built a successful affair for the Daily, Worker. Only a few days are left! The Co- Mseum must be packed! The -mass organizations musf act at once. Take this matter up on all committees, in all conferences, in all locals and branches, with all members. Pack the C um on Sunday Jan- uary 3rd! Show your support to the Daily Worker and at the same time see a brilliant working class program one of whoce features is tht pageant ‘ “Trial of The Revolutionary Press.” “ARSENAL” Famous Doyzerko Film of the Ukrainian Revolution Monday, December 28 LABOR ‘TEMPLE 14th St, and 297 Ave. Proceeds for Ky, M'ners Ausnices: W. 1. R. One block from Prospect Avenue Subway Station Phone: Ktlpatrick 5-5028 Intern’) Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 1 UNION SQUARE 8TH FLOOR AU) Work Done Under Persona! Care of DR. JOSEPHSONS JADE MOUNTAIN AMERICAN ard CHINESE RESTAURANT Open 11 a, m, to 1:20 2, m. Special Lunch 11 to 4...35¢ Dinner 5 to 10.. .55¢ 197 SECOND AVENUE Between 12th and 13th Sts, We Invite Workers to the BLUE BIRD CAFETERIA GOOD WHOLESOME FOOD Fair Prices A Comfortable Place to Eat 827 BROADWAY Between 12th and 13th Sts. Bronx 1932 RED East 177th Street INT'L CHORUS Admission 35c Coliseum DANCERS MELROSE BESTAURANT Comrades Will Always Find 3 Pleasant to Dine et Orr Place, 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD, Bronz (near 174th St. Station) TELEPHONE INTERVALE 9~0149 Rational Vegetarian. Restaurant 199 SECOND AVENUE Bet. 12th end 13th Ste. Strictly Vevetarian food HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian Restaurant 1600 MADISON AVENUE Phone University 4-908 Au Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant Patronize the ‘ Concoops Food Stores anD Restaurant 2700 BRONX PARK EAST “Buy in the Co-operatiwe Store and hel» the Left Wing Movement.” Back Namber of Inprecorrs Comrade wishes to complete files of | Inprecofrs. Will buy back numbers, or exchange for duplicates, Back numbers for exchange ee cod