The Daily Worker Newspaper, February 1, 1932, Page 2

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Pace Two 2.500 NEW MEMBERS JOIN THE COMMUNIST | PARTY § 1000 Workers Ent of Recrui Oa the basis of the struggles for the daily needs of the mass of workers, the Communist Party has recrutted over 2,500 since December 1 the preparation for drive of which 1,000 between Jannary If and January 25, the first two weeks since the drive officially started. In the Pittsburgh district the stu bern battles in which the Party and the revolutionary unions have led t miners and steel workers have cor- vinced the workers there of the need for organizing into the Cor new members the course of he recruiting recruited Petty. One hundred and twent members w uited into the Party from J: 1 to January 25. Of this num 60 are unem~- ployed and 53 employed. The strike now in the Pittsburgh and the organ- le in the mines, in addition to t being done in the steel work ries of wage cui ter of the workers alread into the Party. Of the to and two 61 miners, 20 metal work ailroad workers. Two nuclei have been organized, one in a steel 1 and one in a mine employing men Three members recruited, work in factories employing less than 100, 2 from 1090-200, 500, tho: ose from 1,000. 11 in 0, and one in a factory employing ver 5,000. he leadership of the struggles of Chicago workers by the Commu Party gram of Mayor Cerma! basis that it has in the recr ized. The new recruits munist Party include netal workers, ‘king hou: In Boston t members were ri then. The basic nature of itments can be seen f: thet 3 are mi wor! workers, 5 workers in the A, F of L and 5 former members of the Social- ist Party. One shop nucleus was or- ganized One hundred sevenie members were recruited in Ph 50 having been taken in after January 11. Pifteen came from large shops, 11 from the mining ind 5 from steel, 6-from marine, 4 from railroad, 35 Negro workers, 18 women workers and 17 members of Ameri: Federa. tion of Labor locals. In Cleveland 113 were r e January 11 and 73 a ber 10 are steel rkers, 7 are Negro workers and 16 mer Socialists olt reports a total Thr e January lt 2 among those new Two hundred eight Ford workers joined. new me! ve been recruited since Dec nm Minneapolis. One hundred eigh these were recruited since Janu- ' 11. There are 21 miners, 5 railroad rkers and 60 fa included in + total of those recruited. his total of 2,500 ne re recruited into ty through the le nmunist Party of 10 working class a What's On— mbers ber members ie Communist rship of the 1e struggle of nst starvation. Interna ckers’ él ake place Secon B Over | Forum at 108 Admission free he Prtmon t Worke ., Bron for beg’ ty Tuesday Yorkers! the places re you spend uw’ money rertise m the rke \ THEM TO DO IT! ND US THEIR NAMES! 50 E, 13th St.. N.Y. | League, | Soviet China and the Soviet Union. ‘ty ty In First Two Weeks > Drive Alone lynch terror and the growing danger a new imperialist war..The mass ponse of the call for organization into the Communist Party shows the remendous militancy of the masses of workers and farmers and their recognition of the leading role that the Communist Party plays in the fight against starvation and misery. ‘The increasing numbers of workers | coming into the Communist Party | ‘om the various unions of the Amer- | ican Federation of Labor is an indi- cation of the revolt in the A. F. of L. against the treacherous and strike ig role of the leadership of that organization Workers! Follow the example of} these 2,500 workers! Join the Party | of militant struggle against the capi- | talist class! Organize into the only | olutionary Party, the Communist | arty! Join the Communist Party! “Hunger Fighter” Off the Press 30,000 Copies for Feb. NEW YORK New Yor! Issued ~The first issues of unemployed news- aper is off the press. It was launched by the Unemployed Council of Greater New York as its official organ, with the help of trade unions | nd workers’ organizations who had ecided on this step at the Labor which elected the New York section of the historic Hunger March to Washington. At the banquet on Friday, attended gates from these organiza- the new paper was officially The Unemployed Weekly hereafter be known as the “New Hunger Fighter.” It is an at- ive tabloid and sells for two| erence ts a copy, Starting March 1, it| pear weekly preparation for Feb. 4, Na- 1 Day of Struggle for Unem- ment Insurance, a special eight- | page edition has just been released. y thousand copies will be sold| in New York City. Among the fea- | ture articles on the front page are | an expose of the relief rackets in| ew York, greetings from William Z. | Foster, and an article on the struggle | for Unemployment Insurance by j ett Benjamin, Nationa] Secre- | of the Unemployed Councils. | from workers expose the rents and miserable conditions | high in Harlem and the mistreatment of | workers in flophouses and relief | agencies. An article on Social In-| surance in the Soviet Union stands | striking contrast to the recital of | ers’ misery in the U.S.A. Corre- | spondence from workers in the A. F. ° L. testifies to the growing move- | rent among the rank and file for | unemployment relief and insurance. ‘The advance issues of the “Hunger Fighter” also launches the drive for | ONE MILLION PENNIES to insure | the regular weekly appearance of the! paper after March 1. Contributions | as well as bundle orders should be sent to the Unemployed Council at 5 E. 19th St., New York City. Anti-lmperialist Mass Meet Feb. 5th. For Defense of Soviet China, Soviet Union eee | NEW YORK. — The Anti-Imperial- | ist League is arranging a mass meet- ing against the imperialist partition of China and for support of Soviet China and the Soviet Union. The meeting will fight particularly against an imperialism, which {s lead- ing the imperialist attack upon the workers 2nd peasants of China and the Soviet Union The speakers will include Max Be- dacht of the Communist Party, Wil- liam Simons of the Anti-Imperialist and Chinese and Japanese speake Robert Dunn, chairman of | the Anti-Tmperialist League acts as | cha an ineeting will take place on | h, Priday, at 8 p. m. at| 1 Lyceuin, 66 B, 4th Street. ovkers' organizations are re-| ed to leave this evening open | for this mase demonstration against imperialism, and for the defense of | “MocN IN THE YELLOW RIVER” | NEX? THEATRE GUILD‘PLAY ‘The next production of the Theatre | Guild this season will be an Trish | pl “The Moon in the Yellow .” by Dennis Johnston. Claude | Rains, William Harrigan and John | Daly Murphy will play leading roles. The pley will be directed by Philip | Moeller, It, deals with post-revolu- | tionary days tn Ireland | A. H. Woods hes placed in rehear- | sal “The Inside Story,” a melodrama by Gcorge Bryant and Francis M. | Verdi. A. H. Van Buren ig directing | the production | Beginning tonight. the Theatre | | Gulld announces that the scale of | Eugene O'Neill's trilogy, “Mourning | Becomes flectra,” will be reduced. | ‘The prices now range from $1 to $4 | for the two performances in which the three plays of the trilogy ere |The stage acts include: ion In ‘Campoiaine | Move Behind Backs of Dock Strikers NEW YORK.—Following the noti- fication of a wage cut of from 85c to} k 70¢ per hour for a 44 hour w and from $1.20 to $1.05 for overtime, about 240 longshoremen and checkers who are members of the I. L. A. on the Grace Line docks, have gone out on} strike. So far no strike committee has been elected, but J. P. Ryan, the International president who sold out the Boston longshoremen’s strike, is confering with the company officials for a settlement. It is expected that will be reached behind the backs of NEW JERSEY WORKERS PREPARE DAIL Y W ORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, FEBRI UARY 4, 15 932 FOR HUGE FEB. 4 DEMONSTRATION NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J., Jan. 31. —The preparations for Feb, 4tth, National Unemployment Insurance, Day, which have been made by the Feb. 4th United Front Committee. A mass demonstration will be held in front of City Hall. As a part of these preparations a militant demonstration was S |held on Tuesday, Jan. 26th in front of the Community hest headquarters on Kirkpatrick St., to expose these a compromise | charity fakers. nm February the 4th, 10 a. m., a the longshoremen on wages, but the | mass open air meeting will be held main issue is the question of the open | at French and New Street the mob- shop, The Marine Workers Industrial Union is agitating for the organiza~ tion of a rank and file strike com- j eines US. CONGRESSMAN AFRAID TO MEET UNEMPLOYED | Trying to Avoid Seeing ilization point for the parade which will go to city hall, the place of the demonstration. A delegation elected | at an indoor meeting of unemployed workers will deman from the city commissioners endorsement of the unemployment insurance bill presen- | ted by the National Committee of | | the Unemploy ed Geek to Congress. PERTH Assos, N. J., Jan. 31.— The Unemployed Council of Perth | Amboy has aranged a demonstration | for unemployment insurance on Feb. | 4th at 2 p. m. at Cit yHall. After the | close of the demonstration a parade will be held. Preparatory meetings, mobilizing Delegation andParade | the workers for February 4th are of Workers Today being held in various parts of the city and at the Registration Line. ‘These meetings will take place at the NEW YORK, Jan. 31.—Congress- | following places and at the following man Sirovich is attempting to get out | time: of meeting the delegation of unem- | ployed workers elected by Monday, Feb. ist, 3 p. m. at Spring various | and Lawrence St., Tuesday, Feb. 2nd, block committees to make demands|g a, m. at the City Registration Line, |of immediate relief and endorsement | a¢ Jefferson St., Wednesday, Feb, of the Workers’ Unemployment In- | 3rq, 7 p. m. at Fayette and Stockton surance Bill. Sirovich was notified last Monday | | Street. In Perth Amboy thousands ere that the delegation was coming to | registered with the itizen’s Relief see him on Monday, February 1st, at | Committee, but only a small number 2p. m. giving him sufficient time to | get even the part-time jobs, from make arrangements to meet the work- | the ci! y, county and state. A few ers he is supposed to represent in con- | get relief of $3 to $7 for two weeks gress. A parade to back the demands | in groceries. Potatoes which are fit of the delegation was scheduled to go | for pigs to eat, being so small, are with them, The Downtown Unemployed Coun- | | given to some of the unemployed. Last month the 1932 elty budget | cil who is leading the struggles of | was adopted, calling for close to a these East Side workers, was notified | million and a half dollars expendi- Sirovich suddenly ‘ound he had im-| portant ousiness in Washington and | therefore could not mee! the workers on Monday but would ee ther. Sun- day, hoping in this way to avoid hav- | ing masses of workers in front of his! house. | Immediately a delegation of three workers, N. Ball, M. Stone, and H. Zack, from the Unemployed Council, | were elected to see Sirovich and de- | mand to know why he is not leeping the appointment with the delegation. When the workers got there and asked for an explanation the con- gressman dilly-dallied. He tried to soft-soap the workers by telling them how much he thought of the Soviet | Union, what a soft heart he really had and how he felt for all the workers. Bal] cut him short. “The! workers can’t live on sympathy and, descriptions of good and bad hearts. | | We'll believe what you say when you answer our demands.” Sirovich didn’t this. mean, are you giving 1 orders to be here tomorrow?” he asked. | The congressman showed what he | was afraid of when he blurted out, | “You people came in for one purpose, | | to expose me.” The whole lie of his having to go to Washington was shown up in the different stories he told of when he had to leave. First he said he was leaving for Washington Sunday, p.m., then he changed it to 4 p.m.,| and when he workers were about to} leave he said, “I’m leaving tomor- row,” he caught himself and said, “I mean today.” workers are going to Sirovich’s house | at 539 E. 6th St. as scheduled. ‘The march will start from the cor- | hours, sanitary conditions on the job, | | by @ police sergeant when he deliv-|ture this year. jered the permit for the parade that/ | spent? How will this be ‘The appropriation for the ORGANIZATION OF | CAFETERIAS ON) \Food: Workers Union | Launches Drive Union conditions and recognition | of the union were won by the work~ | ers of the Royal Cafeteria, 827 Broad~ | | way, today, when the boss signed up | With the Food Workers’ Industrial | Union. The drive to organize the cafeteria workers of New York, over 200,000 of whom are working under the most miserable conditions, is now being prepared by the Food Work- ers’ Industrial Union. In the cafeterias, | placing men at Jess than one-third “What do you | 3\ 5 of the wages the men were receiving. ‘The speed-up system, combined with the 12-hour shifts, are killing the workers on the job. Actual condi- tions of slavery exist in many cafe~ terias, where the bosses corral the workers like cattle in boarding houses. have not even the time to get a breath of fresh air, going from the boarding house to the cafeteria and back again and receiving pay as low 8 $40 a month. The union is developing an or- | ganization campaign to demand: Increase in pay protection of the job, ne restrictions as to choice of food, ‘against discrimination, against for- The delegation and the parade of | eign-born and Negro workers on the job, equal pay for equal work for | women and young workers, shorter ner of 7th St. and Avenue A, and go/ against wage-cuts. through the East Side. presented. “If Booth Had Missed,” Goodman's play which won the first National Long Play Tournament at t Craig Theatre last spring, wil) open at the Royale Theatre on Thursday. The cast includes Dan- iel Poole, Royal Dana Tracy, Howard | Kyle, Catherine Proctor and John Nicholson. “If Booth Had Missed” occurs during the reconstruction | period following the Civil War. “The Left, Bank,” Elmer Rice's | comedy, with Katherine Alexander in the leading role, will play its 125th performance at the Little Theatre tonight. Helen Twelvetrees in “Panama | | Flo,” with Charles Bickford, Robert | Armstrong, Marjorie Peterson, isthe | sereen feature at the Hippodrome. Diamond Boys; Pepito, Spanish clown; George Givot, Freddie Pisano & Co.; Renoff, Renova, Renova and Bekefi; Sandy Derson; Mary Palmer and sieiod|| “Boy”; the Knight Troups. “Cynara,” at the Morosco Theatre, | celebrates its 100th performance to- | Tae day, Arthur | An organization committee of 39 | union members are in charge of the organisation campaign. NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES FAST SIDE—BEONE RKO qiamp 25rd fit RKO Acts— Nell Golden & His Diamond Entertatners Clyde Cook | Lewis Mack Eddle Allen & Bobbie Gorman Campus Frolics Today to Tuenday On the Screen— of Women’ with Miriam Hopkins Deeres ne Phillips Holmes —RKO Acts— Wynne Gibson Si Cero} a NNick Stuart. |—Added Attraction— Bil Telnak JACK DEMPSEY Hutchins and returps to Smith “LURE of the RING” The Gray Official motion milly jure record of bi vinnie Connor ||\Mghts and knockouts big bouts of the eight years. LAST Two DAYS! ostoyevsky’s Great Novel Comes to Life! KARAMAZOV Screened from the Famous Book by Dostoyeysky WEDNESDAY COMING “CAIN” And Directed by Fyodor Ozen ACME THEATRE THE REBELLED AGAINST Featuring / Anne Sten 14th Street & Union Square STORY OF A MAN WHO SOCIETY girls are re- | The workers in these places | ‘Two Kinds | | “poor” was reduced, for hospitals was | cut in half, for the “Kiddie Keep ‘Well Camp,” where undernourished workers’ children are supposed to go | in summer, the appropriation of $7.50 given last year, was cut out al- together this year. But for bankers, the note and bondholders the appropriation was more than over last year. ‘ PATERSON, N.J., Jan. 31.—A com- mittee of the Unemployed Council was sent to the mayor and Board of Public Works to get a permit to use the City Hall Plaza for Feb. 4, but were denied. Then the Unem- ployed Council mobilized all the working-class organizations in Pat~ terson and these organizations sent protests to the mayor, Board of Pub- manding that the City Hall Plaza be given to the Unemployed Council for the Feb. 4 demonstration. Jan. 29 a conference of sixteen working-class organizations was held in preparation for the Feb. 4 demon- stration. A committee that was elected was sent to the mayor on Jan. 30. It was instructed to de~ mand the City Hall Plaza for the Unemployed Council on Feb, 4, Meanwhile the preparations were going ahead regardless of the permit being granted or not. The mayor was told that if there would be any interference with the dem- onstration the mayor and the city for the consequences. give the City Hall Plaza and prom- ised that there would not be any The demonstration will be held at 123 o’clock noon and all workers em- ployed or unemployed of Paterson as individuals to take part in the/| demonstration of the unemployed the | $600,000, an increase of over $200,000 | lic Works and the chief of police de- | for | preparations for the demonstration | administration would be responsible | ‘The mass pressure compelled the | mayor and the city administration to | police or any other interference with | the unemployed workers on Feb. 4./ should come in organized groups and | ie. S. U, |. Starting Training Classes Monday, Feb. 8th The Friends of the Soviet Union, | realizing the importance of training | their members in order to build more branches, is establishing an F.S.U. | training course. Monday evening, February 8, at the F.S.U. Downtown Branch headquar- ters, 216 E. 14th» St., 8 p.m, This is the last chance for all unregistered | students to register. ‘The courses will be given on Mon- weeks. The class in organization. will be taught by Marcel Scherer, from 7 to 8 p.m, The class in public speaking will be taught by Carl] Brodsky, from 8 to 9 pm. The class in history of the Soviet Union by A. A. Heller, from 9 to 10 p.m. The Italian section of the Friends of the Soviet Union is arranging for similar classes in the Italian lang- uage. For information get in touch with Comrade Altieri, care of F. 8. U., 80 FE. Oy St., Room 238, HARBOR WORKERS | Lay Base for New York Conference | NEW YORK, Feb. 1—In prepar- ling to hit the wage cuts that are sweeping throughout New York har- | bor, @ meeting of barge captains rep- | resenting various barge and towing companies was held yesterday at the | |New York Branch of the Marine! | Workers Industrial Union. Delegates representing Henry} | Steers, Inc., Walters, Petri and Trap- | rock barge companies were present. All told of the wage cuts and unem- ployment which is seriously effecting the harbor workers. The need of un- ity among the scowmen and towboat- | men, and problems and methods of | preparing for strike were discussed. The proposal for a unity conference to rally all the harbor workers, scow- | | | The classes will start ; day evenings—and will last for 8} HIT WAGE CUTS NEW YORK—A mass conference of workers in the dress trade was \ held at Irving Plaza, 15th St.eand | Irving Place, yesterday. The chair- man of the United Front delivered a report to the workers present on the present situation and tasks facing the dress workers, A reso- lution was introduced urging all workers to follow the united front policy as the only way to defeat the strike-breaking maneuvers of the reactionary International union, Sascha Zimmerman, notorious tool of the LL.G.W.U. officialdom, tried {to disrupt the meeting and provoke a fight with the workers. Due to the proletarian discipline maintained at the meetings by all workers, he failed, as also in his attempts to in- troduce a resolution asking the dis- the joining of the International union by the dress workers. When this trick had been exposed and de- feated, Zimmerman asked the work- ers to follow him out of the hall. None but a few of his henchmen left their seats. It was very signifi- cant that of the few workers who followed him not one was 0 womai worker, ‘The conference from that point on proceeded in a very orderly fashion, with a number of highly important | matters taken up, discussed and de- cided upon, The delegates to the conference represented 260 shops with a working force of 6,000, In the general report it was pointed out that 100 shops had come out on strike up to now. Of this number, 60 had settled and gone back under union conditions, All told, 1,500 tions as a result of the strikes. ‘The challenge issued to Zimmer- solution of the Industrial Union and | workers tecelyed ‘real union condi- | Dress Conference Defeats ‘Zimmerman Disruption Move man to debate Ben Gold at the New Star Casino was unanswered by that renegade and traitor to the workers. When Zimmerman failed to show up, Gold took the floor and proved that his failure to face the workers in debate policy branded Zimmerman, together with his whole record, as a tool of the dress bosses and the reactionary 1U,G.W.U. Many International unién mem~ bers took the floor, greeted the united front policy and promised to be among the most active in the come ing strike. A mass meeting was scheduled for the Mecca Temple this Wednesday, at which the question of the general strike in the dress trade will be taken up and a strike vote taken. All workers nre urged to elect pelegnes to the conference. SOCCER RESULTS “Division Red Sparks 2, Italian American t, Tico 5, Falcon 1. . “B” Division. Sous of Malta 4, Esthonian Wkrs. 2. Harlem Prog. 2, Armenian Wkrs. 1. Crotona 2, Gordon 0. Red Sparks 2, Dress Wear 0. “C” Division. East Side Wkrs. 2, Red Sparks 0. Williamsburg Wkrs. 1, Dauntless 0. Spartacus 1, Harlem Progressive 0. Adriatics 4, Pirates 0. Colonial 1, Brownsville Workers 0. Crotona 5, iwowntown Workers: 2. Pirates 6, Needle Trades A. C. 2. Harlem Wrkrs. 3, Prospect Wrks. 3. Red Sparks 1, Hero 0, “In one word, you reprosch us with intending te do away with your property. Precisely so; that fe Jost what we intend.”—Marx. workers on Feb. 4 at City Hall Plaza, | men, lightermen and towboatmen to! Paterson. | meet the wage cuts was agreed upon. See Who Advertises in Your Own Daily eer |'The date of the conference will be} |mass demonstrations for unemploy- | ment insurance and immediate re- | lief will be held in the district: St. Paul, 11 am., Court House; Duluth, 2 p.m., Court House Square; Superior, 4 pm., Broadway and Hammond; Hibbing, 2 p.m., Market Square; Ely; Eveleth, 8 p.m., Urania Hall; Chisholm; Virginia; Gilbert; Ironwood, Farmers’ Market Square; Hancock; Escanaba; Newberry, Ne~- gaunee. MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., Jan. 31.—~|! ;On Thursday, Feb. 4, the following | | Minneapolis, 4 pm., Bridge Square; | announced soon. Jt was brought out at the meeting that barge captains who had been receiving $90 to $125 a month are now getting $60 to $75. { DIES OF STARVATOIN CHICAGO. CHICAGO, Ill.—Edward Brennan, 59, an unemployed worker was found | dead in a cot at a Salvation Army | Shelter. He had come to the shelter half starved only a few days previous. The workers at the shelter knew he died of slow starvation. EUGENE 0’NE HOMECOMING GUILD THEATRE, 52n MOURNING BECOMES ELECTRA COMPOSED OF THREE PLAYS PRESENTED ON ONE DAY THE HUNTED Ist PERFORMANCE (HOMECOMING) 5:30 to 2nd PERFORMANCE (THE HUNTED & HAUNTED) 8:10 to 11:20 PRICES PA Balcony $1.00, 31.50, $2.00, $3.00; y PARTS Orchestra and front baleony $4.00 (Tickets may be purchased separately for either performance nt one-half the above prices) AMUSEMENTS Se THE THEATRE GUILD PRESENTS ILL’S TRILOGY THE HAUNTED id St., West of Broadway 7:00 The Theatre Gulld Presents REUNION IN VIENNA A Comedy By ROBERT E. SHERWOOD Martin Beck THEA, 45% St, & & Ave. Dve, $:40 Mats. Thurg.Sat 2:40 EVERYBODY'S WELCOME ‘The new musical comedy hit, FRANCES WILLIAMS, OSCAR SHAW, ANN PENNINGTO: with Eve, 8:30, Mats. Wed,, & Sat, Workers’ Correspondence is the backbone of the revolutionary press. Build your press by writing for it about your day-to-day struggle sHARRIETY LAKE. SHUBERT Thea., 44th St., W. of Bw'y | 2130 | in \QUEENIE SMITH A LITTLE RACKETEER The New Musical Comedy Hit! BEST DANCING SHOW IN TOWN | 44th St. THEATRE. West of B’ | Bvgs. 8:30, Muts. Wed, & Sat., Oth Ave. HiPPObREX & 43rd St BIGGEST SHOW LN NEW YORK RKO) Heldn Twelvetrees acls pee bal A) ” oraz? | “Panama Flo COUNSELLOR-AT-LAW . 4 St, Ev. 5:20 Plymouth ™ Teore. & Set. 2:30 | By JOHN Tauthor of ti A Workers School 35 E. 12th St. "STEEL” (A PLAY IN THREE ACTS) WEXLEY he Last Mile) Direction of ROBERT ROSSEN Played by Professional Cast so First Public Exhibition MARGARET BOURKE-WHITE’S Remarkable Photographs of Steel Production the U.S.S.R. and Other Industrial Centers AUSPICES:—Workers School and Daily Worker February 17th and 18th at 8:30 p.m. Tickets On Sale At: Workers aldas 48 B. 12th St. Admission—$1, 75c, 50c By With | ELMER RICE PAUL MUNI} Dr. M LSEN ys SURGEON DENTIST Extraction Specialist 851 East 162nd Street Corner Prospect Ave. One block from Prospect Avenue Subway Station Phone: KUpatrick 5-5028 Intern’) Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 1 UNION SQUARE STS FLOCE 4U Werk Done Under Persona! Care of DR JOSEPHSON Int'l Workers Order OPTICIANS a 4 ae, Harry Stolper, Inc. 73-18 CHRYSTIE STREET Third Ave. Cay to Hester 6¢.) 9 am. to 6 pm. Daily Phone: Dry Dock 4-4523 Patronize the Concoops Food Stores anD Restaurant 2700 BRONX PARK EAST “Buy wm the Co-operative Store and help the Left Wing Movement.” When the Winter Winds Begin to Blow You will find it warm and cory ed Camp Nitgedaiget You can rest tn the proletarian comradely atmosphere rovided te the Hotel—you will also tind tt well heated with steam bea’ hot water end many other rove! ‘be food is el; ib apd especially well pared. PECIAL NATES FOR WEEK. ENDS $3.00 - 5,50 - 6.00 For further information call the— COOPERATIVE OFFICE 2800 Bronx Park Ennt Tel.—Beterbrook 8-1400 Death Benefit: $4,635,677,04 at the age of 44. CLASS &: 80 certe per Death Renesit zecording to aze §: yy forty, tor another forty wee! MELROSE DAIRY Vzerranian pee a Comrades Will Alwaya Find Pleasant to Dine at Onr Place. 1781 SOUTHERN BLVD. (near 174th St Station) fELEPHONE INTERVALE Brens SH0160 Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 199 SECOND AVENUES Bet, 12th and 8th Ete. Strictly Vegetarian food You All Know JOHN’S RESTAURANT JADE MOUNTAIN AMERICAN and CHINESE RESTAURANT 11 a. m. to 1:30 8. wm. oy Special Lunch 11 to 4...35¢ Dinner 5 to 10.. .55¢ 197 SECOND AVENUE Between 12th and 13th AU ' omrades Meet ot BRONSTEIN'S Vegetarian Health Restaurant $58 Cleremort Parkway, Bronx HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian Restaurant 1600 MADISON AVENDE Pheue University 4-0081 Siberia-Russian RESTAURANT 315 East 10th St, Bet. Ave. A and Ave. B PAUL SINIAKEDES—Send sddrecs at once. Grossberg. Large, Beautiful room for two, All improvements. 71 E. 7th; St Cher- WORKMEN’S SICK AND DEATH OF THE UNITED STATES OF A ORGANIZED 1864—INCORPORATED 1800 Main Office: 714-716 Seneca Ave., Ridgewood Sta. Brooklyn, N. ¥ Over 60,000 Members in 350 Branches Reserves on December 31, 1930; $3,334,672.32 Benefits paid since its existence: CLASS 4: # cente per month—Deaih Becedt $085 gt the 6 $200 Sick Benefit paid from the fin "Say of filing the doctor's certificate, 315, resnpetieely, La gd week, for the Srst forty weeks. bel? of the paid ROOM TO RENT—Friedman, 3178 Coney Island Ave., Brooklyn. ENEFIT FUND ERICA Sick Benefit: $11,458,176.98 Total: $16,089,451.97 Workers! Protect Your Families! In Case of Sickness, Accident or Decth! Beuett according to the age at the Ume of tnltisetion is @ of 16 to $115 Month—Death Benefr $55 to Sai, Parente may !neure thelr ote in ‘ase of death up to thetage of LA % ‘* Benfits for hla $9 per week fox the Gret forty weeks: 9480 ceed the Mais Office, Willer Sprky, Wettens! Gearehery. co to tar Vinunctel Socresatiee Of ths Brenches.

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