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pane. a DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, , THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1008 8 Conterence to Support the Daily Worker on Sunday MEW YORK.—<Appealing to the ‘wotteers of New York to support their revolutionary paper, the Daily W er, the New York District Daily Worker committee issued a call to all workers’ organivations, trade unions, fraternal, benefit and cultural or- gemimations to elect Daily Worker Committees and send them to a cc erence to be held on Sunday, Feb- reasy 14th, 11 a. m., at Irving Plaza We, 15th St. and Irving Place, "This conference is doubly impor- tant because now as never before rally to the support } of the only all English revolutionary | paper ting against starvation, un- | employment and the dafiger of a new imperialist bloodbath, | All workers are further urged to| take up ate collections for the | Daily I at the 5th floor, “Save the Daily | coupon book. Have them sold in your shops, unions, and fra- ternal organizations. Have all of- ganizations arrange affairs for the Worker. it necessary to THOUSANDS DEMONSTRATE AS DRESS STRIKE SPREADS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) of L. officialdom, new have not been in the union members of the International, bers of the Industrial Union, marched in solid ranks to demon- strate their determination to secure union conditions in this strike Workers throughout the garment center stopped to watch this Geet stration and read with great int the strike bulletin issued United Front Strike Commi Many workers who were hesitant up to now, joined the ranks of the attikers and came down to the strik- ing halls. Many new shops joined the ranks elements who before, mem 1 of the strikers yesterday. Many of the wotkers who came down yester- day are already today active in the Orgenization Committee, going to call other workers down on strike Meetings of shop chairmen and committees were held in the striking halis yesterday where all Shops lo- eated in a particular building and all buildings on one block were organ- ied into block and building commit- tees and took upon themselves the task of bringing down the other shops ih their respective blocks and build- ines. Unemployed Strikers To Strike Activities. At the mass meeting of unemployed Intensify workers, yester a report of the Strike Committee was given. It was detided that an intensive campaign shotild be started to register all the unemployed workers in the strike hails, to issue a special call to the workers to register, and to orzanize the unemployed for active tioh in the Ofganization ¢ and in the block and bx fhittees so as to spread ahd to provide more jobs for employed aftre a settlement he made. Whar’s On— FHraspay A meeting of all actiwe Basty Fades in unemployment work ter. 3b B lems will ke 1a- The Workers’ Inter Wrsbington Heights fest at School No St. at 3:30 pw ant Efhizations are urger Alteration plumbe 108 H. iath St. a A embership + gz of th Furniture Wo ers ustrial Union wil be hel 30 p.m. at 108 14th St. After the regular business | meeting John Steuben w All furniture workers invited to attend A special meeting of the Joe Hill Branch of the ELD. will be held at 108 Lexington Ave. at 6:30 p.m. ervey eS The N. Y, District of the Fri as ot the Soviet Union is holding a mass r meeting on Thursday, § ft. Nicholas Arena, 69 W. 66th William Z. Foster, I Amter, Scott Nearing, M. Olgin wili Speak, also Chinese’ and Japanes Speakers. All workers, friends and Sympathizers of the Soviet Union are urged to attend * 11, at St. at & p.m oo) ue ‘The Bxecutive Committee of the Bronx Section of the I.L.D. will meet at 1400 Boston Road at 3 p.m ee A special membership meeting of Xhe Office Workers Union will be hala at Labor Temple, 14th St. and Beeond Ave, at 7 p.m FRIDAY The Rea Sparks Athletic Club will Rave a genelar meeting at § pm At 380 Grand st A. beoftsboro, Youth Rally, called by the Youth Branches ¢ aha supported by the Yl take place at Ambassador Claremont 3 pth. All young wited, 4 ear’ © Alteration painters, downtown sec- wil] meet at § p.m. at 124 F, ath t. All painters are welcome ee a A leeture, "7 History of the You Her 'Bourhtrn iva. Bronx at The Pro 1826 Southern | Hy facture on the Scotisbc Pp. and ee ‘he Both Beach Workers’ WIN) Rave a dance at thelr cht 46 Bay 28th St, lyn ers are invited discussion on ers’ strike wi Cub nbFOOME, All work- sent dress held at the Workers’ Club, klyn, at 8 p.m ited. George Powers will loeture on the Present economic cri tho Work- ern’ Fakunfe Club, 3 nd Ave, a 8 p.m Wpstein will lecture on ke ky Strike” at the x Workers’ Chun, 795 | Tehiiy , Brooklyn, at 8 p.m. A‘ workers of Willianisburg are in- vited, ak ioe, Louis EB hh of the Tid, Workers’ hi Slinton . Ay (rade union movement and the wilt be discussed at the Fle Progressive Youth Club, 1497 on Ave, at 8 pm. Admission all] | St, where the pay Negro Workers To Spread Strike. A special meeting of Negro work- ers was held Wednesday morning at the strike headquartets, 559 6th Ave. Maude White and Ben Gold, secre- tary of the Strike Committee, re- ported on the strike, the need of more unity between the white and Negro worker's, and a special committee was elected to activize the Negro work- ers and help to spread the strike among this section of the workers. | Italian Workers Plan Strike Activities. A meeting of Italian workers was held for the purpose of spreading the strike among the Italian dressmak- ers. A huge open air meeting has been planned by the Strike Committee to take place today, 12 o'clock, in the garment center, where leaders and the rank and file members of the Mass Sttike Committee will speak on the strike. Entertainments for the strikers will be held this afternoon at Manhattan Lyceum and the headquarters at 559 6th Ave. With the assistance of the Jolin Reed Club, the Jewish Art Theatre and the Cultural Federa- tion, entertainments for the strikers are being arranged for this afternoon in both halis at 2 p.m. After the entertainments thefe will be mass picketing in front of all the striking shops To Decide Policy on Settlements and To Spread Strike. A meeting of the Strike Commit- tee will be held this morning, 11 a. m., at the strike headquarters, 559 6th Ave., to report on further pto- gress of the strike and to decide on the policy with regard to settlements with the individual employers who have sent in applications for settle- ments. Fur Workers Receive One and Two Day Sentences. Fanny Warshafsky, a leading work~ er in the fur trade and L. Scheer, Sol Jacobson, Isidor Cohen of the B. J. Dretel striking fur shop, were senténeed to 2 days imprisonment yesterday afternoon in Jefferson | Market Court Striking Dressmakers Dismissed. Seventeen striking dressmakerts, arrested Tuesday, were dismissed in Night Court, since no charges could be proved against them. They im- mediately went back on the picket- line Yellow Press Lies. All the enemies of the strike came out yesterday with more vicious at- tacks on the workers’ united front. The Jew Forward which on Tues- day said, “There is no strike; no shops are stopped,” said yesterday that “the strike is licked.” The way the yellow Forward licks strikes is indeed amazing. The Day, another paper printed in Yiddish in New York, only two days ago said that “the strike is of ho value.” Yesterday this same yellow rag contradicts itself by admitting that “many bosses are demanding settlements.” Ochinan, 6ne of the main gorillas of the Schlesinget group of racke- teets, advised the bosses not to settle with the United Front Committee. He advised the bosses that the settled shops would not be recoghized by the gangster unions. All these frantic maneuvers 6f the boss press and the fake unions show clearly that the strike is spréading and is worrying them. Harlem Shops Out. In the Harlem four chops are now down. The Harlem Beguty Girls Shop at 4 E. 116th St., where the wages ranged from $7 to $13 a week; has joined the strike. The New Model Dress Shop at 8 W. 113th St. came down to fight for union condi- tions. The wages in this shop ranged from 38 to $16 per week. The Capelito Shop at 204 E, 107th s of the workers renges from $8 to $15 a week, joined th the striking Harlem shops, An Italian shop near 104th St. is also striking. More of the Harlem shops are ex- pected to join the strike today. Let- ters have come in to the strike head- quarters from the shop committees various shops in Haflem stating their willingness to join the United Front Strike. There were over 120 workers out yesterday from the four striking Harlem shops. Delegates from vari- ous of the Harlem shops came to the trike Harlem headquarters at 2011 Third dve. yesterday. Strike en- thusiasm is spreading throughout the shops in Harlem. A mass strike conference will be held at the Harlem headquarters on Feb, 14 at 2 p.m. All mass ofganiza- tions, unions, block committees, fac- tory and shop committees are invited to aliond the conference in a body. Dressmakers! Rally to the mass demonstration at noon today! Join the strike against Starvation! Negro a N. Bay yril! ak on “The pcinse Stru a* the Lawrence Arai af the E1.D, at ee feger 9 at 8:30 p.m | and white workers, native and for- ¢u born, out on the picket line to- LS.N.R. Endorses Dressmakers Strike NEW YORK. — The League of struggle for Negro Rights, New York District, endorses the present strike called by the United Front Committee of the Needle Trades Industrial Union. We support the struggle being zarried on by the union through the United Front Rank and File Committee for the unity of Negro and white workers, and against the discrimination against Negro workers in the industry. The re- cent mass trial conducted by the union against white chauvinism is & stimulus for the complete elimi- nation of bosses ideology of race prejudice in the ranks of the workers. The I. L, G. W., the company whion, is feverishly attempting to spread race hatred among the workers and is thereby playing the yame of the bosses in beating down the resistance of the workers by stirring up race and national prej- udice. The League of Struggle for Ne- gro Rights pledges active support to the Needle Trades Workers strike on the picket line, and in mobilizing all of its members in participating in the strike commit. tees. 9 Tool and Die Workers Strike At Lockout NEW YORK. — Desperate at his failure to break the militant strike of the 90 workers of his shop against the lockout, the boss of the Durable: Tool and Die Shop at 254 Canal St. is now resorting to an injunction in a new strike breaking move. Wednesday morning a member of the strike committee was served with a tefporary restraint prohibiting picketing and ordering the entire strike committee and other strikers to appear in court Thursday morn- ing on a hearing for an injunction. The workers are determined to win this strike, injunction or no injunc- tion, and with the help of the Metal Workers Industrial League which is leading the struggle, they will orga- nize mass picketing in defiance of this injunction. This injunction is one of the most vicious and drastic one eve} perpe- trated by the bosses in order to break a strike. Not only is it aimed at the workers in the shop and the strike committee, but also agaist the Metal Workers Industrial League. The ‘Trade Union Unity League and the Trade Union Unity Council and any other organization and membership thereof who will support the strike morally and otherwise. ‘The boss made an attempt to bring in scabs Tuesday morning, most of whom when approached by the work- ers with an appeal not to scab, did not go up to the shop, or went up and came down immediately. A dozen of these would-be scabs were sent by J, L. Unterweiser, a plumber of 1671 Lexington Avenue and a friend of the boss. One of them turned over to the pickets the business card of this plumber with a note to the boss that the beater théfeof was willing to scab. All workers must consider it their duty to help smash the injunction by piéketing in front of the shop and by giving financial aid and other relief in support of tyis strike. Members of the Young Communist League, Attention ! A SPECIAL MEMBERSHIP MEETING OF THE Y.C.L. OF NEW YORK WILL BE HELD ‘THIS SUNDAY, FEB. 14, 1932, AT 2 P.M. AT WORKERS’ CENTER, 35 B. 12TH ST., ROOM 205. Dist. Buro of C.P., Dist. 2 Dist. Buro of Y.C.L-, Dist. 2 1 Dress Strike United Front Calls to Support Tag Days NEW YORK —The Dress United Front Strike Committee yesterday is- sued a rally call to all wortkers to support the Workers’ International Relief tag day for the Kentucky Striking miners and. the striking dressmakers, Satufday ahd Sunday, Feb. 13 and Feb. 14. The statement reads in part as follows: Fellow Workers! Hoover, coh- gress and the senate gave two billion dollars of the workers’ money to the railroad owners and the bankers and refused to give one cent to the starving unem- ployed. “Green and Woll approve this hunger policy of the Hoover-Wall Street government. They, too, op- pose genuine unemployment in- surance, The workers, therefore, will have to fight for unemploy- ment insurance, strike against wage-cuts, and finance their own struggles, “This is exactly what the dress- makers, led by their rank and filé strike committee, and the Ken- tucky miners, led by the National Miners’ Union, are doing, The full solidarity of the working class with these workers is an immediate necessity in the smashing attack of the workers against the Hoover- Wall Street hunger campaign, “We call upon the workers of New York to actively participate in the tag day, gather funds and to contribute as much as they can for the strike relief activities of the Workers’ International Relief. Sup- port the tag day with all your might and energy! Forward to a victory for the miners and dress- makers and a smashing defeat to the Greens and Wolls and all other enemies of the working class!” Dress Rank and File Strike Committee, Migdol, Secretary. Ben Gold, Chairman. ‘The Workers’ International Relief announces that the relief kitehen for the dressmakets at the strike hall, 559 Sixth Ave., will begin distribut- ing coffee and food to the strikers today. The kitchen at the Manhat- tan Lyceum will be open in @ day or so. If every worker will participate in the tag days the W.LR. will be able (Sgd.) | to feed every single striker. Support the tag day! Refer to yesterday's ee MAURICE SCHWARTZ IN TCHE- KOFF PLAY AT FRANKLIN THEATRE Maurice Schwartz, noted Jewish dramatic star who recently appeared on Broadway in ‘Tollet’s play, “Bloody Laughtéf,” will opeh at the Franklin Theatre, beginning Satur- day, in. “The Life of An Actor,” a one-act» dramatic playlet. by Anton Tchekoff. The screen features of the week include “Panama Flo,” with Helen Twelvetrees, Saturday to Tues- day, and Lew Ayeres in “Heaven Oh Earth” from Wednesday to Friday. The third week of the record- breaking Soviet film, “Road to Life,” first Russian talkie, commences to- day. Last week’s attendance at this picture tops all previous second weeks, Without exception, and only the first week of “Road to Life” has drawn more patronage at the theatre. uiMASSES FEBRUARY 189392 HAVE MORE CRIMINAL SYNDICALISM sy SHERWOOD ANDERSON ASTORY ... oF MICHAEL GOLD joun Dos Passos THE CASE OF D: RIVERA 0 Boas ANTI-WA R RALLY TONIGHT for the Defense of the Chinese Soviets and the Socialist Soviet Republics SPEAKERS: ISRAEL AMTER WM. Z. FOSTER MOISSAYE J. OLGIN SCOTT NEARING CHINESE AND JAPANESE NEGRO DELEGATE FROM SOVIET UNION Thurs. February 11, 1932 ST. NICHOLAS ARENA, 66 WEST 66th ST. THE WESTERN WORKER A fighter to organize and lead our struggles in the West RAISE FUNDS! 52 Issues $2 Name ... City ..c.0s BUILD IT! 26 Issues $1 SUBSCRIBE NOW! 13 Issues 50c ale. Btrect .... seeeeeee SEAlO ci secere ceeneeeeter Western Worker Campaign Committee 1164 MARKET STREET, San Francisco, Calif. Dally Wofker for the full list of tag day stations or get in touch with the W.AIR., 16 W. 21st St, N.Y.C. The W.LR. calls the attention of all workers’ Orgahizations to the fact that the City Clubs of New York have collected and donated $600 to the Kentucky-Tennessee Striking Miners’ Relief Campaign of the W. I. R. and that this organization chal- lenges all othér workers’ organiza- tions that it will collect more funds than any other group in the comin: miners and dressmakers tag da Workers organizations, what is yr. ansWer to the City Clubs? Landlord Asks to Settle for $3 Cut Stop Two. Evictions Wor'ers Meet to Stop 27 More Threatened Under the leadership of the Lower Bronx Unemployed Council, 105 ten- ant& living at 690, 692, 700 and 702 Fest 139th St. are on a Rent Strike. ‘The landlord has already offered to give a $2 and $3 rent reduction but the tehants are determined to wih the 10 per cent that they demand. ‘These houses are owned by the Near- ing Bros. and_ since two of their houses on strike~at Olinville Ave. haye shown that hte workers are de- términéed through organization to Win thé landlord is running after the House Committee to settle but the workers ate determined to win the 10 per ¢ent rent reduction. Many of these workers have had wage cuts and havé to work long hours for thiserably low wages and find it hard to pay the large rents. This Saturday night, Feb. 13, at Cypress Ave. and 139th St. the work- ers will hold an open air meeting where they will speak on what they have gained through organization. ‘Three families of 524 East 136th St. were taken by the Unemployed Countil to P. 8. 9 Home Relief Buro which was forced to take care of these workers by giving them aid and paying their rent. The workers of this vieinity are organizing into house and block committees to fight against evictions. 2 PROTEST DOAK DEPORTATION DRIVE MONDAY NEW YORK.—On Monday, Febru- ary 15, 8). m. a mass protest Ineeting against the Hoover-Doak plan to in= tetisify the persecution and deporta- tion of the foreign-born will be held {in Webster Hall, 119 East 11th Street. The meeting will be addressed by Wm, 2. Foster, Max Levin, attorney for the Committee for the Protection of the Foreign-Born and Louis Eng- dahl, all members of the delegation whith leaves for a heafing to Wash- ington, D. C., in fegard to the anti- foreign-born bills which will be taken up by the immigration committee on Tuesday, Feb. 16th. ‘The Immigratioh Committee of the United States Congress is preparing the atmosphere for the passage of the anti-foreign-born bills. Should these bills be passed, foreign-born workers will lose their tight to strike and to struggle against discrimination, wage cuts, htinger and starvatioii. All workers, native and foreign- born, Negro and white, are called to support the struggle against thése reactionary ahti-foreign-born bills. The delegation which is being sent to Washington by the Committee for Protection of the Foreigh-Borh and the I. L. D. will state before congress the determined fesistatice of the na- tive and foreign-born to fight against further pefsecution and deportation of the foreign-born, Workers of uhions, shops and fra- ternal organizations are called to at- tend this very important meeting, and ih this way to express solidarity with the foreign-born and to endorse this delegation. WILLIAM POWELL IN “HIGH PRESSURE” AT HIPPODROME Vaughn De Leath, of radioland, is this week’s vaudeville headliner at the Hippodrome. Begining sattr- day the screen features William Powell in “High Préssuré,” with Evelyn Brent and George Sidney. Other vaudeville acts include Frank Conville, with Suny Dale; “A Porce- Jain Rothancé,” the fevue which played four weeks at the Palace, with the Gahjou Brothers, Louise Gay, Billy Hendricks and Misses Fourniere and Devile; Milsl and Robinson; Red Donahue and Uno; Rogan and Trig- ger; Frosini, and Winnie and Dolly in “By the Sea.” AMUSEMENTS “Unpfecedented Throngs” “The whole picture is bursting with a vitality and animal spirit which makes most of our films seem pallid ahd hothouse enough.” sCAMEO THE THBATRE GUILD EUGENE O'NEILL'S Trilogy Mourning Becomes Electra Composed of 8 playa presented on 1\day HOMECOMING, THE HUNTED THE HAUNTED Commencing at 6:30 eharp. Binher tn- termission of one hour at 7, No Mats. GUILD THEA., 524 St., W. of B'way ‘The Theatre Gulld Presents REUNION IN VIENNA A Comedy .By ROBERT EB. SHERWOOD. Martin Beck 72h We vs 8:40 Mats. Thurs.Sat.2:40 And ST America Is Startled BY FIRST SOVIET TALKING PICTURE OF RUSSIA’S “WILD CHILDREN” (WITH TITLES IN ENGLISH) —N. Y. Times. —N. ¥. Herald Tribune. 3rd Capacity Week ALL SEATS 10 A. M, to 25 COUNSELLOR-AT-LAW i ELMER RICE PAUL MUNI Plymouth Thea. W. 45 St. Ev. 8:20 Mat. Thuts. & Sat. 2:20 EXTRA HOLIDAY MAT. FRIDAY QUEENIE SMITH A LITTLE RACKETEER The New Musical Comedy Hit! BEST DANCING SHOW IN TOWN!. 44th St. THEATRE, weat of Bway, ves. $:30, Mats. Wed. & Sat, 2:30 Very shop, fine and factory a feftile field for Daily Worker sub- scriptions. Bway in By JOHN in Workers School 35 B. 12th St. “STEEL” (A PLAY IN THREE ACTS) (Author of the Last Mile) , Direction of ROBERT ROSSEN Played by —e Cast First Public © Exhibition MARGARET BOURKE-WHITE’S Remarkable Photographs of Steel Production U.S.S.R. and Other Industrial Centers Webster Hall, 11th St., bet. 3rd & 4th Aves. AUSPICES:—Workers School and Daily Worker February 17th and 18th at 8:30 p.m. Tickets On Sale At: Admission—$1, 75c, 50c WEXLEY the Workers Bookshop 48 E. 12th St. Off Trade British government would take ment with the Soviet Union, WORKERS IN TWO HOUSES WIN RENT REDUCTIONS Workers Stick to De mand for 10 Per Cent The rent strike movement in New York and the struggle against evic- tions continues to record further vic- tories. Forty tenatits ffom the housé at 2045 Gates Avenue and 2% tenahts from the hotise at 795 E. 18dnd st. both in the Bronx, won $2 rent re- ductions. Committees ftom each house went to their respective land- lords with their demands and were imimediately grahted them, the land- lord remembered the militant rent strike battles that have already taken place in this same section, with the workers unflinching éven before police attacks, Workers stopped an eviction of an unemployed worker and his family from @ house on Gates Avenue near 178th St., Bronx. The furniture was already on the street when the work- ers mobilized by the Mid-Bronk Un- employed Branch held such @ fili- tant demonstration in front of the house that the landlord personally cathe down, and asked the workers to bring back the furniture. Fifteen Workers immediately joined to form & house committee. In Harlem, an unemployed worker, Mofowitz and his family of two chil- dren was evicted at 10 o'clock at night, the landlord hoping to avoid resist- ance at this late hour, but he was fooled. The whole neighborhood was Bnitish Threaten to Cut With U.S.S.R. LONDON.—Announcement was made yesterday that upon the return of Sir John Simon from the Geneva Conference, the steps to cancel the trade agree- This attack on the Soviet Union is an indication of the » rapidity with which the national government of Great Britain un- der the leadership of the social- fascist Mac Donald is carrying out its part in the anti-Soviet frome or the impéfialist éount#ies, Hidden beneath the phrases of “Russian Dumping” is the deadly (CONTINGED ON ‘on PAG THRE) Big Marine Workers Dance Tomorrow at Manhattan Lyceum NEW YORK.—The Marine Workers Datiée at the Manhattan Lyeeumt, 66 'B. 4th St. promises to be the most 6ut- stafiding soéial event of the season. Shirt plays by the InteFhatiofal Workers Order Youth Dramatic Group, music, eats and dancing will be some of the features of the affair. The dance is being held to give finafielal support to the new Matine sub-seétion of thé Communist Party of District Two. The tickets are 25 éénts. All aboard for a real seagoing dance. Don't forget, the ship sails at 8 p, m. tomorrow night. aroused. Members of house cofmiil tees, block committees and members of @ Cominuhist Party unit ame to the workers assistance and at 12 o'clock put his furniture back before the éyes of the helpless landlord and supervisor. ‘The landlord was an especially dispicable breed, thé worker had lived there fivé years afd only owed for two thonths rent. ‘Twenty-seven eviction Summons have beéh served of workers at 2810 Ollinville Avenue in effort to break their strong rent strike. A meeting with fifty tenants present Wa’ held and the workefs are all ready to put up @ bitter struggle against the evic- tions and to win their démands for Feduced fent. See Who Advertises in Your Own Daily “SEROY 657 Allerton Avenae BRONY, N. ¥. Workers! Do the places where you spend your money advertise in the Worker? ASK THEM TO DO IT! SEND US THEIR NAMES! Intern’] Workers Order | DENTAL DEPARTMENT 1 UNION SQUARE eth FLOOR AU Werk Done Undée Peribeal Cate ot DR. JOSEPHEON MELROSE DAIRY Sisracnant ener Beate 1782 SOUTHERN BLVD, Bronx (uber 174th St Station) TELEPHONE VALE Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 199 SECOND AVENUB Bot, itth asd 13th Sta Strictly Vegetarian #008 Daily, Worker 50 E. 13th St., N. Y. SE NE BLADDER ON FIRE? If burhing passages totture you, cash the cause with ‘Quick, results.’ Gold by druggists ib world tor over 100 yeaty. Santal inroustout 8 “Build the Fighting Organiza- tional Fund!” Movies and Dance under the auspices of the FOOD WORKERS IND. UNION FINNISH WORKERS HOME 15 West 126th Street Tomorrow Night at 8 P. M. Motion Picture: “Black Sea Mutiny.” Good Dance Music Admission 25 Cents “CHINA EXPRESS” SOVIET FILM Will Be Shown At The FINNISH HALL 164—40th St. Brooklyn Dance Afier the Show ADMISSION 30¢ CHILDREN 5c RUSSIAN MEALS For Poor Pocketbooks KAVKAZ 332 EB, 14th Street, N. ¥. 6 LUNCH 35¢; DINNER 50c (Por Comrades) Workers & WORKERS IN BURIAL aR Part of receipts goes to Tt. b. nnd Workers” behoor » RE ED..§ STAR SOLLINS’ RESTAURANT 216 EAS1 14TH STREET 6-Course Lanch 53 Cents Regular Dinner 65 Cents “WE STRIKE” and “ON THE BOWERY” Two Revolutionary Acts By DR. MORRI6 LEVITT Published by 1.W.0. Privelse At WORKERS BOOKSHOP 50 E, 13th St, N. ¥. ©. TRIP TO CHICAGO—$8-810, Ask for Keley, 1233 50th St, Brooklyn. Tel BErkshite 7-8120. Daily Worker At Workers RED PLAYERS IN BROWNSVILLE 105 Thatford Avenue, Brooklyn Saturday, February 13th at 8 P. M DRAMA GROUP VIOLINIST RAY GREENBERG, 8-Year Old Bailet Dancer GOOD JAZZ BAND ALL WORKERS INVITED PROCEEDS FOR THE DAILY WORKER Entertainment , Youth Center READOFF,