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\ Page Two poe DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1932 _ Youth Parade, Saturday Against Boss War NEW YORK.—The United Front Anti-War Youth Conference calls apon the youth of tl y to mi and demonstrate their solidarity w the workers and peasants of C 2 this Saturday. The parade art 2 pm. at Rutgers Sq., corner Jef- ferson St. and E parade will go up C St. and Second Ave. to St C sino. The meeting will start at 3:30 p.m. The continuous attacks of the Jap- aneése with the s of the other | imperialist powers, Ameri can imperialism, the drive of the im- perialist warships into the interior on Ohina show that the armed forces of the boss governments are preparing will especially DRESS STRIKE SPREADS TO 250 SHOPS; MASS DEMONSTRATIONS MO (CONTINUED FROM PF. a frenzy and made representations to Strike Committee headq for | séttlements. ie Huge Mass Demonstration. |r Developm yesterday came t and fast. One the o anding | features was a 1 open meet- ing at Thirty Street and Eig! | Avenue. Hosts of unem| ers joined with strikers in cheer and demands of the speakers. great mass gathered at the mi demonstration man: ted cle: sympathy with strikin makers and disgust with* the d the Hoover Hunger dress Gov- voars of commendation through the air, docens of many’s uniformed hirel As the rang of Tam-| amid the spectators like hungry tigers, to leap at their The strikers, however. nted continued to carry on the demonstra- tion At the Solax Dress Company, 224 W. 35th Street, thugs of the com-| pany union swooped down upon two| Pickéters and manhandled them The victims of the gorillas were} Jaek Ribitz and Isadore Isner. ‘These | two militant workers were back on the picket line shortly after, un-| daunted and augmented by other strikers. The many activities of the United Front Strike Committee threw ter- ror into the hearts of the Schles- | inger clah. Once again the betray- ers of organizéd labor prattled about “plans for a strike.” This very prat- tle taken up by the capitalist press | showed the disintegration on the part of the Schlesinger gang. But more | than that, the free talk about a| strike signalized the strength and in- creasing power of the strikers. Mass Demonstration Monday. With a total of shops out on strike yesterday t the of- ficial number of facto alkouts in the outlying areas was not available. ‘The triumphant strike program will have its climax—the climax of the first stage—at an immense demon- stration Monday in the Garment Center. Ben Gold, chairman of the United | Front Committee, has issued a call for all dressmakers of the Industrial Union ILL.G.W., and unorganized workers to attend Monday's demon- Food Workers Hold Organization Drive at Finnish Home Friday NEW YORK.—Cafeteria workers of the Food Workers Industrial Union are carrying on an intensive drive for funds to back up the Union’s organ- ization drive among the cefeteria workers, who are feeling the attack of the bosses in the present crisis in | the form of drastic wage cuts and | léngthening of hours. Under the slogan “Build the Fight- ing Organizational Fund” the cafe- teria section of the Food Workers’ In- dustrial Union are holding an affair at the Finnish Workers’ Home, 15 W. 126th St., on Friday, February 12. The affair will be a dance but a splendid Movie from the Soviet Union, “The Black Sea Mutiny’, will be shown as & spécial feature, Admission is only % cents. Get your tickets at Union headquarters or st the door. Grace Line Pays N.Y Police $1,000 For Strike Breaking | Hall police receive di- | eek. ‘| Tammar rect pay from the ing strikes, It was d Daulton Men. exec president of the Grace Steamshin Co., sent a chee of $1,000 to Com- missioner of Police Mullrooney “praising the work of the police during the rocent longshoreman’s strike at the compariy's piers.” As reported in the New York Ameri- can, The Tammany police protected the strike breakers for the com pany and prevented picketing. The $1,000, which may not be all, is aid to the police in the last analy. sig by the workers and hot by the company, since the bosses consider this as expenses and take it out of the longshoreman’s pay through vice- | tervention into the Soviet Union. The ‘fend the Soviet Union! | A. F. of L. thugs, |and building committees also were | organized. before | effectiveness of the strike is shown | white, American, Italian and Span- Demonstrate the Chinese Soviets and the revolutionary movement in By doing so they will be get- loser to the Soviet Union to cr drown blood. er The border provocations on the northern | of the Soviet Union, the mo- | ilization of the white guard troops d the support shown them by Jap- anese and American imperialism, in- dicates that there is a concerted ef- fort on the part of world imperialism to crush the Chinese revolution, par- tition China, and prepare military in- youth must act now! Demonstrate your solidarity with the Chinese mass- es! Show your determination to de- Negro and white workers, nish, Jewish and English, nationalities and re- gardless of race, have been called upon to rally with the striking dress- kers for a smashing and unmis- takable victory Announcement was made yester- y of the formation of defense com- mittees to protest picketers against In addition, block A competition has also launched among the various e halls to stimulate walkout ac- been tivities. Results will be given out from day to day as to the number of strikers added by each hall. 89 Bosses Plead For Settlement. Up to late yestérday more than eighty bosses have applied for settle- ments. Their appeals havé been laid | the Strike Committee for and action. The strike committee decided yes- terday that the question of settle- ment should be left over until the strike executive committee meets Monday. Plans for settlement, how-; ever, should be submitted to the Cén- tral Strike Committee at once. The study by the fact that 80 bossés ate already asking for settlement. Organization Committee in Action. The most enthusiastic, and at the same time the most businesslike | meeting of the organization commit- ! tee was held yesterday afternoon.! Determination to win was written on | the faces of all the workers on the | committee. Tt is a truly rank and file com- mittee. Workers from the shops, unemployed dressmakers, Negro and ish workers, most of whom have been active since the beginning of the strike, composed the committee. One after another théy took the floor and discussed the problems of strike strategy confronting them. Many of them are veterans of many strikes. Many are participating in} their first struggle. Yet it was hard to tell who were the old warriors and who were the new. They all spoke like veterans. Organizations Mobilizing in Support of Strike. The Central Strike Committee of the dressmakers decided to spread the strike in the various sections of the city and to mobilize the labor and sympathetic organizations’ in emergency conferences. All workers’ clubs, I.W.O. branches, Italian, Spanish and other fraternal organizations, unions and other sym- pathetic organizations located in the respective localities, are called upon to elect delegates and participate in the conferences to be held during the next few days. In Bath Beach the conference will take place on Friday at 48 Bay 28th St., at 8:30 p.m. The Harlem conference will take place on Sunday, 2 o'clock in the fternoon at 2011 3rd Ave. The Brownsville conference will be held on Sunday, Feb. 14th, at the Workers Center, 1813 Pitkin Ave., Brooklyn, 3 o’clock in the afternoon. These conferences are called as emergency in mobilization for the dress strike, and all working class organizations are galled upon to send at least two delegates. A number of entertainments were held for the strikers and these were also attended by hundreds of unem- ployed workers. Meetings were con- ducted for young workers and details for picketing were outlined. The Strike Committee sent out its rally- ing slogan yesterday: “On to the picket line, workers! Spread the strike! And fight, fight, until the bosees of the dress shops in the Metropolitan area meet the demands of the strikers!” ts your or nem @ Slovak or ©: tf te ts, have bim subi Daily Roynost Ludu Csechoslovak Orme. of the 6.P., U.S.A. 1510 W. 18th St. Chicago, ‘Te the Readers of The DAILY WORKER Mae ony ¢ Sangre work ¢ dall rin the U. S, Te stands tor the very eam as THE DAILY WORK |\Carry ‘Durable Tool and Die Ca., ry DURABLE SHOP IN SPITE OF INJUNCTION On Strike In Face of Terror NEW YORK.— -The workers of the now in the second week of their strike against a lockout, are defying an order of the bosses’ court restraining them from picketing. Despite this restraining order the workers car- ried on better picketing yesterday than any other day this week, How- ever, some scabs succeeded in get- ting into the shop and the strikers are planning to mobilize stronger forces to keep all scabs out of the shop. ‘The hearing on the injunction was postponéd until next Wednesday. In the meantime the boss has hired ad- ber of police in front of the shop in- creased, in an effort to terrorize the workers and keep them off the Picket line. Their efforts have failed ‘The workers, will answer the in- crease in police terror by intensify. ing their picketing and making it clear that, injunction or no injunc- tion, they are determined to fight to force the recognition of the union and to maintain the conditions won after the successful strike under the leadership of the Metal Workers In- | dustrial League last December. Relief will be a vital factor in help- ing to win the strike. The strikers for the most part are young, un- skilled metal workers who made barely enough to live on while work- ing. While on strike they are ab- solutely penniless. So far some or- ganizations have been visited by the strikers’ relief committee of the W. I. R, and contributions secured. This is inadequate, however, and workers are hereby urged to send in contribu- tions of money and food to the strike hall, located at 380 Grand St., New Yerk City. Workers are als6 called upon to come to the picket liné every morn- ing in front of the shop at 254 Canal St. at 7 o'clock. All Out to the Big Seamen’s Shin-dig Ds) at Manhattan Lyceum NEW YORK.—The last and final preparations have just been com- pleted for the big seamen’s dance which will be“held at the Manhattan Lyceum, 66 E. 4th 8t., tonight. The Waterfront Section of the Commu- nist Party has béen busy all week getting the riggin’ shipshape for this dance, which promises to be the out- standing proletarian shin-dig of the season. The Youth Dramatic Section of the International Workers Order has a brand new seagoing play all re- hearsed. The dance is being held "to raise funds for the upkeep of the Water- ters. FACTS CONCERNING MOVIES IN RUSSIA, Movies in Russia are not made for profit. They are made for their edu- cational or historical worth. Workers in factories often pass on whether a film shotild be released or not. One would imagine that under such a stringent system it would be hard for an artist to produce really great work. Yet as severe as the criticism is, more non-box-office films are produced in Russia than elsewhere. The workers’ committee have agreed to make im- pressionistic, expressionistic, experi- mental, mass and individual films. It is true that the demand is pres- ent for films which will have univer- sal appeal, The public in Russia is no more interested in the “arty” or “bi- zarre” pictures than the public else- where. Many Soviet films have been remarkable examples of technique, versatility and crammed with experi- mentation. The goal set was a film aesthetically, artistically perfect and at the same time free from a self- conscious attitude towards its tech- By JOHN (Author of t) A in Workers Schoo! 35 B. 12th St. ubseription $5, for 6 mo. $3. for free sample copy téday lower wages. (en ea eee ' ditional dicks and has had the num- | front Communist Section Headquar- | “STEEL” (A PLAY IN THREE ACTS) Direction of ROBERT ROSSEN Played by Professional 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 ‘WASHINGTON.—After weeks of evasive denial that any inflation of currency was intended, President Hoover yesterday conferred with the Wall St. politicians in Congress in preparation for the introduction of bills in both the House of Rep- resentatives and the Senate au- thorizing an inflation of currency to the tune of $2,500,000,000, The traditional policy of the Trea- sury department and the Federal Reserve ystem is being swept aside as the Wall St. financiers begin more and more to adopt frantic measures in an effort to stem the tide of fin- ancial destruction staring them in the face, The new bills which will be intro- duced simultaneously in both houses of Congress by Senator Glass and Representative Steagall will allow the Treasury Department to issue paper money oa the strength of gov- ernment bonds instead of as hereto- fore on the basis of gold, and “first class” commercial paper. It will also permit the Federal Re- serve System to “liberalize” its re- discount policy. The effect of this will be its acceptance of a greater variety of commercial paper for re- discount than before. Since, the Federal Reserve is allowed to issue money to the extent of 40 per cent of the paper which it accepts for re- discount, this measure will result in a huge swelling in the amount of paper money issued. In addition to these openly infla- tionary measures, the $2,000,000,000 Reconstruction Corporation Act will indirectly make for an inflation of almost that amount of paper money because of provisions in the bill al- Jowing the conversion into cash of the bonds that are sold by the cor- poration. ‘These inflation measures are being accompanied by a campaign of dem- ogogy intended to deceive workers into believing that they will be aided by them. The politicians talk of the help that inflation will give to debt- ors. The actual fact is that the only debtors that will be aided by infla- tion are the issuers of bonds, insur- «(CONTINUED ON PAGE THREE) Heavy Sentences Fail to Stop Bread Strike In Brighton NEW YORK.—The ten workers arrested as an outcome of the bread strike in Brighton Beach came up for trial Wednesday in the Coney Is- land court with the Tammany Judge Malbin presiding. Two of the arrested workers, Appel and Salvador, were sentenced to three ; days in jail each. Three other} workers were placéd on probation until Saturday —Leéizerowitz, Kahl and Longberg. Lola Fine, who has already beén arrésted and was sen- tenced last week to two days in jail, was held for special sessions on a charge of third degree assault (against an officer) under $300 bail. One of the workers arrested, Harry Kaplan, 16 years old, defended him-/ self and was given a suspended sen-/ tence. ‘The attitude of the judge during the entire trial was so openly inj favor of the bosses, the objections | raised by the attorneys of the Inter- national Labor Defense were so sys-| | tematically overruled that a motion was made to adjourn the case. This also was denied. In reply to thé objections of the defense attorneys toward the atti- tude taken by the judge, Judge Malbin replied: “you can say what you want. I | rule this court and I will do what I want.” The rest Of thé arrested workers were held over for trial on February 17th. Despite the very evident attempts of the bakery bosses of Brighton Beach to terrorize the workers by having them arrested and given stiff prison terms, the strike is going ahead full force. All workers are urged to come to 3035 Ocean Parkway to picket the struck shops. There will be a mass meeting today at 3034 Ocean Parkway at 8 p. m. All neighborhood workers are asked! to turn out in masses and show the bosses that the strike will continue | until the fight for lower bread pricés is won. ec ea nique. The Russian critics believed | “Road to Life’, the first Russian talkie now at the Cameo Theatre to be this film, Here Director Nikolai has told a re- markable story. The first director in Russia to tell a story with sound. His result was a perfect job graphically and cinematically. He introduced an off-stage voice for the first time in the talkies. Ekk used music and speech for dramatic emphasis. He ed ited his job dynamically, And with all the amazing use of his medium, he never let the technique triumph over the story he was telling, WEXLEY the Last Mile) so the Workers Bookshop 48 BE. 12th St. Jailed Relief Leader Calls for More Intense Strike Aid Drive (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONED the dress makers now on strike. Box- @ can be obtained at the following stations. The money should be sent in without delay to the W.LR. at 16 W. 21st St. TAG DAY STATIONS. Bronz—Co-operative Ww. Rr. 2800 Bronx Park F., Sec. V; Pros- pect Workers Club, 1157 Southern Bivd.; Finnish Workers Club, 2719 Fenton Ave.; Jerome Workers Club, 1645 Anthony Ave.) 1.W,0. Shule, 2061 Bryant Ave.; Women's Coun- cil, 8859 Third Ave.} Tremont Work- crs Club, 2075 Clinton Ave.; Pros- rect Workers Club, 569 Prospect Ave; Bronx Workers Club, 1610 Boston Rd.: Workers Club, 132% Southéen Blvd, and 1400 Boston Rd. Manhattan—innish Wo tkers Home, 15 W. 126th St.; Exthonian Workers Club, 2336 Third Ave.; Harlem 1. W, 0. Center, 143 E. 18rd St, Italian Workers Center, 314 FB. 104th Spanish Workers Club, 4 EB, 116th St; Hungarian Workers Home, 350 E. Sist St.: | Cueeho Slovak Workers. Home, 347 Work- 301 W. 29th. St. Needle +. 28th Stand 2011 Third “Ave.; Armenian Workers Club, 103 Lexington Ave.; W. 1 R. Headquarters, 16 W. 2ist St.; Rus- sian Workers Club, 122 Second Avé.; Qkeainian Workers Club, 66 H, 4th St: Downtown Workers Club, 11 Clinton St.; East Side Workers Club, 196 E. Broadway. Brooklyn—Bridge Plazn Workers Club, 285 Rodney St.; Willamsburs W.LR., 61 Graham Ave.) Williams- burg Workers Club, 705 Elushing Ave; Russian Workers Club, 118 Cook “Sts. Lithuanian | Workers Home, 46 ‘Ten Eyck St.; Browns- ville "Workers Youth Club, 105 Thatford Ave.; Brownsville Work- ers Club, 1813 Pitkin Ave,; Work- Huge Paper Money Issue to o{ ARREST, HOLD 5 Cut Mass Living Standard| WORKERS FOR DEPORTATION Mass Protest Meet On Monday, 15th NEW YORK.—Twenty-five workers were arrested and are being held for deportation after police and immigra- tion squads raided the Construction Workers of Nassau and Great Neck, Long Island. The raid upon the Nas- sau and Great Neck workers took place despite lack of evidence on which any deportation proceedings could be based. All workers, native and foreign born, Negro and white, must answer the terror of the immi- gration department and secretary of labor, Doak. They must assemble Hall, 119 E. 11th St. 8 o'clock, on Monday, ‘February 15, to protest against the anti-foreign-born bills now before the House of Representa- tives. This meeting will also endorse the delegation being sent to Wash- ington by the Committee for Protec~ tion of the Foreign Born and the In- ternational Labor Defense for the hearing on the bills against the for- eign born. All secretaries and workers of mass organizations are urged to come to the Committee for the Protection of the Foreign Born, 12 Union Sq., Room 505, New York, and get leaflets for their organizations and neighbor- hoods, These leaflets are in regard to the Protection of Foreign Born dele- gation, which leaves for Washington to get a hearing on the Anti-Foreign Born Bills coming up Tuesday, Feb- ruary 16. Don't fail to have this leaflet dis- tributed in your neighborhood. Help to Save Polish Class War Prisoners NEW YORK.—A mass demonstra- tion demanding the release of the po~ litical prisoners in the jails of Poland, will take place tomortow, Friday, Feb~ ruary 12, 7:30 pm., at Manhattan Lyceum. There will be a concert pro- gram by prominent artists. Dancing will follow. Tickets, 50 cents. at Webster ers Center, 608 Stone Ave.; Ben- sonhurst Mapleton Workers Club, 6720 20th Ave.; Hinsdale Workers Club, 313 Hinsdale St.; Boro Park W.LR., 1873 East New York Workers erment St.1 Einaish Workers Halt, Youth Workers Cen- : 7 Séhenectady Ave.) Bath Beach Workers Club, 48 Bay 28th St; Brighton Beach Scbule, 140 Neptune Ave.; Coney Island W. 1, R., 2921 W. 32nd St.; Jamaica Finnish Workers Hall, 100-26 Union Hall St. Queens—Middle Village Schule, EW.0., 1 Fulton Ave. AMUSEMENTS THE THEATRE GUILD presents EUGENE O'NEILL’s Trilogy Mourning Becomes Electra Composed of 3 play presented on I/day HOMECOMING, THE HUNTED THE HAUNTED Commenc¢ing at 5:30 sharp. Dinner tn- termission of one hour at 7. No Mats. GUILD THEA,, 524 St. W. of Bway a Theatre Guild Presents |) REUNION IN VIENNA A Comedy .By ROBERT E. SHERWOOD Martin Beck THEA. 45th |! St. & 8 Ave. |! Eve. 8:40 Mats. Thurs.Sat.2:40 EVERYBODY'S WELCOME ‘The new musical comedy bit, with FRANCES WILLIAMS, OSCAR SHAW, ANN PENNINGTON HARRIETT LAKE, savonR Thea,, 44th St., W. of Brw'y @ Sat. 20 Eve, 8: Ey Wea, in QUEENIE SMITH A LITTLE RACKETEER ew Musical Comedy Hit! ANCING SHOW IN TOWN! The -BEST St. a. 8 COUNSELLOR-AT-LAW EUMER RICE 39,562 People === Have Seen Soviet Russia's First Talkie! ROAD TO LIFE DRAMA OF RUSSIA’S “WILD CHILDREN” (Titles in English) SCAMEO dind St. & Wway rd BIG WEEK & 43rd St. Bi ‘GEST SHOW IN NEW YORK RKO) WARNER OLAND ACTS im ki “Charlie Chan's pel ke ka Chance” mine and factory a fertile field for Daily Worker sub- scriptions, ftivery shop, Fall River, cte¢., in 700. SINGERS at the National Concert of all the Freiheit Singing Societies SATURDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 20 Mecca Temple, -— 55th St. and 7th Ave. Choruses from New York, Chicago, Cleveland, Detroit, Philadelphia, Boston, Newark, Patterson, Providence, . Tickets 50¢., 75¢., $1.00 and $1.25—On sale in the Freiheit Office. 35 Bast 12th Street, 6th floor revolutionary songs ‘Start Meu Drive to Demand Freedom of Mooney and Billings (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONED the plutocracy of California put through the death frame-up of Tom Mooney. Were it not for the demon- strations by the Russian workers and soldiers in Leningrad, who demon- Strated before the American con- sulate shouting: “Free Tom Muni” as the now defunct New York Globe re- ported that week, Mooney would have gone to his death as Sacco and Vanzetti did a few years later. The demonstration in Russia let loose a movement throughout the world that forced President Wilson to intervene and commute the sentence of Mooney to life imprisonment. “It is high time now for the Amer- ican working class to carry through the immediate freedom of Tom Carl Hacker, district organizer of the I. L. D,, declared today One hundred and fifty thousand leaflets will be distributed through- out New York City, calling on all workers and particularly the rank and file of the A. F. of L. to attend this giant protest meeting. All or- ganizations «re asked to mobilize their membership, to come to the meeting with banners to demand the freedom of Mooney. The members of the International Workers Order, the Trade Unity Unity Council, needle trade strikers will be visited by International Labor Defense rep- resentatives in mobilization for this MAX BEDACHT Will Speak at the Workers Forum On “RELIGION and the CLASS STRUGGLE” e 35 E. 12th 2nd Floor FEB. 12th At 8:00 P. M. QUESTIONS DISCUSSION ADMISSION 25¢ PLEASE NOTE THAT THIS LEC- TURE WILL BE HELD FRIDAY —EEe Mobilization for Victory in Our Coming Struggles! Masque BALL Given by the NEEDLE TRADES WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION Tonight, Feb. 12th (Lincoln’s Birthday Night) STAR CASINO 107th Street and Park Avenue BEN GOLD WILL SPEAK | Prolet Buehneé in Something New! DANCING UNTIL MORNING! ‘Tickets in advance 50 Cents At the door 65 Cents BALL and DANCE To Be Held By Esthonian Workers Club For the Benefit of The UUS ILM (Communist Weekly) Saturday, Feb. 13th at 8 P.M. WESTMINISTER HALL Lenox Ave. bet. 113th and 114th Sta. Good Music All Workers Welcome AT DOOR 65c ADMISSION 50c Shave or Ha’r Cu Reduced Rates for oem bored «With Council Card Co-operative ber, "Shop 344 BAST NINTH STREE! (Bet. tat Ave. and Ave. A). RED PLAYERS Mooney and the 9 Scottsboro boys,” | This Friday | School Aud. |!" titer’! Workers Order great meeting. Kaowledgs that such a meeting would be attended by overwhelming thousands of workers caused the I. L. D. to try to get Madison Square Garden. When this was unsuccessful because the Garden is being used that night, the Coliseum was rented, Workers will demand the imme- diate freedom oi Tom Mooney and all class war prisoners, raising par- ticularly during this week the fight for the Scottsboro boys awaiting the decision of the Alabama Supreme Court for a new trial against their frame-up death sentence and against the terror on the Kentucky miners. Bedacht Speaks Friday On Religion and Class Struggle at the Forum NEW YORK.—Max Bedacht, of the Central Committee of the Com- munist Party, will speak at the Workers Forum, conducted by the Workers School, at 35 E. 12th St., ° | second floor, this Friday night at 8 p.m. The topic will be “Religion and the Class Struggle.” While the Forum is usually held on Sunday nights, Comrade Bedacht’s lecture will be held on Friday due ot the fact that Comrade Bedacht can not speak for the Forum on Sundays. ‘The origin, development and de- cline of religion, the poisonous role of religion against the oppressed classes in the class struggles, the rev- olutionary struggle of the workers against religion, the policy of the Soviet Union towards religion, etc., will be discussed. See Who Advertises in Your Own Daily Break the Walls of Poland’s Dungeons Today, Friday, Feb. 12th at 7:30 P.M. at Manhattan Lyceum, 66 E. 4th St. Concert Program by Soviet Artist Dancing till morning All Proceeds for the Political Pris- oners of Poland.—Admission 50 cents ] . DENTAL DEPARTMENT 1 UNION SQUARE 8TH FLOOR All Work Done Under Personal Care of DR. JOSEPRSON Cooperators* , Patroniee SEROY MELROSE (DAIRY ieera NEstAUEant Pleasant to Biss sh Gor Poon 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD, Brenx (near 114iB St. Station) TELEPHONE INTERVALE 90149 Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 199 SECOND AVENUE Bet. 12th and 13th ste, Strictly Vegetarian food Daily Worker Entertainment IN BROWNSVILLE At Workers Youth Center 105 Thatford Avenue, Brooklyn Saturday, February 13th at 8 P.M. DRAMA GROUP RAY GREENBERG, 8-Year Old Ballet Dancer GOOD JAZZ ALL WORKERS INVITED PROCEEDS FOR THE DAILY WORKER Workers! Do the places where you spend your money advertise in the Worker? ASK THEM TO DO Mm SEND US THEIR NAMES! Daily, quorker 50 E. 13th St, N. Y. TRIP TO CHICAGO—$8-810. Aak for Keley, 1233 50th St., Brooklyn. Tel. BErkshire 71-8120. Beautiful room for two, all impreve- ments, Chernoff, 71 BE. 7th St. Po neneeDeIRIPU RN NNUON OTS DD EINEM ONL ira ROOM—All improvements, 233 B. 9th St, Apt. % READOFF, VIOLINIST BAND