The Daily Worker Newspaper, February 22, 1932, Page 2

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Page lwo seit Y WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, FEBRUARY, 22, it ss COAL OPERATORS’ THUGS FAIL IN RAID ON RELIEF; CUT PAY IN HARLAN MINES Prepare to Distribute P. Put Communist Candidates on Ballot Strike Executive Reorganized and Enlarged; More Relief Is Crying Need renn., Feb. United N Worke KNOXVILLE, and on erators’ deputies raid a NEWARK LEA’ THER. WORKERS STRIKE Workers Warned, AFL Will Betre ay Them | NEW | of the good: ARK, N S23 shop, thrown aro out scabs. made to hire and as ed to a a reward they have been f starvation level H Preparatior going on the leadershir t and Portfolio Makers Union. of New York Henry Hi Jersey State Federation well known of the Passaic 1926, as the one who n le to prevent the collection of through the locals of the Ame Federation of Labor, and his power to force the workers back to work, has managed through dema- gogic speeches and maneuvering, to take over control of the strike. It is shown by the way the strike machinery has been set up by Hilfers, that his plans are, without the shad- ow of a doubt, to be able to quickly sell out and smash this strike, as he has done in former instances. The Trade Union Unity League of Newark calls upon all the militant strikers of the K. Kaufman shop not to be fooled by Hilfers’ radical speeches, but to see clearly the sell- out plans that are being hatched by this traitor of the workers, and to make plans to get the strike under their own control in order to prevent Hilfers and his bunch from betraying this strike and playing into the hands of the bosses MIDNITE SHOW OF Case, Bi Local 1 's, representative of the of Labor, “ROAD TO LIFE” F.S. U. Take Cameo Theatre for Feb. 25 NEW YORK.—The Cameo theatre will be taken over by the Friends of the Soviet Union Thursday, Feb. 25th, for a benefit midnight showing of the “Road To Life,” the first talkie prodticed by, the Soviet Union. The picture deals with a problem that perplexed the Soviet U some time: the rehabilitation of hundreds of thousands of children who were made homeless by the been postponed until a week from today to allow for more thorough aration the section strike conference to |be held in Clear Fork, LaFollette, Middlesboro, Gatliff, Harlan and Wal- lins Creek in the next few days, the miners will discuss special problems etitions In Kentucky to 21 coal op- organizers tried rs_ Inter: nal Relief trucks iners held the attacks off until d to the train for Middles- | , 12 miles distant. 21,—Pineville, Ky fine Wor cers’ ‘Terror in t ea, particu- cing many als to meet ry in Ken al Miners Unior woods at Mass meeti heduled for today in Midlesboro, Gatliff and Jel- nes Mine. Tennessee. The union con- ferer be held in Knoxville has of each section that ip at the conference. After being evicted from its office | nd refused space in every other office building in Knoxville, the Workers International Relief is again red to leave its headquarters. The r to move again was received by the W. I. R. even before the office furniture had been moved into posi- tion will be taken Several miners have been fired as a result of setting up an N. M. U. local in Whistle Creek Mine in Ten- Harlan mines, where been weakest, have an- mced wage cuts. Stanfield mine s cut wages from 32 cents a ton to cents. Elcomb mine has cut from to 25; and motor men at Tunays ave been cut from $3.60 to N. M. U. locals exist in all mines. hree Strikers are preparing to distribute eS to get signatures to put the y on the Kentucky ballot in the next elections. Uniting of courts, coal operators, police, is convincing thousands of miners that only through the election of Com- munists to office will they be able to have a voice in the control of their lives. The unemployed movement in} ‘knoxville is developing mass support so rapidly that the Knoxville city government has been forced to grant two days work a week instead of the former one day to hundreds of unem- ployed on the city’s charity list. Local leaders of the unemployed have been approached by leading business men with offers.of good jobs if “they will leave the reds alone.” Preparations are being made for; a@ mass meeting socmetime next week in Knoxville under the auspices of the Communist Party. As a result of the jailing of many members of the Strike Executive Cominittee, it has been recognized and new forces have been added. One of the largest meetings of the executiv committe since the beginning |of the strike took place last night. Need Relief Desperately Relief for strikers has never been mor necessary than at the present | moment. None of the thousands of food and hundreds are on the verge of starvation. Seventy-seven evic- tions will take place in Prudent, Tenn., next Monday and not a single tent is available. Workers all over the country must sacrifice deeply in order to keep these heroic strikers in the vanguard of the American working- class aliv. and revolution and had become v: bonds and destructive crimina way this problem under Socis taken care sson in what a Socialism means. No punishment was used. Education, kind treatment clean, healthy life, and special car restored these wild children into constructive members of society The | of | WORKERS INDUSTRIAL LEAGUE. All members of the Metal Workers; |Industrial League at present unem- ployed and those who are able to ab- sent themselves from their job for | one hour in the morning are instruct- METAL Japanese in Savage Drive Against Manchurian Masses Prepare Attack on U.S.S.R. Partisan Troops In Fierce Battles With In- vaders Between Kirin and Tunhua “Socialist: Orginine Fascist Party In Japan to Suppress Revolutionary Workers The Japanese garrison in ine important Manchurian town of partisan troops. WORKERS GREET MRS. WRIGHT ON SCOTTSBORO TOUR 200 Join I.L.D. In Perth| Amboy Section Mrs. Violet Montgomery, mother of one of the nine innocent Scotts- boro boys facing legal lynching in Alabama, concluded a tour of the Perth Amboy, N. J., section last week Mrs. Montgomery spoke at a large number of meetings, 95 per cent of which were arranged by the Negro workers themselves. Over 200 Negro workers joined the International Ia- bor Defense, the organization of col- ored and white workers defending Scottsboro victims. Two big locals of the I, L. D. have been or- ganized in Asbury Park and Long Branch, with Negro and white work- the ers. Mrs. Montgomery was greeted everywhere with the greatest ‘en- thusiasm, the workers militantly rallying to the fight to free the boys. Mrs. Montgomery was so impressed with the tour that she decided to postpone her return to the South until after March 4. On that date a big mass meeting will be held at the New Star Casino, 107th Street and Park Avenue, Harlem. Mrs. Montgomery will be one of the main speakers. The meeting will also be addressed by Richard B. Moore, and Wakefield. In preparation for this big mass turnout in support of the Scottsboro boys, @ house to house canvas is be- ing organized. Two sections of the I. L, D. have been mobilized for this task. Scores of workers will canvas with leaflets announcing the mass meeting. The Harlem section is being flooded with these leaflets and with the new Scottsboro protest post- cards addressed to the governor of Alabama. The I. L. D. has repeated its chal- lenge to the misleaders of the Na- tional Association for the Advance- ment of Colored ePople to defend be- fore the working class their disrup- tive activities against the Scottsboro defense. They are challenged to ex- plain their refusal to turn over to the defense the money they collected in the names of the boys, despite the protests of both the boys and their parents. The I. L. D. challenges the fee of $2,000 the N, A. A.C. P. claims to have paid to Darrow out of the funds collected by them. The LL.D. points out that Darrow did not lift a finger for the defense of the boys. BANQUET AND CONCERT FOR BROWNSVILLE UNIT. ‘ A committee composed of deiegates of various mass organizations of Brownsville is arranging a banquet and concert to take place Saturday, February 27, 8 p.m., at the Workers Center, 1813 Pitkin Ave. The purpose of the affair is to raise sufficient funds to enable the Brownsville Section of the Commu- nist Party to buy a mimeograph ma- chine, a typewriter and other similar things. The mass organizations of Browns- ville are very active in the sale of tickets. “THE INSIDE STORY” OPED TONIGHT AT NATIONAL THEATRE. A. H. Woods will open his first pro- duction of the season, “The Inside Story,” a melodrama by George Bry- ant and Francis M. Verdi at the Na- ed to be at the picket line, 254 Canal The |St., take East Side LR.T. local from | Gajnern, tional Theatre this evening. Louis William Courtney, Edward children themselves act in the play | Union Sq. to Canal St. 7 @.m. each | nis, Marguerite Churchill and Brian and make it alive and real, Besides the film showing, Moissaye J. Olgin, author of “Soul of Russia® and many pther publications, will speak, Tickets are 50 cents, 75 cents and $1. Reservations can only be made at 7 Broadway, Room 230, | Stuyvesant 9-5562. “The labor movement will gain the upper band and show the way to peace and socialism.” LENIN. | morn sing. Help defeat the lockout, i What’s On=— | MONDAY There will be a lecture, “orkers Legisla- | tion in the Soviet Union”, at the Italian United Co-operative, 472’ Summit Ave., | Union o N, Ji, at * @m. Admission free, . TUESDAY All unemployed workers who wish to sell papers, please be at the office of the Un- employed Couneils, § E. 19th St., at 11 a.m. N. J. Gravel Co. Withholds Pay Over A Year (By a Worker Correspondent) FARMINGDALE, N. J.—When the New Jersey Sand and Gravel Com- pany, started operations in the pit in the carly spring of 1931, they drew the workers in, agreeing for the time being that the workers should receive only $10 per week until summertime, and then their back pay would be paid up. Up until when back pay was paid, no wage cuts were to go over, However, wage cuts did go over. After various struggles, which were not united struggles, some of the em- ployees obtained their back pay. ‘Two 10% wage cuts were put over during the summer. On Dec. 24, 1931, the whole plant was shut down and | least three weeks pay in arrears. On | Jan. 4, 1932,.a few of the straw bosses in the yard were drawn in together with the machinists in the machine | Shop. At the next succeeding pay | day the machinists demanded of the |boses that if the back pay couldn't be paid at least pay should be paid on pay days, On the first pay day succeeding the agreement, pay didn't come along and the machinists stage a four and a half day strike. ‘The bosses came across with the money. On the next Donlevy play the chief roles. Dostoyevsky’s drama, “Crime and Punishment,” based on the novel of the same name, is the current film feature at the Acme Theatre. The picture is enacted by a graup of former members of the Moscow Art ‘Theatre. On the same program the Acme is presenting “The Life Of Lenin,” a series of pictures showing the Soviet leader in action, The new vaudeville program at the Hippodrome includes: Stuart and Lash Revue; Joe Jackson, pantomine comedian; Frank Swanee and Joe Daly; Grad and Rafferty with the Carolina Strutters; The Daveys; Lois Torres and her Barcelonians; and other acts. The screen is presenting the first New York showing of ‘The Final Edition,” with Pat O’Brien and Mae Clarke. ° Texas Guinan is putting on her night club revue on the stage of the 86th Street Theatre until “Tuesday, apnesring with thitty entertainers, Including Richard Lane, George Giyot and a‘band directed by Iry- ing Sewitt. “High Pressure” with William Powell, Evelyn Brent and George Sidney is the screen feature. pay day, Feb. 5, 1932, the boss didn’t have the pay ready for the machin- ists and the other people who are employed in the yeard, and again the the employees were laid off with at machinists went on strike. Both plays by Elmer Rice, “The Left Bank” at the Little Theatre and “Counsellor-At-Law" at the Ply- mouth will give an extra matinee today, Tunhuua was attacked on Saturday A battle raged for tisans attempted to drive the Japanese out of the town. Japanese were suffering ROBIN by a strong force of everal hours as the par- The and facing hostile action in “*theit rear by the workers in the town, when Japanese reinféreements came up and forced the partisans to with- draw, Tunhua is one of the most important strategic towns in Kirin province. It is on the Kirin-Tunhua Railway. Japanese control of the railway was further threatened by partisans at- ng at other sections of the line. Japanese troops have been sent from Changchun to Kirin to bolster up the Japanese puppet government in that city. Reports from Harbin say that the traitor Gen. Ma Chen-shan is dispatching cavalry troops to Payen, northeast of Harbin, to attack the forces of Gen. Tsing Tao who de- fended Harbin against the Japanese until he was finally driven out. The Chinese puppets of Japanese imperialism are plishing forward thé “independent” state in Manchuria. the head of the new state. It is doubtful in what capacity he will act, The Japanese are still playing with {CONTINUED ON PAGE THREE) March Labor Unity A Very Good Issue, Already Off Press The March issue of Labor Unity is ready today. All unicns, TUUL groups, IWO branches. Workers clubs, Red Builders, Unemployed Councils, should get their bundles immediate- ly. See Comrade Ward at the Dis- trict Labor Unity office 5 East 19th St., 3rd floor. ‘The March issue is especially im- portant to the Needle Trades ,Work- ers, revolutionary members in the A. F. L. unions, Unemployed Coun- cils, as there are articles by: Gold on “Dressmakers’ Strike,” Foster on “Work in AFL Unions.” Costrell on “The Unemployment In- surance Referendum in the AFL.” Also articles by Steuben, Grace Burn- ham, Borich, Russack, Weingarten on the Tampa Strike, Musteism, Railroads Situation, Kentucky Strike, Red Trade Unions, etc. Organizations that have no Labor Unity agents yet must make imme- diate arrangements to get their Labor Unity bundles. Furniture Workers. Union Moves to N. Y. The Furniture Workers Industrial Union has moved its headquarters to 108 E. 14th St., New York City, Room 300. All furniture workers are invited to visit our new office which is open every day except Sunday from 9 a.m. to 7:30 p.m. Japanese plans for the creation of an: The Northeastern Executive Council ; on Saturday selected Henry Pu Yi as! NEW GAINS SCORED BY DRESS STRIKE; MASS MEET UNION SQ. TUES. All T. U. U. L. Unions to Rally to Strike Front Tomorrow bership to the dress strike front on bers are to report to John Steuben (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) given to the United Front Sttike Sat- urday afternoon in a conference of unions, leagues, fraternal ahd labor organizations, which was held at the strike headquarters, 559 Sixth Ave. Ben Gold, secretary of the United Front Strike Committee, reported on the progress and developments of the strike, of the successful breaking down of the barriers that divided the strikers and thé accoinplishinents that have already been made. Thun- derous applause greeted the state- ment that the settlement committee had already secured 100 settlements with wage increases, no discrimina- tion against Negro workers, the right to a job, ete. M. Olgin, editor of the Freiheit, brought greetings from the Central Cothmittee of the Communist Party. “The dress Strike is the vanguard of the struggles of the New York workers,” said Olgin. “We have come here not to listen to speeches but to help spread the United Front Strike, to consolidate the forces of all the dressmakers and workers to help win the strike.” “Here they are,” said Ojgin, | speaking of the fake Schlesinger strike, “calling a strike which is | not a strike; here they are calling a struggle which is not a struggle. They are stabbing the workers in the back. We must build up the ; United Front to smash the con- spiracy and destroy the sweat shops.” The biggest ovation was given to workers from the company union, who took the floor in the discussion. The vital importance of the strike to the entire labor movement was recognized by every delegate at the conference. Every organization pres- ent pledged to raise strike funds, as- sist on the picket line and to exert every possible effort to lead the great struggle to victory, A fesolution unanimously at the conference said: “We, the delegates assembled at this conference, recognize ‘that the adopted ,, Struggle conducted by the dréssmak- ers is not only a struggle for the im- provement of hte conditions of the workers in this particular trade, but» will vitally affect the conditions of the workers in other trades and will be a blow to the class collaboration Policies, wage cuts, of the bureaucracy of the A. F. of L. which has under- mined and destroyed the conditions of thousands of workers. SOCCER RESULTS © “A” Division Red Sparks 4, Fichte 1. Tico 4, Olympic 1. Salkin 4, Bronx Bakers “B” Division. Harlem 1, Gordon 1. Ethiopian 1, Esthonian Workers 0. East Side Workers 1, Crotona 0. Red Sparks 0, Italian-American: 0. “C” Division, Br’nsville Wkrs. 4, Prospect Wkrs. 2. 2 NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES EAST S1DE—BRONX RKO gross —RKO Acts— TODAY TO TUESDAY —On the Sereen— WILLIAM poacny “High FRANKLIN George Whiting and Sadie Burt Joseph B. Stanley Lyons & Snyder Bobby Gillette wer’ | Pressure” George Sidney And Archer & Jackson Travers & Gray eVrna Hayworth Sig Franz Evelyn Brent Crotona 1, Downtown Workers 0. Spartacus 6, Harlem Progressives 1. East N. Y. Wkrs. 5, Hebrew Wkrs. 1, Red Sparks 1, Charibs 1. Dauntless 1, Pirates 1. BU LL ETI . NEW YORK.—The Trade Union U: York isstied a call today to all inion’ and leagues to rally their them- Marine, food and building trades workers are especially tally to the stipport of the Unitéd Front Strike. Trades Workers’ Industrial Union tomorrow morning at 7. . . \to of Greater New Council Tuesday morning. urged to All 'T. U. U. L, mem- at the headquarters of the Needle “We therefore pledge to exert every effort in order to mobilize the mem- bers of our r ctive organizations to assist the struggle of the dress- maker's findncially and morally, so as to help bring this struggle to vic+ tory.” ‘A committee of Action was elected work {n cooperation with the United Front Committee. Despite the fact that today is a legal holiday, the dressmakers will picket theit shops throughout the morning and afternoon. The slogan of the stfiking dressmakers will be Spread the strike to all shops; for one strike and one picket line. The United Front Dress Strike Committee is working out plans to strengthen the strike machinery of the “halls and to intensify the work around the bifildings. Among the chief tasks during the coming week is the task of putting more effect in- to the strengthening df building and block committees so as to increase the picket lines and spread the strike to the open shops that remained at work. The strike committee has instruct- ed all strikers and United Front lead- ers to fraternize with the workers in thé I. L. G. W. U.; to atrange joint building meetin joint meetings of contractors working for jobbers, In this way the United Front ean be spread to every building, to every shop. Schlesinger Sell-Out Complete. From the latest reports it is evi- dent that the Schlesinger-Dubinsky clique will announce within a few days a settlement of the fake strike, which will mean more wage-cuts and tarvation for those returning under the sell-iut agreement. The dress- makers in every international shop are urged to take steps at once to smash the sell-out. Elect strike com- mittees in all shops and refuse to abide by the treacherous settlement. The workers should take the strike in their own hands, work out their shop demands and carry on the strike with the assitance and leader- ship of the United Front Committee. ‘The underhand treachery of the Schlesinger strike was exposed unwit- tingly by a leading in the Friday's edition of tie “Women’s Wear", which is nevertheless working hard to help the sell-out. The “Women’s Wear” says: “The strike is no more than a racket. The manufacturers object when the buyers ask them for con- cessions in the form of discounts, but they give their consent to a racket called a strike.” An other item in this same journal exposed the nature of the Schlesinger strike in the following manner: “The union officials and the As- sociation officials are in continuous telephone communication. The as- sociation was reproached by the leaders of the union for making such statements that injure the strike.” Meanwhile more and more workers in the International, aware of the conspiracy afoot to sell them out, are joining the ranks of their fellow workers, a number of them coming straight from the International hall on Fourth Ave., to the strike hall of the United Front. AMUSEMENT The Theatre Guild Presen REUNION IN VIENNA A Comedy .By ROBERT B. SHERWOOD. ., THEA.. Martin Beck $0 2"5 402 Eve. 8:40 Mats. Thurg.Sat.2:40 THE THEATRE GUILD presents BUGENE O'NEILL’S Trilogy Mourning Becomes Electra Composed of 3 playe presented on 1\day HOMECOMING, THE HUNTED THE HAUNTED {Commencing at 5:30 sharp. Dinner In- EXTRA “Soviet Russia Today” PUBLISHED BY F. §. U. Presents MIDNIGHT SHOWING OP Soviet Russia's First Talkie! ROAD te LIFE|“ DRAMA OF RUSSIA’S “WILD CHILDREN” (Titles (English) Thursday, Feb. 25th 14.20 p.m M. J. OLGIN, Speaker 2nd STREET CAME & BROADWAY Spend an Evening with P. 8. U. Crowd Call or Phone For Reservations ‘®. ¥. DIST. FRIENDS OF SOVIET UI, a ‘799 BROADWAY, STY, 9-5562 termission of one hour at 7, No Mats. GUILD THEA,, 52d Sty W. of Bway COUNSELLOR-AT-LAW By with ELMER RICE PAUL MUNI Plymouth Mnrerhare: a snc. 220 Extra Matinee Washington's Birthday ; Set quotas, start revolution- ary competition, in fight to save Daily Worker. Soviet Russia’s First Talkie! = (CONTINUED FROM Mooney to come here made its first announcements, the committee of renegades and fakers immediately announced by poster and leaflets that Mother Mooney would speak by long distance telephone to a meeting ar- ranged by them. The idea was to give the impyession that Mother Mooney would n®Bt come to the LL.D. meeting. A physical examination has dis- closed a bad condition of Mother Mooney’s heart, and the doctor fore- bade her to make the trip, warning her that the trip would in effect “mean suicide” for her. Mother Moo+ ney then agreed to talk to the LL.D. meeting over the telephone which was to be amplified in the Coliseum so that everyone could hear. However, the Socialists and other renegades, those who try to capitalize on championing Mooney, immediately got in touch with the telephone com- pany and arranged that they get the telephone hookup for the sum of $135. This figure was also quoted the IL.D. But the following day the ‘phorie company suddenly informed the LL.D, the rate was wrong and that the lowest possible figuré was $800. It was plainly to be seen .what forces were trying to prevent the LL.D. from having Mothef Mooney speak at the Coliseum meeting: The I.L.D. however, refusing to al- low the “Miller-Mandel” retiegades to pull this trick, immiediately got in touch with Mrs. Mooney in San Fran- cisco and the Tom Mooney Molders’ Defense Committee. When Mrs. Moo- ney learned the situation she became so incensed over the trickery that she decided to come to New York despite her condition. Nation-wide Mooney Meetings. The meeting on February 24, is one of a nation-wide series called by the LL.D. to demand immediate and unconditional pardon of Moo- ney. Similar meetings will be held in Chicago, Detroit, San Francisco, etc. The attempts of the misleaders of the working class must be met with a determination of the entire working class to pack the Coliseum as a dem- onstration for the freedoth of Moo- ney and also as a demonstration against the Socialist fakers who are trying their best to disrupt the meet- ing. These meetings take place on the 15th anniversary of the frame-up death sentence upon Tom Mooney by the California plutocracy, February 24, 1917, Mooney by this time would have been strangled on a California gallows had it not been for the giant demonstrations throughout the world by the proletariat after the example in Petrograd (now Leningrad), when the Russian revolutionary workers and soldiers demonstrated before the American consulate demanding Moo- Fight to Free Tom Mooney to Take On New Force With Coliseum Meet ney's freedom. President Wilson saw that it was expedient to have Moo- ney’s sentence commuted to life im- prisonment and he ordered the Cali- fornia governor to do so. Now is the tié in this period when the workers throughout America and the world are showing their fist to the world’s ruling class to gain the freedom of Mooney. The telegram sent to the LL.D, reads, “J. L, Engdahl, 80 E. 11th St, New York, N. Mother Mooney ac- cepts invitation LL.D. to appear Na- tional Mooney Day, February 24, New York City, Wednesday. Totn Mooney Molders’ Defense Committee.” Held On Fredérick Douglass Week. The meetings on behalf of Mooney are being held during the Frederick Douglass week, set, aside by the L.L.D,- in honor of the great Negro fighter for freedom. The fight for Mooney will be linked up with the struggle to free the nine Negro Scottsboro boys, as well as to call for greater protest against the mine owners terrorism in Kentucky, Held Affair for Miners In Newark On February 28th, at 8 p. m., the Workers International Relief will hold a dramatic evening at the Y. Ma H. A. High and West Kinney Sts., Newark, N, J. This affair will be for the benefit of the striking Ken- tucky miners, arid is being sponsored by. the Workers Dramatic Council of N. Y., the Jack London Club of New- atk and the W. I. R. Several of the Workers Theatres will present a program of mass reci- tations and proletafian plays. Those participating will be the Workers Laboratory Theatre, the Prolet- Buehne, the Prolet-Cult, the Jack London Dram Group, and the W.LR Red Dancers. Tickets can be purchased for 36 cents throtigh any of the organiza- tions or through the W. I. R,, 75 Springfield Ave. The admission price at the door will be 50 cents. Every shop, mine and factory a fertile field for Daily Wotker sub- scriptions, Gets Two Years For Fighting Eviction PITTSBURGH.—James Kearns, unemployed worker, was sentenced to a two year jail term today, in connection with a demonstration which stopped the eviction of the family of an unemployed worker. He defended himself. Brown, ar- rested with Kearns, pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 90 day term. See Who A Your Own Daily dvertises in Phone Tomkins Sq. 6-9554 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 302 E. 12th Si, New York é When the Winter Winds Begin to Blow You will find it warm and cozy Camp Nitgedaiget You can rest in the prolet comradely atmosphere provi in the Hotel—you will sss find it well heated with steam heat, hot water and many other im- provements. ‘The food is clean and especially well RATES FOR WEEK-~ ENDS for further information cal) the— COOPERATIVE OF FIOR 2800 Bronx Park East Tel—sterbrook 8-1400 ROAD TO LIFE DRAMA OF RUSSIA’S “WILD CHILDREN” (Titles in English) SCAMEO HIPPODROME':..":; BIGGEST SHOW IN NEW YORK “THE 8s Final Edition” ith BIG WEEK 4und St. & Bway Incl STUART and) With PAT O'BRIEN DASH and MAE CLARKE Chie Cafeteria 876 East Tremont Ave. (Cor. Southern Boulevard) Opening for Business Today, FEB. 20th Invites All Friends—Moderate Prices—Baking On Premises SERVICE —— SELF-SERVICE —— CAFETERIA SIGNED WITH THE FOOD WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION ALL WORKERS MEMBERS OF THE F.W.LU, Mimeograph Supplies Mimeographs, 315 “i repaired, cleaned, Stencils $2.25, 4 LH Bond Paper, Mimo, tte Colored Paper, wales oe ay ite 'T MIMO c. wear Union Sq. 63 108 at iy oe Phone AL; HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian Restaurant 1600 MADISON AVENUE University 4-0081 Patronize the Concoops Food Stores aND Restaurant 2700 BRONX PARK EAST “Buy in the Co-operative Store and help the Left Wing Movement.” ————————>———————S— ‘Large combination living and bedroom —kitchen, steam heat, suite for 2, $25 per month, 293 Lenox Ave, Apt. 5. Intern’) Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 1 UNION SQUARE STH FLOOR All Work Done Under Persona! Care of DR. JOSEPHSON intl Worl ere Order 78-15 CHRYSTIE STREET (Third Ave, Car to Hester @t) 9 am. to 6 pm. Daily Phone: Dry Dock 4-4522 DAIRY fesracnast Comrades Will Always Find 1% Pleasant to Dine ac ‘Onur Place. 1187 SOUTHERN BLVD. Brons (near ‘174th St, Stat! TELEPHONE INTERY au Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 199 SECOND AVENUE Got, 12th and 13th Sts, Strictly Vegetarian food FIVE COURSES 50 Cents Siberia-Russian RESTAURANT 315 East 10th St. Bet, Ave. A and Ave. B’ Au Comroaes Meet ai BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health _ Restaurant $58 Cler-mont Parkway, Bronx _ JADE MOUNTAIN AMERICAN and CHINESE RESTAURANT Open 11 a, m, to 1:30 a. mi, Special Lunch 11 to 4...35¢ Dinner 5 to 10. . .55¢ 197°SECOND AVENUE Between 12th amd 13th Bt, /

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