The Daily Worker Newspaper, February 24, 1932, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Page Two DAILY WORKER, NEW YQRK, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1932 RENT BULLETIN 135 workers in the rent strike on Longfellow Avenue and hundreds of other workers from the neigh- borhood held an open air dem stration Saturday protesting against imperialist war in China and the plot to attack the Soviet Union. A telegram was sent to Pres, Hoover carrying the protest resolution. NEW YORK, N. Y., Feb. 22—The rent strikers of Longfellow Avenue learned who the courts represented when they saw Judge Neuman come © the full support of the landlord against them. Thirty-five workers who appeared in answer to the evic- | jon notices served on them, were sentenced to two days in jail each | and told to have their furniture out of the houses when the two days elapsed. Many are house-wives with children at home Sixty-five other tenants were in the court room to protest the evic- | who acted | worker id the court room r telling Judge Neu- the workers went or She described the tions. A wom as spokesman ike STRIKERS PROTEST AGAINST RO ROBBER WAR IN CHI because he painted the rooms have been paying the $3 ever since. These gs didn’t interest the adi s ears were only open to McKelly, the landlords lawyer. He jored the workers statement as to y jand Communist agitators”, who are try- | ing to spoil the neighborhood.’ roof he pulled a leaflet out addres- ‘d raised the rent $3 a month/ share after a meeting Feb. 5. The | earnings © of the company were 29 cents must have reduced rents |0f the p unched into a attack, blaming | tlmates indicate they report that in- | DuPont Pays Dividend As Profits Soars E. I. du Pont de Nemours and Co., makers of war munitions declared the regular quarterly dividend of $1 per The of in dividend requirements | | “giving reasonable assurance” capital- | ist papers say “that the prevailing rate will be maintained. In paying regular dividends the board of di- rectors did so, they said, on the basis nt trend of profits. Es- come for operations alone for the As| first quarter of 1932 will exceed that Jof the corresponding quarter last sed to the workers of the Longfellow | yeat- Avenue section, fight high rents. calling on them to| This is another proof of the capi- | talists making higher profits during | ‘The judge made a speech to the | the crisis on the wage cuts and speed workers hoping to jabandoning: their strike. He said, You are being misled by the spokes- men and Communists. Go home, be | good tenants and pay your rent, don’t isten to the agitators, etc. etc. He did not tell the workers how} |they were to pay the rents. The workers smiled, They them- elves were the rent strikers fighting agitating for lower rents and | e the judge tells them to beware of agitators, | | The tenants now are even more and conditions of her fellow-workers. “We |determined to fight on. The workers have had our wages cut”, she told |are sticking together in their demands he jud Many of us are unem- | and iritend to fight it through to vic- | ployed and the city doesn't give us |tory despite all the tricks and help relief. Many families have sickness landlord employs to break the | in the home. In some families things ©. are so bad th Idren go to schoo! | ‘Thursday there will be a general without, eatir nd without proper |meeting of the tenants to plan their @othes. She told how last year the fight further, Al DRESS STRIKERS SCORE SCHLESINGER SELL- OUTIN IN UNION SQ. MEETING CCONTIATED Crom PAGE ONES tnion ston ebruary eighteenth ten o'clock hoses stopped power tell- ing workers that the strike has be- gun while potice agitated angry Yorkers outside to register stop Next day workers permitted the sinrt work after dues paid and yes- terday strike officially liquidated on ten per cont reduction, et cetera sien Clozkmakers enraged sell-out obvious. “BLUGERMAN.” Th jpeakers called on the strik- ing dressmakers of the International © reject the agreement made behind their backs with the bosses and to continue the strike in every shop un- til the bosses have granted the de- mands of the 25 per cent increase, 40 hour week, the right to the job, no discrimination against Negro work~- ers and the other demands. of. the workers. ‘The meeting decided to mobilize all the workers to fight this settle- ment and to carry on the struggle in every shop on the basis of the Unit- ed ont of all strikers of*the Inter- national halls and the strikers of the United Front Committee. A membership meeting of all Gressmakers of settled shops will be held on Thursday, after work, at the strike headquarters, 559 Sixth Ave. At this meeting a full and detailed plan of the developments of the strike will be given, also plans for involving the workers of the settled shops in 8 y and in the spreading All dressmakers of ke activ of settled shops are called upon to come to this meeting without fail, Concert and Mass Meetings of Strikers Today. the Today o'clock, a concert and mass meeting will take place at the strike halls, in Manhattan, 559 Sixth Ave., and Manhattan Lyceum. Strik- ers of the International are invited to come to this meeting. A meeting of the United Front Strike Committee was held on Tues- What's On— WEDNESDAY AN store and office fixture carpenters to come to a meeting at 1325 Boulevard, at 8 p.m. embers must report at at 7 p.m. sharp. There the Labor~ Defender tributed to the members to be ght. Report in the lobby. Southern Bronx 1.L.D. sold that A Tom Mooney Protest meeting will be held at the Linden Hall, 16 and Wood Avenue, Lind J, at 8 pm. THURSDAY A membership meeting of the Furnitare Workers Industrial Union will be held at 108 East 14th Street, at 8 p.m. The Intwor Youth Branch of the LW.0. No. 401 will meet at 2061 Bryant Avenue, Bronx, at 8:30 p.m Sie Atlee The Spartacus Youth Branch of the 1.W. ©. No. 403 will meet at 1 Fulton Avenue, Middle Village, at 6 p.m. The Intwor Youth Branch No. 404 of the I.W.O. meets at 1108-45 Street, Brooklyn, at @ pm. i ae The Bensonhurst Youth Branch of the L.W.O, 409, will meet at 2006-70 Street, Brooklyn, at 8:30 p.m Williamsburg Youth Branch of the LW. ©. meets at 226 Throop Avenue, Brooklyn, at 8 p.m. Me er Alteration Painters, Bronx Section, will have their regular meeting at 1325 South- ern Boulevard, at 8 p.m. . * Brownsville Alteration Painters will meet at 1818 Pitkin Avenue, Brooklyn, at 8 p.m. Saute Sisk 4 A mass meeting and conference of the striking dressmakers will be held at 8 p.m. at 195 Flushing Ave. Brooklyn. All frat- ernal organizations and sympathizers of the left wing movement are asked to par- telpate and help carry through the spread~ e ing of the strike in Brooklyn. ; Mrs wipe) All alteration plumbers and helpers are urged to attend the organization meeting to be held at 1325 Southern Boulevard, Bronx, at 8 p.m. Carl Brodsky. will apa on “The War Situation in China” at the West Bronx F,8.U, Anti-War meeting to be held at the mside Manor, 71-85 West Burnside Ave., 8 p.m. ee | Joe Freeman will speak on “Modern lit- erature in the Soviet Union, st Franklin Manor, 836 Franklin Ave, Brooklyn, at 8 pm., under the auspices of Prospect Par. Branch of the ¥.8.U. sisi day night, where the various com- mittees reported on the activities and | plans for strengthening and spread- ing the strike were worked out. The ettlement committee gave a detailed report of the settlements and showed that in every instanee workers re- ceived substantial increases before returning to the shop. The organization committee report- ed on its activities and it was de- | cided to strengthen the organization | | committee and build the block and | building committees so as to get down | on strike those shops where the boss- es have temporarily shut down the factory in order to avoid the strike. It y also decided to mobilize the |S dressmakers of the International to reject the sell out settlement and to organize in their shops to strike for the demands of Committee. Meeting of the dressmakers and sympathizers from the mass organ~ izations, Thusrday, at 795 Flushing Ave. The United Front dress strike committee has arranged a mass meet~ ing of striking dressmakers, as well as all needle trades workers and sympathizers from the mass organ- izational on Thursday, at 8 ‘clock at 795 Flushing Ave. At this meeting the strike committee will report on the strike and how the workers of Williamsburg can assist in spreading out the strike. A similar meeting will be held in Brownsville, at 1813 Pit- kin Ave,, on the same evening. The Coney Island workers have ar- ranged a meeting and concert in support of dressmakers on Friday, 8 o'clock at Pythian Hall, 21st St., near Mermaid Ave. in accordance with the decision of the mass conferencé held last Saturday in support of the dress strike. The workers of Coney Island have organized this concert and mass meeting where the issue of the dress strike will be discussed and the workers of C. I. will be mobilized in support of the dress strike. Ben Gold, secretary of the Strike Committee will speak on the strike. Counter. Olympic ' Group Endorses Mooney Meet The National Counter Olympic | Committee heartily indorses the Tom Mooney meeting at the Coliseum on Wednesday February 24. As honorary chairman of the Na- tional Counter Olympic Committee ‘Tom Mooney has rallied thousands of worker sportsmen to his cause de- manding his release from San Quen- tin prison, where he has now spent 16 years of his life, a victim of one of the fgulest frame-ups known to the American Labor history. ‘The worker sportsmen of New York have been mobilized to attend the huge. protest meeting at the Coli- seum and together with the thou- sands of workers present show their solidarity with the revolutionary working class movement which is carrying on its militant and determ- ined fight for the release of Tom Mooney and all class war prisoners. ‘The Counter Olympic Provisional has arranged “Free Tom Mooney” Street Runs thruout the U. S. Athletes bearing placards on their back demanding the release of Tom Mooney will run thru the streets of New York on March 12. In Chicago and Cleveland similar runs will take place on February 27 as well as in all the leading cities of the U. 8. ‘The Amateur Athletic Union, which is a boss controlled sport organiza- tion, has forbidden any A.A.U. ath- lete from entering the Tom Mooney street runs. This is a glaring ad- mission that the A. A. U. does not want Tom Mooney set free. For the unconditional release of ‘Tom Mooney! Boycott the Los Angeles Olympics! the United Front |and all class-war prisone: fool them into| UP of the workers, blowing up their lies to the workers of “everybody suf- | fering” and “losing money.” FOOD WORKERS UNION SUPPORTS MEET TONIGHT \ Irish Workers March In Body to Bronx Coliseum The Food Workers’ Industrial Union | joins with the revolutionary working class in mobilizing its forces for the | mass protest meeting for the release of Tom Mooney, the 9 Scottsboro boys that will |be held tonight at the Bronx Colise- | |um, under the auspiees of the Inter- national Labor Defense. The many struggles carried on in jthis city by our union against the | bosses, terror, injunctions and the jailings of our members in the strug- gles, solidifies us with the great cause for which Tom Mooney has dedicated his life. The Food Workers’ Industrial Union therefore calls upon its entire mem- bership and especially instructs all shop chairmen to mobilize the entire membership to attend in a body at the protest meeting on Wednesday evening, Feb. 24th, at the Bronx Coli- seum. Irish Workers to Attend In Body, At a mass meeting of Irish workers held at Lexington Hall, 109 East 116th Street, Sunday afternoon, members of several Irish Workers Clubs made arrangements to attend in a body the Mooney-Scottsboro meeting tonight at the Bronx Coliseum. Under the banner of the “United Irish Workers Clubs”, members of the following organizations will at- tend the meeting: Irish Workers Republican Alliance; James Connelly I. R. A. Club, Leit- vini Workers Club, Irish Reading Circle. Other sympathetic organizations of Irish workers are urged to join in this display of militant working class solidarity. SEVEN ARTS GUILD PLAYERS TO PRESENT “LINGERING PAST” The Seven Arts Guild Players, a new organization, will soon present, “The Lingering Past,” a drama by Leonard J. Tynan, directed by Ed- win Hopkins, formerly of the George Broadhurst general staff at the Broadhurst Theatre. Miss Eva La Gallienne, founder and director of the Civic Repertory Theatre, who has just returned from a study of the Theatre on the Con- tinent, announces that the theatre established by her in 1926 will open its sixth season in September 1932, under the same repertory system. Six new plays will be given as well as a constant revival of the old ones. “Alice in Wonderland” will be pre- sented in celebration of the hun- dredth anniversary of Lewis Carroll's birthday. “The Left Bank,” Elmer Rice’s der acts the leading role, play its 150th performance yesterday at the Little Theatre. The change of program at the ‘Trans-Lux Theatre on Broadway de- voted to short subjects, includes: “Big Game,” a Fable cartoon; “Un- crowned Champions,” a Sportlight trend film; “Medbury in Death Val- ley,” “One More Chante,” with Bing Crosgy, and “100 per cent Service,” a@ Paramount comedy with Burns & Allen. The ‘Trans-Lux Newsreel house is featuring this week a group of war pictures just arrived from Shanghai. Frank Fay and Barbara Stanwyck, stars of stage and screen will appear in person at the 86th Street Theatre -| for three days, beginning this Wed- nesday. This will be their first New York stage appearance together. Forward to the Workers Athletic Meet! A. Harris, International comedy, in which Katherine Alexan- | w, The Chicago Dis Other Districts viet China, no longer a problem of “ the Communist Party, and surrounding the Party must be The District Committee No. 8, the largest in the Party, although catching up with it, to do likewise. Dee. Ist. namely, tration—and are determined to fulfi nuclei, Recruiting Quotas ‘With imperialist war, particular ly U.S.A. responsibilities increase a hundred fold. More than ever before the Party must be built particularly in the shops surrounding the Party must be built a strong trade union movement, increase its quota in the Recruiting Drive from 1000 new members to 1,500 new members by March 18th and calls upon all other districts who have already reached 50 per cent of their quota to do likewise,- larly call upon Pittsburgh and Minnesota with whom we are in revolu- tionary competition and also include New York district, which is still In issuing this statement we consider the recruiting drive as opening Already in District No. 8, out of a quota of 1,000 new members, we have recruited from Dec. ist to Feb. 6th a total of 875 new members and out of a quota of 17 new shop nuclei, four have been organized. We also pledge to improve the outstanding weakni absolute insufficient new members from industries of concen- Togethes with this intensive recruiting, we pledge ourselves to de- velop an investigation activity in the shops with the objective of de- veloping broad economic struggles of the workers. DISTRICT COMMITTEE—Distriet 8, trict Challenges to Raise Their against the Soviet Union and So- ‘war danger” but actually in process, built particularly in the shops, and in view of this situation, decides to We particu- the industrial districts are rapidly s in our recruiting, {ll our industry quotas in new shop Chicago. T.U.U.L, CALLS ON FIGHT AGAINST NEW YORK.—In‘a statem Union Unity League denounces against the Soviet Union. workers into another world slaughter. + The statement follows: Less than 14 years after the great World War, “War to End All War,” the world is now entering upon an- other gigantic war, far more terrible than the last. The war is already here, in the Far East. In other sec- tions of the capitalist world, the im- perialist powers are arming to the teeth. Japan supported by United States, France and Great Britain, has seized the greater part of Manchuria and is bombarding Shanghai and other Chi- nese cities. The object of these powers is not only to grab the rich province of Manchuria but also to divide up China among themselves. They see with great alarm the rapid rise of the Chinese Soviet Republic and they want to drawn it in blood. ‘The imperialist powers, by the ne ure of Manchuria, are preparing a great imperialist base upon the bor- ders of the Soviet Union, from which they are preparing soon to launch a joint attack upon the Soviet Union. ‘They fear the gigantic success of the Five-Year Plan, in the Soviet Union. The actions of Japan, in directly pro- voking the Soviet Union by occupying section of the Chinese Eastern Rat!~ road, show that it is working in full concert with the other imperialist powers in the developing attack upon the Soviet Union. Take Bloody Road In E‘fort To Es- cape Crisis ‘The capitalists are also trying to find in the imperialist war, a way out of the terrific economic crisis which is prostrating the industries in the capitalist world. They fear the rising wrath of the unemployed and impov- erished workers. They hope by drenching the world with the blood of workers and peasants, to create NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES EAST SIDE—BBONE Wednesday to Friday JEFFERION —EKO Acts— Lulu McConnell Lovely Ladies Simmons & Kent Clyde Hager —On the Sereen— Manhattan Hilda Rogers ie | Parade with Smith and Dale Meneydaead Of Avon Comedy Four —RKO Acts— Bert Walton Winnie Lightner Lyons & Snyder Ppa Duffy And the anh cat Charles Ben Dodge Butterworth Patronize the Concoops Food Stores AND Restaurant 2700 BRONX PARK EAST “Buy in the Co-operative Store and help the Left Wing Movement.” For the Nat. Counter Olympic Com. LIVE IN A— 2800 BRONX Office open from: 9 =, m, to 8 p. WORKERS COOPERATIVE COLONY We have a limited number of 3 and 4 room apartments NO INVESTMENT NECESSARY — OPPOSITE BRONX PARK PARK EAST Comradely atmosphere—In this Cooperative Colony you will find a library, athletic director, workroom for children, workers’ clubs and various cultural activities Tel. Estabrook 8-1400; Olinville 2-6972 Take Lexington Avenue train to White Plains Road and Get off Allerton Avenue mm. every day; #9 a, m, to 5 Saturday 10 n. m. to 5 p,m, Sunday WORKERS TO IMPERIALIST WAR ent issued last night, the Trade the imperialist war on the Chi- |nese masses and the preparations for armed intervention Tt calls upon the working class to rally to the struggle against the imperialist plots to push the markets that will set their ‘paralyzed industries in operation again. As the capitalist develop their war against the Chinese republic and pre- pare their major attack against the Soviet Union, they quarrel like wolyes among themselves over their expected imperialist booty, creating also from this direction the danger of a world imperialist war. While war in the Far East goes on and while military, naval and aerial armaments in the capitalist world pile up at a rate never known before, the tragic farce of the disarmament con- ference is taking place in Geneva. In this so-called peace conference, the imperialist powers are gathered to- gether, not for the purpose of secur- ing general disarmament—their cate- goric rejection of the disarmament proposals of the Soviet Union prove this—but simply to manoeuver to dis. arm their enemies while they increase their own individual armaments, The world leader in this orgy of Worker Loses Five Fingers Thru Speed- Up In Chair Factory NEW YORK.—Five fingers cut off of his left hand and three from his right is the cost to Joe Weber of the bosses speed up, in the Bentwood Chair Company, Long Island City. Though the danger of speed up around wood-workers machinery is well known, the Bentwood Chair Company forced the men in the shop to work on a piece and gang work basis. Weber, in order to make $20 or $22 a week had to work with fran- tie speed and his hands got caught in the wood-werking machinery, More workers in this shop will be crippled like Weber unless they or- ganize a shop group and force the bosses to stop the speed up, Build up >the Daily Worker permanent sustaining fund. Get your pledge cards and contribute now as much as you can to Save the Workers’ Paper. capitalist militarism is the United States. It is spending more money upon armaments than any other country in the world. Its expenditures are now three times those of pre-war days. In every corner of the world where the imperialists are striving to suppress the masses, American impe~ rialism is playing a leading role. The Socialist party of the world, and the American Federation of Labor, are the war agents of the capi- talists; they help the Capitalists to de~ ceive the workers with their fake peace conferences; disarmament pro- posals, ete, by presenting these as se- rious proposals to prevent war. The revolutionary unions of the Trade Union Unity League must take up the struggle against the war. This must be linked up with the fight against unemployment, wage cuts, speed-up, the persecution of the Negroes, the ailing of workers in strikes, etc. The fight against war is part if the general struggle against capitalist oppression and exploitation. Workers! Fight against the War. Hold United Front demonstrations with other workers organizations against the war.. Prevent the trans- porting of munitions to Japan. Join the Revolutionary Union of your industry! Fight for unemployment insurance and against wage cuts! Defend the Soviet Union and So- viet China! Trade Union Unity League AMUSEMENT America BY FIRST “Unprecedented Throngs” “The whole picture is bursting with a vitality and animal spirit which makes most of our films seem pallid and hothouse enough.” :CAMEO: SOVIET TALKING PICTURE OF RUSSIA'S “WILD CHILDREN” (WITH TITLES ROAD to LIFE Is Startled IN ENGLISH) —N, ¥,. Times. —N. ¥, Herald Tribune. 5th Capacity Week AAT sss sears Binet ue 25¢ 10 A. M, to 1 P. M. Exe. Sat,Sun.Hol. HOMECOMING FOR BOTH PARTS PRICES HE THEATRE GUILD PRESENTS EUGENE O’NEILL’S TRILOGY MOURNING BECOMES ELECTRA COMPOSED OF THREE PLAYS PRESENTED ON ONE DAY THE HUNTED GUILD THEATRE, 52nd St., West of Broadway Ist PERFORMANCE (HOMECOMING) 5:30 to 7:00 tnd PERFORMANCE (THE HUNTED & HAUNTED) 8:10 to 11:20 (Tickets may be purchased separately for either performance at one-half the above prices) THE HAUNTED Balcony 81.00, Ore! 81.50, $2.00, $3.00; ‘stra and front balcony $4.00 The Theatre Guild Presents REUNION IN VIENNA A Comedy .By ROBERT E, SHERWOOD Martin Beck THEA, 45% Ave. Eve. 8:40 Mats. Thurs.Sat 2:40 th Ave, HIPPODROME™"..:":; BIGGEST SHOW IN NEW YORK “THE Bros ACIS: oso ‘aa | Final Edition BIUART and With PAT O'BRIEN LASH and MAE CLARKE RESTAURANT—MUSIC ANNUAL FOUR-DAY BAZAAR! International Labor Defense February 25, 26, 27, 28 Tickets: Thurs. 35c, Fri, and Sat,., 50c, Sunday, A COLLECTION OF DIFFERENT ARTICLES, CHEAPEST PRICES DANCING, CONCERT, SPECTACLE, MASS SINGING COUNSELLOR-AT-LAW By With ELMER RICE PAUL MUNI Plymouth fat'rears, A''snt, 2:20 Build a workers correspondence group im your factory, shop or neighborhood. Send regular letters to the Daily Worker. of the (New York District) STAR CASINO: 107th St. and Park Ave. 35c. Combination ticket $1.00 BY LARGE JAZZ BAND 20 Join Comm at Detroit eities. Resolutions are pouring in to the Daily Worker eondemning the murder and telling of the determin- ation to rally new thousands to take the place of Simms in the struggle against capitalism. + 8 Michigan Workers Protest Murder. DETROIT, Mich., Feb. 23.—A mass demonstration protesting the murder of Harry Simms filled the Northern High Schcool Auditorium here. One could read in the faces of the work- ers, in their enthusiastic response to the slogans of “Build the Communist Party and the Young Communist League!” the determination to fight the bloody capitalist system which is responsible for the murder of Harry Simms. R. Baker spoke for the unist Party Simms Protest Workers everywhere are replying to the murder of Harry Simms by a firmer determination to build the Communist Party, and the Young Communist League to lead the struggle against the vicious conditions in Kentucky and elsewhere against which Harry Simms died fighting. A whole series of mass meetings have been held by workers in many¢. Communist Party; Nydia Barkin of the Young Communist League told of the life of Harry Simms and the heroic miners’ strike in Kentucky against starvation and terrorism. ©. Alston, a Negro member of the Young Communist League, was greeted with great enthusiasm when he called for a united struggle of the Negro and white workers in the north as well as the south to end capitalist slavery. Twenty workers joined the Communist Party to take the place of Simms. ee 8 Simms Protest Meeting Held in Minneapolis. MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. — A mass protest meeting held here Friday (CONTINUED ON PAGE THREE) (CONTINTED FROM PAGE ONED fight to free Mooney immediately. ‘We must all attend the Bronx Coli- seum meeting to hear Mother Moo- ney and to raise our demand for Mooney’s freedom so loud that all the fakers from Mayor Walker, the A. F. of L. officialdom, to Musteites, Lovestonites and the rest of that tribe will shake in their boots. Gov- ernor Rolph, who is about to an- nounce his decision on Mooney’s par- don must hear the thunder of the New York workers calling for Moo- ney’s freedom.” Mother Mooney came East despite the advice of her physician that the trip might have fatal results, due to the condition of her heart. She is 84 years old. TOM MOONEY SENDS GREETINGS TO WORKERS DEMONSTRATING TONIGHT AT BRONX COLISEUM The Bronx Coliseum meeting is one in a nation-wide series, mobilized by; the I.L.D. to push the mass fizht for the release of Tom Mcor the Seottsboro boys and all other. cles: war prisoners, These meetings oceur during Frederick Douglass week, in honor of the great Negro abdlitionist, dur- ing which the demand for uncon tional release of the nine Scotishoro boys is being raised greaver than ever before. The demand to halt tie coal bosses’ terror in Kentucky is also a major iasue in these meetings. The 24th is the 16th anniversary of Mooney's sentence to death. This sentence was later commuted to imprisonment when workers throug! out the world demonstrated on Moo- ney’s behalf, See Who A M. J, OLGIN Will Speak at the Midnite Showing Soviet Russia's First Talkie! ROAD te LIFE (Titles in Bugtish) Thursday, Feb. 25th CAMEO 42nd STREET & BROADWAY Spend an Evening with F, S. U. Orowd Call or Phone For Reservations N. ¥, DIST. FRIENDS OF SOVIET ‘UNY 799 BROADWAY, STY. 9-556? A NEIGHBORLY PLACE TO EAT Linel Cafeteria Pure Food—100 per cent Frigidairs, Equipment—Luncheonette and Soda Fountain 830 BROADWAY Near 12th Street = Al (Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant $58 Claremont Parkway, Bronx Fa amd JADE MOUNTAIN AMERICAN and CHINESE RESTAURANT “Open 11 a. m, to 1:30 a. m, Special Lunch 11 to 4,..35¢ Dinner 5 to 10,, .55¢ 197 SECOND AVENUE Betwee: HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian Restaurant “1900 MADISON AVENUE Phove University 4-9081 Phone Tomkins Sq. 6-9564 John’s Restaurant Lge afl ITALIAN DISHES place with atmosphere Lh ons ‘all endicalx meet 302 E. 12th St. New York One or two private rooms, kitchen, shower, reasonable. Apt. 41, 9 W, 110th St. .Monument 2-6667, —— FURNISHED ROOM—Quiet, near Union Sq., $4 2 week. See A. Ro Dally Worker. Teena Your Own Daily dvertises in Intern’] Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT _ 1 UNION SQUARE sTQ FLOOR AU Werk Dons Onder Pereonn) Care of DR. JOSEPESON Cooperaters Fetroutee SEROY 457 Allerton Avenue O1-8-7584 BRONX, WN, Y. {Int'l Workers Order OPTICIANS Cet) Harry Stolper, Ine, 73-15 CHRYSTIE STREET ‘Third Ave. Car te Hester St.) 9 am. to 6 pm. Daily Phone: Dry Dock 4-4523" Xi MELROSE DAIRY yeerranan | nomad Py Always n te Dine at Our 1187 7 SOUTHERN BLYD. Brenx (near 114th St. Statio FELEPBONE INTERVALS aor Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 199 SECOND AVENUE Bet. 12th and 13th Bte, Strictly Vegetarian food BUTCHERS’ UNION Local 14,4. M 0, & BW. ot NLA Office and Headquarters: Labor Temple, allt, Fert Mth, Seren Regular wiecentpes 8 apo third Sunday, arcs A sh Employment Bi .) evs P 2 mop every Sey WORKERS’ HEADQUARTERS— LABOR TEMPLE 15 WEST 126th STREET Telephone HArlem 17-5750 RESTAURANT, POOL ROOM, STEAM BATH, SWIMMING POOL, HALLS FOR RENT FOR ALL OCCASIONS 29 EAST 4TH STREET NEW YORK ‘Yel. Algonquin 3356-8843 We Carry 3 Full Line of STATIONERY “\noelenoe

Other pages from this issue: