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‘Page Tw PALLY We DEMONSTRATE AGAINST ROBBER WAR ON CH INEFE MASSES $, 1932 BEF ORE JAPANESE CONSULATE, WHITEHALL AND SOUTH STKEETS ON SATURDAY, MARCH 12th, AT 11 O'CLOCK IN THE MORNING N. Y. WORKERS TO SAT. AGAINST JAPANESE BUTCHERY | OF CHINESE; FOR DEFENSE OF USSR Withdrawal from China! Demand of Hands Off the DEMONSTRATE Imperialist Forces Soviet Union! Workers of New York! Rally in mighty numbers to protest the bloody Japanese imperialist slaughter of the Chinese masses! Rally to the defense of the Soviet Union from the threatening imperialist attacks. Show your burning hatred and mass y indignation against the al of the Shanghai de- he Chinese masses by the iy Kuomintang. Rally to the demand “Withdraw all imperial- Ist forces from China and Manchu- ria! Withdraw all Japanese troops from the Siberian border! Disarm the Czarist White Guard bands! Drive out the bloody Japanese im- perialist representatives from the United States! Fight the shipment | @f munitions by the United States to the Japanese imperialists! Tie up every dock—cripple the loading and transport of all war material against the Chinese masses and the Soviet Union! “All out to the demonstration on Saturday, March 12, at 11 a.m,, to blood, Demonstration for 11 Jobless; Protest Today NEW YORK.—Demensirat:ons tc- day before three home relief bureaus, Jed by the Downtown Unerr uw Council, 134 E. Seventh St. and toveed imzucd2.e cleven starving laid iown demands fo: of o«a- ws in the E is these has a mobili police ofii olice have b milit sing uffering movements in Detroit a nervous of the ving in the workers were hund:eds of workers ions. They started venth Si. and made the three bureaus, 38 Houston ar x A ton and used d such to be rit { 8. WORKERS IN SOVIET UNIO! Whitehall and South Sts.!| March in large numbers to the Japanese Con- sulate! “Workers! The most fearful and bloody slaughter of masses is still going on. Not only the Japanese troops, their cannon and airplane bombs, but also the United States marines and other im- perialist forces are pouring death into the Chinese anti-imperialist masses. The Kuomintang execution- | ers of the Chinese workers and peas- ants are working hand in hand with the imperialist murderers. The Japa- nese military chiefs and statesmen talk openly about war against the Soviet Union. Already Japanese and Czarist White Guard troops are past Hailin, at the Siberian border! Po- land, Rumania and all fascist Balkan and Baltic countries are ready for the attack on the western border! All out to the demonstration! De- fend the Chinese masses! Defend our Socialist Fatherland, the Soviet Union! Forces Action City Workers at Relief Cut that the police captain was forced to let the meeting proceed and per- mit a delegation to enter the bureau. Among the workers were a number vho are employed on the city emer- gency work jobs. These workers are aroused at the latest move of the city to economize on their misery. For- y they worked three days each eek, receiving the inadequate sum of $16.50--35.50 a day. The new compels them to work six other week, with the ages reduced to $5 a day, and the nost vicious part is that they must ait three weeks before they get ir wages. Workers whose week exded last Saturday, March 5, will not get paid until the 22nd. This leaves the workers without a cent with weelis. and tomorrow They are incensed at this et 11 am. they- will cGemonstrate under the leadership of the Downtown Council at Leonard and Lafayette Sts. before the offices of Commissioner Taylor and demand that this new misery scheme be re- d. PROTEST SCOTTSBORO VERDICT YORK.—Sixteen American and crecialists living in ow notified the International Labor Defense in New York by radio- gram today that they had cabled Covernor Miller of Alabama “em- phatic protest” against the death verdict passed on eight young Negro boys in Scottsboro, Ala. Six of the igners of the protest were identi- fied as New York engineers The radiogram reads: “Following cable sent to Governor Miller of Ala- bama: ‘Resolution adopted in Mos- cow by American engineers and | specialists: We American engineers | and specialisis in meeting tonight record emphatic protest against the death sentence passed on eight Ne- | Granich MEMBERS, ATTENTION! Y.0.1. All unemplo YCL members are instructed to be at the dis | office o 10 a. m Wednesda District. Secretariat. mornit . x Celebrate Founding of “Liberator” at Casino on March 13 NEW 3 annivers' New Star Avenue, h March 15U) Negro » strate against lynching: jim-crowiem and for N This ainiver concert, will also help the Liberator to appear. For the eecasion an extraordinary program has been arranged with the follov ing features: Freih Singing Soc ety; the famous Negro Quartetic of Staten Island; the Proletbuehne; Red Dancers; John Reed Club flustrating the differences between proletarian and bourgeois art; the W. T, R. Band in revolutionary selections. being Part unday conesit hel Cacino with 2 nexi 8 BE OUT ON WODNESDAY. All sections of the Communist and macs organizations are asked to send in their amount of bundle orders of Liberator no later then Wednesday 12 o'clock at 50 E. 13th St. Room 506. This issue will be a | enanin? 12-nage anniversary issue. gro working-class youths in Scotts- boro case. From ali we have read and heard regarding the case we are convinced the condemnation amounts to legal lynching as a concession to Tace prejudice. We desire to asso- ciate ourselves with the action taken throughout the world for the boys’ defense, and demand their immedi- ate release. Signed, Smith, Nelson, Appleman, Mandel, Brand, Webber, Pearl, Kuttner, Sil- ber, Rivkin. Guralnik, Granich White, Chesney.’” Six of the signers are recognized in New York as Max Mendel, Frank Jeanette Emanuel Herzog, Owen T. Pearl, Morton Webber, Chesney, Worker-Students to Give Dance Sat. at the New Star Casino NEW YORK. — Something new in the social activities of the workers in New. York thi: ar will be the Joint Students Ball this Saturday eve., March 22th at the New Ster Casino, 107th St. and Park Avenue, given by the Workers School and the Jewish Workers University. All workers are invited to partici- The Joint Committee of the schools has arranged an excellent program Tickets are fifty cents each in advance and 75 cents at door. ‘Tickets are now obtainable at the orkers’ School, 35 E. 12th St., the Jewish Workers University, 108 E. 14th St. and the Workers Book Shop, 50 B. 13th St. The dance will be an important affair for the two prole- tarian schools, and all students and other workers should not miss this special occasion, “We are pronouncing in good faith the words ‘the dictatorship of the proletariat’ and we shall make them LENIN. a reality.” | CAFETERIA FRACTION A very important meeting of | the Cafeteria Workers’ Fraction will be held this Thursday, March 10, at 8 p.m., in the Workers’ Cen- ter, second floor. All Party mem- bers must be present, as some very | important questions will be dis- | cussed. DIST. ORG. DEPT. | the Chinese | which to buy food for three | Herzog, Bogart, | Rent Strikers Defy Eviction Challenge of Bronx Landlord ze | NEW YORK. landlord, Mr. Kaufman, of 2810 Olliny where a rent strike has been won now try- | ing to back out of his agreement and has served 21 dispossess notices in a desperate attempt to demoralize the tenants. | “We accept the challenge of the |landlord; we are not frightened”, said the tenants. The landlord has broken its agreement and violated every point of the settlement. He evicted two tenants whereas the sett- lement called for no evictions with- |out consulting the house committee, he has refused to deal with the house committee, he has refused to serve | thirty days notice and carry out the} point of no discrimination against | any tenant for activity in the strike. Open air meetings are being held | in front of the house each day at 2 p. m. Workers, tenants and house | wives are called to these meetings and to rally against the threatened | eviction, | BOSS ATHLETIC BUNCH HATE IDE: OF MOONEY RACE NEW YORK.—The “Free (Tom Mooney” Street Run which takes | plece Saturday, March 12th, has gained wide support among the| worker athletes of New York. The| road work and reputation of some of | the participants predicts a real; snappy race. | The class character of the A.A.U.| is openly exposed by a vicious attack that they have launched against the Mooney Race. The A.A.U. officials have issued a statement that “Any athlete participating in this Running | ‘meet will be barred from A.A.U. | Sanctioned meets and will be expelled from membership.” The officials openly stand against any athletes entering in the fight to free Tom Mooney. Tom Mooney has been framed, and the Amateur Ath- letic Union condemns him to a liy- ing death, by supporting the lying, corrupt regime that has kept Mooney in jail for 16 long years. The Counter-Olympic |Committee, | whose honorary national chairman |is Tom Mooney, under this commit- tee auspices the meet is being run, calls on the fank and file of the A.A.U. to participate in this fun. The statement against the meet comes only from the officials, bank- ers and business men themselves, whose interests lie in common with the interests that keep Mooney rot- ting in jail. This does not repre- sent the sentiment of the rank and file. The Counter-Olympics Commit- tee calls on all athletes to disregard | this rotten attack on the workers’ sport movement. The Run will take place this Sat- urday, March 12, ati 2 p.m. Start will be from Rutgers Square East on T. Broadway to Clinton St., North to Ave. B, north to E. 7th St., west to Ave. A, rorth to E. 17th St., west to Union Square. Prominent working class leaders will make the presenta- tions at Union Square. A letter writ- ten by Tom Mooney together with the autographed photograph will be first prize. This meet Js the opening gun of the Counter-Olympic Campaign. Greet the runners at Union Square JEFFERSO:! AND FRANKL THEATRES CHANGE POLIC’ This Saturday, the Jefferson Thea- tre, on 14th Street, and the Frank- lin Theatre in the Bronx will change their present combination policy of vaudeville and pictures, to all screen entertainment. The theatres also| announce a new low price scale. “The Man |I Killed” (“Broken Lullaby”) featuring Lionel Barrymore, Nancy | Carroll and Phillips Holmes will be the s¢reen attraction starting Satur- The official pictures of the Billy Petrolle and Bat Battalino con- test at Madison Square Garden this Friday night and other short subjects will be included on the program. The Royal Theatre in the Bronx | will also start its entire screen policy this Saturday. Beginning Thursday the Acme ‘Theatre will present a Soviet film, “Broken Chains.” This (picture has an all-workers cast. This is the last day of “Taras Bulba” at the Acme. |The picture is based on the well known novel by Nicolai V. Gogol. BEECHAM DIRECTS THREE SYM- PHONTES SUNDAY AFTERNOON. Thomas Beecham conducts three | symphonies at the Opera House |concert this Sunday | afternoon: Symphony in E flat | major, Breitkopf and Haertel No. 3| | and 99, Haydn; Symphony No. 34 in | C major, Koechel 338, Mozart; Sym- | | phony in D minor, Franck. | Ottorino Respighi, the Italian com- | | poser, is guest conductor of the Phil- | harmonic this coming week, present- | ing programs of his own works. The | world premiere of his “Maria Egiz- | | iaca” is announced for the special | | pension fund concert at Carnegie | Hall on Wednesday evening. This, | called by Respighi a “Triptych for | Concert in Three Episodes,” will be | | preceded by two orchestral works for small orchestra, “The Birds,” and | “Botticellian Triptych.” The entire | | program will be repeated at the regu- | lar concerts of Thursday evening | an Friday afternoon at Senee fal | among the ranks of the workers tn | Metropolitan ie Thugs Invade Needle Union; Shoot Worker Attack Is Part of Vicious Campaign to Enforce Open Shop Conditions NEW YORK, March 9.—Eddie Stark, member of the or- ganization committee of the Needle Trades Workers’ Industrial Union, was seriously wounded yesterday when an armed thug named Ronin bent on murder fired at him with a pistol in the office of the union on West 28th Street. Ronin with four more gangsters, - 2S Sg who have been carrying on a reign | ‘© this important meeting. ; of terror in the Ritz Millinery Shop | The Central Strike Committee will at 161 W, 26th St, entered the of-, meet Mhursday at 7 p.m. in the of- fice of the, Industrial Union in the | {ce of (Pe union. The Unity Com- morning armed with revolvers and | ™ttee © se pie Nai irons. They proceeded to the office | office of the union after work Thurs- of Ben Gold, secretary of the union, 98: : : and at once started to scuffle with The hearing on the Kaufman in- Gold and other workers in the office, | Junction which was to be held yester- When the workers attempted to eject | Gay wes again posiponed. ‘Ss “Will Mass Picket, Smash Injunction”, Rent Strikers Say NEW YORK. ts — “An is to be evicted from 733 Arnow Ave. where a rent strike is in The landlord, Wm, Grassi, | is also an Italian. An Italian worker striking for lower rents, are threat- ened with being evicted at one swoop from the four houses on Longfellow Avenue, between 174th and 176th Sts. Literally masses of workers with their | wives and children and belongings are junction against the strike and evict | +, pe dumped on the sidewalks if the five more tenants. The reply of the |rammeny court has its way tomor- strikers is “We will mass picket and| +o. and carries through the order smash it, |of its masters, the landlords and cor- Workers looking for rooms upon | porations. The eighty families are finding the house on strike refuse to | called to answer dispossess notices scab and look for rooins elsewhere. |tomorrow in William Street Court, This display of working class solidar- | 1400 William Street Road. ity encourages the workers to carry | Eighty evictions means at least | the strike on with greater spirit. $3500 for the marshall and must re- | On Saturday there will be a large | ceive the financial support of the rest of tl I lords wr eth a |demonstration in front of the house | ed coagemr ect who He ae Ms called by the Tenants Committee and | i the s 2 tomorrow progr Grassi now threatens to get an in- 80 EVICTIONS THREATENED IN 4 EFFORT TO BREAK RENT STRIKE NEW YORK. — Eighty workers, that the landlords arc ready to spend $3500 more to evict \-orkers but wont {lower rents. | The Mid-Bronx Unemployed Coun- cil who is leading the strike together |with the workers’ committees will |hold an open air meeting tomorrow, jat 12 noon at 174th and Longfellow | Avenue to rally the workers for a parade to the court to protest At the same time three houses on the same street, 1773, 1775, 1771, won their demands without a strike strug- |gle. The landlord, Mrs. London, stster jot M.yvr London, a leading socialist, ‘had realized that a refusal would not’ |stop the workers. The tenants won |10 percent reduction in rent; no evie- tion of unemployed; painting of hall y improv |the Upper Bronx Unemployed .Coun- | jeil who are leading the strike. the thugs from |the office Ronin) pulled out a gun and ‘fired three shots, one of which pierced the arm of Stark. The workers who were in the office at the time said that the gangsters came into the office bent on getting Gold. The gangsters after the shooting rushed from the building and entered the building at 151 W. 28th St., the police in the meantime refusing to do anything to apprehend the gun- men. Even when the police saw the | be absent from his post in this time thug and knew where he was they | 50 critical to the existence of the refused to make an arrest, thereby Daily Worker, so full of danger for showing that they were in league, the workers, so full of promise for with the gangsters, the revolutionary struggle. All out Nothing was done by the police|for the Tag Days this coming Fri- until J. Buitenkant, attorney Industrial Union, demanded that the | the Daily Worker: | thug, Ronin, be arrested. The police _ series reluctantly arrested (Ronin, at the sy East Tenth st same time taking with them a work- 6 F 4h St, Ukrainian Workers’ Cl er from the Industrial Union named im ar "se Der P teensen Schwartz on a framed charge of at- tacking the gangsters. The whole vicious attack is part of | a campaign launched against the In- dustrial Union and the workers in| the Ritz Millinery shop who are organizing for rank and file control and union conditions. The workers throughout the gar- ment center showed intense indigna- | _ Study the following stations for the Daily Worker Tag Days this coming | Friday, Saturday and Sunday. Re- to you. Let no class-conscious worker H. Broad St., Marine Workers’ Indas- Union, 418 KE. 17th St., street floor. SECTION 4 ‘ak Workers’ Home, 347 E. 72nd arian Workers’ Home, $50 E. Sist St. jan Workers’ Club, Sif E. 1¢4th St. Finnish Workers’ Club, 15 W. 126th St. i | SECTION 5 tion over this latest aet of thuggery! wangarian Workers’ Center, 569 Prospect which is aimed at crushing the strug- | Ave, Bronx. Shole, 353 Beekman Ave. gles of the needle workers. | The United Front Dress Strike | Willi continued to forge ahead yesterday | |"5tage SECTIO! burgh Workers’ Breeklyn. Plasa Clab, 285 Redney St. 6 Cleb, TAG DAY STATIONS LISTED BELOW ; ALL OUT TO SAVE DAILY WORKER’ port to the station most convenient | for the! day, Saturday and Sunday to save| Downtown Unemployed | > Flush Hall, 46 Ten Eyck St. s’ Center, 61 Graham Ave. p Ave. Workers’ Club, 285 Throop | Ave. Middle Village Workers’ Center, 1 Fal- ton St. 29 EAS1 NEW YORK Yel. Algonquin 3356-8843 | We Carry a Fall Line of STATIONERY AT SPECIAL PRICES fer Organizations 14TH STREET Spanish Workers’ Center, $1 Atlantic Ave. Workers’ Center, 657 Fairview Ave., Ridge- | . weed, SECTION 7 1873—43rd St., Boro Park, Brooklyn, 1109, 45th St., Boro Park, Brooklyn. 2006, 70th St., Bensonhurst, Brooklyn. 48 Bay 28th St., Bath Beach, Brooklyn. Workers’ Clab, 2921 W. 32nd 6t., Brooklyn. 450 Hicks St., Brooklyn. 126 15th St., Brooklyn, Russian Workers’ | Club. | SECTION 8 U8 Bristol St., Brooklyn (Brownsville). 962 Sutter Ave., Brooklyn (E, New York). | 403 Pennsylvania Ave., Brooklyn (East | |New York). | 4 NEIGHBORLY PLACE TO EA'l | | | Linel Cafeteria Pure Food—100 per cent Frigidairs Equipment—Luncheonette and Soda Fountain 830 BROADWAY Near 12th Street | Brooklyn. | Brownsville Youth Center, 105 Thatford Ave., Brooklyn. | SECTION 15 Clap, | Prospect Workers’ Bivd., Bronx. Shule, 1400 Boston Road. | Middle Bronx Workers’ Club, 3882 Third Ave. Women’s Council, 1610 Boston Road, Shule 11, 2700 Bronx Park East. 1157 Souther= ~ All Gomroaes Meet at Bronx Workers’ Center, 1322 Seuthers Boulevard. Tremont Workers’ Center, 2075 Clinton Vegetarian Health | Ave. with 8 new settlements marked up to the credit of the strikers. Discontent | the International continues to grow. 8 More Shops Strike. Many of the shops that returned to work found that the wages had been cut 25 per cent. A large number lof) white th workers have left the shops. Many |m salvador of them went to the Joint board and|icust masters that “law and order” demanded from Hochman an ek. ‘ have again been established through- planation. Hochman told the work- | out the country, workers and peas- ers that the machinery was n6t | ants are still being shot down because working good yet and advised the |they dare to express their sympathy workers to wait until it was repaired. |:or the revolutionary movement, The United Front Strike Commift-| he anti-Imperlalist League of the tee advises the workers not to B€/united States will hold a protest fooled by the Hochmans, who helped | meeting against the white terror in sell them out, but ito organize alll salvador and Guatemala, coming shops on the basis of rank and file |rnuregay night, March 10th, at the control, Workers of the Interna |soanish Workers Center, 4 East 116th tional who have been sold out Street, oe ay fake evap ra Pec Fascist gangs extensively organized ment should come to the office ot : the Industrial Union or to the head- |r” 08 ® campaign to terrorize the ve (exploited masses into submission, tt i ft i ie aeas Bate eats aie while living conditions grow worse, shone to real vurion .obhd Hons |unemployment increases and oppres- - The United Front Strike peas ‘sion is intensified in the native and i imperialist owned plantations. tee has announced that there will be | meetings of the building and block, Taking as an excuse the workers committees from 35th and 36th Sts. |and peasants uprising in El Salvador, right after work at the office of the | which has been criminally slandered Industrial Union. Members of the — aie Martinez government of announces to the imper- ANTI-IMPERIALISTS PROTEST = MURDER IN EL SALVADOR THURS. Restaurant | 558 Cleremont Parkway, Bronx Patronize the Concoops Food Stores AND Restaurant 2700 BRONX PARK EAS1 in the native bourgeois press, the government of Guatemala is carry- ing on its fascist persecution against the Communist Party and all work- ers, students and professionals that ‘are sympathetic towards the revolu- | tionary movement of the enslaved masses. | “Buy in the Co-operative |} Store and help the Revo- lutionary Movement.” The tools of imperialism in Guate- | mala, El Salvador and Honduras are j making every effort to check the or- | | Sanization of the workers and peas- : _ lants. They are trying to suppres: HEALTH FOOD {all anti-imperialist struggles by the Vegetarian Restaurant execution of Communist leaders. mass Inurders and the imprisonmen of hundreds of workers. This ter- | rific white terror can only be stopped | by the mass pressure of workers in | other countries. Especially the Amer~ | ican workers should protest against | the white terror that is being im- | posed upon the colonial masses by | the same brand of Wall Street thieves that rob, oppress and exploit them. Phone Lehigh 4-960 AMERICAN and CHINESE RESTAURANT Industrial Union should see that members of the International come | NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES | EAST SIDE—BRONX AMUSEMENTS Open tt a.m. to 1:20 a, m, Dinner 5 to 10... 197 SECOND AVENUE | Between 12th ond 13th Sta. a | TRE THEATRE GUILD Presents RKO (hans Gord fh , HE MOON IN THE | YELLOW RIVER Chester Cafeteria COUNSELLOR-AT-LAW By With 876 E. Tremont Ave. ELMER RICE PAUL MUNI) (Corner Southern Blvd.) Plymouth oe 45 ie fy. 820 Quality—Cleanliness—Moderate Prices . Thurs, + a all Workers Members F.W.J.U. | By DENIS JOHNSTON GUILD THEA., 52d St., W. of B’way. | Wisnottaree Wednesday te Friday | Eve. 8:40, Mats, Thurs., Sat., 2:40 ~—RKO Acts— | | Rao Samuels —On the Screen | THE THEATRE GUILD presente ree Rio Bros. . . sole HUGENE O'NEILL'S Tritogy Kola & Rogers Morgan & Stone Martin & Martin | | Mourning Becomes Electra Composed of 3 playe presented on tiduy HOMECOMING, THE HUNTED THY HAUNTED Commencing at $:30 sharp. Dinner in- termission of one hour at 7. No Mats. a EO One Man” —BKO Acts— ALVIN THEA., 62nd &t., W. of Biway Lillian Shade with a Billy Mapl The Vheatre Guild Presents | pants eadte Paul Lukas =| || REUNION IN VIENNA 38 Relph Olsen A Comedy -By ROBERT E. SHERWUOD Haggerty and Carole Lombard | ‘ THEA, Hofman A Martin Beck sr 'a¢"» 4 Cart Schenk ana) Ricardo Cortez Eve. 8:40 Mats. ThurgSat 2-40 LIVE IN A~— Nicolai V. Gogol’s “TARAS BULBA”’ THE UKRAINIAN COSSACK A Tense Drama of the Cossacks Adapted From Gogol’s Well Known Story. ACME THEATRE 14TH ST. & UNION SQUARE Beginning Thurs.—Soviet Film “BROKEN CHAINS” With 100 percent Workers’ Cast 2800 BRONX Office open trom: 9 Saturday 1 a, me WORKERS COOPERATIVE COLONY We have a limited number of 3 and 4 room apartments NO INVESTMENT NECESSARY — OPPOSITE BRONX PARK Comradely atmosphere—In this Cooperative Colony you will find a Ubrary, 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 ————— ™. to 8 p.m. BWAY.& | | Pro CAMEO 42nd sy. | First Time at Popular Prices! 1 i “EXPLORERS 1 OF THE WORLD” HIPPODROWE::..:;;. BIGGEST SHOW IN NEW YORK | 8 was JOE E. BROWN acts i Tnel. “ Sa yr Paddy Cure Fireman Save & Orchestra My Child” Phone Tomkina Sq. 6-054 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 302 E. 12th St. New York STAR Sunday, PARK EAST STATEN (SLAND J. W. Ford, Robert Minor, B. very 79 a.m. to 5 p.m, to 6 p.m aday Workers’ Clubs Should Advertise in the “Daily” | BRONSTEIN’S (800 MADISON AVENUE | ‘JADE MOUNTAIN |Special Lunch 11 to 4...35¢| Sie Revtema ANNIVERSARY CONCERT CA 107th St. and Park Ave. —PROGRAM— FREIHEIT SINGING SOCIETY—‘. SCHAFER Proletbuehne—Red Dancers—John Reed Club—W.LR, Band PROMINENT SPEAKERS— RICHARD B. MOORE, Chairman ADMISSION 50 CENTS ‘ Intern’] Workers Order | DENTAL DEPARTME 1 UNION SQUARE 4 8TH FLOOR Al) Work Done Under Persona) Care af DR. JOSEPHSON _ | Cooperators* Patron ee SEROY CHEMIST 65? Allerton Avenue BRONX, NX. x od THOROUGH EYE FXAMINATION EXPERT FITTING OF GLASSES Special Rates to Workers and Families WILLIAM BELL OPTOMETRIST and OPTICIAN 106 East 14th St. (Room 21) Tel. TOmpkins Square 6-3237 Intl Workers Order OPTICIANS CFD ‘| Harry Stolper, Inc. | 73-75 CHRYSTIE STREET Third Ave, Car to Hester St.) 9 am. to 6 pm. Daily Phone: Dry Dock 4-4523 Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 1399 SECOND AVENUE Bet. 12th and (ath Bte. Strictly Vegetarlan ood : ° MELROSE DAIRY TRGETABIAN SESTAUBANT rades Will Al Fisd Fleesant ta Dine at Our Place. 118% SOUTHERN BLVD. Berens (near 114th St. Station) SELEPHONE INTERVALE 98-0149 | Schildkraut’s Vegetarian Restaurant 4 West 28th St. Wishes to announce a radical change in the prices of our food— to fit any purse—yet retaining the same quality food. Those new prices shall prevail only at the ‘| 4 West 28th Street Store i] We hope to greet you as before. BUTCHERS’ ‘UNION fecal 174. A MO, # RW ot NO Office and Headquart Labor Cemple, v48 Kast sith Wtreer Heom 12 Regular meetiuxs everz eno third Gunday, 10 4. Employment Guresu open every aay at 6 M Neat AL 13th, at 2 p.m. INO NEGRO QUARTET D. Amis, M. Olgin, Ben Gold