The Daily Worker Newspaper, April 7, 1932, Page 2

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Page Two UMW Local Demands Release U7,S of Frank Borich, Mine Leader yf o¢q1 Workers Local 28 A SPRINGFIELD, Uy, April 5.— Following a speech by Arthur Herchy of the Rank and File Com- mittee, U. M. W. local 913 of the Peabody Mine No. 59 passed a re solution demanding the immediate release of Frank Borich, national secretary of the National Miners Union. Borch, who was arrested after a raid on the national head quarters of the N. M. U. in Pitts- burgh by federal immigration au- thorities, is being held for deporta- tion The resolution adopted by local 913 was sent to Secretary of Labor Doak, who is directly responsible for the raid and Borich’s arrest and to Governor Pinchot of Pennsylvania. The miners cheered Herchy’s call- ing for a fight to defeat the wage cuts in the Illinois fields and for a strike against the policy of Walker and Lewis of the U. M. W. A DELEGATES — FTRCTED FOR MAY IST TRIP ary of A. F. L. 1g Trades in Minn. Elected 5 ts The campaign to elect a May 1 1 to bring the greetings of merican Workers to the Soviet has won the support of wide masses throughout the country in- cluding many A.F.L. unions. Already 20 delegates have been elected and election of the remaining 30 is to be ed from Kentucky, Western and other industrial Walter Frank, secretary of the Building Trades Council of Minne- apolis, has been elected by the build- ing trades workers in that city as their representative. He was en- dorsed by O. T. Folland, president of the 1, who said in part “Brother Frank been a constant fighter for the workers’ cause. He has a following among the A.F.L. union not superceded by any individual in this section:..no one will give us a clearer picture of conditions as they are in the Soviet Union.” “The en- dorsement of Frank,” Folland con- tinued, “represents conservatively 3,000 workers.” “An anthracite miner was elected by miners of Locust Mountain in She- nandoah, Pa.) A meeting of the UMWA Wm. Penn mine local will be held tonight to endorse him. Workers of the Singer Sewing Ma- chine Company in Elizabeth, N. J., wili meet at 408 Court St. Thurs- day, at 8 p.m., to elect their dele- gate. Marcel Scherer, national sec- retary of the Friends of the Soviet Union, will speak. A special factory gate meeting at noon has been ar- ranged to mobilize the workers. Workers of the Anaconda Wire ‘Works in Yonkers, N. Y., will hold’ mass meeting Friday night to choose their representative on the delega- tion. Wire workers in Sacramento, Cal.., have elected a delegate already. He has received the endorsement of his union of wire workers and awaits the endorsement by the Building Trades Council of that city. ‘Punds are urgently needed to en- suze that the delegation will sail on April 19. The F.S.U. asks that or- @anization whos that have elected delegates to rush in their money to the national office, 80 E. llth St. All workers are asked to collect for the American Worker Delegation and send with donations, greetings and resolutions in support of the Soviet workers and a pledge to fight against the, war provocations of the impe- Tiaiist countries. LEON JANNEY IN PERSON AT HIPPODROME Yeon Janney, noted boy actor of the screen heads the stage show of the Hippodrome beginning Saturday. Young Janney is presenting carica- tures of well known stars. Other acts include: Bart Walton; “Pals of the Past,” youths from 65 to 80 years of age including Danny Simmons, Jose- phine Sabel, Annie Hart, Blondie Newcombe and Lombard brothers; Bobby Gillette with Shirley Richards: Van Horn and Inez; Dean and Joyce and their rhythm dancers; Parker ..AE:niUleK-dmqyy ? ? fis Wemberg; and the Demnati harle- quins; “Girl Crazy” featuring Bert Wheeler, Mitzi Green, Eddie Quillan and Ketty Kelly is the film attrac- tion. Zane Grey is planning another ex- pedition in quest of big fish. This time it will be the Indian Ocean, in serch of new specimens. His pic- ture “Second Sea Adventures,” now being shown at the Cameo Theatre will be held over a second week. Sergei M. Eisenstein, noted Soviet motion picture director, arrived in New York during the week and will remain here until April 14 to attend the American premiere shrowing of the latest Soviet talkie, “White Moun- tains,” at the Cameo Theatre. Eisen- stein is anxious to extend this cour- tesy to Yudekevitch, director of “Golden Mountains,” as he and Yude- kevitch started their theatrical careers together. Another member of this group was Nikolal Ekkk, diretcor of “Road To Life.” The trio received their first opportunity when they Joined the Meyerhold Theatre in 1920. Yudekevitch and Ekk remained in the theatre until two weeks ago, but Eisenstein broke with Meyerhold in ? 2 | The arrest of Borich significantly | | came at a moment when the mine operators are tening new and huge wage slashes upon the backs of the already starving miners, Miners all over see in this act the hands of the coal operators and their tools to snatch Borich from the ranks of the miners and to de- prive them of one of their leaders in the fight against the bosses’ tacks. There is very strong evidence that the U, M. W. A. were the ini- tiators in the attempt to deport Borich Only the N. M. U, is exposing the conditions of the miners and is or- ganiing them to repulse the attacks, irrespective of their union affilia- tion. It is because of this that the local and federal government make the most brutal attacks against the N. M. U. and their leaders. | Dozens have been arrested and | jailed. Show Soviet Family Life at Burnside lecture and slides, “24 Hours | With the Soviet Family Fillipov”, banned in White Plains because it reveals the lies of the capitalist press jabout the Sovieti Union, will be |shown on Thursday evening, April |7, at Burnside Manor, 71-85 W. | Burnside Ave., at 8 p.m. Frank Sie- gel, district organizer of the F.S.U., who was arrested in White Plains, | will give the lecture. | The picture shows the life of an! average worker and his family in Moscow, from the time he wakes up| in the morning until he goes to bed. | 4 ‘General Electric Delegate to Get | Mass Send-Off, Workers Show Great, Interest in Soviet; Police Interfere, SCHENECTADY, N. Y.—A final mass meeting for the send-off of Alexander Trainor, the elected work- | ers’ delegate from the General Elec- | tric plant to go to the Soviet Union | in answer to an invitation of the! Metal Workers Union of the Electro- zavod in Moscow will be held Friday | April 8, at 269 State St. | Trainor is a machinist from the tool room in shop 17 and was elected | by 200 workers, 90 per cent of whom | were General Electric workers, at a} mass meeting on March 18, when the | invitation of the Soviet workers was | accepted. Many more workers anxi- | ous to attend were prevented by po-| lice intimidation and the fear of be-/ ing blacklisted. | The police are doing everything | possible to prevent the workers from | rallying to the campaign. Workers | are being continually arrested for | distributing leaflets. A reign of in-| timidation was insttuted wth active | workers arrested and framed on va- grancy charges. The fear of the boss- es of the intense interest shown by the workers in the Soviet Union was | further evidenced by the slander} against Trainor in the capitalist press. They have tried to make him ap- pear in the light of a sinister “red agitator”. The General Electric workers are interested in the Electrozavod be- cause while there are mass layoffs and drastic wage cuts in the General Electric, there is no unemployment | in the Soviet Union where wages are rising. Why are the city and police so interested in keeping us away from the meetings while the General Electric can send their engineers and products to the Soviet Union without | question?” the workers are asking. A campaign is now going on in- volving ali departments to secure | financial support. for Trainor’s trip. | Leaflets are being broadcast through. | out the plant explaining the pur- pose of the delegation and exposing the actions of the press, also invit- ing all workers to send in questions | for the delegate to secure first hand answers from the Russian workers. Meeting of Readers ‘Soviet Russia Today’ The readers and friends of the magazine “Soviet Russia Today” have been iiivited to an open “selfcriticism” meeti (ng to be held in Irving Plaza, 15th Street and Irving Plaa, Sunday, April 10, at 2 p. m. “You know how valuable self- in achieving the success of the Five Year Plan” states the editorial com- mittee. “It should be a valuable means of correcting the error and short- comings of our journal.” In order to make the magazine an effective weapon for the defense of the Soviet Union. “We want to aid our readers in improving Soviet Russia Today” they stated. Smash the illusions of the pa- cifists in the struggle against war. Learn to struggle in the revolution- ary way against war, -lutionary Struggle Against War Versus Pacifism,” by A. Bittelman, five cents. | CE a 1924 and joined the newly formed r DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, APRIL 7, 1932 . HE revolt in the Sheet Metal Workers Local 28 of the International Association is becom- ing bigger and deeper. It has grown out of the fight for unemployed relief. For years and years the present gang has ruled this local union with an iron fist. Any one who ever dared ta accuse the officials was either fined, beaten, or he got all of those things, to start from the last—beaten and fined. Anyone who was only suspected of | being against them was and is even now not sure of his job, The main object of this bureaucratic gang was to make as much money from their jobs as possible. And they did make money! Were it possible to investigate their bank books, the members would find out how their $110-$125 per week they could save so much money. The officials have been carrying on their racket as long as the men of the local could get a job, But building workers were among the first to be hit by the crisis. The bosses, with the union officials in their pocket, began to Tabor Depar | assessing those who work. The other socialist | extent of using physical arguments. And Julius slash the wages to a point where men are to- | day working for five-six dollars a day instead of for the scale of $13.20 a day. There are today over 50 per cent unemployed out of the 2,800 members. These bureaucrats of the union saw-the rising revolt on the part of the men, and they insti- tuted a system of relief whereby those who worked three days paid $2 a week and those , who made four or five days paid $4. But how did the officials distribute the re- lief funds? It is enough to say that the men on the relief committee received $9 for every meet- ing they attended, while on the average the unmployed received $1.50 a week! This 7s not all. ‘Those who were pro-administration received more—some received over $300 and some only $25. That wouldn’t have been bad either. The worst of it was that they introduced the same system as the charity institutions—to investi- gate everyone in his home, fhus trying to make beggars out of the unemployed. This shameless tactic enraged the unemployed and at every meeting” of the local, they became bolder in their attack on the administration. When the bureaucrats saw that the spirit of revolt gripped the whole local, they offered a new proposal. They decided to appoint a new committee of ten, to work out an unemployed plan. They thought they would appoint five Jewish members and five gentiles out of the disorganized opposition, expecting that the Jew- ish and gentile workers would never agree. z But they miscalculated. The committee began to function like a clock. They brought in a plan to assess 10 per cent on all those who work and 30 per cent on the officials’ salaries. Thus creating a fund to be able to pay $9 a week to every unemployed. When the officials heard of this plan, they came out point blank against it. It meant $35 ‘volting membership. In the face of a threat to a week from their wages. At the special meet- ing called for the purpose of taking up the plan, the bureaucrats therefére, declared ‘that unless there is a 100 per cent vote there will be no plan. Out of over 2,500 men, only 139 voted against the plan. But wheom did the bureaucrats find as their allies and defenders? The whole socialist clique. One named Tuvin, who organized the Bosses Association of Tinsmiths and Roofers, and thus controlled the jobs together with the bureau- crats, shed crocodile tears over the robbery of delegate, Cohen, was very active, even to the Gerber secretary of the Socialists in New York, came to help out the bureaucrats by proposing to take up the whole plan, each part separate, instead of as a whole. More than that, he never came out against the administration, but always told the opposition that while he is with them in principle (!) yet he is against their tactics... The reason is obvious. He has a printing shop and does the printing for these bureaucrats. It is plain, the socialists in Local 28 are pur- suing the policy of their leader, Norman Thomas, in the Electricians Union and in other unions, everywhere supporting the racketeers! Since the relief plan of the Committee of Ten was| declared illegal, the bureaucrats never ompleted any of the meetings. They adjourn the meeting at 9 or 9:30. When their term in office expired last De- cember, they refused to call a special meeting for nominations. In this case as well as in the case of the Unemployed Relief Plan, the Inter- national Association supported the gang in of- fice. If it were not for their support, the bu- reaucrats would never dare to violate the most elementary laws of local autonomy. In spite of the fact that the membership invited the presi- dent of the International Association from Washington to straighten out the present diffi- culties, he refused. He has been in New York many times, but never dared to face the re- expel everyone who will dare to participate in the elections, over 500 members participated in the election, The bureaucratic gang in office, together with Hinze—president of the International Associa- tion, as well as the rest of the International brought charges immediately against those who ran on the ticket. And although the opposition opposed taking the whole question to court, knowing that the $160,000 in the treasury which this gang is controlling and using without giving any financial report, the opposition was forced to take the case to court. The membership, the majority of whom are native born, and legalis- tically inclined, expressed their opinion at many rank and file meeting—where nearly a thousand men participated, that if the gang, together with the International Association refuses to listen to ‘tment Joins Labor Fakers of Sheet gainst Jobless Insurance them to take the case even to a capitalist court, not having any illusions, that the court will be with them. When the clique. realized that they would have to face the court, they came to court with the charge that the opposition are “Reds” and re- ceive funds from outside, Meanwhile the Labor Department stepped in And here comes the open strikebreaking role of the government, Secretary Doak instructed his agents in New York under the auspices of the spy agent, Mr. Brown, to question those whose names were given over to them by the combined bureaucratic clique of New York. and Washington, The cry of a “Red Danger” scared heither the leaders of the opposition nor the membership. On the contrary, the rank and file say if to fight against corruption for unemployed relief. -and for local autonomy is a Communist fight, then they are Communisti Nothing can scare them now, they say, since they have nothing to lose. Secretary Doak to- gether with the whole government can not stop them from fighting for bread, for their wives and children! If Doak thinks that he will suc- ceed in stopping this fight, he is badly mistaken, For this is a fight against hunger and misery! But why did Secretary Doak find it necessary to step into this fight? The answer is plain, Hoover and Wall Street are against social in- surance for the unemployed workers. Therefore President Green and the whole leadership of the American Federation of Labor are aaginst it. If this local will accept a local unemployed relief plan, they will then demand that the federal government should provide it for them. These fakers of local 28 are also fighting against any system of relief that may touch their pocket. We can see therefore that the fight of Ruel and clique against unemployment relief is Doak’s fight. Why shouldn’t he help a friend in need. And there is another reason why Secretary Doak came to help these fakers. That is, there is to be taken up in all locals of the A. F. of L., the National Rank and File Referendum on Govern- ment Unemployment Insurance. Doak thinks that his strikebreaking tactics in this local 28 will stop the men from fighting for this referendum and make them accept the present proposed wage-cut of 25 to 40 per cent for the building trades workers, which the bosses with the help of the Building Trades Council leaders are trying to put into effect on May 1, 1932. Court decision or no court decision the men will continue the fight. ‘The main thing now is not to send in a new set of officials that will be not better than the present fakers. The mem- bership will have to organize themselves in a strong organization to fight for local autonomy which takes in all other demands. Organization is Struggle! Don’t weaken your ranks! We shall deal with the coming elections in another article. Gun Bars Workers Demanding Relief A committee of unemployed workers were met by a gun and the threat of being murdered when they tried to vested capital War Profits in Textiles (Based on Labor and Textiles, by Dunn and Hardy.) ° The imperialist war of 1914-18 brought textile mills to the highest peaks of prosperity. Profits were enormous during the war and the fought in 1926, averaged net profits of 53 per cent a year for 16 years. During the war years 1916-17, they Net profits on stockholders’ in- (including capital Protest Against Robber War KANSAS CITY, Mo.,, April 6.— Over 1,200 took part in a prelim- inary anti-war and unemployment demonstrations this morning at the Ford plant here. Many of the workers pledged to take part in the | anyone that tries to go in there.” | Standing besides him was the Demo- to Be Held on Sunday | criticism has been in the Soviet, Union | Read “Bevo- enter the Home Relief Bureau at Washington and Claremont Avenue to demand relief, The bureau announced a few days ago that it would dispense no further relief and was closing. On Tuesday a meeting called by the Mid Bronx Unemployed Council was broken up by the police and a committee ejected from the Buro. The workers said “We will be back until we get relief.” Today's meeting at which over hun- dred workers were present, was the fulfillment of this “promise.” The committee today found cops barring the door and as they tried to push through a plain clothes man pulled a gun and waving it at the hungry workers shouted: “I'll plug cratic leader of the district. Last week a committee from the Downtown Council was threatened with a gun at a Home Buro. This is the answer of Tammany Hall and the bankers, guns, bullets, clubs, terror against the workers’ cry for bread. The workers are undaunted. Their stomacks are empty, their rent is unpaid, their children go to school without properly clothed. To sit at home means death, and they are ready to fight it out. Today the Mid Bronx Council will once more lead the workers to the Buro, strongly deter- mined to place their demands inside. } NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES EAST SIDE—BRONX RKO (09 15°04 flo, JEEFERION ||| FRANKLD immediate post-war boom. Large regular cash and extra cash divi- dents were declared by practically all companies and many paid amaz- ing stock dividents and heaped up great surpluses. Fortunes were made over night by textiles investors Stock values were inflated in ex- pectation of higher profits. In woolen and worsted mills, beginning with 1916, profits were little short of fabulous... As profits continued or expanded, big dividents were paid and prices of mill shares soared to unprecedented heights, Enormous profits werem ade by cotton and wool companies in 1916 and 1917. Thirty cotton manufac- turers examined, showed a precen- tage of net income to capital stock ranging from 24 to 212. Profits of 44 companies making unfinished print cloth ranged from 15 to 165 per cent, and similar profits were shown in other cotton lines, Out of 45 woolen and worsted manufact- uring, dyeing and finishing compa. nies, 16 made over 100 per cent on their capital stock. Some of the high rates were 205 per cent, 213 per cent, 451 per cent, 265 per cent, 297 per cent, 338 per cent, 411 per cent, 451 per cent, and 490 per cent, while the peak profit was made by a com- any that recorded 1,770 per cent for 1917, the year the United States entered the war. American Woolen Co. was shown to have made a net income of $28,560,342 (48 per cent on its inflated capitalization) or nearly $15,000,000 more than it ex~ hibited in its annual report for that year. In other words it concealed more than half of its profits from the public. New Jersey Worsted Spinning Co. one of the firms against which the Passaic strikers stock and undistributed surplus) in | @ group of combed cotton yarn spin. | ning mills, North and South, in- creased from 3.2 per cent in 1914 to 43.4 per cent in 1919. For eight similar companies studied by the Federal Trade Commission the net profit rate averaged about 30 per cent a year during the same six-year period. The total net profits of 625 textile firms in Philadelphia, chiefly en- gaged in some banch of cotton and wool manufacturing, amounted in 1918 to 117 pre cent of their com- bined invested capital. In 1919 it was 95 per cent. The pofits of these mills nearly quadrupled their nor- mal amounts during the boom pe- riod, 1915-1919. In the cotton goods (56 concerns) profits increased over | sevenfold. | Thirty representative cotton ma- | nufacturing concerns made 32.5 per cent net income after all interest charges has been paid in 1916, while | rose to 105 per cent. | | larger demonstration against war this afternoon. The workers militantly defended the speakers from attack by the police. Paul Cline, district organ- ier of the Communist Party, Phil- lips of the Young Communist League and Kahlert of the Unem- ployed Council spoke. Consider- able literature was sold during the lemonstration. in 1917 they made 425 per cent. From 1914 to 1918 inclusive, eight of the chief cotton companies aver- aged about 30 per cent on their al- ready heavily inflated capital. In 1919 some 21 cotton mills in Spartanburg County, South Carolina having a total capital stock of $8,- 908,900, paid stock dividents amount- ing to $6,058,000 in addition to cash dividents amounting to $2,099,950, or a@ total payment of nearly 100 per cent in cash or stock to their share- holders. AMUSEMENTS THE THEATRE GUILD Presents 0O TRUE TO BE GOOD A New Play by BERNARD SHAW GUILD THEA., 524 St., W. Eve. 3:30 Mats. Thurs., 8: ‘The Theatre Guild #1 ‘resents REUNION IN VIENNA A Comedy .By ROBERT brat lag Martin Beck Je. "s Ev 8:40. Mts Th., Sat. Tel. Pe 6-6100 “Wayward” witl NANCY CARROLL, RICHARD ARLEN and PAULINE FREDERICK EXTRA FEATURE AT JEFFER! “FREIGHTERS OF DESTINY,” with TOM KEENE. NEW LOW PRICES MATS. 15 Cents || EVES. 25 Cents Except Sat., Sun., and Holidays EAST SIDE NOW. ELASING Seema, FIRST RUSSIAN i TALKIE Drama of Russia’s “Wild Children” . ROAD to LIFE (Titles in English Also—ART AND CULTURE IN U.! Rn? Uth ST. & ACME THEATR UNION 6Q. Thursday APRIL 7th COUNSELLOR-AT-LAW with By ELMER RICE PAUL MUNI W. 45 St. By, 8:20 } ‘Thurs. & Sat. 2:20 sn CAMEO 20's ZANE GREY (Bimsetty it “South Sea Adventures” We will celebrate the achievements of the DRESS STRIKE and mobilize for further struggles in the Needle Industry! Needle Trades at the at the STAR CASINO—107th St. and Park Ave. Friday APRIL 8th 20c 25c ~50c COMBINATION TICKET (For All 4 Days) 75 CENTS Collect Articles for the BAZAAR OFFICE—131 West 28th St., N. Y. C- BAZAAR Saturday APRIL 9th yw) Sunday APRIL 10th 25e Bazaar! COURT TURNS OUT EVICTIONS LIKE FACTORY Given Ten Days to All Cases; Cold to Any Appeals NEW YORK, N. Y.—“It reminded me of a slaughter house” said a work- er who just been ordered evicted by the court at 268 Madison Avenue. Quite an apt ay of describing it, if anyone had seen the machine-like way of slugging live-stock over the head and killing them at the Chicago stockyard. There was at least 50 cases of workers with eviction notices in court today. Old women, young housewives, mothers with children, tired and worried looking men, all of the working-class with notices to leave the shelter and go . . . where they did not know. There only hope now was to appeal to the mercy on the court. The court sat up on a high bench distant and forbidding. Each worker had his tale of suf- fering. Of long unemployment, of bare existence of starvation of sick children at home, of old mother at home and no relief from the city and government. All had the stories ready to tell the judge to be saved from eviction. Perhaps for hours they had formulated the accounts of their con- dition to tell judge to make clear to him that they should not be evicted. “Alfred Sacks” called the court clerk. A young worker stepped up, ready to tell the judge that he was unemployed for a long time, had no money, had no place to go etc. Not one word was he allowed to say “10 days” said the judge, it was stamped on a paper. . A worker's wife with a child in her arms. She too with her story, more heart rending than the young man preceding her. “10 days announced,” the judge. The women stood a mo- ment wanting to plead, beg if need be “Move along, move along” com- manded the clerk. Next, and next and next and so on to the end of all the cases with the indifferent precision of a printing press, the stamp marked down the ten days. The slight noise of the stampv was the only answer the workers got to the vain hope of appealing to the courts owned, controlled and dictated by the landlord. Benjamin to Speak _ at Prospect Club Herbert, Benjamin, national secre- tary of the Unemployed Councils, will speak on unemployment insur- ance and expose the Block Aid drive f at the Prospect Workers Club, 1157 { So. Blvd., April 7, at 8 pm. The q | meeting was arranged by the Blvd. | | Unemploye¢ Council, In order to defend the Soviet Union you must defend it also against the propaganda attacks of the capitalists. For “ammunition,” read “Anti-Soviet Lies,” by Max Bedacht, ten cents. Workers’ Clubs Should Advertise in the “Daily” Intern’! Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 15th FLOOR AD Work Done Under Personal Care of DR. JOSEPHSON COHEN’S CUT RATE OPTICIANS eC Eyes Examined by Registered Opticians White gold rims $1.50 117 Orch: Shell rims $1.00 Near Save the Daily Worker! What is your Unit or Branch doing? HERE ARE SOME WAYS:— Concerts, dances, af- fairs to— SAVE THE DAILY WORKER Attend the one nearest you; spend an enjoyable evening! Help your fighting paper! BANQUET and CONCERT to be given hy SECTION 8, UNIT 9 for the benefit of THE DAILY WORKER Saturday April 9th At 8:00:P, M. At 524 Vermont St., B’klyn. ADMISSION 25¢ CONCERT and DANCE Given under the joint auspices of L W. 0. BRANCH 132—YOUTH BRANCH 401—WOMEN’S COUN- CIL 28 and SHULE 14 of the TWO 1013 Tremont Ave., Bronx (Near West Farms) Saturday April 9th ADMISSION 25¢ All proceeds for the Daily Worker, Kentucky Miners and Dress Strike CONCERT and DANCE Will be held under the auspices of UNITS 6, 9, 11 of SECTION 7 Saturday April 9th 1113 Brighton Beach Ave. Brooklyn Musical Program Refreshments ADMISSION 25c All proceeds for the Daily Worker Save the Daily Worker CONCERT and DANCE Saturday April 9th At 8:00 P. M. at 105 Jackson St., | Newark Excellent Jazz Band and Musical Program Dancing and Refreshments ADMISSION 35¢ Come and Bring Your Friends Resort all Daily Worker Affairs to this column MELROSE DAIRY VEGETARIAN BESTAURANT Comrades Will Always Find It Pleasant to Dine at Our Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx (near 174th St. Station) TELEPHONE INTERVALE 9—9149 a 3 | a } > «| Garden Restaurant F) 328 EAST 19TH ST. 2 @| EXCELLENT MEALS and SERVICE | 7 z NO TIPPING - < Tel. Tompkins Sq. 6-9707 ™ a a SOLLINS’ RESTAURANT 216 EAST 14TH STREET 6-Course Lunch 55 Cents Regular Dinner 65 Cents : Parkway Cafeteria The Only Strictly Vegetarian Cafeteria in Brownsville WE SERVE GOOD FOOD A TRIAL WILL CONVINCE YOU 1638 PITKIN AVE. Near Hopkinson Ave. Brooklyn, N. ¥. Phone Dickens 2-7653 : SOL’S SANDWICH LUNCH 103 University Place (Just Around the Corner) Telephone Tompkins Square 6-9780-9781 Comrade Rose Chester Let your father know where you are stopping as he is rather wor- ried. Also communicate with him. HARLAN _ MINERS SPEAK ‘The whole story of terrorism in the Kentucky coal fields, told by the miners themselves, byTheo- dore Dreiser, John Dos Passos, Anna Rochester, Melvin Levy, Sherwood Andersonandothers. All profits from the sale of this book will be turned over by the publishers for relief of miners and their families, $2.00 Harcourt, Brace & Co.y 383 Madison Ave,, N.Y. Vida Obrera Bazaar will be held APRIL 23rd and 24th At UKRAINIAN HALL 1538 MADISON AVENUE (104th and 105th Sts.) United Front Committee desires to have some entertainment by ,com- rades from the John Reed Club. Communicate with VIDA OBRERA 2336 THIRD AVENUE

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