The Daily Worker Newspaper, April 18, 1932, Page 2

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onnee chest DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, APRIL 18, 1932 CINQUE SAYS %: “NO” TO MASS PICKETING all National G ) Break Mine Strike UMW Supp Goody Co. Var Ord ‘eo ] uards rts Bosses Pp rotests BEN GERJOY. ve been picke nass piek~ 0 the or- using and eting as has ganization was also Cinque char influence, tt literature, for the militant ers. There i in mind the Na That this statement chearge of trying to br been charg In his statem oug! ete. Preparing to Attack National Miners Union The Eastern Ohio Nation: Miner: authentic information thi that raid upon planned. Th {ternoon’s carry the news to this effect. Th means that a re of terror is be let loose the National Miners Union forces whose i is strongly felt the militant tions of the st: TS. Seab Dies of Fright. One scab, Carol Nyg was dead after scabs at armon Cre were routed by the pickets. The coroner admitted that Nygren died of fright. This is the second death since the strike started. The first was Walter Kimble, a striker shot down by a national guardsman at the Somers mine. paper ac- fo Meanwhile, the strikers are not asleep. They are determined to break through the terror at the Somers mine and keep jt shut tight. ‘The strikers are making preparations for a huge picket line on Monday | morning in answer to the rumors that the Goodyear Company will attempt to open the mine. The strikers’ ranks are still solid, and it is becoming more and more evident that the National Miners Union program for this strike is tak- ing root among the strikers. This is the reason why the UMWA offl- cials and the Government are begin- ning to direct their attack upon the NMU forces. The UMW officials are not permitting NMU members to Speak at strike meetings. Nevertheless the influence of the NMU is strongly felt. Mass picketing has been urged by the NMU since the beginning of the strike. The strikers know it and are | mass picketing. Robert Silvert, the District Secretary of the NMU, spoke at a mass meeting of strikers at Am- sterdam, Ohio, and was well received by the strikers’ The members of the National Miners Union are carrying out a real united front policy by | being active on the piney lines, etc.| against the support by French im- | (3) to get in touch with the org. | Kenner Substitutes Biedenkapp in Tour lay Day Committee | portion TUS | elebration) E BLACKJACKS ON HUNGRY SAY TAMMANY JUDGE ds Unemployed Giulty for Demand- ing Relief on Fri. nany Magi. e William ve official approval of nd bloody at and wome t Fri- | me Relief Bu- reet. The dem- | the leadership mployed Coun- tack nployed | atencing on | giving sus- | ee women attack ‘of to handle the night iilty holdir Apr sentences to He praised the The only way is by brought into | igns of the ter- y had received. and arms were ban- | eyes blood shot from | e, all looked pale and| the cop who was| aging his blackjack | less men and women rs rt showing the be: th were Their d heads they ne € foremost the B. eau admitted on called the the workers e supervisor of the the stand that cops beforehand | he ant cross-exam- upon ination tried to justify the attack | by saying that the workers were | not “peaceful” that they had rushed | the door, He said the crowd was in a “turnmoil.” | The workers’ lawyer asked him to} xplain. “What were the workers houting?” They kept hollering, we | want bread, we want bread” the ser® | geant said. The cop Dumont while on the stand also had to state that workers continually cried for bread. When the workers on the stand tried to tell their side of the story, how they were starving, how the mg of the bureau meant death emselves and their children the magistrate silenced them, “I will allow no speeches in this court. Throughout the case the magis- | trate showed his hatred of the mi- | litant workers. He permited the dis- trict attorney extra liberties in brow- beating the workers and constantly | overruled the workers’ lawyers’ ob- | jections. | The’ district attorney tried to} justify the attack by saying the cops | acted in self-defense. The brazen lie was exposed by the mute testimony of the workers bandages and the unscratched cop. | It was plain from the beginning of the case that the workers could ex- | pect nothing but a frame-up sen-| tence from the court, Two Senegalese Soldiers Rescued French Soldiers Seize, Them from Police | ss PARIS, April 17—Workers in Mantaubon rescued two Senegalese soldiers from the police, following a raid on an anti-war meeting by the police who had learned that the wto soldiers were present at the meeting. | | In addition to their protests perialism to the Japanese imperial- | | ists in their robber war on China and | | provocations against the Soviet Un-| ion, the workers protested against | | the dispatch of a battalion of the 16th | | haye shamelessly betrayed the prin- | zations who are in any way inter- SOCIALISTS IN FASCIST PARTY ; Support Wai ar on Ching Anti-Soviet Moves e “open in their t for the Japanese and the war of against the Soviet Union its successful Soc! construc- * on Satu e organization of a new party amatsu, sec- 1 Demo- , Japane ay complet is he essentially fascist he alist” parties munists have con- nce the betrayal of the ld proletariat by the “Socialist” the outbreak of the World War in 1914, is again prove: action of the Jape “s0- in connection with the rob- of Japanese imperialism. | is the Japanese “ lists” some other secton of the ‘Social International that are the first to betray the workers into war this time is merely because it is Jap- stead o anese imperialism which has been irst to start off the new world slaughter, Faced with the imperialist war in 1914, the “socialists” became social- patriots. Faced with a new im-| perialist war today, the Japanese socialists” have at once abandoned all pretense of opposition to the im- | perialists and their robber wars and | have come out openly as social pa- triots, declaring that the seizure of Manchlria is an act of self-defense. | They rallied immediately to the srp- port of their government, rallying to the defense of the Japanese im-| perialists, The Japanese “socialists” not only | ciples of international proletarian} solidarity, but are striving to confuse | the toiling masses as to the real| nature and principles of Socialism. A Tokyo dispatch to the New York | Times, reporting the latest betrayal of the “socialists,” reports: “The movement toward national | socialism has been growing since | reactions to the situation in Man- churia convinced Mr. Akamatsu | convinced Mr, Akamatsu and others that the labor moyement needed a patriotic basis. National socialism appeals to many of the younger of- ficers, who declare that Manchuria must be developed for the benefit of the people and not the cap- italists. One officer recently de- seribed this creed as ‘imperial communism,’ meaning the develop- ment of Japan into a Socialist State under the aegis of the Emperor.” In the meantime, a section of the Japanese “socialists” are maintaining in the old Social Democratic organi- zation in order to maintain their in- fluence over those workers who re- fuse to follow the secretary of the Social Democratic Party into the} ranks of fascism. URGE WORKERS TO SET UP MUSIC GROUPS The Workers Music League W. M. L.), music section of “the Workers Cultural Federation, urges all work- ers and sympathizers, and all organi- ested, to form the following music} (a) Harmonica Groups (b) Accordion Groups | (c) Bugle and Drum Corps (ad) Fife and Drum Corps. ‘These instruments are inexpensive and within the reach of individual workers or their organizations. Mu- sical and organizational assistance is offered by the various sections of the W. M. L., and especially by the members of the newly-formed musi- | cians club, organized through the, | the anniversary of the Russian Revo- | groups: | will be among the speakers at the |New Health Center, |Rank and File Worker \Slurged by Gangsters | JAPAN FORM A Of A-P-1- Local No. 302 DEMAND RELEASE NEW YORK.—A group of rank and | ile workers came down to distribute | ‘Jeaflets denouncing the new sell-out to the bosses by the fakers of Local 302, Cafeteria Countermen’s Union. neeting called for April 13t the workers a big surpr nd file workers got this big surprise m i their fake “lengthen the hours rs to 12 hours, as the a with the bosses expires May There only a few {t where the 1 ally established in Local 302 The leaflet that the rank and file workers distributed called upon all the workers to stop this onslaught on their conditions and to broad rank and file commitiees t the 12-hour nst the wage-cut, speed-up and fake union agreements, tor a United Front the shop, regardless h to of worl of union One worker was distributing these leaflets across from the union head- quarters in the Chatham 104 W. 116th Street, where the fake Abe Borson, the organizer o} rushed in with a bunch of gangst¢ and slugged the worker, inflicting severe cuts on his right eye. Members of Local 302 must make | an end to all this, and the way to| do it is by organizing and fighting | against the misleaders and fakers, for a United Front Rank and File leadership, Young Girl, F.S.U. Delegate from Tampa, in N. Y. Mary Perez, Out On) Bail, to Speak Monday Twenty - year-old Mary Perez, | elected by the tobacco workers of Tampa, Florida, as their delegate to the Soviet Union, arrived in New) York Friday. At the Daily Worker office the | young tobacco worker told of the} vicious terror going on in the south- ern city since the workers celebrated lution last November. She partici- pated in the strike and as a result was arrested and, as she says, “charged with everything under the sun.” Comrade Perez is out on $250 bail and when she was elected to go | |to the Soviet Union the “law” tried | to hold her in Tampa. She sneaked out, Four hundred workers were at the meeting where she was picked. These workers earn between $10 and $12 a week. Two years ago the same jobs, cigar making, paid $25 to $30. Mary herself earned $6 a week, working from 7 in the morning till 5 in the afternoon, six days a week. With this she helped support a family of ten. Now, recognized as a militant fighter, she is blacklisted and can never expect a job in that city. The same with her father and hundreds of other tobacco workers. Of the ten thousand employed at the trade over half are jobless. The rest work one week and skip the next. Some of the unemployed of Tampa have relief jobs of three deys a week, for which they get $1 and some stinking food. Comrade Perez, who is an active member of the Young Communist League, told the Daily Worker that in the Soviet Union she will look especially for thhe conditions in the schools. In her home town, young working class children are forrced to go to work and drop school at an early age, as did she. On Monday night Comrade Perez Send-Off Banquet given the May 1st delegation to the U. S. S. R. at the 50 East 13th Street, in the evening. The entire delegation will be present, NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES EAST SIDE—BRONE RKO qionys carr" initiative of the W. M. L. ‘The WML therefore advises every organization (1) to give publicity to | this plan in each one of its branches! ‘or units, (2) to start immediate reg- istration of members for any of the above-mentioned music groups, and bureau of the WML concerning regis- tration, instruction, purchase of in- struments, etc. The WML wishes to stress the im- portance of the formation of these NEW YORK.—Fred Biedenkapp, | Senegal Sharpshooters, who are ies lanai groupings in view of the im- national organizer for the Trade Union Unity League, is confined to the General Hospital in Pittsburgh, where he is recuperating from. in- juries received in an automobile acci- dent. The Workers International Relief tour, on which Biedenkapp was to speak, will be addressed by I, Kenner and Norma Martin in- stead. Friends are urged to communicate with Biedenkapp at the above ad- dress, where he will remain for two weeks, KEEP FRIDAY, MAY 6, 6, OPEN. Come to ‘Colonial Night” at Man- hattan Lyceum, 66 E. 4th Splendid revolutionary program and dance. Support the Colonial Strug- gies. Anti-Imp alist League, Rm $36, 799 Broadw Street. | tioned in Montabou, to the Far East. | | The workers after rescuting the | two soldiers from the police escorted | them to t heir barracks. Later on,| | the soldiers were arrested by the mil-/| |itay police and sentenced to eight days imprisonment for attending the | anti-war meeting. The soldiers of the 16th Senegal Sharpshooters an- swered this action by taking up a | collection and sending it to L’Human. | ite, French Communist paper. | ‘ WORKERS SCHOOL NOTICE Due to alteration in rooms, the Workers School office is closed Monday. Classes on Monday evening are called off. Registra~ tion for the Second Spring ‘Term will be resumed Tuesday morning, April 16th, at 10 a, m, Workers School Committee. portant utility of such music forces for the period of outdoor meetings. Particularly is this important for all workers’ organizations with the ap- proach of the presidential election campaign, when all workers organi- zations, clubs, ete. together with | their political, party, the Communist | Party, will be carrying on a more in- tensified fight against Capitalism, against its electioneering demaogues, |its hunger and war breeders its im- | perialist war-plotters, native and for- eign. Individuals and organizations in-| terested in the music plan described should communicate with the bet a buro of the WML, 63 West 15th Street (John Reed Club Bldg.), Phone Gramercy 5-5587 between the hours of 11 am, and 6 pm. daily except Sunday. i} DAY TO TUESDAY BERT WHEELER ROBERT WOOLSEY “GIRL CRAZY” With MITZI GREEN, EDDIE QUILLAN and DOROTHY LEE NEW LOW PRICES ‘| MATS, 15 Cents || EVES. 25 Cents Except Sat., Sun. and Holidays Prospect wit | EAST SIDE NOW PLAYING! REVOLT OF THE RUSSIAN pvinkod BONDAGE *s* The, menaxemant: in prinantiog, end aims to clearly portray the mouslty of the task which the Soviet Jeaders undertook in stamping out the evils of autocracy and religion, In istic Russia, we see religion blind- ing the serfs with supertitions fears, Withholding them, cruelty trom elther intellectual or physical advancement. Looking at which, we must wonder at the inighty accompli yal in exchange for the freedom an oppressed people. ——ADDED FRATU “WASHINGTON HUNGE! PRESENTED BY W.1 B With ST, & RUSSIA he y work at Irving N.Y. WORKERS TO OF SCHNEIDER Mass Meeting Called for Tonight, Right |* After Work A protest demonstration will take place tonight, Monday, rivht after Plaza (15th Street nd Irving Place) against the depor- | ion of Jack Schneider, organizer | of the Industrial Union, and against the imprisonment of dressmakers. | Matthew Woll, Kaufman, McGrady, Schlesinger, ete., with the aid of the} s and the state authorities, have undertaken a new mass campaign of frame-up provocation in an effort to deport and imprison the needle trades workers who are fighting militantly in defense of their interests under the leadership of the Industrial | Union, This is part of the cam- paign of terror on the part of the Hoover hunger government against foreign-born ¥ j The latest dastardly act was the est of Jack Schneider by the Alien| Squad. Jack Schneider is now held | for deportation in Ellis Island. ‘This followed the frame-up of the three dressmakers, Turner, Adalchi and Miller, instigated by the Schlesingers, the Lovestonites and the bosses in order to break the united front struggle of the furriers and dress- | makers for higher wages, shorter | hours and union conditions, These conspiracies of the bosses and their agents must be smashed by mass protest and mass struggles. All| workers are urged to attend the huge | mass protest meeting arranged for | tonight. Leaders of the Industrial Union, ! the I. L. D. and the T'U U L, Hatk-|! jers. Wm Z Foster, Ben Gold, Moore and Amter will’ daress the meeting. REFUSE J WORKERS. RIGHT TO STREET Unemployed Council To Carry on Fight NEW YORK. — Workers are de- nied the right to demonstrate before the Home Relief Bureau of Clare- mont Parkway and Washington Ave. Police thugs, who last week pulled | out their guns in a crowd of women} and children demonstrating before | the Relief Bureau and demanding | inymediate relief, refuse the workers | the right to demonstrate because it | “will interfere with the school chil- | dren.” | Qur public oacials are not inter- ested in the workers’ children when | they go to Public School No. 42, without breakfast, with torn shoes and clothes, when Mrs. Hennesy, the supervisor of this Home Relief Bu- reau, tells the unemployed workers, who protest against starvation food- checks, that milk is a luxury. The Unemployed Council of Mid- dle Bronx is going to carry on the struggle against the Home Relief Bureau in P. S. 42 until adequate relief is given to the jobless workers. The Middle Bronx Unemployed Council is going to carry on a fight for the right to demonstrate, a fight for the streets. Workers are called upon to go daily to the Headquarters of the Council | at 1487 Brook Avenue, to organize demonstrations of unemployed work- ers before the Home Relief Burpau. M. W.1. L. Wants Musical Instruments NEW YORK—The Marine Work-| ers Industrial Union would appreci- ate it very much if some comrade would communicate with the secre- tary when they posses any musical | instruments which they could spare It does not matter if these are not in such good conditions or even to be repaired. | Ivar |nate who recently committed suicide .day, April 20th, | ism! Ivar Kreuger, — “Financial Wizard” Proven Swindler Eighty million counterfeit, Italian Bonds “engraved in Sweden found in the portfolio of the Krueger Swedish Match Mag: x ather than face trial on cha’ juggling the books of the K) and Toll Co. now bankrupt, |he headed. Krueger and Tol! vere one lies and pany to which the world economic crisis | of capitalism had sunk. the collapse of Ivar Kreuger who was exalted in| the capitalist press as a “Financial Wizard” before his suicide has been proven to be not only a cheap swi ler but a high class counterfciter. Karly Opening of Childr en’ s Center To Organize Struggle} Against Misery of Workers’ ‘Children NEW YORK. — Announcement of the opening of a Children’s Center at 450 West 53rd Street on Wednes. was made today b: Michael Burd, secretary of the New York district Workers International Relief. é | “This center and its activitiés”, Burd said, “launches New York into the national fight of the Workers’ International Relief against the mis- | ery of working class children. “Our physicians and nurses ex- ; amined children of the 53rd Street ; neighborhood today and _ reported terrible destitution, malnutrition and diseases—all directly caused by un-|} }employment, part time work and| wage cutting. Case after case re-| | vealed children existing on one sand- | wich a day. Dozens live on+a dish | of black-eyed peas. Some count themselves lucky if they get one small plate of cabbage soup for sup- per. “Many of these children belong in the hospital. Many have been re- fused admittance to city institutions. | Especially horrible is the condition of the Negro children”, our doctors report. “Although the center officially | opens on Wednesday, we are feeding a number of the worst cases begin- -¥ng Monday. The Unemployed Block Committee is registering more every day. “The entire work will be carried on in co-operation with the Unem- ployed Block Committee, and, need- jless to say, done on the basis of workingclass solidarity in struggle for better conditions for all workers and not on the basis of “charity” and humanitarian hand-outs. “Our aim is to organize the work- ers of this neighborhood for mass struggle against the misery of work- | ingclass children, for the fight for Unemployment Insurance at the ex- pense of the bosses and their gov- ernment, and for immediate relief for all children of the unemployed. | Children will join the W. I. R. Pio- neers and aid in’ the struggle. “Workers, fifends, sympathetic elements! Donate funds for milk, vegetables, eggs and expenses so that this work can be carried for- ward to other territories where starv- ation and disease ravages the chil- dren of the Negro and white work- ing class! Help us build up mass movements which will expose the sickening hypocrisy of Hoover's Child Health Day, reveal the depths of misery among working class chil- | dren and force adequate relief for the child fighters against capital- Send all funds to the Work- ers’ International Relief, 16 West 21st Street, New York City. Hoover calls May ist Child Health Day Demonsirate on May Ist for Un- employment Insurance, for food for your children! AMUSEMENT THE THEATRE GUILD Presen| 60 TRUE | TO BE Goop|, A New Play by nga! SHAW |) GUILD THEA., 524 | Eve. 8:30 Mi The ReUNION IN VIENNA A Comedy By ROBERT KE, ‘sHenwoon * HEA, 45th Martin Beek fre". to Ev 8:40. Mts Th., Sat. Tel. Pe 6- 6100 COUNSELLOR. AT-LAW with aLMi aR RICE . PAUL MUNI Alvmouth fae tears at sen 330 | 1 oe Co aermal Twice Daily 2:45-8:45 2 Shows Sun, 2:43-5:45-845 Ail Eves, 500-75e-$1.00-$1.50 All Mats. $0¢-75e-$1.00 | | sr SEATS RESERVED | Wer and SPENCER TRACY ACME THEATRE jsv.3".¢ —_—— ak HIPPODROME’::..:;;; | BIGGEST SHOW IN NEW VORK | vires “DISORDERLY | inet. | CONDUCT” J Ra With SALLY EILERS | | _ Teles oligans OPENS THURS. EVE 3Q'3.2" |. HUROK Presents vASCuA YUSHNY’S RUSSIAN REVUE “B vr Birp” suas A CONTINENTAL COCKTAIL OF SONG, DANCE AND COMEDY DIRECT FROM BERLIN, LONDON, PARIS, VIENNA | Completing Triumphant Coast to Coast Tour CORT THEA., W. 48 ST, Mats. Wed. & Sat. Taty © MADISON $0. . GARDEN TWICE DAILY Ss Sis INGLING BARauM BROS cc Presenting 10,000 st including BEATTY BATTLING FORTY LIONS and TIGERS MAN FROM INDIA—Now Sensation BY POPULAR DEMAND — TRIBE OF Monster - Moutied UBANGI SAVAGES 1000 New Foreign F ilies h en Stars — 100 ©! Feld om ag al hants Menager Be eee vorid Cor obgreee of FREAKS Admission to All (lel Seat:) $1. to $2.50 Incl. Tax 6,000 SEATS EVERY ‘4 PERFORMANCE 12 Walt Prien Every Atte. Exe g i Peuine Cuidea, Ouabel Bros abd Agencies dollars worth of} Government re | late | ot the} | cuistanding world capitalist monopo- the Com- | showed the tremendous depth | | _ The indictment in teh. case will | | Bosses’ Tyrant Denies Bail to Miners’ Leaders, | 8 Other Kentucky Prisoners Are KNOXIELE, Tenn, April 15- Tazewell, Tennessee, has a little dictator of its own—Frank Riley, who has a bloody background and who took the “law” into his own | hat when, without any legal pro- cedure ,he turned over Joe Weber and Bill Duncan, National Miners’ Union organizers, to a mob in Ken- tucky that took them for a ride and beat them. Now he takes things in his own hands again and r to accept bord for four comrades held in Tazewell Jail. ‘Those held are Tom Johnson, Frank Stéwart, Silas Byrge, Will Henegar, They were arrested with eleven other comrades at a relief and National Miners’ Union meet- ing in a private house. The ex- orbitant bail of $1,750 was placed on each comrade charged with sedi- tion. As much as $50,000 in prop- erty, raised by miners, has been offered for Johnson's release and even with the signature of the jndge, Riley refused to acept it. Ses be returned Monday, Pineville, Harlan, Middlesboro prisoners were released today. Vern Smith, Doris Parks, in Harlan Jail; Vincent Kemenovich, Joe Chandler, Allan Johnson and G. G, Green, in Pineville Jail, were released on Life in the Red Army To be Shown at Send Off Banquet, Tonight NEW YORK. — Not only will all the delegates elected from basic in- dustries in the United States.be at the Final Send-Off Banquet, to be held Monday, April 18th, at the New Health Center Restaurant, 50 E, 13th St.. upstairs, at 8 p. m., but, for the first time m the United States, the picturization of Life in the Red Army will be portrayed on the screen by Marcel Scherer. In addition, a full course hot meal will be served. Ticket, including all the above, 60c. To when all the capitalist powers of the world are provoking war upon the Soviet Union, the work- ers of the world realize that it is only the knowledge of what the well- trained, self-disciplined, proletarian Red Army, can do, that is holding the world powers back. The fear of the Red Army, as was pointed out in the Sunday Times, is the only thing that keeps Japan from an im- mediate open attack; instead, she employs the White Guards to pro- voke incidents that will lead to war upon the Workers’ Land. The Life of the Red Soldier in the barracks, his political and technical ining, the raising of his cultural level, his recreational and personal life, and his place in the Workers’ Land as a useful citizen, all will be portrayed, for the first time on any screen in the United: States. All workers who want to see their army in action, will be at . lis send-off banquet Americans Praised As Shockbrigaders In Soviet Union bond. A, Moore and Jake Hurst were released without bond. CITY BARBERS TO HOLD. MEETING Journeymen Will Make Plans, Tomorrow NEW YORK. — A mass meeting called by the Barber and Hairdres- sers League with headquarters at) 126 University Place, scheduled to| take place tomorrow, April 19th, at | 8:30 p. m., in the League’s head-| quarters. At this, meeting the conditions of : the Journeymen barbers, which are | daily going from bad to worse, will | be taken up and the betraying policy of the Journeymen Barbers Interna- | tional Union will be denounced. All barbers are urged to attend | | this important meeting in which is | to be laid down the program of ac- tivity for the coming struggles and for building a strong union which really defends the interests of the workers. MOSCOW, April 12—Among the best shock-brigaders who fought for the earliest opennig of the hydro-electric station “Dniepdos- troi” are the American specialists Winters, Jones, Winder, Modersky. The foreign specialists cannot escape the captivating spell of the socialist construction which is go- ing on in the Soviet Union. Here they have the chance to express their creative abilities which in the capitalist countries are chain- ed to the quest for profits. This offers an additional ex- planation of the socialist effici- ency which is far above the capi- talist productivity. .The source of the socialist superiority is pre- cisely in the wide democracy on which production is based. While in the capitalist countries produc- ton is based on the dull and econ~ omically compulsary participation of the workers and specialists in the Soviet Union production is based on their intelligent, volun- tary and enthusiastic partcipa- tion, Mass organizations, get into revolutionary. competition to save Daily Worker, Workers’ Clubs Should Advertise in the “Daily” OPTICIANS a 5 a, Harry Stolper, Inc. . 73-175 CHRYSTIE STREET (Third Ave. Car to Hester Street) 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. Daily Phone: Dry Dock 4-4522 WILLIAM BELL OPTOMETRIST and OPTICIAN Special Rates to Workers and Families 106 E. 14th St. (Room 21) Opposite Automat Tel. TOmpkins Square 6-8237 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 We hope to greet you as before. Chester Cafeteria 876 E. Tremont Ave. (Corner Southern Blvd.) Quality—Cleanliness—Moderate Prices All Workers Members F.W.1.U. Intern’l Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 15th FLOOR At) Work Done Under Persona) Care of DR JOSEPHSON 4 NEIGHBORLY PLACE TO EA1 Linel Cafeteria Pure Food—100 per cent Frigidairs Equipment—Luncheonette and Soda Fountain 830 BROADWAY Near i2th Street i JADE MOUNTAIN AMERICAN and CHINESE RESTAURANT Open Th am te 1:80 a.m, Special Lunch 11 to 4. Dinner 5 to 10.. 197 SECOND AVENUE Between 12th and 13th Ste . .B5¢ 55 Patronize the Cencoops Food Stores AND Restaurant 2200 BRONX PARK EAS “Buy Store and help the Revo- lutionary Movement.” in the Co-operative CAR WANTED Comrade having car for sale please apply Advertising Dept., DAILY WORKER —8th Floor, 50 EAST 13th ST. N.Y. C. Phone Tomkins Sq. 6-9554 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmoxphe: where ail radicals meet 302 E. 12th St. New fork AU omraaes Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 553 Cleremont Parkway, Bronx RUSSIAN LESSONS—(Native teacher). Spe- cial training for those contemplating trip. CHelsea 3-7860, fh \ |

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