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Unemployed Council to 1 000 WORKERS IN Hold Big Hunger Parade BRONX FIND BORO Downtown W orker rs Fakers, Thursday E Ral tally to Protest Re lief Mobilize for May OFFICIAL GUILTY [State Hunger ‘March on | Its Way to Boston, Mass. Will Be Greeted on Boston Common By Huge Denounce Walker’s Police Attack on Jobless Workers NEW YORK.—Pointing out that | “blows will not feed the hungry | thousands of New York,” the Intellec- | tual Workers League yesterday wired | Mayor Walker in protest against | City Conference to Open ~ Huge Election Campaigti The District Committee of “theSocialist Party—will try with dema- ;Communist Party of New York has sent out a call to all workers organi- | Sogic phrases to fool the workers in [ase to make them vote for them. zations, trade unions, fraternal or-| But in reality all these parties are ganizations, shops, etc., for a eity- | for cutting off relief to the unem- wide mass conference to take place| ployed, are for the preparations of |on Sunday, May 22nd, at 11 am. in | the imperialist war and for wage |Manhattan Lyceum, 66 East 4th cuts and against unemployment in- | | First. Benjamin to Speak police clubbing of demonstrators at City Hall Friday. “Inane wisecracks,” the league's telegram remarked, “will not suffice to divert attention from growing distress.” ‘Pledge to to Carry On Fight, Demonstrate On May Day | Demonstration on May Day BOSTON, Mass.—The Massachusetts Hunger March is al- ready on its way to the State Capital. It will reach Boston on > East Side v the relief of the starving 6 pm, at 7th families of this section and why it e A, where an open is that when a worker applies at the et and 4 k be held to expose the educed will be follow by rough the working class of the East Side, stopping to a series of short open air meet- ndoor meet- Herbert Ben- Natinal Secretary of the as the main ome Relief Bureau he is told that Ss no money for relief, while till being collected. purpose, Wilton Lloyd h, City Chairman of the “Block ’ and Congressman William I, irovich have also been invited to this meeting. Sirovich claims to be in favor of unemployment insurance and recognition of the Soviet Union. This meeting will also be a protest meeting against the police brutality and jailing of the unemployed work- For this Smi A }ers who demanded relief at the Ist Street Home Relief Bureau and were given clubs instad of brad. All workers and workers organiza- tions are requested to take part in NEW YORK. — Over a thousand workers responded to the call of the Upper Bronx Unemployed Councils, filled Ambassador Hall on Thursday, listened to the prosecuting speech delivered by Richard B, Moore, to the witnesses, to the defense speech de-, livered by Comrade Ritter, and to the condemning oratory of Carl Brodsky, and found Boro-President Bruckner, his right hand man Flynn, and the whole capitalist class and system guilty of murder of workers. Comrade Moore, as prosecutor, enumerated case after case, when unemployed workers were denied aid by these grafting politicians and as a result many workers committed sui- May Day to be 8reeted on the Common by a huge mass dem- onstration against imperialist war and starvation, in which thousands of workers, employed and unemployed, white and Negro, are expected to participate, The State Hunger March will pre- sent to the legislature the demands | of the unemployed workers, who re-| cils, were the speakers. Mooney’s call, for unemployment and social insur-| demonstration voted unanimously, ance, for immediate cash relief. { with @ chorus of ayes, to send the The march is divided in three col- | following resolution to Governor umns, one of which, the second, will | Rolph in California: reach Hudson on April 27, Maynard} on April 28, Waltham on April 29, | “In the spirit of Tom Mooney’s Responding determinedly to Tom printed in Friday’s fuse to starve and are ready to fight | Daily Worker, the workers at the| not feed the hungry thousands of The league’s telegram follows: “We protest the brutal clubbing | terday afternoon, and the ruthless | shutting off of their only avenue of expression. Blows on the heads of men and women indiscriminately will workers who live without benefit of political influence. If the city has no better answer, its government must | {admit utter failure. Inane wise-| jeans will not suffice to divert at- | tention from growing distress, The | workers will spurn the only freedom | | and trampling of the unemployment | | relief demonstrators at City Hall yes- |tady, N. ¥., on June 19th, where the | this demonstration and to mobilize|Cide. He spoke about the rent : Schl chairman of their entire membership for this date, Strikes, the police terror, the evic- the Downtown East Side “Block Aid,” to send volunteers for the mass can- | tions, the tenement ‘re at 1630 Bath- ben requested to come. to this’ vassing to take place every day and|8ate Ave., where six workers burned what has been|evening this week to 134 East 7th|to death. He enumerated the graft workers money col-! Street for their assignment. cases and on the basis of all this demanded in the name of the work- ers of, the Bronx to sentence them according. Comrade Ritter as defense attor- ney asked “why to pick on Bruckner and Flynn, They are not more guilty than Hoover, or Walker.” In his Gov't Report Shows New Rise of Unemployment, Wage Cuts further in- of one and WASHINGTON crease in unemplo: A a half per cent in March over Feb- uary was reported for the 16 major industrial groups in the country by 1e Depa: The ret the tabulation of 60,896 establishments showed an in- unemployment in manufac- bituminous coal mining, met- nd other non- petroleum d_ telegraph rajiroad op- hotel can- laundries and ment of Labor Saturday, rns from al mini ir metalic producing, power and light, electric eration, wholesale trade, ning and preserving, building construction. The heightening of unemployment totals in these basic industries show the further deepening of the crisis and the steady downgrade of produc- tion in all sections of industry. The same report gives some indication of | the tremendous wage cutting cam-| paign the bosses are waging by re- porting net wage decreases of 2.4| per cent whereas employment dropped only 1.5 per cent. | The meaning of the difference in} the two percentages is clearly that| Vpart time work and wage cuts for those still working have slashed deeply into the payroll totals. The most important sign of the systematic firing of masses of workers ining. ru telephone compared with the previous month. These figures cover 17,336. shops and factories employing 2,858,001 workers. Approximately 13,015 factories in 89 manufacturing industries reported an average operation of only 86 per cent, showing a decline of 1 per cent rom last month and bearing still fur- ther witness to the deepeniing of the crisis “Workers Theatre” To Be Out May Ist In Printed Form ‘Workers Theatre,” up to now a| mimeographed magazine, published) by only two New York groups, will) |be issued in printed form by the| recently organized “League for Work-| ers’ Theaters of the United States,” the first printed edition to be out on May Ist. At the “First National Workers’ Theatres Conference,” held in New York on April 17th, when the League | was organized, all delegates repre- senting workers’ theatre groups from | all over the country stated with great lyenthusiasm that the groups are| eagerly awaiting the printed “Work- ers’ Theatre.” The May issue, the first one to be is to be found in the report for the| printed, will be a special “Conference manufacturing industries. Here, there| and Spartakiade Edition,” featuring was an increase in unemployment of} the decisions of the conference and 17 per cent along with a reduction in| the constitution of the recently or- payrolls of 2.8 per cent in March ganized league. ANTI-WAR MEETING HELD IN CHINATOWN, NEW YORK Several Hundred Chinese Workers Pledge to Fight War on China and Workers’ Fathe NEW YORK, April 24—An anti- war meeting was held this afternoon, 2 pm., in the heart of Chinatown, at rland Day demonstration a* Union Square. A hand vote on the proposals) against the robber war in China and whole defense speech it became more and more evident that the defend- ants are guilty of every charge brought against them, Carl Brodsky, Communist candi- date in the 23rd congressional district explained the role of the capitalist | and that of a proletarian court. He dwelt upon the existing crisis of cap- | | italism. Made a comparison be- {tween the decaying capitalist and | the growing socialism in the Soviet | Union. Pointed out the imminence of the war danger and linked up the | local situation with the world situ- ation. | S. Gunchuck was the star witness, | | who described his vicits to Bruckner as representative of the unemployed in the Bronx and told how they were turned down time and again by these | grafting officials. Landis, one of the |leaders of the Longfellow Avenue strike was also a witness. |rade Katz, for the coming elections for all class towards the establishment of the workers rule in this country, so that the sentence against these fake poli- ticians could be carried out. Dressmaker Delegates Meet to Elect Trade Committee Tonight NEW YORK—A meeting of the newly elected shop delegates of all the union dress shops of all shop committees of the open and Inter- national shops and the unemployed workers will take place on Monday jmight right after work at the union office. At this meeting there will be a report on the activities of the dress department since the strike, plans fr extending the united front move- ment and the organization work, and nominations for a trade com- mittee and paid officers. It is very important that every shop chairman and delegate be present at this In the name of the mass jury Com- | who called upon the} | workers to prepare for May First, | | struggles so that we shall go ahead | the corner of Mott and Bayard for the defense of ihe Soviet Union Streets, under the joint auspices of |showed a considerable number in the Chinese Anti-Imperialist Alliance |favor. The workers remained to the| and Section 1 of the Communist | end, despite some provocations of a meeting. THEATER GUILD TO STAGE “THE GOOD EARTH” Party, Distdict 2. Several hundred Chinese workers listened attentively to the speakers, | who were Comrads Yen and Liu, of the Chinese Anti-Imperialist Alli- ance, William Simons, Secretary of the Anti-Imperialist League, acting as chairman, The meetinfi ended after an hour | with an appeal to the Chinese work- ers to join hands with the Japanese and American workers in the May What's On— MONDAY Alteration Painters, Downtown Section, will meet at 93 Avenue B at @ pm All painters are welcome. Alteration P: 1130 Southern rs, Bronx, will meet at | levard at 8 p.m. ‘A meeting of the beginning and advanced classes of the film department of the Workers Film and Photo League: will be held at 8 p.m. at 16 West 21st Street. @ class i, corrent events will be held at 4 o'clock at the Harlem Progressive Youth | Club, 1493 Madison Avenue. The Workers Esperanto group will meet at 35 East 8lst Street at 8 p.m. Those in- terested in learning Esperanto are invited. Women’s Council No. 12 and Shula No. 13 will hold a joint lecture at 792 East Tremont | Avenue at 8:30 p.m. Comrade Gorelick will lecture on “The Importance of May First, 1982."" Workers of the neighborhood are The conference of delegates of fraternal organizations on the Election Campaign is postponed to Wednesday, May 4th. The Conference will be held st 905 45th Stret, Brooklyn. have @ lecture at 88 Adee Avenue at 6:30 Council No. 37 of the pam. All workers are Counell No, %4 of the ©. W. ©. Ww. will iked to attend. C. W, ©. W. will haye elections of new officers at their regu- lar meeting, to be held at 1610 Anthony Avenue, Bronx, at 6 pm, All m¢ should "be present. All counell educational @irectors of the U. . ©. W. will meet at 80 East 1ith Street at 8:30 p.m, at the Central Body office i The final peusion, of the function: sie of the U. C. W. CW .will be hele at at | 30 p.m. at ine Workers Center, 80 East tien Street, Room 203. All members of class are asked to attend. te |few Kuomintang agents. Laundry Bosses Assn. Again Resorts to Frame-Up Weapon NEW YORK.—Mr. Cherner, the Socialist boss of the New Style Laun- dry at 16th Street and 3rd Avenue, | with the assistance of his strongarm gangster-backed association, which is | really running his plant for him, is |again resorting to the frame-up | weapon used in the second week of | the strike when fifteen of the most | militant strikers and union officials were framed up on trumped-up [ema of felonious assault, Now, in the eighth week of the | strike, seeing all other vicious at- tempts of terrorism against the in- | experienced but militant negro and | White strikers fail, he is very des- perate. On Thursday morning Leon Blum, organizer of the ‘union, was again | arrested and held without bail, al- though he had been previously re- | leased under a heavy bail bond. This arrest again shows the hand of the racketeering bosses’ association, which is playing its last card, desperately | trying to break the strike by crippling ers Industrial Union. However, the association will again find out that the rank and file lead- ership will always spring up to defeat this vicious plan, The Laundry Workers Industrial Union asks all workers to come to ers | 5 East 19th Street, first floor, to help| the strikers of the New Style to win their strike, white and Negro workers can stop iss! bi Honored hands of the lynch bos- | the leadership of the Laundry Work- | Only a fighting alliance of the | ‘The Theatre Guild has acquired “The Good Earth” a dramatization by Owen and Donald Davis, of Pearl S Buck’s novel of that name. The play will be produced early next sea- son. Mrs. Buck's novel, a story of China, was first published on March 2, 1931 and is now in its twenty- second printing. Owen Davis long has been one of America’s plofific drmatists. His son, Donald, has been engaged in playwrighting for several years. S. L. Rothafel (Roxy) announces that Robert Edmond Jones will be associated as art director in RKO theatres of Radio City. Jones is one of the outstanding scenic designers of this generation. The settings of “The Jest,’ “Redemption,” “Sky- scrapers,” Green Pastures,” “Mourn- ing Becomes Electra” and the opera “Wozzeck” are to his credit. “Wild Women of Boreno, an ad- venture through the Far East rec- ording the beliefs and superstitions of the natives, is the feature film attraction at the RKO-Cameo The- atre. Among the scenes recorded in the film are Kinyaks or ape-like Monday, April ALT. MEMBERS ARE People, who live in jungle tree-tops, UNITY CO-OPERATIVE GENERAL MEMBERSHIP MEETING WORKERS CENTER, ROOM 204 Question of Uniting With the Bronx Co-operative Will be Taken Up. Cambridge on April 30 and Boston on May 1. The first column will be| in Norwood on the 29th, in Worcester | gle and intensify the fight to wrest on the 30th and in Boston on May Day. The third will be in Lynn on the 29th, in Chelsea on the 30th and in Boston on the Ist, 200 Workers Support March In | Springfield. SPRINGFIELD, Mass., April 23.— More than 200 workers demonstrated here today in support of the Massa- chusetts State Hunger March to Bos- ton on May 1. The Springfield dele- gation will leave here Monday morn- | ing and meet the rest of the column in Worcester Monday, at 5 p.m. Joe Hoffman, Springfield unem- | ployed worker, and John Weber, dis- | trict organizer of Unemployed Coun- Call, issued shortly following your! you leave them, freedom to starve.” brazen lynch decision, we ‘pledge /to | carry forward a determined WORKERS SCHOOL Street. The State Convention of the Com- munist Party will be held in Schenec- | program of action for the militant election campaign will be laid down! jand the full Communist ticket will| |be nominated at that State Conven- tion, All workers’ organizations, all shops, trade unions, fraternal organ- izations, workers’ clubs, minority groups in the A. F. L. and reaction- | ary unions and all other workers’ @roups are to elect delegates to send} to the local convention. They are at | the same time to elect delegates for the State Convention that will be held on June 19th in Schenectady. In this call the District Committee | surance. In the call, the Communist Party {calls the attention of the workers to |the miserable conditions that the | workers are going through at the | present time in the city of New York as well as upstate in the industrial | off of relief by the Home Relief Bu- reaus, closing entirely the Home | Relief Bureaus, dismissing of those | Workers from the Emergency Relief Bureaus who had the three-day re- lief job, the intimidation against the foreign-born workers; the injunction | Mensce, and the increasing wage cut after wage cut, as at present the 35 | per cent wage cut of 115,000 building trades workers in New York. All this |makes the need of every worker to organize and develop a huge election ; campaign, expressing the determina- Se the innocent Mooney and Billings from the vicious grasp of the capi-| talist class of California, which you serve so well. We particularly con- demn the crawling attempt~at addi- tional frame-up methods in the state- | ment of your self and Matt Sullivan. We will fight to the last against you and all other fascist lackeys of the ruling class, and declare that we will) some day force the release of Moo- ney and Billings!” The Unemployed Council speakers urged the workers present to multiply their forces and help organize a big May Day demonstration to be held May 1, 2 p.m.,, at the post office. Latin American Play To Be Given Friday those interested in colonial | will have an opportunity to witness what is to our knowledge the first | play to be written about an out- standing revolutionary event in Latin | America, ‘The Anti-Imperialist Lea- gue has had a special play, “The Chilean Naval Reyolt,” written for this occasion. | So little has been written in the American press about this tremen- dously significant movement of the sailors of the Chilean fleet, that this play now becomes an important fac- tor in popularizing the event. The first scene: (on the super- \ dreadnought Latorre) shows the sailors defy the ship commander. The second shows the revolutionary trast with the vacillation of the lower officialdom. The next-scene reveals @ nucleus meeting of the Communist Party of Chile, where the revolt is analyzed, lessons drawn, and an ap- peal is issued to the worekrs and peasants. The final scene depicts the solidarity of the masses of Latin America, with the workers of the HAPTMANN’S “THE WEAVERS” AND “SOLDIER'S BONUS DEM- ONSTRATION AT ACME ‘The Acme Theatre 14th Street and Union Suare, is now presenting a film seldom seen on the American screen. This is no less than “The Weaevrs,” Gerhart Hauptmann’s fa- mous revolutionary play of the struggles of the Silesian peasants and their revolt against their masters. Directed by Friedrich Zelnick, one of Europe’s foremost directors, it brings, to the screen Hauptmann’s stirring story of the revolt of the German weavers against tyranny and oppression. Headed by Paul Wege- ner, star of “The Golem,” who por- trays the part of Dreissiger, the tyr- annical manufacturer, the cast in- cludes some of the most noted play- ers of Europe, among them Wilhelm Dieterle, George John, Albert Stein- rueck and Dagny Servaes. As an added feature, the Acme is showing scenes of “The Soldier's Bonus Demonstration” and other late working-class news gathered by the W.I.R, NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES EAST SIDE—BBONE ! JER ||| ROK TODAY TO TUESDAY Richard Barthelmess “Alias the Doctor” with MIRIAN MARSH NEW LOW PRICES MATS. 15 Cents || EVES. 25 Cents Exeept Sat. 25th, at 8 P. M. URGED TO ATTEND NEW YORK—On Friday, May 6, | events | determination of the sailors, in con- | . United States. After the play and other enter- tainment, there will be dancing to the music of the Dallas Turner Or- chestra. The night: Friday, May 8; the place: Manhattan Lyceum, 66 E. 4th St.; the occassion, the “Colonial Night” of the Anti-Imperialist League of the United States. STARTS NEW TERM NEW YORK.—The second spring term of the Worekrs School, which will last until July begins this eve- ning with heavy registration for al- most all important classes. Workers | | must register for the classes before | the first session. After the first ses- | sion of each class, no registration will | be taken for that class. Especially | party and league units, trade unions | and other mass organizations should immediately send their scholarship | students, according to arrangements. Registration is now open at 35 KE. 12th Street. ‘The second spring term is the third | term of the school in the year. After |the second spring term, the School |imperialist war. points out the major issues in the tion of the workers for their right coming election campaign, such as to organize and fight against this the fight for unemployment andj) misery by voting and campaigning social insurance, and for immediate |for the Communist Party, the only relief at the expense of the bosses |Party of the Workers, that takes up and government, the fight against | the fight. wage cuts, and against the coming | The Communist Election Campaign In the call, the, must be the campaign of every work- committee points out that in the|ers’ organization, of every worker, coming election campaign the vari- | for the mighty success of the election ous demagogues of the bourgeois | campaign will depend on the chal- parties, the Republicans, Democrats and Socialists—and especially the} | engine power of the ‘workers in the fight against starvation and war. TUUL CARNIVAL AND BALL j# ANSWER TO CITY HALL HOLIDAY Bosses Plan to Arouse Patriotic Fervor for New | Committee is planning for a short jterm in summer. ‘Thus the school terms increase from two (as was the lease before) to four. This reflects one of the many respects of the dev~ elopement of the school as an in- |creasingly effective instrument for | \the training for the class struggle. Detective Admi its Planning of Terror Against Workers In Prepartion for War NORFOLK, Va.—Chief of Detec- tives Leon Nowitzsky boasted pub- ely, a few days ago, that the au- thorities have obtained the names | of sympathizers of the Communist | Party here and that “as soon as war is declared they will be sent to prison camps.” This open admis- sion of the close connection be- tween the terror against all mili- tant workers and the war prepara- | tions was made by one of the most | notorious “red-baiters” in the coun- try. Nowitzsky led the army of police, plain-clothes men, army, and navy intelligence officers and immigra- tion inspectors which recently broke Up a protest meeting against the Ford murders in Detroit. On the following day, Bren K. Lacka, or- ganizer of the Marine Workers’ In- dustrial Union, was dragged into an alley and beaten unconscious by two uniformed policemen and two plain-clothes men. While Nowitzsky and his deteo- tives are planning even more vicious attacks against the Communist | Party, the military preparations for | War are proceeding as rapidly as | possible. Target practice with new high explosives at fortifications in this section shake the city almost daily. Hundreds of thousands of | dollars haye just been spent for | the construction of new barracks ; at the Norfolk navy base. ‘he | Newport News Shipbuilding Co. is | speeding up work on a new air- | Plane carrier for the navy, while two battleships are being modern- ized at the Portsmouth Navy Yards, Local factories are receiy- ing large orders for war, supplies from the government. War preparations are by no means confined to the United States but consist also of sending mili- tary supplies to Japan and France for use against the Soviet Union, as shown by the huge shipments of nitrate from Hopewell to Moji, Osaka, Yokohama and Tokio, Japan and to “a port in France.” These shipments were carried not only by | Japanese soins but also by German and Brilish sh'ps, | World War; Workers Mobilize for Defense of USSR on April 30 Thousands of dollars of the city’s funds will be spent for a pageant and dinner for a few grafters, when the Tammany politicians throw a party at the Hotel Commodore on April 20. While thousands of worekrs starve, a handful of politicians will have a good time boozing. But while the Tammany Hall gang has st aside April 30th as a municipal holiday for the observance of George Washington's birthday, the Trade Union Unity Council. of New York will gather the workers at a carnival and ball at the New Star Casino, 107th Street and Park Avenue. The bosses are planning to corral the workers on April 30th in order to arouse patriotic fervor for a new world slaughter. But at the New Star Casino the workers will -pre- pare for a monster demonstration and parade on May Day, to answer the bosses’ war plans and starvation program, Tickets for the affair of the T. U. U. C. are available at headquarters at 5 East 19th Street. Call Dresmakers to Picket Struck Shops NEW YORK.—The Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union reports | that, despite the slow season, there are several very important fur and dress shops striking under the leader» ship of the union, The organization committee of the union is preparing to picket all these shops today. All unemplpoyed dress- makers are urged to come to the office of the union, 131 West 28th Street, at 7:30, to assist the strikers Picket the shops. Rvery shop, mine and factory & fertile field for Daily Worker sub- scriptions. Workers’ Clubs Should Advertise in the “Daily” Patronize the Concoops Food Stores AND Intern’) Workers Order | DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE sth FLOOR AD Work Done Under Personal Care a¢ DR. JOSEPHSON Restaurant 2700 BRONX PARK EAST | AMUSEMENTS Now! INTERNA’ AUTHENTIC ! SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT: fled film inderstand conrmmoous DAILY VANDERBILT #2", « bet, 6th and oe A He went to his death breathing defiance to the Czar and singing “The AMAZING ! The Tremendous Polish Revolutionary Talking Film which is Taking all Europe by Storm! “z0 CONDEMNED” The Intense Drama of the Polish Uprising of 1906 re-enacted in all its sensational details. Now! TIONALE!” GRIPPING ! has English titles it completely. — 11:30 A.M, to MIDNIGHT 3Sce enabling anyone to until 1 pm, ves. THEATRE GUILD Presents TRUE Too TO BE GOOD A New Play by BERNARD SHAW GUILD THEA., 624 St., W. of B'way. Eve, 8:30 Mats. Thurs., Sat., 2:0 tre Guild Presents REUNION, aN VIENNA medy .By ROBERT me SHERWOOD Martin Benth MADISON SQ. GARDEN TWICE DAILY % NOW ae Presenting 10,000 cus BEATTY fionssncrictrs MAN FROM _INDIA—New ae oe & NO BROS co err By With ELMER RICE PAUL MUNI 120 Plymouth Fraga 45 Str Ey. HtPPODRONE:::,:;; & 43rd St. BIGGEST SHOW IN NEW YORK ROSE mosage Tact, Sie) ee «. |SSCANDAL. EEE IPOR SALE” AR DEMAND — TRIBE we orunarea UBANGH SAVAGES Foreign Features 000 Clr Circus ie 100 Cl ‘clowns, — 700 Hi 50 Elephants—1009 Menagatis Animals—World Congress of Fl Admission to All. (IneL Seats) $1 to $3.50 loel Tax SEATS EVERY 5 6, 6,000 rz PERFORMANCE coe 2 a FANNIE HURST'S ooh MILLION ALL SEATS museaveo Buy in the Co-operative Store and help the Revo- lutionary Movement.” 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. Au Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Cleremont Parkway, Bronx JADE MOUNTAIN AMERICAN and CHINESE RESTAURANT Open 11 a, m, to 1:20 a. um Special: Lunch 11 to 4. Dinner 5 to 10.. .55¢ 191 SECOND AVENUE Between 12th and 13th Ste, Phone Tomkius Sq, 6-0654 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: YTALIAN DISHES 3 snout gon hagsusiaas fol gereasioccns a! ae A place with atmosphere whi here all radicals Facet 302 E, 1th St. New York OPTICIANS CGO Harry Stolper, Inc. 13-15 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 Bates to Workers ani tties 106 E. 14th St. (Room 21) Opposite Automat Tel. TOmpkins Square 6-8237 ATTENTION COMRADES! Health Center Cafeteria | WORKERS CENTER 50 EAST 13th STREET Patronize the Health Center Cafeteria and Help the Revolutionary Movement Best Food Reasonable Prices _ Chester Cafeteria 876 E. Tremont Ave. (Corner Southern Blvd.) Quality —Cleanliness—Moderate Prices All Workers Members F.W.1.U: TWO-ROOM APT.—New dutiding, veentin|, fally furnished, all modern improvements, private abI05 - ‘ana 267789, 345-7 W.