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__ Pexe Two James W. Ford, date for Vice-Pre (By Telegraph to Daily Worker) WASHINGTON, May Dr. Du Bois made the key political speech at the convention here of the Na- tional Association for the Advance- ment of Colored People. speaking on the subject “What Is Wrong With the N. A. A. ©. P.2” Dr. Du Bois advocated a break with the past tactics of the N. A. A.C. P. of called for a “turn to the masses.” He outlined a typical employers’ program, aimed at securing a greater share for the wealthy in the robbery of the Negro masses. With sham struggle phrases and other demagogy, he attempted to conceal from the Ne- gro masses that this program has nothing in common with the interests of the Negro toilers. His program is definitely directed towards keeping the Negro masses under the influence of the white and Negro reformists and toward deliver- ing Negroes into the enemy camp of the capitalist parties, the republican, socialist and democratic. On the economic and political fields, he proposed “to take more in- terest in the economic ills affecting great masses of our people and to consider a program that will bring about their economic betterment.” ‘This program, as he presented it, does not include any fight against starvation and for immediate unem- ployment relief and social insurance, tthe ned of which is even greater among the unemployed tens of thou- sands of Negro workers and ruined farmers than among the unemployed white workers Negro Misleaders Peddle Sham|t~ Struggle Phrases at NAACP Convention in Washington) Workers Hold Counter-Demonstration Proposed Communist Candi- | sident_ as organizing the cultured few and| Yo All Sections of District The district 2 trict 2 are c tions to take a copies of the L | will be off the pre | ATTENTION | aa With Main Speaker i ll be of tr tance (o all Neg! to all worke! ou: hers = impor and water methods. He also outlined | and a program for international co-opera-| ' the stru: fi tion with other Negro reformist} | Get your bu groups throughout the world. ‘Liberator office, 5 The proposed “turn” to the masses | | Room 201. includes the centralization of the or- ganization, limitation of the power of | | 2 Dist. Communist Party of U.S.A. District Secretariat, its board of directors and a ars jt pies ccasaialy blance of more authority to branches. ~ PLAN YOUTH DAY DEMONSTRATIO IN HARLEM, N. Y. To Fight Imperialist An economic program presented by Herbert J. Seligman of the N. A. A C. P. top leadership, as a “suggestion” called for a “redistribution of present wealth by systematic taxation of large incomes and the future conduct of industry for public weal and not for private profit.” It spoke of “insur- ance ag Sickness, ol dage ana unemployment” for some distant fu- | ture. It did not show how industry War and for Negro was to be operated for “the public x weal and not for private profit” Rights . without a social revolution which The National Youth Day demon- would smash the present control by a few of the mmeans of production stration will be held this year in New | and release the giant factories and | York rict in Harlem. This .soc- | mills for social production to meet | 0nd observance of National Youth the needs of the masses. Even this| Day as a day of struggle against im- sham program was opposed by Harry | perialist war and the oppression of E. Davis, Negro Civil Service Com-|the Negro people—for the freedom | oner of Cleveland as “too far-, of the nine Scottsboro boys, takes and antagonistic to the ex- | 0 a special significance for the mas- | isting social order. | ses of Negro workers in Harlem, Dr. Du Bois raised the sham slogan| National Youth Day is a counter- | the American Federation | demonstration against the bosses ob- of Labor bureaucrats attempt to cover | Servance of Decoration Day. Deco- up their support of the capitalist | tation Day is a day of boss-war mob- parties, to wit, to “reward friends and | ilization. punish enemies.” The speech of Dr.} Decoration day was established | Du Bois, as well as those of Abram | Hai George Schuyler and Prof. | also indicate a turn towarda | after the civil war—‘the war to free | the black slaves of the South”. This | boss-lie about “emancipation” is bit- 2W YORK, Laude a IN Top: The new workers checker game with bolts and screws! Bottom: paper for events THE SOVIET UNION Soviet workers examining wall a “labor” party in the effort to divert the masses from the necessary revo- lutionary struggle led by the Com- His program includes the setting up of Consumers’ Co-operatives and Tenant Farmers and Share Croppers ; é ri Pisleniive Astoolations. He spoke of | “Us Sexinst starvation, lynching, “s Bs national oppression of the Negro ‘a more determined struggle” against | A hee t | masses and imperialist war. Jim Crowism and discrimination on ‘A couliter sdeinoraieahon facsing all fields. This “struggle” to be car- uses ried on, of course, by the usual milk | |the N.A.A.C.P. convention and its AMTER EXPOSES |sham proposals was announced for IWW IN DEBATE Temple, with James W. Ford, pro- | prea Communist candidate for vice- | president of the United States, as the principal speaker. At this meet- ine the N.A.A.C.P. program will be exposed before the masses, and two delegates elected for the Communist | Sunday evening at the Masonic| ter mockery to the Negro masses of | today. Not only the south were lynch- | ing, and brutal terror and segrega- tion is the lot of the black people— but in the north as well the Negroes | are not “free” today. | ‘Their yoke of oppression is heavy —the masses in Harlem are segre- | gated—forced to live under unsani-| 4 fascinating book on the Soviet tary conditions, forced to pay high|ynion, all in photographs, is now rent—and unemployment is especial- | being offered with a yearly subserip- ly rampant among the Negroes. Every | tion to the Daily Worker. The name | conceivable kind of persecution and|of this book is “The Land Without exploitation is forced up on the Ne- | Unemploy ment”—the free land of the gro masses. | First Workers and Peasants Govern- Under such circumstances the Ne- | ment ever established. gro masses must see a new meaning | ‘This splendid pictorial refutes once “Land Without Unemployment’ Fine Pictorial on Soviet Union Free With Yearly Sub to Daily Worker! WITH FLETCHER Workers Present Send| Delegates to City Election Rally NEW YORK. — The debate on the question “Resolved, that the plat- form of the Communist Party all sufficient for the emancipation of t working class”, held in the headquar ers of the Marine Workers Industrial Union, 140 Broad Street not only served to show the unanimous ap- proval of the marine workers for the program of the C. P. but was also a means of exposing the counter- revolutionary role of the I. W. W. 1. Amter spoke for the Communist Party, Ben Fletcher for the I. W. W. and R. B, Hudson, National Secre- tary of the Marine Workers Indus- trial Union was chairman. ‘Over 400 attended the debate and many were turned away Fletcher attacked the tactics of the Communist Party in the Scotts- boro case, asserting that it was not a class case and stating that “the waving of the red flag by the Com- munists’ ‘would result in the 8 boys being sent to the electric chair. When Amter denounced these views as counter-revolutionary and as meaning the abandonment of the Negro boys to capitalist lynch justice, | he was greeted with thunderous ap- | Plause and at the end of the meeting | a motion, proposed by Hudson, cal- ling upon the workers to intensify | the efforts in defense of the Scotts- boro boys under the leadership of the Communist Party was unanimously adopted. In answer to a question from the floor regarding his strikebreaking tactics on the Philadelphia water- front against the Marine Workers Industrial Union Fletcher admitted this and attempted to pustify it by stating that the M. W. I. U. had gained influence and 800 members amongst the longshoremen by mas- querading under the name of the I. ww. Amter, who is candidate for gover- nor on the Communist ticket, at the conclusion of his speech called upon the workers to elect delegates to the City Election Conference. At the conclusion of the debate a resolution on Defense of the Soviet Union was unanimously adopted and the chairman was also instructed to send a cable of greetings to the ‘World Unity Congress of Seamen and Harbor Workers which is now being held in Hamburg. Then at the sug- gestion of the chairman the meeting decided to elect delegates to the City Blection Conference of the Commu- nist Party. Three delegates were elected: Lambert, King and one other. What’s On— MONDAY ‘The Dram Council will meet at the ‘ening Center, 35 E, 12th St., at 8:30 pm. Alteration jp vee Bronk will meet at 1130 oo 8. p.m. Branch, I.L.D., will Poa Pi 1 Anthony Ave., Bronx, at 8:30 pm, All members are requested to attend. Nominating Convention at Chicago jon May 28 and 29. in the celebration of “Decoration Day”. National Youth Day will show | the way out of oppression to the Ne- | gro youth of Harlem. Togethter with | | the masses of white youth, the Ne- gro youth must rally to the strug- ‘SHOE PICKETS | capitalist system. | | National Youth Day in Harlem will | | ; be an answer to the determined ef- Strikers Mass in Court forts of the boss-class of the South | | Room; Picket Stores and North as well to legally lynch | the Scottsboro boys. NEW YORK. — The trial of the| Forward to National Youth Day seven pickets who were arrested for| Demonstration in Harlem “disorderly conduct” last Tuesday | Down with bosses Decoration Daj around the TI. Miller Shoe Factory} —and imperialist war took place Thursday morning in Long| ‘Free the framed-up {Island City. The first surprise to| boys! the judge was a packed court room of I. Miller strikers. T. Rosenberg. organizer of the Shoe and Leather Workers Industrial Un- ion, was given a three-day's sentence. Sam Ziebel, secretary of the Union, Minnie Drosnin, Plecan, Azarrow, Gaffner and H. Einbinder were given suspended sentences. Boss Gives Cop Orders One of the strikers istated that a cop told him that he had orders from Miller not to let them walk around the fectory. The striker re- marked that he was a slave to the boss inside the factory, but he would not take any orders from him now anv more. The workers Scottsboro Huge New York Communist Election Conference Held (CONTINUED RUM FAG ONED | leagues, six delegates from siv youth | ; branches, 5 delegates from 5 Labor Sports Union branches, 30 delegates from 18 International Labor Defeni branches, four delegates from three Workers’ International Relief branches, a delagte from the Friends in the court room change the 3 day's sentence for Ros-| Delegate From Debate. | enberg to a suspended sentence. This} Included in the T.U.U.C. union| was done after the lawyer, P. Tar-| delegation were three delegates from gum, pointed out that the court was|the mass meeting 400 strong, held | singling out the organizer of the Un-| the night before in the Marine Work- ion for the severer punishment ers’ Industrial Union hall, ‘These | At 12 noon the strikers carried| seamen and longshoremen heard 1.| thru a picket demonstration right at | Amter, district-organizer of the Com- | the very entrance of the I. Miller] munist Party, wipe up the floor ie factory Ben Fletcher of the I.W.W. in | Picket Stores formal debate. The audience unani | Picketing has begun at the I. Mil-| mously voted, after hearing the de: ler stores—at 34th Street and Broad-| pate, to send delegates to the Cor way in Manhattan, and on Fulton! inunist Election Conference. | Street in Brooklyn. Members of the | t ‘atl Women's Councils picketed td stores| ,, Amur made te. mats wo | Thursday. One of the pickets, Mrs. | hai? tg Finkelstein. of Council 28, was ar- clared: “Piling up a huge Communist | | vote will wring concessions from the | RT ee Seite utc capitalist class, and this can only be | ‘The Workers International Relief} te" by intensifying all activities jin conjunetion with the Shoe and| ring the election caliper oe Leather Workers Industrial Union, is} A™ter also riddled the speeches o: running two affairs for the benefit socialist party leaders at their con- vention now going on in Milwaukee, | of the strikers, The first will be a movie, the showing of the Road To| Particularly Hillquit's demand that | f the workers “Forget about Russia.” | Life, famous Soviet talkie, as well as several newsreels. This will be shown |the Soviet and for all the manufactured lies and deceptions practiced by capitalist newspapers against the great achieve- ments of the workers of the Soviet} ; Union. The radiantly happy expres- sions on the faces of the toilers in this book answers decisively all the lies of forced labor, etc., thrown at Union by the capitalist class, and reveals clearly with what energy, eagerness and willingness the masses are building their own world, }a world in pirind they and not the Workers of Commodore Layndry YORK. — As de- NEW rike wa Union in the Commodore , 130 Seneca Avenue, Bronx. dustrial Laund s ago this laundry was af- d by a similar strike led by the American Federation of Labor. It was sold and the wages went down as a result from $35 to 4 tOSHRDLUM a result from $35-46 to $15 or 20 per week. Of the 20 drivers employed in this laundry, 17 answered the ¢all of the Union which is getting ready to | spread the strike to all the depart- | ments. Pe Members of ‘all working class or- ganizations are called upon to help! the union by refusing to patronize their laundry and give laundry only to men With cards of the Laundry | Workers Industrial Union. SHOE STRIKERS PARADE TODAY IN LONG ISLAND Union Organizer, Louis | Greco, Beaten Up by Police y, at 12 noon, starts the T.| Miller Si ikers Parade. The parade! will begin in front of the Strike | Headquarters, 43rd Ave. and Cres- cent Street, in Long Island City, The Union had difficulties in get-| ting the permit. The police, at the| last minute, give the permit for the | route asked by the Union. The strikers will march by the I.} | Miller factory. The W.I.R. Band will lead; placards, signs and slogans will | tell the Long Island population what the workers are fighting for. All shoe | workers—all workers are called upon |by the Union to join in this parade | and march in solidarity with the 1) | strikers. eet the parade, there will be an air mass meeting in front of the I. Miller Strike Headquarters, Union representatives will address the meeting. of the day! Bosses are the rulers It is harg to find another book on) the Soviet Union that tells the story IKE Whe stele Tiendidaviets: Crane. BO) Well.’ Every picture \isira.getn: | Paris Shoe, L. Greco, Union organ- There is not one out of ‘the 200 in| jner, was brutally beaten up by de- the book that does not carry some| tectives, and taken to the police sta special significance. For instance, | tion They tried to frame him up here is a Ukrainian peasant carrying | jn the ‘police station, but Greco re- a hoe, ready for work, ail smiles; ®| fused to let himself be bulldozed. He_| woodcutter from the Urals bursting| gemanded an immediate trial. The with joy; a herdsman from the Altai | police could find nothing on him and! Mountains on the outlook for his | they were forced to let him out. | flock; a Korean ricefield near Khar-} koy; beautiful landscapes in Caucasia| ‘phe workers of the Grand Slipper | Jand Siberia, Here is the Samarkand| shop in Passaic, N. J. went out on| Dam and a gigantic power station, | strike. This firm settled with a de-| par tof the Five Year Plan. And| partment only recently. ‘The work- jmany more! |ers went out on strike after the boss Write to the Daily Worker, 35 East | refused to live up to his agreement. ' PROTEST MURDER OF PERU WORKERS Pass Resolution of Protest at Meets on Waterfront NEW YORK—At two meetings held | the waterfront 21, last Saturday under the joint on morning, May | auspices of the Marine Workers’ In- dustrial Union and the Anti-Imperial- ist League, resolutions were adopted protesting against the execution of the eight Peruvian sailors and de- manding the release of sailors and hundreds of workers jailed by the Sanchez Cerro government. These meetings are a patt of the were very much impressed by the A | way the arrested strikers answered|of the Soviet Union, six delegates Ui ol acne, Meggett questions and defended themselves. | from four Workmen's Circle branches, |! Tee 0 ee | Because of this, the judee was forced|a delegate from a Scandinavian lan- | these class-war prisoners. All or-| to admit that the strikers have a| guage organization, and 100 delegates | ganizations are urgently requested to jright to mass picket |from units, sections and the district |P8Ss similar resolutions and: send | ‘The judge was also foreed to|committee of the Communist Party.| them to the Peruvian Embassy in/ Amter pointed out that this was war propaganda against the Soviet Union and service to the U. S. imperialist war makers. NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES FAST SIDE—GRON* RKO Ges aGood fhe, FRANKEN TODAY TO TUESDAY John Barrymore and Helen Twelvetrees in TATE’S ATTORNEY” NEW LOW MATS. 15 Cents |} Except Sat., Sun. PRICES EVES. 25 Cents and Holidays at the 5th Ave. Theatre, 28th St. on Broadway, N.Y.C., on Saturday, May 28, There will be continuous show- ing from 1 p.m. to 11 p.m. ‘The second affair will be a con- cert and dance on Sunday, May 29, at the Brownsville Labor Lyceum, Sackman and Liberty Aves. from 6 pm. on. This affair promises to be a very lively one with an interest- FROM JOHN REED'S FAMOUS Starting Today—Don't Miss Seeing’ THE GREAT RUSSIAN FILM EPIC “10 DAYS THAT SHOOK THE WORLD” STOKY OF THE EARLY DAYS OF THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION Produced by the great EISENSTEIN Added Features: Latest W.LR, Newsreel and “Sino-Japanese Curse” ing program. All workers are urged to attend these two affairs and sup- port the strikes of the militant shoe workers. THE WORKER'S ACME THEATR Mth STREET & UNION SQUARE M. to M. Sat. & Bun. 9 A. Sei. Midni E HH 12th Street, New York City. All sub- | EASE eee | scriptions paid in advance! | “REUNION IN VIENNA” MOVES TO " = GUILD TONIGHT Washington, to Secretary of State The Theatre Guild production of | “Reunion In Vienna,” Robert EB Sherwood’s satire of old Vienna, will be transferred from the Martin Beck to the Guild Theatre this evening The comedy has been playing at the Beck since Noy. 16. Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fonntaine head the cast. if “On the Make,” a new comedy by| Stimson and to the press. The resolution adopted at the meet- ing follows: “We, workers assembled in front of | the Seamen's Institute, voice our | most energetic protest against the| execution of eight Peruvian sailors, the sentencing of fourteen others to terms of from ten to fifteen yeasr in prison and against the arrest of over| Roger Gray, will have its initial a hundred militant workers by the) Broadway showing at the Rorty Peruvian governntent. |Bighth Stret Theatre tonight. ‘We demand teh release of thesail-| Another opening listed for this! ors, workers, peasants and students | evening is “Yeah-Man,” a Negro re- arrested in connection with the re-| vue by Al Wilson, Charles Weinburg | volt of the sailors, as well as other|and Ken Macomber, which will open | class-war prisoners arrested for their|2t the Park Lane Theatre (formerly activities against American and Brit-|Daly’s 63rd). Hilda Perling, Billy | ish’ imperialism and against the San-| Mills, Lilly Yuen @hd Leigh Whipper | chez Cerro government, which is the | head the cast. agent of American imperialism. We) Jane Cowl returns to Broadway on} hold the American government and| Tuesday night in “A Thousand Sum-| its lackey, the Sanchez Cerro Cece gl mers,” by Merrill Rogers, opening at! ment, responsible for the murder and|the Selwyn Theatre. Franchot Tone | | jailing of these heroic fighters. |and Osgood Perkins vlay Important! “We demand the right of organiza-| roles in the production. | tion, without interference by the “Heigho Everybody,” a radio com-| government, of all anti-imperialist or-|edy by Herbert Polesié and Jack Mc- ganizations, especially those of the | Gowan, is due at the Fulton Theatre working class and peasantry. We de-|on Wednesday night. Jcseph Sant- | mand the cessation of the terror car-| ley, Harry Rosenthal and Edna Hib- ried on by the Peruvian government.” | bard are the leading players. | AMUSEMENTS Last Two Days —STARTING WEDNESDAY— “ALONE” All Seats EBWAY) on ‘Mon. Opening of Giant Sovict Plant MAGNITOGORSK Hockey Gamé between Moscow & Leningrad (in Moscow Stadium) le n New York City theatre, SWAY & 47th ST. ‘> MAYFAIR rc 9— FANNIE HURST'S i Vhe Theatre Guild resents REUNION IN VIENNA By hor GUILD Ey 8.40, Mis Th., Sat. Tel. Co 0 St. medy 2, SHEN We THEATRE, 4 WEST OF B'WAY “SYMPHONY.t SIX MILLION” cond (First Time at Popular Prices) | Louis Bart, were likewise arrested. 2 Paterson Workers on Tria! PATERSON, the five Paterson textile workers who are threatened with the electric chair on a trumped-up charge of murder, come up for trial here Mon- day, May 23, on the separate charge of assault and battery with intent to kill, The frame-up of these workers is part of the organized terrorism of the textile mill bosses in their fran- tie efforts to crush the National Tex_ tile Workers Union, of which the five who face death are members. The facts in this case reveal the same cold-blooded, murderous meth- ods by which the bosses, acting through their law-court puppets, strike at workers organizations by jing the militant elements, such as Sacco-Vanzetti, or railroading them |to jail, as with Mooney-Billings, the Imperial Valley workers, the Harlan miners, and scores of other class war | prisoners. On February 18, 1931, Max Urban, textile mill boss and notorious boot- | legger, who had been previously con- victed for his liquor making activit- ies, was beaten up at his factory. He had made many enemies among his rival rum-runners, and there is little doubt that the fight at the factory was started by the bootlegger boss’ rivals, who seized the opportunity presented by the strike picketing as jan advantageous moment to attack | while diverting suspicion from them- selves. Outside, Urban’s mill was being picketed by workers, belonging to the NTWU. They were striking ageinst speed-up, wage cuts, and abominable working conditions. The picketing workers know nothing whatever about the attack on Urban; those who par- ticipated in it were total strangers to them. Nevertheless, the police per- mitted the attackers to escape, and | then pounced upon the peaceful Picketers, clubbing them brutally. Benjamin Leib, one of the picketers, was arrested and charged with as- sault. Later that day, Helen Ger- shonwitz, another striker, was arrest- ed for from the scene of the fight, and on the same charge. The fol- lowing day, three more workers, Al- bert Katzenbuch, Louis Harris, and ‘The flimsy nature of the frame-up is indicated by the fact that neither Harris nor Bart were on the picket line on the day of the assault. Fur- thermore, Harris was not even work- ing at the Urban mill at the same, having been unemployed for more than six months. | That the police knew they had} nothing on the imprisoned workers is shown by the fact that they were first released on very low bail. A month later, Urban died. It is ex- tremely doubtful if Urban’s death resulted from the injuries. He had been ailing from a chronic disease, and was operated on for this disease just before he died. Be that as it may, the charge a- N. J. — Helen Gers {nocent of shonwitz and Benjamin Leib, two of} changed to murder, | workers. | all. | JOHN Go On Strike Today on Faked Charges clared by the Laundry Workers In-|Si]lk Barons to Have Them Convicted on Minor Charges to Pave Way for Their Rail- roading to Electrie Chair % | affair, was) At this point! we meet with a glaring example of the entire | the devious methods used in engin- eering frame-ups against militant The case against the work- ers was admittedly so weak that the authorities kept continually postpon= ing its prosecution, and after a year’s delay, it was virtually dropped for lack of any evidence whatsoever. But, suddenly, it seems, the prosee= ution conceived a “brilliant” {dea. Surely, an effective way to bolster @ weak murder frame-up against mile itant workers is to precede it by an-! other frame-up on a lesser charge, That this is just what is being attempted. In addition to the mur= der charge which rangs over them, the workers are charged with “ase sault and battery with intent to kit.” Assault on whom? Not on Max Ure ban, but on his nephew, who previe ously did not figure in the case at For this the workers are to be tried Monday. It is necessary for the workers of America to be alert to the danger which faces their Paterson, fellow- workers. We must not permit our comrades to be swept under by the boss wave of terror that is sweeping the whole country, The Interna- tional Labor Defense calls upon all workers to rally behind the Pater- son prisoners! Mass protest meetings must be held. Mass pressure must force their release. Smash this | frame-up. EISENSTEIN’S GREAT FILM, DAYS THAT SHOOK THE WORLD,” AT ACME THEATRE “Ten Days That Shook the World,” a masterly film of the birth of the Soviet Republic, screened from John Reed's thrilling book of the first days of the Revolution,” will be shown at the Acme Theatre, 14th St. and Union Square, on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, May 23, 24 and 24. The picture wa sdirected by S. M. Eisenstein, the genius who produced “Potemkin.” Eisenstein employed some 120,000 actors and took two years to make the film. Here is a great historical pageant. In short, staccato scenes, in keeping with the epic quality of the theme, are shown the sweep of the historic incidents of a new epoch in a nation’s history. On the same program, the Acme is presenting the latest W. I. R. News reel, with scenes from the life of the workers, in this city and elsewhere. BARRYMORE AT JEFFERSON AND FRANKLIN The Jerrerson and Franklin The- atres are now showing John Barry- more in his first radio production, “Svate’s Attorney.” Helen Twelve- trees plays the leading female role. Beginning Wednesday, both theatres will present Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., in “It's Tough To Be Famous.” The Jefferson will show an extra feature on the same bill, “County Fair,” with gainst the five workers, who were in- Wm. Collier, Jr., and Ralph Ince, Workers’ Clubs Should Advertise in the “Daily” 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 JADE MOUNTAIN ANTERICAN and CHINESE RESTAURANT Open tha to 180 a, ecial Lunch 11 to 4...3 Dinner 5 to 10 197 SECOND AVENUE ow Chester Cafeteria 876 E. Tremont Ave. (Corner Southern Blyd.) Quality —Cleanliness— Moderate Prices All Workers Members F.W.1.U. | Phone Vomkins Sq. 6-0554 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: UTALIAN DISHES A place with atmoxphere where all rad 302 E. 12th St. Intern'l Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 15th FLOOR AV Work Done Under Versunal Cate, of DR. JOSEPASON OPTICIANS CFC) Harry Stolper, Ine. 73-75 CHRYSTIE STREET (Third Aye. Car to Hester Street) 9 a, m. to 6 p. m. Daily Phone: Dry Dock 4-452 WILLIAM BEL. QPTOMETRIST and OPTICIAN Special Bates to Workers and Pamilies 106 BE. 14th St. (Room 21) Opposite Automat Tel. PUmpkins Square 6-828) Comrades—Eat at the Parkway Cafeteria 1608 PITKIN AVENUE Neer Hopkinson Ave. Prooklyn, N. ¥. ROOMS WANTED Rooms are needed for students of the Central Training School - for six weeks beginning June 15th. Party members and sympathizers who can accomodate without charge one or more students during that period, please report immediately to:— COUNSELLOR-AT-LAW : with ELMER RICE PAUL MUNI Plymouth jiaurnurs ant, 2120 VOTE COMMUNIST FOR: hy er rights for the Negroes and if-determination for the Black ae Specify whether male or female THE WORKERS SCHOOL 35 East 12th Street Telephone ALg. 4-199 i