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Page Two DAIL ¥ WORKER, NEW YORE WE ESDAY JUNE 8, Re Assault on N NY Negro | EW YORK. “Sunday afternoon, a gro and white worker got into a quarrel in Hester Street Park. A gang appeared and started to beat up the Negro, who got away. ‘They then attacked another Negro, James Ray, 400 STRIKERS | MARCH ON MINE RUN BY MELLON | ae Police Partidinate in | Unemployed Auto Warkeks ‘Atadial by Detr oit Police When They Marched on n Briggs Plant | FORD MEETING IN SCHENECTADY Preparation - for State Convention, June 19 SSS French Workers Greet Scottsboro Mother on Tour for Framed Son (Cable to Daily Worker.) PARIS, June 7. — A large demone | stration of French workers, headed by leading functionaries of the Mi Take ke Control |e tts one. French Red Aid, greeted Mrs. Ada . ; cig t DY, N i ther, and J, Miners a e ‘ ont TOL} no w accused of being a friend of SOHRNEOTADY, N.Y, June <= yey hentia en oa. ie s Of Terminal Strike; | Ray escaped, ran down the street, The mass mesting arranged here | US Bogdan, ccretary of and into a house. The policeman Begin Spreading It on the beat followed him, dragged him out and slugged him. Then he | Started with Ray down the street. Word was passed along that the Policeman would give up the Negro | to the gang, but not while they fol- | lowed him. The cop took the Negro PITTSBURGH, Pa, June 7. Four hundred strikers in the Pitts- burgh Terminal Coal Co. mine in Coverdale marched this morning 0" the Pittsburgh Coa ICo. Mine No. to Rutgers Square, beat him up, then | released him. The crowd of white | | ruffians got him, and Ray ran to | jthe policeman for protection. The | cop beat him into insensibility and | left him there. Someone called an ambulance, and | the semi-conscious Negro was taken | {to the Gouverneur Hospital. Yester- | 10 (Montour No. 10) and although not pulling the mine on strike, roused an excellent sentiment for strike steuggle there, There are indications that this decisive mnie will be pulled out this week. The march was led by the Rank The “liberal” Mayor Murphy’s cop at the left swinging at the head of a woman with a pair of steel | See the bulky, well-fed sergeant reaching out to grab the | handcuffs. uniformed thugs in action. See the Mounted Police ride on the sidewalk to trample unemployed Briggs Auto workers. Scores were clubbed when a demonstration of nearly June 16 for James W, Ford, Commu- nist candidate for president of the United States, is attracting much at- tention, Ford's meeting will mobilize work ers and call attention to the state convention of the Communist Elec- tion Campaign which comes on June 19. Both the meeting and the con- vention are in a city where thousands of workers of the General Blectric Company and other firms are unem- ployed, and the Communist Party's main election platform plank of “un- employment insurance at the expense of the employers and the state” is upon their arrival in Paris, Meetings had previously been held in Germany and Czecho-Slovakia, despite the refusal of the authorities to allow Mrs. Wright and Engdahl to address these meetings. some concession, 5 ge ne Collect Signatures. NEW YORK. — The United Front Election Campaign Committee cons, tinues to call attention to the week of mass signature collections, in) which all workers’ organizations are expected to take part. The “Red < 4 ‘ ; ; A Week” begins June 11 and lasts 4 File Strike Committee of Pitts-|day his condition was reported as| girl by the throat. See the double-chinned officer in the back directing 3,000 was attacked by police, after hundreds had marched a mile to | drawing support of ihe discharged June 18. During this period all ae ugh Terminal Mine No. 8 at Cover-| “good,” that is, he has a chance of| the slugging of hungry men and women from the door of a barber shop demand the company give relief to its discharged workers and a ten |G. E. workers. acleations whieh: have, suse sine daje, elected at meetings called by | surviving. named “Liberty.” per cent wage increase in the plant. \ he National Me U Mass demonstration of these work-| chosen their delegates to the state’ the National Miners Union. wa | a es 36 ers and a committee to the General | convention at Schenectady should da | Miners Lead Strike. )Hun arian Delegates Ga A * . * | Electric recently wrung promises of | so, fy ar ee AGEL AA iS 8 | |Street Meetings Will Remington Strikers | f arge of the strike there in this largest of ito U.S.S.R. Greeted on! |Return to New York! i | the Terminal mines. Pittsburgh Terminal mi ers str NEW June 1 against a ten per cent wage | Ip | YORK.—The delegation re- | ng 80,000 Hungarian workers | oured the Soviet Union re cub ordered by agreement with the employers in the United Mine | rs of America, The U. M. W.|‘urned to New York Sunday on thi Priday’ evenitie ae" Bike Lukes. Hall) aedan seas | 4 » y ev . a" ly y, where about the same} A. then pretended to be leading the men. At the pier an enthusiastic | Cheer Jobless ea Rar Oy a! ig Rn BS akers to Quit | || Arranged by the New York im and ‘called. o. 86 pW. TS0WR. Rhy PO gepey we number of young printers are strik- | * of local |demonstration of greeting was held mestings to take a vote on going back to work, It was at a U. M. W. A meeting Saturday that the Coverdale and the same evening a mags -meet- | ing at which members of the dele-| gation elected by mass organizations, DETROIT POLICE CLUB MARCHERS| Briggs Auto Workers’ DETROIT, Mich., | June 7,—Hun- |derds of Mayor Murphy's police at- tacked the march of Briggs Auto dis- | Precede Harlem Meet | | toWelcome Delegates | number of street meetings in| are will be utilized to mobilize | for the mass meeting to be held on | turning Negro delegation at the Na- | tional Nominating Convention, held in Chicago. 1,000 DENOUNCE Joining Printing FUR JOINTBO ARD) Workers Ind. League NEW YORK. Taeaty picketed the Mass Meeting Shouts | Remington-Rand flant at 7:30 am. NEW YORK “The Committee at a Irving | the fourth slash in a year. of|ing against a 10 per cent wage-cut, Strikers 15 elected meeting in Workers’ Clubs Should Advertise in the “Daily” ON AUGUST 28 PICNIC LORLLSIG Intern’) Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT | z 80 FIFTH AVENUE | ; 1 | cha rae 3 i h|Plaza to demand the resignation of |™arched with members of the Print- | strikers brushed aside the U. M. W.|unions and even reactionary Hun-|Ch@rsed employees on the gates of; Tonight, at 134th St. and Seventh | : ing Workers’ Industrial League, bear- 15th FLOOR | ‘ |the plant here yesterday. In spite Ave. the League of Struggle for Ne- |the International Fu rWorkers’ Joint |; " " A. official protests and voted to|garian societies spoke, was held in|‘? : Bees teed oe ing signs such as: “Bosses’ Profits|| 4¥d vq suusvag ut ‘a "TT ui Wias te ee Eee march on Montour No. 10 |the Labor Temple. ‘The speakers in-|f 9 official permit for the march, te Aghts, pee Fe meeting. The {Council earried through an open-air | 7,090,000 In One Year; Average of DR. JOSEPHSON Sunday Frank Borich spoke to a cluded Colman. Kate, John Holek | tr €88 and clubs met the marchers, Communist Party is arranging 0 | meeting in the fur market yosterday [Printers Wages $16” Plokating, wes mass meeting of C e miners, |Anna Preda, Chulay, Zwara, Tomko, ’ . 4 entry td ne |afternoon and called on the furriers | Tepeated at 4:80 p.m. Another picket and Pat Fagan, district president |Hilbert, Katharine Tomanicka, Hene-| Seven hundred marched in the pa-|m., one at 130th St. and Seventh Ave., (line will form this morning. A few ; ’ > ee eee ee ea a . rade to the plant gates, where they | and the other at 130th St. and Lenox |to come to the Joint Council, where | pe eae ba adh ATTENLION COMRADES! OPTICIANS pear to debate with Boricn, who had | THe delegation was greeted by) Nets Met Welcomed and cheered by Ave, The Young Communist Lesgue |an open forum was to be eld t0| "come and help picket. eport, at] : pauedeed alin Aveel \Tstiner he: namie. ot b0| take guppat fer the auptoheta (ang Tei Rie |@iscuss the question of how the fur|73 Myrtle Ave. Take BMT. Brigh-|! Health Center Cafeteria More Mass Mectings Hungarian the Communist | °° Rhine pit Sp tl es + {workers cah unite their ranks and|ton Line to Myrtle Ave. ¥ ass |Party | ‘ bee | , i : Bleyen strikers haye joined the! J BRS CENTER There will be a series of ma The committee of nine was denied build on class struggle union. WORKERS CEI | The dele: si ingraa,|__The \Mass P: init Wonlan it ¥ meetings today and tomorrow in|, 7 i ee Ms Hy ann eet |admittance when it went up to the Mass Protest Meet The Joint Council, which is main- sit Bee aR ner dake aie 50 EAST 13th STREET Harry Stolper, Inc. three other struck Ter al mines, | pau, the Don Basin and a number |8&t to present demands of the dem Against Evictions tained with the help of the bosses! roo, were brought yesterday from a : 13-75 CHRYSTIE STREET and it is expected they will result | OP OO ce gan |onstrators for: | r A al 27 ans uv ought. ye ¢ Patronize the Health Center (Third Ave, Car to Hester street) ff. NaS Aiaatindt Ge ean “Gind Hin. shrine 1e collective farms. 1 43, Getipiivment sells deptune | Today in the Bronx |and the police, immediately called| food worker whose shop, the Cali- Pa ened Saas REN a Os. we 6b, me, Dale fF committees to take leadership in the ee ee ee employed Briggs workers equal to 50 | on the police and detective squad,) fornia Produce Market in Brooklyn, Phone: Dry Doek 4-4522 f Fagan’s | | paa Me ebay, aut Open Air Mectings to enchmen | The National Miners Union de Protest Jailing of Four elares the U. M A. incapa eedle Workers read the stril meetings this | and unwilinig to sp and gnnounces mass week in three of the largest Pitts- burgh Ceal Co. mines to prepare @:ounds for rapid spreading of the strike in the Terminal mi Pittsburgh Coal Co., a Mellon in- | &titytion, is the largest mining com yany in Western Pennsylvania NEW YORK. — The United Front Defense Committee of needle trades | workers has called a series of noon- day open air protest meetings against e conviction and sentence of Weiss- berg and three other needle workers. The meetings will take place in the nent center at 36th St. and at Pittsburgh Terminal Coal Ce | 38th St. Speakers will expose the second largest, and is owned by |frame-up of these militant workers same interests as the Purseglove | by the bosses of Needleman & Brem- mines in West Va. and Ohio |mer, and the officials of the Inter- national Ladies Garment Workers. The framers were assisted by the Lovestone clique. Potash Elected Sec y! of Needle Workers; Other Officers Chosen NEW YORK. — The shop delegates council of the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union met Wednesday and elected the following general officers Unemployed Teachers in Protest Tonight On behalf of 10,000 unemployed school teachers of New York City, the of the union: Seeretary, Irving Po-|Teachers’ Union and the New York} tash; Assistant Secretary, Rose Wor-" Association of Unappointed Teachers tig; Treasurer, Louis Wise; Italian |has called a mass meeting for to- organizer, Oswaldo Eusepi; Youth or-|night (Wednesday) at Stuyvesant ranizer, Ben Frum; Negro organizer, | High School, 15th St., near Second {lichard Follops; Educational direc- | Ave., to protest against the so-called tor, Emma Yaninski; Winogradsky; — Vice-chairman, Jackso! Chairman, J. A |“economy” program adopted by the |Board of Education | ‘This program calls for increasing 10p delegates council endorsed | classes to 50-55 students and over, the campaign fo rthe release of | which means that more than 300 Weissberg, denounced his conviction | teachers will lose their licenses and and sentence, and took steps to as-|that more than 700 permanent sub- sist the cloakmakers in a real strike | stitutes who now have jobs will lose for union conditions their classes at the end of this term. SHELTER FOR F.S.U.DELEGATION; PICKET KAPLAN PAINT SHOP Accommodations are needed for} NEW YORK. — Williamsburg Sec- returning American delegation to|tion of the Alteration Painters urges the U.S.S.R. which arrives June 12./all te come help picket every morn- Notify F.6.U., 799 Broadway, Room/ing at the Kaplan shop, 285 Rodney 330, New York | Street. The boss fired three workers to put over a wage cut. Two men he got te werk on one of his jobs yesterday were persuaded to quit and join the strike: [ What’ 's On— WevNESDAy AB Open-air meeting will “END OF 5ST, PETERSBURG” AND held at Var and Graham Aves. Willlameburgh, at 83! COMMUNIST CONVENTION AT fm. under the susplees of the 1D ACME pres 0 A wery important membership mee! Beginning today the Acme The-| Will be hielg at the Mapleton Workers’ Club, 2006 70th St., Brooklyn. at 8:30 p.m atre will present for ene week the Comrade Riehard Sullivan will report on|Sovkino masterfilm, “The End of St. toa, Calcage Neminatinr, Convention ot t8*/ Petersburg,” a dramatic. production { kaway end Livonle Aves, Brooklyn, atlof the capture of the old czarist | eat Se capitol by the revolutionary forces. anzetti Branch, ILD. will) Some 5,000 thousand people take Peo Sevlian At 102 ‘Tremoot |. the picture, which wes prod> w branch of the 10,0. will be formed |uced in the USSR. The film has been highly praised both here and on the Schenectady Ave. Brooklyn, at 8| m. All workers in the neighborhood are Bskéd to come. ded by the is. | COntinEnt. Volunteer typists are needed by the Dis- trict LLD. Room 410, 799 Broadway, every; The Acme is also presenting a Vay this week. \Jengthy film of the Communist Con- A in Marxism will be held at the|Vention in Chicago. All important Saw Emery Branch, 1.L.D., at 2462/ events at the convention are brought ith Brooklyn, at 6:30 p.m. Every- out in the film, including the chief delegates and the final demonstra- tion which took place following the nomination. Another W.LR. present- ation is the Worker's Ex-Servicemen'’s Bonus Demonstration at City Hall jand in Union Square, As an added feature the Acme has booked a special Soviet Newsreel, which contains some very important scenes of recent events whieh took place in the Soviet Union, The Acme is planning to show, pe- ginning June 15, a lengthy film of the Fifteenth May Day Celebration held in Moscow. tody {5 invited, “No admission A generei membership meeting of the orkers’ International Reliet will be held + 16 W. 2ist St. at 8 p.m, All members ¢ urged to be precent The Irish Workes ipen-air meeting at 14 Sie, Brony, gt 7 p.m held an ‘Willis will t. and Phe LER will Weve 4m outdoor moect- mg gt 134th St. and Seventh Ave. at @ pan {HURSDAY ular mecting of the Bronx Icor will be held at its new head- 2075 Clinton Ave, at 8:30 p.m. 4a inst the Pat- A mass protest meeting a1 3159 Coney wn tramerup will be held hema “a’ 0 p.m. The Internati il Labor DNefense asks ra f draterne!, organizations not to ayrange| The Trans-Lux Theatre, on Broad ny aftaits for Au th, when their an-| way, is presenting this week the fol- tiieindae aber oR lowing short subjects: A Grantland The newly ohne English section of | Rice sportfilm, ‘Fairway Favorites”; hi Froiel-Byshne, will mest st “Toy Time,” an Aesop fable; “Em. pire of the Sun,” a travel film; “Old Songs for New,” a musical feature, and “The Gland Parade,” a comedy featuring Roscoe Ates. st St, re invited. Al workers’ ia, foe foartrnd| on anisations are asked not ‘ital for July 14, when “disertet 4 wil be held. ' per cent of our wages and not than $15 a week, “2. No discrimination against Ne- young or women work- ving back for our wel less ‘3. Ten per cent increase in wages for Briggs workers. “4, No insurance money out of| workers pay. All insurance paid by Briggs, “5. Slow down the line. “6. The right to organize.” The police were massed inside the| Plant with machine guns, and police outside launched a terrific -attack. The workers fought back for half an hour. Among those arrested was Jessie Negoitza. Others seized by the police were Jessie's husband, Nester Ne- soitza; Joseph Maroz, Roy Bennieus- sis, Max Tasler and Roland Galin. The crowd was charged not only by club-swinging patrolmen, but by mounted police and cops in cars. LABOR UNION MEETINGS Food Workers All members of the Cafeteria and Hotel & Restaurant trade sections of the Food Workers’ Industriel Union meet Monday, June 13, at 8 p.m. at 5 E. 19th St. to hear the report of the committee of 15 elected at the previous meeting, . Carpenters A meeting to which all carpenters in the Bronx are invited will be held Wednesday \tonight) at 8 o'clock at 1180 Southern Biyd, Shoe Workers All shoe workers of Brooklyn and New York aré called the Shoe & Leather Workers’ Industrial Union to a mass me ing Thursday at Irving Plaza Hall, 15th St and Irving Place, at 7 p.m. tn 3 € Needle Trades The United Front Comunittee of Dress- makers calls all dressmakers working on 27th St. to a meeting Thursday right after work at Greek Workers’ Center, 301 W. 29th st ‘The Needie Trades Workers’ Industrial Union calls all members of the union em- ployed on 25th St. to a meeting Thursday, Tight after work, at 131 W. 28th St (By a Worker Correspondent) NEW YORK, June 7—The Bronx | Unemployed Council calls upon all) workers of the neighborhood to rally | at 1520 Seabury Place, near 172nd| | St. and protest against the attempt to evict two unemployed workers: | | A rent strike, in which 14 tenants > participating, is going on at 1520 |Seabury Place to frustrate this at~ tempt. Workers are urged to sup- port this strike, Yesterday a big protest rally took | place near the building affected by| | the strike. About 1,000 workers par- ticipated in it, pledging to fight in order to prevent the landlord from putting two workers out in the street, Called by the landlord's agent, two | policemen tried to break the rally, | but had to send out a call for rein- | forcements in order. to accomplish this. As soon as the reinforcements | |arrived they attacked the workers, beating up and wounding several of them. Two were arrested and brought to! court. Magistrate Greenspan re-| leased them, stating: “You are lucky; there is not enough evidence against you.” The workers are. Lubitz and Simon. NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES EAST SIDE—BRONK a ||| OD WEDNESDAY TO FRIDAY Kay Francis in “MAN WANTED” with David Manners At JEPFERSON—Extra Feature “STEADY COMPANY” — With Norman [| Foster, June Clyde and Zasu Pitts NEW LOW PRICES MATS. 15 Cents || EVES. 25 Cents Except Sat. Sun, and Holidays LATEST SOVIET NEWS LOTTERY FOR 2ND 5-YEAR PLAN— MECUANISED SALT MINE 3-RED ARMY ACTIVITIES—NEW CITY BY SOVIET UNION TOR MONGOLIAN NOMADS—U.S.8.R. AND TURKEY SIGN) TREATY—ETC., ETC., ETC. EXCLUSIVE SHOWING (EXCEPT SHOTS | USED IN REGULAR NEWSREEL) COMMUNIST CONVENTION ,, IN CHICAGO SEE THE CONVENTION PRESENTED BY IN ACTION w. I. R. THE SOVIET PICTURE THAT THRILLED THE WORLD “THEEND of ST. PETERSBURG’ A THRILLING AND SENSATIONAL i OY THE vals, OF Tae Seams SCREENED IN THE U.S. m, camel or S000. Iso: Worker's Ex-Service- Is i. ne n’s Bonus Demonstration PRESENTED BY W.LR. The Worker's. ACME THEATRE Uth STREET & UNION SQUARE 9 A. M, to 1 PM, USCi.0, Sas san, Midnite Show Sat. LIVE IN A— WORKERS COOPERATIVE COLONY We have a limited number of 3 and 4 room apartments NO INVESTMENT NECESSARY — OPPOSITE BRONX PARE 2800 BRONX Comradely atmosphere—In this Cooperative Colony you wil) find a library, athletic director. workroom for children, workers’ clubs and various cultura! activities Estabrook 8-1400; Olinville 2-6972 Take Lexington Avenue train to White Plains Road and Get off Allertom Avenue T Office open from: 2 a, m. to 8 Saturday 19 ». m, PARK EAS moevery day; a, m to 5 p.m. Gouge? who tore up the slogans and banners] g0°s on strike today. and atetmpted to disperse the dem- | onstration. The fur workers refused | to be terrorized and carried through a huge demonsiration in which sev-| Rese Baron will be honored by a eral thousand participated. After! banquet, given to her by the N. Y the demonstration they came to the| District of the International Labor | BANQUET HONORS ROSE BARON. leffice of the Industrial Union, where | Defense on Saturday evening. June they conducted’ an open forum and/|1ith, at 216 BE. 14th St. at Sollins decided to intensify the struggle | Restaurant, against the racketeers and through! The occasion is the reparture for their unity of action to build one| the Soviet Union of Comrade Baron class struggle union of all fur werk-/| who has been called to work for the ers. [Moe the International Red Aid. AMUSEMENTS EVOLUTION OF A NATION ‘on DIARY OAR A REVOLUTIONIST SOVIET RUSSIA IN ITS FORMATION—AND TODAY NEW AMKINO ACTION TALKIE WITH ENGLISH TITLES EXCLUSIVE SOVIET NEWSREEL Dnieprostroy. , . . Maznitogorsk Lottery for Selection of Designs for Palace of the Mechanized Salt Mining “Five-Vear-Plan” Soviets THIS NEWSREEL WILL NOT BE SHOWN Aes modations for Children in Moscow |IN Aye OTHER NEW YORK THEATRE YOO” LB WAY. STARTS AMEO 2” st ina TODAY LAST WEEKS RuuRIGe i'tvunRes || COUNSELLOR-AT-LAW A Comeay Elmer’ Rice Otto Kruger ORT B, SHERWOOD TRE. 52nd St. th Month hea, W. 45 St . Hy 8.40. Mts Th. Bat, Tel, Co $8229 Sy. Sy Yiymouth FIGHT AND STRUGGLE IN THE CITY! AYE IN THE COUNTRY! This can be a reality if you join THE GOLDENS BRIDGE COOPERATIVE COLONY if interested, communicate with Dr. ROSETSTEIN, 285 CYPRESS AVENUE, Tt will be werth your while BRON on the Hudson to Hook Mountains on the $.5. ‘Clarenozt’ SATURDAY, JUNE lith Leaving Pier A, Battery Park, at 2 (Near South Ferry) DANCINGC—ENTERTAINMENT--G00D FOOD TICKETS & CENTS IN D. mi, ADVANCE 31.10 AT THE PIER —Tickets sold at— MOR! G PREINEIT Ada d COOPERATIVE Canes revs tcane-e REPOPORT. AND CUTLER SOLLIN'S RESTAURANT BROWNSVILLE YOUTH CENTER — BRony WORKERS CLUB. _ ROSPECT WORKERS CLUB ou 8) BAST 12th STREET 2700 BRONX PARK EAST 1316 BOSTON ROAD if « Revointionary Movement Best Food Reasonable Prices | JADE MOUNTAIN. AMERICAN and CHINESE | RESTAURANT Ppen Hoa. a tw 11M a ee Y Special Lunch 11 to 4. Dinner 5 to 10. 197 SECOND AVENU: Between (Ith and 13th Ste Be | "55e| Phone Tomkins Sq. 6-554 John’s Restaurant SPEOIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES 4 place wi where all 302 E. 12th St. New York Chester Cafeteria 876 E, Tremont Ave. ' (Cormer Southern Blvd.) Quality —Cleanliness—Moderate Prices All Workers Members F’.W.1,U. Comrades—Eat at the Parkway Cafeteria 1638 PITKIN AVENUE Ne Brooklyn, N, ¥. Hopkinson Aye. Patromze the Concoops Food Stores Restaurant 2100 BRONN PABE BAS “Buy in the Co-operative Store and help the Revo- lutionary Movement.” 55 East 12th Street The Month of Jy Every dollar spent by a workey an rest GO TO YOUR THREE ALL CAMPS HAVE $16.50 Per Weck, Inclujing Automobiles leave for all camps at City Office of Camp Kindert ROOMS WANTED—— Rooms are needed for students of the Central Training Seheol for six weeks beginning June 15th, Party membeys and sympathizers who can. accomodate without charge one or more students during that period, please report immediately to:— Specify whether male or female THE WORKERS SCHOOL YOUR VACATION SHOULD BE SPENT IN A PROLETARIAN CAMP ONLY is ideal for vacation im the Proletarian Camps ‘our mover Nitgedaiget :: Kinderland :: Unity NO CCLLECTIONS d St. ¢ travel by train o1 For information on Nitgedaiget and Unity call City office 8-1400 and for Kinderland TOmpkins Square 6-8434 108 E. 14th St, WILLIAM BELL OPTOMETRIST and OPTICIAN Special Rates to Werkers ard Families 106 E. 14th St, (Reem 21) Opposite Antomat |] Tel. TOmpsins Square 6-823) 729 EAST 14TH STRERT NEW YORK Tel. Algonquin 3356-8843 We Carry a Foll Line of STATIONERY AT SPECIAL PRICES for Organizations 4 NEIGHBORLY PLACE TO EAT Linel Cafeteria Pure, Food—10 Per it Frigidaire Equi; t—Lu MELROSE DAIRY fisracnant Comradée Will Always Plenpant to Dine st On Place. 1787 SOUPETEN Leal Bronx i rane fe WNreRvALRY ews BUTCHERS’ UN 10N Lora 174,46 0. & BW ot Oftics and Megdquartera: Lgpor Temple, 148 Beat ith pteee! Room 12 tings avery “iret ang mdgy, 10 AM. Employment Suede open sreig ABE ate Regyiar m eg Telephone ALg. 4-1199 on raeesten must go to the institutions PROLETARIAN CAMPS UNIFORM RATES . Organization and Press Tax Frid 8 9AM, eter, 2400 Brent Fark i. You All at low rates, 10 A.M. Cal H stro Anto Station Phone Lebish dl