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43 FUR STRIKES WON IN 2 WEEKS Fight in 21 More for Better Conditions NEW YORK.—Although the fur season has not eyen opened, of 64 shops have struck past two weeks in the cai the Needle Trades Wor! trial Union against wage-cuts and for union conditions. And 43 of these shop strikes have already been won ‘Twenty-one shops are still on strike. In every instance the workers who | returned to the shops received wage inereases, shorter hours and gener: improvement of conditions. This is the answer that the furriers are giv- ing to the conspiracies of the labor workers bureaucrats, who planned in their| conference further attacks on the| conditions of the workers. Whiel developing the campaign of shop strikes, the Industrial Union has also taken steps to organize the workers against long hours and Sat- urday work. For the past two weeks cemonstrations were carried through in the fur market against work on Saturday and Sunday and hundreds of workers who had be foreed to come in Plans have been made the trade committee for extending the drive on a broader scale during the coming week. All fur workers who go into the shops should report to the union office at once. Pacific Tidal Wave Kills 200, Leaves 2,000 Minus Homes COLIMA, hundred the toll t to work were stopped off. by Me: June dead and 2,000 I 26.—Two Peeifie Coas mile inland, w bodies have while meny more still lie in the ruins Better (raanisation Needed for Anti-War Leaflet D Distribution (By a Werker Correspondent) MEW YORK.—We went to dis- ‘Ui? leaflets at one of the arm- in the Bronx me rowdies who were playing around the armory and to whom we raid no attention, not wishing to aitreet attention, turned out to be junior stee) pigeons after one leaflet was handed out, They tried to take the leaflets away from us and chased us around the place to prevent us from distributing them. Our male comrade was beaten up and they later sent a cop after us. However, we were let go but the leaflets were not distributed. Work of this kind should be planned. I believe there should be a defense corp and more than two dis- tributing so that if any comrades are removed the others can take their place. Another thing we failed to take advantage of, some of the guards- men had their cars parked on the street and we should have flooded them with leaflets as we can down the sireet. ty B. G. Unit 9 See. 5. MELLON HANDS OUT 3 MILLION PITTSURGH.—Richard B. Mellon, brother of the Ambassador to Great Britain, presided at the ceremonies at the cornerstone of the $3,000,000 East Liberty Presbyterian Cnuch. He gave the $3,000 000, LABOR UNION MEETINGS Painters Al painters invited to night meeting called by Urg-nization Committee, at 1130 Southern Boulevard General membership meeting, June 29, a 8 pm., at Irving Plaza Hall, to organize an Alteration Paiaters Union Italian Needle Workers. Tuesday, at 1 p.m., at Mem W. 36th St., Merabolo, rank ber of tie Amalgamated Clo! tien to the Soviet Union, will speak in Ita who was a member of the May 1 delege- | fan on conditions of needie workers in the Seviet Union. All needle workers invited. Cloak Finishers. ‘The left wing group of Local 9, L.L.G. eslls a meeting of all cloak finishers today at 1 pm. at Memorial Hall to discuss the Of the fake progressive and adminis- jon and its secret conferences with the ‘employers. rans: | | ft +4 Wilson Gang Manages Electrical Union’ s) Election; Keeps Jobs YORK. Frank Wilson, in Local 3 of the In- ternational Brotherhood of Electrical | Workers, re-elected himself and most | of his officials in an election Satur- day at Central Opera House. Wilson appointed all election watchers allowed anywhere near the voting machine. Even then, his victory was } 1,895 against 1,752. | There have been a series of ter- rific scandals in Local 3 during the st few months, court examinations showing a total of 6,000,000 funds has never been accounted for to the membership. | Members of the local pay $27 a quarter year dues, Sou aie e: taxes, China Red Arn Armies In New Victories) \De feat Nanking | Troops in Hupeh and Honan \ ‘ | Chinese Red Armies last Friday | | successfully carried out a smashing! against Nanking Government troops | mobilizing in Honan Province for an attack against the Chinese Soviet | District on the Honan-Hupeh-Anh- | Wei borders. | The ers’ and peasants’ Red | Armies converged from three points on the important city of Kwangehow, smashing the Nanking army outposts, |capturing several towns and spread- = demoralization among the Kuo- | | mintang troops in the city. The early of the city is expected. Mission- agents of American imperialism received orders from the Ameri- ‘Consu Ito evactuate. Br the the |surprise attack (Kuomintang) | have | A Hankow dispatc: to the” New York Times admits that the Red Ar- ‘s are now in.a position to press sive against the Nanking ent. ai dispatch to the New! Id-Tribune admits that the Red Armies control 177 in eight provinces, with a ese r ets |pepulation of over 50,000,600 It re- ‘ports the complete failure of the Nan- ‘chi m1 |iking Government’s four “Communist | Suppression” campaign and admits ‘that in many districts the Soviet Regime “has greatly alleviated the lot lof the poorer peasant, possibly to the det neighbor.” kulaks) (the rich landlords and | Astoria Picnic for Strike Relief, July 3 | NEW YORK.—A grand picnic will be held by the Workers International | Relief language department and the Marine Workers Industrial Union at Wurms Park, 4515 Astoria Avenue, Astoria, L. I., Sunday, July 3. zaar, dancing, various entertainment. Directions to reach picnic grounds: take I. R. T. to Times Square, go {down stairs; take Astoria train to | Hoyt Avenue station; walk to Astoria | Boulevard, between 15th and 16tl Avenues, ‘| Democrats-Sccialists Attack Election Meet | | NEW YORK.—Workers’ organiza- | tions in Brighton Beach are building ja defense corps to resis tattacks on |Communis telection campaign meet- jings such as took place Wednesday night. ; An organized gang, led by a “Yip- | sel,” supplied free with firecrackers |and decayed vegetables by Socialist | Party storekeepers, caught the elec- |tion meeting unprepared and broke jit up. The meeting was at Neptune Ave., anc West Third St. The So- |cialists had the cooperation of the lecal Democratic Party machine. | CITY KITCHEN POISON DETROIT,—Barbara Jekinson, 19, was treated in Receiving Hospital | twice Saturday for ptomaine poison- ing. She said she was stricken after | eating at Municipal Kitchen at Con- } cord and Lafayette Avenues, Friday | night. | “The labor movement will gain the | spper hand and show the way to peace and socialism.” LENIN. iment of his more fortunate | The picnic program includes a ba- | |Chicago Workers to | DAIL Y WORKER, W YORK, MONDAY, JUNE 27, 1932 (Above) Scene at the New York State Communist Nominating Con- vention held in Schenectady, (Be- low) I. Amter, candidate for Goy- ernor, and Henry Shepard, candi- date for Lieutenant-Governor, who leading a delegation of unemployed demanding relief for a Negro women worker. FARMERS CALL A TAX STRIKE Denounce Police for Menacing March DULUTH, Minn., June 26.—‘“We herey declare a tax strike of all farmets of St. Louls County, and call upon all exploited farmers to refuse to pay taxes, and fight! against foreclosures and sheriffs sales by mass resistance. “we pledge to fight against all| bosses candidates of the Republican, | Democratic and Farmer-Labor parties, and work for their defeat in the} elections, and to support the only| Workers and Farmers Ticket, that of ; the Communist Party. We pledge to fight the capitalist program of hun- ger and war, for a Workers and Farmers’ Goverment in the United States.” Passed at Hunger March This is part of a resolution passed by 1,500 poor farmers who marched on the county court house in Duluth Tuesday, and joining with an equal number of city unemployed workers, sent in demands for no foreclosures, no seizure of land for taxes, unem- ployment ~elief and insurance. The farmers’ resolution also con- demns the city authorities for men- jacing their lives with a mobilization of police in armored cars with ma- chine guns, and condemns the Farmer-Labor Party county commis- sioners fo> deliberately staying away from the meeting. It assails the hypocrisey of the other commission- ers for réjecting the demands on the ground they have no authority. Hear Report of | Delegate to U.S.S.R. CHICAGO, June 26. — Chicago workers will rally in a giant mass meeting June 29 to hear the report j;of Alex Nelson, one of the members, of the recently returned American workers’ delegation to the Soviet Union, The meeting is arranged by the South Side branch of the Friends of the Soviet Union. It will be held at 7435-7 Cottage Grove Ave., beginning at eight o'clock, on the evening of June 29. In addition to Nelson who will re- port on achievements of the Soviet masses in the triumphant construc- tion of Soeialist industry, other speakers will be Comrades Schneider and Loyan. A small admission fee of 15 cents is charged, with five cents for unemployed workers with Unem- ployed Council cards. REV. WANTS “RED SCARE” CLEVELAND.—If there isn’t a “red ant brutality and ballyhoo, it won't be the fault of the Rev. E. J. Gracey, pastor of St. Paul’s Roman Catholic Church. Father Gracey, who is state chap- lain to the American Legion, spoke to the Knight of Columbus here re- cently, demanding that the Commu- nist movement. be outlawed. CAN’T SMASH INSURANCE MOVEMENT AFL Expels Building Council; Locals Support It MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. — The ef- forts of William Green, and the whole A, F. of L. bureaucracy to in- timidate the militant rank and file and prevent them from fighting for unemployment insurance and against wage cuts, has so far ended in fali- ure. The decision of the Building ‘Trades Department of the A. F. of L. to revoke the charter of the Building ‘Trades Coyncil and organize a new) council has aroused a storm of in- dignation among the workers, The president of the Building Trades De- ‘artment, MeDowell, came here and the charter by force and has to organize a new council ith a few re-actionary and dis- . officials of conservative lo- The old Building Trades Council, Re rae tne soll x of the ‘ ink {12 file; a = one of os area the affiliated locals has accepted the \invitation of the re-actionary clique | council, The old Building Trades Council, which still maintains its headquar- ters, has appealed against the deci- sion to revoke its charter, and has been informed by William Green | that the appeal has been referred to the next convention of the American Federation of Labor and its Building Trades Department. The appeal is being circularized to all the central labor bodies and building trades councils in the country. The Central Labor Union is sup- porting Green's splitting and expul- sion policy, and the local officials are trying t+ negotiate for “unity” be- tween the re-actionary clique and the militants, but their efforts have end- in failure due to,the solid united t of the militant flocal unions af- mse filiated with the old council, The Rank and File Committee of Action, with representatives from a dozen left-wing opposition groups in the unions, is giving full support to the fight of the old council to retain its charter, which was revoked be- cause its affiliate unions supported the united front struggle for unem- ployment insurance, against wage- cuts and for the freedom of Tom Mooney. Brother Locke, of the Stationary Engineers, spoke at the Mooney- Scottsboro mass meeting on June 17 at the Eagles Auditorium, and in a militant speech which was received with enthusiastic applause declared that the rank and file would continue the fight for the freedom of class war prisoners in spite of the efforts of the bureaucracy to expel them, is serving a 5-day jail sentence for § scare” here soon, with all its attend- | Communist Election Campaign In NewYork Shows New Activity NEW YORK —The Communist election campaign, for unemployment insurance, against wage-cuts and against imperialist war, against at- tacks on the foreign-born and dis- crimination against Negro workers, is developing activity in New York. For state office the principal candidates are: I, Amter for governor, Henry Shepard, Negro unemployed worker, for lieutenant governor, and W. W. Weinstone for U. S. senator. Shep- ard is now serving a 5-day jail sen- tence for demanding relief for a Ne- gro, woman worker. All workers’ organizations with Jewish membership are called to send two delegates each to a conference in Irving Plaza Hall tonight at 7:30 to elect a permanent body to mob- ilize Jewish workers for the cam- paign. Wednesday, June 29, all election campaign committees of mass organ- izations, trade unions, opposition groups in union locals, etc., meet at 7:30 p.m. on the second floor of the Workers’ Center to discuss basic plans for the campaign. Weinstone and James W. Ford, Communist vice-presidential candi- date, will be ‘speakers at the Red | Ratification Rally at Coney Island Stadium July 9. “THE WEB” OPENS TONIGHT — “LINGERING PAST” ON WED. “The Web”, announced as a “thrill. er”, by Frederick Herendeen, will open tonight at the Morosco Theatre. Frank Shannon, William Ingersoll, Sherling Oliver, Elizabeth Day and Harold de Becker are in the cast. “The Lingering Past”, a first play by Leonard J. Tynan, is scheduled | for Wednesday night at the Province- jtown Playhouse. The Seven Arts Guild Players, of which Edwin Hop- kins is the director, is sponsoring the |play. Esther Solveig, Mara Keval, |Howard McCulley, Frances Tannehill jand Elizabeth King play leading roles. “Siberian Patrol”, a Soviet talkie, is now current at the Acme Theatre. This is a dramatic story of the im. perialist intervention in Archangel, and shows the activity of the Red Partisans in the irfight against the British invaders. The same program presents new and latest scenes from jthe working class front. “Office Girl”, a romance of Vienna, is having its first New York showing at the Cameo Theatre. Renate Muller, who has been highly regarded on the Continent for her excellent work op- posite Emil Jannings and Max Schmeling as well as for her own starring films, plays the chief female role. “Towards Soviet America” by Wm, Z, Foster—$1.25—an elabora- tion of the platform of the Com- munist Party in its election cam- paign, MOVIES SYLVIA SIDNEY AND FREDERIC MARCH IN NEW FILM. “Merrily We Go to Hell”, a drama March, is the current screen attrac- tion at the RKO Jefferson and Franklin Theatres. The story is tak- en from Cleo Lucas’ novel, “I, Jerry, Take Thee, Joan”. Beginning Wed- nesday, “The Strange Love of Molly Louvain”, drama of life, co-starring Ann Dvorak and Lee Tracy, begins a three day engagement. The Jefferson will present Tom Mix in his second talkie, “The Rider of Death Valley”, as an added feature. NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES BAST SIDE—BRONE RKO qiwny Som (ors TODAY TO TUESDAY Frederic March and Sylvia Sidney “Merrily We Go to Hell” NEW LOW PRICES MATS. 15 Cents || EVES. 25 Cents Except Say Sun, and Wolldays 400 Demonstrate at Wilkins Avenue; Get Worker $50 for Moving NEW YORK—A big chain store! decided that 1348-1350 Wilkins Ave., Bronx, was the proper place to make some more profit from the workers. Their first act was to dispossess all the families. One unemployed worker with his family was left alone in the building with water, gas and electricity shut off. The Unemployed Council of 1400 Boston Rd., heard about it and mobilized the workers of the neighborhood to force the Jandlord to give adequate cash relief. A leaflet was issued and at night an open air meeting was held. Over 400 workers were present. The landlord came around next day and gave the) worker $50 and moving expenses. Saturday the 1400 Boston Rd. Un- employed Council held a demonstra- tion before the Home Relief Bureau at P. S. 54 and after a militant stand obtained immediate cash relief for the family. INDIAN JOBLESS LEADER CLUBBED M. Major Handcuffed, Blackjacked, Jailed NEW YORK.—Police “riot squads” smashed 4 demonstration from the Seventeenth St. Salvation Army breadline Friday, and six cops as- saulted without provocation and brutally beat up, then handcuffed, beat up again and dragged off to jail, Max Major, an American Indian, ex-service man, member of the Workers Ex-Servicemen’s League, | and leader in the Unemployed Coun- cil. The meeting was being held in Madison Square, and Major . was speaking to hundreds of jobless workers. When the police came in, three of them came up behind Major and one of them smashed him over the head with a club. Major, against three armed police- men, was holding his own very well, when three more attacked. After Major was clubbed into a car and carried off, volunteer speakers jumped up amongst th ecrowd. One old man shouted, “Workers, this isn’t your country; it’s the capitalist’s country. Why don’t you drive the capitalists out like they did in the Soviet Union” Police reinforcements finally broke up the crowd. The case is coming up in night court last night, the International Labor Defense reports. 30.450 Evictions in Bronx Unemployed Councils in New York are putting up a determined struggle against evictions. It is officially re- ported by the Bronx Housing Asso- ciation that there have been 30,450 evicitons in the first half of 1932 in Bronx alone. In Harlem downtown, and in Brooklyn, the number is even greater. +. Support “Hupger Fighter” All workers should show their sup- port of the Unemployed Councils in their struggle against evictions by attending the first annual picnic of the “Hunger Fighter” July 2 at Pleasant Bay Park. Herbert Benjamin, National Sec- retary of the Unemployed Councils, has promised to speak at the picnic. ATHEISTS DONATE TO STRIKE RELIEF. NEW YORK.—Williams, a Negro an athiest street meeting at Colum- miner from Coverdale, Pa., spoke at bus Circle and collected $3.25 for mine strike relief. featuring Sylvia Sidney and Frederic | asked VOTE COMMUNIST FOR: 4. Equal rights for the Negroes and self-determination for the Black Belt. MONDAY ‘The Photo Section of the Workers’ Film and Photo League will meet at 16 W. 2ist St. at 8 p.m. ‘The Harlem Progressive Youth Club will have an open-air meeting at 1538 Madison Ave. at 8 p.m. ‘The Concourse Workers’ Club will have @ membership meeting at Paradise Manor, 11 West Mt. Eden Ave., Bronx, at 8 p.m. to keep Sunday, July 24, District Ptenic. ey All fraternal organizations are asked to Keep Aug. 28 open for the LL.D. Pienic. All workers and sympathizers who have newspaper clippings of the Bonus March are to send them to the National Head- quarters of teh Workers’ Bx-Servicemen’s League, 1 Union Square, Room 715, New York City. ee Ok Cars are needed for the transportation of worker athleses to the International Workers’ Athletic Meet at Chicago, “July 28, 29 and 30. Comrades going to Chicago by car on or before July 25, who can ec- commodate a few athletes, please report to Arnold Ame, Room 229, 80 E. lith St., New York City. The W. I. R. Band will meet at 122 Sec- apen for the All fraternal organizations are requested | COX GANG THREAT LYNCH SPEAKER Smash Election Meet In Pittsburgh PITTSBURGH, Pa., June 26.—A Communist Party Election Campaign meeting Friday at Boggs and Buhl, one of the busiest corners in Pitts- burgh, was attacked by Cox’s “Blue Shirts,” a fascist gang. At a number of recent meetings, in exposing Cox, Communist Party speakers were attacked, the workers terrorized and on some occasions meetings broken up. Last week one workers’ finger was broken, while Pat Cush, an old fighter in the Pitts- burgh District, was beaten up. The meeting at Boggs and Buhl Friday was quite a distance from Cox’s headquarters. Nevertheless, spiec circle the city atetnding meet- ings and whenever Cox’s name is mentioned, exposing his schemes of starvation, the Cox headquarters is called and the Blue Shirts are sent down. 25 Lynchers. About 10 o'clock a large truck, painted blue, with the sign, “Father Cox’s Relief,” came along with about 25 Blue Shirts in it, seeking the speaker at Boggs and Buhl. One of the gang in the truck was swinging a rope and calling upon the rest to find the speaker, who would be strung up right there. The crowd aided the speaker to escape. The recent actions of the various fascist movements here show the necessity of building a wide defense movement of workers. Seabury Admits That Courts Deny Justice JAMESTOWN, N. Y., June 26.— Samuel Seabury, speaking before the annual session of the Federation of Bar Associations of Western New York here Saturday, stated that ‘Tammany control of the magistrates’ and other lower courts of New York, results in “justice denied” to many of the men and women brought before these courts. However, Seabury’s only proposal is to have these judges appointed by the Appelate Division, instead of by the mayor, thus transferring the con- trol upstate, to other capitalist poli- Workers Defeat At- tack on Red Union Of- fice by Berlin Fascists (By Inprecorr Cable.) BERLIN, June 26.—Yesterday the Red Trade Union office was attacked by fascist gangs, but workers repulsed the fascists energetically. At 4 am. about three hundred uniformed fas- cists operating two columns in differ- ent directions attacked the Vorwaerts building and the headquarters of the socialists at Lindestrasse. The at- tack was’ led by the notorious Count Helidorf. ‘The fascists penetrated the second courtyard, where they met a Reichs- banner detachment. A fierce conflict ensued, the fascists firing pistols. Al- though armed the fascists were re- pulsed. Several were seriously wounded on both sides. Workers streamed on the scene from all sides, many fascists were caught and thrashed. The police ar- rived late and began attacking the workers with tremendous brutality, refusing to arrest the fascists who participated in the attack. Owing to the police passivity the fascists again began collecting. Amusements YA) nd VIENNA AFTER DARK “OFFICE GIRL” “Sure Cure for the Blues” —London Times | SoMAYFAI Rios. and Python in Fight for FRANK Buck's “BRING EM BACK ALIVE” LAST WEEK Wheatre Guild Presents REUNION IN VIENNA A Comedy By ROBERT & =. SHERWOOD. TRE, 52nd | GUILD "wre Weer oF BWAY Ev 8.40. Mts Th., Sat. Tel. Co 5-829 THEATRE Biway & 28th ST. 5th AVENUE ‘Topay AND ENTIRE WEEK “10 DAYS THAT SHOOK THE WORLD” ond Ave. All members should be present. New players are invited. “mterventi Archangel—Based on the Moscow sana ry MISSED . . Ca “Russian End. of St. Petersburg. —Herald-Tribune. —Added Features— Soviet Chinese Troops in Action—Latest Working Class News wauerA CME THEATRE \ith_STRECT © UNION SQUARE Cont 9:30 a, m—I1 p. m.—Prices 15-25¢. tol PM , @ Sun | N. Y. John Reed Club, Passes Resolution on Death.of Ryan Walker NEW YORK.—A resolution ex- | pressing: its sorrow at the death of| Ryan Walker was passed at the last meeting of the John Reed Club, of which he was a member. | The resolution follows: | “The members of the John Reed Club of New York express their pro- found grief at the death of their fel- low member and co-worker, Ryan| Walker. H “Comrade Walker dicd on ,June 22 in the city of Moscow, capital of the workers’ fatherland. Faithful to the principles of the class struggle, he gave to the working class his talent as an artist and his devotion as a fighter. “Ryan Walker's death is a great loss to the revolutionary movement | in America, but his life will be an inspiration to all of us. And while we mourn his loss, we resolve to carry on to victory to which he de- | voted his life. | “We wish to convey to his widow | and family our sincerest sympathy. “JOHN REED CLUB.” Tenn. Negro-White Workers Support Fight for Bonus CHATTANOOGO, Tenn., Jane 26.— Three hundred ex-servicemen and unemployed workers cheered N. Ross of the Workers’ Ex-Servicemen’s League when he spoke here yester- | day on the necessity of unity of the veterans and workers in the fight for the bonus. The meeting was at- tended by both Negro and white workers. Over fifty white and Negro work- ers signed cards declaring their sup- port of the program of the \Werkers’ Ex-Servicemen's League. H. Jackson, speaker for the Com- munist Party, said: “We won't wait till fall for the bonus; we will fight now for the right to live.” This was greatly applauded by the workers and vets. Why Should the workers vote Communist—read it in the Elec- tion Platform of the Communist Party, one cent. RAP JOB SHARKS WHO AIDED DOAK “Stoolpigeons”, Says Food Workers Union NEW YORK.—Describing them as “stool-pigeons,” the Food Workers’ Industrial Union, in a statement is- |sued today, vigorously denounced the action of downtown employment agencies for helping immigration agents trip jobless workers for de- portation. The statement referred to the raids | perpetrated upon several agencies | Friday afternoon, when more than a score of workers were arrested and teken to Ellis Island. Workers charged that the job sharks segre- gated non-citizens, turning them over to the police. Jail Job-Hunters. Thirteen unemployed were arrested at the “New York Employment Agency,” 108 E. 12th St. Others were nabbed at other agencies. Previously federal agents had made raids at two flophouses, the Municipal Lodg- ing House and the “Gold Dust Lodge,” where more than 100 workers were arrested. * Linked to Dies Bill. Citing the raids upon the municipal lodging houses and employment agen- cies in New York on Friday, the In- ternational Labor Defense and the Council for the Protection of the Foreign Born, in a joint statement today, called for increased agitation and protest against the Dies Bill, ae BLUE LAW AGENT ON TRIAL NEW YORK—Cornelius McNerney, who says he is an enforcement agent of the “Lord's Day’ Alliance,” which is an organization of preachers to prevent Sunday amusements, was on trial Friday, charged with extorting j bribes from moving picture theatre managers. There is evidence that McNerney threatened to report them for open- ing before 2 p.m. on Sunday unless they paid $100 a week in one case at least. Study the 14th Plenum Resolutions. Get a copy of the new Pamphlet, Workers’ Clubs Should Advertise in the “Daily” REGULAR ADVERTISERS Red Star Press (“The Road”) Lucke-Kiffe Co. (Tents) Creston Caletoris | Garden Restaur: Manhattan Wiping Cloth Co. John’s Restaurant Harry St Optical Co. Concoops Food Stores Camps Unity, Kinderland, Nitgedaiget Lerman Bros. (Stationery) Melrose Cafeteria Kavkaz Restaurant Workmen's Sick and Death Benefit Fund Bronstein’s Vegetarian Restaurant Kale Cafeteria Dr. Kessler Czechoslovak Workers House Avanta Far Union Square Mimeo Supply Camp Woeolona Russian Art Shop Dr. Schwartz IN THE DAILY WORKER Cohen's (Opticians) Coco and Spinicelli (Bashers) Health Center Cafeteria Jade Mt. Chop Suey Wm. Bell, Optometrist Parkway Cafeteria Butchers Union, Local 174 Linel Cafeteria Workers Coop Colony Sol’s Lunch Santal Midy Manhattan Lyceum jollin’s Restaurant Rollin Gottlie World Tourists, Inc. Golden Bridge Colony Cameo Theatre Acme Theatre Intern’! Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 15th FLOOR_ AU Work Done Under Persona! Care at DR. JOSEPASON OPTICIANS CIO Harry Stolper, Inc. 73-15 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 Rates to Workers and Families 106 E. 14th St. (Room 21) Opposite Automat Tel. TOmpkins Square 6-8237 Patronize the Concoops Food Stores » AND Restaurant 2700 BRONX PARK EAS1 “Buy in the Co-operative Store and help the Revo- lationary Movement.” Bungatows and Rooms te Rent for Summer Season Several very is rent for the sum: mer season. Bes ful farm in Eastern Pennsylvania, Run- 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 AMERICAN and CHINESE RESTAURANT Open 11 a. m. to 1:30 a. m, Special Lunch 11 to 4 Dinner 5 to 10 1917 SECOND AVENUE Between 12th and 13th Sts. .35e -55e Phone Tomkius Sq. 6-9554 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all endieats meet 302 E. 12th St. New fore Comrades—Eat at the Parkway Cafeteria 1638 PITKIN AVENUE Near Hopkinson Ave. Brooklyn, N. ¥, CAMPERS ATTENTION! Army ‘Tents 10x16 and Others Also Camp Equipment Reasonable Prices— MANHATTAN WIPING CLOTH INC. 478 Wal St., corner Pike St. Phone Dry Dock 4-8176 Fo one gor feel tata wB2 on E. 11th entrance, : yh A pay! iss Dally conveniences, Worker, 8th her pexupce Reon ae quire all week, Chernoff, 71 z,