The Daily Worker Newspaper, July 11, 1932, Page 2

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DAILY ¥ ORKER, OW YORK, MONDAY, JULY | f ae By i, 1932, TRADE UNION UNITY LEAGUE COU N.Y. MASS CONFERENCE WILL MAP CIL CALLS FOR INJUNCTION FIGHT Election Picnic at Pleasant Bay Park CAMPAIGN xtensive plans to make the Red ection Rally and Picnic at Pleasant “Attack Sounds Warning to All Workers,” Is | pay park, unionport, N.Y July 24, Declaration; Conference Thursday Eve. the most successful Red picnic of the | season were announced yesterday by NEW YORK.—A ringing call to the workers of New York city to join} in the fight against the injunction menace, strikers’ fight in particular, is contained in by the newly-formed Provisional Committee ference, with headquarters at 799 Broadway, trict, Communist Party, in charge, There will be onl one speaker, I. Amter, Communist candidate for gov- ernor. Games, sports and entertain- and in support of the shoe| a statement issued last night for the Anti-Injunction Con- To Be Held July 24) the committee of the New York Dis- | '10,000 WORKERS IN N. Y. RALLY BACK RED CANDIDATES | Meeting Lays Basis for| |Aug. 1 Demonstration | (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE: | Hated Secret Police |Chief Killed in Cuba; Martial Law Declared HAVANA, July 10. 10. — The capital | of Cuba was put under military eon- trol yesterday when Captain Miguel Calvo, head of Cuba's secret police, was killed in one of Havana's princ- jpal avenues. Dr. Carrerra Justiz, a leading Uni- versity teacher, was arrested. Gov- ernment agents said they suspected | him of being the owner of a green ‘Amter Gers Warm Response from Binghamton Workers| ifs Now On Statewide Tour; Routs Secialist and | S. L. P. Hecklers at Meeting BINGHAMTON, July 10.—Despite a pouring rain, about 250 workers | turned out to hear I, Amter, Communist candidate for governor, at the | Sokqjovia Hall. Binghamton is one of the “Triple Cities”. It is the center of Endicott and Johnson shoe industry. But there are also other industries here: Gen- MEET FRIDAY TO MAP PLANS FOR | “DAILY WORKER” |All Workers j invited to Help Lay Basis for Mass Work —eral Cigar Co., which employs about} All workers who wish to help the 2,000 girls and women at 25 cents an|Daily Worker, with suggestions or hour, and the International Business| With active participation in broaden- Weighing Corporation, with about|ing the mass basis for the paper in! 2,000. The Endicott and Johnson|the editorial or circulation depart} plants at Endicott, Johnson City and! ments, are called to a general meet-, | ment will fill the day’s program from 10 a. m. on. Organizations are urged to call at the District Office, 5th floor, 35 E. 12th St., to obtain throwaways for | district. distribution. t The statement, which conclud with a call for the sending of dele- gates to a mass conference to be held | ‘Thursday at 7 p.m. in Manhattan Lyceum, 66 E. Fourth St., follows: “Fellow Workers and Friends: EDISON LAUNDRY automobile used by five men who shot Calvo and two of his assistants. Captain Calvo was the right arm of Gerardo Machado, the bloody dic- tator who is responsible for the ter- roristic drive against the workers. ed 10 minutes after Ford was carried triumphantly to the platform. About 6,000 workers were in the stadium as the meeting opened, but thousands more poured in as the rally got under way, attracted by the pa- IRISH MILITANTS IN COURT TODAY emg “The ink has scarcely dried on the| so-called anti-injunction law recently passed by Congress when it stands exposed already in all its sham and hypocrisy. Charles G. Wood, of the| U. S, Department of well Labor, known for his strike-b: kK tizs against the textile worker South and New England an the New York shoe workers. tained Miller and Andr panies in an ati siike of the shoe wage-cut ar an injui gainst inj deportations to in ctions ure its “JOHN ‘Provisional Meeting of Worker Correspendents Called fer Tonight | A permanent organization of work- er correspondents of the ary press, is the aim of t called for tonight at 8:30 p. the Workers’ Center in under the aus tionary Writers bers of the will addr will be discy All production, w Acme Theatre, Squere, nesday. C.vil. War Saltykov, noved the leading role will have as a latest Bonus “The Tonde1 and a Sovi rent. scree’ and Franklin Wednesday, both theatres will pre- sent “Westward Passage,” with Ann Earding, Laurence Olivier and Irving Fichel. The Je: on will also s an extra feature, “Fast Companion: in which Tom Brown, James Gle: and Maureen O'S play chiet roles. the | MEETINGS 1 nen | Painiers’ Union The Bronx Leeal will m p.m, at 1130 Southern B Cloak: Unemployed Cloakma et Wednesday ft 1 o'clock at Bryant Hall, Sixth Ave. and lst Bt., to discuss problems of unem- jployed and the role of the unemployed in) the coming strike. All unemployed cloak- makers are urged to come to this meeting. | Cloakmakers’ Mass Meet Solomon, a leading member of the left- wing group, will speak at Claremont Park- way onthe coming strike in the cloak trade. The miceting will open at 6 p.m Blommingkrantz will speak at the open forum at Crotona Park al 6 p.m. Needle Trades Left Wing Groups The Central Committee of the Left Wing Grovps in the LLG.W.U. is calling aj of all {ts members tonight at 5 celek ot Irving Ploza, 16th St. and Irving Flape, ‘The meeting will mobilize the cicak- | ryskers to set up rank and file strike com rhittee to turn the coming 1.L,G.W.U. strike | tito areal strike. | Oigin to Speak NEW YORK.—Opening the campaign to mobilize the needle trades workers of Greater New York for the Aug 1 anti-war femonstration, M Olgin, editor of the M Freiheit, will speak on the danger of wer,at an open forum at Memorial Hall, W44 WeeB6th St., Wednesday, July 13 nun a SoA NNO» | WORKERS STRIKE lof Discharged Drivers Workers Slug sed By Lovestonites 1 Blackjacked Other Stabbed in Brooklyn DemandReinstaterment isl We 1010 E, ers of the 173rd_ St., to strike against firing of workers the shop commit- W YORK. n Laundry, u imously the continuo without cons Joe Bell, the boss, : a supposed short- telling him however | ers was stabbed and another black-/| jacked following an attack upon he money by Tues- | them and other workers directed by | e him back the job. leaders of the Lovestone renegades 1d not get the money |at Pitkin and Hopkinson Aves., the money for | Brownsville. morning, The} A large number of workers had the money and | gathered at this corner in response and stay out.|to a widely-advertised Scottsboro | all the drivers | meeting arranged by rkers unanimous- | tional Labor Defense. Seeking to in case the boss | wreck the meeting and get the audi- te this fired worker |ence for themselves, the Lovestone worker, whom he had by ctically, taken off e drivers also decided not ymore bundles, Edison not only e these two work- | u y, he fired seven | The Laundry Work- ing with two of their leaders, Gitlow and Lifshitz as speakers. Police Aid Renegades. Jcseph Elliott of the American Youth Club was stabbed and Roth- stein, another worker was black- jacked, Nelson, a Lovestoneite |strongarm thug, is accused by the e to 1323 Southern | workers of having wielder the black- help these strikers | jack. ties on the picket line |" During the fighting, Gitlow grabbed n air meetings. Lifshitz was thrown from it. Both | | fled as police pursued workers who} |had been attacked, rather than their | assailants. Workers at the meeting charge | that the display of weapons on the | part of the Lovestoneites indicated | that they were prepared for and had | planned to attack the meeting, and call attention to the need for worker self-defense groups for similar occa- sions in the future, Peet ees Socialists Call Police In Bronx. Police were called by Socialist Party speakers at Intervale and Wil- kins Ave., Bronx, Friday evening when militant workers exposed the role of their organization. The S. P. had organized an opposition meeting | vy YORK. — The working class y of the striking tenants of 39th St. has forced the land- lord to come across with a reduction of t of $1 to $2 a flat and to} agree to recognize the house com- | A factor in the tenan! was the publicity giv by the Daily Worker, mittee. strike POSTPONE DEMONSTRATION. “NEW YORK. — The United Front Committee of the United Council of Working Class Women has decided to postpone the demonstration sched- uled for July 12 to demand free food, clothing, medical, etc., for the chil- dren of the unemployed during the summer months. It was decided to intensify the work with more open air meetings and leaflet distribution, to prepare for a demonstration later. of a dozen held the same night throughout the city on behalf of the Scottsboro boys. by police and plainclothes men who arrived in police cars, motorcycles and on foot. A large number of other workers jwere saved from slugging at the hands of the police and thugs by the | militancy and" courage of a defense corps organized by the Workers Ex- servicemen’s League. What’s On— The Daily Worker-Pretheit Bazaar will be d 10 at Madison mass organizations, are asked to keep n any affair, coe who can ena} NOted Speaker at Student Symvosium nd wagon for any “The International Student Move- order that the Down- Registretion for the Summer Term of the posium to be held Friday, July 15, at Community Church, 76th St. and Ww dee hool i: " 4 > (¢ Noa apply at 35 B a2th St, Telephone wn | Fifth Ave., under the auspices of the o| + 1199 SO National Student League. I] mass organizations are asked to keep, The speakers will be Moissaye Ol- Aug, 28, free for the Annual LL.D. | gin, editor of the “Freiheit’; Donald . . . | Henderson, Instructor of Economics tare chee > |at Columbia University; Sidney Hook, mons ane asneg t© Kee? | professor at New York University; Harry Elmer Barnes, author and lec- District 2 v All mi oes | | | MONDAY he Photo Section of the Workers’ Film| turer, and J, T. Yang, Chinese stu- nd Photo League will meet at 16 W. 21st) dent, at 8 pm A general membership meeting is being ied for 8:30 p.m. to organize a new post | The July issue of “The Commu- inst” is a special anti-war number. he Workers’ Exil-Servicemen’s League in | Coney Island and Brighton, Meet at 2933) Have you bought a copy yet? W. 32nd St., Coney Island, NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES Ae | EAST SIDE—BRONY [RKO groays aSerd fit, . Band | 8 p.m, | RANKLN || Somers iin 1 depositors of the U. 8. Bank are re-| ti ome to 80 Center St (State | tu 1 of the WA. 1 heid at 122 Second Ave. members ave welcome, TUESDAY | JEFFERION A mem ! 168 St at Ave ak the United Council ef pmen will meet at 1 p.in, ie, Essex St. and East icipate in the demonstra- clothing, etc., for the a, . TODAY TO TUESDAY | Joe E. Brown in “THE TENDERFOOT” TODAY, TOMORROW and WEDNESDAY “Demon of the Steppes” Soviet Drama of Civil War THE worxers Acme Theatre 4th Street and Union Square With Ginger Rogers MATS. 15 Cents || EVES. 25 Cents Except Sat. Sun. and Holidays SUMMER TERM WORKERS SCHOOL Kast 12th Street, N. Y, C.— Lgonquin 4-1199 “Training for the Class Struggle” Many important courses given: Principles of Communism, Political Economy, | Organizatior Marxism-Leninism, Trade Union Strategy, Methods in Shop Work, Imperialism, Colonial Problems, Youth Problems, Public Speaking, Re- | volutionary Journalism, English, Russian, ete. Complete catalogue obtainable by eommunicating with the Workers School. Term to start July 25th. REGISTER NOW!~--DON'T DELAY: BROOKLYN, July 10—One work- | the Interna-| gang organized an opposition meet-' the platform and ran with it after; to the one called by the IL.D., part | A number of workers were beaten | ; ment” will be the subject of a sym-! rade of ex-servicemen which marched for two hours through the streets of | | Coney Island just before the opening of the demonstration. Hits Slanders. | Ford opened his speech with an jattack on the Socialist Party whis- | |perers who slandered the Commu- nist Party with the charge of oppor- |tunism in the nomination of a Negro| |for the vice-presidency. | “T want to say to those people, and | |to those who have listened to them, | | that the Communist Party is not stu- pid,” Ford said. “The Communist | ; Fatty knows that of the twelve mil- | tion Negroes in the United States, at| | least eleven million are disfranchised. It would be a poor piece of strategy | to play for votes which do not exist. |The lily-whiteness of the Socialist yote-vatchers shows they know that, too. The Communist Party, in nomi- nating a Negro to run with William %. Foster, throws a challenge to the parties of capitalism, which have dis- franchised these workers, to divide | the workers, the better to exploit and | |repress and starve them. In nominat- jing a Negro for this office, the Com-| jmunist Party expresses its funda-| mental principle of solidarity between all workers, Negro and white.” Ford outlined and discussed the six demands put forward by the| |Communist Party in the election |campaign. Each point, as he read it, | | was greeted by cheers from the work- Jers in the stadium. “The capitalist ‘relief’ agencies,” he | said, “have offered the fifteen mil- jJion starving unemployed of the United States a sample menu on | which it is claimed they can subsist. |It consists of wheat porridge, wheat }soup, wheat croquettes, and wheat | coffee, But what is handed out in {practice to the starving millions is {more nearly like water soup, water | porridge, water coffee, and air-bubble cakes for dessert. And that is what | they will soon be advising in theory, tou.” William W. Weinstone, Communist candidate for United States Senator, | Gealt with the demagogic platforms jand records of the Democratic, Re- publican, and Socialist parties in his address, Instead of the chicken in every pot promised him in 1928, Weinstone said, the workers now face ten times as much starvation, misery, unemployment, and terror as four years ago. “The capitalist class has dressed up the Democratic Party as a liberal party,” he said, “and offers a fake |platform, and a presidential candi- date who, as assistant secretary of the navy under Wilson, was respon- jsiole, among other things, for the in- vasion and occupation of Fiaiti, and with the threatened invasion of Mex- ico in 1916.” | He quoted the record showing | dozens of relief bills put through by Roosevelt in New York State, every one direct dole or relief to a wealthy corporation. Thomas and Hoover, He quoted Norman Thomas’ words in 1928, denouncing Marxism and predicting unending prosperity for the working class in the United |tates. “I don’t know whether Hoo- ver has moved closer to Norman | jin the region, Calvo boasted of his record as head of the secret police. He was the most hated man in Cuba, next to Machado himself upon whom the hatred of exploited and oppressed toilers js chiefly concen- trated, MINNESOTA MINES SHUT DOW CROSSBY, Minn. Dear Comrades: Armour Nos, 1 and 2 closed down jhere and 250 miners lost their jobs. These miners belong to the Inland Steel and now not a mine is running The mines were work- ing two and three days a week. We will organize the miners for struggle. The miners of Cuyana Range will fight. I will write you again, Miner, Thomas, or Noman Thomas closer to Hoover, in the last four years, but certainly they are very close. Norman | Thomas is the man who hailed Hoo- ver's calling of an economic council of finance capitalists in 1929 as a |step toward Socialism.” Other speakers were Carl Brodsky, Communist candidate from the 23d Congressional District, chairman of | the meeting, and William Albertson, |secretary of the New York district of the Young Communist League and state senatorial candidate from the 16th District, Manhattan. ‘The program contained also mass; jrecitations under the direction of the, League of Workers Theatres, mass choruses, and a dance number pre- sented by the Red Dancers. Hit War Shipments, Dies Bill. Resolutions denouncing the ship- ment of munitions to Japan to be used against the Chinese workers and peasants and the Soviet Union, as, ewll as a protest against the Dies | Bill soon to come up for vote in the |U. S. Senate were adopted. raised Cheer Ford In Harlem NEW YORK.—An audience ero workers, packed Rennaissance | Hall, 138th St. and Seventh Ave, to hear W. J, Ford, Communist candi- date for vice-president on Friday night. Other speakers included William Patterson and Clarence Hathaway, Communist election campaign man- ager, Henry Shepard, Negro worker, and Communist candidate for lieu- tenant-governor in New York state, was chairman. Ford received a tremendous. ova- tion when he entered the hall, the | crowd rising and.singing the “Inter- nationale”. ci Neg Speaks In Yonkers, YONKERS, N. Y., July 10.—More than 400 workers, including about 50 Negroes—many of them in the work- ers’ Center, 27 Hudson St., for the first time—heard’ W. J. Ford when he spoke here, Ford in his speech called for sup- port of the bonus marchers as part of the fight for unemployment in- surance. Dorothy Shalkin spoke for the Young Communist League, and Ervin Wagner was chairman. of; about 900, more than two-thirds Ne-) Owega employ about 17,000 workers, | of whom 15,000 ere working today, | also making army shoes. There was! a strike at one of the plants recently | against a 10 per cent wage-cut. The| strike was sold out by the leader, a| minister. The workers are learning | their lesson and are looking for real| leadership. Bronx Demonstration to Precede Others | | NEW YORK.—The fight against |the frame-up of four Irish workers charged with felonious assault be- cause they helped resist an eviction will be. carried into the Bronx Coun- ty Court this morning when the case is moved for pleading. A mass pro- test. demonstration will greet the de- fendants—John Mullally, Hugh Mc- Kiernan, John Rooney and Martin Moriarty—as they are called to the stand in the court house at Bergen Building, Tremont and Arthur Aves. Stugged, Framed. Labelle d as common criminals af- |ter being viciously slugged by the po- jlice because they tried to prevent the {home of John and Catherine Mc- | Partland at 411 E. 147th St. from being wrecked by Tammany evic- | tion enforcers, the four workers face Hong prison terms if-the frame-up against them is put over. The case is arousing widespread | protest. Telegrams from workers’ or- ganizations demanding that the’ in- dictments be dropped continue to be- siege the office of District Attorney McLaughlin who joined with the po- lice in having the workers secretly \indicted by Bronx County Grand Jury while the cases were pending in| magistrate’s court. The original} charge of disorderly conduct had| been raised by Magistrate Harris, the |man who said he did not care if the defendants “rotted in jail”, to one of| felonious assault. Protest Meetings. A protest demonstration, the first of a series planned throughout the Bronx, will be held this Wednesday levening at 147th St. and Brook Ave. Speakers will include Pat O'Boyle, 9,000 Jobless. | Still there are 9,000 unemployed in} this, the “white city,” as the bosses | call it. Gas and electric are shut off, evictions take place. They are feed-| ing the unemployed—or at least 1,200) of them—on less than nine cents a day. Now the new $9,000-a-year city | manager, Harrell, with his relief di- rector, Tobley, are trying to fing a “substantial” diet which will cost the city less than nine cents. Amiter’s proposal that all salaries of the city officials be cancelled, and these p20- ple be compelled themselves to live | on the 9-cent diet, was greeted with | applause. Replies to Hecklers. Following Amter’s speech, a social- | ist, a shoemaker, objected to the| characterization of the socialist can-| didates, and spoke about the “bread-| lines” in th2 Soviet Union. Amter| replied to him vigorously, and the crowd lustily booed the socialist who, Amter said, “saw breadlines in the Soviet Union which did not exist, but forgot about the breadlines in the United States and the children star- ving here in the midst of plenty.” A member of the Socialist Labor Party, a contractor of Binghamton, who cuts the wages of his men, dared to call the Communist Party a “reform party,” like the Socialist Party and | the A.‘F. of L. Amter exposed the| record of the S.L.P., its “patriotism” during the world war, its accepability to the bosses today—the fact that Workers’ Ex-servicemen’s League; | ot the socialists, anarchists or so- James Cooney, International Labor | cialist laborites are feared by the Defense; John Donovan, National bosses and its government, but only Students’ League. J. Maguire and the the Communists and the revolution- jrested by the police Satur. ay. ing to be held this Friday evening at 8:30 p.m. at the Workers’ Center, 35° E, 12th St. Worker correspondents, Daily Worker cupporters and members of Daily Worker Clubs are particularly urged to attend, The meeting will be addressed by Comrade Weinstone and other mem- bers of the staff on the future plans for the Daily Worker and on thej |means to be taken to insure a mass, base for the workers’ paper. Discus- sions and criticisms will take up the} main part of the meeting, and the! organizational groundwork will be laid for our future work. SEVEN FURNITURE STRIKERS JAILED Call to Picket Throop | Ave. Shop Today NEW “YORK. — Seven striking workers of the Miskin furniture shop, 232 Throop Ave., Brooklyn, were ar= The strikers were released on parole un- til July 26 when their cases will come up in court. The workers of the shop have or- | ganized a strikers’ childrens club. A mass meeting was held in front of the striking shop Saturday. Picket- ing will continue throughout ‘the week, The Furniture Workers Industrial Union, which is leading the strike, urges workers to come out and help the strikers:picket Monday. All those reporting for picket duty must re- port at 226 Throop Ave,, Brooklyn, at 7 a, m. “Towards Soviet America” by Wm. Z, Foster—$1.25-ran elabora- tion of the platform of the Com- munist Party in its election cam- four defendants will speak for the| ary workers. Irish Workers’ Club. paign, VOT™ COMMUNIST FOR: 1, Unemployment and Social In- surance at the expense of the state and employers. Amusements REGULAR ADVERTISERS Red Star Press (“The Road”) Chester Cafeteria John’s Restaurant Harry Siolner Cptical Co, Kinderland, Nitgedaiget (Stationery) and Death Benefit Fund Bronstein's Vegetarian Restaurant Dr. Kessler Czechoslovak Workers House Avanta Farm Union Square Mimeo Supply Camp Wocolona Russian Art Shop Dr. Schwartz Cohen's (Opticians) Dental Dept., LW.0 Health Center Cafeteria Wm. Bell, Optometrist Reise, “The Cry of the World” With GEORGE BERNARD SHAW AND OTHER WORLD-WIDE FIGURES i —MUSIO— IN THE DAILY WORKER Parkway Cafeteria Butchers Union, Local 174 ~ Linel Cafeteria Workers Coop Colony Sol’s Lunch Santal Midy Manhattan Lycenm Sollin’s Restaurant Rollin Pharmacy Gottlieb's Hardware Messinger’s Cafeteria (So. Blvd.) World Tourists, Inc, Golden Bridge Colony Cameo Theatre Acme Theatre Stadium Concerts | CATADIUM CONCERTS" PHILHARMONIC-SYMPHONY ORCH. Lewisohn Stadium, Amst. Av. & 138th Willem Van Hoogstraten, Conductor + EVERY NIGHT at 8:30 H PRICES: 25e, oe, $1.09 (Circle 3-7375)— H] Intern’). Workers Order - DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE environment, for 75 cents or a 2-day week ond for $1.25. cured Tents, Bungalows and Hotel Rooms for the entire season. Our camps excell in spirit and beauty. You can have a Sum- mer Home for your entire family for a minimum of $15 and a maximum of $85. You will be able to stay a week alone for only $3.00 or a full family for a maximum of $6.00. You can spend a day Two Thousand Workers ||} Spent July 4th Week-End | |] in Nitgedaiget and Unity A great number of them se- Workers— 1th FLOOR AD Work Done Under Personal Care of DR. JOSEPASON WILLIAM BELL OPTOMETRIST and OPTICIAN GREATEST OPPORTUNITY §' NOW BEING OFFERED BY OUR TWO COOPERATIVE CAMPS A PLAN FOR EVERY WORKER! A PLAN FOR EVERY WORKERS’ FAMILY ,, The Plan Works Because It Serves the Workers! ‘OK WORKERS’ VACATION 1S Ci Special Rates to Workers and Families 106 E. 14th St. (Réom 21) Opposite Automat Tel. TOmpkins Square 4-287 This is a Proletarian Plan Take advantage of the new plan in Nitgedaiget according to your pocket OPTICIANS Cyt Harry Stolper, Inc. 78-15 CHRYSTIE STREET (Third Ave, Car to Hester Street) and Unity to serve you. You can live - —Cooking facilities in Store at A Cafeteria will serve you at city prices, also a Food USUAL CULTURAL AND SPORTS ACTIVITY Come out for this week-end and clioose Ue. place. 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. Daily ATLENTION COMRADES! Health Center Cafeteria WORKERS CENTER 50 EAST 18th STREET Patronize the Health Center Cafeteria and help the Revolutionary Movement REASONABLE PRICES BEST FOOD | Phone Tomkins Sq, 6-9554 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES fe A place with atmosphere where all radicalx meet 302 E. 12th St. New fork Comrades—Eat at the Parkway Cafeteria 1638 PITKIN AVENUE Near Hopkinson Ave. Brooklyn, N. ¥, Au vwrnaes Meet at BRONSTEIN'S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Cluremont Parkway Brony FURNISHED ROOM—For one on E. 11th Bt, . eck. All Office Private entrance, shower, $5 per we convenienc Inquire Business Daily Worker, 8th floor, your own tent or bunk — Poets) Diy: Boaaa te GIRL WANTED—To s room, Abramowitz, Apt. —NOW The CONEY ISLAND CE low rates. For any information Autos for both camps at 148 FE. 103° Park East. iP Dally at 19 a.m,; Friday, Saturday at 9 Phone: LEhigh 4-282 call EStabrook 8-14¢0 St. and the Coop. Cafeteria, 2700 Bronx a.m, 2:30 and 7 p.m. Worker and the 2709 MERTIAID AVENUE 10% of all proceeds to go to the Daily All comrades invited to come—Best Food—Low Prices—Comradely Atmosphere OPEN— New INTER CAFETERIA Morning Freiheit

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