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Page Two DAILY WORKER, N Fight fo GREEN IN PHONEY| GESTURE ON AID, FOR UNEMPLOYED fear Workers, Prattle | About: ‘Insurance’ ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., July 24— The executive council of the Amer- can Federation of Labor which is meeting here in the expensive Am- sador Hotel cooking up new wage- chemes tO saddle on the backs » tthe workers made a desperate at- tempt in Friday’s session to head off the rising struggle for unemployment | insurance by making a statement hat the AFL, is also in favor of some sort” of unemployment insur- eance. | Wm. Green and his executive | council, the greatest enemies of un- | employment insurance, like their f low democrats at the recent conven- | tion are for unemployment insurance | in name only, whereas in fact the vague proposals t they put forth | are mere carricatures of a real un-| 2 yment relief plan. TI forced to open this publicity program to divert the w suprorting a genuine 7 w ‘s Unemployment In- as the. surance Bill hypocrisy of 2 is clear from the fact th previous conventions of the A. F, of L. Green and the other high salaried labor lieutenants of capitalism made savage onslaughts on any proposals for unempl acterizing it LAUNDRY BOSSES Want to Restrain Strike Activities The bosses of the Bronx (Edison) Fome Law’ at 1010 E. 178rd St have asked for a sweeping injunc- tion, ining the Laundry Work- Union from all strike plea for this vicious activities. Th Irfunction, a two follows closely upon the injunctions issued The basis for this injunction, rding to the plea of the Bronx Te- cently. owners in their petition to th> corris, is that the L.W.LU, is not acfiliated to the A. F. of L. The bosses, as ed by several po- lic: and detectives, served a summons on the strikers at a side- walk parade. The union must an- Swer this summons tomorrow. The Laundry Workers’ Industrial | Union is ready to start the fightj against this injunction, by imme ately intensifying their strike activi- tiks. | This week there will be many| open, meetings, car and horse and wagon parades, with leaflets, in this anti-injunction fight before the working masses of the city. Workers e asked to come to 1130 Southern Boulevard to help the strikers in their fight against this coming injunction. to bring erdsz Weinstone Speaks to Feod Workers Tonite NEW YORK.—Wm. W. Weinstone, editor of the Daily Worker and Com- munist candidate for U. §. Senator, will address a meeting of food work- ers at Irving PI , Irving Place at E. 16th St., tonight, Monday, July 25. MER TERM. NEW YORK,—The Summer Term of the Workers School begins today and will last ui ber 16th, After this week registration will be absolutely closed. The school is lo- cated at 35 E. 12th St. N.Y. C., 3rd floor. E Wheels Oa 1! Workers School Generel assem of all eu students tos ai 7p Gt. Resgistrat The Laundry sks all workers to come to 11 Bivd, and help the strikers of the Bi Homo Laundry win their fight against Marvetion. Mess picket lines every day! | Comrades to address envelopes by hend | or typewriter are needed by the district of- | |flee of the F. 8. U., Room 330, 799 Broad- | ‘way. | Party members, Unit 3B, Section 1, report jfo the section headquarters at 142 E. 3d St., | to gei address of next meeting | Der Arbeiter will hold a picnic July 31! Mt Pinks Park, 814 ©. 225th St. The Bronx. | ‘Thke White Plains subway to 225th St. sta- tlox, walk one and @ half blocks east. A mission 25 cents. Support the Arbeiter atiend this picnic. The Bast Side Unemployed Council will have an opsn-air meeting on Third St., be- tween Ist and nd Ayes., at 8 p.m, | | Active members of the Council are re-| evasted to gtetnd an important meeting at 103 Lexington Ave, directly after the open- air mesting. ‘The Friends of the Soviet Union, East Bron: Br., will hold an open-air meeting #¢ Pox St. and 163rd St., Bronx, N.¥., at Spm | A Mass Piay rehearsal will be held at ‘kers' Center, 35 EB. 12th St., and) Moor, at 8 pm. Agit-prop groups and| redes who had parts in the Coney foene Stedium, workers inte Yeking part in this pageant, are * 8 ‘The Communist Party, Lower Bronx ii will hold an open-air lecture by Louis Baum every Monday, This Monday, e War Threat." , | likely "W YORK, MONDAY, JULY od Y Unemployment Insurance and Aga inst War Aug. Ist Doak’s Victim _ |Downtown Jobless |Treachery in The Painters Brotherhood NEW YORK.—The list of treachery March on July 28th. lof the misleaders of the “Brother-| To Demand Immediate |hood of Painters” is a very large one.| Relief from Home | Could anyone therefore, who is ac-) / |quainted with the history of the| Relief Buro jerafting and corrupt burocracy be) NEW YORK.—Under the leader- | |astonished at new betrayals? The Distritt Council 9, which re- ship of the Downtown Unemployed | Council, the workers especially the jected the proposals of the Alteration | young workers, employed and unem- | Painters Union for United Front and | Joint Action for wiping out the mis- | ployed, are carrying on an intensive | erable conditions in the trade, in- preparation for a mass march against |stead of concentrating and making | hunger July 28. On that date working |real efforts of leading the strike to class boys and girls, together with | victory, is more concerned with fu- to Hold Hunger | | | | 3 = Photo of Edith Berkman taken before she contracted tuberculosis in the immigration prison of Doak. | Berkman was jailed by the federal government because she led the Lawrence textile strike of 1931, NANKING IN NEW PACT WITH JAPAN To Push War Against Soviet Districts The latest reports Far Eastern war front indicate that an agreement will be effected whereby from the the Japanese would modify their of- fensive against Jehol Province. They don’t want to embarass the Nanking | butcher government in its present large scale war against the reyolu- tionary workers and peasants in the | hinese Soviet Districts . The Japanese war office yesterday | announced that a “settlement” had been reached with the Jchol pro- vincial government At the same time Tokyo officials declared: “Indisputably, Jehol is already a | part of Manchukuo, Governor Tang Yu-lin has semt representatives to Changchun.” Under the agreement, which in- volves the Nanking government, it is that Gov. Tang will “solve” the present sharp situation in favor of Japanese impevialism, by hand- their parents and adult single work- | tile attempts to wipe out the militant | ers, will march to the Home Relief|and constantly growing Alteration | Bureau to present their demands for | Painters Union by organized squads, | adequate relief, | trying to take away the already or-/| ganized shops of the Alteration | Painters Union, the fake leadership of | |the Brotherhood, ‘however, crowned | jits line of betrayals, by engaging in \open strike breaking. An Illustration. It happened in the Bronx, to be |exact at 2181 Barnes Ave., where the | painters of the house went on strike junder the leadership of the Altera- | tion Painters Union. On Thursday |morning, July 21, the pickets occu- |pied their position in the usual man- | ner, when four members of the| brotherhood arrived. They entered Council Fights Evictions. the building and started to work in Every eviction on the Lower East | SPite of the picket line and the warn- | Side is being militantly resisted. This | 198 that there was a strike. week the 10th St. Block Committee |Th€ Demands of the Strike Commit- | ‘affiliated to the Downtown Unem- tee Refused | ployed Council achieved a marked) A Committee of strikers entered the victory over one of the most power-|#Partment asking the men not to ful tenement-owning corporations in|Preak the strike, but to leave the |New York City. | building and join forces in fighting The Downtown Unemployed Coun-| the bosses and to help organize the cil urges all workers to come to 134/#lteration trade. E, 7th St. on the morning of July 28] The four men, Sam Dashinger, | to participate in a huge demonstra: | Charles Hankel, A. Pearl, all of Lo- tion, jcal 1442, and J. Keish of Local 261, all refused to stop, Joe Keisch stating “that Shapiro sent us and we are going to stay.” Keisch also had a red card with| | Which he tried to justify his working jin a place where workers are strik- | Hooverville Organizes. Down in a little Hooverville-Walker- ville at the foot of E. 10th St., two hundred homeless men have pledged | to take part in the July 28th demon- stration, In the large flophouses such as the Gold Dust Lodge, where unemployed | workers have been made to accept | Slavish restrictions and humiliations, | where they eat food that causes ul- cerated stomachs, and where forced labor is part of the “‘rélief program”, | committees are organized to resist these demoralizing conditions. ‘Lehman Puts Over ing. The card was signed by M. Gaft, |@ Socialist Party man, secretary of |Local 261. The card had a numbér of “21012” on it. Police Protection. Our committee left the apartment joining the other pickets. A little while later a car full of police ar- | Garment Pay Cut | RooseveltAide,Banker, | Helps Bosses | NEW YORK.—The International ing over Jehol to the Japanese on @ | Ladies Garment Workers Union Sat- silver platter. It is likely that the agre2ment was effected with the aid of the United States and other im- verialist powérs. NEWARK JOBLESS INVADE COUNCIL Will Return Wed. to Demand Relief NEWARK, N. J., July 24—Delega- tions from mass organizations of] port for him as the next candidate | Newark and unemployed delegations crowded th2 City Council Chambers of Newark Wednesday. When the Commissioners saw the numbers of unemployed there they hastily ad- journed the meeting and in this way evaded the demands of the unem- ployed. The committee decided to call the wor! togsther again next Wednes- day, July 27th, at the Chambers, and do not intend to allow the Newark grafters to dodge the issue so easily this time. All militant workers are asked to be at the City Hall next Wednesday in order to present the following demands: 1. Against forced labor. for work at the prevailing union seale. 2. No evictions of the unem- ployed because of non-payment of rent. 3. Free gas and electric for the unemployed. 4. All vacant buildings, flats, ete., to be turned over to the unem- ployed free of charge. Conference of Unemployed A conference has been called in Newark today to fight for adsquate relief and to fight the vicious forced |labor scheme which the city fathers are trying to put over on the unem- , | Dloyed workers of Newark, PHONE COMPANY DISMISSES 4300 (By a Worker Correspondent) NEW YORK.—While the American Telephone & Telegraph Co. has an- nounced five day week stagger sys- tem for its 300,000 employes by which | $3,500,000 every moth is taken out of the workers’ wages, that is not the only feature of what the company calls its “economy drive.” The com- pany pretends that this move has saved its employes from being fired. I work for this company and I know personally a few friends who have been fired, and I have ben told by them that 4,300 have been laid off. EAST SIDE JOBLESS MEET. NEW YORK. — The East Side Un- employed Council will call on East Side workers to struggle against evic- tions, high rents, etc,, in an open air meeting to be held tonight, Monday, July 25, at 38rd St., between Ist and 2nd Aves., at 8 o'clock. |urday concluded their sell-out nego- | | tations with the bosses’ associations |" CORVersation with the Brotherhood | rived. They entered the building, had | Wages | |with Lieut. Governor Lehman acting oP Working tn. spertaignt 4G ana te nee adel calls for a Hye | Hee ieee dis tape Ds | vised scale of wages to conform with |@nce and while the strikers car- jexisting industrial conditions”, whiel|"¢ 0m #N endless march of picket- |in reality means a sweeping wage cut |!9& the four men, a few flights |for the entire trade, above, were working because “Sha- | Week work, according to the agree- Piro Mee Usrand waters -golne Sto | ment, will be maintained, but bootleg | St: |Piece work will continue under the|, Such 1s @ sample of the strike- | eyes of Dubinsky and the union offi- breaking Policy of Mr. Shapiro and cials as in the past. ,_ | his D.C, No. 9. While we can assure | The sell-out is part of the plan to these misleaders that they will not | set up the lieutenant governor as a | Seevet iA preventing the Alteration |great arbitrator, and thus gain sup- | Painters Union from carrying for- ward a struggle for bettering condi- tions and establishing a powerful rank and file controlled militant }union, we can waise the question— trial Union, in a statement issued | SiIKe breaking today—What’s next, |today, urged the workers to defeat |MF- Shapiro and D. C. No, 0? | the sell out by setting up rank and| file committees in the shops to fight | i lagainst wage cuts and the eum | Many Committees | Piece work poliey of the International) Work forWorld Meet | Against Bosses’War | Ladies Garment Workers Union, | Theodore Dreiser i NEW YORK.—A steadily increas- ing interest in the World Congress \ ois g Supnort to beptata bile by labor organizations . 5 and outstanding writers and artists njunction Fight |r" United States is reported by the American Committee cooperating with the World Congress. In addition to the committee set up in New York with offices at 104 Fifth Avenue, the American Com- mittee announced today that com- mittees have been set up in Newark, Boston, Baltimore, Philadelphia, Bridgeport, Conn., and-in Washing- ton, D.C. Additional committees are to be organized in the Middle and Far West. |for governor of the state of New | York on the democratic ticket. | The Needle Trades Workers Indus- |. The Provisional Committee for the | Anti-Injunetion Conference has re- | ceived a letter from Theodore Dreiser, | the prominent novelist, expressing his | @PProval of the anti-injunction move- | ment and his desire to participae | jin it. | | Carpenters Local 1164, A. F. of L., ‘has elected delegates already to this! conference. Also the Marine Work- ers Union and Office Workers Union elected their delegates. Election of |delegates is now taking place. Or- ganizations are urged to send in their credentials, Trade Unions Endorse Communist Platform at Delegated Rally NEW YORK.—A resolution en- dorsing the Communist Party in the coming Presidential elections was unanimously adopted by delegates from various unions and leagues at the Trade Union Unity Council elec- tion conference held July 21 at 6 E. 19th Bt. The resolution, in addition to stressing the significance of the six points of the platform of the Com- munist Party, emphasizes the neces- sity for reaching members of A. F. A daneral memversiip’ mevtine at ai the [Of L. and other union organisations, groups of the cloak trade has been ealled | It states, in part: | for Monday night, at Irving Plasa Mall. At “We invite all affiliated and sym- pathetic trade union organizations to actively participate in the campaign to elect the candidates of the Com- munist Party (among whom are many militant trade unionists in whom the workers have confidence) and to direct the affiliated organiza- |tions to challenge the candidates of all other parties, and their lieuten- ants in the camp of the A. F. of L. leadership, to show cause why the workers should vote for the boss par- ties whether they be named Repub- lican, Democrat or labelled as So- Vote Communist For 3, Emergency relief for the poor farmers without restrictions by the government and banks; ex- emption ef poor farmers from taxes, amd no forced collec- tion of rents or debts. LABOR UNION MEETINGS this meeting the céntral committge will ex- plain the latest maneuvers and the plans for intensifying the struggle against wage cuts. ‘The Cloakmakers’ Unemployed Council sila w mass mesting oft unemployed for the headquarters of eth Bt. and Painters. pen ‘Will hold a mass meeting at Pinnish Hall, 109 Uunion Hall St., Jamaica, July 28, at 8 p.m. Rank and file members will be organ- ized. Painters Union, ty Monday, 8 p.m., meets every Monday, 8 Pm. at 108 EB, t4th St. ‘Williamsburg Local, meets every Wednes- day, 6 pm, at 11 Graham Ave. 1,500 SEAMEN IN. MASS MEET CALL FIGET ON HUNGER To Demand Relief from | Seamens’ Church Institute NEW YORK, July 24,—Fifteen hundred seamen, at a mass meeting called hy the Waterfront Unemployed Council, decided to hold a giant dem- onstration against the Seamen’s Chureh Institute, to demand relief and protest the announced intention | of cutting of relief July 30, The dem- onstration is called for July 30 at 12 m, Thirty seamen joined the Un- employed Council following the meet_ ing of the 1,500, The meeting was very militant and the whole waterfront is ready for ac- tion and has been stimulated by the demonstration inside the institute a few days ago when the seamen had complete charge of it. The following demands were en- thusiastically adopted and will be presented to the institute: 1, Institute doors to be open to ALL seamen—regardless of length of time ashore, race, nationality or creed. 2. Right of seamen to have access to baggage at all times free of charge; checking rates to be reduced to 5 cents a month; unemployed be per- mitted to remove bags when ship- ping out, free of charge, if unable to pay. 3. Right of all unemployed seamen to the use of bathing and clothes washing facilities free of charge. 4. 500 additional free beds for un- employed seamen and if necessary additional dormitories to be establish- ed in reading rooms, 5. 1,000 meals, twice a day, free, for relief of unemployed seamen. Meals to be of regular quality and substantial. Demands for beds meals are to be in addition to the little relief now be- ing dispensed. 6, Against the Seamen's Church Institute or the City Seamen's Emer- gency Relief Committee discontinu- ing relief July 31. Canadian Police Bar Jobless from Entering Ottawa SUDBURY, Ont., July 24—Hun- dreds of jobless workers and poverty Stricken farmers are being forced Speaker at Election Picnic SHEPARD 4,000 WORKERS AT HUGE PICNIC, \I. Amter and Henry Sheppard Speak NEW YORK. — More than four thousand workers turned out at the | Red Election Picnic at Pleasant Bay Park today. I. Amter, candidate for governor, | jand Henry Shepard, candidate for lieutenant governor, called upon the workers to support the Communist | platform and fight imperialist war. An elaborate program made the picnic one of the greatest.in recent years. The Labor Sports Union sponsored a soccer match, several baseball games, tnd other ssames. The Workers Laboratory Theatre and the Youth Section of the I. W, O. staged side shows. STAGE-SCREEN ALBERT COATES RETURNS TUES- DAY—ALL RUSSIAN PROGRAM SUNDAY Albert Coates returns to the Sta- dium for his fifth summer this week, opening his four weeks’ regime on Tuesday night. His first week’s pro- | grams will introduce three unfay |miliar works, Vaughan Williams’ CALL SERIES OF \Wr'ters’ Federation Seeks Material for Revolutionary Press NEW YORK,.—wWriters are urged to send manuscripts to the Literary Fea- ture Exchahge of the Revolutionary MASS MEETS TO HIT INJUNCTION = Federation, 63 W. 15th St,| nto |Material accepted will be submitted) Broad Conference to | by the Literary Feature Exchange to} | the revolutionary press of the United’ Be Held July 27th | states ana canada. in New ‘York All material must be in English, typewritten, double spaced. NEW YORK—To support the anti- | Manuseripts will be judged on the injunction fight of the 1. Miller and |>8si8 of content rather than form, Geller shoe strikers a series of mass| These types of literature are de- demonstrations will be held through- |Sited: short stories; sketches; revo- out the city July 27. |lutionary reportage; worker corres; All workers are urged to support |SPondence; playlets; mass recitations; this campaign for the right of the|Poems; book, play and cinema re- workers to strike and picket. views; theoretical articles on litera- Demonstrations will be held at the | ture and the arts and translations. following points: [ference will be held at the Manhat- 43 Manhattan Ave., Brooklyn, 8 p.m. tan Lyceum under the leadership. of 23d St. and Madison Sq., N, ¥., at 5|the Provisional Anti-injunction Com- p.m.; Mermaid Ave. and W. 25th St., | mittee, 799 Broadway. Brooklyn, 8 p.m.; 18th St. and 5th| Unions, workers’ mass organiza- Ave., Brooklyn, 8 p.m.; Steinway and | tions are urged to elect delegates for| Jamaica Ave., Astoria, L. I, 8 p.m.; | this conference which will lay a basis} 1538 Madison Ave., 8:30 p.m. for a broad mass struggle against in- On July 28 a mass injunction con- ' junctions, | AMUSEMENTS ' cooLEeD | Bwaye |’ 47TH st. ]j i CONSTANCE BENNETT in “WHAT PRICE HOLLYWOOD” with LOWELL SHERMAN—NEIL HAMILTON —MUSIO— TADIUM CONCERTS PHILHARMONIC-SYMPHONY ORCH. Lewisohn Stadium, Amst. Av. & 198th Willem Van Hoogstraten, Conductor EVERY NIGHT at 8:30 He, 500, $1.00 (Circle 7-7575)— PRICES: QAM. to 1PM, MON, to FRI. 25° OV OW ETE wave) cst MEO + THRILLING SOVIET FILM! ‘DIARY OF A REVOLUTIONIST. Amkino Talkie with English Titles Worxees Acme Theatre Mth Street and Union Square VOTE COMMUNIST FOR: 6, Against imperialist war; for the defense of the Chinese people | and of the Soviet Union. REGULAR ADVERTISERS IN THE DAILY WORKER Red Star Press (“The Road”) overture “The Wasps,” Cyril Scott's |] Chtster Cafeteria Parkway Cafeteria Butchers Union, Local 174 jestablished the police protection. Po- le to their homes by Canadian Two Passacaglias and Tchaikovsky's Overture-—Fantasy “Hamlet.” Willem Van Hoogstrattn closes his season tonight with the following program Beethoven’s Eighth Sym- phony, and the “Leonore” Overture No. 3, and Brahms Symphony No. 1 in C minor. Programs for balance of week follow: Tuesday:* Symphony in D minor, Cesar Franck; Overture to the Suite, “The Wasps,” Vaughan Williams; “Don Juan,” Strauss; Prolovetzkian Dances from “Prince Igor,” Borodin. Wednesday: Symphony No. 5 in C Minor, Beethoven; Two Passacaglias, mounted police and railroad police in an attempt to cut off the “On to Ottawa” march. At the meeting points of the trans- continental railroad lines at Sudbury. Cochrane and Nipissing police are removing all unemployed headed for Ottawa. Similar steps are being taken at railway centers in the West- ern Province, Despite these interferences by the authorities, thousands of jobless are expected to mass in Ottawa during the Imperial Economie Conference. Conference Will Pick | Cyril Scott; Overture—Fantasy D |“Hamlet,” Tchaikovsky; “Leonore” elegates for World | overture No. 3, Beethoven. 4 Anti-War Congr 8S} Thursday: Overture to “Flying| | Dutchman,” Wagner; Ballet Music| NEW YORK —The American! No, 2 from “Rosamund2,” Schubert; | Committee for the World Congress | Golliwog's Cakewalk from “Children's | Against War reported today that|Gorner,” Debussy; Overture—Fan- labor unions in Greater New York |tasy “Romeo and Juliet,” Tehaikoy- | are responding to its appeal for dele-|sky; Polka and Fugue from “Sch- | gates to an anti-war conference at | wanda,” Weinberger; Dream Panto- Labor Temple, 14th St. and Second) mime from “Hansel and Gretel,” Ave., on Monday, Aug. 8. Humperlinck; “Triana,” Albeniz; | At this anti-war conference the| Overture to “William Tell,” Rossini. delegates will elect representatives to Friday: Symphony No. 6 in F ma- attend the World Congress Against jor (“Pastorale”), Beethoven; Death War, to be held in Paris Aug. 20. and Trensfiguration, Richard Strauss; Four German Dances, Mozart; March City “Young Worker” Slav, Tehaikovsky. for Election Drive’ Saturday (all Wagner program): Overture to “Tannhauser,” Siegfried Idyll, Siegfried’s Rhine Journey, Ride All workiing class youth organi- zations are called upon to send two} delegates to the “Kstablish A New| of the Walkure, Prelude to Act 3 of | “Lohengrin,” GoodFriday Music from York City Edition of the Young Worker” Conference on Aug. 8th, 7, “Parsifal,” Prelude and Liebestod of “Tristan and Isolde,” Overture to Pp. m. at Workers Center, 35 E, 12th Street. “Die Meistersinger.” At this conference an editorial and business staff will be elected. This NEIGHBORHOOD THEATKES EAST SIDF-—BRONY city edition will be utilized in behalf | of the Communist Election candi- RKO & dates .and platform. 7 Anti-War Meet Held Eee ||| AN Matta TODAY TO TUESDAY Tiger and Python in Fight for Life! Frank Buck’s “Bring "Em Back Alive” MATS, 15 Cents || EVES. 25 Cents Except Sat., Bun. and Holidays Despite Police NEW YORK. — Cops attempting to break up an anti-war meeting last Friday night at Righth Ave., and 21st St., were frustrated by the mass ac- tion of workers. The meeting—cal- led by Unit 18, section 2—gathered so many workers that a lieutenant was forced to apologize publicly as the workers shouted, “Can that stuff! Down with the cops!” —_ Are you planning to go to the Soviet Union? — SEE DOREVA, Inc. 152-154 Bowery, New York, N. Y. —UNDERSELLS ALL— Headquarters for all merchandise needed for going across. Full line Men’s Furnishings, Dress and Work Clothes— Leather Coats, Windbreakers, Boots and Shoes—Raincoats Bags and Trunks Brownsville Local meets every Thusray at 4S p.m. at 1460 East New York Ave, cialiet John’s Restaurant ‘i Uinel Cafeteria Harry Stolner Gotical Co. Workers Coop Colony Camps Unity, Kinderland, Nitgedaiget S0l’s Luneh Lerman Bros. (Stationery) Santal Midy Workmen's Sick and Death Benefit Fund Manhattan Lyceum Sollin’s Restaurant Rollin Pharmacy Gottlicb’s Hardware Messinger’s Cafeteria (So. Blvd.) World Tourists, In Golden Bridge Colony Cameo Theatre Acme Theatre ) Stadium Concerts Bronstein’s Vegetarian Restaurant Dr. Kessler. Czechoslovak Workers House Avanta Farm Union Square Mimeo 81 Camp Wocolona Russian Art Shop De, Schwartz Dental Dept., I.W.0. Health Center Cafeteria Wm. Bell, Optometrist ATIE \TION COMRADES! Health Center Cafeteria WORKERS CENTER 50 EAST 13th STREET Patronize the Health Center Cafeteria and help the Revolutionary Movement BEST FOOD REASONABLE PRICES Intern’l Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 1th FLOOR AD Work Done Under Persona) Care of DR, JOSEPASON Phone Tomkins Sq, 6-9554 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: (TALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 302 E. 12th St, New York Au ‘ omraaes Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx anaes Comrades—Eat at the Parkway Cafeteria - 1638 PITKIN AVENUE Near Hopkinson Ave, Brooklyn, N. ¥. WILLIAM BELL OPTOMETRIST and OPTICIAN Special Rates\to Workers and Families 106 E. 14th St. (Room 21) Opposite Automat Tel. TOmpkins Square 6-8237 DR. A. C. BREGER Surgeon Dentist and families 30-12-30th Ave. Grand Av., Cor. 24 Av., Astoria, L, I, 200 E. 23d St. Cor. Thrid Ave, New York City OPTICIANS pa Harry Stolper, Inc. 13-15 CHRYSTIE STREET (Third Ave, Car to Hester Street) to 6 p. m. Daily Dry Dock 4-4522 Intensify the mass struggle against the production of war materials, and against the trans- port of arms and ammunition! 9 a. m. Phone! Raise Funds for Your Organization Through the MORNING FREIHEIT - PICNIC and CARNIVAL SATURDAY, AUGUST 6th 1932 At Ulmer Park, Brooklyn SPORTS—DANCING—ENTERTAINMENT PAA lei i Ae Ue aR aRsRi Ne aL eh EEE Os 600 Tickets for $6,00—Order Your Tickets Now! MORNING FREMEIT OFFICE,35 E, 12th St., 6th fl, : let