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Elect D ect Delega tes WORKER ORGANIZATIONS — SHOULD SEND THE MOST ABLE, ACTIVE MEMBERS Delegates Will Lead Struggle for Jobless Relief After the Conference session Will Plan and Start Organizing for| Huge Bread Parade on September 10 | NEW YORK.—A city conference representing all workers’ organiza-| tions to which unions, both of the A. F. of L. and of the Trade Union| Unity League, also workers’ fraternal, sports, defense, ex-servicemen, mutual | and benefit organizations are invited at Manhattan Lyceum to plan a huge The Unemployed Council, call this conference, specifies that dele- | gates also should be elected from) committees, bread lines, flop} ‘s and relief agencies. | Elect Active Fighters | And these are not to be just del: fates who attend one meeting do nothing more. The organizations | are to choose as their delegates active | fighters, who will take over leader- ship of the struggle for unemploy- ment insurance and immediate cash relief, no evictions, no discrimination, no more red tape questionnaire sys- tem, no forced con tions from those still working, etc. Other demands the conference will probably make are that children of the jobless be fed in the schools, that armories and cant buildings be opened to the j that public work in the form of c: ‘uction of workers’ dwellings be started at once. No Wage Cut The Unemployed Council, and Goubtless the conference als strict! ainst raising this m any “voluntary wage cut” such as Mayor Walker proposes. ‘The Un- ex yyed Council demands the Toney be raised by turning over the 200,000,000 city funds now slated to be given the bankers for “debt ser- Vice” to unemployed relief inst The Unemployed Council demani the salaries of Walker and his hi ly paid officials be cut to $3,500 a Talker now gets $40,000, be- gifts from Block and Ten dollars a week cash re ca jobless family of two, with $3 mal for eacn dependent, and a day le unem- s, is demanded. of the sok s’ bonus and rnment war funds to rv -mployment relief are some of the rands that will be made on the} p-“ional government in addition to demands on the city ~ov-"nment. Parade Sept. 10 The Bread Parade should be on t. 10, the Unemployed Council workers’ organizations should ' CITY ELECTION | NOTES WEDNESDAY | and Avenue C, Manhattan (I. exth St Yo... amapiees) ton and Broome Sts., Manhattan. Soenker, Joseph Porper, candidate from 12th | § jal District. | . and East Broadway, Manhat- iMe Workers Club auspices). 4 Jackson Sts., Manhattan. ist Ave., South Brooklyn, 8:30 Cholunski. , South Brooklyn, Boro Park Spesker, M. Weich. and Mermaid Ave. nam. Speaker, First A’ . Pacconach Club, 1538 £4, anit South .| Cor Congression. at an open forum, at 11 inesday evening at 6:30, of the Downtown Ke rker His sub- ject will be “The Crisis and the Communist | Election Campai THURSDAY coth St. and 18th Ave., South Brooklyn. Spesker, F. Jacobs. 1ith St. and Fifth Avs., South Brooklyn, Speakers: G. Mann and J. Zagarelli. ‘Third St. and Nentune Ave., Coney Is. Sveaker. Peter Ia Recca, eandidate from ‘Thir? Assembly Distrie! 113th St. and Fifth Harlem, speak- | ers’ Hayes, Fisher, Dieppa and Clinton, Lenox Ave. and 118th St., Harlem. speak- ers: Martinet, Valdes. O. Rivera and Ibaner. Fifth Aye. and 134th St akers: Albert Ginssford, candidate 21st Assembly District, Williams, and Sol Taub. and 104th St.. Harlem, speakers: Green, Landau, Cozigean and Soi Harper. | PRIDAY Fittieth St, ond isn. Sneaker, M. Blum, and Crrroll Sts, South B. Stallman and 8, Twentieth Ave. nnd fith eroulyn. Sneaker, N. Kay, Seventh St. and Brighton Beach Ave. Speaker, H. Lichtenstein. Court and Fourth St., Coney . Yan Wagner. and 78th St., South Brook- ker, N. Haines. Hopkins and Pinkin Ave., Brownsville cen- ral demonstration. speaker: Israel Amter, | Ave., South Brook- Brooklyn. | et * south | endidate for governor of New York | Seventh St. and Avenue B, central dem-| mstretion, Lower Manhattan, speaker: Wil- iam W. Weinstone, Yerate & candidate for U. 8.| h Ave. and 143nd St. Harlem, Eliner Menderson, candidate 2ist 1 District. Gertz and Kingston, ky, Communist candidate ‘oneressional District, Bronx, the auspices of the Amer- jub at the Bronx Workers’ ‘hy’, 192% Boston Rd., Friday. . and Vyse Avi monstration), fnisnve Olgin, candids Upper Bronx) main er, SATURDAY and 30th St., 4 Bay and Jerome Ave., Brook-| evker, I. Pinkson, Forty-third St. Brooklyn, Speaker: ler. Seventh Avenue and 188th St., central elem demonstration, speakers: George E, twers, candidate Chief Court of Appeals, leevereld end Sklar, Avenue St. John and Fox St., Lower Fonx (Central demonstration), main speak- 1, Henty Shepard, candidate for Lieut. evernor of New York. bor union meetings |city’s jobless to send delegates, will meet Aug, 15 Bread Parade. nediately take up the question of electing delegates to the conference, Children’s Committee Joins Fight The United Children’s Committee of New York, which has been con- ductin & militant fight for relief for the thousands of children of the has joined the Un- employed Councils as a body, and as its first task will cooperate in the mobilization for the September 10 Bread Parade. The Committee will hereafter be known as the Children’s Committee of the Unemployed Councils of New York. APPEAL TO LW.0. FORREDTAGDAYS ollections Saturday and Sunday NEW YORK —A call to all mem- bers and affiliates of the Interna- tional Workers Order to support the tag days August 13 and 14 for funds for the Communist election cam- o- |Brodsky for Congress \ Carl Brodsky, Commuuist can- didate for congress from the 23rd district, lower Bronx, was on the rapid transit employes strike com- mittee in 1928, formerly president of Electrical Workers Association, once organizer of the I. B. of E. W., and is now on the national com- mittee of the Friends of the Soviet Union. Walker Woulnd’t Mind Cutting Own Salary, “Tf” — But He Won’t NEW YORK.—Mayor Walker now plays up to Nicholas Murray Butler's suggestion that ne cut his own sal- ary 20 per cent, and then the firemen might be willing to cut theirs, But Walker, in an interview with the press, slips in a little proviso that he thinks will save him. He says: “Per- sonally I wouldn’; mind giving up ten per cent of even 20 per cent of my DAILY WUKKHK, NEW YORK, WEDN .|committee of that organization. paign was issued today by the city ; Salary if other ranking officers in the city are willing to do likewise.” “The capitalist parties, Democrat-| The Bread Parade of New York | ic, Republican and Socialist, have | Workers Sept. 10 will demand that millions of dollars with which to| Walker's $40,000 a year salary be cut fight the workers in this eleetion,” | to $3,500 and the money used for un- | the call said. “The Communist Par- | employment relief. ty, the only party that defends the} | workers, depends on them for its| AY, AUGUST 10, 1932 Now for Unemployed Conference on Monday: * ENTIRE NANKING CENSOR NEWS Rats Flee Rising Tide of Communism fae The entire Cabinet of the Nankin, government resigned yesterday after- noon, following an unbroken’ series of victories by the Chinese Red Ar- mies and a new upsurge of Mass an- | ger against the government’s refusal | to the Japanese invasion of | Jehol while waging war against the Chinese workers and peasant Red +Armi Chiang Kai-shek, Wall St. | tool, is also “threatening” to resign, |George E. Sokolsky, bourgeois “ex- |pert” on the Far East, told the In- | stitute of Politics yesterday that the | success of the Communist movement |in the Yangtze Valley was inevitable. o 8 « rasist The Nanking Government yester- day clamped down a military cen- sorship on news of the terrific battle raging in Hupeh Province, where the Chinese Red Army is attacking the }main Nanking army, under Chiang Kai-shek, on a front of more than 200 miles, The battle has been going on for more than a week: The latest reports from Hupeh stated that the Nanking line was cracking at several points, and that many Nanking sol- diers were throwing down their arms while others were going over whole- sale to the Red Army, Russell Owen, Shanghai corres- pondent of the New York Times, in a dispatch to his paper yesterday .on the rapid growth of Communism in- dicates that the battle is still going in favor of the workers and peasants Red Armies, He reports Nanking of- ficials as admitting that the growth of the Chinese Communist Power “cannot be stopped by armies.” Meeting to Rally Support for “Daily Worker” August 17 NEW YORK. — To Workers’ Mass Organizations, Readers and Friends of the Daily Worker, and all Party units: The meet- ing to rally support behind the campaign of the Daily Worker for funds and subscriptions will | terror | t support. A fighting fund must be raised for the election campaign, “In the campaign, the Communist Party fights for unemployment and secial insurance, for immediate re- lief to the millions of starving un- employed workers, against capitalist and Hoover's wage-cutting policy, and imperialist war, and for the defense of the Soviet Union, the workers’ only fatherland. “All members of the I.W.O. and all friends and affiliates must sup- port this campaign. Tag days to sup- port this fund will be held in New York district August 13 and 14, Con- tribute and collect! “All members are urged to call for | materials for collection on the tag days at the stations which will be announced in the Daily Worker,” Against capitalist terror; against all forms of suppression of the political rights of workers. LABOR UNION MEETINGS SS BORUCHOWITZ TO SPEAK TO OLOAR- MAKERS J. Boruchowitz, organizer of the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union, at a mecting of closkmakers tor Dm, on the outcome of the and what the cloakmakers must the wage-cut and the standard of pro tion. All cloakmakers are urged to attend this meeting. DRESSMAKERS A meeting of dressmakers will be held Thursday night at 155 W. 24th St. OFFICE The next general Workers Union will Temple, 224 E. 14th 81 WORKERS ting of the Office held in the Labor ‘Thursday, 7 p.m. PAINTERS OPEN FORUM “How union agreements help the unem- ployed painter” will be the subject of a lecture by Joe Harris, organizer of the Al- ation Painters Union at 1180 Southern , at 10 am. today, PAINTERS UNION The Williamsburz Branch of the Altera- tion Painters Union will meet tonight at 11 Graham Ave., at 8 p.m. ‘The Brownsville Branc hwill meet Thurs- day, 8 p.m. at 1440 East New York Ave. SHOE AND LEATHER A membership meeting of the Shoe and Leather Workers Union will be held Thi day, 7 p. m. at Irving Plaza Hall, 15th and Irving Pl. At this meeting a full report on all the strikes, including the Geller and Miller strike, will be given, The question of the election of a new administration will be taken up at the meeting. Bullding Maintenance ‘The regular monthly meeting of the Build- ing Maintenance Workers Unton will be held today ai ® p. m. at Manhal Lyceum, 66 E. Fourth St, The union nounced today that the union office has moved to 799 Broadway, Room 301, aes ae General Membership Meeting of Dressmakers A ge! membership meetin dressmakers 1s called by the Industy Union for Thursday right after work at the furriers strike headquarters, 155 W. 24th St. At this meeting plans for the immed- |iately launching of an organisation drive in the dress trade will be presented by the trade board, ‘The meeting will also wiscuss the recommendations of the dress depart- ment to the district convention of the In- dustrial Union, which takes place on Aug. | 20th and 2ist in Manhattan Lyeeum. All drossmakers, members of the International Uni ., workers from open shops and mem- of the International are called to this meeting. eo 8 6 Amalgamation Party in Typographical Union invites all union members to Open Forum on wage scale, August 10 at 8 p. m., 403 Lexington Avo, Red Press Committecs to Meet Tonight NEW YORK. — A very important | meeting o fthe Red Press Committees | of.South Brooklyn will be held today at 8 p. m. in the Boro Park Work- | ers Club, 1373 43rd St., Brooklyn. All Press Committees of the clubs | be held in Manhattan Lyceum on August 17th, the previously announced date having been cancelled, This meeting 1s being held to organize the sup- port for the Daily Worker in the present critical moment. The reporter at the meeting will be Comrade William Wein- Preferable Union Sq Smith, care Daily Wor! e location. Write r, 50 E. 13th St. listed below should be present with- || stone, Editor of the , Daily out fail. | | Worker, : | Coney Island Workers Club, Brigh- ton Beach Workers, Club, Bath Beach | Workers Club, Mapleton Workers Cl ° d t jClub, Boro Park Workers Club. assifie | WANTED—Large room, double window. | What’s On— WEDNESDAY ‘The following open air anti-war meetings will be held under the auspices of the FSU Stalin Branch, Seventh Ave. and Avenue | SIX-ROOM APT.—Suitable for doctor or dentist. Beautiful corner in Boro Park, 1481 58th St., Brooklyn. By Margaret Larkin By Taylor Gordon . By Boshka Scherer | Waterfront, 12 noon. COWBOY SONGS |__Avery important meeting of the Red|» 91 [Press Committee of South Brooklyn Clubs will b@ held at the Boro Park Workers Club, | 1373 43rd St., Brooklyn, at 8 p. m. The| following clubs must be present without fait: Coney Island Workers Club, Brighton Beach Workers Club, Bath Beach Workers Club, Mapleton Workers Club, Boro Park Workers Club, * © An open air meeting of the Workers Dx- Servicemen’s League of Williamsburg will be held at @ p. m. on the corner Street and Graham Ave, Ail are urged to ottend thi: MUSIC Caroival Serenaders By Paul Sweet’: Boat Leaves at 7 P. M., Pier 11 6 Foot of Wall Street Tickets in Adv. 90 At Boat $1.10 Friends of the Soviet Union, N. ¥. Distriet 799 BROADWAY, ROOM 330 ‘Send-Off Banquet of the NEW JERSEY DELEGATION To the World Congress Against War MUSIC — EATS -- FUN Hear PROF, W. SCHLAUCH and Others At SCHARY MANOR 14 Clinton Ave. Newark, N. J. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST i0th At 8:30 P. TICKETS 50 CI Post No. 2, Workers Ex-Servicemen’s Lea- gue, will hold an open air meeting at 125th St. and Fifth Ave, at 8 p. m, The fololwing ILD meetings will be held: Lithuanian No. 17, 46 Ten Eyck St., Bklyn. Speaker: Morgan. Harlem Progressive Youth Club, 1538 Mad- ison Ave., 8:30 p.m. Speaker: Baum. Frank Little Brank, Mermaid Ave, 25th 8t., 8:30 p.m. Speaker: Dale. Scottsboro Branch, 257 Schenectady Ave., 8:90 p,m, Speaker: White, aed dats and ‘There will be a meeting at the John Reed Club at 63 West 16th St., at 8 p.m. to dis- @ resolution of the TURI on the New Admission with card, r Heit a A meeting of all store and office furni- ture workers will he held at 108 Bast 14th A. Speaker: Miller, F : Eastern Parkway, 257 Schenectady Ave. | Brooklyn. Speaker: Wilson. | . s Yorkville, th St. and Lexington, Ave. iM I h S i h it d | Speaker: Fortell | Moonlight Sail on the Hudson |_ West Bronx, 170th St. and Walton Ave. iti ; : Leroy. SATURDAY, AUGUST 13th Rolland Branch, Lydig and Crug- jer. Speaker: Marshall. —PROGRAM— N.Y. Anti - Elects De the World 356 Delegates Vote delegates, representing 200 labor and World Congress Against War. for the World Congress Against War, elected the following four delegates to the World Congress, which con- venes in Europe on August 27: Johnson, a Negro ex-serviceman and member of Post 2 (Harlem) Workers Ex-Servicemen’s League; Joseph Roth, a metal worker of Ithaca, N. Y., a member of the Socialist Rarty and also a member of the Ithaca branch of the Friends of the Soviet Union; J. MacFarland, a member of the Marine Workers Union, and S. J. Stemba, of the Workers Ex-Service- men’s League. Trotskyite Attack A resolution offered by Trotskyites attacking the World Congress as “pacifistic” and advocating the con- vocation of another congress which would include the Second (Socialist) International, the Amsterdam (labor reformist) International, and the An- archo-Syndicalist International (?), was jeered down by the Conference and overwhelmingly defeated. It was regarded by the conference as an attempt to sabotage the Congress Against War and cover up the treachery of the socialist officialdom on the question of the struggle against war. The resolution adopted. by the Con- ference called upon the World Con- gress to unify all those who are sincerely opposed to war into a world-wide front against imperialist war. It called upon the workers to prevent the manufacture and ship- ment of munitions against the Chi- nese people and the Soviet Union. Marine Worker Chairman The conference was opened by Roger Baldwin. It elected Harry Jackson, a member of the Marine Workers Union, as chairman, Ad- The Conference, held under the auspices dressing the delegates, Jackson ~ er War Cont. legates to Congress Support to Struggle Against Imperialist War Jeer Down Trotskyite Attack on World Con- gress, Expose Renegade Attempt at Sabotage NEW YORK.— Packing the auditorium of the Labor Temple, 356 fraternal organizations of New York State, voted overwhelmingly at a conference Monday night to support the of the American Committee pointed out that “war brings only misery 9nd death to the masses of working people. The World Con- gress Against War must forge a mighty wor''-wide front of labor in order to smash the plots of the im- perialists for another. blood bath.” He denounced the present robber war of Japanese. imperialism against China and pointed out that the seiz- ure of Manchuria was a preliminary to an attack against the Soviet Union. “The World Congress,” he declared, amidst loud cheering by the delegates, “must come out unequiv- ocally for the defense of the Soviet Union.” The delegates present from the Communist Party pledged support to the work of the Congress, at the same time pointing out that one of its main tasks must be the unmask- ing of pacifism, which screens the pro-war schemes of the capitalists. They pointed out that only through revolutionary mass fight can war be postponed and only by the overthrow of capitalism can imperialist war be done away with. Of the organizations represented at the Conference, 15 were A. F. of L. locals, 30 industrial unions, six Work. men’s Circle, and the rest represented workers’ clubs, branches of the I, W. O. and others. The delegates rep- resented a total membership of 75,000. The sum of $110 was col- lected, with $160 pledged for the expenses of the Conference. The Conference is one of a series being held throughout the United States, A farewell meeting for the Ameri- can delegation to the World Congress will be held Monday evening, Aug. 15, at the New School for Social Re- search, 66 West 12th Street. AMUSEMENTS. and STARTING FRIDAY The Intellectual and the Working Class! THE LATEST SOVIET TALKIE WITH ENGLISH TITLES “HOUSE OF DEATH” (Tragedy of Dostoievski) Author of ‘CRIME and PUNISHMENT’ ‘BROTHERS KARAMAZOFT’ LAST TWO DAYS 8th and Last Week Frank Buck’s “Bring "Em Back Alive” BK pYoCo~ LY 8 WAY. nue —MUSIC— TADIUM OCONCERTS™=——™ PHILHARMONIC-SYMPHONY ORCH, Lewisohn Stadium, Amst. Av, & 138th ALBERT COATES, Conductor EVERY NIGHT at 8:30 PRICES; 25e, 500, $1.00 (Circle 7-7575)— NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES HAST SIDE—BRONX | JEFFERION ||| FRANKE EAST SIDE TODAY AND TOMORROW Epic of the Paris Commune “THE NEW BABYLON” “Striking . . . Impressive... E N.Y, worxees Acme Theatre Jith Street and Union Square St., Room 301, at 7:30.p.m, All unorgan- ized workers are invited, Feuer fc A meeting of the Irish Workers Club will be held at 147th St. and Willis Ave., Bronx, at 8 p.m. eee THURSDAY The Brownsville Alteration Painters Union | will hold a meeting at 1440 East New York Ave, at 8 p.m, os 8 ' ‘The Bridge Plaza Workers Club will have| ® very important meeting at 286 Rodney | a3 Ave., Brookiyn, at 8:20 p.m. sia om A general membership meeting of the| Coney Island Workers Club will be held at | | 27th St. and Mermaid Ave., at 8 p. m. Cust paaet ‘The Romain Rolland Youth Branch, FSU, | will meet at 8:30 p.m. in the auditorium. | 2700 Bronx Park Bast. Comrade Friedman | rs talk of his experiences in the Soviet | inion. o 8 The following anti-war meetings under | e pices of the FSU will be held: Downtewn Branch, Houston and Pitt Sts. | Speaker: Bershad, Brownsville, 1813 Pitkin Ave, Marshall. Brighton Beach, Brighwater Court and 4th St. Speaker: Uortell. Speaker . A regular meeting of Post No. 40, Workers | Ex-Servicemen’s League, will be held at 2024 W. 25th St., Coney Island, at 8 p.m. | Os Mears Il organizations urged in 2 no- sent out by the New York State a it Election Campaign Com- TICKETS NOW READY! DISCOUNTS TO ORGANIZATIONS! 250 Tickets ........000000020 500 Tickets .. 750 Tickets .., 1000 Tickets ..... Tickets at Gate Will Be 35 Cents Bry +. 10 Pleasant Bay Cents Each Cents Each ».12% Conts Hach: Cents Each PICNIC AUGUST 21st, 1932 WEDNESDAY TO FRIDAY “RADIO PATROL” With ROBERT ARMSTRONG, LILA LEB AND ANDY DEVINE EXTRA ATTRACTIONS AT JEFFERSON — “ESCAPADE” — With ANTHONY BUSHELL & SALLY BLANE AT FRANKLIN—“IGLOO” Fight For Life In Frozen North MATS. 15 Cents || EVES. 25 Cents Except Sat.. Sun.. and Holidays | MASS ORGANIZATIONS Have Your Own Picnic With Us! G idIVS NO MON SLAYOLL Park McGRADY TRIES TO BERD SCABS IN FUR SHOPS Furriers Mass Meet at Cooper Union Tonight to Hit Plan NEW YORK.—The dogskin fur strike, involving close to 1,600 work- ers, has so completely paralyzed this section of the trade that the bosses are now practically on their knees before the workers of the Industrial Union. The effectiveness of the strike was revealed yesterday following a meet- ing of the Fur Trimmers Agsociation. At this meeting the fur bosses drafted & letter to McGrady, head of the In- ternational Furriers Union, advising him that if he dig not supply scabs at once to work the struck shops they (the bosses) would cancel their agree- ment with him and settle with whom- ever they saw fit, McGrady has been busy through- out the day attempting to herd scabs into the struck shops and to stop the Industrial Union from forcing the bosses into a no wage-cut agreement. The task of the furriers now is to hold their ranks solid and Prevent McGrady’s scabs from entering the shops. The picket lines must be Big Program at i Anti-War Meeting In Harlem Tonight NEW YORK. — The American Committee for the World Congress Against War is holding a mass meet- ing this evening (Wednesday) at the Abyssinian Baptist Church, 138th St. and 7th Avenue. f An excellent program has been ar- ranged, with addresses by Louis Ho- ward, a Negro war veteran and Prof. W. 8. Schlauch, with several musical numbers by the famous Hall Johnson Choir, ALL FUNDS COLLECTED ON COLECTION LISTS AND TAG DAY MUST BE BROUGHT IM- MEDIATELY TO WORKERS IN- TERNATIONAL RELIEF HEAD- QUARTERS, 16 WEST 21ST ST. trimming shops. Halt the scabs! And thus defeat by one blow both the bosses and their agent Mc- Grady! The activities and the strike strug- gles of the furriers of the past iew weeks will be revieweq and further Plans for mass struggle will ‘be de- cided upon ‘at a mass meeting of fur workers called at Cooper Union to- night at 6 o'clock by the NTWU. The meeting tonight will be a mass mo- bilization of all furriers to wipe cut the McGrady scab agency and build the Industrial Union as the one union of all the fur workers. Ben Gold, secretary of the union, and leader of the strike committee, strengthened in front of all fur will address the meeting. 2, Aug, 12, Concert, East N. Y, Workers’ 3. Jamaica, Lr, rest Parkway, ————— — — — — — —— What Are the Communist Party and Workers’ Organizations Doing to Save the “Daily Worker”? 1. Aug. 12, Lecture, Mapleton Workers’ Club, 2006 70th St., B’klyn, N. Y¥., 8:30 p.m. ’ Club, 52 Vermont St., B’klyn, 8:30 p.m. Picnic, Communist Party and Women's Council, Aug. 14, For- 4, es 21, Daily Worker, District 2, Picnic and Mass Features by the Prolet- uhne, Labor Sports Union, Pioneers, Workers’ Ex-Servicemen’s League, Marine Workers’ Industrial Union and Russian Echoes, under the direc- tion of W. Kirspnoff. Speaker W. W. Weifstone, Editor of Daily Worker. 5. Aug. 27, Mapleton Workers’ Club, 2006 70th St., B’klyn. Concert at 8:30 p.m. 6 Aug. 28, Coney Island Workers’ Club, 2709 Mermaid Ave., B cert at 8:30 p.m, bacon Con- 1. Sept. 3, Bath Beach Workers’ Club, 2709 Mermaid Ave. Concert at 8:30 p.m. REGULAR ADVERTISERS Red Star Press (‘The Road”) Chester Cafeteria John’s Restaurant Harry Stolper Optical Co, Camps Unity, Kinderland, Nitgedaiget Lerman Bros. (Stationery) Workmen’s Sick and Death Benefit Fand Bronstein’s Vegetarian Restaurant Dr. Kessler Crechoslovak Workers House Avanta Farm Union Square Mimeo Supply Camp Wocolona Russian Art Shop Dr. Schwartz Cohen's (Opticians) Dental Dept., 1.W.0. Health Center Cafeteria Wm. Bell, Optometrist WATCH THE ADS! IN THE DAILY WORKER Parkway Cafeteria Butchers Union, Local 174 Linel Cafeteria Workers Coop Colony 's Lunch Santal Midy Manhattan Lycénm Sollin’s Restaurant Rollin Pharmacy GottlHieb’s Hardware Acme Theatre Stadium Concerts Dr. A. ©. Breger Intern] Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 15th FLOOR 4D Work Done Under Persona) Care of DR. JOSEPASON 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 200 E. 23d St, | 30-12-30th Ave, Cor. Third Ave. Grand Av., Cor. ad New York City ‘Ay. Astoria, L. J. Dr. ZINS Est. Over 27 Years Men and Women CHRONIC AILMENTS Skin, Nerve and Stom: General W QT h Diseases and All Modern jes Reasonable, Fre Consultation, Blood Examinations and X-Rays, 110 EAST 16th ST., N.Y.C. Bet. Irving Place and Union Square Dally 9 to 8 P.M. Sunday, 9 to 4 P.M. will find the classified of special appeal—Let Helpful Information for Individuals and Groups Those seeking temporary or permanent rooms and apartments in New York and thoge con- templating auto travel share-expense trips CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS 5c. A WORD ATTENTION COMRADES! Health Center Cafeteria WORKERS CENTER 560 EAST 13th STREET Petronize the Health Center Cafeteria and help the Revolutionary Movement BEST FOOD REASONABLE PRICES Comrades—Eat at the Parkway Cafeteria 1638 PITKIN AVENUE Brooklyn, N. ¥. Near Hopkinson Ave, Phone Tomkins Sq. 6-9554 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A piace with atmosphere where all radicals meet 302 E. 12th St. New York 29 EAST 14TH STREET NEW YORK Tel. Algonquin 3356-8843 We Carry a Full Line of STATIONERY AT SPECIAL PRICES for Organizations “The strugg)- against militarism fs an extreme form of the class struggle against war and against the political power of capitalism.” —LIEBKNECHT. columns of the “Daily” us be mutually helpful.