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Page lwo L AlLyY WoOKKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, AUGUST 11, 1932 —_ The Mayor of New York By Quirt ‘ ae t one! SHERWOOD NO ONE EVER TREATED WALKER ano ONO SINE ME IT'S A FRAME-LP. Tat EQUITABLE WAS ee C1AY BE THE UNEMPLOYED TAMMANY “THEY'RE AFTER 4 Goon BUS Co. HISSING AE TION K BETTE ae ; Sian Meuse or, arr OpiTieat EVEN IF (T O10 FaiL Bur I 01D- 4 + a Se SHOWS THE ROF ga< PUBLIC OFFICE .// CrETONe EXCEPT N'T SEE TENESS OF THE e 1 CAPITALIST SYSTEM A> VOTE AND FIGHT FOR THE OVERTHROW OF THIS SYSTEM — VOTE COMMUNIST NOVEMBER Bt 1? TIME TO FIGHT! MEET MONDAY ON BREAD PARADE Will Be Tremendous Demonstration for Jobless Relief OVER A THOUSAND ass - Vet J obless FURRIERS MARCH; suport stake, March Lomorrcw, ie Will March from Union Sq. to Commissioner J am Cooper Union; Tailor’ fi Report 66 Victories ator # Urine Foster Calls to Prepare for Fight Against New Cut in Railroad Workers’ Pay Brotherhood Officials ‘Accepted Ten Per Cent Slash Feb. 1, Without A Struggle BOSSES MEET TODAY TO ANNOUNCE NEXT REDUCTION Men Should Build Rank and File Groups, Get Ready for Strike, Lead It Themselves BULLETIN CHICAGO, ML, Aug. 10.—The latest issue of Unity News, published by the Railroad Brotherhoods Unity Committce just before the an- AMUSEMENTS STARTING TOMORROW (FRIDAY) The Intellectual and the Working Class! THE LATEST SOVIET TALKIE WITH ENGLISH TITLES “HOUSE OF DEATH” (Tragedy of Dostoievski) Anthor of ‘CRIME and PUNISHMENT’ and ‘BROTHERS KARAMAZOFF’ arr annenen ner astically de- Unemployed Urged to Bring Gas and Electric ith the str 3s thou Bills NEW YORK.—‘It is time to fight! ba ithe PRUE It is time to unite and demand im- | NEW YORK.—A mass march of unemployed workers and | mediate relief!” says the Unemploy- war veterans to the Department of Public Welfare to demand |°4 Council of New York, announe- . * e, * . ing a united front conference of all immediate relief from starvation will be staged tomorrow un-| those most active in the fight for cer the auspices of the Unemployed Council of Greater New |reliet to the unemployed, a confer- York and the Workers Ex-Servicemen’s League. jence that will plan a giant bread| NEW YORK.—Enth claring their solidarity w ing dogskin workers, over a sand New York fur workers from the strike hall on 24th Sv. to 4 mass fui meeting at Coo Union yesterday afternoon The workers marched behind banner of the Needle Tra¢ ers Industrial Union. AL Last DAY 8th and Last Week Frank Buck’s “Bring Em Back Alive” the SSR oe i side- who line of march workers on the walks cheered the workers are carrying on one of the mo: erian; strikes in the his fur industry trial Wr Union Union: ay were in ¢ Tiundreds scood in th: Includ: ha the Indusinal and file furrier, ot the right w man, crevary of the qd and Ben Geld,| irial union i furtiers, right| to join the com- rasmber Goss Hou all Houpman’s call for t | siand solid and not return to work until all the workers had won a col- lective agreement ior union condi-} $ ps Was grected with pzolonged applause Arehis, a Greek worker, the Greek fur work industrial union. Trimmers March In | A group of over 200 fur trimmers, | who are on sitike, marched ‘nto the} hall in a body. A delegate for the| twimmers reported that there were| aow 14 wimming shops with the in-| @usirial whion. Only four remain with the right wing union and these ready to come over to the dustrial union. 65 Victories tary of the union shops have settled al union during the sti that s were with the| week, the w inning from $5 to $12 a week increase in wages. The Fenstern shop, one of the| largest in the city was forced to set-| tle with the union, the workers get-| ting ‘a $5 to $i0 increase. | A ‘Yesolution conden | g the ter-| Tor against the war veterans and| calling on the workers to support! the struggle of the vets and jobless for the bonus and unemployment in- surance was unanimously adopted. Another resolution calling for the Support of the strike and for a fight against the attempts of Matthew Woll and McGrady to get out an injunc- tion against the strikers was also passed. Special Drive Gifer—Wm. Z. Foster’s “Toward Soviet America” with. yearly subscription. LABOR UNION MEETINGS DRESSMAKERS makers will be metd W. 24th St. OFFICE WORKERS ‘The next general mecting of the Office Workers Union will be held in the Labor ‘Temple, 224 E. 14th St., Thursday, 7 pm. SHOE AND LEATHER A faembership meeting of the Shoe and Leather Workers Union will be held Thurs- aay, 7p. m. at Irving Plora Hall, 15th St. and Irving PI. 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 xdministration will be taken up at the meeting. General Membership Meeting of Dressmakers A genétal membership meeting of all eescmiakers is called by the Industrial Union for Thursdey right after work at the furriéts strike headquarters, 155 W. 24th St, At this méeting plons for the immed- fately laiinching of an organization drive fh the dress trade will be presented by the frade board, The mesting will also Wiscuss the recommsadations of the dress depart- ment to the district convention of the In- rial Union, which takes place on Aug Hh and fist in Manhattan Lyceum. All Afesstiuakers, members of the International Urilon, workers from open shops and mem- Kors of the International are called to this mmesting FURNITURE WORKERS A miesting of the Furniture Workers’ In- dustrial Union will be held tonight at 8 Pm. > 108 B. 14th St. At this meeting plans for the néxt strike will be taken up. A report of the Wein- stein defense committee will also be giver. A Méeting of the mattréss, box spring makers section of the Furniture Workers Industrial Union will be held tonight at 7:30 at Orton Hall, 151 Clinton St, is All unemployed workers and vet« "e urged by the Joint Committee | vhich is calling the march to bring |} their gas and electric bills and dis-| es notices to Union Square at 10} m, The workers will then proceed | m the square to the office of Com- | oner Taylor, head of the Public | ‘¢ Department, where demands ; cash relief and against: evictions | off gas and 1 y be presented by a inmities elected by the workers. | ‘i Taylor promised the | they would be they returned | He said that the) ng care of the unem-| that when ashineton ta workers who live here, But|, The folfowing anti-war meetings under | ich show how the vets and | jobless are “being taken care o! J.P. Franses, wounded vet, | 1812 Third Ave—gas and electricity ‘| shut I 2. ' ns—evicted from home E. Cb Dessce* order. 3. b, 303 E. 98th Si.—dis- 4, M, Frankson, disabled vet, | 15% Ton Eyck St—to be evicted. There are thousands of workers | throughout New York in the same | | has refused to give them any form of relief. | am open air meeting at Fourth st. All out to the mass march tomor. | Avenue B, at 8 p. m. row wo: and force the city to give the ers quick relief. Communist? The Daily Worker Will | Want your fellow-workers to vote | ‘Tell Theth Why. | CITY ELECTION | NOTES | ‘THURSDAY | OSth St. and 18th Ave., Speaker, F. Jacobs. South Btooklyn. 1ith St. and Fifth Ave., South Brookiyn. | Speakers: G. Mann and J. Zagarelli | Third St. and Neptune Ave. Coney Is. Speaker, Peter Ja Rocca, candidate from! ‘Third Assembly i | . Harlem, speak- | pa and Clinton. — | t., Harlem, : era and 2. | nd 134th St., speakers: Atbert ndidate 21st Assembly District, | ms, and Sol Taub. Lexington Ave. and 164th St. Harlem, | speakers: Green, Landau, Cozigean and Sol| Harper G An onen air meeting will he held to- night at 18th St. and Avenue B under the susmices of the East 13th St. Block Cém-| mittee {9 mobilize the workers of the| neighborhood for the lower Manhattin cen- tral election demonstration to be held to- morrow night st Seventh St. snd Avente B, Reuben Shulman, candidate for as- sembly, will speak at tonight's meetings | on the local issues, which inclide the es-| tablishment of » milk station, and mands for immediate relief for the youth | as well as for single and married workers. | FRIDAY Fiftieth St. and Fifth Ave., South Brook- Ipn, Speaker, M. Blam. Court and Caroll Sts., Sneakers, B. Stallman and S. Licht. ‘Twentieth Ave. and 86th St., Brooklyn. Sneaker, N. Kay. Seventh St. and Brighton Beach Ave, Coney Island. Speake, H. Lichtenstein. Briehtwatet Conrt and Fourth St., Coney island. Speaker, W. Van Wagner. ‘Twentieth Ave, and 78th St., South Brook- lyn. Sneaker, N, Haines. Hopkins and Pinkin Ave., Brownsville cen- tral demonstration, speaker: Israél Amteér, candidate for governor of New York. Seventh St. and Avenue B, central dem | onstration, Lower Manhattan, speaker: Wil- liam W. Weinstone, candidate for U. S. Senate. Seventh Ave. and 142nd St. Harlem, speakers: Elinor Henderson, candidate 2ist Congressional District, Gertz and Kingston. Carl Brodsky, Communist candidate from thé 24 Congressional Disttlet, Bronx, will speak under the auspices of the Amer- jean Workers’ Club at the Bronx Workers’ Cli’, 1625 Boston Ra., Frid: With St. and Vyse A (Cent demonsttation), Moisaye Olgin, candidat District. South Brooklyn. South | Upper Bronx ain speaker, 4th Congressional NA Sa | SATURDAY Fifteenth Ave, and 0th St, South Brooklyn, Speakers, J. Roberts and H. Kap- lan. Sheepéhead Bay and Jerome Aveé., Btook- lyn, Speaker, 1, Pinkson. 8 Forty-thitd St., Brooklyn. Spe: «Toffler, Seventh Avenue and 138th St. central Harlem demonstration, speakers: George #. Powers, candidate Chief Court of Appeals, Pitzwerald nnd Sklar, Avenue St, John and Fox St, Lower Bronx (Central demonstration), main speak- or, Henty Shepard, candidate for Lietits Governor of New York. Labor tinion meetings A SUNDAY Albert Glassford, candidate from the Yist Assembly District, and Gera Srepessy, candidate from the 18th Assembly Distriet, speakers at jertie at Biden ‘14th, wald Park, Bronx, Sunday, August ‘The picnic wit be under the auspices of ine are but a few of the| the joint Yorkville Units and the Young Competes Leagiit, i» What’s On— ‘The Brownsville Alteration Painters Union will hold a meeting at 1440 East New York Ave, at 8 p.m. > ae eS ‘The Bridge Plaza Workers Club will have a very important meeting at 285 Rodney Ave., Brooklyn, at 8:30 p.m, A general membership meeting of the Coney Island Workers Club will be held at 27th St. and Mermaid Ave., at 8 p. m. ‘The Romain Rolland Youth will meet at 8:30 p.m. 2700 Bronx Park Bast. w Branch, FSU, in the auditorium, Comrade Friedman il talk of his experiences in the Soviet n. ies ons. the auspices of the FSU will be held Downtown Branch, Houston and Pitt Sts. Speaker: Bershad. Brownsville, 1813 Pitkin Ave. Speaker: Marshall, Brighton Bedeh, Brighwater Court and 4th St. Speakéer:! Vortell. oe * ay eae A regtlar Meeting of Post No. 40, Workers | Bx-Servicemen’s League, will be held at 2924 W. 25th St., Coney tsiand, at 8 p.m. hee 2 A membership meeting of ‘the Interna- tional’ Workers “Club will be held at the Manhattan Lycotim, 65 East Fourth St., it 8 p. m. Bing mémbership books. ‘The Office Workers Union will have a membership méefing at Labor Temple, 242 Hast 14th St, at 7 p.m. ‘Workers Post Ex-Servicemen’s League, and Pennsylvania Avenues, Brooklyn. Steve Katovis Branch, ILD, will and Ant6-war afr meetings under the aus- pices of the FSU will be held as follows: Waterfront, 12 noon. Speaker: Marshall. Union Square, 7 p.m. Speaker: Wilson. Mee! Cae) Open air ILD meetings will be held as follows: Alfred Levy Branch, Pennsylvania and Sutter Aves., Brooklyn, at 3 p. m. Speak- ers: Findley and Riger. ‘Woodside and Sunnyside Branches, Wood- side, L. 1, at 8 p. m, Speaker Sol Dale. Ella May Branch, 1373 43rd/St., Brooklyn, 8 p.m. Speaker: Baum. FRIDAY The Joe Hill Branch, ILD wil Ihold an | open air meeting at 29th Sti and Second | Ave. at 8 p. m. Speakers: Open air anti-war meetings under the auspices of the FSU will be held as follows: Mosholu Parkway Branch, 204th St. and Perty Ave. Speaker: Miller. West Bronx Branch, 167th St. and Girard Ave. Speaker: Wison. Prospect Park Branch, Franklin and Eastern Parkway. Speakers: Marshall. Karl Marx Branch, 158th St. and Broad- way. Speaker: Leroy. Newark, N.\J. Branch, lecture on “Life in the Red Army,” at Newark Labor Ly- eum. Speaker: Morris. Bs LS A special meeting of the Bath Beach Workers Club will be held at 2273 Bath Ave, Brodklyn, at 8:30 p.m. Bam and Rigor. Comrade Kramer, just returned from the Soviet Union, will speak on “Youth and ‘HOUSE OF DEATH,’ NEW SOVIET FILM, OPENS FRIDAY One of the. darkest epochs of Russian history—the reign of Nicho- Jas I~is the background for the new Soviet filma, “House of Death,” which tells the story of the Russian suthor Dostoievski and which will have its first American showing at the Cameo Theatre this Friday. It was during the rule of Nicholas 1 that the first signs of opposition to the old serfdom appeared. The mid- dle class was rising, and with this the beginnings of a workers move- ment. These ~ conflicting forces clashed and the Czar used exile, flogging, imprisonment, censorship and every other means to suppress the révolutionary circles which car- ried on the propaganda for the new vorder, One of the most important circles of this period was the Petrashevsky group, named after its leader. The membets of this organization were young teachers, army officers, writers, without a definite program, but they all offered their individual remedies of mysticism, religion and utopian communism, Dostoievski was a mem- ber of this group, and for associating with them he was exiled to Siberia. |The film, “House of Death,” traces the activities of this group and shows the young, flery Dostoievski capittilating to the autocracy as a result of a sentence to hard labor in Siberia. Dostoievsk! {s famous, of course, for his “Crimé and Punishment” and “Brothers Karamazoff.” N, P. Chme- lioff, of the Moscow Art Theatre, plays the part of Dostoievski. The film was directed by F. M. Feodorov, famous Soviet stage producer who staged “Roar, Ohina” and “The Armoured Train,” hold} |parade from Union Square on Sept. | 10. The conference of active fighters for unemployment relief, delegates of all sorts of workers organizations and unemployed workers groups and |Mass meetings in flop houses, bread jlines and relief “and |agencies, will meet in Manhatan Lyceum, 66 East Fourth St., Monday. Unite for This! The Unemployed Council of Great- er New York proposes to all workers spective of political opinion, creed or nationality, to the employed and | unemployed, to the workers in shops, {and neighborhoods, united and de- termined action for the following de- mands: 1. Immediate appropriations to provide cash relief for all unem- ‘ployed without discrimination as to |color, nationality, citizenship, res- idence, age, sex. 2. A minimum of $10 a week cash |Telief for each family of two and |$3 additional for each dependent, One dollar a day cash relief for each |single, jobless man, woman, youth. | 3. Stoppage of evictions of the un- employed. Repeal of the eviction | law. 4. Feeding of all children of the unemployed in the schools at city ex- | condition as the above four. The city| 75 will have an outdoor meeting at’ Sutter | Pense. 5. Immediate withdrawal of Wal- ker’s wage cut order for city workers. 6, City to start public work pro- gram on workers’ dwellings, play- grounds, hospitals. 7. Armories and vacant buildings to be opened for shelter of the home- less, 8. $200,000,000 “debt service” pay- ment for the bankers to be trans- ferred to relief purposes. 9. Immediate full cash payment of | War veterans’ back pay known as the bonus. 10. Transfer of all government war funds and taxes on large in- comes and huge fortunes to provide Unemployment Insurance for all workers, | These, | come and other demands, will | before the conference, and |when adopted will be the platform jand Slogans of the bread parade. Elect Now! Workers in local unions, A. F. L., Trade Union Unity League, or un- affiliated; members™ of ex-service= men’s organizations, defense, educa- tional, sports, fraternal, insurance of other workers’ organizations, should bring this mater before their meet- lings immediately, propose endorse- ;ment of the conference, the bread parade and of these demands, and get some of the most active efficient members elected to the conference. These delegates will very likely be commissioned by the conference to head the unemployed struggle in their trade or among their fellow members from this time on. City employees who don’t like Wal- ker’s wage cut program, and unem- ployed workers wherever they con- gregate or in whatever flop house or teliet agency they are registered, should see that meetings are held and delegates elected. The conference and the bread pa- rade will be a gigantic plow to save the more than a million New York jobless from horrible misery, disease, and starvation, Education in the USSR” at the East New York Workers Clith, 524 Vermont 8t., Brooklyn, et 8:30 p. m. Admission is 16¢. Under the auspices of the YOu, . 8 8 ‘The Bridge Pleza Workers Club will have have a lecture at 285 Rodney St., Brooklyn at 8 p. m. ‘The Harlem Ptogretsive Youth Club will have a question and answer meéting at 1538 Madison Ave., second floor, at 8:30 o.m, All comrades welcome, . . ‘The Concourse Workers Club will hold an open air meeting at Walton Ave. 10th St., at-8 p. m. and Ue | Comrade Rosenberg of the Shoe Workers {dustrial Union will speak on the I. Mil- Jer and Goller strikes at 1610 Boston Rd., at 8:40 p. m., arranged by the Shoe Work- ers Center of the Bronx. All shoe workers are invited. A debate will be held at the willidms- burg Workers Center, 225 Throop Ave., Brooklyn, at 8:30 p. m. Subject: Resolved that Communism is the only solution to the problems of the American working class. All orgattizations até urged in a no- tice sent ovt by the New York State United Front Election Campaign Com- mittee, today, not to arrange any meet- ings or collection of funds which will conflict with the Election Campaign tag days for New York City, set for August 13 “ee employment | would be made by the companies, * Already Cut “Railroad workers, because they did not take action over the heads of their brotherhood officials, have been under a 10 per cent cut since February 1 of this year,” pointed out. “This cut their offi- cials took voluntarily for the work- ers, without even taking advantage of the provisions for six months’ de- lay in the federal statutes. They took this cut, although the actual earn- ings of railroad workers have been reduced enormously in roundabout ways even without an official cut. They accepted the 10 per cent cut without any provision whatsoever for the hundreds of thousands’ of railroad men who have been laid off since the crisis started. The officials pretended to believe the company heads who said that the cut would allow more men to be put to work, and swindled the railroad men into accepting the slash without any ade- quate “revolt.” But even these official and un- official wage cuts, bringing less to eat and less to wear and generally lower living standards to huge masses The big railroad owners are determ- ined, as their advance-~ publicity shows, to make the workers stand the whole burden, Foster said. In- spired publicity in the New York Times of yesterday's date says plainly: “The railroad managements now believe it is apparent that this (ten per cent) reduction will be insufficient to offset their reduced incomes. What further reduction will be sought has not been de- termined, but it is considered prob- CARL COSTER EXPELLED Carl Coster has been expelled by fhe District Committee of the Com- munist Party for irresponsibility and for using gangster methods against leading members of the Marine Workers Industrial Union. Before joining the Party, Coster showed distinct individualistic ten- dencies, but it was hoped that i the Party and in doing his work in the Marine Workers Industrial Union he would learn how to function as @ responsible worker,’ He has proven conclusively that he is unfit for mem- bership in the Communist Party and therefore has been expelled. All workers are warned against Coster. Foster | is not enough for the companies, nouncement today of the proposed wage cut, forecasts that such a plea and emphasizes that the railroad workers must demand a referendum on any cut and not permit the of- ficers of the brotherhoods to handle the matter alone. * HARTFORD, Conn., August 10—“Only immediate preparations for a strike against the cut, will prevent a new, dtastic slash in the railroad workers’ standards of living,” declared William Z. Foster, Communist no- minee for president, in his speech tonight at Foot Guard Hall, Hartford. * o able that the railroads will want wage seales at least 15 per cent lower than those prevailing before the February 1 agreement.” Officials of the railroad companies will meet tomorrow at the Bankers Club, New York, to serve formal notice of the amount of the new pay reduction on the railtoad un- ions. The officials of the unions then will begin the fake negotia- tions, but only an aroused and de- termined rank and file will prevent them from handing the companfes a new cut at once. Even if the resent- ment among the workers is so great the officials dare not do as they did already once this year, and grant the cut outright, the fight is not over. Expeet More Trickery The companies demand more than they expect to get, an elaborate gov- ernment supervised machinery of conciliation and arbitration is put in motion, and the men finally get @ “compromise” due to the “good of- fices of the government,” and take a cut which is exactly what the com- panies really expected from the first. In the case of the 10 per cent cut already this year, the companies made a gesture of demanding a fif- teen per cent cnt, and then “yielded” end “commromised” on ten per cent, so the railroad brotherhood officials, drawing $25,000 a year salaries, could pretend to have “saved” the workers something at least. Unite and Fight Foster in his speech tonight, warn- ed the railroad workers to not be fooled by this and similar trickery again, to build their rank and file organizations within the brother- hoods, in cooperation with the Trade Union Unity League, to prepare for a strike in which they, not the cf- |ficials, should lead. He called on | workers everywhere to support the |railroad workers in their fight a- jgainst the cut. He called for a big {Communist vote this year as a sharp warning to the wage cutting em- ployers and the wage cutting gov- ernment, and as a step towards a workers’ and farmers’ government in which such attacks on the workers ean not take place. 5th AVENUE [HrATRE j fway & 28th ST. TODAY, FRIDAY & SATURDAY GOGOL'S PUSSIAN MASTERPIECE TARAS BULBA ‘ris’ Cont, 9:39 a. m.—I11 p. m.—Prices 15-26. GREATEST OPPORTUNITY ¥*UOK WORKERS’ VACATION 1S NOW BEING OFFERED BY OUR TWO COOPERATIVE CAMPS Nitgedaiget na Unity This is a Proletarian Plan to serve you. $12 a Week (Organization Tax 5c) Week-end Rates: 1 Day $2.25; 2 Days $4.25; 3 Days $6.25 WEEK-END ORGANIZATION TAX 10¢ PER DAY Bunks for Home Cooking in Nitgedaiget Are All Rented Profits of both Restaurants go to and Morning Freiheit, USUAL CULTURAL AND SPORTS ACTIVITY Communist Dailies, Dally Worker at 9 a.m., 2:30 and 7 p.m. ‘ ravel By Our Own Cabs Direct to the Camps. Our Cabs Have Special Signs On Them Autos for both camps at 143 E. 103rd St. Dai Phone: LEhigh 4-21 For any information call EStabrook 8-1400 10 a.m.; Friday, Saturday, All Seats to 1PM. ‘Mon.toFri, Dr gam Me "CAM EO 2st OO” LB WAYS 5c NEIGHBO®HOOD THEATRES Siecueriesk EAST SIDE—BRONX WEDNESDAY TO FRIDAY | “RADIO PATROL” With ROBERT ARMSTRONG, LILA LEE AND ANDY DEVINE EXTRA ATTRACTIONS TADIUM CONCERTS“ PHILHARMONIC-SYMPHONY , OROH. Lewisohn Stadium, Amst. Av. & 138th ALBERT COATES, Conductor EVERY NIGHT at 8:30 —PRICES: 250, 50¢, $1.00 (Circle 7-7575)— EAST SIDE j~——“ rovay AND TOMORROW“ Epte of the Paris Commune “THE NEW BABYLON’) “Striking . . . Impressive . . . Excellent” —N. ‘ete AT JEFFERSON — “ESCAPADE” — With ANTHONY BUSHELL & SALLY BLANE ‘AT FRANKLIN—“IGLOO* Fight For Life In Frozen North Acme Theatre TRE WORKERS Lith Street and Union Square MATS. 15 Cents |} EVES. 25 Cents Except Sat., Sun., and Holidays What Are the Communist Party and Workers’ Organizations Doing to Save the “Daily Worker”? Aug. 12, Lecture, Mapleton Workers’ Club, 2006 70th St., B’klyn, N. ¥., 8:30 p.m. Aug, 12, Concett, Bast N. ¥. Workers’ Club, 52 Vermont St., B’klyn, 8:30 p.m, Jamaica, L.I., Picnic, Communist Party and Women's Council, Aug: 14, For- rast Parkway, Aug. 21, Daily Worker, District 2, Picnic and Mass Features by the Prolet- buhne, Labor Sports Union, Pioneers, Workers’ Ex-Servicemen's Leagué, Marine Workers’ Industrial Union and Russian Echoes, under the direc- tion of W. Kirsanoff. Speaker W. W. Weinstone, Editor of Daily Worker. Aug. 27, Mapleton Workers’ Club, 2006 70th St., B’klyn. Concert at 8:30 p.m. Aug. 28, Coney Island Workers’ Club, 2709 Mermaid Ave., Brooklyn. cert at 8:30 p.m. Sept. 3, Bath Beach Workers’ Club, 2709 Mermaid Ave. Con- Concert at 8:30 p.m. earner TRE AY SCT EAST NEW YORK WORKERS’ CHILDREN’S SCHOOL ENTERTAINMENT Fri., Aug. 12, 8 p.m. 962 SUTTER, B’KLYN All proceeds to save the Daily Worker All workers invited! Intern’ Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE lth FLOOR All Work Done Under Versonal Care of DR. JOSEPASON WILLIAM BELL OPTOMETRIST and OPTICIAN Special Kates to Workers and Families 106 KE. 14th St. (Room 21) Opposite Automat Tet. YOmpkins Square 6-825? ATLENTION COMRADES! Health Center Cafeteria WORKERS CENTER 50 EAST 13th STREET Patronize the Health Center Cafeteria and help the Revolutionary Movement BEST FOOD REASONABLE PRICES COHEN’ CUT RATE OPTICIANS L’S SANDWICH LUNCH 108 University Place (Just Around the Corner) Telephone Tompkins Square 6-9780-9781 Eyes Examined by Registered Op- tometrists—White Gold Rims $1.50 Shell Frames $1.00 117 ORCHARD ST., Near Delancey Dr. ZINS ‘Est. Over 27 Years Men and Women CHRONIC AILMENTS Skin, Netve and Stomach Diseases General Weakness Treated. All Methods Employed. Charges Reasonable, Free Examination Consultation, Bisod Examinations and X-Rays. 110 EAST 16th ST., N.Y.C. Bet. irving Place and Union Square Daily 9to 8 P.M. Sunday, 9 to 4 P.M. Going to Russia? Dae see er re COMRADES needing full outfits of Horsehide Leather, Sheeplined Coats, Windbreakers, Breeches, High Shoes, etc., will receive spe- cial reductions on ail their pur- chases at the Square Deal Army And Navy Store 121 Third Ave., New York 2 Doors So. of 14th St. Our Only Store, Camp Eatipment at Reduced Prices ered bee Uotofal ialeanaiion for’ ‘ladiridaile’: anki Those seeking temporary or permanent rooms and apartments in New York and those con- templating auto travel share-expense trips will find the classified columns of the “Daily” of special appeal—Let us be mutually helpful. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS 5c. A WORD el nettle