The Daily Worker Newspaper, August 19, 1932, Page 2

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ones, see Page iwo weeping UNION AND BOSSES ASS'N AGREE ON IMPORTANT POINTS FOR SETTLEMENT Conference Stil ie on to Conclude Agree- ment at V at Ww jage Increases Mass Meet at Cooper U nion Will Protest Mur-| der Charge Frame-up of Larber NEW agree on most of the important points Fur Strike Victories Mount to 163; More Settlements Loom NEW YORK—The following are additional fur shops settled by the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union. The victories won in the strike now amount to 1 3. We give the names of the shops and the amount of increases won, 118. Jacob Cheiken $5-813 119. Stlverman & Wolfe — 120. Kigne Bros. 121. Erenheimer 122. Lerner . Hans Bros. —— Friedberg Sol Rubin —_. Riter Bros, 3 Wittis & Spector Bros._Union |. Reiner - s $5 Union rea Union . H. Weintein, Inc. . A. Ritter Fur Co. . Deleon Fur Co. Goodman Bros. Cooperman & Greenberg - |. Turner & Brooks William Miller . Reiner & Bros., ). Bradinsky, Katz, tanton Fur Co. M. Neuman . Ratick & Perlman - . Sol Kupit - x . Wolger & Goldshick — . Eestein, Berlatt, Glick Jos. Babrow & Bros. & Shapiro. Union s $10 In ‘| | | . Hitler & Kraus. . Farberg & Goldman. . Gruber & Karp & Gingold & Papas - Fraum, Craig & Turner. $5 $0 |. Wagner, Hitler & Breckner Union scale 35 . A. B. C. Fur Co. 2 8. J. Zimmerman... . Birnbaum, Brier, 2. Key & Einstein _ Shuenfield Toc - ~ 3 LABOR UNION MEETINGS ‘The Steel and Metal Workers The Executive Board of the New York District of the Steel and Metal Workers Industrial Union (formerly the Metal Workers Industrial League) will hold a very tmpo.tant meeting at the union's new headquarters, 60 East 11th St., on Friday, August 19, 7.30 p. m. Room 222, Painters Loenls of the Alteration Painters Union | will hold their regular membership meetings 33 follows: Local 1, Bronx, 1130 Southern Boulevard, Monday, 8 p.m. Local 2, Brownsville, 1440 ast Nev York Avenue, Thursday, 8 p.m. 3, Williamsburgh, 11 Graham Avenue, 8 pm. Local 4, Downtown, nth Street, Monday, 8 p.m. | What's On— || FRIDAY— ‘The West Side Unemployed Council will have a dance and entertainment at 418 West 53rd Street, at 8 p.m, Admission is 15 cents. A general meeting of the John Reed Club will be held at the club headquarters. Big Six United Front Rally of newspaper ana job printers under the auspices of the| Amalgamation Party will be held at World| Hell, Park Row. |S Pulitzer Bldg., The Alfred Leyq Branch of the ILD will| have a social affair at 524 Vermont St.,/ Brooklyn, at 8 p. m A lecture on the Communist Election Cam- phign will be given at the Bath Beach Workers Club, 2278 Bath Avenue, Brooklyn, | at 8 p. m. | Comrade. Joe Gliet will speak on the| Conter-Olympics at the Harlem Progressive Youth Club, 1538 Madison Ave., second fl., at 8 p. m. ‘The Concourse Workers Club will hold an open air mesting at Walton Ave, and 174th Bt., Bronx, at 8 p. m. Pe Mae ‘The Steve Katovis Branch, ILD will hold their first meeting in their new permanent headquarters, 15 East Third St., at 8 p.m. The. American Workers Club will present a “Workers Symposium” at the Prospect | Workers Club, 1157 Southern Blvd., Bronx, at 8 p. m. Speakers from the Labor Sports Union, Unemployed Council, National Stu- dents League and other mass organizations will Be present. Admission is 10c. ‘The following open air meetings under 3 susploes of the F.8.U. will be held at * fiegiow Park Branch, .; speaker, Wilson. onx Branch, 167th St. and Gerard, ‘Speaker, Marshel. 158th St. and Broad- 204th St, and Bronx, Karl Marx Branch, way. Speaker, Cooper. Downtown Branch, lecture at 216 East Mth Bt. Comrade Paul Miller will speak on “Thé Political Situation in Germany.” ‘The installation of the first children’s branch of the 1.W.O. in Brighton Beach will take place at 140 Neptune Ave. 8 p.m. Classified WANTED—Large room, double window. Preferable Union Square location. Write Dubow, care Daily Worker, 50 E. 18th St. SIX-ROOM APT.—Suitable for doctor or dentist. Beautiful corner in Boro Park, M481 58th St., Brooklyn. COMRADE FLORA—A. once on your whereabouts. Pads Are. D. asks write at AY.D., 2082 |scale to toke effect as follows: YORK.—A sweeping victory loomed in the furriers strike yes- terday when representatives of the Fur Trimmers Association were forced , °¢companied by the militancy and determination of the strikers to meet in conference | {rom the surrounding section. with representatives of the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union and | of the demands of the unoin. ® The strike so completely paralyzed the trade that Association represent- atives came to the union and asked for a conference with the strikers, The conference, which; all Wednesday night, was re- 1ued yesterday end was still in cession as the Daily Worker goes to press, The following important points have at ody been sereed upon: 1. We 5 5-day week. 3. 2. The 40-hour, A minimum ware $50.60 for first class cutters. $44.00 for sec- ond class cutters. $41.89 for first class overators. $35.20 for second cless operators. $39.60 fee first class nailere. $23.90 for second class nail- $98.50 for first class finishers. $30.89 for second class finishers. 4. A minimum of one unemployed yer to be taken into each shon. Overtime work to be restricted. even during the season. In shons where all work pleces are ocennied 2 hours overtime shall be the lmit. Werkers shell be paid time end a half for this work. 6. Pav for 7 lege! helidavs. 7. Baual division of work. 8. No discrimination against Negroes. 9. Equal pav for equal work. 10. No contracting, 11. In thirtv days after the agreement is ratified by both parties a conference will be called for the establishment jof an unemployment insurance fund. Mass Meeting Today A full report of the conference | with the Association representatives |will be given at a mass meeting to be held at Cooper Union today at 4:30. Here the workers will discuss and act on the points of the agree- | ment. 3,000 Involved The present strike involves around 3,000 fur workers ®and has not only won great increases in wages for the jfurriers but has driven the A. F. of L. officials completely from the fur trimming section. Union leaders declared yesterday that the next big fight of the union will be directed against the shops of the Fur Manu- facturers Association. 2 News of the advances made by the strikers spread through the fur market like wild frie. Workers sour- red on by the news proceeded to stop off more shops. Workers Hail Strike A large number of resolutions signed by workers in the settled shops flooded the office of the un- ion. The following is typical of the number of resolutions received: “We, the workers of Newfield & Weiss, 150 W. 30th St., on strike under the leadership of the Fur Department of the Industrial Un- ion, enthusiastically accept the set- tlement made for our shop on the basis of which we receive increases ranging from $5 to $10 per week. “The negotiations carried on by the Industrial Union together with our shop committee for our de- mands and the gains won by us are convincing proof that the In- dustrial Union is fighting in the interests of the workers and is winning substantial gains which wlil raise the conditions of the workers not only in our shop but in the trade as a whole.” Protest Frame-up The mass meeting to be held in Cooper Union will also protest a- gainst the vicious frame-up against |Morris Larber, militant furrier held on a trumped up murder charge. lans for the mass defense of Lar- ber will be worked out at the meet- ing. Laber was arrested in the fur market last Friday where he was ac- tive in the strike. A charge of mur- der was placed against him Wednes- day, following the death of a pro- fessional strike-breaker who is re- ported to have been injured in the | market last week. PLANS FOR PRESS BAZAAR NEW YORK, Aug. 18.—Plans for the organization of the Annual Press Bazaar will be laid at a bazaar con- ference to be held in room 205 in the ; Workers Center, 50 E. 13th St. on August 25 at 8 p.m. The bazaar will be held on August 6, 7, 8, 9 and 10 at Madison Sq. Garden. All working class organizations are urged to send two delegates each to the conference. SUNDAY PICNIC At the Picnic at Pleasant Bay Park on Sunday, there will be no free ad- missions at the gate. A limited number of tickets has been given to the Unemployed Coun- cil for free distribution. Victory Is in n Sight for New York Fur Workers DEMANDS FROM THE RED CROSS Toined by ‘the § Starving Farmers and City Workers |. MIDDLESBORO, Ky., Aug. 18.— Unemployed miners here, the majority of them veterans of the recent heroic strike led by the National Miners | | Union, marched 18 miles to Williams- | burg, county seat of Whitley County, | jand forced the Red Cross to distrib. ute flour to them. The miners W by wre far The Red Cross has always refused ; to distribute flour to the unemployed. \Before the Unemployed Council | formed, the unemployed miners who | complained against this discrimina- ‘tion were told by the R:d Cross “to go to the Reds,” with whom the min- jers are obviously sympathetic. | The 18-mile march for relief was led by Elizabeth Baldwin, wife of | Julius Baldwin, the miner who was killed by operators’ gun thugs in front | of a Workers International Relief jStation last December. When the | miners reached Williamsburgh they | |were joined by 125 local unemployed workers. Taken back by the mili- tancy and determination of the work- ers, the Red Cross officials granted every one of their demands, includ- ling the right of a committee of min- ers to distribute the flour. More flour was promised the min- ers in a few days. After several day had elapsed and no flour had arrived, | the workers marched on the office} of the Red Cross again. The Cross officials heard of the oncom-| ing marchers and sent a truckload | ° of 200 bags of flour to meet them.| the miners for distribution. Many workers joined the Unem-| ployed Council as the result of its successful fight for immediate relief. same section that recently elected a School Committee on a Communist platform in spite of the most vicious) terror. NOTES FRIDAY. Fiftieth Street and Fifth Avenue, Brook- lyn, speaker: H. Lichtenstein. Court and Carroll Streets, speaker: G. Mann and N. Kay. Twentieth Avenue and 86th St., lyn, speaker: M. Blum. Brightwater Court and Fourth Street, Brighton Beach, speaker: B. Stallman, Brooklyn, Brook- Twentieth Avenue and ifth St. Brook- lyn, speaker: S. Licht. Seventh Ave. and 146th St., Harlem, speaker: F. Welsh, candidate 22th Assembiy | District. itt and Rivington Street, Manhattan, kers: George Gill, Frank Gillmore, Mil-| ton Andrews. Clinton Street and st Broadway, Man- hattan, 7 p. m., speaker: Sidney Maso Henry and Pike Streets, Manhattan, p. m., speaker: Belle Cazanov, Jefferson and Madison Streets, Manhat- tan, 7 p. m., speaker: Robert Jones. Madison and Montgomery Streets, hattan, 7 p. m., speaker: Harry Berg. | Clinton and Broome Streets, Manbattan, 7 p. m. speaker: Louis Schwartz. Tenth Street and Second Avenue, hattan, 7 p. m. speakers: Abrahi candidate from 14th Congressional eet | Rutgers Square, mannattan, 8 p. m.,| central demonstration, speakers: Moisaye J. Olgin, candiadte 2th Congressional D: trict; Joseph Porper, candidate 12th atorial District Harry Beilinson, candi late) ith Assembly District. Claremont Parkway and Washington Av Bronx, central demonstration, speaker, Carl Brodsky, candidate from 23rd Congressional District. | Lenox and 142nd St., Harlem, 7 p. m. Man- Seventh Ave. and 187th St. tral demonsrtation, speaker: Powers, candidate for Chief Court of Appeals, didate from the 20th Congressional Dis-) trict and John Hayes. Frank Ibanez will speak on “The Terror in Cuba,” at a meeting of the Checkers Club, York Avenue and 79th Street. Madison and 104th St., Harlem, speaker: | Fisher. Eighth Ave. and 137th St., Harlem, central | demonstration, speaker: George E. Powers, | date for Chief Judge of the Court of | Harlem, cen- George judge of tl th Street and Avenue A. First Avente and 2ith Street, ALUBDAL. Third Avnue and Warren Street, Brook- lyn, central demonstration, main speak: Henry Shepard, candidate for Lieutena: Governor, & p. m. Court and Carrol Street, Brooklyn, pre- liminary meeting 7 p. m., speaker: N. Haines. Wycoft and Hoyt Streets, Brooklyn, pre- liminary meeting 7 p. m., speaker: J. Rob- and Jerome A. Avenue, Teffler. ith Street, Coney mandattan, speakers, , candidate 6th Assembly Porper, candidate 12th ict Gillmore, Davidson and Seventh St. and Avenue B, speakers: Nicholas Tarney, and Maria Somers, Warren St. and Third Ave., Brooklyn, centrat demonstration, speakers, Henry Shepard, candidate for Lieutenant-Governor. and 139th St., Bronx, : George E, te for Chief Judge of the| Is. Manhattan, Henry Haskell buhne, tion of W. Kirsanoff. 2. Aug. 27, Mapleton Workers’ Club, 3. Daily Worker Concert and Dunce by at 1013 Tremont Ave. Sheppard. cert at 8:30 p.m. 5. Sept 3, Bath Beach Workers’ Club, What Are the Communist Party and Workers’ Organizations Doing to Save the “Daily Worker”? | 1, Aug. 21, Daily Worker, District 2, Picnic and Mass Features by the Prolet- Labor Sports Union, Pioneers, Marine Workers’ Industriel Union and Russian Echoes, under the direc- Speaker W. W. Weinstone, Editor of Datly Worker 2006 Toth St., (near 177th St. Station). 4. Aug. 28, Coney Island Workers’ Club, 2709 Mermaid Ave., Brooklyn. Workers’ Ex-Servicemen's League, B'klyn. Unit 5, Sec. 15, Bronx, Saturday, Aug. 27, Main speaker: Comrade Concert at 8:30 p.m. Con- 2709 Mermaid Ave. Concert at 8:30 p.m. Baa This, too, was placed in the hands of |the sheriff and disarmed him. turned back the trucks. Tae. ad ts The relief march took place in the ly escaped. betr CITY ELECTION le Man- |- m Markoff, | CO Lawrence Campbell, can-| cylvai WORKERS WIN ALL ® Born Three Years Ago and Already Starving | PRINTERS MEET (Above)—A 3-year old-son of a Las Angeles working class famlly ferced to shine shoes to earn a few pennies for bread. Farm Strike Sheriff Farmers Block Roads In Iowa, Nebraska and Spreads; Is Disarmed South Dakota; Fight Milk Trust Facing Ruin, Demand Price for Produce That | Will Pay for Raising It SIOUX CITY, Towa, Aug. 18—The farm strike spread from Towa into | City is completely hemmed in, Militancy of picketing is increasing, ickets at Stevens, S. D., stopped a fleet of five trucks loaded with farm | 100 p luce which he and his deputies re escorting to Sioux City. The immediately rushed They farmers On the Correctionvitle Road in shed through the who narrow- ver, d of farm In rucks have bee: ers, They are fighting ist ruin and exploita- tion. The strike is really two strikes, by dairy farmers against ex- general bee n by the mils trust. ar the 2 declared by the Holiday sociation, (See on Paze 1). Comrade Louis Cohen Is Dead NEW YORK.—A mass funeral is being arranged for by the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union for Comrade Louis Cohen who died | of pneumonia after a few days of illness in the Lebagen hospital. The funeral will take place today at 2 o'clock. It will begin at the hospital and will pass the office of the union, 131 W. 28th St., at 12:30, tonight, (Friday night) include the fol- lowing: Carl Brodsky, candidate from the 23rd gressional District, at Claremont Park- nd Washington Avenue, the upper | x demonstration. Mois . Olgin, editor of the Morning | Freiheit and candidate jn the 24th Con-! Gressional District, at the lower Manhattan demonstration in Rutgers Square. The Harlem central demonstration, way at | 137th Street and 7th Avenue, addressed by | George E. s, candidate for Chief | Judge of the Court of Appeals. anhattan demonstration in speakers: Kingston, D, Hill. | central demonstrations will be Sith St and 5th Ave., Harlem, 7 p, m.{held in Brownsville, South Brooklyn, and speakers; Henry Shepard, candidate for|Lower Bronx. In South Brooklyn, Henry | Lieutenant-Governar, and M. Taub. |Shepard, candidate for Lieutenant-Governor Lenox A rlem, 7p. m.| cf New York, will speak at Warren Street speakers: Tarmon and Richard Cozigan. Eighth Ave. , Harlem, demonstration, George m. speakers: L. Landau and William| =. Pow candidate for Chief Judge of Fitzgerald. the Court o fAppeals, will speak at 139th Street and St. Anne Avenue. Richard Sullivan, candidate from the 9th | Congressional District, will speak at Penn- and Sutetr Avenues, in the Browns~ ville demonstration, with | |southeeastern South Dakota and northeastern Nebraska today, and Sioux Sheriff Slocum fired a shot when Bakers in Jamaica Strike; Relief is Forced by Council | JAMAICA, N. Y¥—The drive for| the organization of the Food Workers Industrial Union in Jamaica, has/ begun with a strike in the Capitol) Bakery where workers are putting in from 14 to 16 hours a day in a cellar with no ventilation at all. 6S eae Unemployed Council Gets Relief JAMAICA, N. Y.—The local Unem- |ployed Council won immediate relief | Ave, Mrs. Koster, with two children | and no means for support was denied relief at the P. S. 95 Emergency Re- lief Station because she has not lived in New York for 2 years, The action of the Council won.$10.a food ticket, and recommendation for a job. The Unemployed Council holds its regular meeting on Monday nights at | 109-26 Union Hall St. BANK DEPOSITORS CONFERENCE ON AUG. 25 NEW YORK, N. Y—A Bank of United States depositors’ conference is to be held Thursday, Aug. 25, in |the Hias Building, 425 Lafayette 'Street. \“CLOWN GEORGE”, NEW SOVIET FILM, OPENS AT ACME SUNDAY “Clown George”, the latest Soviet \film to reach these shores, will have jits American premiere at the Acme | Theatre this Sunday. This is the first jof five Soviet films which the Acme | has contracted with Amkino for ini- | |tial showing in America, The story deals with the struggle ' of the Red Army against the whites | in the Civil War which took place in |the Ukraine. It is a gripping tale of | |the days when not only the White | jAtmatee, but the foreign invaders, overran the country and laid waste to the Ukraine. Here is a picture of | action and revolution. Those who} have seen the film in its special showing claim that “Clown George” is one of the most interesting and engrossing movies ever shown in America, Helpful Information for will find the classified of special appeal—Let Individuals and Groups Those seeking temporary or permanent rooms and apartments in New York and those con- templating auto travel share-expense trips columns of the “Daily” us be mutually helpful. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS 5c. A WORD lfor Mrs. Koster of 110-04 New York | Rosco Ates and Edgar Kennedy, will TO FIGHT CUTS | | United Front Tonight | Against Arbitration NEW YORK.—Tonight, at the call jof the Amalgamation Party, both newspaper and job men of Typo- |gtaphical Union No. 6 will meet to |form a united front to fight arbitra- | ton of wages and to win the union's |demand for a shorter work week without reduction of wages. The meeting will be at 8 p.m. in the Pulitzer Building, World Assembly Hall. All union members are invited to attend. Sunday is the day of the union meeting, and there will b2 a report |and vote on the newspaper scale. ;There is a feeling among the rank and file of the union that the offi- cials will try again to force arbitra- tion on them. The publishers are} demanding a 20 per cent cut. 50 Per Cent Cut The next Snuday there will be another meeting of the union, a con- |tinuation of the discussion of the |book and job scale, The Printers League (employers) asks reductions: |of wages amount’z to 25 to 50 per cent. The emp¢ ers want to make a new classification of job printers of men who break up type and dis- tribute it. This group would be cut to $30 a week, a reduction of 50 per cent, with the employer retaining the privilege of using the low paid men on other work, and using still lower paid office boys on the break- ing up- One Scale! The Amalgamation Party is on rec- ord for one sca’¢ for newspaper and job men, and for a united front of the rank and file to win the union's proposed newspaper scale as adopted at the July 17 meeting this year, and for no arbitration. “SIGN OF FOUR” AT THE CAMEO TODAY “Sign of Four”, a Sherlock Holmes | thriller featuring Arthur Wontner, opens at the Cameo Theatre today. The picture was produced by Basil Dean, noted English stage director. The cast also includes Ian Hunter and Isla Bevan. Wontner was seen here on the stage in “The Captive”, in “The Mariners”. “Hold ’Em Jail,’ with Bert Wheeler, Robert Woolsey, Edna May Oliver, be presented at the Mayfair Theatre today. It is an RKO-Radio picture, directed by Norman Taurog. Amusements BoWAY a 42°ST. with Arthur Wonmer BERT "ROBERT WHEELER and WOOLSEY in “HOLD ’EM JAIL” Daily to @ P. M. 35¢ 11 P. M, to close bie y—" TOMORROW and SATURDAY =" “CITIES AND YEARS” SOVIET DRAMA worxers Acme Theatre 1th Street and Union Square —-mMuUSsIC— ‘| Call for Signature Drive Shock Troops NEW YORK.—A call fer shovk- treops to collect signatures on the outskirts cf New York, where local | |Commutist candidates are in danget | of nto going on the ballot, wes issued today by the United Front Election Cempaign Committee. “Certain sections of New York, near the city, have shown great weakness in obtaining the signatures | necessary to put the Iocal candidates on the ballot,” the statement said. “It is necessary, for this purpose, for shock troops to be organized im- mediately to collect these signatures. Workers and sympathizers who wish | to voiunteer for this vital werk are urged to report immediately to Room | 505, 50 East’ 13th Street, for instruc- tions,” Westchester Jobless Fight On; Demanding | Release ‘of Prisoners | YONKERS, N. Y., August 17. Yonkers and White Plains workers and jobless are planning new strugg- les for unemployment relief without discrimination, for the right to meet, and for release of arrested jobless Jeaders. They do this while two workers still lie in the General Hos- pital after being beaten up in the dark by police, twice, once in the patrol wagon, They were arrested at the demonstration for the right to meet in the streets, Wednesday, Aug. 3. One has internal injuries, and the other has 37 welts across the ly. Their demands were for cash relief in working class neighborhoods, in- stead of the tainted canned goods jobless workers get as payment for their work for the city. And, especi- ally in the Seventh Ward, many Ital- ian workers are discriminated against and get nothing. Yonkers Unemployed Council, I. Ca- puani ,and /Thomasselli Sebastiano are serving 30 day sentences each in Westchester for the jobless. ‘COPS CLUB FOOD WORKERS INN. Y. |\Workers Demonstrate {} Against Injunction NEW YORK.—Police viciously ate tacked a demonstration of workers | yesterday who were protesting against the injunction which the A. F. of L, local and the bosses had got ten out against the Food Workers In- dustrial Union in an attempt to break the strike at the Brunswick Cafeteria at 237 W. 37th St. One worker, Garcia, who was cracked on the head by a cop's club required several stitches in his scalp, The Brunswick was a 100 per cent union shop for the past three years signed up with the Food Workers’ Industrial Union. The bosses, backed | by the association entered into a con- spiracy with the officials of Local 302 A. F. of L, The 13 workers were lock- ed out and the cafeteria re-opened with A. F. of L signs in the window. Only four A. F. of L. workers out of a crew of 13 or 15 who are non-union are employed Under the control of the Food Workers’ Industrial Union +“ every worker was a union member and was protected on the job by the union, | As usual, the A. F. of L. officials Pe and the bosses went: to the notorious injunction issuing Judge Black and obtained one of the most vicious strike-beaking injunctions against the Food Workers’ Industrial Union after it turned the lock-out into a strike, The demonstrations against the in- Junction and the strike-breaking ac- tions of the A. F. of L. is receiving the support of the workers in the garment center among whom are many A, F, of L, members. Against Imperialist War; for the defense of the Chinese people and of the Soviet Union. Organizations Are Already Preparing for the SIXTH ANNUAL Daily Worker Morning Freiheit Young Worker Bazaar Madison Square Garden New York THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY MONDAY October 6, 7, 8, 9 and 10 Collect articles and greet- ings and send it immediately to the Bazaar Headquarters 50 East 13th St. New York (6th floor) TADIUM CONCERTS==—=—= PHILHARMONIC-SYMPHONY ORCH. Lewisohn Stadium, Amst, Av. & 138th ALBERT COATES. Conductor EVERY NIGHT at 8:30 PRICES: 25e, 50e, $1.00 (Circle 1-7575)— PERTH AMBOY, N. J. Perth Amboy, Section 2 PICNIC | Sunday, Aug. 21, 1932) at NATIONAL PARK On LINCOLN HIGHWAY, METUCHEN, N. J. (Between Pines and Stelton Rd.) GOOD DANCING — GOOD MUSIC — Sports—Singing—Refreshments ALL WORKERS WELCOME TICKETS IN ADVANCE—25 cents 4 Pioneer Play “VOTE COMMUNIST” LABOR SPORTS UNION| RUSSIAN ECHOES Baseball Game Directed by W. Kirsanoft | Soccer Game MASS CHORUS Mass Drill Russian Workers Singing PROLET BUEHNE ree Station Daily, qorker PICNIC AUGUST 21st, 1932 Pleasant Bay Park Movies of the Pienic Will Be Shown at the Acme Theatre Beginning Monday Workers Ex-Servicemen’s League Recruiting HUGE GALA PROGRAM WM. W. WEINSTONE, Main Speaker squad ¢e—G.LVD LV SLAMOLL 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 EAT AT THE ROYAL CAFETERIA 827 BROADWAY Between 12th & 13th Sts.) Royal Dishes for the Proletariat OUR WORKERS MEMBERS OF F.W.LU. MANHATTAN OPTICAL CO. EYES EXAMINED BY REGISTERED OPTOMETRISTS White Gold Frames______$1.50 Shell Frames 1.00 122 HESTER STREET (mear Chrystie St.)Tel: Orchard 4-0230 Intern’) Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 15th FLOOR AD Work Done Under Persons! Care et DR. JOSEPHSON 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. ZINS Est. Over 27 Years Men and Women CHRONIC AILMENTS Skin, Nerve and Stomach Diseasgs and Genera} Weakness Treated. All Modern Methods Employed. Ch: Reasonable. Free Examination and Consultation. Blood Examinations and X-Rays. 110 EAST 16th ST., N.Y.C. Bet. Irving Place and Union Square Daily 9 to 8 P.M. Sunday, 9 to 4 P.M. Comrades, For All Automobile Repairing Please Patronize $. PERFUMO BURKE GARAGE 2927 WHITE PLAINS AVE. Allerton Ave. Station, Bronx, N.Y. . Tel: OLinville 2-9104 Bunks for Home Cooking in GREATEST OPPORTUNITY FUK WORKERS’ NOW BEING OFFERED BY OUR TWO COOPERATIVE CAMPS Nitgedaiget 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 10c PER DAY VACATION 1S and Unity Nitgedaiget Are All Rented Profits of both Restaurants go to and Morning Freiheit. 2:30 and 7 p.m. Phone: LE} USUAL CULTURAL AND SPORTS ACTIVITY ‘‘ravel By Our Own Cabs Direct to the Camps. Our Cabs Have Special Signs On Them sai for both camps at 113 E, 103rd St. it 9 For any information call EStabrook 8-1400 Communist Dailies, Daily Worker Daily at 10 a.m.; Friday, high 4-2382

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