The Daily Worker Newspaper, August 22, 1932, Page 2

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wAiLY WORKER, NEW YORK, MUNUAx, AUGUST 22, 1932 ORK FURRIERS TO HOLD VICTORY PARADE IN FUR MARKET TODAY Will Return to Shops Folloing March Led by United Front Strike Ces mittee Thousands of Workers Sent Greetings of Sol- idarity t¢ NEW YORK.—Thousands of fur workers will celebrate the termination victory parade which will march through- of their victorious strike in a m out the fur market this morn! The furriers will assemble at the a.m. from which point they will mare led them through their hard fought,¢ successful strike. A band of music; the parade. Follow- ing the march the workers will re- turn to the shi Fur workers all are expected to take off to show their si fur trimmers, dressy ers from all sectio industry were urged t Trades Workers Indust greet the victor market today, The winnir called forth great ent all sections of the Greetings continue to pour in to the furriers’ section of the Needle Trades Workers Industrial from unions and workers’ organizations all over the country, Communist Party Greets Strikers. The Communist Party, District 2. sent the following message to the strikers: “Congratulations splendid victory. Your fight over New the of the furrie! your Pp once arain thet only through a unit- ed front of all workers can victories Tike this he achieved. to brild strong or7onizetion in the shons. Jeveph Zck, secretary of the Trade (Union Tnity Council of Greater New York, sent the follow- ine: | “The Trade Union Unity Council | of Gréater New York coneratulat | you wnon the victory achieved in| snite of all the treacherv of the A. F.| of L, snd the Socialist Partv. We are sure that the rank end file of the} furriers wiJl continue its militancy to | bring into line those bosses that have | not as yet recomnized the streneth | of the rank and file led by the Indus- | trial Union....” “We coneratulate you for your great achievement,” said a telegram from Post 75 of the Workers Ex- servicemen’s League. | “Together with you we vledge to| build the Needle Trades Workers In- dustrial Union and bring about the rélease of Comrade Morris Lauber.” ‘This came from Newark rabbit fur} workers, formerly members of Local 25 of the International Fur Workers. “Your tremendous victory is a Now your task p union |retail prices on these farm prooucts. » Victors strike hall, 149 W. 24th St., ai h behind the strike committee which FARM STRIKERS FIGHT POLICY OF “LEADERS” Association Heads Urge Picketers to Allow “Exceptions” SIOUX CITY, Iowa, Aug. 21—A rank and file opposition among the farm strikers here against the lead-| ers of the National Farmers’ Holiday | Association made its appearance yes-| terday, when the leaders proposed | that the farm strikers allow milk trucks to pass through the blockade which has effectively prevented any food trucks from entering the city for the past two days. The picketing of the farmers has been so effective that they won an) increase in prices for their milk and confidently expect that this rise will soon be followed by @ rise in the| prices of other farm products. } The attempted move of the leaders of the Holiday Association would seriously weaken the strike. Last Thursday the Daily Worker, in calling on the workers to support the farm strike, urged the farmers to break loose from their leaders, who were leading them into a blind alley, and set up their own commit- tees of action. Only by taking the farm strike into their own hands will the farmers be able to wage an ef- fective struggle against the market- ing monopolies, the dairy trusts and the grain elevators who have impov- erished them, the Daily Worker pointed out. Yesterday’s proposal of the Holiday leaders bears out the| Daily Worker's analysis. The city| workers must not allow these mar- keting monopolies to raise the city Hundreds of deputy sheriffs are |the drive to free the fur worker Sam- | FURRIERS RATIFY VICTORY Ben Gold, secretary of the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union, reporting at a mass meeting at Cooper Union Hall Friday on the settlement wrung from the Fur Trimming Manufacturers Association by the striking fur workers, DISTRICT LL.D. HOLD CONVENTION, Plan Stronger Fight in| Weinstein Case NEW YORK, N, Y., Aug. 21—The | New York District Convention of the | International Labor Defense opened here Saturday with a large number of delegates from the I.L.D. branches | in the district and from various | workers’ organizations. The report by M. Stern, New York | District organizer of the ILD.,| stressed the necessity of intensifying | uel Weinstein, who has been framed up on a manglaughter charge. Greetings were sent by the Con- vention to the Scottsboro boys, Tom | Mooney, Edith Berkman and Samuel Weinstein. Joseph North, editor of the LL.D. | organ, the Labor Defender, opened | his report with a reminder that the convention was being held on the eve of the fifth anniversary of the mur- der of Sacco and Vanzetti. to free the Scottsboro boys, espe cially in view of the dstructive tac. tics of the N.A.A.C.P. and other anti- | working class organizations which are trying to wrest the case from the | hands of the militant workers led by He urged an intensified campaign | § [cre Shops Settle at Wage Increases In N. Y. Furriers Strike NEW YORK.—In answer to Mr. Samucl Shore, leading strike- breaker of the Furriers Interna- tional Union, who declared yester- day in a lying statement that the furriers won nothing in their strike under the leadership of the Needle Trades Industrial Union, the Daily Worker prints below additional shops settled and the amount of wage increases won: eo 8 Pethanis Union Scale Pappas Brost $2-$5 Neureld & Weise $5 Provis & Seidman $3-$15, Sebelman Bros. M. Y. Cohen hiff, Statis & Tarzis Malter & Geller Rubenstein & Hellblum S. Wasserman & Son Cangel-Kohuth, Ine. $3 $5-$8.50 1 10 5-810 $8-59 $5-$7 8. Schwartz $5 Sasman, Gauberman Co. 33 Abramovitz 38-815 Hamilton Fur Co, $2-$10. Sandler Bros, 35-310 | Skolnick & Jasper 5 Alpern Marmelstein 5-37 Schindler Bros, $5 Baron Mfg. Co. . Kimmel Grossman & Brown 33 Abeson & Slivka $3-$10 Samuel Biess Union Scale Ellman Falkowitz & Mogels $3-310 M,N. M. & Co. 35-310 Fink & 50 |patroling the seven highways leading \into Sioux City, offering protection to farmers who want to ship their prod- jucts Into the city, but not a single farmer availed himself of the offer. great inspiration.” said a telegram from a group of millinery workers working in an open shop. Forscher & Greenberg Margolis & Sheteal the LL.D. Carpenters Local 29, A. F. of L.. said. “We congratulate your victory. “Onward to more victories,” said the message of the Furniture Work- ers Industrial Union. “Our hearty congratulations to the vietory of the furriers’ rank and file,” eeclared the Laundry Workers In- dustrial Union. “The Shoe and Leather Workers Industrial Union hails you in your Victory. Forward to greater mass | The strike movement is spreading rapidly into South Dakota, Iowa and | Nebraska. Reports from Bismarck, North Da- kota, indicate that farmers through- out the state are beginning to with- hold their wheat from the markets until wheat reaches the dollar level. litical training of workers, the lower- ing of the price of the Labor De- fender to five cents, greater activity Carl Hacker, national secretary of | Eckstein, Beriatt & Glick $5 the LL.D. reported on the national | Weiderharm Co. ood activities of the organization. He urg- pacman oan Mes ed a more wide-spread recognition | Moscowits & Tropp 95-38 | lof the fact that the International | Gorky Bros. $5 Labor Defense was primarily a mass be hee Schatman z Bd defense organization, not one of legal| ‘4: Goldin & Co. Lage E-2 <o! defense. Buchman & Slivka 310 Among the proposals advanced at | Zimmerman 4 Scheer Pao the convention were the opening of |p utschensky Shane Co. S510 more libraries and schools for the po- | Hymen & Dilless Co. $2.50-$5, |WIN STRIKES IN __ 12 DRESS SHOPS Over 300 Get Increase In Prices * NEW YORK.—As the result of mi- litant strike activity under the leader- ship of the Needle Trades workers Industrial Union, twelve dress shops |out of twenty-five which have been striking. for the past few days have settled on a basis of increases in prices for piece and week workers, |}he 40 hour week and on discharges. | The shops settled involve around 350 ;| workers, The result of the first few days activity in the dress trade show the | readiness of the dressmakers to follow }the example of the furriers to take |up the fight for union conditions, The Dress Trade Committee at its meeting Thursday night decided to |spread the drive and to involve a |larger number of workers in organi- |zational activities. It was decided to |begin an intensified campaign among | the dressmakers working in the open |shops urging them to bring their complaints to the union. Tho organizational department is- | Sued a call today for all active dress- | makers to report to the office of the junion, 131 W. 28th st., this morning jto be assigned to striking shops for picket duty. Painters Win All Demands In Jager Strike; Get Raise NEW YORK—The Jager paint shop strike, Williamsburg, has been won under the leadership of the Al- teration Painters Union. The eight- hour day and five-day week, no speed- | PUT OVER SCHEME FOR ARBITRATION Printers Officials Defy Members’ Wishes “NEW YORK.—The officials of the International Typographical Union Local No. 6 in New York (“Big Six”) succeeded in a meeting of the local yesterday afternoon in putting through a motion for arbitration of the newspaper wage scale by a vote of 336 to 135. There were only about 500 present out of the 11,000 union members in New York, and the ques- tion of arbitration has already been defeated recently on a referendum vote, and also at a union meeting, July 17. The vote of the July 17 meeting was 590 to 10. The interna- tional officials declared a vote at such a meeting as that of July 17 was “not representative of the union”, But will they do this for the meeting yesterday? Rank and file members at she meeting opposed vigorously the arbi tration proposal and demanded an- other referendum. The motion for | referendum, the chairman, President Hewson of Local 6, declared out of erder and would not even entertain an appeal against his decision. The proposal of the officials now lis to put to arbitration the employ- | jers’ demand for 20 per cent wage | cut in the newspaper scale. To fool the members they also propose to arbitrate the six hour day. The only thing that can now stop this wage. cut is more action by the} |members in the shops who are very much opposed to the wage cut. The membership in chapels should take up the question and send resolutions of protest agaihst the decision and against arbitration. The United Front Committee, com- |posed of rank and file members rep- resenting various groupings in the union, which was elected at the joint rally called Friday night by the Amalgamation Party will continue \to lead a struggle against wage cuts and against arbitration. $500 to Miners. The meeting voted to give $500 |from the treasury to the striking |miners of East Ohio and West Vir- \ginia, and to circulate lists in the {chapels for more donations. They did | this after hearing an appeal by |Charles Waters, an East Ohio miner. ‘They voted to send the money to the miners’ locals in the strike area. There will be a meeting of “Big Six” next Sunday to continue discus- sion on the book and job scale, in which employers demand 25 to 50 per cent pay cuts. TO HIT NEWARK POLICE TERROR: “NEWARK, N. J. Workers of | Newark and vicinity, massing behind the Communist Party, will make a militant attempt to smash through the police terrorism at an cgn air meeting at Charlton St. and Waverly Ave., Thursday, Aug. 25, at 7:30 p. m. if The police of Newark have viciously attempted to prevent the unity of Negro and white workers by a wave of arrests and brutal clubbings, by refusing to permit the Unemployed Council and the Communist Party to hold meetings in Negro sections of the city, and by singling out militant Negro workers for special persecution. Eighteen workers have been ar- N.Y. Workers Score German Fascism \P OLICE CARS RIDE at Mass-Meeting DQWN M ASS: MEF’ NEW YORK, — Answering the bre of the Communist Party and the German District Bureau, hundreds of \Say Only Socialists Can lew York wi ated at Get 7th Ave mass meeting in the Central Opera House last Friday which was a vigor- ous manifestation of protest against} NEV YORK—Five police radio ieee Pee in Germany and the |..75 smashed a central election cain- é . |Daign demonstratien at 137th St. and Following upon the speeches of jSeyenth Ave., Harlem, Friday night. Comrade Max Bedacht and Comrade|q militant ‘demonstration of the Erna Stans of the German Bureau | workers, demanding free specch and all workers present at the meeting |freedom of the streets, followed, in adopted a resolution pledging t0|front of the 135th St. police station. | support the fight of the German workers against fascist reaction by rallying around the Communist Pary and fighting under its leadership against wage-cuts, for social insur- ance, against imperialist war and for the defense of China and the Soviet Union. Anticipate Reichstag Dissoiution. If the Reichstag fails to vote its | confidence in the present Von Papen Cabinet, a Bavarian stateman told the Associated Press correspondent, the Government's first step will be the dissolution of Parliament. This will be followed by the election for | a new Reichstag under new electorial | restriction laws. After the election the government would present its proposal for a:new constitution providing for the estab- lishment of a Senate whose members be appointed by the President. CUBA PROTEST AT SACCO MEET Armando Graus_ In Held Incommunicado NEW YORK, N. Y¥.—Today, the fifth anniversary of the legal mur- der of Sacco and Vanzetti by the American ruling class, and the in- ternational day of struggle against capitalist terror and prosecution, will be marked by wide spread protests against the new campaign of mur- derous terror launched against the Cuban working class by Machado, dictator of Cuba. Workers’ organizations are urged by the International Labor Defense to pass resolutions: at every Sacco- Vanzetti demonstration, protesting against the murder, imprisonment and torture of thousands of militant workers in Cuba. Armando Grau, well-known leader of the Cuban workers, is still held incommunicado since his arrest over two weeks ago. It is feared that he has been mur- dered at Machado’s orders. On the basis of the raid on Grau’s home, the Machado police, who claim that they found evidence of a plan of united action between the Na- tionalists and the Communists among his papers, have killed and imprisoned hundreds of militant workers, Their bodies have been found, horribly mutilated, in the streets or in the harbor at Havana. LL.D. BRANCH BACKS CAMPAIGN NEW YORK.—The members of the German Branch, 43, of the Interna- tional Labor Defense, on the basis of the Party's stand on the defense struggles of the workers, voted at its last meeting to support the Com- munist Party and its candidates, The meeting, -at which Henry Shepard, candidate for lieutenant governor of New York, and George E. Powers, candidate for chief judge of the Court of Appeals, were to sneak, had just begun when the five police cars, loaded down with Negro policemen, swooped down and began dashing back and forth through the erewd of workers. Some of the Tam- many thugs jumped out and laid about them with their clubs. “The Socialist Party is allowed to have meetings on Seventh Avenue,” Shepard told the cops. “They're all right. They're straight with head- quarters,” the Tammany thugs an- swered. A delegation was immediately formed to go to the 135th St. police and demand the right to the streets for the candidates of the Communist Party. In this delegation were Shev- ard, Powers, George Legree, candi- date from the 19th Assembly Dis- trict, Elinor Henderson, candidate from the 21st Congressional District. Sidney Kingston, section organizer of the Communist Party, and a repre- sentative of the Workers Ex-Service- men’s League. 500 Support Delegation. More than 500 workers followed the delegation to the police station from the place of the meeting. In the po- lice station, the desk sergeant told the delegation that he could not grant them a permit, as he had re- ceived orders from Commissioner Mulrooney not to permit any Com- munist meetings on Seventh Ave. This place is reserved by the polic> for the third capitalist Party, the So- cialists. Several workers were arrested dur- ing the demonstration, one of the Henderson, a member of the deleg: tion, but the militancy of the workers forced the police. to release them again immediately. As the delegation left the police station, they were cheered by the crowd outside, which broke into sing- ing the “International”, A protest meeting was immediately arrangel and held at 134th St. and Lenox Ave. All the workers from the demonstra- tion followed and attended it, Alteration Painters Victorious at Binsky Shop in Brownsville NEW YORK.—David Binsky paint shop at 446 Kingston Ave., Browns- ville, has been forced to settle with the Alteration Painters Union after a three days’ strike. The painters win: Recognition of the union, 20 per cent increase in wages, recogni- tion of the shop committee, all hir- ing through the union, all firs= to be taken up with the shop commit- tee, equal distribution of work. up and no hiring and firing except | rested within the past several weeks, | AMTER FIGHTS ‘700 at Camp Unity among the mass organizations, par- | a thirteen of them at meetings held | ticularly the Unemployed Councils, through the sho; i | ¥ rp. commmnttivee Has een previously at this street-corn¢r in| st-vegles,” reads another telegram. | Hear Mother Mooney Urge United Fight WINGDALE, N. Y., Aug. 21. |More than 700 workers at Camp ~| Unity near here heard Mother Moo- ys |ney today urge them on to a united | struggle for the release of her son, What's On— |Tom, and the nine Scottsboro boys. Richard B. Moore and Frank Spec- |tor, of the International Labor De- entokx | fense, under whose auspices Mother slowing open-air anti-war meetings | spoke on the. necessity of a more de- Soviet Valor anit we tenn’ Friends of the! termined mass struggle to free the East Bronx, 167th and Fox Sts. Speaker: | Class war prisoners. J. Gordon. meeting contributed $106 to the fight past Gate, 27th and Mermaid Ave. Speaker: |to free Mooney and the Scottsboro West Bronx, Fordham Road and Walton | DOYS. Greetings came from the Rabbit Workers Local 58, the Millinery Unit- ed Front Rank and File Committee end all sections of the Industrial Union Workers at the | the necessty of joint activity with LN the izations, id the sta- ratus of the LL.D. a Demands Increase In | s Plan East New York Budget |Neighborhood Council | NEW YORK—A vigorous attack NEW YORK—Plans for a confer-|on the proposal of the municipal ad- ence to elect a neighborhood council | ministration of New York City, and in East New York were laid at a|Ryan, president of the Board of Edu- mittee * | neighboring blocks, representatives of ment issued yesterday by Israel Am- which met with the block committee, | ter, Communist candidate for Gov- | will canvass the district to call meet-|ernor of New York | to the conference, which will be held|there is a normal increase in the meeting of the Hinsdale Block Com- cation, to make a drastic cut in the | Committees from | school budget, was made in a state-| |ings in other blocks to elect delegates| Amter pointed out that, although | Ave. Speaker: Wilson. Bath Beach, 2ist Avenue and 86th 8t. Speaker: Harris. “Proletarian Dictatorship versus Capital- ist Democracy” will be the subject of a lecture at the United Cooperative, 472 Summer Avenue, Union City, N. at 8 Bp. m. under the auspices of the Union City Branch of the Priends of the Soviet Union. | Pinal plans for the demonstration and Parade against the Cuban terror will be| made at the conference to be held at 24) West 118th Street, at 8 p. m. All del-| egates are urged to be on time, | All members of Pogtt, Workers Ex-Ser- vicemen’s League, are asked to be at 131 West 2ist St. at 7 p. m. to take part in the Sacco-Vanzetti demonstration to be held at 8th Avenue and 4ist Street. lslwWes-tn —| The United Front’ Election Campaign | Committee asks that all collection boxes fro mlast week's tag days be brought back immediately to Room 505, 50 East 13th St. The Brownsville Branch of the W. I. R. will have an open air meeting at Hopkin- gon and Prospect Place at 8 p. m. An important meeting of the L. 0. W. T. N. Y. will be held at 50 East 13th St., 30 p. m. | | | | The East Side Unemployed Couneil will | Meet at 103 Lexington Avenue, at 8 p. m. ‘The Photo Section of the Film and Photo | Lengue will meet at 16 West 2ist Street at 8 p.m The following Sacco-Vanzetti demonstra- | ton, under the auspices of the Interna- | tlonsl Labor Defense will be held at 8| p.m | Bronx: Intervale and Wilkins Ave. Speak- | er: BIll Albertson; Arthur Avenue and 184th | Si. Speaker: Carl Winter Allerton and Holland Avenues. Speaker: B. Levine. Brooklyn: Hopkinson and Pitkin Avenues. Speaker: George Powers; Coney Island, 23rd | Strest and Mermaid ‘Ave. Speaker: Bill | Roberts Eastern Parkway and Utica Ave, | Spenker: Sarl Brodsky; 13th Avenue and | S4%d Street, Speaker: J. Hunt. | Staton Island, West Brighton, Speaker cl Dale. Portchester, Conn., Finnish Workers Club, | 42.N. Waters St. Speakers: G. D'Obartolo. Astoria, 18) and Trowbridge Avenue. Bpenker: ‘Saverino, Stelton, N. J., Modern School Auditorium, Speaker: Morgan, Carteret, N. J., August 23rd, 307 Romo- Nofsky St, Speaker: Morgan. Perth Amboy, N. J., August 24th Colum- bia Hell, 385 State St. Speaker: Morgan. New Brunswick, N. J., August 25th, Workers Home, 1 Plum St. Speaker: Morgan A meeting in commemoration of the murder of Sacco and Vanzetti will be held tomorrow at the Work- ers International Relief Children’s Camp, adjoining Camp Unity. 2,000 DENOUNCE RUEGG VERDICT NEW YORK.—Two thousand work- | ers at an election meeting of the Communist Party at Columbus Circle, Saturday night, denounced the ver- dict of the Nanking lackeys of the imperialists sentencing. Paul and Ger- trude Ruegg to life imprisonment in the Nanking dungeons. The meeting unanimously adopted a resolution to Secretary of State Stimson and the Chinese Ambassador at Washington demanding the release of the Rueggs. | | LABOR UNION MEETINGS A mass meeting of painters will be held Wednesday at 8 p. m. under the auspices of the Alteration Painters Union at 2709) Mermaid Ave., Coney Island to establish a| new local of the union. Joe Harris, city organizer, will speak. CITY ELECTION MONDAY Eighth Ave. and West 4ist St. Man- hattan, speake Sixteenth St. and Fifth Ave., Manhattan, 9.30 a. m. speakers: Moses, TUESDAY Sixth Ave. and West sth hattan, 12 noon, speaker: A. Co: Aye A. and East Fifteenth St., Manhat- d East 63rd St., Mi er: Collins, candidate 16th St., Manhattan, ishton Beach, Coney 1878 Forty-T! Brooklyn, speake George E. Powers, candidate for Chief Judge \City Hall September, 10th. Monday, August 29, at the Hinsdale Youth Center. A. statement issued by Richard| Sullivan, Communist candidate from | the 9th Congressional District, de- nouncing the brutal treatment and arrest of the rent strikers of 518-526 | Pennsylvania Ave., the arrest of three workers demanding relief at the | $15.50 @ week rate, and the miserable | $2.50 a week per family of four which | is being doled out by the Home Re-| lief Bureau, is being circulated in| the East New York neighborhoods. | The statement calls on the workers to support the demands of the Com- munist Party for immediate relief to the starving unemployed, and unem- ployment social insurance, and to take active part in the Relief March to 25 Workers Start . Second Rent Strike at 653 Britton Ave. NEW YORK, N. Y.—Twenty-five | tenants living at 653 Britton St., be-| gan a rent strike yesterday for a 15) per cent reduction in rent. The | strike is the second one to be called} by the workers within the year. The landlord refuses to keep the) agreement he made with the house! committee after the last strike. * number of school children every year, Ryan has proposed that the school budget be cut down by $7,825,000, at the expense of the children and teachers. The following demands have been put forward by the candidate of the Communist Party, to the school board and city administration: i—Immediate building of schools. 2—No cutting, but raising of the school budget, so that both the chil- dren and teachers wiil b2 properly cared for. 3—Immediate more provision of food, books, clothing and shoes for the needy children. Reduction of the salaries of all high-paid city officials to a maximum of $3,500. 5—High taxation of all corporations and incomes over $3,500. Classified YOUNG COUPLE want room in Bronx or Manhattan. Furnished or unfurnished, Write L. G., care Daily Worker. WANTED—Large room, double window. Preferable Union Square location. Write Dubow, care Daily Worker, 50 E, 13th St. SIX-ROOM APT.—Suitable for doctor or dentist. Beautiful eorner in Boro Park, 1481 58th St., Brooklyn. Helpful Information for templating auto 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- travel share-expense trips columns of the “Daily” us be mutually helpful. of the Court of Appeals, L. Golosov, jwon. A 15 per cent increase in wages has been won. Painters, decorators’ and paper hangers, bring your grievances to the Williamsburg local, 285 Rodney Street; doors open every morning at 7. Meetings every Wednesday at 8 p.m. the heart of the Negro jim-crow dis- trict. The trial of fifteen will be held at the fourth precinct police court on Wednesday, Aug. 24, where the work- jers of the vicinity will show their | militancy and spirit of struggle by |packing the courtroom in solidarity with the arrested comrades. | AMUSEMENTS Soviet Movies RUSSIA’S OUTSTANDING CIVILWAR DRAMA “CLOWN GEORGE” One of the most interesting and engrossing of with action and gripping situations ——Today—Last Times—— “CITIES AND YEARS” ever shown in America—It Teems The Worker's Mth ACME THEA A Soviet Drama 9 AM, to 2 P.M. TRE} 1S¢,..’ Sat. & Sun. SQUARE Midnite Show Sat. STREET & UNION ith Street B UEFFERSON Soe sec"Sve TODAY to TUESDAY—Two Features “MADAME RACKETEER” with GEORGE RAFT & ALISON SKIPWORTH WASHINGTON MASQUERADE” with Lionel Barrymore and Karen Morley ALBERT COATES, Conductor EVERY NIGHT at 8:80 PRICES: %5e, 50e. $1.00 (Circle 1-7575)— —MUSIC— TADIUM CONCERTS ™=—— PHILHARMONIC-SYMPHONY ORCH. Lewisohn Stadium, Amst. Av. & 138tb Ba’ WAY « 42 ST. A Sherlock Holmes Thriller “SIGN OF 4” with ARTHUR WONTNER BERT ROBERT WHEELER and WOOLSEY in “HOLD 'EM JAIL” Daily to 2 P. M. 11 P.M, to close 550 | REGULAR ADVERTISERS Cohen's (Opticians) Dental Dept., 1.W.O. || Health Center Cafeteria || Wm. Bell. Optometrist De. Schwartz John’s Restaurant (The Road”) t Cafeteria Harry Stolver Optical Co. Camps Unity, Kinderland, Nitgedaiget Lerman Bros. (Stationery) Sick and Death Benefit Fund Vegetarian Restaurant ak Workers House Avanta Farm Union Square Mimeo Supply Camp Wocolona Russian Art Shop IN THE DAILY WORKER Parkway Cafeteria Butchers Union, Local 174 Linel Cafeteria Workers Coop Colony Sol’s Lunch Santal Midy Manhattan Lyceum Sollin’s Cameo Theatre Acme Theatre Stadium Concerts Dr. A. ©. Breger fatern’l Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 1ith FLOOR AD Work Done Under Personal Care ot DR. JOSEPHSON Dr. ZINS st. Over 27 Years Men and Women CHRONIC AILMENT: Skin, Nerve a: jomach Diseases and Genera) Weakness Treated. All Modern Methods Employed. Charges Reasonable, Free Examination and Consulta Blood Examinations X-Ray 110 EAST 16th ST., N.Y.C. Bet. irving Place and Union Squa: Daily 9to S$ P.M, Sunday, 9 to 4 P.M. 1. Aug. 21, D buhne, Labor Sports Union, Marine Workers’ tion of W. Kirsanoff, Daily Worker Concert and Danee by at 1013 Tremont Ave. Sheppard. cert at 8:30 p.m, Sept 3, Bath Beach Workers’ Club, (near 177th St. Station). Aug. 28, Coney Island Workers’ Club, What Are the Communist Party and Workers’ Organizations Doing to Save the “Daily Worker”? ily Worker, District 2, Picnic and Mass Features by the Prolet- Pion: industrial Union ‘8, Workers’ Ex-Servicemen’s League, Russian Echoes, under the dir Speaker W. W. Weinstone, Editor of Daily Worker. Aug. 27, Mapleton Workers’ Club, 2006 70th St., B’klyn. Concert at 8:30 p.m. ‘Unit 5, Sec. 15, Bronx, Saturday, Aug. 27, Main speaker: Comrade , 2709 Mermaid Ave., Brooklyn, Con- 2709 Mermaid Ave. Concert at 8:30 p.m. WILLIAM BELL OPTOMETRIST and OPTICIAN peut Rates to Workers and families 106 E. 14th St. (Room 21) Opposite Automat Tel. TOmpkins Square 6-8237 ATLE {TION COMRADES! Health Center Cafeteria WORKEKS CENTER 50 EAST 13th STREET Patronize the Health Center Cafeteria and help the Revolutionary Movement BEST FOOD REASONABLE PRICES WORKERS—EAT AT THE Parkway Cafeteria 1638 PITKIN AVENUE Near Hopkinson Ave. Brooklyn, N. ¥, Phone Fomkinw Sg. 4-554 John’s Restaurant ° SPECIALTY: 'TALIAN DIS: ES A place with atm where all radicals 302 E. 12th St ere meet New York Bronx Comrades, For All Automobile Repairin, Ploase Patronize Fle S. PERFUMO BURKE GARAGE 2927 WHITE PLAINS AVE. Allerton Ave. Statin, Bronx, N.Y, Tel: OLinville 2-9104 DR. A, C. BREGER Surgeon Dentist Special rates to workers and families 200 BE, 23d St. am pia Ave, Cor. Third Ave. Grand Av., Cor. 24 New York City Astoria, L. 1. na 4U amrnaes Meet BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Cloremont Parkway. Broms

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