The Daily Worker Newspaper, August 23, 1932, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

ee DAILY WORKER, N Farm Strikers Stop Two Trains to Sioux City; Ready to Picket Omaha Leaders Persuade Them to Let Carloads of) Produce Go On; Farmers Fight Compromise Mayor Urges Conference to Collect Taxes; | Farmers Must Resist Tax Sales | SIOUX CITY, Ia, Aug. 22—Farm strike pickets have now blocked, for the last 24 hours, all trucks with farm products from entering this | city. Yesterday they stopped two trains with cars loaded with live stock and milk, Yesterday also, 1,000 farmers meeting at Dunlop, Ia, voted to join the strike'and to picket roads leading fo Omaha and Council Bluffs. + ——————--=--—®Farmers meeting in Red Oak and 47 LANCASHIRE [seece sara a | Two workers were killed and one is in the hospital in a serious condi- tion when a crane fell on a Tenth is trying to saddle the blame on the workers, Film and Photo League shows the wreckage. WHERE WORKERS WERE MILLS ON STRIKE the state capitol. More Coming Out In Spite of Misleaders MANCHESTER, England, Aug. 22. increase in the Lancashire stri pected to velop Saturday. So far, according to capitalist press reports, 26 mills at Preston are stopped entirely and four more badly crippled. Only three | in the whole town of Burnley are try- ing to run, five others are struck Pickets and scabs ¢lashed here. Only & dozen or so turned up to work Fri- day morning at ten mills at Hasling-| den. The Horockses and Crewdses & Co. mills at Bolton are crippled. —A great The reactionary leaders ate trying to delay strike action, hoping to put over a sell-out agreement first. But the rank and file is streaming out on strike, influenced by the National Minority Movement, which is the Jeft-wing trade union center in Eng- land, Tenhunen To Be Tried In Finland at the Instigation of the U. S. | NEW YORK, Aug. 22.—The trial of Matti Tenhunen, American worker arrested at the instigation of the American government by the fascist Finnish authorities, will be held at Abo, Finland, before the end of Au- gust, according to word received to- | d by the International Labor De- tc American State Department, In iswer to a demand by the Inter- national Labor Defense that an in- quiry be made into the part played by the American consulate in Hel- singfors in instigating Tenhunen’s ar- rest, has refused to reveal on what eharge Tenhunen is held, and has| whrown a smoke-screen over its ac-| iivities in this connection by vag statements about “Communist activi jes” ang statements that Tenhunen is being well treated and will have a egal counsel at his trial. | | rurspay— The Yom Mooney Branch of the LL.D. ean pen air meeting at Union 8q., t Apm. Post No. 2% Wotkers’ Ex-Servicemen’s ceague, members are requestéd to call at equart é in preparation for open air tinge k meeting under the auspices Hariem 1 gernational Branch, $ 13st St. and Lenox Ave. nib hea |milk.’ They also let this train go on, | 8n agreement covering 5,000,000 bush- |Chamber and editor of the socialist | Sunday at |“Sentinelle.” Trying to cover up his | Theatre. Meanwhile the conservative leaders of the dairy farmers are trying to get the rank and file to\accept the compromise agreement they made Friday with the milk trust, for pay- ment of $1.80 per hundred pounds of milk. The farmers demand $2.17, and are so far continuing their pick- eting of milk trucks. Vacillate Too Much The trains stopped were at Mo- ville, Ia., and Jefferson, S. D. Both were headed for Sioux City. The Moville train had eleven cars loaded | with stock. Two hundred farmers stopped it with red lanterns, but let | it go on afterwards due to advise of their leaders. Fifty farmers waving | red lanterns stopped the Jefferson train, and found cars loaded with) 2 Workers Crushed to Death on 10th Ave. Construction Job NEW YORK—Two workers lost their lives when a steel crane on a construction job at 19th Street and 10th Avenue toppled over yesterday. | A third worker was injured and | rushed to a hospital. | Workers who saw the accident said that the crane fell due to over- loading and intense speed-up. Following the death of the work- ers, police arrived and proceeded to arrest workers on the job who es- caped with their lives. It is re- ported that.the Taylor Fischer Steel | Construction Co. is attempting to fasten the responsibility for the workers’ deaths on the workers who were arrested. STAGE-SCREEN By S. Brody (Workers Film and Photo League) after a few minutes. | Meanwhile news arrives of 400| farmers in Lewiston, Idaho, signing | els of wheat, not to sell within 60 days less than 75 cents per bushel. Mayor W. O. Hays of Sioux City has urged the calling of a conference of mid-west governors to discuss tac- tics against the strikers. He admits that “thousands of farmers through- | Nothing would please me more | out the farming region will be un-|than to grab a half dozen of our| e year,” and | leading bourgeois movie critics by That oaly’ achionls will tot te-cpen |thelt eare and lead them into the this fall.” He is afraid that “the |Acme Theatre this coming week. For strike movement will spread lke a| Years they have been prattling about fire over the farming area.” jthe “gloomy” and “depressing” Sov- The strike is led by the Farmers |let cinema. Next to the damning Holiday Association. The militant |#ecusation of propaganda they have United Farmers League, giving sup- |never been able to think of anything port to the strike, at the same time |®S squelching and unforgivable as the urges a strike against the high taxes, |@lleged lack of “comedy relief.” You and mass protest against any at-|know: no cynical references to the tempt to sell property for unpaid |Mother-in-law, no gags, no sidesplit- tea, ting bedroom situations, and so on. 7. Some of these gentlemen did concede some humour to films like “The Answers Attack Girl With Thr Band Box,” and Anti-War Meet On nu-War mee ciles like Laurel and Hardy, a dim- i ao | witted Charlie Chase or a good old : souse like Marie Dressler and lay Romain Rolland Scores | 7 : |“Three Comrades And One Inven- lis not their meat, Give them leg- off this politics! the Splitters |tion,” but revolutionary social satire | maniaes like Harpo, hopeless imbe- | |cern the millions of workers and |farmers who frequent America’s movichouses every day. NEW YORK.—Romain Rolland.| { can’t wait to read what these | famous French writer, has delivered | “cash-and-carry” scribblers will have @ smashing answer to the attack on /t9 say about “Clown George,” the the World Congress by the Swiss so- | Soviet film which will have its first cialist, Graber, a deputy of the Swiss| american showing beginning this the Union Square Acme Not that their opinions can support of imperialist war, Graber | possibly have any value in them- alleged that the Congress was &/selves, But it is safe to venture the “Communist affair.” He accused the] assertion that many more workers Communists and “all those who sup-|can afford to read reviews than can port their miserabie undertaking” of|see the films themselves nowadays. committing “a crime against the | And thése reviewers will not hesitate working class.” to write anything in step with the In his answer, which is published |{7tentfons of American imperialism. in “L'Humanite,” Romain Rolland re- | (The National Board of Review Mag- | ve ; azine has endorsed “Forgotten Com- jects indignantly Graber'’s attempt to mandments, discredit the international congress |™2! the vicious anti-Soviet inst war and hands back the lat-/|{il™, as a “highly entertaining tars acousation, Me dactates imac (titi. fit for family audience”) thos who attempt to split the working | TH¢v must be exposod as decisively It just doesn’t con. | — KILLED Avenue constructionjob. The company Photo taken yesterday by ORGANIZE UNION AT HIGH POINT Independent Group; | | Bradley As Leader HIGH POINT, N. C., Aug. 22—A/} |local independent union called the| |“Industrial Workers Association of | | High Point” has been organized, fol- | | lowing the strike of 6,000 hosiery | | workers hefé last month. The union| was not formed by mass meetings, but at a conference of men from} various departments of the mills. | | D. V. Bradley was made president and placed on a salary, and the other | | salaried full time official is J. J. Thomason, secretary-treasurer. Other jofficers are: Leroy Summey of the {Triangle Mill, first vice-president; |W. S. Stokes of Highland cotton mill, | second vice-president; and J. O. House, of Harris-Covington mill, third vice-president. Bradley claims 3,000 members. | Bradley was the elected chairman of |the strike committee last month. He | allowed himself to be used as a |strike breaking force by shrewd jagents of the employers. One of his | demands of the jobless, and his split- |employed textile workers away from | the struggle of the mill workers, SHOE WORKERS OUST FOREMAN Had Attacked Shop| Committee Leader NEW YORK—Workers of the Oar- ;men Shoe Shop forced the removal of a foreman, Mr. Cohen who ate | tacked Alex Rafael, chairman of the shop committee, with a hammer. After the firm had agreed to re- cognize the shop committee the chair- man was called into the office and |while on his way was attacked by Cohen who hit him‘on the head with a hammer. The chairman was taken to the hospital in a critical condition, Whereupon the workers immediate- |ly stopped work, called a meeting and |demanded that the foreman be re-~ moved from the shop immediately, Following a lengthy discussion be- tween the firm and the shop com- mittee the following was agreed up- lon; that Cohen shall be removed as foreman and be given ordinary work \until Alex Rafael, the chairman, re- turns to the shops. If Rafael de- mands that the foreman be removed from the shop, the demand shall be jers, goods Department ‘Trades Workers which is now conducting an organi- zational drive among the knitgoods workers. cepted the settlement of the strike committee and unanimously décided to join the union. the workers employed in Harlem and in New York will be held Tuesday, jmistakes was refusal to consider the | Aug. 28, right after work, at 6:30 p.m., at 131 West 28th Street, where a | ting of the very large number of un-| detailed report about the strike and settlement will be given. ahd sympathizers are asked to come. DRESSMAKERS TO conditions in the shops, DAY, AUGUST 23, 1932 Does Roosevelt’s “Forgotten Man” Also Include Depositor? Party spokesmen are are now intent on staging a sham battle with Roose- velit over who should “regulate” Wall Si. Representative Snell Republican leader in the Hous2 has issued-a pub- lic challenge to Roosevelt asking why he did not during his years in office as governor of New York, |‘regulate” Wall Strect under state | 16th laws. Snell also jibes at the “forgotten man” slogan of Roosevelt, and asks him whether he has not himself for- gotten the 400,000 depositors of the Bank of United States, which went broke after being carried along for months in an unsound: condition by the New York State bank examin- WIN STRIKE AT SPORTWEAR SHOP Workers Get 10 to 20 Per Cent Increase NEW YORK.—Aster one week of militant struggle, the strike of the Palace Sportwear at 275 7th Avenue, New York City, was settled. ing conditions: Recognition of Shop and Price Committees; Recognition of the Union; No discrimination; No discharges; 44-hour week; ‘The strike was led by the Knit- | of the Needle Industrial Union, | All workers enthusiastically ac- A section membership meeting of | Members PLAN STRUGGLE Meet on Wed. Furriers Set Good Example NEW YORK—To mobilize the The | workers went back under the follow- | ‘CIGAR WORKER | JuanMontero Arrested In Philadelphia PHILADELPHIA, Pa.—Juan Mon- tero, a lead2r among the tobacco | workers, was seized by detectives last | Thursday as he was working on his | job at the Montero cigar factory, St. and Susquehanna ve. |Since that time he has ben held in- communicado, and it took-the Inter- national Labor Defense some time to |find where he was. located in New Jersey, where he is migration authorities, on the ground) that he is a “Communist.” Montero has worked all his life as a tobacco worker. It is for his | activities on behalf of his fellow- workers that the bosses are holding him in jail. Committees have been formed by tobacco workers in Phila- delphia and New York \lease, Open-air meztings will jheld in both cities. The f. L- D. is also pushing its fight in the courts for Montero. Meanwhile, all workers and workers’ mass organizations are jurged to wire or write Secretary of |Labor Doak, Department of Labor, Washington, demanding the release of Juan Montero. Budget Director Eager to Slash Employes NEW YORK. — Budget Director Charles H. Kohler in a statement Sunday called for abolition of the civil service provisions, written into the law, which hinders Tammany from cutting the wages of city em- ployees. Kohler lamented that the firemen, teachers and other workers had refused to cut their wages a month’s pay next year as Walker ordered them to do, “voluntarily.” And in many cases the pay of these workers is fixed by law, and the law has to be changéd before the Tam- many administration can arbitrarily slash it. Kohler says: “Legislation must now be obtained to remove the coercive restrictions now imposed upon the city authorities in managing the city’s business.” He does not mention cutting the Mayor's $40,000 & year salary. Meet Friday Night to Force Thru Righet to Streets NEW YORK—Notice was served on Police Commissioner Mulrooney dressmakers of New York for strug-| yesterday that an election campaign gle for increased wages and union the Left Wing Group of Local 202 of the In- ternational Ladies Garment Workers Union announced today that a mass meeting would be held at Bryant Hall, Sixth Ave. and 4ist St., Wed- tional plans will be worked out. nesday after work, where organiza- “The conditions in the union shops are reaching a level below the condi- tions of the worst open shops,” said the call for the meeting. “Hauchman sits complacently at his desk telling the workers who come with their complaints that they are working for starvation wages and that the union can do nothing for them. “It is a crime against ourselves and class in the face of the common dan-|&5, the cesspools of Hollywood they ee erg og as ger, imperialist war, are those Who | Cate S erautleaiaty sesiieh tar 2 rEbNESDAY— commit a crime against the working | E yo “alee era 1. | Ohne, . ® | gloomy matter to capitalist crit xy of the Youtg Communist League, Brom | 04, jthen “Clown George” will be gloo ection, will be held at 569 Prospect Ave., Romain Rolland declares that he is/to them despite its almost clownish t 8 pm well aware that not Graber, but the |satire. The victorious Soviet work. Secretariat of the Second (Labor and ingclass can laugh without being ialist) International is the source | nical, it can indulge in a little pathos of the attack after he, Romain Rol-| without crying out in despair, In . land, had been present at the nego- | “Clown George” it has blended the Branch of the LUD. will ‘cations between Henri Bafbusse and |two in a way that makes this film =< bd drich Adler. Romain Rolland | unique among Soviet productions we ares that he is absolutely in have seén in América. A simple story srsement with Barbusse and that | about George, the professional clown e international congress against) who as a member of the Ukrainian erialist war is not a congress of Red Army during the civil war per- any one party, but {s and will remain | forms an extraordinary act of re- an attempt to unite all those willing! volutionary heroism despite his light- to fight against the danger of war, | headedness and gay horseplay while whilss not prejudicing the organiza-/| stationed in the woods as a clerk in nal independence of the tactics of |the supply station. George the Clown r is killed during a clash with the Whites during which ‘he bolsters the morale of the Red soldiers by im- personatiny the dead commander | Without who:n they cannot advan | There is no time to lose, no tears to shed—even in death. The class ‘The Executive Commit: gue of the WI i Mist st of the Film ana at 8 p.m necting of painters will be ain Rolland points out that) rcss will certainly not per-} it itself to be dominated by any Barbers , One group, whether that group is the A special be ny of the Socialist International (Romain Rol- cit Dress ie will be held Thurs- rar | Ay at 8:90 pam, at 00 B, s9th adds that at first i¢ wis ob- | snaries must be driven out, “For : viously the intention of the Second |°"¢ml i Thternational to make an attempt to| Sars, fold, high your standards! It 1s ;/ Capture the congress and dominate | pp, ne er é ie story is not fictitious. is Droceedings) or the Communist | sanpted from a real incident of the will speak Pai Leeels of the Al il hold their reg sfollows: seal 1, Bronx, ters International, 1180 Southern Bivd., Mon- our families to permit this situation to go on. We must not permit the few weeks season to go by without an organized struggle for better condi- tions. Now is the time for action, The | granted, | eee eee The strikes at the Princely Slip-| per and the F:v> Star Shop have now | meeting will be held Friday night at |8 o'clock, on the 135th St. and Sev- enth Ave. corner, where his police broke up a meeting last Friday night. The letter to Mulrooney denounces the vicious discrimination which per- mits every sort of meeting on Sev- enth Ave. except Communist election meetings, and affords special protec- tion to Socialist Party meetings, through a Socialist-Tammany agree- ment, and demands the right for Communist candidates to speak on every street in the city. The letter was sent to Mulrooney |today by Henry Shepard, Communist candidate for Lieutenant-goyernor of New York, and George E. Powers, | candidate for Chief Judge of the Court of Appeals. These two candi- dates were the two main speakers at | last Friday's meeting, which was | broken by police clubs as soon as it began. VOTE COMMUNIST reached the seventh week. The strike| committees reported that financial} upport is very urgent and requests | jall Workers who took collection books, | lists and tickets for various affairs held to support the strikes to come to | the office of the union, 96 Fifth Ave. | to settle, Workers of the Baker and Freed- | man shops, previously affiliated with) victory of the fur workers shows us what can be done.” | AMUSEMENTS | Against capitalist terror; against all forms ot suppression of tne political rights of workers, the A. F. of L, contributed $140 to} |Support the struggles of the shoe | workers, je¢special importance to “Clown George.” It is almost a document. The composition (montage) is as balanced and unpretentious as the story itself, while the technical qual- ity of the photography undoubtedly |ranks with the best we have been ccustomed to in Soviet movies, GE Soviet Movies Re "CLOWN One of the most interestiny and engrossing of with action and gripping situations ORGE” ever shown in America—It Teems MEELER and WOOLSEY | in “HOLD ’EM JAIL” Dally te 2 P. M, S50 11 P.M. 6 E t TREET & UNION THEATRE| 1502.40 2 2 SQUARE ow Bal Souther revolution in Ukraine, This lends! isrday, tp. Local 3,| In conclusion, Romain Rolland de- | <aesssassieoo =e Ave., Wednesday, |Clares that later on he will describe | yn, 134 the history of the organization of . the congress, the tremendous wave A mass meetiog of painters will he held | Of enthusiasm which the idea of the| edhesday at 8 p.m. under the auspices of |congress produced amongst the SIXTH & Alteration Painters Union at 2709 Mer- Wa Ave, Coney Isl., to establish n new to. | Masses and the reaction of thé so- of the union, Joe’ Hartis, city organizer, | ClAlist leaders to it after they feared jthat they would be outrun by ti own followers and drawn willy-n to the international action against ‘ “D'TLY WORKER’ “MORNING ———————————— CITY ELECTION NOTES « A CORRECTION te oe Sr | Due to a typographical error in Saar Gyre Stag yesterday's Daily, page 2, in the Pre ge o's ta 2amen’s news story, the number of finn, 12 moor, speaker: A. Corndlath, ,000 instead of 500 is given as at- Awe A. and Bast jeenth St, Mani tending a protest meeting, | BAZ and East 03rd St., Man- $ peaker: Collins, eandidate ‘s Assom ily District. : Ar. Oth St. end Second Ave, | | MASS TRIAL IN LINDEN FRIDAY | | ON WHITE CHAUVINISM eg eeeider ane, A mass trial of Andrew Matlaga, WEDNESDAY expelled from the Communist Party, a al eee 16th St, Manhattan, Linden unit, New Jersey, for white > 5 7} ee | chauvinism, will be held in Linden mB fad BMGRten Boneh, Coney) Friday, Aug. 26, 8 p.m., at Linden | Hall, Wood Avenue and 16th Street, | Linden, N. J, Bazaar — VOTE COMMUNIST Against Imper‘ai’st War; for the | defense of the Chinese people and | of the Soviet Union, ‘and doyed Councii. he” Avenue B, Auspices, Commu- cond Av2 Un- Auepices, Workers, Support Your Communist Press! ee eas Rasy “YOUNG WORKER” MADISON SQUARE GARDEN, N. Y. Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday and Monday Oct. 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 Obtain Articles, Honor Rol! Greetings and Ads for the BAZAAR HEADQUARTERS 503 E. 13th St., New York (6th floor) STARTING ANNUAL ) “$SNI FREIBEIT” LATEST AMRINO TALKIE WITH TITLES IN ENGLISH THURSDAY: PER SOVIET RUSSIA'S PICTURE TO RIVAL AAR 1 Main speaker: Comrade Sh Aug. 28, Coney Island Workers’ Concert at 8:30 p.m, 3. Sept. 3, Bath Betch Workers at 8:30 pm, Journal 2 WAY. CERRY to 1 PM. What Are the Conununist Party and Workers’ Organizations Doing to Save the “Daily Worker”? Daily Worker Concert and Dance by Unit 5, Sec. 15, Bronx, Satur: day, Aug. 27, at 1013 Tremont Ave, (near 177th St. Station). “All Quiet on the Western Front’ leppard, Club, 2709 Mermaid Ave., Brooklyn, Club, 2709 Mermaid Ave, Concert _ SEIZED BY DOAK | NEW YORK. — The Republican | He was finally| being held for deportation by the im-/ to mobilize (4 workers to fight for Montero’s | e | ASKS NEW-LAW TO. CUT PAY IN CITY: Unemployed Workers in. Williamsburgh to Demand City Relief jers in Williamsburg will march to the Home Relief Bureau here on Thursday, under the leadership of the Williamsburg Unemployed Council to demand relief for\the starving fam- ilies in this section of the city. The cemonstration will start at |1 p.m, from the office of the Williams- burg Unemployed Council at 61 |Graham Avenue. delegates from working-class organi- ations held the other day completed final plans for the dernonstration. FURRIERS BACK AFTER VICTORY | 8,000 Win Better Conditions | NEW YORK—Over 3,000 striking \furriers returned to work yesterday | through the market yesterday morn- ie Nearly 5,000 fur workers partici- pated in the great march, led by the Needle Trades Workers Industrial | Union, which began at the strike | headquarters at 24th St. anq Seventh Ave. Thousands of workers cheered from the streets and the shop win- dows. PY | Police seeing the vast support given |the furriers arranged to have the permit for the’ march canceled after |the parade had started and blocked | the street at 27th and Seventh Ave. The workers thereupon counter- marched to'the strike hall and fol lowing an enthusiastic meeting re- turned to the shops where the new settlement went into effect today, A check-up late yesterday showed that 320 shops settled with the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union during the course of the strike. A number of shops of the Fur Manu- facturers Association. are still out, the workers continuing a militant fight determined to force these shops to settle with improved conditions. PRESS BAZAAR CONFERENCE THURSDAY. NEW YORK.—The first mass con- ference for the Daily Worker, Morn- ing Freiheit and Young Worker ba- zaer will be held on Thursday, Au- gust 25th, at 8 p. m., at the Workers Center, 50 Hast 13th St. Organizations which have not yet elected delegates to the conference are urged to do so at once. NEW YORK.—Unemployed work- | | A conference of |following a mass victory march! ‘PAINTERS MEET SUMS UP GAINS Base Laid for Strong Fighting Union NEW YORK.—Forty-five delegates, representing five local unions of the |Alteration Painters, met Sunday and jlaid the base for a strong militant |fighting union. The report of the general organizer, Harris, showed that the union is im. proving conditions on the job. “The rank and file of the Brother= hood are beginning to see through the kind of a strike conducted by the District Council and are learning the real meaning of our union, name- ly, to conduct real strikes in behalf of the painters,” said Harris, Almost all delegates without excep- tion participated in the discussion in @ very constructive manner. A high point in the discussion took place when one of the delegates in the dis- cussion proposed the affiliation of the |Alteration Painters Union to the |Trade Union Unity Council, stating |that the union, because of its growth |and because of the struggles that it is carrying on, must sooner or later become a part of a trade union center |that has led many struggles in behalf of the workers, that centre being the Trade Union Unity League. Joseph Zack stated that the T. U. U. C. will cooperate in every possible way to build up the Alteration Paint- jers Union, and he proposed that the question of affiliation should be taken up again at a future date when the union will have conducted greater jand better organized struggles, and |will establish itself as the union of the painters. “Nevertheless the T. U. U. C., true to its class struggle policy, will cooperate with the Alter- ation Painters Union and help them along generally,” said Zack., To Have Gocd Sport Program at Union Picnic Labor Day NEW YORK —The Labor Sports Union is preparing a program of events for the Labor Day picnic and Election Rally of the Trade Union Unity Council to be held at Pleasant Bay Park on September 5th. In addition to holding regular | sports such as baseball, volley ball, | soccer, the Labor Sports Union will also direct a “tug of war” and other games in which the various unions will compete. Special low rates on tickets will be given to all unions and organizations. Tickets are ready at the office of the T.UUU., 80 E. 11 St. room 238. REGULAR ADVERTISERS Wm. Bell, Optom De. Schwarts Restaurant Chester Cafeteria Camps Unity, Kinderland, Nitgedsiget Lerman Bros. (Stationery) WATCH THE ADS! Workmen’s Sick and Death Benefit Fund IN THE DAILY WORKER Coop Colony uunch World Tourists, Inc. Golden Bridge Colony Cameo Theatre Theatre Stadium Concerta Manhattan Optical Co. Royal Cafeteria Square Deal Army Capital Shoe Repairing a. Navy intern’ Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 15th FLOOR All Work Done Under Versonal Care of DR. JOSEPHSON WILLIAM BELL OPTOMETRIST and OPTICIAN Special Rates to Workers and families 106 KE. 14th St. (Room 21) Opposite Automat Tel. FOmpkins Square 6-8237 COHEN’S ‘ CUT RATE OPTICIANS Eyes Examined by Registered Op- tometrists—White Gold Frames $1.60—Shell Frames $1.00 117 ORCHARD ST, Near Delancey MANHATTAN OPTICAL CO. 2XYES EXAMSNED BY REGISTERED OPTOMETRISTS White Gold Frames. Shell Fremes 122 KESTER (neat Obrystie St.) Tel $1.50 1.00 TRELT Orchard 4.0230 Helpful Information for Individuals and Groups Those seeking temporary or permanent rooms and apartments in New York and those cone templating auto sha will find the classified uf special appeal—Let CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS CSS UE EEE ae ee RAnatetaTi ISON nnnanESSInn I none ee ATLE TION COMRADES! Health Center Cafeteria | WORKERS CENTER 50 EAST 13th STREET Patronize the Health Center Cafeteria and help the Revolutionary Movement BEST FOOD REASONABLE PRICES EAT AT THE ROYAL CAFETERIA 827 BROADWAY Between 12th & 13th Sts.) Royal Dishes for the Protetariat |] OUR WORKERS MEMBERS OF F.W.LU. Comrades, For All Automobile Repairing Please Patronize S. PERFUMO BURKE GARAGE 2937 WHITE PLAINS AVE. Allexton Ave. Stetion, Bronx, N.Y. Tet: OLinville 2-910 Chester Cafeteria 876 E. Tremont Ave, (Corner Southern Blvd.) Quality—Cleanliness—Moderate Prices All Workers Members F.W.1.U. Classified YOUNG COUPLE want room in Bronx oF ttan, Furnished or unfurnished, e Daily Worker, re-expense trips, ete., , columns of the “Daily” us be mutually helpful. 5c. A WORD

Other pages from this issue: