The Daily Worker Newspaper, August 29, 1932, Page 2

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“No Evictions” One of Chief Demands of Relief March Sept. 10 | EVICTION HIT TENANT STRIKE Giles Place Tenants Picket Hou RK. S i . P.’s “Lesser Evil” Former field marshal, Von Hin- denburg, who is reported ready to m Von P: pen’s emergency decree rt ol N TAX STRIKE |United Farmer League Calls Conference reduction h Concess! Aug. 28.—The ague calls a united of all St. Louis; at Mesaba Park, 10 am, to take up sements for an immediate tax I units of the U.F.L., Wo- co-operatives, and the m bureau clubs and other clubs, nvited to send delegates. All are i to take up in their organiza- m of a tax strike and with the workers and yed workers, of a hun- hh on the district commis- 's Offices in Virginia- now , Lout meet yeUS i Message to Iowa Strikers. The’ conference will discuss the prices of farm prod- ucts now going on in states directly a the | | south and southwest of Minnesota, es ae Houde is of police, od | and will call on the farm. strikers with ne guns, revolve! tear| there to include the tax strike in to evict John Mitchell, |their program, and to direct the mt of their struggle against the ig packers, grain merchants and the jacks, bs rested 21 F: in the mest mil eviction ‘ugzle held her2 in a Any other problems the various lo- cal organizatiorts of farmers wish to bi up at- the conference, they rould discuss in their local meetings, and instruct their delegates on them. All United Farmers League locals are urged by the U.F.L, St. Louis County Board to send representa- tives to all other farmers’ mass or- ganizations in their localities, and bring these matters before them, and invite them to discuss the questions and send delegates to the conferenc2. CITY ELECTION eee | n ee they attacked a group cf workers who had gathered to ae- | fend Mitchell. Mere than 100 cops made an un- ful atetmpt to evict Mitchell one capitalist paper Fight Against Eviction Since last Monday, groups of work- ers ranging from several hundred in the early morning hours to several] thousand in the afternoon and eve-| {<<< ming have been present at Mitchell's hhome to forestall his eviction. Friday's attack on the assembled workers was carried through with mount-d, motorcycle and foot police. NOTES Monday Attack Well Planned. Eight Ave. and 42d St, Manhattan; The attack on the workers was|‘Petkers, Daniels, Yontaine and Eaward undoubtedly well-planned by the} simpson and 163d Sts., Bronx; speakers, seme “liberal” Murphy administra- tion that co-operated with Henry Ford’s police in the murder of four unemployed Ford workers in the Hunger March on Ford’s plant last spring. The police are refusing to give the names of the arrested workers and to allow their lawyers to see them. A tant Prosecutor Schemanske has been assigned by Prosecutor Toy to third degree the arrested workers. A mags protest meeting against the fiendish attack was held a few hours after the attack took place. Berger and Brooks. Burke and Cruger Ave., Bronx; Rose Chernin, trict, and Lusti Tremont and Marmion, Bronx; speakers, Kainen and Levy. Fifth Ave. and 50th St., South Brooklyn; speakers M. Weich and M. Kanfer. ‘Third and Warren Sts., South Brooklyn; Scottsboro meeting, auspices Warren St. Block Committee; speaker, Frederick Welsh, candidate from the 22d Assembly District. Tuesday Steinway and Jamaica Aves., Astoria, LL. debate: “Resolved that the Communist Pai ty is the only Party of the Working cla A. Bimba taking the affirmative; $. A. De Socialist Party candidate, the nega- speakers, ndidate 6th Assembly Dis- Wednesday Sixth Ave. and 33th St., 12 noon; speaker, Leslie. Avenue B and E. 16th St., 7:30; speaker, Anna Lyons. 373 43d St., South Brooklyn; speaker, L. De Santes candidate 8th Congressional dis- trict. Church and 49th Sts., Brownsville; speak- ers, Abrams and Walis. Atlantic and | Rockaway, Brownsville, speakers, Cooper and Weinstein. Belmont and Shepard Ave., Brownsville; speakers, Kirsehner and F kel. What’s On— MONDAY— The following open air anti-war meetings | under the auspices of the F.S.U. will be held: East Bronx, 139th St. and St Speaker, Wilson. Sea Gate, 27th St. Ann Ave. | and Mermaid Ave. da, Speaker, Schiller Thursday ‘West Bronx, Fordham Rd. and Walton| Ninth Ave. and ‘8d St, Manhattan; ‘Ave. Speaker, 8. Rice speaker, Harry Flieldberg, candidate oth Assembly district. outh, ist Ave. ay age Ripe payee First Ave. and 724 St., Manhattan; speak- and 86th r, R. Gordon. Boro Park, 45th St. and 13th Ave. Speak-| ¢f, Stevens. er, Green. Tenth Ave. and 49th St, Manhattan; Waterfront, noon, South St. and Maiden| SPeaker, Louise Morrison. Lane. Speaker Ralph. Eighth Ave. and 2ist St, Manhattan; rears speaker, Sonia Margolies. Council No, 29 of the United Council of| Eighth Ave. and 30th St., Manhattan; speaker, Carl Winter candidate 13th Sena- hing Class Women will have « lecture py cs torial Distriet. at 186 Vyse Ave., Bronx, Apt. 4-P. Subject: “The Role of the Needle Trades Workers| Barret St. and Sutter Ave. Brownsville; Industrial Union.” Speaker, Taft. speaker, Alkin and Feldman. Snes Glenmore and Christopher, Brownsville; An open air meeting under the auspices | speakers, Cooke and Feinstone. of the International Workers Club and Young Storm will be held at 8 p.m. at 14th St. and Irving PI. Dumont and Thatcher, Brownsville, speak- ers, Irving Dolb, candidate from 23d As- ; Kulow and Gibbs. and 18th Ave., South Brooklyn; Jaroff and R. Handelman, Workers Esperanto Group will meet at 350 B. Sist St, Room 5, 8 pm. All workers| Kings’ Highway and th St., South interested are invited. Brookiyn; speakers, Israel Gabin, eandi- eee date ith Assembly District. Brownsville Branch, LL.D., will meet at| Riverdale Ave. and Bristol St., Browns- 1440 EB. New York Ave., top floor, at 8:15| ville; speakers, Beilis and Cohen, pm. Ail mémbers are urged to attend. Friday «ie aah First Ave. and 2ith St, Manhattan; ‘The Photo Section of hte Film and Photo| speaker, Tanya Kean Jengue of the W.LR. will meet at 16th W.| Avenue A and 15th St. Manhattan; fist Bt, at 8 pm. speakers, Sohn and Epstein. ed Madison Sq., Manhattan, section rally, ‘The Huskka Youth Branch of Brighton| 9 p.m.; speaker, Sohn and Leslie, Beach will meet every Monday evening at 2169 Coney Island Ave., at 8:30 p.m. Court and Carroll Sts., South Brooklyn; speakers, H. Lichtenstein and A, Jeffer. 20th Ave. and 86th St., South Brooklyn; speaker, Nat Haines. Brighton Beach Ave. and Brookiyn; date TUESDAY— Unit 11, ¥.0. an open night 2700 Bronx Park E; Bronx Section, will hold the Coop Auditorium, All young workers 7th St, South peakers, Peter La Rocca, candi- Sd Assembly District, and M. Weich. are invited. Brightwater Court and 4th St., South Brooklyn; speakers, A. Olken — » Rubin. ‘ ; Twentieth Ave. and 78th St., South Labor Union Meetings] » yoni spearer, a nian, Fifth Ave. and 18th St., South Brooktyn; speakers, A. Viadimir and D. Ackerman, 1373 4ad Painters i speakers, H. Kay and W. Yoeals of the Alteration Painters Union | Van Wagni will hold their regular membership meetings | _ Pacific Buffalo, Brownsville; speak- ers, Cooke and Williams. Williams and Biake, Brownsville; speak- ers, Berger and Rubel, Saturday 2th St., a stoilows: Loeal 1, Bronx, 1130 Southern Bivd., Mon- day, 8 p.m. Local 2, Brownsville, 1440 East Mew York Ave., Thusrday, 8 p.m. Local 3, Williamsburgs, i1 Graham’ Ave., Wednesday, 8 pm. Local 4, Downtown, 134 E, 7th St., Monday, 8 p.m Manhattan; Manhattan, speakers, Stevens and d O'Gara, Tenth Ave. and 46th St., Manat VOTE COMMUNIST Against capitalist terror; against ail forms Of suppression of tne |King of Belgium Bars Engdahl for All Time for Scottsboro Speech BRUSSELS, Belgium, Aug. 28.— King Albert of Belgium yesterday is- sued an alltime ban against entrance tc the country by J. Louis Engdhal, general secretary of the International Labor Defense. The ban followed Engdahl’s arrest at a monster Scottsboro Sacco-Van- zetti-Mooney demonstration in Ghent. If Engdhal enters Belgium territory, he will be immediately imprisoned under the terms of the order. Engdhal was expelled from the country, following the expulsion last Monday of Mrs. Ada Wright, mother of two of the Scottsboro boys, who arrested with Enghdhal at Char- lerou. ‘ The expulsion was affected in spite of Engdhal's demand that he be per- mitted to proceed directly to the ‘orld Congress against Imperialis which opens in Amsterdam to- w The Belgian King’s action was taken as a desperate measure to crush the rising spirit’ of solidarity —|of the Belgian workers with slass war |vietims and prisoners all over the world. Mrs. Wright was expelled from the country because she ad- ldressed a mass meeting of striking Belgian miners, Government troops and police, concentrated in the strike area to drive the miners back to work, clubbed and beat the miners end their wives, arresting three women who tried to defend Mrs. Wright. \In Portchester Mass eeting, Workers Hit KKK Terror March PORTCHESTER, N. Y., Aug. 28.— A mass meeting called by the Inter- national Labor Defense here Tues- day heard Anthony Bimba, and adopted a resolution demanding the freeing of the Scottsboro boys and of Sam Weinstein, Jackson and Powers, and of Mooney and all other worker prisoners in jail for class activities. The resolution also says: “We condemn the brutal display of terrer by the Ku Klux Klan, whose parade, Aug. 27,, in Greenwich, Conn., is welcomed by the Republican and Democratic politicians; a parade to destroy the growing unity of the native and foreign-born, Negro and white workers, against the hunger and war program of the capitalists.” The K. K. K. organized its parade after the Sacco-Vanzetti memorial demonstrations. (JAPAN RUSHES WAR PRODUCTION Pouring Fresh Troops Into Manchuria Japanese industry has been comp- letely mobilized on a war footing with the production of war material pro- ceeding at a feverish rate, and with a rapid expansion of the Japanese air force and a general reorganiztion of Japan’s military machine jn pre- paration for major military activi- ties jn the Far East. Fresh Japanese troops are being daily poured. into Manchuria to com- bat the wide spread anti-Japanese national revolutionary war, push the new Japanese aggressions with the invasion of Jehol province, flank So- viet Mongolia and prepare the way for the seizure of North China. The Japanese troop concentration on the eastern frontiers of Soviet Mongolia is being strengthened. The Japanese are organizing and arming the Mongol princes in Barga and Inner Mongolia and inciting them to attack Soviet Mongolia, as part of the imperialist scheme for armed intervention against the Soviet Union. A force of 50,000 is now be- ing organized in Barga and Inner Mongolia, with the aid of Japan’s white guard allies, War Talk Increases. Foreign war correspondents in Tokio report a general feeling in both Japanese and foreign circles that “momentous events lie ahead”, The Tokyo correspondent of the New York Tribune comments on the sharpening antagonisms between American and Japanese imperialisms over the control of China, but says that “actual war talk, however, seems to Tevolve mostly about Soviet Rus- sia”. The War Ministry has made a de- mand for additional war appropria- tions at the present emergency ses- sion of the Diet. In addition to large sums appropriated for war purposes under the pretext of unemployment relief, a supplementary budget calls for the appropriation of 18,420,00 yen for the manufacture of war munitions ‘PAINTERS WIN NEW VICTORY Two More Shops Out On Strike NEW YORK.—Workers at the Hunts Point paint shop, who went out on strike under the leadership of the Alteration Painters Union, did not satisfy themselves with the gains achieved and continued the struggle to further better their conditions. Additional gains made by. the workers in the shop are: (1) Fifteen per dent further in- crease in wages which amounts to. $5 a week more for each worker. (2) Establishment of the five-day week. (3) All b’ring to be done, through the union office- (4) To do away with the holding back of one day’s pay a week. Following this victory two,more ent out on strike. Twenty-six rs in the T. & T. shop went on strike Friday under the leadership of the Alteration Painters Union. The Medgivick shop for an increase in wages. One Negro worker in this shop was receiving $2 per day. Newark Police Attack Communist Meetings, Approve Socialists NEWARK, N. J., Aug. 28.—There will be another election rally of the Communist Party at the corner of Charlton St. and Waverly Ave. Fri- day, Sept. 2nd, at 7:30 p.m. This is the corner where mounted patrol- men rode into a crowd of small Negro children, knocked down women and children and brutally clubbed and broke up an election meeting of the Communist Party last Thursday night. The mee Friday will be a fight for free speech and the political rights of the workers. The Socjalist Party has held meetings on this very same corner but the police have want the Communist Party to hold any street meetings at ail because in their own words, ‘the Socialist Par- ty is a safe party but the Communist Party is going to do something” about unemployment and evictions, especi- ally jn a section such as Waverly and Charlton where the Negro po- pulation is actually starving and face deportation to the South. (By a Worker Correspondent.) NEW YORK.—Atter slaving for S. Klein for two full years, I was fired. Hundreds like myself were fired in the same manner. Two years ago, I went to S. Klein looking for a job, On the third floor, we were placetl in line like a buncit of criminals to be inspected. Of about 200 girls and boys, 10 were employed. At that time the girls were being paid from $12 to $14 a week. These girls must stand on the floor and pick up dresses or coats for 10 hours Every once in a while Mr. S. Klein, in person, delivered a sermon to his employees on honesty and on the S. Klein Cuts Pay Through Dismissals great advantages of being an em- ployee of S. Klein. The advantage is that you are sure of being fired after a short period of slavery in his ‘em- ployment, Every time he fires some employees, he hires the next batch with a low- ered wage. Now he’s hiring people for as low as $7 a week. When I was hired, there were about 1,500 in his employment, but when he fired me, there was only half that amount. Yet this “ hearted” man claims that he’s help-~ ing the unemployed. 8. Klein employees should unite and fight against all this slavery, Former Stock Clerk. Workers Warned of Socialist Bait NEW YORK.—In an attempt to deceive the workers and bring them to their meetings under the impres- sion Communist speakers will be present, the Brooklyn socialists have been distributing leaflets advertising “Open Air Demonstrations” without naming party auspices, One such leaflet advertises a “can- didate for Attorney General” but does not name the party sponsoring him, for a meeting in Brownsville. J. Louis Engdahl is the Communist candidate for Attorney-General of New York State. Workers are warned by the United Front Election Campaign Commit- tee that radical phraseology, or an- nouncement of a “demonstration,” does not make a leaflet Communist. On every leaflet issued in the Com- munist election campaign, the party sponsors of the meeting or demon- stration announced will be clearly named. Candidates named on the Communist ticket will have no hesi- tancy in announcing their, affilia- tion. A. F, L. Chiefs Have Hanger-on of Czar As Their Support NEW YORK.—The American Fed- eration of Labor now has, one of the courtiers of the bloody Romanoff court, a hanger-on of the bestial Czars, who, with gallows and lash, crushed the workers of Russia for generations. She is the ex-Princess Radziwill and her admirer who wrote her up for the New York Evening Post says: “To prevent an American Soviet she lectures and writes for the Federation with all the authority of one who was a friend of the Roman- offs and called the German Emperor by the familiar ‘thou.’” The ex-Princess herself says: “The Red menace is an ever present factor in American life and only the Amer- ican Federation of Labor can pre- vent another Russian revolution.” Only another indication of the ex- treme reaction and anti-labor policy of the A. F. of L. leadership. Amter Will Prosecute White Chauvinism in Mass Trial, Sept. ist NEW YORK.—The N. Y¥. Young Communist League of Harlem Sec. is calling for a mass trial against white and the development of air fields in Manchuria. Part of this fund is to go for improving the equipment of military arsenals. The air fields to- be developed are situated in Manchu- ria, at strategic points near the So- viet borders. “Yipsels” Dodge Again When Young Com’nist League Offers Debate NEW YORK.—Jim Lerner, section organizer of the Young Communist League, spoke last night at 1373 Forty-third St. Brooklyn at what would have been a debate with the Young People’s Socialist League {f the “Yipsels” hadn't got cold feet and backed out. They were challenged to appear but failed to do so. didate 14th Assembly District. veland and Sctter Ave. kers, Abrams and Backer. Fifteenth Ave. and 39th St. lyn; speaker, B. Sheepshead Pay Brooklyn; speakers, Brownsville; South Brook- me Ave. Carrot South M La nd 1. political rights of workers. gressional District, and Helen Allison, can- Pinkson. Mermaid Ave. and 23d St., South Brook- 1. Roberts. Jyn; speaker, 1. chauvinism and one of its defenders, who was a member of the Yorkville Unit of the Y.C.L., Herman Sachs. ‘The trial will be held on Thursday, | September Ist at the ba Tem le, 243 E. 84th st, Israel Amter, District Ohiguier of the New York District, Communist Party, and Communist Candidate for Governor, will be the prosecutor, Al! workers are urged to attend, Furniture Strikers Attacked by Thugs NEW YORK.—In an attempt to smash the militant strike of the Shapiro Furniture factory which started last Monday, hired thugs at- tacked workers following a meeting of strikers held Thursday near the factory. After the meeting was over the gangsters armeq with clubs attacked the workers as they passed the fac- tory calling on the workers in the } shop to join them. Lots and assist in picketing. Workers Industrial Union. Workers in Brownsville are urged to help the strikers by coming to the strike hall, Christopher St. near New The strike is led by the Furniture Louis Cohen Was Murdered by Cops ! By EVA PINE All members of the Goldens Bridge Cooperative Farms are deeply grieved over the death of an outstanding comrade and member, Louis Cohen, who died in a hospital a few days ago, following a brutal attack by Police on a picket line in the dress market in which Comrade: Cohen was doing duty. Comrade Cohen was beaten up by gangsters and police in that attack, The hospital had said he died of Pneumonia, but in an interview with his familyI found out that Comrade Cohen came home the day he was attacked, all beaten and bruised, and the next day he had to go to the hospital, where he did a slow death from his injuries. VOTE COMMUNIST Against capitalist terror; all forms of suppression Political rights of workers, against of the openly declared that they do not/ Jed so militantly in front of the sta-| Browder to Speak at Trade Union Picnic On Labor Day, Sept.5 NEW YORK.—It was announced today that the Trade Union Picnic to be held at Pleasant Bay Park |Sepi. 5, will be addressed by Earl Browder, of the Central Committee of the Communist Party; Henry Shepherd, Communist. candidate for Lieut. Governor of New York state; John Pace, leader of the Workers Ex-Servicemen’s League, and Ben Gold, secretary of the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union. Unions have already challenged each other to baseball, volley-ball and other competitive games which will be directed by the Labor Sports Union. Twelve artists of the John Reed Club will give chalk talks on current topics; the Workers Labar- atory Theatre is preparing a side show which will characterize the various pander in the election cam- paign, Besides this the New Dancers Group will give a series of folk dances and will lead in mass dancing. The Workers Music League is preparing a torchlight election parade. All organizations which have not yet obtained tickets are urged to get them at once at the office of the T. U. U. C., 5 East 19th St. DISMISS JURY IN 3-DEGREE TRIAL Second Move in White- Washing of Police NEW YORK.—Judge Johnston dis- missed the jury yesterday in the trial of three Nassau county policemen for third degreeing Hyman Stark to death. The jury reported it was unable to agree. Previously the district attorney had dismissed two of the police defend- ants. The ung jury seems to have postponed indefinitely the chance for any conviction of the others, in what is, at best, a half hearted prosecution. Capitalist courts are not made to convict their own machinery of in- justice, FIGHT FOR THE RIGHT TO MEET Big Audiences for Communist Speakers NEW YORK.—Police Friday night smashed two election campaign meetings in Harlem, clubbing and beating the workers, and arresting .a young girl worker. Militant demon- Strations followed the smashing, in front of two police stations, and the 54th St. night court. The first meeting, at 137th St- and Seventh Ave., was attacked as soon as it started, by five automobile loads of police, and detectives of the radi- cal squad. This was the corner where a similar election campaign demon- stration was smashed the Friday be- roe, the police sergeant announcing that Seventh Ave. is reserved for the capitalist parties, republican, social- ist and democratic, and that orders had been given to smash all Commu- nist meetings. Immediately the workers went up to 142d St, where 500 workers of whom 250 were Negroes, held the corner for ten minutes until 30 po-| |licemen and numerous plain-clothes men arrived and beat and clubbed} the workers to disperse them. Crowd Demands Release. Barbara Murphy, a young south- ern white girl, was arrested at 142d St. and Seventh Ave., charged’ with resisting an officer, when she refused to get off the street. Her arm was badly twisted. She was taken to the 135th St. police station. The workers | followed her down, and demonstrat- | tion that the police whisked her away to the 123d St. police station. The mass of workers followed her down there also, and the police whisked her away again, this time for immediate appearance in the 54th St. night court- At the night court, 800 workers gathered in a demonstration, and when she-was held in $50 bail, the amount was immediately collected from them. Thousands Listen. Other central campaign demon- strations, helq in the Bronx and at Columbus Circle were very success- ful. A thousand were present at Co- lumbus Circle, to hear George Powers, candidate for Chief Judge of the Court. of Appeals. Many of these went over to 54th St. night court to join the demonstration there. VOTE COMMUNIST Agamst Moover's wage-cutting Policy. [DEMAND END 10 EVICTION LAW Unemployed Coun cil to Lead Demonstration NEW YORK.—Final plans for the Relief March on September 10th, are being completed by the Unemployed Council and the 300 workingclass or- ganizations which are supporting the march, Tens of thousands of workers are expected to take part. The workers will assemble at Union Square and march from there to City Hall, where @ committee of 100 workers, elected from breadlines, flop houses, the job agency area on Sith Ave., block com- mittees etc., will present the demands before Mayor Walker. Among the demands to be made are: minimum cash relief of $10 a week for each family of two, and $3 additional for each dependant; no evictions of the unemployed and the immediate repeal of the eviction law; the abolition of the private job age cies and the opening of free city employment agencies to be controlled by the workers; the appropriation of one hundred million dollars by the city for winter relief, and the en- dorsement by the city government of the Workers Unemployment Insur- ance Bill. Open Fight to Free Max Schapp, Jailed for Leading Jobless BROOKLYN. — The International Labor Defense has arranged a series of protest meetings. to be held throughout Brooklyn to dmand the frelease of Max Schapp who was s2h- tenced to serve twenty days in jail by Judge Hirshfield, leading Zionist, for leading a demonstration of job- Jess to the Home Relief Bureau at Gravesend Bay August 19, When the workers demanded re- lief the officials of the bureau told them that 10 cents a day was enough for an unemployed worker. The LL.D. urges all workers to send letters and telegrams of protest to Judge Hirshfield, to the magistrate of the 7th District at 25 Snyder Ave., and the Home Relief Bureau. ‘ Two thousand workers heard Moisaye Olgin, editor of the Morn- ing Freiheit, and candidate for Con- gress from the 24th District, at Wil- kins and Intervale Ave., Lower Bronx. | Israel Amter, candi/ite for gover- | nor of New York, spoke to a thou-| sand workers at the South Brooklyn central demonstration, at Court and Carroll Sts, Cohen's (Opticians) Dental Dept., I.W.O. Health Center Cafeteria Wm. Bell, Optometrist Dr. Schwartz John’s Restaurant Camps Unity, Kinderland, Nitgedatget Lerman Bros. (Stationery) Workmen's Sick and Death Benefit Fund Socialists Fear Scottsboro Debate The Socialist Party has refused to debate with the students’ branch of Dr. Kessler the International Labor Defense on Crechostovak Workers House the Scottsboro case. The students’ Avante Farm branch will hold an open air meeting ue Se ee on Monday night, August 29, at 8:30 pm., at 163rd Street and Simpson Street, exposing the Socialist Party as allies of the lynchers in the South. Russian Art Shop Parkway Cafeteria Butchers Union, Local 174 Unemployment and Social In- surance at the expense of the state WATCH THE ADS: . Z REGULAR ADVERTISERS IN THE DAILY WORKER Workers Coop Colony Sol’s Lunch Santal Midy Manhattan Lyceum Rollin Pharmacy Gottlieb’s Hardware World Tourists, Inc. Golden Bridge Colony Cameo Theatre Acme Theatre Stadium Concerts Manhattan Optical Co. Burke Garage Stuyvesant Casino Royal Cafeteria Square Deal Army and Navy Capital Shoe Repairing and employers. ATLEYTION COMRADES! AMUSEMENTS Health Center Cafeteria WORKERS CENTER 50 EAST 13th STREET Patronize the Health Center Cafeteria and help the Revolutionary Movement BEST FOOD REASONABLE PRICES GE The Worker's ACME THE ith _STREE’ 0! American Premiere—2nd Big Week —— a RUSSIA'S OUTSTANDING CIVILWAR DRAMA "CLOWN “The story is not fictitious. It is adapted from a real incident of the revolution in Ukraine ... It is almost a document . . .”— DAILY WORKER. Also:—DAILY WORKER PICNIC — FARMERS’ STRIKE ATRE| 1¢;,. N SQUARE Intern’l Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 15th FLOOR All Work Done Undet Wersonal Care of DR. JOSEPASON ORGE” WILLIAM BELL OPTOMETRIST and OPTICIAN p ae. to 2 Rie “SNE 8; Einstein in Timoshenko’s work—hi photography, Hollywoo oC ON OLY BWALE AM:E é 4209.7] ee ae “Tarn ee War Into Civil War” “aa Premiere — New Soviet Talkie WITH ENGLISH TITLES laws of the earlier Soviet “talkies” havg heen eliminated Speciat Rates to Workers an@ Families 106 E. 14th St. (Room 21) Opposite Automat Tel. LOmpkins Sqaare 6-8%37 DR. A. C. BREGER Surgeon Dentist Special rates to workers and families 200 E. 23d St. }-12-30th Ave. Cor Third Ave Grand Av., Cor. 2d New York City ‘Ay. Astoria, L. 1. PER” best productions of ind technique of the ofe. ALL SEATS TO 1 P, M. Cl f d EXC. SATURDAY, SUN- asst le DAY AND HOLIDAYS Cc WANTED—Large room, double window. Fannie Hurst's “BACK STREET” IRENE DUNN-—"HN BOLES Daily to 2 p. . 350— 11 p.m, to close 35¢ Lith Street UEFFERSON see scit., TODAY TO TUESDAY—2 FEATURES: “War Correspondent” With JACK HOLT and RALPH GRAVES dentist, 1481 58th St, Brooklyn. turn A. Semoli, O44 225th St., Queens Village, L. 1. Preferable Union Sauare location. Write Dubow, care Daily Worker, 50 E. 13th St. SIX-ROOM APT.—Suitable for octor or Beautiful corner in Boro Park, ‘Tag License Jost at Daily Worker Picnic, re- Phone Tomkins Sq. 6-9554 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet i 302 E. 12th St. New York Wiener’s Barber Shop 115 Brighton Beach Avenue Near Ocean Parkway BRIGHTON BEACH 10 Per cent of gross income to The Daily Worker PURITY QUALITY SUTTER Vegetarian and Dairy Retsaurant 589 SUTTER AVE. (Cor. Geors Phone GLenmore 4-32: WORKERS—EAT AT THE Parkway Cafeteria 1638 PITKIN AVENUE Near Hopkinson Ave. Brooklyn. N. ¥, Bronx Comrades, For All Automobile Bepali © “Ptease Patronize aK S. PERFUMO BURKE GARAGE 2927 WHITE PLAINS AVE, Allerton Ave. Station, Bronx, N.Y, ‘Tel: OLinville 2-9104 Au omrages Meet at BRONSTEIN'S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Cler-mont Parkway, Brons “Blonde Captive” AN ADVENTURE STORY Concert at 8:30 p.m. What Are the Communist Party and Workers’ Organizations Doing to Save the “Daily Worker”? Sept. 3, Bath Beach Workers Club, 2709 Mermaid A: > will find the classified of special appeal—Let Helpful Information for_ Individuals aud Groups Those seeking temporary or permanént rooms and apartments in New York and those con- templating auto share-expense CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS 5c. A WORD trips, ete., columns of the “Daily” us be mutually helpful. re enn ata BD aS Sea §

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