The Daily Worker Newspaper, September 7, 1932, Page 2

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Page| ‘Two DAILY Wo DRKER, NEW YORK, _WEDNESDAY, SE! PIEMBER 7, 1932 Unemployed Veterans Pledge Support to Relief March on 10th 66,000 JOBLESS VETERANS IN CITY W.E.S.L. Report Shows Thousands Starving NEW YORK The Harlem Post (No, 2) of the Worker men’s League has made the number of u in New York, it anounces The report shows ti 1931, the latest date fc curate figures are obtainable, t were 66,000 unemployed vete the city, with thousands starving. Even has admitted r 15 per cent of the 15,000,000 ployed workers in are veterans In New t icemen’s League partment of that it works b American veterans f particula Negro veteran Post of the W. E. S. been unemployed has never bi three-day a week jobs given to some of the unemp: The we of L that he still an emp- thering place en who appear Thousands of disabled ban, Italian and othe mobilize March next espe ‘day Harlem Unemployed Council Demands Free Housing for Jobless YCRK. m und caf held ide work raids workers there. Rents in th: ld be free for unem t Unemployed | he rent for em- ved eset should be drastically iced below current | 2 ce voted to support the f March on City Hall on Satur- Unemployment and Social In- at the expense of the state and ems surance TS. CITY ELECTION NOTES WEDNESDAY | d Otis Place Speakers, 105 ‘Thatford Avenue Center, Sent. 7 Richard Sulliven, candidate from the 9th Wednesday, Congressional District and Dolb, from the 23rd A. D., will Second St. and Avenue B, Manhattan Seventh St. and Avenue B, Manha' Clinton St. and E. Broadway, Man! Seventh St. and Second Ave., Manhattan. THURSDAY East 4th St. and Brighton Court Burns. 6th St. and 18h Ave. 1 I. Reswick. Kings Highway and ith St. S. Sklaroff, Church and 98th Street, Brownsville, speekers, Cokee ond Fetstone Tapscott and Sutter, Brownsville, speak- | ers, Samuel Feidmsn, candidate for 6th Congressional District,’ and Cohen Glenmore and Sackman, Brownsville, speakers, Irving Dolb, eandidate from 23rd AD and Bunkin. Stone and Riverdale, Brownsville, speak- ers, Morris Scheer, candidate 5th A. D., Betlies and Valis. Hinsdale and Riverdale. Speakers, Frankel and Abrams. and Bristol, Brownsville, speak- Lacher, Brownsville, ers, and Gibbs. candidate 2ist’ A. D., What's On— WEDNESDAY The East Bronx Branch of the ILD will have @ membership meeting at 411 Penn- sylvanta Ave., Brooklyn, @ East Bronx Branch of the FSU will have a membership mecting at Ambassador Hall, 172nd St. and Third Ave., at @ p.m. z Roumanian Workers Clue and the . Frinu, TWO Roumanian Branch will hold a mass meeting at 77 St. Marks Pl,, at 7:30 p. m. All Roumanian workers are invited. ‘The following open air anti-war meetings will be held under the auspices of the FSU. Stalin Branch, 7th St. and Avenue A.| Speaker: Barufkin < Yorkville Branch, 8th St. and Lexington Ave. Speaker: Ric West Bronx Branch, 170th St. and Wal- ton Ave. Speaker: Marshall. Romain Rolland, Lydig and Holland Aves. Speaker: Green. Eastern Parkway Branch, 257 Schenectady Ave. Speaker: LeRoy. Councils No. 11, 9 and 38 of the United Couneil of ing Class Women will have a joint discussion on the election campaign at the Cooperative Auditorium, 2700 Bronx Park Hast, at 8p, m. Comrade Rose Nelson will lead the discussion. Post No. 2, WESL will hold an outdoor meeting at 125th St. and Fifth Ave. at 3p. m. ‘The Municipsl Clerks Committee for Pro- bee of Salaries will have a mas pro- meeting against the cut in salaries At Greenwich House, 27 Barrows St., at 8.30 & mh All municipal clerks sre invited. da Ie |Workers Arrested at Relief Demonstration Will Be Tried Today | NEW YORK. ployed Council of Coney Island has issued a call to workers on the Island to pro- test at the arrest of two workers for demanding relief for the starving un- employed, by appearing at their trial today in the Gates Ave. Court. The two workers were arrested at emonstration for relief at the | me Relief Bureau in Public School The workers of Coney Island, the employed Council reports, are an- ng the attack on the demon- | stration by redoubling their efforts to mobilize thousands of workers for the Relief March on Saturday. | RELIEF MARCHERS FINAL DEMANDS To Be Presented to City Government Sat. W YORK.—The final demands t will be presented to the city gov- ernment by the Relief Marchers next Saturday have been agreed on by representatives of the 300 workers’| organizations backing th: March, the| | Unemployed Council has announced. These demands are: ; 1. Immediate cash relief for all| | unemployed. | 2. Abolition of all red tape ques- jonnaires at home relief bureaus. 3. Minimum of $10 a week cash eliof for a family of 2 and $3 addi- ticnal for each dependent. 4. One dollar a day cash relief minimum for all single and young ions of unemployed, re- viction law. Feeding of all children of un- employed in schools at city expense. 7, Withdrawal of wage cut order for city workers. 8. No forced contributions from workers for relief funds. 9. Reduction of salaries of mayor and high officials to $3,500 a year. 10. Public works program for new srs’ homes, hospitals and play- junds at trade union rates of pay. shelter of homeless. to be transferred to relief for un- mt of the bonus to vet- 14, Immediate endorsement of the Workers Unemployment Insurance Bill, providing for work or benefits { the expense of the government | and the employers. | 15. No discrimination against Ne- |gro or foreign-born workers in the | distribution of relief. At the last meeting of the City Council Executive it was decided to add an additional demand to those to be presented to City Hall. That we demang the immediate release of | all those arrested in the struggles for unmployment reilef and that all po- lice be withdrawn from the Home Relief Bureaus. = |500,000 Leaflets for Distributed in City More than 500,000 000 leaflets calling |on workers to take part in the Relief |March on Saturday have been dis- tributed in workers’ neighborhoods he Unemployed Council announced | | Relief March Already Of this number the Needle Trades | tributed 30,000; the Food Workers Industrial Union, 10,000; the Marine Workers Industrial Union, 5,000; the "|Shoe and Leather Workers Indus- trial Union, 10,000; the Metal and Steel Workers Industrial Union, 2,- 000; the International Workers Or- der, 35,000; the Friends of the Soviet Union, 10,000; the Women’s Councils, 20,000; the City Committee of the ¢| Unemployed Councils, 10,000; the 24 branch Unemployed Councils, 10,000 |each, and the various sections, 190,- } 000. | STAGE-SCREEN “3 COMRADES AND ONE INVEN- TION AT ACME THEATRE The amusing adventures of two Soviet workers and a charming young girl who are trying to obtain governmental approval of a box making machine while the local manufacturer of boxes is making equally strenuous efforts to discredit the invention provide the plot in “Three Comrades and One Inven- tion” which will be shown Wednes- day, Thursday, and Friday at the Acme Theatre. This Soviet comedy received high praise when first shown on Broadway. The Daily News called this Sovkino production a “rather new angle in the laugh line.” The Sun stated “Three Comrades” as “Russian slapstick.... It is thor- oughly mad.” “Interesting and has jentertaining value.... Done in the manner of that Russian humorist, Gogol Interwoven in the plot is & romance treated in the gay and |comic spirit.... This Soviet comedy is worth seeing”’—from review of the Herald-Tribune, The direction is by Alexis Popoff and the cast is headed by Olga Tre- tiakov, Serge Iablokov, A. Nirov and Serge Lavrentiev. The same program will present as an added feature the latest news from the miners strike in Illinois and picture of the farmers’ strike in the West. Also pictures of the TUUL Picnic. THURSDAY The Longtellew Avenue Branch, WIR will have meeting at 1013 Tremont Avenue, Bronx, at 6 p.m. All workers are invited, Post No. 2, WESL will hold a general membership meeting at 127 West 125th 8t., Room 6, at 8 p. m. Election of delegates to National Convention will take place. The Concourse Wo Club will have a membership meeting at 221 East Tremont Aveg one flight up, at 8p, m WARREN STEEL WORKERS REORGANIZE FORCES IN MILL FOR NEW STRUGGLE |\Company Attacks Union With Blacklist and | Sends Carload of Thugs Thru Neighborhood Women’s Auxiliary Formed; Relief Still Is Needed for Blacklisted Strike Leaders WARREN, O., Sept. . 6—The Republic stect strikers, who are back at} | work now after having defeated a 6 per cent wage ent, are busy consoli- | dating their organization inside the mill. They are building the Steel and |and Metal Workers Industrial Union, which organized the struggle, and are establishing their departmental committees on a firmer basis. es and vacant buildings) jand night. Mounted police were re- Debt service payment to bank-| lorsement of immediate full | Workers Industrial Union has dis-| Although the strike was won as: far as the cut is concerned, the com- pany has been able to temporarily blacklist some of the strike leaders Reconstruction of leadership within the mill is vital now. pointing out the next tasks of the Republic Steel workers is being distributed widel (Editor's Note.—Printed in Septem- ber 6 issue of the D: Worker.) .. Building Unit; Discussions on the léssons of the strike, the need of departmental or- | ganization, of a united front of skill- ed and unskilled, Negro and white, employed and unemployed, are going forward in preparation for the next struggle. Yesterday 40 delegates of workers’ a strong united front relief commit- tee. It plans collections of funds and food from stores and workers’ organ- izations and from farmers. It Will prepare for another struggle, and at the same time take care of the wives and children of blacklisted men. September 24, at Hippodrome Hall. Terror Against Union. In a vain effort to make the steel workers abandon the Steel and Metal, Workers Industrial Union rumors are being spread that the strikers are beaten up when they try to get their pay. Company thugs in a big car patrol the working class neighborhoods day ported stationed at the mill gate last night. The company is clearly afraid of the fighting spirit of the workers, | The leaflet of the Rank and File | \Strike Committee, organizations met here and elected | A Relief Dance will take place on| jand is taking no chances, while pre- paring to try and slip over the wage cut later. Test In Niles Today The Niles Mill of the same com- pany pens tomorrow, and it is not certain yet whether it will try to enforce the wage cut there or not. If it opens without the cut, the Niles men will know that the Warren strike saved their wages. Some of the Warren pickets are still in jail, and will be out on bonds today. International Labor Defense attorneys are here for the prelimi- nary hearings of arrested strikers tomorrow. Women Organize Yesterday the Women’s Auxiliary of the Steel and Metal Workers In- dustrial Union elected’ officers and planned a mass meeting to elect a delegation to go to the school board and demand free food, clothes, and shoes for the school children. Many families unemployed and blacklisted = call for the continuation of relief collections, especially of food and money, in other steel towns. The American Federation of Labor held a Labor Day picnic yesterday at Niles. Participating were officials of the Amalgamated Association of Steel, Iron and Tin Workers, who agreed to the 6 per cent cut in War- ren and tried to break the strike against it. The speakers at the picnic said nothing about the cut or the strike, and confined themselves to praising the Republican and Demo- cratic parties and capitalist institu- tions The steel workers attending e disgusted, and most of them left before the speaking was over. REPORT SUN. ON ANTI-WAR MEET US, Delegates to Tell About Congress | NEW YORK.—American delegates who attended the World Congress Against War held recently at Am- sterdam, Holland, will report io Am- erican workers this Sunday after- noon, Sept. 11, at a meeting to be held at 2:30 p. m. at Webster Hall, 119 E. llth St. Sherwood Ander-| son, Prof. H.W.L. Dana and other} delegates to the Congress wil Ispeak. Other interesting features are also planned on the program of this} meeting, which is being held under) the auspices of the American Com. mittee for Against War. Tickets of admission at the door. Painters Locals of the Alteration Painters Unton will hold their regular membership meetings a sfollows: Local 1, Bronx, 1130 Southern Blvd. day, 8 p.m. Local 2, Brownsville, 1440 New York Ave. Thusrday, 8 p.m. Local 3, Williamsburgs, 11 Graham Ave., Wednesday, 8 p.m. Local 4, Downtown, 134 E. 7th St., Monday, 8 p.m. All cuters whether members of Local 10, of the Industrial Union, or unorganized are after work at Memorial Hall, St. to plan the struggle against long hours. DRESSMAKERS Unity Committee of Dressmakers calls all members in the International to elect shop delegates to a mass shop conference Sat- urday at 1p, m. at Irving Plaza Hall Members of left wing in the ILGW Local 22, attend general membership meeting on ‘Thursday, right after work, in Bryant Hall ‘The dress department of mass mecting of all unemployed dressmek- ers Wednesday at 1:30 p. m. at 131 W. 28th St. makers wil Itake place Wednesday night, right after work, at 131 West 28ht St. FUR WORKERS ‘The Industrial Union urges all members of Loeal 3 to go to the meeting Wednssday Proposed wage cut. . TYPOGRAPHICAL ‘The Amalgamation Party in “Big Six” will have an open forum Thursday at 8 p.m. at 103 Lexington Ave. SHOE AND LEATHER WORKERS Membership meeting ‘Thursday at 7. p.m. of Shoe and Leather Workers Industrial Union, to elect paid and un-paid officials. TEACHERS The Teachers Committee to Protect Sal- 8 calls a meeting of gil teachers, and tend Pp. m. Ho! ‘The meeting is Wednesday at 8:30 at 27 Barrow St., in Greenwich “The labor movement will gain the apper hand and show the way to peace and socialism.” LENIN. the World Congress| are 35 cents, which will be collected | Labor Union Meetings called to a mass meeting Wednesday right | pj 344 West 36] the Needle | ‘Trades Workers Industrial Union calls a} An emergency meeting of active dress-| at 957 Willoughby Ave., to vote down Luke's | es invites other civil seryice employes to at-| SCHURICHER SAYS WAR MUST COME | Between Germany and Poland | In van interview granted to the press General Von Schleicher, War Minister in Von Papen’s Junker Cabinet, made “no attempt to con- ceal the certainty with which he awaits an outbreak of war” between | Germany and Poland, according to ja dispatch from Berlin to the NeW | York Evening Post. | Von Schleicher stated In the inter- view that “East Prussia is especially in danger” and that the Von Papen | Cabinet is determined to do “what is necessary for the defense of that province.” East Prussia was separated from Prussia under the Versailles Treaty which created the Polish Corridor. The interview was granted at the end of army maneuvers along the East Prussian-Polish frontier. NAT'L BISCUIT WORKERS GREET DAILY WORKER (By a Worker Correspondent) NEW YORK.—When I was selling the Daily Worker Friday before the | National Biscuit Co. about 4:30 p-m. | and shouting—“Buy the Daily Work- er! Organize and fight! Fight against lay offs! Fight against wage cuts! ight against the stagger plan! Or- | ganize!—” Groups of workers greeted me with: “Keep up the work.” “The Daily Worker is our friend” “We are jonly working two days a week, and we work nine hours a day.” Classified For Lowest Travel Cost GO BY Private Auto TO ANY FOINT IN U.8. A. via SHARE EXPENSE PLAN You Can Go Direct from New York to CHICAGO for. CLEVELAND DETROIT _ ST. LOUIS Special Rates for Groups of Six Representatives in Chicago, Cleveland, Detroit and other points can bring you back at correspondingly low rates. Auto Travel Bureau, Inc. 1L WEST 42ND STREET PENN. 6-3562 9 « Special Reduction of 5% With This Ad TO RENT—t-room attic apartment; im- provements—$25 monthly. 5722 15th Ave., Brooklyn. Apply Ist floor, WANTED—Double room, Square, reasonable rent. Daily Worker. preferably Miss ¥. Helpful Information for templating auto shai 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- re-expense trips, ete., columns of the “Daily” us be mutually helpful. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS 5e. A WORD Lee, Socialist anne for Stagger Wa Cut Plot nf Green| Algernon Lee, theoretician of the| | Socialist Party, came forward on the | |radio last night to back ‘the same| | | stagger wage cut plan that was ad-| vocated yesterday by Green and Doak. Lee, like the other misleaders, said nothing about maintaining the| jsame weekly wages when he advo-| | cated cutting the hours, ui id | something vaguely about workers be- jing able to strike later for higher wages if more workers were employed. ‘Thus Lee puts the Socialist Party in| line with th e bosses’ wag> cut of- | fensive now being ca: line with the bosses’ y ture. ge cut of- INTERVENTION BY MACDONALD N BRITISH STRIKE Employers and Mill) Strikers Called to A Conference LONDON, Eng., Sept. 6—The Na- tional government, led by the rene-| gade Laborite Ramsay McDonald, in-| tervened today in the strike of 200,000 weave?s in the Lancashire cotton mills, Sir Henry Betterton, minister va labor, met with McDonald immedi- | ately aftey the latter returned from | his vacation in Scotland. Betterson sent letters to both the employers and the union leaders, vir- tually commanding their presence at a conference to “discuss the trouble | with government officials.” Cheers Strike Breaking Leaders = | Government intervention has been| almost the sole hope of the weavers’ union officials ever since an aroused | rank and file compelled them, much against their will, to declare a strike against the 17 per cent wage cut. | | Roumanian Workers to! Mobilize Tonight for| Relief March Saturday | NEW YORK.—A meeting of the Roumanian, Workers Club will be held tonight at 7:30 at 77 St. Marks | Pl. to mobilize Roumanian workers throughout the city for the gigantic Relief March next Saturday. All’ Roumanian workers are urged to attend this meeting or to send representatives to it to insure the greatest possible mobilization of Rou- manian workers for the Relief March. Union Helps Needle Workers Collect Wages NEW YORK.—The §. and K. Dress Co, 842 Sixth “Ave, made Anna Glecth travel four times from Long Island, and refused to pay her wages of $2.25. A comrade, passing by and hearing the argument, took her up to the Needle Trades Workers Indus- trial Union office, and the union’s unemployed committee went down and made them pay her the wages as well as 40 cents car fare. |and corruption ied through | ca, | has unquestionab: | The | ance ] | tronage and getting control of the "WALKER QUITTING SETTLES NOTHING Amter Calls for Huge Relief March NEW YORK.—“The resignation of x Walker,” declares I. Amter, Communist candidate for Governor, ettles nothing.” Through agree- s in the Tammany machine, to save the fac> of Walker, and pre- vent further disclosures of the graft that exists in the Tammany administration of New Walker has resigned, and the closed, as far as Governor velt is concerned. Roosevelt made a deal with the ruling clique in Tammany Hall. Walker may or may not run again. t2 of Lehman is in the bal- —but through handing out pa- plums in the Tammany administra- tion, Tammany will try to settle its differences, Crisis Still Here “But this settles nothing. McKee is now acting mayor and he will have to face the same problems as Walker New York fac2. Despite Hoover's and the Wall Street forces that rule ‘end of the crisis’ talk, and Roosevelt’s support of the Hoover Business Con- ference, the is grows deeper. Wage cuts are taking place one after the |other. The city employes will have to fight against the coming wage re- duction. McKee already promises drastic cuts. The appeal of the city }employees to the citizens through a netition will not be their real weapon. | They must organize and fight as the workers in the shops fight. “The workers will also se2 clearly | through the Socialist Party maneu- vers to put up Hillquit as a fusion | candidate. Demand Relief “But the worst situation faces the more than 1,000,000 unemployed, es- | Pécially the Negro and Latin-Amer- |ican workers. The city pretends that it is bankrupt—just as Hoover, who, together with the Wall St. U. S. Con- gress, after giving billions to the! banks and corporations, declared that ; | Payment of the soldiers’ bonus would bankrupt the government. The un- employed of New York have no in- tention of starving. On September 10 they will march to City Hall and demand an answer to their demands, for immediate relief. The cutting down of relief, the cutting of tens of thousands off the relief lists, are forcing the unéMployed to fight. The Communist Party raises as the cen- tral issue for the entire working class the demand for immediate relief and unemployment and social insurance at the expense-of the state and the employers. This question the bosses wll not be allowed to shirk. Provi- sion for the unemployed will have to. be the first order of business—not for discussion but for execution. 29 EAST 14TH STREET NEW YORK Tel. Algonquin 3356-8843 We Carry a Full Line of STATIONERY Anna Gleich donated the carefare to the Daily Worker. AT SPECIAL PRICES for Organizations AMUSEMENT Hilarious Adventures of Ai An Amusing Comedy of Two Inventors Sovkine of Mosco Latest News of Miners’ Strik Pictures of T.U.U.L. A Soviet Comedy !_Screfmingly Funny ! some, STARTING TODAY—FOR 3 DAYS “@ZECMRADES AND ONE INVENTION’ Fnacted by 2 Brillizmt Cast Headed by OLGA TRETIAKOVA—SERGE IABLOKOV—SERGE LAVRENTIEV —Added Features— worrers A CME THEATRE | BSCS ia to With STREET & UNION SQUARE khov, Makhovy and Dasha and Their Girl Friend! Produced by e—Farmers’ Holiday in West Pienic All This Week Sat, & Sun. PM, Midnite 8) ‘just a pacifist picture, ist war into civil war against “$NI WITH ENGL photography, as in all Soviet pictures, Hollywood, Much improvement is ats: Picture; many of the flaws of the earli oO” LT BWAKe wo no CAME EO 4s: {The picture is clear on the horror of war, but it is not It’s lesson is “Turn the imperial- Beet tux" “Turn Imperialist War Into Civil War” AMGCAN PREMIERE — NEW SOVIET TALKIE MOSCOW NEWS SAYS:—The film is well directed; one feels the influence of Einstein in Timoshenko's work—his mastery in capitalism.”—Daily Worker. PER” ASH TITLES dling th The » by far excels the best pro ms of 0 noted “tn the sound technique of the jer Soviet “talkies” have been eliminated xmirn DOC WEEK 1ith Street and 3rd Ave, x JEFFERSON WEDNESDAY to FRIDAY—2 FEATURES “Skyscraper | Sculs” WARREN WILLIAM “Vanishing Frontier” with JOHN MACK BROWN 2ND WEEK! Fannie Hurst's “BACK STREET” IRENE DUNN—JONN BOLES Daily to 2 pm. 35e— 11 p.m, to close 35¢ FIGHT AND STRUGGLE IN TBE This can be a re: THE GOLDENS BRIDGE CITY!—LIVE IN THE COUNTRY! aljty if you join COOPERATIVE COLONY if interested, communicate with Dr. ROSETSTEIN, 285 CYPRESS AVENUE, BRONX It will be worth your while Capitol Bakery Gets Injunction Against Food Workers Union NEW YORK.—Co-operation of the | Jamaica workers with the strikers in the Capitol Bakery, and the good picketing at 7 am. and 7 pm. at both shops, 144-92 106th St. and 118 | Rockaway Blvd, has crippled the boss badly. Now he resorts to the in- junction. The writ against picketing was served on the Food Workers Indus- trial Union yesterday. The he is set for Thursday, and the union will be represented by Attorney Buitenkant. Police are attempting to prevent all open air meetings and distribu- tion of leaflets, Teachers Meet Tonite to Oppose Wage Cut; Demand Secret Ballot NEW’ YORK.—Teachers will voice their protests to the wage cut pro- posed by ex-Mayor Walker at an open meeting of the Teachers Com- mittee to Protect Salaries. This meeting will be held at Greenwich House, 27 Barrow St., on Wednesday, September 7, at 8:30 o'clock. Other civil service employees and their or- ganizations are urged to cttend this meeting. Representatives of the Mu- nicipal Clerks Committee to Protect Salaries and the Union of Technical Men, medical workers, and others have promised to come. The Teachers Committee to Pro- tect Salaries in a letter to School |Suprintendent William O'Shea pro- \tested the unfair balloting planned by school authorities and urged that teachers be given ample time to dis- cuss the proposed reduction without the presence of a principal or super- visory official, that the ballots be secret and unidentifiable ahd teach- ers count and tabulate the votes. FURRIER CLIQUE. CUTS THE WAGES pee Union Calls Fight the Cut * NEW YORK. — President Luke of the International Pur Workers Union and business agents cf Locals 2 and 3 have a d to a seventeen and @ half per cent wage cut for the fur dressers. trying to com pel the rar cut. ‘The Needle Trades Worsers Indus- trial Union calls on all fur dressers to fight such wage ss and to fol- low the example of the fur workers and dressmakers which under the Jead of the Indust Union have won wage increase: The Industrial Union calls all members of Local 3 to a meeting to- jnight at 957 Willoughby Avenue, to vote down the proposed cut, Concha Michel to Sing at Concert for ‘Daily’ | A group of Spanish and Latin- American workers have organized a concert and dance for the benefit of the Daily Worker Emergency Fund, to be held at 24 W. 115th St. on Sun- day, September 11, at 8 p-m, Goncha Michel, Mexican tionary singer, will giv of songs of the worke: ants of her own land. ial revolu- a program and peas- FORECLOSURES (By a Farmer Correspondent) GLENBURN, N. D—The farmers here are already feeling the effect of the foreclosures being put in mo- tion by the bankers, the ‘insurance companies, and the International Harvester Co. Here in North Dakota, the United Farmers’ League is once more showing ‘that it is the only real organizer of the poor farmers, cree ATIE \TION COMRADES! Health Center Cafeteria WORKERS CENTER 50 EAST 13th STREET Patronize the Health Center Cafeteria and help the Revolutionary Movement REASONABLE PRICES BEST FOOD JADE MOUNTAIN American & Chinese Restaurant 197 SECOND AVENUE Bet. 12 & 13 Welcome to Our Comrades Tomkins Sq. 6-9554 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A piace with atmosphere where ail radicnis meet 302 E. 12th St. New York Ph Brooklyn PURITY QUALITY SUTTER Vegetarian and Dalry Retsaurant 589 SUTTER AVE. (Cor. Georgia) B’klyn _ Phone GLenmore 4-3262 WORKERS—EAT AT THE Parkway Cafeteria 1638 PITKIN AVENUE Near Hopkinson Ave. Brooklyn, N. ¥ Bronx Intern’l Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 15th FLOOR AU Work Done Under Persona) Care of 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. A. C. BREGER Surgeon Dentist Special rates to workers and families 30-12-30th Ave, Grand Av., Cor. 2d Av., Astoria, L. I, 200 E. 23d St. Cor. Third Ave. New York City CUT THIS AD—SAVE MONEY Rubber Heels 19¢ Half Soles Sewed On CAPITOL C sHoE REPAIR 109 E. 14th St. LIVE IN A— 2800 BRONX Office open tram: 9 a, m. to & p. Saturday 10 9. m. “MORNING WORKERS COOPERATIVE COLONY We have a limited number of 3 and 4 room apartments NO INVESTMENT NECESSARY — OPPOsITE BRONX PARK PARK EAST Comradely atmosphere—In this Cooperative Colony you will find a library, athletic director, workroom: for children, workers’ clubs and various cultura) activities Tel. Estabrook 8-1400; Olinville 2-6972 Take Lexington Avenue train to White Plains Road and Get off Allerton Avenue every day; 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. to 5 p,m. Sunday Workers, Help Us Make This Bazaar a Success! SIXTH ANNUAL “DAILY WORKER” FREIHEIT” “YOUNG WORKER” BAZAAR MADISON SQUARE GARDEN, N. Y. Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday and Monday Oct. 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 BAZAAR HEADQUARTERS 50 E. 13th St., New York (6th floor) Ml

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