The Daily Worker Newspaper, September 8, 1932, Page 2

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Page Two New City Budget Calls for A demonstration of spring and Eli ation by the Ci th street: LEADE es Youth to Under Ausp and Un. Council — A demonstrs auspices of the In- Defense and the ed Council will St. be at . tomor- child- Post No. membership m: ‘The Upper Council of Work: a mowe at th and Bar benef: 19¢, In case of rain, t poned to Friday ‘onx Section o the United The Middle United Council of Wo: will hold aa open a 4th 8! Council 3 of the United Council of Work- ing Class Women will have open a Ave meeting at 14ist St. and C Couneit 19 will hol at Avenue C and Tenth § air mee 8 p. The following Bronx, Ford! Port Lu eetet ¥7.5.0., Wilson. Brighton Bench, Brighton Beach. nth St. and The Young Communist Lea: point will debate the ¥. at Laisve Hall, 46 Ten Subsect: “What Party Is Working Class.” eof Green- a mn ting for the 17, Seetio: @ an open al Tho Third Conference of the United Front Election Campaign € will be held at 301 West 29th St Steve Katovis Branch, ILD, will hold » tion et Seventh St. and Avenue! B. at & p. m. ‘An important meeting of the Interna- ton-! Werke+s Club and Young Storm will he Fal st Manhatten Lyceum, 66 East Fourth St., at 8 p. m. A memborship meeting of the Office Workers Union will be held at Labor Tem- ple, 242 East 14th St., at 8 p. m. Post No. 35 to Give Dance ect Workers’ Club end Post No, 3§ WESL will give a concert and dance Saturday, & ers’ Cente: 57 So. Blvd, A program has been’ arranged. Proceeds are for the club and the WESL convention fund. t Side children before the Home BR 10th at the Prospect Work- | cm s demanding the opening of a free GRO JOBLESS PIONEER TROOPS | R BAILED INRELIEF MARCH| Fifty Pioneer Groups Mobilized for Sat. RK.—At least fifty Young s will take part in the on Saturday under the arious Block Committees oyed Councils, the New Office of the Young Pioneers announced yesterday With the help of some Block Com- the Young Wioneers have several hundred children in diate relief in In East New won food from. the P. S. 174 in Side a hun- d last week in 2 ml station. undred wo! rs’ children izeq by the Pioneers in tchen in the last two weeks. ilk a erans Called on to All Posts of the Ex-Servicemen’s League lled on their membership to line at Union Square on Sa- 10 a. m. sharp to take part c ief March on City District Area Committee of jthe W.ES.L. points out that i+ has |secured information which proves that the Welfare Department credits money to alleged veterans” who never receive it. fol: he Bonus Mawchers left York, they were told by the city nment that the federal govern- | they could expect no aid from the city cKee and the Board of, se their demand for payment of the bonus. Elect Cleveland Delegates. |. NEW YORK. — Harlem Post No. meets tonight (Thursday) to elect delegates to the tonight at 8 p. m. 24 West 25th St., Coney Island to elect delegates. All vets are in- vited to attend. Browder, Kingston to Speak Tonight to the NEW YORK. — Tonight at 8 p. m. for congress from the 20th mblyman from the 16th district, Kingstone, leader and organizer { the Negro masses in Harlem. AIRMAN IN SCIENC MISSING FLIGHT CORMORA 7.— It is believed that Commander Gordon of the Royal Canadian Air been forced down in the Dr. Gordon took off with the intention of ascending 25,000 feet as part of | 22, attend general membership meeting on | Millikan. e study n is r ing h CITY ELECTION NOTES THURSDAY Tenth St. and Avenue C, Manhattan. Fourth St. and Avenue B, Manhattan. Seventh St. and Avenue B, Manhattan. th St. and Avenue B, Manhattan le Youth Center, ratification rally. Speakers, ‘an, congressional candidate, Browder, » Yorkville, a and Burns. 6th 8 I. Reswick. Kings Highway and 14th 8t. 8. Sklaroff. Church and 96th Street, Brownsville, | speakers, Cokor and Feinstone. Tapscott and Sutter, Brownsville, speak- | candidate ‘for 6th ers, el Feldman, nal District, and and Cohen, Sackman, Brownsville and Bunkin. Stone and Riverdale, Brownsville, speak- Morris Scheer, candidate Sth and Valis. dale and Riverdale, Frankel and Abrams. | speake: Riverdale and Bristol, Brownsville, speak- | massed strength. | SHOWED MASS STRENGTH | Supervisor immediately of the reac- lare any riots or demonstrations,” di- rected to the City Home Relief Buro jin a secret circular to its precinct) re! Buro Supervisors ordering the inten- sified relief cutting offensive against New York's jobless last sprng. ‘ DAILY W SEPTEMBER 8, 1932" KER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, t for Une me ployed Workers Starvation Die Secret Circular Ordering Cut Sent to Home Relief Bureaus | stopping the payment of rents and| | thus increasing evictions by the thou- | red tape must break By AMY SCHECHTER. On September 10th a great arr of New York jobless workers and ex- servicemen, backed up by workers on job, will march on City Hall to ne |sands, multiplying the through which the jobl | before they can get food. RELIEF STEADILY BE) DECREAS: Even according to the admission the relist cutting s carrying through ] bureau officials), relief is being push- | r }ed to a level well below the hunger | ration under the leadership of the|had been cut off were re-entered on) line. In a secret document headed | able hardship, New York jobless m zs ed Council of Greater New| the list “Experiment in Cutting Food Tick- | ak to the city governinent, ban! t City Hall, threw the fear] 7, as the crisis deepens and| ets,” sent _out a few weeks ago, the | ers and bosses in the only language of the organized strength of the job- eet ae Bas | Bureau “Nutrition Experts,” as the the bosses understand—by mobiliz-| less mass2s into the city government, | “employment in New York steadily| junger specialists who experiment on| ing for the march on City Hall in forced an immediate halt in their| mounts despite Hoover's lying pros-| the living body of the working class | tens and scores of thousands tg force starvation plans, convinced them that|perity propaganda, the city govern-| call themszlves, describe the budget through their demands by their the million and a quarter jobless in| ment is again swinging into anj therein proposed as*“too low,” and| New York were not willing to oblige|even more savage attack on thejlaconically observed “the nursing their capitalist masters by starving | Standards of the unemployed. With) mother in Low Food Allowance is quietly. jthe help of its police, and its ex-| likely to lose her milk”... the money CITY FORCED TO | perts in the scientific starvation of| will provide only where plans are} f there | APPROPRIATE $5,000,000 the workers who run the City Home| made for two meals a day instead of here = , BAtpd, Relief Bureaus, the city government three.” | The government that the day be-j|in trying to force through a general But the food al’owances of the new | was unable to find a cent for) city-wide relief cut of 50 per cont! Home Bureau budget are far below] ef passed an immediate appropri- | and over. At the same time it is! this “Low Food Allowance” of a few | ion of $5,000,000 and’ reopened reg-| cutting thousands from the relief! weeks ago, which, according to the} ation of the jobless which had| lists, trying completely to eliminate | admission of these “Nutrition Experts The | been ordered stopped. Fifty-six thou- | “small” families from relief, inten-| themselves, involves wholesale phys- | mand of the bd Ww f of b > ia is Ss | of the City Home Relief Bureau (not | all the 7,000,000 people of the rich- ry H 4 Dp t to the wor! of course, but in est city in the world illion and a uns er ech sxeret circulars sent around to the arter jobless and their d2pendents —already hed below the hunge line, and ing vinter of intoler- pI “wi you kindly inform the Case tion of the clients, that for ief Bu- | had drafted them and that The veterans are now demanding Cleveland bonus conference to be held Sept. 23 to 25 Workers of Yorkville |‘: . Man., Sept. itoba in the “flying la- of the famous physicist,| members in the Internationel to elect shop | f the cosmic ray that Mul- | Thu 5 SHOE AND LEATHER WORKERS 105 Thetford Israel ve for Governor of New York; Irving Dolb, candidate 34rd , “candidate 20th Congres- , will speak at Hungarian 1 Brighton Court, Arthur | 18th Ave. I. Gabin and .| fice Workers Union, Thursday (today) at LD Brownsville, “reaction” of the unemployed—in, the form Helen Lynch, Released | Today, to Address Open Air Meet Tonight Threats of an organized hunger strike by the prisoners of the Wom- en’s Detention House won the re- lease of Helen Lynch from solitary confinement, where she had been placed following a 10-day sentence for protesting in court against the jailing of workers’ children for de- manding milk. Comrade Lynch, who is the candi- |date on the Communist Party ticket | | for assembly from the eighth assemb- ly district, had been placed in sol tary confinement when she refused to undergo the indignity of a per- sonal examination usually given to| prostitutes. She will be released | from jail today, and will address a workers’ open-air meeting tonight (Thursday night) at 7th St. and Ave. i | ‘Friday night Comrade Lynch will | address a meeting at Manhattan Ly- ceum. FUR POINTERS IN | 12 SHOPS WIN, 38 Fur Shops Struck | Against Contracting NEW YORK. — Twelve fur point- ing shops have agreed to settle with the Fur Department of the Needle! Trades Workers Industrial Union, which is leading a struggle of about | 400 workers in several shops, The bosses willing to settle have signed for week work with a minimum scale | of $20 instead of the previous piece work. They also recognize the union, and grant union conditions in the | shop. The strike against the others | will go on to victory, The campaign of the Fur Depart- ment against contracting started yes: terday, full swing, with strikes de- clared in 38 shops. SAM WEINSTEIN NOW OUT ON BAIL Series of Meetings Arranged | NEW YORK —Samuel Weinstein, | war veteran, who was arrested on July 19, on a framed-up charge of manslaughter by the bosses of the Muskin Manufacturing Co., Brooklyn. for taking an active part jin a strike led by the Furniture Workers Indus- Union, ahs been releasod on | $25,000 bail. The Weinstein Defense Committee rs of Yorkville will gather in| has arranged a series of meetings | mittee and the NTWIU. a mass meeting at Hungarian Work- s|ers Home, 350 East 8lst St. | was ¢ Speakers will be Earl Browder, | Within a few weeks for the payment 4. Wage increase for the lower paid at which Weinstein will speak. It} was also stated that $1,000 is needed | ;of bail bonds and for the prepara-| Geza Szepesi, candidate for | tion of a strong legal defense by the! 20 per cent. | International Labor Defense. | Officials had attempted to thrust | jon Weinstein capitalist lawyers for |his defense, but he strongly declared | | that “the ILD is the only organiza, ‘tion that will work in my interest because it is a workers’ organiza- tion.” | Labor Union Meetings | DRESSMAKERS | Unity Committee of Dressutakers calls all) Gelegates to a mass shop conference Sat-| | urday at 1p. m. at Irving Plaza Hall. | Members of left wing in the ILGW Local | rsday, right after work, in Bryant Hall. | the dress department of the Needle | Trades Workers Industrial Union calls a| =| mass mecting of all unemployed dressmak- | |ers Wednesday at 1:30 p, m, at 131 W. 28th | st. | An emergency meeting of active dress- | makers wil Itake place Wednesday “night, right after work, at 131 West 28ht St. TYPOGRAPHICAL ‘The Amalgamation Party in “Big Six” will have an open forum Thursday at 8 p.m., at 103 Lexington Ave. Membership meeting Thursday at 7 p.m. |of Shoe and Leather Workers Industrial | | Union, to elect paid and un-paid officials. Knitgoods Workers All active members and shop committes members meet at 7:30 p. m. Monday at | 191 West 28th st. | CORE ae. Oftice Workers Regular membership _mecting of the Of-| Labor Temple, 242 East 14th St. at 8 p.m é Furniture Workers All furniture workers, upholsterers, mat- tress makers, box-spring mokersy and cab- inet makers ‘are called to meet Thursday | Pp. m. Or ae ite Metal Workers Membership meeting of the New York | Local of the Metal Workers Industrial | | Union, Friday, at 8 p.m. at Irving Plaza, | / Irving Place and 15th St. Wm. F. Dunne will give a report on the recent victorious | ers, Goldie Lacher, candidate 2ist A. D.,| steel strike in Warren, Ohio. There will | and Gibbs | also be a report and discussion on the | 120th St. and Clinton Ave. Speakers: A.| strike the Union is now leading ‘Netzer, H. Tobman, Max Waimflesh. ia the | Rex Shop, New Yorks I sand familii of local struggles culminating | been refused relief were immediately | groes, the Latin Americans and Ital-1 workers’ famil ; in the great April 2ist mass demon- $. Giles saints = | evictions. jing through Minnesota. Forty coun- |ties are already organized in prepa- ‘Led by Needle Trades night (tonight) at Manhattan Lyceum, at | - Dolb, candidate from 23rd | 7:30 where had applied and | sifying discrimination against the Ne- listed for relief and thousand that ians and other of the foreign born, ical degeneration for the jobless and wholesale star- babies. The new} vation for thei budget figures compare with the “Low; The New York jobless have no Food Allowance” as follows: For a/met the sharpening offensive with- family of two, $1.30 a week in the|ou tfighting back. The number an¢ new budget as against $1.95 in the} militancy of local struggles, befor “Too Low” budget; for a family of |Home Relief Bureaus, gyp agencies three, $1.95 as against $2.40; for four, | at evictions, etc. has been increasing $2.60 as against $2.85, and so on for| from day to day in the past weeks the larger families. | Hundreds of relief cuts have beer In practice the cuts in many dis-| stopped; hundreds of jobless put back tricts of New York are actually much | on relief lists; hundreds relieved 0} greater—a cut in the weekly allow-|the torture of endless red tape and ance for a family of six cut from/questioning by the action of Block $4.75 to $2.35 is one of scores of| Committees and Unemployed Coun. cases recorded; and in addition relief |cils. In Harlem, for example, re- is being “staggered,” from a weekly | cently, the City Home Relief Bureav distribution to distribution once in| was forced to grant an additional two weeks and sometimes even only | $500 a day for food by the fight put once monthly. In some districts the | up by the Negro and white jobless city has completely c2ased paying | and employed workers of the district rents, resulting in a tremendous in-| But with the sharpening of the at+ crease in evictions, and instead has| tack, and its broadening out to @ begun to push the policy of breaking | ceneral city-wide scale, and with the up the workers’ homes, investigators | menace of winter coming near, local demanding that parents give over struggles are not enough. The time their children to the City Orphan! has come when only a city-wide Asylums. | unitéd counter-offensive of the work- Cases are already reported where | ers and ex-servicemen of New York, refusal to give up their children is | jobless and employed, Negro and met by a court order charging “im- | white, native and foreign-born, work- proper guardianship” and th2 chil-/ers of the revolutionary unions, and dren are taken away by force, At) the A. F. of L. and unorganized work- the same time, breadlines are being | ers, can smash the hunger plans of cut, “concentration” they call it, and|the city government and the bankers police approval demanded before even | and bosses who control it, and force the filthy bowl of soup or moldy|them to give food and shelter for bread is handed out. |the whole mass of the unemployed UNITED FARMERS LEAGUE HEAD ROUSES 7,000 TO BROADER STRIKE ACTION Harju Calls for Militancy and for Tax Strike | With Mass Opposition to Evictions | League Spreads Movement Through Minne- sota; Conferences In Mesaba Park and Sioux City SIOUX CITY, I: gy S X CITY, Ia. Sept. 7.—Over 500 farm strikers st 1d 22 trucks trying to run through their Picket lines today, fought » battle sie fists and stones against Sheriff Rippey and his 100 deputies armed with shotguns, pistols and clubs, and licked the whole crowd of deputies. Th Of trncka * Sheriff and his men were in cars pregeding the long line . MARSHFIELD, Wise., Sept. 7.—Rudol, i MA i 5 . TI ph Harju, National § a the United Farmers League, addressed the state wide mass meeting ot 7000 armers here yesterday. The meeting was called by the Farmers Holiday Association, which now seeks to avoid pick oS ie eting, and merely withhold prod- Harju received an enthusiastic re- , DUE HERE FRIDAY the farmers’ strike, but also urged the farmers to extend and broaden American Delegates Report Sunday | their struggle into a tax strike and mass resistance to foreclosures and Ready to Strike in Minn. MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., Sept. 7.— The farm strike sentiment is spread- American delegates who attended | the World Congress Against War | held recently at Amsterdam, Holland, | will arrive on Friday morning at 8 a.m, at Pier 4, Hoboken. ‘The delegates wil report this Sun- day afternoon, at 2:30 p. m., at Web- | ster Hall, 119 East 11th St. Among the speakers will be Sherwood An; derson and Prof. H W. L. Dans The ringing call for taking up the concrete struggle against imperial- | ist war was made by Romain Rolland, | the famous French writer at the | congress when he declared: es b “All together we must examine the | Workers Ind. Union | most effective means of demolishing | ee war by striking it, at the decisive | NEW YORK—The Art Knitting | 20urs, in its very sources of profits Mill strike is won. It lasted a week, and death, in its munitions factories ration to shut off produce to Min- neapolis and St. Paul, according to reports of the Farmers’ Holiday As- sociation. ART KNITTING STRIKE IS WON Turn Local 22 Meeting | Tenight Into A Rally for United _ Struggle! NEW YORK. — The clique which runs Local 22 of the International Ladies Garment Workers has called @ membership meeting right after work tonight in Bryant Hall. The left wing in the union declares this | @ maneuver of these offitials to aid the racketeering drive which these officials are trying to carry through by use of-the Strawberry gang. The | left wing calls all members to come to the meeting, and turn it into a mobilization meeting for united struggle jointly with the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union, a- gainst the growing misery in the dress trade. The Industrial Union reminds the membership of Local 22 that its let- ter to the Local 22 members was never brought before them. The let- ter proposed a united organization | drive. The Industrial Union calls on the membres of Local 22 to act on the proposal anyway, and bring about ‘unity of action between the members of the LL.G.W. and the N.T.W.LU. STRIKERS FIRM AT SOUTH RIVER Reject “Conciliation” and Arbitration SOUTH RIVER, N. J., Sept. 7. — The attempt of the bosses to drive the 1,200, militant strikers of South River back to the shops has once more failed. Tuesday morning the strikers had a very effective picket- line. In the afternoon a committee from the Board of Conciliation addressed the strikers, proposing that they re- utrn to work under the old condi tions and that they elect a commit- tee to arbitrate. Ben Gold, secretary of the Needle Trades Workers Industri=1 Union, addressed the meeting, pointing out to the workers that this proposal of the Conciliation Committee would mean a sellout of the strike. The workers unanimously voted against the proposal of the Conciliation Com- mittee and decided to go on with the strike. with 150 out. It was led by the|4"4 means of transport. The futur Knitters Department of the Needle|W@ is in he hands of he wciking Trades Workers Industrial Union. | Class. Tt depends on the working) All are now in the union. All are |©lass to destroy war. Our role is to |remind the working. class of its re back at work with the following de- | 7 fj mands won: sponsibilities and to assume them as | ours.” 1. Recognition of the shop, com- } VOTE COMMUNIST Against Imperialist War; for the defense of the Chinese people and 2, The 44-hour week. 3. No discharge or discrimination. orkers, amounting to from ten to Relief is urgently needed to help the strikers. The Workers’ Inter- national Relief is sending a truck- joad of food to the strikers today and all workers are called upon to support this militant strike. Minnie Smaller, an active dress- maker send by the Industrial Union to help the strikers was arrested on the picket line yesterday and was arrested and sentenced to 60 days in jail, Steps are being taken to take of the Soviet Union. The Knitgoods Department of the her out of jail under habeus corpus. NTWIU is leading a drvie aganst wage cuts and bad conditions in the shops. It calls all active members and members of shop committees to} a meeting Monday at 7:30 p. m; in 131 West 28th St., to prepare for a big mass meeting of knit-goods work- ers soon. Amusements “ 9, often overwhelmingly 20!” henthro Doi Hees B.WAY a 41°ST, Fannie Hurst's “BACK STREET” IRENE DUNN—JOHN BOLES Daily to 2 p.m. 35¢— 11 pm, to close 35¢ Oct. 6, 7 Collect articles and greetings for TODAY AND TOMORROW MILARIOUS SOVIE® COMEDY “9 COMRADES AND ONE INVENTION” Also: Miners’ Strike—Farmers’ Holiday Pictures of T.U.U.L. Pienic Acme Theatre THE WORKERS Workers, Support the Press That Fights Your Battles! Get Ready for the 6th Annual “DAILY WORKER” Bazaar MADISON SQUARE GARDEN, N. Y. Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday and Monday mediately to the Bazaar Committee. BAZAAR HEADQUARTERS 50 E, 13th St., New York (6th floor) YOUNG WORKER” » S, 9, 10 ‘ the Bazaar Journsl and send im- Help make the Bazaar a suceess Young Workers Strike - Back At Hunger and Terror on Youth Day International Youth Day, Friday, to Have Ser- ies of Demonstrations in New York Sam Brown, Negro Section Organizer Who Was Clubbed and Jailed, Will Address Crowds NEW YORK. — With brutal terror the city government has struck repeatedly at the starving children of the unemployed and the young work- ers during the past two weeks. In Harlem, Sam Brown, Negro section or- ganizer of the Young Communist League was beaten over the head with a led pipe and sentenced to six months in jail for fighting for relief. In the Bronx, Jimmie Ford, Negro Pioneer leader of the Bob miner troop has|P-m. March down Columbia St. to been sentenced to a year in the re-|Court and Carrol. Speakers—James formatory for leading the struggle | Lerner, Nell Carroll, Jack Harris, against Jin -Orowlsm, Brownsvitle—Rallies at Rockaway ne _ jan mont; Saratoga and Pitkin; The jailing of two children, 13 and | Howard and Atlantic; Rockaway and 14 years old, the decision to have a is Atlantic. At 7:30 p. m. march to 15 year old Pioneer examined by central rally at Hopkinson and Pit- alienists in an attempt to have him|kin Aves. A dance will at 1813 Pit- put away in an insane asylum and|xin Ave. finish the evening. Speak- stop his fight for relief are other | ers: Dave Doran, Joe Ross, Partin: examples of this recent reign of ter-| Bronx—139th St, and St. Anns Ave. . The government is taking these | at 7 pm. march to 161 St and Pros- steps at a time when it is officially pect for final rally Speakers: Gil admitted that over 200,000 children | Green, Sam Markson, Gittens, Ber- roam the highways of the country : 4 % Jand. hunting for a bite to eat and a plafe| powntown— Rallies at South and to sleep. Whitehall, 7th St. and Ave. A, 29th St. and 8th Ave. At 7 p.m. march to Manhattan Lyceum, 62 East 4th St. Speakers: Clara Wernick, Bill Albertson, Reese. Astoria—Open air rally at Stein< way and Jamaica Ave. at 7:30. Yorkers—Workers Center, 27 Hud- son St. Jamaica—March from Town Hall to Workers Center, 7:30 p.m, Youth Day On International Youth Day, Fri- day, September 9, the Young Com- munist League in New York will mobilize thousands of young workers in a fight against war and for the immediate relief of the young work- ers and children. Eight conferences held during the past week have pre- pared as many demonstrations on Friday, September 9, At the Harlem demonstration which will start at 110th and Fifth Ave. at 6:30 p.m. Tennessee Milk Strike. MEMPHIS, Tenh., Sept- 7.—A mass and march to Lenox Ave. and 145th Street, Sam Brown will speak. Other speakers will be Shepherd, candidate for Lieutenant Governor, Herman, District Organizer of the Y.C.L. In Brooklyn—Parade starting from State St. and Columbia Place at 8 meeting of dairy farmers here called by the Independent Dairymen’s As- sociation voted to pour 40,000 gallons of milk daily into the Mississippi in a strike to raise the price to $2.25 per hundred pounds. They are now getting $1.67. ATIE {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 ‘nya SANDWICH SOL'S LUNCH 103 University Place (Just Around the Corner) Telephone Tompkins Square 6-9780-9781 Classified For Lowest Travel Cost Go BY Private Auto TO ANY POINT IN U, 8. A. via SHARE EXPENSE PLAN You Can Go Direct from New York to CHICAGO _ for. CLEVELAND DETROIT 8X. LOUIS... Special Rates for Groups of Six back at correspondingly low rat Auto Travel Bureau, Inc. 1. WEST 42ND STREET PENN. 6-3562 Special Reduction of 5% With This Ad KOR RENT—Sunny, airy room, suitable for ‘two. $4.25 per week. 2005 Monterey, Apt. D-5 (near Tremont & 3rd Ave.). é WANTED—Loft space suitable for studio ‘W. 11th St. Section must be ie. A ily partment; TO RENT—4-room attic tm- provements—$25 monthly, 5722 15th, Ave., Brooklyn. Apply 1st floor. e Intern] Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE Ith FLOOR All Work Done Under Persona) Care of DR. JOSEPHSON COHEN’S CUT RATE OPTICIANS é Eyes Examined by Registered Op- tometrists—White Gold Frames $1.50—Shell Frames 91.00 117 ORCHARD ST., Necr Delancey Entertainment—Dance FINNISH HALL ROOF GARDEN 15 West 126th Street Friday, Sept., 9th at 8 p. m Auspices Section 3, W. LR. BENEFIT EAST OHIO MINERS Admission 25 Cents ~ Brooklyn _ AFFAIR FOR THE DAILY WORKER to be given by the BRIGHTON WORKERS’ CLUB Sat., Sept. 10, at 8 p. m. at 8159 Coney Istand Ave. Workers Chorus and Workers Theatre Admission 25¢ Dancing All We Helpful Information for templating auto shar Those seeking temporary or permanent rooms and apartments in New York and those con- will find the classified columns of the “Daily” of special appeal—Let us be mutually helpful. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS 5c. A WORD Individuals and Groups e-cxpense trips, ete.,

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