The Daily Worker Newspaper, March 17, 1933, Page 2

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p. "AGE Tw 0 {| HARLEM STREETS SO DANGEROUS CHILDR TAMMANY AGENTS SNATCH BODY OF SLAIN WOMAN Foree Postponing the} Funeral of Mrs. | Cummings It Could Be Like ¥YORK.—The funeral of Mrs. Negro worker's wife, and both killed Sunday by mis- nt in Harlem Hospital, had to e postponed yesterday because Tam- y agents intimidated the under- ker and secured the bodies. Pre- viously police inter®red with the dis-| tribution of leaflets calling workers | to the funeral in St. Luke’s Hall, A mass meeting was held. NEW Cumin, By SOL HARPER, Negro Work NEW YORK—The tiger (not an African one either but the Tammany tiger, yesterday drove its fangs into the bedy of Mrs. Cummings, deceased widow of an unemployed Negro work- | er who died last Sunday as a result of blood poison brought on by the neglect of the white experimenters | practising in Harlem Hospital. During the week, agents of Tam- of the Biack Sea, Soviet Union, Thei Workers children really live—where workers rule. of happy youngsters, playing without race discrimination, on the shores ae eect eau This Here, Too Hundreds of Cold, Living in Poison By DAN Dd N} pense ef workers’ children forced to Ii are afraid to let their daughters out proteet Negro workers’ children. Scores of Harlem organizations, supposedly to protect Negro children, headed by Tammany Hall bosses, do nothing, but collect. money. “Landmark of Art” The head of one of these groups, | Owen R. Loyejoy, seeretary of the Children’s Aid Society, states in his | booklet “The Negro Children of New | York”: “Their destruction (congested | tenements) would seem a pity as it | would wipe out still another lend- mark of the real local art of former a3) James H. Hubert, director of the New York Urban League, which or- ganization serves the bosses well in rk Here is a group re is no unemployment there, DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, MARCH 17, ps8 W ¥ORK.—Harlem streets, the only playground for Necro ebildren, are so unsafe, sp haunted by white perverts seeking amusement at the ex- [as many Hall yisited the kin of the de- ceased native African woman, told| them, “Byerything was done to saye the life of the young lady.” Other agents dressed in black skins came forward with propaganda such as “Phe Peoples Committee Against Dis- crimination in Harlem Hospital is a red organization.” More Lies Going stili further the agents of the Tammany tiger raised another slander saying that Negroes are cruel to Negro women, and attempting in every way to discredit and hurt the hushand of the yictim of the Tam- many tiger, the militant worker, Mr. Cummings who fought the white doc- ters in Harlem Hospital forcing them to finally (after an hour and half) admit Mrs. Cummings whe was in great pain from an expected baby. activities to intimidate the Under- taker but when he learned that I was| a member of the People’s Committee | Against Discrimination in Harlem| Hospital he showed great concern, | and immediately called the kin of) Mrs. Cummings into the chapel of the | undertaking room, and then pro-| ceeded to say that he had not made the pledge to arrange for the funeral | in St. Luke’s Hall and he showed by | his approach that he was afraid of) the hospital authorities. | ‘Fonight the workers will meet in} Lafayette Hall where turther steps will be taken to expose the Tammany Tiger and its Negro agents who are) Striving in every way to continue the rotten discrimination against Negro | nurses, patients, and doctors in and| I have no direct knowledge of their’ out of Harlem Hospital. 7 Superior Challenges Rest of District 9 in “Daily” Drive; Buftalo Hitting New Stride! A Daily Worker affair recently held in the Workers Center, 1803 North Fifth Street, Superior, Wis., drew a packed house, according to a letter received from Ray Nurkka. a few days,” Nurkka writes. “The proceeds of this affair will be sent in| “Superior has already sent in $21.10 and within the next few days expects ta send between $20 and $25 additional.” Our correspondent con- tinues by condemning the Minnesota district (of which Superior is part) for its poor work so far in the Daily Worker drive, particularly the ejty of Minneapolis. “We in Superior, however,” he writes, “will keep up the work even if our quota is filled. We will ga eyen further than that. good, Superior challenges the rest of District 9 to send in as much, proportion, as Superior will in this drive. Come on, the rest of District 9, wake up! ich we are fighting! Encouraging news y Worker by Mac ‘Harris. ings for the “Daily” of the International Workers Order. If it does any in We make this a CHALT.ENGE! Remember that it is our paper This means that everyone must do his also comes from Buffalo, new being toured for the Harris mentions two affairs recently held Rochester, arranged by Communist Party units for the Daily Worker. , Fag Days in this city will be held on Mar. 25, 26. Moving picture show are planned by units of the Party and by branches Local workers ate following up all egniacts to get donations and subscriptions. Wednesday's donations totalled $587.19, with only ten districts contrib- uting. New York sent $360.17, and $50.27 came from Cleveland. The most encouraging single district total of the day, however, was that of New Jersey, $90.50. New Jersey has been unusually slow in the Daily Worker drive up ta now. We hope this means the beginning of a real spuré that will enable the New Jersey workers to put aver their drive quota of $1,000! . 2 Boal arse Received Wednesday _______§ 587.19 Previously receiyed —_ 18,309.07 Total to date ._ WEDNESDAY’S © $18,896.26 /BUTIONS: DISTRICT 1 I Ranrenen 25 Boston EB Maki od Lith. Amer. Citizens | p Maki 1.00 Clab, Gardner 10.00) A Maki 25 8S Paulenka, M Ahonin 1 from aftair 9.37 ¥ Anderson | Quincey C.P, Unit 2.06 | F Unit: a s ae TOTAL S242) K Koski TH te date $815.66) E Honka DISTRICT 2 K Kown 4 New York O Rassala 16 Buttle Sust J Niemi 16 1 K Hantals aU 1.00) J Heikckila cr Womens Ausiliary, wo 5.0 6. South Side Wkrs Cen Tag Day 2.001 C Sanko 5.00! 1 Suehy Anonymous L Pinomaki Shulle 1, TWO | H Forare Mrs. Doldstelp 2, Joe the Tailor 25 Blovac Wkrs Soc. E Wale 0 Brench 84 25.00 eee Sem Fellzer TOTAL 525.96 | DW Dist Off 287. M Goldstein Bath Beach sholle 6.40) iylan Br, 18: 00 | TH to date $528.30, DISTRICT 13 California g, 0 Grilion uD G Titiman 1 W Beeler TOTAL 00.0) F aR TH te dete $10,086.04) G Parker STRICT | A Friend Philadelphia RR Barlow A Gomrade 1.00) W B Heakman to date $730.01|C Criebe DISTRICT « Buftale J Kopyac FE Lawso TOTAL 82.55 TH to date $254.54 D'SPRIOT 14 TOTAL $1.25 TH to date $346.55 DIST 6 Hillside 2.9 ht 1.85, Razaar | Peterson See .! 8.12 Takewood Braneh. 4 a 65,00 10.00 Day Unit 1, Sec 6 10 TWwo 9.00 P Ghokevich 2.50 Vipelord Seo 3.0 P fortiela, Tag |M Sehiffbrawer 50 Day 1.83) K Sohitthrawer 1.00 D hee Tos A Strunk 1.90 248) K Kronenberg 1.00 P IFeembots, Ts, — TOTAL $90.50 Ec 3H Sy Btotion” TH to date $452.59 es Da ” DISTRICT 15 © 10th Sk, Station Connecticut 12.61 | Unemployed Council reg Day Scandinavian Wirs The Bosses’ Trinity Have to Admit It MOSCOW CHILDREN | GAINING IN HEALTH |duyeniles in the Soviet Capital Held to Be Among Hap- “a Pioet in World, laste = sof O ee |NONE SEEN UNDERCLAD | i | i City’s Wide Boulevards Form Ex- cellent Playgrounds Without Traffic Dangers. By WALTER DUBANTY, Wireless to Tas Naw Yopx Thuns. MOSCOW, Feb, 2.~Moscow's ehil- dren certainly contradict reports abroad that the Five-Year Plan and the collective farm cempaign have materially reduced the living stand- ards of the Soviet masses, < The writer ig prepared to siate that there is no city of 4,000,000 inbjbitants in the world in which the children are healthier and ha plier than in the Soviet capital. In| joint of fact, there is little appear-—m | QuakeExpected;Money Men Barred News of It HONOLULU, March 16.— That Chamber of Commerce publicity me- thods in Los Angeles prevented a forewayning of the recent earthquake in Southern California is implied by Dr. T, A. Jaggar, internationally | | known volcanologist and director of the Kilauea Obseryatory. Jaggar declared that scientists had | been predicting for the last twenty | years severe Southern California earthquakes, bui that “Los Angeles business interests would not let the facts be breadeast. Drive Workers From Red Hook Court Room NEW YORK.—The case of the | heroic Red Hook workers who demon- strated Wednesday before the Scher- merhorn Relief Bureau, came up for trial yesterday in the Adams Street | ‘eourt before Magistrate Hilpern, one of the most ruthless magistrates ever «seen by the I. L. D. lawyer Tauber. The judge became enraged when | ai | He calls it a “Back to the Farm | officials, haye not eyen raised their | starving, foreed to live in eeld, can- | Russia, united, colored and white, | Russia of the bosses was @ terror | ridden land, a new type of ehild quieting the rising Negro masses, ships 3 and more Negre families a y baek to the terror ridden south! Movement.” The ultra misleaders of the Negro people, the National Association for the Advancement of Golered People yoices against the murderous misery. O'Brien Refuses Aid Mayor O'Brien, last January, de- cided to halt every effort to wipe out the slum conditions in Harlem be- cause of “lack of funds,” Negro workers’ children of Harlem, gested, poisonous tenements, denied medical care, playgrounds or proper edueation, call to the workers of New York, Negro and white, ta throw off the claws of the capitalist vultures of child misery, In another land, thousands of miJes away, colored children were also once the victims ef ¢apitelism, But the workers of this land, Czarist workers of many nationelities, and threw out their oppressors once and for all, and established their own government, the Soviet Union, Where Life Is Good Today, only fifteen years since the springs up in the Soviet Union. So much healthier and happier than children anywhere else in the world are those in the New Russia that even the bosses of the capitalist countries are forced to comment on it. The New York Times, on February 5 last, was forced to admit the fol- lowing facts sent by its Moscew cor- respondent Walter Duranty: “Moreover, the children now get a balanced meal at the schools, either free of charge or at a small cost if the parents ean afford it, “No Slums in Moscow” “But the ehief reason is doubi- less that Moseow has no slums like Western cities—no dark, airless courts and human rabbit warrens. Despite the new building, fing ‘4 going on principally on the out- skirts of the city, Moscow is still more like an overgrown village (Tammany Mayor Refuses Any iMoney to Wip 'Misleader Calls Them “Art” | Negro and W hite Should Unite to Save the! e Out Slums; Starved Children ous Tenements DAVIS lve there, that many Negro mothers at night, The police do nothing to} streets bug tree-bordered walks thirty yards er mere wide, where children y wnendingered hy vehicular traffic, even bieyeles. “In the Winter, which brings sleom to children in mest Curep- ean clties, Moseow children play everywhere on skates and sleds, No family, it seems, is ton poor to afford elther or both and—what ly still more surprising—the children here nowadays are all warmly clad, “One hardly sees an underelad or ragged child in the whole city, and the homeless walfg who were so shocking @ sight during the New Ecenemic Policy period, have dis- appeared.” A Provisional Committee to fight Child Misery, composed of Negro and white mass organigation delegates, are launching @ struggle to the end against the unspeakable misery thrust on Negro children by the whole boss outfit. The Committees meets this Saturday afternoon at 2 pm. in thelr temporary headquarters, 27 W, 115th St. AH Negro and white work- ingelass organipations are called upon to send representatives to this meet- WHAT'S ON IMPORTANT NOTE: In view of the evitical financial situation in the Daily Worker, | organizations are urgently asked to enclose money, at the| sertion, with announcements, | oe 8 Friday (Mankatton) REHEARSAL 1 WP heres, 8 pan. sharp at 0b Avenue B. top fu ona at Bast Sew ¥ors Workers 608 Paste Si. Specker: Casi Broce oth Anniversary of Death ot ran Star + pm st Harlem Progressive Youth | 3896 Madison Ave. 8:80 p.m. Sub: | “Role of the Student in Class Strug- MEMBERSHIP MEBTI Rm, TEs. % erie aternationsl at rene ench at a n BERS iG, Derplow Branch E80 at Mooney Branch i a8 Biotgbey. 5 Federa- pon, Berend, te 8: So" p.m. eR ers: Gillman of New York University Hag H. M. Wicks, Editerial Staff, Dati Worker. Sublect: "How Wil} Inflation Af- feet the Worker?” Adsatsiion 15 cents, (Bronx) we DEPATE, Pride pian gt THEATRE NIGHT Given by Workers Laboratory Theatre than a city, and it has far mere open spaces, trees and gardens than any other capital. “Moscow has ten miles of bou- levards which are net like Paris Organizations Particle pating in Raising Funds for the j Yauber attempted to talk about the condition of the Porto Ricans in Red, Hook and threatened him with arrest if he continued. The first thing the judge did was to clear the courtroom of the 200 work- ers who were there. Mrs. Dorothy Roosevelt took as the text of his inauguration speech Faith, Hope and Charity. He tells the starving masses: haye faith in the bosses, hope for pie in the sky when you die, and liye on whatever charity slop is handed out to you. Daily Worker is exposing the true meaning of this faith, hope and charity. Fight the Wall Street- Roosevelt hunger drive! Read and support the Daily Worker! *| Salzman Urges IWO Members to Come to “The Daily” Banquet NEW YORK.—In accepting the in- vitation of the Daily Worker to ap- pear at the banquet on Sunday, March 19, at 7 p.m. at Manhattan Lyceum, 66 BH, 4th St., National Sec- retary Salzman, of the International Workers Order, stated that the rea- son he was coming to the banquet was to show his solidarity with the Daily Worker, the fighting weapon of the working class. He also urged each individual branch of the I.W.O. to do likewise and send de- legates from their branches to repre- sent them. The Aida group of the Lithuanian Sextet will appear at the banquet @ new serles of songs and din- New Briuin 4.78 Tog Dey 6.20) Coit Ist 2076 1.40 Unit 1108 Glanos — | Coll om list 208% 25 Tag Day 1.79| From affair, New Unit 1108 Tag Maven 12 Day Tag Day 6.58 J Smith Unit Bots 1.00| TOTAL v.08 J Horveth 40] TH to date $320.05 " —_—_ DISTRICT 18 LOTAL $50.27 Milwaukee TH to date $805.58 Kenosha 9.40 DISTRICT & g inn. sin ae Palisadyy Unit 1.00 dey 16.68 Alma Pitey Tag OAR Day 7 A Kane, collectior TU to date sasst casion, | y>os| COS, especially gotten up for this oc- The | | Hammond, one of those booked on a | charge of disorderly conduct, was | fingerprinted and given a suspended | sentence. Mys, Salazar’s case was dismissed, and Mrs. Doretta Tarmon will he | tried Monday at 9 o‘clock in the same court, | TONIGHT | AT 8;45 Leeture by GRACE LUMPKIN “To Make My Bread” P.M, Coop Auditorium 2700 Bronx Park East ADMISSION Lie ‘CONCERT — DANC® COUNCIL OF WORKERS' CLUBS Saturday, March 18, 8:30 P.M. Manhattan Lyceum 66 EAST ATH STREET Good Program Dancing Till Dawn TICKETS OBTAINABLE AT ALL WORKERS’ CLUBS WITH TICKET 2%¢ AT DOOR 490 | Daily, Worker wd en LECTURE “Political Situation in Germany” SAM SKLAROFF Hinsdale Workers Club 313 Hinsdale Street, Brooklyn TONIGHT AT 8 P. M. Dance and Entertainment SATURDAY, MARCH 16TH CO-OP. AUDITORIUM 2700 BRONX PARK EAST Auspieces: Section 15 Dance and Entertainment SATURDAY, MARCH 18TH ALSO SOVIET NEWSREEL 55 WEST 197H STREET ‘ADMIBSI Auspices: Unit 19, Section & CHOW MEIN PARTY SATURDAY, MARCH 18TH 1818 PITKIN AVE., BROOKLYN Arranged by be HOUSE PARTY Entertainment-—-Dancing SATURDAY, MARCH 18TH 166 SECOND A’ NY, a Abaniseio ION Ile are Slide Lecture & Coneert SATURDAY, MAROH 10TH 926 THROOP AVE,, say 18 Arranged by Engdaht LW.0. BF and Shule Ne. i ADULTS 10¢—CHILDREN Se PARTY & DANCE Arranged by Theatre Group of Workers’ Beh SATURDAY MARCH 18, AT 4:80 P, 45 Bast 1th St, ord Vloor BRILLIANT PEATURER—ADMIS5ION 16 MOUSE PARTY SATURDAY, MAROH 18TH ARRANGED Bi, UNITS 6 & 7, SEC. 1 243 East 1th St., Sed Floor. OF WEB. Saturday, Mareh 18, 8:30 P.M. Agit-Prop ‘Thentre Collective Skits: We Demand Heottsbore Brondway 1083 Seve the Dally Worker Revolutionary Poems—Songs 4 RAST WFR BTREET ADMISSION 36¢ Comrade Mac Harris & Sour now for the Daily the Wanen organ Inston ‘of the financial ve as well problems of elroulation. The com- are wesied to make all Harris wilt vial the follewing cities: Schenectady—March 18 & 19 Albany—March 20 Gloversville-—March 21 Yonkers-—-March 22. MEST TOUS COMRADES AT THE | Brons. | geols ys. Proletarian Culture. ing, } rate of one cent a word per in-| EN ARE KEPT INDOORS italism and the Negro | Worker Subject American Working Class ve. A. J. Muste. LBOTURE by Grace Lumpkin on her pook ‘To Make My Friday night 8:45 pam. ab Cooperative Auditorium, 2700 Bronx Park East. Adm. 15 cents, LEOTURE at Prospect Workers Center, 4187 Southern Bivd, Subject: "Japan and Qhina at War.” ‘Speaker: Wm. Simon, Net Gecy., Anti-Imperialist League. Ail invited Methods of ©, A. Hathaway Bread, (Brooklyn) LECTURE at Boro Park Workers Olub, 1878 43rd St., 8:30 p.m. Subject: ‘'Bour- Speaker: A. B. Megil. LECTURE given by IWO No. 407 at 60 E goth St. Subject: “German Situation | Breaker: Comrade Sherman, 8:80 p.m LECTURE at Bath Beach Workers Ctub, | 1618 B6th St. Subject: "New Deal.” er; El Jacobson, 8:30 p.m. LEOTURE by Israel Amter tonight at 8:80] p.m. at Boro Park Workers Center, 1109 45th 66. Brookiyn. Admission tec.’ Sub: iject: "German Bliuation and Its Perspec: lives.” Auypices Boro Park Echool 2, TWO and Womens Council 35, EOTURE at New Lots Workers ©} Backman Si., near New Lots Aye, Sul ‘arxism and Problem of American Work- ers.” Bpeaker: Carl Winters, 8:80 p.m Admission 150. QUESTION BOX and MEMBERSHI! | Workers Club, 9606 70th Bt, GENERAL MEMBERSHIP MEETING ell Students of Tractor Auto Workers School dawn, Auspices Council of Workers Glubs. | Admiksion 49 cents. With this tleket abc. JOHN REED CLUB Party and Dance, 461 = DEBATE TONIGHT! “POLITICS and ‘METHOD of the AMERICAN WORKING CLASS CG, A. HATHAWAY versus A. J. MUSTE Chairman: FRANK L, PALMER Editor of Federated Press TREMONT WORKERS CLUB | | 2075 Clinten Ave,, Bronx | | | DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 Bristol Street Bpesk- | Negro Workers’ Home i in Harlem MEETING tonight at 8°80 nm, at Mapleton | Love of| Lenox Ave 2| | 43 Manhatian Ave., i} fonight at 7 p.m. at School's quarters, 282 B. Gixth St. Brooklyn. ae | Saturday CONCERT-DANCE Ssturday pight & pan at Manhattan Lyceum, 68 E, Fourth St.,| hine-plece Negro jazz ‘band. Dancing. till NOT the worst place Negro workers’ families live in Harlem. Here in this makeshift shack, for which a high rental has to be paid, it is bad, In the foul crowded dark and smelly tenements, it is worse, That’s cap- $ most oppressed under it, am. Sixth Ave. 9 pm. to 2 Dansing, en- tertainment, mass singing, refreshments. Subscription 25¢ SECOND ANNIVERSARY DANGE, Satur- AFL Workers Hail MayDay Conference NEW YORK.—In a statement ise sued yesterday, the A, F, of L. Come mittee for baja insurance endorsed the May First Call and Pledged itself to rally not only the unions affiliated with the Committee, but also other A. F.L, unions, beth to elect delegates te the conference as well as to participate in the May First aetion, ‘The Committee pointed out that the aentral demand for May Day, namely unemployment and social insurance at the expense of the bosses and the government, coincides with the cen- tral fight of the Committee for Un- employment Insurance, The Provisional Arrangements Committee for May First hails this statement of the A. F, L. Committee for Unemployment Insurance and urges all workers’ organisations to elect delegates to the United Labor May Day Conference to be held on Sunday, March 26th, 1 p. m., at Man- hattan Lyceum. This conference wil) finally plan all the actions for the May First Demonstration. |Feeltel of modern and classicel warks for dey, & pm. st 1019 Tremont Ave, given by Youth Branch, Ho Lung, IWO. USICAL and’ Entertainment given by YCL Unit 6, Seetion 16, Saturday 8 p.m. at 1691 Vyse Ave. Walk-in Apt. PEASANT NIGHT Saturday, 8 p.m. at the Unjon Workers Center, 801' Prospect Ave. Artists from John Reed Club, Workers Lab. Theatre and other attractions. NATIONAL STUDENT LEAGUE GROUP of Hunter College will hold a party Satur- Stage and Screen “BY ROCKET TO THE MOON” AT THE ACME THEATH« One of the most fantastie films ever produced, “By Rocket to the day night at $451 Giles Pl, IWO Scheol| ,foq) (Mosholu Parkway Station). yooh ieee helng shown at the “By Rocket to the Moon” is tense and exeiting. The picture was directed by Prita Lang, who will be recalled fer his ex- ceptional film, “Metropolis,” and its Sunday JOHN REED © 460 Sixth Ave. B SUNDAY FORUM, at BO pin. | Mordecai Gor- elik. A Program for a Revolutionary The illustrated with an agit-prop play by Workers Laboratory ‘Theatre, Admission 25 cents, scientific matter was supervised by pee eee CONCERT OF sHAsON.| the noted Prof. Hermann Oberth. ierre Deg Club (revolutionary musi- S a Ss} presents Perey Such, eminent British The cast includes many noted con e tinental stage and screen artists, ish (member Hans Lange Quartet) in a “THEATRE NIGHT” TO AID ‘DAILY’ NEW YORK.—'Theatre Night” an evening of revolutionary plays, songs and poems will be given by the Theatre Collective and Agit-prop sec- tions of the Workers Laboratory. Theatre Saturday at 8.:0 p. m, at 42 H, 12th St, Admission is twenty-five cents, All proceeds will go to the Daily ‘Worker, gello and pi Program star 55 W. David Atwell at the piano. | Punctually at 8:15 p.m., at Admission 85 cents; pith SOVIET MOTION PICTURE—‘Her Will be shown Sunday, 7 p.m. | at PSU Hariem Internationa! Branch, ot Admission 15c. LECTURE at Williamsburg Workers Club, Brooklyn, Sunday night, Subject: United Front Program in Trade Uniang. Speaker: Hgrry Jackson, organizer, Marine Workers Ind, Onion. Ad- mission 8 cents, Unemployed free. AMUSEMENTS “SHAME is a gripping account ef life in the Soviet Union, with its new seeurity for the toiling masses, whose enthusiasm, censeiousness ef power, colleetive initiative and sense of awn- ership and responsibility pervade the story.” zt 8:39 p.m, DAILY WORKER, . “Phe New Soviet Film at the Cameo pra- vides the most complete, intimate and convincing pleture of life im present-day Russia that has yet been revealed in the cinema, “Alive, buman ang. real.” . HERALD-PRIBUNE is TITLES FRANOIS LEDERER & DOROTHY GISH is AUEUMN CROCUS ae New York and RESCO THEA’ GRIPPING FANTASTIC FILM DRAMA “BY ROCKET co fein si of Li fate. ” teen, in. Web Thurs. & Sat, 2: Lo, THE, MOON #9) EFPERSON 10 “aNOW ” (Producer of Metropolis”) woutss Aeme Theatre | ou, . eee logeet Hintrance hag 1TH ST. AND UNION SQUARE Feature with ic) RUBLE % LANG English Titles {ntern’l Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUB 1th FLOOR AD ork Done Under Persons) Cary ae JORK, bd Hospital and Ocullst Prescriptions Willed At One-Half Price i All Pa Set Filled From WF PaMeS eee Lenses not included COHEN’S, 117 Orchard St. First Door Off Delancey St. Telephone: OBvdard 4-4520 ANNOUNCEMENT Dr, Louis L. Schwartz | SURGEON DENTIST Announces ‘fhe removal ut anes to larger 1 Union aquare «8th Floor) Suite 909 Tel, Algonquin 4-805 ROWNTOWN Cooperative Dining Club ALLERTON AVENUE Brong Park Bast Pore nat Proleterian Prices CLASSIFIED “ "reterany ef vomecrtie ih care Datly Worker, BROOKLYN Hoffman's RESTAURANT & CAFETERIA Pitkin Corner a Aves. HELLEN’S RESTAURANT 116 University Place CORNER 18TH 87, NEW YORK CITY SQUARE CAFETERIA GRILL 848 BROADWAY Welcomes Worker Center Comrades Telephone STuyvesant 9-9254 UNIVERSITY GRILL, Inc, BAR RESTAURANT 72 UNIVERSITY PL, N. Y. ©. Between 10th and 11th St. DAILY WORKER BANQUET Classics of the Screen! A WEAPON IN THE WORKERS’ FILMS-ciass struceie STRUGGLE FOR BREAD—The dramatic story of the making of the workers’ paper the DALY WORKER, can be shown at a very small charge. We are also booking SOVIET FILMS Every organization should take adyantage of this opportunity to use the film for stimulating activities, drives, etc. CAN BE SHOWN ANYWHERE AT A NOMINAL COST Infoymation—Bookings at DAILY WORKER DISTRICT OFFICE, 35 East 12th Street Tel: AL 4-1754 at MANHATTAN LYCEUM, 66 E, 4th St, MARCH 19 at 7:30 P. M. ALL ORGANIZATIONS ARE INVITED TO SEND DELEGATES MICHAEL GOLD will act as chairman. Speakers; ' MOISSAYE J, OLGIN, Famous Author and Editor Marming Freihely CLARENCE A, HATHAWAY RICHARD B. MOORE CARL BRODSKY J, AMTER Entertainment--Chalk Talk, John Reed Club Do You Know of the Reduction in Rates at CAMP NITGEDAIGET Special Program Every Week-End $12.50 Includes Tax to members of I, W. O, and Co-t e with a letter from your petite $10.50 per week OPEN ALL YEAR—HEALTHFUL FOOD, REST, RECREA’ SPORT AND CULTURE | TCREATION All Winter Comforts—Steam Heat—Hot and Cold Running Wi is Water City Phone—EStabrook 8-1400 Camp Phone—Beacon 13} Workers organisations write for Special Excursions and Rates AUTOMOBILES LEAVE DAILY FROM CO.OPERATIVE ¢ REQTAURANT, 2700 BRONX PARK EAST, BRONX, N.Y. _

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