The Daily Worker Newspaper, March 18, 1933, Page 2

Page views left: 0

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

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

Text content (automatically generated)

_PAGE TWO Celebrating the Paris Commune Anniversary IXTY-TWO years ago today the working class of Paris “stormed the heavens.” In the two months and ten days, b ing March 18, 1871, that, the working class held Paris, and in the holocaust of the final Cays when 30,000 died the hands of the counter there were forged weapons have since been used force against 2 capitalist world No year since the Commune has passed without its celebration. In es the number of toilers and oppressed of the world who pay r mate! s mart. and ned lessons from their ‘own from a few thousand to hundreds of millions. , the 50th anniv y of whose death fs observed thi: , Said of the workers of Pa “History knows no parallel example But in his glorification of the Commune the implacable Marx, took the greatest pains to see to it that the toiling s should be able to take full advantage of the heritage handed down from the Paris barricades. He studied and analyzed its achieve- and carefully pointed out its mistakes and err of the Commune, Marx, in writing to fundamental is friend, Kugel- lesson; that is, that the first task of the P| r volution must be: “not merely to transfer the bureaucratic and military machinery from one set of hands to another, but to break it up”—to smash the capitalist state power and establish the dictators ri letariat, portance did Lenin attach to this he said he should like to see a copy workers’ home, ° and his great companion-in-arms, ceased to stress this fundamental lesson of th Com- cident that the heroes of the second international leaders, who try to deprive the workir weapon of Marxism should take as their tion of the lessons of the Commune. and the Bolsheviks who kept before the working cla Commune, the Marxian principle of the revolutionary overthrow of 4 state power, Lenin, as the organizer and leader of the Bolshevik , corefully studied and applied these lessons and especially helped the toiling masses to profit by overcoming the fatal weaknesses of the Commune—one of which was too much lenienc ward its mortal enemies, instead of crushing them once the revolution was under way The hesitancy, the tendency to take a “soft” attitude toward the class enemy consolidating its forces to unleash terror against working- men’s Paris, the indecision of action at critical moments, the confusion due to the Blanquist and Prodhounist leadership—all these can be traced to the absence of a powerful Communist Party coordinating and direct- ing into one revolutionary channel the manifold forces set in action by the Commune. This shows that without such a Party, there can be no successful revolution, no matter how many other favorable factors exist. Events, especially since 1917, have shown that only by following the road of Marxism, only by upholding the crimson banner of the Commune, can the toiling masses march to victory over capitalism; while the road of the social-democratic distorters of Marxism and traduc- ers of the Commune leads to fascism. The proletarian revolution in the realms of the former czars of Russia, the consolidation ef Soviet power, the use of the proletarian State power to destroy capitalism; the building of socialism through the first Five-Year Plan, the launching of the second Five-Year-Plan which is destroying the very soil upon which capitalism grows—here is being applied in detail the lessons of the Commune. It was Lenin who upheld and carried further the banner of Marx- ism in the epoch of imperialism and the proletarian revolution. It is Comrade Stalin, leader of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, the best disciple of Lenin, who leads the work of socialist, construction, who applies the lessons of the Commune in using the proletarian state power to crush the degenerate remnants of the old ruling class and the agents of imperialist intervention. In Germany today, in Poland, in China—in every part of the world— the lessons of the Commune are being applied. Its traditions are being carried on by the Communist International and its sections, the Com- munist Parties of the world, the Parties that are leading the toiling mosses toward the revolutionary way out of the thralldom of a decaying capi- talism. tter of Marx to =, 8 Frederick En: | Second Ave. | Unionism in U. 8. and Soviet Union.” Aus- | pices Downtown Branch Friends of Soviet Subject: “Importance of Trade WHAT'S ON 5 Union. Saturday | CONCERT-DANCE Saturday night 8 pam. |at Manhatten Lyceum, 66 E. Fourth St., (Manhattan) nine-plece Negro jazz band. Dancing t DOUBLE RUSSIAN FILE SHOWINGS—“‘Ar- senal” and “Two Days,” at Labor Temple, 14th St. and Second Ave. Two perform- ances at 5:30 and 7:30 p.m. Auspices of Workers Film and Photo League and WIR. | Admission 28 cents, JOHN REED CLUB Party and Dance, 450 Ave. 2 Daneing, ® pm. to 2 a.m muss singing, refreshments. dawn. Auspices Council of Workers Clubs Admission 40 cents. With this ticket 28¢. * (Bronx) BIG SPLURGE—Music and entertainment given by YCL Unit § Section 15 tonight at & p.m. at 1692 Vyse Ave. Walk-in apt. SECOND ANNIVERSARY DANCE, Satur- day, 8 p.m. at 1013 Tremont Ave. given by Youth Branch, Ho Lung, IWO. NATIONAL STUDENT LEAGUE GROUP| of Hunter College will hold a party Satur-} day night at 3452 Giles Pl, TWO School] (Mosholu Parkway Station). PEASANT NIGHT Saturday, 8 p.m. at the Union Workers Center, 801 Prospect Ave. Artists from John Reed Club, Workers Lab. ‘Theatre and other attractions PARTY given by Unit 13, Section § to-| night at 1325 Franklin Ave., Apt. 28, 8 p.m. Admission 15c. Proceeds to Daily Worker. 2 evening of revolue 3 and poems given by Laboratory Theatre, 42%. 121h 8 a r, 8:30 p.m. Ads 14 West ist St. te and danse 50 p.m. “Program includes Bunins S, Bill Baird in proletarian 2 Harlem jazz orchestra. RY CENTER CLUB, 101 West 4lst r Sixth Ave., invites all workers to friendly meetings at’ this Midtown Center open every afternoon and evening for ! AND HAMMER, teresting discussions and debates. No a DANCE given at Bronx Workers Center, mission charge. Free instruction by Com-| tonight, 569 Prospect Ave. Admission I5c., Face Cummings in chess and checkers, Very| 8 p.m. for union meetings, Pro- letarian atmosphere, PARTY for benefit of Daily Worker given by Units 6 and 7, Section 3, Communist Party, 8 p.m. at 243 E. 14th St, third floor. DAILY WORKER NIGHT 8 p.m. at PSU) Hall, 216 B, 14th St. Ausplees Unit 13, Section 2, ©. P. Dancing, refreshments, “entertainment. Admission 20 cents, PARTY given by Pelham Parkway Work- ers Club tonight at 8:30 p.m. at 2128 Cru- ger Ave., near Lydig. Geod time promised. Admission 15¢, Feasonable rent ee (Brooklyn) Workers Cultvs! Club, 159 Sumner Ave., 8 ANNUAL SPRING DANCE of Vanguard] Wormers Cuivre) Youth tonight at 240 Fourth Ave., 9 p.m, | Pt. 7 . WORKERS MUSIC OLYMPIAD Gonterence| ,,_NTERTAINMENT-DANCE for Scottsboro viven by Ridrewood ILD Branch tonight at Queens Labor Lyceum, Putnam and Forest Ave. Ridgewood. Hat checks 15¢. CONCERT-PARTY tonight at 8 p.m. at Boro Park Shoe Workers Club, 1109-45th St. Admission 25 cents only. AL’ ‘TION PAINTERS Union Local $3 will celebrate their first anniversary with concert tonight at 285 Rodney St. Splendid program. Admission 23 cents, . 8 at 4 p.m. this afternoon at Workers Music League, 55 West 19th St. All workers mu-| sical organizations invited to send delegates. LE by Charlotte Todes tonight at 8:30 p.m. at Labor Temple, 1th St. and WORKERS SCHOOL FORUM EVERY SUNDAY NIGHT AT 8 O'CLOCK LECTURE SERIES Sunday (Manhattan ) JOHN REED CLUB SUNDAY FORUM, COMMEMORATING THE 30TH = | 4s Bixth Ave, 2:90 pan Mon ANNIVERSARY OF THE DEATH OF | elic.” “A ‘Program. for aR Theatre,” illustrated with an agit~ KARL MARX by Workers Laboratory Theatre. 25 cents, OUTSTANDING CONCERT OF SEASON. Pierre Degeyter Club (revolutionary musi- clans) presents Percy Such, eminent British ‘Admission MARCE 19 The Paris Commune and the Marxian Theory of the State C. A. HATHAWAY, District Organizer Communist Party, MARCH 26 The Marxian Theory of Crisis H. M. WICKS, Rditor Daily Worker. recital of modern and classical works for cello and piano. David Atwell at the plano. Program starts punctually at 8:15 p.m., at 55 W. 18th St. Admission 35 cents; with this notice 25¢. DANCE and PLAYS will be given at the Japanese TLD Branch, 83 East 10th St 8 p.m, All proveeds to political prisoner Japan, LECTURE at Revolutionary Writers Fed- eration, 8:30 p.m. Subject: “How the Bourgeoisie Commemorates Marx." Speak- er: V. J. Jerome. Admission 15e. DANCE-ENTERTAINMENT tonight at 8:30 Pm, et American Youth Federation, 122 Second Av Admission 25 cents. Skits, poems, jazz band. LECTURE at 2:30 p.m. this APRIL 2 The Marxian Approach to Literature MOISSAYE J. OLGIN, Editor, Morning Preiheit. APRIL 9 : The Struggle Against the iternoon at ie of Marxism Vanguard Youth Club headquarters, 240 Distortions v3, EnOure, Fourth Ave, Subject: “Marxism and 20th Fiat Century.’ Speaker: 1. Sklaroff. uctor, Workers’ School. LECTURE at 8 p.m. tonight at Yorkville Workers Club and Forum, Labor Temple, 243-E. 84th St. Subject: “Role of Youth in Coming War.” Speaker: Clinton Green: Admission free. Questions. Discussion, HIKE of Followers of Nature to old camp in Ardsley. Meet at 242nd St. Subway Station—Van Cortland Park at 10:20 a.m. sharp, SOVIET MOTION PICTURE—"Her Way of Love’ will be shown Sunday, 7 p.m. sharp at FSU Harlem International Branch, 227 Admission 150. MEETING SUNDAY at 2:30 p.m. to hear report on Albany Conference, at 347 E, Tand St. Arranged by Yorkville Unemployed Council. Admission free. OPEN FORUM at Tom Mooney Branch, APRIL 16 The Life and Teachings of Karl Marx MAX BEDACHT, Member Central Committee O.P.U.S.A, “"iMarxism-Leninism On the Class Struggle In America Lenox Ave. Central Agitprop Committ APRIL 30 ‘ % Marxism and the National and Colonial Question JAMES 8. ALLEN, “Negro Liberation.”” ILD, 818 Broadway with Paul Miller, spea tng on the Paris Commune, 3 p.m. All wel- Author, Sa) ‘OPEN FORUM tonight at 6 pin Katovis Branch ILD.. 15 B. Third St. Sub- Speaker: John Adams. Admission free. 35 EAST 12TH S' D FLOOR Questions, discussion en vie LECTURE, 2:30 p.m. at Library Center iscuxsions | Club, 101 W. dist Bt, Subject: Intellectual AEhilosiep Be. Gasctions _ Diseursle Background of Hitlerism. Speaker: Harry COME AND BRING YOUR FRIENDS AND i FELLOW WORKERS Meyers, Admission tree, PROTEST MEET by Irish Workers Club DANCE-ENTERTAINMENT at Progressive | cellist (member Hens Lange Quartet) in a| | DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, MARCH 18, 1933 HAME is a gripping account of life in the Soviet Union, with its new security for the toiling masses, whose enthusiasm, consciousness of power, collective initiative and sense of own- ership and responsibility pervade the story.” == SSS os <= a A M (3) Ss E M E N ie rs Organizations. Partici- || soviet Motion Picture DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY pating in Raising Funds 107 Bristol Street Telephone Pe waek for the “Her Way of Love”||| "" reoxe, pionexs sans The New Soviet Morality! DAILY WORKER a “The New Soviet Film at the vides the most complete, intimate and convincing picture of life in present-da Russia that has yet been revealed in th cinema, Alive, human and real,’ HERALD-TRIBUNE neo pro N. ¥. FIRST FILM OF THE SECOND i- YEAR PLAN 9 AMT PLM (ton, ta Fri.) ‘TITLES ‘FRANCIS LEDERER & DOROTHY GIGH in LM DRAMA a | | AUTUMN CROCUS The New York and London Success MOROSCO THEATRE, 45th St. W. of B’ Lives. 3:40. Mats, Wed.. Thurs. & & iB GRIPPING FANTASTIC “BY ROCKET TO THE MOON” Directed by FRITZ LANG (Producer of Metropolis”) English Tit! SEE: HOW THEY TRIED TO CONTROL THE GOLD MARKET OF THE WORLD worners Acme Theatre 14TH ST. AND UNION SQUARE ~ MUSIC Phitharmonic - Symphony TOSCANINI, Couduster BROOKLYN ACADEMY OF MUSIC Sunday Afternoon, March 19, at 3.00 POMA'KOVSKY: “Manfred” | Symphi NAGNER: Preludes to Act 1g Act 8 fro engrin,”* Waldwebden from Siegfried’s Rhine Journey, BKO JEFFERSON ‘tt st. ¢/NOW | SPENCER TRACY and BETTY DAVIS in 20,000 Years in Sing Sing”! °** | tried Added Feature—“DANGEROUSLY YOURS” | sotoist: "Cellist Warner Baxter and Miriam Jordon CASTELNUOVO-TEDESCO, SCHUMANN MENDELSSOHN, RESPIGHI |ARTHUR JUDSON, Mgr. (Steinway Piano) Dance and Entertainment TONIGHT CO-OP, AUDITORIUM 2700 BRONX PARK EAST Auspices: Seetion 15 Dance and Entertainment TONIGAT ALSO SOVIET NEWSREEL SS WEST 19TH STREET ADMISSION 20¢ Auspices: Unit 19, Section 1 CHOW MEIN PARTY TONIGHT 1813 PITKIN AVE., BROOKLYN Arranged by Seetion 8 HOUSE PARTY Entertainment—Dancing FONIGBT 163 SECOND AVE, nm ‘ADMISS: Slide Lecture & Concert TONIGHT 226 THROOP AVE., BROOKLYN Arranged by Engdahl Troop, 1.W,O, and Shole No. 3 ADULTS i0e—-CHILDREN 5c CONCERT and DANCE Council cf Workers Clubs TONIGHT at 8:30 P, M. MANHATTAN LYCEUM, 66 East 4th S Program: Inter Dram Contest, Girls’ Sextette, ‘Aida’ Chorus and others DANCING TILL DAWN Tickets obtainable at all Workers Clubs With ticket 25e, at door 40¢ Street “Celebrate Paris Commune” PARIS COMMUNE “T° IRVING SCHWAB Defense Attorney Direct ' Full Cast of \‘RUN LITTLE CHILLU} . Negro Folk Play by from Alabama Court | HALL JOHNSON WALDO FRANK ROSE McLENDON MICHAEL GOLD gro Actress ELLA WINTER EDITH SIEGEL GROUP RICHARD B. MOORE Revolutionary Dances ST. NICHOLAS ARENA—66th and BROADWAY SATURDAY, MARCH 18—8 P, M. Admission 25 Cents DISTRICT INTERNATIONAL LABOR DEFENSE “Fight For Scottsboro Boys” Rarely even for these times will you find clothing of such EXCEP- TYONAL VALUES at prices as LOW as these. These Suits Overcoats are made to sell at just double the price we ask for them, We do not ask you to take our word for it. We invite you to visit us and see for yourself. We era appealing to knowing ' PARTY & DANCE Arranged by Theatre Group Workers’ School TONIGHT 5 East 12th NT FEATU ind Floor ADMISSION toe HOUSE PARTY ‘ToNIGHY ARRANGED BY UNITS 6 & 7, SEC. 1 243 East lth St, 8rd Flooi “LECTURE ON MARXISM SUNDAY, MARCH 19, AT & P, M, 42 Bast 12th Street ABRANGED BY MAXIM GORKY UNION REVOLUTIONARY WRITERS OF ART DAILY WORKER NIGHT Soviet Armenian Screen Film with English Titles TONIGHT AT 6 ¥, M. ¥. 8, U HALL, 216 E. 14th Bt. Admission 20¢. Unit 13, Section Alteration Painters Union Local 3 FIRST ANNUAL CONCERT TONIGHT GOOD PROGRAM REFRESHMENTS | 285 Rodney Street, Brooklyn ADMISSION 25¢ HOUSE PARTY ngement Commitiee of it Workers Club SUNDAY, MARCH 19TH, AT 5 P. M. At the Residence of Com. Sot Efron, 1026 Ward Avenue Pelham Bay" Line—Elder _ Ave. SUBSCRIPTION 10¢ Station THEATRE NIGHT Given by Workers Laboratory Theatre or W. I. RB. Saturday, March 18, 8:30 P.M. Agtt-Prop ‘Theatre Collective Skits: We Demand tsbero Broadway 1933 Save the Daily Worker Tonight, at 8:30 p. m. 42 EAST WTH STREET ADMISSION 25¢ workers, especially those affiliated to working class organizations and clubs throughout Greator New York City to take advantage of our offer, Stop in Today! SALTZMAN BROS. HIGH GRADE CLOTHING READY MADE and TO ORDER z 181 STANTON STREET x EW YORK F Clinton Street) 44-3946 DAILY WORKER BANQUET at MANHATTAN LYCEUM, 66 E. 4th St. MARCH 19 at 7:30 P. M. ALL ORGANIZATIONS ARE INVITED TO SEND DELEGATES MICHAEL GOLD will ect as chairman, Speakers; MOISSAYE J. OLGIN, Famous Author and Editor Morning Freineit CLARENCE A. HATHAWAY RICHARD B, MOORE CARL BRODSKY J. AMTER Entertainment—Chalk Talk, John Reed Club PICKET EAST NEW YORK RENT STRIKE NEW YORK.—Four evictions are threatened Monday morning at 440 and 444 Williams Ave. The East New York Unemployed Council, 481 New Jersey Ave., calls all workers to picket that morning. D against deportation of James Carlton from Irish Freo State, Sunday, 8:30 p.m. Es- thonian Workers Hall, 27 W. 116th St. (Bronx) WORKERS COLONY music school concert benefit Dally Worker this afternoon at 2:30 p.m. Auditorium, 2700 Bronx Park East. Splendid program. Admission 15 cents. HOUSE PARTY, benefit Daily Worker, 5 p.m. this afternoon at residence of Com- rade Sol Efron, 1026 Ward Ave. Subscrip- tion 10 cents. Pelham Bay Line, Elder Ave. station, All invited. LECTURE at Bronx Workers Boston Road, @ pm. Subject: * and Struggle of the Unemployed.’ Herbert Benjamin, National Organizer 4315 Third Ave., near Tremont, 3 p.m, sharp. eu8 (Brooklyn) LECTURE st Willlamsburg Workers Club, jub, 1610 nk Orie Speak- . J 43 Manhattan Brooklyn, Sunday night, % Unemployed Councils gt , | 8:30 p.m. Subject; United ‘Front Program OPEN FORUM tonight at 9:30 p.m. atlin ‘Trade Unions, Speaker: Harry Jackson, Youth Branch 401 TWO, 1013 E. Tremont | organizer, Marine Workers Ind, Union, Ad: * pinta Sie ite field in ae mission 5 cents. Wnemployed free, nerican Labor History—Interviews with Mooney and McNamara.” Speaker: Sender | ,,"OQUSE PARTY ot ee eer ary Dotense, Cad re ko Marx | AUSplces Walter Rojak Branch, ILD. BE continues four weeks Marx Lecture Course, Second Lecture 11 a.m.| ,WMOTURE wt Brighton Frogressive Club, Sunday morning st 2075 Clinton Ave, Lec-| 12% Brighton Beach Ave. 9:90 pan eee turer—John Stanto. Subject: "Maratan| Jeet: “Tom Mooney — " ‘Theory of Crises,” Outstanding Concert WORKERS’ COLONY MUSIC SCHOOL Sunday, March 19 at 2:30 p. m. COOP AUDITORIUM 2700 BRONX PARK FAST —Program— A. JURASKY, violinist J. SHAFRAN, basso §S. KESSLER, French horn Admission 15 Cents Complicated? Expensive? NO! WORKERS’ MOVIES in any Hall, Home or Club! Stimulates Drives and Campaigns Build a Cultural Base Write to Garrison Film Distributors 729 Seventh Avenne New York City SPRING FESTIVAL '» MARCH 19, 4 P.M. MANHATTAN: “LYCEUM, 66K. 4TH ST. MUSIC GROUP ‘THEATER GROUP DANCE GROUP RECITATION LABOR SPORTS UNION DANCE ADMISSION 33e—AT DOOR 500 NATURE FRIENDS HIKING CLUB, NEW YORK GENERAL MEMBERSHIP MEETING In- ternational Labor Defense, both sections at OPEN FORUM—Brow Center, 149 Sutter Ay ile Shoe Workers Subject: CELEBRATE PARIS COMMUNE, DEMAND RELEASE SCOTTSBORO BOYS, ST. NICHOLAS ARENA TONIGHT | derson. “How | Admission free, ‘All shoe Workers urged to attend, Daily, Worker wy { | | | | | | | | Office Hours’ H-10 AM, 1-2, Got P.O, | Sunday, March 19, at 7 p. m. FSU Harlem Internat’! Br, tutern’) Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE th FLOOR All Wers Done Under Versonal Care @ DR JOREPHRON r. WILLIAM BELL OPTOMETRIST 106 E. 14th St., near 4th Av, 227 LENOX AVENUE Admission 15 Cents Bronx Attention! Karl Marx Memorial Paris Commune Celebration March 26th) | t 2 p.m, Sunday, i Huntspoint Patace 163rd St. and Southern Bivd, DOWNTOWN STuyvesant 9-9254 UNIVERSITY GRILL, Inc, BAR RESTAURANT UNIVERSITY PL, N. Y. Between 10th and lith St. Rm Cc DOWNTOWN COMRADES WELCOME AT L. & B. | BAKERY & LUNCH BAR HOME COOKING 409 Broadway, Between 11th & 12th Gtr. Veiled ldsnhbtndichiad Sadr COMRADES MEET AT ROYAL CAFETERIA 887 BROADWAY, NEAR 13TH ST, Best Food—Proletarian Prices. Watch Our Daily Specials for 2¢c 100% Food Workers’ Union Shep Speakers: C. A, HATHAWAY { FORD | JW. 4-9649 Strictly hy appointment Good Program 1] rey ; ae || Dr. L. KESSLER Auspices: C. P. Section 5, Bronx, | SURGEON DENTIST and all workers’ organizations S53 BROADWAY | Admission 25 Cents Site 1067-1008 Cor. 14th St ze Stine New York CAMP. FOLLOWERS of the TRAIL | OPEN ALL YEAR | Sat. Ey e Mar. 25th| WINTER RATES $10 PER WEEK ey | |] Low Week-End Rates—Splendid Vacation Manhattan Lyceam | | 3rd ANNUAL BALL | Red Spark Athletie Club for Rest Home Atmosp’ Steam Hect —~ Sbowe rain: Stop Peeksiill, : P.O, Box 2, Buchanan, N. I.; PREKSXILL 2870 | | Winter Sports | | 66 EAST 4th STREET | = | Subscription 40 Cents SPLENDID LARGE Hall and Meeting Rooms Comrade Mac Harris) is making a tour now for the Daily Worker, He will take up the organ-| ization of the financial drive as well TO L catcia a as problems of circulation. The com-| Perfect tor BALLS, DANCES, rades are requested to make all LECTURES, MEETINGS. Ete. arrangements to make the tour of iN THE Comrade Harris a success. Comrade Harris will visit the following cities: Schenectady—March 18 & 19| | Albany—March 20 | Gloversville—March 21 | Yonkers—Mareh 22. New ESTONIAN WORKERS HOME 27:29 W.115th St., N.Y. Phone UNiversity 4-0165 we — = | FOR BALLS, BANQUETS, WEDDINGS | a u | Stuyvesant Hennington RUSSIAN ART SHOP) aati Hall PEASANTS’ HANDICRAFTS | 110-152 Second Are.| 214-216 Second St. w York City .TERING POR ALL OCCASIONS York City 100 East 14th St., N. Y. C. Imports from U.S.5.2. (Russia) Candy, Cigarettes, Smocks, Toys Shawls, Novelties, Woodsarvins. Lacquered. Work Phone ALgonquin 4-094 c | PURNISHED ROOM DESIRED downtown. Write L. J., cle Daily Worker. Tea, Manhattan Lyceum Hall For Mass Meetings, Entertainments LO WEST | : Airy, Large a) Rates to the |]||Mestise Reems and Ba Suitable for Meetings, Lectures Soviet Union 1872 and Dances in the Czechoslovak Workers House. Inc. 347 E. 72nd St. New York Telephone: Rhinelander §097 Includés complete round trip passage, New York to Lenin- yeade ord ve’ors. FIVE DAYS iie'Gl ssn. "eh fees MIMEGGRAPH SUPPLIES meals, sightsceing, theatre, etc., INK STENSILS and Soviet visa good for 30 days Paper, 30c Ream Index Cards, 460 MN stay in any part of the Soviet ae Machines $15 up - Union. doled RE MIMEO SUPPLY toe Elite Room 203 AL. 4-768 Free Advice for Cutting Stensila SAILINGS OPEN FROM 9 A.M. to 7 P.M. Mar. 24—S.S. Paris Apr.18—S.S.Deutschland BRONX Apr. 16—S.S. Bremen Apr. 18—S.S. Paris DAYTON 9-1009 D. BACKER May 4—S. S. Acquitania INTERVALE Moving & Storage Co., Inc.| BRONX, N.Y. BOULEVARD CAFETERIA & F. CAFETERIA, INC. 1288 SOUTHERN BOULEVARD Corner Freeman Street and other sailings YOR FURTHER INFORMATION World Tourists, INC, 125 Fitth Ave. New York City Teh ALg. 4-6056-7-8 Soviel Land Tours can also be purchased at any of our branch offices: 902 WESTCHESTER AYE. Mott Haven 2-740 DR. JULIUS JAFFE Surgeon Dentist {01 EAST 140th ST."ET (Cor, Willis Ave.) 1s Harrison Ave., Boston, Mass. ONo, Clark St., Chicago, 1308 Broadway, Detroit,/Mich, 808 Engineers Bldg., Cleveland, 0. HELLEN’S RESTAURANT 116 University Place CORNER 13TH ST, NEW YORK CITY Comrades meet at STARLIGHT RESTAURANT 117 East 15th Street Bet. Union Square and Irving Place —HOME COOKING —COMRADELY ATMOSPHERE A. Surieh from Pittsburgh Management: | ' ne Tomkina Sg. 0-9554 | John’s Restaurant | SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHER | A place with osphere | | where all rai meet 302 EB. 12th St New York JADE MOUNTAIN American & Chinese Restaurant 197 SECOND AVENUE Bet. 12 & 13 Welcome to Our Comrades Gottlieh’s Hardware 119 THIRD AVENTE Near 1th St. ‘Tompkins Sq, 6-¢547 All winds of ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES Cutlery Our Specialty EAST LTH STREEI NEW YORK Vel. Algonquin 3356-8843 2 We Carry a Fall Line of STATIONERY AT SPECIAL PRICES for Organizations GARMENT DISTRICT Garment Section Workers Patroniea . Navarr Cafeteria 333 7th AVENUE Corner 2th St, HYGRADE VEGETARIAN and DAIRY RESTAURANT 149 West 28th St.. New York 4 RKAL TREAT FOR WORKERS Special Dinner 5 p.m. to 9 p.m, 45¢ Phones: Chickering 4947—Longscre 10089 COMRADELY ATMOSPHERE FAN RAY CAFETERIA 156 W. 29th St. New York VISIT an ACTIVE SYMPATHIZER'S SANDWICH SHOP Steinberg’s Luncheonette:: 333 WEST 39th ST., N. Y. C. BROOKLYN RESTAURANT & CAFETERIA Pitkin Corner Saratoga Aves. For Brownsville Proletarians Workers Cooperative Colony 2700-2500 BRONX PARK EAST (OPPOSITE BRONX PARK) has now REDUCED THE RENT ON THE APARTMENTS AND SINGLE ROOMS CULTURAL ACTIVITIES Kindergarden; Classes for Adults and Children; Library; Gymnasium; Clubs and Other Privileges NO INVESTMENTS REQUIRED SEVERAL GOOD APARTMENTS & SINGLE ROOMS AVAILABLE ‘Take Advantage of the Opportunity. oa, 9 10 a, exington Avenue train White Plains Road, Stop at Allerton Avenue Station, Fel, Estabrobk #-1400-—-1401 Ottice open daily Friday & Saturday Sunday to 8 p.m. to 5 pm, to 2 pm, SOKAL CAFETERIA 1689 PITKIN AVENUE WORKERS—EAT AT THE Parkway Cafeteria 638 PITKIN AVENUE Near Hopktason Ave Brooklyn. w. Lf Aven. § Cafeteria PEN DAY A Dewar’ o.so18 penis CLASSIFIED eee WANTED—Unfarnished ut room—vicinity 14th i Ie igen care Dally wee ® entrances FURNISHED ROOM FOR BENT—A; -Hlet St, ADL 82, or call Cheines aeesat, FURNISHED ROM TO al all imprer janay, 1 (tele elev: very reesonable, M,. Padwa, WN Aho ene eed

Other pages from this issue: