The Daily Worker Newspaper, April 22, 1933, Page 3

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DAILY WORKER, wilhal YORK, BASED AY, TAKE NEGRO RIGHTS BILL 10 WASHINGTON (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) News Briefs — Machado Murders Four Students | HAVANA, April 21.—President Ma-| chado’s bands of professional murd-; erers knwn as the the “Porra,” murd- | ered four more students yesterday. | Their bodies are in the morgue and such is the terror that their own re- latives are afraid to identify them for | fear of being shot down by Machado's | murder bands. Political assassination | ha. been substituted for jailings and| trials in courts in an effort to smash | the growing activity of the masses| against the Wall Street regime. Pi a ne violation of the provisions of the law, ! which includes prohibition of Jim- Crowing, all discrimination, peonage, and lynching. There are now no fed- eral laws covering any of these rights, | and the existing state laws are full of holes, where they are not actually part of the lynch and Jim-Crow ap- paratus. One of- the prohibitive clauses for- | is the exclusion of Negroes from rand and petit juries, no matter who is being tried, whether white or black, because of their color. | Davis to Visit Daladier | PARIS, April 21.—Norman H.} Davis, roving ambassador for the) Roosevelt administration in Europe, is to visit Premier Deladier today and | discuss armaments preparatory to the opening of discussion in Geneva on spot Tanehise and Jim Crow | Montay: i ‘ne first. clause forbids every| at ‘ means, direct or indirect, for de-| New Militia Artillery Trucks | Ww _| WASHINGTON, April 21.— New Pepe Pee Ou | motorized equipment for field artil-} |lery is to replace the horse-drawn | to vote, by law and by terroristic| Vehicles of the National Guard units | Methods, in the United States. |of the New England states and the Jim Crow schools are forbidden and’ 104th Regiment of New York. The all Jim-Crowing in restaurants, hotels War Department let a contract for transportation vehicles, theatres, and, 386 motor trucks and 123 station | every other public place. | trucks to the General Motors corpora- Residential Resirictions tion at Detroit for this equipment, at The question of discrimination in| more than a quarter of a million | housing and, residential restrictions dollars. fer Negroes are dealt with in a sep-| uses in employment by priv- firms, corporations, or political and in wages and work- present, ‘it priving Negroes of the franchise. At lion Negroes are deprived of the right | “Red” Probe Voted in Mlinois | SPRINGFIELD, April 21.—The le-| gislature today adopted a resolution | calling for an “investigation of Com- | munist activities” in the state. It was; and the army and) supported by the agents of the La nm care of in| Salle street bankers, the meat packing ich prohibit every form of| trust, the steel trust and the hire- scrimination. lings from the coal counties. As far to Bear Arms Communist activities are con-! rned there is no secrecy beyond | stecting workers in industry who ong to the: Pariy from victimiza- tion by bosses and company spies.) The aims and methods of the Party aye open and above board and no at- tempt is made to conceal them, The , bill is a further attempt to attack tr ‘king class that is showing in- d rezistance to the hunger drive of the bos: e civil service, labor s of gov- it of the agency \ Czarist Guilty as Swindlers | _NEW YORE, April 21—Count obrinski and Professor Arcady .rowski, a pair of hangers’ on of ine ezarist colony in this elty of dope! peddle: ckpockets, confidence peo- rovision of the bill or person in- lesion of the io“ called fo | Hall, | after another. The Republican Party eels 22, 193 33 Page Three JACKSON, Miss.— A few of the hundreds of Negro workers taken from chain gangs and driven into forced labor along the Mississippi River. The system is fostered by Governor Martin Sennet Conner of that state. SCOTTSBORO MEET. Hathaway Speaks on Communist Position | NEW YORK.—Over a bas a Harlem workers jammed every foot | of space in St. Luke's Hall, Thursday tion on Scottsboro. This was the lar- gest mass meeting ever held by the’) Communist Party and Young Com- | munist League indoors in Harlem. Clarence Hathaway, district or- ganizer of the Communist Pariy, Otto Sam Brown of the Y. GC. L., Charles Alexander and others spoke. | S. Kingston, section organizer of the | Party in Harlem was chairman. | “Friends, comrades,” Hathaway said, “Many of you here tonight are listening to Communist speakers for ; the first time. During the course of | the last 70 years you have been listen- ing to Republican speakers, to Demo- | cratic speakers. You have listened to the promises they made and you have seen them fail to fulfill one promise | during the period of the Civil War ce dors mot permit publica- f the full (ext of the bill in Watch for it Mon- ple and prostitutes, were convicted of having operated a “money making” machine that enabled them to get $24,800 from two speak-easy proprie- | tors in 1930, Both of them were orna- ts at the court of the former czar Russia and have been living in cin e 1923, when they came ist colony. Ely Asks Sales Tax BOSTON, April 21—Governor Ely syesierday asked the~state legislature to’adopt a general sales tax as part ‘of a plan to raise $30,000,000 addi- | tional revenue, so the big real estate | and factory owners will not have to | pay so much to maintain their own La 8 government. eon} & be Flan Sam & Adeiph Near Nerfotk | “ta 2 gee turing Their Gwa Ciothing~ {3 geet both old and new friends, Mexico Bars U. 8S. Magazine MEXICO CITY, April 21.—The New York publication “Time,” was barred from entrance and circulation inside Mexico today because the gov- ernment charges it contains articles “defamatory to Mexico” inasmuch as it shows conditions of poverty among the masses, Flo went WORKERS THEATRE | ‘PARTAKIAD Der 5 oY Bullitt Special Aid to Hull ea C. Bullitt of Philadelphia, who was Roosevelt's “unofficial ambassador” with government leaders in Europe before the inauguration ot Roosevelt, sai * APRIL mer} ee Part | to Secretary of State Hull. At the | time Bullitt was touring Europe his tivities caused a storm in the senate than on a private mission. His ap- peintmerit confirms the charge that he wes speaking for Roosevelt regard- ing government’ policy while Hoover was still president. . 8 ioxet MANHATTA N } FOURTH ctw LYCEUM AST TREET, N, X, C. s MaCormick Geis Four Months | Deputy City Clerk James J. McCor- | mick was sentenced to pay a fine of $15,000 and spend four months in a postin we eae cme federal correctional institution in Workers Going €O }) Virginia yesterday by Federal Judge - Knox on a charge of evading income wees) 4 9 taxes. Doctors testified that MeCor- Sovrets mick's health would be injured if he > @ | went to fail, so he goes to an insti- Spesil reaietlon in Cordyroy suits, g| tution for a vacation where his Breeche:, Mozsehide Leather Sheeplined §| e#lth” can be protected. Coxts, Boots SYMPOSIUM ON MAY 1 SUNDAY 1 P. M. IN BRONX, NEW YORK.—A number of or- ‘ganizations have already accepted the invitation to present their views at a symposium on a “United May 1” to be held Sunday night, 7 P. M, at 1304 Southern Boulevard, Bronx. FULL LINE Or CAMY KOULPMENT, |) TENTS, ETC. 97 Sachs Avenue ° Workers needing full outfits of Horsehide Leather, Sheeplined Coats, Windbreakers, Breeches, High Shoes, etc., will receive spe- cial reductions on all their purchases at the Square Deal ne and aes Store 121- Third AvenueAvenue, N. Y. Near 14th St. SAM DON Acting Editor, Daily Worker Marxism-Leninism on the Class tSruggle in America ‘SUNDAY, APRIL 23, at 8 P. M. 35 East 12th Street, Second Floor ADMISSION 25¢ QUESTIONS DISCUSSION ris white guard and czar-| _j. this case: WASHINGTON, April 21.—William and carried on various conversations | has been appointed a special assistant rd it was denied that he was other NEW YORK, April 21—Former promised to the Negro people com- plete freedom, 40 acres and a mule (laughter). As yet, the Negro people haven't even got the mule (voices: that’s right). The Democratic Party | particularly in recent years and in) the north has been trying very sys- tematically to win the support of the Negro people in their greed for} office. If we working people, if the Negro people in America are going to get a new deal, are going to get something different, they will have to join the new Party that really fights for their interests.... We are going to convince the Negro people} in America that for the first time in America, they have a Party that is their Party, a Party that is the Party | of the Negro people, a Party that not! only inscribes full economic, political and social equality for the Negro people on its banners, but a Party that is ready to go out and fight to} the bitter end to realize this slogan | in life.” | Ben Davis, Negro attorney in the fight for Angelo Herndon, spoke on “Angelo Herndon said on the stand, | *You can do what you want to An- | gelo Herndon. Yeu can jail him, you S!can send him to the electric chair, | you can send him to prison for life, but there will be thousands of other 1,000 AT HARLEM ‘Mothers of Framed Boys of Soiah and North Urge Support of Labor Defense Mrs. Patterson and Mrs. Support of Scotishoro Tag Days NEW YORK.—Stirring appeals for suppo ort of the International Labor Defense in its fight to free the Scottsboro boys, for support of the Scottsboro Mass March to Washing- night to hear the Communist posi-| ton, and of the Scottshoro Emer: |Mrs. Janie Patterson and Mrs. eotisboro mass meetings held Hits Temmany’s Frame-up. Speaking at Mount Carmel Baptist Church, Brooklyn, Mr: Griffin denounced the convic- | tion of her son Edward whom Tammany officials framed up on a charge of murder and railroaded this week to a prison term of 15 to 30/ years. She called on the deep) joved audience of Negro workers to join the I. L. D. in the fight to free the Scottsboro boys. 35 joined the I. L. D. at the end of the meeting | which was addressed also by Edward | Sagarin, recently returned from De-/ catur, and by Rey. Carrington] 300 at Bryant Hail. About 300 Needle Trade Worke: | heard Mrs. Janie Patterson at a mee ing Thursday night at Bryant Hall | | declare that had it not been for the ILD. fighting for the Scottsbcro boys her son Haywood and the other | boys, they would been electrocuted. Louis Hyman, Benjamin J. Davis, | si attorney for Angelo Herndon, speak- ing at.the. meeting joined with Mrs. Patterson in calling for the utmost support of the LL.D. in its campaigns against boss-frame-ups. Spector Hits Rv Declaring that the frame-up was an attempt by ing Class. Scottsboro the Angelo Herndon’s to come to the South and fight the battle of the} toiling black and white masses.’ He points his hand ‘at the fury and he} says, ‘If you really want to break the {back of all this misery, why don't | you break the back of the whole, Why don’t you! i send that to the elestric’ohair?’ Now | capitalist system? when you hear a Negro worker speak | that way you know you have a new type of militant leadership in the | Davis ended with the crowd cheering their approval. rs. Griffin Denounce F ney Tag Day Drive starting iriffin, mothers of Negro Bo i Thursday white ruling c pres tional before an,audience of 300 at the A. M, E. Church, 834 Morris Ave., was enthusiastically applauded he called on Negro and white s3 th the Scottsboro pri d fight f the freedom of all workers from cap- on. At the end of the audience joi ion cards, rame - Uy all for this Saturday were made by framed by the ruling class, at night under the auspices of the N, Y. District, ILD. | Scottsboro Tag Days YORK.—AIl members of | to help make the Scottsboro gency Tag Day Drive, April | 22-27, inclusive, effective by join- | ing actively in the drive. Report Tag Day Boxes to following stations: Harlem: 77 W. 131st St.; 2149 7th Ave.; Finnish Hall, 15 W. 126th St.; 119 W. 135th | ; Bronx: 792 E. Tremont; Man- | hattan: 15 E. 3rd St.; 818 Broad- | | way; 109 E. 26th St.; Room 340, 80 EF. 11th St.; Brooklyn: 1813 Pitkin Ave.; 261 Schenectady; 197 Hum- bold The office of the N. Y. | Mrs. “Janie Patterson will speak at | a mass demonstration at Warren and leadership of the Communist Party.” | | Thira ‘Ave, from where the workers ill march to Fleet Street ise Place to protest the Sc lynch verdict. Tomorrow, Su j ing will be held in Brooklyn at 2 p. m branches have been forme ection which is a Negro neighbor- hood. jay, a mass t 1660 Fulton |j ‘NEW YORK. — Help in| ||preparation for the “Free | the S Scottsboro Boys” March’) | \to W ashington is called for in an appeal by the tts- boro .- Action - Committee. ;Technical help, typing, | |speaking, running messages, and doing office work, wante: The headquarters jof the Committee, to which | volunteers are asked to re- re at 119 West 135th is| | | Defense. District ILD will be open all day | y. Rush all funds to Room | 8, 80 East 11th St. All Tag Day | open Sunday. g Day stations 1413 Fifth Av , 27 W. 115th St.; ian Workers Home, 350 EF. St.; Czechoslovak Hall, 347 E. i St.; Italian“ Workers Center, j115th St., and 2nd Ave. at Call for Trucks for Scottsboro Mass March, NEW YORK.—Trucks, busses and cars. are urgently needed for the Scottsboro mass march to Washing-| 7 """ ton for which large numbers of Ne-| —= gro and white workers are registered daily, it was announced today by the! N. Y. District International Labor | All donations of such ve-| hicles for the march should be re-| ported immediately to Room 340, 80 Fast lith St. Telephone STuyvesant 9-4560. At the same time the ILD issued a call for auto mechanics and drivers to. volunteer their services for the march by reporting to the same address, By JOHN L. SPIVAK. i. DECATUR, Ala—Judge Horton had verified the mob movements upon the defense attorneys and the Scotts- | boro boys, but the only noticeable effect was a grimmer silence on the part of those whites in the audience. Some smiled—hard, |cynical smile: The soldiers are Southerners. Th: would shoot Southern white men to | save “niggers” and a couple of Jews. The judge had to say that for the |record. You hear that everywhere. |“The judge had to say that for the record.” The town is tense. Even Captain Burleson, usually smiling and cheer- ful, has a worried, harrassed look, He no longer sits near the jury box with his back to the spectators. He sits on the judge’s bench, scanning the spectators closely, his left hand on carelessly at his side. When you walk by casually you notice that hid- opened the clasp of his leather hol- ster. He must be expecting trouble. Then we learn what happened. Fifty white men from Scottsboro, reported to be heavily armed, are in Decatur. No one knows how many are in the court room. If Burleson knows he has not said a word. He sits there, the set, hard faces of the spectators, oe fs Ruby Bates and Lester Carter have given their startling testimony. Ruby, in her quiet, soft voice, confessed that her story ‘of being raped was a lie. Victoria Price, the hard-faced, hard- voiced women, had urged her to lie, she said. It was an amazing thing for a Southern white woman to do: to state publicly before hundreds of Southern white men, that she did not want to see “niggers” burned. These white men could not under- stand it, could not understand a white woman who would call another white woman a liar to save nine “nig- gers”. “Lynch Bates and Carter!” It was incredible. To accept her word meant that the famous case built on the framed word of a prosti- tute crashed. The hatred against the “niggers” swerved to hatred of this white woman who called an- other white woman a liar to save “niggers”. Ruby Bates was the liar, not Victoria Price. Ruby Bates with her new but cheap little coat and hat, and Lester Carter with his 811 the bench and his right dropped | den behind the judge’s bench he has | Even a split second may count. | hunched, tense, his eyes roving across | When Lynch Mobs Marched on suit. They had been bought. had betrayed the South and South- ern womanhood, and a mad tury seethed against them, Newspapermen covering the trial had arranged with men in Hunts- | ville and Scottsboro, for a considera- | tion, for telephone calls in case mobs started to form in these two centers. | Now the phones are ringing. on Cornelia Court and lynch Ruby Bates and Lester Carter.” The word spreads rapidly. Hunis- ville is arming itself. Decatur hard- ware stores we knew had sold out their supply of arms and munitions. But Huntsville, the home of Rul Bates and Victoria Price, was cauldron of race hatreds, “If T Leave Here Alive... Captain Burleson, too, received re- ville. He appears at Cornelian Court with a scuad of seven soldiers who immediately surround it. Ruby Bates and Lester Carter are Brodsky’s apartment, unaware of the proposed attempt to lynch them. Or, if they are aware, they are not afraid, for while the mobs are gathering in Huntsville and Scottsboro to seek their lives I talk with her and she says wistfully: “T'm going to write to my mother | when I leave here—if I leave here | alive.” I wonder if this nineteen year old child knows what is going on but They | “Huntsville is arming itself. The | whole town is preparing to march a ports of the rising populace in Hunts- | in Joseph | her eyes are clear and her voice steady. If she knows, she is not afraid. A soldier appears at Brods apartment | “The Attorney-General would like to see Mr. Leibowitz.” More soldiers are arvivi with seven more ¢ pockets bulging with extra ca hh shricking brakes stationed in th an Court, dark- Every- and several deputies arrive. They are no longer | grinning and smiling, assuring every- ee that Decatur is peaceful. Taken Away. | Residents in Cornelian Court who have nothing to do with the Scotts- | | boro case are switching off their | lights. Apartments are dark. Only those of the defense counsel and the | prosecution and the newspapermen ‘are lighted. The area grows more |tense with the passing minutes. | | Here, any moment, the first of the new battles for Negro liberation may Knight, the Attorney- Tom Knight, the on, approach the General’ sheriff and Bur little group of ing in hushed voice: sharp face is deeply lined. Leibowitz speaks first. His voice is grave: “Gentlemen, we are going to take you into our confidence and trust that you will co-operate with us. Two mobs are on the way here from | Huntsville and Scottsboro set upon | getting Ruby and Les Carter. We are taking them away to anoth place and we hope that you will n: follow us to learn where we are ta. ing them. Their lives are at stake. Attorney-General Knight speaks: “Mr, Leibowitz and I have had aj | consultation. We hope to forestall this mob action. We are doing ever, thing hurhanly possible to keep this | town quiet, but we must protect these | | witnesses as well as the attorneys. | I agree with Mr. Leibowitz and ask that you do not follow the cars tak- ing Ruby Bates and Lester Carter | to a place of safety.” | The newspapermen assure them that they will not follow the cs They do not want to see elther the boy or the girl hanging from the | | limb of a tree, | “Too Late, General!” The Attorney-General expands. | ‘There will be no trouble,” he re- | | pe ats. “Every step possible hes been | taken to forestall this mob coming Scottsboro boys got a fair trial! | the state of Alabama is asking the | Decatur’ © ) now, for the sake of the 2 1.2 of Alabama, not ton word of this. Tt would give the State a biack eye.” The newspapermen stare at him | blankly. The Attorney-General of press to suppress the news of mob | action, to suppress the news that a whole town has risen with blood lust n its heart and a contempt for the ch adverts of the state One spanermen spea. General. Three of . phoned to New that the mob is on the way expected within half an hour.” The thin lines of the Attorney- General becomes sharper. “Well”, he says slowly, “if you have | already telephoned, then of course | it is too late. It is too bad. But! there will be no trouble.” | He turns to a New York Daily News photographer whose camera is turned on the soldiers around the court. | “Please, don’t take these pictures.” “General,” the photographer re- turns mildly, “I am here to take pic- tures. But I will co-operate with | you like the rest of the fellows. I} will agree not to take these pictures but I cannot ! ppress pictures if shoot- will be no shootin; Knight repeats almost hysterically. “Only a Nightmare.” There was no shooting. In the morning we learned that sheriff's deputies and soldiers had gone out on the Huntsville-Athens road and stopped every car and truck with more than three or four men in it to search for arms. The mob was} turned back. The state of Alabama | did not want the story to get out | that mobs had started out to lynch the defense attorneys, Ruby and Lester Carter, When the advancing mob was only | a bad nightmare, Knight, Burleson, | the sheriff and all the state's officers were cheerful and grinning. They forgot that they had pleaded desper- ately for the press to suppress the story. In the morning there were no mobs. | There never had been any mobs. | The mobs became phantoms of the | imegination, and the newspapers car- | ried stories that a careful search of Huntsville and Scottsboro failed to | “disclose any of the reported mob} action” and the world was asked to | | believe that Morgan County was a tranquil, law-abiding place where the residents wanted to see that the/ ‘ i] Lith FLOOR |TOILERS URGED TO WITH SOCIALIST WORKERS FRATERNIZE AT S. P. ANTI-NAZI MEET TONIGHT NEW YORK.—The Socialist Party of the Bronx ng a German | anti-fascist meeting tonight at Trem- ont A’ ue nd Southern Boulevard. This is done despite repeated re- Ss made by Communist the ques Party to the r nd City Com- mittees of the Socialist Party for | joint united mass action against | German fascism—all of which were turned down. The refusal of the National and City Committees of the S ist Party to accept the united front offer of | |the Communist Party amounts to | splitting the ranks of the masses, whe realize ion a Consistent need for common scist terror, the united front policy of the Communist Party we call upon all Bronx workers sympa- thetic with our Party to attend this meeting, to fraternize with the so- cialist workers, convincing them of the desire of the Communist Party for unity in the struggles of the working class. Only the common action of all workers, regardless of political affiliation, not only against German fascism, but also against the forced labor program of the Roose- velt hunger government will be suce ful. | AMUSEMENTS ; The German Proletariat Speaks! The Truth of the Communist Struggle in Germany "KUHLE WAMPE” (“WHITHER GERMANY”) EXTRA! | with HERTHE THIELE, sescaenS!"%aSnitere” ON HITLER | Complete English Dialogue Titles Hathaway, Datl-| R BROADWAY | paktuaueniilio CAME & 424 STREET | Now! “MADISON SQ. GARBEN Zand 8P.M. eDan with 1000 Amazing World-Wide Attractions including The DURBAR, Colossal Spectacle GIRAFFE - NECK WOMEN from BURMA #4 092.50 50" Seats Greys. we gehen: TICKETS NOW at shombaces Gimbel Broa, Or Twice Daly ar OW SUNDAYS Celebrating RINGLING GOLDEN SUBILEE ASTOUNDING NEW FEATURE! Fickors Admnntiog co Brscyehing Get Sena Gaitaven under I? Hall Pris Bvery Attn Bxe. SAT. fname CARNEGIE HALL Eveniag APRIL 23) - Evening AT 8:30 |RUSSIA| Imperial Russia—As It Was Pictured By BURTON HOLMES Seviet Russia and the Five-Year Plan Pictured By | JULIEN BRYAN TICKETS NOW SELLING Best Seats: 50c, Tie, $1, $1.50 plus tax “The Chicago Mooney Congress, April 30 to May 2, will be a big step toward my freedom.’—Tom Mooney. FANNY DE KNIGHT, HAYS PRYOR, of “Porgy” fame. RUTH MORRISON, HILDER OFFLEY, BENNIE SMALL, ELEANOR HINES, Supported by cast of B’way actors in pein De Knight Five Orchestra TICKETS IN ADVANCE 35¢ MANHATTAN LYCEUM—66 East Fourth Street Tickets on Sale at WORKERS BOOK SHOP, 50 East 13th Street CHILDREN’S OPERETT. STRIKE Given by the Third Anniversary Chinese Vanguard Sunday Afternoon, April 23rd at 2 P. M. star of Belasco’s “Lulu Belle,” “Hallelujah!” {Sound Symposium on the Screen on the Present Situation in Germany Clarence Hathaway—Leading Communist Norman Thomas—Leading Socialist Perez Hirschbein—Famous Jewish Author | (Speaks in ¥iddish) | Added attraction which will be shown te- | gether with KUHLE WAMPE which has ite the PREMIERE SHOWING Cameo Theatre, FRANCIS LEDE! & DOROTHY GISH te AUTUMN CROCUS Gomes: Prices—All performances $1, $1 40TH ST. THEATRE, West of TODAY at ves Se the Jewish Problem ° yevish ae ‘The Return of Nathan Becker DVM DISD Typys m3 Dialogue Titles In English EUROPA, 154 W. 56th, Cont. from 11 A.M. » “A SECOND BEAU GESTE” ‘e108 PUSTYNP (THE VOICE OF THE DESERT) | —COMPLETE ENGLISH TITLES—~ workers Acme Theatre ITH 8T. AND UNION SQUARE ®KO JEFFERSON 42 & ¢|NOW Frederic March and Claudette “SIGN OF THE CROSS” ADDED FEATURE—“GRAND SLAM” with LORETTA YOUNG and PAUL LUKAS MUSIC Philharmonic - Symphony TOSCANINI, Conductor CARNEGIE HALL, This Sun. Aft. at 3:00 (Last Concert of the Season) STH Con Soloist: VLADIMIR HOROWITZ, Pianist ARTHUR JUDSON, Mer. Btelm Piano) SBORO” Harlem Hot Stratters BOX OFFICE 50¢ ME RED Young Pioneers of America In Rhymes by H. A. Potemkin—Songs and Dances Scenes of School-rooms, Scottsboro, Magazine, Child Labor, Evictions, \ and many others—Also Shadowgraphs SUNDAY, APR WASHINGTON IRV IL ING 23rd, 8 P. M. HIGH SCHOOL l6th Street and Irving Piace, N. Y. C. ADMISSION 25 CED DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 Bristol Street (Bet. Pitkin & Sutter Aves.) B’kiyp PHONE: DICKENS 2-3012 Office Hours: 8-10 A.M., 1-2, @8 P.M. {ntern] Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVEN | AD Work Done Cnuer verso of Dr. C. WEISSMAD Ware | OPTOMETRIST 106 KE. 14th St., near 4th Av. Alm. 4-9649 Dr. L. KESSLER SURGEON DENTIST 88 BROADWAY Sulte 1007-1008 New York Cor, 14th St MIMEOGRAPHS $15 up DUPLICATING INK STENCILS $1.35 MIMEO PAPER REPAIRS at Lowest Possible Prices UNION SQ. MIMEO SUPPLY 168 East 14th Street, Room 203 Algonquin 4-4765, Dr. WILLIAM BELL Strictly by appointmen: | TS Theatre Studio Party Sat. Eve., April 22, 9 p.m. at ERT OF BEETHOVEN CYCLE - CLEON THROCKMORTON STUDIO 102 West Third St, DANCE—ENTERTAINMENT—BERE ‘Theatre Collective Seetion—Workers Laboratory Theatre ADMISSION 35 CENTS | TONIGHT ta 8:30 P.Mes SECOND ANNIVERSARY ‘Concert and Dance Tremont Workers Club 2075 Clinton Avenue Musical Trio, Workers Leb, Well-Known Jase Band and Refreshments PRATURIN Theatre, MEETING ‘of all members of past and present | City Committees, Boro Committees, Red Press Committees of Organtza- for (he purpose of electing an Advisory Committee to the Editorial | Denartment of the Daily Worker, | TODAY, at 2 P. M. | 35 EB. 12th St. Second floor | Soeereie inne

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