The Daily Worker Newspaper, May 5, 1933, Page 3

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| — II cetaceans cians DAILY WORKER, EW YORK, FRIDAY, MAY 5, 1933 Page Three ROOSEVELT RAIL PLAN TO INCREASE UNEMPLOYMENT; CANCELS $300,000,000 NEWS BRIEFS Orphan Boys Avert Train Wreck. | PASSAIO, May 4.—At the height) DEBT 10 GOV'T; HAILED BY R.R. HEADS | of an electrical storm last night that | wash away an embankment on the Erle railroad, half a dozen boy in- Federal “Co-Ordinator” Will Have Power to Suspend Working Rules of Men on the Jobs | WASHINGTON, May 4.—Roosevelt sent his railroad re-organization proposals to Congress today. They propose a “federal 00-ordinator” who shall have extraordinary | powers to institute “economies” without regard to existing anti-trust laws or the rulings of the Interstate Commerce Commission. | Roosevelt also proposes that the government cancel the debt owed it | by the roads under the provisions of the “recapture clause.” Thi amounts to about $360,000,000. It is openly admitted that Roose- velt’s plan will immediately place an additional 100,000 railroad workers out of work. Officials close to the gov- ernment have also predicted that Roosevelt’s “more permanent legisla- tion” which he promises for the next session will probably cause another 100,000 railroad workers to be fired. There are less than 1,000,000 work- /¥8 now employed on the railroads, wer 500,000 having been laid off in ge last four years. The “federal co-ordinator’ will have the power to abrogate working rules in the “public interest.” Roosevelt's plan has met with the enthusiastic approval of the railroad presisidents. William Atterbury, pres- ident of the Pennsylvania Railroad states, that he regards Roosevelt's plan as a “highly desirable measure.” Dsiheaeinetnirecintasitasidih stints is| Jobless Worker Bows Before Capitalist “Way Out” Drives Scissors Into His Heart NEW YORK—Unable to get a job, Joseph Azukas, after several unsuccessful attempts to kill his wife ard thirteen-year-old step daughter, drove a scissors blade in- to his heart yesterday and died in} his home at 191 Manhattan Avenue, | Brooklyn. He is another victim of} | capitalism’s hunger program. | Azukas tried to commit suicide | twice on Tuesday, each time police | |were called who did nothing about | | removing the cause driving him to| take his life, his poverty. They |“quieted him” in their usual man- | |her and departed. | The worker went to bed still wrestling with his problems and at 7 a m. yesterday morning arose ca perately from his bed locked him- se] | dead in a room where he was found | in a pool of blood. | JUDGE AURELIO READY 6 WORKERS; JAM COURT ROOM TODAY NEW YORK.—Six militant workers arrested last week when police bru- tally attacked a demonstration of unemployed at Spring and Elizabeth Home Relief Bureau face jail terms when they are brought up for sen- tence today, 2 p.m., before the in- ‘meus Judge Aurelio at magistrates pert, Franklin ‘and White streets. |The ‘arrested workers are Samuel Gonshak, Joe Porper, Meta Manga, Joe Riley Peter Beracca and Marty Smith. Ignoying the testimony of twenty witnesses that workers were attacked | by the police and were not “dis- orderly” as charged the judge re- manded them to jail after a trial last Tuesday accepting the obvious 4,000 VOTE IN NTWIU ELECTION NEW YORK—Close to 4,000 members participated in the elee- tions of paid and unpaid officers of the various sections of the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union. The election committee appointed by the executive council reporter unusual interest on the patt of the members in this year’s popular élec- tions. The Industrial Union has is- ed a call to all shop chairmen d delegates of the fur, dress, fur ,pessers and dyers, knitgoods, ctis- tom tailors, as well as to the active members to come to the public in- stallation which will take place to- morrow, Saturday, 1 o’elock, in Webster Hall. WORKERS’ CALENDAR Friday (Manhattan) ANTI IMPERIALIST EXHIBITION OF THE JOHN REED CLUB and Anti-Imperial ist League at National, Student League, 583 Sixth Ave. (near 16th Bt.). Opening night! 4:30 p.m. Paintings, drawings, seulptures, porters, photographs, charts. et Rebert Dunne, William Seigal, A, Tayl Also A play by the W.L.Theatre, Admis- sion 28 cents. SYMPOSIUM—Religion and the Working Ciass—Prominent Speakers of the Catholic, Lutheran Church and the Association for the Advancement of Atheism will speak. At German Workers Oltb—1536 $rd Ave. (aeth St.) (Bronx) LECTURE—JEWS IN GERMANY—Lecturer ~F. G. Biedenkapp of Nat'l, Com. of --t Tremont Workers Club, 2075 Olinton Ave. LBCTURE-“UNTTED FRONT!” Lecturer —Oarl Brodsky. At Bronx Workers Ci 1610 Boston Road. Auspi¢es—Unit 31, Sec- tion 15. 6. P. LECTURE—“INFLATION IN THE i Lecturer—Comrade Jerome. At Yjospect Workers Center, 1197 80. B’lvd. 4 n't come late. U (Brooklyn) SYMPOSIUM — “SCOTTSBORO” -— Par- teipants, TLD, Richard B. Moore, NAACP— Alexander F. Miller, Presbyterian Chureh— Rey, Crapullo, Amsterdam News (Negro weekly). The Urban Leagu ‘The American Youth Club Labor Lyceum, 219 Sackman Bt, 8 p.m. DEBATE — “SOVIET RUSSIA ONLY COUNTRY GIVING JEWS FULL FREEDOM AND SECURITY.” Affirmative: Liston Oak, editor of Soviet Russia Today; Negative: Hymon MH. Goldstein, President of Demo- eratie Club, At 287 Bo. Sth St. 8:30 p.m. Auspices—PSU of \Williamaburg. Saturday (Manhattan) PREIHEIT Cenang Poreinedcob. Senscter conduétor at Carnegi¢ Hail, First ance of Revolutionary oratorio. ‘'Gebiter” (storm) music by J, Behaefer, 300 singers, assisted by Symphony orchestra. HOUSE PARTY — Entertainment, songs, dance, good refreshments, admission free at 40 W. 65th St. at 8:30 p.m. Auspices— Freheh Workers Club. (OUSE WARMING AND DANCE AND ART EXHIBITION at NBL headquarters, 583 Bixth Ave. Admission 35 cents. IOTOGRAPHIC Wt LEAGUE jodicots—Marionetts! G r ‘Oonoent ‘West 19th Bt. Admission 25¢. Dance till morning. nee! at 55 C jod Band. Bronx INTSRTAINMENT AND DANOB—at the Axspiet oo} ve, ‘. ie dmnission Women Council No. 47. A 180. SOVIET MOVIE “RED AND ” will be shown at the Tremont Workers Club, 2075 Clinton Ave, Also Dancing with « rtorm- | poptilar Jazz Band. Sunday BROOKLYN TRACTOR AUTO WORKER SCHOOL will have ® general membershiy Pri feud at Ukrainian Daily Hall, 16 - “IKE —OF WORKERS. ot ‘OBS OF OITY CLUB COUNCIL. Meet 9 a.m. at last stop on Jerome Ave. line. Announcement DEBATE: RESOLVED: 16 THE League of Instrument, of peace and tree- wissel of Leng fe. Win: simone ons ‘Ab Tremont Auspices-— it Brownsville | | individuals in reference to the ad- false testimony of one policeman With prepared notes. It was the same Judge Aurelio who gave Sam Brown, Negro worker 6 months for protesting Jim-crowism at the Bronx Swiming Pool last year. The Downtown Unemployed Coun- cil, leader of the demonstration, will hold_a protest meeting today, 12:30 at Broadway and Reade St./ and urges workers to be in court and all organizations to flood Judge Aurelio’s home with telegrams demanding the release of the workers. TO RAILROAD. mates of & Passaic orphan asylum, | went through the storm and stopped | a train carrying more than 500 pas- sengers less 50 feet from the wash-/| out. The boys saw the collapse of| the tracks and knew the train was due shortly, so they made such clam- orous demands to be permitted to try) to flag it that the matron finally | consented, ee a Jobless Couple Suicide. | NEW YORK, May 4—Thomas J_| Lindberg and his wife, Gertrude, both 60 years old, died of gas poisoning yesterday in a two-room furnished apartment at 56 W. 84th Street. Lind- berg was a ‘salesman, but had been uneniployed for more than 6 months. They left a note saying the struggle was too much, so they decided to end it. e218 Chiet Stool-Pigeon Dead, NEW YORK, May 4.—Thomas A.| Scanlon, since 1914 general manager of the organization of professional strike-breakers, thugs, frame-up ar- tists and blackmailers known as the Wm. J. Burns Detective Agency, died at the age of 53. Scanlon was known as & supplier of scabs and thugs in| strikes of the skilled trades—particu- | larly building construction. esa age | War Manouvers in Pacific. LOS ANGELES, May 4—With the| ships in lower California waters di- vided into two groups there is being staged mimic warfare in an effort to ascertain the effectiveness of bomb- | ing planes. The two opposing forces of war ships will manouver in a war- like fashion, while more than 300 attack the surface craft. ee Orgeon Salmon Industry Idle. ASTORIA, Ore., May 4.—The Col- umbia River Fishermen's Protective Union, suspended all salmon fishing here yesterday because of failure to reach an agreement with the packers, The packers wanted to pay only 6 cents a pound for chinook salmon, and the fishermen demanded eight and turned down a chamber of com- merce offer to compromise on seven cents, ‘Marching on | With the to Washington Veterans | | The writer left Kansas City, Mis- | souri, for Washington, D. ©., on April 27. Going by freight, I have met many vets along the way and all viceman, just turned out of Fitz- simmons Hospital for tubercular ser- {Vice men, it with me. We slept in the new jail at Cam- bridge, Ohio, where ten men occu- pied a small room about 20 by 10 feet. There were eight veterans among them. One said the “Only way to solve our problems is to turn this country into one like Soviet Russia.” Twenty-four of us were arrested just outside of Pittsburgh, Pa., on the B. & O., and taken before a Squire, named Nugent. We were charged with trespassing and vag- fancy. Twenty of the boys pleaded guilty, but four o¢ us refused to plead guilty to vagrancy. “What is a man going to do if he can’t find a job and has no money for fare?” we asked him. “You know it’s against the law to ride the freights, don’t you?” he an- swered, “Yes, and it's against the law to steal, but if you can’t get a job and have to travel from city to city and then get picked up and given 10 days Le aoe workhouse, we see no other He turned the four of us loose and we walked 12 miles into Pittsburgh. hayé one purpose in mind, to be in| Washington by May 12. An ex-ser-| We stayed in the Helping Hand that hight and got fairly good beds, clean, but it was too Rot to sleep. The food | was terrible, Sleep In Box Cars. |, We caught the Pennsy out of Pitts- burgh and rode into Harrisburgh, where we slept and froze all night in a demolished boxcar. It is impossible to desctibe the conditions which the men on the road are compelled to live under. In Baltimore, we stayed at the Sally. Half of the army and navy is in there. We stopped in at Church St. to see the boys in Washington and left there, arriving in Philadel- onstration there. We hope to take 3,000 vets from Philly to Washington. There were about 20,000 workers in the demonstration, which was led by the National Liaison Committee. Two marines that picked us up on the road between Baltimore and Washington said: “What the hell, are you guys coming back? That means more drill for us.” “What will you do if you are sent out against us?” I asked. “How many of you coming?” they asked. “Thousands.” “Well, if there is that many, and you are sticking, we'll walk up and say here are our guns, buddies,” they answered. Planes will have as their objects of | phia in time to take part in the dem- | At top, typical homes where 1 ampton. Below these houses, so ditions of the shops. tories. Frank Selthofer, 14 is sho delegate of the “baby when they voiced their protest week as a shirt trimmer. | of hundreds of young children in the now on strike against pay cuts bring drive for profits. state officials who have winked at the employment of child labor for 10-15 hours a day and have covered up the vicious practices of the bosses against the child workers. Children work in the shirt factories from 7 a,m.to5 p.m. Their highest wages, according to reports of inves- tigators wete $1.10 per week. More often when there was less work the children would bring home a pay en- velope of 50 to 75 cerits at the end of a week’s toil. One child reports that “Sometimes we'd wait all day and go home at night without earning any- thing. But if you don’t come every day they fire you.” In busy seasons the bosses forced the children to work until 10 p. m. | with no extra pay. In several in- stances the sweatshop owners moved | out of town and failed to pay several weeks’ wages due the workers. Brought before Governor Pinchot by their labor “leaders” of the Amal- By a Teacher | teachers. and shelter. They are learning to gra) side by side with the workers. Pay in Arrears year in arrears, Evictions, tax sales, foreclosures, sickness and starvation are now forcing them to fight for the bare right to exist. Their anger is mounting, and they are taking their struggle to the streets. Three weeks ago, 2,500 teachers demonstrated. Two weeks ago 7,800, and this past week more than 25,000 teachers, parents and pupils joined in great mass protests. By now every- one knows of the militant fight they |Steady circulation. flaily house-to-house delivery of the paper on an 18-cents per week basis. In the three months since the dis- trict office has been considering this undertaking, @ little has been ac- complished: 1,200 new readers on Toutes and 400 on stands. In con- sidering the prospects of the route system, it must be said that not much headway has been made. This is not due, however, to the poor pos- sibilities of carrier-routes, but in- stead to the poor cooperation of the comrades and sympathizers of our press, No Mention In “Dally” This lack of cooperation is due pri- marily to the poor way in which the carrier routes are being popularized. Little or no mention is made of them in the columns of the “Daily,” the per for which these routes are be- ing formed. On numerous occasions, I and other carriers have spoken at Party unit meetings, at workers’ clubs, at conferences, and to many, vantages of carrier routes. Almost everyone agrees with us, but all have the same attitude, which is—a feel- ing of helplessness. This feeling of ‘Bronx, indifference and helplessness (and in Some cases Open opposition) is mani- fest precisely because of the fact that the “Daily” fails to mention even a word about carrier routes. They discovered that the onl |was by the institution of ao— Literature Also By ALVIN WALKER. ed financially, there must BUILD NEW CARRIER ROUTES TO BOOST CIRCULATION OF “DAILY” Carriers and Reader-Sympathizers of Carrier Routes Point Out Tre- mendous Desire for ‘Daily’ on Part of Workers; Readers Order Almost three months ago the District office (circulation department) of the Daily Worker decided to launch a campaign for the formation of carrier routes in the Bronx. istrict office had decided, after a s the “Daily” was ever to be stabiliz The urvey of the condition of the press at the time, that if first be built up a large and ly way in which this could be accomplished ‘This state of affairs will continue as long as the “Daily” neglects po- pularizing this matter. We can readi- ly see that this will mean for the future, first, a continuation of the present small circulation for New York City; secondly, more frequent financial drives; and thirdly, no press ii we depend upon the bosses delivery concerns for distribution in an em- ergency, I want to take this opportunity to write just a few words concerning the benefits of the routes. What is written, however, will not suffice to clear up all doubts. Much more data and instruction must follow up this article in the columns of the “Daily,” in the form of advice, suggestions and experiences, % Advantages of Routes Briefly, the benefits that will be derived from the formation of car- rier-routes, are: 1, Many new contacts will be sec- ured for organizations, our Party, for rent-strikes, for demonstrations, for many other political, economic and social struggles, 2. As has already been stated, the steady circulation acquired by routes means ultimate financial stability. Also, any fund collections whatso- ever can be conducted on the routes, by merely approaching the readers of the paper. | 3. The problem of literature sales | becomes no Oar a problem. This | is proved by the experience of one carrier who, in the course of one month (four collection rounds) sold over 160 pices of-literature, netting over $14, 4. Probably bne of the most im- portant benefits is that the routes Provide an effective means of distrib- ution if the paper should be sudden- ly suppressed by the bosses. \ These are but a few of the many benefits. Space does not permit enu- meration of all the others. Millions Want “Daily” In conclusion, I want to state that our “Daily” is an excellent paper. Its only fault is that it lacks space. Its daily circulation is very far behind its influence and the need of Amer- ean workers for it. We-workers who are acquainted with the “Daily” real- ize how necessary it is in educating us and organizing and leading us in our struggles. Think of the millions of workers in America who must do without the “Daily” because we have never reached them with it. We must build up the Daily Worker until it is as large as some of our papers in Burope, ‘The way to do this is through the formation of Carrier Routes. We can do it. Subscribe nowt Canvass for new readers! Watch the pages of the “Daily” for instructions! Forward to thousands of new read- ers! Forward to a larger “Datly Worker! the sweatshop children of North- of the child workers who are pro- testing against the intolerable con- Below these, one of the 400 children striking against sweatshop wages in North- ampton and Allentown shirt fac- with the banner he carried as a strikers’ Governor Pinchot, at Harrisburg. Frank said he was paid 37 cents a ‘SWEATSHOP BOSSES LIVE ON TOIL OF EXPLOITED CHILD WORKERS | ALLENTOWN, Pa., May 4.—Facts being revealed about the exploitation Their pay checks are now nearly a| ive me wn to Allentown, Pa. shirt and pajama shops out in bold relief the greed and mer- ciless cheating and robbing of workers by the capitalists in their insane Working closely with the Pennsylvania bosses are the “Gamal ed Clothing. Workers and the Central Labor Council on April 26th the impoverished child toilers were loffered “sympathy” by this dema- gogue and Mrs. Pinchot fed them with candy, The Governor promised them further investigations and a | minimum wage la | LABOR UNION MEETINGS NEW YORK.—A special meeting of the Committee of 100 will take place on Satur- day afternoon, at 1 p.m., in Irving Plaza, where the present situation in the cloak | Mdusiry will be discussed and particularly the call for a conference on week work jin the clonk Industry issued by Local 9 | of the International. Al embers of the | | All members of the ‘Trades Work- xs Industrial Union who have taken lists |to collect money. for the expenses of the | needle trades delegation to the Scottsboro march to Washington are urged to turn |in the money immediately to the office of jthe union. This will enable the full quota of delegates to go on the march. Chicago Teachers Learning Solidarity Through Struggle | ~ csr Correspondent CHICAGO, Til—Mass action is the new weapon of the unpaid Chicago They are learning through daily struggles through victory and defeat, to fight side by side with their pupils and their parents for bread pple with the banks and big capitalists Fe | put up. | Suicide Not the Way Out | While the masses of American | teachers were restless, and in action, Paul Schneider, 44-year-old teacher, and father of three small children, shot himself to death. His taxes were unpaid and his family starving. Teachers Learning Solidarity “All quiet in Chicago,” hum the Special wires from the big banks of Chicago to Chase and National City Banks in New York. But all is not | quiet, for teachers are learning un- der starvation, beatings, and con- temptuous neglect, that their interest is with the proletariat. Stern strug- gles are ahead for Chicago teachers |if they are to win their demands. “Divide and conquer” is the slogan of the bankers and their political agents. “Unite with the masses under the guiding mind of the Communist Par- | ty,” must become the slogan of the | | teachers if they are to gain victories | | in the weeks to come. | } | McKEE 10 GET ROOSEVELT AID NEW YOR May 4—With Ma- yor O’Brien carrying out the job of cutting wages of all city workers, reducing the pay of the subway and |other city transport workers, and | putting through a higher fare so, |the bankers can realize on their in- | vestments, Tammany is laying the (gtoundwork for its city election |campaign next fall. McKee Out; Smith May Run Tammany knows it will have to/ make a spectacular move to be able | to hold on to the graft connected with administering the affairs of the city, so they are planning to run governor Alfred E. Smith for mayor. It is generally understood that this was the reason why Al- derman President Joseph V. McKee resigned and announced that he was out of politics. His $60,000 a year job with the Title Guarantee and Trust Company, is regarded as the pension furnished him by Tammany supporters for his good and faithful services to the machine, | The concern McKee is to get a/ job with is one of the most noted of the mortgage-shark organizations with enormous amounts of “Frozen assets” on hand in the form of | mortgage debt claims on property |that has depreciated in value dur- ing the eri McKee says he will | strive for the formation of a private corporation, financed in part by the Reconstruction Finance Corporation to take over approximately $3,000,- | 000,000 mortgage bonds now in de- fault as a step toward solving prob- lems of mortgage bondholders. Thus ithe administration at Wagajngton, | Applaud Councils Unity Proposals NEW YORK.—The Unemployed Council of Greater New York yester- sent an appeal to the Workers Committee on Unemployment, the As- ociation of the Unemployed and the Workers Unemployed League for the | development of a united front on a program of struggle against the relief @ The call proposed the immediate led by the locals affiliated to these¢ organizations and the local Unem- ployed Councils at the various relief bureaus in their neighborhoods. It urged the immediate undertaking of action to force rescinding of the “no rent” order and for the granting of full relief to the single unemployed. Upon the adoption of the proposed program of action which would in- clude mags registration at the relief bureaus and picketing to enforce the workers ‘demands, the Unemployed Council proposed that each organiza- tion select a committee of 15 to joint- ly carry on the united front struggles Workers Applaud Proposals A committee of Richard Sullivan and Benjamin Saul representing the Unemployed Council of Greater New York visited the Central Committee of the Workers Committee on Unem- ployment meeting last night at the Chureh of All Nations. They present- | ed the call of the Unemployed Coun- cil for joint action and were received enthusiastically and with applause by many of the workers delegates pres- ent. The leaders, however, postponed actions on the proposals until after midnight and then appointed a com- mittee of only five to meet with a like committee of the Unemployed Coun- cil. They made it clear, however, that this committee is not based upon any agreement or endorsement of the united front proposals, but is merely “to look into the matter.” This com- | mittee will meet with the Unemploy- ed Council representatives on Mon- day. The local Unemployed Councils, are going ahead, however, leading th workers in each neighborhood in energetic struggle for relief and rent} payments. They will not allow thie| | postponement by the leaders of re- | DAILY WORKER ENTERTAINMENT | Arranged by Unit 12, Section 6 Saturday, May 6, 8 p.m. 371 MELROSE STREET BROOKLYN, N. Y. | Refreshments Admission 10¢ | | einen naan cutting and the forced labor program of the City relief administration. undertaking of joint struggles to be to interfere formist organizatio with much needed action to se the workers demands Crippled Elderly Woman Mercilessly Beaten When Asking Food at H. R. Bureau NEW YORK.—A crippled, elderly woman who came to the Home Re- lief Bureau at 92 Boerum St., near Manhattan Ave. Brooklyn, to ask for relief for the first time, was merciles#ly beaten by the attend- ant, Baly, who called a cop to help him, yesterday morning. The little, crippled woman had been waiting in Tine for several hours and finally complained about having to wait so long. Baly there- upon called a policeman and she was given a beating such as the workers there say they have never seen before, The workers wait'ng tried to defend her but radio cars arrived and dispersed the crowd. arresting the woman. Baly is known among the workers asking for relief at this station as “a little rat.” The number of the cop who administered the beating is 6162. BONUS MARCH DANCE IN WEST BRIGHTON NEW YORK ~—A Bonus Mare Dance will be given by the Workers Ex-Servicemen’s League, Staten Is- land Post No. 174, Sunday night, 8 p. mH. at Svea Hall, 769 Post Avenue West Brighton A picture of the last Bonus marc Will be shown and other entertain- ment. Admission is 26 cents for em- Ployed, 15 cents for unemployed. WORKERS’ RATIONAL LIVING LIBRARY (By the revolutionary Doctor and Health Teacher) % 6.1 “HOW 18 YOUR No. 2 “SEX @ HBALTH” (in preparation) | Address: RATIONAL LIVING, BOX 4. STATION M, NEW YORK. STOMACH?” md Oculist Prescriptions Filled ‘At One-Halt Price | Hospital a | White Gold Filled Frames, ZYL Shell Frames .— | Lenses not included COHEN’S, 117 Orchard St. First Door Off Delancey St. Telephone: OReliard 4-4520 $1.50 31.60 RUSSIAN. MUSIC ‘The onty place where Russian Music and Instruments can be obtained LATEST SONGS FROM U.8.S.R. RUSSIAN MUSIC CO. 155 SECOND AVENUE Mfrs. of Balalaikas, Démras and Guitars DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 Bristol Street Pitkin & Satter Aves.) Bikiyn PHONE: DICKENS 2-501? Offices Meurs: 3-10 A.M., 1-2, 6-4 P.M. LARGE, sunny, airy, furnished room, for | girl or couple; kitehen privilege; In Co-| operative House, 2800 Bronx Park East —K-2; telephoné: Olinville 2548. 35 BRONX CHILDREN'S CAMP CONFERENCE SAT. NEW YORK—The United Child- ren’s Camp Committee consisting of delegates of Trade Unions and Mass Organizations has issued a call for a Children’s Camp Conference to be held Saturday, May 20th, 2 p. m. at MBET YOUR COMRADES aT THE Cooperative Dining Club) | ALLERTON AVENUE Cor, Bronx Park Bast Protetari: | | | | Pore Foods Prices latern’) Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 15th FLOOR AD Wark Dose Under Persone! Care | of Dr. C. WEISSMAN NEEDLEWORKERS APPRECIATE | THE LITTLE | WATCH REPAIR SHOP | S17 SIXTH AVENUE, AT 28TH STREET | Irving Plaza Hall, Irving Place and 15th Street, and urges all organiaa- | tions to send delegates. Children of parents unemployed | or working part-time are the first} to feel the brunt of hungr and mi- sety, the committee points out, and millions of children are swffering from malnutrition rickets and other diseases. | Registration of children for camp | is now open until June 25. All child- | ren of parents who are members of | workers organizations are asked to| register with their respective or-| ganizations. Those unaffiliated with | any organization register their child- | ren with the United Children’s Camp SPRING SEASON Every Morning at 10:30 A. M. CAMP NITGEDAIGET BEAOON, N. Y. REST and RECREATION SPORT ACTIVITIES RATES: $12.50 per week, inc. tax to members of I. W. O. and Co-operative with a letter from your organization Cars Leave Co-op Restaurant, 2700 Bronx Park East FOR INFORMATION call; Estabrook 8—1400 $10.50 per week $2.15 ROUND TRIP Committee direct at 870 Broadway, whose president owes his political | exisignee to Tammany, will help the inhabitants of the wigwam by pil- laging the treasury through. the R. F. C., while at the same time ca * ing out attacks against city work- has now ; ore the fa a cutting ON THE APARTMENTS lown unemployment relief. ; CULTURAL DOWNTOWN . Hellen Restaurant 116 UNIVERSITY PLACE, N.Y.C. Corner 13th Street STARTLING REDUCTIONS Take Advantage of Lexington Avente train te White Plains Road. Stop at Allerton Avenue Station, Tel, Katabrook 8-1400—1401 || Workers Cooperative Colony 2700-2800 BRONX PARK FAST (OPPOSITE BRONX FARK) REDUCED THE RENT Kindergarden; Classes for Adults and Childten; Library; Gymnestem: Clubs and Othér Privileges NO INVESTMENTS REQUIRED SEVERAL GOOD APARTMENTS & SINGLE ROOMS AVAILABLE AND SINGLE ROOMS ACTIVITIES the Opportunity. Office open datiy Friday & Saturéey Sunday Sam. to 8 pm. 6 a.m. $0 5 pom. 10 sum, to & p.m. Pena gl agg UNIVERSITY GRILL, Inc. BAR RESTAURANT 72 UNIVERSITY PL, N. ¥. C. Between 10th and 11th St. BROOKLYN HISTORY For Brownsville Proletarians SOKAL CAFETERIA — Hoffman's | RESTAURANT & CAFETERIA | Pitkin Corner Saratoga Aves. Money condition, FOR GIRLS and BOYS refunded if book is not wanted and is returned in good SCIENCE and By William Montgomery Brown I claim that this is the first book of its kind for the youth of the world and that it is the only book which meets their greatest cultural needs in this revolutionary century.—W.M.B. A 81.50 book for 25 cents, five copies for $1.00, stamps or coin; paper bound, 920 pp., 27 chap. after examination the The Bradford-Brown Educational Co., Galion, 0.

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