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‘ RETAIL STORE CODE CUTS WAGES BY HUNGER RATES Director of Bloomingdale Bros., Member of Industrial Adviscry Board By LABOR RESEARCH ASS) The tentative code agreed upon by| representatives of 3,800 leading de- | partment, dry goods and specialty stores now awaiting government O.K.,| under the National Industrial Recov- ery Act, offers another test as to whose interests the Roosevelt law will serve. Minimum weekly wage scales pro- employers the code might cited. Employers Well Satisfied. on isfied because it was they who drafted the code openly and without Straus of R. H. Macy & Co, sat on the code committee. And represen- | | | be | hundred and thirty workers at the | | ‘The employers are thoroughly sat- of a nine-day strike. | pretense that they were considering | | the workers. Such men as Percy 8. | posed under this code would divide | tatives of William Filene’s Sons Co.,| retail workers into three categories | in Boston, and of Abraham & Straus, | follows: (1) (2) experienced women workers; and (3) apprentices or “in-| experienced help under 18 years of| age.” In cities of a million or more, | minimum weekly wages for these | three classes will be $18, 12 and $11, respectively. In cities s than million, but over 250,000, rates would | be $15, $11 and $10, respectively. In| the rest of the country minimums | would be set at $12, $10 and $9. What does all this mean to the} thousands of salesgirls, clerks, cash- jers, wrappers and other retail store workers affected by this code? It means, first of all, a direct wage cut for many. In California, for ex-| ample, the state law provides for a) minimum weekly wage of $16 for) women. But under the proposed) code, the employers, fully protected) by the federal government, would be able to cut wages to as low as $9 a week. As a matter of fact, Califor- nia store owners even now resort to giving experienced workers the status of “inexperienced help” in order to pay as little in wages as possible. ‘The new code would encourage such practices on a wholesale and nation- | wide scale. According to the Illinois Depart- ment of Labor, average weekly earn- ings in Illinois department stores on April 15, 1933, amounted to $14.35— in itself a ridiculously low wage. Terms of the retail code, however, | provide that even in Chicago, whose size places it in the highest category, women workers could be cut down to} $11 and $12, and elsewhere in Illinois} to as little as $9 for a 48-hour week. For the sake of 4, ament we shall take an example from the “most fa- vored group,” i, e., a male clerk, whose $18 a week means exactly 3712 cents an hour. This compares un- favorably with 45 cents an hour} which General Johnson, chief recoy- ery act administrator, claimed as the administration’s aim for unskilled la- bor. On the basis of the 48-hour} week which is demanded by the em-! ployers, the retail clerk would be} making $3.60 less weekly than an un-)} skilled laborer working the same) number of hours. But even this does | not give a true picture of how the/| code would operate, for most of those | affected will have earnings little| more than half of the highest mini-| muin, the $18 scale. For a Minimum Subsistence. ‘The present codes are much below} even the minimum wage schedules) recommended by conservative state bodies. Thus a state commission de- clared for a $17.20 a week minimum wage for women in Colorado after an investigation several years ago. Few, if any women workers coming under the code in Colorado would be able to make anything near the essential minimum set even by such a con- servative body as this state commis- sion. “The minimum has been little more than a minimum of _ subsistence,” wrote J. A. Estey in his book, The Labor Problem, after reviewing mini- mum wage attempts in the United States. Indged the present policy of retail employers is to drive wages) down to a subsistence—or less than subsistence—leveis. The code as drafted by the em-| Ployers is, in fact, nothing more than an attempt to give federal sanction and legalization of present starvation wage levels enforced upon the work- ers after four years of crisis. It is, in fact, a step back to retail wage stand- ards of 1914 and 1915. No wonder then that S. Klein, New York City department store owner and notorious labor sweater, could say of the code, “I am thoroughly in accord... .” Or that Sol Starr of Oppenheim, Collins & Co. in the same city, exclaimed, “I like the code very much. There is no hardship in it for us (i. e., the bosses—L.R.A.). The minimum wages are fair to us.” Dozens of other such wholehearted endorsements and testimonials of i |to France code for it will benefit only them.| broad shop committee established, at R. H. Macy & Co., which is reported| a meeting where Fisher, representing to haye laid off 6,000 workers in one| the T. U. U. L, mas sea-/ ovation “reviewing” the code. Straus and his brother, Jessie L., likewise an official of the Macy store, contributed together some $25,000 to the Roosevelt election cam- paign chest and are high up in the | creases; | councils of the Roosevelt adminis-| ceiving less than 30 cents per hour The latter is in fact the|and 10 per cent to those receiving Rooseyelt-appointed ambassador# over 30 cents. tration. ne They, too, approve the blow after a recent Chi son, pays wages as little as $10 and less a week. For this reason it has been able to show a net profit of $3,250,000 in the fourth year of the is, 1932, It paid dividends of $3. two years has paid $8,000,000 in cash and $5,000,000 in stock dividends. greater evidence of whom the code will benefit is needed than the ap- proval of the code by such exploit- ers. Another Roosevelt official, Louis E.| most of them arrested because they Kirstein, member of the Industrial Advisory Board set up under the Re- covery Act, is director of such de- partment stores as B'oomingdale Bros., B. Forman & Co., Ab” im & Straus, Inc., and official of liam Filene’s Sons Co. It is such close Roosevelt advisors and millionaire department store owners who, after | Brooklyn court, Smith and Schermer- | drafting the anti-labor codes, then go| horn Streets. through the formality of endorsing and “approving” them. Hypocrisy can go no further than that achieved by the Filene store of- ficials. Thus Edwar called liberal employer, advocated a minimum wage of $25 a week in re- tail stores, according to an article in| Arthur Sitoreza and Joseph Rodre- 1930.| guez, jobless Spanish workers, will | At the same time salesgirls were be-| face trial today, charged by Hyman Nation’s’ Business, November, ing cut from $20 to $12 and $10 in his store, and girls employed in the store bank were told they’d have to take $12 a week instead of the $35 they were making previously! Sim- ilarly, Filene prattles of high wages, ! better conditions and the rest, while his fellow official, Kirstein, is busy | on codes which slash wages to as little as $9. As for the “right to organize and bargain collectively through repre- sentatives of their own choosing” allegedly guaranteed to workers un- der thé retail ‘code, ‘this’ also consti- ltutes ai ‘attatk “upon the workers. For such “liberal” employers as Fi- lene and Kirstein have for years had a company union in their Boston store. And Kirstein, under cover of his recovery act post, will undoubt- ediy see to it that such provisions are continued—that the employers are “protected” through company unions.” The retail code as announced is without doubt one of the most vicious plans yet attempted under the Recovery Act. It aims the fur- ther enslavement of retail store workers. Win Part of Back ‘Pay on Munson Ship NEW YORK.—A committee elected by the crew of the S. S. Mundeaver, following a visit of a delegate of the Marine Workers’ Industrial Union, forced the captain yesterday to pay| will meet today at Ambassador Hall $2 to each man of the back wages due them. The crew also declared it was ready to strike if the rest of the pay is not forthcoming today. When the delegate visited the ship yesterday, he found the crew, which had signed on 18 days ago in Newt York, had been paid only $1, in Nor- folk, since that time. This is the 12th struggle on the Munson Line ships in the last few months conducted by the Marine Workers’ Industrial Union. All Comrades NEW HEALTH CENTER Fresh Food—Proletarisn Prices 59 5. Meet at the ‘CAFETERIA 18TH ST., WORKERS’ CENTER———! experienced male} Inc, in Brooklyn, were among those| the T. U. U. L. | 0,000 for 1932 and in the last! No A. Filene, so-| to intimidate a scab during a rent | | | enozich will also face trial tomorrow | Court on a framed-up charge of dis- DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, JULY LEATHER STRIKE | THE SPrerr oF 3 WON IN JERSEY) gegen: New Brunswick — ers Form Industrial Union NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J. — One Lefkowitz factory, 25 Water St.) formed the Leather Workers Indus- | trial Union here at the termination Originally called to demand that a 15 per cent wage cut imposed last December be rescinded, the strike | gained in power when A, Fisher, | Trade Union Unity League organizer, went to-New Brunswick after a com~- mittee-of the strikers asked aid of | Fisher and many of the strikers were threatened with arrest several times, but the solid front presented | by the workers forced the boss to grant 15 and 10 per cent wage in- 15 per cent to workers re- | Union officers were elected and a/| received a great for the aid given to the strike. 8 WORKERS G0 3, 1933 age Three — —By Burek: BERAL” OWNERS OF CONSUI (0-0P PAY STARVATION WAGES Lie to Board’s Claim Actually commercial restaurants | pay dishwashers $7 to $15 a week, and in those organized by the Food Workers’ Industrial Unjon the: paid $18 for.a 48-hour wee these Co-operatives, however, a dish- washer is taken on in the middle of the day for five days a week, for which he gets at the most $7. His hours make it impossible for him to get additional work. This part-time | practice is never mentioned by the Co-operative. Holidays and sickness further cut |down this minimum wage. There is | @ so-called sick benefit, but its pro- | visions are so’ complicated thafé only |the management can understand it. and workers rarely benefit from it To kill opposition from the work- ers certain of them have been given part-time’ work, instead of being fired, bui their wages come from re- ductions in the wages of others do- ing the same work. When the oppo- sition dies out these part-time work- ers are let go, and the others never get back their old wages. BEFORE COURT NEW YORK.—Five workers will go on trial this morning at 9:30 and three tomorrow at the same hour, were active in demanding jobless | MEANING OF relief, Arrested May 31 at a Brooklyn | home relief bureau during a demon- ‘Workers Can ‘Benefit’ stration, Hanna Jasper and Ada Fish- man will be tried this morning, July, By Slavery Act, Say Socialists 5, on “disorderly conduct,” at the | ‘4TH Jack Fisher will also be tried today at the 161st Street and Washington |celebrated in and around Union Avenue Court, Bronx, on a charge | Square by Tammany Hall—the polit-| placed by his landlord that he tried |ical breeding of President foose- | |velt—and by the Socialist Party of | strike. |New York. In the Tammany We | ts jwam, just off Union Square, je | Eee are nae ce gas Democratic speakers, including both Senator Royal 8S. Copeland and Mayor John O’Brien, told of the wonders of the Roosevelt slavery pro- up and taking $50 from him. Inves- ce ee eit rcs ae tigation by the I. L. D, disclosed that | yorkers could gain under the Roose- Rubin tried to collect rent not due | yet industrial “recovery” act. him from Siroreza at the point of| ive hundred socialists and sympa- a gun, then dropped his gun and fled | thizers gathered in an Independence | when Rodreguez and other workers | pay meeting on Union Square. EAN Aa ee eg William Karlin, former Socialist Hall Dries. Comerrow Assemblyman, stated that workers! Her trial frequently postponed to} could obtain higher wages and less give the police time to “get” evidence \unemployment from the 30-hour week | against her, Anna Hall, arrested | provisions in the bill. He said that) April 26 at a Brooklyn home relief |the bill as a whole was an effort to bureau demonstration, will be tried | support capitalism, but the workers, tomorrow, Thursday morning, July 6,|if they followed the Socialist Party, at the Snyder and Flatbush Avenue} could derive many benefits from it. Court, Brooklyn on a framed-up|He neglected to give any further charge of second degree assault. directions for getting these benefits. Tarmon Trial Panken’s Friend Roosevelt Loretta) Tarmon and Michael Pap- Four sergeants and forty patrol-| men stood listlessly about as speak-| ers lauded American “Democracy”| and shouted against “all forms of| dictatorship.” Former Judge Jacob Panken was not sure whether “my friend, President Roosevelt,” was a “state Socialist” or not, but was sure that the government’s policy led di- rectly to the establishment of state Socialism. August Claessens blamed | most of the evils of the present sys-| tem on what he called “industrio- cracy.” He did not bother to define the term. Most of the other evils were blamed by other speakers on Tammany Hall. Support Laundry | Other speakers, in referring to Ne- gro discrimination, spoke of the Herndon case, without mentioning Strike Planned) or Angelo Herndon’s name, and to the | Scottsboro boys, without referring to the International Labor Defense and its efforts to free the boys. Rubin landlord, with, holding him in the Snyder and Flatbush Avenue orderly conduct for having partici- pated in # home relief bureau dem- onstration June 30. The New York District Interna- tional Labor Defense, which will de- fend all these workers, calls for these courts to be jammed with sympathiz- ers to force the release of the mili- tant workers. Demonstrations to NEW YORK.—The general strike committee of the 1,400 Negro and white laundry workers of the Bronx The meeting ended with an| at 3 o'clock to discuss the latest con- | apathetic singing of the “Interna-/ ference with the bosses’ association. | tionale.” | War Vets Rally Meanwhile preparations have been Two hundred and fifty Negro and) made for carrying on the Bronx laundry strike on a mass scale. These | White veterans met in a spontaneous | preparations include: meeting in Union Square after the 1—Mass picketing this morning at | Socialists had finished théir “Inde- the laundry shops on strike. pendence Day” meeting. Speakerg 2—Conference of delegates from|from the Worker's Ex-Service- mass otganizations tomorrow evening |™men’s League condemned Roosevelt's at 6 at the headquarters ‘of the, New Deal” and showed how itmeant , i misery and starvation for the vet- Talay woes Industrial Union, aceia. ue. Gaawithe condgiined the 3-- Mase Mesuing in. Marien. Thurs- | gnouted 4 heir. pacha ie the eran day at 146th St. and Lenox Ave., at| workers im their struggle against which the demand for the right 6 | mascigin. | Negro workers to all Jobe in the laun-| Speakers condemned the Socialist iry shops receive special stress. | sneak ry ic ft 4—Mass march and demonstration a “Ata cia sklge Blan WORKERS’ ORGANIZATIONS! Daily Worker Picnic Tickets for July 30 ARE NOW READY - %c ADMISSION TICKETS WILL BE SOLD TO WORKERS ORGANIZATIONS AT THE RATE OF $10.00 PER HUNDRED TICKETS. SEND YOUR REPRESENTATIVE WITH CASH to City Office Daily Worker, 50 E. 12th St., ground floor Principles of Communism Political Economy—A Marxism-Leninism Revolutionary Journalism Trade Unionism in the U.S.} REGISTRATION 16 Reem 961, 35 Bast 19th Mtreet, New York THE WORKERS SCHOOL ANNOUNCES, A Six Weeks Summer Term beginning July 24, 1983 COURSES IN TUITION FEES—$1.50 for course of six sessions $3 for course of 12 sessions. REGISTER NOW! NOW GONIG ON AT Got car new desoriptive ontelogue of the summer courses History of the Communist International Science and Dialectic Materialism Russian CLASSES FILL UP QUICKLY ] ‘THE WORKERS SCHOOL OFFICE Telephone—ALgonquin 4-1190 Miss Thomas (West Africa), librarian. especially Judge Jacob Panken, for at 8 p. m., Friday evening, called by | not advocating unemployment in- the Bronx section of the International Labor Defense, held in connection with the fight to free the Scottsboro boys and the struggle to end discrimi- | nation against Negro workers in the laundry shops, as well as the gen- eral struggle to better the conditions of the laundry workers. The march will start at Ambassador Hall and go from there to Wilkins and Intervale surance, but supporting the empty promises of the Roosevelt govern-| ment. | Money was collected to send a tele- gram to Roosevelt, protesting against the “Recovery” Bill. Are You Moving or Storing Your Furniture? CALL HARLEM 7-1053 COOKE’S STORAGE 209 East 125th St. Special Low Rates to Comrades Negro Organization Thanks Labor Defense For Scottsboro Fight LONDON, July 4.—A resolution of pr nl Oi bieragends asp Taber | ARMY TENTS 16x16 $8.00 up “for. the epoch-making bat- | Cots—$1.00 Blankets $1.25 tle it has waged and is still waging | Full Line of Camping Equipment big in defense of the Scottsboro boys”, | MANHATTAN MILITAR’ was passed by the Executive Board 478 WATER STREET of the League of Colored Peoples, Absolately Lowest Prices with headquarters hegre. “We feel certain that you will: ultimately achieve your objective | and we would encourage you to car- Membership in Tent © Ati Op ty on with your noble effort until | you shall have fully triumphed”, the | board said in a resolution addressed | to the I.L.D. | The officers of the League are Harold A. Moody (Jamaica), presi- dent; Alex H. Koi (West Africa), vice-president; Stephen Thomas, (West Africa), secretary; Miss Una Bus leaving front of Workers Ce 50 BE. 13th St., Sunday, 8:30 sharp. Returning same night. Round trip $ | M. Marson (Jamaica), Assistant canoer eerie Set Secretary; David Tucker (Bermuda), For further information phon publicity secretary; K. L. ion. NBvine 8-9831 — Day and Night (8t. Lucia), treasurer; Stella COrtiand 7-7289 — Day only ue DEMOCRATS AND |Labor'sDividends|U. S. MEDIATORS SOCIALISTS TELL Under‘NewDeal’ FAIL 10) BREAK Waiter Ends Life NEW YORK, July 4—When Dr. Wandeck of Knickerbocker Hospital | told him he required an operation— agricultural workers in San Gabriel) Sor which he couldn't pay — Oscar Stone, unemployed waiter, leaped from a window of his furnished room on the fourth floor yesterday and NEW YORK.—Fourth of July was| was instantly killed. He had been Fitepatrick, the Roosevelt mediator totally destitute. Postal Employes Starve PHILADELPHIA July 4.— Stat- ing that reduced pay made it im- possible for them to support their familes, sixty substitute post-office employes marched yesterday to the Philadelphia County Relief Board where they demanded help. The workers exhibited checks for sums ranging from 53 cents to $5.85 which represented their pay for a | half month. Jumps Under Subway Train NEW YORK, July 4.—Upon being evicted from his room, Allen Shedd, 40, ended his life last night by jump- ing to the track in a subway station ahead of a northbound express train. He. died on the way to Knickerbocker Hospital. WHAT’S ON Wednesday REGISTRATION is now going on for the | summer term of the: Workers’ School, at roads to the camps. the School Office, Room 301, 35 E. New York City. NOTICE—Members of the. Communist Party, Y. C. L. and workers’ organisations who ere unemployed and wish to work as a carrier for the Daily Worker please come to the City Office of the Dally Worker at 35 ¥. 12th St. Also comrades who can type and wish to do some volunteer work for the Daily please come in during the day. Ask for Comrade Blyne. TAG DAYS—Benefit Ohildrén’s Camp. Friday, Saturday, Sunday, this week. Mem- bers of those organizations participating on Camp Committee apply at your own or- ganization. Volunteers and all others ap- ply at 870 Broadway. A child’s vacation depends upon you. Apply at once. 12th 6t., HERS | Part-Time Employment and Wage-Cuts Give of “Highest Wages” Workers’ Ordinance Discussed Tonight NEW YORK meetings arranged by Bronx on the Wo: nance for New York C tonight at the Charles § borhood enter, 1447. © Discussion, amendments and e: dorsement of the Ordinance, which demands immediate jobless relief un- til the passage of a federal relief law will follow a lecture Tammany Club Gives Relief for $5 “Tip” NEW YORK.— Albert Moran of 404 E. 1lth Street obtained a relief ticket at the Home Relief Bure: u at a Stre r= militant had bee fight way The members are under the illu-| ‘0 receive f we sion that when the consumers own| ter front a Democratic the restaurant and apartment} the wor went the houses, capitalism will disappear| Club at 113th Str without the necessity of a revolu-| that he was expected tc ave a BU tion. dollar tip. i A** * PICTU RE—D ai ly N e + = ae were J) American Premiere of Soviet Russia's Great Masterpiece’ 6“ 99 THE 26 COMMISSARS WORKERS STRUGGLE OF THE RAKU WORKERS IN THE civin waR| ACME “HERE IS CLASS HISTORY ON PARADE. VLTALLY | EL Mi N N I RECORDED"—P = do y k in. — (English Titles) THEATRE Special Acaed Mf Da Cel b sant M MMTH STREET AND| TE TR KE Atiracuon: May Day Celebration mMOScoW ‘throw ‘savane EL MONTE, Cal.—More than 5,000| "TST Pd z ne MUSIC | Sakae oat PEI TADIUM CONCERTS" Philharmonic-Symphony Orchestra Lewisohn Stadium, Amst. Ay. & 188 St Willem yan Hoogstraten, Conductor EVERY NIGHT at 8:30 Be, 50c, $1.00. (Circle | Valley, Orange County and the beach) | cities, Venice and Santa Monica are | still on strike, in spite of the efforts |by the Mexican Cice Consul Hill and S PRICE 7675) |sent from Washington to force them |to surrender to a sell-out agreement.| — Hundreds flocked to the fields in | answer to an ad placed by the ranch- | ers offering 1 cent a box to all those who wanted to pick berries. But the [AeRRICen Morests in Bt MOnte OF) ciditer Bbiey has been tossed. to “ti ahd pulled out over 100 workers on| retail, under Section 76 of the Aleoholic| one of the ranches. One worker who | Beverage Control Law, at 133 West 28th St., | | refused to move when the police dis. jew York, N. ¥. to be consumed upon the| |persed the pickets was arrested and| Si \ee"yery, wig Dom 188 West 28th) | badly beaten. feces eee Mexican Consul Active | yNORIGE is hereby tiven the | ber B4246 has been issued to Hill and his lieutenant, Flores,| signed to sell beer and light wine at retail, |have again appeared to warn the Ader Section 76 of the Alcoholic Beverage | jand he will obtain assistance for) ises. International Kosher Delicatessen and | them from the Mexican government.| Restaurant, Inc., 14-16 Avenue B, New York He has stopped all efforts of the In- ternational Labor Defense to defend | the arrested workers, although the | Workers themselves have demanded | |that the I, L. D. be permitted to} enter the cases. | Leaflets distributed by the Agricul-| tural Workers’ Industrial Union, ex-| posing the consul’s role and the in-| tentions of Fitegerald, have had| wide effect in the strike area. | | Hundreds of thugs, mobilized by |the Los Angeles sheriff, guard the LICENSE NOTICES | NOTICE is hereby given that license Num- nder-| | Communist | | | Strikers In Need. | | Although they are facing starva-| | tion, the militant workers are deter- | | mined to continue their struggle. | |The relief committee is in charge of | | Teactionaries. The Mexican paper,| | “La Opinion,” reports the death of | two children from starvation at) | Camp Hicks. | | BEACON, New York City Phone EStabrook 8-1400 Camp Phone Beacon 731 | | Go to see every subscriber when his subseription expires to get his re- newal. FREE TO THE Soviet Given at DAILY WORKER PICNIC] July | at PLEASANT BAY PARK | WoriP TOURISTS 175 PIPTH AVE. Inily Worker, 35 Bast 12th 8t., Yew York City. Atts Seneral Manager Gentlemen: ‘This is to inform you that we have todey made Teservations on the 8.8. Ile de France of the French Line sailing fran New York on August 19th, 1938, for & rowmd trip ticket including « tour to the Soviet Union. ‘The World Tourists, Inc,, in the past, has sent large numbers of individual tourists, as well as Aelegetions for many occasions to the U.S.8.R. We assure you that we take tourists traveling through oH0/m P.5. If the above date is change seme according to ¥ GET YOUR TICKETS Discount at the City { 35 East 12th Street, New | : TRIP Union 30th b} e494 { | i || Vacation Rates: $13.00 per week! “EEK-END RATES NEW YORK. ¥. (INCLUDING TAX} 1 Day . . $2.45 |] For those who stay all summer in camp | 2 Days 4.65 June 8, 1933, | $10.00 per week (ONE DOLLAR TAX) (including tax) LEAVE FOR CAMP from 2700 Bronx cal Beday and Saturday 10 a. m., 3 p. m., 7 p. m.—Take Léxington Avenue White Mains Road Express. Stop at Allerton Avenue, ROUND TRIP: to Nitgedaiget . . . $2.00 .to Unity ..... $3.00 RKO Jefferson J4th St. * | Now Richard Barthelmess and Sally Eilers in ‘CENTRAL AIRPORT’ Added Feature: ‘UNDED THE TONTO RIM’ Stuart Ervin and Raymond Hatton STATIONERY At Special Prices for Organizations PHONE ALGONQUIN 2 4-3356-8843 Lerman Bros. . —INC.— 29 E. 14th ST., N. Y. Party Week SPEND Your VACATION IN OUR PROLETARIAN CAMPS NITGEDAIGET UNITY | | WINGDALE | | New York | roletarian | Atmosphere | ° | Healthy Food | | | ] > — e i} Warm and Cold | Showers | ° | Bathing | | Rowing Athletics Sport Activities e | Newly Built Tennis | Courts in Both Camps | Heian ‘: Park East every day between 9-11 a. m.: the best care of 11 | = ON THE APARTMENTS Youre wry ¢ | CULTURAL ’ j Clobs and Other Privileges Bot suitadle, we cen ‘our wishes, 3EVERAL GOOD APARTMENTS Take Advantage of Kindergarden; Classes for Adulis and Children; Library; Gymnasium; NO INVESTMENTS REQUIRED Workers Cooperative Colony 2700-2800 BRONX PARK EAST (OPPOSITE BRONX PARK) has now REDUCED THE RENT AND SINGLE ROOMS ACTIVITIES & SINGLE ROOMS AVAILABLE the Opportunity. Lexington Avenue train to White Plains Koad. Stop at Allerton Avenue Station. Tel. Estabrook #-1400—-1401 NOW at a Substantial | Office, Daily Worker, York | Office Fri & Saturday Sunday