The Daily Worker Newspaper, July 15, 1933, Page 2

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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORKsSATURDAY, JULY 15, 1933 PAGE TWO ———————— ALABAMA BOSSES Cops Aid Ladies Ruling “Camp Terror” Evict SPREAD NEW LIES AGAINST 9 BOYS Say Examiners “Sold Selves to BIRMINGHAM of Girls Jews” ydod Patterson “portant d ‘sold themse New York” ‘by the landlord ap lynch spirit cording the Interna here. These reports. a whispering ney-General Tho Tom Heflin, the Kv senator, have bee he state, and are pecial viciousness in itself, where the t threatened with Pp ional Cy doctors fes, and economic destruc’ they refused to lie on the witness stand. The medical testimony of these two doctors, who examined Vic Price and Ruby Bates immediately after they were taken off the frei; rain at Stevenson, in March, 1931, » showed that they had not been at wacked. 3,000 Workers Attend Scottsboro Meetings NEW YORK.—Expressing a deter- wnination to fight for the reléase of the Scottsboro boys, about 3,000 Negro and white workers partici- pated in mass meetings held by the branches of the New York District International Labor Defense this wéek throughout Greater New York. ‘These meetings, which will be fol- ‘owed by Scottsboro mass meetings on a Section scale in the coming week, will lead up to the giant Scottsboro Mass Demon: tion in Union Square, July 21, 5 p.m. Some of the most prominent revolutionary leaders will ad demonstr terblow to southern lynck nine innocent Ne; STATE RE) JECTS ACTION ON RECTEF ROM PAGE ONE) (CONTINUED nich will 1 gov of Estimate 2 for be requested ernment. T serve as a por! el for Tamman; politicians and contractors. It pr poses the construction of docks at an expense of $3,255,000, to be leased to the North German Lloyd and other large shipping concerns. Carl Winters, answering this pro- ‘posal of the mayor stated, “The Un- employed Councils have consistently fought for a public works program, but on the basis of constructing of tion new homes, hospitals, play grounds for the disposal of the workers.” Pointing to slums in Harlem, Win- “y cessary to build where Negroes ters stated, new houses in Hi live in rotten houses.” Seventy-five employed on Emer- gency Relief jobs held a meeting at 1610 Boston Rd. N of those pres- ent represented from their Jobs. ‘They elected a committee of 15 and prepared a number of demands to be presented to the mayor. They are: “Immediate cancellation of cuts in Wages or the numbers of working days per month; a minimum of 12 days a Month at $5 a day, all work to be paid at prevailing trade union rates and payments made weekly in cash; full compensation in case of acci- dents; no staggering of working days or shifts.” DEMAND REMOVAL Of BUREAU OFFICIAL NEW YORK.— Unemployed work- ers will demand the removal of Mr.| Mellon, formerly supervisor of th Bath Beach Home Relief Bureau,| Cuban week, July 23 to 29. RELIEF | Girls Leading Food Protest Mass Support Prevents Ejection of Four | Other Rebels a Woman Labor Correspondent.) This is the conclusion of the exposure of conditions at Camp era, the camp for homeless and unemployed girls, sponsored by Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt.) ¥.—Well a for By Camp here | ike at} unem- | syed and homeless and dinner con: i potatc p st 2] differ- differs a bit | and r the of and meats, the rest potatoes , instead of meat and plain beans and udding for desert. one had heart- attacks, and consti- nurse gave every Lunch che n. The silly ne epsom salts. The very next day we got cheese, spaghetti and watery jello for de- sert, and a new line-up for epsom alts took place. By this time, prac- tically every one was fed up with ll this starchy stuff and epsom s. The authorities got sick and castor oil with a Perhaps this was pun- eatened hour fast! Here you see a specially posed picture of the happy girls at “Camp Terror”, swimming for the bene- fit of Mrs. F. D. Roosevelt, the sponsor of this camp of “rest” for jobless and homeless girls. facts about the crowded conditions in the swimming pool, and the bad food which nearly resulted in a strike in the baz are told in thi WHAT A ‘BLUFF! : 1c Sesion rash’ atc) | weeks forced the boss The real to New York d of feeding us epsom salts and /dining-room that any one who com- two girl friends had done excellent hypocritical kindness was the fear | 24-|plained would be shipped right back | | work, But on this day, all the girls|that they would prevent the police | because there were/were told to remain strictly in their |from throwing them out and getting | ishment to our undisciplined stom-/|hundreds of other girls who were|own cabins from 2:30 to 3:30 p. m.|Lady Roosevelt's’ camp into news- | more than willing to take our places.|The two girls were given private |paper notoriety. achs. Two girls, openly began agitating for better food. They declared that he authorities would not dare to throw them out; They staff that perhaps they did not kniow what was good for us girls, that during cold weather we wanted hot tea, and instead of so much | starchy food, we wanted fresh fruit and vegetables. Right and left, girls were complaining about the food| until the authorities got shaky. The here was becoming tense for a strike and we were fully prepared. One of the old maids in charge made a threatening speech in the TO HONOR DEAD PARTY LEADERS, (Class War Prisoners Memorial for Zetkin, | | Stokes Planned for July 24 Robt. Minor, William L. Patterson, and Louis Hyman, will be among the speakers at the Mass Memorial Meet- ing sponsored by the Communist Party, in honor of the recently de- ceased revolutionary leaders, Sergei Gussev, Clara Zetkin and Rose Pastor Stokes, to be held at the New Star Casino, 107th St. and Park Ave, on Monday, July 24, at 8:30 p. m, This memorial rally, a revolutionary tribute to the memory of the three valiant fighters against capitalist op- pression and terror, will at the same time be a protest rally of the New York workers against Fascist terror, | against the Fascist attempts to de- ‘oy the lives of the imprisoned leaders of the German Communist Party—Thaelmann, Torgler and their comrades. Originally planned for next Wednesday, the memorial was postponed when a. cable received yesterday annaunced the urn with the ashes of Rose Pastor Stokes will | rrive some time next week. Labor Defense Backs, Cuban Workers’ Fight AgainstYankee Terror | NEW YORK.—Endorsement of the campaign of the Anti-Imperialist | League in support of the struggling masses of Negro and white in Cuba against American imperialist terrot and oppression, is contained in in- structions sent to the various district ffices of the I.L.D. to support the ampaign, which culminates in a | Vicinity Center Although this Miss Mills usually gets hearty applause after speeches about | cooperation and loyalty, the ap- told the |Plause for this one was pretty thin.|to their cabin with the “matron. The next day food took on a de-| cided improvement. We got one- half an orange each for breakfast! For lunch, we got hot tomato soup, | string beans and carrot salad, and hot tea, with water-melon for de- sert. far our best) meal since my residence here. Leaders Are Ejected from Camp. The following day we got very nice pork meat, potatoes, beets and spinach, We were begining to feel that our Lively Entertainment iat I.L.D. Carnival for NEW YORK.—Games, frolics, dan- cing, sports, orchestral and vocal| | music, Soviet movies, dramatics, side- | shows, will be some of the features) at the Carnival-Picnic which the N. Y. District International Labor De-| fense will hold at Pleasant Bay Park this Sunday, July 16, to raise funds for the defense of class-war prison-| jinto the papers, the matron called | ers. The Workers’ Dance League, the Labor Sports Union, the Downtown I. L. D. Dramatic Group will partici- pate in the entertainment program. Funds raised at this frolic event will be used for defending workers arrested for striking for a living wage, for demonstrating at home re- lief bureaus, and in the fight to re- lease Tom Mooney, the Scottsboro boys, Sam Gonshak, San Weinstein, Leon Blum and others. WHAT’S ON Register now for the six weeks’ SUMMER TERM OF THE WORKERS’ SCHOOL. Reom 301, 35 F. 12th st. Saturday (Manhattan) | AMATEUR NIGHT AT HARLEM PRO-| | GRESSIVE YOUTH CLUB, 1538 Madison | Ave., where all talents of the Club will per- | form. Adm. only 15¢, Come and have a good time. OFFICE WORKERS’ ing a strike in Brooklyn. We are in urgent need of help—on the picket line and in the office. All union members and sym- pathizers are asked to come down to the| union office, 799 Broadway, Room $08, they have an hour or two. Strike at 108 | Pulton 8t. (Bronx) ENTERTAINMENT AND DANCE by Aldus Part proceeds for striking laundry workers. Aldus Vicinity Center, 57 Hoe Ave. CONCERT AND DANCE, 1610 Boston Rd. at 9:30 pm. Y¥.C.L. Unit 4 hermonica players. Adm. 10c. MONSTER COSTUME DANCE—“HARLEM LIBERATOR.” Jazz band—Co-operative Auditorium—Adm. 5c. Auspices Romain Rolland Youth Br. F. 8. U.—ist Anniver- UNION is conduct-| ‘Skits, songs, | |notice at 2:30 p. m. to be ready to} leave at 3 p.m. Two cops (the cap- |tain and his right hand man) came A group of 30 girls got together to} |resist the officers. Some formed a; |wedge at the porch entrance but |the cops walked up and bowled them jover, and 2 homeless girls were es- corted out—a typical capitalist evi tion. News travels quickly in the camp. | The sympathy for the evicted girls | was great, particularly because cops | |had taken them out. Our matron |took the names of all those who had resisted discipline. The following day, at 3 p. m. the \4 groups were taken off on hikes in| | different directions, and the 4 who| |had been most “undisciplined” on | diately and leave. They did not in- tend to be thrown out of their only home. They remained in their |ganb clothes and found 20 girls to hang around the Playhouse and watch the law in its treatment of unemployed women. They were pre- |pared to be beaten and arrested. One way to let America know about the evictions in our isolated |camp is to get into court. Because the Roosevelt camp mustn’t come |the girls back into her office, and discipline. lother chance, that they could re- |main in Camp Terror, although she jhad orders from New York to ship home every girl who shows the least undisciplinary tendency. Behind her OPBBPBPOBPOBPOBI for the Daily Worker | TAKE A Free Trip to the Soviet Union SPEND Six Weeks in the Workers’ it Camps GET Lenin’s, Marx’s, and Stalin’s Books EAT The Characteristic Dishes of Each Nationality | ENGAGE || In Sports With the Labor the porch were told to pack imme-| forgave them for their violation of | | She said she would give them an-} ‘Demonstrate Your Support July 30th, Pleasant Bay Park The camp feels a good deal like | capitalist society in miniature with \the dictatorship of the bourgeoisie | the carefully instilled illusions of | the masses. One sees here how} much strength we workers could gain if we would learn the secret | of union to make our voices heard | |too and beat down this autocracy. | MOT THAVEN 9-874 DR. JULIUS JAFFE Surgeon Dentist 401 EAST 140th STREET (Corner Willis Avenue)* Home Phone: Office Phone: Olinville 5-1109 Estabrook 8-2573 | DR. S. L. SHIELDS Surgeon Dentist 2574 WALLAVE AVE. corner Allerton Avenue Bronx, N. x.| | Alg. 4-9649 Dr. L, KESSLER SURGEON DENTIST | 853 BROADWAY Suite 1007-1008 Cor. 14th St. | | New York Strietly by appointment | | | DAYTON 9-4000 D, BACKER INTERVALE ‘Moving & Storage Co., Inc. BRONX, N. ¥. 2 WESTCHESTER AYE. | STATIONERY At Special Prices for Organizations PHONE: cisseces | | _| Lerman Bros. —INC.— 29 E. 14th ST., N. | Manhattan Lyceum Hall For Mass Meetings, Entertainments Balls, Weddings and Banquets | 66-68 E. ath St, New York| AIRY, LARGE jto defend the trade unions. | Army and Navy ING CLOTHES, ~ | WORKERS’ (in the city for individuals and groups | | 20 Workers Win Fur | Strike and Denounce | AFL Joint Council | NEW YORK.—Twenty fur workers | of Jacob Bobrow’s shop at 333 Sev- enth Ave., who after o strike of five to settle and to recognize the Needle Trades We ers’ Industrial Union and to grant | their demands, including an unem-| ployment insurance fund, all) signed an affidavit denying fal rumor that any with the so-called the A, F. of L. racketeer “We condemn the strike-breaking! _ Policies of the Joint Council of the} International Fur Workers’ Union,” says the affidavit, “and we pledge moral and financial support to our organization.” Such attacks, under the recovery (slavery) law, of A. F. of L. racke- teers as were suffered by the Jacob Bobrow workers have been amcng the factors leading to the cailing of July 15 Conference at Webster Hall All work- ers’ organizations should elect dele-: gates to this conference. Phone: TOmpkins Square 6-9554 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY—ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 302 E, 12th St. New York JADE MOUNTAIN American & Chinese Restaurant 197 SECOND AVENUE Bet, 12 & 13 Welcome to Our Comrades enn eee nn tnenntsien RESTAURANT and CAFETERIA American and Chinese Dishes 233 E. 14th St., Bet. 2nd & 3rd Ave. A nice quict place to eat our 25¢ LUNCHEON 35¢ DINNER | | WHERE Starlight Restaurant 117 EAST 15TH STREET Bet. Irving Pi. and Union Sq. Best Food Low Prices Managament—JURICH from Pittsburgh COMRADES MEET UNITY CAMP FULL All friends and sympathizers of Camp Unity, who are planning to spend their vacations in Unity should postpone their arrive! until Sunday, as the camp is all filled for the week end, HUDSON Store 97 THIRD AVENUE Between 12th and 13th Street TENTS, COTS, BLANKETS, HIK- CAMP EQUIP- MENT, COOKS AND WAITERS’ SUPPLIES—LOWEST PRICES SQUARE DEAL ARMY and NAVY STORE. 121 Third Avenue CAMPS SUPPLIED WITH TENTS, COTS, BLANKETS, COOKS OUTFITS, ETC. at LOWEST PRICES Meeting Rooms and Hall To Hire Suitable for Meetings, Lectures and Dances in the Bungalows -- Rooms (Complotely Furnished) For Reni at i, AMUSEMENTS ‘Whe Dramatic Tale of « Modern Wandering Jew! The DAYLY WORKER says THE WORKERS question « decidedly worth seeing.’ ACME 6c 9 _ (THE | THEATRE WANDERING | | Lith Street and JEW) | sas ena Ee] ¢ Exe, Sat, San, and Starring BA TALOV (of “Road to Life”) (English Titles) Holidays. {Young Russia finds mew hope under Soviet regime | RKO Jefferson 1th St. * | Now ard Ave. | DW. G. ROBINSON and MARY ASTOR | ‘THE LITTLE GI ANT”) and “LIFE OF JIM! _ Doug. Fairbank 3 BIG SOVIET ATTRACTIONS | “ISLAND OF DOOM” j “MOSCOW TODAY” | MUSIC ree “FLAME OF PARIS” “pet pri rete | wae 7a 8 Temes |] “8TRA! CASE OF TOM MOONEY” TADIUM CONCERTS RKO CA MEQ !2" STREET and Philharmonic-Symphony Orchestra ‘(BROADWAY WJ Lewisohn Stadium, Amst. Av. & 138 St. ———— ES Willem van Hoogstraten. Conductor | ie EVERY NIGHT at 8:36 PRICES: 25e, 500, $1.00, (Crete. | All Workers Will Meet at the Carnival--Picnic OF NEW YORK DISTRICT I. L. D. Tomorrow (Sunday) PLEASANT BAY PARK 13 CHORUSES 2 BANDS OF MUSIC CHORUSES OF 500 OF JEWISH WORKERS’ CLUBS GAMES—FROLICS—DANCING—DRAMATICS Sinash the Scottsboro Verdict! Help Free Class War Prisoners! 7-765) “All Comrades Meet at the EW HEAL HEALTH CENTER CAFETERIA’ N Fresh Food—Proletarian Prices 52 E, 19TH ST., WORKERS’ CENTER——— AVANTA FARM (Near Station) PRICE $10.00 and $12.00 Per Week BATHING BY TRAIN—West Shore R.R., 42nd Street BY BOAT—Hudson Day Line to Kingston. .Round trip $2.50. (Bus at Kingston to West Short Station, 10c; train to Ulster Park, 21¢) Ulster Park, N.Y. FOR FINE CLOTHING AT PROLETARIAN PRICES SEE ABE FLAMM Now With SAM and ADOLPH 142 STANTON STREET ABE FLAMM IS GRATEFUL for the response from old & new friends Tel.: Fordham 17-4011 BRONX WORKERS! PATRONIZE Columbus Steam Laundry 9 2157 PROSPECT AVENUE BRONX, N. Y. FIRST TO SETTLE WITH WORKERS! ] wpwwevwewweiww wew ws ae. “Morning Freiheit” Week Spend YOUR Vacation in Our Proletarian Camps NITGEDAIGET UNITY BEACON, New York WINGDALE Cily Phone Estabrook 8-1400 ; Camp Phone Beacon 781 New York | Proletarian Atmosphere, Healthy Food, Warm and Cold Showers, Bathing. ene, Athletics, Sport Activities Sasha Berean —| WEEK-END MATES : t Vacation Rates: $13.00 per week, 1 Day . . $2.45 (INCLUDING TAX) 2 Days . 4.65 | (including tax) CARS LEAVE FOR CAMP from 2700 Bronx Park East every day at 10 a.m. Friday and Saturday 10 a. m., 8 p. m., 7 p. m.—Take Lexington Avenue White Plains Road Express. Stop at Allerton Avenue. i | and responsible for the death of the| y STIV: 3 i Vescera’ baby, which died after| “The fight against American im-| “IY /GALA, 3-DAY FESTA niv-|{ Labor Sports Union Czechoslovak CAMP WOCOLONA | ROUND TRIP: to Nitgedaiget . . . $2.00 Mellon refused medical attention, | Perialist terror in Cuba is the fight | vets Brook, 10 am. in front of Co-op./ Workers Ho I Large Bungalow | .to Unity ..... $3,00 now head of the Relief Bureau at|0f the American workers, and of the | Restaurant. | SEE use, inc, Room in Cottage | WEEK END PROGRAM FOR HOT DOG AND BEER PARTY—BENEFIT | BRONX I. L. D., 1165 Gerard Ave., Apt. 4109 Thirteenth Avenue, Brooklyn, |I-L.D.,” William L. Patterson, na- 347 E.72nd St. New York Per Person for Summer The World’s Fair Through im a demonstration there Monday | tional secretary of the organization, morning. Ae in ocean hoy endorse~ iin oy nk The Workers’ Eyes Ree ; LODGING ........ $4.00 Per Week a s Nipeg apes sas Gr BAL: AS ov nity eh : RHin 5097 . Members 4 e 0 ssc sche : bend ranean nas bid al hic enon oak gala SAT. Ariel” in n revolutionary play | 6A, rung Caner PICKET WESTCHESTER RELIEF | port this struggle.” BUREAU NEW YORK.—Workers will dem- ‘onstrate and picket before the West- ghester Home Relief Bureau on Frisby St, this Monday morning, de- manding the continuation of relief. A delegation will present cases of job- less the Bureau neglects. Metal Spinners Elect 31 Delegates to Meet on Workers’ Code NEW YORK.—The conference that | will be held on Sunday, July 16th at 10 a. m. at Manhattan Lyceum, 66 E. Fourth St., called by the Steel and Metal Workers’ Industrial Union and the Metal Spinners’ Union for the purpose of working out a code for the silver and holloware workers, and to prepare a general strike in the trade, will be attended by 31 dele- gates from the Metal Spinners’ Unon, Workers from the Century, Key- stone, Lehman, Forman, Chatham Farber, Continental Eastern Metal, Mautner Cromwell, Colonial, Empire, Crescent, Excelsior, S. W. Farber, Freedman Bros., La Belle, and Shef- field Silver shops are electing repre- sentatives to the conference as well. Both unions worked out separate | codes which will be coordinated and unified at the conference. » Two hundred delegates nected are ex- “The LL.D. will always sup- | The LL.D. called on its members and sympathizers to obtain the pas sage of resolutions of protest to be sent from all working class organiza tions, to President Roosevelt, Presi- dent Machado, Havana, Cuba, and to the nearest Cuban consulate. | LL. D. APPEALS FOR ¥ VEHICLES FOR HARLEM SCOTTSBORO » PARADE NEW YORK.—The N. Y, District International Labor Defense issued an urgent appeal today for donations of cars and trucks for the afternoon | of Friday, July 21, to be used in a Scottsboro automobile parade from | Harlem to Union Square, where on that day at 5 p. m,, will be held a giant Scottsboro Mass Demonstration, Those able to offer the use of such vehicles are asked to inform at once the District I. L. D., Room 339, 80 E. 11th Street, phone STuyvesant 9-4560, SUPPORT CUBAN MASSES NEW YORK.—Rallying to the sup- port of the Cuban people, who are | suffering the terror inflicted upon them by the Machado-Wall Street rogime, Brooklyn workers will hold ® protest meet tonight at Sedgwick nd Cotumbia Streets at 8 p.m. to- | Phone: right. | AMO’ Club, 482 E. ‘THE WORKERS’ w. I. R. presents vlays, recitations, LAB. THEATRE of the an evening of satirical revue numbers, at the 93rd St., Brooklyn, fol- jowed by dancing. 8 o'clock. Adm. 20c. INSTALLATION—VYSE AVE. BLOCK 'OMMITTEE—Celebration of the release of Uoulse Morrison, 1334 So. “Bivd. of the neighborhood invited. DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet. Pitkin and Butter Aves., Brooklyn PHONE: DICKENS 2-3012 Office Hours: 8-10 A.M., 1-2, 6-8 P.M. Intern’| Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 1sTH FLOOR All Work Done Under Personal Care of Dr. C. Weissman WILLIAM BELL——— Optometrist 106 EAST 14TH STREET Near Fourth Ave, N. ¥. ©. Tompkins Square 6-8237 seme Workers | BY The Laboratory Theatre’s || Workers Cast | WITNESS The New Dance Group In Their New Dances DANCE To The Tune of a Seven- Piece Negro Band BE «etched by Famous John Reed Club Artists And partake of the many other events to be held at the Demonstration and Pic- nic in support of the Daily Worker, the fighting organ of the Workingclass. Admission at the door with draw- ing ticket 15c, Tickets from your organizations 25¢ . To all workingclass organizations: Support the Daily Worker Picnic and insure its success by getting | tickets at $10 a hundred from the City Office of the Daily, 35 East | 12th Street. GOTTLIEB'S HARDWARE. 119 THIRD AVENUE | Near 14th St. TOmpkins Sq. 6-4547 ALL KINDS OF ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES Cutlery Qur Specialty | Are You Moving or Storing Your Furniture? CALL HARLEM 27-1033 COOKE’S STORAGE 209 East 125th St. Special Low Rates to Comrades Russian Art Shop Peasants’ Handicrafts 100 East 14th St., N. Y. C. Imports from U. ae ia) Tea, Candy, Cigaret v Shawls, Novelties. Woodearving Lacquered Work Phone: ALGONQUIN 4-004 MIMEOGRAPH SUPPLIES STENCILS $1,909 INK 85c New Rotary Duplicators $18.50 up AM Other Items as Reasonable Union Sq. Mimeo Supply For information phone MOnument 2-7690 | Camp Wocolona—Monroe, N. ¥. | (ON ERYE R.R.) { BROOKLYN FOR BROWNSVILLE PROLETARIANS SOKAL CAFETERIA 1689 PITKIN AVENUE “Paradise” Meals for Proletari Gar-Feins Restaurant 1626 PITKIN AVE., BKLYN Williamsburgh Comrades WELCOME De Luxe Cafeteria 94 Graham Ave., Cor. Stegel St. EVERY BITE A DELIGHT for Brownsville Workers! Hoffman's RESTAURANT & CAFETERIA 108 EAST UTH ST. ALg. 4-4768 | Pitkin Corner Saratoga Aves. SUN, MORNING—Lecture on the role of the Revolutionary Presi in the revolutionary movement By Comrade Katz of the “Morning Sreinsit” staff. SUN. NIGHT—Dance SUN. MORNING-—Lecture on the role of the Revolutionary Press in the Revolutionary Movement SUN. NIGHT—Dance ! | | | | | ! CANDY STORE—An4 s, Paid $1250 in 1931. I will s-" for $750, I am going to Agricultura! Coilese, 334 Central Ave., | Brooklyn, N. imzles, German family. 242 W. Lrote 705 ALLERTON AVENUE AT WHITE PLAINS ROAD Every Bite a Delight m Sublet | COOL APARTMENT—Fast 19th St. No n= all or part. One-baif usual rental. quire B, D. ¢/o Daily Worker. “SoPH—COMM TR ILL, MIN.” FURNISHED ROOM— Brooklyn, Get off Inquire al! week w a Brighton Beach SHeepshesd 3-10447 Nigberg'’s Bakery GARMENT DISTRICT Phones: Chickering 4¥47—Longacre 10089 COMRADELY ATMOSPRERE FAN RAY CAFETERIA 156 W. 29th St. New York and Lunch Room 814 Brighton Beach Avenue Orders Taken for All Occasions Garment Section Workers Patronite avarr Cafeteria 333 7th AVENUE Corner 2kth Bt. Brighton Beach Workers WELCOME AT Hoffiman’s Cafeteria 28! BRIGHTON BEACH AVENUE OPEN DAY AND NIGHT ‘ef ARINE WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION CONFERENCE OPENS TONIGHT AT MANHATTAN LYCEUM

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