Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
4 PAGE 1 WU Aberdeen, S. D. an New Haven Jobless Strike on Relief Jobs Walk Outs on Public Works s Jobs Is Answer to Starvation Pay on Government Projects Strikes on public works projects and forced labor jobs in Aberdeen, South Dakota and New Haven, Connecticut follow after similar actions in many parts of the country. In Rochester N. Y. eight thousand workers returned to work a few days ago after a bitterly fought strike against a wage cut. In Toledo, Ohio, unemployed workers have resumed work after a three weeks strike. Throughout the country strikes are spreading as answer to pay cuts to starvation level on federal, state and local relief projects. D. ABERDEEN, S. July 16—A 300 employed on the ne Relief jobs has W on the public work re. Wages n the job from to cents an his i sec cut since 1e Reconstruction tion reduced wages nts an hour. when January Finance Corpo from 30 to 25 A meeting of strikers in Aldrich) Park found all workers attending After listening to Roy Brown, John S. Soltis and Paul committee was elected Seidler, a strike ler was made strike organizer. Among the demands of the strik- ers are: a mum wage of 30 cents an hour for an eight hour day inclu travelling to and from} work, with 32 hours constituting the minimum work week; pay to be in the removal of George E. relief director and his re-| placement preferably by one from) the wor! ranks. A number of other demands include the stopping | of evictions and shutting off of water News Briefs Gandhi Premres for Jail. BOMBAY. July 16—Again trying his old game with British imper- jalism to attempt to sow confusion in the ranks of the anti-imperialist movement against Britain, Mahatma Ghandi is preparing to return to “prison”. t is announced that he is certain that the viceroy, Lord Wil- lingdon, will refuse his “peace” over- tures and has ifstructed his wife to prepare his prison kit. He bade his friends goodbye before starting his usual Monday “silence” in case he is arrested before his selence ends. Jobless, Jumps to Death. ~ BROOKLYN, July 16. — James Corwin, a salesman out of a job. 36 years old and married, * jumped from a room he had occupied on the twelfth floor of the St. George Hotel | He was dead when picked | yesterday. up on the stfeet. Giant Soviet Transformer. MOSCOW, July 16—The “electro- zavod” here, the largest works for electric machine construction in the Soviet Union, has built a siant | transformer of 220,000 volts capacity | yand weighing 120 tons for use on the Paul Seid-| ‘South Dakota Jobless Kling Leads Single Men Get Second Pay Cut;} Tie Up Relief Job Trial Set for Tuesday in Protest; Arrested; NEW HAVEN, Conn. July 16— Forty single unemployed men work- ing on forced labor “relief,” led by Ralph Savarese, of the Unemployed Council, went on strike for cash re- lief and better food from the Sal- vation Army. These men have been getting lodging worth about a dol- lar a week, and two meals daily at approximately two cents each, con- sisting of slop. The 200 men on the forced labor job are expected to join the strike. The strike started last Friday fol- lowing the arrest of Bob Kling the previous day for addressing unem- ployed workers at a meeting on the | Central Green. Kling led a dele- gation of single men to Mayor | Murphy with the demand for im- mediate cash relief. The mayor ig- |nored the demand and answered that he would do nothing except make an “investigation” of the two meals a day. When Kling brought this | waiting outside, he was immediately | | arrested. 800 Negro and White message back to the crowd | DAILY WURKKER, Evict Aged Couple As Radio Proclaims | Relief Is Adequate| NEW YORK.—While a nearby radio blared forth the statement that adequate relief was being given out, an elderly couple were evicted from their dingy apart- ment on New York’s lower East Side. While the couple were away from their home, the city marshal broke the lock off the and put the furniture on the eet. The couple had repeatedly applied for relief but were re- fused. For lack of $30 back rent they were left without a home. PROGRAM 10 FIGHT SLAVE ACT ADOPTED | Resolution Demands Workers’ Right to Choose Own Union W YORK, M Plan Program of Struggle Against Slavery NDAY, JULY 17, 1933 . Act A Section of the Delegates of workers’ organizations in New York who met at Webster Hall Saturday | afternoon and laid plans for a wide united front struggle to defend the workers’ Wetter their conditions through joining the unions of their own choice. rights to strike and to! OVER 900 DELEGATES Committee of 30 to 120 Rail Strikers | Carry Out Work Is Appointed NEW YORK.—A program of widen- | ing and strengthening the workers’ trade unions and the workers’ condi- | tions against the attack of the Re- covery (slavery) law was adopted) Saturday afternoon at the meeting in Webster Hall attended by over 900 delegates representing A. F. of L. locals, opposition groups in the A. F. of L., independent unions, unions| affiliated with the Trade Union Unity League, branches of the In- ternational Workers’ Order, the Workmen’s Circle, and other fra- | ternal groups. Among the delegates were 267 rep- resenting 208 shops. Over 1,000 other workers attended the conference as spectators. Terror Part of Slave Act. BUCHAREST, Rumania, Julyfo. - Between 120 and 140 Rumanian rail- way workers will come up before court-martial here tomorrow, this year, when workers occupied | tacked by troops. Mass pressure has forced the Ru- manian government to free forty, others held on similar charges, as well as Bojur, leader of the Ruma- nian workers who had been impris- oned 14 years for revolutionary ac- tivity. The International Red Aid has ‘To Face Rumanian Army Trial Today’ for | their activities in the strike of early | railway yards and were savagely at- | | Gladys Stoner, Weinstock, of the A. F. of L. Com- 8) mittee for Unemployment Insurance, Protest Harlem “White 9 Oe | Tenants Only Sign tlined the meaning of the Recov- | ery (slavery) Act, and analyzed the NEW YORK.—Over 800 Negro and| steel, cotton and other codes. Ben} white workers protested the Jim-| Gold described how the furriers were Crow sign, “White Tenants Only,” at| putting up a militant battle against 274 W. 128th St., last Friday, at a/the attempt of the bosses and the mass demonstration called by the | A. F. of L. officials to drive down called on all its sections, in every country in the world, to show their solidarity with the Rumanian rail- way workers by initiating protests | around the demand for their imme- | diate and unconditional release. All trade urfions and working class or- ganizations in every country are cal- led on to send cables of protest to the Angelo Herndon No. 1 Branch of the} International Labor Defense. Six| cops tried to disperse the crowd, but | were “unable to do so. Dr. Vernon Vasquez, prominent Negro physician of the Bronx, spoke Mayor O'Brien for their Jim-Crow tactios--Other speakers were Bonita Williams of the League of Struggle| | for Negro Rights, Leroy and Arthur} | Green. | _F. D. Griffin, representing the I. L.| D., hit the keynote of the meeting| when he said: “The Negro and white workers of Harlem, under the leader- | ship of the I. L. D., have pledged our- selves to the workers’ cause, to smash every such act of Jim-Crowism against the Negro workers in Har- Jem and throughout the city. We demand at this meeting that all land- lords rent to Negro tenants as well as to white, with no difference in rent, displayed.” transmission line of the new hyto- | — flectRic plant on the Svir river. 1 sSoviet Builds Motor Ships. LENINGRAD, July 16—Within ‘the past five months the ship yards here have launched five Deisel- Motored cargo carriers running from 3,500 to 10,900 tons displacement. ~ CULTURE IN SOVIET RUSSIA John Keed Club Symposium CORLISS LAMONT, HUGO GEL- \LERT, JOSHUA KUNITZ, MINNA| HARKAVY Chairman: M. J. OLGIN FRIDAY, JULY 21, 8:30) —Admission 25¢— ‘NEW SCHOOL, 66 W. 12th St. | Are You Moving or Storing Your Furniture? CALL HARLEM 17-1058 COOKE’S STORAGE 209 Hast 125th St. Special Low Rates to Comrades 4 CLASSIFIED ey STORE—An ind 2 rooms. Pala $1250 + in 1981, 1 will sell for $750, 1 going to Agricultura! College. ) Brooklyn, N. Y. 834 Central Ave., FURNISHED ROOMS—Modern, doubles, German family, $4 ‘16th St. Lig Nas FURNISHED ROOM—To let, 41 Lincoln | Brooklyn. Get off Prospect Park Station. | Inquire all week up to 3 p. m. Mother Wright, Ruby Bates, Patterson and Minor to Be at Scottsboro Meeting Demonstration in Union Square Next Friday Evening Will Demand Immediate and Unconditional Release of Boys NEW YORK. whose two sons are among the | Scottsboro boys, Ruby Bates, heroic | witness for the defense of the |9 innocent Negro boys, Robert Minor, of the Communist Party, William L. | Patterson, National Secretary Inter- | national Labor Defense, William Fitagerald, Harlem organizer for the I. L. D., Ben Gold, of the Needle | Trades Workers Industrial Union, | attorney, will be among the speakers jat the giant Scottsboro Demonstra- | |tion which the New York District | International Labor Defense will hold in Union Square, Friday, July | 21, at 5 p.m, Invitations to speak have also been extended to Roger Baldwin, Ameri- can Civil Liberties Union, J. B. Mat- |thews, Fellowship of Reconciliation, | | and to prominent writers and artists. on all friends of the Scottsboro boys | to offer the use of cars and trucks to be used on the afternoon of Fri- day, July 21, for the Harlem auto “Training for th ‘ Principles of Communism « Political Economy—A 1 # ri j Marxisin-Leninism : Trade Unionism in the U.S. H Workers School Office § t Room 801, 35 Kast 1th Street, New York LAST WEEK OF REGISTRATION for the SIX-WEEKS SUMMER TERM of THE WORKERS SCHOOL COURSES IN REGISTER NOW, BEFORE IT IS TOO LATE! Daily at Noon Get our new descriptive catalogue of the e Class Struggle” History of the Communist International Science and Dialectie | Materialism | Russian Opens for Registration Telephone—ALgonqain 4-1199 er courses Waida-Titulesca government at Bucharest, and telegrams to the nearest Rumanian consuls. Oe the furriers’ conditions by forcing them, through terror, to accept the/ A. F. of L. union. This terror, Gold attacking Commissioner Bolan and| and with no Jim-Crow signs! Lennie L. George, prominent Negro | | pointed out, was a concrete example | of how the recovery act works in| practice. | The main resolution stressed the | demand for the right of the workers | to join unions of their own choosing, | and for the right to strike. The pro- | | gram. calls for meetings of workers! | in factories to discuss their demands | |'and to elect delegates to present these demands in Washington. Endorse Cleveland Conference The resolution also endorsed the | Cleveland conference, to be held | Aug. 26 and 27, where workers will be mobilized on a national scale to fight the hunger and slavery pro- gram of Roosevelt. An executive committee of 30 was | chosen to continue the work of the | conference. The struggle of the railroad work- ers of Rumania began last year at | Gradia, Mare, and Cluj-Ploesti, and was answered by brutal suppression and a state of seige. It ended in a| blood-bath in February against the | ;Tailway workers of Bucharest Protest strikes were called in doz- | ens of industries. \ILD Forces Seaman’s | Release from Island NEW YORK.—The . District, International Labor lerise forced the release late this week of Fritz Liedtke, Scandinavian seaman, ar- (Tomorrow's DAILY WORKER will carry a more complete report on the conference.) — Mother Wright, parade. Phone, write, or call the boys to the electric chair. |New York District IL.D., Room 339, 80 E. 11th St., phone number, STuy- | vesant 9-4560. | This demonstration is called to! mobilize mass pressure against fur-| |ther attempts by the southern white | | ruling class to electrocute the Scotts- | | boro boys, against whom a new wave | | |of lynch frenzy has been raised by | the announcement by ex-Senator |'Tom Heflin, prosecutor of the Tal-| lapoosa Negro sharecroppers, that he | would help Attorney-General Knight | | railroad the nine innocent Negro } Negro Given 6 | SOUTH NORFOLK, Va., July 16— | Frank Manly, Negro worker, is serv- ing six months in the county jail here because he helped the victim of an | automobile accident pick bits of broken glass from his face and clothes. The International Labor De- fense is taking legal steps to obtain his release ‘When two automobiles collided | here recently and the occupant of one was badly cut by flying glass from a broken windshield, Manly; stepped up and helped him pick the bits of glass from his face and| clothes. A well-dressed Negro woman came out of one of the houses and ordered him to pick up*the glass from the street. Manly, however, said it was | better in the street than in the man’s | face and that the streetcleaner would soon be along in any case. le wo- man telephoned the police. When an officer arrived, he re- peated the same command to Manly, who made the same reply. When the Policeman drew his club, Manly warned him he would defend him- self. Then the officer drew a black- Kee which Manly took away from im. Enraged, the cop drew his pistol, for Aid to Auto Crash Victim | An automobile parade from Har- | lem to Union Square will precede the | ‘| demonstration. The ILD. calls up- rested in March and held since then on Ellis Island for deportation. Lied- tke was arrésted for class-struggle activity. | The immediate and unconditional and safe release of the Scottsboro boys will be made at the demonstra- tion. . 8 APPEAL FOR AUTOS NEW YORK—The N. Y. District; I. L, D. appeals to all friends of the Scottsboro boys to offer the use of | autos and trucks for the afternoon of Friday, July 21, to be used in the | | Harlem auto parade to Union Square for the Scottsboro Mass Demonstra- tion. Call, write the N. Y. District | IL. D,, Room 939, 799 Broadway, | phone STuyvesant 94560. Months i in Jail shot Manip through the hand, ana | |arrested him. Next day Judge Gib- son, who is also the mayor and chief | of police of South Norfolk, gave him | six months in the county jail and has refused to release him on appeal bonds, though notice of appeal has beon filed, Meanwhile, Manly’s wife and three children ate starving. 1,000 in Norfolk Protest Frame-Ups of Three Negroes NORFOLK, Va., July 16. — Over one thousand gathered in Barraud Park at a meeting called by the Tide- water International Labor Defense, passed resolutions of protest against their local “Scottsboros”, These aré the frame-up of Russell Gordon on a rape charge, John Askew on mur- der charges, and Frank Manly, sentenced to six months in jail for defending himself from 4 brutal po- lice attack. All three are Negroes. A delegation will present the facts | teacher. | Professionals, Chea eated The Negro graduate is in Negro Hunter gradu- ate, pointed out. She told the story of how she had gone from employ. ment agency to employment agency, being turned down for the pitifully few jobs that were open because was a Negro. At the industrial de- pariment of the Negro Y.W.C.A., she found that their sole openings were for domestic help in the white Y.W. CA. The Home Relief Bureau refused help to her and her femily because | they received, through their grand- mother, a tiny pension. The Emerg- | ency Work Bureau told her that-there | were no openings for’ Negro workers. All that employment bureaus would say was, “We'll keep you on record.’ Everywhere the Negro college graduate goes, he is turned down, or at best taken on in menial and ill- | paid positions. Miss Stoner attended the Wash- ington Convention of the National Association of Unemployed Alumni, @ Socialist Party controlled or- ganization. There she found that the delegates were baffled by her presence. “I guess ther didn’t think Negroes gtaduated from col- lege,” she said. tional Alumni Association was she able to break through the bars of Segregation that the socialist outfit was perfectly willing to accept. An- | other step in her disillusionment was | found here, when, on top of this dis- crimination, she found that the con- ference confined itself to preparing | resolutions to be sent to the presi- dent. Isadore Blumberg, ousted teacher, told of an educational system in New York City that had opportunities only for Tammany favorites. He salaries in 1933, to prevent the rise of taxes that would effect those who are wealthy. Blumberg told the story of his ex- pulsion from the school system he- | cause he had dared to act as the Spokesman for a group of teachers who protested against this arbitrary cut in théir salaries designed to fat- ten the Tammanyites and their fi- | Dancial bosses. He told how the teachers have | been organized by the school author- ities in sich a way that conflicting The Association of class- room teachers on the inside and the Unemployed Teachers’ Association | zations fighting for decent salaries, | smaller classes and better school con- | ditions, The U.T.A. has, in the past year, conducted’ several effective struggles. organizing beth parciris and teachers to fight for the rights of the school child and of Tom Conoly, a college graduate who had been at the Bear Moun- tain Camp, told of conditions fac- ing the workers who went there. This is. now practically the only opportunity for the college gradu- ate,” indeed, in some commence- ment addresses he haz been ad- vised to go to the camps and not look for work in his natural field. Conoly told briefly the conditions in the camps that are familiar to the readers of the Daily Worker: 44- hour work-week, filthy living condi- tions, inadequate sanitation, uneat- | able food, and brutality of army of- ficers. Dr. ©. J. Stefano, summing up for the N.A.A. told of the conditions facing graduates everywhere. Un- able to get work, they training through enforced idleness and were glad to accept anv work when offered. The bourgeois lead- ers had nothing to offer to ald this condition. Rodger Babson suggesied that all graduates work a year for nothing and the editor of Business ‘Week suggested that they work three years free. This is the only suggestion that the financial leaders of the country have to offer the and issues involved n these cases to Gov. Pollard, at Richmond, youth who have graduated from col- Jeges and universities and find that Only through the vigorous protests | of another delegate from the Na- described how the political bosses | | had cut $20,000,000 from teacher's | linterests keep them from cffective | | protest. ‘on the outside are the only organi-; the | lost their University Graduates Find Only Menial Jobs by y Capitalism, Look to} Organization As Alternative’to Starving By STEWART CARHART. NEW YORK.—The picture of an economic system that} offers college graduates nothing—not even a bare living, was | presented Thursday night to a meeting at the Central Opera | House under the auspices of the National Alumni Association. | an especially difficult position, | their only means of existence is to ive ti act as porters or push rickshaws on the boa “Century of Progress” It was pointed out that the only hope for the college graduate is or- | ganization and a militant battle for | | his immediate demands. Baltimore Seamen Condemn IWW Raid cn New Orleans Hall BALTIMORE, Md.—Condemnation of the attack of the I.W.W. leaders upon the Marine Workers Industrial | Union hall in New Orleans was voted j}at a recent membership meeting of | the Marine Workers Industrial Union | | here. The meeting here was held jto"elect delegates to the s2cond na- | tional convention of the M.W.LU., tin’ New York on July 16, 17 and 18. | i | ‘Arrest Marine Worker ‘for Pasting Stickers Calling Convention BALTIMORE, Md., July 14.—Past- ing stickers announcing the Marine | Workers Industrial Union Conven- tion in New York, July 16, was the | charge laid here against Anton Baker, a member of the union, arrested by} | local police. | Bail of $300 was provided through the International Labor Defense. Bernard Ades, I. L. D. lawyer, has been assigned to the case. Browder to Speak at Pocketbook Strikers’ Meeting Tomorrow | NEW YORK.—Pocketbook workers jae continuing their strike against) those shops that have not been set- | tled. As opposed to the code of the | pocketbook bosses, which calls for | wages of $12. week, the strikers are fighting for $32 and $36 a week for mechanics, $23.31, or $1.06 an hour} for piece workers, $18 for packers, | and $14 for general helpers. | The Chic Bag Co. boss, who is the | | president of the bosses’ association, is threatening to move out of town. Pocketbook workers are urged to an- swer this threat with mass’ picketing. Mass picketing is aleo planned par- | ticularly for the Morris White shop at 37th St. and 7th Ave. Earl Browder, secretary of the | Communist Party, will speak at an ) open forum of the pocketbook strik- ers tomorrow (Tussday) at 2 p.m. at Irving Plaza Hall, Irving Place and ith St. Browder will speak on the Recovery (Slavery) Act. WIDELITZ SHOP SERVES INJUNCTION ON PAINTERS NEW -YORK—The Alteration Painters’ Union, Bronx local, appeals to all painters to come down to the | local’s headquarters at 4215 Third Ave., to help in the strike at the | Widelitz shop, which is*now entering | its fourth week. The boss landlord. who 1s a mem- ber of many charity organizations, has just served an application for | an injunction on the strikers. A_ special meeting of the Bronx local will be held tonight at 8 to elect ha ea for the next six months. ‘London Dance Raises Funds for Nine Boys NEW YORK=Defying Jim-Crow prejudices which exist in England, | center of British imperialism as well as in America, a Negro and white Scotteboro dance was held July 4 in a London hotel. netting $188.58 for the Seottsboro defense, according to word received here by the Interna- tional Labor Defense. This sum has been received for the defense fund by the I. L. D. The dance was arranged by Nancy Ou- nard ALABAMA LEGAL LYNCHERS FRAME 5 NEGROES IN DEATH OF TUSCALOOSA WHITE GIRL | Original Evidence Pointing to to White Slayer Suppressed | by Local Police | Jail Father Who Off Offered Proof of His Son’s Innocence; All Five Face Trial Today | TUSCALOOSA, Ala. July 16—The Alabama legal lynch machinery | which has resulted in the framing of two Negroes, on charges of criminal | assault and murder, two on charges of being “accessories”, and one on @ | charge of “obstructing the law’s investigation”, was exposed by an Inter- | National Labor Defense investigation into the Charges laid against them -@in the murder of Viola Maddox, a ADMITS PERKINS PROBE OF ELLIS ISLAND TS FUTILE Foreign-Born Demand | Representation NEW YORK. July 16.—vasion of all rézpotisibility was the only re sponse cbtained from Miss Helén Ar- thur, secretary of the commission appointed by Frances Perkins, “New at Secretary of Labor, by a com- ittee composed of T J. McHenry, | natlordl secretary and Rebecca: Kap- | lian, of tle Committee for the Pro- | tection of Foreign Bi and Hayes | Jones of the Marine Workers Indus- trial Union, when they called upon t the demands yesterday to pre: of American worker Two dematids were put forward: 1, That the Bilis Island Conim: sion be broadened to include workers repressnting labor, fraternal and de- fense organizations these ariditions to be chosen by the workers them- selves and to include Negroes atid foreign-born workers, 2. That the scope of the investi- gation be unlimited, so as to perniit | the bringing forward of ali factors contributing to the present deplorable situation, and that a'l records of the vhite girl, on June 12. Dah Pippen, Jr., and Ernest Olarke, Negro boys, are charged with assault and murder; A. T. Harden, 15, and Will dimison are charged with beirig accessories, and Dan Pippen, St., with obstructing and interfering with the investigation of the officers, All five face trial tomorrow. Viela Maddox left her home about nine o'clock on Monday, June 12, She was reported missing Tuesday, and a fearch instituted Wednesday, when her body was fourid in a ravine. A coroner's inquest established the time of death at about 9.30 Monday mortiing. Evidence Points to White Slayer Rumors and circumstantial | evi- derice circulating immédiately after | discovery of the body, implicated sev- eral white men, and were said to point definitely to murder by one of oie girl's men friends. ; On Friday. June 16, however. a white man who owed money to Dan Pippen Jr. for work done for him i told police he had seen him in the ; Reighborhood of the crime on Mon- day. Pippen was arrested. When Dan Pippen, Sr., stated that his son had been working with hin and Willie Jimison, also a Negro, all day Monday in Jimison’s field, he wes arrested by the sheriff and charged with obstructing and inter- fering with the investigation. Mob Planned to Storm Jail departments of Labor and Justice be | made available to the Commission | when enlarged as provided ubove. There are at present 45 members on the full committze, none of whom in any sense représems the workers. I. L. D. CARNIVAL PICNIC ‘Then police arrested A. T. Harden, jon the round that he was a member lef the same church singing club as young Pippen. The sheriff announecd that Harden accused Pippen of the erime, and said he was looking on. When Harden denied this statement. Ernest Clarke, another member of POSTPONED TILL SATURDAY NEW YORK.—Because of rain, the local International Labor Defense Carnival-Picnic scheduled for yester- the singing club, was arresied. On June 21, as a mob was formed to storm the jail here, the four were | newal. IS removed to Birmingham, A special grand jury was hurviedly |ccnvened. When Willie Jimison tes- tified before this grand jury that both Pippens had been working in his field all day the day of the murde:, and had not left it, he was immeé- diately arrested. The grand jury found true bills against the five. AMUSEMENTS annem The Dramatic Tale of & Modern Wanderinz Jew! day was postponed ~until next Sat- urday, July 22, at Pleasant Bay Park. | | Gates to the park will open at 10 am. All tickets bought for the Car- nival-Pienic for Sunday will be good for the new date. Go to see every subscriber when his subscription expires to get his re- i ‘THE WORKERS 6 99 (THE en. RE WANDERING 14th Street and JEW) | Set sn Starring BATALOV (of “Road to Life’) (English Titles) | Exe. a Young Russia finds new hi t Soviet regime KO lith St. & KO Jefferson ish 8. 4 | Now EDW. G. ROBINSON and MARY ASTOR in “THE LITTLE GIANT’ and “LIFE OF JIMMY DOLAN” with Doug, Fairbanks, Jr, and Loretta Young MUSIC STADIUM CONCERTS=— Philharmonic-Symphony Orchestra Lewisohn Stadium, Amst. Av. & 138 St. Willem yan astraten, Conduet \EVERY NIGHT at 8:38 PRICES: 250, 50e, $1.00. (Circle 7-71 3 BIG SOVIET ATTRACT “ISLAND OF DOOM” “MOSCOW TODAY” “FLAME OF PARIS” —Coming— \Aspagon CASE OF Rot meaner: 42nd 8! and CAMEOS Sane Mespital he Oculist Prescriptions Fitted omraaes Mae Halt BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 358 Clzr-mont Parkway Bren Au White Geld Filled Frames___.____.$1,30 ‘YL Shell Frames ~.—_____., .91.00 * Lenses net included COHEN’S, 117 Orchard St. First Door Off cane” St. Garment Section | Garment Section Workers Telephone: ORehard Patronite Navarr Cafeteria Intern’! Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE ITH FLOOR All Work Doe Under Personal Care of Dr. C. Weissinan 333 7th eee Corner 2 DOWNTOWN © Phone: TOmpkins Square 6-994 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY—ITALIAN DISHES DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet, Pitkin and Sutter Aves, Brochiyn CRONE: DICKENS 2-8012 Oftles Moors: 8-10 AM. 1-2 6-8 BROOKLYN “Paradise” Meals for Proletarians Gar - Feins Restaurant 1626 PITKIN AVE., B'KLYN M. JADE MOUNTAIN ou & Chinese Restaurant 197 SECOND AVENUE Bet, 12 & 13 Welcome to Our Comrades CHINA KITCHEN RESTAURANT and CAFETERIA America and Chinese Dishes Williamsburgh Comrades WELCOME De Luxe Cafeteria 233 BE. 14th St.. Bot. 2ud & ord Ave. A nice quiet place eat our 94 Graham Ave, Cor. Stegel St. 25¢ LUNCHEON 35¢ DINNER EVERY BITE A DELIGHT AN Comrades Moet at the jus jessieiduaca bhsvice 4k ae