The Daily Worker Newspaper, July 19, 1933, Page 2

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Lem Page Two DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, JULY 19, 1933 CLOAKMAKERS - NAME DELEGATES TO CODE HEARING NEW YORK.—A ma: cloakm: s yesterday at Bry- ant h Ave., at the cal. ank and I Term These Camps Writes A Recruit file action committee, elected a com- of whom five are to go n orrow to present These de- Se" STRIKES IN MANY a hour week and bosses’ e: will be presented in cloak manufactur- 48 Hr.WorkWeek, Bad Food Cause Protests Throughout State ers’ code This code of the r s, a reported in Saturday's Daily Worker, received secret consent of the| leaders of the International Ladies’ Garment Workers’ Union, who pre- he (By a Labor Camp Correspondent) tend to oppose it ont ine sivike| YUCAIPA, Calif.—California has temurti a tak the largest number of C. ©. C, camps of any state in the Union. These N.T.W Sending Committee camps as a whole are built comfort- A com ee representing the| ably. Modern camp mess halls have Needle Trades Workers’ Industrial| been built and tents have wooden Union will also appear at the hear-| floors in them. However there are ng on the cloak code, to put for-|some predominating grievances among ward the above-mentioned demands on @ national scale, as well as other demands which include a minimum pf 26 weeks’ guarantee of work, the abolition of the check-off sys complete statement in the code to the effect that workers shall have the right to strike and to belong to a trade union of their own choice, regular adjustment of wages to ris- ing cost of living, and full respon- the men that have brought out some striking examples of organization and unity ‘The fellows are willing to do their share of work and comply with reg- | | ulations, but any action on the part | of officers or rangers in charge to| impose on their rights meets with | | resistance on the part of the majority |of the men. Forced Labor Army | | Conditions and the food are so lousy sibility by jobbers and manufactur-| Ymmediate Reaction to Infringement | ers for the conditions of the workers | which their contractors employ. | Louis Hyman, president of the N.| T. W. IL. U.; L. J. Cohen and Joseph Boruchowitch are on this commit- tee. VAN-DYE-WAY FUR DRESSERS STRIKE PATTERSON, N. J., July 18.—The workers of the Van-Dye-Way Fur | Dressing and Dyeing shop are out on | e for a reduction in hours and | an increase in wages. The strike is | under the leadership of the Fur De- | partment of the Needle Trade Work- | ers Industrial Uni The workers are out 100 ner cent, and every de- partment is shut down tight. a A CORRECTION | effort was made to make the men of Rights At the beginning of the camps, an work on Saturday in violation of the contracts, which call for a 5-day week. There was an instantaneous reaction to strike, and groups of men went to the officers protesting and | refusing to work on Saturday. In Company 511 the fellows were forced As Modern Slavery,” from Roosevelt’s | 36 Leave in V Week At Foxboro, Mass. Camp (By a Labor Camp Correspondent) FOXBORO, Mass.—Just a line to let you know what the conditions are in the vets reforestation camp here. that 36 men have left camp in the last eight days. After they tell the officer they want to quit, he makes them wait in camp for transporta- tion and puts guards at meal time to see that they don’t eat a meal before they leave. As a rule they pay a fine of $3 to $6 for quitting. Most all the men are dissatisfied and waiting to see what the next few weeks will be, as most of the men haye given up the idea of stick- ing it out six months, as it is too| much like a workhouse here. Heavy Camp Work Causes Rupture (By a Labor Camp Correspondent) DETROIT, Mich.—There were food strikes carried on by Company 662 at Kenton City, in the Ottawa National Forest of the Upper Michigan re- | cently. But the boys will have to struggle on and put demands before the camp authorities to force them to provide adequate treatment and more proper medical care and atten- | tion to all boys who became disabled from the hard work imposed upon them. We must compel the govern- | to work and their complaints ignored. In Company 538 the officers at- tempted to fool the men into work- ing by saying it was temporary and that the more they worked the sooner the camp could be completed and would be a better place to live in. Can’t Fool the Workers This, however, did not fool the | fellows and they were insistent on a | 40-hour week. As a result the com- pany commander compromised and the men who wanted to worked on In the paragraph dealing with the Communist Party leaders who are members of the Arrangements Committee for the U. S. Congress Against War, the names of Earl Rrowder, general secretary of the Communist Party, and Charles mbein. New York District or- , should not have been in- wed, They are not members of the committee except insofar as they act as substitutes in accord- ante with the agreement reached. s last meeting, however, the ngements Committee voted to | vite the following Communist leaders: William Z. Foster, chair- man of the Communist Party, Jack 2chel, acting secretary of the T. U. U. L.; Clarence Hathaway, editor of the Daily Worker; A. Wagen- knecht, of the National Committee To Aid Victims of German Fascism, and Gil Green, national secretary of the Young Communist League, to serve on the Arrangements Com- mittee. | Saturday and Sunday, but got an extra day leave for every 8 hours of work put in. “If You Don't Like It, Go Home, Say “Camp Terror” Authorities (By a Woman Labor Camp) Correspondent) CAMP TERA, Bear Mountain, N.Y —This is what I found upon arriv- as follows: Breakfast—oatmeal, cof- fee, toast, no eggs; lunch—some stew, potatoes, indescribable desert, | Jello, cold tea; dinner—tough corn beef,’ looks like leather, potatoes, piece of cabbage, desert, cold tear. ‘We get meat twice a day. Why girls don’t leave right and left, I don’t know. Today four of them left. One told the woman in charge, Miss Tinker, straight out the food was making her sick. The other three lied that they have a job in New York. This |4s the reason for this; Miss Tinker | threatens them if they complain. | She tells them’ to go home and if | they decide to do so, she says all | forms of relief will be cut off for anyone that goes home through pure ee = Bungalows -- Rooms (Completely Furnished) For Rent at dissatisfaction. CAMP WOCOLONA There is a Miss Mills in charge. — PRICES VERY REASONABLE — 8: t 1:30 p.m. Return Sun. Murday OUND TRIP FARE. $150." | and make the most sugary speeches, $1.25 for 1 day—$?.00 for 2 days | 8180 designed to quiet down those For information phone MOnumen: nhl ies Somplain.’ An about co-operation and we are doing all we can with the money at our disposal, etc. Of course we don't know how much is spent, but we've ; got to take her word for it. She claims most of us are husky and therefore we don’t need any milk. However, those who do will see the nurse, who will prescribe it for the anemic. So several go to see the nurse, who finds there are so many anemic that she puts a halt to it and tells them, “You should not be here. So many chronic girls come out. You eet what you get.” And, as for co-operation, when you see them individually it is a differ- ent tone, “If you don't like it, go home.” So obviously much has to be done. They are all dissatisfied | With the food. Next day for lunch, | baked beans, no milk, no fruit. They Camp Wocolona—Monroe, N. ¥. (ON ERTE R.R.) DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet. Pitkin and Sutter Aves., Brooklyn PHONE: DICKENS 2-9012 Office Hours: 8-10 A.M. 1-2, 6-8 P.M. WILLIAM BELL Optometrist 106 EAST 14TH STREET Near Fourth Ave. N. Y. ©, Phone: Tompkins Square 6-8237 ment STATIONERY At Special Prices for Organizations PHONE: vtiscsus Lerman Bros. —INC.— 29 E. 14th ST., N. Y. probably get meat for nothing, that | is why they serve it so much. Of | course due to the scattering of the | cabins it is hard to get them to- | gether. It is a big place, yet a very | Well watched one. Killed by Policeman; Shot in Back of Head WICKLIFFE, Ohio, July 18.—Albert Dawson, 15-year old Negro boy, was shot in the back of the head and fatally wounded by Policeman Harry Truax, here, when Truax said he saw him take a watermellon from a truck. The cop insisted he had not aimed at the boy, but in the air at a 45 degree angle, “Just to scare him.” The Lake County prosecutor pondered this alibi and announced that Daw- | Son must have beén hit by the bullet | as it fell. No action was taken against the | murderer. 150 STRIKE IN STEEL PLANT IN MARTINS FERRY MARTINS FERRY, 0., July 18.— One hundred and fifty workers at the Martins Ferry plant of the Wheeling Structural Steel Co. went on strike today demanding that the | minimum wage of 40 cents an hour supposed to be granted by the steel code be put into effect. The work-| ers are now receiving 22 cents an | hous Fe Are You Moving or Storing Your Furniture? CALL HARLEM 17-1053 COOKE’S STORAGE 209 East 125th St. Special Low Rates to Comrades WORKERS PATRONIZE CENTURY CAFETERIA 154 West 28th Street ‘Pure Food Proletarian Prices ing here two days ago and food is! Both appear at meal times| 15-Year-Old NegroBoy, | ment to retire these boys on a regu- | \lar army pension or a disability com- | | pensation, because the reforestation | | project of faker Roosevelt has made | | them. useless for life. ' | A young man who recently passed | his 21st birthday at the camp is going home to his parents next Sunday, a finished product from the Ottawa | National Forest, at Kenton City. A} healthy boy, so pronounced by the, | doctor who examined him at Fort | Wayne, in Detroit, he was sent to | Camp Custer for two week, from | |which he was transferred to the forests, Today he is a victim of | Roosevelt’s reforestation work. He is |ruptured from lifting heavy logs at | the camp and other hard work that | has strained him. When he was rup- jtured, he was sent to Sault St. | Marie, to ‘the hospital theme, and then he was brought back to Kenton City. This lad was ruptured before | and was operated on, and was well | | when he was sent to the camp by | the Welfare Department. | At the hospital he was given such | humanitarian treatment that an ani- | mal would have received better care at the hands of a veterinarian. When the hospital tents were filled with sick youth, he was forced to| spend three weeks sleeping on blan- | kets on the hospital porch, after | spending one week in the camp hos- pital tent. Later he was brought | |back to Kenton City, because the | porches became overcrowded. | Three More Ruptures Three other fellows also are rup- | |tured. One has a heart rupture, | and the other two boys have abdo- | minal ruptures similar to what this | boy has. This boy has done every | job in the forest camp. Lifting logs, chopping treés, and finally ended up | with planting trees. Compelled by Welfare To Go Recruits in a reforestratior In the Forced Labor Camp camp worki Pugs or Strong Arm Rico | Military Training At Spectator, N. Y. Camps (By a Labor Camp Correspondent) SPECULATOR, N. Y.—When we | got up here there was an advance | guard of 25 who were already here. | These 25 had been given military | training for cleven weeks previous. | They were a picked bunch from a} gang of about 2,000. All are a bunch | of brutsers. | Bullied by Bruisers They bossed us around, and one day when we lined up for eats they) smacked one of the bunch of fellows | I was in. We were going to rush them, but they flashed guns. We went to the captain, and as a result | they have to get in line for eats. | ‘ 7 | Work Is Very Hard . . | They work us like hell for about six hours a day. You must be in | bed by 10 p.m. The boys are sore and inasmuch as we are getting our pay Friday, a bunch of boys are ‘quitting. I tried to get them to! —but they receive starv- ation wages which Roosevelt defended in his radio speech as character- izing the “spirit of America”. Radio “They Picked Out Some As Foremen—All Ex- Repeal More. Import- jant to Negro Betrayers Roosevelt’s Speech Contrasted with Forest Workers Opinions With the two national radio chains'at his disposal, President Roosevelt addressed the recruits in the reforestration camps and at the same time hit the 17,000,000 unemployed through the country. The president was fol- lowed by the four cabinet members in charge of the forced labor camps, Dern, secretary of war; Ickes, interior; Wallace, agriculture, and Perkins, secretary of labor. These are the answers, made by {recruits in the forced labor camps The full text of Roosevelt's speech follows: How the government intends to “look after its citizens” is described by a recruit in company 662 at Kenton City in Upper Michigan where numerous accidents have taken place because of the hard work. This youth says, “We must “In speaking to you men of the Civilian Conservation Corps, 1 think of you as a visible token of encouragement to the whole coun- try. You—nearly 300,000 strong— are evidence that the nation is still enough and broad | stay, but I couldn't. | ‘Better Food Won By Camp Protest | | (By a Labor Camp Correspondent) Our camp is still very far from | perfect, being crude in structure and | lacking in sanitary necessities. We | are still without showers, and we have been here over a month. Our toilet is very crude and does not have a {drainage system. Lime is used for | disease prevention. Meeting Results In Better Food. | A week ago we had a meeting in | our camp, due to the meals we had | been getting. In my _ estimation, there is much graft going on, which is taking the food out of our mouths. | During that meeting we refused to work unless we got better treatment. The captain threatened us with strong cnough to look after its citizens. “You are evidence that we are seeking to get away as fast as we possibly can from soup kitchens and free rations, becauce the gov- ernment is paying you wages and maintaining you for actual work —work which is needed now and for the future and will bring a definite return to the people of the nation. “Through you the nation will | graduate a fine group of strong young men, clean living, trained to self-discipline and, above all, wil- ling and proud to work for the joy of working. “Too much in recent years, large numbers of our populaton have saught out success as an opportu- nity to gain money with the least possible work. “Jt is time for each and every dhe of ws to cast away self-destroy- To Camp | The welfare compelled him to go | to the forest camps. His family was | {on the welfare for six months. His | |father at the present time has re- | | sumed work in the automobile fac- | tory and is off the welfare rolls. The family, before they were stricken off | the welfare rolls, were receiving $12, 30 quarts of milk, half a ton of coal | and ome sack of flour every two weeks. | “Solving” the Unemployment Prebiem When their boy was taken to camp, | they were supposed to live on $25 a month, below the budget the welfare department allowed to this family | monthly, which amounted to about $40 a month. This is “solving” the unemployment situation. Cutting off relief, on one hand, and cons¢ripting you indirectly, to undergo military preliminary training of six months, under the guise of peaceful civiliarr reforestation work. | Thugs Beat Workers in Forced Labor Camp (By a Labor Camp Correspondent) N- , N. ¥.—The conditions | here are very bad, disgraceful. The | food is bad and not sufficient. Since we boarded the train, we have been eating canned corned beef and hard biscuits. On Wednesday one group (we are divided into groups of about fifty when we go to work) refused to eat the stuff and returned it in a hody to the captain. Anyway, today we had no corned beef, but the food was insufficient and bad. With our leaders gone, not openly but secretly, we can do nothing right now. Strong-Arm Guys The captain and the major con- | Stantly threaten us with blows. They have picked out about 10 or 15 fel- lows to be the leaders and foremen. They are all ex-pugs or strong-arm men. Some of them carry knives or clubs. About one fellow a day géts a beating from them, Serious Accidents Daily Accidents are frequent, one serious one each day. The worst so far is the toe completely chopped off. U1 Camp ‘The place is very unsanitary, dirty ing, nation-destroying efforts to get something for nothing and to appreciate that satisfying reward and safe reward come only thru honest work. “That must be the new spirit of the American future. “You are the vanguard of that new spirit.” | imprisonment, as this was a federal | offense. He said if we have any sion or a disability compensation, | grievances, we should consult him inj because the reforestration project |® Pleasant manner. If anybody did of faker Roosevelt has made them | Consult him, he would order him to | useless for life”. leave. But he promised better treat- | ment in the future. The result was | we are getting much better food than | previous. Three Sandwiches for Dinner The men that work far away from the camp are only given three sand- | wiches for dinner. One is imitation | jelly, one is peanut butter, and the | other is boloney. What do you think of that for a hard-working man’s dinner? We have had quite a few rain- storms recently, which makes living | here rather a hardship. But still I | am determined to stick it out. I | have served one-fourth of my time. I |-was informed that the government | spends $2.23 on each man per day, this includes salaries and all other expenses. All of our clothes are sec- onds. We must make 40 working hours a week, regardless of weather | conditions. I term these camps as modern slavery. compel the government to retire these boys on a regular army pen- “We are getting away from the | soup kitchens,” says Roosevelt. | “Yes”, says one of the boys in com- | pany 538 in California. He writes, | “the fellows didn’t mind ‘eating | spaghetti and beans for a while. But when they got the same stuff daily for more than a week they organized themselves.” What price discipline writes a youth in New York. “The captain and the major constantly threaten us with blows. They have picked out 10 or 15 fellows to be the lead- ers and foremen. They are all ex- pugs and strong-arm men.” To assure that they work long and hard enough a letter from Yucaipa, California, states: “At the beginning of the camps, | an effort was made to make the | men work on Saturday in viola- | | tion of the contracts, which call for a 5-day week.” Intern’] Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 15TH FLOOR All Work Done Under Personal Care of Dr. C. Weissman There is no danger that the men | will “get something for nothing”. As a letter from Oregon states, | “first when he (Roosevelt—Ed.) | took these young workers, he gave | a direct cut in the amount of re- | | | lief given their families. Second | he has given them military train- ing, and so he prepared another | standing army.” Roosevelt concludes with a call for | , 4 “a new spirit”. Such a spirit Hospital and Oculist Prescriptions Filled St One-Half Price is | ant developing in the camps, but not to| the liking of the president and the | whole bosses’ government, as the | jetters show. In Camp Preston the| |, a Negro youths resisted the jim-crow| | COHEN’S, 117 Orchard St. pelicy of the officials. Many of the | First Dobr Off Delancey St White Gold Filled Frames—___ 81.58 ZYL Shell Frames -——..___—. .$1,00 Lenses not included Men” for Discipline in Camps | BETTER FOOD WON IN CAMP REVOLT Demolish Tent, Soak; Officer in Food Pro-| test at Windy River (By a Labor Camp Correspondent) CAMP HEMLOCK, Stabler, Wash. | This place is seventy miles from | Portland, Oregon. It is almost on) the Columbia River. | We aren't planting any trees as the popular belief happens to be. I had better explain about this coun-| try before I go further. We are in the Wind River Valley, and this vicinity is about the most dry spot} in the state. The forest fires start in| this valley and spread to all the tim-| ber land throughout the state. We) are here to save whatever timber is left, by felling giant smags and by} fighting forest fires. | We had a riot in camp Thurs- day. The cause was the rotten meals} the mess sergeant tried to give us. ‘When we got here, the mess sergeant | acted very hard-boiled, but though’ we resented his actions, we didn’t do| anything about,it—at first. He gave us excellent meals, so we ignored him. Somehow, because we are from Chicago, he got the idea that we were nothing but riff-raff or con- victs who would not dare to speak up. | ‘The lunch came. Imagine the crust | of the mess sergeant. He sent up two| corned beef sandwiches, nothing else, with the warning not to waste any food! The beef was old and stale, and the bread hard. There were fifty of us, and a half of our squad started to bawl the officer out, and, since he didn’t seem to be inter- ested, we chopped our axes and walked over to the lunch and said: “Boys, it’s about time we stood up for our rights and put the mess ser- geant in his place.” When we got to camp, we got the rest of the camp to join us and al}) of us took our food, walked over to the kitchen and threw the food in the mess sergeant’s face. We knocked | the kitchen apart, pulled the tent down and took the sergeant and/ soaked him in the Wind River. When we got through with him, we said: “You had better give us a good sup- per and feed us good from now on, or there won’t be any mess ser- geant!” 4 The king pins did the apologizing, and they let us have Saturday and Sunday off, with the right to stay in town over the week-end, and prom- ised better food Safe Rewards Come Only Through Honest Work, Roosevelt ‘COURIER’ LAUDS ; ALABAMA ‘HONOR’ Tells Underpaid Labor Camp Recruits Over IGNORES 9 BOYS Than Scottsboro PITTSBURGH, July 18.—An ex- ample of the sort of services for which President Roosevelt made Rob- ert L. Vann, editor and publisher of the Pittsburgh Courier. a special as- sistant attorney-general in the De- partment of Justice is contained on the editorial page of the Courier this week A headline on this page reads in bold type, spread over two columns: | “Alabama to Get Another Chance to Redeem Honor.” Called Scottsboro a “Blot” Previously the Courier, in company with other Negro reformist papers, has called the Scotisboro case “a blot on the henor of Alabama,” in order to hide its character as part of the entire system of oppression of Ne- groes in the country by the white ruling class. Does this headline refer to the Scottsboro case? If not that, then does it refer to a lynching? To the present attempt to legally lynch Wil- lie Peterson? To the appeal in the Dadeville framé-ups? You'd be sur- prised. “Alabama's Honor” In the eyes of the Pittsburgh Cour- ier the “honor” of Alabama rests on its vote on repeal of the 18th amend- ment. Once that is settled, Alabama’s honor is washed clean, in the eyes of the Pittsburgh Courier, unofficial or- gan of the NAACP and official organ of the Democratic lynch party among the Negroes. 3 The article is from the pen of H. Councile Trenholm, president of the State Teachers College of Alabama. It deals also with a coming vote on extending the income tax downward to put more of the burden on the Jower middle class, which is put for- ward on the excuse that it will help yy the salaries of school-teachers which the state has defaulted. Nat’l Scottsboro Day Set for Anniversary of Sacco, Vanzetti NEW YORK.—August 22, anniver- sary of the murder of Sacco and Van- zetti, has been set aside as National Scottsboro Day, it was announced to- day by William L. Patterson, national secretary of the International Labor Defense. Scottsboro demonstrations will bée held in dozens of cities throughout the country, and Scottsboro meetings in hundreds more, to demand the im- mediate unconditional, and safe re- lease of the nine innocent Scottsboro boys. ON THE APARTMENTS CULTURAL 3EVERAL GOOD APARTMENTS Take Advantage of Avenue train te White Stop at Allerton Avenue Estabrook 8-1400—1401 Lexington Plains Road. Station. Tel. Workers Cooperative Colony 2700-2800 BRONX PARK EAST (OPPOSITE BRONX PARK) has now REDUCED THE RENT § Kindergarden; lasses for Adults and Children; Library; Gymnasium; Clubs and Other Privileges NO INVESTMENTS REQUIRED % AND SINGLE ROOMS ¥ ‘ACTIVITIES & SINGLE ROOMS AVAILABLE the Opportunity. Oftice open daily Friday & Saturday Sunday Tel.: Fordham 17-4011 2157 PROSPECT AVENUE FIRST TO SETTLE Columbus Steam Laundry Service, Inc. PATRONIZE BRONX, N. Y. WITH WORKERS: letters from the camps show the ris- | | Telephone: ORchard 4-4520 ing mood for struggle against the rotten conditions. As one of them points out, “in many cases the work- | ers have revolted and thus been able to gain a few concessions.” This is | the kind of militant spirit which is | developing in the camps. | BROOKLYN Brighton Beach Workers WELCOME AT Hoffman’s Cafeteria 28¢ BRIGHTON BEACH AVENUE Relief Cut, Military Training Is Purpose of CCC Says Worker (By a Labor Camp Correspondent) MARSHFIELD, Ore. — At least there seems to be method in the “madness” of the boss, that is in ‘gard to the Civilian Conservation Corps. First, when he took these young workers he gave a direct cut in the amount of relief given their families. Second, he has given them military training, and so has prepared another standing army. Bad Conditions in Camp The conditions in the camps are terrible—no baths, insufficient bed- ding, insufficient food and that of the lowest grade, and plenty of work, two to three hours more than they are supposed to do. In many cases the workers have revolted and thus been able to gain a few concessions. Every camp is clearing off land for a baseball diamond, but it is the opinion of the workers that this “baseball diamond” will be used for a military training field. Mr. Hearst has often lamented, in his newspapers, the fact that in the and freezing at night. Your blankets and a heavy overcoat are insufficient. During the day it is very hot. 4 event of a war centering on the, ‘West Coast that there are not suffi- cient roads for the maneuvering of OPEN DAY AND NIGHT | treops. Mr. Hearst can resi easy now. | "The C. C. C.’s are building wide mili- 5B] tary roads and each road connect: | vp with the coast. Also the land that! Gar - Feins Restaurant is being cleared under the pretense | yeor 5 jof besutifying our forests can also | 16 | PITKIN AVE., BIKLYN be used for the maneuvering of | troops. Monotonous, Unbalanced Menu Here is the menu from the Mc- Kinley camp, vouched for by several more of the workers from that camp. | .Breakfast—Line up one-half hour. | 1 spoonful spuds, 1 spoonful gravy, | 1 spoonful hash, 42 pear, 3 pieces of hard tack, Lunch—Line up a half hour. Spuds, 1 spoonful beans (brown or white), 1 small slice chesse 1 slice corned beef, small amount fruit, 3 pieces of hard tack. Dinner—Ditto. There is absolutely no butter nor substituie, and there was lettuce served them once. | ‘They are issued three army blan- kets and all the straw they want. After looking the camps over, I'm afraid that Mr. Roosevelt is not going’ to have the patriotic army that he bargained for. i ise’ for Williamsburgh Comrades Welcome De Luxe Cafeteria 94 Graham Ave. —_ Cor. Siegel St. EVERY BITE A DELIGHT DOWNTOWN Phone: TOmpkins Square 6-9534 | John’s Restaurant || SPECIALTY—ITALIAN DISHES i A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet New York 302 E. 12th St. JADE MOUNTAIN | Amct¢an & Chinese Restaurant | 197 SECOND AVENUE K. K. MoFARLAND. | cede eg od (Signature Authorized.) | Welcome to Our Comrades WHAT'S ON | CLASSIFIED Thursday j DR. SIDNEY LEROY on INDUSTRIAL RECOVERY BILL, & p.m. 60 W. 161st Bt. Auspices Washington Heights Br. F.S.U, FURNISHED ROOMS—! a German family. $4 up. Ligots. 116th Bt. All Comrades Meet at the - | [NEW HEALTH CENTER CAFETERIA ——— Fresh Food—Proletarian Prices 82 ©, 18TH S¥., WORKERS’ CENTER——— DAILY WORKER PICNIC PLEASANT DEMONSTRATE FOR THE DAILY WORKER! ‘ SUNDAY JULY 30 BAY PARK

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