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Page Twe ShoeUnionPrepares for Merger Meet in Boston, Dec. 10 33,000 Shoe Workers to Form One Big Shoe Union at Meet Final ‘hich, if succe hoe worker: Tew York i nion of shoe y the Shoe and Le ustrial Union. The he. Salem Shoe W The provisional wethe Shoe and dustrial Union re’ om yesterday aft Js vith the New gland Committee @@portant questions were taken up, wong them the matter of affilia- don with central bodies the eli- whility of different crafts within the ghee’ and leather industry to par- Sleipate in the convention. The delegates of the New York pro- Lu al committee proposed that par- ition in the convention be on as woad as basis as possible, while dele- tates representing other unions ‘ought to restrict participation to Workers in the boot and shoe in- Justry only and ex Serkers, shoe repair workers and| others. It was decided to leave these qu gons-to the convention. Through its erovisional committee the Shoe and/| ner Flatbush Ave., Sather Workers Industrial Union has Dledged itself to abide by whatever flecision the convention may reach, 7:Geottsboro Protest Meeting sfcottsboro Protest and Defense Meeting, Sunday, Dec. 3, 8 p.m, at TT Gates Ave, Bklyn. Auspices SEngdahl-Scotisboro Br. of the ELD. Prominent speakers. ude the tannery | Try Unseat New Left Wing Delegates from Local 22 Ex. Board Workers Union, the left-wing mbers recently elected as section chairmen and secretaries, was made at the board meeting Tuesday night T mmern clique using all to rule the left wingers off boar@ finally decided to refer the matter to the Organization Com- mittee s, left wing can- the right wing hairman and sec- e exofficio mem- e board with a ut vote. the Tuesday meeting, the} n clique announced that} negade Lovestonite, Will Her- had been appointed educa director of the un Her- s| berg proposed a tie-up with the} Rand School and the Lovestone| 2| school. The proposal of the left wing | group that the Workers School be invited to aid in the educational | plan was rejected by the chair- man. The educational plan of Her- berg, the left-wing dressmakers say, | is designed to poison the minds of | the dressmakers against the mili- tant left wing program. TUUL Painters Union Calls Brooklyn Meet NEW YORK.—A joint membership meeting of ali Brooklyn lovals of the Alteration Painters Union is called today at 2 p.m. at its new union headquarters, 2239 Church Ave,, cor- Brooklyn, ‘The meeting will map plans for co-ordinating and centralizing all activity of the Brooklyn locals | through the one central local. De- spite setbacks and temporary de- feats the union is showing healthy growth. The establishment of the Brooklyn headquarters of the union will assist in the development of ac- | tivity to organize the painters for the improvement of their conditions. Office Phone: Estabrook 8-2573 DR. S. L. SHIELDS Surgeon Dentist 2574 WALLAYE AVE. sorner Allerton Avenue Brous, N. ¥. GARMENT DISTRICT Some Phon. ‘Ofinvitte Ls Phones: Chickering 4947—Longacre 10089 COMRADELY ATMOSPHERE FAN RAY CAFETERIA 156 W. 29th St. New York Garment Section Workers Fatronixe Navarr Cafeteria 333 7th AVENUE Corner 28th st. ‘Concert Sun. to Gree |4 Shoe Union Members | NEW YORK.—To welcome the four militant shoe union members who were jailed at the height of the | general strike at the instigation of |the shoe bosses, the shoe workers | will hold a concert and mass meet- jing at the New Star Casino, 107th| | St. and Park Ave., on Sunday af- |ternoon at 1 p.m. Ivanoff, Meda- }xion, Duchin and Maglicano were released on bail last Saturday pend- jing an appeal before the Supreme | Court. | dances has been arranged. Repre- | sentatives of workers’ organizations | will bring greetings of welcome. The music program includes: The Ukrai- nian Workers’ Chorus Adohmyan con- j ducting the well-known shoe work- er baritone, Ben Alper, and Jacque- j line Alper, opera singer; D. Kotkin, | pianist; Tokaroy violinist, and Edith | Siegal of the Red Dance Group. BROADWAY CLOTHING HOUSE IS Going Out of Business After many years in the retail clothing business the firm is returning to the manu- facturing line and is complete stock of MEN’S AND YOUNG MEN’S Suits, Overcoats and Tuxedos BLUM’S Better Clothes 833 Broadway, New York —Near 13th Strect— WE ARE OPEN ALL DAY offering for sale its All clothes, all sizes, form- erly selling from $18 to $25, now being sold AS LOW AS {2 Now on sale at our only store, located at 833 Broadway Near 18th St., New York At our store you can get BOTH a Swit and Overcoat for the price of ONE garment any- where else. | REMEMBER! | Our entire stock must be | sora at once to vacate for | manufacturing establishment Our Prices Are the Lowest in the City! SPECIAL for Less Money SUNDAY A special program of musie andj DAILY Stockholders Cet Bigger Dividend _ Checks This Month Increase 100 Per cent Over October; Wages Drop, Prices Rise Ww NEW YORK lions of jobless face ie coming winter without any provision for food or shelter, and millions more on the Dec, 1 ile mil. job have had their wages reduced through wage cut 1 part-time, a handful of wealth ekholders re- ceived fat increases in dividends dur- ing the month of November, tt was announced today During the last four weeks, stock- holders of 579 big corporation stituting less 0.1 per cent of th populatior ed $21,966,000 dividend checks. This is an increa: of $131,320,000, an increase of ov, 100 per cent over the four weeks of October. Get Over 2 Billion For the first eleven months of this year the stockholders of these com~ panies received a total of $2,155, ‘789,000 in dividend checks. ‘These enormous payments are in addition to the even larger interest payments to the bondholders. That the increase in the intensity} of exploitation of the workers has been accelerated by the Roosevelt NRA codes is clearly evidenced in these figures since the increased profits of these companies has taken | place despite the fact that business has been dropping since July The extraordinary way in w: Rooseve fe pe the big Wall Street monopolies to in-| crease profits even in the face of | declining business, through speed-up, | reduced wages, etc. is vividly shown by the following table of dividend changes in the recent period: | Stockholders in ‘food, steel, |packing and mail-order compani |received dvidends larger than last | year. | “hirty-four large companies not jonly mai nod v regular div-/ lidents but issued large ch | so-called “extras.” Thirty companies which were not paying dividends last year resumed |payments this year. This compares | with only 7 resumptions of payments jlast year. | Seventeen companies actually de- |} clared increased rates of payments, as | compared with six such increases last year. And whereas 55 compa: | dividend payments last |omitted payments this Last year 39 com their dividend payment, only 10 took such action. Some of the industri dividends dur: | lows: public utilities, $7 packing, $19,000,000; oil companies, $46,000,000; railroads $15, The huge increases in dividends | paid out by these monopolies are due partly to the increased prices of the NRA codes, and the intensified ex- ploitation permitted and organized | under these codes. | The Roosevelt program ‘has, thus, {been of tremendous ben: to. Wall monopoly capital—to the Rockefellers in the oil companies, to | the Morgans in the auto, railroad and food companies. The cost of living during this | period has risen 10 per cent, with food having risen 24 per cent. ‘The latest report of the A. F..of L. }admits sharp reductions in wage | rates during this period. nies omitted | | | paid out as fol- Dimitroff, Torsler Turn Witnesses for | State Against Nazis (Continued from Page 1) | nist Party had bad absolutely noth- ing to do with the fire. | Further witnesses, chiefly former | Communists from the ore mountains confirmed the increased purchases of |ing, also admitting, however, as the | previous witness had done, that these | preparations were meant only for the | purpose of preventing the Storm | Troops march on Berlin. Dimitroff, |again endeavoring to question .the \dge. here a special prohibition. for me?” Dimitroff demanded. The judge replied, “Yes!” A Lunatic Testifies | One witness for the prosecution |turned out to be a former Ithatic, | still under treatment for insanity. | timony of previous witnesses, caused the public prosecutor to give up His plans for the examination of addi- | tional witnesses, emanded that all wit- ther in Jan land February, under the first Hitler | government, measures were taken for |any uprising, whether or not’ the | storm troops were alrea med and ready in batracks, and whether work- ers had been provided with arms for defense. The public prosecutor tested these questions and thé s | backed him by permit | questions pertaining to the measure: taken in preparation for. the expected driving underground of the Commu- |nist Party. Kaltenberg stated that | preparations had been made for .the | possible prohibition of protest dem- onstrations and volitical mass strikes. |There was no individual terror, |said, but merely preparations for i jlegal work. Other witnesses gave | similar testimony, comoletely refuting | the Nazi charge that. the-Communis‘ | Party was preparing. for an armed | insurrection, 5 | Air Force Sent Against Morocco Insurgents | CASABLA , Dec, {Moorish insurgents, continuing thet: {heroic struggle against thé’ French |imperialists, today. attacked and de- |feated a column of native troops who jrecently submitted to the Fren | killing 11 and wounding many othe: | The battle occurred 50 kilometers wes! of Akka, in a region which the French recently claimed had been completely “pacified.” | weapons and increased defense train- | \ This discovery as well as the ‘tes- a WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1938 GUTTERS OF President Roosevelt has appointed Martin Conboy the new Federal District Attorney Mr. Conboy, pictured above, is a notorious labor hater, Tammany strategist, and pal Wiggin, former head of the Chase National Bank, in the present Senate investigation 0: Judge Samuel Seabury, “liberal” crusader and reformer, hails the appointment as “excellent.” Helping the ‘Daily Worker A Few Teachers ........0.c006 Dr. Luttinger ....., Previous Total .. Total to Date EW YORK through Del: —by del for the N. Y. District. and defense lawyer for Al f huge bank plundering. $7.18 1.00 86.70 994.85 ‘Workers’ Mass Force Roosevelt to Fulfill His Promises to Give Jobs, (Continued from Page 1) ates what real gains can be won through greater organization and strugg) But the wor Tusions with this new civil ‘kers must have no il- egard to this C.W.A,, vorks- program. ‘This isso far just another Rooseveltian promise. In practice it will lead to |mew attacks on t workers’ living |standards UNLESS the workers, through their organized mass effort, make* this impossible? Rocsevelt, throughwthis: new-man- oeuver, hopes ‘to dull the fighting spirit of the toilers; he hopes to create division between skilled and unskilled workers, between the few given jobs and the mass of the un- ‘employed; he hopes to give jobs to a few as a cover for his plans to cut | millions off the relief lists; he hopes | to add universal forced labor to his already established citizen’s conser- vation camps and ‘transient camps, In short, under the. guise of helping the unemployed, Roosevelt hopes to the t. of maintaining the} d. Under the guise of his ram, Roosevelt wishes burden on the rich, abandon real public works, avoid un- employment insuraace, and place all urdens of unemployment on the rs themselves. ** ‘ Already the forced labor chatacter of the C.W.A. is evident: long hours of waiting i tion offices, the cold at the registra- he bullying of bureau- | sand foremen, threats | of no further relief. for families and | assignment to transient camps as| etc. Furthermore, it is al-| y clear that at the registration | efforts are being made to} force workers to leave militant trade} unions—T.U.U.L. and independent | unions—and to join AP. of L. unions | dot ted a reactionary, corrupt, | bureaucr: leadership which. works hand and glove with. the Roosevelt} starvation ¢. | A Job Or Relief | | To sum up: Roosevelt's C.W.A. pro-| gram is forward in an effort | to cou! act the. growing mass dis- content and the mass struggles | against t the effects of. -deépening As in the past he will en- to make: the’ C.W.A. a new 20] gainst the workers. The gppropriation of $400,000,000| that by’ struggle “the masses | ain even more. By organizing | ma for the broadest struggle, | can compel the government to} secure further funds to prevent fur-| | ther starvation. There is plenty of | in the country in the hands | | of the corporations and banks, which | have increased their profits and divi- dends during the past -years.: Our} }task is now to raise’ demands that| will compel the governmént through} | well organized, militant struggles to| Yonkers’ Employees, Unpaid for 15 Weeks Again Refused Pay | YONKERS, N. ¥.—With school teachers, firemen and other city ,employees unpaid since Aug. 15, the city of Yonkers today refused to meet its current payroll of $350,000. This amount will bring the total arrears in city payrolls to $1,500,000, Westchester. County, in which Yonkers is located, has announced the sale of tax anticipation war- rants for $1,500,000 in order to meet payments to a group of ten Wall Street banks headed by the Morgan Chase National Bank. | i | Has your unit, club, union, 1.W.O. Branch, your organization held a | méet higher prices. |and sympathetic organizations, All | the organization, the Relief Workers | every District and Section Commit- ‘Effort Must ind” these funds. We must demand: 1, A’ job or relief for every worker, whether married or single, white or Negro, native or non-citizen, 2) A guaranteed 30 hour week with four full weeks work each month. The abolition of wage differentials be- tween North, South and West. The enforcement of the minimum wage set on every job, with standard trade union wages as the minimum for all skilled workers. Increases in wages to Right Of Negroes To Jobs 3. Workmen's compensation on all jobs. The government has an- nounced that workmen’s compensa- tion does not apply to relief jobs. 4. Right to organize recognition of the job committees; right to belong to any union of the worker's own choosing. 5, Right of Negroes to jobs of any srades or categories, with equal pay for equal work. 6. “Against every form of discrim- ination against single workers and non-citizens. 7. Suitable clotr‘ng, shoes, boots, ete., for every worker, 8, Transportation to and from the jobs and no docking for time lost through stormy weather, sickness, etc. 9. Free rent, gas and coal, free milk, clothing and shoes for children of the unemployed. 10. Workers’ control of registra- tion. Organizational Steps Tn order to build up organization | to carry on the struggles on the re-| lef jobs, the following steps should | be taken: . 1, Immediate registration of all unemployed members of the Party, YCL, unions, Unemployed Council unemployed Party and YCL members should immediately register for these jobs since there is no more important |_ work for them at this time than building up organization of the relief workers, 2. Utilization of these contacts for building up organization on the job, for electing job committees com- prising: Workers belonging to unions and unorganized workers. Such or- ganizations as. committees, associa- tions, (or Protective Union or any other name the workers select) should be brought forward. - 3, Organization of meetings in the various sections of the city for the purpose of setting up the union, 4. Linking up of the job commit- tees through delegates into a Relief Workers Council which will be able to take action on various jobs. T.U.U.L. Must Be Active The unions of the Trade Union Unity League must be very active in building these organizations, for re- cruitment into their ranks and for building and strengthening the op- position in the reformist unions. At the same time, Party fractions must be formed on each job and active re- cruiting into the Party and YCL be carrfed on, Wherever possible and provided It will not narrow down the limits of Protective Union should be linked up with the Unemployed Counci! through delegates. While carrying on the organiza- tional work, mass agitation must be cenducted—at the registration buros, on the jobs, in the neighborhood ete. Good results can be obtained ff proper attention is paid to this very imvortant task, ‘This is a most important task for tee, which must immediately on Attempt Terror on Lodi Dye Wokrers Police Report Worker Distributing NT'W Leaflet LODI, N. J.—Company agents and the Chief of Police in particular are attempting to terrorize and smash the National Textile Workers Union in this company controlled town here. out N.T.W. leafiets to the boss, in an attempt to scare him out of the union. The worker, however, de- fended himself mflitantly stating he had a right to belong to any union he desired. ‘The police attempt to suppress the Daily Worker has failed, for the workers are reading it just the same. Strike Department meetings are held every Saturday at 2 P. M., 36 Wall St. Passaic, A Russian Film will be shown by the N.T.W. union Sunday, Dec. 3, from 5:30 P. M. on, at the Russian Street. | Home, 158 Fourth Turkish Consul Bars Workers’ Protests NEW YORK.—The Turkish Consul yesterday refused to see a delegation of three Turkish and two American workers who came to protest the persecution of revolutionary workers in Turkey and to demand the re- lease of over 200 Turkish Commu- nists facing death in the dungeons of the Kemalist republican government. The Consul first sent out word that no appointment had been made, but when the delegation offered to re- turn today at 11 o'clock he returned word that he would not be bothered by the delegation and their pro- tests. He ordered the clerks not to accept @ resolution presented by the delegation in the name of the United Front Committee for the Protection of Turkish Workers and Political Prisoners to be transmitted to the Turkish Government. The delegation said that they would return, backed by thousands of workers who are in- dignant at the brutal attacks by the Kemalists om the Turkish workers and their organizations, The delegation which visited the ‘Turkish consulate Friday morning will make its report Saturday, 8 p. m., at the Turkish Workers Club, 402 West 40th St., New York City. In addition to the report there will be entertainment and dancing, or- iental music and refreshments. City Events Cc. P. Calls for Pickets ‘The Communist Party, Sec. 8 calls upon all Party members, Young Communist League mem- bers,-and members of mass organ- izations to join the picket line at the Meltzer Pocketbook Shop, Snediker and Dumont Ave. East New York on Monday morning. All Party members report to 1813 Pitkin Ave. Monday morning at 6:45 A. M. a Pegs ig Shoe Workers Meeting The Shoe Workers will welcome their four comrades out on bail at a meeting in New Star Casino Sunday at 1 P.M. ‘The shoe repairers will meet Sun- day at 77—5th Ave. The stitchdown workers will meet Monday in the Manhattan Lyceum. Dressmakers “Open Forum ‘The left wing group of the L.L.G.W. local 22 will hold an open forum st the W.LR. center, 421 Stone Ave., Brownsville, Sun., Dec. 3 at 11 A. M. Abramowitz will speak. perks amas Speakers Conference in Harlem. The Agit-Prop of the Harlem Sec- tion is calling a speakers conference to discuss the wave of lynch terror, 15 West 126th St. . 8 Soviet. Film Showing ‘Two showings of the Soviet feature film, “China Express”, will be given ‘Union, this Sunday at 6 and 8 P, M. in the union hall, 140 Broad Street. Proceeds for the fighting fund of the union, Admission 15¢, 8 e Waterfront Dance Dance tonight at 8 pm. under the auspices of the Waterfront Unem- ployed Council, at 140 Broad St., In- ternational Seamen’s Club, for the purpose of raising money to send delegations to the National Conven. tion of the Unemployed Councils, DOWNTOWN x we te CHINA KITCHEN CHINESE-AMERICAN CAFETERIA-RESTAURANT 233 E. 14th St. Opp. Labor Temple SPECIAL LUNCH 25c. DINNER 35e. Comradely Atmosphere JADE MOUNTAIN American & Chinese Restaurant 197 SECOND AVENUE Bet, 12 & 13 Welcome to Our Comrades | Phone: TOmpkins Square 6-9556 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY—ITALIAN DISHES get the job. Great flexibility must be shown both in demands and form of organization. since exverience will teach us the best lessons. collection for the Daily Worker? Holy save our “Daily.” * NEW ——~—~ Fresh Food—Proleterian Prices 8 All Comrades Meet at the HEALTH CENTER CAFETERIA &. 18TH GY. WORKERS’ CENTER. Police reported a worker handing | Sunday, 10 A. M. at the Finnish Hall, | by the Marine “Workers Industrial! 4 What About A eae a comrade from one head and deck. His point was that the vic- published a day late without suffi- AED i i impunity have been left ee ° EAD this thing,” he said. “It’s baseball?” way, strikes or oe 8 of course, strikes are more important. And that is but one of the reasons why you have to write about baseball. Whether we are or are not particularly pleased by the Position {t occupies in American cul- ture, it’s there, and the only way we can put it into its proper place is by writing and talking. With the possible exception of the movie, sport is American capitalism’s most reliable safety valve. It’s a bigger thing than booze. One scarce- ly realizes what a tremendous release and blanket of bitterness and frus- tration fights and football games and hockey matches are. A tremendous release of energy, too, energy whose direction can assuredly be swerved. The Daily need not apologize for, its sports department. Its reception has been too unanimously enthusi- astic, But while you still find re- sponsible comrades holding the views expressed above a few things want to be said. That is the atti- tude responsible for the failure, we mustn't hesitate to use the word, of the Labor Sports Union all these years. Instead of looking uvon, say baseball, as 2 means of attracting youth to the Communist movement, an instrument for building a sound- er social life for people already in the movement, they continue to. regard games in the light of the purpose which they are being made to serve by the more seasoned tac- tics of capitalist civilization. This is the implicit attitude of the comrades who have remained aloof from the Iabor sports move. ment. This is why our Party has never paid sufficient attention to it Al DIVISION Red Spark vs Spartacus, 2:30 p.m., Thos. Jefferson Park. Falcons vs Fichts Keuador vs Tico, tral Park. Italia ys Italian-America, 2:30 p.m, Me- Carren, Al_ DIVISION Red Spark ys French, 12:30 p.m., Thos. Jefferson. Monabi vs Colonial, 12:30 p.m., 96th St. Central Park. ve Zukunft, 2:30 p.m., Head, Bi DIVISION Bronx Hungarian vs Herl, 11 a.m., Crotona. New York Hungarians vs Spartacus, 11 a, m., Dyckman. Juventus vs Hero, 10:30 a.m., Hodson, Brownsville vs Maple, 12:30 p.m. :30 p.m., 99th St, Cen- Betsey Action Now? one of the revolutionary unions came storming up to the Daily Worker’s trade union de- partment. He spoke as though he were addressing an open- air mass meeting during a reasonably active hurricane and his voice resounded through the partitions. His local had won a hard fought, prolonged strike and the Daily gave it a three inch story on the second page with what we call a number ——— nor assigned suitable forces for leadership. E ISN’T lack of material. A pare- graph to recall the letter of John Meldon, National Secretary of the Steel and Metal Workers Industrial Union, which ran here a couple of weeks ago: “For instance, if the show includes boxing, we can supply you with union members who have the following qualifications: Two heavyweights— 180 and 205 lbs. respectively, of ONE of our local unions, who have beaten the best that the amateurs of West- ern Pennsylvania have to offer. Also, a bantam, second best in a Golden Glove Tournament recently, and 2 feather who has won nine out of ten tough amateur bouts, losing the tenth on an accidental foul. If you want to include weight-lifting in the show we can also shove New Yor! Suys into last place with two heavy. weight weight lifters, who both throw & 286 pound press, and a 306 pourid leg lift, etc.” In last week’s mail a letter frore Evanston, Illinois: “At present I am a student Northwestern University and working for the Chicago—— sport staff @n the side. I have competed in all ef the big meets run off in this county, including the National Intercollegiate championships, the Conference cham- pionships, N. A. A. U. meets, intwr- scholastic meets, and even in the final Olympic tryouts at Detroit and Cin- cinnati. With that as a background you can readily understand that I've had some experience in swimming Meets and that I could help out very Well in the technical end of con- ducting the sectional meets prior to the Spartakiade. “For instance, I had learned from some comrade who was doing work in Chicago and who is doing organiza- tional work in Detroit now, that the Chicago Labor Sports Union is very deficient in the technical end of rmn- ning swimming meets. He told me about the last contest they held. It was a flop because the thing wasn’t Tun off smoothly; hardly anyone could judge the diving, hardly any- one knew how to arrange the judges and timers and what not, He sug- gested that I help out if I would. I told him I’d be happy to. “When I found out about the Spartakiade, I immediately wrote to the Chicago L.S.U. and Si Gerson in New York, offering ‘my services. I wrote to them over two months ago {and have not heard from them yet. And I am in a position to help them a little in the swimming field . . .” er ae 8, there’s our material. There is our material in every high school, every college, every union local, I. W. 0. youth section or Young Communist League unit. every factory in the country. They are waiting and ask'ne to be or- ganized into basketball leagues, | Sandlot teams, into cheering squads | even. With a lot of patience and ' s little Imagination we can do it. METROPOLITAN WORKERS SOCCER LEAGUE SCHEDULE SUNDAY, DECEMBER 3rd, 1933. s B2 DIVISION | South American vs Harlem, 2:80 p.zu St. Central. L.W.O. vs Prospect, 11 a.m., Astoria. Ttallan-American ys Pichte, 12:30 p.m. 64 St. Central. Hinsdale ys Red Spark, 10:30-a.m., Betse Head. Spartacus vs Dauntless, Cooms Dam. “ 12:30 a.m. Me. Ci DIVISION Greek Spartacus vs Spartacus, °2:30 p.zi McCooms Dam. Fichte vs Hero, 10:30 a.m., sper. | _Red Spark vs Nonparial, 10:30 a.m., Thos | Jefferson. Frenc’ vs Celta, 1 p.ia., Queensboro Ova! (NOT: not in good standing andi those ent after the first of the month are not included in this schedule), i i MOT THAVEN 9-8749 DR. JULIUS JAFFE Surgeon Dentist 401 EAST 140th STREET (Corner Willis Avenue) DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet, Pitkin and Setter Aves, Brocktyn PHONE: DICKENS 2-9012 Office Meurs: 8-10 AM., 1-8, 6-8 P.M. Breeches, Shoes, ete., will receive m4 celal reduction om afl their purchases st SQUARE DEAL ARMY and NAVY STORE 121 THIRD AVE. (8 doors South of 14th Street) NOTICE! RUSSIA MOVED TO 9 West 42nd Street WILLIAM BELL——— orricia Optometrist. pain 106 EAST 14TH STREET DR. R. H. ISAACS Formerly of Baltimore, Md. has moved his oMce ‘o New York at 304 E, 178th Street, Bronx, N. ¥. (Cor. Anthony Ave.) : FOrdham 7-3448 Phone: Office Hours: 12 to tos P.M. Sunday 10 to 12 Noon f RAPID SHOE REPAIRING NOTICE! N ART SHOP Ine. BRANCH AT 107 E. 14th Street Large Selection of Gifts, Toys and Novelties from the Soviet Union. 10% Discount te Readers of the Daily Worker