The Daily Worker Newspaper, February 17, 1934, Page 2

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creme { Page Tre Austrian Workers In . New Fighting at Many Points Attack Fascists 2 (Continued from Page i) was dismissed after shots were j #fom its headquarters on passing| ‘toons. | Thousands Homeless His wife explained that | en no interest in polities | Tenements in Ruins who vii Hof, bat ted the| red and | -In Vienna, thousands of workers | repes ed savage are homeless, and stil] greater thou- | dments, found hundreds ot Sands are feeling the pangs of| shattered workers’ homes. Children’s starvation. | toys lay seattered on littered floors. ‘The radio today broadcast a sage from Theodor Habicht, Hi Nazi commissar from Austria Munich, declaring thot the Aust Nazis 2 Aus and aGerman action. wy Burned food stood in pans on aban- don tov ave left untenable. | wa The Goethehof tenement has suf-} s _ {Special to the Daily Worker) fered a similar fate. This colorful ZURICH, Feb, 16. (Runa),—The| workers’ home on the banks of the Neimwehr troops have mut at Danube is a mass ruins, Every Hallein, which the workers cecupied| man oy n this building | dest nig has been rounded up and interned The Se workers’ de for questioning gerps) occupied the city of Eben The Schlingerhof, at Floridsdort, in the Salzkammergut region, aNd/ 4 creat industrial and workers’ home disarmed the police late yesterday All workers in the town and in the Salt works went out on strike. rieades were built in the streets. 1 red forces declared martial law The news of the conquest of Bhen- See caused tremendous enthusiasm in Vienrs Kerli Marx Hof Regained 8. * The worke: groups of FPlor- idsdor? are holding their ground near agra The Heim- community, is also in ruins, but not » completely ruined as the Geethe-/ Roosevelt Aids R.R.. . Bosses Clamp New Pay Cut on Workers (Contin issued 4 21 try to reduc after June 21 of forestalling Roose- has begun at iding with Sandleitenhof of the grea’! tne employers’ statement, as obvi- Workers’ tenerients of Vienna. ‘ously refi his cooperation in the, 1 through V mov as “CCrrIFO- Ps are cOncentrati) Vienne for a march on housend a requisitioned al) Ebensee 16.—The roar of t unds of rifle shots _zesound again, after a lull | night jan many parts of the city, and at Marchfeld, juct outside the town, the Uighting has redoubled. Almost to a man, the workers ~jébted the treacherous “truck” re- by stance. Savage Vengeance Tn the city, the savage vengeance ot the capitalist state is being carrie] out with horrible thorough- ness. Three more workers have been strung on the gallows. Literally ,#thousands are in the fascist prisons, “AWaiting the vengeance of the state. The heroic class women of Vienna is grimly mecorded in the number | «whose bodies lie in the city morgue, | and of those in the hospitals. | Jt is now revealed that hundreds of the working class men and women who died could have been saved if| medical care had been allowed them. | They could not get to hospitals— and if they had, arrest and savage “veprisals awaited them there, in- atead of care. Workers Mass Outside Vienna 2%) Workers are reported massing at| cvildlin and St. Poelten, west of| #Mienna, for a march on the cit on fithers are gathered at Vienna Neu-| ewsiadt, and at Stadlau. “= Successful resistance has flared up| yain Neukirchen and Gloggnitz, | Micetrial cities south of Vienna. No word of what happened in the | fighting around Steyr, munitions} geenter where Prince von Starhem-| 3 was surrounded last night, has/| “come, but it is known that he| escaped. At <Annsfeld, in Upper| Austria, he made a speech attacking Dolifuss and his Christian Socialist, party for Jack of firmness. | Marderous Terror | Some conception of the fascist terrorism can be gained from the| fact that a city employee in Linz,| -twas found dead in his apartment) with his wife and two children, A note he Inft said he preferred death to the persecution which awaited him. A wholesale exodus of Jews mind- ful of the fate of their brothers in SGermany, has begun. More than a thousand have crossed the border “into Poland. Thousands of others Have fled to Czechoslovakia, aban- “doning their homes. neellor Dollfuss sought to| ® le of the working} of women| mise,” cut the continuation of the pay- Profits Swell ailroads enjoyed an in- tly 051.502 in net during 1983, according to| given to the Daily Worker by the Statistics Sureau of the ate Commerze Commission. neom23s the 10 per cent cut ay workers plier nm gote nna _ 000 to their apital since 10 tion of this 10 per cent wage cut/ eave been made repeatedly, along | with harrowin: lanations of how | badly it is needed, in addition te the | justice of the demand F. H. Fijozdal, President of the} ood of Mrintenance of way | , Said last December that section men were receiving as little | , that they were retting $10 a week on big roads, and in some cases $6 a week. He said,| “as 2 result of inadequate wage rates, | vart-time employment and the 10 per cent deduction, thousands of railway | | Workers are failing to earn sufficient | to keep body and soul together. | Thousands Loce Jobs. | He pointed out that when the em- nloyes agreed to the cut, the roads had agreed to do everything possible | to stabilize employment, but that | “since then thousands of railway workers have been thrown out of | jobs and thousands of others, retained | in the servic placed on | starvation em ‘The | time has come for this 10 per cent | donation to cease and for the em-/| vloyes to demand a substantial in-| crease in wages, accompanied by a/ guarantee of regular employment.” ‘The railroads have received hun- dreds of millions of dollars in direct sovernmert subsidies from the Reson struction Finance Corporation. The I Roads, whose revenues and ex- Y-|1 Roads, whose revenues and ex-|Commanist workers penses are 98 per cent of the total for | all railroads, decreased expenses from | $2,403,543,795 in 1932 to $2,249,318,750. | Their net operating income, the reve- | nues after subtracting expenses. taxes | end net for equipment, was $474 369,- | 438 for 1933, compared with $326,317,- 936 for 1932. Most of the expense- reductions came out of wages. DATLY WORKER, NEW Y GUTTERS OF NEW YORK “President Roosevelt has Louis Mouquin, millionaire liqz wena 10,000 in NY. Meeting Thunder Cheers for Austrian Workers By MORRIS PITMAN NEW YORK.—More ‘than workers rocked the Bronx Col with the roar of their mighty “/ Thurs night in response resolution which veai in part: “We, New York workers, appea! to the Socialist Party members, to all Socialist and American Fed- eration of Labor workers, to all non-Party workers to forge one m'ghty united front of struggle against fascism and war, for the support of our Austrian fellow workers.” They gathered at the call of the Communist Party to hear a report on the great events in Austria, and to express their deep, fighting solidarity with their heroic Austrian brothers, The first money raised in New York for the use of the Austrian workers was $629., contributed that night. Of this sum, $175 was con- tributed before the meeting, the balance was the proceeds of the meeting and collection. Enthusiasm Unbounded When Clarence Hathaway, . editor of the Daily Worker, reported. thar the radio had just carried the news that 14,000 Austrian Socialist work- ers ahd rallied outside Vienna (at Vienna Neustadt) and were marching on the town, the enthusiasm of the 10,000 um to paced workers knew no more) wrhe Austrian Workers are fight- a f |ing against terrific odds,” he said, Every man and woman of the 10,000) a2, a 2 | that packed the hall was: on his| P°°ause of the treachery of the So- feet, cheering in a frenzy of en- thusiasm. In a breathless silence, interrupted at moments by thunderous applause, the workers listened to James W. Ford, Clarence Hathaway, Earl Browder, general secretary of the Communist Party of the U.S.., and to Robert Minor, leader of Wednes- day’s demonstration at the Austrian | consulate, Divisions Overcome in Struggle “The Social Democratic and have welded their unity on the barricades of Austria,” Hathaway declared, “All the efforts of the Social Democratic leaders and the Austrian bour- — geoisie to keep the working class divided are being overcome in the moment of struggle. “The Social Democratic workers, _fighting side by side with the Com- Chicago Holds Lead As ‘Daily’ Sub Drive Enters Third Week NEW YORK. — As the Dai'y Worker circulation drive entered its| |third week, Chieago district main-| tained its leal over all other dis- | tricts with a total of 75 new daily jand 234 new Saturday subs. | From. Feb. 7th to Feb, 13th, in- \clusive, this district gained 36 new |daily and 21 new Saturday subs. In the same period, Detroit was second | with 13 new daily and new Saturday | subs; Minneapolis third, with 12 new for annual and not monthly subs. ach district is urged to intensify the drive in its territory, to follow up the trial subs for renewals and to obtain adaitional Bosto Women in Heroic Re' - | daily subs; Boston fourth with 12; 3 Pllsdetphs is 1900 =©' The heroism of Vienna's working| Philadelphia ani Pittsburgh tied in| 4 Buffalo 9 300 “class women continues to be attested | fifth position with 11 new daily subs LE Shen be ig 3 wee “by every new report of the fighting, | each. 1 Detroit rs 1000 ‘which still continues whenever the} Since the start of the drive, Jan.| # Chiesge % 4500 sorkers’ strongholds have not been/ 24th, the district sent in a total of| ,? bo agama = “whattered to fragments. | 504 new daily and 355 new Saturday] 11". & S. Dakota 11 200 a = every cane oe vid ay oe | tubs, This is far below what should 1 Seattle 4 $0 “ments, in every vroletarian district,|have come in durin: rst tw allsornie z Weg Floridsdor! Ottakring, Hernals,| weeks, 2 ee See ee 14 Newark 4 09 “e Sin ig, the same report is made, Many of the subs sent in by_the| ts Mauwaukes 4 {00 eaomen carrying ammunition, | districts are only for a month. In a| 19 Denver 5 300 rifles and revolvers, carmz| later table the subs will be tabulated ne aed os dren and the wounded. to show the number of total months sed Sop ~In hundreds of encounters, women _ ® anatched up rifies and fought shvul- rdler to shoulder with men. Time and i“ they advanced through re- eS raked with bullets to carry or go for supplies to tend the You qeort—s«Workers’ Bank Closed. | s2 ‘Soldiers with bayonets stood guard | y in front of the Workers Bank, ch thousands of workers’ or- cooperatives, trade benefit and fraternal groups. ddition to many thousands of Savings accounts, are kept. Hugo Brietner, director of he bank, was arrested, a run began Kautsky, the chief ideologist revision of Marxism, is arrested. His father, how-| is not molested, though he liver | bank, which was immediately | obtained by each district, If a dis- trict sends in a sub for one month, it means that 12 such subs must be | sent in to: count for one annual sub, |The quotas in the table below are National Theatre FESTIVAL L, 0. W. T. New York Competitions English Groups e Workers Lab. Thea.,"New Ex- perimental Thea., Harlem Prog. Thea., Workers’ School, Amer- ican Youth Thea., Aurora-Ella May Wiggins. February 18th, 8 P, M, NEW SCHOOL TICKETS 5S W. 12th St. 35e and 60c ' | | Kautsky, a surgeon, ar | Chicago Workers Will Demonstrate Saturday Against Polish Fascism CHICAGO, Feb. 13.—Workers of this city will demonstrate in Washington Square, 9290 N. Clark St., against Po'ish fascism th's Saturday at noon, demanding the release of the 8 Ukranian reyclu- tionists on trial in that country. A delegation representing the demonstrators will place the de- mands before the local Polish consulate, Organizations ar- ranging the protest are the Inter- national Labor Defense, the United Ukranian Toilers and the | Polish Chember of Commerce | here. | new ones on aj larger scale than has been achieved | so far. The following chart shows how | many new subs each district outside | New York has sent in from Jan. 24th | to Feb. 13th, ineluai | revived the art of dining.”— 10r dealer. Ss, h taken the road of revolutionary struggle on the bar- ricades.” ory of Social Democratic treachery ‘systematic weakening of 's’ fighting front, the syse oncessions to the capitalists which disarmed and demoralized the workers, and paved the way for the ism against which, despite their the Austrian workers have ip arms, Communists Lead in Lins told of the long underground le of the outlawed Communist. ‘arty of Austria. The hall rocked again with cheers when he quoted the report of the Austrian Commu- nist Party to the plenary session of the Communist International last December, telling how the Austrian Socialist workers had come to the Communists, asking to be advised, asking to hear their speakers, dis- | trib their leaflets, | It was precisely at Linz, where | the first struggle began, from where jthe call for the general strike was {sent out last Monday, that the unity | of the Communists and Socialists had been strongest built, he reported. | Here, he said, the Socialist workers |had last year already called on the | Communists to give them Jeadership. | Terrific Odds take | cial Democratic leadership, because | of its poicly of systematically paving the way ofr fascism. “But the struggie will go forward, despite all setbacks, until fascism in Austria is finally crushed, And when that time comes, it will be the Communist Party which stands at the head of the working class of Austria!” | “Support Madison Garden Meet” ‘The hall rocked once more to the thunder of applause when he de- clared that the demonstration in Madison Souare Garden yesterday \called by the reformists, “must be supported by every single worker here!” “It must be the opportunity for | the widest fraternizing with the So- | cialist and A. F. L. workers,” he said, |“We must point out the heroism of | the Austrian workers, in which the | undying unity of the working class {is being welded on the barricades. The unity of the American working | class must be established now in soli- darity with the Austrian workers.” “We Communists do not ask who are the workers who are fighting In Austria,” said Earl Browder. “Like | every worker who takes up the right | against capitalism, they are all our class brothers, Through the fascist offensive of the ruling classes of Eu- TO} the division of the working class is being destroyed. Always Ready to Unite in Struggle “We Communists are ready at every moment to unite with every worker who takes the path of struggle. We must demonstrate to the Socialist workers that we are not separate from them, We must go directly to them, and unite with | them,” he said, urging every work~ | er te go to Madison Square Garden | today, | Robert Minor, who led the Wed- | Nesayd demonstration at the Austrian \consulate, and Tharsday led a dele- gation to Mayor LaGuardia to pro- | test against police brutality in that | demonstration, declared: | “The solidarity of the ruling class |of America with the Austrian fas- cists was proved ‘by the clubs of Mayor LaGuardia’s police. “Today, at the City Hall, Lae Guardia was put in a position where he had to give a pledge that on Saturdcy, when the workers dem- lions vate at the call of the Young | Commu: League, his police will not att: the workers. “But the right of the workers to |make demonstrations does not come | from Wall Street. Our right will | only be established by the determina~ | tion of the workers—determination |-tke that of the wo: yesterday, | who, six times broxen apazt by the charzes of the police, six times re- ormed their Jines again, | _ “Phe Sociatist workers who hero- | ically stood shoulder fo shouder with us there, are to be welcomed by us; they will stand with us in many a struggle in the future,” he declared, NTZ AT HARLEM 1.W.0. will lecture on “The open forum | tomorrow i Poynt | | | meny thovsends were turns | Mighty Strike Hit Austrian Fascism (Continued from Page 1) ——__—— was read by David Dubinsky, and was erected with loud hoos end jeers. Tts contents were not heard by the avience. Wa'king quietlv and earnestly to the platform to plead for an orderly meetine of true vroletarian United Front, Clerenes Hathaway, editor of the Mai'y Worker, and one of the be- loved leaders of the Communist »Partv, was severely beaten by trade union and Socialist Party officials to- day on the platform and in the front tows of the Madison Sq. Garden | meeting called to pledge solidarity | with the her c workers of Austria. Seated in cally bursting fights and disorders threnheut the immense hall threate ened to break uv the meeting, Hath- away, rose to make & short aj for order and work ms clace sniidnrite, As he approached the platform he was met with an unusually brutal j assault of hurled chairs and flying fists as the trade union and Socialist officials seated on the platform rushed toward him in vicious attack, Comoletely alone, Hathaway was Soon snrrounded hy Socialist and trade union officials crowding around him, with fisis and chairs firme Um fay menwenntn Wiethn. wav's face wes covered with blood, avd his enat torn to shreds. The entire front section of the | Garden wes emnty, since {t was ree erved bv the officials for snecial ner- rons, and no werkers weve vermitted to take them. desvite the fact ‘that away, This left Fethawev commletely at the mercv of the effictialdom and the thves on the vlatform, Im his devotion to the Commu- nist larder, ore works etched hig life and leaped from the first bal- cony on to the nisfferm jim hie earerness to nrotect Fathaway, He was cankht rn in the swirling macy of attacking officials wielding chairs and beaten, Simyccline neainet fis acgatlants Hathaway faltered and fell twice, With b'cod streaming from his face he was scon surrounded by a pro- tective euard of workers who ruched toward the vlatfonn and led him out, af the Gordan, as ha wag paing led trade union offeiats seated om the matform rushed efter him in unre- strained thvewery to deliver final blows #t his bodv and face, As Hathaway was rushed out an immense cry arose from the assem~- bled workers, “We want Hathnwav,” which was reneated »gain and again, end a mass exodus from the Garden beran, ing to take victures of the incident were also beaten, their cameras smashed, and thev also were ritched awav by the trade union and So- clalist officials on the platform. The cry of a worker calling for “Unity” brought from the chairman, Algernon Lee, the warning that any ana naling ont ond “Aleteohing. Hh mesting” would “be taken care of” by the ushers, Speaks to Outside Crowd As he reached the outside Hatha- wev was quickly surrounded by a ring of workers who souvht to rush him to a physician for immediate care. blood still running down his face trom head wounds, Hathaway In- sisted on sveaking to the scores of thousands who were unable to obtain admittance, He snoke for about 20 minutes, urging that the working class clasp hands in revolutionary unity for the overthrow of Fasrism. Then he was taken by workers to a physician. At this moment hundreds of work- ers are calling the Daily Worker anz- iously inquiring the state of Hatha- wav's injuries. Hathaway's physician, Dr. Luttine ger, revorts that it has been necessary to put two stitches in Hathaway's scalp to close a very ugiv scalo wound. Hathaway was suffering from num-rous abrasions and cuts about the head received as a result of the cheir blows received on the platform, Hathaway’s physician re- Ported. Over a thousand metal workers stopne+ work in the Majestic, Seiden, Grand Metal and other mete] shove resvending to the call of the Steel and Metal Workers Industrial Union for » general strike, ‘The workers gathered at the union headauerters, from where they marched to Madison Square Garden sineing revolutionary songs and shouting fichting slogans. Painters in Manhattan, Bronx and Brooklyn struck at 3 o'clock under the leadership of the Alteration Painters Union and marched to Mad~- ison Square Garden with their ban- ners. $ At 2°30 pm. masses of fur workers downed their tools, walked out of the shors and gathered at 29th Street and 7th Ave., under the banners of the Needle Trades Workers Union, from which ‘point they marched in formation uv Seventh Ave. to 36th Street and then turned west to 8th Ave,, where they were met by cloak and dress workers who had walked out of the shons in answer to the general strike call, The streets were alive with ban- ners denouncing the bloody Dollfuss regime and calling on all workers to unite, regardless of their political afl- Uetions, azainst fascism and war, Shos workers stonped work and began arriving eat the head-uarters of the Tnited Shee and Leather we rs Thion, 77 Fifth Ave., at 3 o'clock, frem where they marched to the Garden. é vd . The crowd marched around in the bitter cold, shouting slogans a72inst the Aurtrian fascist murderers and calling for unity of all the working class. When the left wing unions, led by the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union, approached Madison Square Garden headed by the Red Front Band, they were flanked on all sides by police, who made them take down. their banners. They folded up the banners and surged into the Garden. Searched For Literature Kivery worker entering the Garden was searched for working class litera- ture by people wearing red badges of audience, as sporadi- | away several of the Socislist and | Two press vhotographers attempt- |’ Nesrite his obvious pain, and with | ORK, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1934 'N. ¥. Workers in | aneans on their laps. | dog show at Madison Square Garden. Hundreds of dogs—huge hounds and bitehes, fluffy little poodles, silky. terriers—some barking, some erying, some Most of them just bored stiff. Dog-lovers walking around the arena, admiring, pouting, whistling at dogs. And pompous judges, tape-measure in hand, feeling | the backs of the dobs, | behind the ears, and what not, es pe. raising and exhibiting is a business, just like manufacturing cuff-buttons or fish hooks, Dog show are sold for hundreds of dollars apiece, Dog lovers pay thou- sands to see the aristocratic animals. ‘They can turn ill with fright to ses a dog kicked in the ribs. But they shrug their shoulders when they see or hear of thousands being shot down, beaten, murdered in the class struggle. Dogs have their classes, too. Those |Ch, Oakcrest Fionne Mac Au Oggs, the Ch, Pathan y. Lohelands, or the winner of the whole show, a@ ‘little brown and white wire-haired terrier called Flornell Spicy Bit of Hal'eston. ~-what do they know of the shaggy, hungry curs who rove the streets, | tryinr to beat the starving worker to « oshean containing the best left-ove,_? I like to think of the pedigreed show dogs as the capital- ist-dogs and the lowly street mon- grels as the worker-dogs. And I get | to hate the capitalist-dogs and love the worker-dogs, especially after reading that “four mongrel dogs wag- ging their tails and yelping with joy over their release from barred cells in which they had been confined More than a week, were put to de-th with a poisoned needle for biting the arm of a little girl.” * ib MAKES me think of the over- fed, crooked bankers who live a ‘ife of moral and physical corrup- | tion, exploiting workers, robbing Poor bank depositors, and then get~_ re the Socialist Party. They were as- sisted by police. No working class lit- erature was allowed inside the hall. A worker carrying copies of Labor Unity, official organ of the Trade Union Unity League, was pointed out by ushers -to- the. police and the lit- erature was taken away from him. Try to Stop Sale of “Daily” ‘The Socialist officials would not al- low the Daily Worker inside the hall. Hundreds of workers, however, got inside the hall with leaflets and lit- erature concealed in their clothes. Thousands of leaflets calling for unity of Socialist and Communist workers were thrown down from the yallery. An Irish worker, who threw down jeafiets, was surrounded by ushers wearing red bands and pointed out to the police. As the workers were marching to the Garden they were met at 36th St. and 8th Ave. by a policeman (badge number 15836) who attempted to smash up a parade by sending a heavy truck through the line of march. The marchers pushed the truck out of the way, however, and continued the march. Thousands of shoe workers, marine workers, building trades workers and members of the Worktts’ Ex--Service~ men’s icague marched into the Gar- den cr filled the strects around the hall, Algernon Lee, leader of the Socialist Party, was chairman of the meeting and opened it in the name of the marks he avoided the word “unity.” Workers in the gallery, however, began to shout when Lee began to speak, asking why he was against unity of the Communist and Socialist workers, “Why did you invite fascist Mat- thew Woll and strikebreaker La- Guardia to speak at this meeting and refuse a united front with the Com- munists,” one worker shouted from the middle of the hall. Boo Schlossberg J. Schlossberg, an official of the Amalgamated Clothinge Workers Union, was jeered and booed by the majority of the workers when he be- gan to speak. He was only supporied by a few hundred in the hall, who ap- plauded him feebly when he ‘inished As Communist workers entered the hall with the cry “United Front,” they were answered by enthusiastic shouts of answer from all parts of the hall. The “Red Front Band,” a group of Communist workers, were not per- mitted to enter re are ates Amongst th: delegations strik- ing workers *“%) marched to Madi- son Square Garden yesterday after- noon was a large group of butchers, clerks, fish workers and dairy and grocery clerks. These | workers marched under the banners of the Food Workers Industzial Union. ‘Speakers Make Dissension ‘From the very first the Chairman, Algernon Lee, adopted a tone of exireme provocation, warning th: thousands of workers against “dis- rupters,” deliberately ignoring the fact #aat every worker in the hall has come in profoundly sincere response to the call for working class unity. The tone of the succeeding speakers was similar to Lee's. It was this hostile, provocative tone of the speak- ers, combined with the tension cre- ated by the socialist officials’ invita- tion of the hated reactionary-fascist strikebreaker, Matthew Woll, that resulted in disturbances throughout anion officials could not -control or suppress, scratching | the hall which the socialist and trate | Goin’ to the Dogs OU'LL see it all in the movie newsreels in a few days, Right | after (or before) the pictures of the French riots, the Aus- trian barricade fighting, you’ll see pictures of pretty little boys and girls or beautiful young ladies standing next to huge do; —Great Danes, St. Bernards, Wolfhounds—or doting old women | making themselves silly over little poodles, Pekinese or Pomer-! You see, the dog show’s been in town—the fifty-eighth. annual Westminister Kennel Clublse | | | I \ gS | ting off scot free, even cheered, | while the downtrodden Negro sets thirty to sixty years for steal- ing an overceat se that he can keep the cold out, It’s not just sentimentality on my | part; I'm not particularly a dog lover, But I wanted to go to the dog | show, So T called up the publicity | manager of the show and asked for | corner Allerton Avenue Press tickets. “What paper do you represent?” he| asked. \ | “Daily Worker,” I replied. t “Justa minute.” I waited for sev- | eral moments during which I heard excited voices talking over the other | end of the wire. | “We're all out of press tickets. No, it's not discrimination, I know there are no reserved seats. But we're all | Phone: Tompkins Square 6-8287 out of. press tickets. Other kinds? No, we can’t give you any.” So that was that. The Westmin- ster show people also know that they and their aris‘ocratic dogs be- | long to a different class, } Metropolitan Workers | Soccer League | (Schedule for Sunday, Feb. 18) Home Team Visiting Time Field Ref, red Spark vs Tico, 3 p.m. Crotona, De: ventura. Ecvadore vs Italie, 1 p.m M, Lippert | Ttal. Amer. vs Spartacus, 3 p.m. McCar-| ren, H. David, Fiesta vs Falcons, 3 p.m. McOooms Dam, | 1. Shiller, ‘Al. DIVISION ae, Home Team Visitine Time Field Bef, | French vs Hinsdale, 3 p.m. German Amer. M. Gross. | Monash! vs Red Spark, If a.m., Betsey | Heed, A. Katz. Presnect vs I.W.O,, 1 p.m, MeCooms Dam. Colonial, no game. BI DIVISION Brownsville vs Rendezvous, 3 p.m. Bet- sev Head. A Guzman, Herzl vs Here, 1 n.m. Gravesend, M. Kats, Matlo vs Dai Colonial, no «i | | | Al. DIVISION | Central, 93th | me, | B2 DIVISION ! Prospect vs Harlem, 11 a.m. Croton, A. Resnick, 1.W.O. vs Red Spark, 11 a.m. Astoria, 0. Harvey. Sp-ttacus vs Ttal. ten, K. Kus. Fichte vs Zucunft, 11 am. McCarren, J. Fink 2) Hinsdale vs South Amer., 1 p.m. Betsey Head, A, Nudel. © DIVISION Greek Spart. vs Spartacus, 11 a.m. Me- Cooms Dam, B. Matersky, | Yorth Culture ys Fichte, 11 a.m. McCar-| ten, 8. Flecker. Hero vs Celta, 1 p.m. Central, 64th St., £. Silva. Frencht vs Bronx Hung. } p.m. German Amer, A. Feur. Red Spark vs Amer., 1 p.m. MeCar-| EXHIBITION Rome; 1 p.m. Croton, Intensive Courses ... 2 to 5 Months Stenography, Bookkeeping, | | Banking, Jr. Accountancy WE PLACE YoU! WASHINGTON MANHATTAN *" .RUSINESS SCHOOL 1 UNION SQUARE, NEAR lith STREET Established = 1992——_____! : | Russian Art Shop, Inc, | 107 EAST Mth ST..N. ¥.C. ~~ LARGE SELECTION —~— Peasant Blouses, Lamps, Shades, Shawis, Candy, Novelties and Toys from the SOVIET UNION our special $1 LBS ASSORTED RUSSIAN CANDY HUDSON ARMY AND NAVY STORE 105 THIRD AVENUE Corner 13th Street Gives Honest Values in GenuineHorsehideSheep- lined Coats; Wind>reak- e's, Breeches, High Shoes, Boots, Work Shirts, Gloves Ete. WORKERS CLOTHES GARMENT DISTRICT | Garment Section Workers Patronize Navarr Cafeteria 333 7th AVENUE Corner 28th St. : Chickering 4947—Longacre 10089 COMRADELY ATMOSPHERE FAN RAY CAFETERIA 156 W. 29th St. New York Bet. Pitkin amd Sutter Aves, Srockiy= Offies Hous: DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 BRISTOL STREET PRONE: DICKENS 2-012 0 Am, 1-2, 62 PM. ‘>. 9Goldin.«. 4 OPTOMETRISTS DY (D}OPTICIANS |} 1378 SLNICHOLAS AVE ® 1690 LEXINGTON AvE> | at 106th ST.MY. Home Phone: Olingille 56-1109 MOT THAVEN 90-8749 + DR. JULIUS JAFFE Surgeon Dentist 401 EAST 140th STREET (Corner Willis Ayenve) DR. S. L. SHIELDS Surgeon Dentist 2574 WALLAVE AVE. Bronz, N. ¥. WILLIAM BELL orricrat Optometrist OF rar 106 EAST 14TH STREET Near Fonrth Ave. N. ¥. ©, 150 East 93rd Street, New York City Cor. Lexington Ave, Tel. ATwater 9-883¢ Dr. E. EICHEL Dentist jours: from 9 mm. to 6 p.m. Bun. 9 to 1 Member Workmen's Sick and Death BeneSt Fund p eS Phone BEnsonburst 6-4490 DR. S. J. GREEN Surgeon Dentist 238 Kings Highway Corner West Ninth St., Brooklyn, N, T. Abgonquin 44433 Scientific Treatment of Foot Ailments 35 E. 125th STREET, N. Y. C, AARON SHAPIRO, Pod. G. CHIROPODIST 228 SECOND AVENUE Cor. 14th Bt. To Hire AIRY, LARGE Meeting Rooms and Hall Suitable for Meetings, Lectures and Dances in the Czechoslovak. Workers House, Ine. 347 E. 72nd St. New York Telephone: RHinelander 5097 A Sacrifice Sale of OSKI CLOTHES Ready Made and Made to Order KRAUS & SONS, Inc. Manufacturers of Badges - Banners - Buttons For Workers Clubs and Organizations (57 DELANCEY STREET, N.Y.C. ’ Going to Russia? e Workers needing full outfits of horsehide leather sheeplined — Coats, Windbreakers, reeches, Hirh Shoes, ete., will receive spe- cial reduction en alt their purchases at the SQUARE DEAL ARMY and NAVY STORE 121 THIRD AVE. (2 doors South of 14th Street) “DOWNTOWN 202 E. 12th St. Phone: TOmpkins Square 6-9556 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY—ITALIAN DISHES Imported Wines and Beers. U New York Tompkins Square 6-9132 Caucasian Restaurant “KAVKAZ" |. Bussicn “and Oriental Kitchen BANQUETS AND PARTIES 332 East 1ith Street New York City All Comrades Meet at the NEW HEALTH CENTER CAFETERIA ——— Fresh Food—Proletarian Prices—50 E. 13th St—WORKERS’ CENTER TASTY, DELICIOUS, ‘WHOLESOME ‘TRUFOOD VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT W. 4ith ST., EAST OF WWAY OPEN TILL MIDNIGHT. i , NATURAL HEALTH FOODS PHOTOS...of the better kind _ AT REDUCED PRICES BLUE BIRD STUDIOS 1595 PITKIN AV BROOKLYN, WN, ¥ i, Near AMBOY STREET + — Phone DICKENS 2-1096

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