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oo ke a ene tee OF ed le Page Four Austrian Socialist Leaders Shared in Municipal Spoils Built Workers Homes; But Left.Main Power and Wealth in Hands of Capitalists By BD. Z. MANUILSKY eens little from their ues in their avarice greed for personal erelgnty of the state, becor meated with a psycholog: tts servant and defender. I seems to him that the proletariat on Bread: without po- bo feel blessed by baie ory in winter-time? he, the “soci: ‘socialist gains” way into the aratn t he gain from the italist state. For him, ti Seitz and the social- offi of of the state overshadow This idea of the state are the Vienna? 2 i- state, he is nc out tomorro sebuilding in Vienna, of 1,200,000 the luxu- n and well-to- It is in eration” that fascization of among the have grown paratus of the ship. After Schleicher gove i replaced the chiefs b large numbers of social. officials to remain knowing that prove true « fascist reac pocial-democr: deen recrui among the rast this olution in volution, > owners of say that of Vienna 2,500 beds in 1931 tube! claim if among the workers, of beds was reduced to} the U. 8. 8. R. all the i the grand all the sana- health resorts, disposal 1 of the y that Vienna, led improvements in quarters of the has ‘been done by the | improve the work- | Tt nain at- jets has task. to the benefits ‘of i italist society proffers &fraid to exceed the la Municipal economy with all kinds of cont imea, state and vantage ide HELEN LUKE & Bevm. Ge COLD WATEE FROM THE “NEW LEADER’ Those forthright shafts a: the welfare of women, wh previously described as profusely 1 tering the bourgeois ss, naturally tan't be printed in a paper ded pated to the campaign to workers under the ban fevolucio: comrades, what is, feel that people die sometimes | almost will their own | n an idealist and ntly Ma crucial nate oN The reaction of the “New Leader Jo the events in Ata are register- in addition there is “payaical illness, tm a column called, “Sad Days Fall | Personal disappointment or frustra- | an un- quote entire, © tragments cession of d eountries ended abruptly ent to continue fragic destruction of the Socialist movement of Germany and the rise to power of the maniac Hitler. . “From Belgium, from France, Den- mark, Sweden, betty long ¢ no word. Gerr g istic, * colu- aay te ate the pe ‘and despair that is now theirs, with the core of their movement shattered and sup- | ahead . ,OF where as in Austria they | ere isn’t visible to the naked | deaperetely battling against |eye. If she isn’t discouraged, after odds for survival... It is|so many years of hard work, why mind can bear to | should we be? A great tonic for dear comrades of ours|any of our women who may be fighting, fighting, and doomed | despondent about ouur chances for almost certain destruction. success, is the thrilling new March because I am a woman | “Soviet Russia Today,” devoted to eseentially conservative. Con-| women and children in the Soviet first—the rest comes | Union. fore the horse.| Tomorrow's our day. All out! just writing} Demand complete social, eco- coward, but their ter-/ nomic, and political equality for this hour shrives my! Negro women! EARL BROWDER SECRETARY OF THE COMMUNIST PARTY speaks TWO THEORIES E ge on Friday March 9th WORKING 8:30 P. M. CLASS UNITY , at IRVING PLAZA 17 IRVING PLACE Admission 25 Cents Auspices of the Workers School, 35 East 12th Street All Proceeds to the National Training School of the ©, Fresh Food—Proletarian Prices—s0 E. 18th St.—WORKERS’ RIA | NEW HEALTH CENTER CAPETERIA |» 8 All © Moet at the ‘ “Arbitrators” a mere handful 9; gs | Silk made | em | Mass meeting DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 7, 1934 DuPont Rayon and Munitions Machine Described By Worker Correspondent Plot Paterson By a Textile Worker Correspondent NASHVILLE, Tenn.—Twelve miles Dupontania to the south, hd north of Nashville, Tenn., lies the Silk Wage Cut village of Old Hickory, with two a . suburbs, a a and Rayon City to the north. Uniformed Armed Police at Plant Gates; Speed- Up and Wage Cuts Inside The! eae A rayon industry that can on | Short notice be converted into an | explosives industry. Workers, do you understand now | itis it is necessary to maintain a/ police department right outside the ‘Piece Work Limits ‘Pay in Glove Plant To $1.62 Per Day PARTY LIFE = Functionaries Must Know Theory and Organization '| Training Is Necekear® Yor Development of | New Cadres in Line With Open Letter | Maybe it’s j because I am a Negro worker and | I am a weekly subscriber of the’/there may be prejudice. Rockford; Il. Dear Comrade Editor: above stated situation. “Daily” and realize that it is a realij,,.Please give me some light on how defense for the entire working} to build a strong Party here. I AFL Leaders Help Them by Preaching Faith in Bosses’ Board (By a Worker Correspondent) latter two villages are the outgrowth | door? Why it is important that of enterprising skinflint land sharks. | workers should think of sports in- | Old Hickory, on the east side, | stead of the class struggle? contains a group of buildings, gar-| Here we can see the closest co- ages and newly painted surfaces. | operation of the government with These, I am told, are the homes of | the DuPonts. Cooperation against | WorkersUrged to Follow Path of Gloversville Leather Struggle class.. Although I joined the Party on June 30, 1932, membership book No. 7592, District 8, Rockford Sec- tion, Unit 2, I was a member of the leading Section Committee; ichave had no heated arguments with j any comrades. They all greet me a3 @ comrade. Comradely yours, ae. the upper strata of DuPont's work~- ers, mainly of workers. In the distance lies a golf | course where one can play golf if he is a member of the golfing club. Three ~ away are the men’s and wo! ’s dormitories. The s: to their Teepe tive are permitted to eat ame cafeteria. In conjunc- PATERSON, N. J.—The broadsilk workers in many of the shops have already experienced the injustice and the bureaucracy of the bosses’ | Arbitration Board. The workers have to contend not only with this but also a pussyfooting, treacherous A. F. of L. leadership. the white collar | In shops where the workers have instinctively struck for better condi- tions, as in Hillerson Silk Co. or Friedman and Frucht, etc., the A. F. f L. leaders have forced the work- ers to start work with the plea that, “It’s against the contract to strike,” and, “The Arbitration Board will de- cide the case.” But the above cases are minor in| comparison with what is happening behind the scenes. The A. F. of L. unions in Paterson are con- | trolled and dictated to by the sec- retary of the bosses’ association, Max Baker. This was brought out 1.| last week, when Baker laid down the law to the United Warpers’ | League—that one of their men, who was demanding p work, must work on time w as the bos: wanted. Baker went on further to say that worker would “be fired {if he made any more claims for | piece work. When asked why the worker would be fired, since no one | is supposed to be fired except for | imperfect work, Baker retorted, “For | insubordination if for nothing else.” This is one instance that came to light. How many times has Baker called the A. F. of L. leaders to keep | their hands off a particular case?’ His orders to the United Warpers’| are the type found in any Southern | have been adopted. League was exposed to the member- ship, but we are sure the A. F. of L, leaders would not enlighten the A. F. of L. membership about these daily attempts to cut workers’ wages for next month or the follow- ing month. The last three meetings | of the Arbitration Board have been taken up with the amount of the wage-cut. | | | Letters from Our Readers HAILS UNITED FRONT Minneapolis, Minn. jenna, and. my | Editor, Daily Worker: I am quite a continual reader of your paper, and I must congratulate the Communist Party in getting can no longer bear to! solidarity of all working people to- gether, regardless of their affilia- tion . That is the spirit. Keep up the good k because it is show- in: uts. I do not belong to the junist Party, I have always ed Farmer-Labor in this state, voi but I found out that they are noth- | jing but a reformist party, so T will | youths who are attending the Na-| that even larger profits may be! vote different this next election. Every time I get a “Daily Worker” |and finish reading it, I take it al > each|the Library, where it is put in the | nd live thr ugh the end-/ holder over the other papers where | people can read it. And believe me | how the people go after to read it. Get other readers to do this and Mike | emphasize that readers should pass | with | n e@n courage-} them among friends. Part of the “Daily Worker” should | be for education, say two pages. “clear, healthy, | This is election year, and the work- i and ers should be made to realize to vote | only the Communist ticket. This y umn, and a eed terres be stressed time and time for more news of | onal wo- | Br Daily Worker: Two weeks ago there was held a in Berwyn, at the Editor, local roading of a comrade at the relief | station, for demanding relief, one | labor board at which 300/ People attended protesting the rail- | n with the groun of buildings the company maintains a gym- nasium where the various depart- |ments are encouraged to compete in indoor sports, mainly basketball. Both men and women have their) department teams. Eight Feet Square The rooms in the dormitory are about 8 feet square. Two single beds are in each room. a clothes | closet, and a dresser. Some rooms | |contain a chair. None have writing tables. Two men live in each room, wo women in each room of men’s dormitory. the w The washrooms and lavatories in| these dormitories have concrete | For months the company has | 1 to et each room of the . but so far tt is only a promise. I can’t under- stand how they il menage to place a teble in so small a space. There are some 500 or 600 work- | ers’ homes in Old Hickory. Housing conditions since the company hes undertaken their present expansion | {program have become very con- gested, as there has been an influx of some 1,000 additional workers into Old Hickory and the two sub-) |urbs mentioned above. These homes mill village, plasterboard and wood. About one third of the married workers’ income is spent on rent, | light and water bills. The company maintains a bowling alley, pool room, ¥.M.C.A. building, a theatre, | ® local newsvaper, and a police | force. The police headauarters are located right opposite the entrance gates to the plant. Instead of plain | clothes watchmen at the gates, uni- | formed armed police are used. During the World War, gun- | powder’ and explosives of the higher |I look around, I see the remnants |of giant enterprises covering about ! two square miles. Today it is being dismantled. The old is being roplac- ‘ed by the new. What was once an | explosives industry is now a rayon industry in the process of expan- | MEXICAN STUDENTS | DEMONSTRATE | MEXICO CITY—Jose M. Lazcano, | | Communist organizer’ was arrested | here when police attacked a demon- stration of college students which |had gathered in front of the offi- ces of Secretary of Edvtnsion Bas- | sols to protest against the continual arrest and mistreatment of studen by M nN pe The demonstra- tion was joined thousonds of by | tional University. values were manufactured here. As/ | of Bill Green, misieader of the A. F. | plet on how to organize his) - whom? Against you, workers. A Careful Check-Up Let us en‘er the plant, At the gate |a uniformed armed policeman stops | | you and inquires about your card. | | You produce ft. He punches out the | | date on it and you enter. Once in- side the buildings, you become | | aware of congestion. Congestion of | machine manufacturing apparatus | | and workers. In the spinning rooms, | | ruling rooms, and chemical process- jing rooms an unhealthy high hu-| | midity is noticeable. Due to the In- | efficient, suction system, hydrogen | Sulphide fumes permeate the atmo- | sphere. Many workers get sick in- haling fumes, while sore eyes are 2 | |common occurrence. | | Wash room and locker room facil- | ities are inadequate. The Negro | workers employed have none at all. | There are quite a number of Negro | workers employed. The policies of | Jim-Crowism and segregation of the Negroes are carried out to the let- |ter by Mr. DuPont. While Negro | and white workers in many depart- ments work side by side, they are not allowed to eat in the same cafe- | |terias. Ther are no special cafe- terias for Negroes. Negro workers who wish to purchase food from the | Whites’ cafe‘cria must take it out somewhere into a corner where | other Negro workers are eating their j lunches. If there is a line of white | | workers in the cafeteria waiting for | their food, the Negro workers must wait until all the white workers | have been served before they can} make any food purchase. Since the | | DuPonts have gone N.R.A., seales | The women) | Workers receive $13 for a 40-hour week, mostly on @ piece work basis. | | That is, if they reach a certain pro- |duction’ ability they receive $13, | otherwise they are classed as ap- prentices and are paid less. In a very few cases the women make} | more than $13. Intense Speed-up The speed-up system is nerve wrecking and up to the breaking point, especially in the reeling reoms, Women workers work in two shifts, 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. and 4 p.m. to midnight. The average hourly rate for all employes is between 40 and 45 cents, that is about 25 per cent Jower than most American | Rayon mil's are paying. Out of such | conditions it is that the DuPont Corp. has been able to show a profit for the nine months of 1933 to the | sum of $26,000,000. This is $1,000,000 |more than for the whole year of Is it any wonder that the DuPont 1932. family is a strong advocate of the Blue Buzzard? Or that Pierre 8.) DuPont raises no objections when he Is appointed to sit In the ses-/ sions of the National Labor Bozrd, | where he can with the coonerctioa | of V. workers into company wnions so forthcoming in the future. apkins Workers Face | Terror and Demagogy | Politicians, Priests and Attack Chicago Workers’ Solidarity | A. F. of L. Misleaders GLOVERSVILLE, N. Y.—We are | about 450 workers employed in the Gloversville Knitting Mill, of whom | about 150 are women. We are pro- | ducing mitten gloves. Before the N.R.A. came into | effect, the girls used to earn be- tween $16 and $23 a week for 45-48 | hours. Now we are working 40 hours | but our wages are $13.20—the code wage. This wage scale is what we are supposed to earn. In most cases, we don’t even make that much. They pay us 54 cents a dozen for knitting the fingers of the gloves. Just figure out. Twenty four gloves, 5 fingers to each glove, which means 120 fingers for 54 cents. The most! We can produce is 4 dozen in 8 hours work. But lately the yarn is cheap} and it breaks ev minute. You; also have to lose time waiting until | your machine is fixed every now and then. The foreman believes that he does you a personal favor | when he fixes your machine. So most of the days, working at top speed, you can vroduce only 3 dozen a day, or $1.62. ‘We work so fast that often we don’t even go get a drink when we are thirsty. Here is one of many examples how the girls are treated. A girl complained that her machine is bad. She can’t make anythins. But the foreman, Mr. Iro Bellinger, who is known as a slave-driver, let } her work for 4 days on that rotten machine, and she earned only $1.08 a dav, producing 2 dozen. We had a forelady here, Mrs. Rose Pockerino. The boss made her believe that she owned the place. She used to earn $16 a week and worked here for 17 years. When the leather workers were on s‘rike, she used to insult them and thought the strikers were “crazy.” It happened that her child took sick. She stayed home for three or four weeks because her house was on quarantine. When’ she returned | to work the boss put her on the machine and reduced her wages to $13.20 a week. She now realizes that “you can never trust a boss.” Our firm fust got a big order from the government. It may be for the soldiers or the C.C.C. camns. But the “New Deal” sovernment wants to make the work for cheaper labor. So the bosses sent this work to Bolster Sya, N. Y., another factory which they own. Eowever, Mr. Collins, the boss of the knitting mills revorted in the press thet the shareho'ters got eomnound dividends for the first time in four years. Yes, this is the new deal. Our wages were cut under the N.R.A. We are slaving like hell. They don’t. do anything, and get comvound earn- follow wait? Let's do, IN A DRESS SHOP By a Needle Trades Worker The sewing machines Are constantly roaring, hissing. The pressing machines And the clammy « Of peint fall, ve er the bowed heads slaving worker. ot | Who struggle for bread. They can hardlv breathe By GLENNA STANDARD SS cde Ba The f following are the forces that | jour union has to fight in the six |Sopkins shops today: The A. F. of | L. leadership, the Chicago Defender, ot the door of the A, F. of do at Sepkins. | day ahead of time. The meeting | was called by the LL.D., which was | responsible for getting this comrade | out of jail. At this meeting a mem- | bership drive was made in view of |" comrades, we cannot kid our- starting an I-L.D. branch in Berwyn. selves. These forces must be fought. Today we had the first successful | Sopkins does not want any union, meeting of the new applicants at | and anv open activities for the In- the house of a comrade. The meet- | dustrial Union in the shops means ing was well attended and were able | immediate dismissal. to elect a full executive body, in-| Oscar De Priest is interested in cluding all functionaries, etc. We the shops to corral the votes of the named it the Lenin branch of the | workers to return him to Congress \LLD. |so that he can become richer at the A speaker from the district gave | expense of the workers. He forced @ good lecture on the I.L.D. work, | the social workers in the shops to | ete. and the spirit was A-1. We | befuddle the minds of the workers the World—South Side weekly paper—Oscar De Priest and his so- cial workers, the preachers and the police terror. | are all confident (25 in all to start with) that our branch will grow and be active, and at the meeting we pce bring the D.W. campaign for- | wi DropUsa Postcard! Let us know what advertisers in the DAILY WORKER you patronize. Give us the names of firms whose advertising you would like to see. Doing this will help us secure new advertisers as well as hold old ones. DAILY WORKER, New York! | with parties. dances, popularity con- tests, swimming lessons clubs, flowers. liquor and what not, at the same time that they were uraing the speed-up for the profit of Sop- | kins, Rele of the Preachers The role of the preachers is to co Into the shops and te'l the girls that Mr. Sonkins is such a nice man for allowing them to work in his shop. The newsvdaners print lies concerning the good conditions in the shops in order to create public sentiment in favor of Sopkins and | De Priest. |@ leaflet in the shop inviting the |Sopkins girls to the Grant Me- |morial Church at 46th and Evans Ave., the latter part of December. Shane’s speech would have been | |wonderful—had we not known the | role of the A. F. of L. As represen- | |tative of the Industrial Union, I/ took the floor and gave a history. jot the A. F. of L. for forty years! ee I asked him to explain the F. of L. towards amated Work-! .,only getting part time. A girl anes | Mr. Shane, of the A, F. of L., put) {ers Council, which is composed of | | Negro craft trades, such as plumb- | team fitters, railroad workers, | that has been hammering at | ». for years and has been refused membership. | Shane spoke of our union as be- | | ing Red. To that I asked him if he| knew that the red scare had. taken a hop over the Black Belt. because | we feel that if it is the Reds that fight for the workers, we are Reds ourselves. A. F. of L. Sples Defeated The outcome of the meeting was that the workers were so solid for us that even the minister, Rev. Griffin, took sides with us and told Shane that he did not seem well prepared and that he shouldn't ex- pect the people on the South Side would swallow the A. F. of L. policy hook, line and sinker. He told Shane that the N.T.W.1.U. was a union for both black and white. When Shane saw the crack he was in, he af-| mitted that the prejudice existed, and he vut his apolication cards in | his pockets. and he and the com- pany spies left the meeting without | incking a single recruit. Today, conditions in Sopkins |shovs are very bad. Workers are to work at 8 am. and does 2 fu'l eight hours work by noon, due to the terrific sveed-up. Then Sovkins tells them that there Is no more work, and the girls only get four hours pay. This, of course. greatly increases the vrofits of Sonkins 9n4 Son. profits won by the worst kind of slave driving, In spite of all the terrorism, and the demagogy of the De Priests and newspapers, the Needle Trades | Workers Industrial Union is carry- ing on the fight for better condi- tions. The union locals in Sopkins shops want to take this opportunity to extend their greetings to our leader | Bex Gold, and to the farmers and share-croppers everywhere. The headquarters for the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union | at the South Side of Chicago is at 10 West 47th Street, In the steam filled shop And their blood seethes | Like victims trapned | By the constant Toaring | And the vibratin Thet shudders all | With the nerve rack | And with the night, The workers take | And like siaves pos: They struggle for light With the might of the oppressed. RAYE SILVERMAN, nz ng song Tompkins Square 6-0132 Caucasian Restaurant “KAVKAZ")| Eassian snd Oriental Kitchen BANQUETS AND PARTIES 982 East ith Street New York City Stomach, Sex, Mind -@ Rational Living Library, oy 2 well- known Health Teacher—No. 1. How Is Your Stomach? (Food, Indigestion, Breakfast, Examples from Life, Consti- pation); No. 2. Sex and Meelth (The Sexual Revolution, Anatomy, Physio- logy, Menstruation — indispensable for adults snd boys and girls over 15) No. 3, Sex Life Marriage (M: tied Life, Pregne: Childbirth). 20c each. Nos. 4 and 5 (double), Mental Health (How to stay healthy mentally, prevent mental troubles. Whet is Mind Disease? Sex and Marriage, Mentel Health and Marriage, Examples from Life. By a Specialist.) 40. Ad- dress: Rational Living, Box 4, Station M, New York. (Send no stamps.) What Readers Say About Oar Books: Very practical for every worker, many troubles may be avoided by reading these books.—I was very much im- pressed. Tremendous help for recon- struction of my health. — Your book “Mental Heelth” brings efficient help to individ patients, which other subject lack—Your books geve meya concise and non-technical explanation of facts I should have learned before—From a dentist: “Just finished reading your “Mental Health”; never read anything so beautiful and yet so plain. At least 90 per cent of the doctors should read it, although everybody can understand it. I em speaking, not only in my name, -but in the name of many others who have read your books. You are making thousenda of people happy and hgalthy.” once elected unit organizer, par- Note by Editor ticipated as a member of the steer- ‘The above letter calls to our at- ing: committee at several unem-j tention a situation, which if wide- ployed demonstrations; was elected | spread in our Party, is a very seri- and served as a delegate from Un- tis one. Here we have a worker employed Council No. 2 Branch, to jiwho'joins the Party, and is drawn ; Washington in the 1933 Hungetj|immediately into leadership, But | March; received nomination papers | nothing is done by the leading com- to bid for the Aldermanic race for) fittees to fit him for this leader- the Spring City elections of 1933. And the worst of it all, I was never familiarized with the work in} which I was engaged. or as organizer of the unit. On several occasions I was called iato the office by the Section Organizer | jand he would tell me concerning’!” | some opposition forces and to vote} this way or that way. But I never | was drawn into a general discussion | concerning the grievances. I could. understand the necessity of a func- | tionaries meeting to prepare an! agenda. But I wasn’t even drawn: into any discussion. It was always cut and dried when the meetings that I attended opened. All that I was to do was to vote so and so When I was unit organizer a cer- tain member would come to the meetings, bring some papers, ap- point me for chairman and whisper cretain things to me:— “Points that he wanted taken up.” I never did know where the cues stamps came} from and the literature committee was so weak that I had nothing to do with it in my unit. There were 12 .| members in our unit. But there is none of the unit left. And it is so I think because the Section has been a little too bureaucratic. The Party still exists but that is all. There. are no struggles, no unemployed movement to amount to anything. I am not active because of the. ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS Olive Oil and Gall Stones | Martha R., Chicago—Olive oil , does not dissolve gall stones; on the’ contrary. The only radical cure for. gall stones is a surgical operation. Instead of continuing taking the Morphine pills, try one tablet of Aspirin and one tablet of Pyra- ;Midon and drink plenty of water. | Give up the eating of all spicy foods, also fats and meats. Live mainly on vegetables, fruits and salads. If}, your attacks become too frequent, |you better have yourself operated ‘upon. Weare Vermin 8.8.8, Cleveland—We have had the subject of vermin and how to get rid of them several times in this column. In your own case, we believe that the insects that you feel crawling over you are merely in your imagination, and that the druggist was right in at- tributing them to your nervous- ness. There are no microscopic in- sects, except scabies. If you had I_ never learned my duties as a member of | the executive or leading committee, | By PAUL LUTTINGER, M.D. | ship . He is not taught Party struc- | ture and Party organization. He is ‘fot? given theoretical traiining. It hasbeen taken for granted that because he has shown militancy in struggle, and has shown a desire {-to be a member of the Communist ; Party, that .he is already a full- blown Communist. This is not’what the Open Letter | means when it states that we must | strengthen and rejuvenate our cadres of fthctionaries by drawing into the leadership the workers who have come forward in struggle. Cer- tainly they must be drawn into the ‘leadership. But in the process of ) this. drawing, in, they must be given organizational and theoretical train- nig by the leading comrades. A comrade should not be made a unit organizer unless he has been in the Party long enough to know the functions of that important Position. And when a-comrade is given this position for the first time, he should be guided and advised in his work by the Section Committee. When new comrades are drawn into the !'Section leadership, thetr work must be.. carefully explained to them. They should be encouraged to par- ticipate in the discussions of the Section Cominittees. it we do not follow this procedure we will not train new but we will demoralize our new militant Comrades, Who may in this way be lost to the movement, jaar insect on your skin or scalp for the last year, you would have i aaeennaeapmdec pies lagabecae at tik Veusualbiaass Alfred K.—You can find a let of the symptoms of venereal di. ltt g Heh halitosis without knowing the cause of the offensive breath, JADE MOUNTAIN American & Chinese Restaurant 197 SECOND AVENUE (Bet. 12th and 13th St.) Welcome to Our Comrades GARMENT WORKERS WELCOME SHERIDAN VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT (Formerly Shildkrauts) 225 WEST 36th STREET Between 7th and 8th Avenues Allerton Avenue Comrades! was first to settle Bread Strike and first to sign with the Food Workers’ Industrial Union 691 ALLERTON AVE. New Folding Chairs JOEN KALMUS CO. Inc. 35 W. 26th St. MUrray Hill 4-5447 Office and School Equipment NEW and USED STATIONERY and Mimeograph Supplies At Special Prices for Organizations Lerman Bres.,!nc. Phone Algonquin 4-3356 — 8843 29 East 14th St. N.Y. C. (Classified ) $3 REWARD for Waltham Watch. Bronx Park East. Apt. E32. 2700 The Modern Bakery |. DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet: Pitkin and Sutter Aves., Brooklyn z PHONE: DICKENS 2-3012 ‘Office Hours: 8-10 AM. 1-2, 6-8 P.M. AARON SHAPIRO, Pod.G. _. CHIROPODIST 228 SECOND AVENUE Algonquin 4-442 Cov. 1éth Bt. Scleutific Treatment of Foot Afiments COHEN’S weil ORCHARD STREET tr, Delancey Street, New York City EYES E: ay Dr. Ay Wolnatets Optometrist Wholesale Opticians Tel. ORchard 4-4320 Factory on Premises AVE* 1690 LEXINGTON AVE. NY. at 106th ST.NY. I Sky StNICHOLA it oes WORKERS COOPERATIVE COLONY “2100-2800 BRONX PARK EAST — has reduced the rent, several good apartments available, Cultural Activities for Adults, Youth and Children, ‘Telephone! Estabrook 8-1400—8.1401 »Direction: “exington Ave, White Plain: ‘Trains. Stop at Allerton Ave, etatior. Offices open daily from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m Friday and Saturday 9 a.m. to § p.m. Sunday 10 a.m. to 2 pm, { |