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Page Two DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, MARCH 10, 1934 Colby Injunction “Daily” Making Deep Inroad)® Smashed by Mass Into New England Shoe Town HAVERHILL, Mass., March Into this important New England shoe town, now seething with work- ers’ struggles against miserable N R. A. working c tions, the Daily r a deeper inroad 2 has been recorded in any pre- Action of Workers Supreme Court Renders Decision Against Anti-Union Motion joe shop alrea The new meeting n preme Court f members Ma y an inj n Jorker agent. At the ns were formulated for rest of ‘op to sub- “Daily,” and for fol- l those who are taking cribers Haverhill has already fulfilled more than 60 per cent of its quota of new subscribers in the present sub drive, and is determined to double its quota. ing between various shoe plants, with each one trying to get the m new er Haverhill challenges Boston, which is in the same district, and other New England cities to show as good were held before | — i Aer wet Urge Workers to Pack A nd protested against f police to enforce the delegation went Court; Wire Protests tion on Feb. 23rd. ENTE RTAIN MENT nd DANCE Hel Builda an Porters Center PROGRAM John Bovingdon Dance Recital Tune Williams Italian Opera Singers Russian Art Shop, Inc. 107 EAST 14th ST., N. Y. C. —— LARGE SELECTION —— Peasant Blouses, Lamps, Shades, Shawis, Candy, Novelties and Toys from the SOVIET UNION a ° our speciel LBS ASSORTED RUSSIAN CANDY Music by Baltimore, Md. Jazz Johnsen’s Syncopators 7 urday Eve. March 10 MOVIE SHOWING ORKERS’ CENTER ne watt cE eee the World” and “Bread” March 11th, at 8 P. M. q | 509 N, EUTAW Proceeds: “Daily Worker” Admission 20¢. Admission 30¢ 50 East 13th St. Last American Appearance SERGEI AND MARIE}! RADAMSKY assisted by Negro Vocal Quartette | SUNDAY, MARCH 11, 3 P. M. - Russia? Royale Theatre | {5th Street, W. of Broadway | Workers needing full | leather, sheeplined | Breeehes, Hizh Shoes, etc., will receive spe- | eial reduction on all their purchases at the ‘SQUARE DEAL | ARMY and NAVY STORE | 22% THIRD AVE. | (2 doors South of 14th Street) | Ben ottsboro Defense |f| “The Place of the Intellectual 9 ; Tickets 50c, 75c, $1 and $1.50 at Theatre; I.L.D., 80 East 11th ' St. and Workers’ Book Shop, °0 East 13th Street A % EANS in the Workers’ Struggle” ° kr i MARY VAN KLEECK Director of the Industriel Research of the Russell Sage Foundation. eeaacen GRANVILLE HICKS be. Revolutiqnary? Literary editor, New Masses. Auspices New Masees f, < 1d John Reed Club EARL BROWDER TICKETS Sc General Secretary, Communist (Plus Tax) . 2 NEW MASSES, 31 &. A Symposium at Irving Plaza Tin Bt: JOHN’ REED 15th Street and Irving Place Sunday, March 11th, 8 P. M. CLUB, 430 Sixth Ave.; TONIGHT NEW YORK FINAL COMPETITION NATIONAL THEATRE FESTIVAL of League of Workers’ Theatres of the U. S. A. JOHN WEXLEY, Author of “They Shall Not Die” —8:30 P. M.— Admission: 25c, 45c, T5c and $1.00. — Tickets at Workers’ Book Shop, 50 East 13th Street. FIFTH AVE. THEATRE 28th Street & Broadway Chairman: Workers’ Laboratory Theatre American Youth Club, B’klyn New Experimental Theatre Coney Island Workers’ Club The. Ukrainian Dram Circle Young Pioneers in “Strike Me Red” Ella May Wiggins Junior Players Workers School Forum JOHN BARNETT Writer on Agrarian Problems Will Speak On The Agrarian Problem and Leninism in America Sunday, March 11th, at & P.M. at Workers School Forum, 35 East 12th Street, 2nd Floor Questions — Discussion — Admission 25¢ First Time in Cleveland! STOPPED BY HITLER Famous German Anti-Fasci st Talkie “KUHLE W AMPE” {Whither Symposium Cast of 4,000—Chorus of Berlin State Opera | 49%inst Fascism With Clarence Hathaway, Editor of the Daily Worker Norman Thomas, Socialist; Edward Dahtberg, Writer Perez Hirshbein, Writer, and Others MONDAY, MARCH 12TH WED., THURS., MAR. 14-15 Slovenian Workers’ Home Royale Theatre 15285 Waterloo Road 12222 Madison Ave. From 7-9 and from 9-11 P. M. From 7-9 and from 9-11 P, M, Added Feature Keen Socialist competition is de- subs among their | Today se mass protests, —- s were arrest-| JAMAICA, N. Y.—Workers are urged to pack the Magistrates | Court, Town Hall, Jamaica today, | to prevent the sentencing of a Ne-| gro worker who was arrested after | the struggles by the Unemployment a | | Councils had forestalled his evic-| their success will mean a practically | paralysin: kfits of Rorsehide arrests was kept out of the papers or better results in the campaign to get new subscribers for the Daily Worker. NEW YORK.—Action to speed up the Daily Worker circulation drive is being taken by a number of dis- tricts and sections. Philadelphia will hold a city-wide Red Sunday for intensive can- vassing with the Daily Worker on| March 11, and all class-conscious orkers are asked to report to the various section headquarters 11 am. Section 1, New York, will hold a special Daily Worker Oonference this Sunday, March 11, at 10:30 a.m., | “pat 122 Second Ave. A Greater Boston Daily Worker | e will be held in that city y. March 16, at 8 p.m., at y St. Opera House, 113 Dud-/| Each District is urged to do its utmost to speed up the drive and to come with the most successful sub-drive to the Party Conven- tion at Cleveland. Every class-conscious worker! Ask | your friends and fellow workers to| subscribe to our Daily Worker! U.S. and Mendieta In Armed War on. Cuban Strikers (Continued from page 1) {complete general political strike, ig the whole island. More Go on Strike Fifty thousand tobacco workers, 10,000 city transport workers, and newspaper workers in Havana Pioined the general strike yesterday, | following the walk-out of telephone and radio workers in answer to Mendieta’s terroristic decree. Communication with other parts of the island remains fragmentary, jbut it is known that Santiago jabattoir employees have walked | out. | _ At Nuevitas, on the north coast of |Camaguey province, 142 striking | dock workers were reported ar- jrested. Police and soldiers fired | with machine guns into groups of | demonstrators in front of the Pro- | vineial Administration building. ‘Masses in Action ———_.— | For Jobless Bill ' Going (Continued from Page 1) the City Council to demand passage of the Workers Bill. Present at | the arrests were M. M. Burke, coal | company lawyer, the mayor and | the chief of police. News of the because of the anger of the work- ers. Meanwhile, the city council called its meeting off, in order to dodge the workers’ committee. They are trying to keep their next meeting date a secret. Those arrested were Peter Paul, James Dunleavy, A. Yanalavage, G. Green, Peter Wargo, Chester Urbansky, and Jamés Gon- zalez, They were held several hours, in order to break up the meeting |and later released after severe questioning. U.M.W.A. Board Endorses The sub-district board of the United Mine Workers of America, of the Sheandoah sub-district, in- dorsed the Workers Bill (H. R. 7598) on March 2, and also elected a committee to go before the city ccuncil, together with the unem- ployment councils. The Village Council of Caspian, Michigan, had a tie vote in its meeting of March 6th, on a motion to endorse the Workers Unemploy- ment and Social Insurance Bill. Harold Olmstead led a committee from the Iron County Labor Union to the village council. The hall was packed with workers who refused to allow postponement. Their act- ing chairman refused to cast the deciding vote, and final action was postponed until the following meet- ing. The workers will come back | again to the next meeting. | Before a gallery of six hundred | workers, and a large crowd outside, the Portland, Maine, city council voted down a motion to endorse H. R. 7598, Philip J. Deering, chair- man of the city council, left the city hall surrounded by numerous Police, slipping out a side door to evade the angry workers. When Edward Lee, president of the Port- land Relief Workers Protective As- sociation, spoke, denouncing the stand of the city council, there was a storm of applause from the as- sembled workers. Deering cut short the council meeting and abruptly adjourned. | Lee was ordered to speak only five minutes. The city council had post- | poned consideration of the bill until late in the meeting, but the large crowd of workers remained inside | and outside city hall. | Lee then announced that the several hundred members of the re- lief association will circulate a petition throughout the city for en- dorsement of the bill, sending these petitions to the local Congressmen as “a permanent record against the action of the city council.” The city council claimed it was “not ac- quainted with the rélative worth of the various bills” before congress. A mass meeting called by the Unemployed Council of Berwyn, Ill. at Sokol Labor Hall indorsed the Workers Bill. A resolution was sent to Congressman Connery, chairman of the House Labor Committee, where the dill now rests, demanding that It be brought before the House floor. The Mitchell, S. D. Independent Union of All Workers, composed of 125 packing house workers, endorsed the Workers Bill. The Pharmacists Union, an independent union of New York City, endorsed the Work- | ers Bill at its last meeting. rowder to Speak at ymposium Tomorrow NEW YORK.—Mary Van Kleeck, director of Industrial Studies of the Russell Sage Foun- dation; Granville Hicks, literary editor of the New Masses, and Earl Browder, General Secretary of the Communist Party of U.S.A., will take part in a Sunday, March 11, at 8 p.m., at |Irving Plaza, 15th St and Irving Pl, on the subject, “The Place | of the Intellectual in the Workers’ | Struggle.” The symposium has been ar-| ranged by the New Masses, in co- operation with John Reed Club. Court F rages Six Workers Found Guilty Urge Workers to Pack | Jamaica Court at Trial | of Negro Worker Today | NEW YORK.—Seven of the nine} unemployed workers arrested for taking part in a delegation which | visited the Home Relief Bureau last Monday were declared guilty by the labor hating Judge Anthony Burke, at Tombs Court Thursday night, and remanded for “investigation” and sentence on Saturday, March 10. During the trial, Louis Fleisher, International Labor Defense attor- ney was arrested by orders of the judge, leaving the workers without defense. Two workers who pro- tested, were arrested and beaten.) Dorothy Marvin, one of the workers on trial, collapsed from hunger; and Joseph Shermerko, testified that he was brutally beaten and kicked by the police. Before pronouncing the workers guilty, Judge Burke ordered that they. be fingerorinted, an unpre- | cedented procedure in cases of mis- demeanor. Louis Fleisher, Interna- | tional Labor Defense attorney pro- tested this procedure. Immediately, Burke ordered the court adjourned, and the police carried out their in- structions. Workers Protest Fleisher, after his arrest, was put | jinto the dntion pen, and the workers weie left without defense counsel. Workers sprang to their feet, protesting the fascist procedure of the court. Poiice seized Clarence Roth, of the 13th St. Block Com- mittee, and Mary Smith, brutually beating Roth in the court. Later, When Samuel Goldberg, I. L. D. lawyer demanded the ar- raignment before another judge, | reading into the record of the court | proceedings that Burke was prej- |Udiced, Judge Burke refused to arrange for their trial, and refused to parole them in the custody of the lawyer, setting bail at $100 for Roth and $10 for Mary Smith. | Yesterday, the I L. D. won the parole of Roth and in the custody | of the I. L. D, lawyer, and adjourn- | ment of the case until March 19 | Joseph Shermerko, whose testi- |mony four defendants supported, | testified that he had been kicked by the police following his arrest. This little delegation of workers who had presented an organized demand for reliei were pronounced guilty by the judge. Five women, two young workers, one old man, and one soft-spoken Negro, who got police clubs when they de- manded relief, stood up while the labor hating judge passed sentence. Six of them face jail sentences. The International Labor Defense urges all workers to jam the court when the judge passes sentence today at 10 a. m, at Criminal Court, Franklin and Center Ss, Every workers’ organization is urged to send protest telegrams to the trial judge, demanding the release of these workrs, To Organize Locality. On Monday, March 12, at 8 p.m., mass organizations in the Sixth and Eighth Assembly Districts will meet at the headquarters of the 13th St. Block Committee, 516 E. 13th St. to set up local un- employment groups on the basis of assembly districts. All workers mass organizations are to be represented at this conference. Mass Needle Trades Women’s Conference To Be Held Today NEW YORK.—A mass women’s conference of all needle trades shops of dress, fur, cloak, white- goods, knitgoods, etc., as well as representatives of Women’s Coun- cil Branches, International Work- ers Order branches and all other fraternal clubs, will be held to- day, March 10, at 2 p.m., in Irving Plaza Hall. To the conference, the Women’s Action Committee of the Indus- trial Union will present a program of action for the mobilization of the women workers and wives of needle trade workers in the strug- gle for better conditions, | | | symposium | *|ing that she would hold a poll for Hackmen on Strike Against Parmelee _ Company Union | (Continued from Page 1) garages to stop all cabs that at-| tempted to run. N.R.A. Maneuvers. | Mrs. Elinore Herrick, chairman of | the N.R.A. Regional Labor Board, | maneuvered yesterday to get the taxi strikers back to work by stat- the drivers to decide whether they Taxi Drivers’ Union, which is lead- ing the strike. Sam Orner, president of the union, | said that such a poll was entirely jout of the question. “The question lof the union is settled so far as | |the drivers are concerned,” said | Orner. “They have proven this by their strike action and the fact that we have now over 12,000 members of the union in Manhattan.” Must Elect Broad Committee. It should be clear now to all the strikers that the present strike committee of 9 is not broad enough to cope with all the problems of the strike. The strike commitiee must be broadened by drawing in elected representatives from all garages. Must Isolate Panken. The socialists, Judge Panken and Lawyer Levy, are again attempting to sit with the committee and steer the proceedings, as they did in the last strike. Their aim is to isolate the committee of nine and put over a new sellout plan. The union of- ficials and strikers sre urged to beware of this plan of the Social- ists. To guarantee success in the strike a broad rank and file strike committee must be elected at once. The Socialist leaders must be iso- lated and driven from the ranks of the hackmen. Hits Company Union. The main demand of the strik- ers is the abolition of the company union and recognition of the Taxi Drivers’ Union. Sam Orner, president of the union, said, “This is a fight against the company union. The men don’t want, @ company union and don’t want to be coerced into joining one.” Orner pointed out that the Par- melee Company, which is paying its drivers $10 and $12 a week was able to pay $45,000 a year to F. H. Miller, who recently resigned as president of the system, To Go to City Hall. The union announced today that a delegation of drivers will go to the City Hall to protest to the mayor against police harrassing, as- saulting and interfering with the Pickets. The company is especially active trying to break the strike. Com- pany officials are broadcasting lying | statements that the union leaders | are a “bunch of racketeers.” Com: pany men were sent to the strike meetings to issue appeals for the | company union and disrupt the | strike. Cops Aid Bosses. Mike Gentile, superintendent of the Christopher St. garage, threat- ened pickets with a piece of iron pipe. He called the police and sta- tioned them in front of the garage. The cops and Gentile were trying to force drivers to take cars out into the street. Early in the morning Superin- tendent Holtz of the 60th Street garage attacked a union picket. The company sent men to the strike hall where the drivers had parked their cars. These men put the flag up on about thirty cabs so that the meters would be clocking up charges while the men were at the meeting. The company is registering these charges against the drivers. To Picket Today. ' Picketing is now going on at all| Parmelee garages in the city. The union issued a call yesterday for drivers to picket garages at the fol- lowing addresses: Christopher and West Streets, 19th and West, 23rd St. and Ave. A, First Ave. and 48th St., 38th St., between 8th and 9th Ave., 57th St. and llth Ave., 60th St. and Ave. A, 140th St. and 5th Ave., 155th St. and Bradhurst. Crown St. and Franklin Ave. and 35th St. and 3rd Ave. The strikers have set quarters at Irvin; Rockland Palace. To Discuss Local 22 Election on Sunday NEW YORK.—To discuss the is- sues in the coming elections in Local 22 of the International Ladies Garment Workers Union a series of open forums are to be held througheut the city on Sunday, March 11, The forums will be held at the following places: Manhattan: Great Central Palace, 90-96 Clinton St., at 2 pm.; Bronx: Ambassador Hall, 3875 Third Ave. 11 a.m.; Browns- ville: Hinsdale Workers Club, 568 Sutter Ave., 11 a.m.; Coney Island: I.W.O. Center, 2918 W. 30th St. up head- i Plaza Hall, and $15 for Red P NEW YORK.—Branch 77, In- ternational Workers Order, of Trenton, N. J., sent in $15 yester- day for a Red Press Certificate, and challenges other I.'V.0. branches, especially Branch 137, to equal or beat this contribution in ort of the new press, With funds still needed to as- sure the operation of the new press, workers and their organiza- tions are urged to send in their contributions at once to help our Red Press. The Workers Dance League among other organizations in- quired yesterday if it still could obtain a Red Press Certificate. “We wer unable to send dele- gates to the Red Press Banquet,” the League writes, “hut we would like to cogtribute $5 for a Red Press CertMicate. Please notify us Trenton I.W.O. Branch Sends ress Certificate if it is not too late, and to whom we shall make the money order payable.” The Red Press Committee an- nounces that any organization which could not send delegates to the banquet, and organizations outside of New York will receive their Red Press Certificates by sending in a contribution of $5 or more for the new press. Individ- ual workers will receive a similar certificate by sending in $1 or more, Contributions are urgently needed as the receipts at the New York banquet, while very encour- aging, were below the amount nec- essary to keep the new press in operation. Forward all contributions to Red Press Committee, P. O. Box Brooklyn drivers will picket at se RM weather and plenty o unawares following some It’s so that I get thinkin wanted a. company union or the| balls. I even feel the curve on the typewriter key, “J.” I’m gonna bat for myself, IALKS of baseball holdouts were postponed for a day last week when John J. Mc- Graw, the little Napoleon of the diamond, passed away. But now that M. G.'M., the great movie producing money organization is thinking of making a movie on the life of the man whose glittering eye faded from too much boozing, the | stars are finding themselves once more haggling over contract terms. Players are down there in Catalina and Florida tuning up for the long summer campaign. Holdouts are down there taking unofficial work- | outs, waiting for the owners and} good-hearted managers to open up with a few extra dollars, for heart | balm, They cry that baseball was never more popular than it was in the years of its highest salaries, so “why not tag on a few more grand to my contract and make the game popu- Jar again,” they say. “Sure thing,” they're answered by the contract makers. “But emptier bleachers and emptier grandstands, don’t make it neces- sary for us to increase salaries, Just because the grandstands take on more color as more and more gray heads come for a day's relief from business and the troubles of the world, don’t make salaries more colorful.” So the candy making Babe Ruth, who was much eulogized and elon- gated on the celiuloids, winds up with a $35,000 a year contract, with the hope that this year, maybe, sweating off a few more pounds from his well-known tummy won't be so hard on him. And Jimmy Foxx hits the limelight when he threatens the Philadelphia Ath- leties that he has a contract to turn professional wrestler for $30,- 000 a year. He takes a sliding scale contract from $15,600 to $25,000 per year providing attendance rises. | Foxx will get $15,000. * . * UT the real baseball players who use the streets, lots and 8AM ROSS Batter | Up! us kind of balmy and which makes us turn to what’s dc among the major leaguers, bushi leaguers, any old league | March 11 is: DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet. Pitkin and Sutter Aves., Brooklyn PHONE: DICKENS 2-3012 Office Hours: 8-10 A.M., 1-2, 6-3 PM f sun came bouncing in on v OPTOMETRISTSY ()OPTICIAN big snow storms, which mz ‘ 90 LEKINGTOR. AVE. at 106+» SEN g in terms of curves, st t Pa ASR Breer New York City ye poh peeided in a city the size © ATwater 9-8638 Comtradely, Frank Krasich. . IGHT you are, Ci Soft ball pl American pas the masses part of our culture, we say. JLLIAM BELI ICIAL form ii OF THE Optometrist OF rd Metropolitan Workers’ Soccer League Resumes Regular Game Schedule 196 EAST 14th STREET Near Fourth Ave., N. ¥. €. Phone: TOmpkins Square 6-8237 Office Phone: Estabrook 8-2573 Home Phone: Olinville 5-119 DR. S. L. SHIELDS Surgeon Dentist 2574 WALLACE AVE. Corner Allerton Avenue Bronx, ¥. ¥. NEW YORK.—The Metropolitan Workers Soccer Le! gets ted again in their wee games after) being idle for over two weeks due to} the bad weather. The schedule for | Schedula for March 11, 1934 Home T. Visiting Time Field Al DIVISION Tico vs Ecuadore, 1 p.m, Central 64th St Fichte vs Ital. Amer. 3 p.m. McCarren. Spartacus vs Italia 4 p.m. Crotona. Falcons vs Red Spark 2 p.m, Crotona. MOTT HAVEN 9-8749 Dr. Julius Jaffe Surgeon Dentist 401 EAST 140th STREET (Corner Willis Avenue) A2 DIVISION Hinsdale vs Prospect 3 p.m. Betsey Hd. | Golonial vs Monabi 1 p.m. Van Cortland. | Red Spark vs I.W.O, 12 noon Crotona, | French, no game. B1 DIVISION Hero vs Bronx Hung. 1 p.m. Jasper Oval. Dauntless vs Herzl 1 p.m. Gravesend, Maple vs Brownsville 3 p.m. Jasper Oval Rendezvous, no game. B2 DIVISION | South Amer. vs Spartacus 3 p.m. Cen- tral 64th St LW.O. vs Zucunft 11 am. Astoria, Harlem vs Hinsdale Prospect vs Red Spark 1 p.m. McCooms- AARON SHAPIRO, Pod.é. CHIROPODIST 223 SECOND AVENUE ALgonquin 4-432 Gor, 1éth St. am. Fichte vs Ital. Amer. McCarren. pase ¢ DIVISION Scientific Treatment of Foot ts French vs Fichte 1 p.m. German Amer. Spartacus vs Celta 10 a.m. Crotona, Greek Sper. vs Bronx Hung. 1 p.m. Bet-| sey Head. Youth Cult. vs Hero 11 am, McCarren. | GARMENT DISTRICT To Hire AIRY, LARGE MEETING ROOMS and HALL Suitable for Meetings, Lectures and Dances in the Czechoslovak Workers House, Inc. Garment Section Workers Patronize Navarr Cafeteria 333 7th AVENUE backyards for games and who | practice throwing curve balls | against hard stone walls and | fences, aren’t bothered with the | weighty trombles of what they're | going to get. Kids play on the | street all day, minus the touch of | expensive gloves and the thriils | of having crowds cheer them, Give | them a ball and bat and they | play. The national pastime is carried on by them. The open market of athicticdom isn’t a part of their eccnomic organization. ees oe ICH brings to mind a letter | I’m gonna dig out of the files from a Chicago comrade who has | a good idea, now that spring is just a little ways off: Dear Sports Editor: Workers’ Club, Sloga, intends to organize this coming spring a soft ball team for boys and one for girls. I am writing to you about this be- cause I think it would be much more beneficial to the revolution- ary movement to organize a league of such workers’ soft ball teams, than for a team to go on playing independently. I have no connec- tions to start this, and as far as I know the L. 8. U. is not doing a thing concerning this particular game. As you know, this game is get- ting more and more popular, is in- expensive, and I think with it we can reach much wider American masses than we can with soccer, We ought to be able to organize TroonsSent Against Ala. Mine Strike; 20,000 for Walkout (Continued from Page 1) prices, and also lower powder prices. Besides the miners are urged to demand all payments, including ad- vances in cash, and no clackers, against evictions of unemployed miners from company houses, and no confiscation of furniture. The miners are rebelling against the 11-hour day, with eight hours pay, being forced to buy their own supplies. “The commissary prices are robbery without a pistol,” say the miners. They are now getting 36 cents a ton with supplies fur- nished, and 48 to 52 cents where they must buy their own supplies. Aronsed Against U.M.W.A. ‘The miners are indignant over the action of William Mitch, Dis- trict U.M.W.A. president, who or- ders the miners not to strike pend- ing a decision of the local Labor Board. Mitch himself is a mem- ber of the Board. In the little Cahaba field where the miners have been on strike for over two weeks, Negro and white miners disarmed 15 company thugs whom the sheriff had promised to deputize, and ordered them sent back to Birmingham. The district Labor Board ruled against the miners, and ordered the strike ended. When the min- ers refused to go back to work under slave conditions Sheriff A. B. Barrentine appealed to Gover- nor B. M. Miller for troops. The governor ordered Colonel Walter M. Thompson of the Sixteenth Infantry and three officers. connected with leading bosses in Alabama, to make 136, Station D, New York, N.Y., | and hely a tour of the ficld. On’ thetr | ROOM, light, convenient, reasonable; wo- 347 E. 72nd St. New York ‘Telephone: RHinelander 5097 Phones: Chickering 4947-Longacre 16039 COMRADELY ATMOSPHERE New Folding Chairs JOHN KALMUS CO. Inc. 35 W. 26th St MUrray Hill 4-5447 Office and School Equipment NEW. and USED WORKERS! FOR | Horsehide, Sheepsiin Coats, Wind- Breakers, Breeches, High Shoes, Boots, Work Shirts, Gloves, Etc. Fan Ray Cafeteria 156 W. 29th St.. New York JADE MOUNTAIN American & Chinese Restaurant 197 SECOND AVENUE (Bet. 12th and 13th St.) Welcome to Our Comrades Phone: TOmpkins Square 6-9554 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY—ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 202 E. 12th St. New York Hudson Army & Navy 105 THIRD AVE. Corner 13th Street A Sacrifie Sale of OSKI CLOTHES (Classified ) FURNISHED room, modern, elevator apt., private entrance; 337 W. 14th St. Apt. 74. GIRL comrade has 2 room, convenient apartment to share. Cost approximately $15 monthly. Call Sunday or evenings. Murray Hill 4-8304. Apt, 26, 142 E, 27th | 8, N¥.C. Ready Made and Made to Order 35 E. 125th STRENT, N. ¥. 6, NICE large room, modern, reasonable; 203 Tompkins Square 6-918 W. 94th St. Apt. 6A. Caucasian Restaurant “KAVKAZ” Russian and Oriental Kitchen BANQUETS AND PARTIES 382 East 1ith Street ‘New York City man preferred; 235 Second Ave. Apt. 15. THEATRE of the Workers School wants to share headquarters with other organiza- tion. Please communicate Theatre of the Workers School, 35 E. 12th St. Room 302 on Mondays and Fridays at 8:30 p.m. Russian and Oriental Kitchen VILLAGE BAR Comradely Atmosphere 221 SECOND AVENUE near 14th Street, New York City GOOD purpose. Piano wanted—donation or reasonable price. Gramercy 17-2088. GIRL or couple to share completely fur- nished three-room apartment, reasonable. Call all day Sunday or evenings, Still- well 4-1151; Elsie Bayer, 45-54 39th Place, Apt. 6D, L.1.C. NATURAL HEALTH FOODS —— ————_ 153 W. 4th ST., EAST OF B'WAY OPEN TILL MIDNIGHT———— —— TASTY, DELICIOUS, WHOLESOME All Comrades Meet at the’ NEW HEALTH CENTER CAFETERIA Fresh Food—Proletarian Prices—30 E. 1%th St.—WORKERS’ CENTER SALTZMAN BROS, MEN’S SUITS Fine Clothing for Workers Ready Made and to Order 181 STANTON STREET NEW YORK CITY NEAR CLINTON STREET Final Reductions ON SUITS AND OVERCOATS Suit:—100% Worsteds, Cheviots, Saxonies Overcoats—Luxurious Velours, Chevicts, Meltons, Ete, $18.50—$20.50—$22.50 Formerly up to $35.00 MAX TRAIGER 168 STANTON STREET (Corner Clinton Street) Member of IyW. O., Unions, Mass Organizations recommendrtion he issued the or- der for the troops Obtain 5% Discount for New Press Fund of Daily Worker a RUFOOD Vegetarian Restaurant | i mencshttaee