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Page Two DAILY WORKER, 'W YORK, WED SDAY, APRIL 4, 1934 Deportation W eapon ™ Is Retained Against Many Groups Back Fight on im-CrowBank J Mi 1 li 1 t an t W or k ers op Desiounees Attempt Mimor Changes in I Not for Revolution- | aries, Says Perkins | By Seymour Waldman | May Day Buttons Are Ready; Organizations sked to Get Them NEW YORK. — Organizations ily Wi Washi Bu.) | WASHINGTON, April 5. —|| now from the United Front, May || The “minor changes in de-|] Day Arrangements Committee at portation in the interest of |] 799 Broadway, Room 589 Ss | 1 n” rec 1, The pins are an attractive red, a panization recommended in placard shape, and have the in the subcommittee report|| words May 1st hanging from the m made by tiee to Sz of ces Perkins do not ap- hose who believe in the by | ed today to the pre: recommendations in the] enter in a circle. Unite Against Hunger, Fascism, War, with the Hammer and Sickle insignia, are on the penant in white. The buttons sell to organiza- tions at the rate of $2.50 per hundred. Rush orders today. Haverhill Shoe nncoompaergeete he interest of giving flex! y and humanity to the law, labor secretary pointed hat the report, which she yet approved, merely seeks to avoid the general cases involving the disruption of a fam- Bosses Give Up Arbitration Talk | ily and similar situations | The Department of Labor re- =i lease significantly announced; “The committee made up of 1a | Make Price Offer to prominent men and women, re- Strikers of Only cently reported that it could see no reason for substantial amend- 10% Increase .ment in the immigration laws} after studying immigration and (Special to the Daily Worker) | naturalization problems since last HAVERHILL, Mass, April 3—The June.” shoe manufacturers of Haverhill, Asked to explain the subcom- j compelled by the shoe strikers here | mittee’s recommendation “that no/to give up their previous refusal to alien is to be deported for mere | go ahead unless arbitration is agreed |upon, presented a proposed price | bill in which a 10 per cent increase in prices is offered. This proposal | of the manufacturers to increase belief in any of the doctrines pre- scribed by the various immigra- tion or deportation acti Miss Perkins declared that it an was aticr to differentiate between @! prices only 10 per cent, when under | mere “philosophical belief” andthe present prices shoe ey action. She admitted that the/| ake $8 a week, is termed a farce | heli provision of the present) by the workers. law “has caused extraordinary bad | Special mass meetings have been | practices on the part of the au- eS to- prove belief.” |arranged here for tonight, ing one at Eagle’s Hall, to discuss Though she has not approved the manufacturers’ offer. recommendations, Miss Per-! The fact, however, that manufac- kins announced, “I look favor- turers have offered some sort of a| ably on the committee.” |price and have given up their talk | That part of the report refer-| of arbitration is due to the solidar- ting to “extraordinary hardship” lity of the workers’ ranks, it is end revolutionaty activities which come within the present law fol- I geueaakss out here. Parmele Hackt Hackmen “That the Secretary of Labor | shall be given discretionary power | not to deport in cases deemed to involve extraordinary hardship, such as where deportation would involve disruption of a family, the | other members of which are en- titled to remain in this country | and have an established residence (Continued from Page 1) tempting to split these sections of here, provided that such discre-| the union away from the Manhatten tion shall not apply to aliens de- | iqeq), portable as criminals, under the Splitter Ousted act for the expulsion of anarchists | and similar classes, or as immoral | persons, and provided further that | any aliens in whose behalf the Secretary of Labor exercises dit George Newmen, president of the Queens local, was forced to resign by the membership, after his split- ting policies were revealed. Herman | Goldstein, président of the Brooklyn cretion not to deport, shall be’ joeal, was under the fire of the rank charged against their respective | and file of his local yesterday. The quotas, and that the Secretary | drivers were greatly incensed over may in his discretion withhold de-|the attempts of Samuel Smith of portation until a quota number is| the Bronx, Goldstein of Brooklyn, available. and Newman of Queens, to break up Bene ee. | the unity of the union. Detroit A uto M en. Papo ah eo ag ea Furious at Sellout: (Continued from Page 1) Money to support the struggles of showed which way the wind is blow- | the taxi drivers is still coming in ing. | to the headquarters of the union. Yesterday about 18 metal finish-| The Office Workers Union gave $150 ers, welders, torch solderers and ‘© the Taxi Drivers Union yesterday. door hangers in the Briggs Waterioo| Section 2 of the Communist Party plant refused to start work, de- brought in $59, while Section 15 Manding a 20 per cent increase in| brought in $60. A Hartford local of | ken and Matthew Levy, and has the ; full support of the Socialist news- | paper, “The New Leader.” Need More Funds pay. The company stalled them oft | an Independent Window Cleaners | until 9:30, when they shut down! Union sent a donation to the hack- the line and sent the men home, men. Funds were also received from | fearing the spread of the strike| a rank and file A. F. of L. com- sentiment. The men declare they| mittee. Wil) strike today unless the increase! The funds received, however, ,are is pranted. not yet sufficient to give proper re- ‘The Waterloo plant was where| lief to all the blacklisted drivers and fhe great Briggs strike of January,| those still on strike. All tag day 1933, had its start. collections should be rushed to the The Auto Workers Union is con-| headquarters of the union, 233 West tinuing to rally workers for united; 42nd St., Room 211. action for wage ‘increases, against | includ- | ‘Out in New Strike {of the Socialist Party, Judge Pan-! To Evict Briggs; Ten- ants Ready for Strike NEW YORK, — Various working- | class organizations in the city ral-| lied yesterday to support of the tenants of 425 East 6th St., in their) fight against the race hatred polis of the Ei nts Industrial Savings | Bank, which is trying to evict Cyril Briggs from the 6th St. hotise be- cause is a Negro. The Downtown Section of the In- | ternational Labor Defense pledged | jthe most vigorous defense of the} | of Negro workers to live they choose, and sent a pro- to the Emigrant Indu igs Bank, 51 Chambers St., | withdrawal of the evic- demanding tion notice against Briggs. The] letter declares, in part: “Over 400 members and support- ers of the Downtown Section In- ternational Labor Defense demand the immediate end of your persecu- tion of Cyril Briggs, internationally known leader of the white and Ne- gro working masses . . “In your attack on Briggs and | his family we see a reflection of the attack of the lynch bosses of the South, the gentry who are now attempting to legally lynch the nine innocent Scottsboro boys | in Alabama and to kill Angelo Herndon, unemployed _ leader, through the beastly conditions forced on him in Fulton Tower, Atlanta, Ga. Your cowardly at- tack on the rights of this Negro famliy clearly demonstrates the attitude of the ruling class toward the entire Negro nation of 12 to 14 millions, now held in condi- tions of semi-slavery in the South and doubly exploited and dis- criminated against in the North. “The International Labor Defense will not tolerate this condition. De- manding complete social, economic and political equality for the Negro | people and backing this demand through its organized power, the organization assures you it will) carry on relentless struggle ;against your terroristic program, rallying the workers, Negro a white, native and foreign born, the broadest masses to force the | immediate end of your attempted program.” The tenants are pushing their lans for a rent strike and picket- ing of the building and the own- ing bank, dependent upon the answer of the bank, promised for today, to the demands of the tenants and the supporting or- ganizations, Nurses’ Delegates Protest Wage Cut | NEW YORK—Ar protest of the | nurses of New York City, organized |by the Medical Workers’ League, jagainst the recent wage cut, in addition to previous cuts, was taken |yesterday by a delegation of 18 nurses to Commissioner of Hospi- | {tals Goldwater. Goldwater side- stepped the issue by advising the nurses to see Mayor LaGuardia. At LaGuardia’s office the secretary said the Mayor was not available and advised going back to see Gold- water. The organized action of the nurses has already reversed the re~; cent wage cut in regard to nurses in the lower brackets, and the nurses are continuing their fight, |refusing to be dodged by the run- around tactics of Goldwater and ; LaGuardia. They are calling a mass meeting this week, inviting both these politicians, who claim they have been misquoted and mis- understood, to make their position jclear on this question. CARPENTERS TO MEET The Independent Carpenters Union is calling an important membership meeting on Wednes- day, April 4, 8 p.m., at its head- quarters, 820 Broadway, New York City. A full report on the recent strike | Settlement will be given all car- GUTTERS OF NEW YORK By DEL (C. W. A. Delegates Demand JobsGo On (Continued f from Page 1) from federal taxation those employ- | jers who contribute to the unem- | | | Three stages in the life of a worker — Browder Opens C. P. Convention . (Continued from Page 1f idium, evoked another stormy burst vention praesidium. Members from brother Commu- vent spirit of international working class solidarity by its repeated ap-| plause and enthusiasm when the greater leaders of the Communist International, Comrades Piatnitsky, Kuusinen, Manuilsky were named as honorary members of the ruling| body of the Eighth Convention of the Communist Party, U.S.A. Again the delegates were moved to enthusiastic cheers when Com- rade Dimiiroff, recently wrenched from the bloody hands of Hitler by the international working class and the Soviet Union was designated as an honorary member of the con- vention presidium. Members from Brother Commu- nist Parties honored by the conyen- tion in the same way were Comrade Pollit, England; Comrade Wan ‘Min, China; Comrade Okano, gelista, Philippines; Kapalinich, Austria; Schultz, Germany. A praesidium of 37 members was unanimously elected. This included members of ihe political bureau, leaders im the various Party dis- tricts, workers from the factories in steel, coal, auto, textile and shoe industries, Negro share croppers from the South, Leaders of the Cuban, Canadian, Mexican and Irish brother Commu- nist Parties were acclaimed as hon- orary members of the presidium. The Convention then recessed for a few minutes, while the praesidium met. Comrade John Williamson, organizer of the Cleveland District, was designated and elected as chair- man of the first session of the Con- vention. Comrade Williamson proposed that the agenda for the Convention published in the Daily Worker be accepted, which was unanimously approved. The chairman next announced the organization of seven commissions for the Convention. These com- missions approved by the convention are: Political, organization, school, Negro, work among women, agra- rian, literature, credentials. Leading comrades were placed at the head of each of these bodies and as secretaries. Each district was given representation, to be chosen at a special meeting of the districts this evening. Districts con- centrating in basic industries were entitled to two or more representa- tives on each of the commissions. The delegates, who had listened silently to the announcement of commissions and their composition, rose and cheered for many minutes | penters will be urged to attend, when the chairman introduced} ‘|thundered forth again ‘Olgin Describes ‘Communist Meet (Continued from Page 1) is the only real revolutionary party in the world,” he declared. Cheers when an- other flag was unfurled—the one carried by the Cleveland Socialists with Ruthenberg at their head in the May Day parade of 1919, when marchers were clubbed by police. The flag, together with the 8S. P.| | Local, went over to the C. P. | A tremendous ovation greeted | Browder. His clear, simple words were listened to by the delegates with bated breath. Browder gave ja review of the capitalist collapse, saying that the “crisis of the cap- | italist system is becoming more and | more a Catastrophe.” The public treasury is a big trough out of which the capitalist pigs eat their fill. The N, R. A., which was heralded | as a new, charter for labor, has pro- |vided new chains for the workers. There is a pressing necessity of forming a united front of all work- ers. Unemployment insurance must be achieved and wages maintained, no matter what the consequences jare for capitalism. Browder stressed the fact that all struggles for the immediate de- mands of the workers are organ- ically tied up with revolution. Im- | mediate demands can be fought. for | successfully, he said, only when ; We are convinced that they must be won, even at the expense of capi- | talism as a whole. The picture drawn by Browder | was of a country with tremendous | | productive forces capable of provid- ing everybody a decent living, but locked away by a Small parasitic | Class. Browder stressed the revolution- | ary American tradition, saying that “life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness today means the dicta- torship of the proletariat.” He then proceeded to give an outline of So- viet America—realistic, lucid and convincing. “We propose the revo- lutionary way as the only way out of the crisis,” Browded concluded. A letter from William Z. Foster was received with great applause. Anna Shultz, Minor and Ford re- ceived thunderous ovations. Long after the meeting was ad- journed crowds remained in front of the auditorium, exchanging im-| pressions and favorably comparing this with preceding conventions. The proletarian nature of the audi- ence was very much in evidence. | | Comrade Earl Browder to report for the Central Committee on the poli- | tical situation and the tasks con- | fronting the Eight Convention ot the Party. Sections of Crowder’s re} A be published in tomorrow’: Bema the killing speed-up and against | company union . The union is re- eruiting new members daily. This; Week mass meetings are being called | for workers at Hudson Gratiot, Budd | ‘Wheel, Packard, Graham Paige and Detroit Gasket plants. A statement issued by Alfred P. Sloan, president of General Motors, and played up in yesterday’s De- troit press, marks a new step for- ward in the offensive of the open shop auto manufacturers against Try Bar Ravohationary| Workers from Union Sq. Until Late Hour NEW YORK.—Although notified BOP std ccnaigncs om tens of thousands of automobile workers. Following up the victory won by the employers in the nego- tiations jn Washington with the A. F. of L. officialdom and government, leading spokesmen for the Morgan- controiled auto trust calls for fur- ther strengthening of the N1.R.A. to smash any attempt of workers to organize in trade unions of their own choosing. Sloan specifically calls for a re- vision of Section 7a, which is sup- posed to give workers the right to organize in unions of their own choice. Despite the fact that Sec- tion 7a has been used to break strikes, Sloan and open shop em- ployers for whom he speaks fear the illusions created by this clause as result of which tens of thousands of workers have struck for wage in- creases, better conditions and the right to organize. His statement opposing the re- duction of the work week shows that the 36-hour week proclaimed by manufacturers when the general strike threatened to tie up the en- tire industry was only a maneuver to halt the strike action. His declaration that “industrial cooper- ation” means “through evolution the elimination of the less efficient,” confirms the statement of the Auto Workers Union that the agreement. negotiated in Washington means the strengthening of the “merit” clause in the auto code and an in- tensified drive aaainst militant as early as February 9 of the plans of the revolutionary workers of New York for a United Front May Day demonstration in Union Square from 1 to 5 o'clock, the police yesterday denied permission for the use of the} Square within the hours named. In @ monstrous provocation against the workers of New York, rallying to| fascism and imperialist war, police are attempting to shunt the United Front May Day demonstra- tion to “5:30 and on,” seeking there- by to disrupt both the Union Square demonstration and the evening May Day celebration at Madison Square Garden, The application for the use of the Square made on February 9 by the district committee of the Commu- nist Party was ignored for over a month. inally, on March 15, the Department of Parks acknowledged receipt of the application with the information that it has arranged to “cover this day for all parties concerned.” Evidently, however, no other applications had been made at that time, and the Superintendent of Parks named April 5 to “take this matter up.” In a telephone conversation with D. Leeds, treas- urer of the New York district of the Communist Party, Captain Day of the 13th Precinct admitted that the application of the Communist Party for the tse of Union Square workers, senor ol greta the May Day united front against | the | Police Trying to Block United Front May L Rally On March 22 and 2, letters giving , Socialist Party and the Veterans of| Cimmitiontalle for Mass | details of the May Day parade and! Foreign Ways, the police thought | demonstration in Union Square were sent to Mayor LaGuardia, Police Commissioner O'’Ryan, to the Bor- ough President of Manhattan, and to Chief Inspector of Police Valen- tine. On April 2, after having received applications from the leaders of the themselves prepared to deal with the situation in a brazen provoca- tion against the workers of New York. Precedence for the use of the Protest; Support of April 14. Conference | cluded: Square is given to the reactionary} forces seeking to distort the revo- leadership of the Veterans of For-| lutionary May Day traditions of the eign Wars and the co-operating So-| working class, and to misuse labor's cialist Party leaders, that is, to the | Minnesota, Vinwin Plen Great possibilities for wide-spread distribution of the May Day edition | of the Daily Worker exist in District 18 (Milwaukee, Wisconsin), accord- ing to George Brink, manager of the Workers’ Bookshop in this lake- shore city. “In some of our sections,” Brink writes, “real efforts are made not only to develop the bundle order for the May Day edition, but also to pay for them in advance. This means that the attitude of the com- rades has changed for the better toward the Daily Worker. “The district disposed of 5,000 copies of the January 6th Tenth An- niversary edition of the Daily Worker. But for the May Day edition, of which 500,000 24-page copies will be printed, the sections and units are mobilized to double ths order, “So far our sections have ordered over 6,009 copies ef the May Day edition. There are still cite > few on May Day was the first received. 25,000 May Day Distribution tions which have not as yet ordered. By April 15, District 18 expects to reach 10,000 and possibly even go over this number and thus beat the Denver district.” Other good news comes from Dis- trict 9 (Minnesota). A recent letter from this important midwest dis- trict states: “District 9 is out to get 15,000 copies of the special May Day edi- tion. At the district convention in Duluth, the various section delega~ tions undertook to order their bun- dles, amounting to 12,500, with the St. Paul section (the second largest city in the district) not yet included in this figure. “Minneapolis will have a bundle of 5,000; Duluth, 2,000; the Mesaba Range section, 2,000; Ironwood, 1,000, and the other sections smaller bundles. We expect that the St.’ Paul section will take a bundle of aan to make our district total more out-of-town units and sec- dled by our district.” the largest order ever han-; international fighting day to disrupt | the efforts of the United Front May Day Arrangements Committee and the Communist Party to build the -proletarian united front against fas- cism and the social-fascist agents | of the bosses, | The district committee of the! Communist Party yesterday notified the police department that it would | support the plans of the United Front May Day Arrangements Com- mittee to proceed with the demon- stration at Union Square within the hours named in previous communi- cgtions to the police department and city officials. The United Front May Day Ar- rangements Committee declared it would not change its plans for the: demonstration, and issued an appeal to all working-class organizations to answer the police provocation by) at once electing their delegates and giving the fullest support to the United Front May Day Conference, Saturday, April 14, at 1 o'clock, at Webster Hall, 119 East 11th Street. All erganizations are urged to «send protest telegrams, resolutions and delegations to Mayor LaGuardis | and Police Commissioner O’Ryan t protest against the attempt to dl@ rupt the United Front May Day demonstration and to demand the} right to use Urion S7uare from 1/ | | to 5 o'clock on May Day. ployment fund He said nothing jabout stopping mass lay-offs. The organizations represented in- the Federation of Archi- tects, Engineers, Chemists meutical Unit of the C. W. A.; Un- employed Writers; Workers’ Ex- |Servicemen’s League; Relief Work- the Alteration Plum- bers’ Union; the League of Struggle jfor Negro Rights; Unemployed Councils; John Reed Club; Associ- ers’ League; ation of Office and Professional | Emergency Employees; Manual} Workers; Artists’ Union, and the City Councils. Forced to See Committee. “Mr. Hopkins is busy. You must |understand that he has his time taken days ahead,” Williams in- formed the skeptical delegates clus- | |tered around his desk. “We represent 47,000 workers and | well stay here all summer if we have to,” one of the workers de- time is rushed,’ Williams answered, “We're not going to be given the run-around,” several workers sang out. Thereupon the entire group voted to remain in Williams’ office until the latter's chief decided to receive them. Williams left but returned shortly afterwards to announce that, Hopkins would see a delegation of six spokesmen. “But all of us want to see him,” the group replied. The officials re- fused to budge. The six, selected under protest, were Sol Harper, Ne- gro representative of the W. E. S. L.; Alexander Taylor, Secretary of the A. O. P. E. E.; Peter Copeland, of the F. A. E. C. T.; Michael Da- vidow, of the Relief Workers’ League; Herbert Benjamin of the Unemployed Councils, and Gretta Spiro of the Adult Education Associ- ation. After acquainting Hopkins with the spokesman’s firm objection to | the exclusion of the rest of the dele- gation, and reading the resolutions | which were adopted at the various} meetings in New York, Taylor asked | Hopkins whether he had any serious | objections to permitting the entire | delegation to at least observe the conferenze. Hopkins replied, with a pugnaciousness that was to wear off completely under the sharp charges to be made during the next hour. “This (the group of six) is all it’s jgoing to be...I'm telling you something now; I'm not asking you. I don’t want them in here.” Demand C.W.A. Continue The resolution read by Taylor fol- lows: “The Federal Work Relief Ad- ministration is responsible for the liquidation of C.W.A. and the con- | sequent mass lay-offs and wage cuts which are reducing the already poverty-stricken unemployed to a | state of destitution and starvation, and is now instituting a means test | which gives work relief only on the { basis of utter destitution.and not on the basis of forced unemployment. “The Federal tinues to spend billions on war preparations and on the refinancing and subsidy of private corporations, Negro Discrimination “There has been frequent and widespread discrimination against Negroes, and other special groups in the giving of jobs and in pay scales, “In New York and other cities, there has been cooperation between C.W.A. administrators and local po- lice in intimidations and terrorizing C.W.A. who have organized to pro- tect their interests. “For these reasons, we delegates, representing 47,000 C.W.A. trade union DEMAND: “1) THAT YOU IMMEDIATELY CALL A HALT TO THE MASS LAY-OFFS, REINSTATE all those} laid off, restore the pay level to the amount prevailing before any cuts were instituted and that you fur- ther extend work relief to include all unemployed. “2) That the wage rates of skilled labor be at the prevailing trade union wage without reduction in the number of hours of labor. “3) That you immediately abolish any and all forms of means tests as a basis of work relief and give work relief on the basis of unem- ployment. “4) That you immediately rein- state all those dismissed for failure to meet, or for protesting, or for refusing to submit to the means test. “5) That there shall be no dis- crimination on the jobs or in wage scales against any workers because of color, race, creed, sex, or political belief. “6) That C.W.A. officers shall be instructed not to initiate or cooper- ate in any intimidation or terroriza- tion of workers organizing in their own behalf. “1) That you give public endorse- ment to the Workers Unemployment and Social Insurance Bill, H. R. 7598.” “The arrogance of Hopkins in re-' fusing to admit the entire delega- tion is a reflection of the contempt | the Roosevelt administration feels | toward the unemployed,” Benjamin told the Daily Worker after the con- ference, ‘He indicated that the ad- ministration will not budge unless | it is forced to by workers’ militant action.” ANTI-FASCIST COMMITTEE MEETS A regular meeting of the West Side Committee to aid the victims of German Fascism will be held Thursday Eve, April at a home of Dr. Sth, at 8:30 p. m., Ave., New 8. R. Kellman, 333 West End York City. and | | Technicians: the Settlement House; | State Department Project; Pharma- | They Come In Over the Ticker TRGINIA BEACH, Va., April —Paul Runyan, White Plains, Y., took the lead in the Cavalier open golf | tournament ome adding a sub-par 66 for a 103 aggregate | for the 54 holes, six strokes ahead of wild Bill Melhorn and Ky Laffoon, of Denver. * 3. * _M. Pierpont Warner, 1932 today failed to * PINEHURST, N. C., April 3. North and South amateur golf champion, make the grade in a play off iosed | Sails Wi AL a with four other players for | seats. the | Cieee hee EMPTON PARK, England, April 2—The King attended the Easter Monday racing today. A slight illness of the queen made it jnadviseble for her to accom- pany him. The queen's prize, a two-mile handicap for a purse of $5,000, was won by... Too bad the Queen (Hail the Queen!) wasn’t there to knight the winner with her $5,000 which she so righteously takes away, by somebody's grace, from the work- ers through her puppet show of the last two places in championship flight of this | North and South tournament. . | JN CERTAIN spots around this side} of the globe, golf is played ali | year round, and those guys who clip | | coupons all year round, who love the} game, manage to play at all times} in one form or another. It’s kind; of nice to bat off work in the white of winter, go down to Silver Springs, Florida, Lower California, and get If they can't get} Government con-} and unemployed workers, | some “real” golf. away from thejr swivel chairs, they} can always clubs and take pot shots at the bull’s eye. And the caddies | around all day, of clubs weighing searching for those little white pills in the green, digging out mud cov- ered pellets from water traps. Aside from their little pay, they follow them golfer. The little caddy gets his eyes open to “big business” and rich men's fun when he sees them bet- ting a dollar a hole. wouldn't be interesting without a money kick in it. * wine AKELAND, Fia., April 2.—After two days of uncertainty, phy- sicians late today decided def- initely that Mickey Cochrane, manager and catcher of the De- troit. Tigers, does not have ap- pendicitis. Cochrane’s abdomen will be kept under ice for another 48 hours and his diet will be re- strieted while observations are continued, Mickey, I’d hate to see you dis- appoint the fans om opening day | this month. It'd be kind of tough having to run around with water bags and ice. The added interest in your welfare is a sign of the coming gpproach of baseball and Spring and Summer. Aside from the big leagues, workers’ baseball leagues will be also forming. The sand lot players of today who play before workers on open felds will some day play before workers in go down to their wealthy | with sets and sets| them down, might | get a half-dollar tip from a generous | The game! parleying parliamentiers, Oh, but the King had his day, laying two bucks across the line or something like that for the honor of the Sport of Kings. me T. PETERSBURG, Fia., April 3, —The yacht, Vamarie, and the schooner, Azra and Haligonian were battling it out today for the lead position in St, Petersburg- Havana sailing race. A favorable 8-miles-per-hour northeast wind was helping the leaders along after a calm period last night. It would have been a piece of brilliant staging by the elements if another Ancient Mariner were en- acted again; but aside from that, here’s another sport which is right up the alley of penthouses lined up along Riverside Drive who send their regatta down to Florida where | you have northeast winds and calms and sun and flowers (in the winter), and where the gambling casinos, horseraces, yachting and swimming are thoroughly enjoyed by aristo- cratic sportsmen. |" Yachts are great old things, Great to enjoy; to be able to watch sails drifting in the faraway blue sky, racing neck and neck, keeling over into the water, swaying upright— it’s a thrilling sight. It’s more ex- citing to participate in the sport itself; but the aristocrats can have their fun now while it lasts. Space keeps. more news briefs from appearing. I feel, in this balmy weather, like barging around on my | continental tour a little longer; but I close again today to resume to- morrow, DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet, Pitkin and Sntter Aves., Brooklyn PHONE: DICKENS 2-8012 Office Hours: 8-10 A.M., 1-2, 6-3 P.M AARON SHAPIRO, Pod.G. CHIROPODIST 223 SECOND AVENUE ALgonquin 4-448? Cor, 14th st. Scientific Treatment of Foot Ailments OPTOMETRISTSCOY (OPTICIANS 1378 ST.NICHOLAS AVE* 1690 LEXINGTON AVE, at !79" ST.NY at 1064p ST.NY. Tompkins Square 6-7697 Dr. S. A. Chernoff GENITO-URINARY 223 Second Ave, New York City New Folding Chairs JOHN KALMUS CO. Inc. 35 W. 26th St. MUrray Hill 4-5447 Office and School Equipment NEW and USED WORKERS COOPERATIVE COLONY 2700-2800 BRONX PARK EAST has reduced the rent, several good apartments available. Cultural Activities for Adults, Youth and Children. Telephone: Estabrook 8-1400—8-1401 Trains. Stop at Allerton Ave. station Office open daily trom 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Direction: ‘Lexington Ave., White Plains Friday and Saturday 9 am. to 5 p.m. Sunday 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Williamsburg Comrades Welcome ASSEMBLY CAFETERIA 166 Broadway, Brooklyn, N. ¥. STATIONERY and Mimeograph Supplies At Special Prices for Organizations Lerman Bros. Inc. ALgonquin 4-3356 —~ 8843 29 East 14th St. N.Y. C. CUT OUT THIS AD and SAVE HALF SOLES Allerton Avenue Comradest The Modern Bakery was first to settle Bread Strike and first to sign with the Food Workers’ Industrial Union 691 ALLERTON AVE. Tompkins Square 6-919% Caucasian Restaurant “KAVKAZ” Russian and Oriental Kitchen BANQUETS AND PARTIES 332 East 14th Street New York City GARMENT WORKERS WELCOME SHERIDAN VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT (Formerly Shildkrauts) 19¢ (White Oak) O'Sullivan Heels 39c (CAPITO] 109 EAST 14TH STREET 285 WEST 36th STREET Between 7th and 8th Avenues We Have Reopened JADE MOUNTAIN American & Chinese Restaurant 197 SECOND AVENUE (Bet. 12th and 13th St.) —_ Food—Proletarian Prices—50 ‘All Comrades Meet at the’ NEW HEALTH CENTER CAFETERIA E. 13th St.—WORKERS’ CENTER, G COHEN’S 117 ORCHARD STREET Nr. Delancey Street, New York City EYES EXAMINED By Dr. Joseph Lax Wholesale Opticians Tel, ORchard 4-4520 Factory on Premises (Classified) ST. LOUIS, Mo. Two Volunteer Typists wanted. International Book Shop, 1243 N. Garrison. MAY 23, 24, Manhattan Lyceum ORGANIZE A BOOTH | CONFERENCE OF DELEGATES TO 5-Day May Festival and Bazaar — Communist Party, District 2 — 25, 26 and 27 66 East 4th Street (Entire Building) Unions, Mass Organizations, 1.L.D., 1.W.O. Clubs are requested to send delegates Wednesday, April 4th, at 7:30 P, M. to 50 East 13th Street, Room 205 COLLECT ARTICLES |