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Page Two SATURDAY, MAY 5, 1934 NY; Paine Chalk Up New Union Gains Force Reinstatement of Negro Garage Chairmen other victory was c Drivers New York wher ald and Ben 5 here hackmen took denounced Kamm, head of the company union and former endent of the oration, and unanimously voted proposals to join his group. e Socialist-racketeer controlled 42 St clique also met with reverses when their Brooklyn, Harlem and Side locals closed up. Sam ner, President of the Taxi Drivers ntimated that their remain- hes in the Bronx and at will not last long. Meanwhile the T. D. U. is begin- ning to organize field branches. The t one will be located in Harlem where Negro hackmen have enthu- Siastically received the union. New Local in Boston Joseph Gilbert, General Organizer recently established a local in Bos- ton after a militant meeting of hackmen. A meeting in Albany this week at which Gilbert will speak, is expected to result in the forma- tion of another local. A campaign to enforce the union | agreements in 40 shops settled} during the recent general strike is| now being undertaken, following the | confusion created by the splitting attempts of the 42 St. crowd. Vietory Over Company Unions union also won two important ; by halting the bosses from} ing a company union in two A meeting was called by company | men at Arthurs Garage on 23rd Street. When a company union Thee | was presented to the men they walked out of the garage. The same | thing happened at the Crown Gar-| age, Witlock Ave. and 135 Street. The Union Hackie, official organ| of the Taxi Drivers Union, now ap-| pearing in four pages twice a month, | will expand to 8 pages and appear | weekly within the next month. Smith Ends Tool And Die Strike (Continued from Page 1) per cent wage increase and thirty six hour, five day granted and that the strike has been | dying on its feet for the past couple | of weeks with many men becoming | disgusted and returning to work. | The tool and die strike served to reveal the whole treacherous char-| acter of the Smith clique. Forced to call the strike because of the over-| whelming demand of the rank and file for action, this slick phrase-| monger and member of the Socialist | Party did everything in his power to castrate it at the very beginning. Only a few hours before the strike vote was taken, Smith gave an in- terview to the capitalist press de-| claring he had been ready to com- promise on demands (without con- sulting the rank and file), but the manufacturers had refused to talk business. When the walkout got \inder way, Smith mouthed phrases about a general strike, but sidetracked “E proposals of militants in the M. S. A. to call out the tool and aie| makers in the big auto plants and to) spread the strike to the production | workers in a United Fight for the demands of all automobile workers. At the same time he refused to or-| ganize real mass picketing, saying | pickets were unnecessary because all | the men were out. Repeated pro- posals for united action made by the} Auto Workers Union and supported by large sections of the M. E.S. A. membership were rejected by the Smith clique. | His Campaign Against Reds | Smith’s duplicity was clearly re-| vealed on the question of turning over the names of members to the} companies. After declaring that| under no circumstances would he do 50, he announced shortly afterward that he was willing to turn over names to a “disinterested third party,” following this with the an-/| nouncement that he would give the) names of M E. S. A. members to two} General Motors units, Fisher Body and Ternstedt Companies. miy quick action by the membership, led by the militant group, prevented him | from carrying through this union-/| smashing act. | About ten days ago, in an effort to crush resentment of rank and| file against his sell out policies, | Smith announced a campaign to ex- | pel all Communists from M. E. 8. A. One leading militant, John Mack,| was thrown out bodily from a meet- ing of his local and turned over to the police. John Anderson, out- standing leader of the militant rank and file and organizer of Local Seven of the M. E. 8S. A., was sus- pended only a few days ago by the Smith-controlled District Committee | for “lack of cooperation.” The Ex- ecutive Committee of Anderson’s Local, however, repudiated this action by voting unanimously to re- commend to the membership that he be reinstated. It is clear only the action by the rank and file can prevent the M. E. S. A. from following the path of the A. F. of L. officialdom and defeat) she sell out and expulsion policies of | the Smith-Griffen leadership. Stop depending for news and information on the capitalist press that favors the bosses and — is against the workers. Subscribe to the Daily Worker, America’s only working-class daily news- paper. SONS) week were not’. | demonstration. Painters to Protest Injunction Today YORK. to break NEW n against | action, the Altera- all Jobless from Geld DustLodge Demand Relief and Clothing Urge Full Mobil on at Hodson’s Office to Back Up Demands NEW YORK.—The 300 single un- employed workers living at the Sal- vation Army Gold Dust Lodge who marched on Commissioner Hodson’s | office at 50 Lafayette St. and won immediate relief demands will again | mobilize at Hodson’s office today, de- manding clothing to all men living in the Lodge, and workers’ contro] of the administration of relief. The men marched on the Welfare | offices, Hodson assured the delega- tion from the Grievance Committee that three good meals a day would be served in the future instead of the two meals as in the past. He also was forced to assure them that there would be no more dis- crimination because of race, political convcictions or organizational work The city amount allowed for each man from 30 to 46 cents a day. For the first few days the meals were fairly satis- factory, but the Salvation Army again started its belly-robbing schemes of starving the men and pocketing the money. The Salvation Army in its recent) financial drive has collected thou- sands of dollars from donors in the past few weeks, but refuses to supply | clothing to the ragged army of men at the Lodge. The city is paying 46 cents a day for food, but the men in the Lodge are given corn meal mush and a few prunes for break-| fast. When the Grievance Committee | aa with Hodson today at 1:30 they will demand the ousting lot. the Salvation Army control of the lodge or the setting up of new houses for the men with workers’ | control, clothing for all men living} in the lodge, the unqualified right to organize, and that all promises made to the men be kept. The Gold Dust Lodge men ask that all organizations which helped | | them in their fight mobilize their} | entire membership at 50 Lafayette St. at noon today. May First~ City By City (Continued from Page 1) WATERBURY, Conn.—400 dem-| onstrate 30 at S. P. meeting. | NEW ORLEANS, La—1,000 in demonstration. MINNEAPOLIS, Minn.—15,000 in demonstration; 17,000 parade. YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio.—1,000 in po ae UFFALO, N. Y.—5,500 in dem- | eanrition, MILWAUKEE, Wis.—10,000 demonstration; 6,000 parade. FAIRMONT, W. Va.—500 in dem- in | onstration. MORGANTOWN, W. Va—400/ demonstrate. CLARKSBURG, W.Va.--100 dem- | onstrate. OSAGE, W. Va.—100 in demon- | stration. | NEWARK, N. J.—3.000 in demon- | stration; 300 in parade. CAMDEN, N, J—800 in demon- | | stration SPRINGFIELD, T.—250 in dem-) onstration, ARGO, Ill—150 at May meeting. Day DECATUR, Tll.—1,000 in demon- | stration. WASHINGTON, D. C.—200 at May Day meeting. ATLANTA, Ga.—200 at May Dey meeting. SALT LAKE CITY, Utah.—250 in indoor demonstration. PORTCHESTER, N. Y.—250 dem- onstrate. BEACON, N. Y.—250 in demon- stration. MINEOLA, L. I—Parade. No estimate of numbers. GRAND ISLAND, Neb.—Broken up by police. JELPER, Utah—Broken up by police. P PAWTUCKET, R. I.—1,000 demonstration. WILKES-BARRE, Pa.—800 dem- onstrate. SCRANTON, Pa.—Demonstration and parade. No estimate of num- bers. NEW BEDFORD, Mass.—400 dem- in ;,| Zone the Javanese imrorts was forced to raise the| DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, Clash Over awe Markets Leading - To New Slaugh iter (Cont ad fr Page 1) uary, 1932. from 449.472 yen in 1931 to 1,110,- ines imvorts of from 29.425,090 in ereases were led in other m: Ss claimed by Il Street as its exclusive prop- In London, reports were made that nese goods. esvecially textile, British products in States and Africa irpose of the Roo: It gov- ernment in publishing these figures | at the present time is to arouse the American workers to chauvinistic feeling against Japan, and to sun- port 42 v out of the crisis Wall Street is rapidly for war in the Far East, to slaughter off tens of thousands of American workers to insure not only markets |in China, but the enslavement of the Chinese peopte. The sharp battle for markets has been mg on quietly the first days of the crisis. but now |the struggle is reaching the stage of the imminent danger of armed conflict. In Japan. speaking before gov: ernors of the prefectures at their annual meeting, Foreign Minister Hirota declared that the time for note-writing was past, thet Japen would maintain its policy of dom- ination in the Far East. It is clear, also, that similar con- clusions have been made in London jand Washington, and that the open | battle for markets will soon be fol- |lowed by provocative incidents lead- |ing directly to war. | The purpose of the imperialist | governments in scrambling for mar- kets at this time |of undermining the living standards |of their own workers and flooding the markets of the world with thei | goods to preserve their rotten capi- bee sy’ stem. Workers “Made No Gains in Wages ‘Wm. Green Admits | (Continued from Page 1) hie business as official cogs i for the N. R. A. machinery. | “Workers’ total income in in- dustry today is still 45 ner cent he- low 1929 and even in 1929 we still jhad 20,000.000 persons livine below the minimum level for health and efficiency.” the report says, “Tt seems likely that the psek of the Spring business rise has heen reached and that we must Jeok for- ward to a period of gradual decline | through May and June.” Speaking as the N. R. A. associ- etes of the indus! ists, the Wliliam Greens and John L. ses warn | the administration and the various | millionaire Elue Eaglers that “We cannot expect to escape labor dif- | ficulies” if the Administration plans union are executed.” In other words, please take us, the A. F. of L., in- stead. We're safe and opposed to the strike. Virtually advising the government and the owners to in- | enetty, anti-strike preparations for |the rising strike wave, the A. F. of L. leaders say: “At present, serious labor progress toward recovery. Stand on N. R. A. “Workers throughout the country |are indignant over the effort to side-step union recognition, to avoid |collective bargaining, and to force workers into company unions. Their patience has been tried to the break- ing point. Unless employers are | willing to deal with trade unions |when they represent their em- ployees, we cannot expect to escape labor difficulties.” | Despite public acknowledgements by N. R. A. Administrator General | Hugh S. Johnson and big business men that the N. R. A. was planned by leading industrialists and fin- anciers, the A. F. of L. Survey as- serts that the “employers . . . with- out a program of their own... . had no alternative but to accept the President's program.” It is only since October, it declared, “When the ‘blanket code’ began to lose its importance,” that there “was a |change of policy in N. R. A.; em- phasis was placed on assistance to vested interests rather than balance in interests and the emergency problem of putting men to work.” Realizing that the N. R. A.-A. F. of L. game is clear to many workers, the A. F. of L. finds it necessary to invent the fiction of “a change of policy.” The Rail Agreement Commenting on the Roosevelt- onstrate. | PASSAIC, N. J.—1,000 in demon- | stration. NASHAU, N. H—75 at indoor meeting. NEW HAVEN, Conn.—1,000 dem- i onstrate. NEW BRITAIN, Conn.—1,000 in demonstration, HARTFORD, Conn.—800 demon- strate. SPRINGFIELD, Conn.—1l50 at demonstration with Y.P.S.L. ac- tively paraticipating. | CHICOPEE FALLS, Mass.—50 at indoor meeting. ALLENTOWN, Pa.—1,000 in dem- onstration. 300 in parade. WAUKEGAN, Ill—250 demon- strate. JAMESTOWN, N. Y.—1,500 in demonstration. 500 in parade. CINCINNATI, O.—One thousand in demonstration, 300 in parade. RICHMOND, Va. Open-air No estimate of numbers. ALBANY, N. Y.—Indoor meet- ing. No estimate of numbers. ROCKFORD, Ill.—Four hundred | in demonstration. WATERBURY, Conn, - hundred demonstrate, | Four |anti-strike Whitney cre lers, |not get more than two and a half Manager-Brotherhood “Railway Wage Decision.” accepted bv the of “Rail- | way Labor Executives,” as “a restor ation of the 19 per cent wage cut. The fact is, however, that this restoration” is spread over an en- tire year so that the railway work- many of whom barely exist, do or three per cent at a time—in the teeth of the blustering Whitney an- nouncement some months ago that he and his “associates” would de- mand a 20 per cent increase over basic rates on the expiration of the present agreement on June 30, 1934. The A. F. of L. figures on income are from government records cov- ering 71,900 firms in 105 industries, the Survey says. “They are adjusted by cost of living figures from the National Industrial Conference Board.” open air meeting. EDWARDSVILLE, Ill.—Six hun- | dred demonstrate. PINESVILLE, Ky.—No estimate of numbers. LEWISTON, Me. — Demonstra- E. ST. LOUIS, Ill, — Sixty at} tion. No estimate of numbers. PEORIA, Tl—Six hundred at demonstration, e Penama Canal | increased | American imperialism in its | for markets and plunder as a preparing ever since | is at the expense | for offcially legalizing the company | troubles threaten to check | May Day Sketches SOLIDARITY , SBS FAR . RAS “He ENE CAN RERCH) Bys : a MR RED BUILDER Many Features In Monday's N.Y. Trade Union Section’ NEW YORK.—The New York Trade Union Section, which first appeared in the Daily Worker on | May Day, will continue to appear each Monday. Aside from giving a general re- view of the activities of the unions in the metropolitan area for the | preceeding week, next Monday's Trade Union Section will contain | special articles on trade union prob- |lems of interest to all workers in New York. One of the features that will ap- pear in the Trade Union Section on Monday will be a thorough analysis of the New York taxi strike, by Rose Wortis, Assistant Secretary of the Trade Unian Unity Council. This article, which deals with the tactics and strategy of the strike in} J artalk. Dockers | (Continued from Page 1) clear today when Milner, vice-| president of the T.L.A., stated in the | local press that every available man and facility of his organization would be placed at the disposal of the piers effected to expedite han- dling freight in face of the M. W. I, U. strike, The union has issued a call to all workers and trade unions to send telegrams of protest to the Mayors of Norfolk and Portsmouuth against the action of the police in the strike. Solidarity action in other ports is also urged by the union. (eee Telane§ ‘To Demonstrate in N. ¥. NEW YORK—To protest the brutal beating of James Barry by Gene Sampson, of the District Council of the International Long- shoremen’s Association, and three gangsters at 18th St. and 11th Ave. yesterday, the Rank and File Ac- tion Committee of the IL.A. has called a protest demonstration at that dock for noon Monday. the longshoremen calling for sup- | port of the strike in the Gulf and | Norfolk, Va., when Sampson, a no- |torious member of Local 791, at- tecked him, breaking his glasses and giving him a gash in the eye. Calls for Action The Rank and File Action Com- | mittee of the International Long- shoremen’s Association, in calling for the protest demonstration, points ouut that Sampson’s attack is an attempt on the part of the L.A. leadership to break up unity between the longshoremen here and their striking brothers in Norfolk and the Gulf. Longshoremen and all other workers are urged to attend the demonstration at 18th St, and 11th Ave., Monday at noon, 3. bes cage Prepare in Boston BOSTON, May 4.—Joseph P. Ryan, the national racketeer presi- dent of the International Long- shoremen’s Association, is resorting to his uusual splitting tactics to stem a revolt in Local 800 of Boston. The longshoremen of Boston have reached the limit of their dis- gust with this arch-betrayer and strike-breaker and are determined to spike his guns once and for all. The rank and file of Local 800 is setting the pace for the other locals. The last straw came when Ryan arbitrarily and without con- sulting the rank and file selected “Whiskers” O'Malley, president of the checkers’ local, to be organizer for the port of Boston. The very largest majority of the longshore- men here consider O'Malley to be totally unfit for the job. The members of Local 800 promptly wrote Ryan a letter and informed him that their patience was exhausted and that they would no longer put up with his high- handed dictatorship of the Boston locals. Ryan is now attempting to bulldoze this local into submission with the threat to set up a jim- crow local in South Boston, to com- pete with them. The Rank and File Action Com- mittee responded to this move to divide the waterfront by playing Negro workers against white, with a special article in its official shop paper, the “Longshore Bulletin.” It exposed this move of the bosses and their agents in the ranks of the workers and showed the need for unity by citing the action of the Strike Is Firm, | a critical manner, should be read by all workers, especially workers in the trade unions. Among the other features that will appear on the trade union pages of next Monday’s city edition will be an article on the situation in Local 302 of the Cafeteria Em- ployees Union, an analysis of the N.R.A. Code for Printing Employees, an article dealing with the prob- Jems of the rank and file in Local 22 of the International Ladies Gar- ment Workers Union and an article dealing with the struggles of the New York bargemen- Read about your union in the Trade Union Section. Order special bundles of Monday’s New York edi- tion and spread the paper among | the members of your union, Seamen Gain in Relief Struggle (Continued from Page 1) labor plan of the A. F. of L. leader. Mention of the Communist Party was enthusiastically cheered. Ratify Sub Committee A sub-committee of three—Kelley, Joyce and Donnaly—to take charge of the relief project were ratified by the workers. Federal Field Direc- tor Ewing was forced to admit that the Baltimore plan would be put into effect in Buffalo. The seamen unanimously rejected a plan to house and feed the job- Jess seamen in the Institute and ac- cepted the proposal of the sub-com- mittee for a separate sanitary build- ing for seamen under the control of the seamen, ‘The committee was recognized by the Relief Administration, but the A. F. of L. leaders say that they will have nothing to do with it unless the A. F. of L. leaders themselves and not the rank and file are repre- sented on the body Following the meeting many mem- bers of the International Seamen's Barry, was distributing ‘Teatlets to| Union tore up their books and joined the Marine Workers Industrial Union. Pees Strike in N. ¥. Continues NEW YORK.—The strike of the seamen of the S. 8. Gypsum Prince continued yesterday, with an effect- ive picket line in front of the dock at Staten Island. The strike is being led by the Marine Workers Industrial Union, There is not a man aboard the ship, The seamen are demanding a $12.50 increase in wages. BroetE ue NEW YORK.—The Seamen on the Santa Lucia, a Grace Line, ship, after having their wages cut from $50 to $40, walked off the ship and quit their jobs here yesterday. Following the action of the men, the Marine Workers Industrial Union issued a leaflet to the seamen urging them not to sign on and to refuse to take the ship out of the port. Sec. 6 Meets Monday to Discuss Convention NEW YORK.—An open member- ship meeting to discuss the Eighth Convention of the Communist Party in Cleveland, will be held Monday, 8 pm. at 43 Manhattan Ave., Brooklyn, under the auspices of Sec- tion 6 of the Communist Party. A member of the N. Y. district committee of the Party will report. Party, Y.C.L. members sympathizers and Socialists are urged to be present. Bedacht to Lecture On Fascism Today NEW YORK—Do you want to know what fascism is? If you do, then come to hear Max Bedacht speak on fascism and social fascism at the Workers School, 35 E. 12th Street, at 3:30 p.m. today. This lecture will be the first of a series of three arranged by the Edu- cational Department of the Trade Union Unity Council of Greater New York, The next two lectures will be held at the Workers School on May 12 and 19. Negro and white on trimmers. in Norfolk who are today uniting their forces for a struggle against their common enemy, the ship-owners. <~ WILLIAN {1 FUCHS The Races cially on the day of the eve | regard the as their divine endownment. Being a follower of the race track has always been re- by thoughtful and sitive people as a dishonorable | j trade, like the trade of a quack doctor or editor of a liberal weekly, | jbut this has not prevented the | Mmewspapers from featuring whole | jPages of racing news. It is not from | them or from the movies that we get any serious verification of the general picture of the habitual pro-| fessional of the race track—the pic- ture of a gaudy tout, involved in shady manipulations with jockeys and statesmen, doping horses and| baiting every weak-minded pool- room hanger-out, in the territory.) When the movies present us with} pictures of such characters they are always rare in the crowd of honest| beings associated with the game, | and are always deposited in ash- cans at the end. The newspapers! never discuss these types, save when @ scandal gets too loud to hide. oe | Hoe racing, in itself, is as thrill- ing and pure a sport as any other; but the pages devoted to it recount simply the connections of} the elite. As with yacht-racing the worker has nothing to do with it, save if he can raise the price, be allowed to attend or to bet. Horse racing, however, is purely not a worker's sport. It is not a worker's sport because no worker, if we ex- clude the jockeys and stable men, can participate in it, as he can par- ticipate in boxing or baseball or basketball. It is not the workers that the Kentucky Derby will attract to- day, but the idlers and the para- | sites. Most of these will come | from New York, flushed with liquor and some carting precious ladies of the chorus. As we can | see by the Rewapeners; Louisville ‘© PICK up the sports sections of the capitalist press dur- ing the week preceding the Kentucky Derby, and espe- nt, is to perceive again how} politicians and gamblers who is one hell of a town on Derby Day. ae The sports columnists of New| York, being men of education and refinement concern themselves with | the proper subjects, of course. What, indeed, interests these Homers? Does it occur to them to point out | that in the town of Louisville, where the sports forgather, conditions. are| so bleak, as they have been for years, that the native worker is seething with excitement but not over @ horse race? Do they mention the terrible exclusion of Negroes from every place where the white man celebrates? Or do they relate little anecdotes about important in- dividuals, in order to give these per- sons free publicity and get a favor) in return out of them some day? His publicity the newspapers give the horse races is one of the means utilized by the gamblers to work their way into innocent and susceptible pockets. There is not an. important gambler on Broadway who does not cultivate newspapermen. The representatives of both professions patronize the same places, as do the keepers of brothels and stock- brokers. Rothstein was on genial terms with most of the well-known reporters of New York . It was a naive; young woman on the Morning Telegraph a number of years ago who was unable to see how the land lay. Sent to in- vestigate a suicide she discovered that the victim had been fleeced of his inheritance at the various race tracks throughout the country. She duly wrote the truth, beginning her story with the sentence, “Betting on horses took another life yester- day. ’ She had forgotten that the ing Telegraph contained on its masthead the information that it was the greatest track newspaper in the country. Need I add that she Local 22 Leaders Scheme to Cut Pay Plan Exposed by Left; Wing Workers NEW YORK.—At a meeting of |the Joint Board three locals of the International Ladies Garment Workers Union held Thursday night at the Mecca Temple, left wing workers assailed the proposals of Manager Hochman that the scien- tific schedule be put into operation in the trade, K. Abramovich pointed out that | the schedule proposed by the lead- ers of the union would mean more speed-up, will thrown thousands of workers out of a job and will un- dermine the wage scale won dur- nig the last strike. He demanded that the union at once take steps to enforce the minimum wage scale and to establish week work for the finishers, the most exploited section of the trade. | Zimmerman, Hochman, Max Cohen and Antonini, leaders of the union, in supporting the scientific schedule, attacked the militant left wing, which is fighting for better conditions in the trade, as ‘a danger to the union.” Many of the left wing members | was fired promptly the next morn? DRY MATES <oons West 15th St, and Mermaid Ave. Brooklyn workinmen’s store in NEY ISLAND WORK CLOTHES OUR SPECIALTY The friendly tere} CLOSING OUT MIMEOGRAPHS — STENCILS — INK and OTHER SUPPLIES at REDUCED PRICES EMPIRE MIMEO SERVICE 799 BROADWAY, N.Y.C. Room 542 KRAUS & SONS, Inc. Manufacturers of Badges-Banners-Buttons For Workers Clubs and Organizations 157 DELANCEY STREET ‘Telephone: DRydock 4-8275-8276 LERMAN BROS. STATIONERS and UNION PRINTERS Special Prices for Organizations 29 EAST 14th STREET New York City Algonquin 4-3856-—4-8843—4-7828 who wished to speak on the question | of the schedule were not permitted the floor. The meeting was packed with strong-arm men. In summing up the question, Hochman said, “Although some are against the scientific schedule, it is not necessary for a vote. We will carry it through. It will be intro- duced.” Hit Injunction in Coney Island Meet Mass Today at 15th St. and Surf Avenue NEW YORK.—The N. Y. Trade | Union Anti-Injunction Committee is holding a mass demonstration this afternoon, in front of Nathan's Famous, Inc., 15th St. and Surf Ave., Coney Island, to protest an injunc- tion issued against the workers who are on strike against the sweatshop conditions. After nine days of peaceful picket- ing, Nathan's, through his political pull, obtained an injunction pro- hibiting workers from picketing. All workers were urged by the Committee to mass in front of the stand. On Sunday, 2 p.m., the Committee is holding a conference to discuss ways to defy the injunction at 2918 30th St., Coney Island. Protests will be made against the issuing of in- junctions by Brooklyn judges. FOR Horsehide, Sheepskin Coats, Wind- Breakers, Breeches, High Shoes, Boots, Work Shirts, Gloves, Ete. Hudson Army & Navy 105 THIRD AVE. Corner 13th Street (Classified ) : SINGLE ROOM—Stuyvesant section, reas- onable rental. Phone Sat. and Sunday Gr. 5-3105. BRIGHT, modern, beautiful furnished room facing park, reasonable, private, all sub- ways. 235 W. 110th St. Apt. 9 Un. 4-9822. LIGHT SEPARATE ROOM — telephone; reasonable. 2156 Cruger Ave., Bronx, Apt. 1-J. STUDIO TO SHARE—large, attractive, li- brary, radio, typewriter, fireplace. 222 E. 4th B8t., 4-F. SHARE 4-ROOM APARTMENT—refrigera- tor, new house, sunny, woman only, $4.00. 549 East 12th St., 4-D. ‘WOMAN COMRADE—desires to take care of a child. Numerous privileges to the parents. R. Green, 981 E. 172nd St., Bronx, Ast floor. RUGSSIAN—25c lesson groups. Schuyler 4- 0174, Translations done. IMRADE — going to Wisconsin. W.LR. CO! Any comrade going with car, if only part W.LR., 870 utterly subservient the immortals who conduct the bac | columns are to the aristocrats, “sport of kings’ 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 P.M Tompkins Square 6-7697 Dr. S. A. Chernoff GENITO-URINARY 223 Second Av. DR. EMIL EIGHEL ROOM — shower, FURNISHED SINGLE comfortable. 270 W. 4th St., near 11th St. Apt. 15. DENTIST j ' ' ' it | 1150 EB. 93rd St. New York City { Cor. Lexington Ave. ATwater 9-8838 Eours: 9 a. m. to 8 p.m, Sun. 9 tol Member Workmen's Sick and Death Benefit Fund Wisconsin 17-0288 Dr. N. S. Hanoka Denial Surgeon 261 West 41st Street New York City AARON SHAPIRO, Pod.G. CHIROPODIST 223 SECOND AVENUE Algonquin 4-4432 Cor, 14th 8t. Scientific Treatment of Foot Ailments 1378 ST.NICHOLAS AVE® 1690 LEXINGTON AVE, at 179" ST. NY at 106+) ST.NY. —WILLIAM: BELL—_—_—_ OFFICIAL Optometrist OF THE 106 EAST 14th STREET Near Fourth Ave., N. ¥. C. Phone: TOmpkins Square 6-8237 e Folding Chairs © Desks, Files e Typewriters KALMUS 2s se 26th Street + To Hire AIRY, LARGE MEETING ROOMS and HALL Suitable for Meetings, Lectures and Dances in the Czechoslovak Workers House, Inc. 347 E. 72nd St. New York Telephone: RHinelander 5097 For Meetings, Dances, Banquets, Conventions, Ets. STUYVESANT CASINO 140-142 2nd Av. Near 9th St. Catering for All Occasions : TOmpkins Squa John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY—ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 302 E. 12th St. New York ~- ALL COMRADES WELCOME — NEW CHINA RESTAURANT Tasty Chinese and American Dishes PURE FOOD — POPULAR PRICES 848 Broadway bet, 13th # 14th st. Garment Section Workers Patronize Navarr Cafeteria 333 7th AVENUE We Have Reopened JADE MOUNTAIN American & Chinese Restaurant 197 SECOND AVENUE (Bet. 12th and 13th St.) Tompkins Square 6-9182 Caucasian Restaurant “KAVKAZ” Russian and Oriental Kitehen BANQUETS AND PARTIES 382 East 11th Street New York City Russian and Oriental Kitchen Comradely Atmosphere VILLAGE BAR 221 SECOND AVENUE near 14th Street, New York City Going to Russia? Workers needing full outfits of horsehide leather, sheeplined Coats, Windbreakers, Breeches, Hirh Shoes, etc., will receive spe- Ss reduction on all their purchases at the UARE DEAL uf MY and NAVY STORE 121 THIRD AVE. (2 doors South of 14th Street) DEAR COMRADE: fun. Spring weather is swell. Your, All Comrades Meet at the’ NEW HEALTH CENTER CAFETERIA Ffesh Food—Proletarian Prices—30 E. 15th St.—WORKERS' CENTER. NITGEDAIGET Beacon, N. Y. We're having a grand time here. and tennis court are in trim, the food swell, the programs P. 5.—Cars leave from Co-operative Restaurant, 2700 Bronx Park East, daily at 10:30 A.M. Estabrook 8-1400. TODAY The athletic field Come join us! COMRADES,