The Daily Worker Newspaper, May 23, 1934, Page 2

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Page Two Se 34 2 DATEY WORKER, NEW YORK. WE ESDAY, MAY 23, 198 Buffalo United Front" ee Plan Series of Actions in Support of Men, Now Out 9 Weeks Special to the Daily Worker IFFALO of tion ited Front to draw in new organizations; the establishment of @ publicity committee to get correct news bulletins into all neighbor- hoods and into the city papers, and | to spread the sale of the Daily Worker to all parts of the city; the holding of a city-wide tag day to} aid the aeronautical strikers as well as dozens of street metings daily, | to report accurately on the progress of the strike. A huge mass meeting is planned for the Broadway Auditorium in the | very near future, to advertise which 150,000. leaflets will be distributed by United Front organizations. The majority of the strikers are determined to force the company | to guarantee no discrimination be- | fore the workers return. The strike has been on for nine weeks, some of the men are. showing their weariness. There is a slight drift back to the plant. Immediate ac- tion of ali the members of the United Front is necessary to aid the strikets and to restdte the con- fidence and enthusiasm which were | somewhat broken when 600 police | smashed the famous mass picket} lines Roosevelt Acts To Smother Facts of : Darrow on N. R. A. (Continued from Page 1) was 107. Fifty-one cities showed in this year an advance in food prices of from 10 to 27 per cent. Rent, fuel, light, house furnishings and other items showed at the end of the year, after the codes had begun to operate, a marked upward tendency.” Therefore, in the daily pur- chase of bread, milk, light, fuel. | shelter, clothing, ete., every single worker and poor farmer in this country during the last year of Roosevelt rule, has had to pay more as a direct result of the N.R.A. development of monopoly. For the small producers, the NR.A. has meant that the Roose- velt government, has taken an ac- tive part in driving them down into the ranks of the proletariat. This not only ruins them, but permits the monopolies to raise prices even more for tne mass of constmers. HE intense exploitation of the} working class by the employers had finally reduced their buying power so far below the amount of available goods that the/| force of the crisis was intensified. The problem of the Wall Street monopolies at the beginning of last year was to find a way to restore their huge profits. Roosevelt's NR.A. was the means by which accomplished it. The method was simple. It was based on this principle: If the masses cannot buy back enough of what they have preduced, then we must make the smaller consumption of goods re- turn a larger retnrn. Less goods, but more profit. More misery on one side, and more profit on the other. That was the method of the N.R.A. The Darrow report confirms this: The control of a market which is attained by force of monopoly maintains profits by diminishing or restricting production, that is to say, by decreasing weaith and lowering standards of living. It also maintains profits by lowering the costs of production. that is, by lowering wages and reducing the living standards of the workers.” and | actual | 19 S i 5 York Cops Throw Gas | Bombs in Attack on} Girl Shirt Strikers} 198 Groups Meet to: Fight Deportation ‘Moves of Perkins Conference Also Urges | Right of Asylum for Fascist Refugees NEW YORK.—Meeting in an en-| thusiastic conference under the au- | pices of the Committee for the Pre- | tection of Foreign Born, delegates) \from 196 organizations representing |a total membership of 69,826, en- | dorsed the committee's four-point program and the proposed bills for, right of asylum for political refu- |gees and for naturalization. The conference also voted to urge their organizations to affiliate with the committee and popularize and sup- | port the proposed measures. -~ D. C. Morgan, secretary of the |New York District Committee, de- |clared in his report to the conven- tion that “there is no fundamental | difference between the policies of | Deportation Doak’ and those of the iberal’ Frances Perkins, except that the present administration is going further in its persecution of the foreign born, and is making jan attack upon those who have citizenship papers, as in the case of Emil Gardos, in a more desperate |effort to divide the workers and {break the tremendous present wave |of strikes.” A delegation from this conven- tion plans to visit both France: Perkins and Samuel Dickstein chairman of the House Committee |on Immigration, now in New York \investigating Nazi activities, to de- |mand that he introduce and sur | port in Congress the Bill for Right lof Asylum for refugees from fascist terror. 20,000 Pickets in Minneapolis Drive ‘Off Police Army (Continued from Page 1) ing of the strike. He used all hi | efforts and succeeded to stop St | Paul drivers from entering th strike. | Together with other top leader |of the A. F. of L. he prevented th treet car men from joining the |strike, while on the other hanc | |all of the A. F. of L. leaders pre- |tend sympathy with the strikers Some of them, such as Congress-| man Shoemaker and I. G. Scott,| went so far as to have themselves arrested on the picket line. The Communist Party will dis-| tribute. its call urging a united front of all labor unions in all labor or- ganizations to bring out a genera strike in Minneapolis for the en forcement of the following demandy | Higher pay and improved work- ing conditions, union recognition in all shops and industries, against police terror and compulsory ar- bitration through the N. R. A.; | against Olson threats to call out | the Militia in Minneapolis. | The Central Labor Union is call- ing a city-wide mass meeting at) the parade grounds tomorrow night} to mobilize support for the strike. Members of all working class organ- izations have been called on to join with the Unemployed Council at | | | MY LATEST om ent! “Accordingly to a weekly at Columbia University, five people can eat for a total cost | ITEM. — of | $9.45 Per week.” "NEW! Ss oS nue, BUTLER menu prepared by scientists ‘Browder to Talk ‘it Opening NEW YORK—Earl Browder, Gen- }eral. Secretary of the Communist Party, U. S. A., will speak at the) opening tonight of the five-day | Festival and Bazaar to be held in} Manhattan Lyceum, May 23 to 27,| it was announced yesterday by the | New York District of the Party, un- der whose auspices the Bazaar is arranged. With the announcement Comrade Browder would speak, the Secretariat of the New York D: aE: trict pointed out the political im- portance of bringing masses of| workers and sympathizers to the| affair. that | “The rapidly growing influence of | Of District Bazaar Tonight the Communist Party,” stated the Secretariat, “as exemplified by the great May Day demonstration and the rising tide of militant strikes, | make immediate financial backing decisive in organizing masses of toilers for struggle and winning them into the Communist Party. | Besides dancing every with the Red Star Syncopaters, en- tertainers include the Theatre of Action, Maxim Gorki Union, scenes from the musical play “Strike Me Red,” by the Pioneers; a new Negro | Dance Group, the Theatre Union Dance Group, Na‘ure Friends Dance | Group, a scene from “They Shall grams and many other features. |ers’ Camp here. Scottsboro Appeal Up Friday Before ‘la. Supreme Court (Continued from Page 1) s in the electric chair, personally c sth ted the prosecution in both trials” at Decatur. The I. L. D. attorneys will con- tend that the lynch verdicts against the boys was in absolute conflict with the weight of evidence, in-| cluding the retraction by Ruby Bates) of the original testimony nto which} she had been coerced by State and county authorities to the effect that she had been “raped” by the boys, The attorneys will also seek to en- ter into the record the admission of Judge Horton, who presided at the first Decatur lynch trial of Paterson, | that the evidence was preponder- antly in favor of the boys. All organizations are urged to rush protest telegrams today to the) Alabama Supreme Court demanding the immediate, unconditional and safe release of the Scottsboro boys | Workers! Hold protest meetings in your factories and neighborhoods |and adopt protest resolutions to be [sent to the court. Contribute and help raise funds for the defense, to) be sent at once to the I. L. D., 80) East llth St., Room 430. | geaaes are Scottsboro Protest in Detroit Sunday DETROIT, May 22.—Harry Hay- |wood, Nejonal Secretary of the League of struggle for Negro Rights, | who is on a three-months speaking and organizational tour, will be the main speaker at a Scottsboro De- fense picnic, May 27, at the Work- An excellent program has been arranged, with the Theatre of Ac- tion group and the Nat Turner Club | preparing sketches and songs to be rendered by workers’ choruses. FOOD WORKERS MEET IN BOSTON BOSTON.—A mass meeting of all food workers will be held Wednesday, May 23, 7:30 p.m., at Wells: Memorial Hall, 995 Washington St., under the auspites of the ba ‘Workers Industrial Union, Lecal 111. | Nicollet and Second and to march to this meeting in an organized body | 4 | of workers. New York representative will outline the steps for building a unified, rank and file controlled union. New Scottsboro Seen in Arrest OfDetroitNesro (Continued from Page 1) operation with the League of Stru gle for Negro Rights. A mass prot meeting is being held tonight in Israel Baptist Church, Under the very quiet but relent- less questioning of Maurice Sugar, LL.D. attorney, the well dressed. | aristocratic looking Mrs. Kaye made a number of significant admissions. It was brought out that when Vic- tory was picked up at the gas sta- tion where he worked, and brought to the Connors St. police station, Mrs. Kaye immediately identified him. But then, to make it official, cops arranged to have her identify him again at Central Police head- quarters, this time from a group of Negroes. The police thus cooperated with her to put over the so-called identification. Mrs. Kaye admitted, in testifying, that her only means! of identifying Victory was by his longish hair Sugar demanded the reduction of the outrageous bail of $50,000, but Judge Skillman, who has a vicious anti-labor record, refused. Jones, Negro attorney of the Charles Young Post, American Le- gion, of which Victory is a member, also appeared in court and the LL. D. agreed to allow him to partici- pate in the defense. The trial date has not yet been set. It is necessary to organize the broadest protest movement among Negro people and white workers and sympathizers to smash this frame- up and prevent a second Scotts- boro case, OPEN FURUM ON FUR CODE NEW YORK.—The Fur Workers Industrial Union will hold an open forum today at 2 p.m. to discuss the Fur Code which has just been signed. The forum will be held at the union hall, 131 W. 28th St, SPECIAL CARPENTERS MEETING The Independent Carpenters Union is calling a special membership meeting on Wednesday, May 23, 1934, 8 p.m., at the union headquarters, 820 Broadway, New York City, | ‘Members Cry Down S| Walin ky At Meet | Accuse Figr of Caitec! Down Demands for the | Manufacturers YORK.—For fully 30 mi rank and file of the Poc'! | utes |etbook Workers’ Union demon- |strated their disapproval against | Ossip Walinsky, who recently re- turned to the union as a “legal ad- visor.” The demonstration took place at a union meeting held Monday night in the Stuyvesant High School, where a new set of union demands were presented. against Walinsky, who has a long record of giving active assistance to the manufacturers and was pre- viously ousted from the union for his double dealing, the Joint Board had decided that no further criti- cism of the present union leadership of Mr, Walinsky will be tolerated. | The board’s resolution on this ques- | tion was not presented at the meet- Jing, however. One rank and filer charged that Walinsky had already earned a debt of gratitude from the manufactur- ers by scaling down two of the union’s proposed demands, one for the 35-hour week, instead of 36 hours, which was submitted, and another for a 20 per cent wage in- crease. The new demands call for a 10 per cent wage increase. In Southern Ports; Support Dockers (Continued from Page 1) Secretary of Labor Edward F. Mc- the strike. The strike can no longer be called a longshoremen’s strike, for every- Boilermakers, ship clerks, marine engineers, shipwrights, caulkers and machinists have joined the walk-| out in San Francisco. A taxicab carrying strikebreakers was overturned yesterday; all union taxis bear a sign saying they are union and the hackies refuse to | Not Die,” musical and choral pro- | carry strikebreakers. Cargo is being moved only by the | State Belt Line Railway. Strikers| | throw themselves across the rail- road tracks of this line to impede the progress of the scab cargo. In Oakland, strikers stormed strikebreakers’ headquarters and the employment bureau of the shipown-| ers and were brutally attacked by police. . . * Demand Rank and File Negotiations SEATTLE, May 22.--The Marine Workers Industrial Union issued a call today to all striking stevedores to repudiate the negotiations being | made by officials of the Interna-| tional Longshoremen’s Association} and to elect rank and file delegates | to negotiate with the shipowners. The leaders of the I.L.A. here are doing their utmost to get the ships moving. Their latest strikebreak- cargo of arsenate of lead to be un- loaded. These misleaders are issuing con- tinuous warnings to the strikers against reading Communist litera- ture. The reaction to the warnings is an increased sale of the Daily Worker, A telegram was received here yesterday from a mass meeting of workers in Fairbanks, Alaska, pro- testing aga2inst rumors being cir- culated by agents of the shipown- ers that people in Alaska are | starving due to the strike. TN oe N. Y. Dock Strike Betrayed; Men Vote on Union NEW YORK.—Through the joint maneuvers of Joseph P. Ryan, head of the International Longshoremen’s Association, and Mrs. Elinore Her- rick, chairman of the Regional Labor Board, the strike on piers 34 and 37 of the Mallory Steamship Company was broken Monday. The men were tricked back to) work on a promise that they could settle their grievances through a plebiscite conducted by the Regional Labor Board. As the Daily Worker went to press the men on the piers were to begin voting on the question of whether or not they want the Inter- national Longshoremen’s Associa- tion to represent them. The Marine Workers Industrial Union was not on the ballot, but oragnizers of the union have ad- vised the dockers to write in the name of the M.W.LU. when they vote, Jobless Demonstrate at Welfare Department Saturday at 10 A.M. Gi fu ommittee of 100 Urges. Full Mobilization of Unemployed NEW YORK.—The Committee of | One Hundred will meet. tonight at ® p.m. at 29 E. 20th St. to draft demands for presentation fo Com- missioner Hodson at the demonstra- tion of unemployed on Saturday, ‘May 26, at 10 a.m., at 50 Lafayette Street. All affiliated organizations to the Committee of One Hundred are asked to send delegates to the meet- ing, and to have their demands formulated for presentation. The Committee calls Members of working class organiza- tions to mass at 50 Lafayette St., Saturday at 10 am. Orders have already been issued by. the Home Relief Bureau to cut off and stagger all youchers for rent. Twenty thousand families are to be upon all) entirely cut off the relief lists. A | systematic plan of victimization by which families with even the small- est income are being made to kick- back relief which has been granted them in the past. 500 Demonstrate at Home Relief Bureau NEW YORK.—About 500 workers under the leadership of the 13th St. Block Committee, massed in front of the Spring and Elizabeth Home Relief Bureau yesterday and forced Mr. Fagan, supervisor. to see their delegation of five. While the meeting was going on outside police seized Virginia Raffe, pregnant and the mother of two |small children, when she demanded | that her rent be paid and her re- lief continue. Most of the assem- bled workers followed her to the Fifth Precinct Police Station and demanded her release. When Bertha Lowenthal, one of the workers, shouted “Free her!” the police ar- rested her too, They will be tried on Tuesday, May 29, at 10 a.m. The International Labor Defense calls on workers to jam the First District Court at Franklin and Cen- tre streets on Tuesday at 10 a.m. and to send telegrams and protest resolutions to the trial judge. Relief Workers League Votes Affiliation to Councils NEW YORK. — The Mechanics Local of the Relief Workers League, following the action of all other locals, voted last night to affiliate With the National Unemployment Councils. Following this action by the membership, the City Executive Committee voted unanimously for affiliation to the Councils. While the Mechanics Local was in meeting last night, a small gro of disruptors led by Charles Goss- lin, an ex-cop, attempted by every means possible to break up the local and make it a tool of the local re- lief administration. The small group of six disrupters, shouting “the fists will rule tonight,” started a fight, and smashed chairs on the heads of objecting members. Gosslin and his clique of strong- arm men were unceremoniously booted down the stairs by the men, and the membership unanimously voted for affiliation to the Councils. Members of the local state that the clique had slimy connections with thugs and politicians, and dur- ing the painters’ general strike last year many had been caught scab- bing openly. * Pack Court Tomorrow to Stop Relief Frame-Up NEW YORK.—Workers are urged up | to pack the court room at 16ist St. and Washington Ave., Part 2, at 10 1Mass at 50 Lafayette Street at 10 a. m, Saturday am. tomorrow, when David Mor- genstein will be “tried” for recety- ing relief while holding down a part-time job. Mongenstein, who has been active in the Charlotte St. Block Commit- tee, taking an active part in the struggle for relief, is being victim- ized by the Relief Bureau. While on relief, he received food checks from the city. Since his rent, like thousands of other families, was not paid, and in order to meet the gas and electric bills, Morgenstein ac- cepted a job which paid him about $750 for 14 months work. Workers are urged to meet at the Charlotie St. Center, 1447 Crarlotte St., Thursday at 9 a. m, and march to the court in a body to stop this frame-up. In an attempt to muzzle critcism| Grady, failed in attempts to break| a “*' Pocketbook Union| ‘to the horse ... as if it were* | ing move was to agree to allow aj"*"* evening | body on the waterfront is striking.| W° ~ WILLIAM FUC M Elizabeth C. I ine to whom mont, is a bereaved Her horse died the other da: in yesterday’s Miri “She Bo: pe RS. urred her child.” I wept as I read Mr. Park-| er’s account of Mrs. Bosley’: propose that he be ¢ Spani: so handily, After all, there society woman’s horse. | One can have no doubt about this after reading Mr. Parker's account of how they buried the animal will those to whom a horse is j another animal,” wrote Mr. Par! (who is a member of the Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Animals). “understand why this woman spent, a large part of her meager savings| to have the body of the thorough- | bred shipped back to Monkton where it was buried with the same reverent devotion that one would accord a member of the family.” (Whose family?) We have the death scene. “See- ing his left foreleg dangling as he |Jay on the ground,” | Parker, ‘Ships’ Crew Strike | tion can rarely writes Mr. prostrate animal.” Such an affec- be seen in the women of the slums when their children die of hunger. One has to be in society to have the higher feelings, Being a dramatist of high ability, Mr. Parker knows how to pull the strings to their fullest lengths. What can round out such an affecting picture? Love, loyalty—and what else is needed? Poverty! We hear, then, of her “meager savings” and that “Mrs. Bosley is a woman of straitened financial circumstances.” get the idea that though she is accustomed to eating at the Colony, now she eats on bread- | lines. Mr. Parker certainly knows | how to put words together. “Yet,” jhe utters, “she had refused an offer of $30,000 for him.” One almost follows him and Mrs. Bosley into convulsions. > . '¥Y CHICAGO operative, trusted William Andrews, the in- forms me of another race track| episode, which happened in the hog-butcher. This Items roman and I do not like to Sito $15 and $5, attitude to her horse and [| Reasi given some kind} of a scroll or a hundred pieces of gold for draining the Muse is} nothing so sad as the death of a “Nor | st “she emitted a piercing scream and threw herself on the ‘the owner of Chase Me, the the accident Saturda eat her y; had become as deeply attached | formed the track authorities mat they would strike if their wages, which are $25 for riding a winne: jand $10 for a loser, were low as was propo: the jockeys but they refused to rea- | son. The matter has therefore been referred to the racing commission, with the old scale being maintained till the oracles speak. i ae League of Cleveland and vicinity essing handsomely with its Tom Mooney Soccer Cup Competi- |tion. Workers are eyincing an enormous interest in the games and! are expressing their solidarity with }the framed prisoner. The victori-| | ous soccer teams of the Eastern and | Western Districts of the U.S. will engage each other for the cham- pionship at Flavai Field, Cleveland, jon July 1. . . 'HE Steel and Metal Workers In- dustrial Union in Cleveland has! | laid out plans for a baseball league and 5 nines were represented at the | preliminary conference. Tonight another conference will be held at| * St. The Union invites all workers organizations in Cleveland into the} league. In particular it invites the | Unemployed Councils, the Small Home and Land Owners and fra- ternal clubs and organizations. eas aba HAVE an appeal from the com- rades who are managing the Daily Worker excursion on June 9th to inform all right-thinking souls that this excursion will be the biggest thing of its kind since Nebuchadnezzar sailed down the Nile. It is a daylight and moon- light thing, to Hock Mt., and the finest boat in the world has been chartered. Those who have an affection for athletics will be able to see a sports pregram which includes a gymnastic exhibition on parallel bars, pyramids, wrestling and boxing, a baseball game and a tug-of-war, Those who like nature will be able to examine the woods. * ars sociated Workers Clubs again| town of the | urges all workers to be present at and as Dan Parker tells us; e men tried to reason with | 'HE Workers International Soccer # the union headquarters, 1404 E. 9th | | 'HE City Club Council of the As- must have been a painful thing, also,| the Anti-War Field Day which that | to the upper crust in that Sodom.) organization is staging at Ulmer At Aurora track the jockeys in- Park, Saturday, June 2. BASEBALL GAMES TODAY AMERICAN LEAGUE New York 000 100 000-1 3 0 Cleveland 010 002 O2x—5 9 2 Murphy, Smythe, Deshong and Dickey; L, Brown and Pytlak. Boston 100 100 903—5 10 2 Chicago 000 030 021-6 8 0 Ostermueller, H. Johnson and Hinkle, | Ferrell; Jones and Madjeski. Washington 101 000 030-5 11 1 Detroit 010 001 000-2 11 2 Crowder and Phillips; Bridges and Coch- NATIONAL LEAGUE St. Louis 000 300 103—7 18 1 New York 010 201 000-4 9 P. Dean and V. Davis; Smith, Luque and Mancuso. Cincinnati 300 211 021-10 17 2 Boston 100 000 300-4 11 0 Derringer and Lombardi; Betts, Smith, Pickrel and Hogan, Spohrer. Pittsburgh A 660 0-13 10 0 Philadelphia 2002-4 9 2 (Geme Called na ith Rain) 3,000 Expected to Take | | Part in Daily Worker Boat Excursion June 9, NEW YORK.—Over 3,000 workers are expected to take part in the Daily Worker Day and Moonlight Excursion to Hook Mountain in the Hudson River steamer, “Clermont,” on Saturday, June 9. The big boat will leave Pier A at the Battery at 1 p.m. when the sun is high and return to New York after a full day and eevning of en- tertainment, dancing and merry- making, at midnight. Tickets in advance are $1.25 at the pier. They can be se- cured at the Daily Worker's city Office, 35 E. 12th St., the Workers Bookshop, 50 E. 13th St. and at vari- ous other workers’ stores through- out the city. Registration for the Daily Worker Excursion Committee —all week—at Daily Worker Office, 35 E. 13th St. A strong committee is needed. Volun- teer now. WORKERS 2700-2800 BRONX PARK EAST COOPERATIVE COLONY has reduced the rent, several good apartments available. Cultural Activities for Adults, Youth and Children. Telephone: Estabrook 8-1400—8-1401 Trains. Direction: Office open daily from 9 a.m. to 8 friday and Saturday 9 a.m. to 5 Sunday 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. LERMAN BROS. STATIONERS and UNION PRINTERS p.m. Special Prices for Organizations 29 EAST 14th STREET New York City Algonquin 4-3356—4-8843—4-7823 $1, and| Stop at Allerton Ave. station ‘exington Ave., White Piains Birkofer and Padden; Darrow, Hansen, 1A. Moore and Todd. { Chicago 100 010 200 000-4 10 2 Brooklyn 000 120 001 001—5 Root, Werneke and Tate; Lucas, Mungo and Lope: INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Buffalo 200 010 000-3 8 1 Toronto O11 200 001-4 8 1 Elliott and Wasem; Hollingsworth and Crouch, Montreal 001 101 000-8 5 2 Rochester 100 420 10x—8 11 1 Collier, Fritzz, Fisher and Stack; Kauf- mann and Lewis. Albany 101 000 111-5 7 1 | Newark 122 110 OOx—7_ 9 3 | Barrett, Porter and Finney; Newkirk and Glenn. Syracuse at Baltimore, night game, & p.m, EST. BEAUTY OPERATORS MEET BROOKLYN, N. ¥.—There will be a mass meeting of beauty parlor operators, Wednesday, May 23, at 9:30 at Temple Auditorium, 251 Rochester Ave., near Lin- coln Place. All beauty parlor operators are urged to attend this meeting. 10 0|% For Red Fighting Fund Opensg Tonitee with Earl Browder as SPEAKER —and— ANDRE CIBULSKI American and Soviet Songs RED DANCE GROUP I. W. 0. SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA KOTKIN TRIO Dancing Restaurant with Balalaika Orchestra 5-DAY FESTIVAL BAZAAR \ Camping Goods, Bathing Suits, Dresses, Millin- ery, Drugs, Leather Goods, Men’s, Children’s Clothing, Household Goods, Soviet Art Ob- jects, etc. y Cool é | Admission: Daily 35¢; vance 25c; Saturday 50c; in advance 40c; Combination Ticket for 5 days 85¢—Free Admission Saturday and Sun- day until 5 P. M. in ad- Auspices: Communist Party, N.Y. (ENTIRE BUILDING) MANHATTAN LYCEUM 66 EAST 4th STREET Against Hunger, Fascism and War! DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet. Pitkin and Sutter Aves. Brooklrn PHONE: DICKENS 2-3012 Office Hpurs: 8-10 A.M., 1-2, 6-8 P.M CAthedral 8-6160 Dr. D. BROWN Dentist 317 LENOX AVENUE » NYC, Between 125th & 126th St. 1378 ST.NICHOLAS AVE* 1690 LEXINGTON AVE. 9 at 179" ST. For full information write to the city office, 50 East 13th Street, Room 200, or telephone Algonquin 4-1148, or write di- rectly to Camp Unity, Wing- dale, N. Y. Williamsburg Comraées Weleome ASSEMBLY CAFETERIA 786 Broadway, Brooklyn, N. Y. Tompkins Square 6-9132 Caucasian Restaurant “KAVKAZ” Russian and Oriental Kitchen BANQUETS AND PARTIES 332 East 14th Street © New York City Allerton Avenue Comrades! The Modern Bakery was first to settle Bread Strike and first to sign with the Food Workers’ Industrial Union 691 ALLERTON AVE. KRAUS & SONS, Inc. Manufacturers of Badges-Banners-Buttons For Workers Clubs and Organizations 157 DELANCEY STREET ‘Telephone: DRydock 4-8275-8276 e Folding Chairs ® Desks, Files © Typewriters 35 West 26th Street KALMUS AARON SHAPIRO, Pod.G. CHIROPODIST 223 SECOND AVENUE Algonquin 4-4432 Cor. 14th st. Scientific Treatment of Foot Ailments COHEN’S 117 ORCHARD STREET Nts Detancey Street, New York City EYES EXAMINE By JOSEPH TAX, OD, Optometrist Wholesale Opticians Tel. ORchard 4-45%0 Factory on Premises Tompkins Square 6-7697 Dr. 8. A. Chernoff GENITO-URINARY 223 Second Ave., N. Y. C. OEsIOe HOURS: 11- 7:30 P.M, SUNDAY: 12-3 P.M, Dr. Maximilian Cohen Dental Surgeon 41 Union Square NEW YORK. CITY GR. 7-0135 — ALL COMRADES WELCOME — NEW CHINA CAFETERIA Tasty Chinese and American Dishes PURE FOOD — POPULAR PRICES 848 Broadway bet. stn @ 1th st. We Have Reopened JADE MOUNTAIN American & Chinese Restaurant 197 SECOND AVENUE (Bet. 12th and 13th St.) ‘All Comrades Meet at the NEW HEALTH CENTER Fresh Food—Proletarian Prices—50 E. 13th St.—WORKERS' CENTER. CAFETERIA {

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