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Page Two DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, JUNE 2, 1934 ° Jobless to Demonstrate for Relief at 50 Lafayette St. Toda Mayor Admits Attacks on USSR. Daily Worker That “Relief Mark Opening of World s His Excursion Best in| “Stevedore” Cast. Will) S Entertain at Seamen’s BASEBALL ory, Say Managers Cub Affair Tonigh: | | NEW YORK.—The International | DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 BRISTOL STREET Set. Pitkin and Sutter Aves., Brooklyn GAMES YESTERDAY rr 9 S P ‘h t —The Dail in the history of the worfd|Seamen’s Club, composed of marine AMERICAN LEAGUE ‘ ¥ men, y I will be there myself. lof the ae of the workers in|“ pesnong, Grimes and Dicker; Ma eae SUon enter “unutterable} Manager No. 2 said: “It will|this basic industry, is sponscring a|and_ ; ; LaGuardia Calls Parley ; United States| be the best excursion in the his- | Spring Party for the benefit of the | Deizoit be eer | y 1 $. * | between variou when asked how a} of the world. The Daily|Marine Workers Industrial Union,| “pore and ccchrane; Lyons and Mad-| of Bankers as City | undoubtedly cox trip on one of the battleships | Worker staff is going to play the |Saturday night, June 2. The af: | Jeskt é f platform would compare with the trip up| Labor Sports Union in ghe best |fair, which will include | exocllent | Boston oot | a the Hudson to Hook Mountain| baseball game in the history of |¢ntertainment by the “Stevedore” | ype nag rerrell | so rie eee } y, June 9, when the| the world. We have the best bat-|cast, dancing and refreshments, Xe | atecott and Phillips, Berg. | cg ote Pe | bes nployed | t Daylight and| teries in the history of the world| being held at the headquarters of ager Ee i psp, rain, D eaumiant Tink gan sak GAaee Ath oe York City ion takes place.|—Hathaway and’ Gerson. Wa|the United Front Supporters, 11W.) | St eO Ne eb ors 418 | Near “al fa : ; 1 said: “I can’t| have to hide them every day so|18th Street. A short addross will | (hlscrinn 010 001 191-4 11 9 Phone: TOmpkins Square 6-8237 A mass demon- talk about anything but the e -|that thé Yankee and Giant |be made by Clarence Hathaw: Darrow and Todd; Hubbell; Luque and | relief at 10 a. m. | However ‘| cursion—on Saturday, June 9,| scouts won’t grab them. Why, we | editor of the poral bikie badge ingens Danning. —— ; he office of the De-| gree the ea of lnae stise 8; | up the Hudson to Hook Moun-| almost had to give Milton How-|YoUr friends, Subscription Se.) 000 at Sra: today at the office of the De- |gie‘cn the part of large differ from | ‘ain, daylight and moonlight, the| ard to get Hathaway from St. sien | \| Ke 5 : 5 { rtment of Public Welfare, | the Tank and fle. Ee Daily Worker Excursion. I am| Paul.” | i) | t ° ; oldin. be ey the Sk. thie. game rsetes et eee ce hae] Caaclnated Day thay Warey Manager No. 8 said: “nvery| GArdo e ega ion oosevelt HiT Acts g) i ets Ine. IK ¢ 50 Lafayette St., the sa principles, but merely nt Pee Son can’ awoke” aie On th |word they say is true. It I | | opronerests OF CoPTicians ged mate sn sping he ron wat OSEAN dens tne |tog ae te cot” ™* "| OFF to Washington, | Against Steel Men’s| To ‘Justify’ Plot To. Luseaeenen | rs thn ena excursion in the history of the| tory o: vorid. | J Ad ies rede ea ke | world. Everything will be the! Manager No. 4 said: 9 0 Y 8 y rid j Ho at eunter- volutionary jeory in ition brutal police ¢ day called of bankers and 6 * for Monday tc lief situation. eretary of the ment Councils, mittee of One e representat: ployed | s and other| ” invited by La} this conference are) W. Aldrich, President of} National Bank, Felix M.| Walter S. Gifford, Presi-| American Telephone| ph Corporation, Lionello} r, Almerindo Portfolio, | rella, Candy f Gerli, Sil] ublisher, | ae Ogden . ¥. Herald Tri- Randolph Hearst, | r Hearst Publications, | William T. Dewart, Publisher The| un, Fremont C. Peck, Publisher, | 2 Times-Union, James O’-| Flaherty, Publisher, Bronx Home| William F. Hoffmann, Pub-! Press, LeRoy L.| Smith, Publisher, The Star, Colonel} Julius Oc Adler, Vice President, | Nev York Times Company, Adolph S. Ochs, Publisher The Times, Roy Howard, Scripps Howard Organiza tion and Arthur Brisbane of the York American. former govern of New) York State and three former mayo Three of New York City will participate in LaGuardia’s conference. They| Alfred E. Smith, | iller and Charles S.| mn; and Mayors John P.| O'Brien, Joseph V. MeKee and John F, Hylan Serious. . . critical. . . no imme-| diate improvement of economic con- ditions. ..” states LaGuardia’s state- | ment, but he makes no mention of abrogating the infamous bankers agreemnt by which the city has mortgaged the lives of the unem-/ ployed. The city has been drawing on| $70,090,000 borrowed from the banks| last fall. In its agreement with the} bankers, the city promised not to} allocate more than $3,000,000) monthly for relief. More than haif of the $70 million was paid back to the bankers at once, and used for other city purposes. The state has cut down its appro- priation for rélief in the new Wicks | Bond bill to be placed before the voters in November, and federal ants for’ relief throughout the) state. are being cut each month.) From 25 million in April, federal| grants to New York state will be slashed each month until in August, September and October, only $19,- 500,000 will be allocated to the state. No provision whatsoever has been made for after that date. To “meet” this situation, the Wel- fare Department is about to slash 20,000 from the relief rolls, stop payihge rents and fire 20,000 rellef workers, It-is in answer to this grave situa- tion- and these new attacks on the jobless that the unemployed workers will demonstrate at 50 Lafayette Strikers Call Workers To Mass Picket Line in Brooklyn; Noon, Today NEW YORK.—The United Beau- ticians and Hairdressers Union, Lo- cal 3, calis on workers to come to Utica, Ave. and Eastern Parkway to- day,“at noon, sharp. They will then 80 to Dorine’s Beauty Parlor at 296 Utica Ave., in a mass picket line. Workérs there have been on strike since-May 2. The cases of workers who were ar- tested on the May 2nd picket, line were yesterday postponed as follows: five will be tried on June 15; 14 on June 14; two on June 22. ATTENTION WORKERS OF CROWN ws HEIGHTS NEW YORK.—The Daily Werker can be yought every night including Sunday at Dtiea ‘and Eastern Parkway — opposite Munteinal Court. 500 Folding Chairs Cheap Also Office Furniture 5, 85 W. 26th Street KALMi | Steady development of fascist ten-| |cr Engels or Debs, cr even Kautsky, The wa. keynote of the convention ick today, not by Leo Krz cki, National Chairman of th party, who made the keynoté speech, but by Dr. Max Wi for vice-mayor of Vienna, ater. Winter's speech w lete repudiation of revolution- action and a defense of the path of the Austrian ary treacherous jocial-Democracy, studded with vi- cious attacks on the Soviet Union and Communism. Winter developed a number of ingenious revolutionary theories: 1. It is not possible to carry through a successful revolution during a period of mass unem- ployment. (Before the crisis the Social-Democratic leaders said the workers are too prosperous and therefore will not fight for Social- ism; now it is the other way around.) 2, Even if the majority of the workers follow th> Socialist Party, it is impossible to carry through a revolution in a small country like Austria, surrounded by dic- tatorships, unless other bourgeois countries come to its aid. 3. It is impossible to carry thru revolution under any conditions in one country unkess simuitane- ously in every country of the | world workers are ready to do likewise. Winter also declared that the fate | of the Austrian Socialist Party was | sealed already in 1933 by capitula- tion of German Social-Democrac; to Hitlerism, thus deliberately gloss- | ing over the treachery of own | Party, its policy of “lesser evil,” | which supported Dollfuss fascism | in preference to Hitler fascism, offers to make a deal with Dollft its criminal restraint of the worker: at a moment. when they could have | struck @ decisive blow—all of which | have been admitted by Otto Bauer, | leader of the Austrian Social-Dém- ocracy. ‘All the countries of the world must win a majority for socialism nearly at the same time.” Winter spoke of this aim as a “distant one,” | thus continuing the traditional pol- icy of social-democratic leaders of postponing proletarian revolution | to the far indefinite future. | Attacks Soviet Union Earlier in his cpeech, after re- citing a list of fascist countries surrounding Austria, Winter said: | “And behind approximately one hundred and eighty million fas- cist-ruled people are a hundred and forty million Russian people under Stalin’s dictatorship. Small democratic Austria [Austria of the Dollfuss democracy.—A. B. M.] with six millions was surrounded | by more than three hundred mil- lions under dictatorship. One against fifty, that was the polit- ical pressure burdening Austria.” Besides lumping the proletarian dictatorship of the U. S. 8. R. with| fascist dictatorships in true Red- baiting style, Winter here declares that the Soviet Union was part of | the “political pressure burdening Austria” and preventing revolution | against capitalism. Toward the end, speaking of the fact that “guns cannot kill the spirit of socialism.” Winter made another attack on the workers’ re- public: “Once more dictatorships, from Lake Constance to Vladivo- stok, try to suppress the spirit with big guns. Though he attacked the Soviet Union, he said nothing about the Japanese aggressions against the Workers Republic, nothing at all about the war danger and the men- ace of fascism in this country. He made no call for struggle for re- lease of anti-fascist fighters. He merely urged a change in methods Of socialist agitation, and then ex- plained what he meant by saying more attention should be paid to winning the youth. Passivity to N. R. A. Attacks The keynote speech of Kraycki reflected a new fake “left” orien- tation of the party. Though he spoke of the growing disillusion- ment with the New Deal and re- ferred to the strike wave sweeping the country, he called for no strug- | gle against the Roosevelt program end made no mention of the tre- mendous war preparations and the counter- dencies. | Towerd the-end of his speech, to! illustrate the point of his remarks, he made quotations, not from Marx but from Grover Cleveland, strike- breaking President, who gave the workers a taste of the New Deal of! strike led by Eugene Debs. LaGuardia Secretly (Continued from Page 1) jon in concealed fashion since it} assumed office six months ago. On Saturday the workers were | clubbed and blackjacked by La- Guardia’s cops. Scores were in- |jured. Thirteen were arrested. Po- lice carried guns in their hands, |some of them even carried rifles. | Felonious assault was the charge made against eleven of those jerrested—a charge under which |they may be framed into three to ten years in jail! | The next y, May 3 crowded the cour n where their com |rades were being tried, the judg |ordered the room cleared when they | |boosd his announcement of the | | bail—$1,500 for each defendant. As jthé workers, protesting, filed out of | | the room and down the steps into |the street, they were attacked by | |scores of police and detectives who | appeared, by pre-arranged signal from adjoining rooms. Their attack a1— jon two white collar workers, Mr. | and Mrs, James Lechay, was so des- picable and sadistic, so inhuman, that two metropolitan press report- ers tried to object, to stop it. They were punched in the face for their trouble. But this terror, this open and bloody fascist brutality, did not be- gin last Saturdi That date marked the culmination of one stage of anti-working class terror at d into a new and more virulent On this day it dropped ail pretense to “liberalism.” to “prog- ressivism,’ to Mayor La Guardia’s hypocritical “Tt hurts me more than it hurts you” attitude. The administration came out into the open. It no longer found it necessary to “make allowances” for the police—to indulge in mild cen- sure. The city government came out. openly. Tuesday's New York Times carried the headline: O’RYAN WARNS REDS RIOT- ING MUST STOP. Says Police Will Use Force if Necessary to Protect City from ‘Foreign Intrigue’ DEFENDS TACTICS OF MEN After Conference With Mayor and Hodson, He Appeals to Public for Cooperation. The story which followed stated, among other things, the following: “General O'Ryan. . . when inter- viewed in police headquarters, . . gave out a statement in which he announced that ‘the police must maintain order in this city and they are obligated to employ all force necessary’ in doing so.” The same story carried the news that LaGuardia had conferred with Police Commissioner O'Ryan about. | “troubles that had been brought about recently by radicals who de- mand more jobs for the unem- ployed.” (Our emphasis—Ed.) On the very same day (Tuesday) appeared an open, lynch-inciting editorial in the New York Herald Tribune, under the title “Yellow ‘Reds’” Not content with spreading its slimy slander upon the jobless workers who admirably defended themselves against police attacks, the Tribune proceeds in its attempts | to arouse lynch hysteria and whip up sentiment for another attack on the coming unemployment demon- stration by linking up the assault upon workers with the killing of a policeman a few weeks ago by those best agents of the police—organized gangsters. Yellow Capitalist Journalism In this foul manner it actually puts on the same plane the strug- gles of hungry and homeless work- ers for food and shelter and the ies of organized gangsterdom (whose intimate connections with New York's politicians and police is too well known to need restatement, “All that can be said of these cowardly ‘rats’ can be said of these yellow Reds—and more,” the Tri une says, characterizing the police ettack as premeditated by the “reds!” The editorial ends by calling upon the police to again attack workers’ demonstrations by stating, “The au- thorities are here dealing not with | Social doctrines but with organized crime for which it would be a costly folly to make any more allowances Against Workers of New York City’ Plans Terrde Civil Liberties Union || Demands Police Keep |; Hands Of the Jobless NEW YORK.—The American Civil Liberies Union today de- manded that Mayor LaGuardia appoint a special conimittee to investigate police brutality both on the occasion of the demons- tration on May 26 and at the police courts. Demand was further made by N. Baldwin, Arthur Gar- field Hays and John Hays Holmes |; ; upon Commissioner O’Ryan that the police do not interfere with the demonstration scheduled for tomorrow at the Welfare Depart- ment. “We consider the conduct of | the police the most brutal and inexcusable in the récent |] months,’ the Civil Liberties Union | statement said, L | than they do for the eruel and vi- |cicus liberties that the underworld ; takes with the public peace.” { This is an undisguised call for } mass murder—for the bloody sup- | pression of workers on strike, jobless | who ask for food. | Cops Fill Court at ‘Trial of 10 Jobless (Continued from Page 1) announcing the demonstration, was @ press release, sent out by the Trade Union Unity League. Sim- ilar releasés are sént out to the capitalist press, but usually only the Daily Worker, the newspaper of the working class, prints them.” Deputy Commissioner Stanley Howe, of the Welfare Department was called as a witness by the Dis- trict. Attorney, although Howe had in the past hearings sat alongside the judge on the bench. To the demands of Tauber that Howe not be allowed to appear since he rep- resented the official police of the Welfare Department and had sat on the bench and conferred with the police, Magistrate Dreyer smiled | and overruled the demand. To every attempt of the I. L. D. attorneys to question the witnesses, Dreyer pounded his gavel and sus- tained the objections of the District, Attorney to the I, L. D. questions. Repeatedly Dreyer rose in his seat, shook his gavel menacingly at the I. L. D. attorneys, and threatened to have them ordered out of the court. When the District Attorney said to Edward Kuntz, I. L, D. at- torney, “Go out on the streets and talk,” Dreyer again rose in his seat and threatened Kuntz and Tauber, The judge also told Kuntz to “go out on the streets.” Kuntz asked | that since he had proven himself prejudiced in this case that the judge disqualify himself to sit on the bench during these hearings. Mahr, the “receptionist” at 50 La- fayette St. was called as a witness by the District Attorney. He stated that he had identified four of the prisoners in the crowd which as- sembled at 50 Lafayette St. on May 26, stating the exact position in which they stood. His memory proved bad, however, when cross- examined by the I. L. D., and was proven to have lied. The court, however, could not see it in this light. | Deputy Inspector James J. Wall, | who was in charge of the police at the demonstration, stated that he had “in a fatherly manner” asked the workers to disperse. “I read about the demonstration in the Daily Worker,” he said, adding, “I only saw one policeman use a stick.” As Magistrate Dreyer adjourned the case until June 4, at 2 p. m. at! 300 Mulberry St., other cops stepped forward and arrested Jénkins, who has been out on bail, on “felonious assault” charges, and lodged addi- tional charges of ‘“félonious as- 'To See Cummings Masé Send-Off Tonight at Hungarian Work- ers’ Home NEW YORK.—A mass send-off to the delegation of workers and in- tellectuals leaving for Washington to demand the return of citizenshin to Emil Gardos, militant Hunganian worker, will be given tonight at the Hungarian Workers Home, 350 E. 81st St. The delegation consisting of rep- resentatives from the Committee for the Protection of Foreign Born, trade unions, International Labor Defense, John Reed Club and work- ers in danger of immediate depor- tation will leave for Washington to- morrow, where they will present their demands to Daniel W. Mc- Cormack, Commissioner-general of Immigration, and Attorney-general Cummings. AFL Officials Aid Move To Disrupt Toledo Strike Plan (Continued from Page 1) intervene to save Toledo from a general strike. iday night’s demonstration, which was supposed to mobilize for a strike and get all direc- tives, is to be turned into a harmless affair. Only 10,000 leaflets were issued and not a single mention of a general strike, The executives also yoted last night to “exclude Commu- nists and radicals from the pa- rade.” “Away from the Battle” At the Auto-Lite strikers’ meeting, Ramséy, local union leader announced he has a new plan “worked out in the quiet woods away from battle.” He re- fused to divulge all points of his “plan” to the membership. Ob- viously he has worked out some strategy to liquidate the strike under radical phrases. Ramsey is presenting his proposals to conciliator Taft, although he would not. present them to the union meeting. Rank and file members made a motion that the union issue a call for an immediate gen- eral strike to all other unions It was carried unanimously. Ramsey did not utter a word about general strike. It is quite obvious everything is heing done to scuttle the gen- eval strike by trying to tie down the electricians at the first pos- sibility, and by trying to put over some sell-out plan tonight with arbitration in the center, and then to turn the parade into a so-called “victory parade.” The Communist Party is warning the workers about these moves, and is calling for the or- ganization of committees inside each union and at a general meeting tonight to refuse to ac- cept anything short of an imme- diate, general strike. An editorial in the Toledo News-Bee Friday states: “We have an idea that the labor lead- ers have no stomach for the strike which would begin a gen- eral strike, and certainly respon- sible labor leaders are fully aware of the terrific conse- quences of a general strike, and are becoming increasingly alert to, find some means of avoiding it. | CAMP | | WO-CHI-CA United Children’s Camp Committee Announces revictration open Ages 10-15 inclusive RATES—S813 for TWO WEEKS | (Inciuding Fare) Register at District Pioneer Office seult” against Lynch. Dreyer fixed additional bail of $1,000 in each case. 35 EAST 12th ST., Rm. 509 New York City (Continued from Page 1) out like that imposed on the anto workers is to keep the leadership of their strike movement directly in the hands of rank and filers, | The administration meanwhile stood pat in the textile situation, Johnson holding conferences with heads of the United Textile Work- ers (A. F. of L.), but promising nothing. Observers generally ex- pressed the conviction that U.T.W. President Thomas F. McMahor threat of a sirike Monday unless | the scheduled 25 per cent cut in Production and wages is modified will not materialize. Gov't. Pressure Against Strike General Johnson today denied | that he promised Mike Tighe, In- ternational President of the A.A., to consider reopening the stee] code, and discussed the steel strike as though the only issue were recog- nition of the A.A. for collective bar- gaining. He indicated that it is his opinion that proof of the denial of collective bargaining by the steel masters has not been established, and thus justification of a strike for recognition of collective bargaining whether the presentation of de- mands for recognition on May 21 and the refusal of plant superin- tendents of U.S. Steel even to ‘“con- sider” the demands did not consti- tute groundwork for a strike on this issue, he answed, “not that I know of,” and added: “I asked Mr. Tighe for one case in which individual plants had refused to recognize representation for colleciive gaining, and I have not seen one.” Johnson’s position now is that the A.A.’s letter to the American Iron and Steel Institute for recogni- tion, and the Institute’s refusal to grant this, does not constitute proof of the denial of collective bargain- ing. The rank and file committee left Wagner and putting up to Tighe an which they had written for pub- lication. Tighe disapproved of this— and the rank and file committee did not issue it. They gave out a state- (Classified) FURNISHED One-Two apartment facing beach, park, reasonable, West End, Bay Parkway; 2223 Bay View Place, Brooklyn, Sunday; also Single and Double Furnished Room. ; room WANTED Rocm for summer in Mohegan (Peekskill). Particulars wanted before June 6. B. Gutman, 2409 Creston Ave., Bronx. WILL rent room with or without meals to responsible individual or couple in our home in Westchester suburb. Thirty minutes Grand Central or subway. Write Box 17, Daily Worker. TWO Rooms to let or share apartment. All improvements. 327 E, 97th St., Apt. 14. FOR rent, furnished room to employed woman. Modern apartment. Summer months $20. Call Monday evening. 2819 Morris Ave. near 197th St., Apt. 5M. RUSSIAN, 25 cents groups, Schuyler 4- 0174. FOR RENT, complete, in part or by the ment. Cattell, 39% Washington Sq. So., Ne 6. FURNISHED room, modern elevator apart- ment, private kitchen, 337 W. 14th St. Apt. 7 PAIR of Eyé Glasses at Sean Murray banquet, Wednesday. Inquire 35 B. 12th St., 9th floor. Information window. TENTS CAMP EQUIPMENT Lowest Prices in New York City SQUARE DEAL ARMY and NAVY STORE 131 Third Avenne (near 14th Street) THE WORKINGCEN'S STORE For Meetings, Dances, Banquets, Conventions, Ets. STUYVESANT CASINO 140-142 2nd Ay. Near 9th St. Catering for All Occasions National Strike has not been established. Asked | bar- | room. Modern furnished six-room apart- Murder Thaelmann (Continued from Page 1) Party must concretely prepare the masses for the fight to a decision facing them, into the conclusion that the German Communist Party —with the support of the Comin- tern—made terrorism its goal, and that this terrorist activity was spurred on Thaelmann. Der Angriff, Goebbels’ personal newspaper, prints a forged photo of Ernst Thaelmann on its front page under the caption “Thaclman on a Spring morning wa The photo is a trick composograph, showing without a prison wall, prison bui jings or guards in sight. The clumsi- ness of the forgery is poved by the fact that Thaeilmann, although standing in a bright sunlight, has No shadow. lin’s population concerning Thael- mann’s fate, which the Nazis are trying to “quiet” with these fabrica— jtions. An intensified world-wide campaign for Thaelmann’s freedom can yet wrest him from the clutches of his Nazi murderers. ment, instead, declaring that: “The A.A. is a unit in its demand that nates to a conference.” the steel owners, thus is merely to give the adminisiration aid in s‘all- ing off the strike by such a confer- ence—if and when they consider it auto mittee’s statement under these cir- cumstances that, “We feel sure that | they the government officials) will | | Tealize that the one way out is a conference between our union and the iron and steel institute be con- | vened by the President” led con- | servative observers to question late Saturday after conferring with whether the committee were unac- | | quainted with “the ‘Washington “Open Letier to the President,”| run-around,” or were more inter- | ested in politics within the union | than in the strike. Brownsville Comrades Eat at WINGS Chinese-American Restaurant LUNCH and DINNER—25c 107 Rockaway Ave. Near I. R. T. KRAUS & SONS, Inc. Mannfaciurers of Badges-Banners-Buttons For Workers Clubs and Orgenizations 157 DELANCEY STREET ‘Telephone: DRydock 4-8275-8276 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 LERMAN BROS. STATIONERS and UNION PRINTERS Special Prices for Organizations 29 EAST 14th STREET New York City ALgonquin 4-3356—4-8843—4-7823 Thaelmann in a flowery garden— | This miserable forgery shows the! extent of the agitation among Ber- | the President call the steel mag- | To place the emphasis thus on a!™ conference with the President and | necessary—just as was done in the! Tike, The rank and file com- | Tompkins Square 6-7697 < || Dr. S. A. Chernoff | GENITO-URINARY | Men and Women || 223 Second Ave., N. Y. C. | OFFICE HOURS: 11- 7:30 P.M. | SUNDAY: 12-3 P.M. Dr. Maximilian Cohen | Dental Surgeon f WISHES TO ANNOUNCE THE REMOVAL OF HIS OFFICE TO 41 Union Square, N. Y. C. |... GR. 17-0135 iae 8-6160 : A ‘ | De. D. BROWN Dentist 317 LENOX AVENUE Between 125th é& 128th Bt. AARON SHAPIRO, Pod.G. CHIROPODIST 223 SECOND AVENUE Algonquin 4-4432 Cor. 14th St. Geientifie Treatment of Foot Ailments DR. EMEL EICHEL ' H DENTIST ' 150 E, 93rd St.. New York City. Cor. Lexington Ave, ATwater 9-8838 Fours: 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Sun, 9 to 1 Member Workmen's Sick and Death | Benefit Fund |} Wisconsin 7-0288 | Dr. N. S. Hanoka : Dental Surgeon 265 West 41st Street i New York City COHEN’S 117 ORCHARD STREET Nr. Delancey Street, New York City EYES EXAMINED By JOSEPH LAX, 0.D, Optometrist Wholesale Opticians Tel, ORchard 4-4520 Factory on Premises Phone: TOmpkins Square 6-9534 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY—ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 302 E. 12th St. New York 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 Kitchen BANQUETS AND PARTIES 332 East 1ith Street New York City — WORKERS WELCOME — NEW CHINA CAFETERIA Tasty Chinese and American Dishes PURE FOOD — POPULAR PRICES 848 Broadway et.1stn «uth st. |” Garment Section Workers Patronize Navarr Cafeteria 333 7th AVENUE Russian and Oriental Kitchen A Comradely Atmosphere VILLAGE BAR| - 221 SECOND AVENUE] near 14th Street, New York City All Comrades Meet at the NEW HEALTH CENTER CAFETERIA Fresh Food—Proletarian Prices—50 E. 13th St.—WORKERS' CENTER, ego Admission 25¢, 50c, 75, $ OD Y at 8 PB. © BIRO-BIDJAN CELEBRATION MADISON SQUARE GARDEN Arranged by “ICOR” in cooperation with 114 organizations