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Page Two DAILY WORKER, NEW YoRK, SATURDAY, JUNE 9, 1934 * = All Out Today at I. M.--- To the Daily Worker Day and Moonlight Excursion! Painters Unitedly Back Rank and File | Candidates at. Meet Cheers Hail Weinstock, Wedl, Meeting Stevens at of the Rank sociation of Di at a meeting held i It was a w ment for mil controlled unionism, against rack- eteering, gangsterism and bureau- cracy—against “Zausnerism.” In like manner was the program of the Rank and File enthusiasti- cally endorsed. Every point was read, and every point passed unani- mously. The Painters’ Rank and File stands for: Rank and File Program 1—6-hour day and 5-day week; 2—The $9-a-day wage scale; 3—The| right and security of the job; Job and Shop Committee; 5—Strict | union conditions; 7—Every painter in New York a union painter and for a minimum initiation fee; 8— Full democracy in our union; 9— Rank and file leadership; 10—Un- employment insurance and for the Workers Unemployment Insurance | Bill, H.R. 7598; 11—Rights of Ne-| groes to join the union and equal! rights for Negroes on the job. The rank and file candidates are fighting against: Maid sien oer and racketeering in the union; 2— “4 Speed-up and piece-work; 3—Com. pulsory arbitration and injunctions; | 4—Expulsions or dropping of mem- bers because of unemployment; 5—| Overtime; 6—Favoritism; 7—Tllegal | taxation. Speaking on the program at the! endorsement meeting, Louis Wein-| stock, demned the racketeering and bu- | reaucratic methods of Philip Zaus- ner, present head of the Painters’ | Union “The painters are interested in bread and butter. They ask: "What are you going to do for us?’ They} know Zausner’s answer. They want to know our answer.” Weinstock outlined the rank and file program for relief jobs from| the city. “With united efforts we ean secure these jobs and relief,” he said Weinstock was followed by the othér two candidates, Frank Wedl and L. J. Stevens who were greeted by enthusiastic applause from the membership. Each supported the statements made by Weinstock and pledged themselves to fight for rank and file demands, against racket- eering and for the general welfare of the painters. The election of officers of District Council No. 9 will be held on June 30 ‘3 The rank and File has calied a mass meeting of painters for Sat- urday, June 16, 2 pm., at Irving Plaza Hall, Irving Pl. and 15th St. All painters. were treed $0) were urged to attend. New Steel Strikes Loom in Alabama. {Continuation from Page 1) ers that if they strike the Commu- nists will lead it. They point to the Party leaflets found in the mills and try to raise the “red” scare. Meanwhile bombings. continue; two more chain stores were dynamited and the butchers strike blamed. The superintendent tries to blame Com- munists and calls on “responsible union leaders” to isolate the Com- munists. Misleaders of the Brighton Local eof the International Union of Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers, organ- ized in the Woodward Iron Com- pany steel plant, which is the only I.U.M.M.5.W. local not striking, is making a vicious attack on the} Communist Party and blames the union men for the bombings. The International Labor Defense and| the Communist Party are issuing leaflets exposing the bombings as | actions of provocateurs. The Unemployment Councils are | ealling on the jobless to support the strikes. | The Republic Steel strike contin- | ues, while charges of firing union men are before the Regional Labor Board in Atlanta in an attempt to defeat the strike. The Board is also arbitrating grievances of the Agri- cola Furnace Company, now locked out, and the A. & J. Manufacturing Cempany, both of Gadsden, Ala., ving to prevent strikes, Start Picketing Of Nazi Consulates In Bostor Phila Shoe Workers Demand “Free Thaelmann” NEW YORK —Resolutions de-| nouncing the Nazi murder plot against Thaelmann and demanding the safety and freedom of the Ger- man Communist leader were adopt- ed at a meeting last night of, women members of the Shoe and Leather Workers Ini ial Union The meeting was called to mo- bilize support for the World Con- gress Against War and Fascism, to be held in Paris next month. The safety and immediate release 4—|0f Ernst Thaelmann, heroic leader | |of the Communist vanguard of the |German working-class in its fight for freedom and the revolutionary overthrow of the bloody Hitler regime, are demanded in two reso- lutions adopted at the last meet ing of the National General Execu- tive Board of the National niture Workers’ Industrial Union. Copies of the resolutions have been sent to Adolph Hitler, Berlin, |Germany, and to Hans Luther, German Ambassador at Washing- m. The board also addressed a letter of solidarity to Ernst Thael- mann at Moabit prison, Berlin, greeting the leader of the German working-class in the name of the union’s 10,000 members. The board also mailed to its locals samples of the Free Thael- mann postcards issued by the Anti- | rank and file leader, con- | Nazi Federation of New York, 168/ W. 28rd Street, with directives that all locals should order supplies of these cards for mailing by their | |members and fellow workers to the | Nazi authorities in Berlin. The cards are available at 50c per hun- dred. Demands for Thaelmann’s re-| lease will be raised at the Herndon- Thaelmann protest meeting Wed- |nesday night at Imperial Elks Hall 168 West 129th Street, at an open air meeting June 23 at 127th Street and Lenox Avenue, and at scor of other meetings being organized throughout the country. Sali . Boston to Hold Thaelmann Meet BOSTON, June 8.—Boston and white workers will gather M day night at Belmont Hall, Hum boldt, Ave., near Waumbeck St., to demand the release of Angelo Hern don, Ernst Thaelmann and the Scottsboro boys. The meeting is called jointly by the John Reed Branch of the International La Defense of Roxbury and the Scotts- boro Branch of the South End. Shoe Striker Jailed At Garside Shoe Co.| NEW YORK.—aAnother big dem- onstration was staged yesterday around the Garside Shoe Co. where | the United Shoe and Leather | Workers Union ts conducting a strike. A scab by the name of Bornstein was beaten up after he had had an argument with a worker. Aftery he came to,the strike headquar in a police car, and an active st er, Ifjis Katz, was arre: trial comes up in 5th St. Magi Court, Long Island City. Gold Dust Lodge Jobless Win Concessions NEW YORK.—-A delegation of six workers from the Salvation Army Gold Dust Lodge met with the offi- | cials of the Salvation Army Thurs-| | day, presenting a 12-point prozram of grievances. The demands in- cluded: better food, free clothing, no | forced labor, medical attention and endorsement of the Workers Un- employment Insurance Bill (HR 7598). The Salvation Army agreed to the minor demands of the men, prom- | ising better food, sufficient eating utensils, no intimidation by the! patrolmen at the lodge, and hot water for the homeless men. 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. DAILY WORKER BOAT RIDE TODAY! : Fur- | PATSY AUGUSTINE, leader of Nathan’s Famous str: after he was beaten by La Guat police in an attempt to get him to sign a stat t admitting he guilty of assault, Cops Torture Chairman of Cafe Strike | | To Protest Térvag In | Mass Demonstration | At Coney Island NEW YORK.—Breaking into his| house at night and dragging him |from his bed, police arrested Patsy Augustine, militant strike chairman, leader of 43 worke: Nathan’s Famous, Inc., without a |warrant. Other members of his ily, including his wife and sis- ter, were also arrested. Beatings at the police station failed to get a confession of felo- nious assault from him. Augustine was brutally slugged into uncon-| sciousness in an attempt by police to break his militant spirit. This terror and brutality on the] part of the police, particularly those | of the 8th St. Station, has been in} effect ever since the beginning of} the strike, which is now in its ni! nth | | week. Thirty arrests have been| made so far, but in spite of this the morale and the ranks of the strikers are more solid now than ever. _ Must Hit Injunction on strike at} the no- Faber, rohibits the strikers’ exercising any of their co tional r Byes 8 injunction is of the same natu the one issued by the same j Bakers Local 506. | Launch Protest | The sof, Brooklyn ar | called upon to | police brutalit frame-up in a mighty pr June 10, at than's Fam- and Still All ganizat are rete to bring| their own placards. | On Monday, June 11, at 2 pm., | the strikers are going to City Hall! \to protest to Mayor LaGuardia against the, brutality of his police. |All food workers are urged to be | before City Hall on Monday at| 2 pm. Outlines Program For Action in Fight To Free Thaelmann (Continued from Page 1) Nazi jails, Free Thaelmann com- mittees (Thaelmann stands at the top of the Nazi 1 of those to be rdered) in all organizations nops, neighborhoods G ten minutes at all meet- , forums, affairs present regarding the situation in Germany, te pass resolutions de- manding the liberation of Thael- mann and all prisoners. 3. Send protest resolutions to the German consul in your city, to Hans Luther, German Ambassador, Wash- ington, D. C. to Chancellor Hitler, Berlin, Germany. Voice the demand for open, public trials, denounce the | “Volksgericht,” demand that prison- | ers Shall have attorneys and wit- | messes of their own choosing, shall be allowed visitors from other coun- tiscali shall have physicians they name, visit them. 4..Send committees by the hun- {dreds to the German consul in your city. Picket the consulate, Keep the consulate’s telephone busy protest calls from organizations and individuals. Demonstrate before the consulates. 5. Picket and demonstrate at the docks where German ships load and | unload. Induce dockworkers to refuse to load and unload German vessel 6. Send letters to the People’s umns of the in your} Demand t ess open | { the pr We Struggle for Relief, Declares ‘Krumbein, New York Party Organizer (Continued from Page 1) at a meeting of the Fellowship of | Social Workers on May 14. Starvation Standards Still, on home relief, sub-starva- tion standards exist, lower even than the minimums established by he Home Relief Bureau itself. which has supplanted wages ranging from Work relief, natically against and given, in case the choice of a flop se with attendant forced labor Shipped off to forced labor militaristic C. C, C. camps back breaking labor on a penal farm. Rents for the main part remain unpaid for the month of May, and even the limited number which are paid were granted only on the morning of the May 26 demonstra- tion at 50 Lafayette St. Medical aid is totally inadequate and in im- mediate danger of being tot: ally withdrawn. Negroes and foreign-born workers have been for the most part dis- | criminated against on C. W. A. jobs, | in all cases, being given only the} most arduous and lowest paid jobs, and are discriminated against on | Home Relief. | In the background of this picture | looms future starvation. The Bank- ers Agreement, signed by the past city administration, approved and upheld to the letter by the present | LaGuardia “liberal” administration, limits city expenditure to $3,000,000 | mum rates of $7 weekly cash relief is reached for August, September and October. After that, no provi- sion whatsoever has been made. In announcing these cuts at a con- ference on March 26 in Albany, the State Emergency Relief Adminis- tration announced to the cities in| the state: “It will be vitally nec- essary to reduce the relief load by means . . . which will insure that only those absolutely in need of re- ief are placed on home and work relief rolls. What Is Party’s Answer? This is the situation confronting the workers of New York “What is the position of the Com- munist . Party?” Krumbein was asked. | “The Workers Municipal Relief | Ordinance, the provisions of which nade the central issues of the 1933 city election campaign, | remains the central relief demands} of the Party today,” Krumbein re-| plied. “This ordinance,” he continued, “was adopted by many thousands of workers throughout the city. It pro- vides that. the city shall assume the obligation of providing for every single unemployed worker on mini- plus $5 for each dependent, this amount to be adjusted monthly and increased whenever the index of the Department of Labor. shows an in- crease in the cost of living as of August 1, 1933, Supplementary re- lief shall be paid to all part time | workers.” “How to raise the money?” he asked. “Simply stop payments to the bankers on the debt service. These payments, which amount to 127 million dollars a year, Funds can be raised from the revenue and | throughout | state grants to the city (which now | expenditure for relief) are being | be further provided by reducing the a month for relief. Federal and; resources of the city of New | York and the corporations that op- aggregate 75 per cent of the total crate within the city. Funds can systematically cut. | Salaries of all city officials to $3,000 From a high of $25,000,000 for the | a year, by imposing a tax on the month of April for the entire state, | profits and reserve funds of all cor- relief grants are to be cut each porations that operate within the month until the figure of $19,500,000 | city, by increasing the tax upon all |Furniture Workers To to inform all) with | | factory sites, | buildings and expensive apartments. Welcome Weinstein Sat. NEW YORK.—Sam Weinstein, | furniture worker, will be released | from Sing Sing this Saturday after | serving one year on a trumped-up charge of felonfous assault. The attempt to railroad him to a longer | term on a manslaughter charge has been dropped. Weinstein will arrive at the Fur- ire Workers’ Union headquar- 812 Broadway, at 12 noon, where he will receive a rousing re- ception from the workers of this city. Youth Club Members Face Court Saturday | NEW YORK.—Trial of five young vor arrested‘in the latest police! raid on the Social Youth Cultural} |Club has been set for this| morning in the Bridge Plaza Court. | The defendants are Whiteman. Williamsburg Section Organizer of the International Labor Defense, Billy Scheff, a member of the City loniae of the Associated Workers Clubs, Mass Samuels, organizer of| | the Progressive Club, Leo Gordon, unemployed leader, and Sonny Wolf, | Chorus Director of the Social Youth | Clubs, Million Signatures and a Million Pennies” to free Thaelmann and all prisoners. 11. Collect funds by other methods, affairs, at meetings, from treasuries of organizations, to send a committee of outstanding men and | women in public life into Geremany | to visit the prisons and concentra- | tion camps, to interview Thaelmann and other prisoners. | 12. Induce tourists going to Europe | this summer, to wire Berlin for their | ht to visit the prisoners in Nazi/ jails. } 13. Secure protests from men and | women in public life in your city, from attorneys, physicians, educa- tors, authors, artists. 14. Check up on every labor paper in your city, Provide it with news of your mass protest movement. 15. Call an enlarged meeting of all delegates to your city committee to Aid Victims of German Fascism to discuss and act upon this call to action. Invite organizations you have not reached up to now to at- tend. 16. All larger cities should begin deliberating the possibility of a | gigantic counter trial, attended by thousands of the city population, to which the National Committee will send a speaker from our World Committee at Paris. Attention: Copies of all resolu- | tions, all telegrams and cablegrams, all letters sent to prisoners in Ger- | many; reports of all actions entered into, of all meetings held, should be} | sent to the National Committee to) | Aid Victims of Germany Fascism, |870 Broadway, New York, N. Y. | From the national this material will | be sent to the World Committee, | Paris for their use internationally, | Krumbein, |and fight still stronger to gain still ill as well be released to the office and factory In no case must any part of these funds be secured by any levy on the workers. Work Relief Demands “For work relief, our central fight is for prevailing trade union rates, in no case less than $5 for a 7-hour day and a minimum of $80 a month. Relief work, for which the city shall assume full compensation award re- sponsibility, full transportation, full issuance of any special clothing and | a full complement of tools, should be devoted to razing of the slums) and the erection of modern low- cost workers’ dwellings, and parks, | hospitals, schools, playgrounds and | recreation centers in workers’; neighborhoods. | “In the center of our fight is the| demand for the Workers Unemploy- | ment Insurance Bill (H.R. 7598)./ Under the provisions of this bill, every employed and unemployed worker, withowt any discrimination whatsoever because of race, color, belief or affiliation will receive un- employment and social insurance. We will fight for the enactment of this bill as against all fake bills brought forward by the agents of the bosses. “In the fight for relief, the pres- ent, immediate need is for further building and broadening the work and scope of the Unemployment Councils, making of them real mass organizations of the unemployed fighting daily in the interests of the entire unemployed population. “In the forefront of this struggle, in the foremost fighting ranks, must be the trade unions, especially the militant trade unions affiliated with the Trade Union Unity League, giv- ing force and momentum to the struggle. “No really effective unemployment movement can be built up without | the active participation of the trade | unions playing their proper leading | role. The unions must realize that unless they take up the fight of the unemployed, their own membership, especially those who are unem- ployed, cannot long be retained | within their ranks. “To carry out its plans for cutting relicf to coolie standards, the La) Guardia administration has called thier leaedrs ‘yellow dogs,’” said “He has asked the press to prepare the public for a blood- bath. “But it is precisely because of the fights led by these ‘yellow dogs’ who are leading the unemployed workers in daily actions at the Re- lief Bureaus and in city-wide dem- onstrations that even the present starvation standards of relief are not further cut. “Yes, more than that, forced in- creased relief from time to time. This should be sufficient the nail the slander of La Guardia that the Communists prey on the misery of the unemployed. We know that when workers wring concessions from the bosses and their govern- ment as a result of their organized struggle that they would organize more until they gain all that be- longs to them. “The Communist Party is arous- ing the entire working class and the friends of the working class to struggle against the starvation pol- icies, the terror and the abrogation of the elementary rights of the un- Boat Leaves From Pier ‘A’ Battery Park Directions: 2nd and 6th and ay A A L&T. 8th Ave. B. M. T. 3rd Aves. “L” to South Ferry 9th Aves. “L” to Battery Piace 7th Ave. and Broadway to South Ferry Lexington Ave. to Bowling Green Subway to Whitehall Street Subway to Whitehall Street Station All Tickets Today at Pier Only Adults — — $1.25 Children — — 75 Cents ANT TLIO MERE NAR, | gan’zations. gsgefangnis, Moabit, any (obiainable at below). Send a registered | T, return receipts demanded, to | Thaelmann, with your greetings and | pledge of solidarity. 8. Erect a “Free Prisoners in Nazi Germany” corner in your headauar- ters, office, meeting place. Disple Anti-Nazi literature, Thaelmann| posters, slogans, etc. 9. Speakers of all organizations that have not yet been ,connected with this natioa-wide mass move- ment (A. F. of L. locals, Jewish or- liberal groups, etc.) its mns to. your protest against | and wi ] hy me in Germany. | Press, thrcughout the United States. All funds collected should be cards by the hur ndreds | | remitted to the National Committee, | at the Address below, Anti-Nazi leaflets, Thaelmann | postcards, can be secured from the} | address below at 50 cents a hundred, | $3.50 a thousand. Anti-Nazi pamphlets: Do you know Thaelmann, by Henri Bar- busse; “Women Under Hitler” Son- | nenberg, the story of a coacentra- tion camp; “Brains Behind Barbed Wire” the fate of intellectua!s, phy- | siclans and scientists under Hitler, ean be ordered from the National Committee. NATIONAL COMMITTEE TO AID VICTIMS OF GERMAN employed by the LaGuardia admin- istration, the watch-dog of the Wall Street bankers,” CAMP NITGEDAIGET BEACON, N. .¥, For a Real Vacation! Swim . Dance . Tennis . Fun | Fine Accommodations Besnlifal (tip up by Desh, train cars that leave 2700 Enst daily. Phone Estabrook. B-1400, Rate: $14 a week; $2.65 a day FASCISM 10, Join in the campaign for “A 870 Broadway, N, ¥. C, WILLIAM FUCHS The Big Game ROM the Labor Sports Union has been received a com- munique which needs to be read thoughtfully to fully understand the forces that are drawn up for today’s game between the Daily Worker staff and the L..S. U. team at} Dr. Maximilian Cohen Dental Surgeon WISHES TO ANNOUNCE THE REMOVAL OF HIS OFFICE TO 41 Union Square, N.Y. €. GR. 17-0135 CAthedral 8-6160 - Dr. D. BROWN Dentist 317 LENOX AVENUE Between 125th é& 126th St., N.Y.C. Hook Mountain, as a part of the Daily Worker Daylight and | — Moonlight Excursion. It is ae— | as ell. It is evident that the La- game that will reverberate! bor sports Union is merely a group the world those who miss it will prob- | ably be cursed to their dying day by their descendants. “We are confident,” runs the statement, “that our boys will over- whelm the editorial staff of the Daily Worker. “Upon glancing over the line-up of the Daily team we note that two of their players are men who were released by the Labor Sports Union when we asked waivers on them and every team refused to accept them. These two are Gerson and Ed Rolfe. Only a bush-league club like the Daily Worker A. A. would pick them up. “We insist on an umpire who is both deaf and illiterate, because we recognize the ability of Garlin to out-talk us and the ability of Hath- away to out-edit us. In fact, if the public, which is just and open- minded, will look up the records of these two in Minneapolis and St. Paul of the American Association, they will be surprised. “Our boys are all primed for the fray. They are acquainted with Gerson’s curves and slants which will get him no job in any chorus— and they will murder his pitching with great relish. We have not yet decided who of our sixteen hundred pitchers will start. because we are afraid that Gerson may try to bribe them, but the public, which always gets a fair deal from us, will get the best man we have.” eae * Lr. IS my duty as the manager of the Daily Worker team to answer these canards. I would never use a man low enough to ‘try bribery on an L.S.U. player. For that reason I offered to supply the umpire, know- ing that any man I put in there would be utterly impartial. I sue- gested, in the first place, myself, and, second, Garlin, but the L.S.U. saw in this an attempt at under- hand work: I thereupon suggested my brother, then my cousin, and) then Gerson’s cousin, but they turned these honorable offers down, and of agitators trying to cause trouble. | The members of the Daily Work- that the L.S.U. team will beat them. “We are tried and true baseball players,” is their statement, “steeled on the diamond, grizzled veterans of Hathaway and Gerson. They will lead us to victory. Long live the Daily Worker baseball team.” sincere NE should observe how the Labor Sports Union attempts to slan- der Comrade Hathaway. What did Hathaway do on the St. Paul nine, comrades? He won every game single-handed! And what about Garlin? This is evidently an at- tempt to give the idea that the La- bor Sports Union is playing a com- pany of intellectuals so that the sympathy of the spectators should be misdirected. Is the Labor Sports Union afraid of Garlin’s theoretical ability? He is the best theoretical ball player the game has ever seen. Our slogan is: We will win with Garlin. The Labor Sports Union is whis- tling in the dark. The Daily Worker team will eat them up and then eat up their whole families. The Daily Worker team stops at nothing. Af- ter we get through putting the Labor Sports Union in its place we are going after new worlds to con- quer. If the Daily Worker team gets. mass support at the game today it will go out after other clubs, fully confident that nothing can stand in its way. Alexander, more worlds! YOUNG PIONEER FIELD DAY NEW YORK.—Five thousand en- tries are expected in the Track and which takes. place next Saturday, June 16, at MacCoombs Dam Park, opposite 99 Yankee Stadium. In addition the track and field events a number of baseball games are also scheduled. All entry blanks must be returned by June 12 to the office of the Pioneers at 35 E. East = St., Room 509. Work Stopped on Docks in Support | Of Coast Strike (Continued from Page 1) New York District Committee of the Communist Party. The Marine Workers Industrial Union stated yesterday that a tele- gram was received from the San Pedro, Cal., local of the union stat- ing that terror continues to reign. on the waterfront. Police are ar- resting at least 30 seamen a day, beating them up and attempting to drive them out of town. Secretary Baxter of the New York local of the M. W. I. U. stated that all the forces of the union would be thrown into the struggle to bring out the New York long- shoremen and seamen to the dem- onstration Monday. On Thursday night one of the largest meetings of seamen ever held on South Street voted to hold a mass trial of Brown and Oscar Carleson, leaders of the International Sea- men’s strike movement. The trial will be held in the open air Sunday evening at Whitehall and South Streets. Manhattan and Bronx workers can get to the demonstration Mon- day by taking the East Side subway to 45th Street in Brooklyn. Walk to 42nd Street and First Ave. The demonstration will be held in front of pier 6, where the crew of the Texan struck several days ago. eae Ne: Ryan Moves to Demoralize Strike SEATTLE, June 8, — Although Joseph P. Ryan was successful in ships for Alaska on Monday, at a meeting held Tuesday the men voted against loading any more ships in this. port. In a twe hour filibuster Ryan, who is trying to demoralize the whole strike front, railroaded through a motion to unload an ad- ditional ship. At a meeting of the firemen’s sec- tion of the International Seamens Union, all proposals of the rank and file were passed. Members of the union demanded that masters, mates, pilots and engineers strike within twenty-four hours. TENTS CAMP EQUIPMENT Lowest Prices in New York City SQUARE DEAL ARMY and NAVY STORE 131 Third Avenue | men’s Union, where they will be| 4 charged with sabotaging the sea- getting the longshoremen to load| BEA Hodson Cancels Relief Hearings individual treatment of all grievan- ces on work relief and reliéf, Com- missioner of Welfare William Hod- son announced yesterday that. all meetings scheduled at 50 Lafayette St. today had been arbitrarily can- celled by his orders. Hodson in- dicated that this would be the per- manent policy of the Welfare De- partment, adding that he hoped this would end the Saturday demon- strations at 50 Lafayette St. Tell your friends and shopmates about the Daily Worker. Let them read your copy. Have them buy it at the newsstands. (Classified) YOUNG MAN wants clean room, with con- genial family at Sea Gate or Rockaways. Resika, 113 E. Oist St., City. DESIRABLE ROOM available. Modern, sunny, separate entrance. 327 %. 18th St. Apt. 3A, YOUNG business woman will share her modern two room, or woman, Rent Manhattan. Box 27, Daily Worker. AIRY ROOM, _ separate | conveniences. 145 Second Ave., Apt. 23. 39 E. 10th ST. APT. 4-W. Well furnished, entrance, 9th St. ing rooms. Share kitchen. TO LET—Two furnished rooms, in sunny four-room apartment, All improve- ments, for two men or couple. $10, each monthly, Comradely gee ath Call Saturday from 12 noon to 8 p.m. and 321 ®. 97th Bt Apt. 14. 01 Gol- den's Bridge Co-operative Colony, West- chester, N. td Grand Central or 125th Bt. Station to Goldens Bridge. See M. , Sat. or Sunday, LESSONS, indi very reasonable. Schuyler 4-0174. ‘AUTIPUL LARGE oe suitable 12. 319 West 94th St., Apt. 43. BEAUTIFUL ROOM — modern _improve- ments—separate entrance, kitchen priv- ileges. 337 W. 14th St,, Apt. 74. BEAUTIFUL ROOM—3 windows, 1-2, all improvements. 58 E. 7th &t., 3rd floor, Kaploff, FURNISHED ROOM, facing beach. $12 a month. 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