The Daily Worker Newspaper, June 21, 1934, Page 2

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a a) “aid Thaelmann’s defense. "The _terday by the Finnish Workers Clubs and by all Page Two RED BUILDER TALE NOW “THAT You'RE A FULL-FLEDGED RED- BUILDER You “to MEET ONE FIGHTING INSPIRATION Workers, Men, Women, Boys, Girls! Ss { WANT WHO IS A Do you want to | Tom Meets the Comrades -R REAL, TWO-FISTED AGGRESSIVE DETERMINED INDIVIDUAL. zp 4 | p 4 Ss OUNDS Worker? HERE COMES THE VERY ERSON | WAS Will you accept a corner assignment to sell the join the drive to double the Circulation of the Daily | “Daily,” where you can earn expenses? Write for particu- fax ) TALKING ABovT / eins lars or call between 3 and 5 p. | Office, 35 East 12th Street (in store). See Williams. m. at the Daily Worker City Mobile, Ala. Dock Strike Several Frisco Unions} Vote General Strike As Ryan Stands By BULLETIN | SAN FRANCISCO, June 20.— | A joint mass meeting of fifteen | thousand marine strikers and | sympathizers in the Civic Audi- | torium gave a tremendous ova- | tion to the proposal to call a general strike. | Strikers demanded that Joseph | P. Ryan call out the east coast | longshoremen in support of the | west coast men. Loud cheers greeted organizers of the Marine Workers Industrial Union. Mayor Rossi who came to the meeting was met with a thunderous boo. (Special to the Daily Worker) BIRMINGHAM, Ala., Jue 20.— Ike Kimmons, a Negro, shot and beaten and his condition is critical, and Josh Miller, a New} Orleans Negro union _longshore- | man, was beaten in a Mobile long- shore strike whén 1,000 walked out for 75 cénts an hour and $1.10 an hour for overtime. It is unknown | yet whether Kimmons is a striker or a scab The strike started Monday. Po- lice swore in a score of spécial Police to protect scabs. Meanwhile the National Guard, attempting to provoké the strikers, announces an alleged attempt to dynamite the T. C. I. Railroad that has been transporting ore. The coal, ore strikes are still solid, despite an attempt to arbitrate. was (Special to the Daily Worker) SAN FRANCISCO, June 20— About half a dozen local trade unions in San Francisco have voted for a general strike in support of the longshoremen, who are continu- ing their strike over the heads of the leaders of the International Longshoremen’s Association. Other unions are scheduled to meet this | week to vote on the question. | Following the meeting held Sun- |} day night where 1,000 seamen of the International Seamen’s Union voted for unity with the Marine Workers Industrial Union, repudi- | ated anti-Communist statements | mad eby leaders of the I. S. U., and elected representatives to the Cen- tral Joint Strike Committee, lead- ers of the I. S. U. came out Mon- day morning wth a statement that the meeting was unconstitutional. They suspended their strike com- mittee chairman, Caves, who fought for unity, and elected their own Tepresentatives who refused to sit with representatives of the Marine Workers Industrial Union. But this attempt of the leaders of the I. 8. U. to split the united front soon went down in defeat. On Monday evening the I. 8. U. leaders called a meeting at which only paid-up members were allowed to attend, hoping that they would get the official O. K. on their disruptive | The picked 125 members, | move. however, voted to repudiate the pro- posal of their leaders and demanded the reinstatement of Caves and unity with the Marine Workers In- dustrial Union; | per cent; ;100 per cent and have militantly f UFL, Militant Farmer Group, Wins Victory in Injunction Fight SISSETON, S. D., June 19 After waging a state-wide mass fight against a vicious injunction directed against its struggles on foreclosures, the United Farmers League won a significant victory here today when a verdict of not guilty was handed down by a jury in the trial against 17 Roberts County farmers charged with violating the injunction. The jury was out three hours. The court was crowded with farmers, their wives and children Mass demonstrations took place before the court-house. The || farmers were defended by Attor- || ney Paul of Duluth, representing || the International Labor Defense || and thé American Civil Liberties || Union. | Cannery Workers) Win Struggle for Better Conditions Agricultural the TUUL Growing Rapidly Union of) VINELAND, N. J., June 20. — Under the leadership of the Un- employed Council, relief workers here struck in a one hundred per cent solid strike today for the par- | ment of 50 cents an hour in cash. | ‘The strike is spreading to neigh- boring towns. VINELAND, N. J., June 20th Backed up by a spontaneous stop- page of work by half the workers in the factory, a committee of the Basket Workers Local of the Agri- | cultural and Cannery Workers In- dustrial Union presented and won demands for improved conditions in the factory. Four demands were presented; Clean-up of the disgusting toilet facilities; decent drinking water and facilities; ventilation durng the hot months of the summer; and pay- ment of wages on Friday night/| rather than Saturday noon. The first three demands were won 100 the fourth demand will be threshed out Monday. The Union has already proposed that the weekly pay checks run from Wednesday to Wednesday so as to have the pay checks handed out Friday night. Though recently organized by the Agricultural and Cannery Workers! Industrial Union, the workers in the Vineland plant of the New Jersey Package Corporation have signed up demonstrated the strength and im- portance of the Union in winning these partial demands. WEST WILL SPEAK IN HARTFORD HARTFORD, Conn.. June 20.—Don West, | proletarian poet and fugitive from Ala- bama lynch justice, will speak at a mass meeting here at the Odd Fellows Hall. 420 Main Street, Thursday, June 21, 8 p.m. The meeting will be held under the joint auspices of the International Labor Defense and the John Reed Club. Admis- sion is free. MINOR SPEAKS IN GARY GARY, Ind.—Robert Minor, working class leader who aided in the drafting of the Workers Unemployment and Social Insurance Bill H.R. 798, will speak here Friday, June 22, at Washington Hall, 1545 Washington St., at & p.m. on “Does the New Deal Lead to Recovery?” under the | auspices of the Communist Party. Admis- | sion free. ja ‘Hitler and Papen | tion of 700 Miners Bridgeport Courts; Seek to Debar ILD _ Alabama Area Attorneys at Trial On Strike In Homes of Workers Are! Dynamited As Higher Wages Are Demanded | BIRMINGHAM, Ala:, June 20—| As 700 coal miners come out on | Strike over the heads of the United | Mine Workers of America. officials, | new wave of dynamiting | has broken out in the ore mining area, where two workers’ homes were bombed early Tuesday morn- ing. The home of Ernest Lewis, Ne- gro ore miner on strike for the past eight weeks at the Tennessee Coal, Iron and Railroad Compa- ny’s Muscoda mine, was torn apart by dynamite in the early hours of the morning. National Guards- men who “investigated” arrested another striker, Joe Simmons. Deputies subsequently placed a charge of “carrying a concealed weapon,” against Simmons. The other blast was at the home of Brucie Turner, Negro woman, near Leeds. She has had no part in any of the strikes, Leeds is the coal mining town where po- lice murdered Ed England, Negro Picket, and wounded Gordon Bice, white youth, during the coal strike. Meanwhile William Mitch, dist- riet secretary of the U. M. W. A..| admitted that the strike of the | coal miners in the mines of the Moss and McCormack Company, “had not been called by union headquarters.” There are a num- ber of demands raised by the strikers, the main one being for higher wages. The strikers charge the company has not even lived up to the contract: made following the last strike. Mitch is making attempts to arbitrate the demands. Ironing Out Things (Continued from Page 1) poverishment, the real effects of the fascist dictatorship. It was to allay this growing upsurge among the armed forces of the fascists that | Goebbels & Co. began the campaign against the so-called “reactionaries,” “grumblers,” etc. The conferences between Hitler and von Papen nevertheless cannot hide the fact that oncoming in- fiation, the sharpening antagonisms between German fascism and other imperialist powers, is causing a crisis in the ranks of the German bour- Reoisie. Along with this rift in the upper | ranks of the fascist rulers there is no disagreement on the intensifica- the terrorist campaign against the Communist Party of Germany, which is shown by the re- cent increase of death penalties meted out to members of the party and by preparations to rush the be- heading of Ernst Thaelmann. The very factors that aggravate the crisis and bring about the factional bickerings among the Nazis force them to unite in their murderous drive against the revolutionary working class in order to save their whole criminal regime. Hitler is working out; means of bridging the sharp conflict between the various Nazi leaders in order to save the Krieger and Sparrow to Be Tried June 26; Plan Mass Campaign | BRIDGEPORT, Conn., June 20.— The case of Sam Krieger and Charles Sparrow, unemployed snow- shovelers who were beaten and ar- rested by the police on March 5) under the diréct orders of Jasper | McLevy, Socialist Mayor of Bridge- port, has been again postponed by request of the prosecution until June 26. In announcing the postponement, Prosecutor Richard B. Swain also announced that the court will de- bar New York attorneys from ac- tively participating in the defense of Krieger and Sparrow, using al law passed last year as a precedent in denying the defendants counsel) of their own choice. | All witnesses to the brutal police attack upon the jobless snow- shoelers on March 5th, are urged to immediately get in touch with the Workers’ Center, 301 Fairfield | Ave., Bridgeport. Financial con-| tributions to aid the mass defense of Krieger and Sparrow, and the exposure of the McLevy frame-up administration, should be sent to the International Labor Defense, 706 Hallett St., Bridgeport. 3 Jailed for Passing Out Leaflets on Picket Line lof Western U, Strikers | NEW YORK.-—Three young work- ers were arrested yesterday for dis- tributing leaflets in solidarity with a picket line of striking Western Union messengers in front the ‘Western Union office at 1440 Broad- way. The messengers are striking for recognition of the Telegraph Mes- sengers Union, for re-instatement of young workers who were fired for union activities, and for a living wage. The basic code calls for $15 a week and these workers are get- ting between $6 and $8 a week. Those discharged are: Dave New- man, president of the Union, Abe Dubroff, general organizer, and Lou Zucker, Max Graham, Edith Malmed and Dorothy Calhoun, although arrested on @ charge of disorderly conduct, | continued to give out leaflets while waiting for the patrol wagon to come for them, Workers and members of mass or- ganizations are urged by the Union to help on a mass picket line today at noon, at 1440 Broadway. Negro Youth Who Aided Pickets on Trial Today NEW YORK.—John Orr, militant young Negro leader arrested for aiding strikers of the Spick and Span Laundry in Harlem, will come up for trial at 10 a. m. today in Special Sessions Court, Part 6, 101 Centre St. fascist dictatorship from rotting at its head. Previous actions of Hitler have already shown that he is ready ‘to sacrifice lower ranks of the dis- contented Storm Troopers who can no longer be kept faithful with demagogic illusions to achieve this | | The 73d Congress~ ‘Wall St. Executive! | Arrest Four More in | Philadelphia SKF Ball Bearing Plant Strike PHILADELPHIA, June 19.—Four| more pickets were arrested here) yesterday at the S. K. F. Ball Bear-| ing plant, Front and Erie. Cops | accused them of being Communists after they had refused to leave the; vicinity. Over 300 strikers picketed| the plant. ‘AT least. 400 policemen surrounded the plant and an area of four blocks around it, chasing away all pedes- trians, Scabs were met four or five blocks from the plant and escorted to work in polic cars, Stepansky, Mac Harris, Leo Lip- | shuts and Rubin Merzoeff, four workers, are being held in $5,000 bail each on suspicion of having “incited to riot” after a hearing Sunday. The International Labor Defense is attempting to release them from bail on the grounds of insufficient evidence. (Continued from Page 1) the Bill-Crosser amendment to the Railway Labor Act through the Sen- ate. This measure means formal compulsory arbitration, despite the fact that Senator Hastings of Del- aware, the avowed representative of the railroad managements, warried that “the bill would foment strikes in the railroad world where peace | has reigned for eight years,” Like those powerful steel cor- Poration heads who opposed the original Wagner Labor Disputes Bill, because they wished to settle matters with their unarmed em- Ployes, with their own machine guns in their own back yards, rather than risk sowing more illusions with Roosevelt Section 7-A dema- gogy, the railroad owners didn’t even want to fool around with talk of arbitration despite the fact that arbitration always ends with the bacon in the bosses’ frying pan. The Senate carefully rejected any mention of the words company union in this bill, in attempting to Penpetuate the fiction that such a “union” is a “labor organization.” Inflation gave the workers an- other kick in the ribs through the revaluation of the dollar at 50 to 60 per cent of its existing statu- tory gold equivalent, thereby re- ducing the amount of goods they could buy with their money, since wages, of course, did no rise pro- portionately. In fact, in many cases wages dropped further. The banks, trust companies, insurance companies and railroads, how- ever, received hundreds of millions in “Jozns” from the Reconstruc- tion Finance Corporation and the so-called Public Works Adminis- tration, Congress emphasized the distinct fascist trend of the Roosevelt Ad- ministration by passing the numer- ous Copéland “anti-crime” bills, some of which contained flexibly devised clauses for crippling mili- tant labor organizations, especially for the intentionally formulated provision against “coercive” meas- ures by labor organizations. When this law will be needed, there will be a crowd. Paralleling the outright war prep- arations appropriation, Congress passed the Communications Act of 1934, part of which is frankly in- tended for the co-ordination of all communications during war time. Nazi Officers Sent to U.S. for Fascist Work Sent to Organize New) Propaganda Agencies | Among Workers | BERLIN, June 20.—Three Nazi of- ficers are now on their way to the United States with instructions from the Nazi Minister of Propaganda Goebbels to organize the Nazi forces in the United States. Two of them are former officers, Ernst von Wer- nicke and Major Hans von Domski. The third is the Nazi von Holtz- housen, who has been in charge of the foreign section of Nazi propa- ganda. Von Holzhousen left Liver- pool yesterday on a White Star liner for New York. Von Wernicke, who left Boulougne on a Hamburg- American liner on June 12, has| either already landed or will soon| land in New York. All of these| Storm Troop leaders come to the| United States with the permisison of the Roosevelt government. | One of their first tasks will be to call a conference of Nazi officials| in Chicago, Tll., beteewn June 25 and| 30, at which 70 delegates from all over the country will be present. They have been provided with huge sums of Money by the Hitler gov- ernment to carry on Nazi activity in the United States, In preparation for the Chicago Nazi conference, Ernst Wilhelm Bohle, now in charge of fascist over- seas activity, calls upon all Germans in foreign countries to declare their adherence to the Nazis. “Who sup- ports the movement helps Ger- many,” he declared, “whoever re- sists commit the blackest treason.” “Your battle, party followers in other lands, is hard and relentless, Fight further for Germany, and nothing but Germany.” The act itself empowers the Presi- dent in war time to take over radio and wire offices in the interest of “national defense.” Congress didn’t take time out from its war preparations activi- ties to protest against the con- tinuance of the $12-a-week aver- age Civil Works Administration. In addition to being very busy the employers objected to the govern- ment paying such “high” wages! Congress appropriated many millions to pay the wealthy farm- ers for destroying food and com- modities needed by poor farmers and workers. The natural drought help finish the work of devastation. It might have stayed on to do more along the same line were it not for the fact that all of the nearly 500 members come up for re-election and hence are anxious to go home to mend their political fences. On the other hand, one- third of the Senate also is up for re-election. Lastly, the Adminis- tration wanted Congress out of the way to carry on its international dickering without Congressional criticism and to prevent the Sen- ate from being used as a national sounding board by the other capi- talist faction—the Republican Party. Six one way and half a dozen the other, Dimitroff (Continued from Page 1) Council of Working Women, City Council of Associated Workers Clubs cor, National Com- emittee to Aid Victims of German Fascism, International Labor De- tense, Workers School, Millinery United Front Committee. ‘A permit for the demonstration has not yet been granted. The Anti- Nazi Federation is calling on organ- izations to send telegrams to La- Guardia and O’Ryan demanding ac- tion. Resolutions protesting Thael- mann’s imprisonment were sent yes- ten work- ers of a fur dressing shop in the Bronx who also contributed $2 to on ae Collective, Icor, and the ery United Front Committee will "picket the Nazi Consulate today. Bronx Parades Tomorrow To prepare for Saturday's dem- onstration the Bronx I. L. D. is tolding a mass Thaelmann-Scotts- Q°0 parade tomorrow. Sections 5 nd 15 of the Communist Party are Nlaboreting in the preparations for e Wires: ° Kinley Square, 169th St. and Boston Road, where the main meeting will take place. The lower parade will start at Longwood and Dawson Sts. | at 7:30 p. m., and the upper from | Wilkins and Intervale Ave. at the same time. Besides these points. meetings will be held at 161st St. and Union Ave., 155th St. and Union Ave. and Tinton Ave. and 166th St. in front of two DAWA stores. Milton Herndon, brother of Angelo, is expected to speak at the main rallying point. A number of independent unions will also participate, it is reported. Communist Party Meeting The Communist Party, Section 3, is holding a mass demonstraticn to demand the freedom of Thaelmann at the North German Lloyd Pier, West 44th St. and 12th Ave., to- morow, 12 noon. All workers are being urged to participate. The Labor Sports Union is send- ing a delegation to picket the Nazi consulate tomorrow. A bicycle, parade with the riders carrying “Free Thaelmann” signs is being organized. Athletes will carry sim- ilar signs at the city anti-war track meet in Ulmer Park, Saturday, The Workers School reports that 6 parade. The demonstration will wnverge from two points at Mc- 900 “Free Thaelmann” post cards were sold in one week, and that 500 Thalmann pamphlets were sold. The Custom Tailoring Workers Indus- trial Union reports that one of its members, Sam Spiegel, sold 150 post cards with stamps on them, Pittsburgh Delegation Corners Nazi Consul (Special to the Daily Worker) PITTSBURGH, June 20.—A dele- gation of the Uj Branch of the IL.D. cornered John Loibl, Ger- man vice-consul, in his office today at 2 p.m. after the latter had been “out” on two other occasions when they called, and demanded the un- conditional release of Ernst Thael- mann and all other political pris- oners held in concentration camps and tortured by Nazi butchers. The uptown delegation was the second to visit the consulate here. The campaign will be continued, at least one group visiting each day, as the Thaelmann trial nears. All delegations are meeting first at the new office of the LL.D. at 522 Court Place, before visiting the Consulate, SAN FRANCISCO.—The Interna- tional Labor Defense started regu- lar picketing of the German Con- sulate General here Saturday. Thou- @mds of leaflets are being dis- ‘Fight for the Release of Thaelmann po9 tributed among the striking marine workers calling for mass support to force the release of Ernst Thael- mann, Hamburg longshoreman and German working class leader, Picketing is continuing in regular shifts from 8 a.m, to 6 p.m. each day. + + (Special to the Daily Worker) , June 20.—Work- ers of Philadelphia will stage a mass picket line at the German Con- sulate, 1420 Walnut St., Saturday, June 23, at noon. The Communist Party has issued a leaflet calling on all workers to rally at the Consulate to force Thaelmann’s release from the bloody dungeons of the bar- barous Nazis. The mass picketing will follow a mass demonstration Friday in front of the North German Lloyd pier, Delaware Ave. and Callowhill St. This will be sponsored jointly by the Marine Workers Industrial Union and the Communist Party, Section 1, * . Delegations Visit Consulate A delegation of the Women's League Against War and Fascism was denied access to the German Consul yesterday, but left a state- ment with his clerk demanding the immediate, safe, unconditional re- lease of Thacimann and all poli- tical prisoners in Germany, and that the Consul communicate im~- mediately their demands to Nazi officials in a manner to make them effective. The clerk was highly angered at similar demands presented by the Dimitroff Branch of the I, L. D. “Who's Dimitroff Branch,” he thundered. Section 4 of the LL.D., send a large delegation to the Consulate this afternoon, and every I. L. D, Branch is electing delegations, so that the Consulate will be daily vis- ited by several delegations. So eee Red Banner on School Pole The children and teachers of the MacIntyre School, 30th and Gor- don streets, and hundreds of work- ers in the neighborhood yesterday massed about the school’s flagpole watching a huge red flag, six feet by three, flapping in the wind, car- tying the legends: “We Demand the Freedom of Ernst Thaelmann,” and “Down with Fascism.” School attendants struggled with it for three hours, the size of the flag and the wind baffling their efforts to take it down. Children refused to go into their classes and insisted on massing about the flag- pole, shouting encouragement and derision at attempts to bring the flag down, Workers in the neigh- borhood swelled the crowd as the attendants struggled to pull down the flag. eee 2000 Postcards Sold in Milwaukee MILWAUKEE, Wis., June 20.— Two thousand “Free Thaelmann” post cards have been sold here and 3,000 more are being ordered, it was reported today. A delegation of German workers will visit the Nazi Consulate to demand Thaelmann’s release. Thirty open air meetings have been planned here for this week, * New Hampshire Workers Protest GRAFTON, N. H., June 20.—A letter protesting the continued im- prisonment of Ernst Thaelmann and Ernst Torgler, German working class leaders, and demanding their immediate freedom, was sent to the German Ambassador in Washing- ton. The letter was signed by farm- ers, workers, mechanics, the town doctor and veterinarian. A minister refused to affix his signature, — N THE DAYS when Jimmy |* daily contributions "WILLIAM FUCHS Plight of Mr. Johnston to mankind, the life of Jimmy | Johnston, the Madison Square Garden promoter, used to be | tranquil and hopeful. Mr. Johnston used to help Jimmy, |make contributions to mankind, and his reward, therefore, was plentiful. |had devoted his life to the up- | lift of professional fighting, jand Mr. Walker aided him. In the days when the states- man walked like a mortal among us, | Mr. Johnson was recognized as a person to be cultivated, because he knew what was best for everybody, and people used to cultivate him. Mr. Johnson had a real cultivation complex. A word from him, he used to tell the people who did not cultivate him, would cultivate them right out of the proper cultivation. When Mr. Jack Sharkey came to New York, to make his fame and fortune, Mr. Johnson sent him a cultivation prospectus, and Mr. Sharkey, knowing his oats, culti- vated him for ten per cent of his purses. Later Mr. Sharkey with- drew from Mr, Johnson's cultivation farm because, as he asserted, Mr. Johnson had not cultivated enough money for him. There was some conjecture about his however, when soon after Mr, Sharkey fought Phil Scott in Flor- ida. It happened that Mr. Scott was one of Mr. Johnson’s cultiva- tions, and here were two fighters cultivated by him engaged in a con- test. . IN those days no cultivators sang better to each other than did Mr. Johnson and the Boxing Commis- sion. It was the Boxing Commis- wii Mr. Sharkey’s interests so well, while he was under Mr. Johnson's cultivation. It even went to the ex- tent of electing Mr. Sharkey heavy- weight champion of the world. This kind of cultivation by the Boxing Commission, naturally, was a great pleasure to Mr. Walker. He often, in fact, used to express his pleasure. It was no secret that he regarded Mr, Johnson as an intel- lectual man and one who always pt the sleep of the just. From this came the rumor that Mr. Walker was a partner with Mr. Johnson in the cultivation process. PS sean ever, are but mortal and prone to forget the heroes of yesteryear. It happens now that Mr. Walker is a hero of yesteryear. And Mr. Johnson, alas, is no longer a culti- vating power. It seems that he is a Democrat, as the constituents of ‘Tammany Hall call themselves. and Fusion is now in power, if one Mr. Johnston¢————_———. withdrawal, | sion, indeed, which looked out for | JOXING COMMISSIONS, how-)| | though it is unthinkable that this difference in politics has anything | to do with Mr. Johnson's straits, yet this difference in politics is a fact, It cannot be escaped that Mr. | Johnston is now saddened by the perfidy of fate. “It is plain,” hi |@ deliberate and personal attempt] of Brown, aided and abetted by’ Phelan, or Phelan aided and abetted by Brown, or both, to run the John- | stons out of business.” Mr. Johns- | ton was referring to the fact that the Boxing Commission had decided that Signor Enzo Fiermonte, the husband of the former Mrs. Dick, one of the four hundred, was unfit |to fight Moxie Rosenbloom, the | light-heavyweight champion, | soe & aed faa commissioner has alréady ! ruined the small clubs and now |they are trying to drive the Gar- den out of the boxing business.” Thus speaks one who used to write | testimonials for the New York State | Boxing Commission, the greatest, most cultivated, Boxing Commission that ever held office in creation, Baseball AMERICAN LEAGUE First gam Indians O11 000 000-2 8 @ Yankees 910 000 O11-3 6 @ Weiland and Myatt; Broaca, Gomez and Dickey. Second game: Cleveland 000 900 000-0 1 New York 000 020 Oix—3 11 L. Brown and Pytlak; Ruffing and Jor« gens. St. Louis 002 011 530-11 13 4 Philadelphia 100 001 010-3 9 9 Blaeholder -and Hemsley; Cascarella, Kline, Dietrich and Berry, Hayes. | Ghicago 103 100 400-9 14 9 Boston 403 011 50x—14 18 9 NATIONAL LEAGUE Boston 200 000 201-5 7 1 Pittsburgh 110 100 201-6 15 6 Cantwell, Smith and Spohrer; Lucas, Chagnon and Grace. DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet. Pitkin and Sutter Aves, Brooklyn PHONE: DICKENS 2-3012 Office Honrs: 8-10 A.M, 1-2, 6-3 P, Dr. Maximilian Cohen Dental Surgeon 41 Union Sq. W., N.Y. C. After 6 P.M. Use Night Entrance 22 EAST 17th STREET Buite 703—GR. 7-0135 wishes to speak so crudely; and Classified WANTED—Room in Brighton. Young man. ‘Must be quiet. Sleep till noon, preferably with phone. Box 19, Daily Worker. SUBLET, light, {ary . room — kitchen, shower, bath—fully furnished. Reason- able. Reynolds, 92 Christopher St., 6-8 P.m.-or 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. WILL GIVE good home to young man (colored) for a little help. Mrs. L. Wil- son, 736 E. 48th St., third floor, right. Chicago, Til. Oall Sundays. ALL SPORTS! FUN! LLM, NITGEDAIGET Beacon, New Fork Coming on our moonlight Hike? See the Theatre Bri- gade! Join the Ping-Pong Tournament! Play Tennis? Baseball? SURPRISE PROGRAMS arranged by Dan Davis, Cars leave 2700 Bronx Park East daily at 10:30 Also Friday 7 pa and Satu 3 p.m. EStabrook 8-1400 DR. EMIL EICHEL 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 WILLIAM BELL——_ OFFICIAL Optometrist oe 106 EAST 14th STREET Near Fourth Ave., N. Y. C. Phone: TOmpkins Square 6-8237 MARINE WORKERS WELCOME The OLD ANCHOR Bar and Grill 31 CORNTIES SLIP Opp. Seamen's Institute New York — WORKERS WELCOME — NEW CHINA CAFETERIA Tasty Chinese and American Dishes PURE FOOD — POPULAR PRICES 848 Broadway bet. 13th s 14th st. ins €a wae HISTORY 8 condition. pe a ‘Seawe WTORNGT, A’ SLWOOL IN CAME TMS THI “a HOW TO GET THERE? Cars leave 2700 Bronx Park East daily at 10:39 A. M. Also Friday at 7 P. M, and Saturday at 3 P. M. Rates: $14 a week, Phone: ALGONQUIN 4-1148 SCIENCE and FOR GIRLS and BOYS book which meets their greatest needs in this A $1.50 book for 25 cents, five copies for $1.00, stamps or coin; paper bound, 320 PP. 27 chap. Money refunded if after examination the book is not wanted and is returned in good | The Bradford-Brown Educational Co., Galion, 0. PLACE WHERE DANCE Tas WOREEES IW A Row BOAT THAT’S EASY! By William ‘ ‘ontgomery Brown revolutionary century. —W.M.B. Walker, the statesman, | 8 stated the other day, “that this 4 ; aS art PSST

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