The Daily Worker Newspaper, September 24, 1934, Page 2

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Page Two DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY. SEPTEMBER 24, 1934 7 Drought Relief Is Major Election Issue in Farm Areas Fight Must Be Record of Gorman’s Own Words Convicts Him | Of Rawest Sellout in History of U. S. Labor Against A.A.A,, For Farm Bill Government Welcomed The Drought, Which Ruins Millions Strike He Lied to Mis- lead Heroic Strikers | Textile workers of America: Eee |Francis J. Gorman, leader of the | By JOHN BARNETT General Strike Committee of the | By examining the past record of |ynited Textile Workers, has be- the Agricultural Adjustment Ad-|trayed you in the rawest sell-out in | ministration, it is not hard to find/the history of the American labor | out why the Administration and thi | movement! | of Agriculture, Wallace,/ ror proof of this one has only to | Bindly embers ies worst! 55 to Gorman’s own statements. drought our history as the sav- jour of the A.A.A., hailing it as a blessing to the farmers. gram of Secreta have so | See what Gorman said, day after | |day, in this heroic strike. See how | The Pro-|he led you to believe that he was crop destruction and cur-| conducting a militant strike, how as to reduce SOM®| vith militant phrases he led you to rs to subs |believe that the strike would not be ended until the demands of the| textile workers, drawn up by the national convention of the U. T. W., would be won. He lied to you, fellow-workers, onsciously and systematically. Now itically by the Communist Party, a its 1934 election platform s is for the repeal of the AAA for emergency relief for the im Day by Day During | Textile Workers’ Demands---What They Get U. T. W. CONVENTION DEMANDS (1) Hours: Two shifts of 30 hours per week with no exemp- tions. | “study” the situation. WHAT THE WORKERS GOT FROM THE WINANT BOARD (1) Hours: A recommendation that a government committee “We recommend therefore that the President ask the Department of Labor, through its Bureau of Labor Statistics, to prepare a comprehensive report on actual wages and earnings now prevail- ing... and that a hearing then be called before such agency as the President may direct to de- termine whether a wage increase based upon reduction in hours, can, under the prevailing economic conditions, be sustained.” In short, the N. R. A. (National Run Around). (2) Differentials: Another re- poverished and drought-stricken farmers, for exemption of the small he is trying to send you back to} the mills without a single one of | (2) Differentials: The estab- lishment of four minimum wages: | Port. farmers from taxation, for the can-| cellation of debts and obligations mn the farm and equip- your demands won, without any | ion agreement, without the faint | guarantee against discrimina- | tion. He sends you back to the | same rotten conditions you struck Bill against! The yearly flow of billions of} See for yourself. Look at the fits into the coffers of the food) record! ance com- big bankers, not large and landlor enough to suit gentlemen. Drought put thousands of dollars into their pockets and gave the ad-| ministration a weapon with which to force through its destruction pro- gram. The Aim of the A.A.A. On Sunday, Sept. 2, speaking to reporters in Washington, he said: “We must haye some definite concessions,” he declared, adding that the union was demanding the thirty-hour week without a pay reduction, regulation of the stretch-out system and enforce- ment of Section 7-a of the Recov- Unskilled, $13 per $30-hour week; semi-skilled, $18 per 30-hour week; skilled, $22.50 per 30-hour | week; highly skilled, 30-hour week, $30 per (3) sion of all work loads on the basis of reason and ordinary common sense. Machine Load: The revi- | A short time ago, when the ad-| ery Act.” (N. ¥. Times, Sept. 3, | ministration felt it was time for) 1934.) | more election ballyhoo for the New) Deal, Roosevelt had his chief coun-| selor, Donald R. Bena d beatles series of reports telling of its won- dérful aconmplishments. Richberg | gives the two aims of the New Deal in agriculture, the AAA. as “in- creasing the purchasing power of the farmers” and “providing a com- plete and coordinated agricultural credit system.” In plain words, the real aims of the A.A.A. were not so much to help the farmers them- selves as to make it possible for in-| dustry to sell the farmer more in-/| dustrial goods which were piling up| warehouses, and to save the) profits and inv ts in agricul-| ture of the big financiers. | We will not dwell on the fact that | according to Richberg’s figures, less | than 10 per cent of the mortgaged | debt of the farmers has been =| financed, that refinancing has been) denied to the poor farmers, who} needed it most, that for many farm-| ers “coordinating agricultural credit” meant sheriff sales and evictions. | The New Deal has done something| for Wall Street, but not enough. | How about the first aim? The) AA. ., after a year of effort, had) failed to raise the purchasing power | of the farmer’s dollar. When the| A.A.A. went into operation a year| ago last July, the farmer's dollar was worth 71 cents compared with| his pre-war dollar. After a year of | AAA, in July, 1934,: it was) h 65 cents. ee Where are those definite conces- | sions now? Why has Mr. Gorman sent you back to the mills without the thirty-hour week? | What were the issues in the strike? Let us hear them out of Mr, Gorman’s own mouth, as he lested them on Sept. 2 in Washing- ton: “IT repeat the issues: “To stabilize the industry and | to provide a decent living for our people, we must cut the hours to thirty and we must maintain the wage without reduction. The average wage has been less than $10 a week. This does not permit an American standard of living. | We must have recognition of the union and collective bargaining. ... We must abolish the stretch- out.” “Life itself depends on wages, and especially the lives of babies. “You textile workers are striking | for babies’ lives. Don’t let your neighbors forget it. Every piece of wage-chiseling means an i crease in the number of little cof- fins coming into the mill town.” How about those babies now, Mr. | Gorman? Will there be any less coffins now that you have sent the | textile workers back at exactly the same terms which you denounced with so much sound and fury a) short three weeks ago? , On Saturday, Sept. 22, the Strike Committee, at the head of which stands Gorman, announced that the | It had fallen five | pee i | workers were to go back and that OL canes. BLD eee | textile board would take gull about this, ‘But, while farm|the new es went up a little, prices that care of all their grievances. But on | cp pala had to pay went up| Sept. 6 he said See the cree: -cheeps: 7 rs “ 0 ion. , more than cancelling | af oe Presi senile the | United Textile Workers of Amer- | ica will agree to it ‘only after we have closed all the mills in divi- sions of the industry, Francis J. Gorman, chairman of the special any benefit Administration Welcomes Drought So it was a happy day for the | New Deal when the drought brought | wholesale destruction and raised} farm prices. But even in August, strike committee, declared today.” with higher prices due to the| (N. ¥. Times, Sept. 7, 1934.) drought, the farmer's dollar was ne | ing out of whim. They are enl above what it was in July 198%, be-| gaged in a great conflict to wipe cause the farmers have to pay such) oyt of the mills abuses that have high prices for what they buy. And) made slave pens. The strike goes little good this did for the drought! on,...” (N. ¥. Times, Sept. 10, farmers, who had nothing to sell,| 1934) or to the milk and poultry pro-| Now, fellow-workers, Gorman is ducers, and the drought-stricken| sending you back to the mills with- farmers, themselves, who must buy) out the lease semblance of a union feed from the feed dealers at profi-| agreement, without one single con- teering prices, or the workers, who} cession from the employers, There pay higher prices for food. It was/is only complete, black betrayal by mot the mass of farmers so much/ Francis (Judas) Gorman. But he as the food trusts, grain dealers,| spoke differently on Sept, 10 over (4) Recognition of the Union: Reinstatement of all workers vic- timized because cf uricn member- ship. “It is our opinion that the De- partment of Labor, through its Bureau of Labor Statistics, should undertake this study, together with a study of actual wage rates for the different classifications.” (3) Machrine Load (Stretch- out): A board and a “study.” “The textile Labor Relations Board shall appoint a_ textile work assignments control board consisting of an impartial chair- man, one representative of the employers and one representative of labor. ... “The Textile Work Assignments Control Board shall study the ac- tual operation of the stretch-out system in a number of represen- tative plants, selected by the Code Authority and the United Textile Workers, and shall by Jan. 1, 1935, recommend to the President a permanent plan for regulation of the stretch-out,” (4) Union Recognition: None, “The board feels that... an industry-wide collective agree- ment between the employers as a group and the United Textile Workers is not at this time feas- ible, and that collective dealing between labor and management in this industry can, for the present at least, best be achieved through development on a plant to plant basis.” This is a complete rebuff to the workers; denial of all union rights, WHAT GORMAN & C(O. DID TO THE STRIKERS’ DEMANDS (1) Hours: The National Strike Committee did not present to the workers a single solitary conces- sion on this question. They tell the workers to return to work and hope that something will come of the bosses’ “study.” The workers are told to go back on the same hour basis as that which they struck against. (2) Differentials: Wages re- main the same, though the Win- ant Board admits conditions are very bad. The U, T. W. leaders order the strikers back into the mills under the same wage condi- tions, promising “future studies,” and future “concessions” when the bosses have broken the strike with the aid of Gorman & Co. (3) Machine Load: The U. T. W. leaders accept the Winant Board report which calls for “in- vestigation,” when every textile worker knows exactly what should be done now, before the strike is ended. The Winant Board ad- mits the N. R, A, helps the stretch-out, Gorman tells the workers to have faith in new N. RB. A. “studies.” (4). Recognition. The Winant Board declares against union rec- ognition. Gorman & Co. orders the strike broken with not a single guarantee of any union rights. In fact, he opens the way for the worst discrimination, be- cause there is not a single guar- antee against discrimination. of the textile workers for strike ac- tivity, In short, the . T. W. National Strike Committee orders the strike broken with not a single one of the demands passed by the last convention of the U. T. W. granted, The workers get nothing, Gorman wants the strike ended. The bosses openly declare they will discriminate against the | workers, dous victory, * * . permanent board, handle the textile industry. of conditions, dustries the same is true. of the workers. The textile workers have experienced the work- ings of N.R.A. boards. It was they who character- ized the N.R.A. as the “National Run-Around,” Even Gorman was compelled to admit that: “Our people haye been treated so badly by the Textile Industrial Relations Board that we cannot go to that body. We have been fooled so long that we naturally mistrust that board. We have sought to obtain relief from the heavy burdens imposed on us by going direct to the employers, They referred us to the board AND THE ABUSES CONTINUED.” Now Gorman greets the setting up of a new But it is a victory only for The demand of the workers for a 30- board as a “victory.” the bosses, specuiators, etc., as well as some of the large farmers who are taking enormous profits from higher prices. | How Farmers Would Gain Big cuts in the profits of the trusts, with lower food prices to the | workers and higher prices to the farmers would give the farmers more purchasing power. But the New Deel would fight this to the last. Now the drought has become the} instrument for carrying} t igh the A.A.A. reduction pro- gram. This cold-blooded policy is} One of putting out of commercial production 40 to 50 million acres of | cultivated land while people are) starving, and forcing two or more | million farmers into subsistence} farming, of putting farming into) the hands of the big farmers, and) placing the market more securely into the hands of the trusts. The A.A.A., which had not been able to push through this program} Biccessfully, now uses the drought| in every conceivable way to force) its policy upon the farmers. After having permitted the drought to devastate whole regions without taking adequate steps to check its destruction, it now requires farmers to subscribe to the reduction pro- gram in order to get benefit relief payments. It uses necessity and suffering caused by the drought to force farmers onto subsistence farms, the Columbia Broadcasting Com- pany network. Read his words now and think of the callous treachery | of this betrayer of labor: “Settlement will be made now, when it is made, whether by ar- bitration or otherwise, with the | textile industries as such. That means there must be settlement with the entire cotton texile in- dustry, with the entire wool and worsted industry with the entire silk industry, and se on. There will be no settlement mill by mill in any of the divisions of the in- dustry.” (New York Tmes, Sept. 11, 1934). And on Sept. 11 he wrote in a letter to the N. Y. Times, still main- taining his militant pose: “We have wanted peace; we still want peace, but we do not want peace bad enough to go back to slavery under the old conditions— farmers must take action to save themselves from such parasitic in- terests. The fight for drought re- lief is a fight against the A.A.A. and | It is a struggle that the New Deal. unites both poor farmers and work- ers. Unless the campaign for re- lief is strengthened, there is danger that even the pitiable amounts they have already been forced to give will be cut. Local struggles for im- mediate and adequate relief for the masses of farmers being crushed by The New Deal policies concerning | the drought and the A.A.A. should} the drought tear the mask from the be spread all over the drought area. A.A.A., show the rank and file farm-| Demand the immediate passage ers ‘its real purpose, to enrich the|of the Farmers Emergency Relief financiers at the expense and suf-| Bill. Demand the repeal of the A. fering of the exploited farmers. A.A. and an end to the destruction The drought-: and all poor of life, cattle and crops. een Appeals. . * up is intense.” board. (Continued from Page 1) eic., means only a feeble effort to conceal the brazenness of the sell-out, be Winant report offers what? It proposes a another N.R.A, board to Is it a “victory” to get another such board? In the automobile indus- try such a board was set up and it resulted only in the destruction of the union, in the establish- ment of company unionism, and in the worsening In steel, aluminum and other in- In every case where such boards were established they work to break up the workers’ organizations, to make effective strike action impossible, and to aid the bosses in carrying through their drive to speed up produc- tion, and lower production costs at the expense hour week, for higher wages, for an end to the stretch-out, for union recognition is side-tracked. Instead of winning their demands the workers are again advised to continue the run-around, to give up their strike, to give up their demands, to again go before another boss-controlled board. * (E Winant board graciously admits: “Your con- ditions are bad; your wages are low; the speed- You textile workers know all of this; that is why you struck. But then they advise you to return to work under the same conditions, with the promises only that your conditions will be “studied,” that they will be examined by a new The workers should never accept such a sell-out Fight On! Reject Gorman Betrayal! Picket Mills! -An Editorial the stretch-out through united, velt’s N. R, A. after their heroic three weeks battle. They will never secure their demands except He Communist Party urges the workers to re- ject Gorman's betrayal. your fundamental demands in any more of Roose- They should continue the strike until their demands for the 30-hour week, wage increases, the elimination of and union recognition are won, determined strike action. * * * Refuse to bargain away boards, Continue the strike until your own demands are granted. Do not return to work this morning. Hold your ranks solid. Mass all your forces before the mill gates to prevent the mills from reopening. Act together in one solid mass, Permit no splits in your ranks. Keep your ranks united; have united action in every move. Exert every effort to con- tinue the strike until your demands are granted. Convene huge mass meetings of strikers in every town. Hold meetings at every mill. Take a vote against Gorman’s proposed settlement. Adopt reso- lutions of protest against the betrayal, and setting forth your own demands. Send telegrams of pro- test and resolutions to Gorman. Demand a con- tinuance of the strike until your convention de- mands are granted, Prepare to continue the strike in your locality even if you read of workers re- turning to the jobs in other areas. By refusing to return to work you can stimulate fresh walk-outs in these areas. ’ . . a YOUR local and mill meetings propose a na- tional conference to discuss the strike and to lay down the terms of settlement. ence. responsible for conditions which would shock the world were they where the world could see them.” On Sept. 14 Gorman even began to talk of sympathetic actions in other industries. This was after the splendid one-day general sympa- | thetic strike in Hazelton, Pa., and the demand for general strikes be- gan to be raised in many sections of the country. On Sept. 15, in answer to General Johnson’s attack on the strike, he replied, again setting forth the situation in the industry: “Let me give you this important news. Dozens of mills have today asked us to settle on the union’s terms. The opposition lines are cracking. We have but to hold the fort, and we shall hold the fort. American labor marches on. The United Textile Workers of America go marching on. There will be a better time for the men and women of the mills and for the children of the mill towns, North and South.” (N. Y. Times, Sept. 16, 1934.) On Sept. 16 Gorman declared: “Efforts will be made to open the mills, and the mills must not open. “Until we go back the mills will not run and we are not going back until there is justice for the work- ers. “The thirty-hour week is abso- lutely necessary. “. . . we object mightily to profit at the cobt of the body and soul of the workers, and that has got to stop. This strike will stop it.” (N. ¥. Times, Sept. 17, 1934.) But the sell-out was already “in the bag.” Gorman, who was al- ready preparing the back-to-work statement, declared on Sept. 21: “... so far as I understand in the report, it is an indictment of at your meetings now to such a national confer- Elect grievance committees to fight against dis- crimination and to take up the struggle in the mills for your demands in the event Gorman’s be- trayal is put over and, with the aid of police ter- ror, you are driven back into the mills. Try to continue the struggle. your ranks united. Build up a tremendous protest. movement against the sell-out. and crooks out of office in the union who are rank and file leadership in every local, made up of the most militant and trustworthy fighters. Fight on until your demands are won. Elect delegates At all costs keep Drive the fakers this betrayal. Set up your own management and it indicates that the position of the union has been right.” (N. Y. Times, Sept. 21, 1934.) Then the final blow — the strike committee’s report. Let every textile worker read the record, It documents a line of be- trayal and treachery that is a new highwater mark in the history of American labor. The textile workers, if they are to gain better conditions, must or- ganize against their betrayers, against the Gormans, who are the agents of the employers in their ranks. This is the lesson of the role of Mr. Francis J. Gorman we can learn from the record itself. No other conclusion can be drawn. The Daily Worker can Better Aid Your Struggles if You Build its End of Strike | In Paterson (Special to the Daily Worker) Wo-kers Flay | United Action Against the Betrayal ! An Editorial (Continued from Page 1) PATERSON, U. J., Sept. 23—At a special meeting held today at Rose- Jand Hall the strikers greeted Eli Keller and Smith, A. F. of L. or- ganizer, with boos and cat calls. It vas evident that the strikers re- sented the decision of the National Strike Committee to call off the strike, For almost two hours the strikers waited for Keller. Strikers in the hall demanded a meeting even if the A. F. of L. officials did not ap- pear, Finally Keller and Smith appeared. Keller stated that he disagreed with the Winant Com- mittee but did not say if he dis- agreed with the decision of the Na- tional Strike Committee. Keller stated that whether it was good or bad, “we must act as good union men’ and then stated that it was almost a victory. He instructed everyone to report to the shops, after reading the telegram signed by Gorman calling off the strike. Strikers again booed and hissed Keller then introduced Smith, who openly agreed that it was a moral victory and that from his mecting in Washington he reported that he was in full accord with the Arbi- tration Board set up by the Winant Committee. Again a round of boos and hisses was the workers reply. Strikers became indignant and demanded that others speak. Kel- ler refused to allow rank and file speakers, but the strikers rushed to the platform and drove Keller and Smith out. Keller ordered the “mike” to be removed. Strikers kept yelling “Let them speak”; “Let them speak!” A shop chairman then acted as chairman of the meeting. He in- troduced John Elias of the Rank and File Opposition, Valgo, a mem- ber of the broad silk executive board, and shop chairman, and Moe Brown, one of the labor lead- ers in Paterson who helped to merge the unions in Paterson for a victorious strike, These speakers called upon the workers to continue to strike for local demands and to reject Gor- man’s sell-out scheme. The meet- ing closed with Moe Brown telling the workers that the strike was now beginning in earnest. 11,000 Hear Hathaway at NEW YORK, Sept. 23. — More than 11,000 workers filled the Bronx Coliseum on Friday night to cele- brate the 15th Anniversary of the Communist Party, and listen to Clarence Hathaway, editor of the Daily Worker, analyze the history of the Communist movement from its formative days to its present posi- tion as leader of the American working class, Francis W. Gorman, head of the U. T. W. strike committee, did not answer the invitation issued to him by Charles Krumbein, New York District Organizer, to address the meeting in support of the tex‘ile strike. The celebration was turned into a great demonstration of soli- darity with the strikers and of pro- test against the terror launched by the textile magnates and their gov- ernment agents. The workers heard Israel Amter, Communist candidate for Governor of New York, discuss the issues in the coming elections. Krumbein told of the advances made by the Communist Party in New York. The highlight of the evening was Hathaway’s address, which was en- thusiastically received by the gath- ering. He traced the history of the Communist Party from the time that the militants in the Socialist Party, under the influence of the October Revolution, broke with the reactionary leadership and formed the new Party, Hathaway spoke of the days when the Communist Party was under- ground and of the period when the Party fought the counter-revolu- tionary influences of the Trotsky- ites and ‘he Lovestoneites. He em- phasized the important role played by the Communist International and Stalin in helping the American Party free itself of these influences which made for sectarianism. Short speeches were made by Steve Kingston, member of the New York District Committee; Rose Wortis of the Trade Union Unity Council, and John Little of the Young Communist League. Sell “Daily” on Busy Corners WEST SIDE WORKERS PATRONIZE BROWNS HAND LAUNDRY 239 West 72nd Street Between Broadway é West End Ave. WE CALL AND DELIVER WE DO POUND WORK TRafalgar 17-0496 125 FOLDING CHAIRS “ 60c 35 W.26th St..NYC John Kalmus Co. “ivr'y nin aay Classified WANTED furnished rcom, $12, man; Man- hattan, below 23rd St. Box 408, Daily ‘Worker. NEGRO LIBERATOR needs volunteer office No experience needed. Come to Circulation, Seventh Ave., any day; 10 A. M. to 5 P.M. ‘fratricidial strife’ between | Socialists and Communists in| the trade unions. But these | workers, as well as the Com- | munists, certainly want no| let-up in the struggle against the betrayal policies of the A. | F. of L. top leadership, the| best example of which is the} Gorman sell-out of the heroic | textile strike. The strikebreaking actions | of William Green and Francis | J. Gorman only emphasize the need for united action of | Communists and Socialists | C. P. Election Drive Begins In Albany Area Successful Meetings in Schenectady, Troy, Gloversville ALBANY, Sept. 23.—The election campaign of the Communist Pazty in this up-State area got under way during the past week with im- portant meetings here as well as in Schenectady, Troy, Amsterdam and Gloversville. All the meetings were well ag- tended in spite of unfavorab! weather, The good attendance i credited largely to the energetic of; forts of the Communist Party a the Young Communist League jj the distribution of some 30,000 leaf: lets throughout the section. In Schenectady, Clarence Carr, president of the Independent Leather Workers Union and candi- date for Congress in the 30th Dis- trict; Harry Daniels, candidate for and their sympathibers of | sheriff, and Israel Amter, guberna- both parties, especially in the | trade unions, against the be- trayal policies of the A, F.| of L. leadership. For this united action the Communist Party will never cease to fight, Forward to united action! PROTEST FASCISTS’ TOUR CHICAGO, MIL. Sept. 23—A dem- onstration against the Italian fas- cist students new touring the United torial nominee, spoke to more than 300 workers. In Amsterdam, Amter and Carr spoke to more than 400 and a num- ber of striking textile workers pres- ent applied for memberhip in the Communist Party. Ernie Johnson, candidate for Sheriff in Fulton County, spoke with Amter and Carr, to a meeting of more than 200 leather workers in Gloversville, in spite of hoodlums encouraged by police, who tried to break up the meeting. Police intimidation, which is also at a high pitch in Albany, was sim- ilarly unsuccessful in preventing several hundred workers from at- Bronx Rally States will be held on Thursday at. 5:30 pm. at the International House, University of Chicago, 1414 E. 59th St. The demonstration has been called by the League Against War and Fascism. tending an election rally for Amter. The Daily Worker can Better Aid Your Struggles if You Build its Circulation. Brownsville and East New York Comrades Welcome J. BRESALIER Get Daily Worker Subscribers! Greater Circulation Will Decrease | the “Daily’s” Need For Financial Aid, EYES EXAMINED—GLASSES FITTED 525 Sutter Ave, at Hinsdale St. Brooklyn, N. ¥. CAthedral 8-6160 Dr. D. BROWN | Dentist 317 LENOX AVENUE Between 125th & 126th St., N.¥.0, Good Work at Clinie Prices DR. J. SAMOSTIE 220 East 12th Street Skin, Urinary and Blood COHEN’S 117 ORCHARD STREET Nr. Delancey Street, New York City EYES EXAMINED By JOSEPH LAX, 0.D. Optometrist Conditions » ||] Wholesale Opticians Tel. ORchard 4-4520 Lady Physicians in Attendance: Factory on Premises for Women Hours 9 to 2—4 to 8—Sunday 9 to 1 DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY Office Hours: 8-10 A.M., 1-2, 6-3 P.M Comrades Patronize JADE MOUNTAIN American & Chinese Restaurant PHONE: DICKENS 2-3012 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet. Pitkin and Sutter Aves., Brooklyn 191 SECOND AVENUE (Bet. 12th and 13th St.) Dr. Maximilian Cohen Denial Surgeon || 41 Union Sq. W., N. Y. G After 6 P.M. Use Night Entrance 22 EAST 17th STREET Suite 108—GR, 17-0185 A CONGENITAL PLACE TO EAT Empire Cafeteria Fresh Food: 125th Street at Lenox Ave, [DACHT Buncey At TenpK Aves| Dr. Simon Trieff Dentist 2300 - 86th Street MAyflower 9-7035 Brooklyn, N. ¥. MEET YOUR COMRADES AT THE 1 th STREET CAFETERIA 8 East 14th Street, N.Y.C. Near 5th Avenue Dr. Harry Musikant Dentist 195 EASTERN PARKWAY Corner Kingston Ave, DEcatur 2-0695 ykiyn, N, ¥, WORKERS COOPERATIVE COLONY 2100-2800 BRONX PARK EAST has reduced the rent, several good apartments available. Cultural Activities for Adults, Youth and Children, Direction: Zexington Ave., White Plains Trains. Stop at Allerton Ave. station Office open daily from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Sunday 10 a.m, to 2 p.m, Telephone: Estabrook 8-1400—8-1401 friday and Saturday 9 am. to 5 p.m. 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. Tompkins Square 6-7697 DR. H. E. SLATKIN of the Morning Ffireiheit has moved his office and residence from 333 CRIMMINS AVE. to HUNTS POINT PROFESSIONAL BLDG., 1018 E. 163rd St,, Tel. INtervale 9-4845 Take Lexington and Seventh Ave. and INtervale 9-4600. Directions: Bronx subways and siop at Simpson St. Station or Lexington local and stop at Hunts Point, From Bronx: 163rd St. crosstown. Southern Blyd. car to PAUL LUTTINGER, M. D. SAND‘. DANIEL LUTTINGER, M. D. Are Now Located at 5 WASHINGTON SQUARE NORTH, NEW YORK CITY Hours: 1 - 2 and 6 - 8 P.M. Tel. GRamercy 7-2090-2091 All Comrades Meet at the NEW HEALTH CENTER CAFETERI | Fresh Food—Prolstarian Prices—50 E. 13th St.—WORKERS’ CENTER 19-10 THIRTEENTH AV"! RADIO SERVICE BY MEN WHO KNOW HOW 6 COUNTS TO COMRADE READERS OF THE “DAILY” SQUARE RADIO CO. WINDSOR 8-0280 WE GO ANYWH SPECIAL DIs- BROOKLYN, NEW YORK ERE | | y to Workers to Vote dete: Boss Candidates Supporting N. R. A. Strikebreaking ! \

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