The Daily Worker Newspaper, September 26, 1934, Page 2

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ARGS ae e Page Twe s Olgin, Drive Brought Into Cleveland Railway Shop Amter, Candidate for Governor, to Speak at Bronx Meeting NEW YORK —M. Olgin, editor of the Freiheit and Communist can- @idate for Congressman in the 23rd Congressional District in the Bronx who has just returned from a th’ months’ tour of the Soviet Union. will report at the state election Tatification rally next Sunday in the open-air stadium of the Bronx Coliseum The gathering will also greet I Amter, candidate for Governor of New York, flying here from Chicago to make formal acceptance of the nomination. Olgin has embarked on active work for his candidacy as Con- Gressman and has already been as- .Y WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDA ‘PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT, | | MR. GORMAN AND BAYONETS ' AN EDITORIAL ‘om Page 1) rank and file leadership to ue the strike over the head of these etrayers, they could see no other way out except the return to their contin! But when they arrived at the mill gates the degree of Gorman's ‘eachery came i } In many cases the mills ained closed; a n: In all other ca a few were permitted to begin work; the most militant were o: cut; they were blacklisted because they fought for their union for improved conditions. In all the locked-out and blacklisted workers number many thou- sands. In the South alone 80,000 are barred from their jobs. In all strike areas the bl. ted and locked-out workers constitute one- third, or possibly even more, of the strikers. d ORMAN'S “sweeping victory” then is this: The best trade unionists, the militant fighters are driven out of the mil those who returned to the milis do so on the same starv: m, stretch-out conditions which y struck against. Every worker, in he face of such evidence, can sured of co-operation on the par arly see that Gorman’s “sweeping victory” was merely of working-class organizations of the bosses. For the textile s, Gorman’s sweeping victor the Bronx. was a miserable sell-out, a criminal betrayal. IEE This is Roosevelt's “New Deal” in action. This is what grows out C. P. Active In Cleveland Shop CLEVELAND, Ohio, Sept. 25 The Communist Party election cam- paign here is being carried into im- portant shops in an energetic and thorough manner. In Collinwood, a working-class suburb, the campaign is being cen- tered around the huge New York Central Railroad shops. The re- sponse of the workers in the shop . 4s excellent. The campaign was started by two issues of the “Red Express,” a mimeographed paper published by the Communist Party members qm- ployed in the shop. These two is- sues dealt chiefly with working con- ditions of the men, their fight against a 10 per cent wage cut and lay-offs. A third issue several days ago made an exposure of Charles Ely. Mayor of Euclid, Ohio, of which Collinwood is a part, Republican | County Committeeman and Repub- lican County Committee vice-chair- | man, as the individuals who were chiefly responsible for breaking the strike of workers in the Chase Brass Foundry here. Both Attacker and Judge Ely, with the help of a foreman in the shop, mobilized thugs and caused the beating and arrest of strikers, against whom he issued severe sentences in his capacity as justice of the peace. | The week following the distribu- tion of the “Red Express” the Com- | munist Party issued leaflets con- demning Ely’s activity in the strike and pointing out how natural it is that public officials of the capita)- ist Republican and Democratic Par- ties should act as strike-breakers. The leaflets set forth the election program of the Communist Party and urged the workers to vote Communist. % Workers distributing these leaf- = lets were arrested, among them Peter Margetich, Communist candi- date for State Representative. After * the leaflets were distributed, a short meeting was held at the shop gates. The officials of the plant tried to disrupt the meeting by driving to the gates a locomotive | which let off huge quantities of steam with a deafening roar. Amter Puts Relief Program to Mayor (Continued from Page 1) | both could witness the destitution | of the unemployed Negroes. “If/ that’s the way you talk,” LaGuardia | answered, “it’s no wonder that the Board of Education fired you.” Business man and representa- | tives of boards of trade and com-| Merce, spoke in opposition to the/ projected relief taxes and for the| most part prooffered a tax on sub-/ way rides as a means of raising | revenue. Gonshak Thrown Out | David Lassber, Socialist Party member and head of the Workers | Unemployed Union, declared that! the relief tax schemes of LaGuardia | “were a step in the right direction, but did not go far enough. “We) feel,” he said, “that the excess) profits of the bankers and the pub- lie utilities must be taxed.” Harry Laidler, Socialist Party candidate for comptroller, asked | that “taxes on incomes of utilities above six per cent be levied by the city to finance relief.” Sam Gonshak, organizer of the Unemployment Councils of Greater | New York twice arose from the floor and demanded the right to be | heard. At the second time, La- Guardia ordered the police to put him out. Slugged by LaGuardia’'s police, Gonshak was ejected from the building. Hundreds of workers who were picketing the City Hall during the tax hearings met in Foley Square, a few blocks away, where Gonshak reported on the tax hearings. All during the tax hearings, City Hall bristled with police. Members of the police alien and radical juads, dressed in plain clothes, led with the people, a police- man was stationed at each door, and others were secreted in the basement and corridors, and 250 mounted and patrolmen surrounded City Hall. : I. L. G. W. U. MEETS TODAY NEW YORK.—A meeting of all members of the Left Wing Group of Local 2, International Ladies Garment Workers Union, will be held today, right after work, at ‘Memorial Hall, 344 West 36th St. |= Questions of vital importance will be taken up at the meeting. keane te beeerawer PEMEN Dod C hi tsntoes roe ae Rana of “faith in Roosevelt.” These are the results which flow from Roose- velt, Gorman and bayonets. It works this way, fellow workers: Roosevelt lets loose a reign of terror against the workers and a flood of demagogy (deceptive prom- ises); Gorman, who pretends to be a labor leader, advises you to h; +> “faith in the President” and return to work; the Socialist Party leader, as well as high U.T.W. official, Emil Rieve, who wins the confidence of workers by talking as a “Socialist,” urges the workers to “stand by the union,” to “support Gorman”; and the expelled member of the Co: munist Party, Eli Keller, of Paterson who poses still as a Communi also, though “criticizing” Gorman’s “victory,” urges the workers to ac- cept it. All the way from Roosevelt to Eli Keller, one sees a chain that serves only te enslave the workers. It is by such maneuvers and outright terror, always closely bound together, that strikes are broken. These were the methods in the tex- tile strike, in Toledo, Minneapolis, Milwaukee and in San Francisco. . . IN PATERSON th silk workers are enraged against the renegade | Keller; in the South the U.T.W. leaders are being denounced; in New England the workers are equally bitter. They are fighting to throw these traitors out of the union; the move for rank and file lead- ership is growing; the sentiment for a new strike is rising high. Gorman admits that: “There's a lot of sentiment in the South to renew the strike, but I told them to have patience and give the new | machinery a chance.” | R. R. Lawrence, president of the North Carolina Federation of | Labor, acknowledges the tremendous demand for a new strike, and | says: “I feel that under the new board that is to be set up by the President the N.R.A. provisions will be enforced.” Keller, head of the U.T.W. silk union in Paterson, refuses to let a union meeting be called, and orders the workers back to the mills, . . . UT everywhere there is the blacklist, the lockout, the same miserable conditions, the same unbearable stretch-out. Will Roosevelt's board “to be appointed” change the situation? Did similar boards change the conditions of the auto workers, the steel workers? No, fellow work- ers, they did not! In the textile also they will not! In auto they aided in splitting the union; there they worsened conditions. In textile also, they will strive to split the workers’ ranks; they aid the bosses in put- ting over still more unbearable conditions. You will continue to have Roosevelt, Gorman and bayonets so long as you accept the empty promises of Roosevelt, and Gorman’s bally- hoo of “have faith in the President.” And Roosevelt, Gorman and bayo- nets will continue to enslave you under the slavery conditions now existing in the textile mills. . . . HAT can you do? That is now the main problem in the minds of all textile strikers. Fellow workers, the situation is not easy, but the fight is by no means lost. You can still accomplish what you set out to accomplish at the beginning of your fight. But you can not win by relying on Roosevelt, or Gorman, or Rieve, or Keller. You can do it only by organizing your own rank and file strike leadership made up of the best fighters, the most loyal union men, the fellows from your own mill who have proved their trust- worthiness, These are the men and women who should make up your leadership. Under such leaders you can fight against the lockout; you can transform this lockout of the bosses into a new strike for your U. T. W. convention demands. You can fight against the blacklist. You can served notice on the bosses that either every worker returns to the mill, or else every workr will again striks ! That is the job at the moment. By means of the lockout and the blacklist the textile bosses are trying to destroy your union. You must maintain your union, but you also must kick out the dirty rats in the union leadership which be- trayed you! JHE Communist Party urges the textile workers to hold their ranks solid, maintain unity, prevent splits, resist the spread of pessimism. Organize the forces of the rank and file, the honest fighters; win control of your local, of the entire U, T. W. The Communist Party urges you to fight against the blacklist; in- sist on the return of every striker; agitate and organize for a new strike against the blacklist and the lockout. ALL INTO THE FACTORIES AS ONE UNITED, ORGANIZED MASS, OR ALL OUT ON THE STREETS IN A NEW STRIKE! PREPARE AND ORGANIZE FOR A NEW STRIKE! CONTINUE THE FIGHT FOR YOUR OWN DEMANDS! DON'T TRY TO FEED YOUR FAMILY ON “FAITH IN ROOSE- VELT”; FIGHT FOR A REAL VICTORY, FOR YOUR ORIGINAL DEMANDS! Make Betrayals of the Workers Impossible! By EARL R. L. Workers | Talk About | New Walkout (Specie! to the Daily Worker) PAWTUCKET, R. L, Sept. 25.— Scores of rs who were ac- the textile strike found es locked out here when ied to return to work yes- and today. Many of them flatly told that they “had ess to be on strike,” or tauntingly were asked, “Why didn’t you come back last week?” | Mass resentment against the | Snited Textile Workers Union leadership in Pawtucket and Cen- tral Falls is sweeping the entire rank and file in the industry. The way to get a black eye in e parts is to say something favor of Francis Gorman or the | United Textile Workers Union. y workers are talking about coming out again soon to take up their fight for their original de-| mands where they were compelled | to leave off by the traitorous lead- ers of the United Textile Workers | Union. | Many workers here have ex- pressed regret hat they were not under the leadership of Ann Burlak | and the National Textile Workers | Union in the strike (Special to the Daily Worker) MANCHESTER, Conn., Sept. 25. —The workers of the Cheney Silk | Mill, though back, are anxiously | waiting the official strike report tomorrow to verify the prevalent opinion of the sell-out. Many say the strike ending was premature since nothing gained; they are ac-| tually dazed. | The Communist Party, which refused a permit in a cam- nm meeting during the strike, is refused. Politicians and union officials fear the exposure of the U.T.W. leadership to the dissatisfied workers, South Is Eager For New Strike (Continued from Page 1) V pa tion during the strike. About 1,300 reported for work and all but 850 were turned away. | National Guardsmen who were on duty in Gastonia and Belmont were |ordered withdrawn today. But the | | troops are being replaced by hun- | | dreds of additional deputies, and it | | Was stated that all guardsmen were | |to stand by for an emergency re- |} | mobilization, | | Strike Firm In Huntsville All mills in Alabama’s largest | textile area around Huntsville re- | mained closed tight by the strike | today. The workers in this fown | Walked out on strike ten weeks ago, before the general strike began. It Was announced by union leaders here that it will be the policy to settle the strikes in these mills on an individual basis. Eye witnesses of the fatal shoot- | ing of seven strikers at Honea Patch | told a coroner's jury at Anderson, | S. C., today that police and mill guards shot the men in the back. | | Dr. E. R. Donald, of Honea Patch, | |who performed the autopsy, testi- |fied that he found holes in the | backs of five of the dead men. | J. R. King, a mil worker, told | the jury that Claude Cannon, one of the dead strikers, was shot from | behind as he was going away from | the mill “without troubling any- | body.” | : |New York Utility Firm Fires Fifty Union Men | | NEW YORK. _ Resentment among members of the Brotherhood of | Utility Employees ran high yester- |day as a result of the firing of | fifty power workers by the New | York Queens Light and Power Co. |Some form of protest action, the | exact nature of which has not yet | been announced, is contemplated. | The fifty men were fired on the | company’s claim of “lack of funds,” | @ claim which the brotherhood de- rides, All fifty worked in the sub- way bureau of the company. The company’s net income in 1933 was $4,049,315, a substantial in- | ers; The Editor Writes to Our Readers By C. A. HATHAWAY — (Continued from Page 1) telegraphed stories from all strike fronts; we gave most detailed organizational and political guidance to the strik- we distributed over} 10,000 copies of the paper, mostly free, to the textile workers. We must be able to do this| in the developing strike of, east and gulf coast maritime} | workers, and in all the major strike struggles now matur-| ing. | The betrayals of the re- formist leaders in struggle} after struggle (Toledo, Min- neapolis, Milwaukee, San Francisco, and now textile), and tke increased fascist trend of the city, state and national governments, places added responsibilities on a paper like the Daily Worker, which takes its stand square-| ly as the spokesman for the| workers’ movement in the fight against hunger, fascism and war, Finally, comrades, it be- comes more clear every day that, together with the build- ing of the Daily Worker, the Communist Party must be built with increasing speed as the only guarantee against the fight to unite the workers’ day-to-day struggles and in the fight unite the workers’ ranks for an effective stand against the advance of fas- cist reaction. In these many-sided ac- tivities and struggles the Daily Worker is needed, and |for that reason, to live and to grow, we need the $60,000. The drive of this $60,000 fund to date has lagged. The} principal Districts of the Communist Party are not on their toes. They have not seriously organized the cam- paign for financial support for the Party’s central or- gan. New York, for exam- ple, has reached only $3,785 out of its $30,000 quota. Such returns, comrades of New York, will never get you a New York Daily Worker! Chieago has sent in only $498; Detroit, $286; Cleve- land, $434; Pittsburgh, $144. What about the Socialist competition between these districts? What about the other Districts with even worse records? Comrades, these returns show a serious underestimation of the Daily Worker, and of the urgent need for the $60,000 fund. The money is needed, and needed badly. Our continued effectiveness as a fighter for the workers’ needs and aims ‘crease over 1932, the union said. BROWDER General Secretary, C. P., U. S. A. TO EVERY COMMUNIST PARTY | treacherous leaders from the ranks UNIT: |of the workers and the working- | aes revolutionist must be filled | class organizations in the interests with indignation at the base |of the labor movement, in the in- betrayal of the textile workers’ | terest of the liberation of the entire strike. What a heroic struggle of | working class—this is our task! hundreds of thousands of workers | Whoever does not understand this, was here stabbed by the treachery | and does not bend all his energies of the Gormans and Greens! j to achieve it with far greater speed But our hatred, our indignation | than has been the case up to now alone are not sufficient. It is one |is not yet a fully conscious revolu- of the most important lessons of | tionary. This is the task not only | this struggle that it was because | there were too few Communists in | the locals of the United Textile Workers, because we Communists were too weak in our influence in the U. T. W. locals, that it was pos- sible for the U. T. W. officials to betray the strike. In their treach- ery, the U. T. W. leaders did not sufficiently encounter the resistance of workers firmly organized in the |U. T. W. locals by revolutionaries. We Communists must face this truth squarely if we are going to make progress, To those reactionaries and rene- gades who try to do business and think to make capital on the basis of our self-criticism, we answer: All} “Yes, gentlemen, we plead guilty to) pulse upon to be there, Without | ratiks of the working class with mae among the textile workers, but it is | how more than ever the task of the | whole working class. | Not only to agitate, but to plunge j into the practical work of organ- izing the workers in the A. F. of L. unions to resistance, | treacherous policies of the A. F. of L. leadership is now one of the most | Vital links in the chain of our revo- lutionary policy. The experiences in the textile strike proved this again, for the hundredth time, and with even greater urgency. We must quickly prove in our practical work that we understand this, that | we know how to work better among | the workers in the A. F. of L. Pope aa HAT is to be done? In the next two weeks, every unit must take sufficient speed.” To drive these|in the trade unions and especially “Yeft wing dtessmakers have been| having failed to drive you from the | ‘ against the | up one central question: the work | j the work in the A. F. of L. unions. At the unit meeting the buro must | have each member report as to whether he is organized in a trade union, and where he is organized. If the comrade is not organized in a trade union, the reason must be found out, and he must be assisted to find his place in the proper trade union. If any comrade re- fuses to do this work, he must be | convinced in a firm, comradely way | of the urgent need for work in the | trade unions. But this is not enough. In addi- tion, every comrade in the unit must report on the work that he jis doing in his union, whether he belongs to a fraction, and what the | possibilities are for organizing a | fraction in his work. He must re- port to the unit on how he con- nects his Party work in the shop with the work in the shop organiza- tion of his trade union. These will not be dull discussions. | This is to take measures to make impossible future betrayals by the | A. F. of L. leadership. This is to organize, more successfully and with greater speed, our revolution- lary forces against the reactionary forces among the masses of the working class. This means to learn the lessons of the textile strike, to is at stake. We call upon prepare for coming struggles, to make, at once, the necessary prep- arations for the approaching strug- gles of the seamen and longshore- men. In short, this means to act as a revolutionary, to organize the rev- olution. This must be done within the next two weeks. Every unit must report directly to the district and to the Central Committee on the carrying out of this work and on the results. These reports will ve published in the Daily Worker. The quickening of our tempo of work is indispensable if we are to defeat the betrayers. It is indis- pensable if we are to organize the tremendous mass of workers who are eager to struggle, eager to re- sist the attacks of the employers. We must draw the practical, revo- lutionary conclusions from the tre- mendous indignation which the tex- tile workers feel at the unparal- leled treachery of the U. T. W. leaders, Comrades, to work! Every unit must become an instrument for the organization of victorious struggle among the workers organized in the A. F. of L., as an organizer of vic- torious mass struggles of the work- ing class, / Y, SEPTEMBER 26, 1934 every ready, every Party member, every unit, section and district, to take up this campaign seriously and quickly. We now need $1,000 per day if we are to carry out our expansion plans. Come to our aid now as you} have in the past. Noted Men Speak | Of Fascist Trend (Continued from Page 1) North Will Report Anti-War Congress For Daily Worker NEW YORK. — Joseph North, one of the editors of the New Masses, will report for the Daily Worker, in day to day dis- patches, events at the Second United States Congress Against War and Fascism, which opens in Chicago on Friday. North will be in Chicago in time to witness the mass parade of delegates and Chicago worR- ers which will precede the open- ing of the Congress With a mass meeting in the Coliseum. Workers’Enemies large support among Jewish and Negro organization. Browder replied that this was) E sed principally due to lack of intensive Xpo: work among the latter groups. He said that already Mabel Byrd, a} Mel Wermblad, of Kansas City, prominent Negro social worker who| Mo, former financial secretary of resigned from the N.R.A. in Protest | District No. 10, has been expelled over the discrimination against Ne-| from the Communist Party and is gro workers, was a member of the| hereby exposed as a stool pigeon. arrangements’ committee of the! Party is in possessi f let- Anti-War Congress, and that the| nee a pang editor of one of the largest Negro| newspapers was also a member of ters addressed to him, as “No. 15,” from 6059 So. Maplewood Ave.,| Chicago, Ill., in which he is asked this important committee, In connection with minority groups, Rabbi Goldstein brought out the point that the wealthy Jews in this country are pursuing the same course that the Jewish bourgeoisie followed in Germany. “They turn to Hitlerism and fascism,” he} charged, “because they feel that un- der a fascist regime they can buy safety for themselves and their prop- erty, whereas they know definitely that should Communists come into| Party workers, which indicated a| power, their property would in-| fairly intimate knowledge on the} evitably be confiscated.” To save| Part of the police as to who is who} their property they are willing to|in and around the Party there. sacrifice the poor Jews. It was also found that Werm- The broad aims and purposes of | plat systematically and carefully the League were illustrated by the| had avoided giving his address to answers of the men to certain ques-| anybody in the Party. I tions. Rabbi Goldstein seemed to| The workers will watch out for| be eager and certain in his replies,| this rat and drive him away where- as befits a young intellectual who| ever he may appear again. | has participated in working class| Description: American of Ger- struggles. The older Dreiser was|man-English descent, bookkeeper slower in his answers, but seemed | salesman by occupation; age, 38; grimly sincere in his hatred of war| height, 5 ft. 8 in.; slender; weight, to obtain the “Butcher Workman” | paper and to sign receipts “for | |June account,” one for $25, dated | June 6, and another for $30, dated | | June 12, Shortly before these proofs were obtained and all Party records| were taken away from Wermblad, | there was an attack upon the Kan- sas City headquarters of the Party and arrests of Party and non- and fascism. Browder was the} about 140 pounds; eyes, brown; calmest of the three and the most| hair, light brown; complexion, sal- | forceful. low; wears glasses when reading; | He showed through the logic of facts that to really fight war we must go beyond mere hatred. He spoke of Communist activities with- in the armed forces of the United States and said that one of tHe re- sults of this activity was the de- velopment of strong anti-war senti- ment among National Guardsmen. At the coming Anti-War Congress there will be 20 delegates from Na- tional Guard regiments, he said. Browder explained that “so far | 1300 | the actual activity of the League has| remain’ on aicike ee cement been of an agitational, educational | ending discrimination against, and propaganda trend.” But the strikers who were refused their | League must go further, he said, | jobs when they reported for work | after it has rallied sufficient forces. | following the official closing of the It must go in for very definite acts | strike. | of struggle against fascist activities} Rank and file committees and | and war preparations. jlocal officials of the United Tex- Despite their individual differ- tile Workers Union are conferring | ences on certain issues, the three with mill employers. Another vote men were as one in their common |on returning to work will be taken opposition to war and fascism. As |after terms have been worked out Dreiser said, “I fully indorse the |to protect the locked-out strikers. League’s program.” And so do \A small silk mill here has re- millions of persons throughout the | opened. y . world who are unitedly fighting the | Local textile workers are losing menace of imperialist war and fas- faith in Gorman and are giving cism, serious thought to the Daily Work- [Se ee nonre of his betrayal of the strike. dresses fairly well; speaks slowly | and in an even tone. | Strike Continues In Many Districts, (Continued from Page 1) BIMBA TO TEACH WORKERS NEW YORK.—The opening of a class on the “History of the Amer- ican Labor Movement,” with An- thony Bimba, author of “History of the American Working Class,” as instructor, was announced by the Left Wing Group of Local 22, In- ternational Ladies Garment Work- ers Union. The first session of the class will take place tonight at 6, at 140 West 36th Street, and will be held regularly every Wednesday at the same place and time. All members of the I. L. G. W. U. have been invited to register for the class. Classified ELEGANT 1-2-3 modern studios. Cross ventilation. Elevator. Reasonable. Pur- nished, unfurnished, 145 Second Avenue (9th St.), Apt. 20. Grammercy 17-2088. Comrades Patronize JADE MOUNTAIN American & Chinese Restaurant 197 SECOND AVENUE (Bet. 12th and 13th St.) Back from U.S.S.R., to Address C.P. Coliseum Rally beineanis Workers Meet Despite Keller (Continued from Page 1) strike, and to press the demands of | silk workers for a membership | meeting for this Saturday in spite of the announcement of the exec- utive board that such a meeting | would not be called until the fol- | lowing week. | Resolutions were also passed stat- |ing that no union members could | be expelled without a membership | Meeting, this as a step against the | dictatorship of Keller; and also th | an organizer for the broad silk des | partment be elected by the men | bership, as this position has been j Vacant since Keller became union | manager. The final resolution condemned |the national strike committee and |the Paterson officials, Eli Keller, | William Smith, -et al, for their sell- |out “policies in the textile strike, |Silk workers as a group infuriated \by Keller’s recent actions declared at this meeting that Keller must |be kicked out. Today many more workers re= turned to their mills, although there are still several thousand, ac- cording to the union, who have not yet returned to the shops. Some were forced out on strike again when bosses attempted to put over wage cuts, and discrimination, DR. J. SAMOSTIE 220 East 12th Street Skin, Urinary and Blood Conditions Lady Physicians in Attendance for Women Hours 9 to 2—4 to 8—Sunday 9 to 1 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 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 Brownsville and East New York Comrades Welcome J. BRESALIER FO 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.¥.C. Good Work at Clinic Prices DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY Office Hours: 8-10 A.M., 1-2, 6-3 P.M PHONE: DICKENS 2-3012 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet. Pitkin and Sutter Aves., Brooklyn Dr. Maximilian Cohen Dental Surgeon 41 Union Sq. W., N. Y. G After 6 P.M. Use Night Entrance 22 EAST 17th STREET Suite 703—-GR. 71-0135 Greet the new Yorkville Restaurant and Garden Section of the C. P. “KAVKAZ" e Russian and Oriental Kitchen JAMES CASEY BANQUETS AND PARTIES Managing Editor Daily Worl: SEs Rast 16th Steest; (New Terk City main speeker Tompkins Square 6- Dr. Simon Trieff| Dentist 2300 - 86th Street MAyflower 9-7035 Brooklyn, N. Y. @ DEL Cartoonist Daily Worker, in Chalk Teli: COMRADES AT THE e MEET YOUR 1 th STREET CAFETERIA 3 East 14th Street, N.Y.C. Near 5th Avenue Dancing — Entertainment Saturday, Sept. 29, 8 p. m. Yorkville Labor Temple 245 East 84th Street, Adm. 30c, Dr. Harry Musikant Dentist 195 EASTERN PARKWAY Corner Kingston Ave. DEcatur 2-0695 Brooklyn, N. ¥. ‘All Comrades WORKERS COOPERATIVE COLONY 2700-2800 BRONX PARK EAST | ——"rth Feod—Proletarian Prices—se Meet at the NEW. HEALTH CENTER CAFETERIA E. 13th St.—WORKERS’ CENTER = 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 am. to 2 p.m. Telephone: Estabrook 8-1400—8-1401 Priday and Saturday 9 a.m. to 5 p.m, 125 FOLDING CHAIRS 60c John Kalmus Co. Snucemuieey Are Now L 5 WASHINGTON SQUARE Hour: P.M, at 49-10 THIRTEENTH AVENUE, + PAUL LUTTINGER, M. D. — AND — DANIEL LUTTINGER, M. D. ocated at NORTH, NEW YORK CITY GRamercy 7-2090-2091 BROOKLYN, NEW YORK LERMAN BROS. STATIONERS and UNION PRINTERS Special Prices for Organizations 29 EAST 14th STREET New York City Algonquin 4-3356—4-8843—4-7828 $14 = Week. Cars leave 10:30 A. M. (Allerton station on East Side An ideal place to rest and vacation. Hotel accomodations with all modern improvements. Individual attention to diets. PROLETARIAN CULTURAL PROGRAM! dai from 2700 Bronx ay). Estabrook 8-11 rk East RADIO SERVICE|! BY MEN WHO KNOW HOW @_ SPECIAL DIS- COUNTS TO COMRADE READERS OF THE “DAILY” SQUARE RADIO CO. WINDSOR 8-0280 WE GO ANYWHERE - Open All Seasons of the Year! CAMP NITGEDAIGET BEACON-ON-THE-HUDSON, NEW YORK

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