The Daily Worker Newspaper, October 6, 1934, Page 2

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Page Two DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1934 C.P. Wins Right of Negro to Run for Congress in Alabama But Registry Board Threatens Workers WhoV ote Communist County Officials Declare They Will Find Out Names of All Who Dare to Cast Vote for Norman Ragland, Negro Communist , Oct. 5.—The C ty Board of Reg- d by the militant struggle of the Com- munist Party here to place Norman Ragland, Negro worker, on the ballot as candidate for Congress in the Ninth District. In doing so, however, the Board made an ominous threat aga. eve vote Comr orkers’Enemi rt hime sun ‘sald dudee ter-|| WOrKers Enemies ace B. Wilkinson to L. B. Coc r “7 chairma e -% rd. of Regis- can see who votes for him. Will Withhold Right to Vote Or e basis of this advice Cooper N. J., also known at Jamaica, L. I., announced that Ragland’s right been exposed by Negro a place on the ballot membership of the I.L.D. in Jer: further contested but ins’ City as an unreliable and untrust- his name would be purged worthy individual, who has misap- Harold Williamson, of Jersey City list of qualified voters in propriated Labor Defender funds, on the gr ds that he ca ha tried to disrupt the ILD and write, branch, has acted suspiciously in trying to get various information, and who has boasted of his ac- quaintance with police officials, He is a mulatto Negro, printer by “I couldn’t conceive of anything nore ridiculous than a ning for office on the Communist ticket in Alabama Wilkin Judge said. This will be the first time ‘fade, but understood also to have since Civil War reconstruction davs| been an advertising agent, and un- that a Negro has qual as a pone aloeace Ol eaee ete ARRIEGe: a on of. is about 35 years of age, stands Poets en he | About 5 feet in height, weighs about stronghold of Goel | oes eee ee nome and Iron Company and industrial | 2/™0M8 the Negro workers in Jersey center of the deep South Oity and Jamaica. He was organizer of the Jersey Worker Fined $50 City Branch of the ILD. up to : “Neither Wilkinson, Cooper nor| November, 193 and through his other officials could tell how it| arrogant manner drove a number would be possible for them to “see | Of workers away from the organiza- tion. Not only did he take Labor Defender subscriptions without giv- ing any receipts for them, but he also absconded with the proceeds of who votes for him,” but the impli-| cation of Fascist annulment of the secret ballot’ is obvious ae Long ae fued, $50 gun an T.L.D. dance without leaving any cost esterday on a framed-up| - cords or accounts. charges of “aggravated disorderly conduct for distributing the Com- munist Congressional election plat- form to workers of Fairfield, an important industrial mill’ town con- trolled by the-Tennessee Coal and Iron Company: Ragland’ has been’ a_ railroad worker for the company for twenty years, and was recently thrown out ef a job along with thousands of AFL. Parley Vot Against Jim-Crow Page 1) (Continued from Negro question: on -the chin and it took the count. The resolution of the rank and Classified file opposition on the Negro ques-|dorsing the strike,.more than 600} LARGE Modern Room for 1-2. Shapiro,| tion Which took up the same ques- 44 St. Marks Place, City. ORchard 4-4573.| tion of discrimination resolved that the convention, “go on record call- nl ing for the elimination of clauses Lexington of constitutions of any affiliated a x #, Unions of the A. F. of L. contain- esc st. ing any. suggestion of discrimina- tion against Negro workers, and All Shipping Halls Philadelph ia District Leads To Be Closed Today £n Daily Worker Fund Drive; (Continued from Page 1) where the rotary system of i be put into effect. Strong Solidarity Tt was the first time such solidar- was expressed between men of he sea. captain rubbed shoulders with a mess-boy. The captain was telling an abled seaman that he was going out with the icensed men to help close the “fink halls.” An engi- neer together sorting out leafiets tha: they were going to distribute on the waterfront and on the ships. There was quite a different pic- ture over at the headquarters of bureau hiring the International Seamen’s Union It was as quiet as a graveyard ere. The officials of this union e again calling a strike, so there were no seamen to be found around the headquarters. Only two offi- cials, who looked upon newspaper men very suspiciously and refused to give out any statements, held forth at the I. S. U. Hall To Close All Halls “See Mr. Olander at the Ply- mouth Hotel,” was all the informa- tion reporters could get from the two I. S. U. leaders. It was announced at the Joint Strike headquarters that while the unlicensed men are closing the ship- ping halls today the officers, who do not hire through the halls, will open a boycott campaign on the shipping company offices. The Centralized Shipping Bureau Committee will lead the work of closing the halls. Committees will go to the ha backed by masses of workers and tell the shippers that they must do all shipping through the Centralized Bureau Committee. Where the Interna- tional Seamen's Union has job con- trol, such as on the Eastern Steam- ship Company, the seamen will not attempt to close the halls, but will 0 convince the men of the nec- ity of the Central Bureau and ask for their support in the strug- gle for the bureau. Unity Agreement Roy Hudson, chairman of the Joint Strike Preparations Commit- tee, explained that all organiza- tions which have united for strike action in the Joint Committee have agreed not to criticise each other during the course of the struggle long as each organization car- ties out the decisions of the com- mittee. The committee also agreed that no organization shall settle with the shipowners until the de- mands for all groups are won. | Philadelphia Seamen Ready (Special to the Daily Worker) | PHILADELPHHIA, Penn., Oct. 5. ‘—Crews of ships in port and sea- /Men on the beach here are en- having signed strike pledge cards |issued by the Joint Strike Prepara- |ticns Committee. The officers and crew of the Amelia received the |committee’s delegate on board and enthusiastically endorsed the strike at an open meeting on deck. An I, S. U. delegate trying to ‘Ne and a fireman were working | w York Trails in Campaign With a quota ten times less than that of New York, Philadelphia has contributed half as much as New York has Philadelphia, leading all jin the Daily Worker drive for $60,000. A grizzled, weather-beaten | the districts, has contributed $2,255.92 of a quota of $3,500. New York has sent in $5,473.10 on a quota of $30,000. Philadelphia’: |percentage is 64.5. New York's is 18.2. The Denver district 1s second— with 57.8 per cent of its sum filled. District Gains Small The gain in the districts this past week was small—the rise being from 16 to 218 per cent, What this shows is that the work is not progressing as it should. With almost two months of the drive passed, only one-fifth of the $60,000 has come in. Many districts are taking their sections sharply to task. for this situation. The Cleveland bulletin, just received, singles out the Erie, Dayton, Cambridge and Mansfield sections, for special scozing. These sections have not contributed a cent. “The Cleveland District,” the bul- letin avers, “could easily be the first to achieve its quota if it were not for such sections.” Youngstown Criticized Youngstown, the bulletin further points out, the national concentra- tion point for steel, “seems to be satisfied” with twelfth place in the section standings. The Boston district, too, has analyzed its position and states that: “It is clear . .. that only small effort has been exerted thus Table in $60,000 Drive—Sept. far by our Party units and practi- cally nothing has been done by our mass organizations.” Boston Plans Affair Boston, however, has scheduled a major affair for Saturday night, Oct. 27, at the Dudley Street Opera House, 113 Dudley St., to send itself to the fore. An excellent program hhas been arranged, a performance by the New Theatre players, a violin solo, the Workers Dance group and a Russian chorus being included. The principal speaker will be James. Casey, managing editor of the Daily Worker. It is noteworthy that Easton, Pa., a section that was in the center of the textile strike, raised half its quota during the struggle. In other sections the excuse is advanced that such a strike prevents adequate work, What have our other districts to say to Easton? The New Daily Worker will be out tomorrow night. The paper's funds are low! Bills have to be met! The new paper has increased the Daily Worker's expenses by $1,000 a week! Money is needed immedi- ately! The districts must push themselves to the utmost to give the new Daily Worker the immediate support it needs. The district table follows: 27-Oct. 4 Received Received % of Distriet Quota Past Week to Date Quota 1 Boston $2,000 $98.79 $ 770.52 38.5 2 New York City 30,000 1485.17 5473.10 18.2 3 Philadelphia 3,500 1103.84 2258.92 64.5 4 Buffalo 750 31.30 80.62 10.7 5 Pittsburgh 1,200 31.74 246.81 20.56 6 Cleveland 3,000 140.13 863.83 28.8 7 Detroit 3,500 90.24 504.19 144 8 Chicago 6,500 206.58 1149.34 17.6 9 Minneapolis 800 50.93 215.01 26.87 10 Omaha 250 3.00 6.00 24 11 North Dakota 250 5.50 11.00 4 12 Seattle 1,000 27.00 52.27 5.2 13 California 2,000 5.00 35.97 4.3 14 Newark 750 5.50 166.01 22.1 15 New Haven 750 60.15 176.25 23.5 16 Charlotte 160 —- 5.00 3.3 17 Birmingham 150 - — — 18 Milwaukee 1,000 56.31 225.39 22.5 19 Denver 400 40.86 231.34 57.8 20 Houston 200 1.00 4.00 13 21 St. Louis 500 — 59.90 12. 22 West Virginia 200 52.15 26.7 28 Kentucky 200 1.00 8 24 Loutsiana 200 2.35 1 25 Florida 200 61.00 20.5 26 South Dakota 200 1,00 5 26 Districts $60,000 $3,436.14 $13,087.84 21.8 Enthusiastic Rallies | HopkinsOpens Big Bosses Launch Drive to Cut Farm Relief Plan Is to Substitute “Subsistence Loans” for Direct Relief By Seymour Waldman (Daily Worker Washington Bureau) WASHINGTON, D. C., Oct. 5.— In announcing that more than 80,- 000 of the approximate 1,000,000 destitute farm families have been taken off the $8 to $10 a month di- rect relief rolls during the last six months by the “rural rehabilitation program,” “and helped toward” the “economic independence” of no relief and subsistence loans, Harry L. Hopkins, Federal Relief Admin- istrator and key member of the new N.R.A. policy committee, to- day virtually announced the be- ginning of an intensive Roosevelt administration drive to substitute meagre subsistence loans for the already inadequate direct relief Payments. “It is an effort to get farm fami- lies off relief rolls permanently,” Hopkins declared. “The funds are loaned, but granted .. . to fami- lies of good character,” he added. When asked to reconcile this subsistence program with the Roosevelt crop destruction pro- gram, Hopkins eyvasively replied, “Oh, that’s not going on forever.” Asked how the remaining 920,000 farm families will get along on the $8 and $10 federal relief when the city families of over four people are suffering under the $23 a month relief payment (Hopkins’ figure), Richberg answered: “Oh, they don’t need it... . They have a house, a little land, and so forth......” The Hopkins announcement fore- shadows the beginning of business- government flank drives to head off the increasing sentiment and or- ganization for both federal indus- trial and farm relief and unemploy- ment insurance. The fact that the Roosevelt administration spent $7,500,000 a month for six months for these 80,000 families indicates how seriously it views the spread- ing drive for genuine farm and in- dustrial relief, especially as pre- sented in the Workers Unemploy- ment and Social Insurance Bill, and in the Farmers Emergency Re- lief Bill drafted by the Communist Party and the United Farmers League. It is also significant that such “rehabilitation” measures, if carried through, will tend to cre- ate a special small farmer class as a dividing wall between the poorer farmers arid the huge army of mi- gratory farm workers. It is also an attempt to furnish cheap “sub- sistence” labor to local industrialists. — WORKERS WELCOME — NEW CHINA CAFETERIA Chinese Dishes American Dishes _ ie 848 Broadway tet.13th @ 14th st. Drive to Cut Wages By CARL REEVE (Continued from Page 1) away with the minimum wages in the codes and establishing a new basis for determining wages. Roose- velt, carrying out the dictates of big business, gave the signal in his speech for the wage cutting drive. This wage cutting drive is simul- taneous with intensification of the union-smashing campaign outlined in the speech of Richberg, which advocates “individual bargaining rights” under the N.R.A. Girdler, in his speech before the American Society for Metals at the} Hotel Pennsylvania, claimed that the steel industry took measures under its code, to increase employ- ment and hourly wage rates. He continued, “The steel industry, like many other industries, has over- stepped the bounds of practicability in this direction ... Now I wish we could continue to pay these wages, or even better wages indefinitely . . .| money taken. in must provide not only for wages, but for dividends for stockholders.” Girdler directly quotes Roose-; velt’s radio speech as justification! for the wage cutting drive in the steel industry. He refers to Roose- velt’s laudation of “the driving power of individual initiative and the incentive of fair private profit,” as the basis for the steel companies’ intention to increase dividends at the expenses of the workers. 20 Million Profits in 3 Months Girdler spoke not only for the Republic, but for all the stzel em- ployers. The exposure of their dem- agogic cry that they have no in- come is complete when the cold hard figures of their profits are considered, The eleven big steel companies, including Republic, U. S. Steel, J. and L., Bethlehem and others, made a combined net profit of twenty million dollars in the three months period of April, May and June this year, the latest figures available. This net profit for the second quarter of 1934 is in addi- DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY Office Ho: 8-10 A.M. 1-2, 6-3 P.M PHONE: DICKENS 2-3012 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet. Pitkin and Sutter Aves., Brooklyn 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. Simon Trieff Dentist tion to the millions of dollars checked off for taxes, deprecia- tion, ete. The Republic company alone in the first six months of 1934, according to its own figures, made a net profit of $805,443. Cuts Planned in Other Industries It is not only in the steel industry that the wage cut drive is being prepared. At the convention of the cotton garment employers in Atlan- tic City, now going on, many speak- ers demanded that the N.R.A. code minimum wages be dropped and that there shall be minimum wages only on piece work. These de- mand can have but one meaning —an intention to cut wages of sev- eral hundred thousand garment workers at the same time that speed-up is on increase. Wages of auto, rubber, and other workers are to be cut also, it is planned. It is not accidental that Presi- dent Roosevelt has placed in charge of the newly organized administra tive division of the N.R.A. S. Clay Williams, chairman of the board of the Reynolds Tobacco Company. It was the Reynolds company that re- fused to be bound by any sort of a tobacco code. Under Williams, this, company stated that forty cents an hour was too high a minimum wage for skilled tobacco workers. This is the real meaning of the “no strike” truce speech of Roose- velt and of the present re-organi- zation now going on.in the N.R.A. The employers are given a clear track and open government sanc- tion to speedup the attack on the workers —to smash unions, cut wages, bring forward the company union and increase government control of existing unions, and to generally worsen conditions. This is the “truce,” to be backed by murderous terror against strikers, to which: the Greens and Gormans at the head of the A. F. of L. have given their stamp of approval. The wage-cutting union-smashing drive of the employers and their reorganized N.R.A. can be defeated The united front of all workers against this employers attack, to develop real struggle for all the workers’ demands, can defeat the Roosevelt-employer drive and bring better conditions to the workers, Dr. Maximilian Cohen Dental Surgeon 41 Union Sq. W., N. ¥. G After 6 P.M. Use Night Entrance 22 EAST 1th STREET Suite 103—GR, 7-0135 { DR. EMIL EICHEL DENTIST 150 E. 93rd St., New York City Cor. Lexington Ave. ATwater 9-8838 Hours: 9 &. m. to 8 p.m. Sun. 9 to 1 Member Workmen's Sick and Death Benefit Fund CAthedral 8-6160 Dr. D. BROWN Dentist 317 LENOX AVENUE Between 125th & 126th St., N.¥.0. Good Work at Clinic Prices Brownsville and East New York re Support Sea Strike that all Jim-Crow locals be imme- win endorsement of the Olander diately merged with the existing | sellout was booed off the ship, Dele- locals to establish the closest unity | gations of the J. 8. P. C., Marine of Negro and white workers, and be | Workers Industrial Union, and un- Comrades Welcome J. BRESALIER a 2300 - 86th Street MAyflower 9-7035 Brooklyn, N. ¥. Browder, 'Stachel and’ Seamen Cheer Hathaway Garment Section Workers Marine Leaders at it further resolved, to rally the |employed seamen were each told by I. S. U. officials here they would take no action in the strike, but would wait for the culmination of arbitration proceedings on the West Coast. Taxi drivers will refuse to haul any scabs to striking piers or ships, a seamen’s strike meeting was told by a driver. Harbor and towboat men are daily coming in to the committee’s headquarters, 312 South Second St., saying there will be no scabbing in these branches. of the industry after Monday. Tomorrow morning the seamen will begin a drive to close all fink halls, and take first steps in es- teblishing a Centralized Shipping Bureau. Longshoremen on the Ericcson | Pier, who walked out last week af- |ter Polly Baker's gang tried to force them into the International Long- Shoremen’s Association, continue picketing of the pier, and this morning succeeded in driving away a scab trying to sneak in, Rally Tomorrow _to Hail N.Y. Daily’ | (Continued from Page 1) membership of organized labor against the provisions of the N.R.A. codes which discriminate against Negro workers, and for a struggle |to establish equal pay for equal work and equal opportunity for any <-| jobs for Negro workers, as well as to establish full equality for white workers in all other working con- | ditions in the shop, and equal | rights in the union, including the right to hold any office. Perkins Speaks Preceded by a laudatory intro- duction delivered by President Green, Frances Perkins, the great- est Secretary of Labor since Will- iam Nuckles Doak of the Hoover Cabinet, let herself go today in her speech to the A. F. of L. conven- tion. Miss Perkins referred in her fully cultivated liberal way to ne present great test of strength by. labor and capital with its great strike. wave as a “transitional period.” The Secretary of Labor, accompanied by her Assistant Ed. McGrady, the man who_ helped break the coal and shoe workers’ strikes, assured the conyention that the present strike wave was not of an unusual character, but that most of them were “susceptible of settlement by means of mediation and so forth.” wishes to share m Square. Box 500, care of Dai ADE wants Reasonable ed room. GRamercy 5-9880 FOR SALE—St new), radio, oriental ruj Other house furnishings. GRamercy 17-2088 Reasona COMRAD mer tare cf ‘ar, team up sales- enefits. Box 105, | SSR (RUSSIA) | GIFTS A Torgsin Order will be highly appreciated by your relatives in the So- viet Union. Torgsin offers 15,000 tantly established in the Executive Council report and the official speeches of the A. F. of L. dynasty, Miss Perkins assured the conven- tion that total “employment and , 2 payrolls had increased” under the different domestic and | beneficent rule of our great Presi- imported articles of hic!: | dent in the year elzpsing since the = quality. Clothing, shoes, Washington ‘convention of the A. foodstuffs and other mer- | F. of L. chandise are for sale. | A CORRECTIO® i} Prices compare fa= | On Sept. 21, there appeared a vorably with those | news. item on the strike of the ¥ es 3 | painters in the Sol Cohen shop, in in the United States | ine Bronx. The painters in this | shop were striking under the lead- Ub OL dd jership of the Alteration Painters authorized agent | Union, and were demanding nine |dollars a day, with a seven-hour |day and other conditions. S28 | The news story in’ the Daily | Worker erroneously stated that the | Wage demands were for five dollars | per day. This error has just been | called to the attention of the Daily | Worker. The correct demand was | for nine dollars per day. SCAND) VIANS TO MEET |; NEW YORK.—All Scandinavian | members of the Communist Party in | Bro m are requested to atiend a meeting called for this evening at |§:30 by the District Language De- | partment. The meeting will be held in the International Workers Order Hall at 246 Forty-Third Street, Huy i $ General Representative in U.S.A | at AMTORG, 261 Fifth Ave., N.Y. T. MARTOV Fine Library Bookbinding Done By Hand 61 East 4th St. - DRydock 4-7794 New York City In the face of all the facts reluc- | which will appear on the streets to- |morrow night “will stimulate im- | measurably the work and leadership » of the Communist Party in this dis- trict, and should show its influence |immediately in the form of results for the Par‘y recruiting campeaign. | But thesé things will be true only if the members of the Party and sympathetic workers in mass or- | ganizations will make proper and | adequate use of this newly forged | Weapon, he said. . “The financial drive for the sup- | Port of the enlarged paper, must be speeded up at once,” Krumbein | Warned. “This is the only assurance | that the city editions will be able | to go on. All individuals and or- | Sanizations should bring whatever | money they have collected for the | Daily Worker financial drive to the delegated mass meeting at the Cen- tral Opera House, 67th Street and Third Avenue tomorrow night at 8 p. m. Section and unit organizations of the Party must respond to the first city editions by rushing their bundle orders at once to the District Daily ; Worker office, Krumbein declared. | There must be a minimum of 10.000 paper: dered by these agen- cies by tonight, he said. ‘With properly direc‘ed effort we can double the New York circulation of the paper in one month and re- double it in a period of six months, !he asserted, Mass Meeting NEW YORK — The entire re- sources of the Communist Party in support of the marine workers strike were pledged last night by Earl Browder, general secretary of the Communist Party, at a mass meeting at Irving Plaza called by the Committee for the Support of the Marine Workers Industrial Union. Among other labor leaders who spoke at the meeting were Jack Stachel, acting secretary of the Trade Union Unity League; Roy Hudson, national secretary of the M.W.LU. and chairman of the Joint Strike Preparations Committee; Willard Bliss, national secretary of the American Radio. Telegraphists as He Urges Militant Fight for Demands NEW YORK.—More than 1,000 seamen cheered Clarence Hathaway, editor of the Daily Worker, at South and Whitehall Streets Thursday night when he told them to “fight as one man and strike on Monday.” The meeting was called wader the auspices of the Downtown Section of the Communist Party and was one of the most rousing rallies held on the New York waterfront since the announcement of the maritime strike call. “If you permit yourselves to rely on arbitration boards you will cool your heels in Washington and then. you will have to go back and organ- ize all over again for your demands,” Hathaway told the seamen. (Independent) Association; Edward Russell, a marine engineer and member of the West Coast Rank and File Strike Committee, and Edward Royce of the Workers In- ternational Relief. Hays Jones, edi- tor of the Marine Workers’ Voice, was chairman, One of the , most applauded speakers, Bliss, started with, “More arresting than an S.OS. call the word ‘Strike’ is being flashed across the seas by radio operators.” Re- viewing the history of his union he related how the M.W.LU. was the only union that responded to their call for united action in their strike last year against the International Mercantile Marine. He concluded by calling on all seamen and longshoremen for united action to tie up every ship on the Atlantic and Gulf coastlines on Monday until all the demands are granted by the shipowners. The appearance of Browder on the platform brought the audience to their feet singing the Interna- tional. In a characteristically simple and clear cut fashion he exposed the causes of “red scares” spread by the united front of the bosses, the government and the top offi- cials of the A. F. of L., as a means employed by them to divide the ranks of the workers in order to either prevent or break strikes. Analysing Roosevelt's “truce” and its acceptance by the leaders of the LL.A., 18.U. and A. F. of L. gen- erally, he stated, “the marine work- ers should also accept the truce— but only after all their present de- mands are granted.” Characterizing truce as a breathing space to pre- pare for a bigger and better fight against the bosses, he said that a touce now, accepting things as they are today, is all the bosses and their hirelings want, but is not in the interests of the working class, “A bold and fearless leadership will lead the strike to a success, Tremendous applause greeted Hathaway when he urged the marine workers not to strike pass- ively but to “become organizers of the strike, close the shipping halls on Saturday and march from dock to dock on Monday and bring the men on the ships and docks out on strike.” Other speakers at the meeting were Joseph Brandt, Downtown or- ganizer of the Communist Party; H. Robinson, waterfront Commun- ist organizer, and Harry Raymond, Daily Worker staff correspondent. The bosses and their press call all who fight for the workers “reds.” If it takes reds to fight and improve your conditions, don’t be afraid to be reds, The Communist Party will gladly accept you into its official family of Bolsheviks if you fight fearlessly to win your demands,” he concluded. In a short but dynamic speech Stachel analysed the history of the strikebreaking activities of the A. F. of L. officialdom and showed the in- fluence of We T.U.U.L. and its teachings not only in revolutionary and independent unions but also in unions controlled by the A. F. of L., citing the splendid mass picketing in the textile and Frisco strikes. He offered all the resources of the T.U.U.L. to help lead the strike to success, Hudson briefly described the con- ditions of the workers in the in- dustry and presented a detailed report on the strike preparations: His announcement that the marine workers will close all scab herding halls today was met with a burst of cheers. Russell reported on the Wesi Coast strike. The collection made by Royce brought in $46.30 in casli ganizatic and $74 in pledges by workers’ or- | Patronize Navarr Cafeteria 333 7th AVENUE Phones: Chickering 4947-Longacre 16039 COMRADELY ATMOSPHERE Fan Ray Cafeteria 156 W. 29th St. New York COMRADES PATRONIZE CANTON KITCHEN Chinese-American Restaurant Special Lunch 25¢ — Dinner 38¢ 207 East 14th Street Cemradely Environment 3 DECKER CAFETERIA Cor. Claremont P’kway & 3d Ave. Comrades Patronize JADE MOUNTAIN American & Chinese Restaurant 197 SECOND AVENUE (Bet. 12th and 13th St.) Restaurant and Garden “KAVKAZ” Russian and Oriental Kitchen’ BANQUETS AND PARTIES 932 East 14th Street New York City Tompkins Square 6-9182 Dr. Harry Musikant 195 EASTERN PARKWAY ~ DEcatur 2-0695 Nr, Delancey Street, New York City Wholesale Opticians Tel. ORchard 4-4520 EYES EXAMINED—GLASSES FITTED 525 Sutter Ave. at Hinsdale St. Brooklyn, N. ¥. Dentist aT ORR | Official Opticians to the LWo0. COOPERATIVE OPTICIANS 114 W. 14th Street Near 6th Avenue Tel.: Chelsea 3-9806 Support Cooperative Action. All. mem- bers of Unions, Organizations, Clubs, Women's Councils, are invited to make use of this service, Corner Kingston Ave. Brooklyn, N. ¥. COHEN’S 117 ORCHARD STREET EYES EXAMINED By JOSEPH LAX, 0.D. Optometrist Factory on Premises PAUL LUTTINGER. M. D. | = AND <= DANIEL LUTTINGER, M. D. 5 WASHINGTON SQUARE NORTH, NEW YORK CITY Hours: 1 - 2 and 6-8 P.M. Tel. GRamercy 7-2090-2091 302 EAST 12th STREET Grand Reopening for Old Friends of JOHN’S RESTAURANT ITALIAN KITCHEN New Beautiful Floor For Banquets & Parties Musical Nights Saturday & Sunday Imported & Domestic Wines Bet. First and Second Avenues NEW HEALTH CENTER CAFETERIA | ROTOGRAP. - All Comrades Mect at the Fresh Pi in Prices—50 13th St. STRIKINGLY ATTRACTIVE LEAF- LETS — POSTERS — TICKETS, etc. 817 BROADWAY, Cor. 12th St. — Phone GRamercy 5-9364 LOWEST PRICES TO ORGANIZATIONS Greet the New York Daily Worker at the DELEGATED MASS MEETING Speakers: Clarence Hathaway James Casey James W. Ford Louis Hyman Charles Krumbein W. L. T. and W. I. R. BAND Sunday, October 7th, 8 p.m. Central Opera House 67th Street and Third Avenue ADMISSION 25 CENTS

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