The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 3, 1934, Page 3

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Nesiien DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1934 Page 3 LR.T. AND LABOR BOARD DELAY HEARING ON FIRED UNION MEN WHILE BOARD LETS !buss Throw COMPANY STALL Transport Workers Union Carries on Fight for Two Discharged Fighters Against “Yellow Dog” Contract and Pension Gouge Thomas Murray, Jr., federal receiver for the Inter- borough Rapid Transit Company, did not appear before the Regional Labor Board Wednesday because he “‘needed more time to prepare the case, ” when the hearing on the discharge of Thomas O’Shea and Jules Garrison for mem- bership in the Transport Workers @- Union, Independent, was to be heard on the complaint of the union. O'Shea and Garrison are mem- bers of the Delegates Council of the union and have been in the lead of the fight against the LR.T. pen- sion plan wage cut and the anti- labor practices of the management. While the N.R.A. boards and the company are continually delaying the case, the fired men are still job- | Jess and blacklisted. * Murray phoned Ben Golden, chief examiner of the Regional La- bor Board, that he would be ready with his defense within “three or four days.” ~ In addition to O'Shea and Garri- son, who file affidavits against the LR.T. with the Board, John Santo, general secretary of the union, and Sidney Cohen, representing the of- fices of Louis B. Boudin, counsel for the union, were there ready to argue the case, charging the LR.T. with violation of the recent decision of the Board and of Section 7-a of the | National Recovery Act. “They didn’t need more time io fire workers with top rate records of years of service with the com- pany,” O'Shea said yesterday, “and to have their ‘beakies,’ secret ser- vice men, trail us to get trumped up charges for discharging us for be- longing to the union of our choice, but they ‘need more time’ to get ready to face as mild an investiga- tion as can be expected from the ‘Regional Labor Board.” ' The affidavits filed relate clearly the history of the firing of the two workers, hardly a week after Mur- ray was reported to have given his “assurances” to Mrs. Elinor M. Her- rick, director of the Board, that the “yellow dog” provision in the contract between the I. R. T. and its company union, the Brother- hood, would be voided. “This provision made membership in“the Brotherhood of I Re -T. Employes a condition of employ- ment. The fight conducted by the Transport Workers Union, which forced the decision of the Regional Labor Board to void the “yellow dog” contract, has legalised the ex- istence of a bona fide union in the industry and is to protect the work- ers who joined the Transport Work- ers Union against loss of their job for belonging to it. While appearing for the hearings before the Board, leaders of the union stated yesterday that they are fully aware of the fact that the N.R.A, and its national and re- gional boards, whose anti-labor character has long been exposed by their action in this and other in- dustries, will not solve their prob- Jems for them. “It is up to the men in the I. R. T., B. M. T. and other transporta- tions systems,” they said, “and to the union to enforce these decisions and to improve the conditions of the men in the service.” “The union is proceeding,” Santo said, “with its extensive drive to organize the men and to establish the union as a factor in the indus- try, which the companies and the Regional Labor Board will have to consider, whether they like to or not.” Classified ROOMS FOR RENT ROOM, cozy, furnished or unfurnished, reasonable, 240 W. 15th St. Apt. 6. TWO GIRLS share furnished apartment (two rooms) east, below 28th St. Reason- able. Call Sunday morning APplegate 6- 7321, FURNISHED ROOM; light sunny; near subway station. 916 E, 176th St. Apt. 204, Bronx. ROOMS WANTED GIRL wants furnished room. East. Private. Reasonable. Box 195 ¢-o Daily Worker. GIRL, large room furnished; privacy; kitchen privileges; phone; Lower West Side preferred. Box 197 ¢-o Daily Worker. —————$$$$$$_{_{_________" FURNISHED, privacy; preferably midtown or lower West Side. Box 140 c/o Daily Worker. CHILDREN BOARDED ANY AGE above two years. Very reason- able rates. Elsie Rauthe, Allison Farm, RFD 2, Bethel, Conn, SEAGATE. Pre-school and school Parents accomodated. Cultural surround- ings. Phone: ESplendate 2-6530. LESSONS FRENCH, Russian Lessons; _ reasonable, © Greenberg, 750 E. 175th St., Bronx. WANTED GIRL to care for child of five, live in, Call Saturday between 5 and 8 and Sun- day until 1 P.M, 312-316 W. 15th St., Apt. 30. DENTAL Services required in exchange for violin instruction from experienced intructor now with L, I. Conservatory. Write M. Drucker, 1346 Grant Ave., Bronx. AN APPEAL to friends and sympathizers for small gasoline motors or motor parts (motor-cycle or outboard type) and radio to be used for building loud speaker equipment. Communicate by mail with Ferguson c-o W. E. 8. L. Nat'l. Office. Room 523, 799 Broadway, Irate Workers Mass at Rally For Lehman Hunger March Protests Flung at Governor at Two Meetings Workers in Harlem and the Bronx confronted Governor Leh- man with his personal guilt for the ambush and bloody attack on the State Hunger Marchers by Albany police, when he addressed two cam- paign meetings late Thursday night. Lehman was met by a hastily or- ganized but militant demonstration when he arrived at St. Mark's | Church, 138th Street and St. Nicho- las Avenue, at the invitation of | Rey, Lorenzo King, tool of Samuel | Leibowitz. On Lehman’s arrival, a mass meeting outside the church, under the leadership of the Harlem Sec- tion of the Communist Party, set up a unified shout of “free the hunger marchers” and “we demand unemployment insurance.” Williana Burrough, Communist candidate for Lieutenant-Governor was carried bodily from the hall by Tammany strong-arm men when she sought to question Rev. King and Democratic campaign speakers on the Scottsboro case. Communists Fling Challenge King and his Democratic allies used the meeting to press their be- trayal of the Scottsboro boys. One Democratic speaker congratulated Rev. King for “taking the case out of the hands of the International Labor Defense,” At this point James W. Ford, sec- tion organizer of the Communist) Party in Harlem, and Theodore Bas- sett, Communist candidate in the 13th A. D., rose to declare that the International Labor Defense is still in charge of the case and to ask whether the Democratic Party fa- vored the immediate unconditional release of the Scottsboro Boys. Both were forced from the hall by police. Outside, mean vhile, police gave Sol Harper, who was addressing the open air protest meeting, a sum- mons for using a loud-speaker with- out a permit. 3,000 in Bronx Later in the evening, when Leh- man arrived at the Hunts Point Palace, 163rd Street and Southern Boulevard, to address a campaign meeting there, he found a mass Picket line of 200 workers parad- ing before the entrace with slogans demanding the immediate release of the Hunger Marchers and calling for a special session of the State Legislature to provide $200,000,000 emergency Winter relief. Across the street from the hall, a mass meeting was in progress attended by some 3,000 workers who had responded to the call of the Bronx sections of the Communist Party for a protest. Inside the hall workers hurled questions at Lehman concerning his responsibility for the attack and de- manding full protection for the marchers and the granting of their demands, Lehman evaded the ques- tions but made no effort to order them from the hall, fearing the re- sentment of the workers massed outside. Five Meetings to Mark Soviets’ 17th Birthday On Wednesday Evening The Seventeenth Anniversary of the Soviet Revolution will be cele- brated at five mass meetings in New York City, the District Committee of the Communist Party announced yesterday. The five meetings, all of which will take place on Wednesday are to be held at the Bronx Coliseum; Arcadia Hall, the Brooklyn Academy of Music, Cooper Union and Rock- Jand Palace. Outstanding leaders of the Communist Party will speak age.| at each meeting. Leon Dennen to Speak At John Reed Meeting Leon Dennen, author of “Where the Ghetto Ends,” will speak on “Jews Under Soviet and Capitalist Rule” at the John Reed Club at 430 Ghia Avenue, on Sunday night at Dennen will contrast the treat- ment of Jews as a national minority in the Soviet Union with the social and economic position of Jews in other countries. He will discuss the Political significance of the inter- national wave of anti-semitism and the position of the Jews in the Burroughs Out One Jailed for Protest | at Attack on Negro | State Candidate Williana Burroughs, Communist | candidate for Lieutenant Governor | was lifted up bodily by Tammany | strong-arm men and ejected from a Lehman election rally in St. Mark’s | Church, Harlem, on Thursday night when she attempted to challenge the statement of a Democratic} speaker who had said that Demo- cratic judges always give Negro| workers “a square deal” in the} courts. Sol Harper, militant Negro work- er, was arrested shortly after the ejection of Burroughs when he ad- dressed a meeting of workers out- | side the church and attacked the) expulsion of the Communist candi- date as a typical act of banker-Gov- ernor Lehman and his Tammany machine, The question which Burroughs asked the Democratic speaker con- cerned the recent decision handed down by Judge Rosenman to the affect that when Negroes picket against Jim-crowism, the picketing | is illegal because it is a “social” and not an economic act, as well as the statement recently made in one of the Tammany courts by a judge to a@ policeman who had arrested a militant Negro worker in which the judge declared that he was sorry the cop didn’t kill the Negro in- stead of arresting him. C.P. Makes Voting Appeal To Teachers The State Election Campaign Committee of the Communist Party yesterday issued a special appeal to teachers in the public schools of the State to vote Communist on Tues- day reiterating its program on the safeguarding of teachers, pupils and parents in their relations to the educational system. The Communist demands on edu- cation are: Return of all wage cuts. Continued monthly payment of salaries. Return of all educational facilities for children. | Return of all privileges for teach- | ers. Building of additional schools, libraries, playgrounds, community centers. Removal of all portable school houses. Reduction of teacher load through the immediate employment of all unemployed teachers. Assurance of tenure of office, and academic freedom. Adequate food, clothing, and shel- ter for the children of the unem- ployed. Free public school education and text books for all children from the kindergarten through college. The appeal concluded by saying, “Teachers, stop the attacks of the Lehman-LaGuardia administrations on education by a strong Commu- nist vote. Only the Communist Party gives real leadership in the fight of workers, farmers and pro- fessionals against every reduction in living and cultural standards now being forced on the broad masses of the population through the policy of local, state and national govern- ment retrenchment at the expense of the workers and for the benefit of the big financiers and indus- trialists.” = Court Jails Red Nominee ForPicketing Sidney Spencer, Negro Commu- nist candidate in the 17th Assembly District, Crown Heights, Brooklyn, and Diana Winters, white worker, were sentenced to 10 days each in jail last Thursday at the Snyder Ave. court for leading a picket line at the Kresges 5 and 10 cent store, Nostrand and Fulton Ave. White and Negro workers have been pick- eting the store for the past two and a half weeks for the demand that the store hire Negro sales girls, without any firing of the present employees. Diana Winters is to be tried on second charge in connection with the picketing at the same court next Thursday morning, Noy. 8 The Young Liberators, youth section of the League of Struggle for Negro Rights, which is leading the strug- gle against Kresge’s discrimination against Negro workers, is appealing to all workers to pack the court Thursday, and to strengthen: the daily picket line by reporting for picket duty at 16 Utica Avenue, any day between the hours of 10 a.m. and 9:30 p.m, ELECTION BALL IN BROOKLYN The Election Campaign Commit- tee of Crown Heights will hold an election ball at New Howland Stu- dios, 1660 Fulton St., on Tuesday. This ball will top the most ener- getic election campaign ever held in the heart of Brooklyn’s Negro territory. William Scott and his Rhythm Masters will furnish the countries of Eastern Europe, music, | WORKERS STILL OUT Democratic Amter and Begun Receive High Vote In Brooklyn Poll | | Israel Amter and Isadore Be- gun, Communist candidates for Governor and Controller respec- tively, polled more than ten per cent each of the 1,142 votes cast by the male students of Brook- lyn College in the election poll conducted by The Pioneer, news publication of the men’s division of the college. A total of 123 votes were re- ceived by Amter. This was more than the 96 received by Charles Solomon, the Socialist candidate, and only 15 votes less than the 138 cast for Moses, the Repub- lican nominee, Max Bedacht And Raymond To End Drive Will Wind Up Election Campaign in West Brighton Tomorrow Max Bedacht and Harry Ray- | mond, Communist candidates for U. 8. Senator and the New York Supreme Court respectively, will be | the main speakers at the final Com- | munist election rally to be held | under the auspices of Section 19 of the New York District, The rally will be held at 789 Post Avenue, West Brighton tomorrow at 8 pm. John Kryzak, Communist candi- date for State Senator who is one of the Albany Hunger Marchers, will address the meeting if he will have returned from Albany in time, the Section headquarters announced. A revolutionary skit will be pre- sented at the meeting by the Work- ers Laboratory Theatre. 25 Sentenced To Long Terms In Roumania BUCHAREST, Roumania, Nov. 2. —In Temesvar a mass trial has just been concluded of 50 persons ac- cused of membership of the Com- munist Party of Roumania. Despite the fact that the witnesses for the prosecution were exposed completely | as spies of the Siguranza (secret Police), the court sentenced 25 of the defendants to a total of 99 years of penal servitude, The leading de- fendant, a worker named Duzsd, received a sentence of eight years. Among the defendants there were two children of eleven years of age, a boy and a girl, who were sent to reformatories for four years. A notice here states that a revolt broke out in a prison in Transyl- vania among the prisoners against the unbearable treatment and the slow starvation to death. The pris- oners barricaded themselves in their cells, and demolished the fittings. The prison wardens called for sol- diery to crush the revolt, Union in Drive to Organize NY Chain Stores Industrial Union Scores A. F. L. ‘Truce’ in | A. & P. Fight Charging the A. & P. Corporatio: |with threatening the rights of its employees to organize and bargain collectively and calling upon all A. & P. workers to join unions of |their choice and fight for their} | rights the Retail Grocery, Dairy and | Fruit Clerks Union, Local 104 and | Local 134 of the Managers, Sales- |men and Meat Cutters Union affili- | jated with the Food Workers In- dustrial Union, 4 West Eighteenth | Street, announced yesterday that |they are in the midst of a cam-| paign to organize chain stores in New York, | This campaign, conducted by both | |these locals, the announcement | | states, has already resulted, several | weeks ago, in contractual relation- |ships with the Highland Dairy | Stores chain, employing more than |one hundred clerks and managers. ;The drive is being spread to the other retail chains in the city, such |as Gristede’s, Oppenheim’s, as well | as into the A. & P. stores with fa-| vorable results. “Recent developments in the A. & P. stores in Cleveland,” the | statement of the unions claims, “is an indication of the widespread dis- |satisfaction with working condi- | | tions.” | “The leadership of the American | Federation of Labor, which claims | to represent all the chain store em- ;Ployees, in agreeing to a truce in |the strike and to ‘elections’ on the | decisions which were recently made | | Public by the National Labor Rela- | tions Board, has placed the men at | | the mercy of unscrupulous employ- | | ers that will utilize such elections to | | their own advantage in forcing com- pany unions on the clerks. “The two above mentioned unions | that are already established in New | | York and many other parts of the | ;country call upon the A. & P, and jother chain store workers not to be | afraid of the threats of the corpora- | tion, but to join into real unions, | jthe unions of the workers’ own | | choice,” | Workers Urged to Aid Final Harlem Canvass Drive of G. P. Sunday The Communist Election Cam paign Committee of Harlem yester- day called on all members and sym- | pathizers to report to the Harlem Workers Center, 415 Lenox Avenue, canvassing and literature distribu- | tion drive. | Hundreds of workers are needed | to visit working class voters, to pro- | vide them with campaign literature | and to recruit from among them | Polling place watchers for election | day, | RELIEF HEAD HELD HOSTAGE TORONTO, Canada, Noy. 2— Two hundred unemployed men | held government Relief Inspector | J. 8. Tiffin a hostage in his office at Long Branch, a Toronto suburb, today, and declared that they will | do so until their relief demands are | met, making of good clothes. the Jackfin Clothing Co. has traditional principles is even of the finest needlecratt, Though the following are bi that go into a Jackfin garment, 2—Only linen thread used fi 3—Imported Belgian canvas breaking. Pert at his work. the importance the Jackfin body in sizes up to 54. into the $16.50 group. and get the choice of measure, we maintain a custom- Look around .. . if you feel the don’t be shy ... well be happy to buy. Why Did Jackfin Co. Become Famous ? As manufacturers, this company for years has pursued its Policy of giving careful attention to the details that go into the For its strict application to this Policy, among the better class retailers throughout the country, for whom it manufactured men’s quality clothes, fore, for the Jackfin Clothing Co. has ceased to cater to retail stores, but is manufacturing direct to the consumer. This company, occupying 16,000 feet of floor space on lower 5th Ave., is now open to the public. generally accepted retail clothing and high rental area, it will continue to offer garments of the choicest woolens and trimmings, and the newest of styles to the public, tween a high-grade and ‘a mediocre suit or coat. 1—Every garment sewn with silk thread. 4—Seams expertly sewn to prevent opening. 5—The finest linings used in pockets and coat. 6—Every tailor, though 100 per cent union man, must be ex- If you've experienced any of the inconveniences that often result from inferior tailoring and materials, you will appreciate Clothing Co. places upon these details to insure complete customer satisfaction, Why not drop in and inspect these values? thousands of all year around garments, there is a wide selection of almost anything a man wants to have on his back. It doesn’t matter whether you are tall or small, heavy or thin—we fit every- For this election week, we have selected 1693 suits, topcoats and overcoats, from our higher priced garments, and we put them So, if you want to get a real buy, come this very low price of $16.50. For those who are accustomed to have their clothes made to wish as to specifications is carried out and $30. We invite you to visit and inspect our new quarters. built up an enviable reputation Today, adherence to its greater importance than ever be- Though not situated in the jut a few examples of the details they represent the difference be- ‘or sewing on buttons. used in front of coat to prevent In addition to tailoring department, where every » Priced specially at $25 urge to slip a coat on your back to assist you, without urging you But we do know you'll like our offerings. on Sunday at 10 am. for a final |= | (corner 7th Street) Gold Urges Assistance | To Defense Ball Called By Needle Trades Union An urgent appeal was issued yes- terday by Ben Gold, national secre- tary-treasurer of the Needle Trades | Workers Industrial Union, calling | on all workers in the needle and| other trades to help make the} Grand Concert and Ball arranged by the Prisoners Defense Commit- tee of the union, a success, by at- tending it. | The concert and ball, with a most | SALTZMAN BROS. HIGH GRADE Clothing Wholesale and Retail Ready Made and to Order 181 STANTON ST. NEW YORK Near Clinton Street) DRy Dock 4-3946 interesting program, will be held to- | night at the Irving Plaza Hall, 15th | St. and Irving Place | “The union is conducting con- stant struggles,’ Gold said, “for union conditions and for the organi- | zation of non-union shops. As a} result of these struggles we have a number of serious court cases and | frame-ups against the most militant and active members of our Union. A number of our most active work- ers are in jail. Twenty-eight lead- | ers and rank and file members of | |the union are indicted by the Grand Jury. All this is part of the at- | tack of the bosses to destroy the | union, which fights in the interests | of the workers. “In order to conduct our work we must have funds. The above affair is arranged for the purpose of rais- The Official Opticians to the INTERNATIONAL WORKERS ORDER WORKERS INTERNATIONAL RELIEF CITY CENTRAL COMMITTEE wishes to announce the opening of its new quarters CO-OPERATIVE OPTICIANS —Room 602—University Pl. & 14th St GRamerey 17-3347 ORGANIZATIONS WOMEN’S 1 UNION SQUARE WEST ALL MEMBERS OF UNIONS, WORKERS CLUBS. COUNCILS, ETC., ARE INVITED TO USE THIS SERVICE. SUPPORT CO-OPERATIVE ACTION PRESENT THIS AD FOR ORGANIZATION DISCOUNT ing funds. Come to the affair, have | a good time and at the same time| support the struggles of the Needle | Trades Workers.” LERMAN BROS. STATIONERS and UNION PRINTERS Special Prices for Organizations 29 EAST 14th STREET New York City ALgonquin 4-3356—4-8843—4-7823 PANTS TO MATCH Your Coat and Vest Paramount Pants Co., Inc, 693 Broadway SP 17-2659 WE MATCH ALL SHADES AND PATTERNS NEW CHINA CAFETERIA 848 BROADWAY near 13th STREET Announces That Beginning November 3rd they will open an ad- ditional Dining Room with extra kitchen space to assure you better service. New Chinese dishes of a bigger variety will be introduced at our regular PROLETARIAN PRICES. The Upstairs Dining Room will be avail- able free to organizations. Message Service, Revolu- tionary music recording and a loud speaker will also be furnished free. The place being decorated by a famous revolutionary artist will lend a real proletarian home- like atmosphere. Watch for Opening Date and Tell Your Friends Comradely Environment 3 DECKER | CAFETERIA Cor. Claremont P’kway & 3d Ave. TALK IT OVER A CUP OF COFFEE AT || |SWEET LIFE] CAFETERIA 138—5th Ave., near 19th St. RUSSIAN CANDIES EXTRA LOW PRICES FOR PARTIES, CLUBS, ORGANIZATIONS WHOLESALE & RETAIL M. RICHMAN & co. 145 E. HOUSTON ST. RADIO SERVICE| BY MEN WHO KNOW HOW @ SPECiaAL vDIB- COUNTS TO COMRADE READERS OF THE “DAILY” SQUARE RADIO CO. 4910 THIRTEENTH AVENUE WINDSOR 8-0280 BROOKLYN, NEW YORK 1125 Broadway, near 25th St. Comrades Patronize JADE MOUNTAIN American & Chinese Restaurant 191 SECOND AVENUE (Bet, 12th and 13th St.) Garment Section Workers Patronize Navarr Cafeteria 333 7th AVENUE K UPFERS OS gee at oe DAIRY, GROCERY and BAKERY | 115 First Avenue, New York City AN COZY PLACE TO SPEND AN EVE’G East Garden NEW Chinese & American Restaurant LUNCH 25¢ — DINNER 350 219 Second Avenue Gramerey—5-8819 —— Restaurant and Garden | 1 | Comradely Service—50 E. WE GO ANYWHERE STRIKINGLY ATTRACTIVE LEAF- ROTOGRAPH LETS — POSTERS — TICKETS, etc. 817 BROADWAY, Cor. 12th St. — Phone GRamercy 5-9364 | LOWEST PRICES TO ORGANIZATIONS All Comrades Mect at the WORKERS CENTER BARBER SHOP Sth St.—Workers Center All Comrades Meet at the NEW HEALTH CENTER CAFETERIA Fresh Food—Proletarian Prices—50 E. 13th St.—WORKERS’ CENTER 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 PATRONIZE A. DORMAN, Ph. G. Pharmacist & Chemist CUT RATE COSMETICS & DRUGS RALPH & SUTTER AVENUES Directly Opposite Worlizt J. WITEK Embalmer — Undertaker Dignified Funeral $135 up 123 St. Marks Place, N. ¥. C. Dr. Harry Musikant Dentist 795 EASTERN PARKWAY Corner Kingston Ave. DEcatur 2-0695 Brooklyn, N. ¥. i DR. J. SAMOSTIE 220 East 12th Street Skin, Urinary and Blood (East 8th Street) Conditions Abgonquin 4-3633 Lady Physician in Attendance Friend to the Working Class for Women Hours 9 to 2—4 to 8—Sunday 9 to 1 “KAVKAZ”" Russian and Oriental Kitchen BANQUETS AND PARTIES 332 East 14th Street New York City | Tompkins Square 6-913% Phones: Chickering 4947-Longacre 16039 COMRADELY ATMOSPHERE Fan Ray Cafeteria 156 W. 29th St. New York Brownsville and East New York Comrades Welcome J. BRESALIER EYES EXAMINED—GLASSES FITTED 525 Sutter Ave. at Hinsdale St. Brooklyn, N. Y. SFR COHEN’S 117 ORCHARD STREET near Delancey St., New York City EYES EXAMINED By JOSEPH LAX, 0.D. Optometrist Wholesale Opticians Tel. ORchard 4-4520 Factory on Premises Algonquin 4-4437 Dr. Maximilian Cohen Dental Surgeon 41 Union Sq. W., N. Y. C After 6 P.M. Use Night Entrance 22 EAST 17th STREET Suite 7083—GR. 17-0135 Dr. S. A. Chernoff SKIN, URINARY AND BLOOD Men and Women 223 Second Ave., N. Y. C. Hours: 10-8 P. M.—Sun.: 11-2 P. M. | Tompkins Square 6-7697 X-RAY and FLUOROSCOPE ||DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY Office Hours: 8-10 A.M., 1-2, 6-3 P.M PHONE: DICKENS 2-301? 107 BRISTOL STREET Dr. Simon Trieff Dentist 2300 - 86th Street MAyflower 9-7035 Brooklyn, N. ¥. Bet. Pitkin and Sutter Aves., Brooklyn DR. EMIL EICHEL DENTIST 150 E. 93rd St. New York City Cor. Lexington Ave. ATwater 9-8838 Hours: 9 a.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.¥.C. Good Work at Clinic Prices Tel. Wisconsin 7-0288. By Appointment Dr. N. S. Hanoka DENTAL SURGEON 265 W. dist Street Corner 8th Ave., New York City ‘Send 1c for leaflet on diet for the teeth. Dr. Sophie Braslaw DENTIST HAS JUST RETURNED FROM A TRIP TO SOVIET UNION AND RESUMED HER PRACTICE OF DENTISTRY 725 ALLERTON AVE., BRONX ES TABROOK 8-0998 Mobilize Watchers and Election Day Committees to Guard the Com %

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