The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 7, 1934, Page 3

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{JPHREE-DAY AFFAT FOR YOUNG WORKER, ‘DAILY’ AND FREIHEIT t e & DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1934 Page 3 RED PRESS BAZAAR OPENS FRIDAY AT ST. NICHOLAS PALACE Court Puts Off ANTI-WAR PARADE AND MASS MEETING TO HIT MILITARISM Editors To Speak on Op ment and Record Selection of Merchandise Will Feature Annual Event Thousands of New York workers are expected to attend the annual National Red Press Bazaar to be held in St. Nicholas Palace, West Friday, Saturday and Sunday, Nov. 9, 10 and 11. Proceeds from the bazaar will go to Freiheit and Young Worker. Greetings from Clarence Hatha- way, editor of the Daily Worker, M. J. Olgin, editor of the Morning} Freiheit and Mac Weiss, editor of | the Young Worker, will feature the | opening on Friday evening. En- tertainment during the three days will include the National Negro Theatre, the International Chorus, | Workers’ Laboratory Theatre, and | dancing to the accompaniment of Deacon Johnson and his 12-piece | National Negro Jazz Orchestra. | Sponsors of the bazaar announce | that the “largest selection of mer- chandise of every description ever assembled under one Toot will be | sold at proletarian prices.” ” Articles | for sale includes men’s suits, top | coats, ladies’ dresses, coats, furs, | millinery, leather goods, hosiery, | ete., as well as furniture novelties, dre goods and Soviet handicraft and candy. Admission to the bazaar is 35 cehts Friday or Sunday and 50 cents on Saturday. A combination ticket for all three days is 75 cents. | | Dinner-Dance To Mark Growth of China Today) On Saturday Evening A banquet and dance celebrating the appearance of “China Today” as a full-fledged printed illustrated magazine will take place on Satur- day, at Irving Plaza Hall, Irving | Pl. and Fifteenth St. Speakers will include T. A. Bis- son of the Foreign Policy Associa- tion, Earl Browder, Malcolm Cow- ley, Hansu Chan, General Victor Yakhontoff, Frederick V. Field of the American Institute of Pacific) ens. Chinese food will be | ed Chinese style at 6:30. s for the dinner and_ dance | are $1.25. Admission to the dance } is 50c in advance, 65¢ at the door. | Dance tickets entite the holder to} hear the speakers at 8:30. Tables| for the dinner can be procured by | groups of ten. Tickets are on sale at the New Masses, 31 East 27th St.; Workers Book Shop, 50 East 13th St.; Chelsea Book Shop, 58 West 8th St.; Rand School Bookshop, 7 East | 15th St., and at Friends of the Chi- nese People, 168 West 23rd St Telephone CHelsea 2-9096. Proposal: for Merger of Dress Unions Will Be Topic at Forum An open forum meeting to dis- cuss the proposal of the Needle Workers Industrial Union for the unification of the dressmakers into the International Ladies Garment Workers Union will take place to at one o'clock tomorrow afternoon in the Memorial Hall, 344 West 36th Street. The meeting is part of the cam- paign of the left wing and rank and file groups of locals 22, 60, 10 and 98 of the I. L. G. W. U. in an effort to force the acceptance of the “unity proposal of the N. T. W. I. U. by the leadership of their union. H. Migdal, chairman of the Downtown Section of the local 22, will be the speaker at the open forum, the committee in charge announced. The committee called on all dressmakers, regardless of union affiliation, to come to the meeting and participate in the dis- cussion. Thugs Hired to Break Elevator Men’s Strike Storm Agency for Pay Four hundred special armed thugs, employed by the Val O’Toole Detective Agency to protect scabs in the recent building service workers strike, stormed the agengy’s headquarters when their pay was delayed. The _ strikebreakers clashed with police Monday night at the O'Toole offices, 521 Fifth Ave, These guards attacked and slugged striking elevator operators last week in the garment center, and attempted to halt picketing by terrorizing stzikers. They did not succeed, however, in lowering the effectiveness of the strike. The guards stated they were imported from out of town by the O’Toole company, which was retained by the building owners to provide sluggers. At symposiums, lectures, de- bates, discussions, tie up topic with role of the “Daily” as organ- dzer for a better society, Call for support, take up collection for 360,000 drive. |day by the National Committee to | |and others. Three thousand widows ening Night—Entertain- 66th Street, near Broadway, the Daily Worker, Morning Relief Drive Opened to Aid Nazis’ Victims Widows and Children of Anti'Fascists Denied Food and Fuel | An appeal for winter relief for the countless number of anti-fascist | victims of the Nazi terror in Ger- | many, and for support of the he- roic united front struggles of the Saar toilers against domination by | Nazi Germany, was issued | Aid Victims of German Fascism, 870 Broaway, New York City, and the World Aid Committee for Vic- tims of Hitler Fascism, 65 Boule- vard Arago, Paris, 13, France. The appeal lists many authenti- cated cases of the murder of anti- | fascists by the Hitler axe-men and the persecution of survivine mem- bers of their familes, and gives the following picture of the vast prison into which Germany has been con- verted by the big industrialists and their Nazi tools: J “There are still 100.000 anti- fascists behind barbed wire in the many concentration camps. There are 30,000 imprisoned behind the cold walls of Germany’s jails. Nearly 100 have been condemned | to death and of this number 50 were beheaded. About 3,000 were tortured to death: Muehsam, Scheer, | Steinfurth, Stelling, Fechenbach, and their children now stand alone | and over these the Nazi regime is | cracking the whip of hunger.” The appeal for aid for these be- | reaved families, denied employment or relief by the Nazi regime and characterized by Goering as a “breed to be weeded out,” comes also from the heroic anti-fascist fighters murdered by the Nazi axe- men. “My life could not have been ‘iven to a purpose more useful. I) die as an uncompromising fighter | against fascism. All I ask is that | you shall help my wife and children after I am gone.” These words were addressed to the World Aid| Committee by an anti-fascist just before he was beheaded in Ham- | burg. ' The Committee urges all anti- Fascists, all decent men and wo- men, to support the united front fight of Socialists, Communists and non-party workers in the Saar for the status quo, against inclusion of the Saar in Hitler Germany. and to gather funds, food and clothing for the victims of Nazi barbarism in Germany. Or- ganizations and individuals are urged to communicate with the National Committee at 870 Broad- way, New York, for full informa- tion on the campaign, which will be linked up with the fight for the freedom of Ernst Thaelmann and other anti-fascists. Moss Reealls OrderAgainst Laundry Men Mass Protest Forces Ending of Discrim- inatory Ruling Bowing to the organized protest of Chinese workers and the Friends of the Chinese People, License Commissioner Moss has revoked his order compelling Chinese laundry owners to prove legal en- try to the United States when ap-| plying for laundry licenses. During the past two weeks hun- dreds of protests from individuals and organizations in New York and | neighboring cities have poured into the Commissioner's office. After their victory, the Chinese Laundry Alliance at their member- ship meeting discussed the experi- ences of their struggle for the re- voking of the Order. Sam Ton, of the Anti-Imperialist Alliance, who was invited to speak, pointed out the effect of mass protest and the need for greater consolidation of their organization to carry the fight further against the other re- quirements, of finger printing and a $10 registration fee, now neces- sary to obtain a license. His sug- gestions were enthusiastically re- ceived. | Readers, subscribers, sympa- thizers: help raise $60,000 by Dec. 1, Solicit funds from your friends, shopma‘es. Contribute today. ithe Artists’ | the Artists’ GalleryComing *\Says Mayor But LeGuacdin Attacks | Artists’ Group Which | Forced Decision Mayor LaGuardia indicated Saturday that the city would turn over a building for artists to use as a Municipal Art Center soon, thus meeting a long-felt demand of art- ists in the city. “We will finish the building,” he told reporters at a press conference. The building referred to is believed to be at 62 West 53rd Street, which, it is un- derstood, is being remodeled for gallery use with federal funds. Coincident with the announce- ment that the building would soon be ready for use, the Mayor launched into an attack on the or- ganization which has taken the lead in the fight for the art center, Committee of Action. “Any such Communist propaganda will not deter us.” he said, making reference to a letter the artists had sent the day before. The letter, signed by Hugo Gellert and Stuart Davis, of the executive council of | the artists’ organization, charged that La Guardia had “even failed to acknowledge the joint resolution of Committee of Action and the Artists’ Union, which was |presented to your secretary on Oct. | 27, 1934.” Obviously trying to split the ranks of the artists by setting their ranks merge! their leadership, the Mayor said: “It’s not doing the people who are lending themselves to this any g An intimation that the city ad- ministration or its appointees would ' decide who is an artist and who is not was voiced by the Mayor. “Whether or not a man is an art- ist will be determined,” LaGuardia said, N.S.L. To Plan RalliesTonight Against War Chapters To Meet at Germania Hall The National Student League will hold an emergency general membership meeting tonight at 7 o'clock at Germania Hall, Third Avenue and 16th Street. All execu- tives of both high school and col- | lege chapters are to report at 6:30. | Student members of the League for Industrial Democracy and all | other students are invited to come} to this meeting, which will arrange when and where the student anti- war demonstrations will take place | on Friday. The student demonstrations are | part of the nation-wide student ac- tion on that day against war and war preparations. There will be campus rallies, anti-war confer- ences and torchlight parades to the war memorials. The National Students’ League will hold an Anti-Military Ball on Armistice Day at 8:30 p. m. at the Irving Plaza. The ball is to wind up the student anti-war activities that take place this week-end, and is aimed at the jingoistic spirit that is fostered at the dances of the cadet clubs and other military | groups. YCL Members Aid YPSL Resist Thugs At Election ae dl A united front in action was eS tablished last Monday night at a Young People’s . Socialist League election rally on 268th Street and) Jerome Avenue between mem-| bers of the Young Communist League and the Y. P. S. L. when | hoodlums attempted to dis-| rupt the meeting. Members of the Y.C.L. volunteered their services to restore order at the meeting, and =| scuffle ensued which finally cul-| minated in the disbanding of the’ would-be fascists and the restora-| tion of order at the meeting. ‘The loyal Y.P.S.L. circle and the, Y. C, L. Unit No. 10 are working, out plans for a united front struggle for the opening of a neighborhood recreational center. On a previous occasion, police, attempting to break up a Y.C.L. | open air meeting on the grounds that the flag was not of regulation size, were foiled by Y.P.S.L. mem- bers volunteering the use of their flag for our meeting. Readers, subscribers, sympa- thizers: help raise $60,000 by Dec. 1, Solicit funds from your friends, shopmates. Contribute today. Classified APARTMENT to share; village (female). Reasonable. Call Astoria 1524M, Wed- nesday night. WANTED LADY to help with housework. Small house. Sleep in. Good conditions, in Hollis, L. I. Small renumeration. Box 140 c/o Dally Worker. YOUNG female comrade as companion (10 AM, to 6 P.M.) in exchange for room and board. Inquire all week. Chechan- over, 959 48th St., Brooklyn. AM. 2-2185. BABY GRAND Piano; wanted by reliable comrade. Will provide transportation and safe storage exchange for use. Box 142 c/o Daily Worker. ‘ | only signs of violence or disorder | R ‘Municipal Art Jailed Strikers Collect Fund for ‘Daily’ Drive Cafeteria Picket Urges Workers To Aid In Cam- paign—W ork In Exposing Samuel Leibowitz Cited Imprisoned in the Tombs, last “Realizing the importance of week, for picketing the Sherman! the Daily Worker and since I Cafeterias and the Tip-Toe Inn, a| know its urgent need, I am en- group of strikers collected $2.50/ closing $1 out of gratitude, with among themselves for the Daily| the hope that you keep up the Worker $60,000 drive. | work of enlightenment.” Now the strike has been won,| A ENS under the leadership of the Food| Here is a letter signed “A Non- Workers Industrial Union. A letter | Partisan.” has arrived from William Gegner, “In this morning’s Daily Worker one of the 350 workers, who was| I read your exposure of Mr. Lei- arrested during the picketing. bowitz in connection with the “without the support of the | Scottsboro case. I therefore de- Daily Worker and the Commu- | cided to aid the drive that the nist Party, which gave us a big | hand in every way, this (victory) | be able to save the boys. Do not would not have been possible,” | Set shocked if in my letter you is ated: | find enclosed some Moscow gold. But let us quote a few more para-| 1 hope the Daily Worker will keep pee gpa ead cert its New York edition. ‘Yd appreciate it,” he addeds No Moscow Gold “if you print this letter in the | The Scottsboro case, the struggles Daily Worker, so that I may |of workers against their bosses for arouse more workers of the Sher- | ynion recognition, higher wages and man Cafeteria to contribute | better working conditions — ade- towards the drive to save the 8- |quate unemployment relief, paid page Daily Worker.” |for by the employers and the gov- Says Mind Was “Doped” lernment—these issues require the “Up to a few weeks ago,” he/paily Worker. But the Daily Worker writes, “I was a steady reader of | gets no Moscow gold to keep in a capitalist paper and my mind |publication—despite the enchanting was doped with anything under the|orations of Hamilton Fish and sun—but the real and vital prob-| matthew Woll. le 2 tits I eaerd have | It receives its means from such ere urther on is promising| .. : is path if it hadn't been for the strike | omer’ 41 tne Wiens of the Dre that was called at the Sherman} faceq with the need of $60,000 to Cafeterias, in which I Was 4] preserve itself. Every worker must worker, s : | come to its help! Those who have ‘After having been kicked and / 1o¢ yet contributed should do so pushed around, jailed, and told | 2+ once, Those who have, should that my skull would be crushed, af " 4 for peacefully picketing, I have | Contribute again. Workers must Feo oie eee ee friends, neighbors, shopmates! have become class conscious. ite cmeiuiad ‘pain papers “While the strike was at its height | VOTKer’s help! the capitalist press offered us nead- Note: Sections, units, organiza- tions, readers are urged to send lines of a famous film star getting divorced, of how fast a train crossed | in immediately full reports of their activities in their drive for $60,000 the continent and some other tzash, while the Daily Worker aione| With the new eight-page paper, space has been provided to pub- interpreted our struggle, our need and misery. lish these each day.—Editor. Against Picketing By Union ‘Of Shops No Not Yet Signed Up Bosses Spray Flit on Pickets After 85 Per Cent Of Stores in Borough Settle in Face of General Pharmacist Strike paper is carrying on in order to | Transit Commission. their 4 ‘ligh School and College Bronx Drug Stores Ask Writ — Growing out of the general strike! so far have come from the camp) of Bronx drug clerks that has been of the employers. Peaceful pick-| conducted by the Pharmacists Union | eters have been abused and sprayed of Greater New York, in which 85 with ‘lit guns, in an effort to Ppro- | per cent of the Bronx drug stores’ voke violence. employing help have already signed! up with the union, an injunction restraining the union from picket~ ing stores still on strike, is being sought by the Bronx County Phar- choosing for the maceubical, | Besoomtion, i was | their economic condition and the) learned yesterday. Py raising of the standards of the | The union, 55 West 42nd Street, profession,” was presented with a summons yesterday, calling for the appear-| The union will be represented in ance of its officials at the Bronx! court by Joseph Tauber, attorney, County Supreme Court before Jus- 402 Broadway. tice Frankenthall on Thursday morning. | “We have been conducting peace- ful picketing in those few stores that still refuse to sign contracts with our union,” Benjamin Barish, president of the union stated, “The he said, |the pharmacists the right to or- Students, intellectuals, writers and artists: The “Daily” points to the way out of the social chaos affecting your lives, your professions. Contribute to the $60,000 drive. Greatest Event for the Revolutionary Press “DAILY WORKER” -- “YOUNG WORKER” “MORNING FREIHEIT” BAZAAR ST. NICHOLAS PALACE West 66th Street (Near Broadway) 9th 10th @ llth Merchandise of every description sold at pro- letarian prices, National Negro Theatre Orchestra every night till dawn. International Chorus of 1,000 Voices. Jimmie Boxwell of National and others. Workers Laboratory Theatre. World-renown Enigma “Black Houdini” and Patient Kish, the only female escape artist. Friday Saturday Sunday Negro Theatre BAZAAR HEADQUARTERS: 50 E. 13th St., Room 602—AL 4-9481 All Out to 5 “The petition of the Association,” | “ds an attempt to deny ganize into a union of their own! betterment of} Trial of Negro In Frame-Up Charge by Democratic Politician Postponed Until After Election Trial of John S. Grant, Queens Negro worker framed up by Joseph P. Dougherty, Democratic politi- cian, was postponed Monday by County Judge Thomas Dewnes to Noy. 22. The Democratic politi- cians considered the case too hot for pre-election trial. Grant was arrested June 10 on complaint of Joseph P. Dougherty, former Chief Inspector of the He is charged with grand Jarcency and faces a 10-year term. While driving Dougherty’s car with Dougherty’s tonsent, he had an accident. in order to avoid any Y of a damage suit, framed him on a charge of stealing the car, The defense is being handled by the Jamaica branch of the League of Struggle for Negro Rights, which has retained Irving Schwab to represent Grant. The Grant case comes on a gen- eral wave of terror against the Ne- gro residents of the County of Queens, The Queens criminal courts are unusually crowded with Negro defendants who have been indiscriminately picked off the Streets and charged with serious crimes, Cafeteria Union Shop Chairmen to Discuss Parade on Saturday To Be Followed By Big Mass Meeting on Armistic War Will Be Calls for united front a e Day; Opposition to Central Issue nti-war - actions Saturday and Sunday, on the sixteenth anniversary of the end of the world war, to protest and organize mass resistance against the accelerating drive of the slaughter were issued yester izations. The Youth City Committee of the American League Against War and Fascism, through its secretary, Mike Stone, urged all organizations opposed to war to turn out en masse this Saturday afternoon, 2 o’clock, at Columbus Circle, and march to the Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Monu- ment, Riverside Drive end 69th St. The call points to the lowering of the enlistment age, military tr ing in high schools and colleges, and the increasing efforts to tur- ther militarize the unemployed youths in the C. C. C. camps. “The burning issue of the day is the united front fight against War and Fascism,” declared Pauline Rogers, acting secretary of the City Committee of the American League Against War and Fascism, in call- ing for the mass mobilization of all anti-war organizations on Armis- tice Day, Sunday, Noy. 11th, in the Central Opera House, 67th St. and Third Ave. at 8 p.m. “The assassinations in France, the massing of the Yugo-Slavian troops, the coming Saar plebiscite, Daily Worker Drive | Italy's militarization of youth, Ja- A conference of all shop chair- men of the Cafeteria Workers’ | Pan’s increasing aggression — are swirling forces on the surface of a ortex can lead Union, part of the Food Workers’ | UY So “cartain “ware Industrial Union, will be held to- | night at the union headquarters, 4 | West 18th Street, to take up the | question of the union’s part in the Daily Worker drive for $60,000. The role of the Daily Worker in | the struggles of the food workers will be thoroughly discussed. In an- nouncing the conference the union pointed out that the Daily Worker provided incalculable aid in the recent Sherman Cafeteria strike. | workers,” the union statement con- |tinues, “by the building of the | fighting strength of the Daily | Worker.” WE HAVE OPENED An Additional Dining Room with extra kitchen space to assure you better service. New Chinese dishes of a bisger variety will be introduced at our regular PRO- LETARIAN PRICES, The Upstairs Dining Room will be available free to organizations. Message Service, Revolutionary music recording and a loud speaker will also be furnished free. The place is decorated by a famous revolutionary artist, lending a real pro- letarian home-like atmosphere. NEW CHINA CAFETERIA 848 Broadway near 13th Street COMRADES MEET AND EAT AT FIELD’S CAFETERIA 332 THIRD AVENUE (Near Claremont Parkway) @ COMRADELY ATMOSPHERE @ PROLETARIAN PRICES AN COZY PLACE TO SPEND AN EVE’G + East Garden NEW Chinese & American Restaurant LUNCH %e — DINNER 35¢ 219 Second Avenue Gramerey—5-3819 COMRADES PATRONIZE CANTON KITCHEN Chinese-American Restaurant Special Lunch 2c — Dinner 35¢ 207 East 14th Street Restaurant and Garden “KAVKAZ” Russian and Oriental Kitchen BANQUETS AND PARTIES 382 East 14th Strect New York City Tompkins Square 6-9132 Comrades Patronize JADE MOUNTAIN American & Chinese Restaurant 197 SECOND AVENUE (Bet. 12th and 13th St.) LERMAN BROS. | STATIONERS and UNION PRINTERS Special Prices for Organizations 29 EAST 14th STREET New York City ALgonquin 4-3356—4-88434-7823 “No one gains more than the food ;P@Parations now going on. | “A review of the last war partially indicates what the next organized |murder will mean. At a cost of | 250 billions—10 millions were killed, 21 millions wounded, 9 millions wid- |Owed and 5 millions orphaned.. The | profits. were lucrative—25,000 mil- lionaires were created in this coun- try alone. The revelations that were disclosed as a result of the Nye }munitions inquiry only scratched ithe thin veneer of th extensive war The imperialists for a new world day by two New York organ- « — ee United States government has ape propriated 2% billion dollars, ex< clusive of the C. C. C. and R. F. C., for its war budget for 1934.” The speakers scheduled to ade dress this anti-war meeting ine clude: Louis Perigaud, French So« cialist; Dr. Harry F. Ward, Clarence Hathaway, Rev. William Lloyd Imes, Jr., Winifred Chappel “and Edward Alexander. Colonel Walter Delamater and Rear Admiral Stir- ling Yates, Jr., have been invited to attend. “The necessity for forging a strongly welded opposition to the immediate menace of war cannot be delayed,” said the statement of the City Committee. “Spread the message of the November 11 meet- ing among your friends, among your fellow workers, in your organiza tions: All Workers, Students, Intel- lectuals: Unite to make this Antie War Rally a challenging threat to the War Mongers,” Police Take Strike Sign Down At Headquarters Of Smoking Pipe Union Still enforcing "the injunction against strikers of the Supreme Briar Pipe Company, 125 Nav Street, police removed the sign at the headquarters of the Independ- ent Smoking Pipe Makers Union, which is across the street from the plant. The sign explained why the workers, now in the twentieth week of their strike, are out. The union calls upon their sup- porters to continue protests against the “temporary” injunction issued by Justice Mitchell May of the Kings County Supreme Court. | BY MEN WHO KNOW COUNTS TO COMRADE RI 4910 THIRTEENTH AVENUE we ney a RADIO SERVICE HOw SPkCiaL vIs- EADERS OF THE “DAILY” “SQUARE RADIO CO. WINDSOR §8-0280 BROOKLYN, NEW YORK NY WHERE 5 WASHINGTON SQUARE _Hours: 1 - 2 and 6 - 8 Pt — AND — DANIEL LUTTINGER, M. D. NORTH, NEW YORK CITY Tel. GRamercy 7-2090-2091 All Workers IN Fresh Food—Proletarian Prices—50 EW HEALTH CENTER CAFETERIA Meet at the —— E. 13th St—WORKERS’ CENTER Brownsville and East New York Comrades Welcome J. BRESALIER 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.Y.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 || S. A. Chernoff SKIN, URINARY AND BLOOD. Men and Women 223 Second Ave., N. Y. C. Hours: 10-8 P. M—Son.: 1-2 P. M. Tompkins Square 6-7697 X-RAY and FLUOROSCOPE | Tel, Wisconsin 17-0288. By Appointment Dr. N. S. Hanoka DENTAL SURGEON 265 W. 4ist Street Corner 8th Ave, New York City Send 10e for leaflet on diet for the teeth WORKERS COOPERATIVE COLONY 2700-2800 BRONX PARK EAST has reduced the rent, several good apartments available. Cultural Activities for Adults, Youth and Children. Direction: “exington 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. | Maximilian Cohen Dental Surgeon || 41 Union Sq. W., N. Y. G | After 6 P.M. Use Night Entrance | 22 EAST 17th STREET Sulte 103—GR, 17-0135 Dr. Harry Musikant Dentist 795 EASTERN PARKWAY Corner Kingston Ave, DEcatur 3-0695 Brooklyn, N. ¥. DR. J. SAMOSTIE 220 East 12th Street Skin, Urinary and Blood Conditions Lady Physician in Attendance for Women Hours 9 to 2—4 to 8—Sunday 8 to 1 Algonquin 4-4437 Dr. Simon Trieff Dentist 2300 - 86th Street MAyflower 9-7035 Brooklyn, N. ¥. COHEN’S 117 ORCHARD STREET near Delancey St., New York City EYES EXAMINED By JOSEPH = O.D. Optometrist Wholesale Opticians Tel. ORchard 4-4520 Factory on Premises MATTRESSES | STUDIO COUCHES DIVANS - SPRINGS At Proletarian Prices Also Mattresses, Pillows and Quilts Sterilized and Made Over. All Work Guaranteed ACME BEDDING CO. Phone: LUdlow 4-7212 OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL 10:30. JOSEPH KATZ, Prop. Telephone: Estabrook saeree fo Oriday and Saturday 9 a. Pm. 397-899 WESTCHESTER AVE.,. BRONX ee . Nicholas Palace, 66th St. and Broadway, Friday for the Red Press Bazaar

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