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{ THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY JULY 2, 1927 Page Three OF LABOR MOVEMENT ABROAD “Every possible worker and farm- er in America must be made to under- stand that an attack against the Union of Soviet Republics is an at- entered the Soviet Union by way of | Charles Mitchell. tack against the American working class.” This was the declaration of J. Louis Engdahl, editor of The DAILY WORKER, who returned yesterday to New York on ‘the Cunardet, Maure- tania, Engdahl pictured the condition of European countries, like Poland, Ger- many and Italy, especially the work- ing masses of which suffer as the vassals of the American dollar in im- perialism. Thru Poland. *Y passed thru Poland,” said Eng- dahl, “the Poland that is now begging @ loan from Wall Street. Poland is @ nation in rags, with great masses unemployed and a crop failure ahead. Communist sentiment growing everywhere. This was clearly shown 8 in the recent elections in Warsaw, | to acquaint himself with the various|workers section, will be held next| League and the Workers Par He visited the great | Tuesday, 10:30 a. m. at 108 East 14th | cated at 108 East 14th St., and candidates were stricken from the bal-| automobile plant in Moseow and other St. D, Benjamin will lecture on the | everyone I find there.” when the names of the Communist lot. Nevertheless, scores of thousands Demonstrations were held at aven, Bremen, Hamburg and Berlin in Germany. Engdah] then cow. \ Brem Riga, passing over Lithuania’ and \Latvia. The burial took place in Mos- cow, Tuesday, April 26th. In May Day Celebration. Engdahl rticipated in the May Day demonstrations in Moscow and its environs. He was one of the Amer- ican gates at the s ns of the ‘plenum of the executive ¢ ittee of the Communist Internati » that took up the three big que: of the War Danger, the Chinese situation and the problems facing the Commun- list Party in Great Britain. Engdahl a member of the British Com- lmission of the plenum. Later Engdahl participated in the hearings deyoted to the dis ion of ithe problems of our American party. Studied Soviet Press. ENGDAHL BACK FROM EUROPE TELL PARTY ACTIVITIES. - | NEW YORK-NEW JERSEY Open Air Meetings Tonight. Y. W. L. MEMBERS: THREATENED BY \ Claremont Parkway and wesnine- FEDER A ton Ave. Speakers: Siselman, Ros- jman, Lazarowitz, J. Cohen, Morance, | | First Ave, and 79th St. Speakers: | Ramuglia, Patterson, R. Mitchell,! | Powers, ' Madison Ave, and 106th St. Speak- ers: Codkind, Evans, I. Cohen, Poyntz. 141 St. and St. Anns Ave. Speak-| ers: Bixby, Garnett. | | Steinway and Jamaica, Long Island. Speakers: Baum, McDonald. | Mermaid Ave. and West 25th St., Coney Island. Speakers: Rady, Raiss. * * * | New Jersey Meetings Tonight. West New York, 14th St. and Ber-| genline Ave. Speaker: Markoff. } | Perth Amboy, Smith and Elm Sts. | Speaker: Ehrlich. Ps Educational Meeting. An educational meeting of the new jeonfiseated the three young workers Stop the Distribution of Anti-War Pamphlet While distributing leaflets at Grand Central Station yesterday morning to | recruits leaving for the citizens’ mili- tary training camp at Platisburg, N. Y., three members of the Young| Workers (Communist) League were stopped by agents of the department of justice. After the leaflets were were run out of the railroad depot. One of the department of justice operatives questioned them, When they said that they were Commun-} , he told them that he had helped ure the indictment agai The | DAILY WORKER staff earlier in the | week, He threatened | South Braintree crime. © | ing. Sacco, Vanzetti Taken To Death House (Continued from Page One) South Braintree, as the bandit went by, got @ clear view of the six criminals and is positive that:neither Sacco and Vanzetti were there. Hasn’t Seen Madeiros. Fuller’s reprieve order was issued after consultation with his executive council. He declared he needed more 5 | time to study the records of the case | {and to interview the numerous wit- nesses. State house talk is that an- other 80-day respite is pessible at the end of the period. tino Madeiros, the murderer con- victed in another case, who swears that he and the Morelli gang, not Sacco and zetti, pulled off the But Madei- ros, Who was to have died the week fof July 10th with Sacco and Van- zetti, has also been reprieved till August 10th. And as yet the special advisory commission of three the governor ap- pointed some time ago kept in the background. In fact the com- mittee has just held its first meet- Each of the three men—A. Engdahl also seized the opportunity | morning international branch, night| headquarters of the Young Workers} Lawrence Lowell, president of Har- W. Soviet activities. factories, addressing the convention American revolution. y, lo- “ruin He then asked who is the leader of | of voters wrote in the names of the/of the Clothing Workers of the Sov-| E . Communists. American dollars are|iet Union. He visited one of the) y.W:L. Open Air Meétings Tonight. being called on to keep the present pris in. Moscow as well as the! ‘The Downtown Section, Y. W. L.. @ppressive government in power. | beautiful rest homes for workers seat-| will hold an open air meeting to di Engdahl also pointed out that injtered thru the Silver Forest along/cuss the danger of war, this the Germany of the Dawes plan there | the Moscow River. He spent a day]evening, at 10th St. and Second Ave. | we more than two millions of unem-| studying the methods of the Pravda,| Speakers: Navaries and Bodzines. | ployed. Returning passengers on the|the central organ of the Communist * * * Mauretania, who had visited in Italy,| Party of the Soviet Union, and sev-|Camp Registration Continues testified to the unbearable conditions|eral days acquainting himself with | More Weeks. under the fascist regime. ‘the workings of the Gudok (Whistle) | Regisivati re ee ti ¥o Pi | Benito Unpopular. \the daily publication of the Railroad Cant Si oat i ke oe “Mussolini is very unpopular in|Workers Union, with a circulation of Goeth ‘heghnehatte ass: Welag | Italy,” is the statement made to mej 400,000, the most powerful publica-| 4, ‘to dating yi ae Sait | by many of these travelers,” said|tion of any trade union in the world.| cen, This Wil allow a 28% imote to Engdahl. | He spent some time at the Ta 0 ik the firkt group which haater | It is in the face of these conditions |gels Institute and also acquainted) 5 4 . is.| Bb ; : New York Tuesday, July 5th. Regis- in Western Europe and the threat of | himself with the objects of the Com- | Two) the league. When he did not get a reply he growled, “Is it Kaplan? I'll get him y Z They were told that they were lucky because he did not’ have them | in a room where they “would be taken | care of.” Several hundred leaflets were given | out before the federal detectives were | aware of the distribution. Many of th recruits refused to give the leaf- lets to the captain who were around to collect them. The three members of the league who distributed them are, Philip | Frankfeld, B, Cohen and I. Shiffman. | The leaflet reads in part: “Today you are leaving for camp. | vard University; Samuel Strat- ton, president of the Mas husetts Institute of Technology, and former Judge Robert Grant, has conferred | with the governor separately looked over the records of the but they had not met together as commission till the present session. * BRIDGEPORT, July 1—Thou- sands of Bridgeport workers are ex- pected at the monster protest demon- stration for the release of Sacco and Vanzetti which will be held to- morrow at 2 o’clock on East Wash- ington Ave., near Washington Park. | DENVER, July “Mother” Bloor, who is hitch-hiking across the United States on a tour DAILY WORKER and Robert Davies, of the British Labor Party, As yet Fullet has not talked to| | Cel COAL SCABS SHO AND WOUND TWO YOUNG BOYS » COAL CENTER, Pa., July 1.— Two boys, innocent bystanders, were wounded at Granville, near Coal Cen- \ter, early June 28 when shots were \fired from a truck bearing scab rir ers, scab baseball players and {coal and iron police from Pricedale, |which is a place owned by the Pitts- !burgh Coal Co. Five shots were fired at one end lof Granville, but fortunately none |was hit there; then coming thru the jother end of the town where people | were standing by a store, more |shots were fired from the tri Tyhonitz, aged 18, of Granvil | shot in the right leg and Cenco Me jcie, aged 16, of the same place, wa: | shot in the left arm. The chief of police of Roscoe, g all ting the | headed his that the scabs , placed a large true across the road, gathered some work- {ers near, and when the scabs came they were forced to stop and were placed under arrest. 1 The occupants of the tru jnumber, were aigned before Jus- |tice of Peace Joe T. S. Cowen on a were OT INTO TOWN | Judge Lindsey, Pioneer | in Juvenile Reform, Is Ousted by Klan Enemies July 1 er of the ile court which he made n known, was ousted from of: yes. tetday ith the signing of a court decree that he was technically de- feated in 1924, from office the Ku Klux Klan lions to defeat him It is understood 's successor will be a 2 marraige the juve storm of con- the country, en his removal dge created y throughout uch to b and did from offi 'Two Big Fur and Cloak and e, | ,|men were held, including two for The| \charge of shooting with intent to kill. Two boys were released, but 15 coal and iron police in uniform. | A large crowd gathered about the office of Justice of Peace Cowen and immediately ate police were sum- {raoned to disperse it and provide an escort for the scabs under arrest, who were placed in a jail in Charleroi late that evening. It is believed the scabs intended to kill a couple of workers so they would submit, and not dare to say a word when a seab is around. ‘Right Wing Plot te Put the revolution in China that drives the great imperialisms into the new | attack planned against the Soviet Union. | Engdahl witnessed the tremendous demonstratien in Moscow against the raid on Arcos in London. Also the demonstrations against the assassin- ation of Voikoff in Warsaw, Poland. “These demonstrations held thru- out the entire Soviet Union clearly show that the workers and peasants | ‘munist Academy, with its “Brain In- stiute,’ for the study of the mind. Engdahl also got in touch with “Tass,” the Russian Telegraph | Agency, with “Russphoto” the offi- cial picture service attached to the |Society for the Development of Cul- ‘tural Relations with the Soviet | Union, thus providing for better con- jnections for The DAILY WORKER lin these fields. He discussed the ques- tions of women’s work and the educa- tional activities of the American tration at 108 East 14th St. daily be- | yrost of y. : mp. | tween 10a. mn. and 8 pt te, Room 41.|ji05 capes huss wees for the first The rate in $10 a Week, j time, others have been there before. | Before you leave, we want to say a few things about the CMTC to you— | | and we want you to think it over. | Party Units, Attention! | All notices of party affairs, meet- | ings and other activities for publica th " ian Pie be addressed to the Party News Edi-| tor, The DAILY WORKER, 33 First | most ruthless and aggressive. Thou- “We are faced with the prospect of | sands of American marines are still | will be among the speakers at the huge protest meeting for Saeco and Vanzetti which will be held here on Wednesday. Fur Pickets in Jail (Continued from Page One) freed when caught in their bloody ree 2 deeds because they belong to the Sig- Strike Plans Continue. man-McGrady Mans aes aid the Spurred on to greater activity by |cause of Americanism, etc., while the transferance of Sacco and Van- workers fighting for the right to a zetti to the vicinity of the death- | decent life are sent to jail. house, labor organizations through-| “Workers, we must not permit this * * * ef the first workers republic ‘realize the struggle that faces them,” said Engdahl. “It is time for the work- Party with the respective depart- {ments of the Communist Interna- ers of America to realize, however,|tional. He was specially delegated that this is a threat not only against | by the American delegation to attend the Soviet Union, but also against the |a conference on co-operation. He vis- working class in this country, that, ited the headquarters of “Mopr,” with faces the slavery conditions to be| which the International Labor De- found in Italy, Germany and Poland, |fense is affiliated, the Revolutionary 4@+this’oppression can maintain itscif; Museum, one of the largest of the in power in Europe with the aid of Red Army Barracks in Moscow, as | American dollars.” well as a summer training camp, at- Engdahl left the United States tended the celebration closing the April 6th entrusted with the task of jyear of the Lenin School, as well as carrying the ashes of C. E. Ruthen-| other educational instiutions in Mos- berg, the fallen standard bearer of | cow. the Workers (Communist) Party, for “Qf some of these I have already burial in the Kremlin Wall, in Mos-| written about,” said Engdahl. “TI shall BUSINESS & PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY FRIuiskDS OF ORGANIZED LABOR FOR A FRESH, WHOLESOMB VEGETARIAN MEAL Telephone Mott Haven 0506. | St, New York. * | Passaic Branch to Have Outing. The Workers Party Branch of Pas- | saic will run a bus ride Sunday, July | | 3rd to Horse-neck Bridge. It will start 7 p. m. from the Workers Home, | 27 Dayton Ave. Tickets one dollar. |For children 25 cents. * write of some of the other places} \visited as time permits.” At Voikoff Funeral. Shortly before leaving Moscow Eng- dahl spoke at the Voikoff funeral in \the Red Square as the representative | lof the Communist International. | | Engdahl returned thru Warsaw ‘over Poland, passing thru Germany ‘and Belgium before reaching Paris, |France. Here he spent three days) awaiting passage on the Mauretania, sailing from Cherbourg, arriving in the United States twelve days out of! Moscow. While in Panis, Engdahl laid mem-| orial wreaths on behalf of the Ameri- | lin little Nicaragua, “pacifying” that | country for the bankers of Wall | Street. Warships and marines are} in China, defending the investiaents of Wall Street and trying to crush the heroic struggle of the Chinese peo- | ple for freedom. Great Britain \s try- ing to provoke a war against Soviet | | Russia, the only Workers’ and Farm- jers’ government in the world. Amer- | ica is taking the lead in suppressing jall of the little countries in) Latin and South America, in creating a large navy and air force, and in mili- |tarizing and prussianizing tke youth. | “The citizens’ military ning | camps is one of the means to train} the future cannon fodder that will} fight and die on some far off battle- | field. The. CMTC’s help to prepare for war—it is a military institution first of all. The slogans employed in | order to attract you to the camps are | nothing more than smoke screens to} hide the real character of this war out New York City are intensifying their efforts to make the one-hour general strike and mass demonstra- tion at Union Square on July 7th a success of such magnitude as to con- vince the Massachusetts legal hier- archy that New York labor will deem | the carrying out the death-sentence an act of murder. This statement is offered by the Sacco-Vanzetti Emergency Commit- tee, Rose Baron, acting secretary of the committee, reports that volun- teer ‘workers from various labor unions are calling at the offices of the committee to undertake the dis- tribution of ciféulars and leaflets. Trade union officials are working in cooperation with the committee to in- sure the complete success of the strike move. Hundreds of thousands of leaflets have been printed and are being dis- tributed throughout the city. One of the leaflets which is printed in Eng- lish, Italian and Jewish reads in part: breathing place. “Build your body,” “Enjoy a good vacation, etc.” are} “Let the world of capitalism know to continue! |hundred women to be jailed and treat- ed like prostitutes! We must not per- mit hundreds of men, old as well as young, to be herded off into the filthy jails and workhouses! We must not permit Sigman and McGrady to estab- lish permanent war in the fur indus- try. We must not permit that these men shall destroy the working condi- tions that we haye achieved after years of struggle. ‘Forward’ Gloats. “The ‘Forward’ is happy. It gloats lover the torture inflicted upon our workers. Note how it describes the jailing of the fur pickets: “<‘Communist fake pickets are sent |to jail for five and ten days for mo- lesting furriers.’ ” “This is social |per that until | Jewish work: Raise Protest. “We must not remain silent! such a mighty protest that the poli- \ticians, police and courts will be com- m! This is the pa- ntly dominated the To- We must not permit one | - a Raise Come to Scientific Vegetarian Restaurant 75 E. 107th Street New York. Where do we meet to drink and eat? at Sollins’ Dining Room Good Feed! Good Company! Any Hour! a Any Day! REAL HOME COOKING 222 E. 14th St. Bet, 2 & 3 Aves, Phone: Stuyvesant 7661. MISHULOW'S Nature Food Vegetarian Restaurant 41 West 21st St. New York 4 Between bth and 6th Ave. ‘Health Foods of the Highest Order. Health Food Vegetarian Restaurant 1600 Madison Ave. PHONE: UNIVERSITY 5565, Phone Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where ull radicals teet. 302 E. 12th St. New York For HEALTH, SATISFACTION and COMRADDESHIP RATIONAL VEGETARIAN : RESTAURANT 1590 Madison Ave. New York |, University 0775 Tel, Orchard 2783 Strictly by Appointment DR. L. KESSLER SURGEON DENTIST 48-50 DELANCEY STREET Cor. Eldridge St. New York DR. JOS. LEVIN _ SURGEON DENTIST X-Ray Diagnosis 1215 BRONX RIVER AVENUE Cor. Westchester Ave. Bronx, N. Y, Phone, Underhill 2738. Dr. Morris Shain SURGEON DENTIST 592 Oak Terrace, Bronx, N. Y. 1dist St. and Crimmins Ave. Tel. Lehigh 6022. Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF URGEON DENTIST Oftice Hours: 9:30-12 A. M, 2-8 P, M. Daily Except Friday and Sunday, 249 EAST 116th STREET Cor. Second Ave. New York. Dr. J. Mindel Dr. L. Hendin Surgeon Dentists 1 UNION SQUARE Room 803 Phone Stuyv. 10119 —_— Booth Phones, Dry Dock 6612, 7846, Office Phone, Orchard 9319. i} Patronize MANHATTAN LYCEUM Large Halls With Stage for Meet- ings, Entertainments, Balls, Wed- dings and Banquets; Cafeteria. 46-65 EB. 4th St. New York, N. ¥, Small Meeting Rooms Always Avaliable. ANYTHING IN PHOTOGRAPHY STUDIO OR OUTSIDE WORK Patronize Our Friend SPIESS STUDIO 54 Second Ave., cor. 3rd St. Special Rates for Labor Organiza- tions (Established 1887.) Airy, Large Meeting Rooms and Hall TO HIRE Suitable for Meetings, Lectures and Dances in the Czechoslovak Workers House, Inc, 347 BE. 72nd St. New York Telephone: Rhinelander 6097. AMALGAMATED FOOD WORKE: Bakers’ Loc. No. Meets Ist Saturday in the month at 3468 Third Avenue, Bronx, Y. Ask for Union Label Bread. |snares to entrap the unsuspecting | *can Communist Party on the grave) . pa ‘ S 4 ones into the tentacles of the military of the victims of the Paris Commune | ' Wanita) tee eee | that American labor fights for its |pelled to change their tactics. own and is determined to save Sacco|gether we will battle until the Sig- and Vanzetti from the electric chair, | mans and the MeGradys will be driven |in the Cemitaire Pere Lachaise, and/| ‘at the tomb of Jean Jaures, in the Pantheon. He also attended the ses- ‘gion of the French Chamber of Depu-| ties where immunity was denied Mar- cel Cachin, the Communist deputy, |who was ordered sent to prison for | anti-militarist activities. He also ‘visited the offices of the powerful) |French Communist daily, L’Human- | ite, in Rue Montmartre, and the head- |quarters of the French Communist |Party in Rue LaFayette. He was de- nied admission to the Sante Prison where Semard, of the French Com- munist Party is being held. Labor Organizations I. L. D. Meeting Tuesday. The Harlem Branch of the Inter- national Labor Defense will hold a meeting Tuesday evening at 81 East 110th St. The question of Sacco-Van- zetti will be discussed. : * * | Soccer Game Tomorrow. | The Red Star Sporting Club Soccer |Team will engage in a match against the New York Eagles tomorrow 11 ‘a. m. at Thomas Jefferson High | School field, Livonia and Pennsylvania | | Aves., Brooklyn. i} * * | U.CW. CH. Meeting Tuesday. | A very important general member- ship meeting of the United Council lof Workingclass Housewives will be | held Tuesday evening, 8 p. m. at Man- \hattan Lyceum, 66 act, Fourth St. | 4 * Plumbers’ Helpers’ Pienic. | The American Association of Plumbers’ Helpers will play the} |Young Workers Sport Club of Pas- saic which has been endorsed by the} {United Textile Workers Local 1603, ‘at the picnic of the plumbers’ helpers on July 10, at Pleasant Bay Park. Tickets for sale at the union office 186 East 24th St. They are 86 cents. LJ * Hungarian Needle Trades Club Meet Wednesday. An important meeting of the Hun- 'garian Needle Trades Club will be held Wednesday evening, 8 p. m. at BBO East 8ist St. The speakers will be Ben Gold and Emil Kiss in Hun- |machine. More than that, the CMTC’s | |are supported and endorsed by b | bankers, industrial concerns and rail- | jroads for another reason too. | “The CMTC’s get the approval of | the U. S. Steel Corporation, Penn- | sylvania Railroad, Standard Oil Com- | pany of Gary and Rockefeller, because | anti-labor and anti-union ideas are | instilled into the minds of the re-| cruits. The lectures given on citizen- | ship are attacks on the labor move- | ment, on all progressive tendencies within America, and partitularly on | Soviet Russia.” | Japan Foreign ‘Office | Shake Up Ambassadors TOKYO, July 1.—A shake-up in the | Japanese diplomatic service is im-! minent, according to reliable reports | today. , | Premier Tanaka, the reports state, | plans to transfer Ambassador Mat- sudiara from Washington to London. ; Matsuji Debuchi, now vice-minister | of the foreign office, will be picked to succeed Matsudaira at Washington, | it was believed. | Kekichi Yoshizawa, now minister to | it was understood, with M. Kimura, present chief of the Asiatic Bureau of the foreign office, going to Peking. China, may become foreign minister, |} and to restore these two brave work- ‘ers to their friends, their families and to the labor movement. UNITE TO FREE SACCO AND VANZETTI.” ‘| Help the Plumbers’ Helpers Build a Union! © |from the labor movement, disgraced and discredited. “Let us battle for our freedom and lrights!” GRAND SUNDAY, UNIONPORT, Musie by Plumbers’ From 10 A. M. to 12 P. M. At PLEASANT BAY PARK | Sports and Games for Young and Old.—Added Attraction: Baseball | Game Featuring Plumbers’ Helpers Team. Auspices: AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF PLUMBERS’ HELPERS. TICKETS, THIRTY-FIVE CENTS. For sale at Jimmie Higgins Book Shop, 106 University Place. PICNIC WULY 30 BRONX, N. Y. Helpers Jazz Band. y Bronx Train to 177th St, DIRECTIONS—West Side—Take Broadway Subway h . Crosstown Car to Unionport. to Sist St. then East Side—Take Lexington Ave, | then 180th Crosstown to Unionport. | The ERNO RAPEE, condu in a special Wagner, Strauss, Tchaikowsky, Borodine, Berlioz, Rimsky-Korsakoff program, Coney Island Stadium Concert | WEST 6th STREET & SURF AVE. BENEFIT FURRIERS’ STRIKE FUND, New York Symphony Orchestra ~ Les cting i | RESERVED SEATS $2. | Saturday Night, July 16, 1927, at 8 p.m. In case of rain, Sunday, July 17, at 8 p. m. | ) AUSPICES JOINT DEFENSE AND RELIBF COMMITTEE, FURRIERS AND CLOAKMAKERS, 41 UNION SQUARE | Lickets on sale at 108 Bast 14th Street, Room 35, and 41 Union Square, Room 714. } PRINCE IGOR with ALEXIS KOSLOFF House and his famous ballet—also Ballet Internationale and Divertissements, | CONEY ISLAND, N. Y. | Dances Polovtsienne Du of the Metropolitan Opera GENERAL ADMISSION 81. garian. 1 | $ THE ENTIRE PROGRAM WILL BE BROADCAST FROM STATION WCGU. Meetings Next Week in Bklyn and Cooper Union The Joint Board of the Cloak and | Dressmakers’ Union will hold a me ing Wednesday evening at Columbia Hall, 522 Stone § lyn. All cloa nd di kers ng in Brooklyn are ed to attend. Open Forum Thursday An open forum arranged by the | Unity Committee of the furriers, }cloak and dressmake ll be held Thursday 1 p. m. at Coover Uniov. Louis Hyman will speak on Sigman’s latest gesture of proportitiona] rep- resentation, while Ben Gold will dis- cuss the | developmetns of the furriers’ strike. Save Sacco, Vanzetti! Strike Thursday, July 7 For the Giant Carnival and Fair For the Benefit of The DAILY WORKER JULY 23 and 24 La- a- Workers Party Uni bor Organizations, | ternal Organizations | Are Invited to Partig- pate by furnishing attrac- tions, exhibitions, side- shows, novelty booths, athletic exhibitions, re- freshments, concerts, ete. Reserve Space Thru the DAILY WORKER 108 E, 14th STREET Tel. Stuyvesant 6584. | Registration closed for 4th of July week end. Only those registered should ‘come out. Non-registered | will not be accommodated. | Buses leave Friday, 6 o'clock at | Freiheit, 30 Union Square. 6:30 at 1786 Lexington Avenue, Cor. 111th Street. | Buses leave Saturday, 9 A. M. and 5 P. M. from Freiheit Building, 30 Union Square,