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BOND BARONS IN ON CONTRACTING GRAFT WITH CITY State Architect Scores Methods of Companies The whitewashing of the surety companies which bond city building contracting jobs has started. Sullivan W. Jones, state architect, in a state- ment issued yesterday said agents and brokers for the companies are responsible for the grafting prac- tices of the surety companies rather than the companies themselves. Jones said that the city and state} has lost enormous sums of money thru the operations of the bonding com- panies. Commenting on the methods used by surety companies and their agents Jones said, “the d ion of architec- ture requ contrat in making an application for thei on their contract, to annex a receipt- ed bill showing the payment of the premium of the bond. These receipts were issued promiscuously by agents of surety companies and in some in- stances by the surety company itself when no payment at all has been made.” Methods Are Ilegal. In view of the fact that practically | all of the surety companies have in- terlocking directorates the control of the granting of state and city buiid- ing and construction contracts lies practically in the hands of the surety companies, Speaking of the {legal methods of securing business for the surety com- panies Jones concluded, “by these and similar means unscrupulous men in this business have in some cases prac- tically controlled the bidding on state work, which has resulted in losses on hundreds of thousands of dollars to taxpayers of the state.” _ Charges have been made that these surety companies use every form of inducement to obtain business. The granting of a bonus or present under the Insurance Law is illegal. The two most prominent surety companies operating in this city are the Naticnal Surety Company and the that | first paymente THE DAILY WORKER. NEW YORK, TUESDAY, AUGUST 2, 1927 “ N Sa A Page Five | iRight Wingers Fight{ For Paid Jobs | (Continued from Page One) the active workers of your organiza- tion. “Factional spirit may be chronic in your opinion, but the factions them- selves are not deeply rooted; in fact \they are superficial and of a shifting nature. “The Communists have strengthen- | led their faction. They are injecting ,;@ foreign issue into the union. The issues of organization \®oper are such that their very nature makes it possible for a man to belong to Group A today and Group B tomorrow. SQUARE 70 HIT AT WAR DANGER * A mass meeting to protest against the impending imperialist war against the Soviet Union will be held in Union Square Thursday evening. Thursday is the thirteenth annivers- ary of the world war. “Despite all the bloodshed of the Found Elsewh last world war”, declares a_state- oD ee oes .. ment from the Workers’ (Com- “On a small scale faction$ of this munist) Party, under whose auspices kind are found in almost every organ- ization and they cannot become harm- ful first because they are petty and second because they are not given sufficient recognition to dare come the meeting is being held, “new prep- arations are already on the way, on a more elaborate scale than before the great war of 1914, for a conflict with the Soviet Union and for new into the open where they are given conflicts between the imperialist }countenance and even semi-official| powers. At the Geneva conference recognition. There is but one result| which is taking place, the American and this is ruin. “When critical moments such as you are facing now arise in any com- munity that must have government, one of the two methods can save the dictator who manages to get the con- situation. Either there arises a clever dictator who manages to get the con- fidence of the people and has the ca- pacity to rule with an iron hand, or the people in the good old democratic | way choose their rulers. The people may make mistakes but democratic mistakes are better than autocratic rule, and British nations talked not armament but more and greater ar- maments.” The meeting will not only protest against the increase of arm&ments in preparation for a general offens- ive against the Soviet Union, but will protest against the maintenance of American troops in China as well. Among the speakers will be J. Louis D. Wolfe, William W. Weinstone, Mossaiye J. Olgin, Ben Gold and Re- becca Grecht. Left Wing Cloakmakers Are Hailed to Court (Continued from Page One) | time ‘so the cloak and dressmakers |should be stripped: of their leading fighters. In this way the right wing- | boss combine hopes to smash the or- | ganization more easily. Among those who will appear this/ morning are Louis Hyman, Charles, B. Zimmerman, Julius Portnoy, Jo- seph Boruchowitz, Rose Wortis and all the business agents connected with the dress department. Four Cloakmakers Arrested. Four cloakmakers were arrested when picketing in 38th St., between Seventh and Eighth Ave., yesterday morning. When brot before Magis- trate Brodsky in Jefferson Market Court they were. discharged. To Divide Spoils. “We therefore recommend that meetings of the members be called forthe. purpose of nominating all paid and unpaid offices and in order to avoid the possibility of undesirable men getting on the ballot, an impar- tial committee consisting of respon- | sible and well known men in the la- ‘bor moyement should be chosen to act \as an objection and election commit- itee. This is by the way nothing new. | |The labor movement practiced such | methods even in the good old days. “This procedure will not only solve! |th® immediate problem of your elec- |tions but will give the first knock- out blow to groups, blocks, and cau- |causes. We further recommend that |caucauses and identification with! | groups and blocks be outlawed. A. I. Shiplacoff, M. Feinstone, | Roberts, L. Fuchs, Engdahl, William F. Dunne, Bertram | Killed While Trying to Hold Up a Physician CHICAGO, Ill, August 1 | Jack Stewart, alias Carl Ku a member of President er, Wilson’s | body guard in Paris, a profession- | |al gun man, ended a career of | }erime in Chicago by attempting to hold up Dr. Frant: L. Nathan- son. With him was a fellow high |wayman, one Gilbert T. Ferris, | | who had heen a college student at | Washington and Georgetown Uni- | versities. The doctor beat them to the | jdraw and killed both of them. | | Ferris and Stewart were identi- | | fied by two women who shared their rooms. The quartet had | committed numerous hold-ups be- | fore the two men tried to rob Nathanson. | BIG AIR PORT PROPOSED FOR NEWYORK AREA | : . Secret Sessions of Mil- itarists WASHINGTON, Aug. 1.—New York City is to have a consolidated air force according to plans diawn tip by the department of commerce. Plans for its development will- be launched at the Biltmore Hotel--in New York ‘Thursday by a committee of industrialists, militarists and other war-mongers appointed by Secretary of Commerce Hoover, it was an- nounced here today. More War Plans. This development is part of the ambitious program of the government and the capitalist plunderers whom it serves to increase by every means its military power in contemplation of carrying into still other parts of the world the blight of Yankee im- perialism. Will Have “Public Meeting.” Trying to conceal their real mo- tives under the hoax of holding publie MEET IN UNION — Wisor’s Body Guard —/STRIKERS FORCED ‘Barbers’ sTRIKE THURSDAY FOR LIBERATION OF TO BATTLE COAL COMPANY GUNMEN Strikebreakers Suffer Losses; One Man Shot DOVER, Ohio, Aug. 1.—In a hand to hand battle between company gun- men and striking miners here, the strikers were victorious, with one seab herder shot in the melee, either by his own gun or by some stray bullet from one of his gang, and some fifteen gunmen and scabs bruised. The fighting started when the min- ers attempted to talk to imported strike breakers who were on their way to Maple Leaf Coal mine at Newport. Armed company guards assaulted them, and tried to keep them from arguing with the strike breakers. Some of the scabs assisted the guards in the struggle. The man shot was John Vesco, a gunman from Wain- wright. Several Ohio mines continue pre- parations to open with non-union la- | bor. Strike breakers brought from the cities and not used to mining work have cost the Goodyear Rubber Co., | Which has a mine near Adena, about $50,000 by accidentally setting fire to the tipple while cleaning the mine preparatory to opening it up. Governor Donahey has just threat- ened President Daugherty of the Hocking Valley sub-district of the United Mine Workers of America, that there will be “dire trouble” in the Ohio mines if the work does not start soon. He offers to mediate, but in his language ‘akes the employers’ part. He accused the union of plan- ning to dynamite some tipples. ; Don McGill, employer of Nelson- ville, has posted machine guns. all around his camp, and assumes a very provocative attitude towards the com- munity of strikers. But when this matter was brot to the attention of the governor, he said little about it. “PARTY ACTIVITIES NEW YORK-NEW JERSEY | 6 SACCO AND VANZETTI At its last membership meeting the Journeymen Barbers’ Interna-! tional Union, Lecal No. 913 voted unanimously to call a one day general strike of all its members to protest against the frame-up to murder Sacco and Vanzetti. The date of the strike has been set for this Thursday, August 4th, ls mass meeting will be held in the forenoon at the Brooklyn Labor Lyceum, Willoughby Avenue and Myrtle Avenue, Brooklyn, New York. A parade has been planned marching thru the working class district | of Williamsburg and Greenpoint, winding up at McCarren Park, where | an open-air mass meeting will be held which will be addressed by well- | known leaders of the labor movement and prominent leaders of the |; Sacco and Vanzetti liberation movement. The list of speakers will be | announced tomorrow. GRAND JAMBOREE FOR DAILY WORKER, FREIHEIT, _AND NEEDLE TRADES DEFENSE ON AUGUST 28TH 1 . * The DAILY WORKER, Joint De- Sacco-Vanzetti Meeting faint HALE ORR, Jae a ° e |Cloakmakers and the ihei Thursday Evening Will Tintlag’ cenluaGely 2 Geers Have Big Speakers List |boree in Starlight Park, 177th St, The Sacco-Vanzetti case will be on Sunday, August 28th. taken up Thursday evening at the |New School for Social Research, 465 West 23d St. The speakers will be J. Louis Engdahl of the Saceo-Vanzetti ezgency Com- mittee. Arthur Garfield Hays of the American ( Liberties Union, Leonard D. Abbott, Celia Polisuck. Speakers will also be present representing the Sacco- Vanzetti Liberation Committee and the International Sacco-Vanzetti | & Something unusual—different — is being staged this time. This wonder- ful amusement park will be overrun with workers and their children on \this memorable Sunday. A Jamboree. What does that bring to one’s mind? All the fun of the fair, ponies, swings, seesaws and ‘rides for the children—and we'll all be children that day. O-oh but it’s hot. - There is a splen- id swimming pool in the park that | jhould help to reduce the tempera- tures. Won't it be fun to make a jround of the rides and then dive inte the cooling waters of the pool. Many workers who were making arrangements to leave town that |week and are going to have a real lholiday with their fellow fighters at jthe Grand gJamboree. The real explanation of a. Jamboree will remain a secret until after this affair when it is expected to become the most popular kind of affair in the Committee. Other speakers invit~- ed include Prof.. Paul | | den, Columbia Uni | Kroptkin and Arthur W. Calhoun of Brookwood College. Admission jeer The speeches will be broad- | cast by station WPCH. The meet- jo ing will start at 8.30 p. m. ulty Brakes Are . Bris | © Fa city. | | Heaps of fun. Barrels of joy; and music. alse 0 ar fas q Yes. A real opera company will present one of the best known of the |familiar operas. This feature is {something extraordinary and is sure to go over big with all who have the |good fortune to be present. Remember the date, August 28th, e day Sunday; the place Starlight In Bklyn; 25 Hurt Twenty-five passengers, mostly th | women and children were injured yes- United States Fidelity and Guarantee. | I. Bearak.” SEE MOVE TOWARD TEN CENT FARE IN A fine program is being arranged, | and all comrades, all sympathizers, | Four shops are on strike on 38th hearings, William B. MacCracken, St. The police objected to more than secretary of the air department of four pickets before any one shop and the commerce department, announced as eight workers were picketing each that the committee would meet in place they arrested the four workers | executive session, after which a to test their police powers, publie meeting would be held. _The The arrested workers were Mollie executive sessions will, of course, be Wudisoon, Ethel Wollestein, Nathan closed to the public and only the Greenfield and Herman Tarshis. theatrical performance to conceal the Furriers Meet Thursday. real designs will be revealed to the A general membership meeting of Public. ae 55 ; the Furriers’ Union will be held Hoover's Military Gang. |Thursday right after work at Cooper Hoover’s committee was announced | Union. A general mobilization of all 48 follows: Il Lavoratore Arranges Italian Benefit Picnic At Pleasant Bay Park An Italian picnic day will be held Sunday,” August 14th, at Pleasant Bay Park, Bronx, N. Y., for the bene- As a result of the power shut-off jon the Staten Island trolley lines be- \cause the city would not pay a power \bill for $175,000, fifteen thousand |Staten Islanders yesterday were white and colored, should remember |furriers is expected that night includ-| Wm. P. MacCracken, Jr., Gen. Wm. this date, August 14th ing those workers whoh have regis-|C. Heppenheimer, repreenting the \tered with the International. Impor-|80vernor of New Jersey, Rodman tant questions will come up for ac-; Wanamaker, L. D. Seymour, of the tion COME! JOIN US! At the NEW MASSES Artists & Writers MID-SUMMER NIGHT FROLIC. ine = A Bus Ride to CONEY ISLAND and LUNA PARK TUESDAY EVENING AUGUST 9th Our Special Club Combina- tion Ticket includes ROUND TRIP BUS RIDE IN LUXURIOUS BUSES and ADMISSION TO SIX LUNA ATTRACTIONS Trip to the Moon Scenic Circus | Grand Stair Mysterious House Love Nest Witching Wave, ete. FREE DANCING in the spacious Luna ballroom, $500 WORTH OF FUN FOR $2.00 Accommodations limited to 300—Get your tickets now from the | | NEW MASSES © | 39 Union Square | Phone: STUYVESANT 4445 | {transported to and fro in buses at a |ten cent fare. | This move is interpreted in many [garters as a try-out to see how the riding public will take to an increased |fare. Commissioner Berry, in refus- ing to pay the Edison Company the | bill for $175,000, declared that the the Furriers’ Union will be held to- \trolleys were operated at a “loss”! night, right after work at Stuyvesant |which had to be met by other taxa-| Casino, Second Ave., near Ninth St. ae _ _| All chairmen should be present as Most of the buses were supplied’ jmportant questions will be taken up. |by the city’s Department of Plant! Five of the seven right wing gang- [and Structures, the ten cent tone | steve who beat up four strikers over bea aie Bae Pi le Sahay line | attested admitted to the police that} they were hired by the right wi | \ran its own cars over the route charg- y i palpi les tala jing an eight cent faré. These cars $50 a week, will come up tomorrow | \bore large signs saying, “Ride Our} in Jefferson Market Court. TOune= Hatter Be Safe thkh Soiry.” The case of the two killers who | Morgan Again. | almost murdered Aaron Gross will! Staten Island officials stated yes- |come up for a hearing in Jefferson hy Market Court Thursda rning. | ‘terday that the action on the part of | 5 ; ‘ ae . | the Edison Company in summarily | | é ~ ‘eutting off the power was calculated | Wrecking Chicago Union, |to precipitate a traction crisis on the CHICAGO, Aug. 1—The Chicago | 1 \island, 100 Cases Today. Action on over 100 strike cases |will be taken this morning in Jef- \ferson Market Court. They have been | postponed from several weeks ago. A meeting of the shop chairmen of «Bertrand G. Eadie, counsel Federation of Labor chiefs together |for the power company admif€ed that| With the right wing leaders of the ‘he knew his company could always International Ladies’ Garment Work- ‘collect the overdue power bill. He ers’ Union spent the entire day yes- | t is a good debt.” " terday in wrecking the union. 3 ie boro president’s officeit; The self appointed objection com- Was aSserted that the power -com-j mittee consisting of four vice-presi- | pany’s action was retaliation because!dents of the International together) jit did not obtain the franchise for | with John Fitzpatrick and Ed. Nock- |bus operation on the island. The/els have ruled that no progressive 'franchise was awarded to a morgan- candidates can appear on the ballot -controlled bus company. jin the Local 5 election unless they | ‘ oe ee cs “sign a “yellow dog contract” to sup- “ ons 499 | Poxt Morris Sigman. i He Was Very Timid The progressive candidates refused ‘Says Carol in Praise, to sign and were immediately ruled ‘Of Father Ferdinand as not eligible to run. The only names | PARIS, Aug. 1.—Prince Carol, pre- | left are several right wingers who during the rule of Meyer Pearlstein! |tender to the Rumanian throne, has | used the union for themselves. | issued to an American nwspaper syn- j |dieate a fulsome paen of praise for Hutchison Raise Is | |his father, the deceased King Ferdin- Beaten in Local 2090 | and of Rumania. Carol, were it not} for quarrels with the powerful Bra- | Ri tiano politicians and various digsipa- | The secon eaeo, a me wan jtions and indiscretions of his own, | eral Executive vi a bg tl Na | would succeed his father. ore Union ar the, salaey, 6 beat ; ident Hutchinson and of its own members be increased was defeated | His flattery of the dead king. is taken here as part of a plan to center at a meeting of local 2090, The vote was 600 to 0. attention on himself, and to surround himself with a halo of martyrdom. ‘ | As Ferdinand’s life was notriously In the discussion it_ was brought out that Hutchinson was responsible for tHe 1916-17 crisis when 60 local unheroic, Carol was forced in his fun- eral praise to elevate, timidity, hesi- +: iA unions were suspended at his com- mand. taney, gentleness and such like un- The speakers recalled when Hut- kingly traits to the rank of virtues. i ised by 1 wesinand i openly water Dyer chinson sent them back to work for less than they won in the strike of | for his extreme timidity. 1916. (Twenty-five cents less per THINK OF THE SUSTAINING FUND AT EVERY MEETING!) hour.) \ eral, National Air Transport Co., John F. O’Ryan, of the Colonial Air Trans- port Co., W. L. Lepage, of the Pit- (cairn Aviation Co., Richard F. Hoyt, ‘of the New York Merchants’ Asso- ciation, Harry F, Guggenheim, of the | Guggenheim Foundation, W. I. Glov- er, representing the postmaster gen- John E. Ramsey, representing the Port of New York, Arthur S. Somers, of the Long Island Chamber of Commerce, James D. Sullivan, of the American Legion, and Robt. E. Cosden, of the New York Union Board of Trade and Transportation. Aimee McPherson Will Sacrifice a Watermelon ‘On Altar of Affection God Came High, but Devil Hit Low. LOS ANGELES, Aug. 1.—How the | devil who is everywhere slipped into the Angelus Temple and shattered the happy family life and successful busi- ness partnership of Sister Aimee Semple McPherson and her mother, Sister Minnie Kennedy, was disclosed today when the two warring women agreed to meet to discuss the elder woman’s demand for a fifty-fifty split of the profits of evangelism in Los Angeles. Plans for the conference were an-|hold its first annual picnc at Fachers | nounced last night when it was learned that Sister Minnie, who has obstinate- ly refused to turn the other cheek /lief and defense of the class war cil of Working Class Housewives at | but has stubbornly held out both hands in her demand for a larger share in the box office receipts of re- ligion, would not. settle on anything but a fifty-fifty basis, Was a Watermelon Fiend! Aimee Semple McPherson declared she was willing to make concessions to her mother and she would bar wa- termelon and lemonade drinking from future conferences of the Angeius temple: Sister Minnie claimed that the watermelon made it impossible to | get down to the more christian busi- ness of cutting financial watermelons. | “T can’t talk to her,” Mrs. Kennedy complained. “Every time I try to talk to her she eats watermelon and drinks lemonade.” The property which the mother and daughter are meeting to divide is valued at $65,000. ' aia Vesuvius Menaces. NAPLES, August. 1,—The activity of Vesuvius ‘is increasing. The lava flow from the voleano is widening and has already overflowed the crater, but it is still contained within Hell Val- ley, where it can do practically no harm, Open Air Meetings Tonight. Rutgers Square. Speakers: Stan- ley, Bimba, Primoff, Bentall and Don. Union Square. Speakers: Raiss, Goldberg, Gussakoff, Lillienstein and Grecht. Unit 3F Meets Tonight. A meeting of Unit Factory District 3 will take place tonight at 6 p. m. sharp at 100 W. 28th St. * * * Night Workers Sub Section. ! A meeting of the Night Workers’ Sub Section afternoon, 3 p. m. at 108 East 14th St. Election of officers will take) place. * * * Carnival Tickets Must Be Returned. Carnival tickets must be turned in at once to cover payment of bills in connection with the affair. Send money to #08 East 14th St. * * * Functionaries, Section 3, Attention! Owing to the Saeco-Vanzetti pro- test demonstrations, the function- aries’ meeting of Section 3 has been postponed until Thursday, August 4th, 7 p.m. The meeting will be held at 100 West 28th Street. ’ * * Bath Beach Affair. The Bath Beach Nucleus of the Young Workers’ League will hold an affair August 6 at 1940 Benson Ave., Brooklyn. * Y. W. L. Hike. The Y. W. L. Sports Committee is ‘arranging a hike for August 7th to the Alpine Woods. Directions: Take I. R. T. train to 242nd street. Take {Yonkers ear to Yonkers, get off a |Gettys Square, and walk up to the ‘ferry, about one block left. All com- | rades should be at the ferry by 10 o’elock. | ee eee | Newark Picnic. The Joint Branches of the Interna- tional Labor Defense in Newark will | Grove on Sunday, August 7th. All ithe proceeds will go towards the re- |prisoners. Buses will leave every |hour from the Hungarian Workers | Home, 37 16th avenue to the Grove. New York Anti-Labor | Bishop Continues to Amuse the Parisians | PARIS, Aug. 1—Considerable at- |tention is centered today on news- jattack upon Paris divorces for Amer- icans. “These divorces are }make a mockery of marriage and are \a dishonor to France as the flood of divorces in ouryland dishonor Amer- ica and represent one of the greatest menaces of our life,” Bishop Man- ning declared. The bishop comment- ed on proposals of trial marriage and be marriages at all but harlotry.” Paris is the mecca of bourgeois dissipation, so the bishop’s prestige acquired by assailing Bolshevism re- cently is turning to amusement on the part of the crowds out for a good time. will be held Tuesday | paper reports of Bishop Manning's | | helping to | declared such marriages would “not: 3, |Park, 177th St. Bronx. Prepare now Sev , terday when a Seventh avenue car \Ger the 3! cae yey | crashed into a Flatbush avenue trol-| \ley car at Flatbush and St. Mark’s Fy 5 Avenue, Brooke au ger hace Picketing Forbidden In passengers rushed for the side-doors | : : and in the melee more injured were \Injunction Served Upon added to the list. A six-year old boy | ;} and a two year old girl were severely the Shoe Workers Union injured by being trampled upon in| | the panicky flight for safety. A temporary injunction restraining members of the Shoe Workers Pro- Improperly adjusted brakes and |tective union from picketing the B. failure of the traction company to/W. S. Shoe Company was served yes- regularly inspect the braking appar- terday on Louis Trubewitz, chairman atus was said to be the cause of the| of the district council. | tragedy. | The strike has been goirtg on for Most of the passengers of the cars| some time. A police guard was sta- were women bent on shopping tours. |tioned outside of the factory after Suddenly the Seventh avenue car, the injunction was issued by Justice running along, struck the otther car John MacCrate in the Supreme Court a smashing blow. Both cars were of last week. the new type with entrances at front | =e | and rear and exit at the center, The) BERLIN, Aug. 1. — Jacob Gould | blow smashed the rear entrance of ,Schurman, the United States ambas- | the first car and demolished the front , sador, today is attending the fourth | vestibule of the one behind. Women|centennial of Marburg University. The screamed and fainted. Then came institution is conferring the degree of the rush for the side doors of both | honorary doctor of philosophy upon’ cars. the ambassador. | Mrs. Miles Lynch, the mothter of === . 3 (Ie Tn ee | the two trampled children was a pas- ‘Tel. Lehigh 6023, |senger on the Flatbush avenue car. | Despite her efforts to save them they | Dr. pai tie ee Lo were knocked down, shoved about and “3 A stepped on by the frightened pas- Ori caeceae rider aad pak oe sengers. Ambulances from the King's |} 249 EAST i16th STREET County and Jewish Hospitals arrived {|Cor. Second A New) Fore and rendered first aid to the injured | passengers, Dr. J. Mindel Dr. L. Hendin Surgeon Dentists 1 UNION SQUARE Room 803 Phone Stuyy. 10119 Labor Organizations Bronx Branch I. L. D. | The regular monthly meeting of |the Bronx Branch I. L, D. will be! |At 8:30 p. m, Rebecca Grecht will] | speak on “Defense as Part of the | |Class War.” Many important matters! _will come up, including the final ar- rangements for the hike on Sunday, SURGEON DENTIST | Aug. 7, to City Island. | 48-50 DELANCEY STREET | . * * ||| Cor. Eldridge St. New York Women’s Meeting Tonight. | | Membership meeting of Bronx and! | Harlem section of the* United Coun- Tel. Orchard 3783 Strictly by Appointment DR. L. KESSLER Phone Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES 184 Boston Road this evening to dis-| jcuss the needle trades situation.| A place with atmosphere Representatives from the furriers| where all radicals meet, and cloakmakers’ Joint Boards will) 302 E. 12th St. New York | attend. 4 | . * os Workers Clubs Attention! All workers’ clubs in New York) |who are able to play soccer are urged | |to be represented at a city wide con-| |ference Thursday evening, 9 p. m.,| at 854 Jackson Ave., the Bronx. \ * * . I. W. W. Picnic. The eighth International Picnic of | |the I. W. W. will be held Sunday, Au-} gust 21, at Harmony Park, Grasmer, | |Staten Island, for the benefit of Il) Proletario, Italian organ of the or- ganization, It will start at 10 a. m. | A big program has been arranged. | * * Bronx I. L. D. To Hike. On Sunday, August 7, the Bronx Branch I. L. D. will arrange a hike! to City Island. All members and. sympathizers are to meet at 9 a. m, at 1472 Boston Road. Bring eats. Entertainment will be provided by the! committee. Health Food Vegetarian Restaurant 1600 Madison Ave. PHONE: UNIVERSITY 6 Dry Dock 6612, 7845, Orchard 9819. Patronize MANHATTAN LYCEUM Large Halls With Stage for Meet- Entertainments, “Balls, W a Available. || ANYTHING IN PHOTOGRAPHY STUDIO OR OUTSIDE WORK Patronize Our Friend SPIESS STUDIO. - 54 Second Ave., cor. 3rd St. Special Rates for Labor Organi tions, (Establishe: aA a