The Daily Worker Newspaper, September 17, 1927, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURD JARDINE AGREES NOT TO SMASH f LABOR AND FRATERNAL|| TTALIAN WORKERS! Chicago Jobless Face | ORGANIZATIONS EPT. 17, 1927 Page Three ~ CONDEMN NINFO, Winter of Suffering 100,000 ama “MILITANT GROUP PLUMBERS UNION PARTY ACTIVITIES HOOVER BRAGS HE HAS ENDED MOST NEW YORK-NEW JERSEY The Workers’ Health Conservation Sigman, in spite of all his maneuvres with the bosses, the workers still heavy firing neither dead bodies nor |lined up all the building trades capi- Sen Court Fight Daily Worker Agents Meeting. |“Mother” Bloor Speaks Tomorrow. c 7 eee . J A. Meetings 7 ght. COTTON AGAIN Ella Reeve Bloor will speak at al§§ ty INS eta emesis 4 pienic given tomorrow at Al Zeman CHICAGO, rae : bie pt. 16.—This ae Juliet Stuart 1 ee Bergen, N. J., by the Anti- | faces the worst winter for unem and Verne Smi 4 a ae of North America | ‘ | ployment since 1913. More tea Claremont P; : ' A rs are invite | | 3 ‘ Se we = Statement ot on Probable | abe Maer /Rally Cloakmakers oe Se jobs| Sag of Local ton Av », Wants No ‘Extra Session | : . ee ¥ ; | is rapidly increasing | i A | Price Favor to Bears Typographical Union, | No. 6. | N.Y. Joint Board || as thousands of men are pourmg|| 463 Nominate Ticket set Mi-- to Balk Mortgages | Typographical union Big Six’ | |into town daily. | e ane a v, 23 : -» at} | “ . no WASHINGTON, Sept. 16.—Becaus leiia anh cesae aed yA reciet ce A meeting of Italian cloak and | Most of those who come here are | The progressive group of Local 463 16, of the open scandal over wild spec oe Sts Brooklyn. |dressmakers was held last night at} |from the flood regions of the South,| |of the Plumbers’ Union is distribut- the concen- | n the New York and New} Tn ar dquarters of Local 22, 16*West | |from the depressed agricultural] jing a leaflet addressed to the mem-|and Mary Hartliel ion « of the Mis- ulation in t the headqua: ‘i | P M sed 1 Orleans cotton markets yesterday, | Booth At Bazaar: }21st St., to start a campaign of en-| | areas of the Middle West and other] | bers of that organization appealing ‘ ippi floods has now entirely ; the Department of Agriculture has} 5 progressive Group, Local 38,| rolling all Italian workers in support | | places. Added to the many local| |for support of the slate in Sunday's Pioneers Hike Tomorrow. ceased, Secretary of Commerce Hooy- | been forced to discontinue issuing its| appeals tarallcamerbern: cf ene local | of the New York Joint Board, unemployed workers they make a] | election. ; es | The Pioneers of the Uppe s in his report to the: presi- j cotton price trend statements, it wat nd friends to contribute articles for| The meeting adopted two resolu-| large army. ot The program of the militant will hike to the Palisad The numb farmers thus | announced today, __ A ts booth at the Daily Worker-Frei-| tions. The first condemns Morris, 2 © | plumbe contained in the leaflet i ed of comper Secretary of Agriculture Jardine | jit bazaar, Workers should also get| Sigman and his ally, Salvatore Ninfo. | calls for amalgamation of all build- the whose discussed the question at today’s cab-) ticles from their friends. Send| The second resolution protests against | ip ing ‘Gunmen ing trades to one depart- brot ir ruin, is inet meeting. them to L. Lieb, care of Goodman, 1| the actions of the “Nuovo Mondo,” mentalized industrial union; a con- Hoover 314,000. Approximately $80,000,000 Was | Fast 11ith St | Italian daily newspaper, that refuses | misting sc ed building trades council to any workers’ The rey t in 111 eoun- wiped off the potential value of cot- * * to publish the communications of the | “ secure the stand s of all trades in} formation c s in the f on grave men- ton when the department’s statement | pages Ranileat | workers, M0 fj icin V3 the building indu against the meeting of rs th Satur- . spreading centers of that prices are likely to ee 8 sia All Spanish-Jewish workers are in-| The resolution against “Nuovo | body of sn pees ee day, 2 p. m. at 1347 Boston Road typhoid, 1 ria and pellagra. next few months, went over ©! vited to attend a lecture Sunday, 2| Mondo” calls upon all Italians to boy- | fh yy s een had oo “s * * “Owi the second flood and tickers. an organization drive to union- : : 20 qs s m. at Lexington Hali, 109 East | cott the “Nuovo Mondo.” It points| ip Ol Cr ) -| Subsection 3-C Meets Monday other causes probably 2,000,000 acres It is learned from New York that | Ti 6th St. The topic will be: “What | out that “the banner of anti ism | jize the trade anc lishment sane of Sut ion 3 ll of flooded land will have no money this public iP. La insprec elena \t saw in Soviet Russia.” The lecture|and liberalism which the ‘uovo | ere 40- eee Peden ee ae fal be held Monday, 6 p. m., at 100 West crops this year,” says Hoover. t unnoticed on e stock mar . a 0 eit 4 eal e progr: reads in pa s fo Report of func a i Hey several hours by all except those ae He euler: by ae iene Ee | Mondo flies balks fake banner because | ATHENS, Ohio, ‘Sent. 16 sl lows he cost of living is still ris- Hep . ah Loans, Not Relief. who knew about it beforehand, and| Nae speci vey ais0) addres “rhe!| in meality athis paper is completely | have been so quiet recently in this ing and the workers need more mon- u A , In s} of the extreme destitution, { that these cleaned up handsomely by|™** ies kee under the control of the reactionary | heavily guarded district that some of |ey. Besides this, the bosses, with Open har Mectiies M and the so far of any actual i selling short. Wutticrs: Sewtug Room id’ the Bons. fascist bureaucracy of Sigman, Ship-|the mine owners’ private arr their new production methods and Seventh St. L aa “ work towards prevention of a new i Whether the department of agricul-| "The Bronx Women's Furriers | coff Beckerman and the “Forward | tachment stationed at the Lick Run’ speed-up make much more profit. Milleg, Willa 1. peeakeFS* flood next spring, Hoover did not ture influences the market immedi-| Gouncil has opened a sewing room at}, : : .__ | Property at Nelsonville, put ona sham} Why should not the workers, who , De dn PGercra. recommend an extra session of con- ately and directly by reports caleulat- | 1549 Minford Place, Bronx, for me The resolution against Sigmanism | battle last night. | perform all the labor get something ~ Fee fee es gr is demanded by the voters d to raise or depress it, or only more | ' 3 for q- | Teads as follows: The community was startled when | out of this speed-up and increased ie ‘Mawitne of the flooded region. An extra ses- e Pp 9 pose of making articles for the N: ‘ : stent a : Open Air Meetings Tuesday. - “ subtly by inside information of/tjonal Press Bazaar in Madison | “Whereas, the Sigman clique is di-| an outburst of rifle f took place | production by reducing the hours of Madison J sth St. Speak-| Sion, the administration supporters changes in supply which always do| Square on October 6, 7, 8 and 9. Vol-|rectly responsible for bringing about |a little past midnight. This was fol-| labor, so that all should get employ- ers: Ch rer and fear, might yield to popular clamor someway manage to leak out to|unteers are urged to report there|the ten months’ destructive civil war|lowed by indiscriminate shooting from | ment and high wages to cover the in- Philip I and yote recompense to some of the friends of the personnel in office, re- | for working any evening. in our union, and machine guns, the steel-jacketed | creased cost of living? Rutgers Sam Don, Poorer victims for the damage done cent events seem, in the opinion of | = * 4 “Whereas, the Joint Board has/lets whining about the countryside.| “Therefore, to improve conditions George Primoff, M. ne and A, them by government laxity in control, olitician-brokers’ here, to bear out | Soccer Club In Bensonhurst. {courageously met and bravely with-| They have a range of over three! Local 1 stru All the plumbers’ acl and thus spoil the bankers’ plan to p , | ; x L l ‘ ; Herbet J b 3 Mark Hanna’s famous dictum: “A| The Red Star Soccer Sport Club is | stood all the attacks and provocations | miles. | bosses in G r New York imme- + mortgage the entire inundated region | senator who takes a cash bribe when | organizing a branch in Bensonhurst. of the Sigman, Ninfo and company| ‘The mine is scheduled to open scab jdiately lined up against them and 2F 1D. thru the “relief corporations” Hoover | he can get tips on the market instead, | For information see E. Gaddesoff, the | clique during the past ten months, | on Monday, and the mine guards told | ¢ven declared a lo ‘k-out. , More than! Unit 2F, 1D meets M 6:30 has organized. is a fool.” | Progressive Center, 1940 Benson Ave. | and a fanciful story this moming of re-| that, the entire Building Trades Em-|, m, at 89 East 10th St. Al Werte es i ae Teo | er et M “Whereas, after ten months of the pelling an attack by six heavily armed | ployers’ Association took the leader-| hors must attend. | Judge Lindsey Answers| Dr. Lieber At Cooperative. most vicious attacks on the part of| miners, The fact that in spite of the| Ship of the plumbers’ bosses and * * . | | } Fake Charges; Records His Personal Property DENVER, Sept. 16.—Former Judge Ben B. Lindsey of the Denver Juven- ile Court today answered charges | filed with the Denver Bar Associa- relation to any filed case in the court. {3 There is no power that has any legal will take no chances on their im- to take them away from me. I} | Center, B. Lieber, M.D., Dr. P. H. ‘for children under ten, an appropriate 5 | the Co-operative Colony, 2700 Bronx | Park East (Lexington Avenue sub- | way to 180th St., then shuttle to Al- \lerton Avenue station) is offering | free health talks from the working | | class viewpoint every Sunday morn-! Chicago Girl Fined for Part in Sacco-Vanzetti and determined to defend rights to the end, and “Whereas, the Madison their Square Garden meeting was a mass demon-| stration of the strength and solidarity of the workers against the aisruptive| re-establish unity in our organiation }and union conditions in the shops.” footprints remained of the six men ma the populace around here to | smile Jeeringly at the yarn of the “battle.” * * * Broadeast Strike Appeal. MARTINS FERRY, Ohio, Sept. 16. 'B.-M.T. Head Confers ‘With Counsel as Court | talists against the plumbe “What did the U. A. leaders do? | Did they mobilize the entire strength of the International union behind the | Brooklyn plumbers? No! “Did they line up the rest of the | building trades unions so as not to the ditch and betrayed.” The progressive candidates are: for president, Irving Weiss; for vice! president, Walter Detlefsen; for re- All Daily Worker tend and all par its must be re nted at the Daily Worker con- ference next Wednesday, 8 p. m., at 108 East 14th St. Agents must To Outlaw Ku Klux From Pennsylvania Pioneers Meetings. machinations of the bureaucratic ma- work with scabs on the jobs? No! tion by Philip S. Van Cise that Lind- | ing. | chine, and |The federal injunction which prac- ‘What did the U. Aol hee The following Pioneer sections will sey had removed some of the “shame At 10 a, m. for children, always in| “Whereas, in order to regain con- |tically prohibits picketing in Ohio is They pene 4G the ae kes meet this week. All children who} PITTSBURGH, Sept. 16.—Affida- records” of the court at the time ‘he | English, on alternating Sundays for trol of the inductee end fede bite partially circumvented by striking aoe oe Dien cieerder ie aoutee. want to join are invited to attend the vits of a sensational character have was ousted, by publicly burning the | those under and those over ten years|union conditions in the shops, the | Miners here who have broadcasted an | sion ahd lobbied site Ais» Homa meeting in the section where they | been drawn up and are scheduled to recotds in question. | of age, if weather permits outdoors. | yank and file of the workers must be|2PPeal by radio thruout the valley |against the workersand thus prac- live. be filed in federal court here shortly “I have not destroyed any court| At 11 a. m. for adults, in the au-| united, it is therefore here, as follows: | tically betrayed the interests of the| On Saturday at 2 p. m.: before noon tomorrow, in the suit to | records,” declared Lindsey. | ditorium, on ee nane Sundays in| “Resolved that we pledge to con- eve oe Ee go to work here; do | rank os file plumbers. é Upper Bronx, 1347 Boston Road; | oust the Ku Klux Klan from Penn- | “ " * ; = Yiddish and English. 4 + ms |not take bread from our starvin aga 71 | aulvania 7 iza- The Dorrie neve acer ed are | Suter. Siatenbee eee. | tinue to support the Joint Board and | abies.” Sarving | “The fight of the Brooklyn plumb- ue Eh 2 : 110th E EN ee so ee ee ee char CE Sepiop | for children under ten, an appropriate | Be se ere cece nae a The U. S. marshall has searched |¢TS Was in the interests of all the) 90's eiggrenaen ips gle C 1 for former klansmen who ave destroyed thousands of | ; |conduct an energetic and persistent lumbers. A victory there would have|25 East 2nd St.; Brownsville, 63 Lib- ses age Ue PT 5 such records before. The ones I have | talk and answers to questions, at propaganda among the Italian ele-|¢Very book of precedents on federal Pp pega eke all. buildi jes | erty Ave. have been ousted by the imperial wiz- ethiciad ledving the cout svere| 1 8 m. for-adults, in Yiddish, on| © one tian. Ge ¢| statutes, but does not as yet see any| Meant much for all building trades | °"Y F : ard, according to their own charges... retained on leaving the co were Poods, | ment of our trade for the purpose 0: way in which he can legally: inter- workers. Local members lost be- Co-operative House, Sunday at 11 at hig spared affidavit ki 4 preserved from destruction only long |lining them up with the Joint Board| W@Y ™ di re satsiadl cause they were not supported, left in| a. m.; Lower Bronx, 600 East 140th | have Prepared Silcayi> aa ae enough to be sure that they had no} |as a.decisive factor in the struggle to | fee with the radio. % ‘ious accusations against certain high St., Friday at p. m.; Bath Beach, 1940 Benson Ave., Friday at 6.30 p. m. * * - officers and purporting to reveal, the ‘alleged inner workings of the organi- zation. Dance for Daily Worker. proper use.” Mass Protest Meetings | Ord Threat Jail Conding secretary, Thomas De Tough- International Costume Ball given) WANTED — MORE READERS! A oe | Ju ge egre S LaW)Order FEALENS AM eich; for secretary-treasurer, Rob-|¥,E™Nch, 6, Section 5, W. P.. Sat-| ARE YOU GETTING THEM? had to do with young girls and women, CHICAGO, II. Boot. aes te fendes | ioe ,, oe ener ite, | Urday , September 24th at 2700 Bronx | ‘ who had come to him and confided in| D’Angelo, eighteen-year-old high | | ‘Threatened with jail unless he an-| Pot Tonnon, ‘Thomas il Goce Park East. Admission 35¢. Benefit | him their troubles so that he might | school girl who was arrested by the Not Hand to Stow sx: questions concerning the man- Ronee We ina BBE GEOLBS tof DAILY WORKER. PAMALGAMATED | | help them. | Chicago police three times during the | ipulation of I. R. T. stock by B. M. T.|* For HPs Gon hea Bae Ralls : Bakers’ Loc. No. 166 “It has meant the saving of thous-| Sacco-Vanzetti protest meetings in|} | officials, Gerhard Dahl, president of | SERENE | DOBTCE Oe Hey, Night Workers’ Section. Meets 1st Saturday ands of homes that the records could | that city, was fined $100 and costs by |the B. M. T., is conferring with coun- | |George Rockman, Wm. | Frick and Wm. Murtha. Goldin, Fred + in the month at General membership meeting of the i t ft yy . t 3468 Third Avenue, destroy,” said Lindsey. | Judge William R, Fetzer in a Chicago e S$ fi Sy ums. sel: to determine whether or not to Ror ekattination bo Ed. Ad Night Worke stion will be held Bronx, N. pabcsSllantlos Sacra | municipal court last Tuesday. ; jappeal the Supreme Court order di- a Fly Be Wed ae next Tuesday, 3 p. m., at 108 East Ask fo El Leading several demonstrations and | jrecting him to answer questions put Mic sath RS he EARS ae : Jack Stachel, head of the even Farmers i in Jury | |parades of protestants against the| CHICAGO, Sept. 16, (FP). — The | him by Samuel Untermyer, special | ~ & ae fi o% d: Ea organization department will report 4 Of Mrs. Sweetin Case; | killing of the two Italians, ‘Ancoea! ‘ jcounsel for the Transit Commission.| . oy ence, board: Ed. Amann, on ‘the Fifth } Say Killed for Preacher MOUNT VERNON, IIl., Sept. 16.— The jury that will try Mrs. Elsie Sweetin on charges of murdering her | | was twice roughly handled by the po- |lice. At one time her clothes were | torn almost completely from her. On her third arrest she was held for) |some time in the psychopathic ward | of a municipal hospital, but the ex- | police drive to railroad radicals like Aurora d’Angelo, the Sacco-Vanzetti demonstrator, to the lunatic asylum is a good thing but unfortunately it is not quite legal. been changed, the police can go ahead When the law has | Dahl's claim that the questions put to him were of a “strictly private nature” were waived by the court or- der, relieving him of answering ques- tions concerning his own financial operations. Fred Maier and Jack Mullane. For outside sentry: Thos. Mulrenin. For inside sentry: Chas. Klein, BIRMINGHAM, Ala., Sept. 16. — Eighteen men were indicted yester- | ational Convention of Election of officers will the also take Place e, Party. Little ‘Blue I Books Only complete York All “Haldman-Julius stock in New Publ : ; with their put-’em-awa; rogram. ay i SHAS, tht *onc |] New and back numb: husband, that she might wed Rev. | amining physicians were forced to ad- These eentlinente ene fee the pday cA connection with recent flog-| Books, monthly lpg 2 Lawrence M. Hight, her lover, was | mit that she was normal and above |): BOE ae re) Brees Rete: Cultu Advertise your union ‘meetings completed in circuit court here today. | the average in intelligence and she tee Se pee Sea i pe tens I. L. D. Conference for | Some i those who are named are HAUNTED BOOK SHOP here. For information write to ea connecte Eleven farmers, married men with children are on the panel. The other was released. | In assessing the fine against her, that legislation enabling the authori- ties to. shut up native radicals in Detroit on Sept. 21 with the kidnaping and | flogging of Arthur Hitt, a Negro. | __ 575 Pacific St. Brooklyn, N. Y. The DAILY WORKER | ; : Advertising Dept. i i ‘ ; | Shortly after he was flogged, Hitt sold | @ ‘ juror Is a garageman. Q a x f *, y zged, | genie: aatonched of both sides et gd Ags her under six |asylums while they deport those of | A general conference of the Detroit 4 ¢9 acre farm for a price far below |||Phone Stuyvesant 3816 See Nex Jt | svretentieetedrto peimads todas ith PI : |foreign birth will be sought at the oa eens ee ae cated an its value, It is said that Louis C. Al-/]] John’g Restaurant | rei aera lee A on ednesday, Sept. 21 a e “ a $44 i testimony to start at the afternoon : |first opportunity. os bright, one of those named in the in-| cb 5 . sched a r . j paketaet ¥ ey Deport the Naturalized | No Law Handy. headquarters of the organization, | gictment is persoital attorney for W.| SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DIREES Spead Your Vacation at Bre a UN | regs A | “The detective bureau’s ambitious | 1967 Grand River, 7 J. Worthington, who according to where all radicals meet. td oe | Citizens Say Patrioteers) program,” says Judge Olson, “is in| The ,delegates and active workers |oourt records, was the purchaser of ||302 E. 12th St, New York Eight Planes Enter | — some measure made impossible be-| Will take up the question of repre- | Hritt's propert | | Sas ae, Deportation not only of aliens, but N. Y.-Spokane Flight ASight powerful monoplanes have entered the New York to Spokane non-stop derby scheduled to start next Wednesday, Captain Charles C. Collyer, in charge of the event, an- nounced yesterday. The entries closed last midnight but Captain Collyer said there might be several additional entries to be re- lof naturalized citizens convicted of | | seditious acts is urged by the Veter- ans of Foreign Wars, an association | lof American ex-servicemen. | In a statement issued from its na- tional encampment, now being held at | Providence, Rhode Island, the organi- | zation announces that it has passed a resolution “urging the deportation of all aliens convicted of seditious | lit out. cause we have neither the law nor the institutional machinery to carry | It is entirely possible, as some have intimated, that psychopathic ex- | aminations could be abused as a means of political revenge. I do not say or believe that it has been done or is being done now but it might happen sometime. That is a reason why the psychopathic laboratory should not become a bureau under police control sentation to the National Conference. A program will also be worked out \at this time for enrolling Sacco-Van- |zetti supporters into active work for the I. L. D. The conference was previously an- nonuced for the 20th, but the,change was made to avoid conflict with other important migetinna on that date. ae WAL fel. Lehigh 6023. br. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST Office Hours: 9:20-12 A. M, 2-8 P.M. Daily Except Friday and Sunday. 249 EAST 115th STREET Cor. Second Ave. New York. ||)Dr. J . Mindel Dr. L. Hendin Health Food Vegetarian Restaurant 1600 Madison Ave. PHONE: UNIVERSITY £265. UNITY k Ww orkers’ Co-operative SUMMER RESORT POR oy Ewes WHOLESOME EGE acts, and also urging that naturalized | Sa tri fy | AKIAN MEAL | piles te on al size who ae covid of uch 6 |Sg "ow the’ inberatory shod be) DISHWASHER WANTED | Surgeon Dentists Scientific "Vegetarian | | it White Rocke Mts, | Workers Party Holds [2nd deported.” any an eeu haa judge’s whitewash of the city’s ae i pecs Club | [eon 803 Phone Stuyv. 10119 | ea Pe nigig All conveniences; ali Bibi esis neyo el Aut ‘Workers te Ss ffer fare Taaual chbarvatlba on rail- | Se ee | ANYTHING IN PHOTOGRAPHY BE DO w TO DRINK vale retheit” Office : f 0 Ss su several thousand workers with the roading two men to the nut ward y Comrade and Teacher 4 STUDIO OR OUTSIDE WORK Lexington Ave, is Unity and H Co-op- 4 message of Communism. . . 1448 who had been torn out of their home | OLGIN if Patronize Our Friend N W Sollins Dinin Room erative axis oexinsten ; The ralifes were held in ditterent) iM Price-Cutting War |. midnight. This was done on or-|1 1 greet on this day. ' {| SPINSS STUDIO’ | | oe Leek come] SuasES aeavs cStpeestive ou sections of the cities. One was held | ders rubber stamped with a judge’s D 1 64 (Geek JA vei cars, ted BG j Ci ndtelpaetehe wat y Day (er an Aye. cor. 1m at Harlem at Fifth Ave. and 110th] DETROIT, Sept. 16 (FP).—“Ford| signature by a clerk. The men were} avid Berkingoff. panies, axhed. £40 ka bors Chan lade | Be rir SERVICE Nb Boe St. and General Motors are preparing for | released on habeas corpus | SA RR ser: $| none (Rstablished 1887.) |! ast 14th Srteet Behe York | The others were in Williamsburg at |a great automobile war,” declares The | ——————— - —— A SS | Grand St. Extension and in the! Ford Worker, a fortnightly paper is- j Airy, Large | 4 Bronx, 163rd St. and Prospect Ave. sued by the radical workers in the Young Couple wants room To members of a nae H ina 2 Bho Stee been Ford plant. “Like all wars the gen- ; m CARPENTERS’ LOCAL 2090. . R Hall Yo W ker: Le erals sit back where it is safe and/||} with comrades or sympathizers; i Meeting ooms and era ion 0S ume ung or Ss ALNUE | comfortable while the workers do the ||| centrally located. Preferably West August Ahlquist TO HIRE Functionaries Meeting front line fighting—the workers are ||| Side. Call all day Stuyvesant 0576. 6) 1 the ones that will be speeded up, mov- de died on September 14, 75 years Suitable for Meetings, Lectures siven by BRANCH 6, SECTION 5, W. P. The District Executive Committee |ed around, laid ‘off, wages cut, and of age. and Dances in the is calling a meeting of functionaries | ruthlessly fired in the coming automo- g t d S t b 24 : to take up a number of very impor-| bile war. pe bi gtgta avadl eon Czechoslovak a ur ay, ep em er. tant problems. The meeting will be| ‘When another world war breaks ‘k ‘ held, Monday, September 19, at 7 P. m, at 108 East 14th St. Every mem-| ber of an execntive committee must be present. out, as it surely will in a few years, these same workers will be drafted [pees to save the boss brand of de- moeracy, like we did 10 years ago.” in the vicinity of 1st to about 8th| freets, East Side. Call or write ‘a John Pol, 87 St. Marks Place. . 40-46 74th Heights, L. I. Geo. Miller, Fin. Sec’y. Street, Jackson Workers House, Inc, 347 E. 72nd St. New York Rhinelander 6097. ‘Telephone: 2700 BRONX PARK EAST 35e. BENEFIT DAILY WORKER. ADMISSION

Other pages from this issue: