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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