The Daily Worker Newspaper, July 10, 1928, Page 5

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)

‘ i » y l “a ‘ rage rive New Jersey SCOTT NEARING, WEISBORD WILL BE SPEAKERS Demonstrate Against Imperialism | NEWARK, N. ly 9. — The | Ratification Convention of the| Workers (Communist) Party inj} New Jersey to ratify state candi- | dates chosen for the 1928 elections | will be held on August 5 at 10 a, m. | at the Workers Progressive Center, 98 Mercer St., here. It will be pre- ceded by a Red Proletarian Banquet on Saturday evening, August 4, at 8 p. m. at the same place. Since this date is the same as that of the 14th anniversary of the open- ing of the last World War, the ban- quet will be made the occasion for a tremendous demonstration against the danger of a new world war, and the menace of American Imperial- ism. Among the speakers at the banquet and at the convention will be Scott Nearing, noted authority on American imperialism and Work- ers (Communist) Party candidate for Governor of New Jersey, and Albert Weisbord, leader of the Pas- saic Strike and candidate for U. Senator. In a letter sent to various labor and fraternal organizations through- out the state and vicinity, the fol-! lowing note was stressed: “The election campaign this year 4s of the greatest significance to) the workers of this state. Now, Jer- | sey, the home of big corporations and special interests, notorious for | its anti-labor record, is ruled by the | democratic machine through Mayor | Hague and by the republican ma- chine through U. S. Senator Edge, | the corporation lawyer. Those two! parties are functioning more and| more openly, as agents of Big Bus-| iness. Injunction after injunction | has been issued against workers on strike. Free speech has been vio- lated in many cities. Police terror and brutality have been practiced with impunity as in the Passaic tex- | tile strike. Unemployment has been | steadily rising, but no relief has/ been given to the unemployed in the | industrial centers. The killing of | labor bills in the New Jersey legis- | lature is a constant practice. Big, Business, especially the railroad and | public service interests, dominate the. government of New Jersey. “The New Jersey State Ratifica-| tion Convention is part of the Na- tional Election Campaign of the Workers (Communist) Party and will be the beginning of the cam- paign among the New Jersey work- ers. It will mobilize them against the Hague democratic machine, against the Edge republican ma- chine, against the socialist party, which today is following in the foot- steps of the capitalist parties.” MANY FEATURES IN LABOR UNITY July Number the Best) on Record Thomas Myersecough, provisional secretary of the National Confer-| ence of newly elected’ officials in} the districts of the United Mine Workers and representatives of the nnorganized, tells in July Labor! Unity, now ready for sale, just why the historic call for the formaticn! of a new miners’ union was issued | by that conference. | Plain Story } In a plain spoken article he ee: lates the history of the fight to in- still democracy into the United Mine Workers of America and break the strangling death grip of the corrupt Lewis machine. The miners wanted to control and save their union, and Lewis forbade them. He wanted to destroy it. By use of: gang tactics, rotten bourough sys- tem and general vote stealing, open | betrayal to the employers, he has about succeeded. Myerscouzh tells the workers how the miners can sill have a fighting union. Other articles deal with vhe re-| cent amalgamation conference of railroad workers, the plans to ur- ganize the marine transport work- ers, the New Bedford situation at present, the British and Chinese unions, the Fourth Conference of the Red International of Labor Unions (by Jack Johnstone, chair- man of the American delegation there), working women, minerst re- Hef and other tepics. Henry George Weiss has another of his pointed’ short stories, There are many il- lustrations. Labor Unity is the organ of the Trade Union Educational League, 2 West 15th St, New York City. It sells for $2 a year, or 20 cents a copy. WOMEN ORGANIZERS -A special meeting of Unit an Section Women Work organizers will be held tomorrow at 8 p. m. at the Workers’ Center, 26-28 Union Square. Among the matters that will be discussed will be the role of women in the present election cam- paign. - cratic Parties. Latest in the Preparation For the Coming Imperialist War om Be OS ads a PAS Tit ‘ Ba NAMES Sse! : U. S. militarists are hailing the Sikorsky bomber shown above as the latest word in the technique of siaughtering the workers imperialist war. Photo at left shows new bomber in full view; .at right plane is shown in flight. SP Platforms Scheduled There will be a district speakers’ conference «n Saturday, July 14, at 2 p. m. at 26-28 Union Square, on the fifth floor, to discuss the plat- forms of the Republican and Demo- D. Benjamin, Dis- trict Agitprop Director, will lead the discussion. Speakers’ conferences will be held regularly every two weeks during the election campaign to analyze and discuss the important issues in the present election cam- paign, All unit, section and sub-section agitprop directors, all members of speakers’ classes being held in the various sections, all speakers as- signed to open-air meetings by the district agitprop department, all who speak at open-air meetings ar- ranged by the sections should attend this conference. The conferences are held for the purpose of preparing the speakers for the various open-air meetings on the subjects that they will have to discuss and to prepare the agitprop directors for the discussions that they will have to organize in the units in connection with the present election campaign. The following bulletins for open- air speakers and for use as a basis in unit discussions are ready in the office of the District Agitprop De- partment, 25-28 Union Square, fifth floor: Hints to open-air speakers; hints on how to conduct open-air meet- ings; why and how workers should j celebrate the fourth of July and the American Revolution; the Nature of the Communist Electoral Platform and Campaign (containing a section on Why We Participate in Election Campaigns, What Our Platform Should Contain, Some differences between the Socialist Party and the Workers Party, Nature of Commu- nist Immediate Demands, Our Atti- tude Toward the Petty Bourgeoisie); Party Program on. Unemployment; War Against Nicaragua. There are also leaflets on the Workers (Communist) Party stand on the War in Nicaragua, the Un- employment Problem in the United States, the Disarmament Proposals of the Soviet Union and the Trac- tion Question. Rebecca Grecht Will ‘Speak at Section Meet A~ general section membership meeting of Section 5 will be held tonight at 8:30 p. m., at 2075 Clin- ton Ave. Rebecca Grecht will re- port on the immediate steps to be taken in the election campaign. Every member of the section has been urged to attend this meeting, which will be the most important one held up till now. A roll call will be taken. THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, JULY 10, 1928 te Electio n Camp align | a EAKERS WILL Workers Party Activities SACCO-VANZETTI | MEET SATURDAY ieee ‘Discussion of Party| s $ will be held , at 101 W. 2ith s 2-2 Meet. section 2 and 3 will meet 1 at 6:30 p,m, at 101 W. 27th St noon 3 | | | | Unit FD1 | Unit FD1 will hold an important meeting tomorrow at 6:30 p. m. at the Freiheit Building, 30 Union Square, first floor. All members are urged to attend. Subsection 2C. A general membership meeting of Subsection 2C will be held tonight at 6:30 p. m. at 101 West 27th St. All members must attend. pxection 3C Executive, ecutive committee of sub- will hold its meeting on s The section Women Unit Organizers. Unit women's work organizers will meet on Wednesday | Workers Cente § oI | Important matters “will be taken up, | jncluding the organizing of Women | for the election campaign of the Party ) All organizers must attend Women's Federation Meet. The Action Committee of the New York Working Women’s Federation will meet Thursday, July 12, at 26 Union Square. All members are asked to attend. * * * Unit 8K, 1F. Unit 3E, 1F of the Workers (Com- munist) Part will hold its regular | meeting: at 6:15 p. m. at | 27tn St. | ee ee Labor and Fraternal YORKVILLE I. L. D. The Yorkville English Branch of the International Labor Defense will hold an open-air meeting today at 8:00 p. m. at 79th St. and First Ave. Speaker: Louis Baum. All comrades are urged to be present. Jewelry Workers Outing. The Jewelry Workers Welfare Club will hold its first annual outing on Sunday, Those who attend will meet at the Dyckman St. Ferry at 9 a. m.; from there, they will go to the Inter- state Park, where an interesting pro- gram of entertainment has been ar- ranged. ee. . An outing will be held on Saturday, July 21, at 12 noon, at Pleasant Bay Park, Bronx, under the auspices of the New York Section, International Labor Defense. Take Bronx Park Subway or “L” to 177th St., then take Unionport car to end of line. Free busses to park. Council 10. Council 10, of the United Councils of Working Class Women will hold a lecture July 10 at 1940 Benson Ave., Brooklyn, at 8:30 p. m. The subject of the lecture will be “The New Stage of the Women's Movement in Ameri- ca Today.” Ray Ragozin will be the speaker. ; * * Working Class Women. Council No, 4, of Williamsburg will hold a lecture this evening at 29 Graham Ave., Brooklyn, at 8:30 p. m The lecture will be given by Dr, Hoffer. The subject to be discussed ie the election campaign. Council No. 22, the English speak- ing council of the United Co-opera- tive Houses, will hold a lecture, to- day at 8:30 p. m, in the Audi- torlum. Lecturer to be announced Subject—Election campaign. 21 of Flatbush, will Couhcil No, hold a lecture tomorrow evening at The 121 Nostrand Avenue, Brooklyn, lecture will be given by Grac bell. The subject will be Women in Industry.” Iron Workers Meet. A general membership meeting of the Iron & Bronze Workers Union Coney Island Branch will be held this evening, at 7 E. 15th | A business meeting of the Coney St. at 8 p.m. A report about the Island Branch will be held on Wes. outcome of the elections will be given ie July 11, at 8:30 p. m. at 2901 Mermaid A financial report about the union's Ave,, Coney Island activity will also be rendered. =f purs- | Wednesday, 6:30 p. m. at 101 West | 27th St. All executive members must | attend. A roll call will be taken. Communist Ratification’ Convention Will Open Sta WILL REPORT ON ‘Labor Defender Photos to be Included The International Red Aid, from a }) © | cabled the International Labor De- re od y | | fense in this country for the use a 2 Leaders Will | of alt available photographs used \ ; | in its monthly pictorial the “Labor eak Satur | : pea uu. day | Defender” and all other _photo- Four revorts on the recent Con-| &Taphs that can be secured on Sacco gréss of the Red International of | and Vanzetti. These are to be used Labor Unions will be made at a|in the preparation of a historical meeting to be held Friday evening | film to be shown throughout Europe July 13 at Manhattan Lyceum, 44 | during the coming first anniversary East 4th St. |in August. The Fourth Congress which was| Soon after the murder of Sacco held at Moscow is believed to have | and Vanzetti last year, all Ameri- marked a turning point in the out-| can movies concerning the event look of the militant labor movement were ordered destroyed. This was throughout the world. Reports on|done on the order of William H. the discussions, the nrogram and. Hayes, motion picture czar, whose perspectives of the great congress | name was prominently mentioned in will be made by members e | connection with the recent oil scan- delegation who attended from the United States. These will include Ben Gitlow, vice-presidential candidaté6f” the Workers (Communist) Party, Jack’ W. Johnstone, national organizer for the Tradé Unional Educational League, and Chas. Zimmerman one of the leaders of the needle trades. John-J- Ballam, Acting district” or- ganizer of New York will be chair- man of the meeting. Because of the interest which has been aroused im the developments of the Fourth Congress, a large atten- dance is expected. The admission is 25 cents. GREEK CHAMBER IS DISSOLVED ATHENS, Greece, July 9. — The chamber of deputies was dissolved today in accordance with the de- mand of the newly appointed pre- mier Venizelos, who was called in- to power by the president after the great strike of the tobacco workers and soldiers in Greece. Venizelos, called the “strong man of Greece” was premier until several years ago, and his iron rule was again sum- moned when Greece was threatened with revolution at the time of the strike. The American Tobacco Company, which controls the factories where the rotten conditions forced the workers to strike, is said to have played a big hand in the re-instal- lation of the imperialist and labor- hating Venizelos. At present, reports from Greece state that the president, who offi- cially called Venizelos back to the premiership, and the premier, are clashing on the question which Ve- nizelos proposed, embodying a change in the voting system. ‘ The Wall Stree By PHILIP FRANKFELD. Those of us who have participated in Wall Street demonstrations on one occasion or another have ob- served an interesting phenomenon which deserves attention, This is the reaction on the part of the white collar slaves to our efforts. In the British Embassy demon- stration held a year ago, our line was not molested by the police at all. Perhaps it was due to the ex- cellent organization work; perhaps due to the fact that the cops were Irish. At any rate at the very be- ginning our line of march was not interfered with or broken up by the police. . It was the office workers, the \ ‘ clerks and typists, who jeered at us, » who laughed, sneered and tried to stop us. | During the meeting our speakers ;were all showered with clips, pins ‘ink bottles, the ink was of many ‘colors. They tore down our ban- ners and yelled down our speakers Same Objectors, When the demonstration was held in Wall St. as a protes' inst the ' brutality and murderous actions of the National Guard on the Rocke- feller mines in Colorado, again it was the white collar slaves who bore down on our handful of comrades, tore down their signs; and beat up some of us, In the last Wall Street demon- stration held on July 3rd, the vexy same thing took place. While the; police were determined to cut the ‘demonstration short, and were wel! |prepared for us, nevertheless .the Wall St. hoodlums booed, jeered threatened, and at one point raised the cry of “Lynch the Red,” “Kil! the dirty Bolshevik,” and other such | cries were heard as Comrade Minor was yanked off the car and marched off to the station house. One little $12 a wés shipping boy was so en-j raged at us that he kicked the car with all his might, and finding that he could not make an impression ir that fashion, picked up one of our signs and tore it to small pieces. What is the reason for these vio- lent reactions on the part of these white collar workers? What can be done about the matter? ‘ Underpaid. In the first place, we must un- derstand that these office workers receive miserable wages. But their proximity to the world’s greatest banking institutions; the illusions which they still cherish about being able to duplicate the careers of any one of their “heroes,” the education they have undergone in the public schools plus their prejudices, and ig- norance of general social problems make them into excellent inflamma- ble material against the Party and League. The yearly bonus which some of them receive in their var- ious places of employment, are like a bone thrown to a dog; they gral t White Collar Slaves it up eagerly and are very thank- ful for it. Even the elementary expressions of the class struggle failed to move these workers; the call of ‘unionism fell on empty ears. Are we to permit these white col- Jar slaves to retain their hostilit towards us? No—absolutely not! The least we can do is to neutralize them towards our movement and towards our ideas, Many of them may never be on our side. Many of them will refuse at all times to listen to us. Others in the course of time will have their illusions de- stroyed; still others will just be in- different; and a few may be won for our cause. This will require our issuing lerflets to them; this wil! mean that a campaign to unionize | them may have to be carried on. 600,000 Office Workers. New York is a commercial cen- ter and employs about 600,000 of- fice workers. These office workers will have to be organized, will have to be won for the class struggle We will have to educate them to the principles of our Party and of our League. This does not mean that we will concentrate only on these white collar workers. Our main em- phasis will and must always be on the unskilled and the semi-skilled workers; and our main work will al- ways be amongst the masses of un- organized and exploited youth and adult workers. | dal. | In addition to the films takef in | Europe, the photos already sent by the I. L. D. will serve as slides to complete the pictorial record of the black deed of last year. The Inter- national Labor Defense, through its hundreds of locals, will be the heart of the movement observing the first anniversary in this country. Memo- rial meetings are being arranged in many cities amd the next issue of the “Labor Defender” will fea- ture new photos and articles on Sacco and Vanzetti. JUGO-SLAY JAILS ARE HELL-HOLES Rats in Food, Disease; | Indescribable Tortures | JUGO SLAVIA, July 9.—The prison near the small town of Po- jarevac is to receive the young Communists who were recently con- victed in Belgrade. The prison of Pojarevac differs in no way from the other awful prison of Jugo- slovakia and is called the Hell of Pojarevac. Political prisoners are treated as the worse kind of crim- inals and have no political rights. The prison administration expro- priates the sums that are supposed to be used for the prisoners and al- lows them to starve. No one is con- cerned about it, since this art of thievery of the state officials is a system in Jugoslavia. , The dirtiness of these prisons surpasses all description. Oftm the prisoners find cooked rats and mice in their food. One prisoner who once showed the director such a cooked mouse, was so mishandled that he lost consciousness. | There are no facilities for bathing in this prison. The cells are covered with human refuse and are} never disinfected. Among the pris- oners there are about forty: syphil- | ities who were not accepted by other prisons. Tuberculosis runs rife. aaa ss THE ARCHITECTURAL IRON, BRONZE & STRUCTURAL WORK- ERS UNION meets every second and fourth Tuesday of the month, at Rand Schoe ast 15th Sta, Headqui St, ‘Telephone: 0144 and 2194, A, Rosenfeld, Secretary. East 15th Stuyvesant Advertise your union meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City Patronize LERMAN BROS. Stationers and Printers 29 EAST 14th STREET Nie Corner Union Square Tel, w—nquin 3356, 8843, | | MARY WOLFE STUDENT OF THE DAMROSCH CONSERVATORY PIANO LESSONS Moved to 2420 Bronx Park East Near Co-operative Colony. Apt. 5H Telephone EASTABROOK 2459 Special rates to students from PLAN NATIONAL MINERS RELIEF MEETNEXTWEEK Pittsburgh Conference to Attract All Cities The National Conference on Min- ers’ Relief to be held on July 14 and 15 at Pittsburgh by the Na- tional Miners’ Relief Committee will have delegates from every city in the union in which a Miners’ Relief Committee is functioning, and will discuss plans for the vigorous con- duet of the relief-campaign. Dele- gates who will arrive prior to the calling of the conference, or who will stay after the conference ad- journs, will Visit the various mining camps in the vicinity and will view for themselves the suffering and privations of the striking miners and their families. The National Miners Relief Com- mittee at 799 Broadway, will be re- presented by a delegate; to. be elec- ted at a meeting of its executive committee, and the various language conferences for miners’ relief, will each be represented at Pittsburgh next week. Reports Must Be In Fanny Rudd, Secretary of the National Miners’ Relief Committee of New York, in a statement issued last night, urges all section relief committees and stations to turn in their reports at once, if they have not as yet done so, because the per- sgn who collected the most money during the last Tag Days’ drive, will be given a trip to Pittsburgh and a tour of the mining camps free of charge. The National Miners’ Relief Com- mittee also asks that all sympathi- zers who have automobiles that can be used for the trip to Pittsburgh communicate at once with the com- mittee at 799 Broadway. German Workers Meet Representatives of various Ger- man workers’ organizations, unions, and Sickness and Death Benefit So- cieties will meet in conference on Friday evening, July 13th, at 8 p. m., at the Labor Temple, 84th Street near 2nd Avenue, to form a per- manent German Committee for Mi- ners’ Relief. Conference calls have been sent out by a Provisional Committee. All German organizations, or organiza- tions having a large German mem- bership, have been asked to send two delegates to the conference. The plight of the strNing miners is daily | becoming more desperate, and all workers should,unite in relief con- ferences to support them. MINER IS KILLED IN FALL OF COAL POTTSVILLE, Pa., July 9. — William Ochs, 42, was killed today when he was caught under a,fall of coal at Bear Gap colliery, at Tre- mont. Ochs is survived by a wi- dow and seven small children. The Bear Gap is one of the large group of contractor-infested mines in this district. ‘ | Union Engineers In Ohio Win Increase MIDDLETOWN, O., July 9 (FP) -—Union engineers’in the Middle- town waterworks will get $2,000 af- ter-January 1, a $200 yearly raise. They are members of Local 924, Steam & Operating Engineers. Phone Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet. 302 E. 12th ST. NEW YORK Health Food Vegetarian Restaurant 1600 MADISON AVE. PHONE: UNIVERSITY 5865 All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S VEGETARIAN HEALTH RESTAURANT 558 Claremont P’kway Bronx Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 19§ SECOND AVE. Bet. 12th and 13th Sts. Strictly Vegetarian Food. WE ALL MEET at the NEW WAY CAFETERIA 101 WEST 27th STREET NEW YORK the Co-operative House. Forum to Donate | To Miners Relief The Labor Temple Poetry Forum, held every Tuesday evening at the Labor Temple, 2nd 14th Ave, and St., will hold a Proletarian Poets’ Night tonight. Among the poets who will read from their own work | will be Harold Anton, Herman Spector, David George Plotkin, Da- vid P. Rerenberg and others. An- ton Romatka, director of the forum, announces that 25 per cent of the t be donated to the National Confer- ence for Miners Relief. proceeds from admission will FINANGIER DEAD, ~ FAMILY INSISTS | Share of Fortune BRUSSELS, July 9.—In consz- | quence of the various rumors con- jcerning Alfred Lowenstein’s death, his family today issued a statement |declaring that there was no douht |that he was dead and that all evi |dence proved that he had entered his plane at Croyden. and was not in it when it landed, and that all evidense showed that his death was due to an accident. Acting on legal advice, the fam- ily summoned all who were in the plane from which the financier is believed to have fallen to come tc Brussels and give depositions in an effort to establish legal evidence of his death. Settlement of the estate gives promise of becoming a matter of al- most unprecedented entanglement because of the vast interests in- volved and the mysterious manner | of Lowenstein’s disappearance. Even | if legal evidence of the death is | established, serious difficulties are | liable to arise if the body remains undiscovered, it is said, and it may be ten or even thirty years before the whole question of inheritance can be settled. SEARCH SEA FOR CHILIAN VICTIMS SANTIAGO, Chile, July 9 (UP) —The search at sea for possible sur- vivors of the Chilean army trans- port Angamos, destroyed on the} rocks Saturdays morning with the loss of nearly 309 lives, was held! up today by terrific gales which | forced ships to put out to sea to} ride out the storm. Two additional survivors were | found on the beach at Punta Chim- | pel today—two young men who had | been badly bruised, were suffering from exhaustion and the rigors of the severe winter weather. Numerous corpses were found | strewn along the rocky shore, and} intense cold. INDIA DELEGATES) ASSAIL BRITISP LABOR TRAITORS Withdraw From Fake Conference LONDON, July 9.—The post tion of the British Labor Party against independence for India way affirmed here in a statement issuec yesterday. The tion followec the sensational withdrawal from thr Commonwealth Labor Conferener last Wednesday of the entire In * dian delegation, led by Chamankal after a resolution demanding the in dependence of India was throwr out. The insinc y of the British la bor reformists revealed clearly the Indian delegates pointed out, by the fact that the resolution was no even read by the conference dele ~ gates or circulated. They furthe= charged that the British Labor Par. | ty was hostile to India’s deman. for independence and sympathetic to the Indian Statutory Commission headed by John Simon. A particularly scathing attach has been levelled against George Lansbury, Labor M. P., for his as sertion that t nterests of Indiar labor were “safeguarded by Britis! / labor representation on the Simor commission.” Japan Postpones 1928 Trans-Pacific Fiights TOKIO, July 9—All projectet< trans-Pacific flights for 1928 have ; heen called off by the . executive ! committee of the Imperial Aviatior; Society, Japanese imperialist.orgar.” ization. Present inability to buile Flanes that would “be expected te stand up” under the hazardous ven ture, was given as the reason. Foreign residents of Japan never took the project seriously, but th Japanese went so far as to collec 50,000 yen (about $25,000) to de tray expenses of the ventures They will hold this money, a report says, in the hope of making a tria in the crossing in 1929. farmers Arrested, ~— Erroneous Charges | JUGO SLAVIA : Brlic were arrested in the villag of Martinska on the 13th of Ma and brought to the prison of Sisal There they were so badly maltreate and beaten by the warden that thei+ whole body, especially the fae anv neck were covered with wounds. I!) went especially bad with Brlie, wh{/ after taking a few steps collapse? and was only brought back to con, sciousness after choking him an, pulling his hair. Both farmers are now being set free, since it has come out that thei conviction was an erroneous one, I. STERNBERG NEW WORKERS CENTER 26-28 Union Sq. 1 Flight Up NEW YORK CITY Individual Sanitary Service by Ex- perts—LADIES' HAIR BOBBING SPECIALISTS. Patronize a Comradely Barber Shop Unity Co-operators Patronize SAM LESSER | > | | Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailor | 1818 — 7th Ave. New York Between 110th and 111th Sts. Next to Unity Co-operative House it was apparent some of them had | Optometrist died after reaching land, where they ||} pyes Examined—Glasses Fitted | lay exhausted oe exposed to the ||! 916 Prospect Ave, Cor E, 162 St. nly six persons ar ni Cites Boe * known to have survived of the 295 | iralabhens eau 8448 or more aboard the vessel. Ne 3 ee ee Telephone Sta 6 No Tip Center Barber Shop phone Sees Dr. J. C. HOFFER Surgeon Dentist South 5th St., mear Marey Ave. ‘ Brooklyn, N, Y. Proletarian prices for proletarians PYCCKHM 3YBHOM BPAY Dr. JOSEPH B. WEXLER Surgeon Dentist practice. Moderate prices. SOND AV. NEW YORK Temple Courts Bldg. = “For Any Kind of Insurance” CARL BRODSKY 7 E. 42d St. New York City Telephone Murray ‘Hill 5550. =~ Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST Office Hours: 9:30-12 a.m., 2-8 p.m, Daily Except Friday and Sunday 249 HAST 115th STREET | Cor. Second Ave. New York |) Telephone Lehigh 6 4 Tel. Res, 167 Pulaski § Pulaski 1770, ‘Tel. Pulaski 5216. Insure with DAVID OSHINSKY GENERAL INSURANCE Office: 60 Graham Ave., Broo! Fire, Life, Public Liability, pensation, Automobile, Ac Health. a Dr. J. Mindel Dr. L, Hendin Surgeon Dentists 1 UNION SQUARE Room 803 Phone, Algonquin $183 S: WORKERS CENTER, Labor and Fraternal Organizations Attention! Airy, Light Rooms To Rent for OFFICES and MEETING ROOMS at the 26-28 Union Square. Elevator Service. Telephone Stuyvesant 1201.

Other pages from this issue: