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rekce rive CITY ELECTION DRIVE SETS OFF First Sprint For Big Signature Quota (Continued from Page One) On Saturday the drive begins at 1:30 p. m., The Sunday work be- gins at 10 a, m. and. lasts until 1 p.m, Reports indicate an enthusiastic response to the work which is to be strengthened this week. Section 1 Meeting At a special meeting of the mem- bership of Section 1, downtown Manhattan, the response, and the spirit and willingness displayed, has proven again that the Party mem- bers are fully aware of the impor- tance of the campaign and are ready to do their best to make the cam- paign a success. Definite plans of how to carry +he campaign into the shops, fer. ories and the residential section , is well as how to extend the plan vf the campaign within the party were presented. A report by a district represen- tative on the immediate technical methods of approach in the process of signature getting was taken up. In line with the generai mobili- zation of the Party membership for the collection of signatures in the city each section has called a gen- eral membership meeting to take up the technical points in the drive and to discuss the campaign. The meet- ings scheduled for this purpose are: Tonight at 8 p. m. Astoria Gen- eral membership meeting at Bohe- mian Hall, Woolsey and Second Sts., Astoria, L. I. 6:30 p. m. Monday, July 16: Sec- tions 2 and 3 at 101 W. 27th St. 6 p. m. Monday, July 16: Wil- liamsburgh Section at 29 Graham Ave. WHITE GUARDIST BOMBER CAUGHT Rumanian. Espionage Aided Plot: (Special Cable To Daily Worker.) MOSCOW, July 11.—Two white guardists threw the bomb in the ante-room of the headquarters here at 5 p. m. on July 6 which killed one Red Guardist and seriously in- jured another. One of the bombers Georg Radkoviteh; 30; ex-member of the Imperial Page Corps, was shot dead, while the second bomber was caught in Podolsk, near Moscow. The bombers came last. week from ‘Paris via’ Rumania with the assis- tance of the Rymanian espionage lsewvice. Peasants aided in the hunt for the white guardist. BIG PICKET LINE RKERS PARTY | In order to “prote: * Where American Imperialism its growing imperialist interests in the Pacific and its Latin-American colonies, | Wall Street’s government in Washington is planning the construction of a new canal in Nicaragua. | Photo above shows site of the proposed canal, 'FARMER-LABOR’ PARTY FADING Ready To Merge With Old Parties CHICAGO, July 11—A resolution to combine the Farmer-Labor Party with the Prohibition Party was in- troduced at the conventions of the two parties today, after the Pro- hibition Party was confronted with a resolution to choose Hoover, Re- publican nominea, as their candi- date for president. The resolution was decided upon last night, the commit+e being in session until 2 a. m. today. It stated that the committee favored a coalition of the two parties dur- ing the 1928 campaign. | The Prohibition Party. voted to table the resolution until the plat-| form is decided upon. The Farmer- Labor convention started discussion of its platform without considering the resolution. The complete degeneration of the so-called Farmer-Labor Party is seen here in its willingness to en- dorse Al Smith or possibly even Hoover while making a pretense of attacking the reaction in both old parties. CLOAK COUNCIL MEETS TONIGHT Representatives from the shops | of cloak and dressmakers will to- | night hold their first. monthly con- ference of shop delegates at 5 p. m. in Webster Hall, 11th St. and Third Ave. The intense organization cam- | Greece, conducting an heroic fight,” Four Bodies Recovered in Pittsburgh Rivers PITTSBURGH, Pa., July 10. Pittsburgh rivers today had surren- dered the bodies of four persons who disap\~,~vd within the last few days during the heat spell. Late last night the bodies of two women were recovered from the Ohio River. It was believed that they were suicides. The bodies of} two boys, drowned while swimming } near Sharpsburg, were taken from the Allegheny River near the High- land Park bridge. URGE HELP FOR GREEK MILITANTS Flays Reformists For Betrayal MOSCOW, U. S. S. R. (By Mail). —In a statement issued here yes- terday by the Red International of Labor Unions, the workers of Greece who have undergone brutal treatment at the hands of the Greek fascists, headed at present by Ven- izelos, and the imperialist officials of the American Tobacco Company. in whose plant the strike originally broke out, were called upon to mob- ilize and continue their militant fight. The statement, which is ad- dressed to “the proletariat of and to “the proletariat of the whole world,” follows: Imprison Thousands. , Hundreds and thousands of fight- ers in the cause of the working class are thrown into prisons. The troops and the police have been mobilized against the workers. This struggle has been trans- formed into a spontaneous general strike of the Greek proletariat for paign prepared by the Joint Board of the Cloak and Dressmakers | Union’ and the Local Committee: of | the defense of its political rights and its organizations. Reformists Betray Workers. wy Natal FUR UNION WAGE. RAISE DRIVE ON Wkvr’s in Right Wing} Shops Join Campaign (Continued from Page One) and Wollin, 330 Seventh Ave. Seven workers in the former fac- tory and one of the leading mem- bers of the Joint Board, Irving Pot- | ash, were arrested yesterday morn- | ing by detectives of the industrial | squad who were called to the bosses’ rescue by a right wing hireling of the Joint Council, Sam Weiner. The events leading up to the ar- rests were related as follows: The workers of Bloom and Gerber’s shop were telling Potash that they had decided to send a committee to their employer, who is a member of the | board of directors of the Associated, | ATTEND BIG ‘DAILY’ AFFAIR All comrades in Section 2 and 3 are - asked to report at. section head: | et quarters, 101 West th Street Mass Demonstration |sromptiy at 12 o'clock, Saturday, July y | | 14, without fail, by order of the Dis os vole trict Office. Attendance will be Urged Saturday — | ttiet, 2 (Continued from Page One) Bronx Open Air. “ ‘ Lower Bronx Section Open Air Meet ‘Many years have since passed | wit be held at 138th®Street and Brook The bourgeoisie, helped to power by | Ave ee eee amt the masses’ revolt in 1789, 1830 and| section 1. Literature Sauada. 1848, soon became a reactionary| section literature agents and force. The place of the old feudal | literature squads will meet at. 60 St Marks Place at 6:15 p. m. today. lords was taken by: the captains of industry and finance. The place of | |the old bondsman was taken by the |new working class. In a different society, under different economic conditions, exploitation and oppres- | sion of the masses never ceased The accumulation of wealth, the con-| centration of production brought about a rise and concentration of | And now we are| | the working class. going through a period of new rev: olutions; the working class is ris-} ing against its capitalist overlords | who are in command of the capital-| ist state. | “The era of proletarian revolu- tions began in 1917 with the estab-| lishment of the Soviet Republic in| place of the Russian bourgeois| state. The coming of proletarian | revolution is felt everywhere. The proletarian revolution is the aim of | all the Communist Parties of the | world, including our own Workers | (Communist) Party. The revolt | against the capitalist distatorship of the United States is animating our | militant dailies, The DAILY| WORKER and the Freiheit. “We, too, have a fortress to take | We, too, have a Bastille to destroy. It is the fortress of finance capital It is the Bastille of Wall Street. It is to remind us of this historic task | that the comrades chose the Four-| teenth of July. Only several days ago a number of our comrades were sentenced to jail for protesting | against the murderous actions of | American imperialism in foreign | lands. This rally of July Fourteenth | | at | w and demand from him a wage raise | must be also a mass demonstration | for the entire shop. Weiner, a right |against the enemies of the working | THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, JULY 12, 1928 URGE WORKERS + Workers Party Activities Lower Bronx Y. W. Lower Bronx unit of the Young Workers League will hold an open air meeting Friday evening at 138th Street and Willis Ave. Stein, Adler, Grant, Perl and Smith will speak Section 2 and 3. Speakers Class. The speakers class of Section 1 will be held today at 60 St. Marks Place at. 8 p. m. All registered for this class are required to come on time. today 27th Street Women's Federation Meet. The Action Committee of the New York Working Women's Federation rill meet today at 26-28 Union Square. All members are asked to attend. Bath Beach. The unit meeting of the Bath Beach unit will be held Friday, July 13, at 1940 Benson Ave. 8 p. _ sharp. Brownav: Brownsville Section ® tion! An open air meeting will be held tonight at 8:30 p. m, at Hopkinson and Pitkin Aves. ie Ww. ¥ Section 2 and 3. There will be a général member- ship meeting of sections 2 and 3 on Monday, July 16, 6:80 p. m., at 101 y. 27th Street. All members must attend since very important matters wil be taken up, Labor and Fraternal Workers Culture. The Workers Culture Club of Bath BREAK SILK UNION Use Guns in Attempt To Break Strike Y. L. Atten- CHINESE JINGOES the National Organization Commit-| The reformist leaders of the tee will be officially launched by | Greek Confederation of Labor who the conference tonight. ‘a few weeks ago criminally split | the trade union movement of Greece IN NEW BEDFORD (Continued from Page One) the proffered refreshment. for his pickets. Picket Together. When morning was reached the two picket lines were picketing to- gether in the friendliest manne.. } When morning came the U. T. W. | line was asked to share the break- fast sandwiches of the T. M. C. pic- kets. This was done with great en- thusiasm. Fishermen Help. A sudden report circulated among the pickets in the early hours of the morning that the scabs were about to leave in boats. brought an im- fe: proffer of aid from the fishermen, who are active strike sympathizers. The union accepted this offer and immediately ten pic- kets were dispatched in five boats to guard the waterside entrances of the mill. AFFAIRS TO HELP MILL STRIKERS (Continued from Page One) ditional relief stations in addition to those already operated in order to meet the situation. Biedenkapp states that at present more than 1,000 families receive cooked food at the two W. I. R. relief stations and that milk and bread is daily distrib- uted to thousands of children. He further states that the demand for relief is growing greater day by day and that it is imperative for the friends and comrades of the strikers to come to the aid of the W. I. R. “The week of July 15 to the 22nd garization and its members and all workers in general must give their time, energy and money. “Picnics, outings, entertainments, house to house collections, and other affairs must be arranged for and relief funds raised. The New Eng- land Relief Conference is holding an @uto excursion Sunday, July 9. The ' destination is Camp Nitgedaiget at + Franklin, Mi; A big program for the entertainment of all is provided. Busses will come from Boston, Franklin, Worcester, Chelsea, Re- vere, Malden and other places. The ad in. this at DAILY WORKER will carty full particulars. Represents Thousands The conference, which will repre- sent the great majority of the work- ers in the ladies’ garment industry of New York, will take immediate steps to bsin the fight against both the t «es and the right-wing Sig- man clique in regaining union con- ditions in many of the New York shops. It will also move to launch an organization drive among the overwhelming number of open shops now swamping the trade, according to preliminary information of the is Textile Relief Week. Every or-| agenda. JAILS BROTHER FOR PICKETING Henry Sazer, who yesterday de-| clared that he intends to picket the | Truefood Restaurant, owned by his brother, as a demonstration of sym- pathy to the workers on strike there, was arrested yesterday while march- | ing before the place, together with the two union pickets usually per- mitted by the police. In spite of being previously in- formed of the fact that the police would permit no mo.e than two pickets, Sazer ~“evertheless deter- mined to join the ‘ine. Is Arrested A huge crowd gathered in the Times Square section w ere the res- taurant is situated. It watched Sa- zer as he patrolled the place car- rying large signs denouncing his brother and calling for a boycott va the anti-labor r'ece. Several policemen at first’ tried to intimidate Sazer, but he insisted on his right to picket the place, dis- avowing any direct connections with the Waiters’ and Waitresses’ Union. He nevertheless maintained his own right to picket in sympathy with the strikers, police decided to arrest him, Pose As Labor's Friends The strike against this firm, the members of which made their money through the patronage of labor sym- pathizers, pose as semi-radicals, ac- cording to Sazer’s statement. They own three restaurants, all of which are on strike. They are located at 158 W. 44th St., 110 W. 40th St., and 522 Seventh Ave. The strike is now in the third week. | ian Solidarity! |Children Greeted At and expelled from its ranks the To- bacco Workers’ Union and other revolutionary organizations, has now hypocritically joined the gen- eral strike. In reality the social- fascists are taking all measures to end the general strike of the Greek proletariat in a shameful compro- mise. This must not take place. Im; mediate and decisive help of the in- ternational proletariat is required. The Red International of Labor Unions expressing its fraternal sol- idarity with the Greek proletariat calls upon all trade union organiza- tions, all workers’ organizations, the workers of the whole world, to hur- ry to the aid of the heroically strug- gling proletariat of Greece. A powerful act of international] _ proletarian solidarity will prevent the execution of the plans of the Greek bourgeoisie and will defend the class organizations of the Greek proletariat. Long live the victory of the fight- ing Greek proletariat! Long live the united revolution- ary class trade union movement of Greece! 4 Long jive International Proletar- International Relief Unity Camp Reception WINGDALE, N. Y., July 11—All the children that were registered for the first two weeks at the Work- ers’ International Relief. canp ar- rived safely on Monday afternoon at their camp crounds at Wingdale, N. Y. An enthusiastic reception was given them by the campers and workers of the Unity Co-operative camp. When the children arrived in two big busses they were received with banners, cheers and songs. The workers left their jobs and the campers came out of their resting places or the cool water to join in the reception. Long before the chil- dren arrived they were waiting pa- tiently in the hot afternoon sun along the road which the busses had to pass. The construction workers carried a flag greeting the children of the Workers International Relief camp. Other banners read “The Work ers Child for the Working Class,” ete. When the children stepped out of the busses everyone sang the In- ternational wing agent in the factory heard this | and imm fietely ran to call up the police. Sy this time the workers had received the bosses’ reply that | no raise would be granted and were | already picketing the shop, when | the police squad arrived and liter- ally forced them back into the shop. Those arrested were later haled | before Magistrate Norris in the! Jefferson Market Court. Potash and another worker who prefers his name not mentioned, were fined five | dollars each, while the others were dismissed. Cheers Up Boss | The workers of the shop of | Brownstein and Wollin declared a etrike when they were refused a wage raise, and declared their de- termination to picket the place till! the bosses give in. Later in the day the entire office | force of business agents of the Joint Council came to Bloom and Gerber and assured them before the workers in the shop that they would not permit the workers to ask for any more raise or any other im- provement in working standards. Three Wall St. Fliers Bomb. Nicaraguans WASHINGTON, July 10.—It was reported to the navy department to- day that three American airplanes, which tried to exterminate a group of 10 Sandino follewers by bomb- ing, succeeded, it is believed, in kill- ing one. CONTRACT AWARDED The Canadiag Colonial Airways, Ine., New York City, was awarded the contract for operating a one- way air mail route from New York City to Montreal via Albany at 96 cents per mile. of tl DELEGAT PROFINTERN CONGRESS held in Moscow, April, 1928 MANHATTAN LYCEUM | 66 East 4 FRIDAY, JULY 13, 8 P.M. BEN GITLOW CHARLES ZIMMERMAN will make the JOHN J. BALL. Reports from delegates on Ma: Trades, Food Industry, Shoe and Leather, Building Trades, etc. ADMISSION 25 CEN’ Trade Union Educational | 9 wider® appeal than ever before. |this a mass demonstration of the | All Militant Workers Should Hear the REPORT Auspices: { League, Local New York. class. | “We appeal to every class-con-| scious worker to join the demonstrm- | tion. The concert and rally ir planned as a means to secure funds for our papers. This alone shoul¢ be sufficient ground to make it a snecess. Our dailies are the great- est weapon of the working class in all its struggles. Now that we have entered the election campaign in which we wish masses of workers for the revolu- tionary class struggle, the work of our dailies is more urgent and has The task of improving their finan- cial conditions should in itself be of great concern to the militant workers. “The task, however, is not con- fined to funds. We want to make militant labor movement. »We want this to be the first election rahy where rare entertainment is com- bined with sympathy or the Work- | ers (Communist) Party its eandi- | dates, its platform. We wit this rally to be worthy of July 14th. “We appeal to all party members to help make this undertaking a ved banner day. We appeal to all) workers to come to thé Coney Island | Stadium and demonstrate by their | very numbers. “Comrades and Fellow Workers! | Remember July 14th! Make this a/ day of mass protest and a day of | aid for the Red Press. | “CENTRAL EXECUTIVE COM- MITTEE WORKERS (COM- | MUNIST) PARTY.” FEDERAL GRAFT IN SOUTH. | ATLANTA, Georgia, July 10.—A senate committee investigating the republican graft in the southern| states found that local postmen, in | order to keep their jobs, must “con- tribute” an annual sum to the re- | publican party campaign funds. ——4+ to mobilize large | SHANGHAI, July 10.—The strike of 55,000 silk workers in the fac- tories here was forcibly broken when the commander of the Chin- ese garrison in Shanghai used bul- , lets to dissolve the union of the silk |spinners because the union refused |to appeal to the striking workers to jreturn to work in accordance with | the militarists’ demand. The spinners went on strike al- |most a month ago, when the con- |ditions under which they had been | working in the factories became un- bearable. ‘They struck against the |long hours and the excessive over- time that they were forced to put in every day of the week; against the pay, which was even smaller than that of workers in American | factories, and against the inhuman |slave-driving treatment they re- ceived at the hands of the bosses’ officials. In spite of the forcible dissolu- tion of the union by the military forces, however, only half of the factories originally hit by the strike have recommenced work. No Tip Center Barber Shop NEW WORKERS CENTER 26-28 Union Sq. 1 Flight Up NEW YORK CITY Individual Sanitary Service by Ex- perts.—LADIES' AIR BOBBING ™ SPECIALISTS. Patronize a Comradely Barber Shop ana eeeeery) 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 he ION to the th Street main reports AM, Chairman. | rine Transport, Youth, Needle TS AT THE DOOR. VEGETARIAN HEALTH RESTAURANT 558 Claremont P’kway Bronx Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 19§ SECOND AVE. Bet. 12th and 18th Sts. Strictly Vegetarian Food. ch will 22nd, 9 Outing Sunday, 1940 Benson Ave m. at Spanish Workers Dance. On Saturday, July 14, at 8:00 p. m. there will be a dance and entertain- I ment, in behalf of the Centro Obrero (Spanish Workers Center), at the headquarters of that organization 55 | West 113th 8t | Jewelry Workers Outing. The Jewelry Workers W will hold Sunday UNION SPREALS TO ALL FIELDS Urge Anth racite to Stand Solid (Continued from Page One) the Call WE ALL MEET at the NEW WAY CAFETERIA 101 WEST 27th STREET NEW YORK 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 the Co-operative House, DRIVE FOR NEW { ‘ vi | at the Dy led the miners’ union, LREL FRc winees Beg | charges Lewis with refusing to or- gram of entertainment has been’ar- | ganize the unorganized miners, ranked | smashing miners’ strikes in Kansas 7 eRe and Nova Scotia; betraying’ the An outing ¥ . z hes ie 3 ayette-Westmoreland miners in vee Bie Grae 1922 by leaving them out of the ( the New York S International | strike settlement, and playing a Subway oF “Leto 177th Ste then take | strike-breaking role in the recent Unionport car to end of line. Free | Colorado strike, opie nea Oe Record of Betrayal. Splitting the anthracite from the 6 | ti bituminous miners through separate | |agreements expiring at different times, and the policy of separate | agreements in the present bitumi- i i 8 | declares, for the disastrous condi- pee’ tion of the strike, The general ef- | : fect of these policies has been “to J Election Main Issue isolate the strikers in the hey dis: eae triets of Pennsylvania and Ohio an | For Discussion to enable the employers to shatter 7a ‘4 the strikers’ forces at their leisure, § Six “Party Days” have been de-|+hus undermining the whole miners’ signated by District 2 of the Wor-| organization.” During all the long kers (Communist) Party, according | months of the strike, while the to a statement issued last night by | Pennsylvania and Ohio miners “have » John J. Ballam, acting district or- | been starving on a dollar or two a ‘ ganier and Bert Miller, organiza- | week relief money, these false lead- 4% tion secretary. Jers drew their enormous salaries These “Party Days,” called for | and lived 4 the fat of the, land TY ; | Lewis Sabotage. y the purpose of discussing the major! <ttal result of all thease party campaigns, are designated for| ‘The inevitable result of a! est o July 23, 24, 25 31 and August |Co!TuPtions, betrayals, and wrong 4. i Lee est | policies by the ‘leadership of the ; | United Mine Workers of America, 8 The statement says in part: | the Call concludes, “is the present ¢-. “Many of our comrades are en-| breaking of the union. Democracy te gaged in activities in the union and!in the United Mine Workers of Party auxiliary organizations which | America is dead. To depend fur- 7 take a great deal of their time and| ther on the broken United Mine % | energy and fail, on this account, to| Workers of America as our union, \‘attend to Party units. would be for us to sink deeper and. ~ at ee ; ye deeper into cpen shop slavery. We The major activity of our Party | must build a new union, We must ™ |for the coming months will be the | take the situation in hand ourselves * election campaign and it is for the| and break the control of the Lewis purpose of clarification and discus-| gang. We must organize a new qy sion that these ‘Party Days’ are be- | miners’ union, one with an honest : ing called.” | progressive leadership and a fight- ——— ing policy.” te - $$ al Speakers Conference MONEY, BUT WHERE? 1g To Be Held Saturday} washington, July 10.—The United ss, | States’ population on July 1 was a. * : estimated at 118,364,000, the Trea A speakers conference of District ury Department announced todal lls 2 will be held Saturday at 2 p. m.| Money in circulation totalled $4,791 re jat the Workers School, 26-28 Union | 408,000 or $40.52 per capita, a 40 om Square. per cent increase in a month but 9. a 96 per cent loss over last year. All Workgrs Party speakers must | rota] money stock in the U. S. wae © attend this conference. D. Benjamin, | $8 117,768,786. *h % district agitprop director, will lead |————H—____—_ = = the discussion ie ——— = Advertise your union meetings ti f ‘)| |] here. For information write to & Workers Cooperativ The DAILY WORKER a8 Advertising Dept. | s Clothiers, Ine. |] 26.28 Union Sq., New York City} r- t a- | |= = r- || CARPENTERS’ UNION to | LOCAL 2090 |] Meets every Thursday, 8 P.M. at || Labor Temple, 243 East 84th St. 49 |] Office and headquarters are in the tile Labor Temple. ills _ | — 4 Piesezreerne ac momar se a || SUITS MADE TO ORDER. a, Te ! tr READY MADE SUITS. I. STERNBERG ike Optometrist me | Quality—Full Value Eyes Examined—Glasses Fitted Gl : 5 916 Prospect Ave. Cor E. 162 St, 872 BROADWAY, N.Y. eee ‘Hrs? Cor, 18th St.—Tel. Algonquin Telephone—-Kilpatrick 8448 on SS, Sy Patronize Telephone Stagg 5356 in- LERMAN BROS. Dr. J. C. HOFFER aq Stationers and Printers cay sateen vee ret: the 29 EAST 14th STREET Ny. Y. "— ) Brookipn, NY eee Corner Union Square Proletarian prices for proletarians | 108 Tel. Algonquin 8356, 8843. \6 tee (—_—_———— Unity Co-operators Patronize PYCCKHM 3YBHOM BPAY|| sm | SAM LESSER Dr. JOSEPH B. WEXLER] 8 \ Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailor Surgeon Dentist ble 1818 — 7th Ave. New York 25 yrs. in practice. Moderate prices, | re~ Between 110th and ilith sts 223 SECOND AV. NEW YORK]] ne Next to Unity Co-operative House Temple Courts Bldg. the = = on SS SSS re 4 ) and “For Any Kind of Instance” ||'|] Dr, ABRAHAM MARKOFF||_ SURG N DENTIST a CARL BRODSKY Oftice Hours 2 a.m. 2:8 p.m Ving i 3 y Excep riday’and Sunday 7 E, 42d St. New York City ; 115th STRYET tty Ave. N f er- Telephone Mu Hill 6550, Palaehohe: Lahten: KORE od, — tT Hd Tel, 8. 167 Pi s 5 Pulask! 1770, “Rei Rhine Bae Dr. J. Mindel Dr. ,L. Hendin in Insu with \|| DAVID OSHINSKY Surgeon Dentists oe ! GENERAL INSURANCE ¥ Office: 60 Graham Ave, Brooklyn, 1 UNION SQUARE Fire, Lite, Public Liability, Com- fly pensation, AGERE PDILG: Accident, Room 803 Phone, Algonquin 8183 co- as ing co- far Labor and Fraternal Organizations Attention! we Airy, Light R 3 on Iry, Light Rooms }} : : he nd oO en t = he for OFFICES and MEETING ROOMS at the cil j ae. WORKERS CENTER, 26-28 Union Square. ad Elevator Service. Telephone Stuyvesant 1201, * | “ ae be as