The Daily Worker Newspaper, July 23, 1928, Page 4

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pose F Four THE DAILY WORKKR, iW YORK, MONDAY, SULY 33, 1928 Will Begin Big Drive of Militant Cloak Workers at Giant Bronx Mass Meeting Bait for Suckers Trains for Champ Bout RANK AND FILE TO FIGHT SIGMAN, SWEAT SHOPS “Defeat Right Wing| Thugs,” Is Call In order to “launch the campaign | of the rank and file against the sweéat-shop system and to build a eloakmakers union of the workers under the leadership of National Ofganization Committee,” the latter organization is calling all workers in the ladies garment manufactur- ing industry to gigantic mass meeting in Bronx Stadium, accord- ing''to a statement issued recently bythe latter organization over the ignature of Louis Hyman, chair- man. vi shows Gene Tunney, heavyweight champion, training at Appeals To Workers Speculator, N. Y., training for his battle on Thursday with Tom The statement also appeals to the] Heeney, challenger for the heavyweight crown. The sparring part- Workers to fight against any at-| 14» is Harold Mays. He leads a dag’s life. tempt of Sigman and his cohorts to | coripel them to pay dues to his com- pany union under the guise of the fake organization campaign they are conducting. The statement de- clares in part: “The International clique is now making a new effort to extort money from you thru their guerilla com- mittees, under the~ pretext of a brand new organization campaign. (By United Prese) Red Faber’s single, which scored . two runs, enabled the Chicago White Tt is not a campaign to get better/sox to defeat the New York conditions for you in the shops. It | yankees, 6 to 4, yesterday. John- ig not a campaign to organize the son and Moore gave Chicago only industry. The “company union,”| seven hits, but two Yankee errors which is on the verge of collapse, is | hurt New York. making a last effrot to extort money from you before it is com- pletely wiped out. Defend Yourself. “You must not permit yourself to Se terrorized by their guerilla com- mittees. a of the un- z ay ; seed e Wah the will apd determina. series, three games to one, and kept ee. f united “Strength. All|them on the heels of the league- ey ited i ver leading Cardinals. Charley Root “;at you need is united action when The’ committees. appear in your |28¥¢ the Giants only four hits and Shope. Do not “stop when the guer- | did not yield a run until the eighth ‘Hla committees come to your shops. inning. : Do not give them a cent. Give them) Pittsburgh and Brooklyn divided proper resistance. Defend yourself |# double-header in their fight for against them and wherever possible leadership of the second division. | attack them, drive them out. Dazzy Vance pitched superbly in 1 jque’'s the first game, giving the Pirates oe ! lique’s Workers! The ond ot ee tthe only four hits. Brooklyn won, 5 to domination is in sight. Now is the |) “pittsburgh won the second game, time for united action to put into sages ny i Me the plans worked out for |° *? 5, chiefly because of Ray Krem- Mae our union, The first |*T® steady pitching. monthly shop chairmen’s conference, i held on the 12th of July, in Webster The Chicago Cubs demonstrated Sunday that they are ready to fight the St. Louis Cardinals right down to the wire for the National League pennant. ee 4 to victory over the * * * YESTERDAY’ * RESULTS Hall, has acted. It has decided to sige the campaign of the rank file against the sweat-shop sys- tan and build a union of the work- ers. A gigantic mass meeting he been arranged i nthe Bronx Stadium for the 8th of August. The confer- ‘ence of chairmen has decided that the cloak and dressmakers must im- mediately join the union of the workers, under the leadership of ~w09 yeuonez1Ues1O yeuoneN 242 mittee, which constitutes the united front of all those who want to have aj union, and union coppittions. Pos istrict Open Air Meetings This Week i ‘ttention all Party speakers and Te Campaign Committees ar- by District 2 Agitprop Dep. * WEEK OF JULY 23. iy, July 2: § Square—Marshall, Leroy, Hendin, Pasternack, Trach- nd Ave, and 106th—Baum. day, July 24. St. Ext., and Havemeyer, lyn.—Liptzin, Midola, Rose- esday, July 25. Ave. and 10th St.—Pollack, eer, Auerbach, M. Epstein. m Square — Minor, ° Silber, , Blake. nox Ave. and 132nd St— off, V. Smith, Ed. Welsh, Gussakoff. ins and Intervale.—Di Santo, vitz, Cibulsky, R. Wortis, Sev- le and Prince.—R. B. Moore, is, Bimba, Rosemond. Dayton Ave., Passaic—J. 0. Pencil—noon—B. Miller. irsday, July 26. mway and Jamaica, L. I— , P. Shapiro, V. Smith. St. Annes.—Baum, Ja- m, Yusem, Gitz. h St. and 8th Ave.—Auerbach, , Schalk nd. Cruger — Padgug, Shas. Nemeroff, Ruis- and Mermaid.—G. Pow- tock, Wright, Midola. ls Biscuit Co.—Noon— y, July 27. ‘and Pitkin, Brooklyn.— admoge, 1 Nessin, Reiss, Suskin. , and Graham, Brooklyn.— Rosemond, A. Sus- | , Primoff, Wwe. and 110th St.—BalJam, _ Taft, Ed. Welsh, Codkind. t and Plaza, Newark, N. J. Biscuit Co.—Noon—D.| National League’ Chicago, 4: New York, 2. Brooklyn, Pittsburgh, 0 (1st). Pitsburgh, 6: Brooklyn, 5 (2nd). Cincinnati, 5; Boston, 4. St. Louis, 8; Philadelphia, 7. American League Chicago, 6; New York, 4. Washington, 8; Detroit, 2. St. Louis, §; Cleveland, 5. Only games scheduled. AMERICAN OLYMPIC TEAM IN WORKOUT AMSTERDAM, July 22 (UP).— For the first time since the final tryouts at Cambridge, Mass., the American Olympic team had a real workout today. The cinder strack in the stadium was in better shape and coaches sent the athletes through their paces, clocking many of them. Ray Barbuti, Fuil Snyder and Joseph Tierney, quarter milers, ‘were all timed around 50 seconds and Lloyd Hahn did a quarter mile in 52 sec- onds. Hahn, who is working harder than any of the American athletes, then ran the 660-yard distance in 1:24 4-5. ‘ DETROIT LABOR. SPORTS SECTION PLANS MEET (Labor Sports Press Service) DETROIT, July 22—The Detroit section of the Labor Sports Union, which is one of the liveliest in the whole organization, is proceeding with the plans for a local elimina- tion meet, preparatory to the na- tional track and field meet at New York on August 25-26, The Detroit section includes some eight clubs with a total of 350 members and ' the meet will undoubtedly develop spirited competition U. S. TENNIS PLAYERS SPLIT EVEN IN LAST 2 MATCHES PARIS, July 28.—Johnny Hennes- sey and Franc Hunter went through the formality of playing out the semi-finals with the Itr‘ian Davis Cup team today. Hennessay won and Hunter lost. George Lott and Hennessey, by* winning their doubles match Saturday, clinched the victory for America. . Today’s results made the standings four ‘Fisherman Drowned | When Boat Hits Rock | NEWPORT, R. I, July 22—One | man was believed drowned and a fel-| ‘after the two-masted. oyster schooner and ceeened in Narragansett Bay. First Ave. ‘and “Toth St.—Markoff, | Suskin, Lustig, Hendin. 18th Ave. and 42nd St., Brooklyn. Sherman, Wright, Lillienstein, Val- entine. West New York, N, J., ldth St. } and Bergenline Ave.—S, Pollack, | Freiman, YANKS, GIANTS LOSE, DODGERS BREAK EVEN matches to one, in favor of the United States. Hunter lost to Baron Henri De Morpurgo today because he played erratically at the staft and was un- able to overcome the Italian's lead in time to stave off defeat, Hunter rallied too late and lost, 6—4, 6—8, 3—6, 6—3. The score of match with P. Gaslini today was 7—5, 6—3, 6—4, TRY LAYOFFS T0 HALT BIG STRIKES ‘Vain Gesture, Say Fall River Mill Workers _ Continued from Page One imminent Fall River struggle, also declares: The closing down of the American Printing Works in Fall River from July 25 to August 7 is a definite attempt to weaken the determina- tion of the workers in Fall River to go out on strike to fight for the jrestoration of the 10 per cent wage cut and for the other demands of the T. M. C., 20 per cent increase in wages, 40-hour, 5-day week, against the speed-up and the recog. |nition of the union. The excuse that the management gives for the closing down of. the It cotton division, which alone employs | |2,500 workers, is that there is not jenough work. This all the workers lkmow is not true and realize that the activities of the T. M. C, in the past weeks has mobilized thousands | of workers into the union in prep- aration of the struggle that is about to begin, and this together with the fact that the influence of the T, M. C. is felt generally throughout the city has thrown a scare into the ranks of the mill owners and they are becoming desperate in their at- tempts to weaken the spirit of the workers. 3 WORKERS DEAD IN TRAIN WRECK 8 Injured{ “Many Other | Bodies Not Yet Found} FARMINGTON, N. H., July 22.— At least three workers were killed and eight others injured in a derail- ment of five cars of the Barnardi Show Carnival Company’s 20-car train at Places Crossing, near here, just before noon today. The identity of three bodie taken from the wreckage and still at the scene of the accident late | this afternoon, according to railroad officials, had not yet Been estab- lished. The eight persons who were injured were removed to a hospital at Rochester, N. H. Wrecking crews from Dover and Concord, N. H., were rushed to the scene of the derailment, a secluded | spot three miles south of this town, | as soon as news of the accident be- came known. Railroad officials said there was a slight possibility that others might pe found in the wreckage and that the crews were continuing | their search, according to the latest reports, FPATRIOTIC—5 DIE OF LOCKJAW | ERIE, Pa., July 22 (UP).—John| Diemert, 15, died in Hamot Hospita’ today of lockjaw resulting from a blank cartridge wound received on Independence Day. His death is the Lilienstein, Mag-| low fisherman rescued yesterday | fifth in the last week from lockjaw | | all caused by! Fourth of July explo-| ‘and William, Brokolyn— | “Elida Hearn,” had piled up on rocks | sives. No Tip Center Barber Shon NEW WORKERS ‘CENTER 26-28 Union Sq. 1 Flight Up NEW YORK beet ae Individual Sanitary Service perts.—LADIES' HAIR BORING SPECIALISTS. Patronize a Comradely Shop JEWISH LABOR T0' Workers Party Activities! AID PARTY DRIVE IN NEW YORK CITY Pledges Support to Red Candidates Forty-six Jewish “labor and fra- ternal organizations of New York City at a conference called by the Jewish Bureau of the Workers (Communist) Party, voted unanim- ously to endorse the Workers Party ticket, and drew up a comprehensive program to rally the Jewish working masses for the Communist program and candidates in the coming elec- tions. Among the sented were Workmen’s Independent Workmen’s Circle, 7 Ww ’ Clubs, and 13 parents’ or- ganizations of the Non-Partisan Workers’ Schools. The Progressive Delicatessen Clerks’ Union, Local 302, also sent delegates. organizations repre- 18 branches of the Communist Program Stressed. The conference was addressed’ by Boris Lifshitz, secretary of the Jew ish Bureau of the Workers Party land candidate for the assembly in the 6th Assembly District, Manhat- tan. He spoke on the program of the Workers (Communist) Party exposing the role of the republican and democratic parties, emphasizing especially the degeneration of the socialist party and its open betrayal of the interests of the working class Rebecca Grecht, New York cam- paign manager and candidate for as- sembly in the 5th Assembly District Bronx, also spoke on the tasks of the left wing in the political campaign. Campaign Committee Chosen. The conference elected a cam- paign committee of 21 to coordir- ate the work of the various organi- zations and mobilize the greatest support possible for the campaign Every organization present pledged itself to work for a voluntary tax of $1 per member for the $100,000 elec- tion campaign fund of the Workers Party, and agreed to enlist its mem- bership put the Workers Party candidates on the ballot. A resolution endorsing the Work- ers Party, and calling upon all Jew- ish workers to support the Com- munist election campaign, was adopted unanimously. The confer-| ence decided to call a second confer- ence in the middle of August and to double the number of organziations| !Y represented. : Members of Section 7 of the Workers (Communist) Party are urged to report to the section cam- paign headquarters, 1373 48rd St., Boro Park, every evening from 6:30 to 9:30, and on Saturdays, from 1 to 10 p. m. to participate in the election signature drive. On Sun- days, the work for ‘the day will be- gin at, 10 a. m. and continue throughout the day. Members of Sections 2 and 3 should also report to the Section 7 | headquarters for the signature drive. Bath Beach Youth Pian Hike to Alpine Woods ircle, 5 branches of the| in the signature drive to) International Branch 1. International Branch 1. will | an educational meeting on Wednes- day at 7:30 p. m. at 60 St, Mark's Place, N. Y. All members are urged to be present Section 7. Section 7 signature collecting drive. Every comrade ‘of the section must report at campaign headquar- 1373 48rd St., Brooklyn, every g from 6:30; Saturday and all day. Section 2 and 3 are to report to same headquarters for signature drive Subsection 8C Meeting. All units of Subsection 8C will meet today at 101 West 27th St. at 6:30 | Bm. | _Diection of directors Rios Pes election campaign will All members are urged a are Executive Subsection 3C. The executive committee of section 3C will hold a mecting we Wednesday at 101 W. 27th St. at 6:30 p.m. Subsection 24 Functionaries. A meeting of the executive func- tionaries of Subsection 2A will be held today at 101 W. 27th St. All comrades must attend the meeting. Sections 2 & 3. ers class arranged Sections 2 &nd 3 will start tomor- row at 3 p. m_ at 101 W. St.- Ray Ragozin will be the instruc- tor. Ail comrades who wish to join | the class must report ‘Tuesday. McKinley areas Traub; ¥. W. Le The McKinley Square branch ‘of he Young Workers (Communist) League wiil hold an open air meet-| ng today at 8:30 p.m. on the cor- ners of i74th St. and Vyze Ave., the The spe Bronx. The subject of the meeting will be the present election cam- paign z i és Sub-Section 8H. onal BEN Also comrades from | at 8 o'clock. ‘angements for mobilizing masses of workers to attend. District Executive Committee, Dis- trict 2, John J. Ballam, Actipg Dis- trict’ Organizer. Brownaville ¥. W: An open air meeting Will be hela tonight at Hopkinson and, Pitkin Ave, at 8:30. Speakers: . Liphshitz, | Gudisman, Stove, Bortz and Polchack. An open ac feacting tomorrow night at Hirkimer and Utica Ave. Speakers: Kass, Mell- man and Marr, SMALL SUMS TO HELP RAISE FUND Workers D Donate to be | | | | by | 27th | Mellon, | The enlarged executive committee | of the Subsection 3H will meet to- day at 6:15 p.m. It is of great im- portance that the comrades be pres- ent on time bry International Branch 1. The International Branch No. 1 will hold its regular meeting today at 9:00 p. m,, at 101 W. 27th St: Unit 3B 1F. A very important meeting will be held of Unit 3E 1F tomorrow at 6:15 p. m, at 101 W. 27th St. Every com- The roll call rade must. be present. will be taken. Unit 3B 2F. The Unit 3B 2F will have a very important meeting on Wednesday July 25, at 6:15 P. M., at 101 W. 27th | St. All comrades must be present and on time, Roll call will be taken. eee Campaign Dixcusston, B. 1, Sec. 5. | Everyone interested in the issues | of the election campaign should at- | fend the discussion at the headquar- ters of Branch 1, Section 5 tomor- row at 715 EB. 138th St., at 8:00 p .m. | Prominent speakers will address the meeting. Discussion will follow from | the floor. Brooklyn Speakers Class. The speakers class being held by | Section 7 of the Workers (Commu- | | nist) Party will hold its first session | at section headquarters, | 764 40th St. Boro Park. The class | starts at 8 p. m. but all who wish to attend regularly should be at the meeting room at 7:45 p. m. prompt- Daily Worker Agents, Section 7. |__A conference of unit and subsec- tion Daily Worker agents will be held tomorrow at 6 p.m. at 101 W. 27th St. Joint Industrial Conference of Sec- tions 2 & 3. A joint. industrial | Sections 2 and 3 will be held to- morrow at 6 m. at 101 West | | 27th St, All unit and subsection in- | | dustriai organizers as well as rep- | | resentatives of the leading commit- tees of the Party fractions of the | I. L. G. W. U., Furriers, Millinery, | Fancy Leather Goods and Office Workers must attend. A district | representative will be present. Pariy ass All comrades, including all func- tionaries, are instrugted to’ attend unit meetings held duMng this period, to take up important tasks in con- | nection with the election campaign | | conferences of | Communist Drive Continued from Page One tween the democratic and republican parties worth noticing. Raskob, the | multimillionaire, supports Smith. the multimillionaire, sup- ports Hoover. Both millionaires will win. The working, class will lose when Raskob and Mellon bring home the bacon. The workers and poor farmers are asked to vote for Foster and Gitlow’ because those candidates {Represent the interests of the ex- ploited masses. Those candidates run on a platform which calls for the organization of the workers and farmers for a struggle against capi- talism and for the organization of a Workers’ and Farmers’ Govern- ment. While the two parties of capi- talism insist on their devotion to the interests of big business, the] Workers (Communist) Party ap- peals to the working class to sup- port it in a war on the robber sys- tem which will free labor from the chains of wage slavery. Send in your contributions at once to the Communist Campaign Fund. Workers Party of America, 43 E.} 125th St.,"New York City, Alex- ander Trachtenberg, treasurer. WEST COAST FUR UNION IN FIGHT International Refuses, Charter | The recently published appeal of the Boston Fur Workers Union, Lo- |cal 30, to all International locals requesting them to endorse the Bos- ton union’s demand on the general executive board for an_ inter-local | ‘conference met with a response from a Los Angeles local, it has heen learned here. A group of progressive workers in the fur industry in that city or- iganized a furriers’” local and were \vefused a charter by the Interna- | tional officers. The Los Angeles Fur Workers Union, as the group \afterwards termed itself, replied to \dorsement of the the Boston appeal will a full en- conference de- mand. The proposed |asked for by the Boston local in or- der to have all the International standing. Section and unit executives | locals take steps to end the struggle and to place themselves in good | are instructed to prepare a special | between the right wing Joint Coun- The Bath Beach unit of the Young order of business for the meetings to | jeil and the JJoint Board in New Workers (Communist) League, to- gether with all the other clubs in the vicinity, have arranged a hike to the Alpine Woods for next Sun- day. The sports and social com- mittees of the unit have prepared | a varied athletic and musical pro- |gram for the event. The hikers will leave at the Dyck- | | man St. Ferry at 10 a.m. All| | young people living in Bath Beach ond vicinity have been invited to at A CORRECTION. The DAILY WORKER of July 9th carried an article that the partner of | the plumbing firm of Adolph Grob- | | aeeitt of 980 E. 138th St., Bronx, is Mr. |of Manhattan and the Bronx. Now, you made some slight error The name of Mr.. Grobstein’s part. ner is Mr. Benchey Danis. Kindly correct the error. —CASSELL, AMALGAMATED. FOOD WORKERS kers’ Local 184 Meets 1stSaturday in the month at 2468 Third Ave. Bronx, N. Y. Ask for Union Label Bread Cone? |] 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 PAST lth STREET bee Corner Union Square Algonquin 3856, 8843, 29 | Tel. Unity Co-operators Patronize SAM LESSER Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailor New York 1818 — 7th Ave. Between 110th and 111th Sts. Next to Unity Co-operative House Benchey Davis, a member of | Local 463, of the Plumbers’ Union | e held on the Party Days. ‘The arcane meeting will take | place Wednesday, July 25th, 8 p. m. at 350 EH. 8ist Street. Party Membership Meeting. The comrades in the units are| asked to take note of the fact that| there will be a Party membership | meeting Wednesday, August Ist at Manhattan Lyceum, 66 KH. 4th St. No | other meetings are to be arranged to conflict with this date. | Note is also to be taken of the fact that on Saturday afternoon, Au- | gust 4, the anniversary of the World War opening, there will be an open | air demonstration at Union Square under the auspices of the Workers Party, All units are to make ar- 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. SEGOND AVE. Bet. 12th and 13th Sts, Strictly Vegetarian Food. WE ALL MEET at the NEW WAY CAFETERIA 101, WEST 27th STREET NEW YORK | | I. STERNBERG Optometrist Eyes Examined—Glasses Fitted 916 Prospect Ave. Cor E. 162 St. BRONX, N, Y, . Telephone—Kilpatrick 8448 Telephone Stagg 5356 Dr. J. C. HOFFER Surgeon Dentist 287 South Sth St., nenr Marcy Ave. Brooklyn, N. Proletarian prices for proletarians PYCCKHM 3YBHOM BPAY Dr. JOSEPH B. WEXLER Surgeon Dentist 25 yrs, in practice. Moderate price: 223 SECOND AV. NEW YOR) Temple Courts Bldg, Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST Office Hours: 9:30-12 2-8 p.m. Dally Except Friday and Sunday 249 EAST 115th STREET Cor, Second Ave. New York Telephone Lehigh 6022 Dr. J. Mindel Dr, L, Hendin Surgeon Dentists 1 UNION SQUARE Room 803 Phone, Algonquin 8183 CO-OPERATIVE Dental Clinic 2700 Bronx Park East Apt c. L. TEL. ESTABROOK 0568, DR. I. STAMLER Surgeon-Dentist DIRECTOR OPEN: Mon., Ss al Wed. Thurs. from 10 to § P. M. Satura and Sunday from 10 to 7 paste I |the Amtorg and a number of lead- _shorteomings,” she hoped that Pro- conference was Labor and Fraternal| Organizations Iron, A quarterly meeting of the union, to be held on Tuesday evening, Suly | to be held tomorrow evening at EastMast 15th Street, at 8 p. m. Washington Heights, Attention. A literary and social club is being | formed, All interested are invited to a meeting tonight at 8 p, m. at) 100 Northern Ave., corner of 18Ist | St, Apt. 33. Bronze Workers Meet. | Working Women’s Federation, On the eve of the anniversary of the World War, the New York Work- ing Women’s Federation ts calling a delegate meeting of shop representa- tives and delegates of its affiliated organizations at Labor Temple 14th St. and 2nd Ave. at 7:30 sharp Au- gust 2, 1928. At this conference the causes of war, and the methods to be used in fighting the war danger will be discussed by women promin- ent in the labor movement. Women's organizations are invited to send delegates, and girls working in shops are invited to represent their shops at this conference. Volunteers For I. L. D. Volunteers are wanted &t the Na- tional Office of the International De- fense, 80 East 1ith St. Room 402, anytime between 9:30 a. m. and 6 p.m. * * 1. L. D. Outing. An outing will be held on Saturday, Aug. 11, at 12-noon, at Pleasaift 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, busses to park, DEWEY RECEIVED IN SOWET UNION Many Educators At- tend Welcome Banquet MOSCOW, July 22.—John Dewey j and his American group of educa- tors were officially received here by the Sociéty for Cultural Relations, at a banquet attended by Lunarchar- sky, minister of education; repre- sentatives of the foreign office, of * Free ing Soviet professors, Mms. Kameneff, president of the Society for Cultural Relations, wel- comed the American professors and asked them to present the facts fairly tu the American public. As- suring him that “our work is scarcely begun and that we know hat there are many qrrors and fessor Dewey and his companions would help in sweeping away the host of prejudices and lies that are jextant about~the Soviet Union. York, and stated that the inner | struggle there was rapidly destroy- ing the out-of-town locals. The I.os Angeles reply contains a brief history of the California | workers’ struggle to build a union there. It is signed by N, Henkin, president; H. Tsepon, treasurer; S. Sonnenshein, secretary, and T. Rut- nik. “For Any Kind of Insurance” CARL BRODSKY 7 E. 42d St. New York City ‘Telephone Murray Hill 5550, ‘Tel. Res. 167 Pulaski St. Pulaski 1770. ‘Tel. Pulaski 5216. Insure with DAVID OSHINSKY GENERAL INSURANCE Office: 60 Graham Ave., Brooklyn. Fire, Life, Public Liability, Com- pensation, Automobile, Accident, Health, “PEACE” MOVE AGAINST USSR. IS SUCCESSFUL | Powers Maintain Bloe Against Soviet WASHINGTON, July 21,—The fourteen nations invited to pare pate in the “Kellogg ‘ “peace” con- ference, scheduled to be held in Paris towards the end of August, have all replied favorably, it was announced here today. The governments are Germany, France, ftaly, Poland, Belgium, Great Britain, the Irish Free State, Canada, India, Australia, New Zea- land, Japan, Czechoslovakia, and the Union of South Africa. The Union of Socialist Soviet Republics was not invited. Changed Instrument. The reply of Chamberlain is con- sidered here as being the basis for an agreement in Paris. The orig- inal draft which was pledged to the “renunciation of war as a inetru- ment of national policy,” has* been so altered by revisions and reserva- tions that it is hardly recognizable. English reservations insisted on the right of a government for un- restricted action in its imperialistic areas, and on the holding power of all previous treaties. Aims To Confuse. Informed circles here look upon the whole matter as an elaborate ef- fort to do nothing and to confuse public ‘opinion. If the Locarno treaties and the League of Nations remain unaltered, it is thought that the same military bloc against the U.S.S.R. will remain. PROHIBITIONISTS TO CONFER LITTLE ROCK, Ark., July 22.— (UP).—A conference of Arkansas prohibitionists to meet here and take steps “to protect and preserve the 18th Amendment and all the state and federal laws enacted for its en- forcement,” has been called for July 19, it was announced today. 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. Workers Cooperative Clothiers, Inc. SUITS MADE TO ORDER. READY MADE SUITS. Quality—Full Value 872 BROADWAY, N.Y. Cor. 18th St—Tel. Algonquin 2223 | SUnHCRS Dividends Paid From the First of July Subsidiary of the United Workers’ Co-operative Ass’n. — 6% | dividends are being paid from the first day of deposit on gold bonds in denominations of $100, $300, $500 and $1,000 secured by the second mortgage of the second block of houses -in the Co-operative Workers’ Colony. * Offices: 69—5th Ave., New York, N. Y. TELEPHONE: ALGONQUIN 6900. IL 2700 Bronx Park East (Co-operative Workers’ Colony) afl DORATIo¥ open every evening: Put the Party on the Ballot All Party members and all sympathizers are asked to report for duty to collect signatures to put the Party on the ballot at the following headquarters which are Section 1—Downtown Manhattan—60 St. Marks Place’ Section 4—Harlem—43 East 103rd St. Section 5—Bronx—2075 Clinton Ave. Section 6—Williamsburg—29 Graham Avenue > Section 7—Boro Park, 764 40th St. ; Section 8—Brownsville, 154 Watkins St. |

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