The Daily Worker Newspaper, August 30, 1928, Page 5

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| USED TO COMPEL THE DAILY WURKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, AUGUST 30, 1928 Wage five Injured Victims of DECEIT, DURESS — ‘SETTLEMENTS’ Dist. Atty. Opens His) “Investigation” | The Interborough Rapid Transit| Co. ‘was vesterday charged by vic- tims of the wreck at Times Square| for which it was responsible last Friday night with refusing to pay| the hospital bills of the workers in- jured in the crash, many of them! incapacitated for life. Victims of the wreck and relatives of some of! the 17 workers killed also told of visits from I. R. T. lawyers, and other IT. R. T. agents, in which! threats were made that if immediate settlements, suitable to the I. R. T. were not made, no money at all Creek Valley have lost most of the waters. Houses, out-buildings, ro drowned or temporarily dispersed. Wreckage in New York Stat e Flood Area ns in the rural communities of the Rowndout tr means of livelihood in the flood ads and bridges have been sub- merged and planted areas are under water. Farm animals have been might be forthcoming to the victims of the wreck. The agents hinted! ¢ that the tompany “might go bank- rupt.” “$100 or Nothing.” Daniel Hagerty, a victim of the wreck, who received serious injuries | to the back, vesterday said that he had been offered $100 by a claim| agent of the Interborough who hint-| ceetone b ar Na dillon |despatched, so that all may arm| Hagerty and other victims charged|‘remselves for | the | ceremonious | that the I. R. agents had visited|"Snine of the “Treaty to Outlaw | them while they were in extreme) Wa?” in Paris. This treaty to outlaw war has a pain, and sought to trick them into i signing agreements while they were|Tather involved and long history. On the alleged suggestions of Amer- | not in condition to glearly realize An | what they were doing. Hagerty and /iean pacifists, the French minister | for foreign affairs, Briand, in June) the other victims approached by the of last year made the proposal to company agents refused to sign. Mrs. William Mitchell, of 30 W. the Washington government to con- 82nd St.. whose husband was so seri- clude a reciprocal Franco-American ously injured in the disaster that he| pact’ of permanent peace. Briand must remain in a hospital for three thought by such a gesture to gain months or more, yesterday stated|the good-will of American creditors that the I. R. T. had refused to pay and perhaps also a rearguard | a week’s hospital bill of $28 for her| against England, and to make a cheap pacifist show in order to husband. Mitchell was a waiter. and is unable to pay the hospital) weaken in Geneva the impression of French sabotage of disarmament. charges. He will never be able to resume work, doctors stated. To this Kellogg replied in the name Threats Made. of the United States government Alice Palange, 22, a clerk, whose|with a counter-proposal that a foot was fractured and who received |“‘Treaty for Perpetual Peace” internal. injuries, told of being ap-|should be arranged not merely be- proached by an I. R. T. agent and tween France and the United} being warned that she would do bet-|State, but between the United ter to settle with the company| States and the five other big capi- “while you have a chance.” Another talist powers. The American pro-| victim, Max Gomez, said that an I.| posal was not merely a pacifist ges- R. T. agent had threatened to bring|ture as election propaganda for the| a physician employed by the I. R. T.| republican party in’ office. Dollar | around to *xamine him. ‘imperialism went. much farther and aan sree 3 | undertook an attack on the organi-_ Banton Opens Quiz. _ |zation and alliance systems of the Questioning of witnésses of the|other powers. The thrust was di- wreck was began today by District | rected, on the one hand, against the | Attorney Banton. He has already|League of Nations, which Great, received the “reports” of the city| Britain is manipulating for its pol- | police and the transit commission|icy of power, and, on the other “investigators” as to the cause of|hand, against the network of; the smash-up. (French alliances. The United In the report of the transit com-| States proposed the formation of a mission it was said that there was| new system, the center of gravity of no evidence that the accident had) which should lie in the United been caused by a defective wheel on| States. The dollar government was | the fatal ninth car of the under- to become the supreme judge in ground train. Instead, «the report) every conflict. found that it was more likely that/ France, caught in its own net of someone had manipulated the switch pacifist hypocrisy and out-mancuv- as the train was passing. ered by Washington, responded | That this is part of the deliberate| with a list of conditions and reser- | frame-up which the Interborough is yations, due regard for which was now perfecting against three of its | stated to be an essential prelimin- employes in an effort to shake it- ary to its signing a treaty. The self from criminal responsibility is|sense of the French reservations now clearly seen. These workers! was as follows: France can ys are William E. Baldwin, mainte-|nounce neither its military alliances nance foreman and his helper, Jot |nor the support of the League of eph Carr, and Harry King, a tower-! Nations. France will sign no treaty man, Baldwin is now free under by means of which the United $10,000 bail charged with homicide. | States can forbid it to enter into a) BURKE TO CO ON war. For this reason, Briand with-| By GEORG (Berlin) The answers of the governments | to the United States have all been drew behind the formula “Right of | Defense”; furthermore, the war ob-| | ligations arising out of the Con-| venant of the League of Nations, ‘RESERVATIONS’ IN THE “PEACE” TREATY France to retreat. In their latest notes, despatched last week, they still insist formally on their “res- ervations,” but they declare them- selves prepared to sign the Amer- ican text unaltered. They make out as if they are under the impression that America acknowledges pheir standpoint. Accordingly there arises the gro- tesque situation, so stigmatizing for imperialistic hypocrisy, that they will sign a treaty, the text of which will be “interpreted” differently by each signatory. Their differences remain unchanged. It might be asked why this scrap of paper should be signed at all. In the first place, to fool the workers with pa- cifist phrases. On this point all the signatories are in agreement. In the second place, each of the signa- tories is thinking of his own special position. Under serious stances, the United cireum- States is strong enough to snap its fingers | at the European “reservations” and to.interpret the pact in the Amer- ican sense, i.e, to compel France and England to accept a dollar judgment, if no other means avail, then by means of ship’s guns. But while still referring to the “pact,” England and France have in the course of the pact-negotiations ce- mented their alliance more firmly, a fact which is of great importance for England on account of its war plans against the Soviet Union and its fight for power against the Uni- ted States, while for France it is of great importance for England on retaining its supremacy in Europe over Germany. Germany has made use of the opportunity to ingratiate itself with America in order to ac- quire a support in the rear against France. None of them can refuse to sign; such an open demonstration against Washington would be too risky. Therefore, they are signing, | but “wggh reservations.” These reservations, in part tacitly acknowledged by Washington, are such, however, that even bourgeois- liberal newspapers are asking whether war is now really “out- lawed and prohibited,” as the reser- vations and exceptions can easily be interpreted to admit of any war. The pact has still another very serious aspect: The Soviet Union has been completely excluded from the negotiations. This diplomatic boycott alone bears witness to a capitalist world solidarity against the Workers’ State, which is re-| garded as being outside of the “moral world.” exists between American and Eng- Nay, more, there | STRICT GENSOR Workers Pa IN YUGOSLAVIA; RUMOR REVOLTS Troops Held Ready by Belgrade VIENNA, Austria, Aug. 29.— | While a strict censorship enforced by the Belgrade government pro- hibits news of the Croatian and Dal- matian movement for autonomy from leaking across the border, meager reports received here indi- cate that the Yugoslav police are moving against the leaders of the Croatian Peasant Party znd that all | workers’ and peasants’ demonstra- tions in Dalmatia and Zagreb are being ruthlessly suppressed. A few days ago officials of the Belgrade government announced that they would proceed against Dr. Vlado Matchek. president of the Croatian party and Deputy Kremje- bich, who headed the Croatian dele- gation to the inter-parliamentary congress in Berlin, where he ap- pealed to the congress not to seat the Belgrade delegates since they did not represent Yugoslavia. The actual moves that the zovernment have taken in Ahis direction are not known, due to the efficiency of the censor. Rumors that student and workers’ demonstrations against the Belgrade hegemony are continuing to take place in Spalato in spite of police and gendarme obstruction, still per- sist. | Although it is known that the Croatian and democratic delegates are holding their coalition conven- tion in Laibach and have indicated their support of Matchek, details concerning the convention are lack- ing. The troops that were mobilized on the occasion of the death and burial of Stefan Raditch, in order to prevent any peasant uprisings, are still being kept in readiness by the Belgrade government. Liberal use, however, is reported to be made of them in the suppression of mass demonstrations, strikes and revolu- tionary organizations. RED CAMPAIGN MEETS THIS WEEK The Workers (Communist) Party will present to the workers of New York City its program of the class struggle at a series of open-air meetings throughout the city this week. The meetings follow: Today. Ona Hundred and Thirty-eighth St. and St. Ann’s—Le Roy, Cibul- sky, Green (Pioneer). One Hundred and Fortieth St. and Sth Ave., N. Y.—Shapiro, Joe Co- hen. Bryant and 174 St., Bronx—Nes- sin, Kastrell, Spiro, Gozigian, Ber- man (Pioneer). Twenty-fifth St. and Mermaid Ava. Coney Island—Padgug, Lil- lianstein, Magliacano, Shafran. Steinway and Jamaica, Astoria, L. I—Schachtman, Abern, Vera Bush, Burke, Blake, Heder. One Hundred and Sixth and Mad- ison, N. Y.—Codkind, Schalz, Sum- ner, Brantz (Pioneer). Osborn and Dumont Aves., Brook- lyn—Benjamin, Rosemond, Kindred, Julius Cohen. Tomorrow. | National Biscuit Co. | Ballam, Ross. | Bristol and Pitkin Ave., Brook- |lyn—Lipzin, Pasternack, Alkin, G. (Noon)— LR.T. Smash-Up Charge Company Refuses to Pa Units, branches, nuclei, ete. of the Workers (Communist) Party and the Young Workers (Com- munist) League in New York City are asked to send notices of their activities to this column. There is no charge. All notices must ar- rive one day in advance to ensure publication. Downtown Y. W. L. Unit An open air meeting of the Young Workers League, Downtown Unit No. held today at 49th Avenu Speakers will Jensky, Len , Joe Har- ¥. W. L. Upper Bronx, Unit 1. The Y WwW. L. Unit 1 of Upper Bronx will hold an open air meeting at Inter e and Wilkins Ave., Bronx at 8:30 p. m. tomorrow EB. Wald, P. Green, S, Daniels will speak. Section 5, Campaign Conference. A conference of all tprop direc. tors, all member: 2 campaign committee of , all Daily Worker nts, ‘ature agents, will tz place ‘today at 2075 Clinton Avenue at 8:30 p. m Literature Agents Meet. A meeting of the District Litera. ture Committee an@ all Section Lit. erature Agents of District 2 will be held today 6 p. m.| at_ 28 Union Square in the Workers Book Shop. Strict attendance is necessary Section 5, Bronx. All unit and section agitprop lead. ers, campaign committees, Daily Worker and literature agents and all comrades active in this election cam. paign must be present at a confer. ence of the section today at 8 p. m, at 2075 Clinton Avenue, Important Notice. All Party members are instructed to appear at Party Headquarters 26. 28 Union Square, today at 6 p. m. for important Party work. Also on Sat- urday, September 1, at 1 p.-m Ali comrades are instructed to turn. in at once all money collected during last week's Tag Day and take an- other box or list for this week's col- lection —John J. Ballam, Acting Dist. Org. Party F A. Party |held Wednesda ept. 5, at |Party | headquarters § Union’ Square, at {8 p. m. of all Party members belong. ing to the United Council of Work- ing Class Women and other women's organizations. Party members who are housewives must all come to the Fraction meeting. All active com- rades, in language groups such as jon Meeting. n meeting will be uanian, Ukrainian, Finnish, Jew- ish, etc., etc., must attend this meet. ing. ¥. W. L. German Branch, Yorkville. The next meeting will be held tomorrow at m, at the Hungarian Workers Home, 350 E8ist Street. All German speaking young workers are invited to attend this meeting. Branch 2, Section 8 Meet. A meeting of Branch 2, Section 8 of the Workers (Communist) Party will be held Sunday, at 9 a. m. at 154 Watkins St. After the meeting all members will go out to partici- pate in the collection of, signatures. Section 5, Bronx, Meet. A special meeting of Branch 5 will be held today, 8:30 p, m. at 2075 Clin- ton Ave. of the branch and section committees. Members elected make further arrangements for the Bronx, Red Banquet to be held Sun_ day, September 9, at the same ad- dress. U. S. CUBA SUGAR MONOPOLY SEEN HAVANA, Cuba, Aug. 29— | Sometime today or tomorrow, Presi- dent Machado is expected to sign a decree restricting the sale of the sugar crop exclusively to the United States, except for 1,500,000 tons of a) sugar remaining from last year’s crop which will be allowed |to be sold by European companies. All sugar bound for other countries |bu: the United States would have |to be sold through the Sugar Ex- | port Corporation. Interests are known to be work- ing for an exclusive United States monopoly on the sugar crop. MEET YOUR FRIENDS at Messinger’s Vegetarian will, ‘Labor and Fraternal Organizations Labor and fraternal organiza- tions in New York City and vicinity are asked to send notices of their activities to thie column. There is no charge. All notices must arrive one day in advance to ensure publication. Local 22 T. U. BE. Le Local 22 of the Trade Un'on Educa- tional League will hold Sts annual Dance on October 13 at the Park Falace. Fretheit Genangs Verein, The annual picnic ana concert of the Freiheit Gesangs Verein will be held Sunday, September 4, at Pleasant Bay Park. An original program of songs has begn arranged for the occasion Brownsville Sacco Meet. The Brownsville branch of the I L. D, will hold a Sacco-Vanzett! mem- orial meet at 8 p. m. at Bristol St. and Pitkin Aves., Brooklyn Young Workers Social Club. A membership meeting of the Young Workers Social Culture Club will be held this evening at 8 p. m. Report from Comrade Hol. lander will be given at the meeting which will be held at 118 Bristol St. the Single Tax Abolish Economic Slavery” will be the sub. ject of debate at the Ingersoll Forum 113 W57th St. next Sunday, Septem- ber 2nd at 8 p.m. The debate will be between Timothy P. Murphy and George Lloyd. Affirmative by Lloyd, Negative by Murphy. I. L. D. Open Air Meet An open air meeting under the aus- pices of the International Labor De- fense will be held tomorrow evening corner of Longwood and Prospect Aves. Bronx. The speakers will be Louis A. Baum, Secretary of the Photographic Workers Union, and S. Levy. I Brodowsky will act as chairman. “Would leor Concert. Saturday night, September 29 at Town Hall, 113-123 W. 48rd St. a concert will be held for the benefit of Jewish Colonization in the Soviet Union and the new Jewish Soviet territory in Biro Bidjan. COAST ASSURED FOR U.S, CANAL |Colombian Puppets are Faithful BOGOTA, Colombia, Aug: 29.— Nicaragua acquires the Mosquitia coast, which has been under dispute for the last twenty-five years by the {Colombian and Nicaraguan com- “panies, according to the treaty that | was announced today by President Abadia. Mosquitia is on the eastern coast of Nicaragua and is of primary im- portance to the United States gov- ernment in view of the proposed Nicaragua canal which would cut through this territory. By granting | the sovereignty of the Nicaraguan government over this territory, United States is assured of control | according to the canal agreement \entered into with Nicaragua. | As a recompense the Colombian government got the Providencia Archipelagio, which is off the Mos- quitia coast about 100 miles from Nicaragua and 400 miles from Colombia. The Archipelagio offers no danger to the United States canal since it is located in shallow water which does not allow the ap- proach of large vessels. | You're in the fight when you write for The DAILY WORKER. rty Activities DEMONSTRATION IN SEATTLE FOR «GLASS VICTIMS Centralia Victims’ Re- lease Demanded SEATTLE, Wash., Aug. 29.—A mass demonstration and open-air meeting for the release of the eight Centralia I. W. W. was held here on Occidental and Washington Sts. with more than 500 present to hear speeches by Carl Brannin, chairman of the Seattle In- ternational Labor Defense; Mrs. Barnett, wife of one of the prison- ers; John C. Kennedy, of the Seat- tle Labor College; George Ritchie and George O’Hanrahan. Bill Worol, well known for his activities in or- ganizing the lumber workers, acted as chairman. Speakers gave the details of the case, exposed the conspiracy of the lumber trust which still exists keep these workers in prison, and urged the workers to carry on the fight for their release through their economic and political power by in- ‘creasing their pressure on the cap- italist class. It was pointed out that Kenneth | MacIntosh, notoriously anti-labor, and the state supreme court judge who sealed the fate of the Centralia men by upholding the vicious sen- tence of 25-40 years parcelled out by the, judge of the lower court, has declared himself a candidate for the |U. S Senate. A state-wide conference, planned for the Centralia prisoners, will in- clude trade unions, farmers’ organ- izations, liberal groups and other labor organizations. Progressive Group of Delicatessen Clerks to Hold Red Drive Banquet A Red Election Banquet and Con- cert of the progressive group of Lo- cal 302, Delicatessen Clerks’ Union, will be held Friday evening, Sept. |7, at the United Workers’ Co-opera- tive Restaurant, 2731 White Plains Ave, the Bronx. The proceeds of the affair will be donated by the progressive group to the Election Campaign Fund of the Workers (Communist) Party. | Among the speakers will be Re- becca Grecht, district campaign manager of the Workers (Commun- ist) Party and P. Yuditch, labor editor of the Freiheit, Jewish Com-, munist daily. Rebecca Grecht will speak on the significance of the 1928 elections to workers, and Yu- ditch will devote a large part of his talk to the struggle of the progres- sive clerks against the right wing bureaucracy of the United Hebrew Trades, and the role of the socialist party misleaders. He will urge the political as well as the industrial left-wing solidarity of the delica- tessen clerks. Save this copy of the Daily for one of the 40,000 traction workers. Advertise your union meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City “oO Dr. J. Mindel Dr. L, Hendin Surgeon Dentists 1 UNION SQUARE Room 803 Phone, Algonquin 8183 CARPENTERS’ UNION LOCAL 2090 Meets every Thursday, 8 P. M., at Labor Temple, 243 East 84th St. Office and headquarters are in the Labor Temple. Hospital Bills now in prison Sentence Czech Worker to 4 Months Prison for ‘Blasphemous” Speech PRAGUE, Aug 29.—A Communis con- victed in Leitmeritz, phemy and sentenced to four months hard labor in prison, with d fasting per month Medina had oken the year be- fore in Teplitz-s enau before a meeting of w alled to protest against mistreatment of rev sers. He was charged wit hemy and the un- dermining of religion NEARING GREETED IN PERTH AMBOY Workers Give $36 for Red Campaign PERTH AMBOY, N. J., Aug. 29. —The 150 Pe Amboy workers who a dri instorm to hear tt Nearing, Communist Candidate for Governor of New Jer- sey, speak on the issues of the 1928 elections and the working-class pro- gram of the Workers (Coramunist) Party, received the Communist can- didate with an enthusiasm which in- dicates the growing discontent of New Jersey workers with the Hague and Edge political machines, accord- ing to a Workers (Communist) Party statement tod The meeting, which s the initial one of Scott Nearing’s New Jersey tour, was held at the old Y. M. H. Av Hall in Perth Amboy. Nearing unmasked the Wall St. control of Hoover and Smith and presented a clear picture of the workers’ problems under capitalism, emphasizing the wage redhctions, speed-up, and union-smashing activ- ities of the bosses to further reduce the standards of the workers. Jensky of the Young Workers (Communist) League outlined the problems of the working youth in New Jersey and throughout the country, urging the working youth of Perth Amboy to join the Young Workers (Communist) League. Before the main speech, delivered by Nearing, the Lapotnice Russian Balalaika Orchestra rendered sev- eral numbers, under the direction of Alexander Belakopytoff. Irving Frieman, ‘the chairman, made an appeal for membership in the International Branch of the Workers (Communist) Party of Perth Amboy and help carry on the working-class campaign of Com- munism. Every worker who entered the hall bought a Vote Communist but- ton, from the sale of which $13 was raised for the Communist Campaign fund. An additional collection brought the total contributions of the meeting to $36. | “For Any Kind of Insurance” CARL BRODSKY 7 ™. 42d St. New York City Telephone Murray Hill 6550. ; ' ‘ H ' L ERON SCHOOL 185-187 EAST BROADWAY N YORK JOSEPH ERON, Principal THE LARGEST AND BEST AS WELL AS OLDEST SCHOOL, to learn the English language, to prepare oneself for admixsion to College. ERON SCHOOL is registered by the BR ENTS of the State of New York. It has all the rights of a_ Government High School. Call, Phone or write for talogue School Opens im September, N 000 alumni are our best Register N Our the Treaty of Locarno and the vari- jland a tacit understanding that war | Welsh, Levitt (Pioneer). jous French military alliances were, against the Soviet Union is “not! Fifth Ave. and 110th, N. Y.— |not to be influenced by the pro-| outlawed.” Thus the pact outlaws Taft, Huiswood, E. Welsh, Ruiz, i | posed treaty. ‘not war, but the Soviet Union! Or, | Lyons, Repalsky (Pioneer). . : 1 . | This exposur: tl |as the liberal “Manchester Guard-| Market and Plaza, Newark, N. J. Will Arrange Meetings | 4 bee aio Pl ot ant expresses it, “Chamberlain |—Wright, Friedman. os | France of its own “pacifism” was | | in 12 Cities | ‘agve®| suggests that all members of the| Varet and Graham, Brooklyn.— S very opportune for the Washington | Nessin, Rosemond, Mindola. | f Nations be invited to governme’ Over the head of the, League 0 ations be invite sin, : Continued from Page One | Paris pa wh it NOR aptaalod| sign the pact. Critics in Paris re- Fiftieth St. and Fifth Ave., Brook- state where workers will be able in| to all the big capitalist powers for Mtk that through this suggestion lyn (4th Ave. line, B.-M. T.)—Pow- wit TELEPHONE HARD 4473 MARY WOLFE STUDENT OF THE DAMROSCH CONSERVATORY PIANO LESSONS Moved to 2420 Bronx Park East and Dairy Restaurant 1763 Southern Bivd., Bronx, N. Y. Right Off 174th St. Subway Station penal ste Marl each niet ltachcachiaeter } Hotel & Restaurant Branch of THE AMALGAMATED FOOD WORKERS 133 W. 51st St., Phone Circle 7336 Business Meeting Held On the First Monday of the Month One Industry—One Union. Join and Fight t mon Enemy Workers PYCCKHM 3YBHOM BPAY Dr. JOSEPH B. WEXLER Surgeon Dentist 25 yrs. in practice, Moderate prices. 223 SECOND AV. NEW YORK Temple Courts Bldg. WE ALL MEET at the NEW WAY CAFETERIA h r } * Fi Office Open from m, to 6 p.m. Near Co-operative Colony. Apt, 5H many instances to hear Comrade their support of the pact. In doing |the Universality of the pact is ¢r% ohn ae ae 101 WEST 27th STREET Telephone EASTABROOK 2489 Minor, and other Communist speak-| 80, the United States counted upon ‘topped. For this suggestion hits erie Sinaia NEW YORK Special rates to students from ers, for the first time. | the | means that not only Egypt and the ®€e)- | possibility of playing the pow- | the Co-operative House. Donald Burke, having surrendered the “Red” Esseti to George Pearl-! man for use in the New Jersey cam- | paign, will cover the state by train. He will speak at street meetings, deavored from that moment to _ Galiger. , p i | scout : Fie * 2 9. SECOND AVE. many of them before factory gates! bring about ; Waat New York, N, t.Padmore, 1 at noon hour, sell literature and so-| the ebsites raglan ie United Armenian Picnic Will Beusssiy: ae Bet. 12th and 18th Sts. licit funds in support of the Party! campaign. Burke will leave next Tuesday, Sept. 4, making Poughkeepsie his first stop. His itinerary includes Hudson, Troy, Albany, Schenectady, thereby ensuring the success of the ers off against one another. In view of the paramount con- flict between England and Amer- ica, the English government en- States. In the negotiations now be- ginning with France the Anglo- French front has actually come into being. In order § gain the support of France against Washington, the equal in value to the American Monroe Doc- Monroe territories but also Russia would be drawn into the zone in which military operations are sanc- tioned.” : Donate Part of Funds ‘to Communist Fund East Van Cortlandt Park, next |dancing. The peak of the program Paterson, N. J., (3 Governor St.) —Markoff, Russak. Saturday, Sept. 1. First Ave. and 79th St. N. Y.— Markoff, E Welsh, Napoli, Rolfe, Perth Amboy, N. J.—-B. Smith, L. Duke, Rosen (Pioneer). Elizabeth, N. J. (Union Square)— Yusem, R. Duke. Ford moves his automobile factory Rational Vegetarian Restaurant Strictly Vegetarian Food. All Comrades Meet at Vegetarian Restaurant PHYSICAL and MENTAL RECREATION Co-operative Workers Camp Nitgedaiget | Beacon, N. Y.—Tel: Beacon 731 Co-operative Workers Patronize I. SCOLNICK Fancy Cleaner and Dyers 107 Allerton Ave. Bronx, N. ¥. ~ Unity Co-operators Patronize Insure w! ' London government adoriet Bar| Sunday, will be the scene of the Ww BRONSTEIN’S ' SAM LESSER | Ution, Rochester, Syracuse, Buffalo, and’s reservations and supplement. | Armenian picnic for the benefit of Hundreds of Workers | vegEraRIAN HEALTH con pasar sania Trinh po lier era bays Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailor ‘acer ; | 5 a a A 7 4 - ! heat ss Stak igi Hens vidnaera Nag wee Peyoee Eng-|the Armenian Communist weekly, | Fired as Ford Opens RESTAURANT nights, lectures, camp magazine and other recreations during the 1818 — 7th Ave. New York} He is! leman: t ba ‘ ” | £. if Betw | | Members and sympathizers of the eediniee as Taal Englien | RSet eat haan abun cls Plant in Manchester | 558 Claremont P’kway Bronx corre naeae ene Next to Unity Cocoperntivs ire | Workers (Communist) Party in| spheres of influence” certain parts campaign fund. feats =~ ORR A kindergarten with compe- Don’t drag any bundles — = | ert teed eesidaney fe aiegal as pelts cee ae TEC AMM | cats fee here, ecranusd, to trode | weviene tr Conk aia il be e- ply A Phong gh bape ea ved Tel ay, Reh et Puan Be whole-hear' the Persi: | en arranged, to include workers in Cork, Ireland, will be de- whose parents stay in camp. ite i 117 | this preliminary tour a success— Sxeland m bbe cana BrONe etivediubie aris inary dorian vet (prived., cf. theif, Jobecowial) Henty Health Food P. y P. erate prices at the camp store. Pulaski 1770. | Tel, Pulaskt 6216, | | | ; DAVID OSHINSK much more important tour te fellow. trine, : |will be reached when the Freiheit to Manchester, England, as was an- REGISTER NOW for the New GENERAL era Definite dates for each city will! tn its answer Washington eliien| Singing Society will give a number | nounced at the meeting of the Cork 1600 MADISON AVE. | Spacious and Airy Bungalows At: Pirie: Sh GTR eat Ae ee be announced soon, NEGRO HITS HOOVER CHICAGO, Aug. 29 (UP).—Ar- inand Scott, Washington, D. C., Ne- gro attorney, told 25,000 members of the Improved Order of Elks, a Negro organization in convention here, that “I for one never again will support the policies of Presi- t Coolidge and I know that many. ? ieve that way.” passed over the French and English reservations in silence or refused to include them in the text of the treaty. The original American draft waa retained, although “ex- planations* were offered, not, how- | ever, to be incorporated in the treaty ancl, consequently, not legally binding. This trump card played by dollar imperialism caused England and of its well-known seiections, | Refreshments will be served, the chief of which will be real Armenian “shashlik” and an Armenian bev- jerage whose nature is unrevealed. The picnic is open to all class-con- scious workers, whether their ante~ cedents are Armenian.or Abyssinian. The program arrangements commit- tee promises an extraordinarily good time to alla, Ww Rotary Club here last night. The Ford factory is being moved to escape the British duty of 22 2-9 per cent, which was aimed directly against the Ford car by British au- |tomobile interests. Most of the ma- \chinery has already been moved from Cork to Manchester. | British manufacturers have been chard hit by Ford competition and had succeeded in having parliament impose a high duty on the cars. \ PHONE: UNIVERSITY 5865 OFFICE: 69 Fifth Ave. John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES . A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet. 802 E. 12th ST. NEW YORK | 1 PHONE: Alg. 6900 2700 Bronx Park, East (Co-operative Workers Colony) Rates: $17.00 Per Week TRAINS LEAVE GRAND CENTRAL EVERY HOUR. BOATS TO NEWBURGH—$1.50 ROUND TRIP | Fire, Life, Public Liability, Go pensation. Automobile, Accldl Health. No Tip Center Barber NEW WORKERS CENTER. Pi 26-28 Union Sq. 1 Flight NEW YORK CITY Individual Sanitary Berthes b perts.—LADIES' HAIR B . SPECIALISTS,

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