The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 9, 1928, Page 5

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veer THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1928 New York Workers to Protest Fascist Terror at Mass MINOR, BALLAM, OTHER SPEAKERS ‘TO-SCORE TERROR To Tell About Latest! Acts of Violence Robert Minor, editor of the Daily Worker and Workers (Communist) Party candidate for governor of New York, will be one of the speak- | ers at the protest meeting against | | Mussolini’s international terror, to | be held Sunday at 2 p. m. in Web- ster Hall, 119 E. 11th St. The meet- | ing has been arranged by the New| | ¥ork Section of the International | | Labor Defense and the Anti-Fascist | | Alliance of North America. The protest meeting has been given additional impetus by the re- | cent execution in Italy of the Ital-| ian Communist, Michele Della Mag- | yciora, and the murder of Tony Parra, anti-fascist worker, during a |fascist parade in Detroit, These | latest acts of terror on the part of | the Mussolini regime and its agents have aroused the resentment of thousands of workers all over the world. Several thousand New York work- ers are expected to, be present at the meeting Sunday and demand the cessation of the fascist terror. Among the other prominent. speak- ers, in addition to Minor, will be John J. Ballam, New York secre- tary of the Trade Union Educa- tional League; V. Montana, national secretary of the Italian Bureau of the Workers (Communist) Party, Carlo Tresca, editor of “Il Mar- tello.” The chairman of the meet- ing will be Karl Reeve, edifor of the Labor Defender. jJAIL, TORTURE ~PERSIAN REDS Communist League in Protest One of the best and most fearless | comrades in the Persian revolution-/ ary working class movement has} been murdered by the Persian gov- ernment, Comrade Hedjazi, a mem- ber of the illegal Communist Party and Young Communist League of Persia, was imprisgned for his ac- tivities. While in’ prison he was cruelly tortured in order to compel him to reveal information with re- gard to the revolutionary movement, its work and members. This he steadfastly refused to do. His death came as a result of the police apply- ing ice to his head for three succes- sive days, The torture and death of this com- rade is but one incident typical of | the reign of terror being conducted by the Persian government against | the revolutionary movement. any | revolutionary workers are at present | languishing in jail for such “crimes”, as participating in the last May Day) | | ” celebrations, or as “suspected” of being members of the Young Com-| munist League. This brutal anti-working class ter- rorism is waged at the behest of and | on behalf of British imperialism, | ' whose puppet the Persian govern-| ment is. British imperialist oil inter- ests in Persia and the plan to use Persia as a base for military op- erations against the Soviet Union are responsible for collaboration of | the British and Persian bourgeoisie against. the Persian revolutionary) working class movement. | The Young Communist Leagues of | Britain and Persia unite in protest-| ing against the murder of Comrade) Hedjazi, the continued imprisonment of the Persian comrades and the} White Terrorism exercised against the workers organizations. Unitedly | we demand «the release of all im- prisoned comrades and call on the working class youth of Persia and) Britain to sharpen the struggle against the White Terror in Persia and against British imperialist dom- ination. Down wth the white terror in Persia! i Young Communist League of Persia. Young Communist League of Great Britain. To Honor Haymarket | Martyrs at Chicago Demonstration Sunday November 11 marks the 41st com- memoration of the Haymarket mar- tyrs. In 1886 five workers, fight- ing and leading the struggle for the eight hour day, and better working | conditions, were sentenced to be. hung; two workers were sentenced to fifteen years imprisonment. The Chicago branch of the Young Workers (Communist) League will demonstrate in memory of these working class martyrs on Sunday at 2.80. They will begin their commem- oration at Union Park, and will there stage a demonstration before the statue of a policeman, erected by the state in memory of the vicious and reactionary policemen that were killed in the “frame-up.” They will then proceed to the Waldheim Ceme- tary, where the Haymarket victims are buried. The parade of the Y. W. C. L, will featured by many banners, mass in the raid, and resulted in the seizure of $75,000 i $75,000 in Drugs Seized in Raid er The drug traffic, supposedly barred by law, continues to thrive while politiciags find ita fertile source of graft. Once in a long while, however, some gesture must be made of “enforcing the law” and so we have another sensational raid. The latest was made on a building at 1818t St. and St. Nicholas Ave. nm drugs. Photo shows three of the federal agents who took part REDS SUMMONED _ BEFORE COURTS IN ADLER CASE ‘Injunction Fight on at! Milwaukee MILWAUKEE, Nov. 8. — Two] members of the Workers (Commu- nist) Party, sub-district organizer Benjamin Sklar and Samuel Herri-| man were subpoenaed for appear- ance before Judge Gustav Gehrz, to IN LATVIAN By VALENTIN OLBERG. 'HE elections in Latvia on October 6th and 7th took place at a time of fierce reprisals against the revo- |lutionary working class. The very first election results show that the elections have entailed |a material strengthening of the Left, | but also a strengthening of the! Right. Their gains were at the cost of the Social Democrats and the 22 of the workers and peasants (the In Rigas the Left-radical trade union list recorded 32,000 votes against lectuals) will be represented by two members. There is therefore the possibility of a Left fraction of seven} deputies in the new Diet. “Socialists” Lose. The Social Democrats experienced a loss of six mandates and will thus be represented in the new Diet by 26 instead of 82 deputies. The So- cial-Democrat “Minimalists,” a party allied to the Social Democrats and commanding four mandates in the old Diet, will hardly muster a single deputy. This ftaction played rather an important role in the old Diet, since itvconnected the Social as prime minister in the government of the Left in Latvia. The Demo- cratic Centre Party has retained its three mandates. The Peasants’ Union, the biggest bourgeois party of Latvia (organization of the big farmers) will again be represented by 16 deputies. The fascist groups (house-holders, National Centre Party, etc.) record an accretion of six mandates, i.e., from 13 to 19. The elections took place at a time characterized by an extraordinary accentuation of class differences. The bourgeoisie had done all in its power to be sure of having an obedi- ent tool in the new Diet. List No. 22) was only admitted in three of the existing five constituencies. Terror- ism raged pitilessly. The press or- gans of the revolutionary working class were systematically suppress- ed. The publications, “Young Guard” and “Our Fight” were confiscated | The election appeals were annulled. | Numerous arrests were made and| many houses were searched. On the! eve of the elections, the well-knowr | writer and poet, Linard Laizen, the) chief candidate of List No. 22, was! arrested. The police prevented all agitation for List No. 22. And yet the revolutionary working class se- cured five seats. The discontent among the broac masses of the population is very! great. For the last two years agri- culture has been passing through a serious crisis, by which the weak industry of Latvia was also affected. The bourgeoisie and the big farm- ers renewed their attacks on the working class. According to a state- ment made by Vishnias, the leader} of the Social Democratic trade} unions, the average wages paid in the textile and match industries is 25 lats. The minimum required to keep body and soul together is, how- ever, 28% lats. The eight-hour day exists only in theory; in reality 12 or 14 hour’s work are done daily, Communists Gain. The discontent and the activity of broad masses of workers have con- | stantly been increasing since Decem- ber 1927, One strike follows the), other, In the summer of this year the Left trade unions succeeded in forcing a wage increase of from 10 to 15 per cent. The bourgeoisie re- plied with reprisals and the Left trade unions were dissolved. As a instituted a general strike on August 22nd. The Social Democrats looked upon the general strike as an act of “Communist provocation.” They stil] speak of the “sacrifices” made by the “poor police.” It is obvious that if 75 per cent of the police force are members of the Social Democratic trade union, the Social Democrats were not in a position to proclaim a strike. ” / Besides this, they denounce the Left workers as Communists. When publications before the ‘Riga court- martial, the public prosecutor asked the Police Sergeant Stieglitz how he knew’ that the Left workers were Communists, the official in question professed to be in possession of ample evidence, including a confi- dential circular of the Social Demo- cratic Party leaders addressed to the local organizations and plainly stat- ing that the Left trade unions con- ing and talks ‘sy prominent speakers. stitute a Communist organization, The prestige of the Social Demo- LEFT WING MAKES GAIN Democratic Gentre Party. List Nog left-radical trade union list) secured} five seats out of the total hundred.) Democrats with the Democratic Cen-| tre Party. Its leader, Skujnik, acted) protest, the revolutionary workers | a few days ago, on the occasion of) the trial of the editors of the Left! ELECTIONS Jerats has greatly decreased. In many assemblies a remarkable form of demonstration was employed against them. As soon as Social Democratic orators started speaking against the Communists, the work- ers would quit the premises singing! the “International.” | ‘Labor and Fraternal) Organizations Williamsburg 1. L. D. The Williamsburg Branch of the |L. L. D. is calling a mass meeting for | Monday, November 12, at 8 p. m. at) 56 Manhattan Ave., Brooklyn. Prom-| i | inent kc i) Shif- 19,000 at the last elections. The In-| fant speakers will report on Bre | rin's case and on the cases of the dependent Socialists (radical intel-| other martyrs in our class struggle. |ing” the union, Schlesinger’s “re-| their | After a discussion on the reports a | good concert program will amuse | those present. Admission free, Working Women's Concert. | \Umnited Council of Working Women | | will hold ¢ literary and musical af- | |ternoon, Sunday, Noy. 11, 2 to 6 p.| m., at Irving Plaza, Irving Place and | 15th St. M. Olgin, Ben Gold and | Juliet S, Poyntz will speak. Konin | Girls, piano and cello; Miss Menkel, soprano, proletarian orchestra will feature. Admission 50 cents. ey | Women’s Culture Club. | A concert and dance of the Amai- | gamated Women's Culture Club will! |be held Saturday evening, Nov. 10, jat the Workers Center, ‘28 Upion| | Square. | Knitgoods Workers Attention, The conference of the knitgoods| workers, called by the New York lo- | cal of the Textile Workers’ Union for | October 28, was postponed urtil Sun-| day, November 11, at 2 p. m, The place where the conference {s to be| held will be announced at a later | date. This conference is of the great-| est importance as it will lay the plans | for organization when the new sea- son arrives. | Albert Weisbord, national secretary of the union and Louis Hymen, chair- man of the national organization com- mittee of the needle trades, will ad- dress the conference. Workers must | not fail ¢o attend the conference. | eee ia Italian Chamber of Labor. ‘The, Italian Chamber of Labor will celebrate the tenth anniversary of its foundation on Saturday evening. January 26th next. A concert and ball has been arranged for the occa- sion at the New Webster Manor, 125 East, 11th St, New York City. A Special invitation has been sent | to all Italian-speaking local unions of this city to set aside any other affair that may conflict with the date of this celebration, i AEA | Course in Spanish. ‘The Spanish Workers’ Center is| opening a class in Spanish for the English speaking comrades. All those interested in joining this class should write to the club at 55 W. 113th St., N. Y. C, The class will start on Thursday, November 16th and will continue ‘once a week on the same nights. . . The Spanish Fraction of the Work- ers (Communist) Party will hold its first dance Saturday evening, Dec. 22, at Harlem .Casino, 116th St. and Lenox Ave. Proceeds will go for the organization of Spanish workers and | the support of their organ “Vida/ Obrera.” As this will be a real In- | ternational affair, please, dot not} arrange any other affair on that date. PTY he | Brownsville I. L. D, Meet. A special membership meeting of the Brownsville branch of the Inter- | national Labor Defense will be held} Monday at 8 p.m. at 154 Watkins! St. Important matters will be taken) up and Rose Baron, secretary of the| New York section of the I. L. D., will speak. Refreshments will be served after the meeting. Postpone I. L. D. Lecture, The lecture by S. Almasoff before the Brownsville branch of the In- ternational Labor Defense, scheduled | to be held tonight at 154 Watkins | St. has been postponed because of | the illness of the lecturer, The date | when the lecture will be given will| be announced late: Eron School 185-187 EAST BROADWAY, NEW YORK JOSEPH E. ERON, Principal THE LARGEST AND BEST AS WELL AS OLDEST SCHOOL. to learn the English language, to prepare oneself for admission to college BRON SCHOOL Is registered by the REGENTS of the State of New York. It has all the rights of a Government High School, Call, Phone or write for Catulogue. REGISTER NOW! Our 25,000 alumni are our best z witnesses. TELEPHONE ORCHARD 4473, CENTRAL ; ~ BUSINESS } SCHOOL —Bookkeeping —Stenography —Typewriting Individual Instruction CLASS LIMITED 108 E. 14th STREET AFFIRM 100,000: LEHMAN FUND Roger® Baldwin Makes testify on injunction violations in |the strike against the Adler Cloth-| ing Co. The Amalgamated Clothing| Workers’ Union is conducting the| strike here for many months. Since thé beginning of the strike| the two Communists have been car-| lrying on a campaign of propaganda among the members of the Amal- gamated,. most of whom are on strike, to conduct the fight in a | militant way as the only method of | Statement |winning the struggle against the) open shop firm, Their advocacy of| Continued from Page One open violation of the federal injunc-| strips the last fig-leaf from the|tion taken out by the bosses, was} | wreckers of the needle trades work-|fought not only by the capitalist|#"¥ conflicting affairs for that da ers’ once-powerful organizations.| Police but also by the reactionary Hillman’s Amalgamated Bank and/ officials of the Amalgamated. Now the yellow Jewish Forward had each|they are being called to testify aa given $25,000 to make up the balance |court on violations. of the $100,000 fund. | 'Thruout the long months of bitter! Not “Rebuilt,” \and futile struggle against the Adler erly But Destroyed: |e (Piaile becauie. of the. coward-| In Baldwin's statement he de-|ly methods of the right wing), the clares that the $100,000 fund was col-|local A. C, W. members have learnt} lected by Schlesinger for “rebuild-|to follow the left wing leaders inj $00 n proposals. Last Saturday building” consisted of the hiring of night a large number of strikers, underworld thugs to slug and stab/under the leadership of Sklar and left wing workers, whd fought bit-| Herriman, conducted a spirited de- terly to establish a real union after|monstration in front of the home the right wing had smashed the old/of the injunction judge, F. A. IL. G. W, U. and had turned it into| Geiger. a virtual company union. Only since the left wing gained The statement by Baldwin, here| influence and following among the given in full, declares: {strikers, did the strike take on an he ‘story of laspect of life and hope for victory. to TSE: GWU oe cms, Workers) here look forward to the tate it after the 1926 strike was |testimony they will render when) told to me by an official in the |they appear in court. It is belived! needle trades whose position pre- |that they will openly defy the right) vents his name being used. But |f ® judge to abrogate the constitu- | it comes from such,an authorita- | tional rights of the strikers to picket, | tive source that there is no ques- |@nd that they will express their in- tion of its truth. The statement | tention to further violate the in-} made to me was in substance that | Junction. ° Benjamin Schlesinger some time after the 1926 strike, the exact date not being given, collected a $100,000 fund on his own respon- sibility to be used solely for re- building the union. Of this amount $50,000 was loaned by Colonel Herbert Lehman, $25,000 by the Daily Forward and $25,000 by the Amalgamated Clothing Workers. I reported this loan to the board Irish Regime Raided Communists. to Stop |Anti-Kellogg Protest. | BLIN, Nov. *8.—Debate in the) | Dail yesterday revealed that civic! | guards who raided the James Con-| |nolly Workers’ Club here August 30/ 3 ts were instructed by the Free State) of directors of the American Fund government to prevent the demon-| He ete ie | stration against American imperial-| G. W. U. during the 1926 strike |ism, on the occasion of the visit of ; A | Kellogg. It is obvious that any such large | nny ie) Fy ‘ | financial transaction as this re- Releee Roch te Davin without i | meeting any protest, due to this) Sap aa pean eka git? | action on the part of the government. : |The Free State government was) souuently, one of the directors of | sharply eriticized‘in the Dail for this| the Fund checked up Colonel Leh- | reaction, < . | man’s loan and verified it. The |?” : | other loans were. not verified by | = * : the Fund directors but there is ‘Soviet Scientists | no reason to doubt them. My | < ; 4 s6le ,connection in reporting this | Discover Oil Fields) matter was as a director of he | sine a ail Fund. I have no knowledge of the | MOSCOW, U.S. S. R. (By Mail). terms of the loans, “heir exact | ~The geological department of the dates or the purposes for w' ich betes government has reported that they were used. it has discovered rich oil deposits on |the island of Sakhalin, a remote < jisland off Siberia. Official reports FIREMAN KILLED IN BLAZE. |cay that the deposits compare favor- CAMDEN, N. J., Nov. & (UP).—jebly with the fields of Baku and Richard Greenwood, a fireman, was Grozny, which are among the rich- killed and four other firemen were| est in the world, overcome today when gas exploded| It is believed that sufficient oil in the boiler room of the Rud Presi-|can be obtained to establish an ex- sendanz Sons Company plant, an au-| port trade to Japan and China and tomobile body firm. The firemrn to supply all Siberia. Plans are be- were overcome by leaking gas be-| ing made for the organization of a lieved to have been caused by the|company to develop these vast blast. ‘tracts. Workers School Forum Opens Sunday, November 11, 8 p. m., with JAY LOVESTONE | Executive Secretary of the Workers (Communist) Party, on “THE SIGNIFICANCE AND RESULTS OF THE PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS.” 26-28 UNION SQUARE, 5th Floor. Admission 25c. “GET THE SUNDAY NIGHT HABIT!” ph AS SA a SN Com rade OLGIN ‘ will speak on THE REVOLUTIONARY POEM “TWELVE” by Block at the LITERARY MUSICAL AFTERNOON on the . FIFTH ANNIVERSARY of the United Council of Working Women. BEN GOULD, of the Furriers Joint Board; REBECCA GRECHT, of the Workers Party will greet the Councils. | Talent:—MISS MENKEL, Soprano; KOHIN GIRLS, Piano & Cello; . PROLETARIAN ORCHESTRA. | SUNDAY AFTERNOON, Nov. 11th, 2 to 6 | | IRVING PLAZA, Irving Place and 15th Street | Admission 50c. Part. of Proceeds to Shifrin Defense. | SCOTT NEARING will speak on THE IMPENDING WAR BETWEEN THE UNITED STATES AND GREAT BRITAIN to be held FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 9th, 8 O'clock at HUNTS POINT PALACE 953 South Boulevard, Bronx. X SECTION, WORKERS (Communist) PARTY, . AUSPICES: BRON: Meet in Webster British Planes to Bomb Moscow The British imperialists, not sati ied with their present air force, which they fear is not strong enough, will build $5,000,000 worth of planes during the next year. Care will be taken to produce long dis- tance planes which will be able to use Warsaw or Riga as a base against the Soviet” Union. Workers Party Activities N. J. Attention. ton v The t for d The City Central Committee of ie sion sag 1 be Le T B Elizabeth, N. J., is organizing a Mas- | learned From the Re 1 querade Bull and Bazaar for Satur wyiciens Pe day evening, Dec. Ist. All units and School Dance. workers’ organizations of n ; De i Mohegan Mod Office Workers, Attention. ¢ Rand School, 7 E S this evening at 9 p. 1 All office workers in the Young Workers League are asked to send in dah ve thelr names and addresses to the Dis- Branch 2, Section 8 trict Office immediately. A members meeting of the unit rae aes will be, held Monday, Nov. 12, at 8 Party Units Attention! p. m. at 313 Hinsdale St The Spanish Fraction will hold its aE TS dist Sait on Baturday evening, Dec. Young Defenders Dance. 22, at Harlem Carino, 116th St. and) The “Young Defenders Lenox Ave. Proceeds will go for the organized, will F organization of Spanish speaking) ment and dance/at its head workers and for the support of the | 1400 Boston R Sunday, organ of the Spanish Bureau “Vida/at 8 p. m Obrera.” Please, keep this date open . . >. and give this affair your greatest fy wesege support, al planned by th the this rae fos Notice To All Units. ot Prompt settlement for all Madison | Satur Square Garden tickets is necessary | poned in order to avoid serious financial ments Nov, 10th, Watch for f difficulties. All comrades who have LUNES ET RI y tickets and all tn charge of ticket a distribution, are urged to turn in| * * tlekets or money for same by ‘spe: | Nearing Will Speak cial messenger to the district office, by order of the District Executive! ON Progress of the Corhmittee. i : Tigtsx J Tov. Brenx Section Y. W. L. Soviet Union Noy. 12 The Bronx section of th Workers (Communist) Leag’ hold a final autumn hike All who attend must m the following stations: Scott Nearing, noted Communist of lecturer, will address a meeting at 188th /the Hungarian Workers Home, 350 Young St.; .1400 Boston Road; . prone li Park East. All 10 a. m. sharp, all/E. 81st St., next Monday eveni groups wiil meet at the Woodlawn onday evening at |8:30 o’clock. The subject Section 3 Functionaries. talk will be “Soviet Ri A meeting of all unit and sub-sec-| Years Old.” tion functionaries of ction 3 wil take place toda¥ at 6:30 p. m., at 101 W. 27th St. All members who hold of his ia: Eleven station of the Lexington Ave. line. Workers living in all other bor- positions must attend this meeting. |CUghs, as well as Manhattan, are Many important matters will be/urged to attend this lecture, in | . . . which Scott Nearing will present, " statistically, th 3 Ss vi Ss Pig SIMON GIEN sachiaw’ ot the | y; e enormous advances Young Workers (Communist) League ade by the Soviet Union in the will hold an open forum on the “Re-|rast eleven years toward Socialism. sults of the Elections” on Sunday, 8 p. m., at 56 Manhattan Ave., Brook-| lyn, "All are invited to attend. Williamsburgh Y. W. L. Forum. | SWEDISH RAILWAY REPORT. Finnish Fraction Meet. |,, COPENHAGEN, Nov. 8.—Statis- The Finnish fraction district con-|tics just published, on the activities ference of the Workers (Communist) |of the Swedish National Railways Party will be held tomorrow at 4) during 1927 show that 249 accidents m., at the Workers Center, 8 2 Binion Square. Very important n or mishaps occurred, involving 77 ters will be taleen UR. And a!com. | deaths, while there were 157 persons munist) Party should attend., injured. The net surplus of the . . . year came to about 36,000,000 kroner Section. 1 I, L. D. Organizers. | against about 33,00,000 in 1926. Section t I. L. D. organizers will} —— - _ have an improtant meeting to- day, 6:30 p. m. at.60 St. Marks Place. ' Fretheit Mandolin Orchestra. The Freiheit Mandolin Orchestra, conducted by Jacob Shaefer, has sent out a call for new members. All those who wish to join the orches- tra should apply at the headquarte 106 HE 14th St, on any Thursday evening at 8 p. m. SURGEON DENTIST H 1 UNION SQUARE feces 803—Phone, Algonquin nal Not connected with any other office | CTS MRSARER cit'eF Brighton Beach ‘wat he hela | PYCCRMM SYBHOM. BPAY 227 Surgeon Dentist 26 yrs. in practice. Moderate prices. 223 SECOND AV. NEW YORK Brighton Beach Workers. | tonight 8:30 p. m., at Bright- COOPERATORS M. FORMAN PATRONIZE Temple Courts Bldg Allerton Carriage, Bicycle and Toy Shop =) 786 ALLERTON AVE. Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF Nenr Allerton Theatre, Bronx dakeebauses Office Hours: Tues. 9:30-12 m., jay, 10 m. Thurs. & Sat. 2-8 p. m to 1:00 p Phone Olinville 2583 (ont causme summeniagancmy Soremencrered MARY WOLFE STUDENT OF THE DAMROSCH CONSERVATORY PIANO LESSONS 2440 Bronz Park East Near Co-operative Colony. Apt. 6H Telephone BASTABROOK 2489 Special rates to students from the Co-operative House. m Cor Second A Telephone Lehigh. 6022 Hotel and Restaurant Workers Branch of the Amalgamated Food Workers 133 W. Sist St, Phone Circle 7336 [@"PBUSINESS MEETING=7] MONDAY, NOV. 12, at 3 p. m. One tnduxtry—One _—Join and Fight the Comm cnemy! Office Open from 9 a. m. to 6 p.m. Get Your Money’s Worth! Try the Park Clothing Store for Men, Young Men and Boys Clothing 93 Avenue A, Corner 6th St NEW YORK CITY Advertise your union meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City ‘COUPERKATORS PATRONIZE COOPERATORS! PATRONIZE E. KARO Your Nearest St: ym | Cigars — Cigarettes J. SHERMAN Your Nearest Tailor Fancy Cleaners and Dyers | 665, ALLERTON AVE,, | e — Candy BRONX | 649 ALLERTON AVE, Cor. Barker, BRONX, N, Y. Tel, OLinville 9681-2 — 9791-2 1 Co-operative Workers Patronize 1. SCOLNICK Pelham TAILOR Fancy Cleaner and Dyers 70% Allerton Ave., Bronx, N. ¥.9° Patronize No-Tip Barber Shops 26-28 UNION SQUARE (1 fitght up) 2700 BRONX PARK EAST (corner Allerton Ave.) Individual sanitary service by Experts—Ladies Hair Bobbing Specialists. Unity Co-operators Patronize SAM LESSER Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailor 7th Ave New York Between 110th and 11ith Ste, Next to Unity Co-operative House 1818 Ha J. MINDELL Page Five ll Sunday |ASK WORKERS 10 BOYCOTT PAPER FAVORING TORAL Excelsior Is teactionar MEXICO CITY, Nov. Mexican government has a: | workers and peasants, all ical parties and off s of the federal and state mments to*boycott the news- h has made a hero and a m r out of Jose de Leon Toral, cl i eral Alvaro Obr An off published Excelsior, ment to rgents counts Were an eactionary engaged in c tivities in: to ernment or advertising to Exc The final cases of both the prose- eutor and the defense will be given today in the courtroom It is believed that To demned to death and that Mother Concepcion will get greatest penalty that can be given to a wom- an, twenty years imprisonment. at San Angel. 1 will be con- WASHINGTON, Nov. 8 (UP),— 000 far dredging was announced by nt today. Tuckerton, N. J the war depar Minor Vusie Those who read Reich’s occasional contributions to | The DAILY WORKER will welcome . this collec- tion of poems by one of the few brilliant American poets who sing to Labor. $1.00 Workers Library Publishers 43 East 125th Street New York City, ‘For Any sm (usurance™ ARL BRODSK Pelephone Murray mili 550 7 East 42nd St., New york For Good Wholesome Foud EAT AT RATNER’S Datry and Vegetarian Restaurant 103 SECOND AVE. H, L, HARMATZ, Prop. Self-Service Cafeternna 115 SECOND AVE. Near 7th St BAKING DONE ON PREMISES: Visit Our Place While on 2nd Ave. Lel.; Dry Dock 1263; Urehard | 430 Rational Vegetarian Restaurant iv. SECOND AVE, Bet. 12th and 13th Sts. Suictly Vegetarian food. | Phone Stuyvesant 38 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere here all radicals meet. w 302 E. 12th ST. NEW YORK All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S VEGETARIAN HEALTH RESTAURANT 558 Claremont P’kway Bronx \}MEET YOUR FRIENDS at Messinger’s Vegetarian and Dairy Restaurant 1763 Soutbern Bivd., Brona, ¥. & Hight Off 174th St. Subway Station WE ALL MEET at the NEW WAY CAFETERIA 101 WEST 27th STREET NEW YORK Health Food Vegetarian Restaurant 1600 MADISON AVE. PHONE: UNIVERSITY 0869

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