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DAILY, WORKER, NEW YORK, THU DECEMBER ‘18, 1928 Page | Piru ive Officials of Milk Drivers Union Ignore Militant Tactics in Court Plea in Boston Workers Party jes) SHOW SECRETARY SEEK 10 GET INJUNCTION TO. END $60,000 FINE International in Role | of Betrayer BOSTON, -Dec. 12 (FP),—Un- willing to accept the compromise foreed on them by international union officials, nearly 100 members ~f Milk Wagon Drivers Local 380 2re represented in a plea for an in- unction restraining their employ- ers from making weekly deductions | from wages to satisfy a $60,000 judgment against the union. The award was ordered because the un‘on struck to organize two firms which had consolidated with the Ab | den Bros. Milk Co, Tnternational union officials ad- ised against appealing the decision nd compromised the award against the opposition of the local union, which wished to carry the case to higher courts to test the validity of the fine against the union and its | yiembers for striking. The Boston Central Labor Union is also indig- ant against acceptance of the ard, viewing it as an opening wedge in bankrupting other unions | | | | when they strike. * o8 BOSTON, Dec, i2.—The fight of tilk Wagon Drivers Loca! 380 against the weekly deductions from their wages to pay off a judgment against the union is . proceeding along purely legalistic lines, despite experiences of the past which show that the Massachusetts’ courts are openly trying to crush the union and to outlaw all militant unions. A plea for an injunction, which | 100 members of the union were per- suaded to sign, is being held out | es a hope in an effort to dissipate | the growing resentment of the men. Indignation runs high, not only avainst the international officials, who openly betrayed them, but also against the leaders. of the local union, whose passive, vacillating policy is blamed for the present pre- dicament of the union. Strike Against Open Shep. The $60,000 judgment against the union was awarded in connection ‘th a strike conducted several months ago against the Alden Bros, Milk Company. When this firm, whose men were organized, ab- sorbed two other firms which had been running the open shop, the tmion demanded the right to organ- ize the men of the two subsidiary firms. When the Alden company sed, the drivers were called out on sitike, The Alden company, de- termined to maintain the open-shop, Lrought suit against the local union nd about two months ago secured a judgment in Superior Court of $60,000 against the union. The union appealed the case in the State Su- preme Court, where the original de- cision was sustained. The union wanted to take the case to the United States Supreme Court, but the international officials oblig- ingly came to the aid of the Alden Company and told the men to go lack to work pending negotiations. ‘The Alden Company, however, lost | no time in collecting its money and ene Saturday every milk driver | found $20 deducted from his pay lope Since drivers get only $38 this I'ttle operation left each only $18. Drivers’ help- e relieved of $18 of their sal- a we w , reducing each man’s pay from £53 to $15. Fekerg Again Aid Company. Feeling among the men ran so high thet the international officials again found it necessary to step in and help the Alden Company. They ruck a good bargain—for the com- pany. In return for a promise that the case would not be taken to the | United States Supreme Court, the | company agreed to accept “only” £50,000, instead of the origina! $60,- 000, deducting $3 weekly from each | man’s salary. Under Massachusetts law each member of the union is | responsible for the payment of the uioney. The judgment against the union, awarded with the connivance of the international officials, sets up a precedent which makes every union | liable to legal prosecution and fine | for conducting a strike. Rank and file members of the local are urging | the adoption of militant tactics to | fight the judgment award. Social-Democrats Back | Seipel Regime Against | Government ent Employes (Wireless to the ‘the Daily Worker) VIENNA, Dec. 12.—The social- | democrats in parliament today oted’| for the government’s proposal to grant the postal employees a thirty per cent increase in wages instead of | the 100 per cent demanded by the | workers. The social-democrats excused their | § opposition to the demands of the | workers by saying that otherwise the government would not have granted anything. Fifty thousand employes in the government’s postal and telephone service are in a strike of passive | resistance to force tye regime to give them an increase in wages. | The Daily Wo years old on January 5, Work: from all parte of the bi sending in greetings. y nt yourst If not, se varer) |be present. | League for Mutual Aid will be held “Irregularities” at the Polls ae “irregularities” at the polls, which in plain English meaus vote-stealing, vote buying, corruption of every kind, is, of course, the usual thing in American elections. There are many job-seekers | willing to serve capitalism at fancy salaries: Above (left) is | Judge Augustus McCloskey, who after being “elected” to congress on the democratic ticket, has now been indicted for “irregularities.” The pious republicans are saying all sorts of nasty things about the judge. | Fraternal Organizations: hi Si | at the | ch be EL Spanish Workers Dance. The Spanish Fraction of the Work- ers (Communist) Party will hold its first dance Saturday evening, Deo. a | will Yelock at 35 Workers Club. d toni cond St., ht . St Hatiém Casino, 16th Bt and Unity Cooperative Ball. | Lenox Ave. Proceeds will go for the! A concert and ball will be given organization of Spanish workers and|by the Unity Cooperative in celebra- the support of their organ “Vida tion of its first anniv 'y on Sat- Obrera.” As this will be a real in- | urd i ec, in the Laurel ternational affair, please, dot not 116th St. A Russian arrange any other affair on that |b: hestra and a noted Ru: date, sian dancer will be on the progr: peal Saale | Office Workers. The Office Workers’ Umon has ar- Freiheit Sport Club. A general meeting of the Freiheit | ranged a dance for Washington's | Sport Club will be held today. at 8 birthday eve, Feb. 21, at Webster) p, m., at the club room: a. 5th | Manor. Sympathetic | organizations | St, Committee reports Te haTaad are asked not to arrange any affair for that evening. | | | and acted upon. The following days will be de- | voted to the following sport activi- Inter-Racial Dance. t Today, general exercise and ‘Notice to all Party ana labor and! pyramids conducted _ by Comrade fraternal organizations: There will| Finkelstein at 230 Sth St, at be an Inter-racial Dance on Decem- |7:30'p. in.; ‘Tomorrow, general exer ber 29, It would be greatly appre- cise and pyramids conducted by Com- clated if no affairs were afranged|rade Pinkeldtein at 230 1. Sth St, that will conflict with this one. | 7:39 p, m. All are welcome. Women Theatre Party. pee es Attention! The New York Working Women’s Federation will have a theatre party at the Provincetown Theatre, 133 McDougal St., Saturday evening, Dec. 29, presenting Upton Sinclair's “Sing~ ing Jailbirds,” All the proceeds will go to the building up of the Wo- men’s Federation. ‘Tickets can be obtained at 26-28 Union Square. An all has been is- sued to ail umbrella and handle work- jers of New York City for a meeting at the People’s House, 7 EH. 15th Street, today at 6 p. m. Matters of yital importance of all workers in this trade will be taken up. Labor ‘Temple poster Forun Dr. Harendranath Maitra will lec ture on Hindu poetry tonight at Women's Council 8, Women's Council 8 has arranged a hor Temple, also four other well- lecture for Monday, Dec. 17, at 8:30/ known poets. All invited. pom. at 1387 Washington Ave, sae Bronx. S. Leroy will speak on “Wo- Ottics Avorksie Adkentiont men and Workers’ Education.” All| 4 mass meeting of office work Interested in workers’ education are | wil] he held ‘Tuesday, Dec 18 at the invited.. Admission is free. Labor Temple, 2nd Ave/ and 14th ; St. Juliet Stuart Poyntz, as well as Dancing at Workers Centet. other prominent speak will ad- Every Saturday night there will Gre, 5 be dancing at the Workere Center, | ‘ee8_the meeting, 26-28 Union Sq, on the fourth floor. A good band will be on hand on thesé| momorrow evening the Newark evenings, and all workers who come | pranch of the 11D. will hold a lec. for the dancing are assured of @/ ture on “The I.L.D. and the New Trend good time. \in the American Labor Movement.” |All a f Freiheit Singing Society. ste) urged to Sttend. For_the first time in New York, | . Newark I. L, D. Meeting. Ww ace: ageeants. Group. the Freihelt Singing Society, will) pho Werten eR tS present Mendelsohn's oratorio, “Wal-| gat” announces the fellow Ts purgis Night” with a symphony. or- ram for this weeks Iriday, at 108 | chestra conducted by Lazar Weiner. The concert will take place Satur. day, Dec, 29, at Carnegie Hall, 57th 3t. and 7th Ave. Tickets can be got- ten at the Freiheit office, 30 Union Sa. , 14th St. rooms 402-403, at'7 p. m.: Intermediate class meeting; at 8 p. |m.: Beginners’ class meeting; at § p. m,, Important meeting of all mem-| bers. On Sunday at the Young De- | fenders Club at 3 p. m,, the Inter- i a has mediate class meets for reading and The Brownsville Workers Youth | ‘scussion in Esperanto. Center will hold its first dance Sat-| Dec, 22, at the| Negro ‘Champion’ Dance. ' urday evening, 4 The Negro Cham Brownsville Labor “Lyceum, 219! 4 merican Negro abuse Gengveas wii} Sackman St., Brooklyn, have ‘ joint dance and entertain- | Ment Jani 22 at Renaissance C; Williamsburgh I, L. D. Meet. 188th St. and 7th Ave. Other oe: | the Williamsburgh branch Of the | ganizations’ are “ased’ t¢ observe | International Labor Defense will date. b . hold a membership meeting Monday, | °*'* Dec. 17, at 56 Manhattan Ave. Brook- | Bout club Hasica! All_ members must | lyn, at 8 p. are in-| m. syispathicers The Bronx Workers Social Sport | | Club will have its third semi-annual | nee this Friday at the Bronx Ly- |ceum, 170th St. and 3rd Ave. WELCOME HOOVER BY MASS ARREST \Trigoyen Jails Workers | as Tribute to U.S. Contynued from Page One delegation from the Argentine goy- Ae vite: " vs ernment, which welcomed Hoover ull price Ww: charged on the|\); Paella Gayot tte performuude, Tickets, In | with bad usual flowery insincerities. | advance may be gotten at the centra sident Tri U office of the United Counefl of Work- | sae aa ere aes eae oe ing Women, 80 E, 11th St, Room the arrests, giving details of what 533, or phorig Stuyvesant 0576. is considered here a frame-up of | Williamsburg I. %. D. Dance, | Several radical workers in order to | The Williamsburg branch ot the | justify the “red raids” and numer- I. L. D, will sponsor a dance and | | Concert on New Year's live, Dec, 21, CUS arrests, is as follows: | at 56 Wu eae iba ede an Ha “The president of the republic, | 8 p.m, e funds collected a . 4 ; dance ‘will be donated to the class being desirous of making agreeable war prisoners, Admission will be 26 | the visit of the President-elect of the Conte etic rere | United States of America and of of- | Bedacht at Harlem Forum. ‘fering the greatest possible guar- | eae ri gist up ieg (ai teree Bi ‘ antee of safety to the personnel of the | tty. Will speak on “The Socialist | iliustrious visi commanded the | ray ea Saree Work- police to intensify their observation ers’ Forum, 14 108rd_St.,_ tomor-. row at 8 p. m, Admission 15 cents, Of dangerous anarchist elements. All Party members and workers are) “This order was carried out by the Mutual Aid i Dance, (division of investigation which, after | ‘The’ annual Rainbow Ball of the [discreet inquiries and investigations, | this morning ‘earched a house. in| yited. ey See Course Given at Jersey City. A course in English for workers | and’in the A. B, C. of Communism | will be given at the Ukrainian Home, 160 Mercer St. Jersey City, every | Sunday at 10 a. m. S. Leroy will be the instructor, Defense Conference. A conference of representatives of | labor organizations to formulate | plans for the defense of the ey textile strikers on trial in New Bed ford will be held Sunday atternoon,'| Dee. 16, at 2 o'clock at Irving Plaza 15th St. and Irving Pl. Women Theatre Party, A. good opportunity for Jewish workers to see the regular week-end play in the Schwartz Art Theatre on 14th St. and 3rd’ Ave., on Friday evening, Feb. 8, at reduced prices if tickets ‘are gotten in advance. The Dec, 21st at Beethoven Hall, 210 EB. bth St. : Estomba Street in which were found | bie Se \four hand grenades, two cylindrical | ironipheoes the Pivoteara of the |bombs, one square bomb, dynamite, | Bronx will hear a lecture on Mendel- |sohn’s oratorio “Walpurgis Nacht” at 1472 Boston Road, the Bronx Work ers Club, Minkov will be the lec- turer, and will speak in Yiddish. revolvers, automatie pistols, quan- | tities of ammunition and 150 ten- | peso notes, all of which have been iplaced at the disposition of judicial Negro Entertainment, Dance, _| authorities.” A Negro entertainment and dance | has been arranged by Section 6 of | the Workers (Communist) Party at 56 Manhattan Ave,, Brooklyn, for Saturday, Jan. 12, An_ interesting program is being. prepared. quart 12) Southern Blvd.. near Freeman St. station. | Co ek tad I. L. D. German Branch 43. | The next monthly meeting will be | He today. A lecture on “The | D. and the Labor Movement” | haa 'b n arranged for, All Germa: ing workers are invited to at- ana this important meeting, Brown ville Hi iL. D Meet, The Brownsville branch of the L 1, D. will hold a special membership — DR. L. HENDIN SURGEON DENTIST 853 Broadway, Cor. 14th St. MODERATE PRICES Room 1207-8 Algonquin 687: DR. J.MINDEL| | | | i mecting today ‘at 8 p.m. at 154 | SURGEON DENTIST sinneraetional peuretary: of then d.| 1 UNION SQUARE D. will attend, | itoom 803—Phone, Algonquin 8:83 F office . Downtown 1 ie b, A meeting of the Downtown. Be % Not connected with any ot woceeee. | cil ; | to sweat super-profits out of cheap | 'ANTI-IMPERIALIST. WHITE TERROR gm RESOLUTIONS ARE, REMAINS UNDER NOW PUBLISHED Show Big Exploitation! To Continue Trial on by Powers i Trade Unions (Red Aid Press Service) | BUCHAREST, Rumania, |Mail).—The new’ Maniu regime in |Rumania will not alter the terror system of the former Bratianu re- gime, it seems from the action it has taken regarding the trial against the MANIU REGIME The first pamphlet of the-printed resolutions of the General Coun- of he League Against Imperialism, whose congr was j held some time ago in Brussels, has arrived in America. The resolutions form a platform for anti-imperialist (By work. junited trade unions which has The first resolution is on the “tagged along for two years in Bucharest. general political aspects and points out that imperialism, although sup- ported by the reformist trade union leaders under the argument that it aids workers in imperialist tries, really does the opposite. Exploitation Intensified. The time has gone by, the League finds, when the proletariat of im- | perialist countries could be bribed by occasional crumbs from the prof- jits of exploitation abroad. The League says: “From this period of capitalist decline the super-profit derived from colonial exploitation must be increased by intensified ex- ploitation and is badly needed for the stabilization of capitalism at | home. “Thus colonial exploitation is an indispensible method of capitalist rationalization, having an adverse influence upon the economic condi-| tions of the home proletariat... . Colonial exploitation cannot cease to have an adverse effect on the economic conditions of the home proletariat unless the oppressed peoples become completely free.” And to this end the League works. “While endeavoring to mobilize all available forces in a joint strug- gle against imperialism, the differ- entiation inside the nationalist movement in the colonies should be noted,” says the resolution and points to the treachery of the native bourgeoisie in China and India, Imperialism and War. The secdnd resolution is on the | war danger, directly connected with imperialist policies. On this matter the resolution decleres: To carry on the fight against im- ‘The war peril is growing once perialism, more because the robber imperialist This trial is to decide whether or not the united trade unions in the capital should be dissolved. Again and again the banning o* the unions was stopped by the mass protest of the workers. When the new regime took office it was reported that it would deny the charge against the united trade unions, but that it will “study the circumstances some more.” The trial was postponed un- til January 16, The new regime shows that it will put aside for the moment the un- popular system of the Bratianu re- gime when its execution would mean mass protests threatening its over- throw. So that in practice the old conditions remain unaltered. coun. GAMBLERS BAIT TRAP. Stocks today definitely turned about from the reaction gripping the market for the past. two weeks, Gains ranging from one to 10 points were made by the majority of issues. Sentiment of the bulls. however, was not entirely restored and dealings fell off sharply in the first three and one-half hours, with sales about a million shares under yesterday. Socialist Soviet Republics, the first great challenge to world imperial- ism. The U. S. S. R. does not de- pend for its existence on the subju- gation and exploitation of colomal peoples, since the pov ruled Tsarist Russia, has been ut- terly destroyed.” ization states: Powers are once more finding them-| Aj] political organizations, all selves locked in conflict throughout parties, trade unions and persons the world, first of all over the re-| who are fighting against capitalist: | distribution of the right to oppri the colonial peoples and subject races, to monopolize colonial mar- jkéts and sources of raw materials, | imperialist domination, for the self- determination of all nations, for the | |national liberty of all pgoples, for the equal rights of all races, ¢lasses |and individuals, shall be allowed to colonial labor. | affiliate to the League against im- The struggle between British | perialism and for national inde- | and American imperialism over the | pendence.” right to exploit China, Central and Other Problems Considered. South America and the peoples of| -“The executive shall aim at or- Eastern Europe; ihe struggle be- | ganizing in each colonial and each | |tween French and Italian imperial- | \capitalist country, so far as practi- ism over the economic control of | eable, a section of the League con- the Mediterranean shores and be- sisting of all organizations and in tween British and French imperial- | viduals that endorse the policy.” ism over the right to exploit Syria, In the United States, the U. Palestine, Arabia and the Near East Section of the All-America genersally—these are typical of the fatal internal antagontsms of im-| |perialism which show themselves, | now here, now there, but always and | everywhere bring the peril a step | | closer.” tail the treacheries of the Second Empires Unite Against U.S. S. R. (International and the special prob- “Even these antagonisms, how- |lems in India, China, Indonesia, Per- ever,” the League finds, “are tem- |sia and the Philippines. Special at- |porarily reconciled whenever the im- tention is given tc that phase of | | Perialist world us a whole finds it- | American imperialism which works | self face to face with the Union of | through the Pan-American Union, y; S. | Anti- Imperialist League, national head- quarters at 39 Union Square, is the body affiliated with the League Against Imperialism. Other resolutions take up in de- Come to See the ISADORA DUNCAN DANCERS OF MOSCOW, V. S. S. R. IRMA DUNCAN ina program of REVOLUTIONARY DANCES at the Fifth Anniversary Celebration of the DAILY WORKER Saturday Evening, January 5 MANHATTAN OPERA HOUSE Tickets: $1.00, $1.50, $2.00 and $2.50 are now on sale at the Daily Worker Office, 26-28 Union Sq. All Seats Reserved. Ja r of the im- | perialist bourgeoisie, who formerly | the resolution on Organ- | nin Memorial Meet. Lenin Memorial Meeting will be hei in Madison Square Garden Sat- urday evening, January 19. All Party and sympathetle organizations please | take note. | You are requested not to arrange any conflicting dates, The Lenin | Memorial Meeting this year will be powerful demonstration against the imperialist war and for the de-| fense of the Soviet Union, | District Executive Committee, New York District. Party Units Attention! ‘The Spanish Fraction will noid Sts first ball on Saturday evening, Dec. 22, at Harlem Carino, 116th St, and Lenox Ave. Proceeds will go for the rganization of Spanish speaking workers and for the support of the | c, the Spanish Bureau “Vida Please, keep this date open this affair your greatest organ ot Obrera.” and give support, Bronx Y. W. mee. ‘The Bronx section of the Young Workers (Communist) League will hold a Section Dance on Saturday, Dec, 22, at the Rose Gardens, 1347 | Boston Road. There will be enter- tainment and an excellent jazz band | Miller at Morning Intl. Br. Bert Miller, organizational secre- ary of District Workers (Com- munist) Party, will speak on “How Soon Will the Next War Come” at the monthly open forum of the Morning International Branch t morning at the Workers Center, 28 OHA Square, All workers are attend. | invited Section 2 “pally Campaign. Section 2 of the Workers (Com- munist) Party is starting an inten- campaign for the 5th anniver- of the Daily Worker. Dec. 10 to 17 will be Daily Worker week for the entire section, Business meet-| ings will take up the drive. All| inits will adjourn for one big meet- ing w @ representative of the Daily Worker will speak. | W. L. Jazz Band, The Young Workers (Communist) League j band practices at the home of 8, Goldberg, 152 W. 72nd St. every Sunday at 1:30 p, m, Those wishing to join should communicate | with the above address at once. Dedacht at Harlem Forum, tomorrow at 8 p. m. Admission 15 cents, All Party members and work- | ers urged to attend. Max dacht, national |director of the Workers | nist) Party, 1 ak on “The So- cialist Party Tod at the Harlem Workers Forum, 143 E. 103rd St. Section 5. ave joined last year are to Branch 6, Comrades who Party during the join the class in Fundamentals of Communism which will be started tonight at the Workers School Co- operative Branch, at 8 p. m. The | next meeting of the branch will be lan educational one. The subject will | be “The Results and Significance of | the Last Election Campaign.” | the -¥. W. L. Hike. s ew York unit of the} Young Workers (Communist) League will hike to Alpine Woods on Sun- | ai Those going, will meet at 313 H a, m., or at a St. at 9 @. m. All young work- and students are invited, ers Notice to All Party Members. A Party membership meeting will be held Friday evening, Dec. 21, at| Central Opera, House, é7th St. ‘and Third Ave. AH comrades are to take | note that they are to arrange no |conflicting meetings with this date | and are to be prepared to attend this meeting without fail. Doors will be Jopened at 7:30 p, m. Comrades will be admitted by Party membership | card only, and must be in good stand- ing. | Section 6 Agitprop. | meeting of all unit egitprop | directors of the section will be held | tomorrow, 8:30 p. m., at 56 Manhattan | Aye. Brooklyn. INTERIOR IN PAY » OF POWER TRUST S ra | to partl- tend. ome Senators Afraid He’s Too Notorious Continued from Page One public utilities magnate. (Com sull, The munis) Party Insull contribution was in cash. tablishing , he collected campaign sient ae funds for 25 or 26 vears and never kept any books. He said he had represented some Insull corporaiions in a legal way since 1897, and often talked about stments with In- many investments recommendations, he Section 1 I.° IL. D.-rep 1 will meet in 1. He made at D. ’ previous affair will “have Insull’s counted for ac- upon added. Newark Y. W. Insull Hireling. dance on Ja of Inter t told the committee Labor Hal his law firm had Tickets are sub to the Young W of business for months. All E ilities) Com- tions are ash ae fairs on the his firm us make this Unit 3F, Subsection 2 before the committee An important meeting of Unit 8F, | wag just before taking his Subsection of the Workers (Com- < ; % S e munist) Party will be held tonight |cabinet pos » he sold all of his In- at 6 o'clock 101 W. 27th St, All sull stock. Under questioning, how- geile os hee wens” ever, he admitted his wife still had nteers Needed. 100 shares of Commonwealth Edison v Volunteers are wante sull’s company) and his sister work in connection w si Negro work. — ‘The 30 shares. charze are head over heels in work, The senate debate continued thru- and unless volunteer help important matters will be slowed up, if not altogether neglected. Phone Ida Dailes at he ional Office: Har- lem 1278. cut the day on details of the Bolder Dam bill, without must being said or complished. will now cost $6,650,000. AlD THE ‘DAILY’ It also passed a bill author’ alteration and repairs on the battle- “Red Press Sundays’ |p. Catitornta. with ecretary of State, two-thirds of all the Chicago units England’s face and create a new of the Workers (Communist) Party League of Nations in which U. S. The House passed a bill author- izing an additional $2,700,000 appro- work on the V-5 and V-6. Each appropriation of $350,000 in add to $300,000 already authorized for Disregard Brit Start in Chicago After further d 52 § Kellogg, over CHICAGO, Dec. 12.—More than’ the Kellogg treaties intended to slap were represented at the second will be predominant, the Senate Daily Worker agents’ conference | Foreign Relations Committee de- | since the launching of the big sub- cided tentatively to vote on recom- scription drive. Most of the agents! mending their adoption Friday. reported that the campaign to, Kellogg made it clear that he did build the Daily Worker was meet-|not consider the adherence of the ing with a splendid response from! Union of Socialist Soviet Republics the members of their units. to the treaties after they were An effective plan of activity that formed implied its recognition by the will draw the entire membership other countries. He also insists \into the task of increasing the cir- that the treaties leave the Monroe culation of the Daily Worker and Doctrine intact, and that all notes | widening its influence among the of reservation by England and masses has been inaugurated by France which accompanied their several Chicago units, This plan|signatures are null and void. It was designated as “Red Press Sun- is expected that the committee will |day” distributions. The basic fea- also adopt the Kellogg viewpoint on ture of the plan is to accumulate all these matters, whatever im- a large list of candidates in a work- patience England and France may ing class neighborhood, to receive expr over it. a free two weeks’ trial subscription _ to the Daily Worker. COMRADES at the EAT Mast J Y. Concert, Dance. The EB New York section of the | Young Workers (Communist) Les ague | has arranged a concert and dance for January 12 at 313 Hinsdale Ave. All workers are invited to attend, 4F, 35. Nucleus 4F, 3B will hold an im- portant meeting today at 5:45 D. m, at 101 W. 27th St. All members must be present. x Unit 5F, 2B Meeting. Unit 2B of the Workers (Com- munist) Party fil es s meeting today at r Workers Center, 26 Union |] Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST Thurs, & Sat.. 2-8 p,m. Sunday, 10:00 . to 1:00 p.m. || PLEASE TELEPHONE For AP! INTME: Voth STREET Vork S' Cor, Second Ave. New Telephone: Lehigh 6022, | ‘For Any Kind of Insurance’ (CARL BRODSKY Yelephon’ Marray BRI 5550 7 East 42nd Street, New York * JEWELER 737 ALLERTON AVENUE Near Holland Ave. Bronx, N. Phone Olinville 5489 Y. Cooperators, patronize your local JEWELER We carry a full line of watches, clocks and jewelry MARY WOLFE STUDENT OF THE DAMROSCH CONSERVATORY PIANO LESSONS Moved to 240 Bronx Park Enst Near Co-operative Colony. apt. 6H Telephone KASTABROOK 2469 Special rates to studente from the Co-operative House. CENTRAL BUSINESS SCHOOL —Bookkee ping —Stenography —Typewriting Individual Instruction CLASS LIMITED 108 E. 14th STREET The method employed is a sam- ple copy distribution, house to house, in the course of which names and addresses of “candidates” for trial subscriptions are secured. Thou- sands of workers will thus become acquainted with our fighting labor paper for the first time, thru this means of activity. SCIENTIFIC VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT 1604-6 Madison Ave. Between 107th & 108th Sts, Health Food Comrades, Patronize : s Vegetarian The Triangle Dairy Reataueant Restaurant 1600 MADISON AVE. 1379 Intervale Avenue Phone: University 5365 BRONX Good Wholesome Foud RAT AT RATNER’S Datry and Vegetarian Restaurant 103 SECOND AVE. H. L. HARMATZ, Prop. Self-Service Cafeteria SECOND AVE.. Near 7th St, BAKING DONE ON PREMISES Visit Our Place While on 4nd Av Tel: Dry Dock 1263; Orchard «4 mn EY For CARPENTERS’ UNION | LOCAL 2090 | Meets every Thursday, 8 P. M., at Labor Temple, 243 East 84th St. Officerand headquarters are in the Labor Temple. Hotel and Restaurant Workers, Branch of the Amalgamated Food Workers hone Circle 7336 ae MEETING =] eld on the first ete of the at 3 p. MEET YOUR FRIENDS at Messinger’s Vegetarian and Dairy Restanrant hern Bivd., Bronx, N. ¥, Hight Off 174th St. Subway Staito: month m, One Industry—One Unton—Join and Fight the Common Enemy! Office Open from 9 a, m, to 6 i Advertise your union meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City WE ALL, MEET NEW WAY CAFETERIA 101 WEST 27th STREET NEW YORK Patronize No-Tip Barber Shops 26-28 UNION SQUARE (. filght up) 2700 BRONX PARK EAST (corner Allerton Ave.) Rational Vegetarian Restaurant iv. SCOND AVE, Bet. 12th and 13th Sts. Suuetlly Vegeturian Mood, Unity Co-operators Patront: SAM LESSER Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailor All Comrades Meet at 1818 - 7th Ave. New York i BRONSTEIN’S Between 110th and 111th sts. VEGETARIAN HEALTH Next to Unity Co-operative House RESTAURANT 558 Claremont P’kway Bronx COOPERATORS! PATRONIZE E. KARO Your Nearest Stationery Store Cigars — Cigarettes — Candy 649 ALLERTON AVE., Cor. Barker, BRONX, N. Y. Tel. OLinville 9681-2 — 9791-2 Phone Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant } tr eae ITALIAN DISHES % ace with utmosy * re all radical pay 802 E. 12th ST, Cs