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\ _ | | | Page Five Two Workers Are Killed When Cas Escapes Hom ae in Pipe in | Rooming House. SPHYXIATED BY EADLY FUMES IN A SQUALID ROOM Other Tenant: Discovers Both on Floor, Dead Oscar Sundquist, 47 years old, and John Dahlquist, 45 years old, two Scandinavian workers employed as laborers in Manhattan, were found dead yesterday on the floor of the room at 300 E. 49th St. in which Sundquist lived. Dahlquist, a fellow-immigrant of Sundquist, had entered the room the night be- fore. Both had been asphyxiated. Both workers had been seen last at 6 o’clock on Wednesday evening. About 9 o’clock yesterday morning, Hsther Sandell, another tenant in e same house where the two dead rkers roomed, smelled gas in the | 1. Calling the proprietor of the uuilding upstairs, they traced the fumes to the door of Sundquist’s room. It was after the door of the room had been forced open that the bodies of the two workers were found on the floor. Sandell said that their attitudes indicated that they had been overcome by the escaping gas while talking, and had suc- cumbed before they could realize what the danger was. Investigation revealed the fact that a gas pipe in one corner of the room had been thoroughly corroded through failure of the owner to re- pair it in time, and that the rust had gradually bored its way through the metal, leaving a small hole through which the gas had escaped. If it had not been for the timely discovery of the fumes by Esther 4-Sandell, all the people in the house | } } { Haight have been asphyxiated, ob-| rvers said. The house is occupied | ‘utirely by workers and poor labor- | “ers employed in the vicinity. BOSTON PARTY MEMBERS MEET Meetings Thruout New England BOSTON, Mass., Dec. 27.—The Convention Arrangements Commit- tee of the Boston district of the Workers (Communist) Party has planned the following discussion meetings in the district. Party members in these units will receive mail notices for these meetings and are asked to attend them without il. The meetings follow: _New Bedford—Dec. 30, 1 p. m.; eakers, Robert Zelms for the C. . C, and Sam Wiseman for the Op- position. Worcester—Dec. 30, 1 p. mj speakers, Alex. Bail for the C. E. C. and Max Lerner for the Opposition. Fall River—Dec. 80, 7 p. mj; speakers, Robert Zelms for the C. E. C. and Wiseman for the Opposi- tion, Norwood—Jan. 1, 2 p. m.; speak- ers, Bail for the C, E. C. and Jack McCarthy for the Opposition. Haverhill—January 7, 7:30 p. m.; speakers, Zelms for the C. E. C. and McCarthy for the Oppasition. Lynn—January 7, 7:30 p. m5; speakers, Harry J. Canter for the C. EB, C. and Sam Winocur for the Opposition. Maynard—January 7, 7:30 p. m.; speakers, Bail for the C. E. C. and Wiseman for the Opposition. Springfield—January 8, 7:30 p. m.; speakers, Bail for the C. E. C. and Wiseman for the Opposition. Peabody—January 8, 7:30 p. m.; fen Zelms for the C. E. C. and 8 s for the Opposition. Lumberjack Denies Charge of Murder ROSEAU, Minn., Dec. 27 (UP).—|- George Ryan, 55-year-old lumber- jack, will be charged with murder in connection with the death of Rob- ert Lobdell, 30, St. Paul immigra- tion inspector, authorities announced here today. Ryan denied he was connected with the death of the inspector when arrested in a dense swamp after a 12-hour man-hunt. Ryan sald he was just making “his way through the country.” He was un- armed and did not resist arrest. Lobdell was shot to death Tues- day on a boundary highway about five miles east of Roseau. Moncada to Be Placed in Wall St. Job Jan. 1 weohen Nicaragua, Dec, 27. —wWith American marines constantly ready, the puppet officials of the Nicaraguan government are prepar- ing to inaugurate on Jan, 1 the gov- ernment of Moncada, who owes his {ns} election to Washington’s envoys, Ad- eee “tl of miral Sellers and General McCoy. Banquets and richly decorated parties are being extended to Mon- cada by Americans resident in Managua and by the native bour- gevisie, WOMEN WORKERS WASHINGTON (By Mail).—Une in every eleven women are employed ‘industry and business, the Wom- reports, Italian Red Ball. A grand annual ball will be given| by the New York Italian fraction of | the Workers (Communist) Party for| the benefit of Il Lavatore, the Italian Communist paper tomorrow at 8 p. m. at Workers Coc paatve Hall, 642 Hudson Ave., West N. Section 5 Dance, Section 5 of the Workers (Com- munist) Party will celebrate the es- tablishing of the Bronx Workers Center at 1330 Wilkins Ave., on New Years Eve with a concert and dance till daybreak. All Bronx workers are invited, Fhivag he Newark Y. W. L. Dance. The Young Workers (Communist) League will hold its sixth annual dance on Jan. 5, at the Ukrainian Labor Hall, 57 Beacon St., Newark. Tickets are 50 cents including a free sub to the Young Worker for three months. All sympathetic organiza- tions are asked not to arrange af- fairs on the same date and to help us make this affair a success. Se eee East N. Y. Y.W.L. Dance. The Hast N. Y. section of the Young Workers (Communist) League will hold its first section dance on Saturday, Jan, 12, at the East New | York Workers Center, 313 Hinsdale St. There will be entertainment and an excellent jazz band. All work- ers are invited to attend. Een ea Unit 3F, Subsection 2C will meet January % at 6:30 p. m.._in- stead of Monday as usual. On Jan- uary 7th and thereafter, the Monday meetings will be resumed, chin panes Le Memorial Meet. A Lenin Memorial Meeting will be held in Madison Square Garden Sat- urday evening, January 19. All Party and sympathetic organizations please take note. You are requested not to erranige: any conflicting dates, The Lenin Memorial Meeting this year will be powerful demonstration agal the imperialist war and for the femse of the Soviet Unton. | District Executive Committee, | York District. | New . Williamsburgh Y. We Le will meet today at the 107th St. w. L. New Star Casino at 105 E. 7 8 The Y. W, L. of Williamsburgh win hold an open forum Sunday at . at 56 Manhattan Ave., Max Saltzman, member of the N. E. C. of the League, will speak on “Our Latin American Neighbors.” The forum will be followed by danc- jing. A good jazz band will supply the music, ier Bast New York, Y. W. L. Hike. The East New York unit of the Young Workers (Communist) League will hold its second section hike to ‘Workers Party Activities’ MELLON GIVES are expected and all young nedriccen | and students are invited to join us on this tramp. All going our headquarters at 31 Hindale at 7:30 Sunday morning. “Daily” Agents, Sec. 3. The Daily Worker's agents me: ing will take place today at 6 meet at St. |p..m,, at 101 West 27th Street. Bring with you a complete report of your activities also suggestions and plans to make the Daily Worker | activities successful. aiLis Downtown Y. W. L. Forum The speaker for the Downtown Unit 1, Y. W. L, Forum held at 60 St. Marks Place this Sunday, 8:15 p. m. will be Herbert Zam, National | Secretary of the Y, W. L., who will speak on “Youth in Industry.” Dancing will follow the discussion. Admission Free. Str, wd. Lower Bronx Y. W. L, Forum The lower Bronx Unit of the Young Workers (Communist) will hold its first open forum of the) winter this Sunday at 8 p. m. Hy-| man Gordon will speak on “The} War Danger and the Youth.” Pay ea McKinley Square Y. W. L. The McKinley Square unit of the Young Workers (Communist) League will meet today at 1400 Boston Road, at 8:80 p.m Upper Harlem Y. W. L- The upper Harlem unit of the Y, W. L. has arranged a gala in- ter-racial dance for tomorrow eve-| ning at the Imperial Auditorium, 160 W. 129th St. John C. Smith and his Serenaders will supply the jazz. All|; are invited. ages eee Progressive Countermen Group. The next fraction meeting of the Progressive Group of the Delicates- sen Countermen's Union, Local 302, will be held at the Workers Center, 26 Union Square, today at 3 p. m. a hie Unit 1F, Subsection 24, Unit 1F, Subsection 2A will hold its regular meeting today at 6:30 p. m. at 26 Union Square, fifth floor. Important communications and other matters will be taken up, and every | member is urged to attend. tin eR Upper Bronx Pioneers. The Pioneer Sport Club of the Up- per Bronx will have gym practice at|ihe miners and bringing on the late |them outside of the ranks of organ- their gym, 1347 Boston Road on Sun- day morning at 10 o'clock. All) Jamaica woods on Sunday, Dec. 30. Sports activities and plenty of fun Pioneers are asked to come on time. Office Workers. ‘The Office Workers’ Umon has ar- [ranged a dance for Washington's |birthday eve, Feb. 21, at Webster Manor. Sympathetic ’ organizations are asked not to arrange any affair for that evening. ie Women mheatre Party. a The New York Working Women’s Federation will have a theatre party at the Provincetown Theatre, 3 McDougal St, tomorrow evening 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. Frethelt Singing Society. For the first time in New York, the Freiheit Singing Society, will present Mendelsohn's oratorio, “Wal- purgis Night” with a symphony or- chestra conducted by Lazar Weiner. The concert will take place tomor- row at Carnegie Hall, 57th Street and 7th Avenue. Tickets can be got- ten at the Frejheit office, 30 Union Sa. . ‘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 8rd Ave, on Friday. evening, Feb. 8, at reduced prices if tickets ‘are gotten In advance. The full price will be charged on the day of the performance. Tickets in advance may be gotten at the central office of the United Council of Work- ing Women, 80 EB. 11th: St., 533, or photie Stuyvesant 0576. Room Wittamsbars i L, D. Dance. | The Williamsburg branch of the I. L. D, will sponsor a dance and concert on New Year's Eve, Dec. 31, at 56 Manhattan Ave., Brooklyn, at p. m. The funds collected at the dies will be donated to the class war prisoners, Admission will be 25 cents, RAE EN Negro Entertainment, Dance. A Negro entertainment and dance has been arehnaee by Section 6 of the Workers (Communist) Party at 56 Manhattan Ave. Brooklyn, for Saturday, Jan. 12. An_ interesting program is being, prepared. Negro Champion Dance, The Negro Champion and the American Negro Labor Congress will have a joint dance and entertain- ment Jan, 22 at Renaissance Casino. 138th St, and 7th Ave, Other or- Sap eatione are asked to observe late. Spanish, Club Dance. The Spanish Workers Center {s ar- ranging a dance for Monday eve- ning at 8 p, m., in its club rooms, 55 W. 113th St.; Latin American music. A good time is promised to all, Start the new year right. Ad- mission will be 50 cents. Girls are admitted free of charge. Dr. Liber To Lecture. Dr, Liber will lecture today at 8:30 p. m. at 227 Brighton Beach Ave., on “True and False Prevention.” This lecture is under the auspices of Women's Council it. Young De! rs Meet. AN | Defend are having a lecture Sunday at 8 p. m., at 1400 Boston Road.” The business, meeting will be at 6 o'clock on the same evening. R i fs Labor Temple. The Labor Temple will hold the following lectures this Sunday ee “at 14th St. and Second nd Pp. m., Dr. G, Beck ‘The Book of ‘the ‘Month——‘Bligabeth and Essex,’ by Lytton Strachey.” 115 p. m.. Edmund B. pee tts on “Some Thoughts for the New Yi - 8:30 p.m, Forum, Joseph Giber- nau on "From Cathedrals to Sky- scrapers.” . Cultare Club. o Social Culture Club will hold a package party and dance this Sunday e ing at 118 fone St, near Pitkins A’ Brook- Tyn, All young workers, are welcome, Workers eppicaus Group. The Workers Bsperanto Broun will hold an important meeting today at 8 p. m, at 108 B, ae st. All membera should be present, Yonkers Open Forum. The Yonkers Open Forum. will be held this Sunday at 8 p,m. at the Workers Co-operative Center, Warburton Ave. The topic for dis- Fraternal Organization Brownsville Workers Center. The Workers Center of Browns-| ville will hold a ball this Saturday night at its clubhouse, 154 Watkin St. Brooklyn. A good time is prom- ised to all. Fretheit Sport Club. ranged a dance for Sunday, Dec. 30, at its club rooms, 230 B. Dancing will start, at “s p.m, Ferrer School Festival. ‘The Ferrer Modern School will hold at the N, ¥. Labor Temple, 243 E. 84th St. Dancing. The affair starts 8:15 p. m. eo. Bronx Open Forum. Otto Huiswood will speak at the Bronx Open Forum, 1330 Wilkins Ave., on “Problems of the Negro in Industry,” Sunday, Dec. 30 at 8 p,m Brownsville Workers Center. The Brownsville Workers Center ball will be held tomorrow, Dec. 29, at 154 Watkins St, Brooklyn. Wanted, Athletic Volunteers. Volunteers are wanted to take part in the gymnastic drill which will take place at the Lenin Memorial Meeting in Madison Square Garden Sunday, Jan. 19. Comrades who are qualified to take part in such drill, including the formation of pyramids, should report promptly at 10 a. m: Sunday at Manhattan Lyceum, 66 EB. 4th St, and every Sunday thereafter. re Red Poets’ Night Dec. 28. The third annual International Red Poets’ Night will be held to- night at 8 o'clock at the Man- hattan Lyceum, 66 E. 4th St. Tickets on sale at Daily Worker office, 26 Union Square. . Dance in Harlem. The New York Branch of the Anti- Imperialist League is arranging its first ‘annual dance for Friday night, Jan. 11, at Laurel Garden, 116th St. and Park Ave. Keep this date open and come and have a good time. . Freiheit Singing Society. The Freiheit Singing Society Con- cert will be held tomorrow evening at Carnegie Hall. | . Bronx * Workers Center. All Bronx comrades will meet at the concert and dance of the Bronx Workers Center, Monday evening Dec, 31, at 1330 Wilkins Ave. Danc- ing till’day break. Come and bring your friends. | . “Frieheit” Sport Club. The Freiheit Sport Club will have a dance this Sunday at 8 p, m. at ie club rooms, 230 East 5th Street, N. Y. C. There will be a band for dancing and a sport exhibition com- posed of the best athletes. The club invites all interested workers to at- tend the entertainment. Radio Workers, Attention! The Radio Workers Association will hold a unity social tomorrow, at Stuyvesant Casino, 9th St. and 2nd Ave. A free raffle, a snappy jazz band will be part of the variety of enter- tainment for the evening. Radio Workers, come and organ- ize and have a good time, ae Uline | M, Epstein to Lecture Tomorrow, at 8:30 p, m., M. Ep- stein, editor of the “Freiheit,” will speak at the East Flatbush Workers Club, 1111 Rutland Road, on “How the Soviet solves the national prob- lem.” All wel ome. iim. Film and the will be shown this Sunday at 2:30 p.m, at the Czecho-Slovak Workers Home, 247 EB. 72nd St., for the benefit of the tex- tlle The affair is under of the Local N. Y. W.LR. . Metro Workers Soccer League, ae baht Auk on er Workers Soccer 111 hold a ball on reaped s Laurel Garden, 75 EB. 116th St. Organizations are asked not to arrange any conflicting dates. a aay United Council, Working Women, The United Council of Working cussion will be “World Imperialism.” are welcome Women will see “Singing Jailbirds” at the Provincetown Playhouse to- t The Frejheit Sport Club has ar-/ Sth. St.| its January Festival on Jan. 12, 1929) _ MILLIONS BACK TO OWN FIRMS Congressman Charges | Looting Increases (Continued from Page One |of New York was next with $4,270,- 059. Others receiving more than $1,-; 000,000 were the Federal Shipbuild- jing Company, Kearney, N. J.. 33,- |654,239; estate of Margaret Olivia |Sage. New York, $1,618,939; Swift & Co, Chicago, $1,496,631. the |Texas Company, Houston, $1,336,- 507; estate of Peter C, Brooks, Bos- |ton, 1,368,826; United Fuel and Gas | |Company, Inc., Charleston, West | | Virginia, $1,235,962; the estate of | |Verner Zevola Reed, Denver, $1,-} | 222,883, Mellon’s own Aluminum Comp: jof America gets a refund of $5 962. | The Texas Company, of Houston, lately took part in a merger of all the largest Southwestern Oil Com- panies, and is controlled by bank- ing capital over which the Mellon family of Pittsburgh, in turn, acts | {as guardian. Good to Melton Firms. Among the other companies fa- | vored during last year are the Amer- | ican Smelting and Refining Co., of | |New York ($945,342), an enormous | labor-hating concern controlled by the Mellon-Morgan financiers; tho McClintic - Marshall Construction | \C . of Pittsburgh ($874,255), which jis the home of Mellon financial | power; the estate of Henry Clay Frick of Pittsburgh ($802,720)— property of the Frick family, which | jis Mellon’s associate in scab coal | jmining throughout Pennsylvania, | and followed the lead of Mellon’s | Pennsylvania Coal Co. in locking out | strike, Other big coal mining com- panies which took their union- smashing labor policy from the Mellon interests and which are given big refunds of taxes, are the Ber- | wind White Coal Mining Co, of | Philadelphia ($545,962), and the} |Paint Creek Coal Mining Co. of Cleveland ($412,213). The Southern California Edison} ie (Insull-controlled) is given |t! $337,569, ‘Pershing to Speak in | Washington on U. S. in ‘Latin America Sunday WASHINGTON, D. C., Dec. 27. —George Pershing, former soldier in the United States Army, sta- tioned in Hawaii with Paul Crouch and Walter Trumbull, who were sent to prison for organizing a Commu-| nist League, will speak here Sunday | night December 30, at 8 p. m. Hoo- | ver’s jaunt as part of American im-| [perialism’s attack upon Latin-| America. Prshing, who is a cousin of the/ Jingo general, ing, will speak at the Neighborhood | Playhouse, 1814 N St., N. W. The meeting will be held under the aus-! pices of the Al] America Anti-Im- perialist League and the Workers (Communist) Party. Admission will be 25 cents. i morrow at 2 p. m, Tickets at re-| duced prices, . . Fretheit Mandolin Orchestra. The second of a series of concerts will be given by the Freiheit Man- dolin Orchestra on Sunday, Jan. 6, at 8 p,m, at the headquarters of the orchestra, 106 H. 14th St. | . Progressive Butcher Workers, A concert and dance will be held under the auspices of the Progressive | Butcher and Poultry Workers’ Union on Friday, Jan. 4, at the Workers Center, A special meeting of the same organization will be held at 8 p.m, today. Get Your Money’s Worth! Try the Park Clothing Store For Men, bp ogg and Boys 93 Avenue ‘A, Corner 6th St. NEW YORK cITY LL COOPERATORS PATRONIZE M. FORMAN Allerton Carriage, Bicycle and Toy Shop 786 ALLERTON AVE. Nenr Allerton Theatre, Bronx Phone Olinville 2583 Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST scscata\ Boney Tues., Thurs, & Sat.. PLEA SE THEPHO NE FOR APPOIN' NT 249 art igh “Shuey, Second A Telephone! 1 Lehigh Nom. DR. L. HENDIN SURGEON DENTIST 853 Broadway, Cor. 14th St. MODERATE PRICES Room 1207-8 Algonquin 6874 Cor. DR. J. MINDEL SURGEON DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Room 808—Phone, Algonquin £182 TALKS ON NEGRO. ‘sured. “Black Jack” Persh-| — Bridge Collapse Injures Three ___SOGIALISTS OF GERMANY CALL FOR BiG ARMY Gesture Covers Troops Shooting Strikers (Continued from Page One | | | } facsie i , and certainly without Commu- In order to give a “socialistic sound to their support of the bour- soisie, the reactionary armed forces which the social democrats to present to the German capi- will have, according to the party platform, a system of what they call “trade unions,” omething like American cone, unions, with a “welfare program.” The circular stairway on the Queensborough Bridge collapsed, injuring three persons. Traffic was tied dup and and passengers had to walk back to Manhattan. The collapse was due to faulty construction. Fe! AFRICA WORKERS, soldiers’ ( kavesbieine Bose Left Working Girls Smoke Screen. Part of the ouflage thrown | Stranded in West over these militarist measures is INLOS ANGELES POLICE IN CLASH fencer the atae | CHICAGO, Dec, 27 (U.R).—Claire \ract, that the army shall not be — Robbins, 19, and Josephine Burke, ee es used dur strikes. There is also 17, advertising saleswomen who told Gov't Guards Diamond a crafty effort to hold together the Hall to Address Many Meetings of the working class with ion that a revolution may ted against the government f it fails to resort to “arbitration” when threatened by war. The Communist Party of Germany fights aga the creation of an army and navy under control of the capitalists and their socialist assis- tants, which will, certainly, law or police they were left without funds by their “crew manager,” were turned over to the Illinois Vigilance | Association today to await return to their homes. Miss Robbins, 177 Stanton St., 3 : New York City, and Miss Burke, 317 {Patrolling the diamond fields of River St., Burlington, Vt., said they | Namaqualand, where diamonds were had been employed by the National| recently discovered, to protect the | Advertising Company, New York’ British diamond industry and pre- Mine Fields CAPETOWN, South Africa, |27.—Two hundred police tod (Continued from Page One dications and the universal interest manifested both in the Negro section and among the white workers, the success of all these meetings is as- Dec. y were 70,000 Negroes in City. City, and came west with William | no law, be used against the workers In this city there is a Negro popu-| Lockwood, crew manager, two |Vent the half-starved workers, who | in Jabor struggles. : ian ae he had been laid off, from rushing the | - lation of about 70,000, the over-| months ago, field The workers of Germany rally to whelming majority of whom are) They were taken to police head- $ the Red Front Fighters organiza- workers. These Negro wi re quarters last. night by a motorist) Clashes between the police and the tion, which provides guards for |largely employed in the lowest paid whom they asked to drive them|workers, who have been reduced to meetings, prevents the fascisti from positions, such as street workers, | east. The girls said Lockwood left {desperation by unmployment, and breaking them up, and defends |garbage collectors, etc. and the them in Minneapolis with only 15|pasants in the vicinity whose crops | strik white chauvinism of the A. F. of L./ cents and that they had hiked to/had been ruined by prolonged Eisenmann has been instrumental in keeping Chicago. drought. It is impossible to obtain acres of state diggings or else em- ploy additional diggers, It is re- ported that unless these demands were not met by Friday the diggers would rush the fields. full information here. ized labor. Not only do they find |themselves, along with thousands of |local white workers, victims of Cool- jidge “prosperity,” but they are also} confronted with cial problems ising from chauvinism and racial | prejudices. | At a recent meeting at Port Nol- lcth of some 2,000, it was demanded that the government throw open 34 Pershing, Benjamin in) Anti-Imperialist Meet in Philadelphia Friday | PHILADELPHIA, Pa., Dec, 27.— The All America Anti-Imperialist League and the Workers (Commu- nist) Party organization in this city will hold a protest mass meet- ing to demand the withdrawal of |American forces from Nicaragua |and “hands off Colombia.” The speakers will be Herbert Ben- FIRST TIME IN NEW YORK! “Walpurgi’s Night” By F. MENDELSSOHN Race Discrimination. FIRST TIME IN YIDDISH! It is needless to say that socially, the status of the Negro worker in Los Angeles is on a par with his economic situation. Residential re- strictions make it impossible for the Negroes to either buy or rent a home lin sections other than those that now!. i ‘An jamin, district organizer of the ee hin Tie aa Party, and George Pershing, for- by the a resu ey. 80 |merly with the U, S. army in able overcrowding and poor housing | | Hawallmnd-cotiinestesttiack sack” ipa i 'Pershing. The meeting will take | The fact that Hall has recently re-/ place at Carpenters Hall, 715 N. turned from Soviet Russia where he | Fytaw St., on Friday, Dec, 28, at 8 spent three years in earnest study p.m lof racial and colonial problems and their successful solution in U. S. S.| |R. undoubtly qualifies him to deal | Freiheit Singing Society NEW YORK—PATERSON Symphony Orchestra Dancing Instructions - Soloists with his subject, and his visit) — promises to be momentous im-/ DANCING NEWEST STEPS LAZAR WEINER, Conductor portance to both Negro and white poise, balance, lead, follow in vomnfi- finest teachers, guar- h you correctly walt dence, quickl workers of the city. , anteed to t —— | fox trot, collegi Peabody, Ar- Ss t d D b 29 gentine tango, en in separate BSC OR ee rooms, without appointment; indi- a Ure ay, ecem er $1; open 10 A to vidual’ lessons, 1P. pecial cou CIA DANCIN: 74th Street. at 8:30 p. m. CARNEGIE HALL 57th Street and Seventh Avenue rat nners. DIOS, 108 W. quehanna 0629, MODICOT. Yiddish Marionette Theatre MODICOT PLAY Z. Maud and Yossel Cutler will appear in person WORKERS Ne 26-28 Union Square, N. Mi Today, Sat., Sun., December 28, 29, "ae - Tickets now on sale at the Modicot Studio, 317 2nd Ave, ST Any Kind of Insurance” CARL BRODSKY CARL Murray BIN 5550 7 East 42nd Street, New York | r Eat Tickets for Sale at Freiheit Office, 30 Union Square, N. Y. For a Real Oriental Cooked Meal VISIT THE INTERNA ONAL PROGRESSIVE CENTER 101 WEST 28TH svEner (Corner 6th A RESTAURANT, CAFE! RECREATION ROOM Open from 10 a. m. to 12 i ‘WE ALL MEET NEW WAY CAFETERIA 101 WEST 27th STREET NEW YORK Patronize No Tip Barber Shops - fi UNION SQUARE Q) fitght up) 2700 BRONX PARK EAST (corner Allerton Ave.) CENTRAL BUSINESS SCHOOL p.m. Health Food subsite hy COOPERAT: St PATRONL Vegetarian —Stenography ie ree Restaurant —Typewriting E. KARO 25%, of the Proceeds 1600 MADISON AVE. Your Nearest Stationery Store Cigars — Cigarettes — Candy | 649 ALLERTON AVE., Saturday and Sunday —:—will go to—:— Individual Instruction one Uae eae CLASS LIMITED Cor. Barker, BRONX, N. ¥ SEN OSD Ssh SN 108 E. 14th STREET }|) va. on oe aaa Antandirs . All Comrades Meet at BES {3| Tel. OLInville 9681-2 — 9791-2 | | Scientific Vegetarian BRONSTRINE Restaurant VEGRIAKIAN HEALTH —INSTRUCTION —'(“gutty Co-operators Patronize eg Coa RESTAURANT SAM LESSER ’ and Gents’ Tailor ~ 7th Ave. New York NEW YORK CITY 558 Claremont P’kway Bronx English Instruction wie by Public School Instructor. | Given 'rivate or Your jome, English, ox 225. ’ | John’s Restaurant [English tx'Cniversicy Student For Good Wholesome Foue || SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES i Med ay ch ‘or oo Vholesome ou | A place with atmosphere to. Children backward “in School MARY WOLFE BAT AT where all radicals meet. Studies, Very reasonable. Write|] grupENT OF THE DAMROSCH T ’ 302 KE. 12th ST. NEW YORK Box 150, CONSERVATORY Dairy and Vegetarran Restauraut 103 SECOND AVE. H. L. HARMATZ, Prop, Self-Service Cafeteria 115 SECOND AVE., Near 7th St. PIANO LESSONS Moved to 2440 Bronx Park East Near Co-operative Colony. Apt. 6h Telephone EASTABROOK 2469 Hotel and Restaurant Workers Branch of the Amalgamated Food Workers 128 W. Sixt St. Phone Circle 7336 BUSINESS MEETING: Comrades, Patronize The Triangle Dairy : udent BAKING DONE ON PREMISES on, the flrat Monday of the are Argel Bictthos, “Ha ey Visit Our Place Wrile on @nd Ave, | Restaurant Dba aber ER io adods ne Vel.: Dry Dock 1263; Orchard (430 1379 Intervale Avenue and Fight the Common Enemy! Office Open from 9 a. m. to 6 p. m BRONX 8S. PLOTKA JEWELER 737 ALLERTON AVENUE Near Holland Ave. Bronx, N. Phone Olinville 6489 Cooperators, patronize your local wWELER MEET YOUR FRIENDS Messinger’s Vegetarian Rational Vegetarian Restauran! aie BECOND AVE, Bet. 12th and 13th Sts, Advertise your union meetings here, For ‘nformation write to The DAILY WORKER || Adve.tising Dept. 26-28 Union 3q., New York City i i Y. We carry a full line of watches, with oy other office eeeeecoseeceeea Strictly Vegetarian Food. clocks and jewelry