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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, JANUARY 1, 1929 Page Five Thuggery of Carpenter Bosses Exposed as Onlookers ‘Witness Slugging of ‘Pickets SOSSES, SCABSIN Workers Party Activities WRECK BRITISH SOCIALIST HEAD SHIPS TO KEEP OF BERLIN COPS VIGIOUS ATTACK ON TWO STRIKERS Locked-Out C: Carpenters | Struck With Pipes | ‘An owner of a carpenter shop, his | two sons, and a scab hired by the| oncern when the workers went on strike against a wage slash on Fri- day, Dec. 18, attacked and viciously beat up two of the striking workers | who were peacefully picketing be- fore the factory at 7 o’clock Friday | morning. The two workers are Harry Ger-| nan and Ben Glass, both militant | members of the United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners, Local 1057, The workers, until two weeks ago, were employed at the shop of Abraham Buttinsky. Six months ago, he was the only owner of the shop, but then, in order to attempt to break the union conditions, he took four other men into partner- ship with him, Immediately he be- gan to slash the wages of the workers. A strike however, into which the full progressive resources of the union was thrown, succeeded in restoring the former wage scale. Declare Lock-Out. Two weeks ago, Buttinsky and his | four associates declared that there was no more. work, and locked out ten of the most militant workers in the shop. Immediately afterward, he took on several scabs, including his two sons, Joseph and Sam But- tinsky. When Glass and German began to picket the plant at 392 Madison St. Friday morning, they noticed But- | | 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. All sympathetic organizations are ked not to arrange affairs on the same date and to help us make this affair a success, East N. Y. Y, Dance. The Hast N. Y. section of the Young Workers will hold its tir: Saturday, Jan. 12, at the East New York Workers Center, 313 Hinsdale St. There will be entertainment and an excellent jazz band. ers are invited to attend, . All work- Lenin 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 ure requested not to arrange any conflicting dates, ‘The Lenin Memorial Meeting this year will be| a powerful demonstration against the imperialist war and for the de-| fense of the Soviet Union, Unit 3E 2F, ii 2F will hold an important meeting tomorrow at 6:15 p. m. at 101 W. 27th St. é Unit 3E 1F. Unit $2 1F will ha very impor- tant meeting on Thursday, Jan. 3, at 6:15 p. m. at 101 W. ote Unit Unit 5F, Sec 1, will hold a spe- cial meeting for the discussion ae the majority and minority theses to- morrow, 6:30 p. m. at 60 St. Marks lace, * * * Pioneer Basketball Team. The Young Pioneers of District 2 have formed a basketball team, and challenge all junior teams to games. All who wish to arrange contests should communicate with the Young Pioneers of America, 26-28 Union) Square. th St. . *, Section 1. * * * Unit 8F, Section 1. Unit 8F, Section 1, will hold a Party discussion, meeting tomorrow at 6 p. m, at 60 St. Marks Place. All members must be present and on time. . Branch 4, Sec. 5. se tinsky, his two sons, and one of the The meeting is postponed from communist) League) section dance on| | Monday, Dee. 31, to Thursday, Jan. are only four days left to the Fifth Anniversary, All greetings must be in at once. Settle for tickets not later than Wednesday night. Order your Daily Worker bundles. Elect your com- | mittee for distribution of the Daily | Worker and to help at the affair. Reation. 6: Beginning with Monday, Dec. 31, the units of Section 6 will’ meet and | discuss the agenda of the Party Con- | vention. All comrades must attend |their unit meetings and take part |in these important discussion. Tomorrow at 6 p. m., F6 will meet Jat its headquarters, 253 Atlantic Ave. | Thursday, Jan. 3, at 6 p. m., F2 and. F'4 will meet at the Section Head- quarters, 56 Manhattan Ave. The meetings of the rest of the units of Section 6 will be announced later. * * * | Discussion on Youth Problems, A discussion on the youth problems |of old ships as THEM FROM U.S, England Sees War Soon Wants Naval Reserve (Continued from Page One Ship Brokers, condemns the selling “penny wise and | pound foolish.” W. L. Robertson of | Kellocks, Ltd., wishes all owners of tramp ships would follow the exam- ple of the liner companies and en- gard to cargo ships more than | thirty years old. and the Party, Will be held t |morrow at 6:30 p. m., at 253 | Atlantic Ave., Brooklyn. The discus- sion leader will be John Williamson. All members of Unit 6 must be pres- ent. | * * * Nucleus 2F, Section 1, Postponed. | The convention discussion of this| unit will be held Thursday, Jan. 3, at 6 p. m. at 60 St. Marks Pla Representatives of CEC and Opposi: tion will introduce discussion, | * Merax Int'l. Branch. | The Morning International Branch will meet this Thursday, at 10 a. m., at 26-28 Union Square. There will be a discussion on the inner Party jsituation, and the pre-convention is- sues. . Unit 18, Subsection 2 There will be a regular meeting of | Unit 18, Subsection 2C tomorrow at | :30 p. m, at, 28 Union, Square. | Fune' theasiees TF, St. All the functionaries of Unit 7F, Si | jwill meet tomorrow at 6:30 p.m, jat 28 Union Sauare, Section 7, Attention! There will be a meeting of the jIndustrial Organizers and Agitprop Directors of Section 7, Thursday, 8 p. m., at 764 40th St., Brooklyn. Tt ‘|units’ must be represented. Very important. is - Unit 3F, Subsection 2. An important meeting of Unit 3F, Subsection 2A will be held Thurs day, 6 p. m., at 101 W. 27th St. members must attend. | ‘All | | “Tf that were done the mercantile marine of this country would be in a much more flourishing state than it is today,” says Mr. Robertson. “The loss incurred in the sale to breakers instead of to foreigners for | \ tending would be much more than made up by the lessened competition which would follow.” Line of Battle British industry sees U. S. cut- \ting into its foreign markets, and jeven invading British colonies and dominions. But British shipping, | |vital in time of war especially, and historically and economically the |symbol of British imperial domina-!| tion, has become a kind of Hinden- | burg line in the conflict of empires, a | |position which Britain is almost | | fanatically determined to defend. The first victory is going to England’s competitors, chief of) which is U. S. More British ship- ping lies idle in port than at any | previous period. In 1928, there was an average of half million tons tied to the wharves, waiting for cargoes | that did not come. force some breaking-up policy in re-| scabs standing before the door. The) quartet waited until the two pick-| eters were on the sidewalk, and then Buttinsky said something td his| sons, who immediately rushed to the | two defenseless workers and at-| tacked them. Buttinsky and Joseph struck German across the mouth with an iron pipe, breaking three teeth, and throwing him to the side- walk, where the son continued to strike him across the face with the pipe. The other scab hit Glass heavily on the side with a pipe, fell-| ing him too. Then, with both work- ers prostrate on the ground, bleed- ing from their wounds, the whole quartet began kicking them heavily | until the shouts of the workers summoned passersby, who brought policemen to the spot. Open Shop Drive. Although they hesitated for a} while the onlookers, some of whom — had witnessed the vicious attack, finally forced them to arrest But- tinsky and the others. At ten o’clock the same day, they were re- leased on $500 bail at the Essex Market Court and remanded by Magistrate Stern to the Court of General Sessions, where on Satur- _day their bail was raised to $1,000/ each, George Woolhauser and Max Zalenick, the former a scab and the other one of the owners of the fac- tory, were both placed in jail. Wool- hauser is still incarcerated, but Zalenick secured the $1,000 bail necessary for his temporary free- dom, = 3, at 8 p. m., at 1330 Wilkins Ave. Discussion on the Convention issues Speakers representing the majority land the minority will be sent by the district arrangements committee. + 8 8 Morning Night Workers Branch. All members of this branch must attend the meeting on Thursday, 10 a. m,, at the Workers Center, 28 Union’ Square. The meeting will be devoted to discussion on the conven- tion issues, There will be two speak- ers, one for the majority and one for the minority. > ecm International Branch 1-1. The next meeting of our Int. Br.| tomorrow, order of business will be the discus- sion on the majority and minority} theses. * * * All Organizations and Daily Worker Agents! All organizations and Daily Work- er agents bear in mind that there STOPS MEETINGS Threatens Attack On) Red Front Fighters BERLIN (By Mail).—The Berlin police president, the social democrat Zoergiebel, has taken a number of | collisions which have occurred re- cently and which for the most part were attacks by fascists upon Red Front Fighters, as an occasion to direct a blow at the Communist Party and the Red Front Fighter League. On Dee. 13 he issued a prohibition of all meetings in the open and pro- cessions. In his declaration he re- ferred openly to the 1923-24 period when Berlin was practically under martial law. The prohibition concerns itself directly with recruiting marches of the Red Front Fighters League which were to take place on Dec. |14 in order to win new readers for |his action was only a preliminary | |, | |cial demccrats to the bourgeoisie for the “Rote Fahne.” day Zoergiebel declared to represen- tatives cf the Communist Party and the Red Front Fighters League that | and would be followed by direct ac- tion against the R. F. The action of the social demo- | cratic police president, which has been taken in complete agreement with the leadership of the social democratic party, which is shown clearly by the “Abend,” the evening edition of the Berlin “Vorwaerts,” | the official organ of the social dem- vcratic party, is without doubt one of the concessions made by the so- On the same |! Belk ie rice |day of the perforn Chists of Tammany Graft Machine | in Confab REBELS DRIVES OFF FROM AFGHAN CAPITAL KABUL British Plane Refugees Refuse to Talk PESHAVAR, India, Dec. 31. The Afghan troops have succeéded in clearing Kabul of the rebel tribes- men and driving them out of a radius of 20 miles from the ¢ |according to latest reports receive |from the capital. Reinforcements are reported” to |be on the way from Kandahar, Mayor Walker and Governor-elect Franklin D. Roosevelt, Tam- |Hereat and the northern provinces. many’s new silk-hat hope, confer on plans for serving the bosses |It was also reported that Ali Almad and lining the pockets of the Tammany grafters with still greater \Khan, lately governor of Kabul was efficiency in the future. Fraternal Organizations the W Daily kers’ to Jan, the Brown ville d its af are as for that ev: Women Theatre Party. 00d opportunity for Jewish 3 regular wee chwartz Art Theatre A “. * on Kate Gitlow “| Afghanistan, and even th jin charge of the town of Jelalabad, |where he was dealing with the: in- cited tribes with ancreaBing success. India, of | LAHORE , Dec, 31.—All the members of the foreign lega- tions thus far evacuated by British army planes from Kabul refuse to anything about conditions in not at- se to | | sa: |tached to the legations r _|talk. Three more troop-transpert planes have been sent by the British from Irac and have now reached Karachi on their way to Peshawar. 8 d <Ave., on F iday Kate Gitlow of evening, Fe _ at Hee pri SAY MURDERER WAS tic rotten in advance. EAT full will be charged INVENTOR ance. T advance may be gotten at the c office of the United Council of Work ing Women, 80 E. 11th St., Room 533, or photle Stuyvesant 0576. oe ow pe bi Entertainment, gro entertainment d by Dance. nd dance tion 6 of| 247 Sixth Ave Labor Temple Poetry LONDON (By Mail)—The sister of Vaquier, v-ho was hanged for the “Blue Anchor” murder, has brought xction to recover profits on a meat chopping machine Vaquier claimed to have invented. with majority and minority repre- sentatives. . 8 Unt 4F SS. 2A, Unit 4F, Subsection 2A wilh inet | tomorrow at 6:30 p. m. at 101 27th St. Very important. p.m. at 101 W. 27th St. Imp. Doe * | tant matters will be taken up. All| executive members must attend. | Unit 5F, 3D. Unit 5F, 3D will meet tomorrow | at 6 p.m. at 28 Union Square, Room | | 602. A Party discussion will take | place. Executives, Subsection 3C. The Executive Committee of Bub section 3C wlil meet tomorrow, ~ * Unit SF, 20, A special meeting has been called by Unit 5F, for Thursday, 6 p. m., at 101 W. 27th St. All members | are urged to attend and be on time. Night Workers, Night Workers Branch meets to- morrow at 2:30 p. m. LYNCHING NEGRO WHO FLED JAIL Another Hanged While They Hunt Victim (Continued from Page One ard escaped, said: “To attempt to wrest the Negro from the mob by |force would mean certain bloodshed. | \“They are a determined lot and sen- | Zionist Group Asks Palestine be Made a British Dominion | | VIENNA, Dec. 3L—The interna- tional comic opera khown as the Zionst movement went one step further in its clownish groveling be- fore British imperialism when the Union of Zion Revisionists, the “right wing” of the movement, at) the closing session of its third con- ference adopted the suggestion of | Col. Josiah Wedgwood, millionaire lexploiter and labor M. P., that Palestine be officially transformed) Unit 4, Section 7. | The British shipbuilding industry r Unit 4, Section 7, Nill meet, to- | is also in bad shape, with less num- | the formation of the government of row at t 48 sth St. wen |There will be a ‘Party discussion | ber of workers employed than at|the Great Coalition, for direct ac- Harlem Progressive 1, Freiheit| Division C: Spartacus 1, Work-| ers B. 0; Red Star 2, Freiheit 0; ee time since before the war. |tion against the Red Front Fighters | League was one of the demands of the German people’s party. The ‘Weather Buro Predicts rignt-wing reactionary press wel- \Intense Cold Thruout | comes the action of Zoergiebel with unconceaied AOL pany Midwest for New Year | CHICAGO, Dec. 31 (UP).—The| LABOR SPORTS new year will ride into the midwest | on the wings of a biting cold wave, ther br redicted today. on lage yamine: rhqipecataree| The results of the games played | which extended across southern|in the Metropolitan Workers Soc- [North Dakota and northwestern|cer League Sunday were as as fol- Minnesota today will dip southward | lows: 5 |tomorrow, bringing zero or sub-| Division A: Martians 3, Bronx |zero temperatures to most of the, Hungarians 0; Rob Roy 8, Hunga- Chicago forecast area before the|rian Workers 1, Divison B: Ameri-} new year has really arrived. The cold wave will last at Teast |35 three days, the forecast said, and |? | frill be accompanied by some Precip | scandinavian Workers 4, Vagabond tinea ah iver iniciencdice é Cooperative 2, Harlem 1. In the Brooklyn Workers Soccer Involve Ohio Officials League the results were as follow partacus 2, Atlantic Park 0; Frei-) in Charges 0 of Bribery | hnett 4, Red Star 0. COLUMBUS, (one, Dee. 31 (uP). | —State Treasurer Bert B. Buckley, Lynn Shoe Bosses to John L. Schrimpner, Cincinnati at- torney and Joseph Sperber, a brew- Seek Non-Union Cities master, were indicted by the federal if grand jury here today on a charge} LYNN, maael: (By Mail) overt of conspiring to offer a bribe. la half dozen large shoe manufac- turers have announced their inten- |tion to move from Lynn. Thou- FISHERMEN STRANDED. |can Hungarian 2, Prospect Unity | ¢t 8 the been ) Party at wis Sg Manh Brooklyn, for TO SAVE PROFITS. . . . Prince of Monaco, Louis, arrived Negro Champion Dance, The Negro Champion and American Negro Labor Congress have a joint dance * members home Assi from his winter residence in Northern France today, to deal with the political crisis growing out of the n called off ment Ba at ae Hoe Ua charges that the C no of Monte 8 St. a 7 Ave. 20) ‘emp! eanieedobbumres ascent tto Carlo directors have taken over con- date. | her Workers. |, |trol of Monaco, School Festival, B ute ier Spot ae ey > a The Ferrer Modern School ¥ on on For Good Wholesome Four s January Festival on Jan. EAT AT at the emple, ’ sith The affair RATNER S | 8:15 p. ee rand bs od MILWAU D e . 7 Biatee: Workers: Baccds sae S GROW. Dairy and MEd Kis te Restaurant The Metropolitan Worke Soccer|) MILWAUKEE (By Mail)—Help 103 SECOND AVE. League will hold February | w, at the Laurel ¢ St. Organizations are arrangé any conflictir 116th “not to Freiheit Mandolin Orchestra, The second of a series ot concerts Hari Orgrnizations! The Harlem Youth Center that will open within two weeks in | headquarters 2 E. 110th anted ads in local papers fell off 44 percent in November. Unskilled labor, wood, leather, and building |trades workers were ‘hardest hit. H. L, HARMATZ, Prop, Self-Service Cafeteria 115 SECOND AVE. Near 7th St. BAKING DONE ON PREMISES Visit Our Place Wrile on 2nd Ave. Dry Dock 1263; Urebard (430 will be given by the Freiheit Man- oa i golin Oren All Comrades Meet at % ~ 4 BRONSTEIN’S Progressive. Butcher Workers. VEGETARIAN HEALTH | WE E ALI, MEET A concert and 4d Ce will be held } ne ba the x ‘ RESTAURANT under the auspices of the cr t Butcher and Poultry Wor Unio 558 Claremont P’kway Bronx | NEW WAY CAFETERIA [on Bridky ef the, enter. | 101 WEST 27th pel NEW YORK Meal For a Real Oriental Cooked VISIT THE NATIONAL }rent. out rooms on weekly, monthly +, or daily basis for prices ‘that will| Rational suit every working class organiza-| PROGRESSIVE CENTER . tion. For more information apply to Vegetarian Restaurant *, Fisher, 1271 Hoe SoH Bronx, OST 28TH STREET 2% . Ne | aes ¥. SECOND AVE, a Postpone Brownsv ile Bet 12th and 18th = 8ts. ue to the annive —_—_—_—,______ “For Any Kind of Insurance” bese BRODSKY ATION ROOM a. m. to 12 p. CRE Open fron 10 ourictly Vegetarian Kood. Comrades, Patronize Health Food Since then, the striking workers | 4; i ly in favor of |; oa aus LONDON, Dec. 30—(UP)— | sands of shoe workers will be af- Ti i * have discovered that Yurkevitch, Se and en baniue him,” Nae pao Sierra ae Esthonian airplanes located 110) fected. The firms announce that Wilbibais Mureny Hin than The T angle Dairy Vegetarian one of the bosses, together with Girl Unharmed. Msi Ay iagcoks aie stranded fishermen on an ice floe on | they will seek locations in cities to-| 7 East 42nd Street, N Y. | Restaurant Restaurant Louis Browno and Max Kern, have| ghepard was accused, without| /@dimir Jabotinsky, notorious Lake Peipus, Esthonia, and dropped | tally unaffected by the labor mov ‘ast 42nd Street, New Yor! IbTaTIRERVEIS Koakaio igen eget i i bed jmilitarist and fascist, we re-elected i ing | mer < MADISON AVE. been continually given money to at-| proof of having killed J. D.| race v3 we food and clothing to them according | ment. AABN Phone? BAiaerE cae tacks on the union, and that it was | Duvall ie prison guard found| president of the revisionist group. to Exchange Telegraph dispatches. | DANCING NEWEST STEPS i : y they who instigated the attack on! geaq after’ his escape. He was} If Wedgwood’s plan is adopted in The ice flow was reported drifting | PAPERS; MEN JOBLESS. te ece, pg opal ise ~ the two workers on Friday morning. |aiso accused of abducting the guard’s | |official British circles, it will mean Eastward toward the Soviet coast. | i a 4 | pee » auickly, finest teachers, gua MEET YOUR FRIENDS t |} = The workers, however, are gather- daughter, but the girl appeared to-|the somal 4 Hy we Bite veil re other cohen Figs on EN Be alps Py. Mei cane antecd to te ash vou correctly’ waltz,| a Phone Stuyvesant 3816 ing all their forces in the union to 2 rom the fraud by whic! ritain | the ice were rescue y planes solidation of the two Swedish papers | 40% Beane en nie ties Re paeatel ’ fight this vicious attack on. the |12y 8 her home, Without, telli"g if! grabbed Palestine under the pre- | Saturday. [published in Denver has thrown a/ faure wine, given, ia, sobarate|| Megsinger’s Vegetarian | | John’s Restaurant, strikers and the attempts to create j, taken for granted that she will tense of establishing a Jewish home- FEGS LESTER dozen workers out of work. froma etna vanentalicaniee . | A place with atmosphere —/ a open shop plant. agree to the version of her abduction land, a fraud carried thru _With the WORKERS ROBBED. | for beginners, VALHMNOLA DANCIN and Dairy Restaurant where all radicals meet, | hich all’ her frisnda*and welghibord jactive connivance of the Zionist or-| Three bandits bound three em-| phe workers (Commu: [UL 4th Street. — 11763 Southern Bivd., Bronx, N. 302 E. 12th ST. NEW YORK . es cl Wave hea talline She was unharmed | 22nization and the leaders of ployes of the Smaill-Strasberg Met-|the party of the class a | deh babe Right Off 174th St. Subway Staiton Charge Chicago Police p27 pee eng ane ae ay armed | Histadruth, the so-called labor or-|ropolis Theatre in Richmond Hill | am = — = re *. Gakas dati? Blood < Roundy,’ sere ganization of alestine, yesterday taking $700 from one em-| MARY WOLFE | Have Agreement With ssdeehiow a Shepard, : Palestine is of little value to Ploye and then robbing a collection | STUDENT OF THE DAMROSCH | COOPHRAT PATRONIZE: | Crime; Ask Grand Jury England as a source of raw mate- | truck standing in front of the thea- | rials or as a market for manufac-| tre of approximately $6,000 and es- Shepard was surrendered to the CONSERVATORY GENERAL MEMBERSHIP MEETING CHICAGO, Dee, 31 (U.R)—A peti- tion was filed tdaoy with Chief Just- ice John J. Sullivan of criminal court asking that a special grand jury be empaneled to investigate the Chicago police department, crime and its alliance with politics, and charges of payroll padding by city and county authorities, “The police department has per- mitted endless violations of the laws without making the slightest efforts to stop them,” Swanson said, charg- ing that a connivance exists between law and organized crime, Referring to payroll padding, the state’s attorney said, “Articles of fictitious and padded payrolls have reached me indicating that city, | county and state officials have de- frauded many, departments of vast | sums by misappropriation, embezzel- ment and unlawul usage.” Warden Who Executed | Sacco and Vanzetti | Dies on Prison Ground BOSTON, Dec. 31—The warden 0 conducted the murder by elec- ion of Sacco and Vanzetti, illiam J. Hendry, has not long survived the workers he rushed to their deaths at the! earliest possible moment he was legally able to do so. He died today at his home on the prison grounds of a disease with which he had been sick for some J Bs sg far the omasen Pontes police by his brother, on guarantee of safe conduct and trial, but the posse delivered him:to the mob with- out a struggle. * * Lynch Another Negro. HATTIESBURG, Miss., Dec. 28, —tThe pitiful ; oast of Liberals that there were only nine lynchings in the United States this year, is al- ready undone. News is expected here momentarily that Charles Shepard, Negro escaped prisoner, will be lynched at Parchman, Miss. Meanwhile, a small mob last night took Emanual McCullum, a Negro garage mechanic, into the woods last night and strangled him to death | wit) a half inch rope, McCallum had committed no other jerime than to have a difference of opinion with W, D. Fasterling, a local shop’ keeper, over unfair charge for commodities sold by the shop keeper, According to Sheriff Gray, Mc- | Callum had told him of threats made against his life, and the sheriff, in- stead of affording him protection, had advised him to quit his job and |leave town, A coroner’s jury today returned a verdict of “death at the hands of parties unknown,” without making the slightest effort to dis- cover who was in the mob. COW WITHOUT TAIL-LIGHT. NEW HAVEN, Conn. (By Mail) —Because his cow did not carry a tail-light at night, as required in an old Connecticut law, Morris Miller, a farmer, is being sued for $2500 by # woman whose auto crashed into the cow, ee tured products, but as the pivotal point of the road into Asia and Africa, with seaport access to Europe, it is of the greatest strate- gic importance to British imperial- ism, Dec.GrainProcurement | In U.S. S. R. Increases Soviet grain procurements by of- ficial purchasing agencies for the first fifteen days of December) amounted to 503,698 metric tons, an/ increase of 75,000 tons over the pre- | ceding half monthly period, accord-| ‘ing to cable reports received by the | Amtorg Trading Corporation. Pro-| |curements of grain for the entire, month of December 1927 amounted | to 582,900 metric tons. CENTRAL BUSINESS SCHOOL — Bookkeeping —Stenography —Typewriting Individual Instruction CLASS LIMITED 108 E. 14th STREET caped. The original Isadora Duncan Dancers of Moscow will perform in a2 special Program of Revolu- tionary Dances at the Fifth Anni- yersary of the Daily Worker. Tickets are on sale at the Daily Worker office. PHONE:— RHINELANDER 3916. Comrade Francis Pilat MIDWIFE 351 E. 77th St., New York, N. Y. The Greatest t Selection of all S —IN NEW YORK crTy— 1000 pair of pants of the best wools and worsted to match any coat and vest, $4.95 and Up We are making the best pants to order. We have 60,000 dif- ferent fabrics, at very rea- sonable prices, A good opportunity to save money and time when you come - the well-known ants specialist Bikucr: R. & G. 47-53 Delancey St. Between Forsyth and Eldridge. OPEN SATURDAYS & SUNDAYS. | | | PIANO LESSONS Moved to 2440 Bronx Park East Near Co-operative Colony. Apt. Telephone EASTABROOK "has Special rates to students from the Co-operative House. Patronize No -Tip Barber Shops 26-28 UNION SQUARE (1 flight up) 2700 BRONX PARK EAST (corner Allerton Ave.) DR. L. HENDIN SURGEON DENTIST 853 Broadway, Cor. 14th St. MODERATE PRICES Room 1207-8 Algonquin 6874 Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON Office Hours: Tuet Sunday, 10:00 a. m. PERASE ph a) FOR NTMENT 249 east nibh hae oe Cor. Second A New Telephones Lehigh Cort. DR. J. MINDEL SURGEON DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Room 803—Phone, Algonquin £183 Not connected with any other office E. KARO | Your Nearest Stationery Store }, Cigars — Cigarettes — Candy | 649 ALLERTON AVE., Cor. Barker, BRONX, N, Y. Tel.. OLInville 9681-2 — 9791-2 of PROL Unity Co-operators Patronize in SAM LESSER ri Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailor WORKERS’ € suibare 1818 - 7th Ave. New York]! Between 110th and 111th Sts, Next to Unity Co-operative House Very important matters will BOARD OF DIREC S. PLOTKA JEWELER 737 ALLERTON AVE Near Holland Ave. Bron. the ETCOS will be held on Wednesday, JANUARY 2, 1929 the 26-28 UNION SQUARE Floor — be taken up. Elections for a | new Board of Directors will take place. TORS: N. Polak, Secretary. Phone Olinville 5489" Cooperators, patronize your local JEWELER We carry a full line of watches, clocks and jewelry Advertise your union meetings here. For ‘nformation write to The DAILY WORKER Adve-tising Dept. 26-28 Union 3q., New York City Hotel and Restaurant Workers Branch of the Amalgamated Food Workers 133 W, 5ist St,, Phone Circle 7336 ier BUSINESS MEETINGS] eld on the first Monday of the month at 3 p. Induntry—One jon—Join Fight the Common Enemy! Office Open from 9 a. m, to 6 p.m RATES: $17.0 On Spend Your Winter Vacation at the Cooperative Workers’ Camp Nitgedaiget PHYSICAL AND MENTAL RECREATION BEACON, N. Y. — Phone, Beacon 862 0 PER WEEK OPEN ALL YEAR CITY PHONE:—ESTABROOK 1400. Special Program for the New Year Holidays,