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| Five in 40th | HOLD tst NEEDLE | ‘are held for the purpose of fighting DAILY WORKER. NEW YORK, FRIDAY, JANUARY 4, 1929 TENANTS GARRY HOUSEHOLD BITS OUT WITH THEM Fire Causes Removal of 2 Sick Children Hundreds of workers and their families were forced to flee their erowded apartments early last maby sinen tire; Btarting: tn’an un-| Th i iAgieun! Batlkes: Ganley: Bate occupied five-story tenement at 821) urday evening, January 19. All Party W. 40th St. was whipped by the and sympathetic organizations please wind into a blaze that destroyed the | *¥Ou Gre re | quested not to arrange two upper floors of the building ay certo nine Sates, The aa i | Memoria} Meeting this year w e and threatened the tenants in the/ 2° OWertul demonstration against djoining tenements. the imperialist war and for the de- Clouds of smoke, coming from) fense of the Soviet Union, the burning building, caused ten- ants all down the block to flee in} Newark ¥. W. L. Dance. The Young Workers (Communist) League will hold its sixth annual dance tomorrow at the Ukrainian Labor Hall, 57 Beacon St, Newark. AH sympathetic organizations are asked not to arrange affairs on the same date and to help us make this affair a success, Sie da YW. Y. section East N.Y. The East Young Workers (Communist) League will hold its first section dance on aturday, Jan. 12, at the East New York Workers Cerfter, 318 Hinsdale | St. There will be entertainment and an excellent jazz band. All work- ers are invited to attend, pod ates Dance. of the Lenin Memorial Meet. A Lenin Memoria Meeting will be Pioneer Basketball Team. Workers Party Activities interested in Ne; section and sei unit Negro organ attend this confere * ro work, Negro sub- fon directors, and zers are urged to German Fraction Meet. An important meeting of the ¢ man fraction of thé Workers (Com munist) Party will & held toda 8:15 p. m., at the Hungarian Wo: ers Home, 350 E. 81st St. Every € man speaking Party member mus be present. Ds * Women's Committee. There will be an enlarged District Women's Committee meeting tomor- row afternoon at 2 o'clock at 26 Union Square, All members of dis- trict women’s committee, section women's work organizers, fraction women's work directors and women's work directors in language fractions should come and be on time, * * * Harlem Youth Center, The opening of the lem Youth Center will be celebrated with a have participated in confusion from their homes, Many of them, poverty-stricken and afraid to leave any of their meagre possessions to possible destruction, carried furniture out into the streets with them when they fled.| Agents! The street was blocked with fire All organizations and Daily Work- ef ei ‘c er agents bear in mind that there is only one day left to the Fifth Anniversary. apparatus, which had been brought} to the scene by three * successive | alarms, and by a health department | pects LO Sagat Bee ones: ambulance summoned from the} Wednesday night. Willard Parker Hospital to cenioval Worker Nimaiee oer Boll ee two children suffering from scarlet | Worker and te hele ct ae rey fever. The street was hemmed in P18 . and closed from traffic for several hours. The blaze was discovered shortly after 6 o’clock in the evening by a tenant in the building next door, who saw smoke escaping through windows and partitions in the doors. Immediately he turned in the first alarm from Ninth Ave. and 40th St., bringing firemen un- der Deputy Chief O’Hanlon. Later he sent in two more alarms when he saw that the adjoining build- ings were in danger of destruction. Nucleus 2F, Section 1, Postponed. The convention discussion of this unit will be he]d tonight at 6 p. m., at 60 St. Marks Place, Representa- tives of CEC and’ Opposition will in- troduce discussion. * * Morning Int'l. Branch. The Morning International Branch wil] meet today at 10 a. m. at 26-28 Union Square. ‘There will be a discussion on the inner Party situation, and the pre-convention is- sues, eb cec) vie Negro Committee Conference. The Negro District Committee of the Workers (Communist) Party has called a conference for Jan. 25, at 8 pm, at the Workers Center, Union Square. Negro workers, those 28 | Newark Party Meet, A general membership meeting of Newark Part} mémbers will be held Sunday at 6 p. m. at the Center, 93 Mercer St. There will be discussion on majority and minority theses, election of delegates to the district convention and election of a new Executive Committee in the Newark unit, Speakers from New York will be present representing both sides. Be sure to bring your membership card with you for this meeting. a ii Subsection 3B Meet. 6:30 p. m. to participate in discus- sion on Party problems. Two ou side speakers, representing the ma jority and the minority, will address the meeting. Delegates will be voted to the district convention, Cas Unit 7F, Section 1, A meeting of Unit 7F, Section 1 will be held at 6:30 tonight at 60 St. Marks Place to discuss the theses of the majority and minority of C.E.C, “Every member of the must be present. the unit 1 G.E.B, MEETING Choose Organization Committees Continued from Page One ship meetings where, with the pres- ence ov a G. E. B. member, a re- port of the convention could be made to the membership. Uniform Dues Payments. The first mentioned sub-commit- tee of five is also to. work out the details of arranging for ‘uniform dues payments in the various sec- tions of the country. It was decided after the report of the California delegate, that Louis Hyman should address a meeting on the Pacific Coast as soon as this was found possible. ar) |__ The Salvation Army and the New | York Times handed out a few hun- |dred Christmas baskets on Christ- mas Day. The Times announced that it had discovered a hundred “most neediest cases,” and offered its columns to capitalists who wanted some publicity and a char- | ity wreath about their names. The | Times notified its readers that ex- ploiter so-and-so had sent in a few | hundred, and sobbingly announced that it would take care of the “need- jest cases.” The Daily Worker reported want- ed to find out how these “neediest cases” were getting along after they had eaten their Christmas din- |ner. There is a whole year between | Christmas dinners, and sometimes even more than that between jobs, He went down the Bowery on New Year’s Day when everybody was| supposed to be hailing the new year with joy in his heart and looking forward to another year of pros- perity. The New York Times does not give the addresses of those on whom it. lavishes its charity so the reporter walked down the Bowery, G. E. B. Members. | The General Executive Board! elected at the last session of the} convention of the new Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union is| as follows: | Virginia Allen, B. Baraz, S. Burt, | H. Berlin, Joseph Borachovich, L.| t Cohen, S. Cohen, J. H. Cohen, M.| knowing that, this was one of the H. Cohen, A. Digiralemo, Oswaldo | Places where he was most likely to Euseppi, A. Gross, M. Jensky, S.| meet at least 100 “neediest cases.” | Kaklan, E. Kaplan, H. Kessler, E., He was not disappointed. He met! Kudrenetsky, H. Koretz, J. Levine,, many more than one hundred, | 8. Liebowitz, I, Lutsky, J. Petrof-' There is very little of cheer—! sky, I. Potash, G. Perlman, J. Pap-| whether for the New Year or hang-| pas, J. Portnoy, H. Rosemond, Lena!ing over from Christmas—below Rabinowitz, J, Strauss, I. Stanzor, Fourth Street. The Christmas din-! M. Shapiro, J. Schneider, J. Weil,| ners seemed to have given out a| Rose Wortis, A. Weiss, J. Wino- long time ago, and whatever clothes gradsky, E. Yanninsky, Charles S. charity had given had gone their Zimmerman and A. Zierlin. |way to the pawnbroker for some Other important resolutions) adopted unanimously at the con-| vention, and which lack of space) compelled us to omit in yesterday’s | report, are: | (1) To send fraternal delegates | to all conferences called by mili- tant unions in this country and to conferences called by the Trade Union Educational League, which unitedly against the enemies of the working class and their betrayers. Ask Class Prisoners Be Freed. | (2) A demand for the immediate lease of Mooney and Billings and 1 other class war prisoners in American dungeons. One delegate proposed that telegrams in the name of the convention be sent as greetings to the imprisoned class martyrs. This was adopted with acclaim. (3) A resolution recognizing the need of special work among women and endorsing the United Council of Working Class Women, (4) A resolution endorsing the work being done by the ICOR, an American organization working to sid the Soviet Government’s free colonization of Jews on the land. “* 8 Yesterday's Daily Worker, due to an error, published the final re- sults of the vote on restricting the terms of office for functionaries in the union as 119 for restriction and 41 against. The opposite is the truth, 119 were against restriction ind 41 were in favor. ARMORY SOLD. (United Press) The armory occupying the block between 67th and 68th Sts, and Broadway and Columbus Ave., was sold at auction by the city yester- day for $3,375,000 to Max Versh- food. Walk down Third Avenue and reach the lower end of Cooper Union Square and you have come to the Bowery. You need only look |at the meagerly clothed, hungry looking workers walking about on the streets to know that you are there. It was cold. The workers stood in groups, or stood listlessly about waiting for something that never seemed to come. Many of the work- ers here are transient workers, traveling via hobo express to any place there might be a job lurking. Many of them represent the lowest strata of the working class—com- pletely submissive to the will and aims of the system, knocked out by hunger, joblessness and all kinds of degrading work, From these ranks bosses obtain strikebreakers, They are barely kept alive by the Salva- tion Army outposts on the Bowery. It is significant to note that in this section there exist side by side with the Salvation Army posts the’ so- called “Inter-State Labor Agency”— bosses’ organizations for the trans- port of scab labor from one state to another, When the worker has spent a charitable night at. the. Salvation Army dMemorial Hospital on the Bowery, the next day he can go to the scabbing agencies in search for a job, If he refuses to take the job the Salvation captain will then say to him, “Well, now see here, there’s a job for you. You simply don’t want to work so we can’t keep you here.” Charity always has its strings to it and the well-organized charity in this country has turned its strings into chains with which to bind its victims. A The reporter ventured into the Salvation Army Memorial Hotel. Workers were huddled in the hall for warmth, The most submissive NO JOBS, CHARITY, SCAB AGENCIES ON BOWERY of them were listening to services in a room close by. The strains of an organ could be heard, the siren whining of a Salvation Army lass. Then the booming of the Salvation captain calling upon the workers to |Seal their fate with thanks to god and accept their sewers with pray- ers for salvation. The captain is a short bleary- faced holier-than-thou preacher of the gospel. He keeps himself be- hind elosed doors in a well-furnished and warm office. There are too many “lost souls” and “roughnecks” out in the hall for him. suspicious when the reporter tells him that he is a reporter from the Daily Worker. He sticks his head out from the halfopened door, un- certain whether to bang the door in him to mind his own business. mas baskets. The captain doesn’t terview. that in this Memorial Hotel 610 workers are put up every night; that when the weather turns very cold many more are turned away; that | before a worker gets lodgings here he must go thru a regular barrage | of questions, Which means that every day in this place 610 unemployed workers are given charity and bound closer to the will of the bosses; which means that every day 610 workers are being bribed to register at the scabbing agencies; which means that 610 workers every day are poisoned with anti-labor propagan- da, are chained to the wheels of the capitalist organization. This is what New Years and Christmas charity means to one sec- tion of the proletariat. Organiza- tion and fight are the weapons to be used against these gloved-hands of Wall Street. Ten Destroyers Leave to Join U. S. Fleet in ManeuversOffPanama Ten United States destroyers left the Brooklyn Navy Yard yesterday to join other units of Pacific and At- lantic fleets at the eastern end of the Panama Canal, whence they will proceed to Guantanamo Bay for maneuvers, lasting until March, The destroyers were the Hum- phrey, Reuben, James Sands, Wil- liamson, Gilmer, Lawrence, Goff, Hopkins, Kane and Hatfield. They were attended by the mother ship, Dobbin. COOPERATORS PATRONIZE M. FORMAN Allerton Carriage, Bicycle and Toy Shop “786 ALLERTON AVE, Near Allerton Theatre, Bronx Phone Olinville 2583 Get Your Money’s Worth! Try the Park Clothing Store For Men, toe Men and Boys Clothing 93 Avenue A, Corner 6th St. NEW YORK CITY The Young Pioneers of District 2| ments. Other organizations please have formed a basketball team, and| Observe date. hallenge all junior teams to games. * 5a All who wish to arrange contests} Students Literary Association. should communicate with the Young] Aj! are invited to attend the first | of America, 26-28 Union| anniversary of the Students Literary Aa Association on Sunday a 4 p. m. at! All Organizations and Daily Worker | Nicholas Tava Ehiediineie and St. Subsection 3B will meet Monday at | | North Carolina; the Atlantic Air- + \Hale Says Cruisers to’| Demand the Release of grand concert and ball on Saturday |val fixtures, developed the argument i the face of the questioner, or tell | The reporter wants to know about | Court, Brooklyn, today for $250,000 | the “neediest cases” and the Christ-| damages for the death of her hus-| know—only the general offices can | Who was killed in an airplane crash give out such information. He’s sly, 2¢ New Brunswick, N, this captain, and terminates the in- tember 1, 1927. | The reporter has learnt, however, | Reynolds, of Winston-Salem, N. C.; Street Tenement Forces Hundreds of Workers to Flee for The Page Five iv Lives GONGRESS HAS WORKERS OF Fraternal Organizations MELLON MACH KELLOGG PRCT UNDER DEBATE Hold World Power Continued from Page One in the senate tho Stephanson is serving a life sentence for raping and murdering a girl. | Matter of Power. Senator Hale, in his speech for | fifteen more cruisers and one air- | plane mother shin, besides other na- | evening, Jan. 12, at the Harlem Youth | tha . S. prestige in making and | Canter? i, 110th Gh Mermbers of | oto: 5+ Presuige 1 adie nee all units of the Harlem ¥, w. L.\enforcing treaties (including del the arrange-| contracts, presumably) depended on her naval strength. Office Workers. The Office Workers’ Umon has ar- anged a Washington's | at Webster RUMANIA FORM |... AMNESTY GROUP Manor. Sympa are asked not to ar! for that evening, | 2 organizations range any affair . Women Theatre Party. : A good opportunity for Jewish workers to see the regular week-end | play in the Schwartz Art Theatre on r |14th St, and 3rd Ave, on Friday Workers, Peasants _|evening, Feb. 8, at reduced prices if Z |tickets ‘are gotten in advance. The , full price will be charged on the BUDAPEST, (By Mail).—A com-| {uy df the ‘performance, ittee for e 1 amnesty has | advance may be gotten at the central | Bee Or woes teren peur office of the United Council of Work- | been formed in Rumania with Costa- ing Women, 80 E. llth St. Room| Foru at its heads. The committee | 533, or phone Stuyvesant 0576. has issued the following appeal: ° ae i . ea eek Meare Negro Entertainment, Dance. To Public Opinion in Rumania:| 4 Negro entertainment and dance For years Rumania has groaned /has been arranged by Section 6 of| , regi i .-|the Workers (Communist) arty at) oe eC we Oppression, SUP-|55. Manhattan Ave., Brooklyn, for pression of all public freedom and | giturdaye Jan. 12.” An interesting the flagrant violation of the most} program is being prepared, elementary civil rights. The arbitrary will of the rulers | has replaced the law. A furious Negro Champion Dance. | The Negro Champion and the | American Negro Labor Congress will! Tickets in| x For Poetry. } will be held Anton Romatka Labor Temple The Labor Tem} 242 EB. 14th St., day at 8:15 m, will be chairman. Ries Poetry to: Progressive Butcher Workers. A concert and dance will be held HAD SLUSH FUND IN 1928 ELECTIONS under_ the pices of the Prog See es aye Peng ane oe y Wor a nion tonight at the Workers Center a AG “Daas ca $6,541,748 Is Raised to Brighton Bench I, L. D. | Advertise Hoover The Bill Haywood branch the} D. will hold its regular monthly | ‘ js s tonight at 2 Brighton | Continued from Page One Brookly: A i ef i jhave a joint dance and entertain- Hale had previously consented to | @™pagn of persecution has heen |ment Jan, 22 at Renaissance Casino | ver plan of allowing « vow |C@ttied on against all persons who/issth St. and 7th Ave. Other or- | ike Hoover plans os allowsns) @) vou |have dared to protest against this |@nizations are asked to observe on the treaty before further argu-| state of affairs and who have de- ment on cial ke the Kel.| #nded their civil rights. The re- A group desiring to make the Kel-| suit has been illegal arrests, tor- logg treaties more openly militaristic | tures, maltreatment and even mur- £ date, Ferrer School Festival. The Ferrer Modern School will hold ts January Festival on Jan. 12, 1929 enue, promi- $1 0: Wayerian nent speaker ‘will discuss the com- n., $10,000; Ways an ing tria] of the 662 textile worke mmittee of Eastern Penn in New Bedford. | nia, $30,000; S. S. Kr oe ee Rha . a Detroit, $15,000; John W. Sacco-Vanzetti I. ™, ae Rat ‘a | Toledo, An important meeting Seats : branch will be held Pittsburgh, $ Pp. m., at 1472 Boston Road, wald, Chicago. business meeting will be followed chwak a discussion on “Labor Defense chwab, Bethi lehesUs Ernst and es ® |000; Eugene Me; Silk Workers Meet. | ¥ A meeting of the silk worker: local of New York will take place tonight at the headquarters of the local, 247 Sixth Ave., near 16th St., at 8 p. m. All textile workers e employed in the silk mills ter New York and those whc work in the Ribt a Passementrie Mills are urge Democrats Spent 7 Million. ® meeting as the que re . Nite campaign to organize these The Democratic ational Com will be taken up. mittee clo: He ats, Woman Sues for Death i ; ae KH at the N.Y, Labor Temple, 243 ¥.| and more obviously and favorable to| der, Political trials before court| sith St. Dancing. The affair starts | American imperialism, introduced | martials have served as a weapon | 8:15 p. m. resolutions to amend. They will be | opposed by the straight administra- | tion policy senators, who feel that such amendments are superfluous, | as everything they try to accomplish is taken care of already in the) treaties, Chief among the amendments was | one by Senator John G. Blaine, a La Follette republican of Wisconsin, | who introduced a resolution propos- ing to eliminate the unofficial reservation of colony protection, | which Great Britain set forth in a} note to the United States before the | treaty was signed. U. §. Claims Latin America. The Blaine resolution proposed to} state for the senate an opinion that | the British note was not an official | reservation. It was tabled alongside the Moses- | Reed resolution proposing to “pro- tect traditional American foreign policies” (the imperialist Monroe Doctrine) from any interpretations of the treaty. Blaine made a short! statement in which he charred that Britain’s effort to state a policy of! national defense toward her colonies | was nothing more than an effort to restate article ten uf the League of | Nations covenant. | While these affairs held the at- tention of the senate the House was going its serene way. After Happy New Year greetings were exchanged all around, members took up some! minor rules before proceeding with the war department appropriation bill, of Aviator Husband in a Defective Airplane he | (By United Press.) | Mrs. Louise Chandler, of West- bury, L. I., filed suit in Federal and, Harry A. Chandler, aviator, J., on Sep- The suit was against Richard J.| the Reynolds Airways, Inc, of craft Corporation, of New Bruns- wick, N. J., and the Fokker Air- plane Corporation, of Holland, \drought, two fires in Luchow and Metro Workers The Metropolitan Workers in the hands of the government to! dispose of its opponents, Kee ee Soccer is aitunti vorking | League will hold a ball on February any this | piimetiony the working |e ee tue anrell Garden; 76/30. 116th class, the intellectuals, and the ‘Organizations are asked not to| peasants must demand a full and) unconditional amnesty for all the imprisoned victims of the court mar- tials. Tho the new government has promised an amnesty more than once, it is the duty of public opinion to demand this amnesty now with all energy.” arrange any conflicting dates. Frethelt Mandolin Orchestra, The second of a series ot concerts | will be given by the Freiheit Man- |dolin Orchestra on Sunday at 8 p. m.,| |at the headquarters of the orchestra, | 106 E, 14th St. a eee Progressive Butcher Workers, A concert and dance will be held under the auspices of the Progressive Butcher and Poultry Workers’ Union on Friday at the Workers Center. | * * Taxation Makes China Peasants Helpless In Drought; Stores Gone. CANTON, Jan. 2.—Thousands are | facing starvation in the provinces} Harlem Organizations! The Harlem Youth Center that will | open within two weeks in its new) headquarters at 2 E. 110th St., will rent out rooms on weekly, monthly or daily basis for prices ‘that will suit every working class organiza- | tion, For more information apply to| F. Fisher, 1271 Hoe Ave., Bronx. Textile wi orkers of New York ty, e e1 AC Brooklyn and Long Island ar of $1 : to come to the meeting d help us| statistics the comm build a strong and powerful union of all textile workers, Be lee Brighton Beach ener temee Ets De |) Thos, committee received he Brighton Beach 4 D: Will] one pe eo ecemt meet tonight at 227 Brighton Beach | 958 from June 1 to December @ A Louis A. aum will speak on|and spent $5,342,349, leaving a pa: “Tho World's est Conspiracy.” the Clerk of the House of Repre | sentatives showed today. | per balance of $102,608. | The committee, however, bor. Bath Beach branch I. L. D. will | rowed $1,500,000 through the New hold an important meeti Tuesday | y, . " + at 8 po mat the Workers Contes,| York Country Trust Company anc 48 Bay 28th St, urged to attend. ee All members a . | Lecture on Trotskyism. Ben Lipshitz will lecture on “Trot- skyism in the Soviet Union and in the United States” tonight at 8:30 at 227 Brighton Beach Ave. Brook- lyn, under the auspices of the Brigh- $100,000 from Chairman John J Raskob, which has not been repaid Whalen Puts Cop Fired Over Graft Scandal At ton’ Beach Workers Club Head of Slugging Gang Ieor Concert, Meet. sera An Icor concert and 1 meeting nates A will be held Suni at 8:30 p. m., at| Fitzgibbons, the leader of the New Irving Plaza h St. and Irving} York Police Glee Club, has been ap- » 15t Place. Dancing till daybreak. of Kwangtung and Kwangsi in South China because of a protracted Sinclair Uses Fumble} Of Government Again | misgovernment, it was reported to- day in a cable message from the Canton-Wuchow chamber of com- merce to C. C. Wu, special envoy of China to the United States. The severe taxation robbed the peasants of their seed grain and military requisitions by, the Kuomintang | used up stores in the cities, WASHINGTON, Jan. 2 (UP).—} Harry Sinclair objected today to aj proposal of government counsel |that the Supreme Court consider |the entire senate contempt case jagainst him, instead of only five questions of law certified by the District of Columbia Court of Ap- peals. George Hoover, counsel for Sin- | clair, told the court that he was Lanxious to bring the appeal to ar- |gument on the five questions next | Monday as scheduled. Consideration Jury was yesterday still considering |of the entire case would require a jevidence in alleged street cleaning| postponement of the argument. \payroll padding and there was a/Government fumbling suspiciously \possibility that it would not com-|cases again gives the accused a plete its work today, when it is/prevalent all through the oil graft scheduled for discharge, it was| technical advantage. rumored in the courthouse that five or six indictments for felonies will Argue 7-Cent FareIn | High Court Next Month | be voted and handed up to Judge Taylor today. WASHINGTON, Jan. 2 (UP).—} The Interborough Rapid Transit Company in a brief filed in United | States Supreme Court today re-) newed its argument that the pres-| ent five cent fare on subways in| New York is confiscatory of its | property. The case is to be argued | this month. | |More Indictments in Payroll Graft Case | ( United Press) | While the Kings County Grand Coolidge Discovers Haiti “Independence” WASHINGTON, Jan. 3.—What is officially called h:ve the anniversary | of the “independence of Haiti” was used yesterday by President Cool- idge as an opportunity to send a} telegram of congratulation to Wall Street’s puppet president, Borno. “Without a revolutionary theory Chandler was using a Fokker] there can be no revolutionary par- | The highly hypocritical message,| (yo—Lenin. Lenin memorial meet- U. S. Trains Aviators | In War Preparations LOS ANGELES, Jan. 2.—The great tri-motored army plane| “Question Mark” was soaring over! Souhtern California today, well) along in its second day in the air and apparently headed for a new en-| durance flight record, in the pub- licity stunt for popularizing, war preparations. Army officials observing the} flight said they believed the “Ques- tion Mark” would stay in the air for ten days or more. The ship will be kept aloft until its engines wear out or re-fueling in the air proves im-| possible, | The Workers (Communist) Party fights for the enactment of the 40- hour, 5-day week. For a Real Oriental Cooked Meal VISIT THE INTERNATIONAL PROGRESSIVE CENTER 101 WEST 28TH STREET (Corner 6th Ave.) RESTAURANT, CAFETERIA RECREATION ROOM Open from 10 a. m. to 12 Pp. m. Comrades, Patronize | pointed head of the strnog arm squac by Police Commissioner Grover Whalen. He was demoted by War. ren because of a scandal which arose |over disappearance of funds of thc New York Police Glee Club. We demand the tmmedtate recognt- tion of Soviet Union by <he United States government? MEET YOUR FRIENDS at Messinger’s Vegetarian and Dairy Restazrant 1763 Southern Bivd., Bronx, N. ¥. Right Off 174th St. Subway Station Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 19. SECOND AVE. Bet. 12th and 18th Sts. Strictly Vegetarian Food. All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S VEGETARIAN HEALTH RESTAURANT 558 Claremont P’kway Bronx Health Food The Triangle Dairy Vegetarian Restaurant Restaurant 1379 Intervale Avenue 1600 MADISON AVE. monoplane F-7, owned by the Reyn- | which was made public here by the olds Airways, Inc., according to the |State department, hopes “that the January 19, in Madison Square en. complaint, when he met his death |°oming year has in store great/ at New Brunswick, where he was Prosperity for your country and| employed. The complaint alleges | happiness and well being for your | the plane was defective. \excellency. HOLD TWO GANGSTERS. PHILADELPHIA, Jan. 3 (UP). —Anthony Piccirelli, 19, and Louis Larre, 20, alleged gangsters, were ordered held without bail today for further hearing Saturday in con- nection with the machine gun at- tack on two cars on Black Horse pike near Camden, N. J., in which three persons were killed. MARY WOLFE STUDENT OF THE DAMROSCH CONSERVATORY PIANO LESSONS | 2440 Bronx Park East Near Co-operative Colony. Apt. Telephone EASTABROO! 246) Special rates to students from the Co-operative House. 7 | | “Imperialism ts the last stage of | No-Tip Barber Shops the coming imperialist war, 26-28 UNION SQUARE PHONE:— RHINELANDER 3916, Comrade Francis Pilat MIDWIFE 351 E. 77th St., New York, N. Y. DANCING NEWEST STEPS poise, balance, lead, follow in vonfl- dence, quickly, finest teachers, guar- anteed to teach you correctly waltz, fox trot, collegiate, Peabody, Ar- gentine tango, given in separate rooms, ,without. appointment; indi- vidual lessons, $1; open 10 A. M. to 11 P. M,; also Sundays; special course for beginners, VALENCIA DANCING STUDIOS, 108 W. 74th Street, SUSquehanna 0629, (1 flight up) | 2700 BRONX PARK EAST (corner Allerton Ave.) R. L. HENDIN SURGEON DENTIST 853 Broadway, Cor. 14th St. MODERATE PRICES Room 1207-8 CENTRAL BUSINESS SCHOOL Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST Office Hours: Tues., Thurs, & Sat. 9:30-32 a. m., 2-8 p. m. Sunday, 10:00 a, m. to 1:00 p. m, CREARE TER ERONE FOR EBA 'POINTMENT iT 115th STREET 5 New York Lehigh 6022, —Bookkeeping TEE ET TN ET SOE — Steno graphy DR. J. MINDEL —Typewriting SURGEON DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Room 803—Phone, Algonquin 8183 ted with nny other office Individual Instruction CLASS LIMITED 108 E. 14th STREET Not cos (CARL BRODSKY ‘For Any Kind of Insurance” ‘Telephone Murray Hill 6550 East 42nd Street, New York COOPERATOKS! PATRONIZE E. KARO Your Nenrest Stationery Store Cigars — Cigarettes — Candy 649 ALLERTON AVE., Cor. Barker, BRONX, N. Y. Tel. OLInville 9681-2 — 9791-2 Unity Co-operators Patronize SAM LESSER Ladies’ and Gente’ Tailor 1818 -- 7th Ave. New York Betw: 110th and 111th Ste, Next to Unity Co-operative House S. PLOTKA JEWELER 737 ALLERTON AVENUE Near Holland Ave., Bronx, N. ¥. Phone Olinville 5489 Cooperators, patronize your local JEWELER We carry # full line of watches, clocks and jewelry Advertise your union meetings here. For ‘nformation write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept, 26-28 Union 3q., New York City Hotel and Restaurant Workers Branch of the Amalgamated 133 W. Sist St,, Phone Circle 7336 BUSINESS MEETING?) eld on the first Monday of the month at 3 p. m, stry—One Ui: and Fight the Office Open from 9 a. m. to 6 p. m One BRON. Phone: University 5365 Phone Stuyvesant 3816 WE ALL MEET at the NEW WAY CAFETERIA} 101 WEST 27th STREET NEW YORK John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where al) radicals meet. 802 E. 12th ST. NEW YORE MASS PROTEST AGAINST PREPARATIONS FOR A NEW IMPERIALIST WAR at the fourth annual LENIN MEMORIAL MEETING at Madison Square Garden Saturday, January 19, 1929 SPEAKERS JAY LOVESTONE Executive Secretary Workers (Communist) Party WILLIAM Z. FOSTER Communist Candidate for President and others Revolutionary Feature Program JASCHA FISCHERMANN, Russian Pianist Selections “1905” — “1917” — “Insurrection.” Soviet Sports Spectacle—Labor Sports Union FREIHEIT GESANGE VEREIN Tickets on Sale at Workers (Communist) Party Headquarters 28-28 Tinlon Sauare ADMISSION: Balcony, 50¢e —Arena and Orchestra, $1.00