The Daily Worker Newspaper, April 11, 1929, Page 5

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Five TWO MORE SHOE - PLANTS STRUCK Cor MANHATTAN : DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 1929 mmunist Activities Unit 2B, 5F. meets tomorrow, 6 p. m. * * *ARADE ON MAY DAY IS PLANNED MILL STRIKERS | “TELLOF SLAVERY A Millionaire’s Jail Sentence nit Section 1 Membership Meet, ie ee ee hem \ general membership meet ot the ickets fo je May F lemon- section will be held at section head- : | oe ee, | so eiigt ee at the eons roe acam muy | Postion Will Ve Rely at section Sete rikes Now : Men Delegates Elected. to Gastonia Workers in ie had'at ‘ue District Ottice, Finan TT csuctions trom the Dy B. & 6 Strikes Now On; Mer A Glial’ secretaries should sectire their PY, innuiuctions f a Conference | N. Y. for Relief quota through the section’ machiners I will be taken, | Stand Firm | a ne ‘The as poste Women's Work Organizers. _— Gag | Roc pe ke r April 12. Leaflets for distribu-) section and unit women’s work or- , Se ome + (Continued from Page One) | (Continued from Page One) tion ‘in shops will be ready April 21.|,,ccCuo” ait weet Friday, 7 p. m,| ,¥° more shoe eases cluding the great international holi- | workers, she had lived on a farm|Sections and units should organize/2¢ Union Square, Sth floor. pecs are shut down by 100 per cent day of the working class, May Day. where existence was equally or more} Gomrades are wanted for the : i Sta strikes, called by the Independent ig 3 nel s y \ 4 Section 3 Daily Ag 5 Sh Wotlare © We have now strikes against 5 difficult than in the textile mi é tre arsal every Suni » May Day Campaign will be Shoe orkers U other shops, and by May 1st we are She told how the workers sometimes | gyuare. Furt! iufomidaeion. trom) ecussed. St 1 ENG soe, the |plants are now par confident of still more victories to| go without food because they have Di Santo at the District Office. “fe 15 p,m, tomorrow, ization strikes. celebrate. We have elected dele- no money and cannot get “coupon” * = a | Bice Of the two ni the Barlin : Ini . May First Organizat Conference. Harlem Y. W. C. L. Dance. . pepe gates to the United Front Confer- books between Saturday and Tues-|"Wirty unite labor and fraternal| Last season dance by both units,|Shoe Co., 79 Bridge Brooklyn, ence at Irving Plaza next Sunday, | day. These coupon bool. are is- should te Best oe} 0 Satur 2B. 110th St. had its production halted yesterday will do all that is possible to} sued on the company stores, pay- Te ERs GEtiON wil Council 17 W. ". W. W. _|when the crew of 60 walked cut de- !make the May Day Celebration this | ment being deducted from the week- ay, 1 Pim at) Mary Adams will lead discussion manding decent living standards and |year the biggest that we have ever lypayroll, ‘besides bi» for rent, |the Irving Elssa, 15th Oe ta ba pres lat ole fonal meeting of Unit |recognition of the union, The en- celebrated.” | light, fuel, e’». Many workers have! pared to send two delegates. 5F, , at 6:30 tonight. tire crew of 100 closed down the Michael Obermeier, organizer of empty pay envelopes after the de- vin 6 iene & one Welset Shoe plant at 599 Broadway BROOKLYN |the Hotel, Restaurant and Cafe- teria Workers’ Union, branch of the | ductions azz made. Rent must al- ways be paid in advance. by striking. After all the elaborate prepara- A held at the Italian Workers Club. ? danc and entertainment wilt. be x rkers, said, | .. E. 104th St aturday. Proceeds to Bath Bench, Y.W.L. Hike, ‘ B ee aaa poe ore said, | Altho she had worked for years| Daily Worker and Il Lavatore. The unit will hik the Palisades /tions for recruiting strikebreakers, “Before the first o: ay, I am con- | i e ris or i Yi i Sunday. _Meet at } rec ve. he Griffi d White Mf in the rls and was an inspector in| eee fae Sunday. Mogi at von, ed0e me |niade by the Griffin and White and ‘ident that the 2,000 cafeteria work- | Harry F. Sinclair, (inset), millionaire oil grafter, must serve 90 days and pay a $500 fine for con- on strike in the garment) tempt of court. For being one of the chief figures in one of the biggest oil swindles in American history and thousands of Senet | Sinclair got nothing but plenty of good publicity. The contempt sentence is merely a polite tap to cover workers all over the city,! wp the brazen whitewashing. Photo shows the District of Columbia jail where Sinclair will spend his won our struggle for union | rrounded by the usual comforts provided for those who do their stealing on a the spooling room, Iva Fulbright got | $12.90 per week for 65 hours work. , Bonnie, received $12 2 | Arthur Bender firms, only about six Workers (Communist) League Comrade J. Berg wil discuss the;Scabs are at work for the latter ‘All - America Anti - Imper' | “Shoeworkers’ Union” at the net company. Out-of-town workers, fm- @ will be held at, Royal Palace, educational meeting of the unit, 253 | norted by the scab agency In the caret Saar ie Sol faa |Broadway Central Hotel here, de- the aus- Young d An anti-war meet under pices ot the Communist Party. Unit OF, Section 6. Her de--z ter, per week for piece wo has not yet started the sai have > i will have three months’ vacation s ee eee, Section 6 Meet. feat the bosses.” WOMEN TO RALLY place this Friday, at 7 p. 26-28 Union Square at Union Unity Convention. will make plans to assist A Women’s Conference will take |! m. (Workers Center), to discuss the mobilization cf working women, for the Trade mittee of the Communist Party, and | in the} vention to be held in Cleveland, June | “! be |Conference of the Alumnae Associa- eee | United Council, Annzal The annual concert United Council of Working Wom | will be Ball. urth St. Saturd be obtained a ith St, Room 0 ee night. he of. Cutters Local 6. given will be by N.T.W, eet and rasova, Third Soviet P estra to entertainment prog U. C. Tillie Litinsky will speak on ‘ German Coun 3. We) Wi Children and We" at the Hunga Irving Plaza, St, 2:30 p,m. * Irving Place Tr Unionism and ball of the | 1330 Wilkins 2 en at the Manhattan :Lyce- * * * .|Fretheif Symphony Orchestra Con- Cutters Ave- folks 1 contribute n. Dur 5 4 un | Bronx Park East, & and 15th A dance and entertainment will be ven at the Bronx Workers’ Center, cert. | A conecrt and dance will be given by the “Freiheit” Symphony Orches- tra at 2075 Clinton Bronx, Saturday. Ave., ae * Athletic Club Hike. : uy sino, at 142 Second Ave. reports will be given. ew Cooperative International Labor Defense. M. of the branch at the Auditorium, 30 p. m. Tuesday, ers Cultural Club, Sunday, at 313 Hinsdale St. 8 Dp. Ave., 8 p. .m., Saturday, We we esant Ca- Important | thi ‘Taft will address the meeting m., Negro Labor Congress at 152 Putnam Soz slavery conditions, the Marvin Res-! gait pork is used to a large extent, jtaurant at 39th St. near Seventh) with an occasional pork chop.” Ave., was yesterday compelled to} close up for a while. sere Sen i Paatette ae Le) the strikers’ delegation, was |, Protests by the International La-|¢irmly convinced of the need for bor Defense and the American Civil Leaves Scab Husband. to death a striker, were made by organizations. Great relief was manifested by the workers in the strike haii when word was received from Bellevue »|definitely out of danger. Until now Mass Meeting Tonight. At the mass meeting in Irving {made by strike leaders. This is shown by the dozens of typi- of fhe |restaurant because of their sympa-| meat eatex,” she replied, “as weling at 8 p. m, tomorrow, 26 thetic aid to the workers fightin; rhe DORE it, | Sauare: ighting | are not in a position to pay for it. Violet Jones, another member of Meeting on N.C. Strike S80} Pal 3 yy Marta solidarity of the workers and unity ater | ; meh irdaye ‘iiowets ‘at 231 “| he Bronx Workers Athletic Club eapet ace ue y under leadership of the union that|called by the City Central Commit- ip 3 és sane will hike to White Piains Sunday. lodged with Police Comm she left her husband, who was one|tee of the District Nati W 4 Be tes the ee Busty Goton Concert, Dance, |Hond, 8:80 ame gn | Whalen, Demands for immediate of the few who failed to respond to| Workers’ Union, to attend a mass nion Convention Be POG eSG 7 Or cle nent t Ott the > a . POLO RTHESSUETE eae the strike call. “I do not expect to| meeting tonight, 8 o’clock, at 16 W. Gunies at Wenete: | Drug Clerks Meet: meet Policeman 11124, for almost beating | ever live with him again,” declared |2ist St., which was called for the | Violet, who places the victory of | purpose of organizing relief and as- the strike above all personal consid-| sistance to the textile workers on erations. Violet is 18 years of age | strike and has been working for five years. | unionds leadership. = >: She entered the mills at the age of | 2700 |Hospita! that Albert Rescigne was|13° She was married two years. “My wages of $9 a week for 60/ of volunteers for the “Textile Strik-| rade Unien Unity Convention. rarkers: - April 16. | 6 For this purpose, a special shop|day, april 1h'8 p.m tt OP | a definite assurance of recovery for | hours work is the highest paid in|ers Relief Tag Day,” which organ- delegitelicontercntecaeill" ba Ceallad (ma one I BROOKLYN |!the brutally assaulted worker were | my department,” said Violet. “Many ized by the Workers International very soon. Tiga on Sere Sistine ners | Nearing at Culture Club. eee san ea oy sores Se | wet six, seven or eight dollars.” hins@htereuce He ja ew orking Women's Councils are! seott Nearing Will lecture _on|Mounted cossack, ; me % : Pt ene called in New | us to send delegates to the May GRIER ana TuObENe ain. the United | €lubbed) tov death! Dewey Martin, 29, is the other Sunday. ork by the District Women’s Com- | F Conference on Sunday at the} states” at the East New York Work- |member of the delegation. He was} | in charge of a section and has work-/he the four Southern strikers who jed in the mills for six years. His | have come to New York to aid in “ | | _ * spreading of the call issued by ie a y a Summer Anti-Jim-Crow Meet. |Plaza Hall tonight, reports of what | pay for 60 hours work was $21.95, the Tag Days. She W. I R. will have, Trade Union Educational League SON ect 2 ae as mass | meeting against gL | had been accomplished since the | but this, he states, is unusually high| a national Trade Union Unity Con- | sé 5 under “he auspices of the American |Strike began last Thursday will be wages received only by section men.| trict union head, will also speak, | Le gi s jon of Bryn Mawr, Barnard Summer | ocakers will be Harold” Williams, | Appeal to Working Class Women. |C#! Pay envelopes of workers Convention Endorsed. chools Ss Are ee eee NST chairman; quchard B Moore, wom: Appeals to all working class | brought with them by the delega- ; AEG SB vill |S eee eee eye |munist Party; Ray Ragozin, Work- eh k i ; The convention in Cleveland will aticgsglon Juliet Stuart|ing Women’s Federation;’ Henry | women to give all possible aid to tion. ‘ organize a trade union center for national. sec Gilt ook Rosemond, American Negro |the striking cafeteria strikers was Get $1.75—$14 a Week. the new unions recently formed in Ls issued by the women’s yesterday |department of the New York Dis- | trict Communist Party. mperialist | Unity, and William Burroughs, The weekly wages given on the} | pay envelopes brought back by the} | strikers follows: $1.70, $2.95, $6.50, | unorganized industries like the tex- | ep | ee ie Oe tile industry, and as a result of aed Sewelry Worker lab: | | gro Champion. | + * @ | Boro Park Jewish Workers Club. Mae get ek ues eee Mek ub will celebrate its first) «Socialist Construction in the U. 8.| The women’s department is now $4.05, $14.15, $11.85, $7.25, $12.95,|membership a fers, Furriers Union and _Interna- ary Saturda: {30 Pm. at)s. R.” will be discussed by J. Louis in the midst of intensive organiza-ig9 $3.45 (with $6 addition i !/day evening in the Park Palace, tional Ladies’ Garment Workers’ Hall, 15th St. and Irving | ingdahl at 8:30 p. m. tomorrow at|j. Acts Exe ay $9, $3.45 (with $6 addition in cou-| 1OnA adies Garmen' orkers’| Place, with a banquet and dance. | tional activities to mobilize its mem- Tris the Club, 1373 43rd St., Brooklyn. Unit py ctie ce eneeer AnD Jaa cae |bers and sympathizers to hold a $7.85, $7.50, $10.35, $5.90, $2.10, | Trades Workers Industrial Union, is to hold the first big affair of its \pons), $6.65 (with $2 in coupons), 116th St. and Fifth Ave. }supply the music for the occasion. fight. On May Day, they will 80 | ty units and labor and fraternal! Ed Wright will talk on “Romain ‘ go barefooted all winter. hesis of the N. published. re- ) Tew York Coliseum organizations should take note that | Rolland” tonight at the Bronx Work- | Styjker, the children could not go to school|cently in the Daily Worker and in eu. to the New York Coliseum to cele-| tne" conte for the organization | ers Un Cooperative, 2700 Bronx Strikers Sentenced to 5 ide te & lak oF cloth 80. the Young Worke Frond Mectina Deematic Clans brate their victory together with|of the May First demonstration will| Park East, under the auspices of . due to a lack of clothing. * * pe Lette ae atk see ays in Jai i The Little Red Devil,” a Protet the militant needle trades workers| »® ela at the Irving Plaza, 15th St. Council 22, United Council of Work- e She was asked about the kind of | Anti-Fa tat Meet. etete: |Aetore’ Co eeite: weit the: nite 5 = ame ve **\and Irving Plac at 2 p, m./ ing Women. SS oCMAL aCe 1 by the Gas-| The plebiscite in Italy will b Leal raat Le eee a a. Be will and others who have supported our} Organizations st repared to * Pa * (Conti food that is consumed by e Gas: cd by Catl Hacker, of the I. L.|of peasants he s . 7 t a ‘ontinued from Page One. res et ies title la a ors at the meet- | be presented the Bronx Section of strike and helped us so much to de-|send two delegate “ meets nce: fi go ) tonia workers. “There is very little|1p,, and Italian speakers at the meat Dee ar Te Ratitdar, 8. be mi lat 1347 Boston Road, |Police, Writhing Under ith Strikers Will eemoags Ridicule Over “Bomb” Speak Tonight at Mass Knit goods, silk and other textile | workers in Greater New York, are James Callegy, Negro porter, who discovered a harmless bomb in the mal Textile boken tonight. Postal inspectors said he was the person who mailed tho bomb to the executive. in the South under their dc with this bit of election propa- ganda for Mr. Roosevelt, except to accidentally bump into it with his broom. Police and post office of- ficials, who went into hysterics over the “bomb” when it was first dis- covered, are thought to be taking out their spite for the laughs di- rected against them on the man who called the suspicious article to their attention. Callegy’s friends are afraid he will be tortured under “third degree” to force a false “con- fession,” “The particular task of the meet- ing will be to give as large a quota ‘Relief, for tomorrow Saturday and) Chief speakers at the meeting will a speaker and Sarah Chernoff, dis- | Anarchism was often a kind of punishment for the opportunist sins (of the working class movement. Anarchism and opportunism are two deformitiex, one complementary <o ‘Cutters Local to Hold Affair This Saturday ' Cutters’ Local 6 of the Needle Comrade Frances Pilat MIDWIFE 351 E. 77th St., New York, N. Y. Tel. Rhinelander 3916 nd friends this Satur- The Charles Smith Orchestra will collaborating burs raci Meet. | c il 17 W. U. C. W. W. <a war: : ‘at i F Be Gross at the meeting of the TUL, | Golem” at 227 Brighton Beach Ave. |cafeteria strikers next Monday at/ “The Daily Worker is the only! the National Textile Union, National! “ross at the meeting of the -|8 p.m, Monday, Discussion follows: |the noon hour, ‘ Miners’ Union and Needle Trades |‘ 80" 1 Pe gm WP W:, 2st St | Wee : paper which has told the facts about Workers’ Industrial Union. Kern Culture Club. —Adv't.— | the strike,” the serikers fold. ey t i} ri v 0 Ci it Women Must Organize. y will lead aiscus- Roosevelt Approves _ described how, the leeat apie But the Cleveland Convention will | $i9n on “The A. PF. the Enemy | Bill M P li press is aiding the efforts o: ie ut the Cleveland Conve Oi ithe, Waring clneee 8:40" pe tor = a ill for More Police) min owners to slander Beal, Persh- be based especially on the newly) tomorrow, 154 Watkin y) ing aud other atilice: leaders atid wae i Ff cil * * * | | 4 } peace ee ee oaneny. Moore at Yonkers Forum, ALBANY, N. Y., April 10—Gov- | the strikers to return to the same riitbace willbe G baat fon the Gath and vy Wiens lernor Roosevelt today signed the conditions of slavery. “But we are : ps of those inauate 28 | the Harlem Tenants |bill for a new troop of state police going to stick,” they declared. | Tt esi Will Pal PST aL |for Long Island, for which $80,000| The four strikers will address| The convention will also provide for a co-ordinating center for or- | * ganized left wing movements in old | Warburton Ave, Yon ht “Die Naturetreunde, Ine.” AND CIGAR STORE has been appropriated. He assented| mass meetings in New York and |to various other bills, few of them | vicinity. of value to others than exploiters i S i y "7 = The ngl ection will attend a unions stil controlled by bureau-| o"Sudvale Work iike. Meet at of labor. The Lefkowitz teachers’ ; ; ; oracle, t wil se specia a st orhe Fer nbers ‘St, 4 De ms bill provides for minor assistance to Advertise your Union Meetings re rkers, and calls | Saturda. train leaves at 4:40 : : i i i Pais adele eat tad to form | P. ™,§ ne leaving at 5:10» ROOd Reduction for teachers, allowing each year before | here. For information write to ij m. {October 1, 1920, to count as two ER s at once. r [ a | ies p , The DAILY WORK shop committees at once en BY 6, will be, held at Members Soon _| years. Various road and bridge bills Advertising Dept. | 8 p. m., tomorrow are now law. | “Russian Revolution Dramatized,” Dana’s Topic, School Tonite Pro! The Prolab The will present a Saturday and a mine pl “Mr. ee plays Love is a God Is The PROLETCOS has covered an- other milestone on the march of its development. Beginning with a small cafeteria it met with such marvel- 26-28 Union Sq., New York City Citar a | CARPENTERS’ UNION Bina hd seer bor dion; ee ee ous success that it soon opened the ‘ ' philip’ Mocller,” Saturday ana Mew large and beautiful cafeteria- LOCAL 2090 “The Russian Revolution Drama- | >¥ Philip” Moeller,” Saturday and | M@W i tized” will be the subject of the sec: |“P" ** 5 gg restaurant located in the Workers STAR CASINO Meets every Thursday, 8 P. M., at ond lecture to be given by Harry Dana, dramatic critic and lecturer, s « ‘ Sears owes St. passed the 4,000 mark. This is the Labor Temple. | bi ie eee eere eect workers | CReterl= Strike will’ be “on ‘the teal test of a workers cooperative. > ee Hin a taeolagvat finn lectives | ec __ |The Proletcos has shown its worth Hoicl Gad Hettaicaatcwworkezs} | ¢ igre ' ES AR by the fact that it is able to attract i on “Revolutionary Russian Drama.” The lecture will take place tomor- row at the School Auditorium, 26-28 Union Sq., 5th floor, and will be | United Council Working Women, | Council m day, April mbers will meet M 10 a.m, at the D: TEXTILE STRIKERS Center. To-date, the number workers using the restaurant has wide masses of workers. This organization has now reached a point when it is able to cover an- of | Labor Temple, 243 East. 84th St. Office and headquerters are ‘in the Branch of the Amalgamated Food Workers |} 133 w, Sist St, Phone Circle 7836 | BUSINESS MEETING=]} Unity Co-operators Patronize || “For Any Kind of Insurance” SAM LESSER Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailor 1818 - 7th Ave. New York Between 110th and 111th Sts. Next to Unity Co-operative House Telephone: Murray Hill 5550 { East 42nd Street, New York 2s” Phone: DiCkens 1096. Blue Bird Studio “Photos of the better kind.” 1598 PITKIN AVE., Cor. Amboy St. J} BROOKLYN, N. Y¥. Patronize No-Tip Barber Shops 26-28 UNION SQUARE (1 flight up) 2700 BRONX PA"K EAST (corner Allerton Ave.) Tel.: DRYdock 8880 FRED SPITZ, Inc. FLORIST NOW AT 31 SECOND AVENUE (Bet. Ist & 2nd Sts.) All Occasions REDUCTION TO READERS 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 Flowers for 15% OF THE DAILY WORKER Giant Demonstration | the other—vV. I. Lenin (“Left” Com-— CARL BRODSKY conditions. We will fight the bosses) gig scale. the night shift work eleven hours,”| Unit 3F, Subsection 2A, A membershin meet of the section|™manded and got their fare back onthe leet den eee Ne eae eroteday a: lor w. 2th St tonight, 6 p.m.) tedahl at 8:30 p. m., tomorrow, at|when they saw a strike was in hired gangsters, for the 8-hour day | . ° | Go foot in Winter, ga. vay * Manhattan Ave. Roll call will be | progress, ae Fraternal Organizations !CAFETERIA RALLY 2ccn ce toe go SBE Sok eee ee Pec picting i big “py i i erring s! Nucleus meets 6 p. tonight, * ¥ icketing is being car- bosses in a futile effort to break} of the workers, Mrs, Ful-right said: See * | bership e will: “bel om baie ed idee uc, the strike, may arrest our pickets “The majority of the workers of| League Members, Attention. April 15, at 8 p. shops, as well as at the Morgan- begs . . . | | Gastoni d vicinity havi t| A general membership meeting is the Turn Hall, 14th Ave. and Broa Grossman Co. and Lipp Shoe Co by the hundreds, but they will re-/ MANHATIA 1! RONX 1} actonia = and vicinity nave no! announced by the District Committee | way, Astoria, Long Island City. | Actaemined sol turn to the picket lines as soon as NHATLAN J} 5) | enough clothing to dress decently.|Sinaay. 2 p.m., at the Workers Cen-| “°° The workers are gots mine to stick % ay | | ae f e ter, : . The basis of \—like 8 is of er work- they get out of jail, to carry on the| May First Organizational Conference, Wright Talks, |Many of the workers have had to/ter, 28 Union be ‘the Dratt BRON. } Silane: Ehopennds oh euien Kore -!ers—they gain union standards and a permanent fighting organization Ke help them. Police Torture Negro for ‘Bomb’ Confession | Aftes putting through the third jdegree Thomas J. Callegly, the Negro porter who discovered the Arrest Its Discoverer harmless bomb on whick Governor Roosevelt has been getting big pub- licity lately, New York police today |gave out what purported to be his “confession” that he brought the main post office here Sunday, ad-|pomb to the station himself to get dressed to Franklin D. Roosevelt, , promotion and a raise in pay for was arrested at his home in Ho- | finding it. Police said Callegly had been working for years for $1,600 a year, |and was trying to support two de- Callegy denies having anything to | pendents on this small pay. Of all the -‘asses that stand face to face with the bou the profetariat alone is lutionary class.—Karl |munist Manifesto). =. kiT SCIENTI, IC VEGETAR'AN RESTAURANT 1604-6 Madison Ave, Between 107th & 108th Sts. Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A. place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 302 E.12th St. New York Meet your Friends at GREENBERG’S Bakery © Restaurant 939 E. 174th St., Cor. Hoe Ave. Right off 174th Street Subway Station, Bronx | All Comrades Meet at | BRONSTEIN’S VEGETARIAN HEALTH RESTAURANT 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx MELROSE—, : VEGETARIAD Dairy RESTAURANT jomrades ‘Will Always Find It Pleasant to Dine at Our Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx (near 174th St. Station) PHONE:— INTERVALE 9149. Comrades, Patronize The Triangle Dairy Restaurant 1379 Intervale Avenue BRONX MEET YOUR FRIENDS at Messinger’s Vegetarian ; sient other need of the workers. | eld on the first Monday of the for the bist by questions and discus-| Spring is here, The hot days of ose pouaiat Si Bia fee 4 : and D ° R 8 t ~ Dana will discuss current plays in| summer are drawing dangerously | |] ana the Common Enemy’ Organization of the airy hestauran the Soviet Union dealing with the | near. A dish of ice cream, a glass! | [ Oftice Open from 9 a, m. to 6 p. U ped 1763 Southern Blvd., P-onx, N. Y. revolts led by Stenka Razin, Puga-| : of ice cold soda becomes as much| norganizea; Right off 174th St. Subway Station choy, the Decembrists and the Re- volution of 1905. The speaker will also discuss the plays that portray the October 1917 Revolution. Among the dramas to be analyzed are “Armored Train,” “Ten Days That )Shook the World,” “1917,” “The Fall of St. Petersburg,” and “The Breaking.” The response of the audience to the first lecture on the Soviet The- atre indicates that there will be an overflow crowd, D, Benjamin, school instructor, states. IMPERIALISTS LUNCH PARIS, April 10.—Frank B, Kel- logg, former secretary of state, had lunch today with Owen D. Young and General John J. Pershing. Aft- erwards Kellogg visited the other American delegates to the repara- tions conference. ‘The the self-c 0 movement of ity.—Karl Mi festo). SECTION 1 MEET ‘Tell First Hand Story of Heroic Struggle | The comrades of Section One will \have the opportunity to get first hand information of the strike that the textile workers of |the South are carrying on. Four arrived in New York this morning, jagreed to come to our membership |meeting as guests. Comrades of Section One now have an additional responsibility to attend this meet- ing. We must show these strikers that in back of them stands the Communist Party with its entire membership ready to help in their fight. Remember the meeting takes place to-day, 6 p. m., at 98 Ave. B, BEN GERJOY, Organizer, heroic | of a necessity as a meal. The Pro- letecos was quick in its response to this need of the consumers and opened, at the same address where the cafeteria is located, 28 Union | Sa, an up-to-date ice cream parlor. | But this is not all. | Right in the cafeteria one can |find a cigar and cigarette store, where all brands of cigars and cigar- (ettes are sold. In the near future the Proletcos | workers who are members of the |strikers from the South, who have | organization will receive a reduction | jon their food. Those workers who are not members should act at once |and join. Those who have joined, | but who have not paid for their two shares must make haste and pay up. The Proletcos is growing. Our cooperative is making progress. Much more however can be done. We ask all workers to become mem- bers and give us a hand. By doing |this you will not only help the Proletcos, but the Left Wing move- will announce a plan whereby those | )|| Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST Office Hours: Tues, Thurs. & Sat, 9:30-12 a, m,, 2-8 p. m. Sunday: 10:00 a. m. to 1:00 p. m. Please Telephone for Appointment 249 EAST 115th’ STREET Cor. Second Ave. New York Telephone: Lehigh 6022 DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Room 803—Phone: Algonquin 8183 Not connected with any other office | He will have to get shaved He has grown whiskers waitin, for the ‘BUILD THE UNION’ BAZAAR | But it will pay because there | will be real bargains for the | home and for everyone in the Cooperators! Patronize STAR CASINO S E R O % April 18, 19, 20 & 21 | CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. Y. ment as a whole , RES Against Imperialist War; Defense of the Soviet * Union Wetlnesday, May 1 RED BALLET—PROLETARIAN MASS PAGEANT FREIHEIT GESANGS-VEREIN International May Day | BRONX COLISEUM, EAST 177th STREET AUSPICES OF THE COMMUNIST PARTY OF THE USA, 26-28 UNION SQUARE, —ADMISSION 50 CENTS. | Rational || Vegetarian Restaurant | 199 SECOND AVEl UE Bet. 12th and 13th Sts, Strictly Vegetarian Food || HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 5865 For a Real Oriental Cooked Meal VISIT THE INTERNATIONAL PROGRESSIVE CENTER 101 WEST 28TH STREET (Corner Oth Ave.) RESTAURANT, CAFETERIA RECREATION ROOM Open trom 1¢ a m te 12 pm.

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