The Daily Worker Newspaper, April 24, 1929, Page 5

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Vaiter Cheated JDGE IGNORES| fORKER'S STORY: REES ATTACKER ictim Forced to Pay) Hospital Bill Ugly gashes showed on the skull Charles Faessler, waiter, yester- y, as he told the Rye Court of a utal attack made upon him by e proprietor of the local Blind| cook Tavern Saturday morning. He ld a representative of the Daily! orker that after he later charged | {), s employer with assault, the em-| vyer was released on $100 bail. At the trial Faessler’s evidence s ignored by the magistrate, who iposed a sentence of $10 or ten |? zin will speak on “Women in His. iys in jail, tory Faessler had been sent to work AS ey y_the Signal Employment Agency,| Literature 3 s of the section] 35 Sixth Ave., who assured him | meet at 8:20 p, m, tomorrow, 56 Man- rat the job, for which they de-/h@ttan Ave, | | | 1anded a fee of $6, would be worth! International Branch 1, Sect ary nis Wankcian (2.2 nh meets tonight at om $46 to $50 a week. Faessler) Pins St May Day isisted on paying $5 only, but on rangements will be discussed. rrival at the restaurant learned re IRS vom another waiter that the job aid about $27, mainly in tips. Cheated Out of Tips. “I reported for work at 11:15 ext merning,” Faessler states, and shortly after starting, attend- d to a lunch party of 12, While I} vas in the kitchen the boss collected | he cost of the bill plus the tip. Vhen he gave me a dollar I asked 1im to tell me who paid the bill.) ‘he boss told me the man who paid | iad left. ‘I don’t work that way,’ I aid to him, but he told me to get} ut. “I was walking from the restaur- it to the kitchen when he suddenly rushed me against the kitehen doors, | nd as I turned he smashed me on| he head with a pitcher. I managed | o get to the phone and call the ol: They took me to the sta- ‘on, where I told the captain what ad happened. But the boss first id he had struck me in self de- ‘ense, They released the boss on 5100 bail, and a policeman took me o the hospital, where I paid $3 to xet the wounds dressed. “When I went for my clothes at he restaurant Monday morning I ‘ound them scattered around in an- ther room. My locker had been oroken. “At court I swore to my story vefore the judge. The German girl whom the boss had persuaded to ive evidence spoke so low that I vould not hear what she was say- ing. The judge asked me if I under- | stood the evidence. ‘How could I understand it—it was whispered,’ I said. The judge then declared sen- tence.” 16 More Cafeterias | Surrender to Union (Continued from Page One) inion, stated that Bushel, who was lawyer for the American Federa- ion of Labor for 20 years, and who claims to be “fair to labor” is evi- lently carrying on the policy an- »y Judge Rosenbluth when he said that he would impose suc hhigh ines and bail that the union ::will 0 bankrupt.” Fiye thousand leaflets, calling | ipon worke jcafete: , were distributed in the istrike zone by members of the Sec- jtion Two of the Communist Party yesterday, “The food workers have been the elpless victims of terrific exploita- tion, they have been at the mercy f the powerful trusts, because they re unorganized. The burning need in the food industry and other un- rganized industries is the forma- ion of strong militant industrial nions,” the leaflet declared. educational meetin, not to patronize scab | May Day Discussion Outlines. Units and unit agit-prop directors to notice that outlines on ) y for unit discussion be secured from the District Agit-Prop Department. * * | BRONX | Lower Bronx Unit. I. A. Baum will speak at the open air meeting of the unit at 138th St and St. Anne's Ave. at 8:15 p. morrow. a PBROOR DUN. 2 oe sige Coney Island Unit. “The Significance of May 1” will be di ed at the educational meet- of the unit at 8:30 p. m, tonight, 01 Mermaid Ave m, to- * a singer will entertain party and concert, urday, 2901 Mermaid Ave. a. ore Units 2F, 4F, Section 6. A combined educational meeting o will be held tomorr Manhattan Ave. Ray Ra f 0 Unit 6F, Section 6. The Cleveland Trade Union Unity Convention will be discussed at the of the unit at 6:30 p. m. tonight, 253 Atlantic Ave., Brooklyn. Kopper will lead discus- sion. : BROWNSVILLE | Engdahl Talks On U.S.S.R. “Soviet. Russia ‘in 1 will be discussed by J. Louis Engdahl, act- ing editor of the Daily Worker, at p.m. Friday, before Section 8 at the Brownsville’ Workers Center, 154 Watkins St. MANHATTAN | Party Members, Noticet Tickets for the May First demon- stration at the Bronx Coliseum may be had at the District Office. Binan- cial secretaries should secure their qucta through the section machinery at once. The will be ready April 32 tion in shops will be ready April 21. |Sections and units should organize machinery accordingly. | Comrades are wanted for the pageant rehearsal every Sunday, 2 p. m., at the Workers Center, 26 Union |Square, Further information from | Di Santo at the District Office, ee ittee, Section 4. By of the Secti Executive Committee a membe meeting of the section will tonight, harp, at 143 10grd St. 1 HE. L, confe will be discus: Labor and Fraternal | Organizations United Council 22, Ann Eaton will lecture on “Chil- |dren's Books" at the Cooperative | Auditorium, 2700 Bronx Park East, jat 8:30 p. m. tomorrow. |. BROWNSVILLE __— Postpone I, L. D. Lecture, ville. Browns- The lecture by Juliet Stuart Poyntz, national secretary, International La- bor Defense, at’ the Brownsville | Branch of the I. L. D. has been post- poned till tonight. May Day Ballet Rehearsals. Rehearsals for the Workers Ballet at the May Day Celebrations at the N. Y. Coliseum will be held at 7 p. | Iter, Fourth floor, 26 Union Square. Food Strikers Ask Workers to Report | The strike committee of the Hotel, Restaurant and Cafeteria Workers’ Union appeals to members of the Communist Party, the Young Work- ers (Communist) League and un- employed workers to report at union | headquarters, 133 W. 51st St., early | this morning. Ask for Rosenberg or Milton, On May Day—long live the al- liance of the working class and the poor farmers! Out of Tips, As Olgin Talks. Moissaye Olgin, of the Freiheit, will lead discussion on he importance and Significance Day be- of ay fore Unit 4 at 126 W. 13ist St, 8:30 p. m, tomorrow. * ati Bran Ss 10 a. m. to- morrow, 6th floor, Workers Center 26 Union Sq. Wai aoe) May Day Demonstration Tickets, 1 I aflets and stickers for the May District Office. Comrades instructed to come for them without delay. * * Unit 5F, 3D, Unit meets today, at 6 p. m., 101 W. 27th st * 2 May Day Ballet, als for the Worker: y Day Celebra fourth floc Union Squ; ee le Union Wants Volun- teers. rs to prepare membership the Southern textile strik- ked to call at Room 1707, Textile Workers’ Union, 104 between 9 a, m. and 8 National Volunt books fo: ers ‘ational th Av m. daily, F P. * * 48, 3B. omorrow, 101 W. tt Unit meets AGAINST MAY DAY WARSAW TERROR (Continued from Page One) |May Day appeals of the Communist Party were being printed, and ar- rested the owner and everyone on the premises. In the provinces there were also many arrests. In the great textile center, Lodz, 26 persons were arrested. In Sos- novice, a worker named Frankovski was seized by the police. They had been hunting him since 1925. In Lemberg there were also numerous arrests, The Polish Socialist Party has decided to have no public demon- strations on May Day, but only in- door meetings. The yellow Jewish Bund and the Paole Zion are not demonstrating on May Day either. The Yavorski group is preparing fc- anti-proletarian excesses. In Tarnapol, the trial of 31 charged with being members of the Communist Party of West Ukraine, \is proceeding. There are a number |of young workers among the pris- oners, ee Prisoners Unfurl Red Flag. (Wireless By “Inprecorr”) BIALOSTOCK, West Ukraine, Po- land, April 23.—The trial of the 35 workers and peasants aceused of membership in the Communist Par- ty of West Ukraine was electrified jas the accused unfurled a red flag when the judge entered the court |room. The chief among the accused, Ep- | stein, denied charges of individual jterror and set forth the attitude of the Communists on the question of armed insurrection. "pao" rau (Wireless By “Inprecorr”) MOSCOW, April 23.—Prepara- tions for May Day are in full swing here, with many factories introduc- | of May 1, and the trade unions con- | ducting widespread propaganda | against the observance of the Easter holidays. The Executive Bureau of the Red International of Labor Unions has issued an appeal to the workers of the world, protesting against the suppression of the Rumanian inde- | Pendent labor unions. BUILDERS STRIKE | CHRISSMAN, Ind., (By Mail).— | Construction on the school building here was stopped when lathers and carpenters struck, Long Live International Day! May Doors Open at 4 Tools Down MAY DAY! PROTEST AGAINST Police Brutality Injunctions Mass Arrests of Workers ‘ Fight Imperialist War Organize the Unorganized Defend the Soviet Union Celebrate May Day _ The International Labor Holiday WEDNESDAY, MAY FIRST P.M. PHI (' JAMES PHILLIPS BRONX COLISEUM (EAST 177th STREET STATION) EXCELLENT PROGRAM—Dixie Negro Choir will sing Negro Labor Songs—Guild Dancers in a special May Day Ballet—James Phillips, noted Basso — Nationally known Speakers. Admission 50c; through your organization 25c. Auspices of the May Day Conference of Unions and Fraternal Organizations, Commun- , ist Party, District No. 2. S Demonstration are now ready at DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDA Y, APRIL 24, 1929 saulted BUILDING WORKER LEFT DESTITUTE Lives in SqualidHarlem Tenement House | (Continued from Page One) three weeks when the negligence and vicious speed-up of the contractors had sent him to his untimely death |at the age of 37. Before he had got- ten that job he had been sick for three months, broken down as a re- sult of the terrific strain under '|which he had worked on his previ- ous job in order to eke out a living wage for his small family. “Yes,” said Joseph Coiro, brother of the dead worker, “Antonio and | Lucrezia have lived here for, let me |see, sinee 1922, when they came to America. Not all the time in the same house, but slways on the same block. No, Antonio first came to America in 1911, a young boy, but could get no work, couldn’t live, so he had to go back to Italy.” Industrial Depression. Just after one of the biggest in- dustrial depression in the United States in twentieth century, 1911, and immediately before the panic that was due to break on the coun- try when the World War put a new weapon, the manufacture of arma- ments and war supplies in the hands jof big business, did Antonio Coiro first come to the United States, No wonder he starved, no wonder he, a “foreigner,” too, searched in vain foz work through the streets, no wonder he was forced to return to a ‘country, which, although just as vicious and reactionary, was at least | familiar! “When he came back to Italy,” his brother continued, “the war | broke out, and Antonio was drafted |into the Italian army.” He served |throughout the war, returning to | America in 1922 with his wife and j child. Deaths Frequent. Another brother of the dead worker, Arsenio Coiro, listened care- fully as he spoke, interrupting now and then with fuller details. Mrs, Coiro, who speaks little English, sat quietly next to us, seemingly re- signed to the calamity, one which is a periodical visitor at the homes of workers in this age of speed-up and | rationalization all over the world. | Now and then she asked that what her brother-in-law was saying be | translated for her. | She seemed uneasy most of the | time, in spite of the presence of her relatives and the neighbors, all |Italian working class housewives. | Later she told me, when I had con- vinced them of the sincerity of my visit, that all the time she had been vaguely disturbed by the thought that I might be one of the agents of |the company, sent there to “settle” the death of the family bread-winner with a few dollars in exchange for the life of her liusband, And vaguely, | too, she understood that these com- pany agents meant no good to her. Many Others Hurt, once did she show any Only jounced openly in court last week|m. tomorrow, at the Workers Cen-| ing the 7-hour day during the week| marked sign of emotion, when Jo- |seph Coiro gave me the picture of | the dead worker. Mrs. Coiro turned around suddenly when confronted | with it, and clasped and reclapsed her fingers nervously. One of the | women in the room, understanding, put a consoling arm around her shoulders. “You see his face,” said one of the brothers, “a fine man, handsome. him home. And the pain on his face and the | gesture of his hands told more than if he had finished the sentence, Shown a copy of the Daily | Worker, one of the neighbors in the room noticed the “11 injured.” | “Only eleven!” he almost shouted, |“There were more than that, at least |six others, crippled! The papers, they don’t know what is what, they print only what the foreman tells them is so, At least six others, I know, crippled... .” Through the dark dirty hall again, In the darkness I almost stumbled on a child, the orphan of the dead man, playing on the floor with bits of broken plaster from the wall. But when they brought International Barber Shop M, W. SALA, Prop, 2016 Second Avenue, New York (bet. 103rd & 104th Sts.) Ladies Bobs Our Specialty Private Beauty Parlor Dr. M. Wolfson Surgeon Dentist 141 SECOND AVENUE, Cor, 9th St, Phi ‘chard 2333, DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Room 803—Phone: Algonquin 8188 Not connected with any other office Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST 249 BAST 115th STREET Cor, Second Ave. New York Office hours: Mon., Wed., Sat., 9.30 2 to 6 P.M. 30 a. m, to 12; 2 to’ pm. Sunday, 10 a. m. to 1 p. m. Please telephone for appointment, Telephone: Lehigh 602% a.m. to 1 Tues. Thurs, by Boss-D Communist Activities WIDOW OF KILLED HOUSING EVIL IN ° vaws $10 Fine 7 | United States of a Workers’ and Farmers’ Government. | “So long as this vicious system of lyace art class oppression exists, so long will such brutal acts and mur- | derous deeds continue, the masses of \black and white workers will be ‘erushed under the most brutal form ‘of terrorism. The government of \the capitalist oppressors will |tect the property and system of the wealthy. The black and white workers will not only receive no pro- tection but will be crushed by the governmental agents of the exploit- ing ruling class.” The other speakers were Odessa Clarke, mother of the murdered boy; Leo Grant, president of the Harlem Inter-Racial Club; J. Louis Engdahl, editor of the Daily Wor! er; Charles Alexander, Young Work- ers (Communist) League; _ CLARKE KILLING Se | gregation Is Part of Landlord’s System (Continued from Page One) As the exposure of housing condi- tions Harlem by the Daily ‘O- in Worker has revealed, the vicious ex- ploitation of the Negro workers by landlords and real estate men is only possible as a result of race prejudice fostered by them, The resolution passed unani- | mously by those present said, in part: “The capitalist system is re- sponsible for the murder of Harry Clarke. It is responsible for all lynchings, Jim Crowism, peonage and other forms of discrimination, which the Negro race and Negro work re subjected to, It is re- sponsible for the segregation of Ne- groes into certain sections of the city, resulting in congestion, high vents and the ‘worst abuses of land- lordism.” Call Clarke Martyr. Harry Clarke, who was called a North Carolina strike area; | Eisman, of the Young Pione Harry Workers Are Urged to Support the May Day Issue With Greetings (Continued from Page One) printed 300,000 times and will jtalism and the establishment in the] organization in this edition will be) , be ¢ in Ma cist rate's Court Vive FOR 3-DAY WEEK Union Officials Gag | Demands of Members (Continued from Page One) Owens, recently returned from the) ports issued to the different New Jones | “something fis! officials, The bosses’ association fered $15 a day, a 5-day we three summer mon and a on the part of the of- for 2 has nere in wag n the ja must be re: “Investigate” Charge Associated Press Men Maneuvered to Office a week, no new agreement has lion! , Frank B. Noyes of the Washing. jreached. Gill and the Bricklayers’ ton Star was re-elected president of u:.ion officials state that this is due the Associated Press at the annual to the bos refusal to grant the Meeting yesterday. demands sought ; One new director was elected, The rank and file members char ick E. Murphy the Min. John} however, that the fact that the re- "eapolis Tribune to s H. V. of the same news York local unions Due to the careful man- are full of encies, indicate « of the Associated Press, cers elected Comrade martyr by the speakers, was pre- sented as another rallying point for both Negro and white workers to unite in a common struggle against seen by more than 300,000 workers. This means that over a quarter of a million workers will know that such and such an organization is with| {them in their struggles and_ will give them still greater confidence in the new left-wing unions and in the Party. the system of oppression. Williana Burroughs, school teacher representing the American Negro Labor Congress, also stressed the housing situation as a result of the Mass Distributions. |same system of oppression whichled| More greetings will o make to the murder of the Negro school- | possible more free distributions and | boy. more special editions. Greetings, The resolution adopted by the pro- | therefore, mean, more workers will test meeting follows: ‘be drawn into the Trade Union Resolution Unanimously Adopted. | Unity Convention in Cleveland, “Resolved, that this meeting to-; night, April 22, 1929, held under the joint auspices of the American Negro Labor Congress, Young | Workers (Communist) League, Com- {munist Party of U. S. A. Young | Pioneers, Harlem Inter-Racial Club, more workers will rally to the sup- port of the textile strik south, more workers will rally to the fighting miners, to the Commu- nist Party, to the struggle against imperialist war and to the defense of the Soviet Union. and Labor Sports Union, protests Ellis Drawings. the killing of Harry Clarke, the] The May Day Edition will be well Negro schoolboy, by his white) worth working for. In its pages isechoolmate for winning a race in) there will be many drawings and an athletic meet after having been! cartoons by Fred Ellis, full accounts warned not to win. {of May Days of the past and the Lynchings. | May Day of today, reviews of major “This act was the direct result workingelass struggles during the of the vicious system of race and last year, the struggles that face us class oppression which rules in this; now, It will be a live and fighting country, which resulted in the past; May Day Edition, year in the beating of several Negro} Special May Day Editions will be workers in the subways of this city| printed for California, Detroit, Chi by U. S. soldiers, in police brutality cago and Philadelphia and will ar- against Negroes in Harlem and| rive at their destinations in time to elsewhere, as well as in many lynch-' be distributed on May Day in con- ings in various parts of the country. | junction with the mass demonstra- “The propaganda of racial preju-| tions on that day. dice spread by the bosses has per-| “Gladkev’s Cement.” _meated the minds of the white work-| The May Day Edition of the ers of this country as well. A few! Daily Worker will also contain a weeks ago 19 Negro painters in full page of “Cement,” the remark- Newark were refused admittance able novel of socialist construction in into existing unions. But the class-| the Soviet Union. This will be the ‘conscious militant left wing work-! first installment and the book is ers are rallying to the struggle for| then to be printed in serial form the liberation of the oppressed] daily. Negro race, To Divide Ranks, “The bosses cad their government deliberately foster racial divisions and racial prejudice among the ‘workers in order to divide their ranks, enabling the bosses to play one against the other. Their sys- tem of education and schools are used to create artificial racial bar- riers between children of the work-| ing class. “The capitalist sible for the I am a citizen of the world, and I work wherever I happen to be. Marx, tem is respon- murder of Harry} Clark It is responsible for all] lynching, Jim Crowism, peonage, and other forms of discrimination, whieh the Negro race and Negro workers are subjected to. It is re- sponsible for the segregation of Ne- groes into certain sections of the city, resulting in congestion, high; rents, and the worst abuses of \Jandlordism. It is responsible for! denying Negro workers equal op- portunity for work with equal pay. | Black and White Masses Unite. “This meeting tonight calls upon the workers, black and white, to unite in protest against the murder | of the Negro schoolboy and to or- ganize for self-defense, for the pro- tection of the whole working class} against capitalist terrorism; it calls! upon the black and white masses to |mobilize their power behind these | organizations in their fight for full} economic, political and social equal-| jity of the Negro workers, condemns the capitalist society under which) |we live, and pledges itself to fight | vigorously for the overthrow of capi- | : | Your Chance to See SOVIET RUSSEA TOURS FROM $385.00 The Soviet government welcomes its friends and will put all facilities at your disposal to see everything—~ go everywhere ~ form your own opinion of Eig prpatont Social experi- ment in the History of Mankind at first hand. World Tourists Inc. offer you a choice of tours which will ex- actly fit your desires and purse, Don’t dream of going to Russia— make it a reality ! Write immediately to WORLD TOURISTS, Inc, 175-5th Avenue, New York, N. Y. Tel, ALGonquin 6656 | acciaseseianinsstaciaeansaaiememnamenemamaeterteel VvVVVVVVVVVY MASS-DEMONSTRATION OPENING of the FIFTH NATIONAL CONVENTION YOUNG WORKERS (COMMUNIST) LEAGUE National Speakers, Reunion of the Hawaiian Communist League Paul Crouch, Walter Trumbull, George Pershing, Harvey Steele Mass Recitation by YOUNG PIONEERS “STRIKE,” by Mike Gold Sports’ Exhibition—Labor Sports’ Union APRIL 26TH AT 8 P. M. ADMISSION 25c Central Opera House, 67th St. & 3rd Ave. Tickets on Sale at: Daily Worker office. Young Workers League, 26-28 Union Square, Young Workers League, 43 E. 125th St. ay 1 OD RLS aL a 2 1 Ve V0 s in the} | | | | day week starting October 1. This! Mrances Pilat the rank and file has refused Ast The representatives of the union |, MIDWIFE j are basing t mands of the work- | 351 E. 7/th St., New York, N, Y. rs, not on the fact that the work- Tel. Rhinelander 3916 ers’ labor deserves a higher rate, |= as oo | COMRADES MEET AT P Mey : Visit Giusti’s Spaghetti House Russia $375 * Free Russ! stopover p) every tourist Mability insura out charge — weekly sail- ings —no delays American - Russian TRAVEL AG o¥, INC 100-5th Ave. Chels New York City “For Any Kind of Insurance” Y . East 42nd Street, New York Pitronize No-Tip Barber Shops 26-28 UNION SQUARE (1 flight up) 2700 BRONX P/K EAST (corner Allerton Ave.) Tel.: DRYdock 8880 FRED SPITZ, Inc. FLORIST NOW AT 31 SECOND AVENUE (Bet. Ist & 2nd Sts.) Flowers for All Occasions 15% REDUCTION TO READERS OF THD DAILY WORKER Unity Co-operators Patronize SAM LESSER Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailor 1818 - 7th Ave. New York Between 110th and 111th Sts, purse Luncheon 50c—11 to 3 Complete Tour $ 6-course Dinner 75e—5 to 9 | Ligaen ae imate A LA CARTE ALL DAY 19 West 16th Street Meet your Friends at GREENBERG’S Bakery © Restaurant 939 E, 174th St., Cor. Hoe Ave. Right off 174th Stre L t Subway All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S VEGETARIAN HEALTH RESTAURANT 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx Dairy Comrades will Find It Pleasant to Dine at Our Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLYD., Bronx (near 174th PHONE 1 MEET YOUR FRIENDS at Messinger’s Vegetarian and Dairy Restaurant 1763 Southern Blyd., onx, N.Y. Right off 174th St, Subway Station Por a Real Oriental Cooked Meal vis THE INTERNATIONAL PROGRESSIVE CENTER 101 WEST 28TH STREET (Corner 6th Ave.) RESTAURANT, CAFETERIA OREATION ROOM Open trum 16 a m te 12 pm. Advertise your Union Meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept 26-28 Union Sq., New York City Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 199 SECOND AVE UE Bet. 12th and 13th Sts. Strictly Vegetarian Food Hote} and Kestaurant Workers Branch of the Amalgamated Food Workers 143 W. SIst St, Phone Cirete 7 Fay BUSINESS MEETINGS eld on the first Monday cr the hat 3 p.m. —One Union—Join Common Enemy! rom 9 a, m, to 6 p,m, AMALGAMATED Next to Unity Co-operative House FOOD WORKERS Meets istSaturday inthe month at || 3468 ‘Third Ave. Baker's Loca) 164 Cy a BUTCHERS’ UNION Local 174, A.M.C.& B.W, of NA Office and Headquarters: Labor Temple, 243 E, 84th St. Room 12 Regular meetings every first an@ third Sunday, 10 A. M. Employment Bureau open ‘evert day at 6 M. HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 5865 \ Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SP: LTY:; ITALIAN DISHES place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 302 E. 12th St. New York ROMA DEE Bat SCIENTIFIC VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT 1604-6 Madison Ave, Between 107th & 108th Sts, Lyceum, Window Cleaners, Join Your Unton! Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. Y. '§ Window Cleaners’ Protective | Cooperators! Patronize Union—Local 8 S E R O Y Affiliated with the A. F. of L. 15 E, 3rd St., New York CHEMIST Meets each Ist and 3rd Thursday of each month at 7 P. M. at Manhattan 657 Allerton Avenue | PRESS, INc. 26-28 UNION SQUARE NEW YORK CITY

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