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EW YORK, SATURDAY, MAY 4, 1929 - Communis | ‘ORM GROUPS IN. Communist Activities STRIKE RELIEF | WLLUMAN SHOP: SOLUMBIA. STEEL New Street Nucleus | Organized | BAN FRANCISCO, Calif. (By | fail)—The Party Building Drive in Jistrict 18, although in its initial | tage, has already resulted in the rganization of three very important iuclei. One in the Richmond Pull- nan shops employing 1500 workers vith four members, another shop uclets of three members in the lohimbia steel-mill of Pittsburgh |] BRONX | mploying 2000 workers and a street | ucleus of four members in Sacra-} yento, the state capital and im-/ ortant industrial and agricultural | One of the Sacramento com- | s working in a shop of 4000} and a shop nucleus will be/| rganized in the near future. | foe nRON eget Pioneer Orchestra, The orchestra w at 2:30 p,m, 1 Wilkins Ave,|Membership drive will be discussed Btoue - ‘lat the meeting at 8 p, m. Monday, 2 . * * 313 Hinsdale Street. Section 5. | > Branch 1 onday, 8:30 p. m. || MANHA’ at 1330 Wilkins Ave. san Drm arece weT NA nt | Y. W. ©. Ls dazx Band. { BROOKLYN i|_ ‘hore will be a rehearsal tomorrow, Wiliamsburgh ¥. W. C. I. A membership meeting will be held tonight. oe ie Brookyn Workers Center. A contest ball will be held tonight t Party Organ 1 rehearse today | ized 3 |to present flags to the Y.W.C.L. and the Workers Center of Williamsburgh. eek an Branch 2, Section 8 Reorganization of the unit and the | 12 noon, 143 B |and trumpet players are required, 2 | German Language Fraction. The German language fracti jmeets tonight at 8 o'clock, a (Workets Center, 26 Union Square. Fraternal Organizations Hardware Setters Club. Zimmerman will speak on the inst the war danger at the al meeti of the United zs fight educ Hardy p. m., at 1400 Boston Road. | BROOKLYN tio re Setters Club Monday, 8:30 | Yorkville 1. “Defense of the | will be discussed by r, or- |ganizational secretary of the Inter- national Labor Defense, at the Vork- ville I. L, D. at the Czecho-Slovak Workers Home, 8 p. m, today. Re- freshments, dancing, follow lecture. ce Wee | Armenian Workers Club. | A house warming party will be held tonight at 8 o'clock at 105 Lexington Avenue. DAILY WORKER 103rd St. Banjo, piano Nuclei in New Housing Evil MASS MEETINGS Well Received - ; % : Southern Str ike Wins The fact that The Daily Worker If Workers Send Food” is now engaged in exposing the housing conditions in lower Harlem, Scores of mass meetings and tag| with its intricate system of racial days to raise funds for the s' ~ | barri has awakened much interest ing textile workers of the South are| among the Latin American workers. bein,; held by branches of the Work-| While on his tri ers International Relief throughout] house, the Daily W: from house to ‘ker investigator e| the country, Alfred Wagenknecht,| found that the Daily Worker had executive secretary of the W.LR.,| achieved a much higher regree of 1 Union Square, New York, an-|poularity with workers in lower Har. nouned last night. dem that he at first suspected. RAEI Maes Porto Rican League, a benefit | Wagenknecht, “is now being utilized . . |to raise as much funds as possible. Society, he found a Porto Rican | ‘The W.LR. now has three relief dis-| Neer office worker, who had even tribution centers in North Carolina, Ted the Daily orker while in lin Gastonia, Pineville and Lexing-| Porto Rico and was now a daily ton, while arrangements to open| te@der of it. others are under consideration. | “Friedman is now in Boston and will visit Providence, New Bedford, Fall River and many other Massa- ator, found that news of the | ing campaign carried on by the TAKE HUGE TOLL Hundreds Injured; 37 Known Dead (Continued from Page One) Gate City, Va., was demolished. The terrified screams of the children were drowned by the crash of the timbered building. When relief par- ties finally were able to work in the ruins of the razed building, they found the broken bodies of the chil- dren as gruesome reminders of the strength of the tornado. At Connellsville, Pa., the May- flower Cleaning and Dyeing Com- {pany plant was wrecked by a terrif- lie windstorm. Barns, houses and telephone wires were destroyed, and street car traffic between Pen ille jand Scottdale was suspended. A southwestern gale drove th sound steamers wild-the-Party Drive in Exposure of STORMSINSOUTH "pen itere"May 17 A mass meeting at the Manhattan Lyceum, 66 E. Fourth St., on Fri- day night, May 17, will open the} convention of the New York Dis- t the Young Pioneers of ica to be held May 18 and 19. “Strike,” a play produced by a t of 100, will feature the pro- at the mass mee’ g TEAMSTERS WIN IN TWO PLACES Strike Contin ues | All Other Jobs The strike of the chauffeurs, yard- men and helpers being conducted by the Brotherhood of Teamsters, Lo- on In alarge number of houses that) Twelve towns in the section report! cal 816, continued yesterday with visited, the Daily Worker in-| heavy damage, many being injured.| the men holding firm. Two concerns have already capitulated, the Mutual and several small) Building Material Corporation and} ISSUE CALL FOR “TEXTILE RELIEF IN NEW BEDFORD IW.I. R. | Conference On May 12 | NEW BEDFORD, Mass., May 3.— The New Bedford local of the Work- ers International Relief, in a call issued to all workers and sym- | pathetic organizations, announces @ | conference of organizations, to take place May 12, 10 a. m., at 49 William | Street, the aim of which will be the construction of a powerful relief junit to aid the southern textile strikers. All workingclass organizations are }asked to send delegates to this con- }ference and get in touch with the | W. 1. R. office at 49 Williams Street, | Room 2. The all for the conference recalls ef given the N 3edford Council 5, U, C. We We | Mae chusetts “cwhs, especially textile Daily Worker had preceded him. craft into the harbor at New Lon- the Donner Lumber, the first in-| the re ep New Organizations. Ar sativa of the Piri agus | cathe atininers Laaeerate c centers, where the workers will be One Yatin American worker, who) don, Conn., yesterday. volving 18 men and the second 16, | mill st : t strike D iS. By , eture on bitth co the 2 ry Ha Yorkers Union, | 5 se i iy ra eB ty : last year, reviews y Part: ite before in| troleat 2001 Mermaid Ave, at 8:30 Local 43, has arranged a Spring Revel | Urged to come to the support of had been unemployed for six months, Sailors’ Lives Endangered. The Mason Materials Dealers As-| pie deed tan ey oy aS iat Ae ek el ord na laed a CT sha" Danie, for Friday “evening, "Alay | their fellow workers of the South, |said that friends of his had told him| High wind off the mudflats near! sociation continued to “stand pat” | £0", the miners, an ‘ither cities and with the exception | \24 at Webster Hall, 11th St. and Third x, a of the exposures in the Daily Work- | p, 7 valian' uggle of the southern tex- if two, the comrades are new snem-|1-. BROW BROWNSVIL LE Avenue. Drive Into West. eda Y K-|Fort Lafayette blew the United) but decided for a conference Monday \ tite bea anita: at Gib gobs bbasls| See GG RRA | “Miss Rudd is in Chicago, where | ¢T and that he was now reading it| states Navy tug Iuka aground. The! to again take up their policy. They | Leas . silitiea aie Braet hems fee vast| Bill Haywood Branch, 1.1. D. | | J otttore, Ttarian’ Communist | She is assisting Lydia Beidel, secre-| regularly. ; ; tug, manned by 30 men, was laden had hoarded considerable material) Jt tells how masked gangsters, je ees ae ay el aecetip! Ed Wright, business manager of | newspaper, will benefit trom the ball|taty of the Chicago local of the! In many other instances it was | with refuse and was heading for the on the construction sites in antici-| Send by the mill barons, sacked the eaeice ni ae na Datta we the Labor Defender, pS Pie to h given at the Workers Genter, | W.LR. mobilizing the local labor found that the exposure of housing ocean dumping grounds. It was! pation of the strike and are there-| W.I. R. relief store in Gastonia and ree ceding to A gerious lees in|monthiy, meeting of the branch to-/aumitted trea,” movement in the campaign for| conditions and the racial prejudice | finally refloated in the afternoon. fore in a position to sit tight for a| how another store was immediately ene tt tote acrohe the [ight at 227 Brighton Beach Ave. OE Re funds. She will soon start on aj instilled by the exploters, had arous-| Sixty men ate endangered on the| few days longer. | set up and loaded with food, nembership, especially among the oroletarian elements. Both Rich- uond and Pittsburgh are in the vicinity of San Francisco, while jacramento is a city of a population | of 75,000, with its many packing 1ouses, machine and car-shops, pay- ng starvation wages to the large iumber of Mexican, Negro, Japanese | ind other workers. Train New Memb: The District Cor-mittee, in spite of the difficulties created by the dual ganization of Glickson, Manus, etc. | vho were expelled from the Party their splitting activities and vio- | tions of discipline, decided right fter it was organized to go aiter hese places which were waiting for he Party to reach them. Comrades | ers. | | Harlem Educational Forum. MANHATIAN || Solon De Leon will discuss “Ration- ization” at the Harlem Forum at National Textile Union Wants Volun-|3 p. m. tomorrow, 169 W, 153d St. cers. NEW_JERSEY Volunteers to prepare membership books for the Southern textile strik- | “La Stela Coneta.” ers are asked to call at Room 1707, | National Textile Workers’ Union, 304/ The ninth annual ball of the so- Fifth Ave. between 9 a. m. and 8/ciety will be held at 167 West S p. m, daily. Union City, N. J, 8:30 p. m. Snare pen ARS Armenian Workers Club. S.A.T. be} A house warming party will The club hikes ve's Lake” held Saturday, 8 p. m., at 105 Lexing- today, Meet at South Ferry, near ton Ave, |the Staten Island ferry at a, m. a EES Iron, Bronze Workers A mass meeting of the Iron and rorkers’ will be held today at Bae : Hall, 119|Midvale May Festival today, Meet B. 11th the coming|at the Chambers St, the struggles ‘ rie R, R, at 3:45. Expenses, ZARITSKY READY WORKERS SOCCER iar RS, J Die Naturfreunde. The English section will hike to ‘tour of Illinois, also visiting Mil-| ed great interest among the workers. | Waukee and St. Louis. In addition| | textile centers of Allentown, Philips- burg,; Easton and Bethlehem. Other | Pennsylvania industrial centers are |. part of the United States, with- in the last few days, 16 W.LR. lo- (Continued from Page One) cal secretaries have gone into ac-! sarment section. Every worker re- sponded to the strike call in two of |to the textile centers of New Eng- \land that are being visited by = FOOD BOSSES ENGAGE’ BOSS expected to be heard from shortly. | “Workers International Relief ac-| tion and have started to raise funds fo the striking textile workers, in| the five shops, most of the workers coming out in the others, | ganizer Friedman, relief committees are to be organized in Pennsylvania aos. eae | tivities are going rapidly forward in| Cafeter la Strike Now | the middle western and southwest-| Spreads Thru City Arkansas, Jowa, Oklahoma, Kansas, Missouri, Utah, Texas, Colorado, | United States tug Ruah No. |which went on the rocks near Fort | Lafayette yesterday near the Fort |Hamilton section of Brooklyn. Mexico Hit. A hurrieane swept the Gulf Coast of Mexico, wrecking buildings and plantations. Victor Carlie, of the crew of the American steamer San Jacinto at Tampico, was drowned. The San Jacinto was torn from its }mooring in the Panuco River, where it collided with another ship. Carlie {fell overboard. Many small craft in the harbor are feared lost. Other sections hit by the storm }were Culpepper, Va., Jacksonville, Fla., and Arkansas, Alabama and Georgia, 37, | Representatives of the State La- bor Department, A. J. Portenar and P. J. Doyle, 3 rday conferred with representatives of the man- agers association in an effort to break the str 2 WORKERS DIE IN TRAIN WRECK Two Others Are Hurt Seriously | “The strikers in starving,” the call must help them win. the fight for all workers. win, we will win.” Pass Death Penalty Bill in Mich. Senate LANSING, Mich., May 3.—The state senate yesterday concurred in the house amendment to the bill pro- viding the death penalty for first degree murder. The senate had rreviously passed the bill specify- ing that the question be submitted to Michigan voters next year, but ; the house in passing the bill yester- Gastonia are continues, “We Their fight is If they SAYRE, Pa., May 3.—Two men | ay climinated the referendum Hold All Soviet Meet were killed when a Lehigh Valley clause. The bill will thus be added and Wyoming. Two of these secre- More Thugs. vere assigned to different cities with | 1 n taries are in Alaska. These new| Private detectives attacked the uction that they spend sev-/ ays there, going after the| cf the Party press and other | until the unit is Thus the two nuclei weze organized Morris, the Hast Bay section anizer, while comrade Daniels formed the unit in Sacramento. These comrades will also attend the meetings as instructors, training the anew members. for the very im- portant work before them. With such a good beginning, it is -ertain that the new leadership in District 13 will prove that California is not a “tourist state” only, and the instructions of the Communist International Open Letter regarding | proletarianization and the building of shop-nuclei will be carried out, putting an end to the right wing ine and the factional disease result- ng from the poor social composition ind the wrong leadership of the past. v WOVE FOR FOOD WORKERS’ UNITY Conference in Favor of | Industrial Union | (Continued frie» Page One) | -ery cler' in support of the strik-| ng cafeteria workers, and denounc- ing the fake unity conference re- cently held by the United Hebrew T-4dcs, were adopted. Unions Represented. | The unions represented included, the Central Executive Board of the Amalgamated Food Workers Jrion, which sent two fraternal delegates; Cooks and Boilers Union, Local 6, Amalgamated Food Work: Local 164, A. F, W.; Hotel, Restaurant and Cafeteria Workers Union, A. F. W.j Grocery, Fruit, Daity and Butcher Workers Union; Japanese Food Workers Unioh and the T. U. E. L. troup in existing A. F. L. locals. ‘ For Amalgamation. ’ The resolution on amalgamation reads, in part: “Whereas, the splendid strikes of the Hoiel, Rastaurant and Cafeteria Workers Union and the Grocery, Fruit, Dairy and Butcher Wofkers Union are meeting with the hearty response of the food workers, prov- ing that they are in a mood for ctruggle and that the organization campaigns now conducted can be thousendfold more effective if all the {ood workers’ organizations were finited into one solid body to heat back the attacks of the em- ployers, who ate organized into powerful bosses’ organizations, | therefore be it “Resolved, that the organizations yvepresented at this food workers’ conference go on record as in favor of effecting the unification of the separate food workers’ organiza- ions of Greater’ New York and ricinity into one powerful industrial lass ution of food workers. BAKERS GAIN |Trades Workers Industrial Union. WITH EXPULSIONS MEET TOMORROW Packed Convention Has | National Convention at Shock from Telegram Irving Plaza Continued from Page One) The Labor Sports Union, soccer day * the union’s convention to ex- department, will hold its ba nal pel any member who supports finan- Lronar titig laos Rte Nd cially or morally, the new Nestle | + legates tf taiy nobcer laagdes ‘and individual soccer teams will be The convention of the union, which | present eth all over the United ae See, ae of Pres“) States, The convention will start ident Zaritsky, is being he Beethoven Hall. This resolution, workers say, is| workers’ demand of the rank and file that the) For this occasion the Metropoli- |cap and millinery workers become} tan Workers Soccer League and the a part of the steadily growing left) New Jersey Workers Soccer League wing industrial union. This demand, | called off their games. The Brook- as well as others, was given voice,|lyn Woxkers Socecr League, due to not at this fake convention, but at/the fact that it started its season lan enthusiastic meeting of cap and|too, will play the scheduled five millinery workers in Webster Hall jieague games for this Sunday. The ‘Thursday night. The other demands | games are as follows: of the rank and file are: re-instate-} |convention is to organize a national | er, soccer association in the! a tag day for April 28th. Gertrude | and vere held in $600 bail, |the union bureaucracy’s reply to the | United States. and seven were n $ b branches of the W.LR. are not be-| strike committee of the St. Regis ry ine organized on a temporary basis,|as it left the shop. Fourteen were of ‘Technical Men but will be coutinued as permanent) arrested. Gangsters attacked with Moscow; Study Abroad |sections of the W.I.R. after the knives strikers at the Spring. An) | strike ends, so they will be able to| increase in wages and reduction in| MOSCOW, U. S. S. R, (By Mail). | conduct relief work in future strike} hours was offered by the owner of —The fourth All-Union Congress of situations. In this way, a great deal| the Belmore. His offer was laughed | Engineers and Technical Workers of time will be saved, and the | at. \vecently cpened in Moscow. In an | amount of money raised in the early; Of the 43 strikers arrested and| address delivered by Kossior, deputy |days of the struggle will be much | charged with disorderly conduct 20/ chairman of the Supreme Economic larger. This will be an important) were held in $25 bail by Magistrate |Council of the U. S. S. R., the fol- step forward in .ur work of relief.) Eatl Smith in Jefferson Market |lowing data was given out relative Meetii gs, Tag Days. | Court for trial May 6. At the First|to the enginecring forces and tech- “The New Haven local of the WIR | District Magistrates Court (Tombs) |nical education in the U. S. 8. R. |has arranged a mass meeting which 21 were arraigned before Magistrate| At the present time Sovi ‘ | will be held May 8rd, with Rose! Faward Weil. Fanon MAGIOe ss SBE a v Nine were sentenced sia has 13,000 engineers. By the 7 /at 11 a. m. The purpose of the | Pastor Stokes as the principal speak-| to ton days in the workhouse, three end of the next five years the num. Stamford, Conn., arranged|to five days. Two were discharged|ber of engineers is expected to reach 40,000, or 3.6 per cent of the |total number of employes engaged Duell, secretzry of the Connecticut) At Essex Market Court, two were WIR organization has promised to | fined $2 and 3 were discharged. | in industry, while in countries with ae miei ively d days) Refuse Strike Committee Floor. |a higher technique, such as Ger- er parts 0: ie state, The use of the floor to make an|Many, for instance, engineers con- “In New York City, ial t: ; des ditee will be hela from May 2 appeal for support of the strike by|Stitute 5.5 per cent of the number . f i > Mi :.|0f workers employed in industry. to May 19 by the United C oi] of | Committee headed by Michael Ober- ae 9 Red Star S. C. vs. Barcelona 8. C.| took place 3 z,| officials of Local 1, aided by the|/Cided to increase the number of | Section of the W.LR. Rochester, N.| y lkigher engineering schools, and to organize new laboratories, courses, | ¥., a house to house collection drive President, Flores, of the Hotel, Res- on April 28th, A taurant Employees International Al- ment of the left wing Local 43 and all other expelled locals and mem- bers, cessation of the war on the membership, preparation for a strug- gle to wrest improved conditions Jat Thomas Jefferson at 12 noon. | house to house collection drive was |liance of the A. F. of L. at the last | Red Star “A” S. C. vs. Atlantic | also held in Philadelphia on April meeting of the local. |Park S. C. at Thomas Jefferson at | 27th, | Flores instructed the sergeant at 2p. m, | “New Jersey is also swinging into | @™s to throw out the workers who Cecil Burger, one of the Gas- made the motion that the communi- |trial union of all needle workers. from the bosses and organization of at Thomas Jefferson at 3:30 p. m. the unorganized. Self Educational S. C. vs. Sparta- The convention was/cus S, C, at Thomas Jefferson at yesterday |somewhat disturbed by the unex-|5 p.m Spartacus “A” S. C. vs. Mohawk . C, at Crotona Park at 3 p m. Two exhibition games will be played in the Metropolitan Workers Soccer League. Martians §. C. vs. Freiheit S. C. at Crotona Park at 1 p. m. Freiheit “A” S. C, vs. East Side Workers S. C. at Crotona Park at 5 p.m N pected arrival of a telegram from| Local 3 of Montreal, demanding that S the right wing union wreckers stop their pogrom against the rank and) file, re-instate all expelled workers and locals and help build an indus- Except for this telegram, which! caused a little consternation among) the oily Zaritsky boys, and the reso-| lution of the Boston yes-men, the! convention yesterday was as dead as a door-nail. At the opening ses- sion an attempt was made to prod Nearly Kill 2 Fliers the delegates into some show of life with speeches by well-known labor) SAN DIEGO, Cal., May 3.—Two fakers, but even these “silver-| fliers just escaped death at the na- tongued” orators were powerless to|val air station yesterday. They put any pep into a convention which| were participating in the aerial is merely going through the motions|maneuvers led by a squadron of na- of passing measures decided on in|val planes as part of the farewell advance by the corrupt union chiefs, |celebration to a former commandant tional introduced a resolution yester-|of the aircraft squadron’s battle De Groot, Ousted, Says their machines and crash into two Will Bare Opponents; jerounded airplanes, Say They May Probe) Federal District Attorney De Groot finally accepted his discharge | yesterday from none other than) President Hoover and turned over | his office in Brooklyn to his suc- | cessor, Howard W. Ameli. He left vowing to expose the “po- | litical higkwaymen” who had brot about his dismissal, ' | On the other hand, a motion was made in the house of representatives by Loring Black, of New York, for a congressional committee to inves- tigate alleged bail bond frauds in De Groot’s area. val Air Maneuvers air, the men were forced to land For a Four Weeks’ Holiday for PATRONIZE AN BROS. Stationery Store arettes, Candy, Toys 649 Allerton Ave. BRONX, N. Y. Telephone: Olinville 9681-2—9791-2 Cooperators! Suitable for Meetings, Lectures USSR AMATEUR GETS RECORD and Dances in the \fleet. To avert a collision in mid-| Vagabond S. ©. vs. Aurora S. C. | line. ie | tonia strikers, spoke in Trenton| Cation from the Hotel, Restaur mt land Chester, N. J. on April 28th, ,@nd Cafeteria Workers Union be PE ae read to the membership. The issue was side-tracked by the motion of the “Progressive” Rubenfeld to “ap- TROOPS SENT TO cisc2 tis: Bites, | Hotel, Restaurant and Cafeteria | T Workers Union.” | CIGAR BOX § RIKE. BOSSES HONOR MISLEADER. | MASSILLON, 0., (By Mail).— The principal speaker at a chamber of commerce smoker to be given here May .15 will be Arnold Bill, president of the Ohio Federation of Labor. | JOHNSON CITY, Tenn., May 3. |--“Troops will remain on duty at | Elizabethton as long as may be nec- essary,” declared Adjutant General |W. C. Boyd in commenting on the arrival of the Tennessee National | Guard for strike (strikebreaking) | “duty” at the American Cigar Box, Lumber Company here. The cigar strike is reported to have spread) from the Happy Valley area at! Elizabethton, a few miles from here, where the Glanzstoff and Bemberg rayon workers are on strike, AMALGAMATED FOOD WORKERS Mi In. the 3468 Third Ave. Baker's Loca) 164 Down With the Fascist Hire- lings of Capital! Hotel and Restaurant Workers Branch of the Amalgamated Food Workers 133 W, Sist St, Ph 17 BUSINESS ETING' held on the first Monday of the Why Exploiters? BUY ONLY FROM YOUR Cooperative Food Service UNION SHOP Bakeries, Meats, Groceries, Restaurant Brooklyn: 4301-3 8th Ave. 806 43rd St. 4005 5th Ave. 6824 8th Ave. Advertise your Union Meetings here. For information write to || The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City E EXTEND to the workers greetings on this internation We call upon every worker to on May ist as the first step towards carrying on the spirit of solidarity as expressed in the simultaneous celebrations of May Day etc. Numerous Soviet engineers |will be sent abroad to study foreign | methor This year’s quota of | Soviet engineers to go abroad is equal to 1,200. Long Live a Strong Alliance Between Workers on the Job and | Workers and Peasants in Army | Uniforms! “For Any Kind of Insurance” (CARL BRODSK elephone: Murray Hil: 5550 East 42nd Street, New York COOPERATORS! PATRONIZE | M. FORMAN Allerton Carriage, Bicycle and Toy Shop 736 ALLERTON AVENUE (Near Allerton Theatre, Bronx) Phone, Olinville 2583 bene ter BAT SCIENTIFIC VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT 1604-6 Madison Ave, Between 107th & 108th Sts, Phone: LEHIGH 6382 International Barber Shop M, W. SALA, Prop. 2016 Second Avenue, New York (bet, 108rd & 104th Sts.) Bobs Our Specialty rivate Beauty Parlor all over the world revolutionary al holiday. enroll in the ranks of the workers Railroad freight ran into a washout | early today. | The men, Zeba Prall and Floyd | Young, were pinned under the cab of their submerged engine. The wreck occurred shortly after | the heavy freight, with two engines [hauling it had left Sayre. The first engine of the train plunged into the washout and toppled over. It was completely | submerged and Prall and Young, en- | gineer and fireman, were trapped. The second engine, manned by B. | Flumerfelt and William Sullivan, | also of Auburn, also was derailed. The two men were seriously injured and rushed to a hospital here. | Dr. M. Wolfson | Surgeon Dentist 141 SECOND AVENUR, Cor. Sth St. Phone, Orchard 2333. In case of trouble with your teeth come to see your friend, who has long experience, and cun assure you of careful trentment. to existing anti-working class legis- IN | near Oswego, N. Y., north of here | jation, since workers are periodically framed on murder charges. Comrade Frances Pilat MIDWIFE 351 E. 77th St., New York, N. Y. Tel. Rhinelander 3916 COMRAL MEET AT Giusti’s Spaghetti House 5-course Luncheon 50c—11 to 3 6-course Dinner 75c—5 to 9 A LA CARTE ALL DAY 49 West 16th Street Meet your Friends at GREENBERG’S Bakery & Restaurant 939 E. 174th St., Cor. Hoe Ave. Right off 174th Street Subway Station, Bronx DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Room 803—Phone: Algonquin 8183 All Comrades Meet at Not connected with any other office || Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF | SURGEON DENTIST 249 BAST 215th STREET Cor. Second Ave. New York Office hours: Mon., Wed., Sat., 9.30 a.m. to 12; 2 to 6 P. M. Tues. Thurs., 9.230 a. m. to 12; 4 to § p,m, Sunday, 10 a. m. to 1 p, m. Please telephone for appointment. { Telephone: Lehigh 602% Cooperators! Patronize SEROY CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. Y. Patronize 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. 1st & 2nd Sts.) Flowers for All Occasions 15% REDUCTION TO READERS OF THE DAILY WORKER Unity Co-operators Patronize SAM LESSER Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailor 1818 - 7th Ave. New York Between 110th and 111th Sts. Next to Unity Co-operative Hous tj FROM FACTORY TO YoU! BRONSTEIN’S VEGETARIAN HEALTH RESTAURANT 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx : vi Dairy nestavnase omrades “Will Always Find It Pleasant to Dine at Our Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx (near 174th St, Station) PHONE:— INTERVALE 9149, MEET YOUR FRIENDS at Messinger’s Vegetarian | and Dairy Restaurant |] 1763 Southern Blvd., T-onx, N.Y. Right off 174th St. Subway Station | For a Real Oriental Cooked Meal VISIT THE INTERNATIONAL PROGRESSIVE CENTER 101 WEST 28TH STREET (Corner 6th Ave.) RESTAURANT, CAFETERIA RECREATION ROOM Open trum 1@ a m te 12 p om. HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian | RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 5865 Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES with atmosphere 11 radicals meet 302 E.12th St. New York HIGH-GRADE MEN’S and NIJNY NOVGOROD, U.S.S.R., RENO, Nev. (By Mail) —Organ- (By Mail).—Anikin, a radio ama- ized bakers of Reno have won a Rational all over the world. Together we will go forward and carry on the | | Czechoslovak Manhattan: 2085 Lexington u: wage increase of $2 a week. teur of Nijny Novgorod, re estab-) Workers House, Inc. Ave. fight of the working class until the final emancipation of all the YOUNG MEN'S SUITS Vegetarian Restaurant = lished a record in distance radio con- f workers. = 7 q Long Live the Revolutionary tac either way upon a wave length, $47 E,. 72nd St. New York steel ae ath Ave Bigs Nes | oF, 3D. wine cue Po pane a pattice alter metre: e- sangeet ie Oppressed Colo- a Bales eee: amateur { Telephone: Rhinelander 5097 Tel. Windsor 9052-9092, | pay enced mae Strictly Vegetarizn Food be