The Daily Worker Newspaper, May 13, 1929, Page 5

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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, MAY 13 | REOPEN SACCO (SE IN BIG LIBEL HAL TOMORROW orker Called Fuller Murderer | OSTON, May 12.—The case of | Commonwealth of Massachusetts | inst Harry J. Canter has been} ed for Tuesday, May 14, before | Massachusetts Superior Court | ing in criminal session at Boston. | ter is charged with criminal libel | inst ex-governor Fuller, the | gman of Sacco and Vanzetti. The | ged libel consists in that Canter | tied a sign in a Communist elec- campaign demonstration before State House in Boston branding ler as the murderer of Sacco and} ‘RIGHT’ ELEMENTS Three Worker: Three workers and the manager were burned in an explosion in a varnish factory at Second Ave. and 15th St. Brooklyn on Friday. These workers received low pay for dangerous work, and are not Photo shows the plant after the fire. safeguarded cgainst accident. s Injured in Brooklyn Varni sh Plant Blast © ARITSKY POLICE. " EJECT WORKERS | |Left Wing Mass Meet Tomorrow Eve (Continued from Page One) rouncement of a mass meeting of |all cap and millinery workers was announced for tomorrow night, im- | mediately after werk, at Irving |Plaza Hall. | Speakers at the meeting tomor- |row night will include Louis Hy- |man, president of the Needle Trades |Industrial Union; Rose Wortis, Jo- | | | | \ | | | USSR PARTY HITS Moseow Supports the Shot Striker’s Boss Brags of Strike Thugs seph Boruchowitz, Gladys Schechter | and Sylvia Blecher, organizers of | PREPARING FOR |Local 43; H. Sazer and Zukofsky, |of the New York Cap and Millinery | Workers. Feingold of Chicago will “New” G. E. B, 1 | At Saturday’s session also the new General Executive Board was | Photo shows Lieut. Soucek, naval aviator, being greeted by the Fage Five HAGUE TRIES TO ~ COVER GRAFTING Jersey City Elections Tomorrow JERSEY CITY, N May 12.— Fireworks, bands and general bally- hoo are being used by democratic Mayor Frank Hague in cam- | paign to consolidate his position and get re-elected the districts which his graft hine operated with such success that his political enemies authorized the McAllister “investigating” commission to | stantiate charges of widespread graft and corruption. J his nis Campaign literature of the Hague forces is being used to lull public interest in the damaging admissions made before the “investigato Even the official county automobile: are being used in the vot atching campaign, Hague’s ene report. | Hague, of course, denies the charge tti, jal , To Draw Negro Labor |elected. The same gang of cynical| arch-jingo Admiral William Moffet, after setting an altitude record, paiat aunties ee ee oe ti, Canter faces a long jail i (Continued from Page One) ee |reactionaries will decorate the G. E,| to boost the Wall Street air service, which will be used to bomb work- |, “ large police guard wili be on Fae aaa perth at ames | Central CommitteeLine | the Daily Worker man represented,| to Communist Party |p'tne neat tre youre an did ducing | ers in the coming imperialist war [band to:( protect the, polls) trom hs o ernationa vabor De ense | ‘ i so they were quite friendly. | } - iieegest tro years, A light ‘bat ‘ ood ums peely used by both es @ New England District which | (Wireless By “Inprecorr”) ‘The strike here?” asked the (Continued from Page One) ananiporant chanwewas made by . ° e,¢ in pre-election scrambles. Burkitt conducting the case intends to! MOSCOW, U. S. S. R, May 12,— |elderly individual, apparently George leading the fight of the Negro|in. selection of Goldin of Local 42 ( ommunist Activities |self- led “Jeffersonian demo- ee uals au and re-|The meeting of the Moscow organ- | L. Storm himseli. ee kers against the exploiters, both| nq Bergstein of Canada. eye Hoy SDE oa Onis ainst Hague BS 8 whole Baccd> anzetti issue. | i>ation of the Communist Party of ; Strikes Are “Intimidation. ,__ black and white, plans to introduce!" Goldin for many years fought | - oe oe Meat Cbs ie 2 case was previously postponed | the Soviet Union adopted a resolu- ‘Well, it’s just intimidation, that’s resolutions into the trade unions de- against Zaritsky, not on principle, | coe maneuver of calling the Mc pee eee vacate 4. | tom, after the speech of Baumann, all. ‘ Pel paste full economic, political and )jnt pecause of difference in per- || MANHATTAN al BROOKLYN eee Uh emer ope S0C:R0u pike e subpoenaed. | onorting the Sixteenth Conference When did the strike commence? cial equality for Negroes, no dis-| ona} policies. Recently he made | — | However, after hundreds of wit- w bi a pee para ue de- | of the Communist Party of the| “About three weeks ago. About crimination against Negro workers] ,eace with the ezar, and for this Section 3, Subsection B. Section 6 {nesses testified to the graft and se will demand that he take the} a 3) z 3 Meets today at 9:30 p. 27th m., will , 6:30 p.m a dozen of the chauffeurs struck. | in the trade unions and condemning Then about 30 yard men, laborers,| Jim-Crowism, lynching and peonage. struck in what those fellows call a} Nearly 1,000 white and black sympathy strike.” | workers officially started off Negro|riisky, is a Trotskyist and an in- “How much were they getting a) Week in New York with great en- | veterate foe of the U. S. S. R. week,—the chauffeurs ? |thusiasm at the Negro Champion} 3,4 prior to the conclusion of thousands of pages of incriminating |evidence was read, the commission | came to the conclusion that the so- | lution of the corruption lay in “rec- ommending legislature >| waste in payrolls Soviet Union. The resolution ap- proved the Party line and con- demned the Right wingers and the conciliators. It warned, in particular, against the Right wing factionalism, point- he was rewarded with the job on St. |the G. E, B. Bergstein, another croney of Za-| nd and render an account of his ions leading to the execution of | two Italian rebels. This new attempt to railroad a itant worker to jail is looked ele are: Unit B, Section 4. An open educational meeting will be held to discuss the program of the Communist I tional Wednes- day, 8:30 p. m., 350 E. 8ist St memorial more vat 1 he t i ow] by war i Fp a aamae tie ce : . | Int tional Branch ¥ kins St., the | Thus, should the oppos fore rts in Massachusetts are making | 44 declaring that all such attempts | Y@¥ from $25 to $35 a week. | tary of the Communist Party of the! <16q to the delegates to the conven-|™» at 93 Ave. B Negro | Congress, Saturday, | 1 mpn ak the polls, the way is still ins 2, iki § : i “For how many hours a day?” | nj Ste ve he fact| ‘>. Aves Mee es Music 1 Brown's Modern Col-| left open for them to make as huge inst the 12,000 striking shoe-| would meet with the united resist- z y United States, said that the fact) sion by Local 48, Unit 1, Section 4. POC AS aL nae B rkers, who are defying the injunc- ? dhe whol 1 ist P. “Oh,—10 hours,” was the reply. | that the Party has set aside a special 5 5 Aiapeciamemeatnar wither held| ° ra profits from graft as the Hague ance of the whole Bolshevist Party. if si < é eee The document related how the D 0 3 E. 108rd st . Show roup—except that should the legis hn granted to the shoe manufac- ia seer “See OUR Union.” |week for intensifying the d delegates of Local 48 were elected | BORD Oy e ao nea e Ranh ee Branch 2, Hection &, na Vena ats a Paes ty legis- i i i . i = = Tai ig- aes . ‘ cnet 4 * Maas ‘Brave She oda 8 p. m, 313 Jation pass, the graft will be “ ers against peaceful picketing of Soviet Congress Opens. The Old Man continued. In re-| among the Negro workers, was sig-| +, participate in the convention; |tomorrow, 62nd St. and Manhattan | Semen ts today, 8 p. m., 318 ae g ill be “more Ave. ir shops. Moscow, sponse tv another polite question: |Mificant of the fact that the Party instructed to de- May 10.—More than how they were Che New England District of the |, 9 “Well, thi Sea vho was | Was a revolutionary party of work- i j Es ST aa e Due to the severe election laws 3 . ,000 delegates opened the Congress ell, this man Smith, who was 2 : ie mand unity by the reinstatement of es <j Dh ‘ U. D. has issued an urgent appeal |. Soviets at tater es Pederatea shot,—he was working here steady | ers of all colors and nationalities. | 7 cay 43, and for unity with the ° ° the Communist Party has no can- all its affiliations calling upon! Republics tonight, At the Opera|for about six months. But these No Love for Bosses. Needle Trades Industrial Union, in raterna 1g anizations didate in this election campaign. m to immediately send funds for | House, Josef Stalin, head of the | fellows always work on the quiet; “The Negro masses have no love! o.4or to make possible the organiza- pana vety the issues facing the : defense, as the defense treasury Communist Party, sat modestly far|@md you can’t always tell when | 0 tolerance for their exploiters,”| tion of tens of thousands of cap and workers are being brought to the empty because of the immense uins that have been made upon it the New Bedford arrested and} | millinery workers. | ' The statement continued to tell) ig MANHATTAN BROOKLYN of the brazen and arbitrary action they’re getting ready for a strike,” | Said Richard B. Moore. “They will “Of course, I suggest you get in| drop the church creed, remember the touch with our organization, the years of suppression, and bring a fore by the Party through meetings. WORKER ELECTROCUTED. in the rear, but was loudly cheered upon his arrival. ny other local cases. Funds should | New York Lumber ‘rade Associa-|militant spirit to the struggle| of the Zaritsky gang which follow-|"ntiona! Texttle Unlon Wants Volua-| Bast New York Valty ©: tne|_ LOS ANGELES (By Mail) —Ray rushed to Robert Zelms, Secretary | tion, the Grand Central Building, | @gainst capitalism. ed; how repeated demands for the) volunteers to prepare membership! soasun will be held at the corner of | Beasley, 22, was electrocuted, when .w England District I. L. D., 113} They can give you more informa-|_ Among the other speakers were) moo, were contemptuously and in-| books for the Southern textile stri| Hinsdale St. and Sutter, Ave. to-/a steel tower and water tank he dley Street, Room 6, Boston, | tion about the strikes in other places, | Harold Williams, organizer eal sultingly refused. | National ‘Textile Workers’ Union, Te seetea . Gudisman, Heller. witi [helped to put up came in contact with iss. too.” Negro department of Mkt ta “Zeritsky refused to grant us the| Fitth Ave. between 9 a. m. and 8) speak. |a power line here. O Powell and fahesCommunt ipshitz, y t jp. m. daily. | | ate i ; Attorney Harry Hoffman, who de- | VOTE IN NEWARK Shot for Striking. | the Communist ints sen ine tz floor of this convention,” the state- | D. ee ONE oT omer Sherrer, working with him, ided the New Bedford cases, the} a 5 i Be rwe) Oheetrey 2. ¥ lina | Ment says, “fearing that we will ex-| German Fraction Protest Meet, | ——@———————_—__— | were badley burned. mba trial and many others is the | The strikers in the place are fight- | district; Kermit Harden, Carolina the criminal action of the G.|..The, Berlin police terror will bey, ¢, wW. W. Council S Concert. orney in Canter’s case and the} ‘ ing for recognition of their union, | textile striker; George Pershing, who | ee te ve aaa ee Ranvise ate the micotine: At cen aner “Mr. God Is Not In,” by Harbor Al- RAIL WORKER KILLED nerican Civil Liberties Union willi Shown by Straw Ballot, jan increase m wages and improves |had just returned from the strike) "yt oment further exposed the| tomorrow, Room Ii, Jen,._ will be presented Neeale| | RAIL z Hon) asked to assist. | ‘ 7 working conditions. Smith was in-| area; Mary Adams, representing the ver of Spector i aki the pabuiete: Cataata CLAW Peete concert at iat s Ave, Pet BOE a mare Masses at Meetings | strumental. in leading the laborers |American Negro Labor Congress and} MRiV ver 0° SCC Oy oe eae nee eaten eee yw at| 830 Dp. mm, Saturday, . Other |An unidentified worker was killed out in a sympathy strike. He was|Louis Gibarti, international repre-|™otion to grant Local 43 the floor) The, club pirets | tmion Sauare, | musical numbers. on the eastbound tracks of the Le- * as an attempt to cover up his ap- Conti P f (Contemuedtnon, Reee One) proval of the G. E. B.arbitrary ac- high Valley Railroad near Mattano by a freight train. He was walk- The aim of the club, organized recent meeting at the office of th nion | shot by the policeman while on! sentative of the League Against Im- a le | Freiheit Symphony Orchestra. OVERCOME IN - SUBWAY BLAZE R.T. Endangers Lives for Profits’ Sake Gasoline spilled in an underground oreroom of the I. R. T.-B. M. T.| bway station at Canal St., between fayette and Center Sts., Saturday capitalist candidates are running a campsign without issues, urging the workers to vote for them because Congelton “will keep the wheels of progress turning,” because “Newark knows Howe—Howe knows Newark,” because you can “go big with Bige- low,” ete. Only the Communists have come forth with a worling class program, using the following slogans for the ballot: S. D. Levine “Political, So- cial, Racial equality for Negroes;” Frank Fischer: “for a workers and picket duty near the lumber yard. And Martin Lacey, organizer of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters and Chauffeurs, which is presumably in charge of the strike at the Storm Company has an- nounced that he will do nothing to prevent the framing of Smith. “We can’t find his name on our books,” is Lacey’s lame alibi! . Thus the treacherous A. IF. of L. chiefs reward this valiant worker who may yet lose his life in the} struggle against the corporation. perialism, Champion Fund. Karl Brodsky, L. D. lawyer, spoke on the ne ity for creating a substantial “Champion Sustaining Fund” which will make possible the spreading of the influence of the paper among the Negro workers. A good coliection for the Negro Cham- pion was taken up at the dinner. In a statement issued last night the New York District of the Inter- national Labor Defense pledged its full support to National Negro Week tions in breaking up strikes of Lo- cal 43, provocated by himself, as manager of Local 24. The action of the administration | in slandering the delegates of Local 43 is attacked in the statement, as is also Zaritsky’s maneuver to refer the entire question to the Commit-| tee on Officers’ Reports, for the pur-| pose of keeping the facts of the un- scrupulous actions of the G. E. B. in smashing Local 43 from the dele- gates, The statement concludes with a 1 Workers International Relief, 1 |Square, is to take p the life of the work events of working class interest FIVE WORKERS Aged Oil W tures featuring | r and deal with | Powell levening at 1400 Boston Road conducted by be held every Rehearsals will Tuesday DIE IN BLAZE Workers Relief Call : textile workers win their strike | orker should report to the Workers Inter- national Relief, Room 604, 1 Union | Out for Volunteers to Help Immediately Volunteers to help the southern | Arnold|ing the track and did not hear the approaching train. Equal-Pay for-Equal Work! Comrade Frances Pilat MIDWIFE 351 E. 77th St., New York, N. Y. Tel. Rhinelander 3916 ternoon filled the station with |{@™™ers government,” Anna Dren-| And, if Smith survives, which is/ and called upon all class-conscious|demand that the delegates hear the Among Trapped |Square, New York City. Food and | Meet your Friends at 10ke and forced. crowds of pas- |Kowski: for the workers, against not certain, he will be tried on a) workers to make this week produc-| truth about the attack on Local 43, | at May 12.—Five |tents are needed for the striking | GREENBERG’S ngers returning home from work |"'® POSses. “felonious assault” charge, accord-| tive of concrete results by drawing| and warns them that “the member-| AMARILLO, Tex., May 12.—Five| outers. Help the W. I. R. raise | the street. Subway workers in the Raise Working Class Issues. ing to District Attorney McGeehan, | Negro worl into all left wing | ship of Local 43, as well as the en-| workers were burned to death and/the funds to purchase them. Bakery & Restaurant ‘ker room escaped just in time to oid serious injury. | The B. M. T. tunnels filled with oking fumes, forcing the firemen | work in shifts to avoid suffoca- | One of the most important prob- lems facing the workers in Newark is that of housing. Being an in- dustrial town with a large working- class population, Newark has some of the Bronx, | Open Air Moetings Planned This Week organizatio: The statement, sign~| tire membership will hold you re- ed by Rose Baron, secretary, fol- lov Must Strengthen. “The New York District of the sponsible for approving the disrup- | tive activities and the expulsion poli- cies of the G. E. B.” | “Our members demand unity in three others were reported to have died from injuries when fire de- | stroyed a tourist hotel here. The origin of the blaze was not deter- Dr. M. Wolfson 141 SECOND AVENUE, Cor. 9th St. Phone, Orchard 2333. 939 E. 174th St., Cor. Hoe Ave. Right off 174th Street Subway Station, Bronx the ranks of the Cap and Millinery | mined. Twelve were injured in the Workers and unity with the Needle | fire. of the worst slums in the east. mn Seven romets Nemarets HeLa Newark is an industrial town, and ercome and required treatment at | International Labor Defense en- |dorses wholeheartedly National Ne- In case of trouble with your teeth Monday. come to see your friend, who has All Comrades Meet at | theref housi: fi kers is sr iS Tool a . Trades Industrial Union.” The hotel was a three story struc-|] long experience, and can assure adquarters. therefore housing for workers is @} 37th St. and 7th Ave. 8 p. m.—|gro Week now being held thruout| e EmCe, Pee 3 The menace of the fire was in-|big issue—for the Communists, who M. Adatn SalsnayesGelthe eauntrytard: as the ontealtte: a es |ture built in the days when Amarillo you of eareiul treatment. | BRONSTEIN’S eased with the difficulty of direct-|demand city-built houses, rented at 0" Veense organization of the working | Successful Banquet. was a struggling panhandle cow | a | VEGETARIAN HEALTH g water streams between the sta- | ten per cent of the workers earnings. Newark (speakers to report to 93 s, pled to carry on ceaseless Over 500 left wing millinery | town. | RESTAURANT m walls. Commenting on the com- | ny’s responsibility for constant | nger of such fires to which em- dyes and passengers are exposed, bway workers condemn the com- | iny’s practise of using gasoline in e store-rooms underground instead the safer but more expensive ectricity. “Electricity could be | ed just as satisfactorily for any | b we have to do,” one worker! inted out. “But the company rules tt its use as ‘too expensive.’ ” ANT GET CITY TRUST RECORDS Failing yesterday to obtain the samination records of the defunct ity Trust Bank, Saul S. Myers to- ‘ay brought United States Judge nox into the squabble over posses- on of the papers through which fyers will endeavor to get former anking superintendent Harry F. Varder to reveal in cross-examina- jon more damaging evidence con- erning his relations with the City ‘rust Bank, for which he sanctioned rans of $3,000,000 just before it piled. | The bankruptcy hearing is being ushed by the Lancia Motors Co., a absidiary concern of the late Pres- ‘lent Ferrari, of the City Trust ‘ank, with whom Warder was ciendly. Fearing to let further incriminat- ig details of the widespread graft 1 which most parties are incrim- ated, the quarrel over possession f the papers was kept inside Judge ‘mox’s chambers. State troopers sported at noon for duty at the {fice of Moreland Commissioner foses, appointed to “examine” the ank’s affairs. Moses complained One gang of capitalist candidates wants to let the Prudential Life build houses and the other wants home industry to get the big rents. The War Danger. Newark has spent last year over $50,000 advertising a military air- port, used for commercial purposes during what peace is left. It is spending thousands more. The so- cialist candidate Reilly, endorces it. Dupont Ammunition Company and Grasselli Chemical Gompany (poison gas) have big plants here. All the capitalists would find a war profit- able, Police Repression. William J. Brennan, head of the department of public safety, which means police and fire departments, poses as a “labor man” in elections. Green, Woll, Major Berry and other bureaucrats have endorsed him, along with Scott of the strikebreak- ing United Textile Workers, and a lot of others. He sent his police to enforce injunctions against. and break the strikes of the taxi drivers, window cleaners, barbers, waiters, newspaper delivery men, and others. His police broke up the Sacco-Van- zetti demonstration and the celebra- tion of the Bolshevik revolution. Communist Meetings. All the meetings held by the Com- munist candidates have exceeded ex- pectations. Many workers organiza- Mercer St. at 7:30 p. m.—Speakers: Nessin, Sparer, L. Bloomenthal, Gussakoff, S. Pollak, Spiro, Owens, Speer, Kagan, Baum, Tuesday. | 72nd St. and Manhattan Ave,— Speakers: Glassford, Rees, Ehrlich | (8 p. m.). | Wednesday. 138rd St. and Lenox Ave., 8 p. m. —Speakers: Williams, Bloomfield, Primoff. 138th and St. Anne’s, 8 p. m.— Speakers: Padgug, Taft. Myrtle and Fleet (Williamsburgh, Brooklyn) 8 p. m.—Speakers: Alex- ander, Spiro, Thursday. | 137th and 7th Ave, 8 p. m— Speakers: Moore, M. Adams, R., Grecht. | 180th St., near 3rd Ave. (IR, T.),| 5:30 p. m.—Speaker: Wright. Friday. | 132nd St. and 5th Ave., 8 p. m.— | Speakers: Alexander, H. Zam, Mo- reau. Wilkins and Intervale, 8 p. m.— } Speakers: Chernenko,*Solon DeLeon. | Saturday. | 1383rd and Lenox, 8 p. m.—Speak- | ers: S. Darcey, Auerbach. Rubber Trust Takes tions and the May Day conference of 20 organizations have endorsed the Communist candidates. At the May Day meeting, which was also a campaign rally, the workers packed two halls, Street meetings have been held when weather permitted, and meet- ings before factories during the noon hour. USHERS MAY BE DISPLEASED CINCINNATI, Ohio, May 12.— The invention of an electrical seat- rat he had been forced to summon 1em because police, who were pre- umably supposed to “guard” rec- rds and serve subpoenaes, had been vithdrawn, xd:fipaliatibnsesmnets mets, ¥ ing device is announced which con- sists of a panel which would display, with illuminated numerals, the loca- tion of vacant seats in a theatre, It Over Exploitation of | Georgia Mill Slaves | CARTERSVILLE, Ga., May 12.— Sale of the American textile Com- pany’s $5,000,000 plant here to the Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co., was announced today by President John A. Miller of the textile corporation. The mill will be devoted hereafter exclusively to the manufacture of fabric for tires. More than 1,000 workers are employed. All the workers in this mill are unorganized, end work for wages as may displace ushers. 1% jing machinery struggle in behalf of the Negro|Workers had gathered at a banquet Gites Gus veceise ions tele color ,2¢ Irving Plaza Hall, 15th St. and | are made the especial victims of ibe cern ees Sgn an “But we must not be content with /£%4 aie ane ees ot oe merely observing Negro Week and | ving Wascatd ceMnicnca palin; Borns | making pledges of solidarity. ‘The batatii: Ganaval Wnarthgoerit the Joint I. L. D. calls upon all class-conscious \Board of the: Needle ‘Trades Work. | workers and especially the members ecesdudistrals Unto doseph Bert | of the I. L. D. to make this week|")ovits and Ben Gold. | productive of significant concrete re-| Gojq yeceived an Ra dehen kell sults. This week must result in the raset to dpeake ctinediendoua: enti strengthening of the militant organl-|incm ‘ollowed his announcement | zations of the Negro workers, the|!115+ the “fighting, milliner: workers | American Negro Labor Congress, | inion Soul nee Syaleaine, tas the:| the Negro Champion and the Har- Needle Trades Workers Industrial | lem Tenants’ League. In addition, | Union,” all class-conscious workers must bend all efforts toward drawing Ne- LA CUARDIA T0 gro workers into all left wing or- | | | capitalist ‘justice.’ ganizations, including the Interna-| tional Labor Defense. Join I. L. D. “The Negro workers are the most terrifically exploited section of the American working class, doubly vic- timized because of class and color. This means that Negroes who at- tempt to break the chains that en- slave them, who join with their white brothers in a fight against the system that exploits them both, are made the special victims of the elaborate frame-up and strikebreak- WASHINGTON, May 12.—Repre- | sentative La Guardia, of New York, called on Secretary of State Stim-| son yesterday and asked him not to \return the Escobar aids, Ateca and) | Antonio Maquero to Mexico where) |as paymasters of the clerical reac- erat | tionary forces they would probably Orato S| be shot. La Guardia told Stimson, courts. Only the verneEN ie. | With blithe disregard for the con-| bor Defense fights for Negro work-| (+4) deportation of revolutionary ers who fall into the clutches of} Be | workers, that the U. S. always pro- the capitalist courts. And only PY tanta political refugees. drawing more Negro workers into U. S. Holds Money. the International Labor Defense can Washington and ‘New York oft. we adequately perform this task, cials had the Mexican rebel pay- “We greet our black fellow work- | masters seized when they came ers during Negro Week, we pledge! into New York with $750,000 which cur support in every way, and we) never reached the soldiers conscript eall upon all workers, black and| oq into Escobar’s ill fated “revolu- white, to build the I. L. D., not only | tion.” during this week, but thruout the) The Banco de la Laguna Refac- year.” cionatio of Torreon has filed suit for the money, and an attachment hag’ been levied against it in New (By | Y¢rk. Washington supports the Calles| de in the Mexican affair, and La juardia is not expected to get very! RAIN HURTS FARMERS. MADISONVILLE, Tenn, Mail).—Heavy rains have damaged farmers’ crops considerably in the | last week. Raising waters covered low as $5 a week, 12 and 14 hours aday. 2 side fk many farm villages. _..dututwihss.. far with his plea. ,.sewiiiecsvaliaes,. COMRADES 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 ‘For Any Kind of Insurance” | RL BRODSK (ARL Murray Hil. 5550 . East 42nd Street, New York | Cooperators! PATRONIZE BERGMAN BROS. Your Nearest Stationery Store Cigars, Cigarettes, Candy, Toys 649 Allerton Ave. BRONX, N. Y. Telephone: Olinville 9681-2—9791-2 Branch of the Amalgamated Food Workers 183 W. Sist 8t,, Phone Circle 7336 BUSINESS MEETING<] 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 House DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Reom 803—Phone: Algonquin 8183 Not connected with any other office Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST 249 BAST 115th STREET Cor. Second Ave. Office hours: M a.m. to 1 Tues. Thu: % to 8 p. m. Sunday, 10 a. m, to 1 p, m. Please telephone for appointment. Telephone: Lehigh 6022 Cooperators! Patronize CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. Y¥. Phone: LEHIGH 6382 laternational Barber Shop M, W. SALA, Prop. 2016 Second Avenue, New York (bet. 103rd & 104th Ste.) Ladies Bobs Our Specialty Private Beauty Parlor Patronize No-Tip Barber Shops 26-28 UNION SQUARE (1 flight up) 2700 BRONX PA’K EAST (corner Allerton Ave.) Tel.: DRY¥dock 8880 FRED SPITZ, Inc. FLORIST NOW AT 31 SECOND AVENUE (Bet. Ist & 2nd Sts.) Flowers for All Occasions 15% REDUCTION TO READERS OF THE DAILY WORKER 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx ROSE — VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT Comrades ‘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 Blyd., 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 trom 1@ » m te 12 p m. HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 5865 Phone: Stuyvesant ‘3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 302 E.12th St. New York Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 199 SECOND AVE] UE Bet. 12th and 13th Sts. Strictly Vegetarian Food

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