The Daily Worker Newspaper, May 23, 1929, Page 5

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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, MAY 2 3, 1929 Page | Five WANTS SUPREME GOURT “INQUIRY” sity Trust ‘Assets’ Are Entirely Worthless (Continued from Page One) ion of depositors before a bank pens for business. The late Francis M. Ferrari had wned so many enterprises that he| right have been able to make the) apital appear on the books when | ctually “it had come in the front} oor of the bank and gone out the ide door,” it was suggested, | Warder Aided Swindle. Yet however much easier the task { asset-padding was made by the umber of Ferrari’s interests, he the members of the supreme co urt. Above is a model of the new home in Washington planned for those nine ser Wall Street gives its faithful servants the bi ants of t of every Wall St., thing. ould never had escaped with the housands of dollars in graft with- ut connivance from his close friend Varder, (who pocketed $30,000 and esigned when the scandal got too Communist Activities ot for him) and other Tammany | Jmeeting at Stone and Pitkin Ayes. eaders dragged into the mess of || MANHATTAN || tomorrow evening.» orruption at Monday's hearing. Ee read, | New Jersey Units Conference. Tammany’s contributors to the Party nice A conference of New Jersey Com- Keep June plenic to Pleasant, Bay ree aaet windle include to date Edward J. ilynn, nephew of ex-Gov. Smith, udge Francis X. Mancusco, and his | ather, former Sheriff H. Warren {ubbard, and Dr. Charles Brancati, Fi nd all the time other politicians are Park, open. Unity ff, shool, will nd Communis Cooperative. instructor of the lecture on at the eing added to the rich list. The ee ditor of the fascist newspaper “I! | Dow des reesitee ‘rogresso” is also involved ‘the meeting of the Downtown Ut the date of the Party , 1800 Seventh Ave., munis |day ter, at the Workers Cen- Unit organ- * 1 p.m, Union Square. * and unit especialy urged to attend ‘a includes report of organizer, ts of delegates, discussion of election campaign, reorgani er tion anization work, liems and others. colonization Party units will be held Sun- * industrial organizers ‘The organization of shop nuclei, or- prob- PROTEST REPEAL OF RENT LAWS Harlem Tenant League Calls Mass Meeting To protest the expiration of the Emergency Rent Laws on May 31, which will result in even greater rent raises and more dispossesses, the Harlem Tenants’ League has called a mass meeting for Sunday. May 26, at 3:30 p. m., at Mother Zion Community House, 151 West 136th St. A leaflet, calling upon the Har- - lem tenants to fight against extor- Definite approval of delayed bank |} At 7:20 pm. tanorgow at new head- | tatements in defiance of state pit ays GA Lower Bronx Rranch 1, Section 5 i i y % et 2 Social. Sela tia dene ce Margera tinig meets at 101 W jacinga et Siem bee gigen by the unit lupenvine di the, QepeSuneh ia Woes cre Maleate sD Tig + in’ connection. with the membership ablished at Tuesday’s hearing by hie da \drive at 71 3 ey witnesses who showed that only! ‘rhe unit meets today at 6 p. m.,|Satur 0 | i required |at 101 W. 27th St act 1 presented by polieianslegoes Raney eed rsa \ 4) * German "proletarian dramatic club our were submitted by Ferrari’s Upper Hare Other entertainment will be offered i i Hs oxi P : t speaker W t thering. fficers during the bank’s existence. ithe unit meets a 8:80 p.m. today A speaker UL SOT ee he ga ing ‘i i at the new ¢ r abo’ Previous hearings had also re Center, 235 W 129th St eke Harlem Cait, Communiat shed proof that entire minutes of Youth League. ~ BROORT 1 t ll be held at the he City Trust Company had been YN Hopen’air garden at 143°H, 103d St. aked, that an alleged salary of §7-, Uiltaremection © at 8 p.m. Saturd Music. enter: 00 a year paid to Judge Francis X./ Unit meets today, at 6:30 p. m, attainment, eloftered interesting fea [ancusco was as worthless as o‘ber 56 nhattan, Ave, A | > ntries on the ban! records, and Section 6 Literature Agents, ‘ ales Brons ‘e. ne lee a inst geo Literature agents will meet at 8:15 meeting will be held at 8:30 p. rat loans charged against Mancusco p.m, today, §6 Manhattan Avenue. |m. today at 715 Hast 1asth St. A nd his father were paper loans aly. Yet Mancusco, as chairman of he board of directors, had seen the Brownkville ¢ ommantat Youth League. The League will hold an open a r mittees wi report of the newly elected executive will be given. Sub-com- be “elected. ‘committee sts of loans which a bank exam- rer had described as “doubtful.” A Case of Poor Memory. Warder had conveniently “forgot- mn” everything about a little red ook which contained more incrim- iating evidence. It was shown by sstimony from former employes of | ‘arder that the book had last seen | re light in the drawer of Warder esk, from whence, apparently, it ad vanished forever. MA A Jugoslayian Workers Club, An entertainment and dance be given Saturday, May Workers Center, 26 Union Music by the Yugoslavian Tamburica Orchestra, wil 25, Commissioner Moses and chief). yastem Interencial Club Dance. yunsel Walter Pollak suspended) 4 dance will be given Tuesday, iblic hearings yesterday. They will 28, 8:30 p.m. at 145 W. 136th St ssume today. However, federal Referee Henry . Davis resumed at two o'clock yes- in the Die Naturefreunde. social evening will be held at F, W. Hall, 350 E. 8ist St., to- A the A. morrow night. English section will hike to wey Bugis heerines Ni oa rha along the Catskill acqu HR i 4 ep. 0. ichael_F, Longo, Lancia Motors |XenPernt aay and Sunday. Meet ankruptey, whose assets included 242na St. and Van Cortlandt Park, 9 ity Trust stock. .m, Saturday, it is possible that Warder will be | at on the stand at today’s hearings » answer questions he avoided at 1e Moses hearing by refusing to. gn waivers of immunity—provided ore startlingly-sudden catastrophes ke the deatn of his wife on the eve ' her appearance on the witness * Office Workers’ Union. An, open ir meeting will be held) nd Park Ave. at 12:30 noon today cers merman and Rae Heim. ‘A roof garden dance will be held at Hechscher Foundation, 104th St and Fifth Ave. Wednesday evening, June * # «* Progressive ¥ h Club. Harle: h Clubs The club will join the J at the Square. Workers Fraternal Organizations Proceeds Ny Tid.’ itations and songs. |the workers’ weekly, * * “Ongdabl at Swedish-American Work- ers Athletic Cab. 1) 3, Louis Engdair the Daily Worker, Soviet Untodn in 192: tertainment at the Swedish ae Hall, 267 Sixth Av Place, by Spa Jewish Workers Clubs. Members of 18 meet Sunday, 9 |Station of the I. R at Pelham Bay for the gen- tionate rents, dispossessions and lagainst the reneal of the rent laws, has been widely distributed in Har- lem. The Emergency Rent Laws were passed in 1920 by the pressure of the overcrowded tenants in Harlem who were being subjected to high rents because of lack of space. The last vestige of the laws, applying to all avartments renting at less than $10 per room per month, will be repealed May 31 on the suggestion of a commission appointed by the! state legislature which is Supposed ; to have gone into a careful “survey. The investigation carried on ‘by lth ¢ Daily Worker exposed the brutal exploitation by the landlords and torent raises, which in some cases {amounted to 50 and 60 per cent at a time, | ° IStrikers Picket Fake ‘Liberal’ Cooperative (Continued from Page One) w York Clubs will |titude of the Consumers League. Long confessed that he could do eral hike to Hunters Island arranged |nothing because he is afraid of an- by the City Committee o: ers’ clubs. * ‘Truck Party, Bronx Workers Club. A truck party to Valhalla will be [held Sunday, Meet at Rose Garden, Boston Road, 8:30. }13 ‘BROOKLYN || “Marching Guns,” by the Workers Laboratory Theatre, will be presented {at the entertainment and literary evening of the Brownsville Workers \Club Saturday night, at 154 Watkin for the benefit’ of the Needle Trades Workers’ Industrial Union. |Samuel Goldstein will give a piano and are avoided. hike Sunday. Meet at i492 Madison |recital. Singing and recitatjons will Ave. 8:80. be rendered. eas 1 BRONX 1} Williamsburgh 1. L. D. | The first of a series of open Scandinavian Workers’ Club. meetings will be held at Varet St Will, be given at Vasajand Graham Ave. tomorrow night 14sth St. and Walton (Speakers, I. Zimmerman, Dr. C. J nce program Will follow ‘Hoffer and Nelson. 30,000 WORKERS Vorkers Will Answer Owners’ Offensive BRESLAU, Germany, May 22.— general lockout affecting 50,000 orkers was announced by the union | Silesian Textile Industrialists to- y to take effect Saturday. | The lockout is a part of the of- nsive started by the textile bosses the lockout of 45,000 workers last | tumn at Muenchen Gladbach, in attempt to keen wages at a low) rl pnd break the union, As happened in the great Ruhr :kout, of the steel men last fall, e reformist labor union leaders e again talking about carrying e case through the arbitration urts, despite the award finally anted by the social-democratic inister of labor in the steel dispute aich was favorable to the mill eners. ’ farlem Labor Center Cat we nae strike of the eorrices, wil be made, | Dress Meet Tuesday. The new Harlem Labor Center at; On Tuesday a general membership 5 West 129th St., will be officially meeting of all dress workers will be rened this coming Saturday eve-|held at Manhattan Lyceum, 66 E. ng, May 25, with a social and/4th St. A comprehensive report of - ince under the auspices of Unit A, the activities of the dress depart- setion 4, Communist Party of the|ment will be given at this meeting, S. A. The new center takes up and a record attendance is expected. entire private house and will be! Both Louis Hyman, president, and ilized as a real workers’ center in| Ben Gold, secretary-treasurer of the + midst of Negro Harlem. Needle Workers’ Industrial Union, Several labor organizations have will speak at this meeting. -eady made it their meeting place, | Week-End Open Forums. tluding the Harlem local of the) A series of open forums to mob- merican Negro Labor Congress, |ilize for the coming fur strike will 2 Harlem unit of the Communist be held in various parts of the city uth League, the Negro Workers uuring the coming week end, it was lief Committee, and Units A and) announced last night by the Needle of Section 4. | Trades Workers’ Industrial Union. The dance on Saturday night will) the first of a fixture of regular | HOFFMAN ACQUITTED; FIVE | turday night dances at which good YEARS EN JAIL, sic and refreshments will be fur-| Harry Hoffman was acquitted at a hed for a nominal price. All|Brooklyn court last night of a rkers are urged to attend these ‘ular Saturday night dances, and vecially to come out this Saturday the formal opening of the cén- \ TALE OF RIGHT WING TREACHERY Vital Meets ots Called by Needle Union (Continued fron Page One) Hungarian Workers’ Club, 350 E. 8ist St. . Local 35 Tonight. Local 35 of the Cloak and Dress ; |Pressers will hold a general mem- bership meeting tonight at Webster Hall, 11th St. and Third Ave. Weiss, | manager of the cloak department of | the Joint Board, will discuss the | threatened fake stoppage of the| right wing grafters, it is announced. ce ree + oe Cooper Union Meet Soon. | Plans are progressing for the which will be held soon at which) Bauer. He had been tried three times previously and held in jail nearly five years before the verdict of acquittal, great Cooper Union mass meeting \final preparations for the general charge of murdering Mrs. Maude C.} SENTENCE MORE IN FOOD STRIKE Pickets Refuse to Be) Terrorized (Continued from Page One) ' Deakers include [, Zin- | ————— as | that the 40 others, to be tried to- | day, be held for violation of Section | 660 of the Penal Law—or disoboy- |! |] was located for a period of thirty ing a court order. Brodsky declined to do so, but agreed to adjourn the | 40 cases to June 10, Despite the severity of the sen-| itences, the cafeteria strikers are |maintaining solid ranks and refuse to be terrorized back into conditions ‘of slavery. | * * Important Correction! | A regrettable technical error oc- curred in yesterday’s account of the jfood strike, by which it was made to appear that “Local 719 had ex- pelled three of its members, Robert |Long, I. Fox and Harry Annis be- cause of their support of the focd strike.” | As a matter of fact these three militant workers are leaders of Cooks and Broilers, Local 719, which \is a progressive labor organization, vhich from the beginning gave its junstinted aid and support to the courageous struggle of the cafeteria strikers. Exposed Strikebreaking. The three workers were expelled, vit should be noted, from the reac- ‘tionary Local Joint Executive Board lof the Hotel, Restaurant Employes International Alliance of New York, \affiliated with the A. F, of L., to | which they were delegates from Lo- ‘eal 719. The local has consistently | exposed the strikebreaking policies \of the Joint Board, whose most re- \actionary spokesman is William Lehman, secretary of Local 1, Wait- ers and Waitresses. | Make every factory our fortress. i Organize shop nuclei. Issue shop papers. Build the Communist Party. f the work-!tagonizing the wealthy Consumers | League. He is afraid that’ they would drop out of the Eastern States | Cooperative League, of which he is | secretar The cafeterias operated by the Consumers League are called “Our Cafeterias.” | At the last several conventions of ithe Eastern States Cooperative League, there has been a sharp fight between the left wing workers co- ers Cooperative and Camp Wocolona and the petty bourgeois, conservative jelements led by James P. Warbasse airjand Cedric Long. Penny-Savers. The militants demanded that the cooperative movement should be an organic part of the labor movement, and not a device for saving pennies for members of the middle class. | Warbasse and his group maintained the unique point of view that in the cooperative movement workers and cmpeye lose their class status, all becoming “consumers. ERON SCHOOL Moved! The Eron Preparatory School, which holds a Regents Charter as a private high school and which years at 187 East Broadway, has now moved and is now located in larger and more commodious quarters at 853 Broadway, Corner 14th Street, facing Union Square. The Eron Preparatory School runs courses in: (1) Regents and College Entrance preparatory for all colleges and universities. (2) All Commercial and Secretarial Subjects. (3) Comptometry, EI keeping and Ele (4) All grades of Engl ligent foreigners. Registration for Our Summer Term Is Now Open. Telephone: STUYVESANT J. E. Eron, Principal. h for intel~ 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 Hotel and Restaurant Workers Branch of the Amalgamated Food Workers 133 W, 5iat 8t,, Phone Circle Tas BUSINESS MEETING] eld on the first end of the month at 3 p. m, age noire Advertise your Union Meetings here, For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City operatives, such as the United Work- | JUDGE REVEALS BUILDING TRUCE ,Lockout Club Still to S Be Handy Weapon (Continued from Page One) ganize f the cafet: workers’ union, each for urging the strikers to violate injunctions pre- venting picketing. That the lockout scheme, in which the Building Trades Council joined with the employers, will not come off at this time is now quite clea Specifically the reasons for this seem to be: (1) The builders cannot afford it now on account of the gi- gantic building contracts which they must fulfill. (2) The building trades fakers, especially the reaction job-trust gang in Local 3, Elect ‘al Wor of which H. H. Broach is the little czar, fear that the fav- orable publicity received by the bosses may result in an investiga- tion, thus incidentally exposing the swamp of corruption. (3) Due to the forthcoming municipal elections, the Tammany Hall gang fear that a crisis in the building trades situa- tion might disclose the crooked and profitable alliances which they are maintaining with the officialdom of the building trades unions. A Ready Club. Despite the fact that the lockout order is revoked for the time being,| it is clear that the bosses will wield it as a club against the building trades workers whenever they de- cide that they no longer need the GERMAN BOSS OUT OF DEBT PARLEY manding t Sarre industrial district, immediate evacuation of he Rhineland by foreign troops and! eleration of the return of the now under ague of Nations mandate, to Ger- SAIRON STRIKERS TO DEMONSTRATE many. The Allicd experts acted upon the eservations today, favorably for Rae the most part but not entirely, ac- xr 7+ Se Steel Trust Head Bolts éoraing to advices from Paris. | WO? king Women on s Plan Decis Dawes sion (Continued from. Page One) gate to the conference of the inter- ¢ ‘ : the Picket Lines Connect Debts With Reparation. PARIS, May 2: e French gov nment served notice on the Am national bankers in Paris, resigned |jcan government today that the; 4 ; from the delegation today after in-| question of the war debts depends , under forming the German government entirely on whether the reparation tura that the prolongation of repara- conference now proceeding in Paris Workers’ Union Mit tions payments beyond 37 years | will come to a successful conclusion, of the iron ronz would be “intolerable” and he would This is the same position taken by 08 fuse to sign any such agreem the British who insist on making . The d e ind fore t The German foreign 0 ed that his retirement from the del-/ pre- the debts dependent upon the important parties, Reich ments, despite Wall Street’s in-/ baum, egation was definite. ence to the contrary. and of the Li retary of the) The foreign office, replying to| Longwood A German tion of Industries,| Washington's request for informa- ¢™ and oth ea eEt 3| who has been one of the alternates,! iin about France's intentions to-|*00K part in the demonstration | replaces Voegler. wards the debt accord, notified Nor-|the Madison | Works. a The resignation of Voegler leads|man Armour, the American charge ac uikset ae aikat Fare Eoithe\ belie® ‘that the ‘tuna coneldiatfatvas) thal as soem aaithe weps| tts mes eres ne, MO tained in the final note sent by the | arations experts conclude their work and threatening the ith re bankers to Shacht last night are and Premier Poincare can use pres- clubs, H _ high above the maximum set by the sure on political groups in the| The Oscar Bach w LL German bankers. ‘hamber of Deputies, Poincare will| 42nd St nhattan, v erda The head of the German delega- ask parliament’s approval of the tied up, when over 40 v : tion, Shacht, was given the collec-| accord. all unor; j tive reply of the allies to the Ger- A foreign office spokesman point- strikers of the Re liance man reservations to the Owen plan oq out that parliamentary ratifica- | UP DY, bossé yesterday. It was framed in such a ti, is almost impossible now unless yesterday re ed I a eects the experts succeed, because several OWer Stal ply from the German capit for the occurr including the re yeaa by Dee untae thus re’ publican national alliance headed by|sVestment in. the. future Lee “of the conference on the|DePuty Louis Marin, are fighting | strikers laughed at this crude ru BUG Cree ratification. However, once the ex-|) oy than bac i : Germans an d paving the way for a 2 Sice : *_ to get them back. my avaraneanetwelmnylockine nota. the ene) cen une ne mance tia er t 7 tore in caters The cnen break (ficient incom from Germany to], ma ae meet Anglo-American debt agree-| Pe hel |made by Voegler seems to indicate Wert Grea again aden a Ge far, tn Hele that reparations payments have cut|™ents, they say, Poincare will use| | a strike, the iron fist” in parliament, services of even the docile and cor-| the potential profits of the German 1,000 men the Arc rupt union chiefs, and determine on| capitalists to a minimum, that is eRcaealutbon tana va Work Be acs cus all union-|below their demands. \Light mine ran Wealthy Union. Over 3,800 are now on strike. S stry | * * * _While these maneuvers are con-| partIn, May 22. — Germany's Man Who Attacked Girl) __. a i tinuing between the union official-| Pr "tions to, acceptance of the FASCISTI TALK “MORAL dom and the profit-glutted employ- eerie ese alan of repara-| Andrey Calhoun, 21, accuses) ROME, May 22 (UP).—The gov- ers, the fate of the workers in the) |: 3) ’.ottlement, now near its final|/David Day, son of a wealthy and| ernment campaign against beauty industry lies in the hands of their ‘Ons setilement, : enemies, the bosses and labor -bu- JEL ante teat e He Ne aac prominent sitizen of beating her up, contests and short skirts wa: reaucracy. Thousands of building "Ce, 8r¢ political as well as eeP- and throwing her from his automo-/ed up today when the minister of trades workers are unorganized and) OM Cespite pubic asset’ ols y¢_|bile and beating her against a tree|the interior issued a circular to all and | the contrary, it was revealed in of- 2 ta no attempt is being made to union- ficial sources here tonight. when she resisted his too intimate |prefects ordering them to keep dete The German conditions, included advances. He was yesterday found| special vigilance at bathing resorts Urge Building Committees. Militants are continuing to point out that the latest conspiracy be- tween the bosses and the union fakers is but another reason for the immediate formation of building committees and a Workers’ Council which will defend and fight for the interests of the great mass of build- ing trades workers. BAN STUDE PARADE. SYD. May Permission for a university proces- ion here Thursday probably will be withdrawn because of the action of students tonight in throwing wreaths and vases from the cenotaph of the national memorial into the roadway. The students howled down the vice- chancellor of the university when he Australia, 2 tried to speak, and otherwise caused | | disorder. Comrade Frances Pilat MIDWIFE 351 E. Tith St., New York, N. Y. Tel. Rhinelander 3916 “For An Any y Kind of Insurance” of Insurance” (CARL BRODSKY Telephone: Murray Hil. 5550 ‘, East 42nd Street, New York Cooperators! PATRONIZE BERGMAN BROS. Your Nearest Stationery Store Cigars, Cigarettes, Candy, Toys 649 Allerton Ave. BRON Telephone: Olinville Ae 2—9791-2 DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Recom 803—Phone: Algonquin 8183 Not connected with any other office Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST 249 HAST 115th STREET Cor. Second Ave. New York Office hours: Mon., Wed., Sat., 9.30 a.m. to 12; 2 to 6 P.M. Tues. Thurs. 9.30 a. m, to 12; 2 to 8 p,m. Sunday, 10 a, m. to 1 p. m. Please telephone for apgointment, Telephone: Lehigh"6022 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 PAnK 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 THE DAILY WORKER in the joint draft report drawn up by Dr. Hjalmar Schacht of Ger- many, and Sir Josiah Stamp of) Great Britain, were made available | guilty peace, and fined $75 by Judge Mead jin } of tions which assault and breach of to prevent any demonst might result in “grave inconvenien- Greenwich Borough Court. ‘ces to public morality to the United Press through official | information. They show that, in return for cer- tain concessions in the size of an- nual payments, Dr. Schacht is de- COMRADES EAT at the SCIENTIFIC VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT 1604-6 Madison Avi Between 107th & 108th Sts. 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 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 Dai VEGETARIAN airy RESTAURANT omrades Will Always Find It Pleasant to Dine at Our Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx (near 174th St. Station) ONE :— EERVALE 9149. MEET YOUR FRIENDS at Messinger’s Vegetarian and Dairy Restaurant 1763 Southern Blyd., F-onx, N.Y. Right off 174th St. Subway Station For a Real Oriental eee Meal VISIT T! IWGRANATIONAS, PROGRESSIVE CENTER 101 WEST 28TH STREET (Corner Gth Ave.) RESTAURANT, CAFETERIA RECREATION ROOM 1@ a m to 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 AVEI.UE Bet. 12th and 13th Sts. } Strictly Vegetarian Food Freiheit Excursion wAnnnnnnnnnnrnnnnnne A Trip On the Atlantic —a day at one of the most picturesque sea shores in America— Saturday Afternoon and Evening, JUNE 8th Boats Leave 2:30 P. M., Pier ‘A, Havtery —TWO BOATS— CLAREMONT ONTEORA will glide along the ocean and stop at the very beautiful ATLANTIC BEACH where there will be BATHING, BALL GAMES, SOCCER GAMES, ete., and where we will spend a pleasant after- noon and evening together. PRICE FOR TICKETS IN ADVANCE ...... AT THE PIER............$1.50; CHILDRE Get your Newsdealer to carry the Daily Worker AaAAABAAAABRA LAA BAKA BAAR BEBA . Get Your Friend and Shopmate to Buy It Give It to Neighbors Buy An Extra Copy See That It Is Dis- played Properly vvvvvvwwewe wr veer re If your newsdealer desires to get the “Dail order—fill out the rerease his nk below bi DAILY WORKER 26 Union Square New York City Send...seeeees Copies. Increase order copies, ADDROSB i. cesiaessccecceccesecsccvcsecsevevons *Distributor *Information in reference to given you by the newsdealer. + Inspector. . ‘butor very important.

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