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

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IL 17 WORKERS OR PICKETING; STRIKE SPREADS ull Mass Meeting for Saturday at 2 *ifty more workers, employed in Berkshire Iron Works, 38th St., voklyn, yesterday joined the strike ng led by the Architectural Tron { Bronze Workers Union, which ; tied up most of the iron and nze shops of Greater New York. 2 workers who walked out yester- r were all unorganized. A total nearly 4,000 workers are now on ike under the banner of the union. Jail 17 Pickets Continuing their campaign of ter- against the workers, police, at instigation of the frantic bosses, terday arrested 17 pickets. This k place before the Tiffany Studio, L. 1, where 15 pickets were DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, MAY 24, 1929 | ifty More U: norganized Workers Jo | Communist Activities New Jersey Units Conference. | A conference of New Jersey Com-! munist Party units will be held Sun-| day at 1 p.m, at the Workers Cen- | § Union Square. Unit organ- and unit industrial organizers pecialy urged to attend. ANHATTA Party Pienfe. Keep June 23, the date of the Party picnic to Pleasant Bay Park, open. See report of Unity Cooperative. reports of delegates, discuss A. Markoff, instructor of the/|ports, election campaign, reorganiza Workers School, will Jecture on|tion, ‘organization of shop nuclei, or “Anarchism and Communism” at the | ganization Unity Cooperative, 1800 Seventh Ave., lems Sunday, 8:30 p, m: work, colonization prob: and others, eer ae Downtown Communist Youth League. A new executive will be elected at he eeting of the Downtown Unit L at 7:30 p.m. today at new head-| quarters, #74. 4th at. A social will be given by the unit Pade cary Jin connection with the membership drive at 715 138th St. at 8:30 p. m. | tomorrow. “The Woodworm,” a one- jact play, will be presented by the | wick Oke German proletarian dramatic club. Yorkville Communist Youth League. ‘ OF rs etn ment. will be offered. A new unit executive will be elect. |4 Speaker will address the gathering. Aas meeting at 350 E. 8ist St./| Social, Educational Club of Local 43 Gives Dance Tonite youtn| Hundreds of members of Millin- eedle Trades €ry Local 43 will attend the spring _ LS ae festival and dance which will be Lower Bronx Branch 1, Section 5 Social, t Downtown €. ¥ The unit meets at 101 7 p.m. today. Wz 27th St., Pioneer Marionet Club. Members are needed for the Pioneer Marionet and Punch and Judy Club. Leave name in Pioneer District Of- fice and attend meeting at 26 Union Square at 12 noon, tomorrow. | Needle Trades Youth. Members of the Communist League working in the N are instructed to attend at the Workers Center BRON CASE FOR SPIES Administration Attacks Lenroot Vote Expose (Continued from Page One) themselves relatively at a disadvan- |tage, not able to extract the huge | prices that the Standard Oil, or the {Mellon coal companies might re- ceive. |. It also permits, in case of “in- |ternal disorder” such as a large strike, the conscription of | plants and workers, who would then | be placed under military discipline. | tion bills provide that they shall go into effect when congress declares |the existence of a “national emer-| gency.” | aoe | WASHINGTON, |Hoover commission on “law en- forcement” today went through pre- liminary assignment of work to it jmembers, who are all big corpora- alofsky, however, was fined $25. | BROOKL YN Mass Meeting Tomorrow. . fine Bre) 34 . a y be- Brownsville Communist Youth Lengue. icketing continues vigorously be- "RN" oaeuc wilt hata ait opep air ‘e all struck shops, leaders of th> meeting at Stone and Pitkin Aves, ike declare. tonight A mass meeting of the strikers ond before the shop of Saxau-|industrial union wil seponte”°% ‘he /Biven By the Social and Educational |tion lawyers, or prominent in the end Lambkin, Corona, where two | OU Bop taitic ‘Hall, sith S see at the Webster |kept universities of the trusts, ot rkers were jailed. Arraigned in) “S"Meeting will beheld at wae. |[Fouth Aves to rer third and |are big employers of labor them- rt in Flushing, L. L,, sixteen of|m. today at ‘the ‘bureau office, gy |Pourth Aves., tonight, |selves. workers were discharged. 14° nion Square, Room 608. The dance will be given as part; Under the guise of investigation ‘of the general program of the club, | of prohib: {which has conducted an attractive | planning |social and educational |members of Local 43 ithree years. recommendations of a for the past |of trial by jury by what Hoover ‘calls in his speeches and in the proc- lamation creating the commission \l be held in Webster Hall, to- rrow at 2 p. m., where the pro- 28s of the strike will be reported EEDLE UNION IN OOD STRIKE PLEA Torkers Called to Vital Meetings (Continued from Page One) break this bondage and walked t on strike.” The statement relates.the various ikebreaking schemes of the bosses injunctions, police brutality and 2 usual assistance of the A. F. of bureaucrats, “The needle trades workers must Ip break this terror of the cafe- sia bosses! Join in the mass pick- ng demonstrations! Support the feterias which have settled with > unions! Point out to your fel- v-workers the necessity for win- ig the cafeteria strike.” ** Hyman at Dress Meet. Several hundred cloak and dress essers affiliated with the Needle orkers Industrial Union met last cht at a membership meeting at ebster Hall, ilth St. and Third e. Louis Hyman, president of the ion. exposed the maneuvers in > threatened fake “stoppage” of company union International dies Garment Workers Union, e principal purpose of this move, declared, was to mulet money m the workers and to force them o the scab union. He called for mobilization for a ul general strike and support for » fighting Needle Workers Indus- al Union. Weiss, manager of the cloak de- rtment, also discussed the “stop- after which rank and file took the floor for general * The Joint Board of the Needle orkers’ Industrial Union has an- unced a number of important setings: Propaganda Committee. A meeting of the Mass Propa- nda Committee of the cloak, dress fur workers will be held at the norrow morning at re Week End Open Forums. A series of open forums in var- is parts of the city will be held nday morning at 11 o’clock. The ‘ums thus far have been arranged the following places: (1) Bronx Workers ston Road, Bronx; Speakers, A. ock, A. Wise and B. Baraz; I. verman will act as chairman. (2) th Beach, Workers Center, 48 y 28th St. Speakers, A. Block, Pinchefsky; chairman, S, Weiss- rt 11 o'clock. * * Joint Executive. On Monday a meeting of the Joint 6.0% COOKS’ LOCAL 719 WILL SEND ° DELEGATE TO CLEVELAND MEET (Continued from Page One) ,establish the 8-hour day in spite of nine militant members from Local | the police brutality and hired thugs 302 for demanding their rights as|of the bosses, and all the injunc- members of that local. They were tions that Judge Sherman and Judge expelled for making such demands | Levy have issued. as: A correct trade union policy, | rank and file leadership, for demo- put into the hearts of the workers cratic elections, not gangsterism. | the meaning of a union and nothing |For such demands they were not | Will stop these fighting strikers to i only expelled but they were brutally| Win successfully their rights as ‘beaten up by the sluggers who are |Strikebreaking Methods of A. F. L. | members of that same local and who | Workers, ‘help to keep the bureaucratic ma-| Not long ago, after the strike was ‘chine in power. declared in the garment center, Leh- Local 1, Fails ‘ man, secretary of Local 1 and vice- peat fea he | penigeny ot the zparns tional ob- In 1928 the officials of Local 1 fyrved the successful struggle of approached Local 719 for a joint fe workers in the cafeteria indus- drive to organize the cafeteria)“. A workers of New York City. On May This same Lehman, who is the |1 of the same year, various meet-|i!0g"om leader against the food jings were arranged calling the work- Strikers in the A. F. of L., at the lers to join the cafeteria auxiliary of |!@8t meeting of the Central Trades |Local 1, At the same time, these {and Labor Council, launched into a jofficials were appealing to the Vicious attack against the strike. bosses, asking them to force the Working hand in hand with the re- workers to join the so-called Cafe- *¢tionaries of the council, Lehman jteria Auxiliary. The owners of the ‘00k the floor to urge that the coun- \cafeterias naturally refused to do ‘il should officially denounce the |this. Then the officials were com- ‘trike, giving as a pretext the fact |pelled to approach the workers to that its leadership is not under the |Join the union. But the workers Wing of the American Federation of knew these fake methods and poli- Labor. jeies of these officials for many In order to crush the strike he |years. The results of that drive was rushed to give relief to the bosses, a victory for the bosses and a fail-/as they always do, They had con- jure for the workers, which brought ferences, preparing together with on more miserable and slaving con- the United Hebrew Trades and the | ditions in the food industry. | Central Trades and Labor Council Local 719 at that time exposed|t establish a fake “food council” |their methods, for they knew what fr the purpose of confusing the \the results would be, and stopped ™inds of the workers. Lehman also participating in that drive at the|@8ked the assistance of the inter- |very beginning. A year passed since M@tional President Flori to take the The leaders of that strike bave| “better selection of jurors” and cre- ation of a vast secret service io spy on labor organizations, what Hoover forces of law enforcement.” Meanwhile the senate spent the |day arguing over the order, already issued, punishing reporters who jdared to expose the vote for Hoover's appointee to the bench of |the customs court, the arch-reaction- jary and power trust hireling, Len- | roct. Would Capitalize Vote. The vote was taken in secret, and many senators, whose ability to ob- tain vetes depends partly cn their concealing their true trust al legiances from the voters, are very angry at the publication by the United Press of the way they voted. Others, who voted against Lenroni, {desire to capitalize that fact, and gre opposing the barring of Re- porter Mallon of the United Press frem the floor of the senate. The order prohibiting Mallon was later extended to cover all reporters ci al! news services. A motion by Norris challenged the authority of the committee in seeking to discipline the United Press and its correspondent, Mallon, by barring them from the senaic floor privileges, Senator Norris contended the rules committee must get authority ky a majority of the senate before it can proceed in the secrecy inves- |tigation’ which it has launched. ‘Freiheit, Communist Daily, Banned in Cuba (Continued from Page One) tious inauguration in Havana last Monday, show clearly that Machado will continue his bloody regime with increased ferocity, it is charged. At the same time the “Freiheit” ‘ice of the union, 131 W. 28th St.,| Club, 1472| |then,—no activities, nothing con- lead of this strikebreaking council. has just learned that the ban on the | structive was done in these various Flori came down from Cincinnati; paper which was declared some |locals that exist in New York City. 8nd visisted various locals of this | months ago by the Canadian govern- |We know that this is not the only|City, appealing to them to partici-| ment has now been strengthened. year that passed without any or-| Pate in this “food council.” He made The editors yesterday received an of- 'ganization work being done in the|* Statement at a Local 1 member- ficial notification from J. J. Kiely, food industry. Since these locals|Ship meeting that the Amalgamated New York postmaster, that the | were organized, they do nothing else Food Workers, who are conducting | “Freijheit” is hereafter forbidden but fight amongst themselves over | the cafeteria strike, is a dual organi- even to post the paper to any ad- jurisdiction—while the whole “jur-|7@tion and is fighting against the dress in Canada. isdiction” of New York City is dis- A: F. of L. It is therefore the duty The attack against the “Freiheit” organized into slavery, open shop, of the International to organize the was incited by right wing labor mis- |low wages, long hours, unemploy- | °afeteria workers. He also made a leaders of Canada, led by the yellow ment and unsanitary conditions. statement that the big chain stores | Jewish Forward. Militant workers Conditions Bad. approached him to sign up with the|thruout the Dominion are rallying Out of these nine locals in New a ors wae ie rier that the to the campaign of the “Freiheit” York, Local’, \Waltets and Wait-| were on strike sod being conning | ee tne ban. resses control a large portion of Uy the Award ed | | restaurants in this city. But condi- i can ERON SCHOOL Moved! tions in these so-called iskganized (oot oe shops are just as bad as any other | 4 Strikebreaker. |open shop.. The officials and mem-| fi ae Beets ope eae aan a cal |bers of that local know the rotten | fic! ed that they wi eet | conditions the cooks and the fice |all the cafeteria shops except those | onan wells iiieeees Guaseaces |help work under, but no efforts on| Which signed up with the Amalga-|| “ iris high boat and which the part of that local are made to|™ated Food Workers. Grad loekiag cot alpericd of ttt organize these workers, although , This also shows an open strike- at 187 Bact Broadens his |they know. there: isa ‘cooks’ local | breaking policy on the part of that | ¥°2"s wédiand ta vow 1 fe fe lin existence in this city. Not only | local. It is known that Lehman him. aves sad reste [esata aaioe did they not cooperate and help Lo-/ Self, together with his gang had | (Store at 853 Broadway, Corner cal 719 organize these workers, but connections with the police and thugs | 14th Street, facing Union Square. The Eron Preparatory School runs courses in: G4) Regents and College Entrance Preparatory for all colleges and universl | they openly scabbed where Local 719 © Delancey Street where there was | 2) All Commercial and Secretarial ‘called strikes, as for example the ® Picket line in front of the Para- lockouts in the Marvin Restaurant, ount Cafeteria. i W. 39th St, Elm Tree Restaurant, , All these misleading and strike- |W. 86th St., 54 Rivington St. and | breaking methods on the part of 1157 Allen St., ete. | these officials in the A. F. of L. ecutive of all cloak, dress and fur’ * als to mobilize for the fur strike|, Toeal 719 battled for many years Il be held. Louis Hyman, presi- | build up its membership and or- nt, and Ben Gold, secretary.|#anize the kitchen help but found sasurer of the Needle Workers’|'t @ very difficult task because of dustrial Union will report on the the sabotage of the officials of Lo- »ps that have been taken to mob- | °@! 1. i e the union nationally in support} The Cafeteria Workers Strike. the strike. | About seven weeks ago, the Hotel Mey eet _& Restaurant branch of the Amal- Dress Workers Tuesday. |gamated Food Workers declared a In Tuesday at 7:30, all workers strike in the cafeteria industry. The the dress trade will meet at a|leaders of that organization before aeral membership meeting at) declaring this strike, worked hard inhattan Lyceum, 66 E. 4th St./to lay down correct policies so they report on the activities of the|could lead the workers to a success- x88 department and on the mob-| ful strike. Their policy was, an vation for the fur strike will be will be at all times successful be- de, cause they approach the workers di- x Hf a _vectly, and not the bosses as does Greek Workers. the A. F, of L. The cafeteria work- Jn Wednesday there will be a ers responded to this call heartily eting of Greek workers at Bryant| and are bravely carrying on the Il, 42nd St. and Sixth Ave., to| fight. These workers know and feel | bilize Greek workers for the com-| that this new cafeteria union will ; strike. djcommon cause with our fighting | fight to better their conditions and, Proves definitely the necessity of a {strong trade union center for the | food workers and all other indus- tries, This trade union center not | only will lead the workers to suc- cessful struggles but will their class collaboration policies. | It is high time to now raise the | question to all the members of Lo- | cal 719 as to whether any further | good can be accomplished by re- maining inside the corrupt atrike:| | breaking International. We must | |ask now every member of Local 719 | whether we should not at once make _ \brothers of the Cafeteria Workers | |Union and lay the basis for actual | organic unity of all food workers | | within one powerful industrial union | based upon the principles of the ‘class struggle. With this aim fn mind, Local 719 | has elected a delegate to the Cleve- jJand Trade Union Unity Convention. | Subjects. (3) Comptometry, keeping and Electric Billing. (4) All grades of English for intel~ Mgent foreigners. Registration for Our Summer Term Is Now Open. Telephone: STUYVE 2387. J. E. Eron, Principal. Electric Book- Gote) and Restaurant Workers Branch of the Amalgamated Workers 133 W. Sist St. Phome Circle 730 BUSINESS MEETING: on the first Mond: a month at 8 p, Ove atry—One Union—Join and Fight the Common Esemy! Office Open from 8 a. m, to 6 Advertise your Union Meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City in Growing St both} Both man and industrial conscrip-| at May 23.—The | ition enforcement, they are | hea pregram for | drastic nature for practical abolition |A.N.L.C., “Negro Champion,” |has called, “strengthening of the . already should be deported.” “MANHATTAN ]| bexington “A Jugoslavian Workers Club. An entertainment and ven tomorrow. May will the 26 Union’ Square. goslavian Workers tra. oe Harlem Interracial Club Dance. A dance will be given Tuesday May 28, 8:30 p.m., at 145 W. 136th St aie ae Workers Center, Music by the Y famburica Orch: * Die Natu A social evening the A. F, W. Hall, 3 night. The English section will hike Nepperhan, along the C il_acque duet, tomorrow and Sunday. Meet at 242nd St. and Van Cortlandt Park, 9 p.m. Saturday, held at St, to . * | Office Workers! Union. A roof garden dance will be held Hechscher Foundation, 104th St. ‘and Fifth Ave, Wednesday evening, {June 12. Hees Harlem Progressive Youth Club. The club will join the Jewish Clubs hike Sunday. Meet at 1492 Madison Aye, 8:30. 7 : Prolab ‘Theatre. Two one-act plays will be sented by the group at the concert of the United Council of Working Women, 1330 Wilkins Ave.. Bronx, aturday. The plays are "a farce by h St. Monday, Wednesday an venings, has several m pa: * by Ma to be t in'a play, “Strike,” x Gel which is now being re- The play is based on the Carolina textile strike | erie | Address. onal offices of t a n moved L Harlem por Center at St. phone Bradhurst 75: Pia ne SAT Hike. The group will hike to d fountains Sunday, 9:30 m. 6 MONTHS PRISON FOR FOOD PICKET ‘Court More Savage as Strikers Stand Firm (Continued fren Page One} the thou- ce terized the whole arrests, 1,315 since the beginning of the strike. Blum- | berg was slugged so- viciously that he could not walk and was thrown into a taxi and taken to the station house. The policeman bluntly tes- tified on the stand yesterday that Blumberg tried to hit him! Phil Rusgo, lawyer for the union, in de- fending Blumberg, charged that this was an obvious frame-up. “A Professional Picket.” Hyman Bushel, attorney for the cafeteria owners, denounced Blum- berg as a “professional picket, a Red who has no respect for law, who has been convicted twice before during the strike for disorderly con- pre- | Remove [© | | V1 HOOVER BUILDS Fraternal Organizations |.strike. ke of New Meet at 180th Local Social and club, 3, da A sp Millinery, Loca u local membe h H Mth St, between Third ' Aves, tonight ‘ __BRONX Hy Y U I Jewish Workers Clubs. Station of the 1K. for the xen- f eral hike to Hunter evening of the Club tomorrow 1 St Williamsburgh I The fir meeting: nd ( st of a b will ham I nd Nels Bath Beach De festiva at the Work 28th St. 8 p. m, § the benefit of the LL.D. Dramat presentations, songs, and violin piano recitals will f ed on t! entertainment pr 28. The other $1,000 bail. One striker was sprin I f in held two were dismissed when it became perfectly obvious that it was a case of a crude frame-up against him, from the testimony of the policeman who admitted that John Myrachak, the striker, was peacefully standing outside the cafe- teria. Even Weil could not find any excuse to send him to jail. Demonstration Saturday. On Saturday afternoon, there will be a demonstration in Union Squ to protest against police brutality and the injunction, and to we Ben Lifshitz, distritt organizer the Communist Party, who is ex- pected to be released from jail on appeal. He was arrested during the police parade last § the Communists and ¢: ers staged a demonst police brutality in I cafete STUDENT PARADE. Permission for a university proces sion here Thursday probably will be withdrawn because of the action of students tonight in throwing wreaths duct.” Judge Weil in imposing sen-| and vases from the cenotaph of the tence, remarked that “such strikers The charge was resisting arrest. Rusgo pointed out that the officer was a big, six- | foot, 200 pound man and Blumberg is a small, 125-pound man. Fifteen strikers were taken from the picket line yesterday to Jeffer- son Market Court, where 13 were released in $500 bail for trial May “For Any Kind of Insurance” ARL BRODSK (ARL Murray Hil. KY . 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 96S1-2—9791-2 DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Rcom 803—Phone: Algonquin 8183 Not connected with any other office Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST 249 HAST 115th STREET Cor. Second Ave. Please telephone for appointment. Telephone: Lehigh 6022 Cooperators! Patronize CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. Y. Patronize No-Tip Barber Shops 26-28 UNION SQUARE (1 flight up) 2700 BRONX PAK 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 national memorial into the roadw: The students howled down the vice- chancellor of the univer: when he |} tried to speak, and otherwise caused disorder. Meet your Friends at | GREENBERG’S Bakery © Restaurant 939 E. 174th St., Cor. Hoc Ave. Right off 174th Street Subway Station, Bronx MembershioMeeting of LBREST Sly A Vi aR Communist League on ANNE! QA Sunday, Worker Center the Cor a decrease from 16 York Iron W 4 v Agains Scouts csentative ive Committec genda will in i ; vi members (¢ oung ¢ nited 2 against a members t id in con eague must be prese in front membership card only _& ¥ rs and Pio- zabor to Hit Police | ets, denoune- Terror at Big Meet t ation, financed by the and urged any (Continued the Scouts to quit that or- rested, They are p n and join the Pioneers a rousing welcome Young Workers (Communist) Fearing unpleasant licity, the pu the meet entence of Unity Co-operators Patronize SAM LESSER and Gents’ Tailor New York nd 111th Sts. to Unity Co-operative House Ladies’ La- s being LD. the rranged by district 2, tas? FROM FACTORY TO YOU: Cow and LONDON (By 4 » | YOUNG MENS SUITS $12.50 to $25.00 STORE 6th St. N. ¥. C. From PARK CLOTHING A, Cor. miners unemployed in Eng: prese t 181,000. The daily paid those working nine shillings a day, shillings in 1920. 93 Ave, mines i COOPERATORS! RONIZE M. FORMAN Allerton Carriage, Bicycle and Toy Shop ALLERTON AVENUE A Bronx) Prepare for the hig struggles that are coming by building the Communist Party. FURNISHED —136 FE double 7.00 w ROOMG st 17th Street— nprovement. 3 call eve- 736 (Near Se SH COmR MEET AT cana Giusti’s Spaghetti House Frances Pilat Scouse tanehon See + 3 ane g-course Dinner 75¢—5 to MIDWIEE: A LA CARTE ALL DAY 351 E. 7/th St., New York, N. Y. Tel, Rhinelander 3916 49 West 16th Street TONIGHT AT 8 P. M. Anti-Fascist Mass Meeting atdrving Plaza Hall, 15th St. & Irving Place S Pon AK BR SS A. Markoff George Pers| Louis Kovess, in Hungarian ni Gold will the World Anti- Juliet Stuart Poyntz Fasc e of the ernaitional Labor De- Thom fense of A SPEAWER from the AM = oes ICAN NEGRO LABOR CONGRESS Robert W. Dunn Chairman: Car] Hacker he International Labor De- Robert Minor : Workers Attend. This Meeting in Mass! G8- ADMISSION FREE! l te All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S VEGETARIAN HEALTH RESTAURANT 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx . VEGETARIAN Dairy nestacnaxr omrades ‘Will Always Find It Pleasant to Dine at Our Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx (near 174th St. Station) ONE:— INTERVALE 9149. MEET YOUR FRIENDS Messinger’s Vegetarian and Dairy Restaurant 1763 Southern Blvd., 7 onx, N.Y Right off 174th St. Subway Station at For a Real Oriental Cooked Meal VISIT THE INTERNATIONAL PROGRESSIVE CENTER 101 WEST 28TH STREET (Corner 6th A e.) ANT, CAFETERIA CREATION ROOM Open trom if a m te 12 p.m. HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 5865 ~d 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 A Trip On the Atlantic —a day at one of the most picturesque sea shores in Amcrica— Saturday Afternoon and Evening, JUNE 8th Boats Leave 2:00 p. m., Pier A, Battery —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, etc., and where we will spend a pleasant afters noon and evening together. PRICE FOR TICKETS IN ADY ANCE .. AT THE PIER.... $1.50; CHILDREN, seeeeee THC

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