The Daily Worker Newspaper, June 10, 1929, Page 5

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DAILY TLY WORK KER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, J Mass s Picketing Demonstrations Thruout City Today in Strike of the Iron Workers PIOKET LUNCHES SERVED BY WLR, AIDING FIGHT Need Contributions for Food Kitchen Mass picketing of iron strikers, out the secretar; tural Iron and Bronze Union announced last night. Despite intimidation by police and city today, J. Rosenfeld, treasurer of the Architec- Since the strike began hundreds of unorganized workers have been taken into the organization. Picket lunch was served Friday at 10 a. m. bronze workers at three stations lo- cated in Manhattan, Brooklyn and Long Island, by Local New York, Workers International Relief. In the future sandwiches will be given to the strikers who return from the picket line, every Tuesday and Thursday, Harriet Silverman, secre- tary, Local New York, W. announced last night. Donations Urgent. Food contributions for the kitchen established by the W. I. at the headquarters of the striking cafe- teria workers, 133 W. 51st St., are being collected every day. Three meals a day are given to the strik- ers, and more food is needed. Those Broadway, phone Stuyvesant 8881. Food collections are being made from Weis, 949 Freeman St., who is giving vegetables and fruit; Sam’s Dairy, 967 Aldus St., dairy; Bulicn’s Dairy, 1070 E. 165th St., groceries; f, 574 Prospect Ave., fruit; 577 Prospect Ave., Unica Stores, 2729 White Plains Ave., coffee and butter, and Luis, 848 Union Ave., eggs. HARLEM PRESS AIDS LANDLORDS Tenants League Holds Meeting Tonight That the Negro capitalist press in Harlem is for the landlords and | against the thousands of working | ; class tenants in their | against unbearab'e living conditions | and high rents is evident from the latest issues of the New York News | and the New York Age. The New York News, owned by | George W. Harris, former Negro al- | derman and during the last elections | chairman of the publicity commi' -| tee of the colored division of the| republican party, contains an edi- torial headed: “Vicious Tenant: The editorial decla Glib Lies. “Many Harlem landlords have complained to us of the et damage and criminal abuse of thei: property by vicious tenants. They complain that very frequently the tenants will not use the dumbwait- ers, but insist in throwing their gar- Not only this, of their tenants will commit other sanccs destroying the health and ue of their property. We believe that a general campaign of educa- tion should be started by all such| landlords against all such tenants. . . Summons to court should be served by the landlords against such tenants.” Thus this corrupt sheet, fawning on the oppressors, both black and white, of the Negro workers of Har- lem, calls for intensified widespread persecution of the already merci-| lessly persecuted and defrauded ten- ants. The New York News, blandly playing its traitor role, fails to men- tion that the reason tenants throw their garbage down the shafts is) not because they love to endanger their own and their neighbors’ haven’t worked in years. Similarly the New York Age, con- trolled by Alderman Fred R. Moore, pitter enemy of Harris, but joining with him in his hatred of the Negro masses, also does its bit. It does not come out in such an open and shame- more hypocritical language, pre- tending to be interested in extending the emergency rent laws. At the siame time, however, it does not let pass the opportunity to attack guardedly the great parade of Har- Jem tenants held Saturday, June 1. Tenants League Meets Tonight. Negro tenants are beginning to repudiate the misleaders of the land- lords’ press and are turning for guid- -ance to the papers that are fighting for their interests, the Daily Worker and the Nego Champiom. They are also organizing together with the white tenants, particularly the Latin-Americans, under the banner of the Harlem Tenants League. An important special meeting of the League for the purpose of consider- | ling ways of fighting the threatened 135th St. All Harlem working class tenants are urged to attend. ‘Long Live the Revolutionary Struggle of the Oppressed Colo- Peopies! * to take place in various points thru-| Workers’ | hired company thugs the ranks of | the strikers are solid, he anndunced. | to striking iron and} Tay desiring to contribute food should | .*'3; notify thé W. I. R., Room 221, 799 fruit; | struggle | j e down the shafts and in the} but many! health, but because the dumbwaiters | less attack on the tenants, but uses |, rent raises will be held tonight at’ 7:30 at the public library at 103 W.! Speed-up Causes Drowning of Worker on Waterfront Speeded up in his work, Felix Goodinovich, worker on an East River barge, tripped and was drowned sehen he fe Ut into the river, while at w work. Photo shows his body on a the barge de Communist Activities jdancing, es, contest and special surp will be on the program. |Special Italian dishes will be avail able throughout the day. SHOEBOSS LOSES ‘INJUNCTION PLEA | Mass Meet Is Is Called for | Thursday Eve Women's unit GEpAnisene! A ie conference will be held at 8 p. | erieee eae at 26 Union Square. BROOKLY. | at 6:15 p. m. A * 8 One Celebratto ‘ | The bo: of the Bender Shoe | A ce jon and house-warming | Section 6. C treat Bing Bi ; will be held by the, section at its| A section membership meeting will|Company, 4th St. and Broadway, | new hea ecauerters at 27 a be aes MM 56 Manhattan Ave. at 6:30/ Brooklyn, against which the Inde-} 8 day, June 15, p. m, today. 5 7 rae foaeite EMow be the. Bee re wade he pendent Shoe Workers’ Union is Pioneer — orche f rk International Branch. now conducting a strike, have lost | games an¢ « will lead discussion on their application for a temporary al meeting of the branch at 313 Hins- |dale St., 8:30 p. m, today. fore their shop. So rabid and preposterous were the charges made against the strik-| u he Muste sed at 6:30 . 4th St. p,m, Section 6, Unit 4F. r from the Women's Di address the educatio A si partment will aoe * Branch 5. ae |meeting at 253 Atlantic Ave. at ers before Judge Valenti in supreme mahbusiness ns. will be held to- | p,m, tomorrow. is court Friday that even that faithful Unit 4, Section 6 Open Air Meet. servant of the employers refrained Il La The annual p re Pienie. and outdoor Conditions in the Ame or Plant will be the from granting ite application. | About 160 workers are striking in ore,” Ita meeting outside the plant a r, will be rence St, and Myrtle Ave. 5 | the Bender place, and picketing con- | Ju ay Park, “Music,!p. m. toinorrow. tinues regularly despite the intimi- | dation of the police. F ternal . Or anizations Fred Biedenkapp, general man- Ta g ager of the shoe workers’ organiza- tion, last night announced that a Far win cs) hae eaaee |mass meeting of the union would jJune 12, a 2 CR wwe | be held at Arcadia Hall, 918 Hals. wu | Foundation, 104th St. and Fifth Ave. | ey | | MANHATTAN anda | St. Brooklyn, this Thursday eve- | Harlem International Labor Defense. || _B BROOKLYN —__i| ning, June i3, where reports on ac- The branch meets Wednesday, 8 p.| t es he branch mi y v ection 4. Wun.4be | tivities and struggles of the union m,, at the Unity Cooperative House, 1800 Seventh Ave. An open air meeting will be held | will be given, ig ba at Myrtle Ave. and Lawrence St. | Speakers: will includ 5 | Office Workers Open Air Meet. | tomorrow evening. Bi ; i uh ue de, besides | The Office Workers’ Seicn w -_* ss | Bist cue fen Gold, secretary- hold an open air meet at 26th § Shoe Workers Mass Meet. .|treasurer of the Needle Trade a Madison Ave. tomorrow Hea The Independent Shoe. Workers’ | y/o hae ; dle Trades 0, Speakers will include I. Zim- | Union is calling a mass meeting next orkers’ Industrial Union, Juliet jmerman, Primoff and Ray Heim. Thursday evening, June 13, at Ar- Stuart Poyntz, national secretary of | by Md * eadia Hall, 918 Halsey St., Brooklyn. Office Workers Dance. Speakers will include Ben Gold, Fred | the International Labor Defense, The Office Workers’ Union will| Biedenkapp, Julict S. Poyntz, and J.| and J. Magliacano, organizer of the hold a roof dance next Wednesday, | Magliacano. A. F. OF L. SELLS Vow tute Gang Won't | OUT TEAMSTERS Interfere with A An indication of the character of |Lacey Orders Men to Return to Work the recently overheuled Muste “pro- Telling the men to go back to gressive group” into the Conference for so-called Progressive Labor Ac-| work “and deal individually with the employers,” Martin Lacey, man- tion is seen in a statement just issued by three backers of the new ager of Local 816 of the Brother- hood of Chauffe Saturday called organization, off the strike of 800 workers in his union, LAUNDRY DRIVERS - DEFY BOSS THUGS Bronx Strikers Fight Crude Frameups (Continued from Page One) striker, instead arrested the pr The Progressive Group was bodily taken over by socialist party leaders | at a recent two-day conference in’ New York, who utilized the oppor- tunity to launch into a venomous and savage attack against the Com- |munist Party of the U. S. A. Describing .the conference as a “well-rounded group,” Stuart Chase, one of the directors of the Labor! Bureau, Inc., a research organiza-| |tion that accepts paid assignments |from both labor and employers’ groups, asserted that the Muste gang would provide “a more com- prehensive program for the A, F.! sation that he and placed him ur When a striker of the F: was slugged and the other strikers demanded the arrest of the thug, the policeman replied that he is not} supposed to run after the gangster. | Boss Trick Fails. vikers, who have been out |for nearly two months, consist of |building material drivers and yard- men. Follows a Deal. Whether this treachery on the part of Lacey, » well-known bureau- crat if the A. F. of L., resulted from |a deal with the union officials di- rectly, or was the result of orders \from the officialdom of the Build- ing Trades Council, is not certain, |but individual strikers yesterday |characterized the order as a rank sell-out, Originally, 1,200 workers struck but several hundred of them had al- ready returned to work, following | jvictories over individual bosses. Deserted Striker. | light Laundry tried to frame a | driver who is helping the strikers | Agents of the bosses put a black of L.” | Jack into his wagon, and as per ar- Benjamin Stolberg, a journalist|TnBement 2 hae ie arta who exploits situations in the labor| bot ci a es ortunately, other ;movement for well-paid “analyses”! baie lad abl Jot hits ee ere [in the liberal and capitalist press, paathihid RIB: HO" EXD OBE Xone crude: jdenied that the fake progressives her ty ag |are forming. a dual organization. SA yan Ee ene ira The movement, he announced, would) > i vill aha He eocninbade MI help bring in new members intel Sey ee eee ee ete the American Federation of Labor. | “ht in spite of all eae sages Stolberg, at the same time, re-| | dan. and nolige brutality. Lacey’s anti-union character was |frained from making any comment, The workers ask that all class- | |eeain revealed several weeks ago|on the reactionary character of the|C°7scious workers and workers’ following the shooting by a Bronx |Federation and its consistent sell-| housewives to aid in this strike by policeman of Garry Smith, a strik- | out policy of the workers, giving their laundry only to those . firms where they have settled with the union, ERON SCHOOL Moved! The Eron Preparatory School, which: holds a Regents Charter as a private high school and which was located for a period of thirty years at 187 East Broadway, has now moved and is now located in larger and moré commodious quarters at 853 Broadway, Corner 14th Street, facing Union Square. The Eron Preparatory School runs courses in: jing laborer of the George L. Storm |Tumber Co., 135th St. and Park |Ave. Asked by the Daily Worker what action he would take to de- fend Smith from a police frame-up, Lacey replied that he would no noth- ing inasmuch as Smith’s name could not be found on the union books While it is-true that Smith was not a member of the Chauffeurs Union, he nevertheless led a strike of la- borers at the Storm plant in sym- pathy with the chauffeurs. Smith is now convalescing at the Fordham Hospital, according to of- \ficials ef the institution. Margaret Lawrence, Actress, § Shot Dead A melodramatic sho shooting in a roof bungalow atop a fashionable apart- ment in the Fifties brought a sordid end yesterday to the career of Mar- garet Lawrence, one of the fore- most actresses on the American stage. In a room iittered with whiskey bottles and thrown into wild disor- der, police found her dead from two bullet wounds. Nearby lay the body of Lewis Bennison, 50, Los’ Angeles actor, with a single bullet in the left Is Among all the front the bourgeo! le today, the (4) All grades of English for intel- ligent foreigners, RESTAURANT John’s Restaurant proletariat nlone tw really revolu- breast. Bennison, police said, had nce 0 (1) Regents and College Ent pase ees eee | shot: Miss Lawrence, then committed preparatory. for all colleges | suicide, and universities, | (2) All Commercial and Secretarial RATIONAL «a Conipion try, Electric Book: : » " ‘omptometry, Electric Book- Vegetarian | Phonet Stuyvesant 3816 keeping and Btectrie Billing. | | IN ‘ENFORCEMENT’ BILL CONFERENCE |Senate to Obey Hoover | | Hoover’s national “law enforcement | commission” has completed its pre: | limina organization conference }and adjourned until June 18. dn | the interval the secretarial staff will injunction to restrain picketing be-| dent of the union on the false fe accu | Last week the bosses of the Star- | COMPLETE WORK on Farm “Relief” WASHINGTON, D. C., June 9.— gather official records from widely- scattered sources, with the object of strengthening commission mo- tions for changes in the federal | statutes to make it easier to frame |up labor leaders in the courts, to| | deprive defendants of part of their| \right of trial by and to cen-| and service and coas More compr of all form: anti-working class demanded by Hoover | “law enforcement” Spies, federal officers and armed cutters can be added to} ‘the military service when the im-| pending imperialist war bre Meanwhile, the strengthened service can be used against strikers. | Secret sessions of the commission | will continue during the preliminary | jphases of the work, Chairmas 3eorge W. Wickersham told news- papermen. The troublesome farm “relief” bill continues to create complica- | tions, delaying the rapid passage of | | the recommended Hoover legislation. | Rushed through the House of Repre-| sentatives without the debenture | jprovision, the decks are being | cleared for ramming it thru the sen- jin which Charles |lem.” He is MURDERING OF PENNA, WORKERS MOUNTS HIGHER Officials Prot ect the Bosses By J. C. EDEN. PHILADE .PHIA, June 9.—There jis no quiet on the Pennsylvania front. The industrial casualties mount higher and higher in the slaughter-house of Mellon and} Grundy. 126 men killed in 25 working days in Pennsylvania. 7183 men injured in the same period. | These are the conservative fig-! ures divulged by the Pennsylvania Bureau of Workmen’s Compensation, Weters, secre- actually as a “prob- fearful of telling the appro: ate truth, now that his term of office is about completed. 46 deaths in the anthracite February. 29 deaths in the bituminous dur- ing that period. tary of labor and indust admitted unemployment in trial group. 7183 men injured during Febru- ary’s short month. A’ respectable casualty list for a world war engage- | ment. “Business conditions may be good and at the same time employ- ment conditions may be unfavor- able”, Secretary Waters said in his closing statement. “We must rea- lize that unemployment where pres- ent today is due to fundamental caus rather than causes,” ate des ture provision was previously adopt- ed by the senate by a vote of 47 to 44, But the orders of Emperor | Hoover are expected to cause a num- ber of senators to “change their | minds” and the fake farm bill, which ith or without the debenture pro- ion, offers no relief to the poor farmers, will probably be adopted by the senate this week, SWINDLEGHARGES, © | Some Grafters Have | Already Left Town The rising completely organized system of for- | gery, graft and open theft prac- tised by a Tammany-fascist alliance headed by Francesco M. Ferrari, dead president of the City Trust Company and allied institutions, and <-State Banking Superintendent | Prank H. Warder, has at last forced Gov. Roosevelt to authorize criminal prosecution of those who brought about the bank crash at present be- ing investigated by the Moreland Act probe. Supreme Court Justice Cropsey will hear charges at a date not yet announced. Current reports that several key witnesses in the scandal were pre- | pared to ese: possible conse- quences of the court action are said to have forced Commissioner M | swindle in bond. Some decisive ac- | tion was required in any case if the | state administration wished to quiet | reports that it was deliberately pro- | | tecting leading officials in the crash | } in which thousands of poor deposi- | tors were ruined. The lower middle class, the small manufacturer, the shopkeeper, the artisan, the peasant, all these fight against the bourgeoisie, to save rom extinction their existence as fractions of the middle class. They are therefore not revolutionary, but conservative-—Karl Marx (Commu- nist Manifesto), Communists fight on behalf of the immediate sims and interests of the working class, but in their present movement they are also de~ fending the future of the move- _ |“For An Any Kind of Insurance” : Murray Hil. 5550 ie East 42nd Street, New York a Phone: LEHIGH 6382 International Barber Shop W. SALA, Prop. 2016 Second Avenue, New York (bet, 103rd & 104th Sts.) Ladies Bobs Our Specialty Private Beauty Parlor 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 ite the fact that the deben-| TAY ESGAPE BANK | es to make prep s for holding | certain of those involved in the In other words, unemployment | and hunger may be looked upon as permanent, and not simply as seas-! onal. “We have learned with the use of modern machinery to produce faster than the world can purchase.” Surprising frankness, rarely indulged | in by officialdom of capitalism, gen- | erally so anxious to hide the contra-' dictions of their system. “To absorb the surplus of labor, to find jobs for workers turned out of hand jobs by machinery, is now receiving special attention by the department of labor and industry, | and it is hoped that the help now being given to the department, in work, by employers and various | eee: will be continued and| stimulated.” The same old bunk |that brings no bread to the starv- |ing miners of the anthracite, to the {thousands walking the streets in the protest against the Pennsylvania textile centers, such} {as Kensington, in Philadelphia, Chester, Wilkes Barre, etc. He concludes his statement with the cheery “fact” that for two suc- | cessive years Pennsylvania has “en- joyed substantial reduction in the| number of industrial accidents.” Is the final statement true? Let us take a glance at the statistics: Allegheny Counter, center of the steel and bituminous coal industries jumped to 1,266 non-fatal accidents in February 1929, from 1189 in Feb- ruary, 1928. Ten men were killed in that county for the one month alone.. Erie county, another. industrial section listed 183 non-fatal accidents in February, an increase of 32 over the previous year’s record. In Philadelphia, now suffering great depression, only 1709 men | were injured in February. York | County had an increase of 25, War- ren county of 39; Chester County, with its steel mills, an increase of 32; and so on. This tremendous list of injured |and killed draws no tears from the | official but he laments the follow- ing fact, “We cannot close our eyes | to the fact that we are losing some | {of our industries in Pennsylvania. |The Commonwealth alone can not AMALGAMATED FOOD WORKERS Mecta 1st Saturday in the month at 3861 hird Ave Tel. Jerome 7096 Baker's Local 164 Bronx, N. Y, Ask for Union Label Bread! 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. Slat St,, Phone Circle 7330 ape MEETING] 1d on the first Moni month Advertise your Union Meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising “Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City Cooperators! PATRONIZE BERGMAN BROS., Your Nearest Stationery Stojc Cigars, Cigarettes, Candy, Toys 649 Allerton Ave. BRONX, N. Y. SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES Registration for Our Summer 199 SECOND AVE. UE A place with atmosphere Term Is Now Open, Bet. 12th and 13th Ste, where all radicals meet Lelophone: STUYVESANT . 2287, Strictly Vegetarii Food 302 £.12th St. New York |. E. Eron, Principal. Telepkone: Olinyill Patronize No-Tip Barber Shops 26-28 Last th SQUARE 51 fatalities in the general indus-} temporary | Ford Says He ‘Bees Big! Motor Markets in USSR for “Standardization” | ATLANTIC CITY, June 9 Henry Ford, here to attend the Na- tional Electric Light Association Convention, declared that trade pos- | sibilities in his line with the Soviet Union were good. He gave the opinion that the U. S. S. R. would be benefitted by equip- standardized ment, and refused to discuss the pos- sibilities of wide spread business | dealings involving companies other, than his own. He stated that in view of recent orders of tractors, his company would assist in industrialization in the U.S. S. R. FUR-WORKERS IN vice: vania and no attempt even at a farce “investigation” of the —The hug: in this section continues daily, the coal tected in their SLAUGHTER OF MINERS KEEPS UP UNABAITED Boss Negligence Aided by State WILKES-BARRE, Pa. (By Mail). laughter of coal miners while operators are pro- neglect of safety de- 3s by the authorities of Pennsyl- mine is made in the deaths miners due to the bosses’ negligence. SETTLED SHOPS operator Some of the victims of the coal ’ greed for profits follow: Glen Alden At Truesdale colliery, Coal Co., at Nanticoke, Peter Krom- Hanover Green, a miner, was caught under a of rock and suffered in- Millinery Workers Join Industrial Union (Continued from Page One) and a series of meetings are ex- | pected to be called soon. Additional support for the strike is also seen in the announcement that at the meeting of the General Board of the Industrial Union held Saturday, the question of the af- filiation of Local 43, Millinery Workers, with the union was taken | up. Millinery Workers Affiliate. These workers who have for over two years fought the union-wreck- ing activities and the terror of the | Zaritsky machine in the Interna- tional and have become a model for | militant labor thruout the United States. A resolution was adopted accept- | ing into the Industrial Union, Local | 43, of New York; Millinery Local 42 4 i hi led locals | GF Ciieaeos end otereepelied JOCRs soy Tirat. Streat, Plenisaai Mem j and groups of unaffiliated workers. At the same time it was an- nounced that the cap and millinery | workers will have representation of five members to the General Board. To Push Oorganization Drive. | Plans are being worked out, it | was announced, to establish the cap} and millinery workers into the In-| dustrial Union so they can proceed | with the job of organizing the thou-| sands of unorganized workers in their trade—a job which was decided | | upon by the recent National Confer-| | ence of the Progressive Cap and Millinery Workers. | Gasténia Strikers Will | Speak at 10th St. 2 Av.,, on Brutality of Police Kermit Hardin, Raymond Clark! | and Inez Rowland, Gastonia, N. C. | textile strikers will speak at an open air meeting at 8 o’clock tonight | at 10th St. and Second Ave. The meeting has been arranged by Lo- jcal New York, Workers Interna- tional Relief. Other speakers will | include Sylvan A. Pollack, Louis A. Baum and Mary Himoff. | | | The strikers will tell of the con- ditions which led up to the raid} and shooting and of the brutality of the police and mill gunmen in pre- vious attacks on the strikers. prevent this migration. It can help, but the real means to prevent this | Situation is in the hands of labor | and industry.” ' And then this bit of irony, “Or- ganized capital and organized labor | | alike should remember in the long run the interests of each must be in harmony, etc. ete.”, which every working man knows by heart by | this time. | Organized labor in Pennsylvania— Comrade Frances Pilat MIDWIFK 351 E. 7/th St., New York, N. Y. Tel. Rhinelander 3916 Cooperators! Patronize CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. Y. Dr. M. Wolfson Surgeon Dentist 141 SECOND AVENUE, Cor. 9th St. Phone, Orchard 2333 In case of trouble with your te: come to see your friend, who has long experience, and can nasure you of ‘al treatment. DR. J. MiNDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Rcom 803—Phone: Algonquin 8182 Not connected with any other office Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST 249 HAST 115th STREET Cor, Second Me New York Office hour: Bete lgtae 9.30 1 to 6 P. Thurs, 9.80 a. m. to. 12; to § p.m. Sunday, 10 a. m. to 1 p. m. Plense telephone for appolntmen Telephone: al 6022 juries to the chest, right leg and a fracture to the skull. He was taken to nticoke State Hospital where he died two hours after being admitted. While working in the Prospect colliery, Lehigh Valley Coal Com- pany, this afternoon John Matti, aged , of 10 Sypress Street, an oiler, was electrocuted. He was dead when admitted to General Hospital at 1:30 o’clock. * Stephen Ancin, aged 67, of 284 State Street, Plymouth, died in Wilkes-Barre General Hospital of complications resulting from injuries received while at work in the mines of Hudson Coal Co. Ancin some time ago received an injury to one of his hands and was apparently on the way to recovery when blood | poisoning set in. ee x 2 8 Two Injured in Fall of Rock. Vincent Kluczynski, aged 45, of and John Arotcko, aged 22, of 152 Regal Street, Korn Krest, a laborer, suffered injuries yesterday morning at Truesdale colliery when caught under a fall of top rock. They were taken to Nanticoke State Hospital last night and it was reported that Kluczynski was suffering from a fracture to the left leg and Arotcko from a fracture to the right leg. Both were reported in fair condition. * +, Miner Victim of Fall of Coal Peter Wandell, aged 42, of Break- er Street, Parsons, employed at Le- high and Wilkes-Barre Coal Co, col- liery No. 2 as a miner, suffered lacerations to the scalp and shock when caught under a fall of coal. He was removed to Wilkes-Barre Hos- pital. * Mine Official Hit by Falling Rock. Malachi Glennon, aged 55, of 188 Simpson Street, Swoyerville, assist- ant foreman for Lehigh Valley Coal Corg, at Maltby colliery, suffered lacerations to the forehecd, possible fractures to several ribs and lacera- tions to the right hand yesterday morning when he was hit by falling rock, Oe er When his hand was caught in a pulley while at work at the mines of Loree No. 4 Colliery, Hudson Coal ompany, late yesterday, Charles Jor- dan, 41, of 146 Mill Street, City, sec- tion foreman, suffered severe lacera- tions of the fingers. He received treatment in General Hospital. MEET YOUR FRIENDS at Messinger’s Vegetarian and Dairy Restaurant 1763 Southern Blvd., onx, N.Y. Right off 174th St. Subway Station For 2 Real Oriental Cooked Meal VISIT THE INTERNATIONAL PROGRESSIVE CENTER | 101 WEST 28TH STREET (Corner 6th Ave.) RESTAURANT, CAFETERIA RECREATION ROOM Open trum 1° a om te 12 p om. 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 --MELROSE— VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT omrades ‘Will Always Find It Pleasant to Dine at Our Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx near, 174th St. Station) PHONE:— INTERVALE 9149. HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 5865

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