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DAILY WORKER 'W YORK THURSDAY, SULY SAY BOSS PRESS JMAN AIDED ANTI- USSR FORGERIES Charge Evening Post Reporter Provoked the Fraud Berlin Trial Continues | Two Forgers Officials Under Czar BERLIN, July 3—Did H. R. Knickerbocker, correspondent for the New York Evening Post, have a hand in the anti-Soviet forger: e which two Russian monarchist lemigres are now being tried here r did he not? This was the question minds of many of those in the court- 1eom today as they heard Dr. Wal- ter Jaffe, attorney for Vladimir Or- loff, one of the forgers, make the charge that Knickerbocker provoked the forgeries. Dr. Jaffe did not, of course, say that Knickerbocker pro- voked the forgeries in order that the New York Evening Post might print another anti-Soviet lie for the purpose of prejudicing the Ameri- can tasses agaist the workers’ state. nlous charge that Knickerbocker was actifg .a8 an agent of the Soviet government. Gave 100-Mark Advance. Discounting this absurdity, it sems entirely plausible that the capitalist press cortespondent, in his eagerness to secure any sort of | moving, those going to and from| “documents” that could be used against the Soviet Union, took a hand in the plot, with Orloff and | overnight and ran on more or léss|. other | regular lines, taking in the nickles |i" charge of the labor party gov- forger on trial, doing the dirty;and dimes that would have gone to |¢’ment’s campaign to fool the un- Michaei Pavlonofsky, the work. Knickerbocker has admitted anding over @ 100-mark advance on 4, the $2,000 he promised for : the } daper The forgeries, it is gen- rally agreed, w very crude af- airs. It is possible that Knicker- bocker decided to turn the two worthies over to the police only efter he discovered that the “docu- ments” were too feeble to fool the American public? Knickerbocker (was the chief wit ness today and both Dr. Jaffe, Or- loff’s lawyer, and Herbert Fuchs, Pavlonovsky’s attorney, launched at- tacks on him. The capitalist press correspondent is, -however, receiving great consideration from the court and is putting on a pious air when attempts are made to identify*him with the activities of the two de- fendants, whose guilt is obvious to everyone. Both Czarist Officials. Both Orloff und Pavlonoysky were officials under the ezar. Pavlonoy- sky has since the revolution had a \, checkered career as a stool-pigeon md spy and was fired from the fovet Embassy in Berliri for petty in the) | Instead he made the ridic- ded: Fascists ] | 7, Henry P. Fletcher, Wall | Street's ambassador to Italy, was the go-between for Wali Street in dealing with Mustolini, whose reign of terror is backed by U. S. im- perialism. Fletcher has just retired, jand a fat salaried position awaits him here, as a reward for his sere vices for Wall Street. as 2.000 ORLEANS CARMEN STRIKE, ALL CARS STOP j |Reject Bosses Program of Firing at Will NEW ORLEANS, La., July 8.— |The strike on the New Orleans | street railways continued today in | full foree. With not a street car |work were accommodated by volun- teer jitney service which sprang up the street car bossés. 2,000 Walked Out. least ,000 street car motormen |and conductors walked out Monday after a mecting of the local car- men’s union had voted down clausé | by clause # contract offered them by the New Orleans Public Service, Inc. They are demanding the re- turn to work of several men dis- jcharged for activity in the union, |and the company has added insult |to injury by proposing a contract |in which the men would agree to | this high-handed procedure when- ever the company saw fit to resort to it. Complete Steppage. The last cars stopped running at |5:20 a. m. this morning. The com- pany admits that the strike is com- plete, and does not hope even to be }able te import any scabs before Thursday. |. Major J. O’Keefe called the city | council into special session today, jand efforts will be made to buy off the union leaders or wheedle the men back to work, pending “arbi- 1 LLOYD GEORGE JABS MACDONALD ON DISARMAMENT. Spills Some Truths in| Hypocritical Speech LONDON, July 3.—David Lloyd | George, whose liberal party holds the balance of power in the present parliament, today embarked upon a harassing campaign against the government by demanding actual | naval reductions, of submarines as well as cruisers, and the limitation of the “huge armies on the conti- nent.” i Lloyd George, while war premier of Britain, never did anything to’ | hamper the naval race of Britain, jand his speech, like most of those he made during the election cam | Paign, is not regarded as serious, but merely for political effect. No Disarmament. Premier MacDonald’s government continues to stagger to the right, and MacDonald, in his part of the debate on arms limitations, made it clear that he proposed “nothing | hasty.” This is interpreted as the | British imperialists’ answer to the | | jingoistic “parity” (superiority) an- | nouncement of United States Sec- 1etary of State Stimson recently. MacDonald’s share in the debate which followed the labor ministry’s |formal statement of policy appa- jrently has removed any naval offi- jcers’ fear of immediate action, The premier said the time for forinal negotiations toward naval reduction \had not yet arrived, and, “so far as | America is concerned, the conversa- ticns that have been started are purely of a preliminary and ex- ploratory character.” | Thomas Boosts Coolie Plan. J. H. Thomas, lord privy seal and |employed, today confirmed his ru- |mored decision to go to Carada in | the near future and arranze for the | carrying out on a larger scale of the former tory government’s plan to hip unemployed workers to slavery junder the contract system in Cuna- |dian wheat farms and mines. Those sent under this coolie system dvr- jing the last government’s tenure cf | office were used as strikebreakers; held in camps by force, and, when | unemployment came in Canada, too, were simply thrown out on the | streets to Starve. | Thomas today also spoke for sév- \eral minor road building bills, ete., | which he is advocating as “unem- | ployment cures.” HUNGARY LIMITS “U, 8. "MOVIES" | Hays Agents Assailing | empire. Hailed by McDonald | TEXTILE UNION DELEGATION Urge All Workers to Aid Pioneer Drive The national office ot the National Textile Workers Union yesterday is- | sued a statement, endorsing the | workers’ children’s delegation to the | Soviet Union and pledging their aid in the campaign that the Young Pioneers of America are conduting for funds for the delegation. The statement, reecived by the Young Pioneers, commends thein for the part that they ate playing in ising’ money for the relief and de- of the framed-t and urg fe strike | their Wall Street's new man as ambas- | sador to England, Charles G. Dawes, notorious foe of the workers, who|dren fer the | was received by Ramsay MacDonala, |°™>- He | A " Youth Is Militant. libor party premicr and fervent d 7 fender of the British empire. Dawes i P. Reid, pre Murdoch, v “To the Yo ica, greeting: “The eampaign by your organ) ing of a work children’s de tion to the Soviet Union receives the heatty support of the National Textile Workers Union. was hailed as a fine fellow indeed by the latter, who naturally feels « kin- ship with one who dlso serves an conducted d- being m for the ¢ FIGHT ON CHANG “Our union realizes the great role DEATH OUSTS THE that the children p in all the 2 struggles of the we In the fight that w the mill bos: den of the ¥ in the front is for thi i against in the Sotith the chil- s of the strikers. | reason that we find | ia 19-year-old Sophie | ged with murder, be- helped to organize. the en to aid the strike. outhern Striker Goes. | “We are very glad to see that the | Young Pioneers realize the gravity | and importance of this situation in Gastonia. This is shown by the fact that you have as a member of your delegation a child striker from the South. “We feel, that it is your duty and the duty of all the workers to ex- pose the lies of the bosses and their agents against the Sovict Union by JAPAN MINISTRY Intensified Struggle in China Foreseen TOKIO, July 8.—Shortly after the govertiment of the imperialist Premier, Baton Tanaks, resigned én bloe yesterday, the emperor sum- motied Yugo Hamaguchi, opposition reactionary, and ordered a new cabinet. Since Hamaguchi poses as a “liberal,” the Genro powerful aris-} tocratie organization which enforces | emperor-worship in Japan, hopes his | selection’ as head of the ministry will | hs ‘ give the govérnment a “liberal’| Sending this delegation over there. tinge and, temporarily pacify the! “The National Textile Workers | masses, whose spirit is beginning to! Union congratulates the Young Pi- | smoulder under the iron oppression | OMeers on the leading part that you E Page Three Through a author gets a job at the Electric Haiti, at a salary of $ whom Dicharson has taken waylaying him to the Dicharson 1m and after scious with a gun. friend, an Englishman a month, rakes his way to the named George Hey, the Light Company in Port au Prince, Dixon, a white colonist straw into his confidence, betrays him, Terminus Bar, knocks hint uncon= home of his friend, and Hey and his native girl, Pauline, nurse him Chauvet, the editor of a fake and calls tercsted in Dicharson’s case pretends to be in- L the ¢ liberal paper, sub-chief and the chief of detegtives, Bonte. * * By JACQUES DICHARSON REPEAT devided that we We took the chief’s car. Chauvet We were ushered right in that to wait very long for the worthy W. “What's this, Dicharson,” he said, night and having a quarrel with Dixon? stay sober? SD for their benefit the tale had better go to the Electric Light Company office. I had told Chauvet. It was stayed behind. time as we arrived. . Bleo. ‘about you getting drunk last Don’t you know better and I did not have I told him that I had been perfectly sober and that I had been the victim of a cowardly attack by Dixon. I also told him what Dixon had said about me having to get out of town, and what he had ‘said to the marine officers. outraged. “The trouble with you sessed by the folly of persecution, and you let your imagination run because we do not happen to be in “That's all poppycock, young man!” he exclaimed as if he had been and your kind is that you are ob- you think every one is your enemy away with you. I discharged you need of a time-keeper at present a8 we are beginning to lay most of our men off.” . HEN turning to Miller who was if he had seen Dixon, Miller said that he had not. * * standing alongside of him, he asked Bleo then turned to the chief of police and to! him that everything would be alright, and that he would not let trivial matter like that take the time of that worth; fixed up. course. I never smofted cigars that he would speak to Dixon and that everything would be ie then handed everyone present a cigar except me, of s back and told He patted the chie him that he would see him that night in the Masonic Lodge. As soon as the chief of police had taken his departure, Bleo turned quickly to Miller and told him to go and see Chauvet right away and fix it up with him regardless of cost, so that the night’s happening | raided. tent colc He needn't have feated: the worthy Chauvet |be brought would not appear in print. knew which side his bread was butteted. ’t want to be corrupted by the at- took his hat and left. As I didn’ As soon as Miller left, Bleo mosphere of the place I went out also, WENT to George's afternoon he told me: “Why don’t you go and see a what he has done to you and what hack and lived with him a few days. * * Then one lawyer and haye Dixon arrested for he is doing now? He’s going about town telling the people that you are an anarchist and that you believe in blowing up people, and all that alright, Jack, and I will stick by you know I cannot do very much as I’m liable to lose my job too. blooming trash. you no matter what happens. I know that you're But Of course this does not worry me, but it’s my old woman back home, you see; she’s old-fashioned and since my daddy died in a mine accident, she hasn’t got anything. stranded here in Haiti. It would break her heart to know that I am But anyway, as long as I have some grub, as you Yani:s call it, you will be welcome to it.” I thanked,him, tears coming to my eyes. fulness and generosity were a balm to my embittered heart. people are good in this cheating world of ours, after all. His candidness, truth- Some I thanked kim again and told him that I would be at his order if he ever hap- pened to need me. (To be continued) ef the feudal aristocracy as well as ere taking’ in helping the Gastonia of the capitalists. | strikers, and we hope that you will It is claimed that the appointment Comtinue your good work. of Baron Shidehara to the foreign Expose Boy Scouts. office itdicates that Japan will re-| “You must also point out to the vert to a “conciliatory” policy toward Workers’ children the danger of an the Nanking government. This | attack by the bosses’ governments means that Japan will make more|on the only workers’ state, the U. tremendous efforts to buy over|S. S. R., and show that the Boy Nanking, increasing the three-| Scout international jamboree is only cornered struggle for control in| part of the preparations for a war China between the U. S. Britain and} with the Soviet Union. Japan. “The existence of this war dan- Tanaka’s. fall followed a split in) ger gives the delegation that you the cabinet caused by the “investi-| are sending a gation” of the assassination of Mar- | since it shows that the working class shal Chang Tso-lin, Chinese tool of | children ate mobilizing for the de- MILL WORKERS REJECT CUTS 500,000 in Lancashire mine here, May be Locked Out MANCHESTER, July 3.—The cot- added significance, Yon mill workers of Lancashire have’ ‘Zine Miner Killed | in Fall Down Shaft; Men Blame Co. FRANKLIN, N. J., July 3— Frank Rutaka, 35, a mine runner in the New Jersey Zine Company’s was killed today when jhe plunged 100 feet down an ore shaft. Had the owners of the mine taken measures to protect the open shaft of the mine, the dead miner’s fellow- rejected the proposed wage cut, and workers say, the accident would have MILLS ON Aiwa ARREST, ATT! Bosses’ Press Slan Dead Unionist (Continued from Page One) ties usec st the stril Id lead to their injury He |} | reconsidered his tering the case jthe I. L. D. a Conferences and Juliet Stua aga’ orr of defer counsel | ternational Labi efer offices of Atto: s dit 1 f Charlotte and Abernathy, are tale jing place to work out plans for a | counter-offensive owners’ authorities. the only lawyer of the office of Jimi nathy, not on the Manville-Jenckes mill, h by the I. L. D from tt ficials by confiscating t } in Gastonia pa 1 ned union quarters and other prop¢ destroying the work meet and speak Sue for False Arrest The 1. L..D. will immediately to halt interference with ri workers, and to prev | terference with the pro; } to recover the grounds on which } | | Agents of the mills on bel |Gividual strikers to re losses sustained, through | property of the union, falsc and other persecution The father of Fred ‘Southern organ of | Textile Workers Union | terday, and today will }wno is in Gastonia |framed for murder and facing trocution. E Enthusiastie organization meet- ings for the National Textile Work- Jers Union, the International Lal | Defense and Workers Interns | Relief are being held in many mill8 séveral times weekly. Gazette Maligns the De The employers’ ney , Gastonia Gazette, is tr to repe jvesent that Joseph Huntsin 4 | whose funeral Thursday tended by a great crov efs and workers from surround mills, was not a union man and ¢ ay |not die on his way to defend the strikers’ tent colony. The strikers here, howevet, know | that Huntsinger was an active mem- | ber of the National Textile Work- {ers Union, though not him: |tay sttiker, atid died of h |ute caused by his exertions, 1 | ing to a garage for an auto to get | out to the tent colony.’ He heard the sitens of passing police and |thought that the often threatened |raid on the new tent colony was in icin betas +4}, | tation.” Meanwhile Superintendent | Germany a8 Instigator | Japanese imperialism, in Manchuria |fense of the workers’ fatherland, | # lockout of 500,000 members of the | been avoided. pEvetene pide eee Vig easunine ties jof Police Theodore Ray has called | sf Hd last year. ___. | the Soviet Union. | Lancashire Cotton Operatives Amal- — eae bites has been responsible for‘ other anti-| i"), Police on vacations and is) PARIS July 3—The Hutigdtiah| The war lord, olitfitted “snd| “The National Textile Workers | gamation. toreed TE Stipa RANE LIE Soviet “documents.” ete is ee a | government, ae the example |financed by the Japanese imperial-| Union calls upon jhe entire work-| ‘The conference yesterday death to\ftnelft Mt has ‘nino enlted Comrade = A ail Raviti | Ne f France, Britain and Germany, has | ists, was given the job of lavi ing class to back this children’s i * os ray o existence the men who are to The 1 will conti Te k. + Sad o! RUC} “ ‘ » 5 3 ie job of enslaving | z | between union and employ Held th Sal Mi omnes aH week | GOLD, DIGGING TRIAL signed "doce effective Aue. 1, IMaSchiie for lapuite exlstetiog, deletion tothe U. 8 S. Bape | eeentaives ote ap eahaar nares | Roman thee See || Frances Pilat }_ ¢. 10, vuly %.—Another po- | establishing a film import quota of | but finally grew to be so stron, cially is it the duty of all labor or- ai ag °: | Kart Marx (Communist Manifesto). | TE tis % ea ment. The employers were demand-| MIDWIFE Labor and Fraternal jtice battle took place here today. |20 to 1 against foreign filnis, figure in the province that he be-| ganizations all over the country to jing twelve and a half per cent re- his was not against workers, for 351 E. 77th St., New York, N. Y. * ‘. i The decision was a surprise to}eame somewhat intractable and it be- give moral and financial support to | q, tion in wages, to take effect im- 2916 Organizations ja change, but against the mobs of American disttibutors in Eurdpe, came necessary to get him out of this delegation.” cea ee tf Ccopeeatarsl Patronize Poti teil —- ie “gentle Hs trying : get all|who believed the state department | the way, Sie AGE j the dirt from the breach of promise |note of March 30 had quashed the| The party of the industrialist ; i ihe jfmployers are organized "in 8 E R O Y Hotel and Restaurant Workers MAN HATTAN jsuit of the youthful Ann Living-| quota law n Hungary. which sfatite to wrest abiiteot of the Mill Boss Profited by the Master Cotton Spinners’ Feder- Beasth of the “Aitidlghtaated j SY storine Workers League Demon- |St0n against her gray-haired and)” Buropean agents of Will Hayes, |governinent from the old aristocracy, |Selling Used Stamps; @tiom and the Manufacturers Asso- CHEMIST Food Workers strates, ry wealthy furnace magnate, One | American film czat, attack the Ger-|seized upon the “investigation” to clation, both of which have served seer nits, me PRGee. Chris 7258 ){| protested The Gastonia frame-ups~ will be | at an open air demonstra- | tion by the Marine Workers’ League | at the foot of Whitehall St., Battery, | at 6 p. m. today, | [BROOKLYN] Brighton International Labor Defense. | } f \ girl fainted and two people were |man film industry for having insti- injured in their efforts to hear free |gated this boycott of American of charge the details of this new films, and predict that this method gold digging drama. of economic warfare will be used in} other fields also, especially in the automobile industry. Hungary imports 600 films annu- Our own age, the bourgeois age, is distinguished by this—that it has .simplified class hntagonismn, enough Hungarian films, the licenses further their political aims. They in-| sisted that certain Japanese jingoes ee Manchuria at the time | of Chang’s death be made the scape- 7 ; Boats for the murder, while Tanaka |£0rd, N. J., vice president of Zophar and his fellows bitterly opposed their | Mills, Inc., Brooklyn, on charges ot punishment on the ground that the | Possessing stamps with the can- ‘His Trial Postponed BROOKLYN, N. Y., July 3.— | Trial of Chatles W. Gramm, Cran- |try to escape legal consequences. notices on the workers that they are going to cut wages, FURNISHED Rooms ||DR. J. MINDEL OPPOSITE CENTRAL PARK 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. Y. SURGECN DENTIST . Labor Detes : t ; a vas 7 i 1 UNION SQUARE eee catstonia framie-ups will’ be | More snd more, society ix splitting |ally, but produced only three this |imperialist forces would be brought | Cellation marks washed off, was) | Now is your opportuhity to \ dis: d and officers elected at th a s e brought " i {hic Reom 803—Phone: Al, {i : fhecting OF the Bill Haywood iearen |. pre tits freateneat ahoe £amen. lyear and six last year. into bad repite, [Postponed today for two weeks| | get a room in the magnificent Nae caspered aR a 8183 Dairy at 227 Brighton Beach Avo, Friday Posed elaanen: Dourgeoisle and pro- | For each Hungarian film bought when his attorney, former Mis Workers Hotel other office omrades “Will Always Find It might. letarint—Murz, for showing in America, licenses to INGE, OF “RUM-TL-FOO.” man John J. Fitzgerald, was late in . . Pleasant to Dine at Onur Place. 5 5 jimport 20 films into Hungary ate} LONDON, July totes Ww. p, sttiving at court. ‘The wealthy | Unity Cooperative House | | 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx lgranted, but since there are not » July 3—Rev. W. R./forger is thus given mote time to| : (near 174th St. Station) 4 Inge, gloomy dean of St. Paul’s, has | 1800 SEVENTH AVENUE PHONE:— INTERVALD 9149. BUSINESS MEETING) eld on the first Monday of the | month at 3 p. m, Industry—One Union—Join Fight the Common Enemy! ice Open trom 0 a. oe ; es be bought in the open market. Pi Bue an MAE heessin ae | Gramm was arrested in connection Cor, 110th Street 4 249 WAST rath ‘SThERD (Continued from Page One) ¥, Hagersttom, Enfield, The decree also imposes a tax of | vious of the cottifortable, short, With a nation-wide ring which has) Tel. Monument 0111 eeite oatds diss MEET YOUR FRIENDS at Workers of Mansion Dress MB Say. certs 5,00 |$200 each on foreign films, creating | sjeoveless drésses of the girls and been circulating U. S. government Due to the fact that & huniber | if ‘ Shop, City ..... + 5.00) John Didocha, Westville, Ill, 1.50 | Tund to be, used for subsidizing the | wants the meh to profit by the spirit | Postage stamps with the cancella-| | Dv *0 the fact that elled to lesbo ; Messinger’s Vegetarian YN. Pacter, City... + 1.00/Frank Graham, Hecles...... 1.00 Hungarian film industry and send-|6¢ seform likewise, As first steps | tion miarks washed off. Gramm tried) | jenve the city, we haveta dine Sunday 10 a ih Nestor, Jersey City, N. J. 1.00/M. Thuroff, Albany, N. Y... 6.00 |in& @ specialist to study in Holly-| the collar stud and superfluous shire | t0 tell the court that he was a stamp| | 2% of rooms to rent. No | || M#t.telebhone tor apjota d Dairy R t rles Kanner, City....... 3.00/Pat Kavaridugh, Carlton, | wood. Buttons are td be banned. Whether Sollector. His weak denial was| | Or Of rooms to rent. No nr 6028 ani estauran nit 13, See. 6, Dist. i einn. sare elarsceese .. 1.00] + +L Bb Oe tHe, dekh: Wall taka 240° She | panetared when he admitted that hel: | ius Sox sutenae tobi 1763 Southern Blvd., P onx, N.Y. Brooklyn, N. Y........ ve 8B 3. R. Ross, Jamestown, N 3.00 Viti tent: hi id cO8 ‘had sold $30 worth of used stamps | Podge 5s Right off 174th St, Subway Stat! apes, Chenen Unit, City. 200/W. B. Davis, & Omaha, Neb, 500, COMMunist Activities fot been divadgels "to Zophar Mil, Inc FRED SPITZ, ‘Ih ites : — y, Chinese Unit, City... 2.00|Rubin, Brighton Beach, | TRE Saree | y Inc. 73 _— Peeeee, ait 2, Bab. 8) | Bhoatiyt N Voces 100 ——WANHAPTAN J] rantAN “Reb” BANQUET. | imperial fn ae tne come time | i FLORIST HEALTH FOOD MN Se ng, ee ee | " — The Harlem Italian Workers Club | *t¢ form of the State power which | NOW AT 31 SECOND AVENUE Vv * Steinberg, Brooklyn, N.Y. 2.00! Mass. re se 2.00} Downtown Unit 1, C. Y. L. iil benefit fect Rascent middie-clasy society had (Bet. 1st & 2nd Sta) egetarian Logisk: KI N.Y. 2.0015. Deoni || A meeting will be held at § p, m,| Will benefit from proceeds of a Red! commenced to elaborate os nm | z Forsberg acta Wise. 1.00 Me ie 8. Dartmouth, 2.99 | morrow at 2TH, Fourth st, Banquet to be held at club head-| of tts ow | Flowers for All” Ocedsions RESTAURANT , He ry . ‘| saa ee ees 2. a * nlism, | 5% REDUCTION TO READERS fs ‘i a ds FRlo d6r the juarters at 314 E. 104th St. Sunda; | 2 enced E. J., Philadelfhia, Pa.. 1.00|David Seuzk, 8 Dartmouth, of tne ra stetaee CHART COMPHRRAE gulp BL-CAW BAbEEAIS piakr ce] Henteaa esters aadaytianily eats | anes yyy. R. IN ITS OF THE DAILY WORKER 1600 MADISON AVE. i x meson, Grimes, Calif. 4.00 ia es ete 2.00 | newspaper, Will be held Sunday at entertainment will be presented pflavemient of labor by capitan. = | STRIKE RELIEF Phone: UNIversity 5865 \ . Pine, Grimes, Calif.... 1.35 T. P., 8. Dartmouth, 1.60 |Loetfler's Park Casino, 2061 West. erate pee t F | H. 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Des ae tf pea , aie Theodore Dreiser 5°: Telephone: Oltaville Sési=s--0t0153 ain . . Kaliroko, Chicago, Ill 1.00 | Unit 7, Dist. 10, Sioux City, BROOKLYN ——— Mae, be — Llewellyn, Detroit, Mich.. 1.00) Iowa .... +» 60.00 " — ‘I recommend ' Nucleus 504, Chicago, Ill, 46.00| Unit 2, Buffalo, N. Y....... 51.30] o, ty peste & i . ‘ e e Patronize RATIONAL | ‘ony Sablich, Neffs, Ohio.. 5.00 St. Nucleus 2, Dist 5, Pitts- pn foday at” fyrtie, Resour Crime and Punishment > Vegetarian “pri Dernae, Nefts, Ohio... 5.00] burgh, Pa. ......1....... 25,00 | Prince. St Tompkins. Ave, cof Matt as the most brilliant and artistic psychologic| || 418 Brook Ave., Bronx (i Ip Bar rr Shops m. Beiersdorfer, Orlando, International Br., Sec. 3, City 7.00 |Grand St. Extension, cor ‘Havemeyes M study the Cinema has ever achieved.” (Near 144th Street) RESTAURANT MEaics Cans ieiiccist 1.00 ee 1 OMteas ‘ 4 a St. ade Gua Baketon, By the te a, Iatees or hott ieel d Tel.: Mott Haven 5654 26-28 Htietss Co eae 199 SECOND AVEl UE amp N i. . Rapeani,’ EB. Chicago, Ind, A Witit & yw " - ted ey Bet. 12th and 13th Sts, get, Beacon, N.Yivviss.. 6.00 Cévainunlst Patty, Denver.. 25,00]. A junit meeting “mn he helt at s¢/ | FILM GUILD CINEMA ich att eto 52 West 8th Street Goods Called for & Delivered 2700 BRONX P/ °K EAST Strictly Vagheanan Pood Geo. Tesena, Fordson, Mich. “1.00 Unit 2, See. 4, City........ 31.00 [Manhattan Ayo. tonight. | cerecrroner yr re dcoreee Allerton Ave) pine. aah Seymour, Con. 5,00 E. S. Unit 1A, Sec. 4, City. 5.00 ie bast S. ¥, Unit. ©, x in Teer AR Rid Gi Taine By Patronizing the W. I. R. Store Bi a Tb Ore, 2.50 Max Twin, Bronx, N. Y.. 1.00 Jat’ pa, IHMGEENe aN Widodate wae reet| “For Any Kind of Insurance’ you will enable us to clean and Unity Co-operators Patronize Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 f y go, Tll.... 5.00 ‘ ——_—_—_ | Sutter’ Aves, ondwaty | repair the clothing we send to 0. Saulnier, New Bator. 400| stotat_ yesterday & 66035 | Bo ——— | | ARL BRODSK striking and destitute workers. SAM LESSER John’s Restaurant . Bogun, Neversink, N. Y.. 8.00 ta eA. tere ; aur CONSTANT NYMPH | so Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailor SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A. Bisbych, Baltimore, Md... 2.0¢| Previously collected..... 3,185.84 Upper nroite Unit 9, €. ¥. 1, E relephone: Murray Hil. 6550 Qh “Not Charity—But i with atmosphore Workers Co-op. Restaurant, ———— FAN open air meeting will be ‘neld| and PAULINO-SCHMELING FIGHT 4 hand 111 , ron radicals meet k . Te 5 | be a . i 39 tl Detroit, Mich. .sseveeecee 10004 Sum Utd. cseseeeeseesGiiT08.00 ata Whe Hagimonrom at fetnd sul" "we MgAN soUND. | 7_Hast 42nd Street, News York Setsdarity! Co‘Gherative Hotes f'] 308 B, 12th St,