The Daily Worker Newspaper, July 30, 1929, Page 5

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NE ULL a oie el = DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, JULY 30, 1929 : Page Five CO AT ONFERENGE BACK T.U.EL MEET Agenda Announced for Cleveland Sessions A highly successful preliminary conference in preparation for the Trade Union Unity Convention to he held in Cleveland August 81— September 2 was held recently in Seattle, Wash., the Trade Union Educational League reports. The Cleveland convention, which will begin the building of a new trade union center in the United States, will also mobilize for the working masses against imperialist war and for the defense of the So- wiet Union, and will fight for the release of the Gastonia strike lead- ers and strikers. From Heavy Jndustries. Twenty-four delegates, represent- ing heavy industries in Aberdeen, Tacoma, Everett and Seattle were present at the Seattle meeting and discussed the principal tasks to be taken up'at the Cleveland meet, in- cluding the fight against wage cuts, speed up, and for trade union unity; the fight against the war danger ete, Of the 24 delegates, nine came from saw mills, 5 were shingle weavers, two loggers, and the rest were carpenters, boilermakers, members of the building trades in- dustry, ete. Great enthusiasm pre- vailed at the conference at the con- clusion of which delegates were se- lected to attend the historic conven- tion in Cleveland. The workers of the Northwest, scene of many great labor strug- gles, are looking to the Cleveland conference as the beginning of new struggles under militant leadership united in a fighting trade union center. hed Defer Detroit Meet. Word comes from Detroit that jthe preliminary auto scheduled for August 11, has been postponed to August 24. A large | number of delegates have already been chosen for this conference * tatives to the Cleveand meet. ee a Many Respond. | Preparations for the onvention are going forward rap- idly, the T. U. E. L. reports, All | districts are reporting enthusiastic meetings and promise a full delega- tion to the convention. In the metal mining regions of Minnesota and Michigan, the T. U- E. L. organizer reports the arrange- ment of nine regional conferences which will lay the basis for union | organization and also elect delegates to Cleveland. The Illinois Conference of the Na- tional Miners Union, held recently, will send its quota of delegates to the convention; J. Rubin, Boston T. UU. E. L, secretary, promises a mini- mum of 35 delegates, stating that if finances permitted they could double this number. Texas—and Alaska. The highly successful Southern | Textile Conference, held in Besse- | mer City, N. C., Sunday, elected delegates to Cleveland. Delegates | have already been elected by the} cabinetmakers’ A. F. of L. local in| Rockford, Ill., and by a number of shop committees in the steel mills of Indiana. Delegates will be pres- | ent from Rockefeller’s domain in Whiting, Indiana. From two points Cleveland 10,000 miles Texas, an “outlaw” Longshoremen’s union, composed of Negro workers, will be represented, while in North- | ern Alaska a group of workers have sent in money to Seattle for T. U. | U. S. stamps. | * 8. ® Decide on Agenda. | The National Committee of the T. U. EL, at its last meeting de- cided upon the agenda for the Cleveland Convention as follows: 1. The Fight Against Wage Cuts, Speed-up (rationalization) and for Trade Union Unity. | 2. The Fight Against the War Danger—Defense of the Soviet nion. 3. The Organization of the Un- wrganized and Strike Strategy. 4, The Struggle of the Colonial Peoples Against American Imper- ialism. 5, Trade Unionism and the Ne- gro Workers. 6. Social Insurance. 7. Reports of Industrial Confer- ences. On the evening of Aug. 31, at the close of the first day’s session, a monster mass meeting will be held_in Cleveland to greet the Con- vention. , je, tl rely of the State power ut in bolder and bolder relief.—Marx. Pitronize No-Tip Barber Shops 26-28 UNION SQUARE (1 flight up) 2700 BRONX P/~K EAST (corner Allerton Ave.) Coopers rat PATRONIZE BERGMAN BROS. Your Nearest Stationery Store Cigars, Cigarettes, Candy, Toys 649 Allerton Ave. BRONX, N.Y. Telephone: Olinville 9681-2—0701-2 ST WORKERS Harlem Tenants Respond and the defense of the Soviet Union, | ) _ [DRESSMAKERS TO to Housing Conference weet TONIGHT (Continued from Page One) _yvicious system of segregation and N DRIVE | held the evenings of August 7 and |race division which forces the Ne- 8 at St. Luke’s hall, 125 West 130th | gro masses to herd into Jim Crow Street. The call points out the op-| districts, makes them the special pressive conditions under which the’ prey of unscrupulous and oppressive Negro and Latin American tenants, |landlords and real estate agents, in particular, are forced to exist in| both black and white. Negro work- upper and lower Harlem. jers get the lowest wages, are | Its Pet Thugs “The oppression of the landlords |est hit by unemployment, and are alike has reached the point where it calls | already forced to pay rents almost (Continued from Fage One) for immediate action on the part of | twice as high as others. Now their | limited to a few staged conferences all working class tenants and their | rents are bejng raised still higher | with the dress bosses, similar to the supporters. There is no end and no | and they are being dispossessed. So }recent fake fight with the cloak limit to the robbery of the rent |oppressive are the conditions of | bosses. profiteers. They have taken advan- | these workers that they fall ill and| A capacity attendance is anticipat- |tage of the housing shortage to/die from two to six times faster! ed at the mass meeting in Webster boost rents constantly. | than the people of other sections. | Hall tonight. Rent Raises, Wage Cuts, Unemploy- Tenants and Workers Must Unite * * : ment. | and Fight. 1, L. G. W. Bails Thugs. | “In spite of these outrageous rents| “All oppressed tenants and work- An assistant of Samuel Marke- |and in the face of constant wage re- ers are called upon to unite upon wich, lawyer for the International ductions and widespread unemploy- | a basic program for united mass ac- |Ladies Garment Workers, company | ment, the landlords are now serving | tion against rent robbery and vile | n i 4 ee junion of the cloak manufacturers, rent raises and dispossesses whole- | housing conditions. All tenants and | yesterday walked into court and |sale upon the poor tenants. They | workers’ organizations and individu- | posted $21,000 in bonds for the pur- have taken advantage of the aboli-| als sympathetic to this aim, are in- | pose of freeing on bail three hired _tion of the state emergency rent law | vited and urged to join in this rent | gangsters who Saturday invaded the |to demand increases of $10, $20, $30 | and housing conference.” | shop of the Style-Made Cloak Co., jand even as high as $52! | The League has also begun issu- 941 West 37th ‘St., for the purpose Negroes Suffer Worst in Jim Crow | ance of a special bulletin to keep | of attacking members of the Needle | |the tenants more closely acquainted | Trades Workers Industrial Union Districts. These conditions are rampant in| with work of the League in fight- who have an agreement with the | firm, the ghettoes of the east side, lower | ing rent increases, in defending ten- west side and lower Bronx among |ants in the capitalist courts against Because the Industrial Union en. the foreign born and poor native | the landlords, in so far as the whol- forces the 40-hour week, and it: workers. They are at their worst ly inadequate capitalist laws can be workers do not work on Saturday, in Harlem among the Latin Ameri-|used for such defense, and in the the thugs didn’t find those they were can and particularly among the Ne- | preparation of further action to pro- looking for, Reluctant to leave with- |gro workers and in the San Juan | tect the tenants against rent op- | out performing some kind of a and Brooklyn Negro districts, The | pression, | “job,” however, the Schlesinger em- * r less recklessly, LLG.W.U. Bails Out! \issaries beat up a cutter of the Du-; va! binsky outfit, the foreman and one |f ING SING ASKS NEW YORK LABOR S22" | til they had shot up the place more conference, | which, in turn, -will choose represen- | ARMED CRUISER \Prison Chief Admits Huge Demonstrations| Auburn Congested (Continued from Page One) Auburn prison, moved today to ob- _tain an armed cruiser to patrol the Hudson River nearby. | Eight machine guns were mount- ed-atop prison walls and four on the | prison docks along the river front | while 168 armed keepers patroled the institution. | + * 8 AUBURN, N. Y., July 29.—Fear- ing that horrible and incriminating facts about vile conditions, over- crowding, poor food and abuse may seep through following the prison mutiny here yesterday, Dr. Ray- mond F, C, Kieb, Commissioner of Corrections, today urged an “inves- tigation” to determine the cause of the mutinies both in Auburn and, last week, in Dannemora. The obvious purpose of this “in- vestigation” is to forestall the pos- sibility of these facts coming to the |fore and to save the face of the prison officials. A gang of “desperate New York criminals”—some of them now gon- fined and others free—these were blamed by Kieb for the Dannemora and Auburn prison break attempts in a cock-and-bull story handed out today. When asked if any such trouble is anticipated at Sing Sing, the state’s other principal penal institution, Kieb said that apprehension had been felt concerning all three pris- ons for some time, due to overcrowd- ing and the incarceration of large | numbers of long-term prisoners dur- ing the past few months. . At least one cell block was dam- aged and the prisoners today are | huddled in the remaining cells and jin several large assembly rooms, apart comes news that in Houston, | where they are under guard of men with machine guns. The trouble at the prison, though it broke out at a moment when it had not been expected, was long brewing. While the prison has a capacity of 1,200, there have been | more than 1,700 prisoners inside its walls for some time, 8 Prison Vile, Ancient. Auburn is the oldest and vilest prison in the state, and is now more than 100 years old. Even the Na- tional Society of Penal Information described the region around the Owasco River where it is located as “a damp and unhealthy place.” The cells are tiny, and because of its age and general neglect, the prison has been overrun by vermin. - * * Escape From Reformatory. , CROTON, N. Y., July 29.—Two | prjsoners, Harry Brown, 14 and Jo- seph Icowicz, 15, committed as “in- | corrigibles” from New York City, jescaped early today from Haw- | thorne Institute. They broke’ from separate rooms in a dormitory on | the second floor, The Gastonia Textile Workers’ trial began July 29! Twenty-three workers face electrocution or prison terms! Rally all forces to save them. Defense and Relief Week July 27—August 3! Sign the Protest Roll! Rush funds to International Labor Defense, 80 East 11th Street, New York. * at 6:30 P. M. All Daily Worker Agents must be present’ at a special meeting this FRIDAY, AUGUST Very important matters will be taken up, and evérybody must be present, PREPARES STRIKE on August Ist (Continued from Page One) |the organization of other anti-im- perialist war groups, to launch a |campaign for war funds and inau- jgurate efforts to establish contacts ‘with world organizations having aims similar to its own. The mobi- |lization of the toilers, including |working women, the Negro masses, |the youth and workers’ children, for |the struggle against the rapidly ap- ;Proaching attack on the fatherland of the working class, is to be the \chief task of the Conference. The Conference, ipractically every militant trade union and workers’ fraternal organi- zation in New York City, voted to a man for the general strike at 4 |o’clock, August 1, International Red |Day, and for the participation of | the organized workers it represents ‘in the Union Square demonstration. | * Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday of next week will be utilized to stage factory gate meetings before every |large factory in the city, Sam Darcy |of the Workers Action Committee \said yesterday, their purpose being |to mobilize the workers for the August 1 strike demonstration. | The Workers Action Committee of | 43, which was elected to facilitate the handling of Conference work, is | listed below. Jim Reid, president of the Na-| tional Textile Workers Union;) Alexander Anderson, vice president; representing | Me Schlesinger’s “boys” were released for hearing in Jefferson Market Court tomorrow morning before | Magistrate Gottlieb. Two are charged with felonious assault and malicious mischief, and one is charged with malicious mis- chief. Who were these individuals for whom the counsel for the ‘scab “un- ion” was making such 4 valiant plea? Here are their records as re- vealed at the preliminary hearing yesterday: Schlesinger’s Assistants. 1. “Joseph Cohen” (name given yesterday); arrested in 1925 for fe- lonious assault under the name of \“Paul Berger”; discharged by Mag- istrate Oberwager. The following day he was arraigned on a separate charge of homicide; discharged by Magistrate Hause. Arrested again |in 1925 charged with felonious as- sault, freed by Magistrate Hause. Arrested in 1927 for felonious as- |sault, this time giving the name of | i} jury. In 1928, giving the name of Harry Weinstein, he was arrested for felonious assault; freed by Mag- istrate Goodman, Arrested again in 1928 for malicious mischief, giv- ing the name of “Paul Goldstein,” he was released by Magistrate Good- man. “Little Frenchie.” The second character, who gave his name as “Harry Klein,” is bet- | ter known in the garment center as “Little Frenchie,” a notorious gang- ster of many years standing with the corrupt right wing unions. This worthy, from 1922 on was charged at various times with grand larceny, felonious assault and unlawful entry and each time he was freed by an Alexander Anderson, vice-president, National Textile Workers Union;| |Fred Biedenkapp, general manager | |of the Independent Shoe Workers Union; Al Thibauld; Louis Hyman, | {president of the Needle Trades | Workers Industrial Union; A. Gross, | jmanager of the fur department, same union; Rose Wortis, secretary of the New York Joint Board, |Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union; J. Cohen, furriers depart- ment, N.T.W.I.U.; Sylvia Bleeker, Local 48, Milliners Union, N.T.W.1. U.; Anna Fox, Amalgamated Cloth- ing Workers; J. Anderson, Marine Workers League; Michael Obermeier, Hotel, Restaurant and Cafeteria Workers Union;- D. Gitz, ditto; Fotis, Bakers Local 164, Amalga- mated Food Workers; Leo Hoff- bauer, Architectural Iron and Bronze Workers Union; M. Rosen, Carpenters Union; Owerking, Win- dow Cleaners Union; Keppel and Heder, A.ILB.W.U.; Albert Moreau, All - America Anti - Imperialist League; W. Simons, ditto; M. Aus- tin, Laundry Workers Section, T.U. E.L.; Richard B. Moore, president of the Harlem Tenants League; H. Williams, American Negro Labor Congress; George Pershing, Young Communist League; Saltzman, Oken, Abe Epstein, Sultan, and Sherman, Independent Workmen’s Circle; Y. Y. Hsu and James Mu, the Chinese Alliance for the Support of the Workers and Peasants Revolution; John D. Masso, glassworkers; Kate Gitlow, president of the United Council of Working Women; A.! Landy and A. Wagenknecht, Work- ers International Relief; J. Louis Engdahl and Juliet Stuart Poyntz, the International Labor Defense; Wm. W. Weinstone, Rebecca Grecht, Ben Lifshitz, Pasternack, Sam Darcy, New York District of the Communist Party. accommodating magistrate or judge. The career of the third thug, “Irv- ing Zaraich,” is very much the same as that of the other two, FURNISHED ROOMS Now is your opportunity to get a room in the magnificent Workers Hotel Unity Cooperative House 1800 SEVENTH AVENUE OPPOSITE CENTRAL PARK Cor. 110th Street Tel. Monument 0111 Due to the fact that a number of tenants were compelled to leave the city, we have a num- ber of rooms to rent. No security necessary. Call at our office for further information. Costume-Ball Sam Gold; discharged by the grand i ARE YOU READY? TICKETS IN ADVANCE $1.50 JAZZ MUSIC BY VERNON GET YOUR TICKETS IN ADVANCE AT: |All onfts and all menibera attention! | Main tasks for the Units: Th a Greater New York Work- Unit ers Anti-Im list War and Detend || ts, meets 7 | the Soviet U n Conference his es- 6 101 West h St | tablished 2 permanent body to fight * Ba Ee | Imperialist war. It ix the duty of | 4. : | Re | all units to take up the task of build- |, Th ae é ae ing anti-war committees In the shops, °f Daily Worker Arranges unions and with the object to the conte Commur West tomorroy Moonlite Cruise Ever since pithecanthropus erectus hem | (2) Everyth must be speeded | OTK is life i voare. dtvid k up every Party comrade on) = the year into months, and whittled ix doing for August 1. what|Labor and Fraternal down the month into weeks, and be-| is : i i n gan to put out Poor Richard’s Al- Organizations manac, Friday has been a sig: nt Tee in the history of mankind. tonia Defense | 1" BROORT VN) $ all, comes but once a aderouae ae: ] BROOKLYN : 1 st of all, it comes bu ni week. Then it drips with all sorts of high and ghostly connotations or Brighton Beach Open Air Meet. Aug. 1 for the defense * aed Ualon will likewise be something. For instance, we have a Ition for the defense of the G Beach Ave. today Kt S80 Black Friday, a “holy” Friday and |textile workers, Spread widely t the joint auspices of Council & a , arr ‘riday the signatures of protest and help to ob- | United Council, of Working Women | ‘He allegedly ill-starred Friday thi tain the 1,000,000 signatures, and the ighton Beach W: 13th, not to forget Robinson Cru- Club Speakers include Chere soe’s man Friday (4) Defend the Soviet Union. Fight | Ronbing and Tlarper soe’s man Friday. against the war danger. This is the i are Rat eiday eae ee OLR will notcHe main task of the Part 5 S pate By aera Stnavernes j Brighton Reach I. L, D. marked by any particular “holi- sion in the units on Len- | meeting of ee ses ines or etras aa A eties and alms of Inter= | p,4, reating of 1 Ha 1 ness,” and as for anything sinister patonal Red Day. | Lugust happening on that occasion — we (6) Frepare th lection machinery Le that thought will be taken for a for putting the Party ticket on the ride (a boat ride). And far helen witha. elder ride (a boat me), Beles >m {Ta Pee 5 Daan running under the color of reaction, ‘tor the Coad Gastonia Defense Concert. inerinancimutamenmicnuteniiinerae |August 20th in pre hton Beach Workers Club Z ed a de Cleveland Conference. a midnight cone: nd palpitating red. (S)_ very Phrty comrade must ee a Because Friday, August 9th is the pay his day's wage. Funds are | pj, Saturday t 11:30 date of the moonlite cruise and co: needed to carry on the struggle yy) ‘Tickets are 5 2 against the war danger. Ha obteinadeatether Ny tume ball arranged by the Dai TO ALL FRACTIONS 79 Broadway, and at Worker, which has chartered the DIRECTIONS IN TRAD UNIONS AND LABOR Beach Ave | Peter Stuyvesant, one of the whales | ORGANIZATIONS, (Fraternal, wo- | ans ; 4 | men’s organizations, workers’ clubs, - of the Hudson River Day Line, f ete.) | MANHATTAN the event, and corralled Vernon An- Meet immediately on the war dan-| | drade’s Famous Negro Renaissance | ger, as follows: To prepare for rais- to Students. ‘ing the question of the tasks in rela-) _W: ding Esperanto Orchestra for good measure. to the defense of the Seviet OT re interested in learning i a ve teint rapa Uni Mobilize the maasex for a|and want direct correspondence} There,are only a limited number struggle against the war provoca-| With workers in the U . R. are | of tickets, on sale at the business o: tions. asked to write to F Branch, fice of the Daily Worker and all e of Hunga rkers Ifome, |. Do everything to make the events 3 FE. Sist St., YC. or to the | Party stations, and at present going |in which the Party participates sue- Daily Workers Esperanto Correspon- |p. ¢1 5 es egy leessful, dence Department for $1.50 a piece, although there is | | +3 ee c a rumor abroad that pasteboard speculators are endeavoring to cor- ner the few that remain. The lucky Immediate tasks for all New Jer- sey and up-state New York units in line with a program of work sent out today are: | ference of Women conference of unit ctors will t |G) Get resolutions passed in alt 27,0, m, at 26 Tinton Square.” Very |holders of the prized stubs will workers’ organizations for defense of |!™POT! s wi s- | strike work Red Friday evening and [tHe Soviet Union agningt the war ie | us to the pier at the foot of West jment backed by the foreign Imper-| 4 ofits ovkorn rte weet to at. |42nd St. boarding the boat before |ialints, | Immediate arrangement f/tend an open air meeting to be held|8 p.m. Many a Red plans to paint er 2 Q under the auspices of the Office |the Hudson River red on Red Fri- | (@) Immediately send material for Workers Union at 26th St. and Madi- cavers special anti-war issue of every shop son Ave. today at 12:30 p, m. day, Et tu? paper we issue. W. I. R. Wants Chauffeur. Week July 27—August 3! Sign the Protest Roll! Rush funds to International Labor Defense, 80 East 11th Stre:t, New York. (3) Elect committee of three to] 4 chauffeur is wanted to avi Sadtonia. Text Fortier |earry thro other preparations for Sate oaihteen i OES ty The Gastonia Textile Workers: August Ist An open air demonstra- Mott Haven 9654, asking for| ‘ial began July 29! Twenty-three |ton in every town must be arranged. s. Baum. | workers face electrocution or (4) Immediate mobilization for prison terms! Rally all forces to Second Met Lt: Trad Union * . len eurcnelitae etane T save them. Defense and Relief | } y Conference in New York Au- t 20th and National Convention in | Cleveland August 3ist. | € Arrange house to house col- | lections and at least one tag day for Gastonia Defense before July DISTRICT COMMITTE Communist Activities |N. Y. WORKERS | a >. ore: 20 Needed to Help ILD on Gastonia Case | seats | During Gastonia } | Relief Week, July Jone quarter mi be sent from the national offices | of the Internati abot De- fense, Room 402, t ith street, New York. In order to] fold, stamp, address, and do the j other technical details in the of- | fice, twenty more persons are] needed in t Unemployed | workers wil d their ¢x- penses to aid in the mass of work |for the defense of the Gastonia |priseners. Apply at the above] | address any time throughout the lday after 9 a.m. STRIKE IN BUDAPEST. VIENNA, (By Mail).—It is re- ported from Budapest that all the workers of the large-scale engineer- ing works in Budapest went on a e. 24-hour prot str Kind of Insurance ARL BRODSK Telephone: Murray Hils 5536 7 East 42nd Street, New York Cooperators! Patronize oe OA BS a CHEMIST 657 Allerton Estabrook 3215 Avenue Bronx, N. Y. Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST 249 BAST 115th STREET Cor. Second Ave. New York 2 to 8 p,m. Sunday, 10 a. m. to 1 p,m. Please telephone for appointment. Telephone: Lehigh 6022 IDR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Rcom 803—Phone: Algonquin 8183 Not connected with any other office 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 CALLED. TONIGHT For the purpose of extending ana Tel.: DRYdock 8880 [BROOKLYN a FRED SPITZ, Inc. ction 6 Opens Air Meets. Section 6 has arranged the fol-|spreading the organization drive| FLORIST * and Cumberland, |among the thousands of unorganized |} NOW AT 31 SECOND AVENUE ee moeny aay ae |shoe workers, the Independent Shoe (Bet. Ist & nd Sts.) | : and Wyekott | Workers Union will hold a shop del- Flowers for All Occasions St. Wed. July Oe te ae Myrtle s? 7 i i: vi 15% REDUCTION TO READERS Ave. and Nostrand, Wed. July 31, 12 legates’ conference tonight in Irving OF THE DAILY WORKER Plaza, 15th St. and Irving Place. | noon 50,000 Workers Must Come §| Saturday (*.) August 3 Morning Freiheit PICNIC at ULMER PARK wpa kiation 2 SOCCER GAMES at 1:30.and 3:30 P. M. Music, Dancing, Entertainment Sports, Refreshments, Games TICKETS 40 CENTS—at the Morning Freiheit, 30 Union Square, New York AUGUST 9th WITH THE DAILY WORKER BUNCH A on the V2 S. S. Peter Stuyvesant e TO UNKNOWN PLACES on the BLUE WATERS OF THE HUDSON Dancing Entertainment ON DAY OF DEPARTURE $2.00 RADES ORCH ESTRA THE FAMOUS RENAISSANCE ORCHESTRA DAILY WORKER OFFICE, 26 Union Square, N. Y. NEW MASSES, 39 Union Square, N. Y. Comrade Frances Pilat MIDWIFE 351 E. 7/th St., New York, N. Y. nder 3916 Tel. Rhine Dairy & : omrades Will Bind It Pleasant to Dine at Our Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLYD., Bronx (near 174th Station) PHONE:— INTERVALE 9149, MEET YOUR FRIENDS at Messinger’s Vegetarian and Dairy Restaurant 1763 Southern Blvd., P-onx, N. Y. Right off 174th St, Subway Station RATIONAL Vegetarian RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVE1.UE Bet. 12th and 13th Sts, Strictly Vegetariun Food All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S’ Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx 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 Advertise your Union Meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City Vvee———————__. Hotel and Restaurant Workers Branch of the Amalgamated Food Workers 133 W. 5ist St,, Phone Circle 7336 BUSINESS MEETING?) eld on the first Monday of the month at 8 p. m. Indastry—One Union—Join and Fight the Common Enemy! Office Open from 8 a, m, to 6 p. m. & Bronx; German Workers’ Club. Meets every 4th Thursday in the month at Labor ‘Temple, 243 E, S4th St. New members accepted at regular? meetings. German and English library. Sunday lectu’ Social entertainments. AN Ge man speaking workers are wel come.

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