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EM tl ld a ee — emus * . a Page Five DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SAT JRDAY AUGUST 3, 1929 15,000 BATTLE IN PITTSBURGH ON ANTI-WAR. DAY Show Militant Action Against Police (Continued from Page One) Ambridge, Monesson, and the min- ing towns, Meluding Avella, Cover- dale, and Penowa. Four thousand workers from the Westinghouse Electric Co, demonstrated at a noon- day meeting, and remained five min- utes over the lunch time, to vote their protest against the attack on the Soviet Union, The International Labor Defense, through District Secretary Saltzman, mass meetings. At 5 p. m. hun- dreds of workers came straight from the auto shops to the Danceland Auditorium where speakers of the Communist Party and Young Com- munist League were cheered to the \echo when. presenting the Commu- nist analysis of imperialist war and calling for mobilization of the work- jers to defend the Soviet Union and | defeat imperialist attacks upon it. Train To Defend Labor. A young worker from the citi- | {zens’ military training camp pledged | solidarity, saying, “We young work- | lers will train ourselves to fight al- | ways on the side of the working | class.” After the | workers in attendance proceeded to }open air demonstrations. The po- lice attempted to destroy signs with | slogans such as: “Down With Im- jperialist War,” etc. Hundreds of |workers cheered the speakers and | jeered the police who were attempt- |ing interference. | Seven workers were arrested. | The Hamtrank open air demon- indoor meetings, the, 1 POLICE ARREST 3 N.Y. WORKERS ON ANTI-WAR DAY ‘Many Others Beaten; I.L.D. Defends (Continued from Page One) at 27th St. and 6th Ave. Taken to Jefferson Market Court and charged with holding a meéting without a permit, inciting to riot, ete. Re- leased in custody of attorney for a | later hearing. Thursday, August 1: Laura Oken and Helen Haynor, Pioneer leaders, |arrested near Union Square while defending Pioneers from police at- jtack. ‘Taken to Jefferson Market | Court and released on $500 bail for is defending all the cases and has/|stration was attended by hundreds | hearing Aug. 9. already bailed out all atrested. oer * ‘Parade in Philadelphia. PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 2. — Pa- rading from street meetings in working class sections with ban- ners denouncing the imperialist at- tack against the Soviet Union, as- sailing the Kellogg pact and de- manding freedom for the Gastonia prisoners, workers filled the New Broadway arena here last right at the International Red Day demon- stration against imperialist war and for the defense of the Soviet Union. Police Out in Force, Hundreds of police and detectives surrounded the arena and lined the streets as the paraders converged in the vicinity of the meeting and marched into the place, but no ar- rest8 were made and there was no attempt to stop the marchers in spite of the fact thet the newspa- pers had declared the police would prohibit the demonstration. Refused to Get Police Permit. The police of the city have tried for years to maintain a strict police censorship over meetings of the} Communist Party,—but of late the Party aid other organizations have waged a struggle agaist the per- nit system with the object of break- ng it. The inactivity of the police s accounted for by the fact that a week ago an indoor meeting of the International Workers Aid in behalf of the Gastonia prisoners was raided and a number of prominent Phila- delphians, among them the daughter of a former goverr.or, were arrested. The newspapers, that had always applauded arrests of workers, began | a campaign of denunciation against the police and two contending po- litical factions used the incident for their own purposes, with the result that Superintendent of Police Mills is on the defensive. Cheer Revolutionary Speeches. Herbert Benjamin, district organ- izer of the Party, as chairman, spoke about the war danger, the attack against the Soviet Union, and the Gastonia case. Rudolph Shonan, of the Communist Youth League, dealt with the question of imperialist war s it affects the youth. There was speaker ffom the Pioneers and a hinese speaker who denounced the | Chiang Kai Shek government for its war against the Soviet Union, H. M. Wicks, editc : of the Daily Worker, former candidate for gov- ernor of Pennsylvania and recent Communist candidate for mayor of the city, was the principal speaker and presented the Communist posi- tion with the role of the United States government in the campaign against he Soviet Union, and raised the gan of “defeat American imperi- alism,” in declaring that in case of in imperialist war between imperial- st nations the Communists raise the logan of fraternization and at the proper moment, of turning the war vetween the imperialist nations into a civil war against capitalism. In ase of a war against the Soviet Union, the slogan shall be “go over o the side of the Red Army.” The meeting was ex’. .rely enthu- iastic, far surpassing any May Day jemonstration of recent years. After the meeting there was a parade with banners along streets ‘illed with crowds from the theatres, ind past the City Hall to the Party readquarters, ‘ pms * Miners Meet; Defy Police. . WEST FRANKFORT, Ill, Aug. —In this important coal mining enter, the mayor of West Frank- ‘ort prohibited mass meetings to lemonstrate against imperialist war. (he meeting was held nevertheless. The police raided it, and used their lubs freely, even on the children oresent. William Matheson, sub- listrict organizer of the Communist »arty, and Jack Johnstone, Mid- Vestern organizer of the Trade Jnion Educational League, were ar- ested. Johnstone’s hand was brok- n by the police in the attack. Coal operators’ gunmen held up nd threatened Fred Hert, field or- canizer of the Young Communist eague, and told Hert and Matheson o leave town. Several others were urt in the raid on the meeting. Ce ee Five Jailed in Steel Town. HAMMOND, Ind, Aug, 2—Five orkers in this steel company town ore arrested yesterday for distrib- ing anti-war circulars, which the lice aré going to say in court are seditious.” They are held under $5,000 cash ail @ach, and are today in the nunty jail. * 8 Auto Town Meetings. DETROIT, Mich., Aug. 2.—Detroit on war, particularly dealing | lice attempts to arrest speakers. pledged solidarity to the Gastonia | defendants, and defense of the Soviet | Union against imperialist war. MORE MORE MORE ETAO N EISMAN, PIONEER, SENTENCED TO 6 MONTHS IN ‘HOME ‘Judge Makes Threat of Reformatory (Continued from Page One) | Several times for his activities and |also carried on a fight in his school, | Junior High School 61, where he was first demoted and then suspended for refusing to stop his propaganda work among the children at the school. Should he be finally sent to the Home of Jewish Guardians, he will be kept practically a prisoner there. “The vicious sentence is an evidence of the intensified attack launched on this militant children’s organization \ by the capitalist police and courts. But, undismayed, Eisman, before be- ing taken away, wrote the follow- ing statement to his comrades in the Pioneers: “Dear Comrades: “In view of the fact that I have been sentenced to six months in a Jewish institution at Hawthorne, N. Y., I want to state that my spirit is still high, in fact, at its highest. I promise that when I come out, I will lose no time and will join again |the ranks of the Pioneers as a | fighter for the working class ¢hil- \dren, for the improvement of their |eonditions and against the Boy Scouts, against bosses’ wars and to defend the Soviet Union. I con- clude that I stand ‘Always Ready.’” “HARRY EISMAN,” LA GUARDIA IS “CANDIDATE OF (Continued from Pdgé One) | alist conflict and for an attack on |the Soviet Union. The tremendous demonstration in Union Sq. on Aug. 1, Grecht pointed out, indicates that the militant work- ers of the city will support the can- didates of the Communist Party, which alone fights imperialist war |and for the defense of the Soviet | Union. His whole political reeord, Grecht said, proves that he is eminently fit to be the candidate of the big financial interests who hold the con- trol of the city in the palm of their hands. He has always been sup- ported by the Italian fascist organi- zations in New York. Fake “Progressive” La Guardia, she said, is a typical representative of the bosses. His fake “progressivism” is a cloak to | cover his faithful service to the fin- ancial groups who want him to be their agent in the City Hal. “Ta Guardia was chosen to tun on a platform which says not a single word about speed-up, wage cuts, the struggles of the workers, the dan- ger of imperialist war—one that doesn’t even make the pretense of mentioning housing, rent, etc. It ig- nores completely the brazen police terror that has characterized the Walker Tammany administration. “It has nothing to say about the bitter exploitation of women and the cruel oppression of the Negro mass- es, The platform speaks of creat- ing a business government which is obviously a duplicate of Hoover's platform of imperialism and ration- alization. All Boss Candidates. “All three capitalist candidates, La Guardia, Walker and Thomas, are united on the issues of vital impor- tance to the workers of this city. Rogardless of whether one or the other is elected—strikers will be bru- tally slugged and jailed and courts will issue injunctions. “The closeness of the socialist party to La Guardia is seen by the fact that it supported him in his campaign for Congress severa! years ago. “Only the candidattes of the Com: munist Party truly represent the in- orkers yesterday demonstrated vainst imperialist war in three forthcoming campaign they will ex- of militant workers, resisting the po- | The workers at all of the meetings | BIG EMPLOYERS: | Sidney Bloomfield, arrested when | police violently attacked a meeting at night at Wilkins and Intervale Aves. Charged with disorderly con- duct and released on $500 bail for | hearing Aug. 9. | 17 Arrested in Raid. | Seventeen workers were arrested | when police raided the Communist |Party headquarters at 1472 Boston Rd., after breaking up the meeting at Wilkins and Intervale Aves. They are Harry Eisenman, Barney For- man, Dave Madikin, Leo Brick, Philip Kaufman, Kozel Finke, Max Wolf, Harry Kaplanitz, Pearl Mann, Aaron Cohen, Sophie Zucker, Jeannette Rubin, Helen Shifman, Shiriey Pearl, Sonia Levin and Ray Halpern. They | were kept overnight at the 177th St. Court and appeared before Magis- {trate Vitale in the 6th Magistrate’s Court yesterday., The case was | postponed till Aug. 9 and they were | veleased in custody of eer * Herbert Bentall. 15 years old, ar- rested at the Intervale and (Wilkins Aves. meeting. Appeared in Chil- dren’s Court yesterday and case was | dismissed. Carries Torch — Gets Pinched. J. Silver, arrested at a meeting | downtown while carrying a torch. Kept overnight in the Fifth St. Sta- tion and appeared in Essex Market Court yesterday morning, charged with violating fire regulations. Case postponed. Mary Dworkin and Olga Kioodin, arrested for distributing leafiets in the Bronx. Appeared before Magis- trate Vitale in the 6th Magistrate's Court and released on $500 bail each for hearing Aug. 23. Klein and Flickman, arrested while holding an Anti-War Day meeting in the morning near the Navy Yard in Brooklyn. Taken to Adams St. Court and case dismissed. ae ae I. L. D. Scores Police. The savage brutality of the police Jin thei¢ attempts to break up the International Red Day demonstra- tions is denounced in a statement issued yesterday by the New York District of the International Labor Defense, which furnished bail for and is defending the 30 workers who were arrested during the police at- tacks. The statement, signed by Rose Baron, secretary, declares: | “The Tammany police ran true to |form on Thursday. Enraged at the mighty demonstrations against im- perialist war by the workers of New York, they did everything in their power to break up the demonstra- tions, attacked workers and little children, beat many of them merci- lessly and arrested 28. Their “good | behavior” during the big Union Sq. demonstration was evidently only for show. When the workers con- gregated around the Workers Cen- ter after the meeting, they rushed upon them with their armored mo- toreycles and began clubbing and manhandlifig men, women and chil- | dren. Vicious Attack and Raid. “But the police reserved the height of their savagery for the Bronx, when they ran wild at a meeting at Intervale and Wilkins Aves., beat- ing everybody whom they could lay hands on, and making arrests. They capped this with the raid on the Communist Party headquarters at Boston Rd. where they broke into the building and arrested 17. “The New York District of the International Labor Defense con- demns this unprovoked orgy of bra- tality. We hail the courageous way in which the workers fought back, defending themselves against the bloodhounds of Tammany Hall. With the support of the workers the I. L, D. will defend in the courts all those arrested and do everything possible to secure their immediatte release.” pose the frightful housing conditions existing in the e'ty, show the strike- breaking tole of the police, and re- veal how they sétve the interests of the bosses whenever the workers are engaged in struggle.” | .o* Red Nominees Speak. The opening gun in the Commun- ist mayoralty campaign will be fired today at the annual picnic of the Freiheit, Jewish Communist daily, to be held in Ulmer Park, Brooklyn, When leading candidates of the Party speak. Included among these will be William W. Weinstone, candidate for mayor; J. Louis Mngdahl, candidate for presi- dent of the Borough of Manhattan; H. M. Wicks, candidate for presi- dent of the board of aldetmen; M. J. Olgin, 4th A. D., Bronx; Rebecca Grecht, 6th A. D., Bronx; Rose Wor- tis, rd A. D., Bronx; Fred Bieden- kapp, candidate for president of the Borough of Brooklyn, and Richard terests of the working class. In the! B. Moore, candidate in the 21et Con- gressional district, DEFEND U.S. S, AGAINST ENEMIES e Aid Against War (Continued from Page One) urmoun‘ed by a tremendous num- ber of red flags and home made placards, including caricatures. * * | The National Executive Commit- |tee meeting of the National Textile | Workers’ Union meets tomorrow at the national office, 104 Fifth Ave. | The questions particularly to be discussed are the National Silk Con-| ference, to be held in Paterson, on| the 28th, the New England Cotton a ‘conference, and the Charlotte Gen-- Pledge Activ ‘eral Southern Textile Workers’ Con- | ference. The matter of electing dele-! gates to represent the union at the; Cleveland Trade Union Unity Con- ference will also be taken up. 15 ARRESTED IN “GHIGAGO BATTLE | GET JURY TRIAL Poice Charge Engdahl I Started Struggle (Continued from Page One) picked up and thrown into the police wagon with others, not even know- | ing what the demonstration was ebout. Through the night she was tormented by the fact that police had taken $12 from her, all of her, vings during thirteen years, dur- ing which she had only two days off, | Engdahl was arrested in the court room today, it being charged he spoke from an open automobile at t he demonstration, demanding “Down with the police,” which po- lice claim started the “riot.” This is evidently the line the prosecution will attempt to follow at the trial. Mme. Sun Scores Kuomintang SHANGHAI, China, August 2. The widow of Sun Yat Sen, leader of the Chinese revolution against the Manchus, and considered the father the Chinese nationalist movement, sterday sent a telegram denounc- the Nanking war lord govern- ent. The telegram was to the id Anti-Imperialist League. ils the ig party ationalist { revolution and attempted to provoke war with the Soviet Union.” “Terrorism,” she said in the mes- sage, “only strengthens the masses’ determination to triumph over the present bloody reaction in the short- est possible time.” * 20,000 In Stockholm (Wireless to Inprecorr.) STOCKHOLM, Sweden. Aug. 2 There was a successful anti-war demonstration here of 20,000 work- crs. There wére also fine meetings in Goteborg, Malmo, Norrkoping, |and other cities. * * Great Strikes in France. (Wireless By “Inprecorr”) PARIS, France, Aug. 2. — Fine Try Frame-up. | Detective-Sergeant Peter Harlip, | 3 arresting Engdatl, also charged that | demonstrations surged through the < | Belt,” the factory workers’ Bruno attempted to deprive him of | ection ef Paris, in spite of all Pre- his gun. This shows the desperate |} ~ * 1% efforts of the police, led by Captain 40°¢ Chiappe’s 80,000 troops could Charles Essig, to frame-up the |{°. Be RO asia al Wailers Bssig declared in open !did not prevent mass meetings and s in Clichy, Argenteuil, Ivry, St. Denis and other quarters. Many strikes and demonstrations were reported from the provinces. On Wednesday night the police court he wished he could throw all Communists in the Chicago river. The struggle for the streets for the workers’ demonstration sterday was waged over the historice scenes | was police from the Desplaines sta-|aéain Thursday, confiscating the tion who were sent against the | August First number. The Commu- (Randolph St.), protesting against also confiscated. Yesterday morn- the ing and wounding of numer- | ing there were numerous strikes of ous strikers at the McCormick Har-|metal, building, and auto workers. vester plant. |The workers marched in demonstra- Attorneys David J. Bentall and | tion. Albert Goldman, of the Interna-| Reports from Loire, Alsace-Lor- tional Labor Defense, announce they |raine, Aube, Marseilles, and other will claim no permit was needed for | industrial centers, show great strike the demonstration. They declare this | movements. issue was fought out when Engdahl | was arrested June 6, 1925, but later | freed when it was found that no) permit was needed for meetings. * * * (Wireless By Inprecorr) | Although demonstrations on August 1 were prohibited by the government the workers held them everywhere. C L0 A K C UTTE R | Large forces of police and military attacked the workers, wounding many. The Communist leaders: Welti, Wiesser, Arnold, Bodemenn, jers to demonstrate despite the pro- hibition of the meetings, was con- jand others were arrested. fiseated by the police after the The demonstration in Zuelich was permitted. Thousands were present at it. The edition of the Basle Vor- (Continued from Page One) caught two, who were as a result| oe Saath greater part of the edition was dis- Brought to Jefferson Market | !tibuted. The editorial offices were Court they told Magistrate Gottlieb | 9¢cupied by tht police they were “taxi drivers.” This is the regulation bluff offered by these | t “knife drivers” whenever they are | (Wireless By “Inprecorr”) caught in their murderous attacks| KISHENEV, Rumania, Aug. 2 under the direction of the right wing|The workers here demonstrated on bureaucrats. | August 1 with red flags and revolu- Shooting in Kisheney, attack was found in the fact that| Soviet Union. The military attacked only a short time before the gang-|the parade, firing on the workers. sters were brought into a court,;Many are wounded. Thirty are ar- three workers who were arrested on/| rested and are in the foul Rumanian the first day of the recent fake | dungeons. cloak stoppage were arraigned for hearing. These workers had de- (Wireless by Imprecorr.) fended themselves from an attack; VIENNA, Austria, Aug. 2—The by gangsters operating under the) August 1 issue of the Rote Fahne direction of Breslav, one of Schles-| was confiscated by the government inger’s clove associates. | because it appealed to the workers Raises Workers’ Bail. |to demonstrate that day against the At the so-called hearing Magis-| attack on the Soviet Union. Great trate Gottlieb, the same luminary] demonstrations Wednesday evening before whom the I. L. G W. thugs| and mass meetings caused collisions were bought, iacveased the bail of | with the Austrian fascists. The po- the three workers. Originally $3,500 | * * of the Haymarket affair of 1886. It | ‘aided the offices of L’Humanite and | workers assembled in the Haymarket | nist publication, Internationale, was| waerts, whch appealed to the work- | and military. * | An ironic sidelight on yesterday’s | tionary songs for the defense of the | lice escorted the badly damaged fascists away from the meetings. | Yesterday the Freiheitsplatz was made into med police camp. The work demo: ted before the Burg theatre and in many places in the workers’ sections of the city, Armed police attacked the meetings everywh and confis cated another edition of the Rote Fahne. The police searched the c tices of the Communist Party and fi the Communist Youth League. | Factory, Barrack Meetings | By “Inprecorr”) England, Aug. 2. Demonstrations were held at the London factories and leaflets were distributed through the soldiers’ bar- |racks yeste There were good |demonstrations at Glasgow and E inburgh, There were spe ings of the locked out textile wi ers in Lancashire. Par' the demonstrations was good in the industrial areas. * * | (Wireless By “Inprecorr”) Great Demonstrations in Bohemia. PRAGUE, Czecho-Slovakia, Aug. .—The police Wednesday night made numerous further arrests in order to prevent anti-war demon- \strations. Bubenichek, Wagstein, | Vodipeska, and other worker lead- ers are in jail, Prosecutions are prepared against 183 Communists. Early morning demonstrations terday, especially around the Kar- lin railway stations, took place and jwere addressed by Deputy Stern, who was arrested and then released. COLOMBIA FACES FRESH OUTBREAK NW Armed Workers Battle | At Dos Quebradas | | (Continued from Page One) breaks as “without political signi- \ficance and reiterated its former statement on the ability of the au- ithorities to deal with the insurrec-| |tion, It is known, however, that this is |far from the truth and that the gov- {ernment forces if the revolted areas Jare finding it difficult to hold their own against the armed forces of |workers and peons. Some of the papers have gone so far as to advise the government to take more drastic steps in remedy- ing the intolerable conditions under which the Colombian workers live, if it hopes to stem the rebellion at the eleventh hour. In the opinion of competent ob- |servers of the Colombian situation, BASLE, Switzerland, Aug. 2. —|it is already too late to suppress the |revolt by such measures of partial jreform: The outbreak in the vicinity of | Dos Quebradas is reported to have |been far more violent and the strug- jgle more bitter than the battle at |Libano last Sunday. Communists Win Fight 'to Hold Harlem Meets Ave., in Harlem, tonight proved that the Communist Party has won its long fight with the police for the right to speak at this corner. The attentive crowd was addresed by H. Williams, Harper, A. Glass- |wood, Grace Lamb and a Gastonia striker, ~|| |] Phone: LEHIGH 6382 || International Barber Shop M, W. SALA, Prop. || 2016 Second Avenue, New York | (bet, 103rd & 104th Sts.) | Ladies Bobs Our Specialty Private Beauty Parlor Patronize |No-Tip Barber Shops 26-28 UNION SQUARE (i flight up) 2700 BRONX P/ “K EAST (corner Allerton Ave.) DE REVOLT: A successful open air meeting at | the corner of 138th St. and Seventh TO DAILY’S BIC MOONLITE CRUISE Get Tickets in Advance For Aug. 9 Affair (Continued from Page One) record. The’ outstanding featur of course, will be the costumery If for the occasion by the mo: intrepid members of the rollicking Red crew and the jazz music torn loff by Vernon Andrade’s famous Negro Renaissance Orchestr According to the grapev of the costumes that are hatched out by various groups will knock ’em dead. This does not mean, howev that it is obligate a Hallowe'en suit; any b short of no garb is permissible. A wor ean show up in his street clothe jumper and blue jeans, Bee Vee I y to don es or even a bathing suit, so long as he has a ticket on his person. | In fact, those addicted to swim- ming might do worse than appear in for the cool haberdashery, Hudson will offer of the ers them an irresistable temptation to wet their whistles, etc. But, to drag another platitude onto the scene, don’t cross your bridges until you come to them—| mulling over the hot time you are going to have ma: unless you book pa Tickets can still | Worker busi Square, the Worl the New Ma: Square, respect do you little good age in advance. 9e had at the Daily office, Book and ely, or any Commu- ist Party station. MAKE NO APPOINTMENT FOR AUG. 9TH. COME TO THE | MOONLITE CRUISE, ALBERT MODIANO Violin Instructor 3224 BRONX BOULEVARD Blocks North of Bronx Co- operative Houses) For Arrangements Call OLINVILLE 7340 a | —_———— ites | Airy, Large | Meeting Rooms and Hall | TO HIRE Suitable for Mcetings, Lectures and Dances in the Czechoslovak | Workers House, Inc. 347 E. 72nd St. New York Telephone: Rhinelander 6097 ee ee Cooperators! PATRONIZE | BERGMAN BROS. Your Nearest Stationery Store Cigars, Cigarettes, Candy, Toys 649 Allerton Ave. | BRONX, N. ¥ | 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 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. each, Gottlieb raised the bail of two | of the workers, Golderg and Cohen, | to $5,000; the bail of the third, | Kavalski, was increased to $10,000, Bd’: Workers Group Hit Gastonia Trial (Continued from Page One) themselves and t').'r union against the murderous cks of official | and unofficial thugs.” | A copy is in the hands of the In- | ternational Labor Defense. | The petitions for these workers’ | release are pouring in with each | mail, The American masses are breaking through the bonds of cor- | rupt bureaucracy and the bass-con- | trolvd police bans in their surge | to the defense of the strikers. | Despite the refusal to grant per- | mits for I, L. D. conferences; de- | spite the refusal of such reaction- | aries as the socialist mayor of Read- | ing to let workers come to the Gas- | tonia strikers’ aid, the defense spirit is heightened from one end of the country to the other, | Workers Demand Release. | This is proved by the mass of mail arriving daily at the national offices of the I, L. D. at 80 Hast Eleventh Street. Despite the in- erease of the returns, however, the funds have not yet grown to such an extent that the legal expenses! are insured for the long trial, TODA at ULMER PAR 2 SOCCER GAMES at 1:30 and 3:30 P. M. Music, Dancing, Entertainment Sports, TICKETS 40 CENTS—at the Morning Freiheit, 30 Union Square, New York NOON AND NIGHT Y TO THE GREATEST PICNIC to 25th A Refreshments, 50,000 Workers Must Come ) TODAY Morning Freiheit West End B.M.T. Line venue Station Games LESS THAN WEEK r Any Kind of Insurance” CARL BRODSKY Telephone: Marray Hil. 5556 7 East 42nd Street, New York Cooperators! Patronize SEROY CHEMIST 657 Allerton Estabrook 3215 Avenue Bronx, N. Y. DR. J. MINDEL Rcom 803—Phone: Algonquin 8188 Not connected with any other office Dr. M. Wolfso Surgeon Dentist 141 SECOND AVENUE, Phone, Orchard In case of trouble with me to see your friend, rience, who has and can assure 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 Hotise Comrade Frances Pilat MIDWIFE 351 E. 7/th St., New York, N. Y. Tel. Rhinelander 3916 Ts x TAURANT Iways Find It Pleasant to Dine at Our Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx 74th St, Ss (ne: PHONE INT 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* AVE]. UE Bet. 12th and 13th Sts. Strictly Vegetarian 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 Comrades in Brighton Beach, Patronize Laub Vegetarian & Dairy Restaurant 211 Brighton Beach Ave. at Brighton Beach B.M.T. Station i Advertise your Union Meetings here. For information write to || The DAILY WORKER | Advertising Dept, || 26-28 Union Sq., New York City Hotel and Restaurant Workers Branch of the Amalgamated Food Workers 188 W. Sist St, Phone Clrele 7336 71S¥- BUSINESS MEETING } lield on the first Monday of the | month at 3 p. m, One Industry—One Union—Join and Fight the Common Enemy! Office Open from 9 a. m. to 6 p, m. AMALGAMATED FOOD WORKERS Meets ist Saturday in the month at 8861 Third Avenue, Bronx, N. ¥. Jerome 7090 ts? FROM FACTORY TO YOU! HIGH-GRADE MEN'S and YOUNG MEN'S SUITS 2.50 to $25.00 From $1 PARK CLOTHING STORE 9% Ave. A, Cor. 6th St, N. ¥. C.