The Daily Worker Newspaper, August 16, 1929, Page 5

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NAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, AUGUST 16, 1929 AT BIG RALEIGH MASS MEETING Convention Delegates Pledge Support (Continued from Page One) Boston, 26,000 of its 75,000; Cali- fornia, 22,000 of its 75,000; Buffalo, 2,800 of its 10,000; and Minneapo- lis, 2,300 of its 10,000 quota. Thousands of workers are sending more than the minimum contribu- tion of ten cents. Many of them donate a dollar with their signature on behalf of the Gastonia prisoners. Workers throughout the land are | expected to exceed even the 1,000,- 000 signatures because of the trial’s | postponement until Aug. 26, the| Gastonia Joint Defense and Relief | Committee declares. | The petition will demonstrate the | solidarity of the American working | class behind the Gastonia prisoners | and will be presented to the various | North ,Carolina officials at the | time of the trial. The work of the petitions is a| phase of the organization of united | front committees of all workers, | throughout the land, to save the de- | fendants from the chair or long) terms in prison. | Commenting on the “voluntary”! grant of a shorter work day with-| out reduction in pay by the cotton} MELVIN. SPEAKS | mills of Gaston County, Jim Reid, |be a woman worker—particularly a president of the National Textile Workers Union, said: “The Gasto-| nia Goose Stepper in its report tells of how this concession has been ‘con- | templated’ by the mill executives for ‘some months.’ This small conces-| sion was far from ‘voluntary’ on the part of the mill bosses. The mill executives would be still ‘contem- plating’ it many months hence if they were not disturbed, by the en-| ergetic and fearless work of the Na-| tional Textile Workers Union inj} sending in organizers to organize the | worker slaves of the Manville-| Jenckes and other slave-driving out-| fits. “While this shows that the blows of the union are having a telling ef- | fect on the robber mill barons, and} they are trying to placate the work- | ers and make them slow up on chen ing campaign in the South, | having the opposite effect. The are working harder to make | a solid fighting union, for they say, ‘4f this can be wrested from the mill | owners . with our present strength, when we are well organized we can get better and better conditions.’ “The workers are under no illu- sions as to the positive gains. They know that the majority of workers are paid by the picce, but they know also that the union is working for the abolition of the piece rate sys- tem. “They know that the union is working for an 8-hour, 5-day week. They will not be satisfied with the 5-day weék with the unbearably long hours, “They know that the speed-up that the bosses have put over makes it possible for them to squeeze just as | much profit out of their slaves as before.” FORD WORKERS IN N.Y. UNITY MEET Seamen’s Conference Opens Tomorrow (Continued from Page One) | of us have the eight hour day, one | “Obviously, Negro women workers | Strikebreakers in Strike of Grave Diggers TAMMANY FEARS) Communist Activities | Harlem Section 4. meee deel TG ye ae eee rs All members of Harlem Section 4 Rete ee ne meting Ors Che OUT) | P are instructed by the Section Buro to | Of electin ea tea Photo shows strike- report 148, E 08rd st. or 235 w | celled tor er: Unit 3, Seition 7. By instructions of t e Section ex- embers must | this week n of sig- Calvary Cemetery, Branch 4, Section 5 ecutive committee Brooklyn. N.Y. Funeral An open air meeting will be held|appear, cne a chauffeurs may go out '‘Says Engdahl, cP? eT Intervale foe eeaaed BE in sympathy with the Candidat vanalaate strikers; the drivers are i ke 129th for the Party signatu plakters st the cstrike drive. Stations will be open trom of the workers at the | ae tare Aves, (Continued from Page One) Austin added. Incidentally, she will be one of the speakers at the Daily Worker Press Carnival at Pleasant | Bay Park this Sunday. Is Active Woman Worker. The Communist nominee knows by | bitter experience what it means to | 1> ® iS FIRST NEGR 0 Gastonia Colony Is| In Need of Clothes; WOMAN NOMINEE. W.LR. Asks for Help Clothes are badly needed in the rs bh Scand . | tent colony néar Gastonia, accord- Will Speak at Daily ing to Caroline Drew, relief rep- * quate ae iie resentative in the South. The] Press Carnival Sunday! |Workers International Relief | | urges workers everywhere to send bundles of clothes of every de- scription, and shoes to the W.LR. store at 418 Brook Ave. New York City, in care of Louis Baum. Baum, who manages the store, announces that a truck wil) call for bundles if they cannot be sent direct. A cleaning establishment aon 7 a wena is also operated under Baum’s egro worker—in New or! ty. visi vhic) "4 S Aga -dguisatie) GereanteT used oti land cleanse Pike uae ee work 14 hours a day for $1.50,” she| | are sent South, but also does eel says. “It was hard work, with never | | pert cleaning and dyeing for pa- a break to relieve the drudgery.| | trons, to cover the expenses of These conditions were much the same | operating the store. in small laundries I worked in.” All sympathizers are urged to “In all my experience I found that | | patronize the store. Garments are if it were true that the white women | | called for and delivered. workers needed organization, this | 4 ° was doubly true of the Negroes. In| 1918 I helped organize the Women’s Day League. Within three months I we got our first demands for a $3 a day minimum wage. Of course, the fight is by no means ended—few MAY STRIKE SOON of the prime demands in our plat- | feeb form.” i = : “Race Unity Essential.” | Ready to Organize En- “How do we propose to get the j ~ eight hour day for women workers?” tire Industr y she replied in answer to a question. (Continued from Page One) can never hope to accomplish this as | 82n1zer, 100 laboratories nyhicn a race. Unity with white women | Signed agreements with the union workers is absolutely essential.” _| have since rejoined the Dental Lab- Broadening the question, Austin tory Owners Association, Inc., held that women workers—whether |Which they left during the last Negro or white—could achieve eman- | Sttike when they signed agreements cipation only with the complete over-| With t he union. This _asso- throw of the capitalist order on|‘ition is open shop in its policy which is reared a whole system of /224 fights against union recogni- suppressive measures. She ‘came to | 402. Shalian and Henry Posner, this conclusion, when attending the |?resident of the union, stated that conference of the New York Federa- | the workers Bros pew genny: boyeon tion of Working Women for the first | (Ct ® Struggle to unionize the en- time, she became acquainted with the |e industry. Communist program through conver- Jim Reid, president of the Na- sation with a delegate. “I joined the | tional Textile Workers Union, spoke Party and have been active in it ever 0" the Gastonia trial and called since,” she said. | upon the dental workers to fight in The Communist nominee {s con-| Unity with the Southern textile fident that the Party platform is | Workers. winning greater support in Negro) Jacques Buitenkant, attorney for Harlem. “Never a day passes with-|the union, spoke on the need of out I meet Negro workers who want | conducting an energetic organiza- to join,” she declares. MOVE TO MAKE THE COMMUNIST PARTY ILLEGAL Is Part of Capitalist Drive on Workers ° ° Gro. being forced WG) MOV IZATIONS) cctsnues hor sss 6 are being forced to (Continued from Page One) (Continued from Page Cne) work with scabs while | confess that the so-called ‘regula- munist Par was not am or- the officialdom of the | tion’ against meetings would be set DAD OR AE ihe on cer cp Bane ORS ciation; society, OF union ‘prevents them | aside later on when the republicans | Marlem Gastonia Defense Convery (gp. m. Picnic, swinmng, boatng,| group that advocates or from striking. and democrats get ready to hold/yangea by the Harlem P. dancing, ete. Tckets $1.50: on s teaches the over v force or . i 4 ‘lub is ised for y|the Workers Bookshop, 3 nc é Spe ‘erated veals the methods by which Tam-|4j] proceeds for the defense of the|129th St. United Statcs or of ‘orms. of i i vorkii ss|Gastonia frame-up victims. Concert us * * aw.” many Hall fights its working class | yee at 8.30 sharp. Freiheit Mandolin Orchestra. I ae =a foes rallying in support of the Com- * * * 0 ra, under the leadership Voich was defende he Inter- munisy Barty: LE htop eae preparing’ for national Labor I ec. His free- 2 a ee —| “Workers in Harlem feel acutely | ,.coUncH § fine Carty at Goney 1, and inv dom and that of his friend, Rade the misery that is their lot under|Isiand for this Satur¢ vy, Aus. i! Tete pemienc oun te Radikovitch, were cured through ! ts ; * ae Work z women, heir h bands, sgt of - 1 e ‘i Tammany Hall misrule in municipal | htc" ang fricnas are snvited. t {ducted into the orchestra; gthers witi the T. L. D. | government.’ The unbearable hous-|meet at the council's club Egariey 200. |S Reet Hesr uation! frit tie Cleenes now When itch was arrested, |ing conditions have resulted in the| Mermaid Ave. Coney tee x'‘social [108 B. 14th Stare open Mondays and |Voich notified th tional La- organization of the Harlem Tenants’ |and educational program will follow, |Thursdays at’s.00 p.m Kor Defen: of his. ef- hat h ized the only! With supper in the evening. All pro- « * * aerate the tacegell League, that has organized the only ‘coeds go toward the defense of the aid. Wei wivuee Uivatia) j forts too, wha eae ,;class resistance to the landlords. Gastonia frame-up victims. Tickets! The W.I is organizing a brass |into fede | Rent strikes and other forms of re-|%5 cents: children free. band and invites warker-players to] me move to outlaw the Commu \ 8 . * * * Jregister with Comrade Cohen at its} The mo 0 0) v G >mmu- S ° .,_ |Sistance to increased rentals have | Workers Esperanto Group. office, 1 Union Sa. room 608, any day |nist Party is an attempt to stem the Industrial Union Nails|sent the landlords scurrying to the| |The s. A. 7. will meet at Pelham |Oitwsen.s Sil h “necting wit be |growing strength of the Party, : “ | Protecting arms of their defenders | fi” S'hike ‘and will later join. the | called ufficient n t| which is daily becoming more and Company Union Lies |in the Tammany Hall city admini-|Perty Dress Plene of players have signed up anes the <a |stration. Mayor Walker, Governor Negro Village Outing. Die Naturfreunde, English Section |of the art of the (Continued from Page One) | Roosevelt and Tammany Hall gen-| | An outing to the Negro Villa e of socheersal of the m| general capitalist dr inst the | ;. Pm | sla AS rr pnight, e e ger of the Joint Board of the Needle |erally have been profuse in their Sunday, "Aug. 18. The Negro Club of| Ave Swint ‘on | militant wo: of which the Tre Vorker' stri i i tenants, all|Sandy Grounds will give a program |Suniday. Meet tal Gomaaniat oD fact Trades Workers Industrial Union. | promises to the tenants, but he |ot Negro songs and resent @ Negro| are 80 cents. Conn aa x on ; Borouchowitz referred to a state-|their support has been given to the | piay “* Bathing in the Princess Ba | The I. L. D. is 4 hting the effort y vi insky, ing | lai > Wi ’s prom-|Proceeds for the C. P. election 3 =, See ea’ dectetee n 1 jises have now been thoroughly dis- |Secton_6, headquarters 56 Manhattan counted by the workers in Har-|Ave., Brooklyn. \lem, who are planning a city-wide | ~ ee ® Tenants League Outing. jconferenc~ of tena=ts for the pur-| ‘rhe Harlem Tennats League will|: unda, president of the company union, | which appeared in yesterday’s issue of Women’s Wear Daily, the bosses’ trade newspaper published here, in p F 2 I which Dubinsky is quoted as report-|}pcse of organizing a Metropolitan | give CH CO Ee ponaeralel ee D, ing to a meeting of the I.L.G.W.U.| Tenants’ League. The housing sit- Lona ™ AUS pes E nook leaveslene) Ave: Eress Gentlveliat Plesssucibye bark strike committee that 95 per cent uation alone st’=s all Harlem deeply. | of the New York cloakmakers have |Tammany Hall knows that Harlem LAND OF SOVIE § come under its control. is against it on this issue, as well} as on other municipal problems. em te trea pos (CREW UNHARMED EXPECT SELLOUT ., and proce Har rogressive Youth Club, 1492 Madison ve. On Sunday, the ‘members will n gather atthe club rooms, 1 in a body nda Ave. Workers Know. “The statement of Dubinsky,” Borouchowitz asserted, “has as much truth to it as his claim that | the recent so-called ‘strike’ won bet- ter conditions for the cloakmakers. The workers in the market know attacks on Communist meetings, to charge that the Communists are ‘at- | {tacking the government.’ This will not prejudice Harlem workers | agains Sommunist Party. The | that the conditions of the cloak. | Het ene oe a dg not! makers are getting worse every day. feel that they should worry much| “The company union is daily issu- | about the Hoover-Walker bipartisan ; ing the names of a list of shops | government of lynch law, jim crow-|Manchurian frontier last Sunday. Pass | which are alleged to have signed up |ism, segregation and the most bru- has not yet been determined how es ie ere | with the I.L.G.W. These are shops |tal exploitation. | soon the all-metal, bi-motored mono- | ie a" y in which the right wingers are| “No republican or democrat has|Plane will be able to resume ae uarinitiraraea ota ouener ee agents of the manufacturers who | come forward to protest against the | flight. q(fers to the “friendiy relations exist- | pose as unionists have been able to | jim crow rule announced by the Hud. | Bringing with them greetings and |. 7 z worsen the working conditions of the|son Day Line boats, which has| expressions of sclidarity from he ne Rebyeen the company and your cloakmekers, jaroused all Harlem. | workers and peasants of the U.S.S.R. | DWwateh tha Tondo” expresses the “The cloakmakers will not be fool-| “The Communist Party and its to the workers and farmers of the latitude of the strikers. “The same ed by this kind of propaganda and | candidates do not intend to be si-| United States, S. Shestakot and Ta Sate dedshy ow. D. talon, meowel| will rally to the Needle Trades |lenced on these and other issues. | three comrades, Boris Sterligof, aise misletin New Cork when at Workers Industrial Union for a real |Police oppression even when con-| Bolotof and A. Shestakof, took off lanowad' avery promise oh annie | |fight for better conditions.” jtinued in police stations with the| from the Moscow airdrome Aug. 8, The aauns mane Ae: Belin (hes bee Be ae laeriathe cave ees seme mien | hist aueals the tiighy eoneated | erae oy cn teeneer Carinae ztN ey! Jacobs Removed to Polyclinic. /per of the Young Communist |to Novosibirsk and thence to Kras- | OTleans. Jack Jacobs, the cloak cutter, who League, will not gag the Commu-|noyarsk, from where the airmen set | ee eeeenay started Wy I. ts |nist exposures, but rather testify | out Sunday, planning to eit chita, Bush Addresses Large . W. thugs near the shop where he |to their correctness and the fact| 400 miles beyond Lake Baikal. i . |was working on July 28, yas yes-|they are worrying Tammany Hall,| at Ticolaievak, on the Siberian Defense Meeting Held terday removed to Polyclinic Hos-! tool of the capitalist class.” coast, the Land of the Soviets was By Paterson Workers | pital from Bellevue. Jacobs, who is —————— to have been fitted with pontoons | | suffering from a fractured skull and GUARDSMAN KILLED, for a transoceanic flight, which was! PATERSON, N, J., Aug. 15. — | other injuries inflicted by the Schles-| CAMP TRUMBULL, Niantic, expected to take upward of a fort-| Vera Bush, National Textile Work- | inger thugs, is still in a dangerous | Conn., Aug, 15.—One__ national /night, with stops at Petropaviovsk,|ers Union organizer, charged with jcondition, doctors state. | guardsman was killed and two others |the Aleutian Islards, Unalaska, Se- murder with fifteen other workers | seriously injured here today when | ward, Sitka, Seattle, and thence toifor her participation in the Gasto-| COURT CONVICTS én explosion occurred when the “sun-/ San Francisco, Chicago, and New |nia textile strike, addressed a well i | | Plane Down at Chita; Men for Strike; Warn Flight May Be Off | Against Leaders (Continued from Page One) | (Continued from Page One) It| its” plea is based largely on crooked beating of y-ath worke-s arrested,| making the 1,350 mile hop to Omsk rise gun” misfired. | York, | attended meeting at the National Peter T. Ainskowich, 20, of Brad- | Textile Workers Union Hall here yesterday. A collection of $116 was many who are sympathetic, but we | must still study even more intensely | the problem of winning the Negro workers for the party. j TRAITORS STAB “BRITISH STRIKE “We meet tion campaign and pointed out that jthe meeting. | Textile Workers Solid; Fight Bureaucrats sented at the conference. The New York local of the Na-| tional Textile Workers Union at its | Ross, Weich; Intervale and Wilkins | meeting at 16 W. 21st St. last night elected delegates to the conference. Delegates to represent the Inde- pendent Shoe Workers Union have been selected. Many shop commit- tees in the shoe industry are also sending delegates to the Irving Pla- za conference which will choose del- egates to attend the National Trade Union Unity Conference in Cleve- land, Ohio, Aug. 31. The Laundry Workers Section of the Trade Union Educational League announced last night that they will also be represented. Open air meetings are continuing daily in front of large plants in New York and New Jersey at which the workers are urged to send dele- gates to the Aug. 20th conference. + 8 « Seamen Meet Tomorrow, Fifteen delegates to the Atlantic Coast Conference of the Marine Workers League to be held here to- morrow and Sunday at the Interna- tional Seamen’s Club, 28 South St., were elected t the last meeting of the New York branch of the Ma- rine Workers League. A large number of delegates from Philadelphia, Baltimore and other cities will be pzesent at the Atlan- tic Coast Conference, which will lay the basis for the establishment of a new, militant industrial union of American seamen. William Z. Foster and a number of other leading left wing union- ists have been invited to attend the conference, and will be seated as regular delegates, At the same time it was an- nounced that four delegates were elected to represent the New York marine workers at the Second Met- ropolitan Area Trade 'nion Unity Conference to, be held Tuesday, Au- gust 20, in Irving Plaza hall, 15th St. and Irving Pl. | clare, will the cuts be averted. (Continued from Page One) Cotton Spinners’ Association has forced home its advantage by cam- paigning for the principle of wage reducticns even before further pro- | ceeding. | Against the open alliance of the | millowners, union bureaucracy and the labor rulers are the rapidly or- | ganized rank and file committees | which advocate cognter-demands for | higher wages, shorter hours and im- | proved working conditions. The British Minority Movement is an ac- tive propagandist for these demands. | Pointing to the long record of vacillation and open treachery of the present union misleaders, they ex- pose them as being for years the| most vigorous advocates of indus- trial peace. Only through firm strug- gle against the betrayers, they de- MacDonald Aids Sellout. While Premier Ramsay MacDonald maintains his policy of keeping in the background in order to disavow responsibility for the sellout, em- ployers have already expressed their gratitude for his personal. interven- tion in their behalf. Following his lead, the Daily Herald, labor party organ, expressed the official attitude of the labor party and the trade un- ion congress when it pleaded cditor- | ially for an “inquiry,” but stipulated that cuts might be “considered” fol- lowing it. DISCUSSION OUTLINES READY Outlines for discussion in all units on the Election Campaign are ready and obtainable at the District Agit- prop Department, fifth floor of the’ Workers Center, Agitprop Direc- tors are asked to call for same. | Game of baseball soccer, ete., at the Press Carnival. | Ave., at 8 p. m., speakers, G. Spiro, the dental workers must realize that | they e-2 a part of the general la- bor movement. Posner presided at | Open Air Meetings | 110th St. and Fifth Ave. m., speakers, A. Lyons (chair: A. Moreau; Pier 36, at nocn, | speaker, Peisely; 56th St. and First | Ave., dock meeting at 12 noon, speekers, B. Sklar, A. Overgaard; | 50th St. and Fifth Ave., Brooklyn, at 8 p. m., speakers, G. Lamb, N./} P. Shapiro; Schwindler Press, speak- er, Pollock; 154 Watkins Ave., at 8 p. m., speakers, A. Garcia, Glass- | ford; 149th St. between Third and | Bergen Ave., at 8 p. m., speakers, | Bloomfield, Pershing, Simons; Grand | St. Extension and Hovermeyer St., | speakers, Sam Nesin, Candelia, | Harper; Prospect and Longwood Aves., speakers, L. Baum, Rivera; ¥ 138th St. and 7th Ave., comrades to report to Labor Center, 235 W. 129th St., speakers, R. Moore, H. Wicks, | F. Austin, K. Powers, Our own ange, the bourgeois age, in distinguished this—that ft hi antngonisms. oclety in splitting into two grent posed classes: bourgeoisie and pi letarint-—Marx, Hotel and Restaurant Workers \ Branch of the Amalgamated Food Workers . Phone Crete 73:16 ]J@PBUSINESS MEETINGS} eld on the firat Monday of the “For Any Kind of Insurance” (CARL BRODSKY | ‘elephone: Murray Bil, 5530 7 East 42nd Street, New York Patronize No-Tip Barber Shops * 26-28 UNION SQUARE (1 flight up) 2700 BRONX PF’ K EAST (corner Allerton Ave.) | ford, private first class, died shortly | tl Communist Campaign Managers Talk Tasks, |At Meeting Tomorrow after the accident. h NEGRO ON LIES |them until several hours after the |fictitious assault. Prosecutors obtained from Mrs. |Lynn her confession supporting her xy - rand-daughters’ assertions. | The political issues of the elec- The puncturing of the cooked evi-|tion campaign, the program of ac-| dence, however, was not strong |tivity for bringing the Communist | Ten Years for Aged Tennessee Worker (Continued from Page One) "lest “evidence,” the state pressed for|enough for the white jury to order | Program before the masses of work- | a death sentence right up to the last| immediate acquittal. “The public|ers in shops, trade unions, and moment, when it was revealed that | must know the facts.” Attorney Gen- |workers organizations, ways and | the testimony on which Wright was) eral Aggleston said when ordering |means of raising the $25,000 Com- | to be killed judicially was perjured.! continuation of the trial in order to | munist campaign fund, and general campaign tasks, will be discussed | taken up for the defense of the workers who go on trial Aug. 26 in Charlotte, N. C. Before the meeting opened four workers were arrested for distribut- ing leaflets announcing it. An open air meeting to take up the Gastonia case will be held on Tuesday night at Beach and Cedar Sts. 1] FROM FACTORY TO you! HIGH-GRADE MEN'S and By passing the ten-year sentence, | secure the ten-year sentence. however, it openly encouraged fur-| “That* conviction is on false evi- ther framing of Negro workers. _| dence is only incidental to the pro- Admit They Lied. gram of suppression against Negro at the city-wide meeting of all units and section campaign managers to- morrow, 8 p. m., at the Workers} YOUNG MENS SUITS From! $12.50 to $25.00 “Even two members of the state’s| workers throughout the United | Center, 26-28 Union Square, | staff withdrew and expressed the States,” Harold Williams, Negro Di- This is the first general meet- conviction that the Negro had been| rector of the New York District of |ing of campaign managers. In ad- | framed. Two grand-daughters of| the Communist Party, told the Daily | dition to unit campaign managers, Mrs. Lynn, the alleged victim, ad-| Worker yesterday. Such suppres-|members of the election campaign | mitted they lied when telling the|sion—along class and race lines—|committee chosen by the various! court that Wright had cowed Ges, be ended only by unity of Negro |lancuage departments of the Com- | with a pistol. The admissions were | and white workers under the leader-|munist Par. - must be present, as! made after Allen and A. B. Breece,| ship of the Communist Party,” he} well as the campaign directors of | brothers, testified they were with' said. s the industrial groups. | | in TC Te Nh AAA AT Morning Freiheit Cmic Saturday (“#.) August 31 at ULMER PAR 2 Soccer Games at 1.30 and 3.30 p. m. Music, Dancing, Entertainment, Sports i postponed postponed ce A NOON West End B.M.T. Line to 25th Avenue Station Tickets 40 cents—at the Morning Freiheit, 30 Union Sq., New York Cg rT RR RARER MM, NW, PARK CLOTHING STORE 93 Ave. A, Cor. 6th St., N. ¥. C. Comrades in Brighton Patronize Laub Vegetarian & Dairy Restaurant Brighton Beach Beach, 211 Ave. at Brighton Beach B.M.T. Station 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 FURNISHED ROOMS Now is your opportunity to get a room in the magnificent Workers Hotel Unity Cooperative House 1800 SEVENTH AVENUE OPPOSITE CENTRAL PARK 110th Street Cor. 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. Tel: DRYdock 8880 FRED SPITZ, Inc. FLORIST NOW AT 31 SECOND AVENUE (Bet. Ist & 2nd Sts.) Flowers for All Occasions 15% REDUCTION TO READERS OF THE DAILY WORKER m Single or Double Furnished room; all Improvements, St, Brooklyn, Phone 183 Hooper Stagg 8490, Window Cleaners’ Protective Union—Local & Affiliated with the A. F. 15 E. 8rd St., N Meets each Ist and 3rd Thursday of each month at 7 P. M. at Manhattan Lyceum. Window Cleaner join Your Untont Advertise your Union Meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST 249 HAST 115th STREET Cor. Second Ave. New York Office hours: Mon., Wed., Sat., 9.30 a.m. to 12; 2 to 6 P.M. Tues. Thurs., 9.30 a. m. to 12; % to 8 p,m Sunday, 10 a. m. to 1 p. m, Please telephone for appointment. Telephone: Lehigh 6022 DR. J. MINDE SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Rcom 803—Phone: Algonquin 8182 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 Cooperators! Patronize SER O® CHEMIST 657 Allerton Estabrook 3215 Avenue Bronx, N,, Y. | Comrade Frances Pilat MIDWIFE 351 E. 7/th St., New York, N.Y. Tel. Rhinelander 3916 omrades Will Always Find It Pleasant to Dine at Our Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx (near 174th Station) PHONE:— INTERVALB 9149. MEET YOUR FRIENL. at Messinger’s Vegetarian and Dairy Restaurant 1763 Southern Blyd., ™ onx, N.Y. Right off 174th St. Subway Station RATIONAL Vegetarian RESTAURANT | 199 SECOND AVEi UE Bet. 12th and 13th Sts, Strictly Vegetarian Food All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Cleremont Parkway, Bronx HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNI versity 5865 Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant | SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 302 E.12th St. New York

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