Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
ey FOR RETREAT IN- AILY WORKER, NEV PD JEER UTW PLEA MARION STRIKE Bring in Troops as Strikebreakers (Continued from Page One) lina and Georgia to rally the mill | workers there for the general strug- | gle to be initiated by the Charlotte | Conference Oct. 12, they exposed | the series of betrayals that lay in| the path of the U. T. W. misleaders | and warned the strikers to be on their guard against the betrayal | which developed today. Last week, the union and Interna- tional Workers Relief launched a campaign for relief for the Marion | strikers who are greatly in need of | food and clothing. Several meetings | were held for this purpose during | the week. Now that the Muste gang | is attempting to stage another be-| trayal, the relief will be doubly | needed, Attempts to evict strikers Iving| in company houses, to make way for the strikebreakers, were resisted all through the week. The rank and file of the U. T. W., no longer blinded by the lies of their officials, are asked to rally with the other textile workers in the South, under the militant leadership of the left wing union, in a struggle to beat the stretch-out and long hours the bosses impose upon them, and demand wage increases. eee GREENVILLE, N. C., Aug. 19.— Hoffman is quoted in the local} papers here as saying “I have not) collected my thoughts after this morning’s deadlock. I have advised | | Pulling the Wool Over Workers Eyes with Religion | | “Honoring Italian worke OBSERVERS SEE JINGO RIVALRY IN BRITISH AIR RACE War Machines Fly at Phenomenal Speed BULLETIN 7 YORK, TUESDAY, AUGUST 20, 1929 Fraternal Organizations | Freiheit Mandolin Orchestra. ! The orchestra, under the leadership of Jacob Schaefer, is preparin its sixth annual concert, to take in Town Hall neyt April, and invites workers who play the mandolin to join, eption n- ducted into the jreceive instruct {being conducte xht, lasses now club rooms, Trac Thursday Page Five LATIN AMERICAN MASSES AID IN ” St. Rocco is what the Italian catholic priests call thé above process in New York and making them sheep for the bosses thru religious clap trap. of the blinding LANDLORD GREED DISABLES TEN Building Crash Buries Workers and Passerby Ten workers, including one passer- by, were seriously injured yesterday, by the collapse of a three-story building on the southwest corner of 23rd St. and Kighth Ave. The ac- cident was due to the practice of avaricious landlords who were trying to squeeze more profits out of an old tenement house by patching it up so that they could charge higher rents when the new subway is com- |Cleaners and Dyers to ‘Form Shop Committees —Favor Unity Meeting Organization of shop committees in the cleaning and dyeing plants of New York City was decided upon at a meeting of the Cleaners’ and Dyers’ Section, Trade Union Educa- tional League, held last night at the | Workers’ Center, 26-28 Union Sq. | Delegates were elected to attend the Second Metropolitan Area Trade Union Unity Conference to be held | tonight at Irving Plaza and a reso- | lution was passed to participate in |the Joint Defense and Relief Cam- | paign for the Gastonia workers who | go on trial in Charlotte, N. C., Aug. |26. A motion was also passed to ie membership books in the T. A. FL UNION IN’ NEW SCAB ROLE : eeps Cafeteria From Recognizing Union (Continued from Page One) feteria Worker! ement yesterda nion to sign the \¢ | agre . ‘ When the union representative: entered the cafeteria they were ap- | proached by seven gangsters. who, |posing as garment workers are be- |lieved to be in the employ of the They strikebreaking Food Council. | warned the union spokesmen ag CALSHOT, England, Aug. 19.— Flying Officer Atcherley piloted a powerful Gloster-Napier 4, one of the seaplanes entered by Britain in the jingo air races, at an esti- mated specd of 340 miles an hour in a test flight today. The official world speed mark for aircraft is 318 mil * * * ANNAPOLIS, Md., Aug. 19. Lieut. Williams, navy jingo, today gave up his attempt to make ex- tended flying tests in the $175,000 seaplane Mercury, which Street has entered in the Schneider cup races, and preparations were made for transporting the 1,100 horsepower machine to New York mine-layer Sandsniper. y must be shipped at once if it is to seach England in time for the jingo races, which will ist Italy and the strength for their sérve Britain, fi tests 0! respectiv eee oe CALSHOT, England, Aug. 19, The Golden Gloster, a Gloste: pier S-6 type seaplane, with ‘which imperial Britain hopes to win the Schenider cup races here on Sept, - ‘yt 6 and 7, was revealed to public view today. It is of dull gold, mounted on two slender floats, with a silver body not more than 30 inches wide at its thickest part, although it} air forces in preparation | ° for the coming imperialist War. 106 EB. 14th ml re open Mondays and y, Ps res Thursdays at 8.00 p.m. Plaza Hall In Rally Militantly for | babes balts etd | Immediate Release The WLR, is organizing, | i nat 43 i ith Gomends ce 1 fr oO re) by mail) A meeting ) of the on the “Work Office Worl Wednesday, Aug. 6 All oftice workers are urg dite t hattan Ave, tend the open meet at 26th St. * * s nnd Madison Ave., 12.30 p.m., t at ; Speakers esénting the” Offi E City Sacco Meet. || Workers’ Union. will include Geor reey City will hold) Siskind and Kitty Harris Sacco-Vanzetti memorial meeting ‘ i under the {the Ukranian Thursday eve p.m. There lish and Ukr pices of thi Hall, 160 ing, Aug il be speeches in sexe tonia D neetings w rsday ¢ a in New J 8 sck as follo | following o nit n ts.; speaker 112 conference calle nboy speaker, Geo Spiro. protest pt to send 1.113 G to thei death, has | d by 'Y- Workers’ Fed ge sary of the ex anc Vanzetti | A mess t jlidarity was re- i |ceived today f 18 French trade les whose member thou sed to t id Relief , 80 E. 11th unions, hundreds of ip in in a cable- rastonia Joint nittee’ at N.Y. Cy Communist Activities | East N.Y. tnt). Branch. ‘ 7 ast N. Y. International Branch Section 8 will meet tonight, 8.00 p.m., at 349 Bradford St., Brooklyn. | |There will be a discussion of the thesis of the Tenth Plenum, led by a representative of the District eg * | Intl, Branch 1, Section 8. = | Meets dnesday, Aug. 21, 8.30/p.m.. on the |p.m,, at 151 Watkins St, Brooklyn, | ers Center |to discuss the thesis of the Tenth} | Plenum. p.m. at the Worker: cuss the thesis of the Section 7 Industrial Organizers. All unit industrial organizers of Section 7 wll meet tonight, 8.00 p.m., at 48 Bay 28th St., Brooklyn. * er lish sh be held tomorrow_nig Agents. a s of Section 7 ednesday, Aug. 48 Bay 28th St, Seetion Daily Worke will hold a mee 21, 8.00 ing at enter Room 4 which will campaign f: eee | e en greatest « \to save ay workers of fF send most comradely greetings. nation-wide 1 funds Aug. conduct a with the sur campaign ners. The ou their the Gas The unions signing included the National Federation of Railwa: ,| Workers, the Metallurgical Workers Union, the Union of Machinists and Helpers, the Chemical Workers Union, the Electrical Workers Union, ° |} the ffeurs Union, the Food Ch: and cleven other Union unions. Mass protest demonstrations are orld, both i commem- ot | {| Planned throughout the at the Sacco and Vanz strikers against violence and advised U. E. L. Section of Cleaning and | negotiating with the boss and intim- | holds a Napier engine believed capa- | ee oration meetings and afterward. ‘ e 4 The shop bulletins issued last | 2 ‘blog | Pleted. The old building gave way |, .: t “ood Council will sign ble of developing 1,500 horsepower | Brooklyn. month for International Red Day and | Not only American worker: them to carry hymn books and bibles [aie ie fe Hote, ving | Dyeing workers. Many Fank and ioe ue seed beavis Nara and attaining a speed of 330 miles féation 7 Open Air Ralllen, the contents thereof will be discussed. | ternational labor. instead of blackjacks and guns.” | Without a moment’s notice, burying | sj, workers joined in the discus-|% fake agreement with the cafe- y AAbECs SCH EEL Hon ihe cuiostclection edm-|it is Important that every section and | tetmational la pe: A subedistrict office of the Na-|*R& Workers in its debris. jsion and told’ of conditions in the |teria, which will only “unionize” an hour. The makers claim that the| ,aige {2ilien Have heen arranged for [shop he represented, even those | Gastonia strikers are in danger of _A sub-district office of the Na- pos ! Sars pietaet a he sali veral skilled workers in the cafe-|Machine, the fastest death-dealing | Brooklyn by Section 7: ight, 8.00! which have not issued shop pavers. |their lives for fighting for the fun- tional Textile Workers Union was| Working three hours with firemen shops in which they work several skilled workers in the cafe : : 4 jal Textile ers Union was | 7 Sedge se | Shops in 5 fs whi ga a: - plane yet designed for the next im-| | damental rights of the working class opened today in Greenville, with Wil- | 4nd policemen, workers who escaped | |teria, while leaving the mass of | g liam T. Murdock in charge. {9 larger territory. « By LISTON M. OAK | CHARLOTTE, N. C, Aug. 19. —) When a delegation from the Inter- national Labor Defense and Work- | ers International Relief came to Marion yesterday to offer the legal | aid of the defense organization and relief from the W. I. R., Hoffman and a guard immediately surrounded the automobile in which the delega- tion, consisting of Juliet Stuart Poyntz, Walter Trumbull and S. C. Saylors came. | Hoffman asked Poyntz to step aside, as he did not want his guard even to hear. With utter self-abase- ment, he apologized for his vicious attack upon the Gastonia defendants and the International Labor Defense and the union at the Raleigh State Federation of Labor Convention at Raleigh, according to the delegation. With a confiding smirk he said that he himself is a progressive, one of the Muste group and opposed to the A. F, of L. bureaucracy. He in- | sisted that he was not responsible for the sell-out in Elizabethton, but that Kelly engineered that job. He appealed to the delegates not to interfere in Marion and proposed a division of territory between the National Textile Workers Union and the United Textile Workers. Hoff- man admitted that the possibility of the N. T. W. coming into Marion worried him, and he complained bit- | terly about the distribution of leaf- | lets about the Charlotte Conference | | several days ago. He pleaded with Poyntz. not to have any more leaf- lets distributed. Poyntz explained the policy of the N. T. W. U., the I. L. D., and W. I. R., to help all strikers every- where in their struggle, to form united fronts with workers every- where against the bosses and their agents, This was made necessary as part of the intensified drive to extend the union | unscathed succeeded in rescuing nine of the victims. A sky-pilot of the | Church of St. Columbia was on the | job waiting to give the last rites to any worker removed and at the same time to cover up the criminal greed of the landlords by attributing the incidend to God. The injured were: James Clavacea, 87 Bedford Ave., Brooklyn, to St. Vincent’s Hospital with serious internal injuries. George Nussler, 709 E. 12th St., multiple bruises and cuts, to St. | Vincent's. Gilbert Mercer, 151 W. 90th Si right hand scrapped and bceuised, home. Vito Barraco, 8 Vandervoort Pl., Brooklyn, face scratched and cut, home. James Blithe, Negro, 32 W. 99th St., left arm bruised and cut, home. Nathan Soloff, 96 Bay 32nd St., Brooklyn, both arms scratched and scraped, home. George Culsa, 5 Eighth Ave., legs cut, home. James Malloni, 7608 Sixth Ave., Brocklyn, shoulder dislocated, home. William Carr, Kingston Ave., Brooklyn. Morris Wasserman, 800 Jehnicke | Ave., Brooklyn, was taken to Beile- vue with serious internal injuries. L. TRAIN CRASH INJURES TWENTY Brakes Failed; Begin “Investigation” At least twenty beach-bound work- ers were injured when defective | brakes sent a Long Island Railroad | train crashing into a terminal bump- | er at Long Beach yesterday noon. | Motorman Charles Wolfort was at the controls as the 11-car train swung along the slight grade at the end of the branch line to the heavy FIRST COMMUNIST workers to continue toiling under the | P&™ slave conditions. The Hotel, Ri taurant and Cafeteria Workers Un, ion, organizes all the wor! countérmen, bus-boys, wishwasher: and cooks, a mile a minute from sea level. machine, said today: “I see no rea- son why the Schneider trophy hould not be won 20 years hence at list slaugther, is able to climb | M4 HOUR WEEK TO everywhere, Build Up the United Front of the Working Class from the Bot- tom Up—at the Enterprises! MEETING IN N. 6, Dunne Scores White Chauvinism (Continued from Page One) nee they both are subjected to the same conditions of speed-up, long hours and low wages. The tradition of mental inferiority of Negroes i pure fiction without any scientific | basis, Dunne said, adding that Com- munists stand for full social and | political equality for all races. It is \the policy of the capitalists to stir |up racial prejudice, and thus divide |and weaken the forces of the prole- |tariat, he said. “White workers must fight with Negroes against the system of jim crowism,” he said. “Our Party makes no distinction between races except that in the South Commu- jnists fight harder for the Negro | workers because they suffer greater exploitation fnd persecution. Only solidarity of the workers of all races throughout the world will smash the capitalist system of ex- ploitation and oppression and estab- lish a workers’ and farmers’ gov- ernment.” Among the questions asked, was one about intermarriage. plied that Communists do net oppose intermarriage. That the standard question intended to end all argu- ment on the Negro question is “do you want your sister to marry a Dunne re- | 2 The Cafeteria Workers Union yes- | terday denounced the strikebreaking |role of the Food Council and called upon all workers to support it in its campaign to unionize the Ambas- | sador Cafeteria. The union also stated that it is jcontinuing its organization campaign and said that Fishers Cafeteria, 168 Delaney St. and the Proletarian Cafeteria, 6 W. 21st St. have signed agreements with the union. The Proletarian Cafteria, it added, will open up next Tuesday | | SPEEN-UP, WAGE GUT IN NABISCO Girls Tell Communist | | Signature-Drivers (Continued from Page One) signature petition. | Splendid factory contacts, laying |the basis for a broad Communist fact, through the bloody Chinese at-| that the union should take the ques-| jonslaught on key shops in the city,|tack upon the First Workers’ Re-|tion up with his attorney, He stated 'are driving Party members to even! harder efforts to get the necessary 5,000 signatures, {committee report: Party literature Daily Wor and workers, the Committee states. ress a speed of 1,000 miles an hour, I cannot divulge the calculated speed of the present plane, but I can say that if I had time to remodel it, I could improve it and get more speed even now.” WORKING WOMEN 10 MEET TONIGHT Communist Conference to Aid Campaign (Continued from Page One) take it up in their shops and elect three delegates to attend the con- ference, The Communist Party puts up specifie working women’s demands| in its platform: “Equal pay for equal work,” full protection of working mothers.” Fight Imperialist War. With war an almost established public, the only country where women have been liberated from the campaign |their double yoke of slavery, and! Wich, who is also the chief attorney ers, with the United States government, |for the International Ladies’ Gar- application |the fascist and pacifist women’s or-|ment Workers’ Union. Markewich is cards are taken eagerly by many ganizations, together with the reac-|a@ notorious enemy of the militant “We tionary A. F. of L. officialdom, com-| needle trades workers and has ap- PLAN OF LL. 6, Cloakmakers Oppose, Day’s Pay Tax (Continued jrom Page One) ers, who do not want to give money | to the strikebreaking company union. | When they protest to their employ- ers, they are told that they have been instructed by the Industrial Council and the other bosses’ asso- jciations in the cloak industry to be lin charge of collecting the funds for the company union, Have Same Lawyer. Strike (Continued from Page One) ganizer of the Architectural terday. Tron and bronze workers shou [the company union and the bosses | ty-hour, Powe was again proven yesterday when | concluded. ‘the workers of the cloak shop of! Rich and Stegnesky, 306 W. 37th | St., who were discharged after work-| ing a day and a half, attempted to collect their wages. The boss re- fused to give them. their wages and |when the Needle Trades Workers’ five-day week,” “For Any Kind of Insurance” Telephone: Murray Hils 5550 the firm, and demanded that the) workers be paid, the cloak boss said that his lawyer is former Assistant} Advertise your Union Meetings |District Attorney Samuel Marke- here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City NY IRONWORKERS Tlorced by General Tron and Bronze Workers Union said yes- | realize that the only way to keep the shorter week, to establish a uni- | | form wage scale, and to protect \themselves against the boss, is thru The close co-operation between|a militant union fight for the for-| (CARL BRODSKY Industrial Union got in touch with 7 Past 42nd Street, New York Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST 24) HAST 115th STREET Cor. Second Ave. New York Office hours: Mon., Wed., Sat., 9.30 a. m. to to 6 P.M. Tues, Thurs., 9. 2 to 8 Sunday, 10 a. Please telephone Telephone: appointment. Lehigh 6022 DR. J. MINDE SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Rcom $08—Phone: Algonquin 8183 Not connected with any other office 1d | rs | —— 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 CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. Y. Comrade jare making especially good pr bining to drag the millions of work- Negro?” Dunne replied that his jamong the Negro workers,” the ing women in this country into sup- ter would have to decide for herself, | committee adds. port of this imperialist war, it be- | but added “I would rather have her| Interest in the signature race is ¢omes more important than ever for marry a militant, courageous Negro | worker than throw herself away on|out the city. The Lower Bronx her interests and join with the van- a white bum.” Unit of the Young Communist} guard of her class. The Communist At this point, one man, a socialist | League is running a neck-and-neck| Party, therefore, calls upon all producing inter-unit challenges thru-| the working woman to awake to| Commission met yesterday, with rep- |resentatives of the company union, the bosses and Tammany Hall pres-| 26-28 UNION SQUARE (1 flight up) 2700 BRONX P/ “K EAST peared in court against them on| — = Frances Pilat many occasions as legal representa- | Patronize rates tive of the I. L. G. W. and of the| ee winder ie | employers. | N Ti B b Sh 51 BE. 7 » New York, N. Y. | The Cloak and Suit Industry 0 Ip ar er Ops Tel. Rhinelander 3916 MELROSE— (corner Allerton Ave.) | conerete and metal bumpers. He ap-| and white chauvinist in one, together |race with the Party unit in that| working women, and especially the plied the brakes in good time, but | with a skilled worker, rose andtried | highly-industrialized section to see|Negro working women, who are the they failed to hold. | to start a walkout. Only ten out of | who'll be first in the race and win| most exploited of all, to send dele- The grinding shock immediately | nearly 200 left the hall, and several | the coveted Red banner, gates to the conference on Aug. 27. threw the packed train into a panic, later returned. Dunne’s position was| Other units are taking up the | and the force of the crash was so | applauded overwhelmingly by the | fight. But it must rest on every strong that the bumper was torn| majority of the Southern workers member of the Party to report every | ent. They discussed further enslave- ment of the cloakmakers, such as the check-off system, piece-work and other methods to lower the wages of the workers and increase the prof- its of the bosses. “We will do everything in our power to help the Marion strikers carry on the fight,” Poyntz said when she returned to Charlotte. “Hoffman said that the N. T. W. had a place and that it could suc- * VEGETARIAN Dairy RESTAURANT omrades Will Always Find It Pleasant to Dine at Our Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx (near 174th St. Station) PHONE:— INTERVALE ————$—— Hotel and Restaurant Workers Branch of the Amalgamated Food Workers 138 W. 5ist St,, Phone Circle 7340 Not only has eiae forged the weap death to itself; it haw bourgeoisie that —o= ceed where the U, T, W. had failed, for instance in Durham where he had only been able to organize a few skilled workers and not masses of unskilled, but pleaded that we should ‘leave him alone.’ ” rae pe CHARLOTTE, N. C., Aug. 19.— William Murdoch, vice-president of the N. T. W. U. who has just re turned from a tour through South Carolina and Georgia, together with Sam Phifer, Don Stevens and three other local organizers, announced that they distributed urn and I. L. D, leaflets and organized groups as a basis for further organization at Gaffney, Spartanburg, Greenville, Anderson, Ware Shoals, Pelzer, Pied- mont, S. C., and Athens, Ivey. Star, Eiberton, Eatonton, Macon, Barnes- ville and Fortyth, Ga. Shop com- mittees were organized in seven of loose from its setting and jammed into 15 inches of the ground. The front of the first car was crushed. Hastily improvised first aid sta- tions were organized on the plat- form. Many women were being treated for more than two hours after the crash. ~The traditional investigation was yesterday begun by the Public Serv- ice Commission inspectors. Long Beach police held the motorman for questioning, although he showed that the accident was not, as the railroad fective breaks. reeoin age, i it into two #! two great and directly co classes: bourgeoisie a: Into | present. night to local headquarters to help into existence the men wi Build Up the United Front of | [S=° BUSINESS MEETINGS] cqmpanies always seek to establish, | | due to “man power failure,” but de- | wield those weapens—the modern working class—the proleta The Charlotte Observer featured | get the 25,000 signatures, the veut peg Karl Marx (Communist Manifeste), | part of the speech which advocated | paign committee warns, race equality, brazenly misquoting | \him. Tho Observer's story gave the | impression that the audience was hostile and offended, stating that a fourth of the audience walked out. Workers who were present brand | this as a deliberate lie. | Because of the great interest man- ifested by workmen who approached Dunne after the meeting, he agreed | to give a series of lectures. Daisy | MacDonald, Gastonia striker, pre- sided. . AN EA postponed Open Air Meetings Pier 14, at 12 noon, speaker, Guss; _ Pier 86, at 12 noon, speaker, R. |Grecht; 62nd St. and Amsterdam AA AA HODES TCG eg Morning Freiheit picnic Leld on the firet Monday of the month at ¥ p. m. | the Working Class from the Bot- tom Up—at the Enterprises! industry—One and Fight the Comm memy! Office Open from 9 a, m, to 6 p.m. EAR IN ak Comrades in Brighton Patronize Laub Vegetarian & Restaurant 211 Brighton Beach at Brighton Beach B.M.T. = FURNISHED ROOMS. Now is your opportunity to get a room in the magnificent Workers Hotel Unity Cooperative House eae postponed ee MEET YOUR FRIENDS at Messinger’s Vegetarian and Dairy Restaurant 1763 Southern Blvd., T 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 fetnrt called the Beat-O system. The work- these textile centers and a Iccal of the N, T. W. U. at Anderson with Ave., at 8 p. m., speakers, F. Aus- tin, E. Borg, L. Jaffe; 42nd St. and 13th Ave. Brooklyn, at 8 p. m., NOON and NIGHT Cor. 110th Street 1800 SEVENTH AVENUE OPPOSITE CENTRAL PARK Vegetarian Health Restaurant neariy 100 members as a beginning. The groups have arranged for mass meetings at many of these tex. | tile centers. At Greenville, Murdoch stated, the N. T. W. U. organizers met with 158 members of the U. T. W. who are disgusted by the d tion of the U. T. W. officials. These 158 members asked the N. T. W. U. organizers to return on the 18th, and if the U. T. W. organizers have not returned, they said, they will join the N. T. W. U. Murdoch stated that he found wages somewhat lower in Georgia and South Carolina than in North Carolina, tho average wage heing about $10. “The speed-up system there is ers are speeded up to try to reach this mark set for them by the bosses | which they must reach in order to | be classified as Al workers, and re- ceive a 25 per cent increase over their ofd wages. However, the mark is so high that less than 5 per cent of the workers are able to reach it. Those who fail get a 30 per cent wage cut. The system is particul- larly hard upon the women workers, who work 60 hours a week on the night shift. As one worker remark- ed ‘it is killing the women {olks,’” Murdoch, Phifer and Stevens re- turned to the Gastonia aren while \the three other organizers remained in the field, Saturday at ULMER PAR 2 Soccer Games at 1.30 and speakers, J. Magliacano, Overgaard, A. Schalk; Myrtle and Prince, at 8 p. m., speakers, Walter Burke, Har- riet Silverman, J. Williamson; Sec-, ond St. and Ave. GC, at 8 p. m,,_ speakers. Radsi, G. Schechter, | | WINDSOR, Ont., Aug. 19.—Heirs | of Lieut. Urbain Tessier-Lavine will meet here tomorrow evening to make plans~for an attempt to re- cover property now valued at $1,- 000,000,000 in the heart of Montreal given to keeping of the Catholic Church in 1654. The land comprises 30 acres in Montreal and covers the, Place d’Armes and sites of the Notre Dame Cathedral, Ea ] Ee By ) August 31 West End B.M.T. Line to 25th Avenue Station Music, Dancing, Entertainment, Sports 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. 3.30 p. m. Tel: DRYdock 8880 FRED SPITZ, Inc. FLORIST NOW AT 31 SECOND AVENUE (Bet. 1st & 2nd Sts.) Flowers for All Occasions 18% REDUCTION TO READERS OF THE DAILY WORKER CCNA 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 5865 Ce ee Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals it 02 E.12th St. New York