Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
, Green, Uther "ara PRIDE THEY POINT TO RECORD OF TREACHERIES Demand Cooperation With Bosses WASHINGTON, Sept. 2.—Wil- liam Green’s message to the work- ers on Labor Day consisted of a thanksgiving that “collective bar- gaining is coming to be more and more adopted as a preventative of labor disputes and that there were only 18 strikes taken part in by the A. F. of L, in 1928.” Despite the fact that the period between 1: Labor Day and this Labor Day was one replete with wage cuts, lengthening of hours, and great increase of speedup, Green said that “organized labor could ackward over the past year isfaction.” Green waxed unconsciously humor- ous when he stated th-' “the or- ganization of the unorganized by the A. F, of L. has gone ahead with startling success.” This statement was made with a straight face by the leac-r of the labor *-“ers, de- spite the fact that the A. F. of L. has neither desired nor attempted to organize the automobile, packing- house, oil, rubber, lumber, metal mining, and other workers of the basic industries. Green pointed with pride to the| record of the A. F. of L, im the south, a record which in the past year included the betrayal of the} Tennessee rayon strikers, various | Carolina textile strikes, and the sell- out of the striking New Orleans carmen, * HUNTINGTON, W. Va., Sept. 2. —“Deploring” present conditions xisting in the coal industry, Frank | Morrison, secretary of the Ameri- | can Federation of Labor in a Labor | Day speech here today made ari ap- | peal for “collective action and co-| operation between coal operators and miners to solve the problems of the industry.” Misleaders of the United Mine) Workers Union, who are the very ones responsible with the coal bosses | in bringing about the starvation con- | ditions the cc-] miners now enjoy, also spoke. Morrison anv the mine | union misleade-3 made it clear that} they were more concerned with solv- i ing the problems of the industry | from the operators’ angle than from | the miners! { Strong Growers Trust Urged By Farm Board WAPAKONETA, O., Sept. 2. Strengthening and expansion of e: isting food farm trusts (styled “co-| operatives”) and “sound managerial and financial policies,” ™n connec- tion with them was urged by Jas. C. Stone, vice-chairman of the Fed- eral Farm Board before a picnic of wealthy farmers today. The policy of the board, he claim- ed, aimed at “bringing about co-or- dination of efforts on the part of| cooperatives.” Stone is active in what his board) calls “cooperation.” _ The function) of the farm board as an instrument to enable rich growers to control the market and force out the petty producers is indicated by his own record. A rich tobacco merchant, he form-| ed the Central and Planters’ Tobac- | co Warehouse Company in 1917. He} is president and general manager of | the Burley Tobacco Growers’ Coop- erative Association, which he found-| ed in 1921 and which “coordinates” $50,000,000 business yearly. He is also a director of the Fayette Na- tional Bank and the Joint State Bank at Lexingto:, Va. The working claxs cannot simply lay hold of the reaay-made machinery, and wield it for purpore....Thix ne Commun: (Paris Commune) breaks the modern state power.—Marx. | Labor Legion, a strike breaking out. Paw waewep wMKW VORK. TUE Federal Inspectors Guilty of Murder of 74 ve Be Cradh! The coast old San 46 wise Juan, on which 74, in- cluding many members year liner of the drowned with the oil tanker Dodd last Thursday night, 30 miles south crew, were in a crash of San Francisco. F'ed- eral authorities are blamed by seamen for allawing such an old and unseaworthy boat to sail. IRT AIDS WALKER | Fraternal Organizations IN N.Y, CAMPAIGN Traction "0, Gives Money to City (Continued from Page One) the money, at the same time hoping that they will forget that the same Tammany Hall attempted to award a bus franchise to the Equitable \Coach Co., controlled by the traction interests. Address Meeting. Mayor Walker and Major La Guardia were busy yesterday ad- dressing Labor Day meetings in an jeffort to line up the working class |vote for the democratic and repub- | |lican parties, respectively, in the coming city eldction. LaGuardia ad- dressed the convention of the post office laborers in Brooklyn and the | convention of the post office clerks | |at the Commodore Hotel, at which Mayor Walker also spoke. Late yes- terday the republican candidate spoke at several picnics arranged by American Federation of Labor | unions. Leads Parade. La Guardia led a parade in the afternoon through Harlem, heading a group of members of the Loyal! fit. Later, he attended their outing | at Whitestone, L, I. It is in Harlem, which La Guar-| dia represents in congress as a mem- ber of the house of representatives, that he is connected with Italian fascist elements of the republican} party. Recently at a meeting of! Italians he was greeted with the| fascist salute. Had Poyntz Jailed. | Harlem workers still remember) that La Guardia, who in 1924, was the socialist party candidate for congr aused the arrest of Juliet Stuart Poyntz, his Communist oppo- nent, because she was addressing a larger body of workers at the cor-| ner of Lexington Ave. and 111th St., jthan he was. The workers objected | so strenuously to the arrest, La Guardia did not press the charge. 11 DIE IN ENGLISH FIRE SMETHWICK, Staffordshire, En- gland, Sept. 2. — Eleven lives were} lost in a fire here which spread from | a confectioner’s shop to an apart- |ment in which 28 persons were liv-| ing. Six of those who were burned to death were members of one family. In addition to those dead, three of the occupants of the house are now in a hospital suffering from severe injuries. ( chair. : A million copies must weeks, issued WRITE 0 1 Millon LEAFLETS ON THE GastoniaFrame-up JUST OFF THE PRESS HIS IS A POWERFUL INDICTMENT of the huge conspiracy to send fifteen textile strike leaders and workers to the electric factories, mines and mills within the next two Order your bundle immediately. $1.50 per 1,000 plus express charges, Checks or money orders must accompany all orders. COMMUNIST PARTY OF THE UNITED STATES DAILY WORKER, 26 UNION SQUARE, NEW YORK be distributed in the by the R WIRE: | t || Cer Office Workers Dance The Office Workers Union will give its first Fall dance on Saturday eve- ning, Sept, 14, at the Hecksher Foun- ation Roof Garden, 1 B. 104th St. Admission 90 cents. * +« Freiheit aston Society Picnic. The annual picnic of the Freiheit Singing Society will be held on Sun- | Mi pt. 8, at Pleasant Bay Park, The Freiheit chorus, .ed by ‘ob Schaefer, will appear in a new gram of songs and instrumental John C, Smith’s Negro jazz 1 provide smusig for dancing. Ww. t ra se WV otutateses: The W. I. R. store, 418 Brook Ave., |needs volunteer help, including a chauffeur, at once. Workers unem- Ployed, on vacation or with spare time should phone Louis Baum, man- ser, Mott Hawn 5654 hetween 8 a. and 7 p.m. im * 4 Williamsburg I. L. D. A general membership meeting w be held Wednesday, Sept. 4, 8.30°p me at 56 Manhattan Ave. Gomradé | Blumfield will speak on an impor- tant subject. * Soviet Fliers Bbception Committee. A meeting of all Workmen's Circle delegates will be held on Wednesday, Sept. 4, 7.30 p.m., at 175 Bth Ave., ESDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 192 a p E Page Five TALK TOMORROW Shared By Officials That responsibility for the $5,000,- ;000 City Trust Company crash was |shared by all the bank directorate jand not individual “goats,” is ex- |pected to be the contention of An- |thony Di Paola, former cashier of the looted bank, when he takes the stand at the special grand jury to- morrow. Di Paola, right hand man of the |late Francesco M. Ferrari who led the Tammany-fascist clique in the swindle, holds that directors knew all of the proceediags he noted in his minute book. They knew of the forged loans and ef the “discipli- nary” but purely formal letters from the state banking department then under Frank H. Warder’s adminis- tration, he will maintain. Once the indictments are out of the way, Di Paolg is expected to spill even more dirt on the sordid story of the steal. However, with so many of its) sons in the dark mire, those close| to the inquiry believe that it is | largely due to Tammany’s protect- ing hand that responsibility for the crash is fixed on Warder and a few) ON BANK LOOT To Prove Steal Was) Room 304, others rather than on the much} greater number of Tammany offi- cials. * 6 * “Ieor? Concert. The “Icor” has arranged a concert for Saturday, Sept. 8.30 p.m, in Town Hall, for w cholas Kar- lash, bass’ baritone, and Wolf Barzel, Russian trio composed of Victor Pecker Jewish actors, the vi Kutchero, Basil Belaieff and faranz, and the Soviet pianis ha Fisherman, have been engaged. All proceeds go toward the rehabili- tation of Jewish workers and ped ants in the Soviet Union. ese * Workers Laboratory Theatre. The Workers Laboratory Thea will open its 1929-30 season w general membership meeting Wednes- Sept. 4, 8.30 p.m., in’ room 607, Workers Center, 28 Union Sq. Ali workers interested in the drama, re- gardless of experience, are invited. After the business meeting the direc- tor will commence casting for the Gastonia p! “White Trash.” Other plays to be produced this sea- son 100,000," an anti-fascist play; “S.8._ Hell-en-back,” revolt aboard a freighter; “Revolutionary | Interlude,” Soviet Commune: “March- ing Guns,” a miners’ play (2nd cea- son); and “R, U. R.,"” a mass_panto- mime of world revolution. For in- formation apply Workers School, Union Sq., or address L. tes, 1271 55th St., 28 A. DeSan- Brooklyn, nit 3, Seetion 4, will holds business meeting Tues- day, Sept. 3, 8.00 p.m., at 235 W.| 129th St. “A discussion will follow. aaah eae Intl. Branch 2, Section 6. Meets Tuesday, Sept. 3, 8,00 p. m., at 6 Manhattan Ave. to discuss the the-| is of the Tenth Plenum. eink Ba Unit R2, Section 1. Will meet BreGnenday. Sent. 4, p.m. at 27 E, 4th 7.30 Intl, Branch 1, Scetion & meeting of the unit utive has been called for. Wedne Sept. 4, 7 p.m., at 154 Watkins § Brooklyn. Membership meeting at 9 sharp, ober Unit 4F, Section 6. A meeting for discussion of tt thesis of the Tenth Plenum, to be le by Comrade Ne will be held W nesda pt. 4, 6.30 p.m., at 253 lantic Av read ion” and the articles on the Tenth Bien tarilio peared in the Im- precorr and the Daily Worker. After the discussion an open air meeting At- Comrades are urged to up “On the Road to Bolsheviza- Communist Activities will be held at Fleet St and Myrtle Avenue. Ba ae Unit 2, Section 1. The regular Monday meeting hay- j ing been put off on account of Labor | Day, Unit 2F, Section 1, will meet today, 615 p.m. * * * Unit 1, Section 3. A special meeting of the unit will be held Wednesday, Sept 6 p.m, at 1179 Broadw % unit 1, Section 4. * ial meeting has been called rsday, Sept. 5, 8.30 p.m., at 03rd St., for discussion of the Tenth Plenum thesis. * Unit 5, Section 7, The executive meets Wednesday. Sept. 4, 8,00 p.m., at th St. and Mermaid Ave., Coney Island. Mem- bership meeting at 9 o'clock Pout sabes Intl. Branch, Section 3. Meets today, 8.30 p.m. at 1179) Broadway. * * & Unit 12, Section 3. today, 6.30 p.m, at 1179 REGISTER FOR WORKER SCHOOL Offer Widest Choice of Courses (Continued from Page One) ping courses eliminated and the con- tent of each course carefully exam-| ined. The English department, now un-| der the chairmanship of V. I. Je-| rome, has in line with the general policy of the Workers School, re- duced the period for the study of English to seven ierms instead of eight, thys covering the subject in three months’ time less than was| previously’ necessary. | In other departments like changes were made, In all, about forty of the courses given last year arer9) either reorganized ox eliminated be- | cause the same ground was covered junder different headings. This will be of advantage to all students be- cause with the elimination of these courses it becomes more possible for | students to take classes with leading instructors. Among the instructors who will! take a leading part in the faculty) of the school are Max Bedacht, Scott | Nearing, Robert Minor, M. J. Olgin, |W. W. Weinstone, A. Markoff, J. L. Engdahl, Sam Darcy, H M. Wicks, A. Landy, W. Z. Foster, Wm. F. Dunne, Jack Stachel, Julia Stuart Poyntz, Cyril Briggs, and others. Also the administration staff of |the school has been changed. new director is Max Bedacht; assist- | ant director, Sam Darcy; executive committee, Max Bedacht, Sam Dar- cy, W. Z. Foster, ... Markoff, Scott Nearing, Alexander Trachtenberg, W. W. Weinstone. Registrztion is now going on. Cat- alogues and other material are avail- able at the school office. Comrades are urged to register early so that The, |\Close Baptist School After Lone Squabble With Lord’s Anointed | DES MOINES, Ta., Sept. 2.~-As- sailed last May by the rocks and eggs of excited students who ques- tioned the morality of their spirit- ual leader Dr. T. T. Shields, the doors of Des’ Moines University, Baptist College, will remain closed, the board decided today. The action was the final episode| of a stormy year at the house of God. The student attack on Shields dismissal of President Wayman and other faculty members suspected by Shields of harboring faint gleanings of scientific truth which constituted a grave menace to their fundamen-)| talist faith. At the height of the row, inquisi-| hotel register which showed the names of Shields and Miss Edith M. Rebmans—described on the books as Shield’s secretary — suspiciously close together. The devout youths whispered their fears. Some even snickered surreptitiously. Of course, Shields was “exonerated” by the board, leave for his native Toronto, accom- panied by police eseort. Prepare Bookings For Bookings for “White Trash,” by Gastonia textile strike vresented by the Workers Laboratory Theatre, | will be accepted commencing Oct. 15. Preference will be given to those orgamzations whose enter-) tainment is being run in behalf of the International Labor Defense and the Workers International Relief. The Workers Laboratory Theatre, it was announced yesterday, is ar- yanging to give a course in proletar- can have tho widest choice of os hefore théy are fillet the Workers School, Square. 26-28 Union and other board members followed, tive students peeped at a Waterloo) Subsequently he had to) Louis A. De Santes, a play of the | ian pleywrighting and producing at) WARNS NEGROES, KEEP OFF BEACH |Chauvinists ts Aided by Chicago Tribune CHICAGO (By Mail).—In an edi- torial that appeared in Monday’s Jissue of the Chicago Tribune, a \leading capitalist and anti-labor | | paper here, Negroes are advised and | | practically warned to keep away from Jackson Park Bathing Beach, | jand to heed the threats of white chauvinists. The beach was the scene a week |ago of the driving away of a troop of Negro girls scouts by the chau- vinists, who threw stones at the girls, Many of the girls became disgusted with the girl scouts as the result of this discrimination. The editorial states that “to a | very large section of the white popu- | lation the presence of a Negro, how- | ever well behaved, among white bathers is an irritation.” It warns the Negroes to avoid the beach, less serious race troubles re- | sult. Racial Conflict at the Beaches. Two letters recently published in the Voice of the People have to do with displays of race antagonism at or near the beach in Jackson Park. It appears that twenty-three Negro girls organized as a Girl Scout troop, were stoned away from | the beach on one evening and on the previous evening several Negro |couples were threatened with bodily | injury if they did not leave at once. | In the one instance several of the girls were injured and in the other only a prompt withdzawal appears to have prevented physical violence. The legal rights and duties are \clear and they are all on the side | of the Negroes, but there is a good deal more involved in these inci-| dents than mere legalisms. We) should be doing no service to the Negroes if we did not point that to a very large section of the white| population the presence of a Negro, however well behaved among white | bathers is an irritation. This may | | be a regretable fact to the Negroes, but it is nevertheless a fact and it! |must be reckoned with. Moreover, { | it is a fact which has frequently con- tribute to discords and notably to the race riots of a decade ago. Un- ‘der the circumstances it would seem that the Negroes could make a definite contribution to good race lrelationships by remaining away | from the beaches where their pres- ence is resented. We do not doubt that*Negroes, for | the most part, are willing to make whatever sacrifice is involved. The |South Park Board should, without delay,, provide adequade bathing (facilities along the miles of beach | between Roosevelt Road and Persh- ing Road which Negroes now may juse and do use without hindrance, The Negroes of Chicago are among the principal beneficiaries of the millions of dollars spent upon the ‘outer parks. In addition, they have inherited two of Chicago's finest ored people in Washington Park, one of the ‘largest, most br autiful and best equipped in the city, is not resented. Their voluntary waiver \of the right to bathe at the Jackson |Park Beach would seem then to be. a small price to pay for peace be-| tween the races, particularly after \proper facilities have been provided |for them elsewhere, STRIKE AGAINST OPEN SHOP.) WASHINGTON (By — Mail).—| |Union workers at the Rust En- | gineering Co, here walked out when non-union men from the Virginia Engineering Co. were® placed ° a job in the same building, boulevards, and the presence of col- | Gastonia Strike Play | The policy of the A. F. of L. from the time of Sam Gompers (remem- ber his infamous defense of mob tule against Negro workers?) has been one of open antagonism to the Negro workers. Prejudice, race ha- tred, discrimination in the union and on the job—all the forms of the ideology of race hatred of the white ruling class—mark the dealings of the A. F. of L. leadership with the Negro workers. The A. F. of L. leadership encourages Jim Crow unions. Most of the A. F. of L. unions have color bars! Where these radial bars have been removed such removal was effected by the left wing workers in those unions, who alone have agitated and fought| against these color bars and other devices of barring Negro workers, from the benefits of trade union or- ganization. Left Wing Unions Fight Jim Crowism. | And now, again, the left wing | workers lead the fight against the ; Jim Crow policies of the A. F. of L.—against the bosses’ ideology of Negro inferiority and race separa- tion which the A. F. of L. leader- | ship so faithfully defends! No lon-| | ger content with merely carrying on, jinside the A. F. of L. the fight for ‘working class solidarity (unity of all workers, black and white) and |for the militant waging of the class | struggle, the left wing workers are | building new unions and a new labor center. Already affiliated with this new labor center are over half a million workers. The new left wing unions are easily differentiated |from the A. F. of L. unions by the following facts: 1. The left wing unions seek to organize the black and white work. K.K.K. Fails to Drive Members | ers in the same unions and logals on a basis of absolute equality, full par- ticipation in’ leadership and equal opportunities on the job. ” of L. Fakers owe “orth Labor Day Message of Class ( Collaboration DI PAOLA WILLA. F. of L. Is Openly Against Negro Labor CAY PA’ AVE DRIVE ON BUCKET SHOPS IS BEING MADE 2. All the left wing unions have To Give G. 0. P. City Negro workers on their committees. In addition, president of the National executive the vi Miners’ Union is a Negro, the Needle Trades Workers’ Industrial Union has Negro vice president, Ch. Henry Rosemond. 3. The National Textile Union ‘which is leading the strike of tex- tile workers in South Carolina fused to at on its principle of race eq and in the ¢ of most vicious attacks of the capi ist press, which worked the issue overtime in its efforts to t the white strikers against, the TU, against the capitalist-injected judices of the Southern wo: won these strikers to its princ that the Negro textile workers must be organized side by si white textile worke nd that th must be absolute equality within th face pre- union. And won them so complete- ly that the whi ers were not only willing to accept a Negro or- ganizer of the union, but learning | that his wife as threatened by the ku kluxers and chamber of com- merce, appointed a bodyguard to protect him, And, when, following {ag the unprovoked attack by the police! on the strikers’ meeting and the} shooting of the chief of police, the] mill boss police and thugs tried; to lynch this Negro organizer, the white strikers mobilized and spirit. ed him out of town, putting him on a train for New York forty from Gastonia. This left wing union was denounced and attacked by the| apitalist press of the South for it race equality policy. And, the A. F. of But the N. of se ny N. miles | | wealthy theatre mR EUS) faces trial | | | race separation and antagonism in| From the ILD The-white sheets ‘ai and hoods of the | Ku Klux Klan in the South do not {have a strong enough hold to pre- vent the members from joining the| International Labor Defense. | This was the unusual news| brought north by Walter Trumbull, | representative of the I. L. D. in the! South, who has returned after sev- eral months’ intense activities in the | Carolinas. He reports especially cae I. L. D. aetivity in Charlotte, Gas-| and | tonia, Bessemer City, King’s Moun- | tain, Cramerton, Mt. Holly | Hickory. exclusively Negro, gave a splendid | welcome to the I. L. D. despite at- | tempts made of the mill bosses to| stir up a race riot, Trumbull re-| ported. “The workers of the South are; practically 100 per cent on behalf| of the Gastonia strikers,” Trumbull | |said. “Conditions everywhere in the pellagra-rotten South are the same, | and the workers feel a strong sol- idarity toward one another. “A most surprising fact,” Trum- bull said, “was the number of mem- bers joining the I.L.D. who wrote on the membership ecards that they | were members of the K, K. K. also. | The latter organization cannot pre-! vent the members from joining the| I, L. D. once the workers become | acquainted with our aims.” Trumbull reported that the de- fendants were in good spirits, con-| fident that the mass protest of the | working class would save them./ |They are certain that American | | workers everyw! -re are taking most | active part in the ten-day campaign | tor funds of the Gastonia Joint De- fense and Relief Campaign Commit- tee. “Tt is class against class,” Trum-| bull said. “The class lines are so| sharply drawn as to be apparent to | everybody, despite the attempts of | the mill bosses to hide them.” | | Berlin Fascists Bomb Reichstag; Part of | Terrorist Campaign | (Wireless By inprecorr) BERLIN, Sept. 2.—A bomb ex- ploded in the Reichstag building at 4 o'clock this morning, breaking windows and damaging the mason- ry. The explosion is obviously a continuation of fascist terrorism. ‘Distribute Leaflets to Czech Soldiers; Arrests (Wireless by Inprecorr) PRAGUE, Sept. 2.—Arrests are being made following the distribu- tion of leaflets among troops par- tigipating in the annual maneuvers | 7 4 ot the Czech army in Kremsier. 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 Hou Comrade Frances Pilat MIDWIFE 351 E. 77th St., New York, N. Y. Tel. Rhinelander 3916 The latter town, almost | yy the very center of reaction, South itself! As stand on the race issue, fourteen of its organi: e today menaced with the electric chair, following a a result of |frame-up by the mill bosses in con-| nection with the shooting of chief of the police. The United Textile Wo Union, an A. F, of L. outfit, conducting strikes in the it the capitalist press finds necessity for attacking the U. T. W. on the race issue. Nor will the mill bosses and their police agents find any necessity for framing the U. T. W. organizers to stop their a vocacy of race equality. The U. W. is not advocating race equality. $ not even trying to organize Negro workers. Its policy on the race issue is the same as the bosse policy. The Trade Union League is building a new trade union center for all the workers. Among the leaders of the T. U. E. L, are workers of all races, Negro, white, Japanese, Chinese ,etc (CARL Morray Hil, KY 7 East 42nd Street, New York no Educational “For An ‘Any Kind of Insurance” Kind of Insurance” Patronize No-Tip Barber Shops 26-28 UNION SQUARE (1 flight up) 2700 BRONX P’ K EAST (corner Allerton Ave.) ‘| 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 st 133 W. 51s Phone Circle 7336 [=F BUSI. MEETINGS] Leld on the first Monday of the month at 3 p. m, industry—One Untoo—Joii and Fight the Common Enemy! Office Open from 9 a. m. to 6 p, m. One 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. Tel.: DRYdock 8880 FRED SPITZ, Inc. FLORIST NOW AT 31 SECOND AVENUE (Bet. Ist & 2nd Sts.) Flowers for All Occasions 18% REDUCTION TO READERS OF THE DAILY WORKER FURNISHED ROOMS, a lican party \ the union won its point and Campaign Material To give the repub- the opening of the the United ice, which is rs of the re- next week ar- ns who have city election ¢ from impli rney’s office does at to prevent the con- arrests m after fleeced thousands The politicians a score or so small business ed that the re- vorth their sup- into men will publ custe port, republicans alking point bucket shops, > authorities con- Hall have vol- the drive stock sales- camp: YYork trolled by " unteere nst the in frau lulent men Try Wife of Pantages For Murder; He Faces “Ferced Love” Charge LOS AN Alexander tELE Pantage: 2. — Mrs. wife of the joined the|the death of Joe Rokomoto, a Jap- stuck to/|anese. its guns and achieved a notable vic-|tages automobile crashed into his. tory against the bosses ideology of| in the|& its | * | defense. the | lt ,| Pantages | her South. | P° tomorrow on a second d | charge. She legree murder is declared responsible for H as killed when the Pan- Ww With the huge wealth obtained from his vaudeville circuits, Panta- able to retain the high-priced York lawyer Steuer for the Steuer is also trying to defend Pantages from charges made by the da Eunice Pringle, who gave orate evidence setting forth de- ls of an attack which she said made on her following rejection of certain cash pro- ne Not only has the hourgeol: forged the weapons that bj Geath to tnelf; ft bas also alled into exixtence the men who are to wield those wenpons—the modern working class—the proletarians.— Karl Marx (Communiat Manifeste). Cooperators! Patronize oh vig GE de CHEMIST 657 Allerton Estabrook 3215 Avenue Bronx, N. Y. Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST 249 BAST 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; E 8p. m Sunday, 10 a. m. to 1 p. m, Please telephone for appointment. Telephone: Lehigh 6022 DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Rcom 803—Phone: Algonquin 8188 Not connected with any other office . VEGETARIAN Dairy RESTAURANT omrades Will Always Find It Pleasant to Dine at Oar Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx (near 174th St. Station) PHON INTERVALE 9149, MEET YOUR FRIENDS at Messinger’s Vegetarian and Dairy Restaurant 1763 Soxthern Blvd., " ox, N.Y. Right off 174th St. Subway RATIONAL Vegetarian RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVEi UB Bet. 12th and 13th Sts, Strictly Vegetarian Food =F All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE, Phone: UNI versity 5865 Phone: Stuyvesant $816 John’s Restaurant ITALIAN DISHES SPECIALTY A place. with atmosphere where all radicals meet 302 E.12th St. New York