The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 13, 1929, Page 2

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What to Do to Free the Five Gastonia WORKERS SCHOO! TEN YEARS JAIL TO HEAR FOSTER ‘vsoresi= 72" FOR FLYING THE ON CLASS WARS “is.l<i=.sececs RED FLAG IN GAL, ing out among the workers of the entire country, These tried leaders could be out on bail to lead the restive work- ers! But they have to wait for the brea TUUL Secretary Wil! Speak Sunday Beal Writes of West Coast Terror The same tremend workers to eeusesat (Continued from Page One) shown by workers wh To date the national office of | |4@nger framed-up with charges of ture hall of the Wor the International Labor Defense, |™Urder—with four separate cases capacity at the ope has received about $2,500 of the of sedition at present—with three Forum last Sun expect on! |950.000 needed? workers, Resetar, Muselin and Zima Wm, Z. Foste These five men risked their! |$0ing to jail for five years charged he Trade lives for the workers, they are With sedition—with the murder of speaks this Sund: ae Steve Barkoski. Every state in the | only waiting for the opportunity to risk them again. The work- ers must tear them out ef jail. Intense ts will pro- the land of orange groves and jails, ide Foster’s lecture with material The I. L, D. calls upon the with a long list of working-class op- | vf ee inte dust workers to do the following Pression. On the ollowing ag NOVSIN- tl Sainen. ty tpatasusthe. acesealy This ig in the land of “democracy” er 24, Ma will talk on) | pond: |of “liberty.” The working class of Labor Gover ” , On Decem- Canvass for individual loans, | | America has opened its ey It et 1, ‘art 8 s Relation a a Contributions and shop collec-| | Sees What class justice means. It Proletariat, be ssed by} | tions. finally sees one set of laws exists Louis Lozov The f lecture Fraternal organizations to yote| |for the poor and another for the of the series will be given by Scott | | ¢ rich. ‘or loans. 5 Nearing on “Revolutionary Perspec- tive in the East The student body of the nounces a “Pr rian Banquet,” to be held at the school November. 28. ————— | Workers, you are at present fight- IMPORT THUGS | ing to free the Gastonia prisoners and let me remind you workers that bail has not yet been raised—that United States can match California, | NOVEMBER 13, 1929 Vee | Communist Activities PITT WORKERS | | Section 3 Members, Note, All mem of Section 3 must at- 6 5 tend their respective unit meetings during the week of Noy, 11-14. Those absent will be dropped from the list | Sg ANNIVERSARY Section eting Thurs- . dwis.mvey|Defy Terror Against Units : Militants s Wednesday, 8.30 p. m., at} Sf Dyes 10S MIRCURE tHe! DIT RAGE, |Joining thousands of New. York Umit: aa Workers throughout the country in cuss October Ple egular meeti sday hereafter instead of Tues- tC Wedne day of the Russian Revolution, 500 wo ers attended an enthusiastic mect- tion “8, ing arranged by the Communist Plenum to- |Party of District 5 at Labor Temple, 35 Miller St., Sunday evening. Although the Communist Party of '*|Pennsylvania, by the operation of nop (the Flynn. sedition law is virtually Co | Shop Paper Today, 7.30 p r comrade: floc J engaged on papers, prospective shop paper Worlts | illegal in this state, the workers, ers and section tprop direct ; attend many of them from steel plants, | jcame to the nieeting to hail the Shop p,m. * wnursday, {achievements of the first workers’ pective shop paper work- | Pat Devine, district orgar and agitprop directors must at-|the Communist Party in Distr was the principal speaker. He told 7.30 loor. papers, } ers tend. pnet Hike: will con. (of the struggle of the Russian wo hike to Alpi Forest ers and peasants to protect the Sunday. ‘Snappy program; re-/fruits of the October Revolution in freshments A Soviet fil ns h hee the five remaining prisoners are \the face of counter-revolution, con- a eae bestia Ob: Yee: SAD HD: NOES still in prison, You must free them| gio, |spiracies by the imperialist powers musie, fun and food are on the pro- at once. You must also protest for |p. moPat Se Union San eth Tonk’ “en land of the gigantic task of rebuild- Grane Fico bre a canes, the freedom of the five women work- |ComTades engazed oh “shop pavers |ing a nation shattered by the years etree Ts eas —— ers of Los Angeles. You must de- section agitprop directors must at- ia war, Devine contr sted pSseo tpi apa 7 mand tHat Bella Mintz, Esther Kar- | ‘°"° pene aes ditions of the workers in the U. 8. LOCK-QUT 1500 Strikers Face Them jer,” Yetta Stromberb, — Jennie | Unit 7. Section 5 |S. R. with the miserable conditions and Labor Fakers | Wolfson are freed. There is only |, Mssts tpduy; Duro at 7p. m, mem- lof the workers in America, especially one method of effective, powerful * in Pittsburgh, where the workers GLOUCESTER, Mass., Nov. 12.— | ™ass protest—and that is through 4) Plug-ugiie: imported by the Ip-|the mass defense organization—the swich Hosiery Mill bosses here as International Labor Defense. scabs from Kenosha, Wis., are at-| All workers who want to protest tempting to terrorize strikers who against such cases as the Los An- ’ have been out for several weeks. geles, Gastonia, Marion, Mooney and Don’t Help Men The Ipswich workers struck when| Billings cases should join the In- 3 an the company refused any longer to/| ternational Labor Defense in its CHICAGO, No Fifteen hun- gea} with them as union members. | drive for 50,000 new members, All dred journeymen lathers, union men, ‘The strikers are hemmed in on workers’ organizations should send Building Union Fakers have been locked out on a half dozen two sides, facing both the company’s | delegates to the fourth national con- | iarge buildings under construction. imported thugs, which were lent by | ference in Pittsburgh, December 29, The lockout occurred over job con- the Allen-A Company of Kenosha,|30 and 31. And all workers and trol. The union demanded to have a and on the other hand having the organizations and friends should in the choosing of the foremen, <word of the sell-out hanging over | send funds which are vitally neces- thus the lockout was declared their heads, for the strike is being |sary, at once, to the national office by the bosses. led by the notorious Hosiery Work-|at 80 E. 11th St. Room 402, New The officials of the lathers here ers Federation, to which militant! York City. are all reactionary, bitterly opposed strike action is anathema. Lae Pee PN be to militant action. The officials of The ‘imported thugs, recently An account of the terror in Cali- the other building trades unions here stung by jeers of the workers of| fornia, written by Yetta Stromberg, are of the same stripe, and the | this town, who are all for the strik-| appears in this edition of the Daily | lathers stand no chance of receiving ers, retaliated for this by rushing) Worker. help by sympathetic action on these out of the mill in full force and at-| — misleaders’ part, it is clearly indi- tacking a small group of men in the cated by the building trades union gece hon they thonght were) Shop Delegates Busy fakers. The Lathers’ Union officials strikers. Actions like this are com-| " here are the same men who recently mon for the thugs. | (Continued from Page One) declared for the barring of Negroes. Manager Lufkin, the mill manager, efforts are being made to reach the from the union. stood by approvingly while the scabs workers in the chain cafeterias. ee attacked. | Chain Stores Worst Exploiters. Refuse Bend to Free Five Gaston Jailed (Continued from Page One) The workers! Nearly all cooking (Continued from Page One) banking hours the next day noon,| for the Willow is now done at a toiling masses of Japan in detail | November 9”—“which procedure 1 central commissary by a few cooks, through the ‘Proletarian News’ and adopted,” Norris adds. |while young girls are hired at $15 workers. and peasants magazine| On the day of Riordan’s death, 's week to do the counter work. ‘The Banner.’ Smith had visited Riordan’s home, | “In the Horn and Hardart auto- “The International Labor Defense says the Medical Examiner, stating mats, workers stand on their feet of Japan, representing the workers that “In the interview with ex-Gov- and peasants of that country, ex- ernor Smith, he stated that he was presses its international solidarity | anxious to find out where Mr. Rior- with the Gastonia strikers, to com-|dan was, and went to the Riordan | ost kind of work. Silver's may mean rades Ella May, and the seven con- | home and interviewed Molly (a ser-|-iiver for the bosses—but for the victed strike leaders, who through vant) whom he knew very well on | workers, it isn’t even a decent meal their valiant fight, gave great im- account of his close association with ticket.” petus to the oppressed masses of the Mr. Riordan. She told him Mr. | Women’s Leaflets Issued. colonies, semi-colonies, and in fact, Riordan was not in.” | A special appeal is made to wo- all the toiling masses of the world.| The servant was interviewed in jon cafeteria workers in leaflets “In face of the coming imperial- | Smith’s presence, and said she did | warning them against being used ist war, white terror reigns in Japan. | not know Riordan was in the house | 2. bosgas’ tools to reduce wage Japanese workers and peasants lost before his body was discovered by! standards. The union demands for dozens of their most valuable lead- others at 5:50 p. m. |women workers are equal pay for ers at the hand of the capitalists in| Not only Riordan’s bank, but Jequal work; no speed-up; the eight- the past year and a half. Besides, other leading bank stocks broke |our day; time and one-half for there are more than 700 valiant heavily in yesterday’s trading, Na- |} vertimés. fio split shifts; special working men and peasants now in tional City sinking 75 points. Steel | -rotection and rest periods for wo- jail. The workers and peasants of | was driven down to 153%, being off | non and young workers; provision Japan are now determined to re-|6 points and 3% points under the] o¢ uniforms by employers. venge the wrongs done to them by year’s previous low. Wall Street | Among the speakers at Thursday’s the capitalists of Japan. would not even try to “explain” the | .aijy will be M. Obermeier, organ- “Comrades in the United States, reason, and the usual pulmotor tac-|i70., and S. Kramberg, secretary- even if the America-Japanese war tics of claiming that “the bottom |ireasurer of the union, and repre- is approaching, the workers and | has been reached and a rise is due” sentatives fromthe ‘rade Union peasants of these two countries are | was not even used. Last week’s Unity League, whose program of not enemies, but friends, Your aim |touting headlines, “Rockefeller i8|reyolutinoary trade unionism the and on is ‘to overthrow the world Ht ed absent. Everything lunion membership has endorsed. imperialism. i. “Against imperialist war! The Journal of Commerce report- | eee pee Gastonia class-war ed yesterday that the Wall Strect| Boss Caused Cave-In victims at once! ‘collapse, besides the growing Com- | ee “Long live the international sol- munist movement in the South, was (Continid from rhe One) idarity of the workers and peasants “slowing down industrial growth in condition. through the International Labor De- | North Carolina.” | Contrary to the official excuse fense!” = given by police chief Whalen and Complete Lay-Off of board of transportation inspector WALL STREET HIT BY NEW LOW |«trayful for a trifle!” says one of the leaflets. “Who gets the trifle? from exhaustion. Workers in Han- over’s get the least pay for the dirti- “The Willow chain advertises a) so long, they are ready to fall down} Section re exploited in the most brutal ashion, and are the victims of the speed-up and of a vicious industria] spy system. | ~ unit tion 4 today, d St | Important meeting Fp 0 8.30 p. m., a \joined the Communist Party in Labor and Fraternal | tesponse for his appeal for new va H + | members. Organizations | Other speakers included Rose Japanese Workers Dance, Exhibit. A dance and revolutionary poster |exhibition will be held by the anese Workers Association this Fri Clark, of the Young Communist League of Cleveland who has just returned from Gastonia. For the day evening at the Manhattan Ly- | first time i tutoey. of ) jceum, 6 ath St. “Tickets in nd- | /tst time in the history of the Com: vance, 75 cents; $1.00 at door. munist Party, she reported, Russian * * © ‘anniversary meetings are being held ional Direct ©. WW. /in the heart of the South, ducational d of the lo- |" ‘ souncils will meet Wednesday, 8.30/ Charles Guynn, organizer for the ith - St. room National Miners Union, acted as a ors must send |) 0: | chairman, * A varied program of entertain- ,.|ment included revolutionary songs weta (by the Freiheit Gesangs Society; y, 8.30 p.m, at 48| Hobo Songs by J. Simonen; violin ‘ | selections by John Doyle, accom- Council 10 Vetcherinka. ‘panied by K. Doyle and selections Council 10 of the UCWW. has 1 10 Leetures t H ar- |ranged original Vetcherinka for |PY the Ukrainian ballet. this Sunday, 7 p. m., at 48 Bay 28th} bata sie aaa nae ne St Admission 35 cents. AUSTRIAN ELECTIONS SIGNI- | FICANT. (Wireless By Imprecorr) VIENNA, Nov. 12.—The Lower Austrian municipal elections showed ‘socialist gains in the country, but ‘considerable losses in industrial dis- tricts—where fifteen per cent increase. ne Bronx Youth Banquet, Concert. The Bronx Workers Youth Club has arranged a banquet and concert for the benefit of the Gastonia prisoners | at 1472 Boston Rd., this Saturday \evening. All workers invited. Paar eles | Bronx I. Lb. D. Mass Meeting. The Bronx Cooperative Branch, 1 L. D., will hold a mass meeting Thursday. 8.30 p. m., in the Coopera- tive Auditorium, 0 Bronx Park East, which “Red” Hendryx, one of the Gastonia prisoners now out "| | | bail, will spea Admission free. $e oe ton Workers Lecture, Com, Constrell will speak on “Right Deviations in the Communist move- ment of the U. 5.” 27 Brighton Bi e welcome, | Beach Worker: Friday, $.30 p. m. ch Ave. All work- Brighton Auspices Club. PICKERS SEE NO HEALTH IN APPLE Armour Bleeds These! Workers SEATTLE (F.P.).—Although Ap- ple Week throughout the state of| | Washington finds commercial bodies | all handing out canned publicity | about the wonders of this “wealth and health producing” fruit, 700) women at the National Fruit Can- | ning Company do not rhapsoiize | over the ruddy apple. | Standing on their feet for eight | hours on a floor wet and cold, with} 30 minutes for lunch, they do not}! seem to see Apple Week in the big} way the boosters do. Perhaps the | jfact that the rate of pay on piece | work ranges from $8 to $10 a week | _may have something to do with their | unresponsiveness. | “My friend and I stood it for a week,” said one woman, “and when we found that we would have to take piece work pay for the following Now P. Fine Soviet film...” “ARS ‘Special Added a remarkable film showing the celebrating the Twelfth Anniversary | A number of workers | Communists gained | *AMUSEMENTS- “Shows invincible revolutionary labor at war . e te 8 —greater than “TEN DAYS THAT SHOOK THE WORLD” . The Film-Epic of the SKRAINIAN with amazing force the titanic struggle for control between the Bolsheviki and the forces of the bourgeoisie headed | by PETLURA —hailed as the equal of “POTEMKIN” “THE SOVIET FLIERS IN AMERICA” the Fliers in Seattle, San Francisco, Chicago, Detroit and New ;. that continual blasting was primar- Work Up Relish for ily responsible for the crash, the men on the job point out that cheap planking used on the excavation structure was unable to stand the steady strain. “A small charge was (enough to blast it through,” they point out. Even though several in the neigh- borhood noticed the span was per- ceptibly sagging for the past few weeks, the cellar was not shored up |as a precautionary measure. Thus, Banquet on a Hike The Workers School student body | is to go on a hike to the Alpine Woods this Sunday, starting from) 3 Union Sq. at 8.30 in the morning. it has been announced that the more historical moments of the march will »> taken down for proletarian pos-| erity. via the moving picture amera. Detroit Packard Auto Workers is Planned DETROIT, Mich., Nov. 12,—Gra- | dual lay-offs leading to a general shut-down is the plan of the Pack- ard Auto Co. The plant here has shut down while officials plan for the complete lay-off. One fifth of all the Packard workers here will be laid off within a fortnight, it is This hike, the arrangements com- | reported. The plant will then go OM When the northern side of the road nittee claims, is for the purpose of four days a week operation, Pack- | fel) through, the extra-weakened orking up a sufficiently ravenous ppetite in the studes, so that they ray be in form to do the School’s ard is following the suit of most of the other auto and allied plants. | southern end followed, | By centering formal questions on the blasting foreman instead of D. yroletarian banquet, scheduled for Pasejsts Know Where ©. Serber, the contractor, Whalen he evening of Nov, 28, full justice. naddition to the unexpurgated hike novie, a hitherto unreleased Sovkino | im will be shown on this occasoin, | and there will be music, food and un in plenty. Despite the third eriod, the price of admission has regen kept down to 50 cents; tickets | vay be obtanied at the school. OHIO WORKERS WILL AID | GASTONIA 7. | CLEVELAND, Ohio, Nov. 12.—) the Labor Sports Union of the! ‘leveland District, at its first con-| ovence, has pledged its support and promises to rally the workingclass | vath in this section for the defense! of the Gastgnia class war prisoners. to Look for Finance | ‘spread practice of using cheap ma- | WASHINGTON, Nov. 12. — The State Department, which in Austria is encouraging th eafscist regime of Schober, broke into print here with a “denial” that the newly appointed Austrian chancellor had consulted with the American minister in Aus- tria, Albert Henry Washburn, as to what the U. S. government would do, or how it would regard the ap- pointment, before he would accept the post. A Vienna paper had said such consultation took place. Wash- ington “denies” it. But the fact is that fascist Austria wants a loan whigh explains everything ? actually connived again at the wide- terials at the expense of the work- ers’ safety. As many of those endangered point out, however, these conditions will not be ended by legal inquiries pleaded by A. F. of L. office-men. A union zealous for the welfare of its members would maintain union conditions right on the job, they show. JAIL RED EDITOR. PARIS (By Mail).—Another editor of the Communist paper “Lorraine nar, has been sentenced to one year din prison, Ouvriere et Paysanne” Laurent Dar- | weeks we quit. We got $13.20—the state minimum rate—for the first week. It’s the same way with lots of the women on both shifts, The help is coming and going all the time. The turnover is high. A lot} bands and are earning a Ititle to supplement their wages. Most of the force is beyond middle age.” "The question was asked as to why the minimum wage law did not apply \after the first week. The woman ex- | | plained that an employer has 60 days as an apprenticeship period before he is compelled to pay the full rate. The practice of paying it the first week is for a balt. of the women have working hus- | York—ALSO THEIR S' 52 W. Sth Street Olrection Symon Gould. FILM GUILD CINEMA ‘bet. Sth & (ier Aven] SPRing 5095-5690 Contin: Special Forenvon Prices—Weekdays 12-2, 35e—Sat. & Sun. 12-2, Sie \“Broken Dishe Trivial, Bui Capably Done fartin vin, who astounded York Theatregoers several, sea- sons ago with his play, “Children of the Moon,” the author of} “Broken Dishes,” a mildly interest- ing play of small town life, now at the Ritz Theatre. The play theme is is far from origi- inal but manag o hold interest, | pecially in the first and second | fowards the end, it weakens | a great deal Lut is still far superior | to the average play. Flavin is a/ capable pla ight, knows his the- | atre and is able to co-ordinate his ideas in such a manner that they seem reasoanble and logiacl. | In addition, Marion Gering, the’ producer, has assembled a remark- able cast headed by the ever re-| liable Donald Meek. Meek has ap- peared in more than half a score of ; plays in which he portrays the docile clerk or small town man. In the| present production he a similar role. Cyrus Bumstead (Meek) an un- clerk, married for over ‘y years, is becoming more hen- | pecked the years go on, if such | a thing ble. It seem that wife, Jenny, had before her mar- riage, been in love with a man named Chester Armtsrong. Hardly an hour passes without friend wife | passing some nasty remark about | her husband and at the same time | broadcasting a compliment about | her former sweetheart. Chester is rich; her husband is poor. Chester | is strong and handsome; her hus- | band is everything but that. Along | that line Jenny browbeats and tor- | tures poor Cyrus. The two oldest daughters, accept- | ing theeir mother’s philosophy of life, never marry. However, the youngest daughter, Elaine, has a different opinion of the matter. When ma and the two spinsters are at the movies, father and Elaine en- | | gineer a quick wedding between the girl and Bill Clark, the delivery boy for Bascom’s, and declare themselves | free from maternal tyranny for- | ever. When the trio return from the | movies, the expected uproar over the | forbidden wedding is averted by the | sudden appearance on the scene of none other than Chester Armstrong himself! | | Instead of being all that Jenny had expected, Armstrong disclosed jas a crook. While rather is too tenderhearted to shatter his wife’s ; ideal, Blaine is not so bashful, and | in a ringing speech tells her mother exactyl what is what! | In addition to the superior per- 'formance rendered by Meek, others in the cast worth special mention are Bette Davis, as Elaine; Reed Brown, jr. as Elaine’s young hus- band, and J. Francis Robertson, as the Rev, Dr. Stump, who performs \the rapid marriage ceremony. laying! i | —DAILY WORKER. | | Revolution depicting Super-Attraction! enthusiastic receptions given to TART FROM MOSCOW. us Dally No Midnight W. of Bway, Eva8i30 Wed & Sat. at 2:30 MAJESTIC\ia(.. International Musical Trlumph By JOHANN STRAUSS “A WONDERFUL NIGHT” The apples are peeled by ma-) chinery and dumped on long tables! \where they are “trimmed” (soft | spots and unpeeled portions re- |moved) by the women. A machine’ |sometimes will handle 16,000 apples a day. 10,060 is the average, The) five women on each machine each) receive 12 ¢ per thousand. Some workers are known to have made as much as $3 @ day but the fruit was unusually sound and they put in overtime, This concern is a subsidiary of the Armor Co, Ford recently laid off over 26,000) men, and Briggs, Mack, etc., laid off many too, SHUBERT hea, qith Ww. of ‘way, Lvs. 0, Mats, Wednesday and Saturd. 2:30 QUEENIE SMITH tn the Musical Comedy Sensation THE STREET SINGER ANDREW TOMBES ETHEL BARRYMORE THEATRE é7th St. W. of Biway. Chick, 9944 Eves. 8:50, Mats, Wed. & Sat, 2:30 JOHN Comedy DRINKWATER'S Lives. 8:20, Mats. ‘Thur., Sat., 2:30 B00. gt sino BVA Le GALLIENNE, Director Toulght—“MLLE. BO brite ‘Tom. MutT Hi A ‘wou, Nights 10K 6 BIRD x HAND. tomes REPERTORY 14th st 1 i SONG" oa i ‘ SND BIG CA™ EQ | Wisconsin | | Wd ST.&UWAY., 1786» ‘AROUND THE WORLD VIA GRAF ZEPPELIN” | | i TALICING picture re- of most daring v of modern tim { po The Theatre Gu Vresenty —, KARL’ ANNA | GUILD \. Mats. fve, 8:60 | | H.&Sat. 2:40 EAST SIDE OPEN FORUM THE Church or ‘ Sevond SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 8 P.M. DR. EUGENE L, LYMAN “SOCIAL REDORM” jon the bos: junion will meet to work out y (107TH STRE! ” at the Rilz-- TESSA KOSTA. Victor Jolson In “The Fortune Teller,” erbert’s operetta at the heatre. “Rights” in Trickery (Continued from Page One) right wingers, with the A. F. of L., have been secretly negotiating with the bosses and waiting to sell out Fight Betrayal, Is T I, Call. Friday the A. F. of L. will try to do the job. But they are reckoning without the membership. nin warning the union members, the Window Cleane Section of the Trade Union Unity League points out the present intervention means only an attempt to expel the mili- tant leaders and to sell out the strike s’ terms. The T.U.U.L. calls on the workers to fight relent- tactics. ters, floor scrubbers and r building service workers, many of Jwhom are being used as seabs in the present strike. ‘The union Executive Council yesterday aceept- ed the offer of the Amalgamated Building Service Workers’ Union to |conduct the organization drive joint- {ly. A committee of three from’ ea Aid Daily, Gaston in \Sioux City “12th” Meet SIOUX CITY, Iowa (By Mail).— Sioux City workers, led by the Com- 'munist Party celebrated the Twelfth Anniversary of the October Revolu- tion at a mass meeting attended by over 200, Roy Stephens, district or- ganizer of District Ten of the Com- munist Party, collected $13 for the Daily Worker and Gastonia re- ief. : TEXTILE WORKERS Ball & ; and Carniva FOR THE GASTONIA DE TOF THE EI . STRUGGLE THANKSGIVING EVE, Wednesday, Nov. 27th NEW STAR CASINO AND PARK AE. JOHN C. SMITH’S NEGRO ORCHESTRA Tickets 75 Cents Auspie YORK, Ww PERNATIONAL RY 799 Broadway, Room 2: NEW th and NATIONAL TEXTILY WoRKS UNION, LOCAL NO. 4 15 West 2ist Street Tickets at Workers Bookshs 80 Union Square, New Yo Fight to Free the Seven Gastonia Strike Leaders! | Cafeteria Workers!!! Organize! SPCC CE MEN AND WOMEN COME TO THE MASS MEETING Thursday, Nov. 14th ATS POM. BRYANT HALL Avenue, Between dint and 4 Nirects, Sixth W.LR. WORKERS CHORUS ENGLISH LANGUAGE Now Being Organized Register at Workers International Relief. New Address: 45 BROADWAY Room 512, Telephone Algonauin 8048 Phone: LIMIGH 6482 Interrational Barber Shon. Mm. W. SA 1 2016 Second Avenue, New York (bet. 103rd & 104th Sts) Ladies Bobs Our Specialty Adinivsion Pree, Everyone Invited hy + Private Beauty Varlor y all such splitting and betrayal | Bring Your Fellow Worker!) ‘* “For All Kind of Insurance” ([ARL BRODSKY ‘Telephone: Murray Hill 5550 7 Bast 42nd Street, New York | Patronize No-Tip Barber Shops 26-28 UNION SQUARE (1 tight up) 2700 BRONX P/~K EAST (corner Allerton Ave.) Cooperators! Patronize SEROY CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. Y. | \ Comrade Frances Pilat MIDWIFE J 351 E. 7/th St, New York, N. ¥. Tel. Rhinelander 3916 ——-MELROSE— $. VEGETARIAN Dairy RESTAURANT mrades “Wil Always Find It Pleasant to Dine at Onr Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx (near 174th St. Station) PHONE: INTBRVALD 9149. RATIONAL |. | Vegetarian | RESTAURANT | 199 SECOND AVE] UE t | Bet. 12th and 13th Sts. | Strictly Vegetariun Food someetorsya HEALTH FOO Vegetarian : RESTAURANT ; | 1600 MADISON AVE. \ Phone: UNIversity 5865 Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 | John’s Restaurant SPECIAL! ITALIAN DISHES | Y A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 502 E. 12th St. New York | All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant Cleremont Parkway, Bronx Unity Co-operators Patronize SAM LESSER Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailor 1818 - 7th Ave. New York sl Letween 110th and 111th Ste, u Next to Unity Co-operative Hoi i \ a g DR. J.MINDEL| | ‘ SURGECN DENTIST | "e 1 UNION SQUARE in {|| Reom 80%—Phone: Algonquin 6188 Not connected with any i g | other office : : SE BES uu he Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST AST 115th STREET a Ave. New York DAILY EXCEPT FRIDAY Please telephone for appointment Telephone: Lehigh 6022 Cor, Dr. M. Wolfson Surgeon Dentist 141 SECOND AVINUR, Cor, 9th St. Phone, Orehard 2333. In case of trouble with come to see your fri long experience, can ant you of careful (rentment. | Advertise your Union Meetings here, For information write to | The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City |, ce. Hotel and Restaurant ; Workers Branch of the Amalgamated Food Union—Local 8 Affitiated with the ALF. of mh 6, New York at Manhattan | N Windcw Cleaners’ Protective | Sicha Wit By ewe Manhattan ' val ) 9 3UTCHERS’ UNION Loent 174, AMC. @ LW. Of NA Ottice and Headquarterst Labor Fempte, 243 iG. s4th su | oom 12 ||| Hegular meetings every firet ane { third Sunday, 10° A. M. [employment Bureau open evert «lI day at 6 P, FURNISHED ROOMS 1101 St, Heated roomn: 1; ail improvements; new hues B90, Biche! Unik

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