The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 28, 1929, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

PROSPERITY? FORD LAYS OFF 7700 N CALIF “Prosperity” Belied by Shut-Downs SAN FRANCISCO, C: The “prosperity” preachings of Henry Ford, and of all the open shop bos being spreai thru the apitalist press, have again been belied by the laying off of 1,000, out of 1,200 workers in the Ford ssembly plant here. The pretext for he plant is to be equipped for the new 1930 model Altho the thousand workers were old that the impending ould be only for a few days, this s belied by the statement given by Ford cfficials to the local press, that the men would be “re-hired as ast as orders for the new models warrant i This y a complete at weeks areat p tion the wor 1 to be unempl for a long time after In addition to facing long lay- offs, the auto workers are being victimized by the favorite tricks of the auto magnates, which is to re- hire the worke fter a long lay- ff, as “new” men at lower wages. The Ford Factory in San Fran- cisco, as well as the Chevrolet, the Fisher body, and Durant plants | in Oakland have been running far |} relow capacity for some time, and | the present lay-off accentuates the | already acute unemplopment situa- tion in th: i sti LECTURE ON ORGANIZATION. Workers interested in organization problems will hear Obermeier speak on Monday at 7 p. m. at the Work- ers School, 26 Union Square on the subject of “Organization of Food Worke: The lecture is one of a series given weekly on the same day and hour at the school. All those | not registered may be admitted for 25 cents. FIGHT “SOCIALIST” TERROR. MILWAUKEE, Wis. Nov. 26.— Milwaukee working class women are | continuing the fight for the rein- statement of Joel Schneider, Young | Pioneer suspended and transferred | : tective Start Relief Drive in Cleaners’ Strike; 2 Unions Meet Friday Working organizations thru- out the c are being called on to aid the of the window cleaners by contributing for strike relief. A campaign for relief has been launched and committees are addressing meetings of trade unions, workers’ clubs and other labor or- ganizations, appealing for funds. Both the Window Cleaners Pro- Union, Local 8, and the Amalgamated Building Service Workers Industrial Union are now preparing for the conference of or: ganized and unorganized building service workers on Friday, Dec. 6, that will launch a new industrial union of building maintenance work- ers. Tomorrow (Friday) night, both unions are holding membership meetings at which plans for mobil- izing as large and as representative a group of delegates as possible will be discussed. The nieeting of the window cleaners’ union will be held at 7 o'clock at Manhattan Lyceum, 66 E. Fourth St. The Amalgamated Union will meet at 8 o'clock at 16 W. 21st St. Active picketing continued ye: in the window cleaners’ strike. ets told of the increasing de- moralization that is spreading in the A. F. of L. company union camp. Discontent is growing by leaps and bounds among those workers who have been deluded or forced into registering with the scab outfit, Labor and Fraternal Organizations Mindel Leetures, J. Mindel will give two lectures in Yiddish on the crisis and the tasks of the working class in the auditor- ium of the Bronx Cooperative Colony. The first lecture will be on Thurs: day evening, Nov. 28, 8.30 p. m. * Metal Workers Industrial League. The Metal Workers | Industrial League will méet Friday evenifiz at 8 o'clock, at Irving Plaza, 15th St. and Irving Pl. Cee Wotkers Laboritory Theatre. The Workers. Laboratory Theatre will hold its most important mem- bership meeting at the new meeting place, 26 Union Sq., room 607, Friday, Sp, m. sharp. cil naanilitiahiieieaiMece from his school for his activity as a Pioneer. The persecution of mem- bers of the Young Pioneers conies at the hands of’a “socialist” school board. s 8 National Miners Board Tells Why John Watt Was Removed (Continued from Page One) ‘ establish the National Miners’) Union, defeat the bosses and their | agents, the Lewi shwick machine | and any bureau s we may find in our ranks. i “This can be the only guarantee that our union will ever remain an instrument of the rank and file and not degenerate as did the U. M. W. A. under the leadership of the bosses’ agents, the Lewises and the Fishwicks, into an instrument of | the employers.” Pointing out that the N. M. U. follows its leaders only as long as these leaders uphold and fight for the principles of the union, the state- ment points out that the union has, from time to time, been compelled to fight against opportunism and bureaueratie hangovers with which the U. M. W. A. was saturated. “The National board of the N. M. U,” the statement continues, “unamimously approves the resolu- tion of the Belleville convention con- demning John J. Watt for his at- tempt to split the union and his re- fusal to accept decisions of the rank and file.” | Little “Loan” from Lewis. | Continuing, the statement sum-| marizes the specific charges against |Sent of those districts, despite the latter will be called to account be th Watt, as follows: (1) “Pressed by rank and file miners, Watt admitted, before a} company had made by exploiting him. (2) “The Nationa] Miners Union will not permit Watt or any other individual to build a machine, seize | control and bureaucratieally rule our | rank and file union, as he and his jclique sought to do, nor to revise | ,,, our fighting policies and substitute | Nov. 2 policies of surrender and defeat. | #i5?i | Watt, schooled in the old-line phil- | josophy of the U.N.W.A. simply does | not belong in a fighting, class-cons- cious union like the N. M. U. Calls Bosses Neutral. (8) “Watt maintains that the | | operators are neutral in the struggle | a jfor spoils between Lewis and Fish-| wick. This is false. It is well known that the coal] operators are the chief enemies to be fought if we hope to joust the Lewis-Fishwick machine | 3), st who are th (4) events of the operators, “Watt never functioned as |the national president of the union. | He remained in his home in Spring- jfield refusing tc work with the Na-| tional or Illinois district boards. (5) “Watt has established a per- sonal “fice in Illinois, ‘appointing’ organizers from one district to an- ° without the knowledge or con- fact that there is no appointive pow- er in our union. (6) “Watt joins with Lewis. and NEW YORK, R 28, SEEK TOENJOIN TRUCK STRIKERS LY WORKER THURSDAY, NOVEMBE | Bosses Ask Injunction Before Shoe Lock-Out NEGRO STEEL TOILERS WAKE (Continued from Page One) bosses openly, without pretense of | {being “friends of lab Frame-Up Starts. An attempt to frame-up some be aaa Bressler Shoe Co. workers on —_—_— ! Militancy Rises in jcharses of destroying machinery) Mojlows AFL Inability > came to light yesterday when Buit- Youngstown enkant secured the release of one, named Reilly, who was taken, wit YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio, Nov. 27.—| out being arrested, down to In this steel-trust controlled city, the | police station, and questioned in the militaney of the Negto workers, who | presence of the attorney for the form a large proportion of the steel | bosses, and an assistant district at- workers, is rapidly rising. torney. They did not go through The Negro and white workers are the formality of notifying’ him he uniting for the common struggle jaq a right to be represented by to Halt Militancy NEWARK, N » Nov. eared sy the great militancy displayed by the striking Newark produce truck drivers and helpers, who battied im- ported thugs on the streets of Harri- son Saturday, 37 commission mer- chants have combined to seek 2 against the bosses, and are turning | .ounsel, When he was released, they | drastic blanket injunction against more and more to the leadership of wade him promise to return to the | the truckers. the Communist Party and the Trade | station Friday. The blanket injunction petition Ini y League. | A ea a Tin aeewael in bringing| Attorney Buitenkant stated yes- the Negro and white workers to- terday that this whole procedure gether in the class struggle was Was illegal, and that he would not comes after the granting o' an in- junction to the Mitchell-Dickerson Trucking Co., on which is is based. |made at the Twelfth Anniversary permit Reilly to return Friday un-| Jt follows on the inability of the mass meeting here, which 25 Negro less accompanied by his attorne reactionary officials of the Teams: steel workers attended, some of| The strike of over 2,000 workers ters,. Truck Drivers and Helpers them joining the Communist Party.|in 16 shops is still on full force. Over 20 Negro steel workers have Most of these shops locked out their | joined the Metal Workers Industrial | workers in response to a letter from: eague, and are taking active part|the U. §. department of labor, ad- n building the League. Negro work- vising the bosses to break their con- ers came in large numbers to hear tracts with the Independent Shoe William Z. Foster, of the Trade’ Workers. Union. Others are on Union to throttle militant action by the strikers, for the bosses had clear+ ly counted on the misleaders’ abil- ity to do so. | The 37 bosses seeking the injunc- | tion are all members of the Fruit and Produce Trade Association: The Wye faa trl oot sitike against attempts to cut wages, | injunction prohibits strikers from i naan a ibe Moree Joined ene t8 force the week workers to do! picketing. Une aot id my atad Rates tioned piece work or to discriminate against Akice. win tsieina he de Gastonia protest demonstration at : 8: The bosses are using the few | Communist workers. truck strikers who have returned, as decoys, and also to aid them in pres- sing charges of “coercion” against strikers, by which the bosses, thru the courts, hope to break the strike. The produce bosses are using the | Sol Harper, Negro member of the) strike as an excuse to increase the | five years by the steel trust because Labor Jury at the Gastonia trial,| prices on perishable good ithey were militant workers. will speak on “How to Stop Lynch- | A mass meeting, to be addressed jing of White and Negro Workers” at |by Mahoney, militant Negro worker |the Harlem Educational Forum, Har- jand member of the Communist Par-|lem Labor Center, 235 W. 129th St., which one of the Gastonia class war |prisoners, “Red” Hendryx, spoke. = | Over 100 were present at this meet-- Harper Will Speak on ling. 2 * Negro workers as well as white How to Stop Lynching attended the affair for Tom Zima,| | Woodlawn steel worker railroaded to Banquet at Workers meeting of 250 members in Kollar|the coal operators in an ‘anti-Red’ Hall, Staunton, Ill, Friday night,|campaign, by demanding the expul- November 1, that he accepted the!sion of so-crlied ‘Reds’ from the sum of $100 from John L. Lewis,,N. M. U. Such policies weaken our arch-betrayer of the coal miners. | union and strengthen our enemies, Present at this meeting were Wil- The N. ~“. U. : a union for the liam A. Boyee, vice-president of the | miners of all creeds, colors, political . M. U., Henry Corbishley, secre-|'-l‘efs, «ho stand n the platform | 25 tary-treasurer of the Illinois district, |of the class struggle. N. M. U., and Vincent Kamenovich, “The National Miners Union is special organizer of the union in Illi-|moving forward despite all its ene- nois. As a feeble defense, states that he took the $100 as a ‘loan’. Watt furthermore explained that inasmuch as he has paid dues to the U.M.W.A. machine for years, that he was entitled to get back some of his cash. By the same token, Watt presumably would ac- cept money from the Peabody Coal Company or any other group of operators on the ground that he was Watt |mies. With the rank and file stand- ing solidly behind its National Exe- cutive Board, the N. M. U. will be built into a fighting organization, upholding our class principles, and go forward to energetic struggle against the fakers, against the split- ters, against the -bosses, to bring every coal miner under the standard of the N. M. U. and into the coming militant struggles that will be simply taking back money which the THE NEW waged.” BABYLON The First Tremendous Achievement of the “FEKS” The Ultr: a-Modernist Group of the Soviet Cinema. AN AM OPENS THIS ATURDAY AY THE CAMEO KINO PRESENTATION! saga | rien 42nd St. & Bway jat 5 p.mi. at Workers Hall, 120 Wick Ave., Youngstown. Mahoney will speak on the subject “Why Negro and White workers capitalism,” and on “The life and} work of the workers of the Soviet) Union.” | | Fandamental« Class. | _Funetionaries of Coney Island have lorganizéd a class in Fundamentals |of Communism. The net class will | be held on Thursday Nov. 28 at 3909 Mérmaid Ave. Coney Island, New lana membets should not fail to at- | tend, « 8 6 | Brownsville ¥.0.U. There will be a Thanksgiving Day jaffair this Thursday at the Brown: ville Youth Center, 122 Osborné § | All- members of the Brownsville unit | come with friends. Everyone wel- come, | o.. -$ * Dance Upper Bronx 2. | An “hod | riba. « and dance will be given by the ung Communist | | Léagne of Upper Bronx 2, for the benefit of the Detense of ‘the Gas- tonia prisoners. The affair will be jheld at 1330 Wilkins Ave., Bronx, on | aturday, Nov. 30. Moving picture Music by Spartacus band. Admission | 35 cents, s 2 # 9 Bath Beach Y.C.L. Entertainment. A spaghett! patty and entertain- ent will be given Friday evening, 29, at 48 Bay 28th St. under pa ot the Bath Beach unit of eee | Dance in Bronx, Spartacus band, snappy program, efreshments, plenty of fun. Come to 330 Wilkins Ave. Bronx, this Sat- rday, Nov. 30, 8 p.m. Auspices of .C.L., Bronx section, eee r 1 u ly. Harvest Dance. A Harvest dance will be held under vspices of Section 6 of the Commi nist Party on Nov, 30, 8 p. m,, at 56 |Manhattan Ave. Admission 35 cents. | | ee FE: Unit 4, Section 4, Dance and Concert, Unit 4, Section 4, is having a concert | and dance on Saturday evening, Nov, | the Italian Workers Club, 314) Admission 35 cents, All ited, * 4th St. | comrades inv’ * * YC.L, Thanksgiving Party. The ¥.C.L, of Downtown 2 will give | ja Red thanksgiving party on Thur: | av. 28, at 7.30 p.m. at 11 way, 3rd floor. “Red” Hendry |ne of the Gastonia strikers sentenc: {to many years imprisonment, will | speak. | * 8 «# 4 Unit 4, Seetion 4. _ Educational meeting of Unit 1, & tion 4 will be héld on Thursday, 28, at 8 p. m., at 148 B, 103rd St. Meni bers not attending unit meetings here ro Party and will be severely disciplined ¥ A_ spec action meeting of ai ¥.C.L. members employed in the meta! trades will be held Thursday, Nov $, at 3 p. m, to organize a youth section. 1 * Clas in Trade The class in Problems cond * ¢@ Union Problems. | Amertean Trade Union | ucted on Mondays at| 7p. m. is one interested in the various ph of trade unionism, | Admission to. those not registered is fo cents, Next Monday's class will | ear meier on “Organization of Food Workers.” " | + * « Industrial Registration. All industrial organizers and all | Section organizers are instructed to | complete the fegistration of all Party members. Be 16 are riot as vet registered should do so immediately. This registration is of utmost import- ance in the building of the T.U.U.L, | —District Industrial Department. Bath Bench Thank«givine Banquet, A. thanksgiving banquet [twetarn Beate Tuaieor aney.dy, [| ch unit 0 OY. 48 Bay 28th St. iN rs Invited, of eats. 2 All youns workers | Good program ‘and plenty | Admission 80 cents. | ee ee Attention Section 2, All_ members ‘Of Section 2, Units 2. 8. 6, 12, 18, 14 and 16 must De present this Friday, Nov. 29, 6.30 9, m. sha jat section headquarters to hear a r port of the Central Committee plen- ums. A Central Committee renresen- tative will give the report. All mem- bers must attend. eS “ Unit 12F, Section 2, The Buro of Unit 12F, Sectton 2, Pl Mitel G80 v. m, Friday, at 1173 i ‘ay. meinbershil; meeting will be held about 6.30. . ‘digi LOZOWICK LECTURES. The tremendously spurred cycles of creative effort working full blast in. the Soviet Union; the tyrann: jand subjection under which creativ. effort struggles in capitalist society and thé relation of Art to the Prole tarian, is the subject of the lecture |to be given by Lonte Lozowick, noted art oritic, at the Workers School, 26 Union Square, on Sunday at 8 p. m,! Admission is 25 vents. \ty, will be held Sunday, December 1, at 4 p. m. unite for a common struggle against | at Ch School This Evening | Harper made the open mass meet- ing address for the Labor Jury at the Seuthern Conference of the Na- tional Textile Workers’ Union held lotte, N. C., in October, where he called upon the white and Negro | Sa. workers to unite in their fight of entertainment, including musical against the slave bosses who control | solos and music, aiid plenty food. and own the mills as well as the Students of the Workers School | will hold a “thanksgiving” banquet this evening at 8 o’clock, at 26 Union There will be a wide variety | fatms in the South. The capitalist conteption of - “thanksgiving” will be exposed | Build Up the United Front of {while the occasion is used for a the Working Class From the Bot- | Revolutionary affair. tom Up—at the Enterprises! will be only 50 cents. | | { OPEN TODAY CREDITORS DEMAND CASH SALE To Meet Their Demands We are forced to Sell Our High Grade Stock SUITS OVERCOATS TOPCOATS TUXEDOS These Garments Formerly Sold Up To $37.50 Don't fail to drop in early and see our | wonderful line of Men’s Clothing. The latest cut and style in every garment. Suits in one and two-hutton models, many different patterns. Form-fitting and Box Overcoats in all varieties. Excellent Tailoring, Fine Woolens, Great Bargains SALE AT THE FOLLOWING STORES ONLY: 871 BROADWAY | 1375 FIRST AVE. | 1652 MADISON AV. | Corner 18th Street Corner 74th Street Corner 110th Street BAST 125th ST. 17-19 W. 125th St.| 605 West 181st St. «te Lexitigton Ave. Newr Fifth Avenue | Neur $t. Nicholas Ave. 1 Third Avenue 517 Seventh Avenue 1002 Southern Blvd. i Claremont P*kway | Neng 38th Street U Near Aldus Street 1047 Southern Blvd.| 969 Prospect Ave. Near Westchester Ave. | Near Loew's Burland ‘Th. ALL STORES OPEN TILL 10:30 P. M. Admission | O17 1vzy “New Babylon’ >a New Soviet Experiment in Film Making “New Babylon” is a film about the Paris Commune. The complex historical event is, in the scenario, reduced to a few charavters who must setve as symbols ef whole classes and of social conditions, In spite of their reality and visual tan- gibility, the principal characters must go over to the spectator as ab- stractions and generalization. There- in is the core of the experiment. The historical film is an attempt to restore photographically an event that took place in the past. As a rule, such films are neither histori- cal nor artistic, Failing to repro- duce the given event in all of its details, it generally also fails to bring to life the atmosphere of the jpast and the spirit that animated | the events in question. Nor do we find historic truth in those films which make use of a dramatie plot against a historical background. In such films one invariably gets a false perspective of the historical enoch, since individuals are substi- tuped for history and historic events | are made subservient to the plot. In “New Babylon” the “Feks” (the ultra-modernist group that pro- duced the film) attempt a third method—that of symbolization and generalization. They seek to give visual embodiment to the contends ing social forces and cireumstances that‘ were in operation at the time. The department store New Babylon and the Cafe Empire ‘are made to} serve as symbols of the Second Em- pire. Several nameless women, not | woven ito any plot-texture, but | constantly recurring in the course IN THEATRE GUILD PLAY. | Frank Craven, who is one of the | principals in “The Game of Love and Death,” Romain Rolland’s new | play at the Guild Theatre. the heroic women of the Commune. |The peasant army of the Empire is symbolized by the soldier Jean. The jspokesmen of the Commune are | symbolized by the bombastic but | sincere journalist. jand the ruling class are personified by the owner of the department |store, the Deputy of the Chamber and the chanconette. In the same | symbolic manner are constructed the basie scenes of the film. Here and there the producers vandered off the course of symbol- |of the film, are made to stand for ‘ism, The soldier and the salesgirl, @ International Musical ‘triumph By JOHANN STRAUSS “A WONDERFUL NIGHT” |ETHEL BARRYMORE THEATRE | Chick, dts 47th St. W. of Biway. Evgs. 8:50. Mats Wed. & Sat 2: Extra Matinee Thurs. (Thanksgiving Day) ster’ BIRD s HAND DRINKWATER’S Biway & 80th St. Hives. 8:30 CASINO En Thur. & Sat, at 2:30 NEW MOON SCHWAB & MANDEL’S MUSICAL GEM with BVELYN ROBERT Gus HERBERT | HALLIDAY SHY 0 Plenty of good seats. $1, $1.60, $2. $2. BROOKLYN THEATRES torws DITKIN ‘SO THIS IS COLLEGE’ MGM'S ALL, JOY—ALL TALKING SENSATION K, “CAFE DE PARED,” a Brilliant Stage Show from Capitol Theatre—Broadway Pitkin Ave. Brooklyn AMUSEMENTS><| MAJESTICyiats: ‘Tissr. ‘a Sat. at 2:30 | ‘The Theatre Guild Presents “GAME OF LOVE AND DEATH” By ROMAIN ROLLAND GUILD W. 62. evs. 8360 Mats, Th.@Sat. 2:40 IVIC REPERTORY 1th st ; Bves. §:30, Mats. Thur., Sat.. Boe. $1, $1.50 EVA Le GALLIPNNE, Director Today Mat—“PHTMt PAN” Tonight—*THE SEA GUL Tom. Night—“MLLE | BRONX THEATRES }*°™"S DARADISE “‘ron"* ‘SO THIS IS COLLEGE’ MGM'S ALL TALKING—LAUGHING SUCCESS With “Miami Nights,” & Glamorous Stage Show frum Capitol—piway LILY DAMITA “Dancer of Barcelona” : ANNUAL COSTUME BALL of the OMANONSINEYE EH YPMVAR PR SONY HR YEN wy I) Vad bah iF? “Morning Freihelt"=the only workers’ Jewish Daily in America will take place on Saturday Evening, December 14, 1929 at ARMORY HALL Lexington Avenue and 25th Street TICKETS 50 CENTS HAT CHECK 50 CENTS Tickets at the Morning Freiheit, 30 Union Square By Helping the “ICOR” You Help Build Soviet Union! Fifth ICOR Bazaar FOR JEWISH COLONIZATION IN THE SOVIET UNION FRIDAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY NOVEMBER 29, 30 and DECEMBER 1, 1929 at the INFANTRY ARMORY 68 LEXINGTON AVE. (bétween 25th and 26th Sts.) Entertainment and Dancing Every Day Restaurant and Buffet Admission—Friday and Sunday 50¢. Saturday 75¢. Combination $1.25 The bourgeoisie | | both symbolie figures, are made to fall in love with each other as if they were two casual individuals. But in the main the scenario is built upon symbolization rather than illu on of reality. The teal difficulty confronting the “Feks” was in making these ymbols count as such in the eyes of the spectator. To make them felt as symbols the producers had to make cleat the social interrelations of these characters. Here their suc- cess was aot over-great. In the pas- sages where the symbols of the Commune are born dynamically the spectator grasps their meaning eas- ily “For All Kind of Insurance” CARL BRODSKY Telephone: Murray Hill 5550 7 Kast 42nd Street, New York “Ser! See ER Patronze i —— ) | |No-Tip Barber Shops|| | 26-28 UNION SQUARE l flight up) 2700 BRONX P- & EAST (corner Allerton Ave.) Cooperators! Patronize ‘SEAOF CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenie Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. ¥. Comrade Frances Pilat MIDWIFK 351 E. 7ith St, New York, N. ¥. | | ERMEO=4ay ‘Tel. Rhinelander 3916 Unity Co-operators Patronize SAM LESSER Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailor 1818 - 7th Ave. New York Between 110th and 111th Ste. Next to Unity Co-operative House _—MELROSE— Dai VEGETARIAN al RESTAURANT mrades Will Always Fi: a Pleasant to Dine at Our Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx (near 174th St. Station) PHONES~ INTERVALE 9149. RATIONAL | Vegetarian RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVE] UE Bet. 12th and 18th Sts. Strictly Vegetarian Food HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 5865 * Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 02 E. 12th St. New York All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Claremont Parkway, DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Reom 803—Phone: Algonquin 6188 Not eonnected with any other office Bronx Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF Cor. Please SURGEON DENTIST 249 BAST 115th STREET Seeond Ave. New York DAILY EXCEPT FRIDAY ne for appointment Lehigh 6022 felepho ‘Telephone: DR. MITCHELL R. AUSTIN Optometrist 2705 WHITE PLAINS AVENUB Near Allerton Ave, Brona, N. Y. TEL, ESTABROOK 2631 Special Appointments Made for Comrades Outside of the Bronx. Advertise your Union Meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union 8q., New York City Hotel & Restaurant Workers| Branch of the Amalgamated Food q Workers, 133 W, 5ist St, bhone Business m Monday of Hducaijonal Cirele 7336 eotings held the first the month at 8 meetings=the the month, meetings—every afternoon at & o'ch One industry! One Union! Join and right the Common. ‘Enemy! Oftice even from 9 a. m, to 6 p.m Monday of Board” | 184 Bast 110th St. Heated rooms; Inrge | od gmail Ww Lehi | way, “Pot, [Pie 77 hae len lr ba ‘ROOM TO RENT—ai inorevements Prooks, 144. 10th st. Only Party mom: bers—Reasonable,

Other pages from this issue: