The Daily Worker Newspaper, December 25, 1929, Page 2

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DAN ny WORKE R, I COMMUNISTS HIT Quintero Plav Next Offering EW Y ORK Ww. en _faxe Two ILL, MINERS, GASTON DEFENDANTS, SpAY, DECEMBER | 25, 1923 “For All Kind of In ARL BRADSE' C joriginal musical seore composed by | Maurice Baron, The east of solo- ists includes Celia Branz, Dorothy [Meets i in Needle Trates| Call Block, Building Miller, Jose Santiago, Belle Flower SORE, ey of Civic Repertory Theatre inierivy cient Wet: Apeaconon: suey # f to throw himself actively into the ding of the Painted Doll” is an-| "a, Neer ganization campaign of the Indus- The 5 Repertory Mbentes will bie for the translation ofthe new ee number in the program with|7 Kast 42nd Street, New York\ ansla \Ge : Patri ne and the Roxy Bowman, k orge Herman, Leonide let. trial Union. The Joint Board calls | every worker to attend the block and building meetings and help in ss| Ci turn to Spain for the fourth bill of | Quintero comedy this season. Late in January the; “The Game of Love and Death” |players will present in Fourteenth | move from the Guild to the Bilt- STRIKE BREAKERS Will Be Joined by Delegates from Paterson Patronize Textile Convention, South; All Rally for Struggles ‘With a; unanimously agreed that the organ- PITTSBURGH, Dec. 2 large delegation of striking Illinois ization affiliate as a_body to the} coal miners present, all seven of the ional Labor Defense. Gastonia defendants, a delegation Starts Saturday. sent direct from the Paterson con- he I. L. D. conventon, which will vention of the National Textile open with a mass meeting, Saturday Workers Union, and another from | Might, at the Carnegie Music Hall, | thern fields, the Fourth Na- | Nerth Side, Pittsbargh, has on its the sou tional enda zveperts from leading work s in the labor defense movement. . Louis Engdahl, executive secre- Convention of the Interna : Defense here will be n of the main struggle enters in this country today. tary of the I. L. D. will report for ay the National Executive Committee; of mobilization for developing the |rtary of the 1. Le D., will deliver campaign to free the Gastonia the ‘organizational report; Cyril seven, the first time they will be| Briggs member of the National Exe- together since they were reieased | tive Committee will report on the ene Ore yabeck inners cs program of activities among Negro on bail, and for the defense of the workers; Robert Minor is to report Ilinois striking miners. on the international white terror; At the National Convention of George Maurer, ‘n represen- the National Textile Miners Union, | tative of the I. ill report on just completed in Paterson, N. J.,|the South. All delegates are to it was decided to send a delegation | report at 119 Federal St., Room 206, of ten from the convention. It was| Pittsburgh, North Side. I. L D. Convention Communist Activities By Bus on Friday Unit ae a ee ey Working class organizations of be held of Unit 12 the y York district have begun Star De Gresent cand on time ending in reservations for the bus that the New the National to sburgh delegation to ae ee! Workers School Classes, vill be held as usual I -|bor Defense will make. The round-trip fare on the buses i ounced by the New District of the LL.D. They s' ou from the district office, | Friday night, at ion opens Sunday, , and lasts till the 31st. | tions that wish. reserva- r their delegates must in-| t office of the num- ber of reservations, the names and | addr of their delegates and send in the fare money not later than Thursday noon. 'Proletarian Cabaret, Dance, Sat., Dec. 28) } A very unusual affair in the form of a “Proletarian Cabaret Dance” will take place on Saturday night, December 28, at 26 Union Square. Tickets are only 75 cents. An interesting and varied pro- | am, including the well-known singer, James Phillips, in his labor ngs, movies, dances and selections n the piano, violin and accordeon will be given by workers. e schuol for tha ve) at Rockland nd 8th Ave. ce fice and $1.00 at door, * Section 4 D. W. meeting a. Representatives. of all Da Sect send special letters to r this meeting. [eS Section 2 oF, Thursday, ion resolution and ¢ ction conventions. ip books. > do not atter the Section Discipline Com- ih bo present. a jon-on section re Unit 7, Section 5. Will hold its regular meeting We nesday evening. Convention of the International La- | ™ * Attention Y.C-L. An anti-religious dance will be hela at 1830 Wikins Ave. y the upper Bronx Unit No. 28, 8 p.m. Good time in| store 23 Unit R2, Section 1. An important unit meeting will be held Wednesday, 8 p.m, at 27 5. 4th ship St. All members must, be pre: register for the new 1930 mem books, *. Unit 1F. Unit 11F will meet Friday after work at 1179 Broadway. All com- rades of this Unit must come without fail. * nit Meets thureds at 235 V sth gates A eA So ttew Executive Committee of check up of financial standing of ai Unit members before new books are ssued for year. “eee eae | South Brooklyn Unit, ¥ Will hold open forv p. m,_on Youth and Industr 0th St. Food Workers Fraction meets of food Dee. 26, 8 Very important problems to be acted on. Every Party member must be present. Anti- Religion Dance, Will be held urday, Dec. p. m,. by Lower Bronx Unit. B. 138th St. ram. at 7 Good band; good pr * * Br, 1 and Meets Wedn Unit Thursday. to Section Convention will take pl: Bring your cards. * Section 8, Labor and Fraternal | Organizations Leatn Memorial Pagent. The Lenin Memorial Pagent to nresented by the Workers Dra) Souncil at Madison Square Gi Jan. 18 is now in hehearsal under di rection of Comrade Edith Seal and mice Basshe. One hundred com- radex are necded for important parts: so experience necessary. Come to re- Nearanl Thursday, Dec. 26, 7.30 p m. at Workers Center, room 402. Work Anti-war working woman's confer- ance ign take place Saturday, Jan. at ho Ine ow énen Conference. tat 2 Irving Plaza Hall, Irvine fttand ibth St. under the auspices sf the Communist Party, New York Fistrict. All trade unions, shop ren- wesentatives and progressive women's “clegates. ees Workers Dance Group. ig in the Lenin Mem- Pageant to be presented at the mare Garden, Jan, 18. will have its sext pees tse! this Wednesday aiter- orkers Center, room 402. who have good form and izations are requestetl to elect Workers Dance Group, which jad PSfemorial Meeting. at Madison ee. 25 at 2.30 p.m, sharp at lnse of rhythm are eligible. Workers Theatre Workers Theatre meets a7. at Antoria Hall, 62 Sth St. ard floor) at m. sharp. ‘mee Phillins will direct singing of corkers sonzs and mass recitation 3 biua et Year of the Five-Yeor All interested can become ._ 8 «* \Siotiter Glas Womens Connell. sr Reeecrritaiectors and Iter. ture ements of the loc»! councils © ‘. ibe Nfan Council of Working Clare ‘ren will meet on Friday nicht oe, 27, 8.20 p. m. at the Workers nter, 26 Union Sanare. The mem- rrethet Anramstten, slscted at the Jart entral body meeting of the U.C. sbi with the organization ‘com- ‘ittee | will meet cry Friday night we, the central of- , 80. B, sin ats coon 535. this Build the United Front of the Working Class From the Bottom Joie Industries! y |File Club, Wednesday, 2 p. m. sharp, The proceeds of the affair will go to building up “The Working Woman,” published by the Commu- nist Party, through its National} Women’s Department. “Red Art Nite” for Miner’s Relief. | Funds for the relief of the strik-| ing Illinois miners will be provided | by Red Art Night this Saturday at| 8 p. m. in Labor Temple, 14tH St. and Second Ave. | Among those who will appear on| the program are Michael Gold, M. |J, Olgin, Harold Hickerson, William | Gropper, Hugo Gellert, Louis Loze wick, Horace Gregory, Kenneth Fear- | ing, Keene Wallis, A. B. Magil, Harry Alan Potankin, Melvin P.| Levy and Charles Yale Harrison. | Tickets are 75 cents and are on \sale at the W.LR. office, 799 Broad- way, room 422 | PROGRESSIVE PAINTERS MEET The progressive members of Paint- | ers Local 1011, are called to a very important meeting of the Rank and Jat 143 E, 103rd St. MUSIC AND CONCERTS CONDUCTORLESS ‘SYMPHONYORCHESTRA CARNEGIE HALL Sat. Eve, January 4, 8:45 | NANETTE § ol oistsuawtence sible to bring the thousands | norganized dressmakers into the ranks of the union: This means that shops which do not grant union organization will have strikes, real strikes and not the fake stoppage of |the LLL.G.W. The General Executive Board of the Indu: i al Union at itslast meet- g considered the question of re- rganizing the union in all centers on the basis of the complete shop delegate system. The Joint Board of New York has worked out a tenta- j tive for discussion and-action at a special |meeting of shop chairmen and dele- |gates to be held on Monday, Dec. |30, at Irving Plaza, 15th St. and Irving PI., 7.30 p. m, All shop chair- men and delegates are urged to at-! tend this meeting without fail. “SUPPORT DAILY’, MILLER URGES INTWU Secretary Hails Anniversary Issue | “The anniversary of the Daily | Worker comes at a time when the |workers in the textile industry a3 well as in other industries are fac- ing sharp struggles,” said Clarence Miller, Secretary-Treasurer of the National Textile Workers Union, urging support for the anniversary issue which will be published Jan 11. Miller, who was sentenced to 17 to 20 yea mprisonment as one lof the leaders in the Gastonia strike, | said: “In the increasing pressure leeaine the workers is to be found the key to the fighting mood of the Southern worke: Mr. Lovestone and the other renegades with their theory of the “second industrial revo- llution” and with the vision of a growing capitalism could not and |cannot see the big social movement lin the South covering one third of the preney, and one third of the U. S. population. “The Daily Worker, which has in | \the past played such an important | |part in the aiding and coordinating our struggles in the South must in- crease its circulation in the South, and elsewhere. The Daily Worker is known amongst large masses of workers, but more and more must be reached by the Daily. “This anniversary of the Daily Worker should mark the beginning of an increased drive on the part of the Daily Worker to become the col- lective organizer and agitator for the Communist Party and the militant labor movement.” “NEGRO IN INDUSTRY.” The Workers School Forum this | Sunday will hear Otto Huiswood talk on “The Negro In Industry.” Negro workers are strongly urged to bring their shopmates to the lec- ture. It is to be held at the School, 26 Union Square, Sunday, Dec. 29, at 8 p.m. MOBILIZE FOR ANTI-WAR MEET. The Working Women’s Anti- war | ‘conference to take place Jan. 4, at 2 p. m. at Irving Plaza Hall, Irv- ing Place and 15th St., N. Y. C., |nist Party, N. Y. District, will be | a mobilization of delegates from all | organizations and groups. Build the United Front of the Working Class From the Bottom Up—in the Industries! wW. 1. R. CLOTHING STORE 542 BROOK AVENUR, Telephone Ludlow 3098 Cieaning, Pressing, Repairing High Class Work Done Goods Called for and Delivered. All ayy go towards strikers nd their families. sHOW your SOLIDARITY ‘TH THE WORKERS! FURNISHED ROOMS 10th St. Heated rooms; large improvements: near sub- GUILFORD Symphony No. 10 ‘in “11 Re Pastore” he Enchanted Isle” FF, “Stenka Razine” Ei at Box Office and St. Steinway Piano. UNO Tickets $1, 32 at 22 B. b8tl 8-ROOM APT. rade in the village, Rent $25.00 2 month. Separate room. Chelsea 8474. New Year’s Eve ‘ROCKLAN. WORKERS SCHOOL and WORK: ADMISSION 75e IN ADVANCE Workers Costume Ball Tuesday, December 31 155th St. and 8th Ave. (Take Sixth or Ninth Ave. “L” to 155th St.) Auspices: VERNON ANDRADE’S NEGRO ORCHESTRA D PALACE ERS INTERNATIONAL RELIEF $1.00 AT THE DOOR Workers Will Go With Party Into Struggle (Continued from Page One) government which is trying to beat them down. “Tt does not like them any more than it liked the National Textile | | Workers’ Union which is leading the textile workers of this country | into struggle to build up a powerful | | textile workers’ union, that will} plan which will be submitted | sont for the interests of the one |from Alfaqueque,” which has been | million textile workers of this country. “The U. S. government thinks that in this way it can conceal the crisis in which American industry {is at the present time, which means under the auspices of the Commu- | left wing unions, working women’s | \inereasing misery for the working |class. It cannot conceal the fact that the U. S. imperialist govern- ment is feverishly preparing for war against the Soviet Union, the | Workers’ Fatherland, and in these preparations is trying to crush the working class of this country. The shoe workers of New York, as the textile workers of Gastonia, know the work of Chas. Wood. He is the the imperialists of this country, in: tent upon smashing the revolution- | ary industrial unions and the Com- munist Party. “The Communist Party under- stands the situation in this country full well. It knows that the coun- try is rapidly driving into a fascist dictatorship. It knows that the workers are taking the offensive against the schemes of oppression of the employers. It knows that the imperialist government is pre- paring for war as no other country in the world is preparing. “The Communist Party declares that no threats against the Party will take it from its revolutionary path. If the Communist Party sees the necessity of preparing for un- derground activity—for an illegal period of work—it is because the Communists know that the U. S. government will spare no means in order to destroy the forward move- | ment of the workers who are fight- ing for decent conditions. “The Communist Party declares that the threat of the U. S. imper- ialist government against the for- eign-born workers—to deprive them of citizenship and to deport them— is in keeping with the bills that have long been before the U. S. Con- | gress aimed against foregn-born workers, and with the proposed fed- | fascist government agent of | |St. another of the Spanish come- dies by the Brothers Quintero, “The Women Have Their Way.” It will |be preceded by Robert Browning’s {short dramatic sketch, “In a Bal- cony.” Shakespeare’s “Romeo and Juliet,” which was expected to be the fourth new production of this group, has not been abandoned, but will come later in the season. Eva Le Gallienne will assume a leading role | in both plays. “The Women Have Their Way” by the same authors as “The Lady | a favorite of the Civic Repertory | Theatre’s schedule. Helen and Har- ley Granville-Barker are responsi- rubber, oil and the millions of other | unorganized workers will be organ- ized, white and colored, men, wom- en and young workers. These work- | ers will fight not only for better | conditions in this, the richest coun- | try®of the world, but in this strug- gle will clearly learn what the U. S. government is—a government of | Wall Street, ing at the Film Guild Cinema, week, imore Theatres Brady, Frank Conroy and Otto Kru- Wp Ry \ | Fred Ston GRETA GARBO singe will bo to be presented at th dam Theatre followi: William Gillette. The new 7 by William Anthony MeGuire. yet unnamed. In the comp; be his daughters, Dorot Paula, who will make he but in this production. the company will be Mrs. S drew Toombs and § The eappearance on th ical p! New Amster- z the an Ze de i Laboratory American atre’s production of Teh “Three Sisters,” with Maria G nova Steetine and playing the rol In “The Street of Sor ow,” show this ing fo! prepai lapted novel of ank Jlser, laherty’s e name. last nig run a will open on Wednesday, c| | No my Barber Shops 26-28 UNION SQUARE ai fight ep) 700 BRONX P- & EAST |__ ‘corner Allerton Ave.) : Cooperators! Patronize ~EROX CHEMIST Allerton Avenue Bronx, N. ¥. n 657 Estabrook 3215 le the theatre auditori- Comrade cast peat St. It will have s Sluice a wel Frances Pilat |) evening: MIDWIFE th S:., New: York, N, ¥. Rhinelander $916 ! vel. VEGETARIAN Dair directed by the Na- a enki ‘ aed Ata a Tae URANT tinal taasine Obunell. A Bene continue . mt principal roles. s mr Pra omnes WIL Always Fing rr a are aes \U.U.L. MEETIN Pleasant to Dine at Our Place. Saban wathe courts the le ai “CHRISTINA” AT ROXY _ | 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx of this country expect none other THEATE What are the new functions of (mear 174th Station) than capitalist ‘justice’—the ‘jus- ATRE the TUUL? This question will be|}@HONE:9 INTERVALD 9149, tice’ that sent, Sacco and Vanzetti S. L, Rothafel has selected the | discussed at the meeting of the | to the electric chair; the justice} Fox Movietone product “Chris- | Needle Trades Workers on Thurs- that sentenced the Gastonia strikers | tina,” starring Janet Gaynor, at the | day, Dec. 26, 1929, 7 p. m. sharp | RATI to prison for up to 20 years; the|Roxy Theatre, this week. Featured | at the Irving Plaza Hall, 15th St. ONAL | justice that freed the murderers of | | the Marion textile strikers; the jus- | tice that let the cossack murderers ‘of the Pennsylvania and Illinois miners go scot free. “This is the ‘justice’ of the U. S. government which shoots down the workers of Haiti, Nicaragua and China in cold blood, and pins medals of heroism on the breasts of the uniformed and ununiformed mur- derers. “The workers of this country will ‘continue the fight. The statements of the Department of Labor merely expose the real strikebreaking char- acter of the imperialist government with its National Fascist Council. The workers will not be terrorized | by the imperialist government, but | will be organized into the revolu- | tionary unions of the Trade Union Unity League, and will go fozward to battle. “Yes, Mr. Woods, the issue is Communism against your growing fascism. The workers will decide as the Russian workers and peas- ants decided, as the workers of the other capitalist and colonial coun- | tries are deciding. They will sweep your governments aside, and build in the production is Charles Mor- “Babes in the Wood,” seven pared by Leon Leonidoff, with an | di and Irving Place, Ys N. to attend ani very importan' a spectacle in arranged and pre- are urged scenes, NOW PLAYING! SPECIAL DOUBLE-FEATURE PROGRAM STRIKING A Powerful Drama of Post-War OVERWHELMIN Life in Europe. v GRETA GARBO “STREETS OF SORROW” nising revelations of dies in the Ives of the ed proletar! ANIC! “RYU. Re “METROPOLIS” | The tremendous drama dep the revolt o' FILM GUILD CINEMA Direction: Symon Gould Special Forenoon Prices; Weekdays 12-: The Cinema 62 W. Sth St. (Bet. 5th and Gth Aves.) Continuous Daily—Noon to Midnight SPRING 5005—5090 Z—35e; Sat. & Sun, 12-2—50e eral criminal syndicalism law. up Workers’ and Farmers’ Govern- Theatre Guild Productions 2nd BIG “The Communists declare that {™ents, the Soviet Governments of A M E WEEK nothing can stop the work of the|the Revolutionary Workers and “METEOR” Peery DR. J. MINDEL Communist Party. Not only the | Farmers. By 8. N, BEHRMAN f2a ST. & BYWAY SURGECN DENTIST shoe workers, but the dress, food,| (Signed) “Bureau of District 2, GUILD W., 5% evs. 8:00 Sey aaa scrune, 1 UNION SQUARE Mats, Th.&Sat. 2:40 THE ||] Rcom 803—Phone: Algonquin 8183 textile workers, the miners, WORKERS! Try International Celebrity COLUMBIA RECORDS auto, CELEBRITY RECORDS (Il Trovatore: Il balen del suo sorriso (‘Tempest of Verd! Riceardo Stracciart Barearolle—Pexeator affonda 1910-D. 10 inch, 75e Pesca Thy Batt Now Lower) Ponchielli Baritone Solos Riccardo Stracclari and Chorus An die Musik! (To Music) Schubert. G-50170-D a i Sel mir gegrisst! (Greetings to You) Schubert Lb ise ani Soprano Solox Lotte Lehmann e Andante Cantabile (from Concerto”) Nardini Teh, g1.25 ¢ Silhouette (Kramer) Violin Solos Yelly D'Aranyi ees I Look Into Your Garden (Wood and Wilmott) ‘The World is Waiting for the Sunrise Violin Solos (Seitz & Lockhart) Chas. Hackett Cavalleria Rusticana: Prelude Part 3 (Mascagni) Cavalleria Rusticana: Entrance Chorus (Mascagni) Instrumentals ietro Mascagni Conducting the Orchestra of the Berlin State Opera House Cavalleria Rusticana: Intermezzo (Mascagni) Amico Fritz: Iatermesse pirasces ni) Instrumentals: lan Symphony Orchestra (Under direction cm Cav. Lorenzo Molajoli) 10 inch, 75e G-50168-D. 12 inch, $1.25 50167-D 12 inch, $1.25 RUSSIAN: Victor Chenkin with A. Bloch on the Piano: 10 inch, 75 Starrey Frak-Old Evening Dress pd ioy Priznanie k Tubvi Kavkaztza (The Love Confession of a Caucasian (Comic Song) Peasant Orch. under dir. of Constantine Sadovnik 20189F Vengerka, Dance Polka Brilliant: =4 Orchestra P Village Orchestra of Paulo Humeniuk: Kamarinskaya 20187F Village Polk rchestra is of the Don roasacks under the pices of N. Kostriukov The Evening Bell (Vecherniy Dzyon) 22 inch, $1.25 604007F Kanavka of Chesnokoy UKRAINIAN: ( Ukrainian Orchestra of Humentuk 10 inch, 75¢ . aig! Orchestra with Inc. Singing stra of Michel Thomas: erka. (The Kolomeyka Dance of 27205F (Orchestra) utealki n Peasant Woman—ot Smeritcbin Samuel Philin, and, His Temko-Peasant Orchestra: 10: Snob, 76a The Munte in the Tavern (A. Dai sei 271808 Where Have You Been, Yaniehok? (Polka Dance) John Wyskows nd His Village Orchestra: Polka of the Standardbenrer Oberek-Dance of Hate! (Orchestra) Edward Mika, the Violinist and His Merry Orch.: Old Country Kujayy Dance Crazy Polka (Orchestra) POLISH: 10 inch, 75¢ 18357 18356F For various International Catalogues of Columbia Records call or write and then select the best liked melodies Surma Music Company 108 AVENUE “A” (Bet. 6-7th) | NEW YORK CITY Communist Party, U. S. A.” Extra Matinee Christmas Os Fs PATROL with CYRIL McLAGLEN “GAME OF LOVE AND DEATH” By ROMAIN ROLLAND Vegetarian ton and Rudolph Schildkraut. The, Comrade John sistant screen story is by Tristram Tupper. | secretary of the 1 , will lead RESTAURANT The ‘stage showing includes sion. All Needle Trades SECONDS BV eis Bet. 12th and 18th Sts. Strictly Vegetariun Food HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 5865 id t Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALT ITALIAN DISHES # place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 302 E. 12th St. New York | All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S | Vegetarian Health | Restaurant 558 Cleremont Parkway, Bronx | j | | Not connected with any other office Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST 249 EAST 115th STREET. Second Ave. New York DAILY EXCEPT FRIDAY Cor. NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES | Loew’s “Big 2” | PITKIN || PARADISE }) Pitkin Avenue Grand_ Concourse Brooklyn Bronx “RED RUST” By Kirchon & Ouspensky MARTIN BECK $20 sre fs Aav. Extra. Matinee Christmas IVIC REPERTORY lth st ON BOTH SCREENS Eves. 8:30, Mats. Thur.. Sat., 2:30 60c. $1, $1.50 JOAN EVA Le GALL! CRAWFORD ‘Tonight—« Tom, Mat. tPA IN ‘om, Nigh: HE LIVING CORPSE” “UNTAMED” OLSON’S Thea. 59th St. & 7th Ave. Eva. HER FIRST ALL J 8:30. Daily Mats. from Xmas. TALKING PICTURE VICTOR HERBERT'S BABES IN TOYLAND Popular Prices—$1 to $3 Stage Shows—Both Theatres from CAPITOL THEATRE, BROADWAY Please telephone for nppolntment Telephone: Lehigh 6022 || DR. MITCHELL R. AUSTIN Optometrist 2705 WHITE PLAINS AVENUE Near Allerton Ave., Bronx, N. Y. TEL, ESTABROOK 2631 Special Appointments Made for Comrades Outside of the Bronx. | Dr. M. Wolfson } Surgeon Dentist 141 SECOND AVENUB, Cor, 9th St. | Phone, Orchard’ 233: in case of trouble with your teeth come to sce your friend, who hi |] tong experience, and can assure you of careful treatment, BUY YOUR TICKETS at the DAILY WORKER OFFICE 26-28 UNION SQUARE, NEW YORK DUNCAN DANCERS Here Again from Moscow for United States Tour CARNEGIE HALL, Seventh Avenue and 57th St. Saturday Matinee, December 28th, at 2:45 P. M. ADMISSION $1.00, $1.50 and $2.00 Advertise your Union Meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City RSet Hotel & Restaurant Workers} Branch of the Amalgamated Food Workers, 18 W, Dit St. Ne Ys Cy Phone Chelsea 2274 Business meetings held the first Monday of the month at 8 p. iducational —meetings—the Monday of the month. Executive meetings—every ‘Tuesday afternoon at 6 o'clock, ustry! One Union! Join and t the Common Enemy? Office cpen from 9 a. m, to 6 p.m AMALGAMATED FOOD WORKERS Meets “Ist Sutui in the month at 8861 ‘Third Avenue, Bronx, N.Y, Local 174, AM.C.& BW. of NA Office and Headquarters: Labor Temple, 243 EB, sth st. Hoom 12 Regular meetings every firet a third Sunday, 10° A. M. Employment Bureau open ever day at M. Window Cleaners’ Protective - Union—Lecal 8 Affiliated with the A, FB. of Ie 15 E, 8rd St, New York tf of tan Meets each Ist and Srd ‘Thureda: each month at 7 P. M. at Ma Lyceum, Window Cleaners, Join Yo

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