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MINERS KEMP U P FIGH Police in Aim | vi. sLLITANTS’ UNION to Smash Red | AGAINST UMWA FAKERS Meets in Cal. SAN FRANCISCO, Cal. (By| Mail).—Yetta Stromberg, 19-year | member of the Young Commu-| t League, convicted with other | women workers in the San Bernar- | dino Workers Children’s Camp case | and sentenced to one to ten years | in San Quentin Prison, will tour | the country for the International! Labor Defense. She spoke at two enthusiastic demonstrations and mass meetings Diggers Won’t Be Bullied Into Company Union, They Pledge at Crowded Meet Raise Strike Slogan as They Howl Down Lewis Stool; Plan Mass Meetings TAMAQUA, Pa—Over 450] miners crowded Moose Hall in Tam- aqua, Pa., Saturday night, Dec. 28, and decided to continue the struggle against the corrupt Lewis U.M.W.A, and refuse to get buttons on Jan. 6, which date has been set aside by the officials to force the miners to join the U.M.W.A. One stool-pigeon of the Lewis ma- chine-men was present at the meet- ing, and from the start tried to cause confusion and disorder by in-|in San Francisco and Oakland last | terrupting Phil Frank, T.U.U.L,| week. speaker, He was permitted to speak] ‘The six members of the Commu- at the meeting, and after stating nist Party and Young Communist that “he does not come to defend| Teague arrested two weeks ago for} the U.M.W.A., but only to offer as-| conducting a street meeting for the | This meeting was the most entht siastic one yet held by the N.M.U. in Tamaqua. Altho the mass meet- ing was “prohibited” by the burgess, the meeting was held as a regular union meeting by Local 912. The miners cheered every mention ot fighting the fakirs on Jan. 6 and not to go back into the fold of the operators-controlled union the U .M W. A. Real Leaders From the Pits. Every miner present pledged him- self to N.M.U. who were already threaten- ed with victimization by the chief superintendent of the company. The officers of Local 912 are all miners themselves, working in the pits with the men. The slogan o: strike was raised by the different N.M.U. speakers, and by the rank and file miners themselves who spoke from the floor; and in case of any mass victimization on Jan. 6, there will be open warfare be- tween the miners on one hand and the U.M.W.A. fakirs and the oper- ators on the other. “Let me see any s—o—b— try and stop me from going into the mine on Jan. 6 to earn my bread and butter just because I refuse to get their lousy button” declared one militant Irish miner during the discussion “Some one will go down that shaft, and he won’t use the cage either,” he said amid thunderous applaud from the men. | sistance to you miners” he launched as Jiscussion to why the prepared to sacrifice d-won conditions. Said this stool: ow we are fac- ing a depression or crisis. Money is being taken from the bosses, The miners must do their bit to help overcome this crisis.” into miners must b- some of their ad The miners booed and jeered this rat constantly, and at one point were going to throw him out of the hall He left the hall a little stick with the officers of the | Jat, U.M.W.A. fakirs stood down while the meeting was going and did not dare to carry out boast of a week ago that “no more Red N.M.U. meetings were going to be held in the valley.” This meeting will be followed by many and for Jan. 6, the N.M.U. preparing the miners to defy th Ww $10 tax and back dues and as- since June, 1929, and in- stead, join and build the N.M.U. A-similar mass meeting two weeks ago endorsed the Illinois strike and pledged their solidarity with the Il- inois miners. Speakers who addressed the meet- ing were Phil Frank, T.U.U.L. rep- resentative, M. Zaldokas, .U. Lithuanian organizer, and A. Bur- lack, from the National Textile Workers Union who brought a mes- sage of greetings. defense of the Soviet Union were found guilty and given tenday sentences, suspended for six months. The sentences were given by the {notorious anti-labor Judge O’Brien. who declared that police would try to smash the series of street mect- ings being held by the Communis throughout the city every week. aus VOU, INT LUNA, WE FROM U.S. S.R. Here is something real different | jin the way of entertainment, at the | o bee i Forty-Ninth Street Theatre. While it is only a two-man show, there Working Class Bodies Send Telegrams Fred Keating, who has made quite PITTSBURGH, Pa,, Dec. 31—/a reputation as a magician and Al- The I. L, D. of the Soviet Union !hert Carroll, who likewise has re- (MOPR), of Mexico, the countries |ceiyed much notice as an imperson- of the Carribean, workers of both |ator, unite and are unusually suc- North and South, demonstrated their |cessful in their little production. In bond of international solidarity in |addition to being a clever magician, the fight against class justice, fas-/who presents some remarkable cism and imperialist terror in| tricks, Keating is likewise a come- scores of messages of greeting sent | dian of no small ability. to the Fourth National Convention | Most of Carroil’s impersonations of the International Labor Defense, |are of well known actresses. His now being held here. lopening number is as Beatrice Lillie For the first time in the history |singing “Georgette.” It is slightly of the American labor movement risque and goes over with a bang. greetings were received from white|In portraying Laurette Taylor as and Negro *workers from many |“Qphelia,” he is not quite up to »ints in the South, where the ILL.D.| mark, but more than redeems him-| ad penetrated in its fight against |self with impersonating Emily Ste e prejudice and discrimination. lens, also Ernest Milton in “Rope’s The 350 delegates and visitors at | f#nd.” | ‘more actual pleasure in their antics | |than in many productions that enlist |the aide of three or four score men, women and children. UNEOWAY, JANUAR x, rv07 ‘Albert Cee ana Fred Keating Stage Good Show EDMUND LOWE. A. committees, refuse to pay | Union. “The Fourth Plenum of the Cen- tral Executive Committee of the |\Tie Smith Up in Thug- George Tells Meaning| Tammany - Vitale Case of 6th Anniversary | (Continued on Page Three) “The Daily Worker on its sixth birthday faces necessity of paying very close attention to the interna- tinoal labor movement,” declared Harrison George, member of the | Central Committee of the Commu- |nist Party. “As foreseen by the Fourth Congress of the Red Inter- national, the radicalization of the exploited masses of the whole world is taking place to a most notable de- gree. “This is particularly to be ob- served in a whole series of colonial revolts breaking out. Foreign news | each day reflects extremely inten: od struggles from Samoa to Fi (Continued from Page One) cropped up. Vitale’s name was |found in the note-book of a dope- | peddler named Saccarona, under the headings of “members frequently | called.” Now the process of making the }goat of Detective Johnson of the Bronx and several men known to | have been connected with the gangs- ters in proceeding before the Bronx Grand Jury. While Mrs, Grace Savino, wife of an underworld character named | “Zack” Savino was being arrested, and warrants were out for several other minor underworld characters, Ciro Terranova, wealthy Italian merchant, known as the “Artichoke ; the convention rose in a mass ova-| Many of the tricks that Keating Despite bosses, police and courts, |tion when a cablegram of greetings | however, the meetings will be held.| was read from the Fourth Plenum T0 60 TOU. SSB ipresents are old. However, these |are supplemented by several othe: |that are new and delightfully mys- tifying. Special mention must be imade of the disappearance of a bird | and bird cage on two occasions, once | being in the audience about five feet }from your reviewer. Other tri included chopping a woman in eight |pieces and shooting a bullet through | jthe body of Carroll. Those who | |want to be convinsed must go to} the Forty-Ninth St. Theatre. | Vaudeville Theatres PALACE. Estelle Taylor, Jack Benny, mas- | ter of ceremonies; Al Trahan, in “The Curtain Speech,” by Frank’ Fay with Yukona Cameron; Charles | Ruggles, Jeanette Hackett, Venita Gould, Boyd Senter, the Great Rolle, others. RIVERSIDE. George Jessel, Ina Williams and Jere Delaney, Kitchen Pirates, feat- uring Peggy and Gary; Mickey Lewis and Jimmy Winthrop, “Step- | ping Elite;” the Chevalier Brothers, PREPARE FIGHT ON'N, T. U. DEFEATS oe ESTINGHOUSE PB ince iat ae an ih iknow of the events in the rest of.| King,” and supposed to have been | others. a party to a murder contract which aa : resulted in the murder of two HIPPODROME. ! gangsters, Frank Yale and Frank| Gitz Rice, Moss and Frye, Devil’s | ou jthe world in order to work together \with the exploited masses every- WAGE CUT PLAN part of this world struggle, must TLUL to Lead Toilers/Forces Brooklyn Mill in Electric Plants | to Recede | MILWAUKEE, Wis. Dec. 31—| A wage cut yesterday at the H “Dagrmined to stand no longer for| and M Knitting Mill, 59 Liberty wage cuts and increased speedup, | Street, Brooklyn, was prevented by the workers of the Milwaukee West-| the National Textile Workers Un- inghouse Electric Lamp Works are | jon. preparing to strike for shorter hours| As the workers returned after be- and better conditions, and against | ing laid-off for several weeks, they the speedup and wage cuts. jwere notified of a wage cut by the i istribution of leaf- | bosses. pe ee sete Uaioe Unity Yesterday, when the wage cut League, the Westinghouse workers | was to go into effect, an organizer have responded by starting to form shop committees and their rising militancy is indicated by their let- ays to the T. U. U. L. offices at 2 West Water St., Milwaukee. t the first distribution of leaf- National Textile Workers spoke to workers at the mill gate jand pointed out to them that they should organize and fight against |the wage cuts of the bosses. Learn- ling of the activity of the Union and vom the New York district of the | Union | , the “socialist” administration, nich boasts of its friendship for |seeing the workers go in a group | where in the common struggle. | “The sixth anniversary issue must be made an occasion for bringing to the larger numbers of American | workers the facts about these strug- | gles.” The sixth anniversary of the |Daily Worker will be greeted by | workers throughout the country with mass meetings and other affairs, and by greetings in the special issue. The Daily Worker will also be printed in Russian and sent to fac- tories in the Soviet Union. The greetings in the special anniversary issue will be read by the Soviet | workers. | In New York the anniversary of | \the Daily Worker will be celebrated | Saturday evening, Jan. 11, at Rock- | |land Palace, 155 th St. and 8th Ave. | |Working Women’s Big Anti-War Conference |__In connection with the Working | Women’s Anti-War Conference |which will be held on Saturday. | January 4, at Irving Plaza under the auspices of the Communist Party, District 2, the District Exe- ecutive Committee has issued a state- ment calling upon the working class | women to mobilize against imperial- st war and to elect delegates to the Conference. After pointing out that the dan- Marlow, probably to hush them up, stated that he was being made the |goat in a dispute between factions \of the Tammany machine for con- | trol of the city organization. { One faction, he said, was headed \by former Governor Smith and Ed- |ward J. Flynn, Bronx leader, and ‘the other by Mayor Walker. | Thus, many workers who were misled into thinking of Al Smith as anything but an ordinary big capitalist politician and willing tool of the bosses, see Smith dragged into a sordid mess-pot connecting Smith’s Tammany organization with |the same gangsters and thugs who act as strikebreakers against the | Workers. Fascist Plots Against Anti-Fascists on Fake Circus, Crabot and Tortoni, Lathrop | |Brothers, and Three Danubes. Feat- | |ure photoplay—“Dance Hall” star- | jring Olive Borden, Arthur Lake and | Joseph Cawthorne. | Enlist Your Shop Mate in the | Drive for 5,000 New Members. | MUSIC AND CONCERTS CONDUCTORLESS | SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA CARNEGIE HALL Sat. Eve. Janusry 4, NANETTE (y+ LUCILE, ‘GUILFORD SOLOIstSLaWitENC! | HAYDN, Symphony No. 10 | MO: R’ astore” | e andl | GL | Tickets $ E Piano. it 22 FE. § |JOLSON’S , 59th st. “Bomb” Plots in Paris |- pee Re WORKERS FICHT MEXICO TERROR, POLIGE ATTAC Jail 12 at Ohio Meeting for Cuba Workers AND, Ohio, Dec. 31.— Police attacked a protest demons- ion on the Cleveland Public e, being held under the aus- of the Young Communist League against the reign of terror in Mexico which. is jailing Cuban |workers to deport them to the Ma- {chado terror in Cuba. The District Organizer the $ Young Communist League ii members of the League were arrest- ed. A large crowd of workers re- turning from work witnessed the demonstration and the arrests. The Cleveland demonstration was part of a great series of demonstra- = tions planned by the Communist Cameo League and the All America Anti- Imperialist League, against | terror in Mexico. Chuknovsky Starts on - Search for US Aviators the Siberian coast, The Ice Breaker has already arrived at Petroplvorsk, Ice- Breaker On Way jnear the place where the aviators Re is Featuring in “This Thing Called Love,” showing at the Theatre this week. BERLIN, Dec. 31.—A Soviet Ice |cording to a radio from the Soviet Breaker has been sent to aid in the |Steamer Stavropol. search for Carl Ben Eiclson and | arl Borland, American aviators | formed Amer who have been missing for week: They were lost while flying nes an aviators that they ‘North-eastern Siberia. “AMUSEMENTS | tay REPERTORY 14th st Theatre Guild Productions “METEOR” By S. N. BEHRMAN GUILD W. 62. Bvs. Mats, Th.&s: Extra Matinee New Year's “GAME OF LOVE at. 2:30 ves. 8:30, Mats. ‘Thur. 50c, $1. $1.50 E, Director 1 SEA “PHE LIVING EDMUND LOWE and CONSTANCE BENNETT in “THIS THING CALLED LOVE” “RED RUST” By Kirchon & Ouspensky of S Av. ‘Thursday 2:40 Extra Matinee New Year's Loew?”s ‘Big 2” PITKIN Pitkin Avenuc Brooklyn a h Av. Daily Mats, This VICTOR HERBERT'S BABES IN TOYLAND Popular Prices—$1 to $3 Concourse Grand » ‘Bronx ON BOTH SCREENS HAROLD LLOYD “WELCOME DANGER” ALL ‘ RUTH DRAPER 3, Including Sunday y & Thursday Evgs.) dist, E. of B TALKING Stage Shows—Both Theatres from CAPITOL THEATRE, BROADWAY eoemoeno ec emreenenoemvemcen ia | ‘ Saturday, January 4th) Paris dispatches Tuesday tell of | the arrest of three alleged anti-Fas- \ecist Italians in Paris, the French | police evidently following the well- \known American custom of “plant- ing” dynamite, the home of one ar- rested man being said to have had explosives in it. | The prisoners are newspaper men, jnamed Alberto Cianca, Guiseppe Sar- |belli and Alberto Parchiani. No- |body can give any explanation just | what was supposed to be “bombed” by those arrested, and the whole af- fair is undoubtedly part of the fas- leist organization of Italians abroad to victimize anti-fascists, get them Worker Sixth Anniversary Celebration deported to Italy where théy can be quietly mo-7ered by the Special Tribunal. anarters, at 11 & m. the eapitalist business interests, |to the mill, the besses did not wait hurry-call for police to stop the giv- | announced that the old wages would ing out of leaflets. A police guard jbe continued. through the courtesy of the “social- | ist” inistration, : Ree a Support Ill. Strikers cialists” or the bosses are to | meeery ‘ me Bree Serer the workers, and the distribu-| JESSUP, Pa., Dec. 80.—The first ill k ers Union since the days of the a dese trom the general offices | ‘S#ve the Union Union Committee” ers ‘ol s A ‘ |the part of the Italian miners here. week, with further cuts coming in | Phil Frank spoke for the N, M. 0 | being waged in Illinois, and related | ger of a new imperialist war, which . * + eye \it to the fight anticipated in the|is being aggravated by a growing | Communist Activities | anthracite when the five-year agree- | economic crisis and the necessity of | rts Club Par Sagerly responded to the bosses’ |for » strike vote, but immediately was posted at the gates every day, | . Sousa Rae Italian Miners Rally to Neither the police, the yel ‘so- | tions of leaflets have continued and | ™ecting held by the N tional Min- t t ges were carried out last | met with a favorable response on o cut wa: ci Si (Continued on Page Three) _ | told of the significant struggle nm | 1 members Workers School Si A gathering 0: friends will take place Saturday, Jan. Watch for further announcements in the Daily Worker. * * Unit R2, ‘Section 1 A special meeting will be held this | Thursday, 7 p. m., at Manhattan Ly- ceum, 66 EB, 4th St. matters will be discussed members must attend. Unit 12F, Section 2. A special meeting will be held Thursdey, Jan. 2 at 6.30 sharp at 1179 Broadwa Section resolution will be discussed. Very important and all NSE Sate Lenin Memorial Pageant. The next rehearsal for comrades who have speaking parts in the Lenin Memorial Pageant “will take place ‘Thursday, § p. m. sharp, at Workers Center, 26 Union ‘Sq., under direction of Etmjo Basshe, " No experience necessary. ie. FN Workers Dance Group. The next rehearsal of the Workers Dance Group for the Lenin Memorial Pageant will take place Wednesday, 2.30 p. m. sharp, at the Workers Center. 3 pe. S| LL. Class. Class in ABC of Communism is be- ing conducted by the Young Commu- nist League at South Brooklyn head- 136 15th St. every Sunday nt Ee eg oh Unit GF, Seetion 1, A snecial_ meeting will be held or 3. chureday. Jan. 2 at 27 EB. 4th St Yeetion of delorates to section con- Aeiition wilt tate place | Vit 12, Seetion 2. Phuredev n. 2, 6.30 p. m > every inn stint meoting will held in section headquarters ary snemiicr must be on time. ue ae Unit 5, Seetion 7. eeta Wednesday at 8.30 sharp at etion headquarters. All must Greetings to the Workers Soviet Union Through the Printing of The Daily in the Russian Language! |ment expires in 1930. His speech | was afterward translated into Ita- | lian. After the meeting Frank was invited to speak informally to a | grov ¢ young American miners. | plans for a huge mass meeting in | Jessup soon, with English-speaking and Ttolian speakers, \Drug Clerks to Hold Mass Meet Sunday The New York Drug Clerks held their meeting Thursday evening with quite a large attendance. Prepara- tions have been completed for a monster mass meeting of all drug clerks in the city of New York, to be held Sunday afternoon, Jan. 26, at 1:30 p. m., at Irving Plaza Hall, 15th St. and Irving Pl., New York, to discuss ways and means of bet- | tering their conditions, eliminating | the 60-hour week and combating the unemployment situation. The meet- ing will be addressed by prominent men in the pharmacy, law, engineer ling and teachers professions. ACCORSI THANKS I.L.D. PITTSBURGH, Pa., Dec. $1.— \Salvatore Accorsi, saved from Andy Mellon’s electric chair by the cam- paign carried on by the Interna- tional Labor Defense, present at the |Fourth National Conference of the ILD now being held in Pittsburgh, ahd member of the presidium of the conference, presented a state- ment of thanks to the members of the International Labor Defense, to be delivered Ly the delegates to the conference. The N. M. U. is now making} grabbing more and more foreign | | markets, is greater today than ever | before since the last world war, ‘the statement continues: | “The women workers, who are | compelled to work under miserable | | conditions, for lower wages and long hours, have particular reason to |Gight against the bosses. They are not organized, they are diseriminat- ‘ed against. They are being thrown \into the industries today to take the ‘place of men, so that the men may be released for war purposes.” Calling upon the workers to or- ganize against the coming imperial- ist slaughter, to fight for equal pay for equal work, regardless of race, sex, color or age, to fight for de- cent wages, hours and conditions, and to defend the Soviet Union, the workers’ fatherland, while fighting |for a workers and farmers govern-, ment in America, the statement con- _ cludes: “In demonstration of this position, the women workers of New York jand vicinity must send their dele- gates to the Working Women’s Con- ference, which will be held on Jan- vary 4, at Irving Plaza, Elect your delegates in the shops, in your un- ions. Mobilize the working women for a mighty demonstration.” WORKERS SCHOOL TO HEAR BEAL Gastonia, the Outstanding Class- War Battle of 1929, is the lecture scheduled for this Sunday at the Workers School. Fred Beal will speak. Workers are advised to come early. Admission is 26 cents, The lecture |? Bs, ‘/ encii. _crialists Arrest Anti-Fascists PARIS, Dec. 31.—Three Italian anti-fascists were arrested and charged w'th plotting against the fascist government. The usual bomb plot charges were placed against the, anti-fascists. The names of the prisoners are reported as Alberto Cianca, Giusep- pe Sarbelli and Alberto Parchiani. The French imperialists have in- stituted a severe terroristie cam- paign against anti-fascists under the excuse that there are plots against the lives of the fascist delegates to the race for armaments conference. Labor and Fraternal Organizations niture Workers Section, T. very important meeting urniture workers, progressive workers of the furniture industry on Thursday, Jan. 2, 6p. m. sharp, at 26-28 Union Sq. A discus @on of nresent situation in the furniture in- dustry will take place. EN ee Coney Isiand LL.D. each month. The next meeting will he held ‘Thursday. Jan, 2 at 8 p.m. at 227 Brighton Beach Ave, Standing of the Metrovotitan Workers never Lenwue, | is to be held at the School, 26 Union Sq., Sunday, Jan. 5, at 8 p. m. up- holsterers, wood carvers and all other Will meet on the first Thursday of Division © 3 By A j fue fea Cooperative 8. C. ....9 7 2 0 14 Prospect Unity 8. CG... 8 @ 2 0 12 COth St. S.C... a 2:34 ‘2 ae ae te See S$ 35 0 @ gs@148 i Sagas Sbeakers: ROBERT MINOR ALFRED WAGENKNECHT CONDUCTORLESS SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA NAOHM BENDITSKY, Cellist DORSHA, Interpretive Dancer ARIEL RUBSTEIN, Piaztisé TAYLOR GORDON, Noted Baritone in a group of Negro songs A. SACKET, Flutist JAMES FORD MAX BEDACHT ROCKLAND PALACE 155th Steet aud Eighth Avenue. Prices: 75c, $1.00 and $1.50 Tickets on Sale: Daily Worker PARADISE |) (CARL BRODSK K, | Patronize | the are thought to have been lost, ac- } The Soviet government has in- jean use gasoline stored at points in | pT | 6th Ave. | NOW, AND DEATH” CA M EO Vis By ROMAIN ROLLAND Poa ge we eS ey Nia an j | | | | | “For All Kind of Insurance ‘Pelephone; Murray Hill 53550 7 East 42nd Street, New Yor No-Tip Barber Shops | 26-28 UNION SQUARE (1 flight up) 2700 BRONX P_ & EAST H (corner Allerton Ave.) Cooperators! Patronize SEROY CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. Y. —MELROSE— : VEGETARIAN Dairy RESTAURANT omrades “WI Always Find It Pleasant to Wine at Oar Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx (near 174th St. Station) PHONE INTERVALB 9149. RATIONAL Vegetarian RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVE. JE Bet. 12th and 18th Sts, Strictly Vegetarian Food 1 | | | HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNI versity 5865 een ene sme oa 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’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE » Reom 803—Phone: Algonquin €183 Not connected with any other office Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOF SURGEON DENTIST 249 HAST 115th STREBT econd Ave, New Yo DAILY EXCEPT FRIDAY Please telephone for nppointmen Telephone: Lehigh 6022 Cor. DR. MITCHELL R, AUSTIN Optometrist WHITE PLAINS AVENUB Y 2705 Near Allerton Ave, Bronx, N. TEL. ESTABROOK 2631 Special Appointments Made fo: Comrades Outside of the Bronx. | Dr. M. Wolfson} Surgeon Dentist 141 SECOND AVENUE, Cor 9th St Phone, Orchard in case of trouble with your teeth B) ne to see y friend, who bas long experience, and enn assure you of careful treatment. Advertise your Union Meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City Hotel & Restaurant Workers Branch Worke: Business meetings held the first Monday of the month at 8 Hducational —meetings—the Monday of the month. Mxecutive Board” meetings—every ‘Tuesday afternoon at 5 o'clock, Ove industry! One U Fight the © Otfive cpen from Ny See at Baker’ 164 | QUIS eget > Union Label i 1 Bronx, via] > TINTON UTCHERS’ UNION Loent 174, AMC. & BW. of NLA, (fice and Headquarters: Labor temple. 248 EK. séth St. |ttenular meetinge every t 0 eguinr meetings every first third Sunday, 10 a ra employment Bureau open evere day at 6 P. M. W. 1. R. CLOTHING STORE 542 BROOK AVENU) Telephone Ludlow Cleaning, Pressing, Repairing High Class Work Done Goods Caled for and Delive All profits go towards strikers and thelr families. SHOW YOUR SOLIDARITY WITH THE WO! "FURNISHED RO" 153° Bast 110th St, Heats * and smait; all im) way. Tel Lehigh 18 | ON aS Se a t t 1 c