The Daily Worker Newspaper, January 24, 1930, Page 2

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| District Convention must be 1,000 DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, JANUARY 2A, 1930 WALL ST. GOVERNMENT Revolutionary (COMMUNISTS ANO AIDS RADIO TRUST AS PREPARATION FOR WAR “Most Gigantic Monopoly This Nation Has Ever Seen”, Little Bosses Complain Anti-Trust Laws Are Used to Attack the Trade Unions The radio trust is “the a ea ange Hugh M. Morris “found” gigantic mono; oly this nation has|ths RCA “guilty” of monopoly prac- even scen,” according to Oswald P.|tices and ordered it to desist. But ~Sehutte, executive secretary of the| the Hoover Wall Street government Radio Protective Association, testi-| while representing the interests of wifying before the Senate Interstate | capitalism as a whole, is the direct Commerce Committee yesterday. |Tepresentative of finance capital, if | A few days ago, B. J. Grisby,|Recessary even against the small, President of the Grisby-Grunow | “independent” capitalists. Company of Chicago told the om-} Outright encouragement and sup- 'Combetition | | Sharpened revolutionary competi- tion in the Communist Party Re-| [eruiting Drive is being shown as the | drive passed ine mid-way point. In a recent letter to the Chicago Party Dieta, Comrade Gerry Allard bee note that the Chicago District \is lagging behind in the Revolution- lary Competition. I issue a chal- lenge to all other mining comrades-— | I pledge to get 25 miners, mostly | youth.” This challenge is speci: cally directed to miners in Illin Indiana, Ohio and Pennsylvania. * Perth haba Active. | Is Intensitied UNIONS CALL TO PROTEST MURDER |“Come in ‘Thousands to) City Hall Saturday” (Continued fram Page One) |Party was shot in the back by a |policeman, and now lies at death's door. “The police showed their further cotrage by beating up six wome who demonstrated in behalf of the food clerks at 161st St. and Union PAS yesterday. These vicious cos- | sacks are carrying out the orders jof Wall Street bankers and the! International Wireless News 12,000 FRENCH WORKERS ON | STRIKE. | ai fuiretere By Inprecorr) S, Jan. 23.—Hight thousand | ane of the thom Works at| Belford are striking against wage uts. At Boulokne there are 4,000 work- | ers of the telephone equipment fac- | tory Josked ont fa enfores. out to enforce wage cuts. | " DEFENSE ME MEET | ATIRVING HALL The Perth Amboy unit of the|manufacturers of this city, who are |Shifrin, Gold, to Speak | |Communist Party writes: “We trying to crush the rising revolt tittee, which is continuing its hear- port of mergers and giant trustifi-| raised our original quota of recruit- of the workers under the leadership | ings on the Couzens communications | cation has been the avowed poliey of ing new Party members to 12 in-| |of the Communist Party. The boss- Dill, that the radio trust is terror-)the Harding-Coolidge-Hoover regime | stead of 8. Our unit challenges the |es of this city, who hoped that the| “fzing the industry, and that “in the | of finance capital, The independents year and a half in which we have | are therefore being squeezed dry be- Made radio sets, we have paid that tween the government and the ‘tionopaly $5,302,879.15 in royalties.” | trusts, while the anti-monopoly laws, Through its control of patent rights, |are enforced only against working | the Radio Corporation of America | class organizations. Hence the des-| is able to exact a tribute of 714 per! perate “appeal” of Schutte to the cent on gross receipts from the| Senate Interstate Commerce Com- stialler manufacturers as royalties, mittee, which will and can do no In this way, the trust is not only; more than “listen in” at the hear- | able to undersell its competitors but | ings. | it ig also in a position to drive them} That the radio trust is closely to ultimate bankruptcy. In Sehutte’s| connected with the war preparations} words, the independents “face an|of the American imperialists was| _tnemy boasting of owning 8,500 | made crystal clear not long ago, by patents.” |General J. G. Harbord, chairman o/| Last November, in connection with|the Radio Corporation of America, ® complaint of the independent|who called for the merging of the mishufacturers that the Radio Cor-| American cable and radio services poration of America was compelling) into an efficient unit to meet a sim-/| them to use radio trust tubes, Fed-jilar British merger in “time of war.” 7.U.U.L. Discusses Program ot Action Before Convention Forward to struggle against the employers, the national faseist coun- | cil and their tools in the ranks of | the working elass, till, under the (Continued from Page One) energetic development of an organ- izgtion drive among the unorgan- dzed, the building of shop commit- ee che se oe Thank {0FSC8 | mobilize for the establishment of| i e 1/ gles, the rousing of the fighting | orkineclass power in this country! | | spirit and energy of the masses, In the neadle aitvation the main|Cops Raid Headquarter, strategy of the T,U.U,L, is the ar- ganization of the unorganized shops of Shoe Union Strikers’ to enforee union conditions in shops i Nat etal under our control to develop a broad (Cortinued from Paga One) offensive against the bosses and| ail, ranging from $100 to $500 their company union agents, The, each, All strikers were taken to shoe struggle must fs taken into the | the Raymond Street Jail. camp of the bosses by developing an There was @ hearing, Wednesday, energetic organization campaign, by | °?. the Dan Palter application for an developing mass picketing, mass," No decision was ren- violations of the injunctions and for Gered. i at the development of a general strug-|__” dependent Shoe Workets | Union is calling ypon gli shoe work: eta, organized and unorganized, to) 43 Every new talon every T.U. yup must rawn into ac- | sea a Patl in these struggles | participate in the general organiza- 8s-qell es in the rapidly developing| jon drive that is now going on. It genera! strike situation in Paterson, {is a drive to form shop committees Bullé T, U, U. L in open shops against wage cuts, for Medical \the abolition of piece work, for the | Pee yeegpuel with these strug-| 40-hour, Brday week, thus aiming igs and the general leftward trend /4o build one powerful Independent the workers, with ever greet-| Shoe Workers Union. eo"; Masses looking te In spite of the continued intimida- Ur. for organization and |tion and repressing on the part of is a Fy vavalutionary union | the police working under the orders aH in group must yndertake | of the ghoe manufacturers, the shoe y the task of building strikers are keeping up their heroic the vUL of establishing ® reel utrugele against their bosses. of elass struggle unioninm, |” Pyced with big expense for bail- ory new union and T.U,U.L ing hundreds of gtrikers and of the group must immediately raise the) oresnization of unorganized shops, | Tate Un funds to entablish a new! the Independent Shoe Workers Un- ion Center, to open head-| ion has launched a 82,500, “Build ra and coordinate the entire |the Union Fund.” All workers ere left wing movement, ‘urgently requested to perform their ett goming District Convention | PU.U.L. on Mareh 1 and 2 working class duty by actively per- ticipating in this drive. must be made a genuine mass con- vention with the bulk of the dele-| Ke Sl j gates coming fyom basie induetrion; iLabor and Fraterna metal, mari transport, textile, £, * mal The slogan sh the coming | Organizations . APPENTION—ALL ORGANIZATIONS tes from shop committees, ai AU, inepme attater, by i ot og nee Lied aa Ria aie. iat ioe may @elegation, at least one-third of the f 4 tes, to the gonvention is of|inmea we th ve importance. We muat rac: igen st ‘hat the jnayfficient number delegates at this eoufers sic Ghorteoming which rected in Jine with the of the T,U.U.L, ® conference realises the im: e of the growing unemploys situation ~ therefore in: structs the counci) at onee te popul- peril our program for pn energetic campaign among the unemployed teed T,U.U.L, groups, unions and | 75! committees. Every shop gom- I sidtieie, Pad eee hee at i) To LLD. iy “ea a, & oe me Na Fear priaad Vae ps peat earna’ oad wa ‘hit weleauie. . Volunteers ‘wanted. Rainbow mien, Bel Acct 2 ehster rig it eth ate thy ee aril ely aa? Ph Oty jt] i Waters Booker shop. W it ‘ » avery new union, eyery T,|_ Woy ailine reliet work 18) UU yl immediately | HY "Beondwayy, Saetoit hal Bangvet Women's Connell, Banguet and Mainbersh Gore a ee Women ¢ portal Pr ny legs te arrange discussions ony Program of the T.U.U,L. and Tarate. resolution and on the ‘it elect their delegates ta Tith’ gt, room" district gonvention which will)” ai ai. bog vag Minh } and 2, 1930, ar iting Floss all, Pritiice Dance. a eet Bog hn Fete gre acer ih ny Fae iS Benetit rays "ann fi oy fateat ere. Pearle Meaeet, Martie © pd mee, const necien Ball i aie a bets ae young ite industries and do oor i power to reach our goal | hippie ‘hel in | Wh uid Passaic unit of the Communist Par- ty, although we know that this unit has more members than we havé | We will double our quota sooner than the Passaic unit of the Party. a ale Philadelphia Units Compete. Unit 3B of Philadelphia says: “We challenge the comrades of Unit 2A of Philadelphia, that we will succeed in recruiting more members into the Party and secure more subs for the Daily Worker than they will before the period of the Recruiting Drive is over. “Comrades! Revolutionary Competition we will jearry through the Party Recruiting | jand Daily Worker Building Drive successfully.” Failure to Agree Shown by Secrecy (Continued fram Paye One) sistance” of France. France has col- jonies which must be “protected,” was Tardieu’s argument. Against | whom, he failed to say. Secretary Stimson, the great} apostle of “frankness,” the self. | leadership of the R.I.L,U., we will classed opponent of “secrecy,” the foe | of “intrigue,” came out long enough to say: “After careful consideration and consultation with my colleagues, I have decided not to make any state- ment today as to the naval require- | ments of America.” silence after saying that while he would listen to others, he would say nothing. The other delegation heads spoke showing an insistence on “parity” ) with France, and the session was edjournad, the heads of the delega- | tions lator, after a secret conference | Jat 10 Downing Street, announcing that they were trying to work out an agenda (on the third day of the conference!) and that all meetings were off till Monday, to allow Stim- son’s svstem of intricue to rule. So obvious is the secrecy and so embarassing is the failure even ta agree on an agenda (what to dis cuss), that the best press prosti- tutes have been trotted out to give excuses. “It hardly seems fair,” says one, to criticize the conference for not having a program. it is attempted to “explain” the secrecy hy saying that “things fare most complicated and delicate,” land that ‘good conference work” does not allow anything but secrecy, 80 no one should “blame the diplo- mats for not admitting the press.” Then the reluctant give- away: “Qpen diplomacy is not all it is ad- | vertised to be and never was. i Which is very interesting, but does over heels in secret intrigue a week after he “pledged the American people’ that he would stand for “no secret diplomacy,” “no intrigue” and “no alliances.” pre | MEMBERSHIP. DISTRICT ' No.” ATTENTION. Phere will be held at Central Qpeye House on Tuesday, Jan, 28, at 7.80 p. m. a general membership meeting. The purpose of this meet- .|ing ig to take up the struggles that are taking place in New York at the present time and to mobilize and organize the Party for participating in these struggles. It is unnecessary to pojnt out to the membership the nature and mili- taecy of the struggles that are oc- curving in New York at the present time, and those that are developing. Therefore ad a Party member is w |instrueted to without fail. Admission only on Presentation of card, Signed—District Byreau, Dist. 2. Build the United Front of the Working Class From the Bottom Up--in the Industries! an Herbs Mass Jan, 180 ne ong Be: i, he Pit’ Brome ph ineni spent pe * Dance Grou Clase yt any, Wy pm, il Bast 14th floor, re ‘iy ue eu ib Lecture. nga Geist an uit ii Py) ink it ‘heat Yosrd A 6 fet = anvsltytteg ryt Bah at, Lower ite, ALN te en fae Site" se Sat. Jan. 26, 8:38 r4 Nelt-Kauestionsl Gentes, nd delegates representiny load of New Ya ed, unorganiz?1 and unem- workers with special atten- the most exploited sections working class—-Negro, we- 0 workers, in industries, | P to the coordination of aur arts eee aia etideajartai* if ETD ae etautetan | ae Bane abet Irate thence ay dting. RAINBOW COSTUME BALL Friday, January 24 at NEW WEBSTER MANOR 43h Bast ith Street Weketn 91.50 to be obtained at LEAGUE FOR MUTUAL AID 104 Fifth Ave. oy Workery Bookshop a Under the slogan of | Whereupon he again lapsed into} in gencralities, Grandi of Italy still} 2 Then} the net explain why Stimson is head | be at this meeting) me Watking 7581 Party would be destroyed by the ex- pulsion of the renegade Trotzkyites |and Lovestoneites, got a shock in the {splendid Madison Square Garden} meeting, of the masses of militant workers. “Not satisfied with these meas- ures, the courts are issuing wide- sweeping injunctions, which the workers are defying—and correctly. Then “Paragraph 600,” lates to contempt of court, is ap- plied, and the workers are sent to} | jail for 60 days. “If the bosses of this city think | they will dampen the fighting spiri by their barbarous action, they are | | mistaken, The workers will fight all | the harder. They will form their Workers Defense to protect them- selves from the murderous attacks of the police and their A. F, of L.,| socialist and gangster allies. “The workers of this city know the connection of the courts, which send honest, fighting workers to jail, with the underworld. Judge Vitale, one of the capitalist judges, is typ- ical of what the workers must ex- | Pect—police justice, torture, murder, | prison. “Not satisfied with taking away | | the workers’ which demonstrated thht | the Communist Party is the leader| which re-| rights, not satisfied e on Mineola, Gastonia Shifrin, the Mineola and Gastonia | defendants, and Steve Katovis, ly-| ing at death’s door, will be the four principal topics at the mass meeting | tonight in Irving Plaza, when fur- ther mobilization of New York's | class conscious workers to fight for these militants will take place. Three of the four mentioned cases have arisen out of the collaboration of Tammany cops, thugs and their | j socialist party allies. Shifrin’s case will come up the third week in February. The Min-| eola case may be called at any time. The Gastonia appeal is costing thou- jsands of dollars. Steve Katovis, | dying, lies in the hospital with aj policeman day and night at the} foot of his bed. The International Labor Defense, fighting these major cases, has is- sued invitations to every working class organization, every fraternal | ‘society to be represented at the} meeting tonight. Besides, many of | the defendants and other prominent j speakers, a World War veteran, | | crippled and unable to walk, will speak. The huge expenses incidental to} |defending these workers, have } | strained the resuorces of the I. L, | |D. As a result, thousands of work- | rs are called on to volunteer for announced that he would work close-'| Comrade Weber, w: with breaking their “promise” to! Hoover at the conference in Novem- | ber, the bosses of this city are/|° reducing wages, increasing hours, | and throwing tens of thousands of | workers into the streets to starve, | “There are hundreds of thousands | of unemployed workers in New York for whom the city is making no pro- vision. Mayor Walker may increase his wages at the expense of the city, while the workers cannot find a job. These workers are hungry \and demand that they be given re- f. WORK OR RELIEF is becom- ng the ery, und the unemployed workers will gather at City Hall to demand help. “WORKERS OF NEW YORK: “Come to City Hall by thousands. Show the bosses of this city that New York workers know pow to fight for their rights. Show the police that you will not be intmi- dated by their terror. Men and wo- men, white and colored, let us march | before City Hal] and raise a mighty voice of protest against the “Shooting, beating and jailing of workers. “Against Paragraph 600, by which they are trying to silence our voice. “Against unemployment, “Against the socialist party, the A, F. of L., gangsters and police, “Organize workers defense! “Fight against Paragraph 600! “Demand social insurance against | unemploy ment! | “Support and join the Communist | 6 |Party, which is leading the fight.” the mass tag days, Saturday and | Sunday, in all parts of the city, to | leola and Gastonia defendants, and} for medical aid for Katovis, Working Women Picket (Continued from Page One) | shops, winning union conditions in the fruit markets at 1406 College Ave,, Bronx. and at 320 East 170th St. The union is determined to go on with its struggle until al] at pres- ent unorganized shops are forced to establish union conditions, It is striking now at Millers Market and at a shop on Avenue U. The socialist right wing clique Wednesday began to frame up three active strikers, all arrested in Brooklyn and held one on $5,000 bail and the others on $2,500 each. Communist Activities Lower Bronx Open Forum, Bunday, Jan. 26, 715 H. 138th St. mouth and the coming war." Spring Term Workers School. offers Public Speaking, Trade Union- sm, Latin-America, Gapitalism and American Negro, Literature. Register ow. A * * Open Forum, Unit 4, Section 7. “Five-Year Plan,” Sunday, Jan, 26, Pp. Bay 48th St. Brooklyn: Free admission « Executive, tion 2 | Build The Daily Worker—Send | in Your Share of the 15,000 New Subs, _ Saturday Eveni at Box Office, $1.25, Jerome (Lexington Aye.) of Friday Evening, COOPERATIVE ADMISSJON 50 CENTS Arranged by the Workers of PROCEEDS FOR THE DAILY SSS a COSTUME BALL arranged by the “UJ ELORE” COMMITEE ROCKLAND PALACE 165th Street and Eighth Avenue eens nena eS Tickets in advance at “UJ ELORE” Office, 26 Union Sq,, $1.00. At DIRECTIONS; jubway to 167th St. From there back on the Sixth or Ninth Avenue “L” to 155th St, West Side—Sixth or Ninth Ave, “L” to 155th St. From Bronx 163 Crosstown to 155th St. & 8 Ave, GRAND COSTUME BALL Friday’ ‘Sane a4, Se ation 5 Bana net, Sunday, Jan, 26, 8.30 p. m., welcome Jewish Section Committee, 8p. m. at’ Center. * ing, January 25 the Good Orchestra. the JOLLY MOHICANS January 31, 19380 NEW WEBSTER MANOR, 125 East Eleventh St. Tickets in advance $1.00. At door $2.00, On sale at Worke: Bookshop, ‘PROLETARIAN DANCE Saturday Night, January 25 AUDITORIUM 2700 Bronx Park Heat REFRESHMENTS FREE DANCING ALL NIGHT the Unica Cooperative Stores. WORKER AND THE FREIHEIT ———— SSS 0 GOVT BREAKS | WITHSOVIETS | Rubio-Calles Aid Hoover-Stimson (Contin.ed from Page One) | reactionary character and its com- plete sell-out to the Hoover regime in the face of the exposures of the Communist Party of Mexico. With the break in relations, the Mexican petty bourgeois bellycrawl- | |ers, in obedience to the Hoover- Stimson orders given Ortiz Rubio while in the United States, increased efforts were made to aurest other members of the Communist Par The action of the Rubio-Calles Morrow - Hoover - Stimson Mexican, government follo the action of the U. S. imperialists in their role as the leading capitalist power or- ganizing an attack on the Soviet Union. The Mexican minister at Moscow has already departed accompanied | {by the entire legation staff, with! the exception of one secretary, who | is remaining in charge of the Mex- ican archives. Estrada declined to} | say whether any action wes contem- | plated regarding the passports of | the Soviet Union. The the Soviet envoy here. Ortiz Rubio, who was chased out | of Detroit and the United States, | after he had contemplated a long) stay, by mass workers’ demonstra- | tions that brought to the attention | Workers’ republic. of the American workers, the whole- sale murders and arrests of Me: can revolutionary workers, had ar- rived in Mexico City just two day: before the announcement of the} break by Estrada. When he left the United Stat Ortiz Rubio was escorted to Mex by American troops of the 25th In- | |fantry, the very same troops that | |heretofore had been used against | the revolutionary workers and peas- | ants of Mexico, While in the United States, Rubio ly with the Hoover regime, He promised the Wall Street bankers collect funds immediately necessary that all payments would be made 000, mostly worker: in the defense of Shifrin, the Min-|0n the faked claims of American finished steel produe |imperialists. He said that the American land robbers would be | paid cold cash for all land taken. Stringent, anti-working class la vid were passed in order to help U. Militantly at at Millers | imperialists in their exploitation es perialist powers in London. Clique; Bill at Eva Le Gallienne announced ter that on Monday evening at the ©. Repertory Theatre, she will present Alfred Sutro’s “The Open Door” in place of Browning's | » a Balcony,” the one-act play first scheduled to precede “The Women Have Their Way,” Sera- fin and Joaquin Alvarez Quintero. For the first time in the new pro- | ductions this season, Miss Le G: lienne will me a leading role in} both plays of the double bill. Egon Brecher will also appei prominently in the cast. The set-| | tings and costumes for both plays were d ned by Aline Bernstein, Re director of the Fourteenth BRITISH “DAILY” RILES THE GOVT ‘Henderson In Protest At C.I. Message (Continued f Page One) | Goyernme: e in order to use the excuse for en off re- lations and preparing war against} “Daily Worker’ itself de- ele that Henderson's protest is | he first step toward breaking oft | diplomatic relations and the prelude to an imperialist war against the Calling attention to the fact that the police of the “Labor” ment has arrested the |}. fortnight for wor activities, the “Daily Worker’ worker will note that th new provocation comes at the very mcment when the five-power naval conference reparing imperialist war plans t the Soviet.” T MAYOR COMMU? LECT IN BERL IN, Jan, s elected mayor | the industrial city of Solingen. | mgen has a population of 140,-} s in the steel and | industries. the Mexican workers and peasants. | The break with the Soviet Union comes on the eve of increased naval | war pr ations by the leading im- -#_ "AMUSE haem nay 4 SOVKINO FILM “... has moments of greatness, approximat- ing ‘Potemki: mendous acting.” —Daily Worker. a See thrilling picture of LENIN addressing = SPECIAL ADDE) wing STALL FILM GUILD CINEMA Direction Symon Gould. Special Forenoon Prices—Weekda: “—" Theatre Guild Productions "| “METEOR” By 8. N. BEHRMAN GUILD & 5% vs, 8:60 Mata, Th.&Sat, 2:40 *RED RUST” By Kirchon & Ouspensky MARTIN BECK 45th street W. of 8 Ay. Eves. 8340, . Thursday and ‘Saturday at 2:40 & 7th Av. Evs. 8:30 JOLSON’S Mote, Thurs, and Sat. "The Prince of Pilsen” Musical Comedy marence LNIVIAN "what Roy ch CROPPER _ ith St IVIC REPERTORY 6th Ave. Eves. 8:30. Mats. ‘Thur. Sat. 2:30 boc, $1, $1.60 Pan i Director Tonight WP iN ‘LEMAN’ ‘om. Nii re CRADLE soNG” BRONX THEATRE GUILD St be Tremont’ Wrentre ‘reine ae wep- stoe Aves., “H. H. H. ” A gative om the medical profession. Even. 8:30; Mats, We Sat. ‘Tel. Beg. MoneTHi pares R—a play on a apelal prohiem, EAST SIDE THEATRES ND. A PLAYHOUS 138 SECOND Ay: Centinuous Noon to Midnient hi In Memory of the Sixth Ai WHEN LENIN DIED THE MOST INTERESTING SHOTS OF LE —on the same program— THE PASSION of JOAN of ARC The French TION OF THE12TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION” N—KALININ—VOROSHILOV—and others Conti MENTS DYNAMIC ON ng role inn titanic en the Red Army and Ds . & 6th Aves. SPRING 00 ous D: ye 12-2, 35— C AME Q)XOW s2d ST. & B'WAY ae we WITH TALK pel MUSIC “UP THE CONGO” AMAZING ADVENTURE laugh with every thrill night A |Ethel Barrimore Theatre 47th Street, West of Brondway E 8:50, Mats. Wed. & Sat. 2:30 “Death Takes a Holiday” with PHILIP MERIVALE A comedy about life. NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES | Loew’s “Big 2” | PITKIN || PARADISE Pitkin “Avenue Grand, Concourse Brooklyn Bronx ON BOTH SCREENS MARY and DOUG PIKFORD FAIRBANKS ALL TALKING! TOGETHER! “TAMING of the SHREW” Stage Shows—Both Theatres from CAPITOL THEATRE, BROADWAY¥ VENU ORNER HIGHTH STREET sapnlar Prices. nniversary of Lenin’s Death — NIN’S LIFE AND DEATH Film Triumph \ the | tial MEXICO WALL ST, “The Open Door” Tudeh Civic Repertory Street Playhouse. “Recapture” by Preston Sturges, author of “Strictly Dishonorable,” will have its first Broadway per- formance next Wednesday night at Eltinge Theatre, it was nounced yesterday by A. H, Woods. The chief players will include Ann Andrews, Melvyn Douglas, Hugh Sinclair, Glenda Farrell and Cissie - | Loftus, |“THE HOLLYWOOD REVUE’ AT LOEW’S PARADISE John Gilbert, Marion Davies and Norma Shearer are included in the long list of stars who appear in “The Hollywood Revue,” Metro's singing and dancing picture at Loew's Paradise Theatre. Conrad Nagel and the comies, Laurel and Hardy, are also featured in the pic- ture. “Land of Syneopation,” a stage spectacle from the Capitol Thea- tre, brings Ken Witmer to the Para- dise as guest master of ceremonies. The Caligary Brothers, in their ini- American appearance; Serge | Flash, Sally and Ted, and a group of Chester Hale girls also appear in this revue. “For All Kind of Insurance” CARL BRODSKY Telephone Murray Hill Aaat 7 Kast 42nd Street, New York a ER O Ag 657 Allerton Avenue tstabrook 3215 Bronx, N ¥ ned WORKERS’ CENTER BARBER SHOP Moved to 30 Union Square @REIHEIT BLUG.—Main Wloor W. LR. CLOTHING STORE 542 BROOK AVENUR Telephone Ludlow 309s Cleaning, Pressing, Repairing High Class Work Done ioods Called for and Delivered All profits go towards strikers and their families. SHOW Your, SOLIDARITY ITH THE WORKERS: -MELROSE— H VEGETARIAN Dairy BATATRANT 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD, broms (near 124th St. Stato; v HONE INTBRYAI! " ied RATIONAL Vegetarian RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVE. JE Bet. 12th and 13th sts Strictly Vegetarian Food —— HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE, Phone: UNI versity 5865 FED | Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: (PALIAN DISHES | A place with atmoaphe: Where all radicale ‘meet | 02 B.12th St. New York | ae = = All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Claremont Farkesy: Brong (DR. J. MINDEL SURGE( N DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Reom 803—Phone: Algonquin 8388| Not connected with any Dr, ABRAHAM WARKOFP SURGRON DENTIST 249 EAST 115th STRERT Second A‘ lew York DAILY excErr FRIDAY Pledee fer? Lenigt gues" Cor. Advertise here. Pex ialeommetion Lah wrtte te The pany WORKER 26-28 Union 8a. n Sa, New York City Hotel & Restaurant Warkers eset saeninere ay Guriness or aeiags, hele, the sie i cational meetings—the third scaly Hoard | moetings—-every ‘afternoon at . ‘a'clacs. ovat tie id Uali pace, FON MEL §¢ ScunOL TE, TOE ; igners. gee rh East Third Street, yall Her he A ne

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