The Daily Worker Newspaper, February 1, 1930, Page 4

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| _Page Four HIT BESSEDOVSKI AND HIS FAIRY TALE ABOUT POLITICAL DIFFERENCE Darling of Capitalist Preas Pre Proven a Thief and A Liar; Now A Hero of “Socialists” “Political Difference” With Soviet Government A Tale to Conceal Theft, Brother Testifies MOSCOW, Inprecorr the ace dj, then categorically de- f the for- {nied thi atements of the accused -/in the French bourgeois press, ac- | cording to which his relatives in the Soviet Union were suffering perse- - /cution at the hands of the Soviet a the writ | thorities. No single relative of Bes- i had suffered any pers s theft. r. born as! a small trader and at the beginning of the revolution he was a member the Cadet Party. In 1918 he was in touch with anarchist | reles, and in 1919 he was the sec- retary of the Poltava government committee of the left-wing Social Prior to the ion had ved in France, -but +|not because he was persecuted at hon 's revolutionary activities, but because he wanted to attend the y and at home this was -d until t evening Bi dence was then given by the} ch ea. employees of the Soviet Embassy | and belongings and |i% Paris, including the French em- | : ployees. The evidence showed that had) Bessedovski led a luxurious and ex- the Em- | travagant life, and was absent for | p,|days quite unaccountably. Evidence | w: to flee ove! ed by armed G. kind in connection with | | DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1930 Mussolini’s Metal Supply DRIVERS REBEL _ATRISKS IN THE ~ ELDORADO MINE Under Bad Rock (By a Worker Correspondent) "LDORADO, Ill.—The checkoff | is on an average $5 per fifteen d pay for dues and assessments. And , house rent is more than other dwell- ings which runs from $8 up. The company store has a great part in getting the miners’ pay. The prices! are all the way up from 30 per cent to 70 per cent higher than the other stores. When the mines are ahout to start working, the company stores opens its credit to the miners ahead of time so they can get the mimers | in debt to them. Then the miner has to have money to pay his bills that he made through the Summer when the mines were |down. So he must “sticker”—get store credit and cash $1.00 for 90 cents, which is 11.1 per cent in not over two weeks. The bottoms at some of the mines are very hard and in holes in the fire clap. At Number 1, O’Gara, the bottoms are so hard to pick up militia ard duty, both the Italian fac- s. Work is being done under the menace of bayonets —News WAKING UP OTIS ELEVATOR MEN Slave Driving Worse in Harrison Plant Strong patrols of fascist in Italy are on and load one ton without any pay} as the bottoms must be over five inches before there is any pay. And in’ very near every place in No. 1, O'Gara, there are the same condi- | tio (By a Worker Correspondent) HARRISON, N. J—I am a worker in the Otis Elevator Co. in {the machine shop for the last 10 e have some very dangerous top in Saline County. I have seen a whole entry for 300 feet fall in. And I have worked in places that | the timbers had to be set on the bot- | SLAVE WAGE FOR NORFOLKNEGROES IN FACTORIES Can 16; Wouldn’t Work’ Average Is $ $6 and $7| | | per week (By a Worker Correspondent) NORFOLK, Va. — Conditions of } ay for the Negro workers in the| American Tobacco Company are} very bad. They can hardly average | |two dollars a day after hard work, | | At the end of the week thelr pay| env elope has about six or seven dol- | ltera in it. The Negro tobacco work- | | ers are forced to work under meer | sanitary conditions. And then the \living quarters of the Negro work- | lers are very poor. | There are similar bum conditions | in a box manufacturing company | here. The average wage is like that | of the tobacco workers, 6 or 7 dol- lars after a week's hard work. The | bosses are well organized and do all they can to keep the workers separated, especially on the color iine. Comrade Stephen Graham who ried here by the bosses court | neitine the Negro poggilation | to rebellion” has started the work of organizing the poorly paid and ly exploited Negro workers of city under the T. U. U. L. We | will continne it. NORFOLK WORKER. Fear Ohio Workers | | Militancy, State A Bright Idea The French ambassador at Mos- cow tried without success to read the note of Rumania (adhering to wv Stimson attack on the Soviet Union) to the Foreign Commissa- riat. Then he tried to leave it on a desk, but failed. The caricature Below gives the “Youth Pravda” suggestion of what the French ambassador might do with it. Diplomat: “Shouldn't I leave this paper here? Mane somebody would read it. ” ‘SMASH FRAME-UP AGAINST MINER Acquit Communist N. M. U. Leader in Trial TERRE HAUTE, Ind., Jan. 30. An unusually rotten frame up| ridiculous invention. subsequent attempts ent the whole affair as the} sult of political differences with the Soviet government, were nothing but an insolent attempt to turn the offense of a common crimi- nal irito a pol 1 affair. Up to the time the defalcation was dis- covered Be: ith | ski, the brother of sedovski had never given the slightest hint that he disagreed with the policy of the Soviet Government, | on the contrary, he had always ener- | getically supported the policy of the Soviet Government, The court sentenced Bessedovski | to ten years imprisonment for em- bezzlement in office. A separate e | trial will take place against him on | a charge of high treason committed | jafter the discovery of the embezzle- ment. | i ee German Government Exposed in Plot on Soviet | keep on and organize with a real | BERLIN, Jan. 9 (By Inprecorr] Mail Service)—The fourth day of the trial on Thursday brought a number of further sensational proofs of the international backing enjoyed by the forgers. The ac- cused Schmidt questioned with re- gard to his relations with» the de-| ceased General Isaffmann declare “Our aim was to jismember Rus- | sia and found an independent Black | Sea.State, embracing the most fruit- | ful and richest parrs of southern} Russia. This scheme had the sup- port of Great Britain.” Schmidt than made intevesting statements concerning the anti-bol- shevist activity of the Georgian ac- cused Karumidse and the assistance | given to him by the German au- thorities. During the war of inter- | vention Karumidse had carried out} $a number of sabotage actions | | against the Soviet Union. Here the lawyer of Karumidse, | | Beet; demanded that the public be § excluded from the court because he | {wished to read a confidential doco- sgment proving Karumidse’s political steliability, for the German bour- ‘ geoisie, of course. The court im- | mediately agreed and the public was temporarily excluded. What hap-| pétied in the meantime is unknown, | but the “Rote Fahne” of the Janu- | ary 10 declares that the document | | Soviet schemes. read in court whilst the public were excluded was nothing lesg than an official documentation of the fact) also given to the effect that | years and conditions are getting toms as the coal was taken out. And, terrible and I am trying to do my|the last place, the top fell all the All along the entry after we in |the machine department, and we will | had gone as much as two or three |The film, “A falls the top would get bad, and \rcula deli edt even six. tp ight arouse the militancy of Ohio work- | local of the N.M.U. We sure had! ers, and so cannot be shown in Ohio, | | Mine Workers’ officials persuaded a is the evident opinion of the Ohio | ten-year-old girl State Board on Motion Pictures, | No. 20, the company fired six-, Which, after having the film in its| her. The trial was a strenuous one, has banned it. |and the charges The reason given is that the film is | blasted. An acquittal was the only the workers.” | barring of the Soviet film is in con- | | junction with the attempt of the | | U.M.W. and the coal Ota | best in waking up the workers in| time. get quite good results, The foremen and straw bosses are at our backs all the time, and big boss Campbell is y “friendly” | to some of the men, and we got to swallow all that he tells us and make him think that we like him Jand the company. What we need is a good metal organization and | we have the material to do it with, with all their spies here we shall body fighting organization. —OTIS SLAVE. | all kinds of Pittsburgh Liebknecht Meeting inches in thickness. to keep an eye of this kind of rock. At one mine I worked at, Pea- teen drivers for coal under some bad rock. | superintendent of the coal company | +} came to see what was wrong. ’| He saw the rock and knew it was | dangerous and gave orders for it to Ohio courts to suppress the Com- | ‘be taken down. There were sixty |munist arty and all militant labor | jears of rock “two-ton cars.” We have | Sroups. nature in all of the mines all of the | time.—Eldorado Miner. | CLEVELAND, Union” is too refusing to pull hands five weeks, So the “harmful to grievances of the same | hio, Jan. 2 t to the Soviet | | has been found not guilty by a jury. | likely to 50,000 Jobless in Cleveland CLEVELAND (By Mail).—B. C. pa Bans Soviet Film) against a Communist official of the | lea Soviet Union, , found | National Miners Union has just — [been smashed here. Arthur Debarge | | Debarge belonged to the Bicknell The United further | to charge him falsely with a serious crime against | were completely The | possible outcome. Miners regard it | as a victory over the unscrupulous Officer Murders 16 “Year Old Guardsman DETROIT (By Mail)—A 16 year old member of the National Guard | was shot and killed by a sergeant that Karumidse conducted anti-bol-| PITTSBURGH, Pa., Young work- ee |Seiple, city employment commis- | who went to the youth’s home to shevist activity in co-operation with|ers of Pittsburgh will honor the Sheet Metal Workers Strike sioner, admits that 50,000 workers |arrest him for missing drill. Stan- the government of republican Ger-|memory of Karl Liebknecht in| CHICAGO (By Mail). — Sheet |are unemployed in Cleveland. This | ley Prusinowski, the youth, was many. an an ar demonstration Friday, | metal workers of the Wonder Heat-|is an obvious understatement, | | shot by Sergt. Poggione. The youth The accused Schmidt declared that negotiations had taken place be- | tween General Hoffmann and promi- nent industrialists, particularly «the | | British petroleum interests, with .a/ view to securing material and finan. cial support for Hoffmann’s anti- Here the judge interrupted and declared: This is the first time that the oil interests have been men- tioned. Did these oil interests put money into the venture with a view to doing good business? Both the accused Schmidt and Bell replied simultaneously that the pe- troleum interests concerned had put money into the conspiracy. Schmidt declared that the idea of | the foundation of an independent} Black Sea state had been mooted} chiefly in the interests of the petro- leum interests because this would | place the petroleum resources of | South Russia at their disposal. Schmidt also declared that he or- ganized the journey of General! Hoffmann to London to negotiate | | with the British petroleum King De- | terding. Soviet Workers Reject Religious Dope MOSCOW, Ja. 8 (By Inprecorr anti-religious carnival took place on eum, 35 Miller St. Mail Service)—The Xmas celebra- | the Streets, and masses of workers | tions of the Orthodox Church take | took part in it wearing masks and | place on January 7 and 8, according | |fancy-dress and bearing placards *to the old calendar. The priests | |making anti-religious propaganda. | * and their supporters conducted zeal- | Motor lorries drove through te ous propaganda for the celebration streets collecting holy pictures and Of these two days and even issued | other religious emblems flung into | illegal leaflets calling upon the | , the roadway by the workers as rub- | workers not to go into the factories. ‘bish no longer needed. In conclu- | The anti-religious societies con- | sion tens of thousands of such em- ducted an effective counter-propa- | blems were burned in Premencaue ganda with the result that on Janu- | bonfires. ary 7 and 8 no strike occurred any- | Meetings took place all over the | where, and no noticeable truantism | Soviet Union demanding the closing made itself felt. In answer to the | of the churches, and the dismantling | religious propaganda many workers | | of the bells for industrial purposes. | contributed their wages on the two/A number of churches were cleared | xmas days to the industrial loan. out and the buildings turned into! After working hours meetings, | | clubs and other cultural institutions. processions, theatrical pieces and/ ln many places the peasants took | performances of anti-religious na-| down the church bells and sent them | ture took place on the ice rinks and ‘to the nearest industrial towns to | in the workers’ clubs. A sort of |be melted. London Dockers Declare Ship “Black” The “Maine” has now left for | Hamburg. The London dockers ap- | peal to their Hamburg fellow work- LONDON, Jan 9 (By Inprecorr Mail Service).—Four hundred Lon- don dockers refused to unload the “Maine,” : ; Be the oehese eS ie fers to maintain the principle of in- | the sailors should serve a watch of | ternational proletarian solidarity ‘six hours instead of the customary |and to refuse to unload the sweat- four hours. | ship “Maine.” Cohen Tour for Gaston Shifrin Mineola Cases;_ Trenton First; Jan. 30. Joseph Cohen, organizer of the, th section of the International ior Defense, will begin his tour cities. He will visit Trenton, N. J., Thursday and Friday, January 30 and $1; Philadelphia and vicinity (Camden, Vineland, Chester and others) Saturday, February 1 to February 8; Atlantic City, N. J., February 8 and 9; Wilmington, Del., | February 10 and 11; Baltimore, Md., February 12 to 16; Washington, today on the intensive campaign of | January 16 to 19; sympathizers and the defense organization on hehalf | friends in all these cities have) of the Gastonia-Shifrin-Mineola de-| pledged themselves to aid Cohen in fund. his tour, in seeing to it that there | will address meetings. hold lee- will be large attendance at all the and visit individuals in ten | meetings, i} | ists and the imperialists to reckon with February 7 at 8 p. m. at Labor Lyc- | ing and Ventilating Systems struck (against violations of the rules. Suideod by long lines of workers} tried to flee the sergeant, and was waiting for work at the plants here. | ‘LONG LIVE THE STRUGGLE FOR A SOVIET INDIA” shot in the back. Open Letter of the Young Communist International To the All-India Youth Congress and To All Young Workers and Peasants of India. Comrades and Brothers! ‘HE Young Communist International in the name of millions of young workers of the world, addresses itself to your Congress and to all young toilers of India on questions of interest to hundreds of millions of the Indian people. The Young Communist International is an organization of the best representatives of the toiling youth of 63 countries, and has every- where been in the front ranks in the struggle against capitalism. Its members stood in the front ranks of the great Chinese revolution, just as they are fighting now in all parts of the world for the emancipation of India. We, as friends and comrades who have shown in deed our devotion to the interests of the colonial peoples and the world revolution, now address ourselves to you. The progressive representatives of the In- dian people, the workers, are actively fighting against imperialism and exploitation, showing an example of heroism and tenacity in the | struggle for the liberation of the Indian people which has brought them forward as the lead- ers of the Indian Revolution. The spirit of revolt among the Indian peasantry against the landlords and imperialists is growing in ma- turity. The revolutionary struggle of the workers ‘and peasants of India is only a part of the world struggle agajnst imperialism, a part of the world revolution. Already imperialism has lost one-sixth of the globe—the Union of So- cialist Soviet Republics, in which the nations that inhabit it are building a new life, build- ing up socialism an} in which all national hatred has been forgotten. The Soviet Union is the fatherland of the workers of the world, the friend of all oppressed peoples in their liberation war, and just as the imperialists of the world are preparing for war, against that country, so must the workers of the world pre- pare for its defense. The activity of the masses of India in the fight for a new life, their heroism, their good organization, have shown to the world what events are maturing in India and have at the same time compelled the liberals, the reform- the* force of the mass movement of the workers and peasants. The imperialists, as represented by the “Labor Government” of Great Britain, are pre- paring weapons and soldiers against the mass movement of the workers and peasants, will try to drown their revolutionary struggles in blood, while playing upon the demands of the Indian people by promising Dominion rights to India in the distant future. The nationalist bourgeoisie, pretending readiness to fight against imperialism, is in fact throttling the Indian people and especially its progressive champions—the Indian workers, as seen in the betrayal of the peasants of Bardoli, the strug- gle carried on in Bombay against strikes, and its compromise on the question of Dominian rights. The National Congress, which repre- sents the interests of the bourgeoisie and lib- eral landlords, actually retards the revolution- ary movement, uttering revolutionary phrases id etop to (depri rive it of its revolutionary char- “3 lon~ ago betrayed the masses ef the Indian people and cannot lead their go struggle “against British imperialism, its ob- ject is to arrive at a peaceful agreement with the British imperialists for the oppression of the Indian people. Every honest revolutionary who believes not in what people, political parties and organiza- tions say, but in what they do, will see that all the talk of the leaders of the National Congress and of the League of Independence is downright deception of the masses, which becomes more dangerous now, when the mass of workers, peasants and toilers have shown their readiness to fight. Their best repre- sentatives are now in the jails of the Labor Government—with the actual benediction of the leaders of the National Congress. The Labor Government of British Imperial- ism will continue to promulgate laws to worsen the conditions of the masses, legalizing exploitation and slavety. The National Con- gress will “retaliate” by issuing declarations that “there can be no fight now and that the people must wait.” Comrades and brothers, many of you have. already worked among the masses, have come forth from the masses and known their senti- ments, Many of you, while actively fighting against British imperialism, still believe in the National Congress, in the League of Inde- pendence, and in the identity of the classes and the Indian people. Many of you really want to go to the masses of workers and peas- ants, to help them build and develop their or- ganizations. It is to you that we now appeal. Sever your contact with the National Con- gress and the League of Independence, dis- close their falseness and treachery. Show them up for what they are, as assis- tants of British imperialism. Drive the traitors, the phrasemongers, out of your ranks, Everyone of you who takes part in the movement of the youth, who is an honest fight- er and who wants to fight with all sisi means against British imperialism for the ‘ benefit of the Indian people must understand that he has nothing in common with the lib- eral bourgeoisie, the landlords, and their spine- less intellectual flunkeys. What is it that you must fight for? You must fight not in the interests of a handful of moneybags, but in the interests of the 400 million Indian people, you must fight for Com- munism—our ultimate aim, for the abolition of exploitation of man by man, for full equal- ity of all people. But for this one must fight in India first of all for the workers’ right to strike, to organize their trade unions, to work an 8-hour day, to enjoy human conditions, to abolish exploitation in the factories, mills and railways, ete: The workers must be helped in their struggle against exploitation, The strug- gle of the workers is a struggle in the inter- ests of all Indian people. The Indian workers have already been and must be the leaders and teachers of the mass of Indian toilers, You must fight for the right of the peas- ants to the land, for the confiscation of the landed estates, for the annulment of usurious debts, the abolition of usury, ard the aboli- tion of feudal relations. The peasants must be helped in their struggle for land, They must be heiped to seize the land and to get rid of the landlords, to organize in the strug- gle against the landlords and against British unperialism, A struggle must be waged for freedom— | not in words, but in deeds. Such freedom can be guaranteed only by a workers’ and peas- ants’ government, by Soviets. Any other gov- | ernment in India will be a government of vio- lence and oppression. Anyone who fights against the establishment of a Soviet Govern- ment in India differs from the British imper- jalists only in the methods of oppression of | the Indian people. How to fight? lutionary one, the methods used by such peo- ple as Nehru Junior, people who fight against British imperialism with their tongues in the homes of the rich, at Liberal meetings, must be exposed. The workers must be helped to organize their strikes, the peasants must be helped to seize the land, and preparations must be made for a general strike of the In- dian masses. A general political strike will show the masses their strength, will organize them, and will deliver a serious blow to Bri- tish imperialism. Prepare for a general strike, organize committees of action, organize the masses, disarm imperialism and attract the mass of soldiers to the side of revolution, work among the forces. We reject individual ter- ror as a method. Mass action is the best weapon in the hands of the revolution, Whom to fight with? You must go to- gether with the workers and peasants, to- gether with the Communists and with the Young Communist League of India, who alone are capable of leading the Indian masses to the end. The Indian Communists are the van- guard of the Indian working class. The Young Communist League is the vanguard of the young workers of India. We call upon the best of you to join and build the Young Com- munist League which aims at the preparation of the masses of young toilers for revolution- ary conflicts by means of active participation in the daily struggle of the workers and peas- ants against landlord and capitalist exploita- tion. The Young Communist League fights in the interests of the young workers and peasants. It aims at the securing of better working con- ditions for the young workers, and at leading their struggle, and takes steps towards their education. The YCL fights for the revolution- ary enlightenment of all young toilers. Build the Young Communist League. Draw the young workers and the best revolutionary . representatives of young peasants into the or- ganization. Only under the leadership of the Young Communist League of India will the movement of the Indian youth be able to fulfil its historical mission—to be in the front ranks of the Indian revolution. Long live the revolutionary struggle for a Soviet India! Long live the revolutionary youth of India! Down with the leadership of the National Congress and the League of Inlependence! Long live the Communist Party of India! Long live the Union of Socialist Soviet Re- publics! Executive Committee of the Young Com- munist International, Executive Committee YCL Great Britain. Executive Committee YCL Germany, Executive Committee YCL China, Executive Committee YCL France. Executive Committee YCL Holland. Executive Committee YCL America. 4 The fight must be a revo- | FRIENDS OF SOVIET UNION CALL INT'L MEET FOR FEB. 22-28 ‘Mobilize For the Defense of the Soviet Union | Against Imperial War Danger | Congress To Be Held in Essen Under wey of Int’l Committee e Committee of the Friends | viet Union appeals to all ations and all individual in the labour movement, nd to the 1¢,-v.entatives of the dical intelleginzia sympathizing , |with the socialist reconstruction of lthe Soviet Union, and calls upon these to take part in the work of the International Conference, | The greatness of the events tak- s jing place in the Soviet Union and the seriousness of the position an| characterized by the intensified ' campaign staged against the Soviet Union by its enemies and by the growing preparations for war, de- jmand imperatively that all the friends of the Soviet Union should _The eyes of the whole world are tic ed to the Soviet i 1- | the lowing with intense interest the \news relating to the carrying out of the gigantic work of socialist | reconstruction. The imperialist great powe' alarmed at the actual success of nd |socialism in the Soviet Union, janxious to save what can be at the last moment are inte! their efforts—even in where so-called labour gover: jare at the helm—to ass anti-Sovie’ front, and to the long projected war a: land of ane workers ar Tr | capitalist countries | assemblies of the eae ts: her together and should | League of Nations, Kellogg Pact, |sify their measures in support ai reparations negotiating, and disar-|jin protection of socialist x mament conferences are enliste’ the cause of intervention the Soviet Union. In view of these intensified slan- |der campaigns and war pr | tions the friends of the Soviet too must redouble their effort: |number of the friends of the $ Union, and their determin; fight against vie threate are growing steadily and movement of the par rial Union, has been country #2 his return | from the Soviet Union is head of delegation to the’ celebration, The ial Union here has arranged! ome for him for Wednesday, nont Temple, Lorimer: St. Boston. Admis- sion will be 50 cents. | delegates sent by the workers jcountries to the Soviet Union on the occasion of the tenth anniver- | sary of the Russian revolution, is | on the road to become a broad mass movement. In order to confer on| CLEVELAND, Ohio, Jan, 31.— the most urgent tasks of the Com- | Over 300 Cleveland workers greeted mittee, with the aim of extending Pred Beal, and defying the police, lits activities, the international com- marched from the station singing mittee convocates the international revolutionary songs. Placards de- {conference of the Friends of the | the Gastonia sentence. The Soviet Union, for Essen, held a mass meeting in the and 23, 1930, d i The Sections of the Committee city. A big meeting was thon held are preparing for this international at 6021 St. Clair Ave. About 100 gathering by means of national | Negro workers Liveerue) Beal, conference, | But today the number of sincere! Chicago Women’s Day friends of the Soviet Un International Women’s Day wil far beyond the organizations a be celebrated in-Chicago March “4 individual members belonging to the | the People’s Auditorium, oa Sections. Theref the '‘erna- | Chicago Ave. Greet t Beal In Cleve In Cleveland Feb. 22, struction. st | | Greet cyan in Be in Boston | ' BOSTON, Jan. 3:. Louis ~ | Hyman, of the Needle Trades Work- 36 8 ey 1 |FOURTH ANNUAL COLOR “BALL” LIGH’ at WESTMINSTER HALL 73 Lenox Avenue, near 14th Street TONIGHT! TONIGHT! Given by HARLEM PROGRESSIVE YOUTH CLUB Musie by Union Radio Artist Tenth Anniversary of THE UKRAINIAN DAILY NEWS will be celebrated by a | GRAND JUBILEE CONCERT Tomorrow Evening, at 6 O'clock MANHATTAN LYCEUM 66-68 East Fourth Stree, New York City ‘ . Program: Ukrainian Workers Chorus V. DILOFF, Baritone, in a new repertoir Group of Ukrainian Bandourists Interpretive Dancing Singers from Other Cities Speakers ADMISSION 50¢c——CHILDREN 10¢ Come and help in maintaing this unit of the militant revolutionary ENTERTAINMENT and DANCE given by NOR ASHKHARH, Armenian Weekly Communist Organ TONIGHT at 7 O’CLOCK Special Art Program j WORKERS CENTER, 26-28 Union Square, _ Admission 50 Cents Sa SE rie ce nate ths te ante ASR IN IS Reve TAR TTA SOR. ENTERTAINMENT and DANCE TONIGHT AT 8:30 at LABOR TEMPLE 243 Hast 84th Street, New York City Greeting Auspices: METAL WOR Segtion of the T..U. U. L. ERS INDUSTRIAL LEAGUE Admission 50 Centa Co eee HunncEl Renee eon ntact omnes. Gr SORA NACE se MASK and CIVIC BALL BAKERS UNION NO. 164 Amalgamated Food Workers at AMBASSADOR HALL 3861 Third Ave. Near Claremont Parkway TONIGHT Dancing at 8:30 Tickets, 50c. Hat Cheeks, 60e. Eat at— COOPERATIVE RESTAURANT 26-28 UNION SQUARE Service—Self-Service FRESH VEGETABLES OUR SPECIALTY, * of the " ‘ [ { 1 0. d

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