The Daily Worker Newspaper, February 3, 1930, Page 2

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y iwo SPEED-UP, FEW SAFETY DiVICES MAIMED 49,000 DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1 930 PiNNSYLVANIA MINERS es Rationalization £ Brings More Than 2,000 Deaths to Penn. Miners Than 166,669 Industrial Accidents During | Year; Bosses Profits Swell nISBURGH » method and lack of in the mines resulted, during 1929, just released reveal. ily killing and s is found in Workmen's tor of the ion Bureau to the state and industry. arr aS ‘ i ee dE Rte “rani 4 on 18 ‘es ot Rime tie & Admit Misery n All Cities B CHICAGO, Feb. 2,—The finan- cial ¢ of the City of Chicago, h over 40,990 city workers still unpaid, is e. The ba over the profi ing money to the city gov- ment. ern | Niean Hamilton Club, com- of the leading Chicago bosses, | ent a plan for digging the | es out of the bog, | Crisis In All Cities. | McClure said, “ But other cities and com- nit have faced similar prob- New. York is heading in the direction as fast as it can with a population only twice ze as Chicago’s, yet with a three times greater.” eClure intimated that the whole- sale grefting indulged in by the Thompson Gang in Chicago is dupli-, cated in New York by the Tammany | Hall politicians who rule New York} City. The United Charities are making’! capital of the situation in Chicago, | sending out wide-spread appeals for donations to take care of city work- ers who are working but receive no pay, and to handle the many eviction cases for non-payment of rent. TUUL Takes Action. “The emergency which thousands ef Chicago's needy families face ow- ing to the eonditon of the city and county finances continues serious,” said Joel D, Hunter, superintendent | of the charities organization. He did not mention the fact that there is growing mass unemploy- ment in Chicago and the mobilization | of an unemployment council under the leadership of the Trade Union| Unity League to fight for unemptoy- | ment relief, and not beg for charity. The Chicago unemployed workers are being organized to take part in the international unemployment dem- | onstration which comes to a head on ‘Feb. 26. German Jobless Hold Congress) (Continued from Page One) growing army of unemployed in all capitalist lands. “Labor” Government Cheats Jobless. In Great Britain, with the help of the slimy “labor” government, more and more workers are being thrown on the streets. The figures issued for the two weeks, ending December 30, show the number of registered unemployed in Great Bri- tain is 1,510,200. This represents an increase of 206,643 out-of-work added to the jobless army in less than 15 days! But what is worse, the “labor” government is trying to cheat every possible unemployed worker ovt of relief due them. In Germany, the latest reports show 3,500,000 unemployed workers. This number is rapidly increasing. | rep sa total of 2,012 | plo Pa, Jan, 31.— | deaths oceurring in industr's! ac- | that 166,669 of | accidents of all kinds occurred dur- | i cidents, and states ling the year, The number of min- s accidents to 49,013 min-|ers killed in accidents is not given. | | Of the mine accidents, |reported from the anthracite fields | and 23,123 from the fields, All these figures are obviously very conservative, being only those rted to the state by the em- bituminous N.T.W.LU. Statement On Its Strike Policy (Continued from Page One) Fight against them militantly wherever you meet them. | (Communist Party Calls “Dressmakers; The International company union is responsible for the present miserable sweat shop conditions under which the dress-| makers are working. The Interna-| tional company union is the agency of the bosses and you must fight| and destroy it. “The Industrial Union is your | _ union, and is administered and con-| trolled by the workers through the | shop delegates, which you your-| selves elect. You must build your} McClure, New York cani- | union—for only under the leadership | at editor, was called upon by the of your union can you win better! erated police officer Kiritz conditions in the shops. Make It a Real Strike. “Dressmakers; Be on your guard. | When the bosses, on the day of the | in order to help the company union | carry through its betrayal against | you, you must immediately come to/ the Industrial Union, 131 West 28th St., and we will, together with you, declare these shops on strike and! through struggle force the bosses to give you better conditions, Dressmakers: Mobilize! Join and spread the organization campaign conducted by the Industrial Union, the campaign to establish the 40- hour week, minimum seales, the right to the job, ete., the campaign which will prepare the ground for a real general strike of all dress- makers under the leadership of the N.T.W.LU. - “Build shop committees! “Elect delegates to the shop dele- gates’ council! “Spread the paign! “Strike only at the call and under the leadership of the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union —the union of the workers. “Down with the company union! “Down with the fake strike lock out of the bosses and their agents! “Long live the struggle of the needle trades workers for better conditions under the leadership of the Needle Trades Workers Indus- ° trial Union! “Forward to the struggle to union- ize the dress industry! War Plots Rife At London Meet (Continued from Page One) to be patient, democrat, republican and socialist alike, as everything possible is being done to get other imperialist powers, particularly England, to disarm, while America is to be allowed to build a bigger navy. Thus he remarked, that “Limitation and reduction from the American standpoint are connected with parity. This complicates the problem and makes satisfactory re- ductions difficult to secure.” A brilliant idea seems to have been discovered Saturday to “set- tle” Italy’s demand for “parity” with France. France rejects the whole idea as menacing her Medit- erranean colonies, but the idea’s brilliance consists in getting France to agree to parity “in principle,” with the assurance that Italy is too poor to build enough warships to organization cam- Reports from Berlin indicate that in one week the number of workless in- creased by 20,424, bringing the un- employed in the Berlin Brandenburg district up to 458,784, Of this num- ber 360,000 are in Berlin, Only 197, 639 receive a small pittance of un- employment relief. Many thousands are in desperate need, facing actual starvation. Besides this, there are many shut- downs in the building industry, the dismissals in the metal and wood adcustry that are causing more and amore unemployment. If the eppli- ton of the Berlin-Karlsruhe In- works to shut down its s granted, another 12.500 men men will be added to the nemployed army. Cerman workers are organ- jer* end fighting against the in- «>> unemployment. Under the p of the Communist Party, rovers are demanding @ seven- b or do, higher wages, and unem- pl ment relief. Ber‘ in the international mass pont eet for February 26. shout Your Conditions iy Worker : Correspondent, w About ay ie The mobilization | anose imperialists with being “Com- of the German workers will culmi-| munists.” ation against wnemploy-| being shaken in Korea, however, but really attain parity. There may be, of course, an “un derstanding” with Italy to get the money from some other imperialist power in exchange for a war alli- ance of armed support, but that, as well as what all the imperialists are plotting against the Soviet Union, is hidden in the darkness of secrecy, Yet this secrecy was loudly repudiated by Secretary Stimson when he left Americe— though it is admitted openly here that Stimson is the one who pro- posed that there be no open con- ference and thet everything be secret, Workers! This Is Your Paper. Write for It. Distribute It Among Your Fellow Workers! MASS UPRISINGS SHAKE KO} 4 A. (Continued from Page One) Not only is Japanese imperialism in Japan itself. This is shown by | for decent conditions. | “The grand jury has put the Needle Trades Workers Industrial | } ‘y year thousands devices. Photo shows familie: | carly in 1928, when 25 miners of miners ar f miners waiting before Mine 18 of the Ind were murdered by the operators’ greed for profits, caused by presence of gas in the mine, and sparks from speed-up machinery. killed Speed Up in Mines Increase Accidents and maimed, because of speed-up and lack of safety ial Coal Co. in Illinois, This explosion was HONORS FOR GOP “KILLING KATOVIS "PART OF TERROR | | | For Workers’ Answer Stating that the exoneration of the murder of Steve Ka Communist fighter, by the Tam- | many-Walker-Whalen police, was ex- pected, the District Buro of the Communist Party, District New York, has issued the following state- ment: “The Bronx County grand jury, its session on Jan. 31 has exon-| for the} murder of Steve Katovis. No work-| er could have any illusions as to what the decision of the Bronx} County grand jury would be. The} grand jury composed of bankers and | icago is at al fake strike closed down their ShOPS | business men had a specific func-| tion—to sanction the murder of workers who fight on the picket line stamp of approval on the shooting | down of workers by the police, de- | tectives and gangsters. This is the) function of the canitalist court and) all other capitalist institutions, | which recognize that in this period the workers will struggle and that the police have their duty to per- form—namely to murder the best fighters of the working class. What Courts Are For, “Nothing else must be expected of a capitalist court. At this per- iod, when the workers are fighting against the rotten conditions in the shops, when they are demanding shorter hours and higher wages when they are demanding the right to organize, strike and picket with- out interference of the police and courts, when millions of workers are unemployed the capitalist courts and the police use their brutal pow- er to make an assault on the workers. “The capitalists disregard their| own mandates to such a degree that although the injunction against the strikers at Miller’s Food Market,) where Steve Katovis was murdered | by the police, was vacated, two) women picketing for the Food| Clerks’ Union, were brutally beaten up by the detectives. “The Communists have no _illu- sions and the workers must learn} ‘from the current experiences, The) | eapitalist courts and police are for| |the protection of the capitalists) against the fighting workers. | “The capitalist courts and police are for the protection of the work- ers who submit to the bosses, Thus Walker has promised full police pro- tection to the Schlesinger-Green In- ternational Ladies’ Garment Work- | ers company union, which is calling a fake stoppage on Feb. 3, By pre-} arrangement with the authorities, the traitors at the head of this or- ganization will be granted full po- lice protection. The reason is clear: This is a company union working hand in hand with the dress manu- facturers. But fighting workers are shot down by the police. “The Bronx Grand Jury session exposed the role of the American Civil Liberties Union, which first | sanctioned the use of police violence against the murder of Steve Ka-! tovis, and then appealed to the hangmen’s court to place responsi- bility upon the police who shot down Steve Katovis. Mighty Demonstration, “The Bronx County grand jury exposed the social fascist role of the socialist party which sees in the shooting of Steve Katovis, the fight- ing worker, only a mania of the Communists to be martyrs. “The demonstration at the funeral of Steve Katovis, which was a mighty protest of New York work- ers not. only against the savagery of the police, but also a demonstra- tion against uneniployment, against the growing danger of war, against the breaking off of relations of the Mexican fascist government with the government of the Soviet Union, is the answer that the workers of New York have given to the police, the courts, the American Federa- tion of Labor, the socialist party and the American Civil Liberties Union, “The workers have learned that they can obtain their rights only by fighting for them. The Communist Party is mobilizing the workers for Section 2 Calls Mass Meeting to Mobilize Jobless, February 4 The first of a secies of meetings to mobilize the thousands of unem- ployed workers of the section has i called by Section 2 of the Com- munist Party for Tuesday, Feb. 4 at 1 p. m. at 1179 Broadwa With armies of workers walking the streets in search of work for| iv! Delegate System | CHICAGO, Ill, Feb. 2—The| Union, has finished election of local | executives of delegates to the joint council, and of officers, The trans- formation of the present mixed form | into a complete shop, delegate sys- tem, will be presented to the mem- bership for discussion in a concrete form suited to the situation in Chi- cago in the very near future. The newly elected joint council has already worked out plans for strengthening the organizing cam- paign in the dress and the millinery trades, with the aim of getting the workers in both to strike for union shops and union conditions. There are many unemployed and the bosses are taking advantage of it to cut wages and lower conditions. In the millinery trade the “Yel- low Dog Contract” lockout continues. The Zaritsky machine of the Cap and Millinery workers, with the aim of still further strengthening the grip of the bosses’ over the workers, are already giving up even the ap- pearance of a struggle. The Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union, is conducting the strike of the millin- ery workers over the heads of the Zaritsky gang. - The Industrial Union is calling shop conferences of the dress shops for Thursday, February 13, 6 p. m., at 28 South Wells St., and of the millinery shops, for Friday, Febru- ary 14, at 6 p. m., at 177 North | State St., room 310, All workers in the dress and mil- linery shops are urged to hold shop meeting without delay and elect delegates to the shop conferences. down in the performance ‘of this Communist working class duty, rep- resents the working class of the United States in struggle. All over the country, the workers know why he died. All over the country they know the name of the worker and Communist, Steve Katovis. They are rallying to the banner of the Communizt Party, they are joining the fighting Trade Union Unity League. This is the answer—the fitting and best answerthat the workers can give to the capitalists’ government and its allies.” * * 8 The membership meeting of the cafeteria workers adopted a resolu- tion pledging: “We will fight on as Katovis fought for the fundamental right of labor to organize We will crganize 19 fight on the picket line and wherever neressary until we shall be alle to establish a work. ees’ and farncere’ government. Build The Daily Worker—Send fin Your Share of the 15,000 New Subs, Eat at— this fight and the support given the fact that during December many students were arrested in Tokio, and Become a | not by police, but by troops of the army. the Communists in this struggle is the best and only answer. “Steve Katovis, the first Commu- |‘ nist fighter in New York te be shot | months, the only hope for relief is| the organization of the unemployed. | Che Communist Party calls upon the} workers out of work to fight, not to starve. Attend the unemployed meetings of the Communist Party and organ- ize for work or wages. TW LEADS HAT STRIKE, CHICAGO Re-organizing on Shop|: 400 MINERS OUT AT MOUNDSVILLE HIT WAGE CUT Fight Under N. M. U. Militant Leadership MOUNDSVILLE, W. Va., Feb. 2. —Under the leadership of the Na-| tional Miners’ Union, 400 coal min-} ers are.on strike here against the third wage cut in one year in the} Paisley mine. The tonnage rate was cut from 51 to 45 cents. Mass picketing is being organized in the face of a standing injune- tion. *An enthusiastic mass meeting was held at the Paisley mine, with | Guynn, Tash and Garlin as speak- ers. Every effort is being made By the N. M. U. to spread the strike to other mines. Paisley is the owner of the Valley Camp coal mine where scores of workers were murdered by being | foreed to work in a gas filled mine | that blew up last year, Arrange Big Defense Bazaar at New Star’ Casino, Feb. 26-Mar.1 Workers of every nationality and race are working together for the biggest bazaar in the history of the New York district of the Interna- tional Labor Defense, in New Star Casino, Feb. 26, 27, 28, Mar. 1 and 2. J. Ginsburg is in charge of the bazaar committee. Seven workers more are to cooperate with him. The success, Communist Activities Workers School. Registration assistance needed at once. Afternoons and evenings. Please respond, Comrade Having Spare Room, To house students of National Training School for six weeks, please communicate at oncé with Workers School, 26 Union Sq, Stuy. 7770. Unit 3, Section 4, Tuesday 8 m. at new headquar- ters, 386 Lenox -Ave. #.. §) 0 8 Unit 7F, Section 2. Wednesday, 6.80 p. m., 1179 Broad- way, Unemployment Gincuaaion: Unit 2%, Section 6. Tonight, 8.30 p, m., 688 Broadway, Whipple Street entrance, Unit 6F, Section 1. Tuesday, 27 B. 4th St, * Agitprop. Unemployment outlines ready, RR RE Unit 12%, Section 3, Tuesday, 6.20 p. m. Labor and Fraternal Organizations All income affairs, such as bazaars, dances, concerts, etc, for which or- ganizations desire publicity in this column, must be pafd for at the rate of $1.00 for a singe insertion, $2.00 for three insertions. The space lowed at this rate is a maximum five Hines with five words to each line. A total of 25 words. % Nat Turner Branch IL.D, Tuesday 8 P iy 6 Lenox Ave, Brownsville 1,L.D, Tuesday, & = my 105 grnctera Ave. Gastonia Branch LL.D. Tuesday, 1179 Broadway. Discus; sion on “TLD and organization of Negro Workers.” * oo # Hungarian and Gérman Womens m Tuesday, 8p. rh, 842, 83rd St, Lecture on birth control by Mary Macaulay. | ones, eee) Womens Council No. 11, Tonight § p, m. 2700 Bronx Park Bast. M. Taft on “Role of Commu+ nist Party in Class Struggles. * + Council 4 ana ‘wi jamabure Workers Joint lecture, Tuesday, § p. mi, 68 Whipple St., Brooklyn. Nous Hyman on “Immediate Tas! of Needle Trades Industrial Uni \Liebknecht Memorial Anti-War Demonstration FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 7 : YOUNG COMMUNIST LEAGUE, DISTRICT 2 Manhattan Lyceum, 66 E. Fourth St. Speakers—Play—Recitals Dances—Movies Admission 35c COOPERATIVE RESTAURANT 26-28 UNION SQUARE Service—Self-Service FE’ Sil VEGETABLES OUR SPECIALTY Arthur Hopkins to Present “Rebound” at Plymouth Arthur Hopkin’s new production “Rebound” opens at the Plymouth tonight. This is a comedy by Ogden Stewart with Hope V | Cast also includes Donn Cook, art, Walter Walker, iams, George MacQuarrie. “Many a Slip,” by Edith Fitz- gerald and Robert Riskin comes to the Little Theatre this evening. | Sylvia Sidney, Dougless Montgom- jery and Dorothy Sands are in the east. “Dishonored Lady,” by Margaret Ayer Barnes and Edward Sheldon, |Katharine Cornell’s starring vehicle opens at the Empire Theatre on Tuesday. Other players include Francis Lister, Harvey Stephens, Fred L, Tiden, Fortunio Bonanova and Paul Harvey. Wednesday evening at the 48th Street Theatre, Otto Kruger will be jseen in “The Boundary Line,” a new |play by Dana Burnet, Katherine Al- jexander, Winifred Lenihan, Charles |Trowbridge, John T. Doyle and Miriam Sears are other players. “Out of a Blue Sky,” a comedy jadapted by Leslie Howard from the German of Hans Chlumberg, opens at the Booth Theatre, Thursday eve- jning. Katherine Wilson, Warren | William, Gregory Ratoff and Will- jiam Gargan. Build The Daily Worker—Send in Your Share of the 15,000 New Subs. | 2 | nr. K. 0 “It’s a fine picture, realistic use of Rip ‘Van Winkle theme and vivid scenes of present day Russia.” —Daily Worker. yviyia cer given Pi oe pressive, imagin- | —N. ¥, Times. | | | The Rebirth of a Robert Will- | |CAMEO: AMKINO PRESENTS The American Premiere “A Fragment |of an Empire” mounting number of cases néces- | sitate that the bazaar be a great! ANN ANDREWS. si Rare ™ Now playing in “Recapture,” a new play by Preston Sturges, at the Eltinge Theatre, | SOVKINO FILMS AT 5S: |}OND AVENUE PLAYHOUSE A double feature program will be shown on Monday. Tuesday and Wednesday at the Second Avenue |Theatre. The pictures include “The i Love of Jeanne Ney,” a story of the ‘Soviet revolution and “Looping the ‘ Loop,” a Ufa production of circus life. Beginning Thursday and continu- thru Sunday, will be shown an- other Sovkino release,” “The Man From the Restaurant,” with the noted Russian actor, M. Chekhoff, in the leading role. “Por All Kind of Insurance” (CARL BRODSKY Telephone: Murray Hill 5550 7 East 42nd Street, New York | BRAILOWSKY SOLOIST WITH PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA | Alexander Brailowsky will be the soloist with the Philharmonic this week, playing the Chopin E minor | Concerto on Thursday evening, Fri- day afternoon, and Sunday after- |noon at Carnegie Hall. The re- | mainder of Molmari’s program con- sists of the Handel Concerto No. 10 in D minor for string orchestra, with |Guidi, Pogany, Wallenstein and \Kurthy playing solo parts, and the Beethoven Fourth Symphony. The third of the second series of |Children’s Concerts under Ernest seas is scheduled for next Sat- urday morning at Carnegie Hall. |\sAMUSEMENTS- 42nd St, & Bway Phone Wisconsin 1789 QNnd BIG WEEK “Russian Movie Wins 3 Prize.” Star —Datly News, e of the most satisfactory pictures yet to emerge from So- viet Russia.” y. American, PRODUCED BY SOVKINO OF MOSCOW Shell-Shocked Man TREMENDOUS, MIGHTY, CONSTRUCTIVE The Tremendous Tragedy “EVOLUTION” a comprehensive séreen exposi- tion of the theory of man's origin by the producers of the EINSTEIN film. Theatre Guild Productions “METEOR” By 8. N. BEHRMAN GUILD ¥- $% Svs. 8:60 Mats, Th.@Sat. 2:40 “RED RUST” By Kirchon & Ouspensky LAST WEEK! MAR CK 45th street TIN BE W. of 8 Av. 5 $:40. Mate, Thursday md Saturday at 2:40 Ethel Barrimore Theatre ATth Street, West of Brond: Eves, 8:50, Mats. Wed. z Sate 2:30 Death Takes a Holiday A comedy about life. with PHILIP MERIVALE ELTINGE Then. roadway. Ever 42nd St, W. of t 8250 Mats, Wednesday and Sat i A. H. WOODS Presents “RECAPTURE” A Love Story by Preston Sturge: Author of “Strictly Dishonorable” YORK MILL STRIKE. and warpers in the mill here struck against wage cuts. EAST SIDE Continuous Noon to Midnight. Beg A Loon the Now Playing! | Special Anniversary Triple-Feature. Program! VICTOR HUGO’S Immortal Drama of the Proletariat—Oppressed and Triumphant LES MISERABLES YORK, Pa. (By Mail).—Winders | 2nd Ave. Playhouse 188 BECOND AVENUE, CORNER !1GHTH STREET Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, February 3, 4 and 5 DOUBLE-FEATURE PROGRAM S OF JEANNE NEY revolutionary novel by I, Ehrenberg. a young girl cought in the tides" Of Savors - LOOP THE LOOP ia a thellling clreun love story with WERNER KRAUS of the French Revolution! ENACTED BY A CAST OF 10,000 FILM GUILD CINEMA EIGHTH STRE) ifth and Sixth Avenues SPRing 5095—5000 Continuous daily noon to midnite Special Forenoon Prices, 12-2—i5¢ Between bees REPERTORY lth st Eves. 8:30, Mate, Thur. Sat., 2:20 | 600, $1. $1.60 | Tonight—“TH' EVA Le GALLIENNE. Director SHA GULL” OPEN DOOR” and EN HAVE THEIR 50th St. & 7th Av. Eve. 8:30 Mats, Thurs, and Sat. JOLSON’S OSCAR STRAUS’ OPERETTA RCE ith LES 5 Allee MacKensie, Vivian Hart and Roy Cropper NEJGHBORHOOD THEATRES ; Loew’s “Big 2” PITKIN || PARADISE Pitkin Avenue Grand Concourse Brooklyn Bronz ON BOTH SCREENS TALKING BILL HAINES IN “NAVY BLUES” ALL TALKING ‘ M-G-M Picture Stage Shows—Both Thentres from CAPITOL THEATRE, BROADWAY THEATRES Popular Prices, mendous my The Chocolate Soldier’ | Cooperators! Patronize CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. ¥ W. I. R. CLOTHING STORE | 542 BROOK AVENUE Telephone Ludlow 3098 Cleaning, Pressing, Repairing High Class Work Done Goods Called for and Delivered. All profits go towards strikers and their families. SHOW YOUR SOLIDARITY WITH THE WORKERS! WORKERS’ CENTER BARBER SHOP Moved to 30 Union Square FREIHEIT BLDG.——Main Floor Opening for Three Children Ages 14 to 36 months at ,;Our Nursery School | 338 EAST 19TH ST. (near Stuyvesant Park) Group training for children from 9a. m. to 5 p..mt., freeing mothers for work or activity in the movement. Interested parents should apply in person, or phone Gramercy 2487 * VEGETARIAN Dairy RESTAURANT omrades Alwayn Bind it Pleasant to Dine ai nce. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx (near 174th St, Stati PHONE = INTBRVALE —= RATIONAL Vegetarian RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVE] UE 1 Bet. 13th and 13th Sta. Strictly Vegetarizn Food ‘HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 5865 Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: FTALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 102 E.12th St. New York All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant || 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx (DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST Beis Aneta SQUARE other office . Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST 249 HAST 115: Cor. “Second Aves * Naw york DAILY EXCEPT FRIDAY Please telephone for nappol Telephone: Lehigh oss erie Advertise your Union Meetings here. For information write to | The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. || . 26-28 Union Sq., New York City ee Hotel & Restaurant / Branch of the Amalgamat ‘ood Business meetin Monday” of the Month cath prey Hducational | meetings—the thi ponsey of the month, Bxecutive onrd | meetings—every — tuesday f ‘oon at 6 o’clock, ! One Union} Jot jommon Enemy to6pm Ank tor Baker's Local 166 Unien! Uebel eee ———— Penaren army tet tur aio minal 1a Kant Ahoeee weleee® and Bare Bae Lit SL Rt cee ee

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