The Daily Worker Newspaper, April 28, 1930, Page 2

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CZARIST GENERAL SAYS|MOBILIZE MAY 1 HE AWAITS CALL FOR WAR ON SOVIET UNION The Moment the Imperialist Bandits Say the Word Will Attack Distribute 25,000 Daily Workers to Workers PHILADELPHIA, Pa., April 27. —Workers are circulating 150,000 leaflets and 25,000 copies of the | special May Day edition of the Daily Worker to mobilize the greatest mass demonstration and__politicei strike in the factories that has ever and Red Army Is Also Seum Proletaria Ready for Czarist World PARIS R r officers, young ll grab arms and ointed posts.” composed mainly the degenerate nobles, land own- nd other exploiters, which the ian workers and peasants shed h vermine. Miller and g are awaiting the call of the stration will be in City Hall Plaza ments of striking workers and joh less mobilized at preliminary dem- onstrations around the city. and work is events preparatory bandits to attack the vested in the committees elected a n, but his joy will not week ago at the United Front May onfined when he meets pay Conference, to which came 104 rous Red Army and the | delegates from 79 workers’ organ- force of the world proletar- | j7ations, who will rush to the defense of Workers Republic against the Win Other Organizations. arist and imperialist rats. The conference, besides demand- ing the release of the New York frontiers, then all c Department Store Heads Argue for Harder Work tration, voted for the following: To appeal to all organizations that all their members strike or May 1 and participate as a body in the demonstrations. Those or- ganizations which did not attend the conference shall affiliate now. The 18 organizations shall raise be- en them a fund of $300, to pay for leaflets and Daily Worker, etc. A committee of 25 was elected to co-operate with the Communist Party in the May Day preparations by sending out speakers to organ- izations which were not represented. arranging meetings before May 1 raising finances, ete. The conference endorsed the Daily Worker drive for a circulation of lowing a full half day off in i y once a week for The department sters argue that a to work especially hard ep her out of mis- if the half holi- through the hire more has brought a delegation and managers of the k York department is a political bluf: be enforced, but B and others thought pear. The provision they fi: to s | worker Capitalists Crow Over Clubs for Paris Labor Capitalist r r Paris, France, tell of police plans et gangs of t M If the we will receive the “bravest ads as a reward. will soon realize t police is for, and workers have made some revo- he past, when they be- acties such as tions to elect a Daily Worker rep- resentative to attend the Builders Conferences, the first one to be held jon Tuesday, May 20, at 8 p. m. at 1124 Spring Garden St. Please send in the name of the represen- tative to the office, demonstrations. to move out of the cordons of thrown around thi ay t po: We s Master’s Voice Hoover Transmit WASHINGTC republi SES leaders in cong Hoover en- ARRESTS CANNOT STOP nounced that in the forn i by We 7 desired ty Wall Stee NEGRO WORKERS MEETS ; Tammany Clubber | MINNEAPOLIS, Minn, April 27. gee le Cos ‘olice broke up a street meeting i een the held by the Communist Party in i N r of M pee ‘ot nh. Here we the Negro section in Minneapolis, earries on sham fights a pe mere We Thursday, and arrested two of the Street, showed his true colc d front open- | sneakers, D. Moses, district Negro Peet drat work director, and an organizer of ‘eplixee the Trade Union Unity League. This was the third arrest in the | Twin Cities during the last week, ja street meeting in the Negro sec- jtion in St. Paul and a shop gate meeting at the South St. Paul meat es were held with packing plant having been broken 2 organization, as up and the speakers arrested. n czarist white banquet given to the Ta Governor Franklin D. New York. Wheel: lauding the Tamm: Roose made a s y governc ig of the j Fascist War Vets Hide Real Plans A braggart statement from the Weterans of Fore Wars on their s the plans for May Day were issued l roel: All of these meetings were held urday by George William: Duggan - who are going to march for in preparation for the May Day A aes noe, on “Americanism, demonstration, which takes place in chairman of the committee on ar In order to drum up enthusiasm Minneapolis on Bridge Square, 4 air cist march, Duggan |p, m, rangements. for tk flaunting ive of wild figures about The meeting at Sixth and Aldrich munist or the r > expe to be in the was attended by over 500 Negro and Duggan. anks ¢ white workers, who cheered the ee |speakers as they were led away to ss tes > ee Nie © 4h r Apetiarn the police on, crowding around Police Parade Provocation of the Workers jn "aemonstration agamet the Ral Beak ch hcticn acted (ies et Other meetings are being ar- with steel helmets and each ms aration was to kill work- |T@nged on the same corner. hould “become unruly. ng unemployed fuses to die quietly, or any carrying a rapid fire rifle or machine gun formed the center PROTEST FREES en s Saturday in New Yc » picket line is con-| CUBAN WORKER came the “riot wagons,” y the police—agents high sides, and laden with | HAVANA, Cuba, April 27—Higi bombs and more machine gu | , the Czar had his police nio Ordoqui, leader of the strike of Capitalist press and individual po- , 1 who was secretly arrested by agents of the fascist Whalen Wants Breadlines Plus Blackjacks released when the s militantly demonstrated in beha The strike lasted for one and was partly successful. The attempt of the bosses to have only one man on each bus was de- feated, and a driver and conductor will be assigned to each bus as in the In order to carry out the policy of “blackjacks and breadli ’ Tamman unemplo: blackjacker, supporting | en the Salvation Army drive for $52: collected, of cours as starvation the 000 to supply the breadline. Most! army drive. past. 1) SRS Hes | When i : en the International Labor De- Beg Hoover to Ditch Parker fense, 80 East 11th St., New York was informed of Ordoqui’s ar- rest, it immediately cabled to Pres- ident Machado and demanded that he be liberated. The reply signed by Ricardo Her president, stated that Ordoqui was free, but resented the manifestation | of working class solidarity on the part of the I. L. D. WASHINGTON, April 25.—Sen-| Senate who heartily favor the Hoo- ator Watson of Indiana and other) ver anti-wo g class and ani ¢lose Hoover supporters have warn-| Hoover policies will defeat Parker in ed the imperialist chief to withdraw | order to get support at the coming Judge Parker of North Carolina as | elections. Watson told Hoover that nominee for the U. S. Supreme at the most Parker could get only Court, as the vote-catchers in the! 40 out of 96 votes. N. Y. TEXTILE WORKERS! union, such as “For the 7-hour day, 5-day week, “equal pay for equal} : work, regardless of color, age or'3 Convicted in Los st “figh ains! e speed- PILL PICKET MILL MAY 1 sos" st2iy assist the ceri" Angeles for March 6 The New York District. of tho | 2#2inst wage-cuts,” etc. These} LOS ANGELES, Cal., (By Mail). Berar nestiin. Worker stickers have been placed on many | \ 1 i calling upon all the workers in the| Mulls and factories where textile) “Three workers SS aE EE textile industry to be out of the | Workers are employed. besa rppeahoeiis yaa Lary ee 4 i All textile workers are called upon Stvation were tried and two convict- shops and milis on Thursday, May 1 P ry A , to assemble on the corner of East|¢d. They are now serving six At the last membership meeting | Broadway and Jefferson St, at 11:36) months and ten day sentences. The of the district it was decided that)on May 1, from which place they | Charge against the third worker was some of the members are to picket | will form lines and parade with the | dismissed, one of the biggest textile mills in| hundreds of workers to Union Sq, Claude Brohn, who the police this city on Thursday morning and| ayy toxtile arorkers | charged with throwing a brick dur- n : *, out of the)‘ call upon the workers of that mill r WEAN Fe ing the unemployment demonstra- to come out and demonstrate to- parade 70M tion, drew the six months sentence, tether with the rest of the workers which he is now serving in Lincoln in New York. Heights jail. He was also fined Another decision was made that | $500; Vartin Jallalian, | accused. of all the members and non-members pasting ‘stickers, was givet 10 devs are to gather in front of the unior in'the same Jail, “The other: worl headquarters, 2 W. 15th St., afte Ob APaEnis Se liny ECan th the demonstration on Union Squa blocking the sidewalk, was let go. and go in a bus to the Coney Islan: The International Labor Defense de- Stadium for the indoor cclebration fended tie) Hires. workers, ‘rranged by the United Front May Day Conference. To familiarize the textile worke of New York with the plans for th May Day celebrations the union has | says the May Day Ssiled thousands of leaflets and ing for the demon: atigkers with the slogans of the lare Union is mills, fall in line and Rutgers Square to Union Square} on Thursday, May 1, ‘May 1 Call in French, English in Montreal: MONTREAL, Canada, April 27.— | There will be a mass demonstration at 10 a. m. May Day at Place Viger |Square, and a mass meeting and leoncert at 8 p.m. at the Gayety Theatre. “Protest Against Starva- ion Wages and Unemployment,” ILLEGALIZE SYMPATHY STRIKE BOSTON, Mass.,— Workers in | Massachusetts my not legally strike | to obtain the union shop. The state Conference, call- | senate, by vote of 21 to 7, killed a ration, Leaflets hovse measure legalizing such vrinted in French and English. strike IN PHILADELPHIA 60,000 and instructed all organiza. | ‘a, secretary to the| \ILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MOND. APRIL 28, 193 IS WILLING TOOL Promises “Extermination.” The U. S. State Department an- nounced on April 26 that one of its | willing tools in China, General Ho of Chiang Kai-shek, promised to “promptly exterminate” the “Com- munist” forces beseiging the impor- \tant city of Kanchow. Protecting {the missionaries, of course, serves as in countless other cases, mission- laries alw: pose as m danger, giving the imperialist and been seen here. The main demon. native butchers of the workers and | peasants the lofty excuse of fight- to which will come large detach- ing the battle of plunder and ex- loitering, | ploitation against the revolution for the glory of God. The leadership of the May Dey BOSSES BRIBE THE | CLEANERS CLIQUE | Effrat Gang Orders Expulsions For All Workers Who Refuse to Sign The Effrat machine in the Clean-| dustrial Union is calling all needle “collective farming,” a topic which ers & Dyers union has promised the |bosses to force the drivers to sign | individual contracts. This would ‘committee of the March 6 demon-| mean that each driver is tied to the tor, just released from prison, will | shop, and that if he is forced out of | the job he cannot work anymore in the trade, at least not in the same | territory. | The contract stipulates also that should the bosses decide to raise the | price of cleaning a garment from the present 35 cents to 40 cents, any driver who will not be able to keep |up the price will be fired or his commission reduced from 10 per |eent to 5 per cent, a cut of almost 50 per cent in wages. | According to a statement of some | bosses, a conference was held last | Friday where it was decided that | sign individual contracts, the agree- ment, which is supposed to be in |force since April, but in reality is not signed yet, will be void. This will mean that there will be no agreement, and that the check off |system will not bring in any money |to the union grafters. Open Bribery But if Effrat succeeds in forcing \the drivers to sign the contracts, ‘there is a fund of $36,000 for him, jeach boss giving $600, beside the ‘regular check off. | The Effrat gang has sent notices |to the drivers that they must sign, and has threatened expulsion and loss of job. So far the drivers refuse to sign the agreement. The inside workers also refuse to pay dues to the union, because of the eut of four holidays contained in \the agreement, and the general wage cutting campaign going on | with the connivance of the. union of- ficials. The Cleaners & Dyers section of |the Trade Union Unity League, 13 |W. 17th St., calls upon all drivers and inside workers to refuse to pay |dues to the agents of the bosses, to refuse to sign individua clontracts, to organize shop committees in every shop, to defy the bosses and their agents, and not to permit them to fire anyone. ' Jail Yetta Stromberg for School Meeting LOS ANGELES, Calif., April 27. —Yetta Stromberg, who was con- victed under the vicious California Criminal Syndicalism law, was ar- |rested yesterday while speaking at ‘an open air meeting in front of Roosevelt High Sehool here. The meeting had been called pre- paratory to May Day. Three mem- bers of the Young Communist League and one member of the Workers Defense Squad were held on suspicion under the Criminal Syndicalism Law. No bail has been set. The meeting was brutally broken up by student spies and the police. Communist Activities Sec, 2 Daily Worker Campaign Dance Saturday, May 10, 26 Union Sq, jazz band, international dance music. BEB eh: nit 4-F, Se U | Tonight, 6:30 p. m., ee Section 4, | 1800 Seventh Ave, | * # * Y. C. L, Needle Trades. |L_U. must report Tuesday and Thurs: day ‘at 7 a, m. at 131 W. 28th St. for important ‘special work, Section 1 Emergency Task. All unemployed comrades must re- port to section headquarters, Special | work in connection with May Day, Labor and Fraternal Organizations Notice, May Day Demonstration. | All organizations participating in May Day Demonstration must have their orders for banners turned in not later than Tuesday at 3 p, 1m. at 26-28 Union Sa, Room 601, | rx and Halrdreswers T. U, Us 1. night at 18 W,, 17th Bt. at 9 p.m. Women's Council 15 and Furriers’ 1. | Mass May Day meet tonight at 8:30 jp. m. at 727 “Allerton Ave, Good speakers, | en's Council 2. 30 pin. 1400 Boston May Day, Harry Eisman, Lf Badan oe Women's Council 18. Tuesday, 1373 43rd St., Brooklyn. May Day,’ Harry Wismag. v Tonight, Rd., Bronx, ‘omen’s Council 21, 8:30 p. m.. 239 Schenec- Brooklyn, May Day, Harry e ¢ * Women's Council 4, Tuesday, 8:30 p. m., 68 Whipple St, Brooklyn. Lecture, Proceeds Work- ers’ School, pa Tags we Tuesday, tady Ave, Bisman, Hy Upner Harlem Council, Wednesday, Ave, pAdmission 25 cents, CHINESE WAR LORD Ying-ching, a very close lieutenant ce. 4. 13 Myrtle Ave. | Units 1, A and % meet this week at | All League members in N. 'T. W.! May Day Eve Dance, Entertainment, I Unemployed 1800 Seventh 72 STRIKERS IN BOSTON TO TRIAL Workers Enraged at LL.G.W.U. Tactics | BOSTON, Mass. April 27.—Sev- | enty-two strikers belonging to the Needle Trades Workers’ Industrial | again as a pretext. In this, as well! Union are coming up for trial on|«potemkin” and “Ten Days That | appeal in the Superior Court on} Monday. Fifty are charged with| obstructing traffic, eight with d turbing the peace, thirteen with as |sault and battery and one for | the lower | | The fines imposed in | court amount to over $1,200; and in| ‘the case of Morris Sarkowitch, al thirty-day jail term. The entire| labor movement is enraged against! | the provocators of the Schlesinger, | LL.G.W.U,, clique who are responsi- ‘ble for railroading Jack Gorvine and Leonard Doherty to jail. The Needle Trades Workers’ In- workers to a protest meeting on! Monday after work at the Union | Hall, 22 Harrison Ave. Harry Can- |be one of the speakers. All are | urged to attend. | This meeting will also prepare | |for the May Day demonstration in | which the Needle Trades Workers’ | Industrial union will participate to- gether with other working class or- ganizations. $40,000 BAIL AGAINST 12 IN EL CENTRO, CALIF. LOS ANGELES, Calif. (By Mail). —Of the 87 leaders of the Imperial | E! Centro and Brawley, 75 have | been released and the other 12 in- dicted under the criminal syndical- ism law. They are held in $40,000 bail each and are now confined in| |the El Centro jail. | Warrants have been issued for the arrest of 24 others including Frank Spector, district organizer of the In- ternational Labor Defense which is | | defending the arrested workers. | | Those now in jail are John Bres-| ender, Gillermo Alonzo, Edward} | Herrera, Lawrence Emery, J. Oros- | 'eo, Danny Roxas, Esteber Mendez, T. Hariuchi, J.. C. Miller, John | Funes, B. Lopez and A. M. Maldon- ado. | An application for a reduction of ‘their bail has been denied by the | Superior Court. It is now before} | the Frenso Appellate Court for ac-| tion. In addition to Spector, warrants 'have been issued for Carl Sklar, | Jack Begler, Frank Waldron, Frank Huff and Leon Mabille. | Leo Gallagher, of the Internation- jal Labor Defense is defending the arrested workers. \Plot to Deport Toiler to Death in Hungary GARY, Ind. April 25.—Frank Vikukel, a member of the Hungari- |an Buro of the Communist Party, is | |faced with death upon his deporta- tion to Hungary by the U. S. immi- gration authorities. Comrade Viku- kel was arrested last Monday, and is out on bail of $1,000 pending de- portation proceedings. He was ar- |rested at a meeting called against | Hunga: Fascists. The U, S. {bosses are cooperating with the Horthy regime in attempting to murder this Communist fighter, BROOKLYN SHOR SCHOOL, 1084 Broadway, teaches all trades Monday, Wednesday and Friday Evenings. | | WORKERS’ CENTER BARBER SHOP Moved to 20 Union Square FREINEIT BLDG.—Main Floor Phone: LEHIGH 6382 M, W. SALA, Prop. 2016 Second Avenue, New York (bet. 103rd & 104th Sts.) Ladies Bobs Our Specialty Private Beauty Parlor Tel. SACramento 2592 The Szabo Conservatory of Music 1275 LEXINGTON AVENUB at 86th Street Subway Station NEW YORK CITY Instruction given to Bexinners ‘ and Advancers in MUSIC COMPOSITION VOCAL, VIOLIN, PIANO, ‘CELLO Theory and all other instruments 25% \§REDUCTION TO CITY AND UNION WORKERS Have Your Eyes Examined and Giasses Fitted by WORKERS MUTUAL - OPTICAL CO. under personal aupervision of DR. M. HARRISON Optometrist 215 SECOND AVENUE Corner ith Street NEW YORK CITY Opposite New York Eye and Ene infirmary Telephone Stuyvesant 3836 ‘Eisenstein’s New Film International Barber Shop | Coming to Cameo Friday NATALIE HALL “Old and New,” the new Eis stein film, will have its American premiere at the Cameo Theatre next} Friday. This film was previously known “The General Line,” and is the directorial work of S. M. Eisenstein, known here for his earlier films, | Shook the World.” Associated with Eisenstein in the direction was G. W. Alexandrov and the photography | was by Edouard Tisse. | The Amkino, representing in the United States the Soviet film in- dustry, and the organization releas- ing the film, announced that the g National Board of Review of Motion eee, ; Pictures has selected “Old and| One of the principals in the | New” as an “exceptional motion | &8¢ operetta, “Three ee picture.” Eisenstein’s previous films | now current at the Shubert Theatre. were also so honored by the board. The film is especially interesting now as it deals with the subject of “GARRICK GAIETI | OPEN IN JUNE A group of young people have been connected with the Thea- |tre Guild are now assembling ma- | terial and a cast for a new edition | of “Garrick Gaieties” and the s of the Guild is being used for av tions. Philip Loeb, Sterling Hollo- way and Hildegarde Halliday of the previous “Garrick Gaieties” are in- terested in the new edition. | Dr. Edmond Pauker, acting for the Georg Martun Verlag of Vienna, | has purchased the Central European \rights to Philip Barry’s new play |“Hotel Universe,” will be Harlem Landlord Evicts Section 4 which | produced soon in several mid-Euro- The latest addition to the many | pean cities. evictions by greedy capitalist land- lords in Harlem has been the evic-|thrown out and scattered tion of Section 4 of the Communist | street. Party from their headquarters in| Units 1, A and 3 will meet Le who has attracted so much attention in se connection with news from Soviet Russia. The film is as unique as the other Eisenstein efforts and its pioneering aspects are assured by the description from Moscow which declares that the stars of the film are “a cream separator, a bull andj a tractor.” in the at *\unless Effrat forces the drivers to| Valley workers arrested April 14 in | 336 Lenox Ave. All furniture was 11800 Seventh Ave. f ‘ “AMUSEMENT S- ‘Theatre Guild Productions | (XIVIC REPERTORY 1th se Mats, Thur. Sat, 2.20 | Eves. 8:30. 5 $1.50 HOTEL UNIVERSE By PHILIP BARRY MARTIN BECK 432 Stree: W. of S Av. Eves. 8:50. Mats. Thursday and Saturday at 2:50 A MONTH IN THE COUNTRY By IVAN TURGENEV a) W. 524. Evs. GUTTA Worse “THE APPLE CART” By Bernard Shaw ALVIN W. 524.Evs. 8:30 | Mats. Wed. and Director “THE ‘CUCKOOS” with BERT WE «ind ROBERT Woo “STAMPEDE” An Epic of th Life “THREE LITTLE GIRLS” Great Singing and Dancing Cast Revolving Stage THEA, 44th St. W. of Ev Mats. Wed. and unglep and | am. in the Su Saturday at 2:30 paso —————————— i RE B OUND swum Arthur Hopkins presents a new comedy by Donald Ogden Stewart | ah hea. 4: E with HOPE WILLIAMS | MUSIC BOX fyts. tes PLYMOUTH T®. 49th $¢. wv, of Bway | Mats. Thursday and Saturday at va. 8:50, Mats. Thurs. 66 TOPAZE 99 and Sat. verti Comedy Hit from the French Tell the Advertiser—“I Saw |with FRANK MORGAN, Phocbe Foster, | Your Ad in The Daily Worker.” Clarence Derwent EAST SIDE THEATRES Sa LAST TWO DAY 2nd Ave. Playhouse CORNER EIGHTH STREET AMERICAN PREMIER! LATEST SOVIET PRODUCTION! “The Simple Tailor’ (MOTEL SHPINDLER”) A tremendous tragedy of a Jewish soldier carried away by patriotic impulse to help win the war and his later realization of the oppression by the czarist government of the Jews, N THE SAME PROGRAM— ‘SOVKINO JOURNAL NO THE LATEST NEWS FROM THE SOV un Beginning Wednesday—*SHOLOM, ALEICHEM” (Jewish Good Luck) A Sovkino Produc 22 10N We Meet at the Morning Freiheit VSPRING BALLN Saturday Eve., May 3, 1950 NEW STAR CASINO 107th Street and Park Avenue Misha Kritzer Jazz Band TICKETS: 50 CENTS Let the Moving of our Millinery Branch to the National Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union be a further step towards solidarity with all the Needle Trades Workers Unions in our struggle to organize the unorganized exploited workers. Our wholebearted pledge for cooperation, GIRLS OF JAY HAT COMPANY. We Meet at the— COOPERATIVE CAFETERIA 26-28 UNION SQUARE || AU Comrades Meet at | “For All Kinds of Insurance” (PARE BRODSKY Telephone: Murray Hill 5556 7 Wast 42nd Street, New York Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DE Sth STH New York DAILY ©XCE Please telepho Telephone: R. J. MINDEL SURGEUN DENTI 1 UNION SQUARE Room 803—Phone: Algonquin 8183 Not connected with any other office ORChard 378% DR. L. KESSLER SURGEON DENTIST STREET NEW YORK Sy6uaa Jlevebunua DR. A. BROWN Dentist 301 Bast 14th St. Cor. Second Ave. Vel. Algonquin 7248 Dr. M. Wolfson Surgeon Den 141 SECOND AVENUE, Cor. 9th St. Phone, Orchard 2333, in case ‘ouble with your teeth F friend, who has erience, and can assure of careful treatment. vou * ETARIAN Dairy RESTAURANT omrades Will Always Find It Pleasant to Dine at Our Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx (near 174th St, Station) PHONE: INTERVALD 9149. RATIONAL © Vegetarian ™ RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVEi JE Set. 12th and 18th Sts, * Strictly Vegetarian Food BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx Eat where the best dairy foods are served, Where one customer recommends another. TRIANGLE DAIRY RESTAURANT 1379 INTERVALE AVENUB Cor. Jennings St. BRONX HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 5865 ed Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere radicals meet New York where all 302 E. 12th St. Cooperators! Patronize CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. Y. W. LR. CLOTHING STORE 542 BROOK AVENUR, 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! ATTENTION? REAL BARGAINS at 226 E. 23d St, Bet, 3d & 2a Aves. Ladies, Gents and Children’s Furnishings Extra discount to D. W. renders. 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 ot the Am Workers. 14 W. ss Phone Chelsea 2274 Business meetings held the first Monday of the month at 8 p, m. Kducational meetings—the third Monday of the month. Executive Board | meetings—every ‘Tuesday afternoon at 6 o'clock, One Industry! One Unton! Join Fight the Common Enemy! Oftice upen from 9 a. m, to 6 p.m EAE turd: iat net ; Meets Ist BN n't nth & iy aly) 2 oy i Al ‘or 164 Fresh Vegetables Our Specialty javead Vel. Jerome 7090 Union Label Bread!

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