The Daily Worker Newspaper, June 17, 1930, Page 2

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Page Tw a) DATLY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY. JUNE 1, 1930 om en ee CLOAK BOSSES COMPLAIN COMPANY UNION IS READY TO SMASH ECONOMIC CRISIS ALE BOSS TELLS OF 1. U. UL UNIONS IN OVER WORLD SHOWN UP IN NEW WALL ST. PANIC World Wide Business 3,637,000 Jobless in American Workers Unions of T.U.U.L. Patalys sis; Report That Germany on June 1 Must Organize in Militant to Meet New Attack With the new Stock Exchange crash revealing the general eco- nomic crisis not only in America, rapid declines in production and pric brief resume of only one day’s news shows the as follows: only partially but truly, Steel production, as yardstick only America but everywhere. 840,000 tons in May, output in France dropped 40 per ce Prices in England have fallen 1929, to 692,000 this past May. dropped from 1,150,986 tons to 859,! where the falling trade has caused s, but also in the entire world, a international crisis, of general business, is falling not In England it has dropped from In Germany it 75 tons in the same time. Iron ent in April from March. 10.4 per cent since last October. Prices in France have fallen 13 per cent from a year ago, falling over 2 per cent in May. Germany, whose capitalists are trying to unload the whole burden of the Young Plan Reparations payments on the workers, is being again “warned” by Parker Gilbert ernment having a deficit of 1,284 the present fiscal year. all kinds with nobody to buy them. ,000,000 marks, There are $7,500,000,000 tied up in goods of to “reform the budget,” the gov- about $421,000,000, Argentina is in a deep crisis, the government customs receipts for six months having dropped 15 per the worst is the catastrophic fall over-supply ‘A year ago, in one week Argentina this year, 000: bushels. Saturday Canada has a “good” prices and hard times. over of 270,000,000 bushel crop. Is, with a 000,000, it is said, but then it has remainder. What falling prices w' all capitalist papers. The same t and rye are also falling even more Optimists, figuring on exports on the Chicago Wheat Pit, July wheat crop—which under capitalism means “bad” The U. S. Farm Board is stuck with a carry- cent from that of a year ago, but in wheat exports, due to the world (though millions in all countries have not enough bread). exported 5,731,000 bushels of wheat; wheat broke below $1. bout 800,000,000 coming on the new Nobody dares to say what the farmers will get for it. Of the 270,000,000 bushels carry-over, the government owns also backed with loans a lot of the ill do to this is being concealed by hing applies to cotton. Corn, oats than wheat, to Europe, where the crop is said not to he above average and where there is little carry-over, get pale when they think of the big crop said to be coming out of the Soviet Union where agriculture is being Year Plan. rapidly socialized under the Five In addition, the economic depression and. unemployment in Europe will make less demand, though millions need bread. And besides all this, all European countries are preparing a tariff war against U. S. exports. “Are we going to have a tariff It will be less bloody than another the misery and resentment which the road to revolution. Is the ¢: through excess of production—thro' The wail of the French paper, “La Liberte,” says: war between Europe and America? but just as ruinous. And through may result it may prepare so well apitalistic system doomed to die ugh excess of wealth?” Aldermen Push Salary Grab, Jobless Starve While over 700,000 workers are unemployed in New York City, the Board of Aldermen is voting $519,000 of salary increases for 200 high «city officials and their subordinates. These parasites who live on the-toil and produce of the workers do not hesitate to in- crease their legal graft, in face of the starvation, suffering and misery of the jobless workers. These are the capitalist poli- ticians who preach to the workers about the “blessings” and the sacred opportunities of capitalism, and who send the police to club the workers whenever they strike | for a living and better working conditions. This outright grab is a direct insult hurled into the faces of hundreds of thousands of workers who are walking the streets of New York today. The workers have nothing to gain from supporting their ex- ploiters and enemies. In the com- ing elections they will ask you to vote for them again. But only the organized struggle of the working class against capitalism will free the workers from this capitalist hell. Show your deter- mination to fight capitalism by voting for your Communist can- | didates. Jackson Street Car Men Face Battle JACKSON, Mich., June 16.—As an answer to a wage-cut of 2% cents an hour when their contract with the street car company expired | June 1, local streer tar men have presented counter demands, includ- ing an increase of 2 cents an hour for one-man car operators and 5c} jan hour for two-men car opera- tors. The executive committee of the street railway employes is de- ferring action pending word from the international officers. Street car lines in Lansing, Kalamazoo and Battle Creek are also affected by the Admit Decline in Industry ALBANY, N. Y., June 16.—“New York has suffered an industrial de- cline,” said a statement issued yes: terday by the State-Wide Economic Council of New York. This organ- j ization represents the leading ex- ploiters in the state. They are at- tempting to work out plans similar to Hoover’s Economie Council—and with about the same success. Smothered in TortureChamber of Ala. Jai! BIRMINGHAM, Ala., June 16.— J. A. Marshall, sent to convict camp | 8 for petit larceny, complained to | the warden that he was unable to work, The warden threw him into |the “sweatbox,” where he was later found dead. The sweatbox is so {small that a man can neither sit ‘down nor stand erect in it. W.LR. ORGANIZING TAG DAYS FOR JULY 4 MEET. Three cities—New York, Phila- delphia and Boston—have already | swung into action for the nation- wide Unemployed Solidarity Day, to be held June 28 by the Workers’ In- ternational Relief and the Trad Union Unity League. On this da: tens of thousands of workers will be | mobilized in support of the strug- | gles of the 8,000,000 unemployed and particularly of the National Un- employed Convention, to be held in} Chicago on July 4, under the aus- pices of the Trade Union Unity | League. New York has arranged an Un- employed Solidarity Tag Day for June 29 and has issued the slogan: “1,000 Volunteers for Unemployed | Solidarity Day.” * Boston, because of a conflict in dates, will have a house-to-house collection on June 22 instead of June 28, Philadelphia is making elaborate plans for the unemployed campaign. On Thursday, June 26, a mass con- ference will be held to rally the support of an militant organiza- tions. The eins. raised on Unemployed "WRG ekr EE en stare orem i “Seeds of Freedom” in: | Trenton June 20th |. The workers of Trenton and vicin- | ity (which includes New Bruns- |wick and Perth Amboy) will have | | an opportunity this week to see one jof the best of the Sovkino films |ever to come to this country, when Seeds of Freedom,” produced in the ‘oviet Union under the title of | “Hirsch Leckert,” will be shown for one night only at the Trenton Labor | Lyceum, 159 Mercer St., on Friday jnight, June 20, | REGISTER FOR SPANISH CLASS | There is still time for Party com- |rades who wish to enroll for the |class in Spanish to register at the | Workers School. It is very import- ant that a number of comrades who Pos prepared to do active work in \ the Party, learn to speak, read and write Spanish. The class will begin in the very near future, and inter- ested comrades are urged to regis- ter at once. Solidarity Day will be used to fi- |nance and maintain the unemployed |convention in Chicago and to feed the thousands of delegates that are | expected. EVILS WHILE HE ASKS FOR WORSE: Gitlow Repudiated at His Own Meeting NEW YORK.—One he organized needle trades boss has filed with the governor's chair- man, Ingersoll, a complaint that ad- mits a great deal of what the work- the eedle Trades Workers Industrial Union have been tion ecutive director 1 Council of Clo Samuel Klein, of the Irtdustr 1. L. D. TAG BAYS NEW YORK.—June 20 and 21 have been endorsed by the revolu- | mary industrial unions to be con- centrated days of collections and re- cruiting for the International Labor Defense. A mass recruiting and | tag day will be conducted by the New. York District as part of the nation-wide campaign for the re- lease of the unemployed delegation and to prevent the burning of Pow- ers, Carr, Dalton, Burlak, Story and Brady in the electric chair in At- lanta, Georgia, The I. L. D. will use every available channel to fight Ives and their union, the | for these workers and the unions in| the mass picketing instituted im-| the Trade Union Unity League, as well as other workers’ fraternal o | ganizations and clubs, will partici- | pate in the collections. “250 MORE MINERS ne Cowl in“ STRIKE AGAINST 10 PER CENT CUT Jane Cowl, “who last here in “Jenny,” will be seen in| Shakespeare’s “Twelfth Night” in the new season. A second ze | “When Hell Froze, which was | tried out last winter with Helen Only 17 Scahs; Wed by |stacenar, wil als serve | Mist Cowl during the season. The record of the ill-fated British South Pole expedition of Captain Two hundred and fifty miners have | Robert Scott preserved in the film, : Sere “At the South Pole,” will be the struck at the Duquesne Mine. One| scture at the Fifth Ave. Playhouse hundred and fifty participated in| the first part of the week. For the remainder The state troopers and/ the Pla: is offering F. W. deputies arrested two women the| Murnau’s film, “City Girl,” first day. The International Labor) which was originally made as “Our | |Defense is defending them. There) Daily Bread.” Socialist Party Man PITTSBURGH, Pa., June 16.—} eae Suit and Shirt Manufacturers, Inc.,| The United Council of Working |are at present seventeen scabs at} The motion picture version of states that his outfit signed with|Class Women will as usual mobilize|the mine composed of Lewis and| | Lyof Tolstoy’s “The Living Corpse,” the Schlesinger company union, the| 100 per cent in behalf of the class|Howat elements and bootleggers.| presented under the title “Redemp- International Ladies ers, under the impress ment thai nger would bring all the ander his control. What’s a ompany union good for, if i sn’t fool the worke; And Mr. Klein complains that 45 per cent | of the coat and suit trade was either non-union or had no union, even company union, conditions, Klein didn’t concern himself with large hat are controlled he was concerned numbers of sho) by the N.T.W.LU., with a failure on the part of agent, Schlesinger, to carry contract. Agents have failed in | their contracts before, and Klein | knows what to do, He warns Schlesinger, through the “impartial chairman” that the pposedly powerful structure of m (he means company union- —I. W. brand) is house of cards, in imminent danger of complete collapse.” Let’s Cat Out of Bag. Without realizing how he is back- ing up the charges of the Industrial Union, he points out that he knows »f 42 non-union shops, where long hours, piece work, and unwholesome | of |. conditions prevail. He tells many hidden shops, ostensibly in- dependent, but really underwritten y big manufacturers, where the en- tire force can be fired at a moment's notice, simply by dismissing the contractor. He tells of favorable conditions to the.employers, granted the dressmakers by Schlesinger, af- ter signing the agreement with the cloakmakers, and competition developing there. of Industrial Union Speaks. The Needle Trades Workers In-| dustrial Union yesterday stated: “The facts ‘revealed’ have been known to us and the workers in the shops for a long time. The company union can not organize the workers, and does not even want to abolish the horrible! conditions. But we wish to warn the workers to beware of Klein’s motives. What he is doing is to demand still worse conditions from the LL.G.W. He will get them. The) company union will easily grant them. “The industrial union is the shield of the workers. great mass meeting, Wednesday night, at 5.30 in Cooper Union, where the whole situation will’ be explained to the workers and their forces prepared for great growth of the N.T.W.LU. Today the industrial union calls all unemployed needle workers to attend a meeting at 131 West 28th St., the union office, at 2 p. m. District meetings will take place | tonight as follows. Thirty-third St. to 14th St. west of Broadway to Seventh Ave.; 40th St. to 14th St. east of Broadway; and 14th St. South. This last meeting will be held in Manhattan Lyceum. The | other two are to take place in 131 | West 28th St. Reject Gitlow. Yesterday morning there was a very successful men’s clothing work- ers meeting, The Lovestone meet- ling, also for men’s clothing work- \ers, brought out about 150 of them, |and the Lovestoneites felt elated. | They let two or three of the mili- |tants speak, intending to give Git- low the floor at the end, with no come-back to his attack on them. | But when Gitlow was introduced, ithe workers howled him down. They |refused to listen, and he had to leave the hall at his own meeting, | without a chance to slander the in-! | dustrial union, which the great ma- | | jority of the workers were support- | ing. Labor and Fraternal Organizations Couneil 22 U.C.W.W. Will have a lecture on the Role of England on India tonight at 8.30 p. m. at Auditorium of 2700 Bronx Park £. i Ry. a Council 4, U.C.W.W. Will have a lecture on the election campaign tonight at 68 Whipple St., Brooklyn. Volunteer Help for “Daily” Needed The Daily Worker business of- fice is in need of volunteer cler- ical workers to help duririg the cireulation drive. Those comrades interested should apply any time | |during the day at the business office, second floor, 26 Union Square. merely a] by Klein] It is holding a} war fighters. The Pioneers and working-class children will intensi their fight to free Harry Eisman. Following this tag day will be ‘ celebrated the fifth anniversary of the International Labor Defense at Irving Plaza, Irving Place and 15th St., Friday, June 27. FASCISTS KILL GERMAN TOILERS ‘Expose Free Speech | Sham in Australia \ (Wireless By Inprecorr) BERLIN, June 16.—Sunday six truck loads of armed fascists at- tacked twenty unarmed workers in Leipzig, killing one, while another died of wounds and twelve were seriously injured. The fight lasted an hour, but the police arrived after it was all over. In the Koepernickestrasse Berlin, cists shot down the Communist Erich Pollak who was taken to a | hospita! with three bullet wounds. trance to the Wansee Bathingland,| beating up those who were obviously Jewish. | Mannheim fascists attacked the Reichsbanner, wounding five severe- | | Beuthen sts attacked Com- munists, wounding two. | Police took the names of 150 fas- lcists this week end, but made no ar- rests. Police toleration alone made | possible the fascist refgn of violence. The Reichstag met today after three weeks recess to discuss Bruen- jing’s proposals to meet the deficit. |The Communist fraction tabled ‘counter motions for ail anti-proletar- jian legislation. ‘Today a mass meet- ing took place in the Lustgarten |against Bruening. se ae Sar } Austrian Communists in Election. | (Wireless By Inprecorr) SYDNEY, June 16.—The Commu- nis: Party presented workers candi- dates in the municipal elections Wed- nesday against the labor fakers. Yesterday evening the police broke up a Communist propaganda dem- onstration, arresting twenty-one, in- cluding the candidates, ‘DREW HELD FOR! ASSAULT TRIAL Police Attacked White Goods Meet; Now Try to Jail Woman Organizer. NEW YORK, June 16.—The cases of Fay Roth, Dora Fishberg and Caroline Drew were heard in 57th St. Court yesterday. These three were arrested after the police and local fascists had attacked a meet- jing called by the White Goods De- partment of the Needle Trades Workers’ Industrial Union in May. The meeting was held at Madison Ave, and E. 30th St. Roth and Fishberg were sentenced to pay $3 fines each. Drew, who is organizer of the White Goods Department and of the Sixth New York District of the N. T. W. I. U., was held on $500 bond and bound over to general sessions for trial on a charge of assaulting a policeman. The policeman was on the stand, | trying to show that when he handed Drew the usual punch with which a Tammany policeman arrests a | worker, she bit his arm. This would be felonious assault, a policeman considering himself almost sacred in New York. Communist Activities Musicians Take Notice. All comrades who play musical in- struments are to report at W. I, R. Headquarters on June 17 for rehear- sal Tor the Madison. Square Garden affair on June 2 Report at 10 EB. Tit St. Distriet Agitprop Com. Mass Meetiniz, In support of the India Revolution will be held on Wednesday, June 18 in Mantiattan Lyceum, Auspices, Séc- tion 1, Communist Party, section & Attention! All comrades are to report.at sec- tion headquarters the following days for important election | campaign | work, Wednesday 6 to 9 p, m.; Thurs- day 6 to 9 p, m.; Sunday 9.30 a, m, to 2p. m * * Unit SF, Section 1% Meeting tonight. All members must tend withont fail ety! ARE: | Unit 2. Section 5. Aleeis tonight at 2016 Bryant Ave. aturday, fascists beseiged the ene | j The Penowa mine workers are help-| tion,” is now being offered by Lit- jing the Duquesne miners and are} tle Carnegie Playhouse. participating in the picket line. The screen attraction at the Roxy There is a good possibility of| Theatre this week is “Mamba,” the | spreading the strike to other mines.| Tiffany all-technicolor production. Over 1,000 are already striking in|Mme. Ernestine Schumann-Heink, Pennsylvania, led by the National] noted contralto, is the chief stage Miners’ Union, Eviction notices| feature of the week. STRENGTHENED In their efforts to smash the| strike, the state troopers threat- | Imperialists Prepare Intervention ened the miners with deportation | stating that all miners who were| foreigners would be deported. | The strike committee that visited the superintendent were told that) wages would have to be cut to 30 cents per ton, the boss claiming} that the mine wasn’t making any money because of the scale. The Lewis fascist and Howat| The continuous upsurge of the social-fascist elements are leading| revolution and the extension of Sov- the scabs here. There are 17 scab- | pelled the ahention of the capital- | st reporters. Associated Press | dispatch from Shanghai dated June | carries the report that “dis- patches from Amoy said widespread disorders apparently were steadily increasing as bandits and Commu- bing at Duquesne. The Le scabs comprise former beer agent: who are now bootlegging, and | gangsters who own five houses,| 15 leaders among them being Mike | P: Havilak and Mondo Rullo. The; leader of all the scabs, John Dob-| jlyak, is a member of the socialist | nists roved uncurbed through the party and a Howat supporter. He}countryside.” Again it says: “Con-| controls a small group of Sloven-|ditions inland from Amoy seemed ian socialists, 6 or 7 in number, and | especially confused because the Com- | all are actively scabbing. munists appeared to be strengthen- ing their power. * ee Get Ready For Convention. Imperialist activities WEST FRANKFORT, Ill, June |16.—The Illinois district board of the National Miners’ Union, meet- ing in Belleville, has voted to con- centrate all energies of the organ- izers especially upon the prepara- tions for the big national conven- tion of the National Miners’ Union, June 28, in Pittsburgh. The dis- trict pledges to activize 25 more dues paying locals, meeting regu- larly and sending in regular re- ports to the district office and na-! tional office. SPECIAL MEET OF SHOE UNION WED. NEW YORK.—A special member- ship meeting of the Independery Shoe Workers’ Union will be held | Wednesday night at 8 p. m. at their head@fwarters, 16 W. 21st St., in or- der to take up some very important | questions facing the union, At the last Joint Council meeting it was decided to call this meeting to discuss the following questions: |(1) The question of combining a pression of the revolution is becom- ing more and more _ intensified. A_ strikingly impressive forceful reels . . . CAIN & Artistically a masterpiece. ordinary films ever made . ADDED LATEST S ATTRACTION CAMEO 42nd St. and Broadway appeared | of the week While American, British and Japa- | nese gunboats have increased its { “AMUSEMENT S+ SECOND BIG WEEK! DYNAMIC — POWERFUL — REALISTIC SOVKINO life .. . a worthy artistic effort, says Irene Thirer, MAXIM GORKY’S Truly one of the most extra- POPULAR PRICES Be. 10 220. Twel ‘th Night” | - ‘Little Show” at Royale IN “CAIN AND ARTEM.” _ Two of the principals in the iet film, “Cain and Artem,” y's novel, now in its second week at the Cameo Theatre, SECOND W K OF “RUSSIA | REBORN” AT SECOND AVE. | “Russia Reborn” will be held over another week, due to the lar crowds that come to see this fine picture of the Russian Revolution. | It shows the contrast of the Soy- jiet workers, all working together to build up Socialism, the woyking out jof the collective farming plan and |the conditions of the workers in ‘Germany, bread lines, and the gen- eral discontent of the masses. | prop. PAVLOV’S FILM AT 8TH STREET PLAYHOUSE V. I. Pudowkin, whose film, “Me- jchanics of the Brain,” is now play- ling at the Eighth Street Playhouse, is considered one of the greatest of Russian directors. Pudowkin, al- though still under 80 years of age, has produced such internationally known film suce as ‘The End lof St. Pete burg, other” (from iet power in China have again com-|Maxim Gorky’s story) and “Storm | Over Asia.” | vigilance in patroling Chinese riv- lers, shipping companies with the ac- tive assistance of the British gov- | ernment have organized a patrol or- ganization of 200 guards, which will be known as “Hongkong Anti-Pirate Guards.” Organized for the speci- fic purpose of fighting “pirates,” the chief function of this organiza- | tion is undoubtedly to put every ob- |stacle in front of the advancing rev- for direct | intervention in China for the sup-|especially along the seacoast, thus |attempting to contribute substan- olutionary forces in South China, tially to the general imperialist task of suppressing the Chinese revolu- tion. STERPIECE nt unwound in Daily News. film treatise on pe: ARTEM . Says Rohte Fahne, Berlin. OVIET NEWS REEL NOW! Ap.m. ¢ Sun jmeeting with the suit and bag makers; (2) the membership drive; piebekss | | THE NEW i Guild Productions (3) mobilization and intensification | of the organizational campaign. All members are requested to at- GARRICK GATETIES tend the meeting, which is of un- Wi Ha. mek H80 : |. Evs. 8: usual importance. GUILD Ye beatae Advertise your Union Meetings heré. For information write to The DAILY WORKER | Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City HOTEL UNIVERSE By PHILIP BARRY 45th Street MARTIN BECK (ye s"as. | Eves. 8:50. Mats. Thursday and Saturday at 2:50 FOOD WORKERS UNION OF Sw ak m . INDUSTRIAL NEW YORK Chelsen 2274 2994 Third Brooklyn “LYSISTRATA” Violet Kemble Cooper, Ernest ‘Truex, Miriam Hopkins, Sydney Green- street, Hortense Alden, Eric Dressler 44TH ST. ee ATR, W. of Bw: 30, Bronx Headauarters, Avenue, Irose 0128; Headquarters, 16 Graham Avenue, Pulasky 0634 The Shop Delegates Council meets the first Tuesday of every month at 8 P. M, at 16 West 2ist St. The Shop Is the Basic Unit. Fight for the seven-hour day, five-day week. 318 EAST 14TH ST, APT. 1—TWO BEAUTIFUL light rooms for tw: Shower, bath, §3.75 enc Workers Cooperative Colony 3-4 ROOM APARTMENTS a limited number of apartments, No investment necessury. The rooms face Bronx Park. Ayal ‘yourslef of the be portunity to live in a comradely atmosphere! Take Lexington Ave. White Plains Subway and get off at Allerton Ave, station. TEL, ESTABROOK 1400 2800 BRONX PARK BAST Our, Orti F fro 1. Mm. G8 oe ine Gato, nan from Ti to 680 p. ‘a it. to 8 p.m, easier “Russia Depicting actual struggle and Workers, Peasants GERMANY AFTER We Meet at the— Mats. Wed./ BAST SIDE THEA 2nd Ave. Playhouse 133 SECOND AVENUE, CORNER EIGHTH STREBRT Now—Soviet Premiere Showing (U.S. ALSO COOPERATIVE CAFETERIA 26-28 UNION SQUARE Fresh Vegetables Our Specialty “BEAU BANDIT” A Radio Picture with ROD LA ROQUE. Doris Kenyon and Mitchell Lewis | MUSIC BOX Bites. 45th, we ot Bway. Kvgs. at 8:40 Mats. “hursday_and Saturday at 2:30 | “TOPAZ Comedy Hit from the French with FRANK MORGAN, Phoebe Foster, Clarence Derwent “THREE LITTLE GIRLS” Great Singing and Dancing Cast Revolving Stage ', | SHUBERT Ps Adth St W. of Is s 0, Mats. Wed. an TH STREET PLAYHOUSE (Film Guild Cinema) 52 W. 8th St. SPR. 5095 Cont. 1 P. M. to Midnite Popular Prices, “Mechanics of the Brain” Great Soviet Scientific Film also “Hurrah! I’m Alive!” RES: Reborn” S. R.) ccomplishments of the Russian and the Red Army, THE WORLD WAR rge | SOVIET UNION FACTORY PAPER HAILS DELEGATES Special Edition Greets American Workers When the American Workers’ and Farmers’ Delegation now visiting the Soviet Union arrived in the city of Artemovsk in the Ukraine, they were greeted by a special edition of “Kochegarka” (the Fire-Engine),; organ of the Artemovsk district of the Communist Party. dts most in- teresting feature is the leading ar- ticle, written entirely in English. An entire page is devoted to the American delegation and to condi- tions in this country. It includes a |cartoon showing an American work- er swinging a hammer at a sky- scraper on the top of which sits a |fat capitalist; a picture of the American delegation; a _poém on America by the late Vladimar May- akovsky and a reproduction of the front page of the American Daily Worker. The American Workers’ and Farmers’ Delegation will return to this country June 26. The Friends of the Soviet Union is preparing a mass reception for them. Lodgings for Delegates Needed Accommodations for Delegates to the National Convention of the Communist Party, betweeen June 18th to 28th needed. Comrades or sympathizers living in M: hattan or Bronx that will h the Party by accommodating one or more delegates should write, giving detailed address and di- rections to the Convention Arrangements Committee, 43 East 125th St. New York City © “For All Kinds of Insurance” ‘Telephone: Murray lll 558¢ 7 East 42nd Street; New York Cooperators! SEROY 657 Ese om ; Estabrook $215 Bronx, N. ¥. | a All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant . 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx ag eet hig we] big: SECOND AY. Bet, 12th and 13th Nt ‘tl Always Bind it Pleasant to Dine at Our Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx bn otter 27418, St Rtatlcn) 5 OND SVALB 9140. HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian. RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE, Phone: UNIversity 5865 Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 oats, rte teat place with atmoaptiers here all. radicals. New: ‘ork 302 E. 12th St. Dr. ABRAHAM SURGEON DENTIST eae pase 2 115th STREDE Seco ’ DAILY EXCEPT FRIDAY Cor. ‘Tel. ORChard 3783 DR, L, KESSLER SURGEON DENTIST Strictly by Appointment 48-50 DELAN 1 Blaridge 8 DR. J. MINDE SURGECN LeSNTIST . 1 UNION SQbaRe Reom 803—Phone: Al; fot eonnect other office _ WORKERS’ CENTER BARBER SHOP Moved to 30 Union si ([ARL BRODSKY ( OO Ae

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