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

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Pave ‘two EUROPEAN ATTACKS ON, ___ U.S. TARIFF ALARM AMERICAN CAPITALISYS Mills, Under-Secretary of ee Goes to! Europe on “Economie Mission” Capitalist Conflicts at Lead to a ars Our Epoch Can Only; s and Revolutions European capitalizat‘on is buzz- {move is clearly both directed against | ing with for and | the w protests agains BS, ation while Italy has| blow by raising against American Ss moment that der-secretary sails for hide his of the / 2 5 to in case ion proves tc be a fail M he true fash- ion of geois politicians, pre- tends t he is going to Europe for rest and recreation,” al- | h the whole world knows that “an important economic Pr dent Hoover,” as nes’ Paris corre- | spondent puts it. That a section of the American | bourgeoisie is alarmed at the tariff situati w will deny. The Euro- pean bosses are up in arms against | the American tariff. The automo- | bile manufacturers of France, Ger- many, Italy, Belgium and Great Britain have already worked out a plan which will cut down present American sales abroad by at least 50 per cent. The plan will be sub- | mitted to the respective govern-| ments of these countries for ap- proval, and if the tariff rates in the Smoot-Hawley law. stand as they are now the plan will be most likely approved by the governments. The first Congress of the Euro- pean Tariff Union has just con- eluded its sessions, with the dele- gates agreed to return home to work hard for the organization of an European Customs Union, The delegates also came to an under- standing that they will do business wherever possible within the radius of the European membership. This the Soviet Union and the States of America. The French national committee of the Councillors of Commerce, which United | devoted its. Tuesday session to the | | consideration of the American | tariff, passed an important resolu- | tion, which contains the following | categorical statement of the policy of the French bourgeoisie: “The committee invited the pub lic authorities to revise our tariff policy and our policy of commer- cial agreement to accord henceforth the benefit of a minimum tariff in whole or in part only to such coun- tries as accord corresponding ad- vantages to us—that is to say, to those whose tariffs leave possibili- ties for reasonable commercial ex- change.” | Whatever the outcome of the| Mills mission will be, it is safe to say that it will not even be able to mitigate the seriousness of the jconflict for some length of time, not to say solving the basic contra- dictions underlying these events. The complicated network of con- tradictions of modern capitalism is such that a mitigation of the con- flict does not only require a tem- porary compromise between the different capitalist countries, but also a compromise between the war- ring industrial groups within a cer- tain country. Any effort to reach such a compromise is attempting the impossible, and any one who ex- pects any mitigation of the con- flicts of imperialism at the present | to last long is doomed to disap- | pointment. Such conflicts can only lead to wars and revolutions, which are the dominant features of our epoch, the epoch of dying capital- ism. MASS MARCH TO HONOR FALLEN MARTYR WORKER Demdnstrate at 110th St. and 5th Avenue (Continued ‘Sune Page One.) | struggle of the workers. The Com- | munist Party leads and is the most | active force in the struggle to or- ganize the workers into powerful industrial unions. The Communist | Party leads the movement against unemployment. The Communist Party raises the banner of struggle against all forms of discrimination and oppression of the Negro masses as practiced by the white ruling class. The Communist Party sup- ports tho..struggles of the toiling masses of the colonial countries and fights alas Mag imperialist wars which ate now in preparation. The bosses know that the Communist Party alone can provide leadership for offensive struggle by the work- ers. By murdering and jailing the leaders, the bosses hope to destroy all possibility for effective organ- | ized resistance by the workers.” Negro Workers to March, Calling upon the Negro workers to turn out in masses to demon- strate against the same boss terror that done to death Alfred Levy, reyolutionary Negro worker, the American Negro Labor Congress has issued the following statement: | “The American Negro Labor Congress, the only Negro organ- ization that leads in the struggle against lynching and the entire system of Jim Crowism and op- pression of the Negro masses, calls upon all Negro workers to rally in masses to the funeral and demonstration in behalf of our murdered comrade, G. Gonzales, this Friday, July 4, at 9:30 a. m. at 308 Lenox Ave. | “Comrade Gonzales fell a vic- tim to the murderous police while he demonstrated his solidarity with the Negro workers in the struggle against lynching, and was on his way to pay the last honors to our Negro comrade, Al- fred Levy, murdered by the same Tammany police. “We especially call upon the Negro workers, therefore, to rally in large masses to the demonstra- tion, and rally to the united strug- gle of Negro and white workers against lynching, police terror, race discrimination and the entire system of capitalist exploitation and oppression.” LL.D. Statement. In answer to a number of in- quiries which are coming into the national office of the International Labor Defense, as to whether or not that organization will take leva] ac _ tion against the policeman who shot an¢ killed Gonzalo Gonzalez, the Mexican Communist who was parad- ing in protest against the murder hy New York police of his comrade the Negro Communist, Alfred Levy. | the International Labor Defense tes today: “We have iearned, through five of defending working class ims arainet borees’ and govern persecution, that the courts | work hand in hand with the police and all other weapons of the ruling class against the workers, “The killing of Steve Katovis, last February, shot in the back by a po- liceman, received official praise from the New York City government, And now, policeman O’Brien is being whitewashed for his role in the mur- der of the Mexican worker. The po- lice killers of Albert Levy have been covered up by the Tammany of- ficials. “For this reason, the Internation- | al ‘Labor Defense will not make any | legal attempt to bring Police Officer O’Brien to aceount for his killing of ‘he Communist worker, Gonzalez The growth of the militant organiza- tions, and activity of the working class is our answer to these brutal | slayings. This spirit will motivate the demonstration that will attend the funeral of Gonzalez on Friday morning at 9.30 a, m. when the huge procession of workers, including the International Labor Defense will fol- low the body from 308 Lenox Ave., near 125th St.” The Trade UnionUnity League, in a statement indicting the murderers of Comrade Gonzalez, declared in part: “The armed thugs of the bosses, the Tammany police have again murdered one of our comrades, Gon- zalo Gonzalez, a Latin American worker, who was shot dead while | Protecting another worker from be ing beaten by the police. Several days ago the police beat to death a Negro worker, Alfred Levy, for protesting against lynching. Both workers were active members of the revolutionary unions affiliated to the | ~ T.U.U.L. “The bosses, the government and their agents, the fascist leaders of the A. F. of L. have instituted a campaign of terror against the workers who are struggling against rationalization, wage-cuts, unem- ployment, and the general worsening of the conditions of the working class, The workers must resist the fascist terror of the bosses and their thugs. By militant self-defense, by organization into the revolutionary unions of the T.U.U.L., by the or- ganization of workers defense corps, we can defeat the capitalist fascist terror.” Scoring the murders of Levy and Gonzalez, the Food Workers Union, in 2 statement, declared in part: “The Food Workers Industrial Union, of which Comrade Gonzalez wes a member, being a baker, and or whose picket line Comrade Ka- tovis lost his life, has pledged itself to replace these comrades by thov- sands of militant fighters in our revolutionary union. The Food Workers Industrial Union, realizing that the killing of Alfred Levy is an attemnt to terrorize the Negro work- ers from joining hands with the white workers under the leadership of the revolutionary industria! unions and the Communist Party, and pledeed itself to carry on a more intense anc energetic strugele on behalf of the Negro workers for self-determination, and for full po- litical, social, and economic equality. Demand the release of Fos- | ter, Minor. Amter and Ray- mond, in prison for fighting for unemployment insurance, Write About Your Conditions for The Daily Worker. Become a Worker Correspondent. DAILY WORKER, NEW _YORK, THURSDAY, JULY 3, 1930_ Ses Scene of the Mass F) crea of Comrade Alfred Tee CALL WEIZENBERS MASS FUNERAL Jobless to F Form Guard of Honor Stirred by the cold-blooded - der of Herzel Weizenberg, and | the threat of the police to | any demonstration, thou militant workers are dete carry out a mass funeral for fallen comrade, regardless | permission of the city admini: | tion. The delegates who are arriving from every part of the count mployed Conventic July 4 and 5 will form a guard of | honor for Weizenberg. The Com- | munist Party of the Chicago Dis- rohibit of ds on {on the murder: | “Saturday, July 28, Herzel Wei- |zenberg, member of the Trade | Union Unity League and the Com- | munist Party, was brutally mur- | dered by the hired gangsters of the strike-breaking officialdom of the Painters’ Union. Another worker, also a member of the T. U. U. |David Manhanna, was bruta | slugged and taken unconscious to the hospital. “The worker, Weizenberg, w killed for distributing a leaflet call ing upon the painters, who are suf- fering from unemployment and heavy wage-cuts, to organize and fight against unemployment and) wage-cuts. The leaflet called upon date of the Progressive Group, John Heindrickson, vice-president of Lo- cal 275, This group works under the guidance of the T. U. U. L. against the strike-breaking Wallace. “The killing of Comrade W berg is part of the growing fa: terror of the Thompson fascist city administration. ean expect the police, allied with supervision of the city administra- tion, controlled by the Insull trac- tion interests, to make even the slightest attempt to prosecute those responsible for Weizenberg’s killing and the slugging of David Mahanna. “The workers must build the Trade Union Unity League as the new revolutionary trade union cen- ter, which will organize them in their struggles against the grow- ing unemployment and wage-cuts, and in that way they can only be successful if they carry on a most decisive struggle against the fas- cists and social-fascists of the American Federation of Labor. The killing of Weizenberg, taking place on the eve of the July 5 Unemploy- ment Convention in Chicago, is syr bolical of the growing struggles of the workers and the importance of the July 5 Convention. The state- ment of Durkin, vice-president of the Building Trades Council, urging the police to prevent the July 4 unemployed demonstration in Union Park and breaking up the July 5 unemployed convention is one more proof of the complete merger of the strike-breaking officialdom of the A. F, of L. with the bosses and police. “The workers must answer the killing of Weizenberg and the state- ment of Durkin with organizing their self-defense corps. “In the coming elections the workers must support the Commu- nist Party, as the only party which organizes the workers in struggle * ks .n the standard the growing ot nst war da. ,< Build the Trade Union Unity League! Demonstrate on July 4! Elect delegates to the July 5 Un- employed Convention! B8uil! your defense corps! Fight against wage- cuts and speed-up! Demand work or wages! Fight for social insur- ance! White and Negro workers, unite against your common enemy, the bosses! Drive out the agents of the bosses in the ranks of the working class, the fascists and so- cial-fascists! Vote Communist! Join the Communist Party! De- fend the Soviet Union!” The Trade Union Unity League, of which Weizenberg was a mem- ber, also issued a statement on the murder of Weizenberg and the sav- age attack against the new revolu- tionary trade union center, STRIKE YELLOW DOG SHOE SHOP Open Forum « on Jobless Thursday NEW YORK.—Locked out when they refused to sign a yellow-dog agreement, thirty workers in the Century Shoe Shop, 7 St. Nicholas St., Brooklyn, went out on strike under the leadership of the Inde- pendent Shoe Workers’ Union. An open forum to discuss the unemployment crisis will be held by the Shoe Workers’ Union, Thurs- day, July 3, at 11 p. m. at union headquarters, 16 W. 2ist St. All unemployed shoe workers are urged to attend and learn how to fight the starvation policy of the bosses. trict issued the following statement | the workers to support the candi- | Of course, no one} the gangster world and under the} ee as | Today in History of the Workers July against -Indian boycott Britain begun. eat 1923—Noya Scotia miners struck of troops to break strike. 1923—National bor Party conyention Chicago. KEEP JOBLESS’ use met in mined to | Continue Fight for Work or W ages to the decision of the it of appeals denying the York unemployed delegation the right to appeal, Foster, Amter Minor and Raymond called upon the workers of the entire country to an- swer this challenge of the boss class by organizing for a militant struggle against unemployment and against their fascist attacks. The statement follows: “Or June 26, 19380, Chief Justice Benjamin Cardoza of the Court of Appeals, refused to permit to come before the court, the case of the New Yor's Unemployed Delegation were railroaded to the peniten- ti and their rights denied for leading the demonstration of the un employed at Union Square on March | 6. We, the New York Unemployed | Delegation, by this decision are |compelled to serve our sentences | without any right to appeal against the decision of the then police com- missioner Whalen, which decision ha» been upheld by the courts. Workers! You must understand this decision of the Court of Ap- peals. It once more clearly exposes th> capitalist cuaracter of the courts, which give workers brutal, class justice. These same courts act quite dif ferently when handling capitalist ereoks such as Vitali, Moscowitz. Connelly and the recent recruits to their crooked gang, Walsh, Doyle, Cooley, etc. Walsh, indicted on state and federal charges with pos- | sible sentences totaling eleven years and $9,000 fine, was given $2,509 bail—Cooley was freed. Not so with workers! Before they enter the capitalist courts, they are gvilty. When they are arrested for leading workers in struggle, they arc thrice guilty and convicted. Workers of the United States! The situation is clear. The capital- ists intend to jail working class lead- ;)ers so that they may, as they hope, carry out their drives against the employed workers and prepare for war on the Soviet Union. We call on you to answer this decision of the N. Y, capitalist court of Appeals! /.nswer the attacks of the capitalists of the country by or- ganizing for militant struggle! Make the National Unemployed Convention in Chicago on July 4 and 5 a resounding reply to the capital- ist challenge! Make this the be- ginning of a movement against un employment that will sweep everv militant worker, white and Negro man and woman, into its ranks! Organize gigantie unemployment demonstrations all over the country and let the capitalists know that the workers are beginning to fight back! Join and build up the revolution- ary unions of the Trade Union Unity League! Join the Communist Party—the working class Party which organizes and leads all the workers’ struggles against unemployment, wage-éuts, imperialist war and for defense of the Soviet Union! Don’t starve—fight! New York Unemployed Delegation William Z. Foster, Israel Amter, Robert Minor, Harry Raymond.” Communist Activities Lost! Drucker lost a bracelet at the Red Election Pienie_at Pleas- ant Bay Park Sunday If found, re- turn to the business office of’ the | pe Comrade Daily Worker. A donation will be given to the Daily if it is found and returned, hime eae Membershtp Meet, Seetion 4, Will be held tonight at 8 p.m, at 808 Lenox Ave. All must attend. ONS pee Section 7, Daily Reps. Will_meet tonight at 6.30 p,m. 126 15th St, Brooklyn. All Daily Worker reps must be there. Section unit Lx ir meet will be-held tonight and Prospect Ave. at 8.39 Pp. m. sharp. CGI, Seni New Jersey, Election ca mpalgn pienle to he held in Catham, N. J.. on July 6 at Catham Colony. Good time for all. * Section 4, Financial secretaries will meet to- night at 7 p. m. sharp at 308 Lenox * * Perth Amboy, AMW fraternal and Party organiza- tions are to send delegates to a con- ference to be held on July 6 at 2 Pp, m. at 308 Elm St. for the purpose of making arrangements for an elec- tion pienie La be held Sp August 3. ° pat ay edie hit at 52nd pen air meeting tonight at 52n St. and Fifth Ave, Brooklyn, COMM, JAILED) {have been jointly abandoned. CONTINUE FIGHT ON RIGHT WING |\Claim Statements of Rights Is Insincere (Wireless by Inprecorr) MOSCOW, July 2.—At the Con gress discussion, Rykov followed Tomsky, declaring the demand that he should attack his former com- panions was unreasonable, since the errors were committed jointly and He admitted that the errors strength- ened the resistance of the petty- bourgeoisie against socialism. The chief error consisted in the under- estimation of the possibilities of socialization. He withdrew his statement against the Party regi: and declared that he was prepared to do everything to make good his error. At the morning session on June 30 Kirov of Leningrad accused Tomsky and Rykov of forgetting the main questions. He summed up the errors of the right wingers as a kulak program. He warned the Party against trusting the right wing declarations, particularly in view of Bukharin’s silence. Other speakers supported Kirov and ac- cused the right wingers particu- larly of lip service without any practical fight against deviations. Kossior, Dubnov, Lominadse, Shki- ryatoy and Rudsutak described the right wing statements as unsatis- factory and hypocritical. At the morning session of July 1 Petroyski demanded that Bukharin make a clear cut statement once} for all. Krupskaya stressed the ur- gent necessity of the liquidation of the kulaks as a class, showing that Lenin held the kulaks equally dan- gerous with the landowners and capitalists. The restoration of cap- italism is possible as long as the kulak power is unbroken. Unity is absolutely necessary, and) the right wing opposition must therefore be destroyed like the Trotskyist. Bau- mann and Syrzov also attacked the right wingers, 90,000 WORKERS STRIKE IN RUHR Metal Workers Follow Revolutionary Lead (Wireless By Inprecorr) BERLIN, July 2.—Fifty-five thousand metal workers struck work in the Rhine Ruhr district under the leadership of the revolutionary trade union opposition. The Communist Party is distributing thousands of leaflets appealing for a mass strike against wage-cuts. Following a fascist meeting in the Sport Palace here yesterday evening, collisions occurred between workers and fascists, whereby a worker by the name of Speicher was stabbed and taken to a hospital. Collisions also occurred in Gassel where armed fascists attacked pedestrians. Sev- enty-five arrests were made. Neumuenster fascists attacked a group of Communists wounding 12. A worker by the name of Timm re ceived two bullets in the stomach at close range. He was taken to a hospital in « hopeless condition. Six were arrested. (Wireless By dageeersy BUDAPEST, July 2.--Hundreds of workers took part in a flying demon- stration before the courts where the trials of the Communist workers are proceeding. Windows were smashed. Nine-thirty in the evening, the dem- onstration was repeated. The police succeeded in arresting thirty-six, Pat Oe (Wireless by Inprecorr) HELSINGFORS, July 2.—The fascists yre zontinuing their tactics of kidnapping leaders of the workers and rushing them over the Soviet frontier, thus violating the sover- eignty of the Soviet Union under the Finnish flag. Among others, the | following were victims of these tac- ties: the trade union leader, Heikka peasant deputy Peraelae, the worker Manepaepae, the peasant Kyhhaclae. Deputy Tabell, the secretary of the leather workers, Lechto, the earpen- ters, the carpenters Hiltunen and Juuti and the mechanic Maekelae. The victims were mishandled. POPULAR TOURS TO THE SOVIET UNION. The World Tourists has succeeded in arranging popular tours to the Soviet Union, including visas and hotels in London and the U. S, S. R. (seven days in Leningrad and Mos- cow). Labor and Fraternal Organizations Of the Bpper” "ante Unemployed | Counei) will be held Saturday, July | 5 at 8.30 p, m, at 808 Lenox Ave. Good time for ail, seen 36 cents. Will be held sina Jul; Ww. is 6, at Va. Cortland Park. Good time ‘or ‘all, oftica Li: ars Protect Murderers head “hy a “block of wood” which the Negro worker, Alfred Le vy, | ther claim “fell off a building’—au who died after being clubbed on thy] Mamous lies. The police doctor bolstered up’ the “spontaneous” lie head by police last Friday night at| yy saying that the contributing a street meeting broken up Cilleyally | causes were enlargement of the of course) by the police. The police| heart (cardiac hypertrophy) and doctor, as a part of the capitalist | hardening of the arteries (arterio- system, protects the murderers by| sclerosis). Yet the truth is that | saying that Comradé Levy died of; Comrade Levy was in ordinary “spontaneous” hemorrhage of th. health, about 34 years old, and brain (cerebral hemorrhage). The| Would have lived at least twenty| capitalist press helpe the lie along | vedrs more had he not been mur-| by saying that Comrade Levy died| dered, clubbed to death by the capi- of apoplexy after he was hit on the | taiet police. Growth of Newspaper Dinialinn in U.S.S.R. Capitalist press reports that, ac-| paper shortage in the Soviet Union cording to Comrade Kaganovich’s | at the present time, the report states report to the Convention of the Com | that the circulation “would be 30 or munist Party of the Soviet Union| 40 per cent more except for the the present total daily circulation of | paper shortage.” all newspapers in the Soviet Union This single fact testifies to the is 25,000,000 while the circulation of | great elevation of the cultural leyel all papers in Czarist Russia was|of the Russian masses since the only 2,700,000, Since there is a! October revolution. Young Pioneer Film Rased on Fact, Says Author “Children of the New Day,” the] her relatives to beg in the streets, latest Sovkino film, now playing at| “The story was told to me by a the Eighth Street Playhouse, is| group of Young Pioneers in the based on a true story. | course of one of my visits to the Boris Brodyansky, author of the| 65th Child Home where the scenario, called in Russian “Lenin’s| Pioneer organization is very active. Address,” tells how he came to| They told me of that house, of the write the story: children living there, of the club “This picture is based on an in-| they succeeded in organizing and cident that took place in thé house| of the little Alexeyeva girl, who where Lenin once lived. The story| Was maltreated by her kin, is not about the great revolution-| “In all, ‘Lenin’s Address’ ary leader, but rather about a little! true story, rewritten in the girl of eight who was forced by|guage of the screen.” is a lan- *AMUSEMENTS- NOW PLAYING!——AMERICAN PREMIERE! SEAN O'CASEY’S Famous Play of the Irish Workers JUNO =: PAYCOCK THE A Tense and Dramatic Story of the Revolution in Lreland WITH ABBEY TH RE PLAYERS OF DUBLIN R 42nd STREET POPULAR K and PRICES ° BROADWAY Cooling Plant WIS. 1789 in Operation | Now Playing! American Premiere lame, THE FIRST FILM OF SOVIET CHILDREN! LATEST SOVKINO RELEASE CHILDREN «& NEW DAY tune’ “LENIN’S ADDRESS” } TITLE Enacted by cast of Soviet children, headed by § year old FATIMA GILAZOVA TH STREET’ STREET PLA ¥ HOUSE 52 W. Sth St. Spr. “5008, Continnous 1 P. M DIRECTOR JOSHPH Rt. Mon ARTISTS AND MODELS | | Parix-Riviern Edition of 1920 | MAJESTIC nee 44th St. W. of | way Eves, at Si30 Mats, Wea.) and Sat. at v Lidyalgi nd COOLED TO 70° inity Popular prices. oR A Theatre Guild Production" THE NEW GARRICK GAIETIES GUILD W. 524. Bys. 8:30 Mts.Th.&Sat.2:30 cy 2 Dempsey’s Stace Hit Jnek "HE BIG FIGHT with RALPH INCE and LOLA LANE Fight for the seven-hour day, five-day week. We Meet at the— é COOPERATIVE CAFETERIA ; 26-28 UNION SQUARE FRESH FRUIT SODAS AND ICE CREAM U. S. S. R. CANDIES CIGARETTES Fresh Vegetables Our Specialty /ORISIS GRIPS LATIN AMERICA Militant Struggles Developing Fast The economic crisis is sweeping | Latin America into the throes of | militant labor struggles and revo- lution. | As most Latin American coun- | tries depend more or less on one specialized industry, the slump in one particular industry will leave ¥ | a certain country helplessly desti- lisic tute. For instance, the slump in Whi | coffee is seriously affecting Brazil, tion the unprecedented drop in the price ther of sugar is haying a serious effect tray on Cuba, and the fact that the bot- tria | tom has dropped out of meat, und | wheat, tropical products, eotton, ties | copper, tin, silver, ete., are under- doo mining the economic positions of pac! the other Latin American countries. ers The rapid radicalization of the cur! Latin American workers and peas- ent antry is the necessary consequence ove | of such economic conditions. Un- T fortunately, owing to the lack of a digi ' strong organized Communist lead- and ership in the labor movement, the the | profound discontent of the masses was |has not yet been consolidated int poli ja strong, concerted revolutionar wer | movement. But the seed for sucky was a movement is already sown and ‘The the fruit is already growing very des’ rapidly. cha The fact that, within the last few han days, militant labor struggles oc- offi eurred in Cuba, Mexico, Brazil, Honduras, Paraguay, and the work- {ers and peasants almost captured power in Bolivia testify that the revolutionary movement in Latin America is digging deep and spread- ing fast. “For All Kinds of Insurance” ARL BRODSKY ([ARL Murray HII) 5550 7 Hast 42nd Street, New York 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 8215 Bronx, N ¥. Alu Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 658 Claremont Parkway, Bronx | | RATIONAL | Vegetarian RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVE, JE Bet. 12th and 13th Sts. Strictly Vegetariin Food MELROSE— Dairy ansravnant omrades i Always Find tt Pleasant to Dine at Oar Place 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx (near 114th St. Sti ’ *®RONE:>— INTERV. Le e149. HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 5865 Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A_ place vite Hgormhere where all 302 KE. 12th St. = New York Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST 240 BAST 115th YrREET. Second Ave. New York DAILY EXCEPI FRIDAY Wlease telephone for appointment ‘Telephone: Lebi; 6022 Cor. ‘Tel. ORChard 8788 DR, L. KESSLER SURGEON DENTIST Strictly by Appointment 48-50 DELANCEY STREET Cor. Eldridge St, NEW YORK DR. J. MINDEL| SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Room 808—Phone: Algonquin 6188 Not eonnected with any other office FOOD WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION OF NEW YORK 16 W. 2ist St. Chelsea 2274 Bronx Hesdfuarters, 2994 Third Avenue, Melrose 0128; Brooklyn Headquarter: Graham Avenue, 4 Pu sy 0634 ates Council nests ¥ of every mont 16 West 2ist St. Basic Unit, The Shop Di the first Tu at 8 M, al The Shop Is Advertise your Union Meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sn., New York City 188 BAST 10TH ST Furni rooms; all improvements, sear ahs Zz eae

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