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_ Page T Tw o- FASCIST TERROR RAGES fh THROUGHOUT FINLAN Diessiaiia « TOILERS PLAN PROTEST ses vox € Fascist Terror ie F Preparations Communist For Demonstrati The deepenin land makes the and landlords feel smashing the milite of the working class and t antry in order to shift 1 the burden of the shoulders of th lass. The i 1 the Finnish w while, r an attack on { a m tas turdlly lend a hand t to the g of a fascist terrorist campaig Finland Workers are jailed he tho Sie kan! thea among them are f W6rkérs presses are sup thé printing plants sr munist members in and and 73,124 Unemployed \ WASHINGTON.—Over nataré of the Birmingh trial Board, the Industrial Devel Birmingham Distr: been issued a folder e New Reservoir of Woman Birmingham, Alabama.” dustfial Board, it appea has placéd on the industrial auction block some 73,000 white women and girls in that region. “There are 73,124 v in the district, 10 years over, without any emplc the brutally frank w the situation is pr ed. though Birmingham’s white lation is primarily industrial few of the white women are whose slo of age or ment,” in which popu- very em- inlend Ie: Is Against Soviet Union ‘omen for a Step in War arty and Finnish Federation Call July 19th and tortured. Free speech sed and trade union or- are outlawed. Yester- 1 s reported that the adop tion of the Anti-Communist Law in Parlia’ ment is a matter of certainty. tical situation in Finland cerious attention of the the world. The Commu. of the United States and h Federation have just is- al] to “all revolutionary sympathizers with the ainst fascist terror and rialist preparations for war ainst the Soviet Union” to dem this coming Saturday, July noon before the Finnish Consulate, at 5 State St., New York, against the brutal fascist terror that ng throughout Finland. 10n on is ¢ workers o nist Par! Fir ale in Sout at Of these few em- ed white women, a negligible | number are engaged in industry.” But the real confession of pride | zham’s jure to bosses is i in the report on wages: wage scale necessary to at- ct these unemployed women is than that existent in specializing in woman lower centers labs Thus, cotton ‘mill operatives get $10 to $12 a week; waitresses get $5 to $12 a week and tips; laundry kers get $6 to $12 a week; | kery workers get $4 to $8 a week, d candy workers $4 to $8 a wéek. a In short—“Should the professional and cleri the average pay for women, week, would not exceed $10.” per Heywood Broun Talks Malthusian Gibberish NEW YORK.—The petty-bour- gedis clown, Heywood Br » fea- ture scribbler for the N York Télegram, and now one of the adofnments of the “socialist” pz shows his brilliance in his Frid column in the N. Y. Telegram, writing on the theory of “overpop- ulation.” “Though Malthus lived a long timé ago,” writes the solver of un- employment, Mr. Broun, “it does not seem to me that any economist has been able to shatter his funda- mental proposition that population tends to increase more rapidly than means of sustenance.” We can hear a militant worker ask Mr. Broun: “Why do the bosses destroy millions of pounds of fruit? Why does Legge and Hoover and Lamont ask the farmers to quit} Why do farm-| producing so much? ers burn their corn and wheat? Why do the fruit growers let their crops rot on the trees? Is it to} prove Malthus right, or is it because orkers starve? Australian Bosses Exploit Jobless BRISBANE, Ausirialia, J —Taking advantage of the y 14, nem. ployment situation, the Brisbane City Council attempted exploit thé jobless workers and use them the for road building by paying stafvation wage of $15 a week. The cost of living in Australia is quite high and workers, not to mefition their families, could not get enough nourishment out of what $15 can buy to sustain them for t on strike and demanded se of $1 a week. city council, seeing that they could not exploit these workers their hearts’ content, refused thé d and suspended work on the an road. Boss Sheet Laails Thomas-Hoover Unity NEW YORK. on the “socialis orial in Friday’s issue of the New York Telegram. The editorial headed “Republicans and Socialists” praises the social-fascists for their willingness to work with the Hoover Republicans. “To it” (the socialist | party), concludes the Telegram “as —Praise is heaped | ” party in an edit-| much as to the sonality of Mr. character and per- Thomas, is attrib- utable the new respect which the Republicans are paying the social- sts in these later days.” The attraction for like is so great that the socialist party now becomes an intimate bedfellow of | Hoover's Wall Street party. Report of Soviet Peasant Revolt Is a Lie | ADE A HERO TO HIDE BOSS GREE ess Lauds Foreman Doesn't Mention Abuses K.—Recently a New York paper carried an editorial lauding the foreman of the Patrick McGorman company for getting killed while supposedly saving his NAILY WORKFP. NEW YORK, TUESDAY, o|OFFICIAL RAVES MEN'S CLOTHING AT BRICKLAYER WORKERS TODAY | Bars Severin Because’ Dicks Arrested Him | jerew during a tunnel accident at} NEW YORK.—The meeting last} Cortez and Bronx Park East. Tuesday of Local 37 of the Brick- Workers at the tunnel tell a dif- férént story. The accident took |place July 9. It was directly the re- sult of the company’s speed up. Tunnel workers are supposed to be | out of the tunnel while’ dynamite is being placed in the drill holes. They are kept at work by Me- Gorman. They are supposed to Stay out for half an hour after the blast. The b rushes them im- |} mediately to work. They are sup- sed, by the rules of the union (A. F. L.) to get $11.50 for drillers and $9.50 for muckers. Drillers get $9.50 and muckers get $ When the loosened rock aved on the crew, and injured 15, they found, on being taken to the sur- face, that there was a priest hover- ing on the scene, and lots of police- men but no doctor for half an hou: later. As for the foreman ero, he was killed by a falling rock ~after the accident and the men had ‘0 strik2 (and were fired) to keep from being sent immediately back into the dangerous tunnel. N. J, FASCISTS KIDNAP WORKERS |300 Armed With Guns Attack Meeting NEW BRUNSWICK, N July 14.-A clash with the fascists of th: Veterans of Foreign Wars and the American Legion occurred here tonight, when 300 armed fascists at- al classes be eliminated,| tacked an election meeting of the | Communist Party, armed with guns, lead pipe and blackjacks, and after a battle kidnapped nine workers, taking them away. The meeting was arranged by th2) Election Campaign Committee of | the Communist Party of New Jer- séy, in spite of the previous clashes in New Brunswick. When the fascists attacked, the workers in the audience fought back, | | but not being armed the fascists had the advantage. Nine of the workers were séized, fivé are unknown. The four following are known: Gladys Bloomfield, a girl organizer of the Young Communist League in the Elee tion Campaign Committee; Elias Marks, Campaign Manager of italism overproduces but lets the| the Communist Party in the New | Jersey elections; Joseph S. Fosrich, a crippled war veteran; Sepesi. At this writing, 11:00 p. m., all the kidnapped have been found ex: cépt Sepesi, who was last seen being | taken down an alley and beaten up. George the strenuous job of road building. | The fascist véts were drunk. 200 PARTICIPATE IN LABOR SPORTS EVENT * GENEVA, Ohio, July 14.—Over | 200 worker athletes took part in a two day sports festival arranged by the Pennsylvania-Ohio Labor Sports | Union at Red Beach here early in July. Thousands of workers came as spectators. Nine teams with a total of over a hundred players took part in the first baseball tournament of the L. | S. U. Four were girls’ teams, and played excellently. The running events had over a hundred participants. Koski of De- troit won the 60 and 440 yard events. Liuska led in the mile until | layers saw a union official, Chair- man Donohue, turning stool pigeon in public and trying to help the government against a worker whose | crime was fighting for the cause of labor. The international union tion is early in September. Local 37 was TA Ee delegates. When the name A. Severin was put in nomination, Spariine got up and spoke something like this: “IT am going to put youse broth- ers wise to something. Some days conven- ago I got in touch with a top guy in the republican party and he put| e me w to this here brother. Why in 1922 a bunch of dicks swooped down on a bunch of Reds in De-| troit and arrested them. Now this here brother who has been pullin’ the wool over youse eyes was one of those Reds. He ought to be ashamed of himself—plottin’ agin the U. S. government. (Wanting to make a revolution in such a rich country!) Now it has got to stop, brothers, I woul ldn’t allow this here thing no mor | Unfortunatel. vit worked, $500 For Junket. The gang got busy and pushed through the local a motion to give} each of its delegates $500 to spend | in Montreal — which, i aioe) how many bricklayers are out of work and not able to buy the nec essities of life, is pretty generous. Severin has written a letter of protest to the executive board of bricklayers’ union in Washington, D. C. He is careful, after explain-| ing how he was kept out of the/ delegation which he hoped to go on| |for certainly the bricklayers have} | problems that need discussion, that he is protesting, for the record; only, without any expectation that) the bureaucrats who are back of| | the attack on him will show any justice towards him. Severin ex plains that he puts his faith in an| aroused rank and file. | Paterson Toilers Hold 5 |Meeting Despite Police, PATERSON, N. J., July 14—} While Communist Party candidates and speakers were calling upon the workers to fight against the grow-| ing bosses attacks on their condi-| tions and exposing Wall Street war preparations, police and dicks at- tacked the speakers. Speaker after speaker stubbornly took the stand and called for more determined struggle against the bosses. In spite of the admission of Chief Tracy that the Communist |Party had obtained a list of cor-| |ners for meetings and that» the meeting was going on at one of these corners, Judge Joelson, demo- | jeratic candidate for congress, de- cided that the comrades were guilty lof disorderly conduct and assault jand battery and threatening an Chee? Comrades Elkind, M. Liss, received suspended sen- cae while Comrade Vafiades bie |fined $20, Another open air meet-| ling was scheduled for Saturday, July 12, on the same corner. | Despite the fact that all the | speakers were arrested and kept in jail over night the meeting was continued with non-Party workers from the audience taking the plat- form and speaking in support of the Party. | $ i Virginia Worker Framed By Bosses, WELSH, West Va.—Andrew Spe- kar, arrested here while at work in jemn warning to the capitalists | given in an interview | market rever: MOSCOW (LP.S.).—According to; No disturbances of any kind have an 6fficial statement issued by the} taken place and the grain campaign Soviet government, the report pub-| in Transcaucasia is in full swing. lished by the official organ of the|In Scuthern Georgia bread from the German social democracy, “Vor-| new harvest is already for sale on| waerts” that a peasant revolt has/the markets. There exists not the broken out in Georgia against the| faintest danger of any revolt in Soviet power, is absolutely baseless. | Georgia or an, where else. he trippéd on loose dirt, and fin- | one of the Consolidated Coal Co.’s ished second to Fager with Brensic | mines, has been held and grilled by third. In the three mile run, Liuska| the police since early last June. won, with a record of 16.1 minutes) While he was being arrested, his/ on a slow, rain soaked track. Fager|/ room in the company boarding | was second. house was raided. The police took The broad jump was won by/his belongings and sent them to/ Kuosman with 20 feet and four | Washington. inches. Spehar, who was active in col- The next sports festival of the/lecting subscriptions for the Rad- Many Rice Rio’ in China SHANGHAI (I. P. S.).—The|lion peasants in the eastern areas Canton Kuomintang newspaper|of Szechwan are suffering from “Kwangtung Shars Pao” reports! famine. A number of rice riots ac- that the peasant revolt in the prov- | ineés of Kansu and Szechwan is rapidly spreading. About 5 peasants are involved. There is a severe shortage rice in the villages and over 6 mil- million | of| companied by much destruction of property has taken place. In the middle of May the rice riots had | developed inte a mass phenomenon. In many districts martial law has been declared. Jobless Mother Killls Her Starving Baby SUFFOLK, Va, July M— Geneva Slade, 20-year-old young mother is being held in jail here af‘er having killed her baby, which » was starving. The young mother ha? beén out of a job for some time, had no money, and after seeking employment for wecks without suc- cess. (Like many other Negro work ers uneniployed in the South and other sections of the country, she had never heard of the program of | th Communist Party). JOBLESS INCREASE IN GERMANY. BERLIN.—The labor bureau here gives statistics showing that there are 2,600,000 German workers un- miployed. This is double the number who Were out of work a year ago. ver 750,000 are without state relief, ‘epending upon the meager crumbs _ chat come from private relief or- _ ganizations Unemployed Jewelry Toilers Meet Tomorrow NEW YORK.—Tomorrow, at 11 a. m., all unemployed jewelry work- lers are called to a meeting at 125 W. 45th St., Room 512. The Un- employed Council of the Jewelry Workers’ Industrial Union, calling the meeting, states in a leaflet dis- tributed: We can organize and demand im- mediate relief and unemployment in- | surance from the government 4s the jobless in many countries did and jgot it. One billion dollars given for battleships and not a cent for the unemployed! Demand the billion for the jobless! Write About Your Conditions for The Daily Worker. Become & Worker Correspondent. Support the Daily Worker Drive! Get Donations! Get Subs! year will be held at Monessen, Pa., on August 9th and 10th. All work- et athletes are asked to prepare for this meet—all workers are asked to support and attend. CHARLOTTE YOUTH TO HOLD PICNIC, JULY 20 CHARLOTTE, N. C., July 14. “We have starved long enough, or- ganize for a change”, says an ap- peal of the Young Communist League here to the mill child slaves ahd other working youth of this vicinity. “We young workers that do have work have to do two or three times as much as before, work that it used to take two or three to do,” says the appeal. “The bosses have kept us workers fighting each other. He tells the white worker, ‘You are better than that Nigger’, and then he tells the Negro, ‘You are better than the white trash’, and in that way he has kept us from organiz- ing. But we young workers will not be so easily fooled from now on.” The Young Communist League organizer here is Elbert Totherow, of Gastonia. AH young workers are invited to the Y. C. Li, district head- quarters at Workers Center, 14th St. and North Caldwell Ave. Char- lotte. The Y, C. L. also invites them to the picnic at Old Wizard Plant on Mt. Holly Road, near Charlotte, July 20th. nic, the Daily Worker, and the La- |bor Defender, was turned in by his |fandlord, one of the mine bosses, for spreading “red propaganda.” When Jack Rose, the Internation- | al Labor Defense representative, in- | | sisted on bail, a cash bond of $500} was demanded by the court before Spehar would be released. The ter- ror and poverty of the West Vir- ginia miners is so great that this | amount has not yet been raised. | The police expect to “frame” a} | charge against Spehar by July 14— so far they haven’t been able to in- vent one. He faces trial in Welsh, West Va., on July 17. In their efforts to secure the de- portation of this worker the mine owners and the rotten boss courts are working hand in glove against Comrade Spehar. July 18 Women Hold Anti War ar Conference The Communist Pi Party has ealled | a Women’s Anti-War Conference for Friday, July 18, at 26 Union Square, New York City. The ob- ject of the conference is the mob- ilization of thousands of New York and New Jersey working women for participation in the mass demon- stration to be held on August 1 at Union Square. Negro and white working women must rally all forces to Union Square, on August 1, in mighty pro- test against, the feverish war prep- arations of dhe bosses. IVEY 15, 1920 Cooper Union Meeting For New Struggle NEW YORK. — — call of the Needle 1 Industrial Union, m of men’s clothing workers, organized and un- organized, employed and unemploy- ed will rally at Cooper Union today right after work, and take up the serious problems of the trade. The men’s clothing workers are endur- ing steady wage cuts, increased un- employment, worsening condition: The Amalgamated Clothing Work- ers officials deliberately encourage the b s and assist them in this “reorganization” and “efficiency.” The Needle Trades Workers In- dustrial Union leads a fight to stop this. trade to build their own, to fight to cut down the force or worse conditions or cut wages, to look to the P.W.1.U. for leadership stead of. to Hillman “Tailors!” says a | uted by the N.T.W.LL “You have gone through heroic struggle in the past, and you know from experience the road to better conditions is the road of struggle and strikes. Take up the struggle for union con- |ditions right in the shops!” Leaders of the Industrial Union | will speak at tonight’s meeting. POPE WITH FISH AGAINST “REDS” Tells U. $s. 1 Bosses to] Suppress Communists nswering the rades Worker. flet distrib- Reports from the V; day said that pope Catholic church ican yester the Roman had uttered a sol- of i tie United States to “beware 2f the spread of Bolshevism.” This was | by the pope |to Monsignor John A. Ryan, of the catholte university at Washington, It calls on all workers in the | shop committees of | every attempt | ‘FOOD UNION IN- ACTIVE DRIVE Hv Rube s; Picket Many in Defiance of Gangs, Police BULLETIN, NEW YORK.—A fraction meet- all Communists in the food ing, industry, will be held Thursday, 7:30 p. m. at 26-28 Union Square. Thursday is the day, by accident sent out called the meeting for Wednesday. | NEW YORK —A picket line was } thrown around the bakery at 5317 | Church Ave., Brooklyn yesterday, where workers are on strike for |union conditions. The police ar- three, but were unable to et charges against them. Every night the scabs at the Open | Kitchen Cafeteria at Brighton Beach are escourted home by police and detectives who loiter on the corners. < | The Food Workers Industrial has won the strikes in the s at 4118 Thirteenth Ave. Jnion | two dairi and 2311 Ave. U. | Millers Market, in the Bronx, | | where Si Katovis was mores by a poliee agent of the aided by the socialist party nave was again the scene of a battle be- tween pickets and gangsters yes- terday. The W. FE. U. continues picketing this s months it has been on strike. shop runs only through the support lof the other bosses. The police again came in to aid the gang, and sted a picket, H. Mitzberg. | Picketing continues at Pato’s| . | Bakery on Allerton Ave., Glenmore | Bakery, McClellan Bakery, and the | bakeries at 616 East 180th St. and | Bai st 156th St. A strike was declared at the | Roseland cafeteria at 138th St. and | | Gy ypress Ave., with the workers re- ‘| sponding 100 per cent to the lIcad- ership of the F. W. I. U. CHILD DELEGATES BACK FROM CHI, Two Week Trip From Jobless Convention a “Ths people of the United States ; do not realize how far Boishevism had _ spread,” the Pope asserted | forcibly. The Pope added that ¥ in London some year | becoming pontiff he w | by the hold that Bolshev had obtained there. His Holiness warned America to “beware lest anything similar hap- | pen to ur own country.” Mons. Ryan said the Pontiff show: ed considerable knowledge of con-! ditions in the United States, being | fully acquainted with business de- velopments of the last year. The Pope’s warning followed half an hour’s conversation with Mon- | signor Ryan and was precipitated | during conversation about the stock 1 of last October. Replying to a question put to him by the Pontiff, the Washington clergyman said there were at least two million unemployed persons in the United Stat The Pope countered, “This is just the right time for the spread of Bolshevism. The people in the United States do not realize how far it has gone.” FILIPINO LEAGUE JOINS THE ANTI-IMPERIALISTS Following the statement issued by the Anti-Imperialist League of the United States on June 17, in which this organization demands the immediate independence of the Phillipines, the League for Phil- lipino-—freedom of Chicago, after endorsing the resolution, decided to give its affiliation to the Anti- Imperialist League. In issuing this statement of the League for Filipino freedom, Albert Moreau, Secretary of the Anti-Im- perialist League stated that these organizations which are giving their affiliation to the League are expressing their determination to folldw these resolutions by actions. on he was ago before | startled | Biggest and Best Work- ers’? Outing of Season Our Build the Daily 52: Worker PICNIC ana CARNIVAL vvvve¢ Held in Co-operation with All Revolutionary and Sym. pathetic Workers’ tions; —All Party Communist Pap- ers; All Daily Worker Readers; All Workers from the Shops, That We Can Reach; Organiza: REMEMBER THE DATE Sun., Aug.17 Pleasant Bay Park '! cago in the “Pioneer NEW YORK.—After travelling) for about two weeks the Pioneer Delegation of Néw York to the} July 4th Unemployed Convention | arrived in New York. They had started out from Chi-| Express,” a truck converted into a_ travelling ear for the delegates. They had numerous breakdowns on the trip and sometimes ran out of gas a) long ways from a gas station. The truck had a sign written on it— | “the Pioneer Express” and was bordered by a hammer and sickle. ILD Excursion to Hook Mountain July 19th Since the proceeds from the Hook Mountain Excursion this Saturday, July 19th, are to be used for the | International Labor Defense’s work for dlass war prisoners, the District Office is working out an elaborate program to attract as large a crowd as possible and thus insure for the event a genuine success, So far the program includes the M. O. P. R. moving picture of the s war throughout the world, a picture which has had a splendid reception from those who have al- ready seen it. The boat leaves Pier A, South Ferry at 2 p. m. on Saturday (July 19th), and returns at midnight. The cost is $1.25 in advance (at, Inter- national Labor Defense Local Office, Room 410, 799 Broadway or at the Workers Bookshop, 26 Union Square, or $1.50 at the boat. AMERICAN PREMIERE, {THE ROOF TH STREET Film Guild Cinema Dir, Jos. R. Fliesler Popular — Prices IRKO THEATRES LETS GOV] LOBE “sania ine “LAWFUL LARCENY” with Bebe Daniels; Lowell Shermans Kenneth Thomson— A Radio Pleture AMEO = "Fors sitect? “AT THE BOTTOM OF THE WORLD” |the August primaries.” | the Mooney-Billings jury in 1916, and whom MacDonald | out Mooney and Billings to him in| jail as the persons he had to iden- ness before Governor Young by re- himself.” and testify. at the scene of the preparedness day j imprisoned, have died. NOW PLAYING! essen LATEST SOVKINO FILM. ‘PAMIR’ See Soviet Scientists scale 21,600 ft. to Mt.Lenin (This Expedition Was Barred in 1918 by Caar Nicholas) PLAYHOUSE 52 W.SthS#., Spr. 5005, Cont. 1 p.m.toMidnite - YOUNG WAITS FOR MASTER'S VOICE Won't Open Hearing) Until Railroads Speak| | SAN FRANCISCO, Calif., July) 14.—The machinery is being geared up to diseredit, if possible, John| MacDonald's affidavit made in} Baltimore the day before yester- day repeating his confession in 1921 that he testified falsely agai Mooney and Billings in their t: 4 for murder when they were being! framed for the 1916 preparedness | day bomb explosion. | “After the Primaries.” Governor Young, in Sacramento, made a statement today that he} would hear MacDonald at an open ssion of the pardons board “after | It has been charged all along that Governor | 'Young’s attitude on the Mooney- | Billings case would depend very much on how much support the United Railroads of San Francisco gave him in this primary, in which he runs for republican party nom- } ination against Mayor Rolph of San Francisco and another. The trac- tion interests have for years dom- inated California politics and were prime movers behind the frame-up. They wanted to get Mooney because he organized the street car men. Captain Charles Goff, the officer who handled the MacDonald per- | now, and in i921, swears pointed | tify, of course qualifies for a wit- iterating his previous statement that “MacDonald identified them MacDonald Released. BALTIMORY, Md., July MacDonald was released today, He | states that he will go to California He repeats that he did see vither Mooney or Billings not parade explosion. BOSSES 0.K. KILLING OF 17 LATIN WORKERS MEXICO CITY, July 14.+The fascist authorities of Mexiéo, ap- |prové the massacre by those in | Mataiorros on June 28, where 17 workers were killed and 15 wounded. The Matamorros authorities (in the state of Coahuila) not content with the massacre, are daily adding to those jailed. Among the séveral score afrested since Juné 28, are! Faustino Vela (wounded 1 the at- tack), Benito Médina, Cecilio! Valero, Joaquin Calderas, Manuel Negrete, Felipe Zarate, Santos Montiel and Pablo Valles. Two of the wounded who were They were Ceferirio Reyes and Filemon Garcia, They died because the autheri' | held them in filthy jails without giving them any medical atiention. Many other wounded in similar con- ditions are in danger of death. “Cain and Artem” For Another Week| The Amkino production of Maxim Gorki’s “Cain and Artem” will re- main at the Little Theatre for the first three days of next week. Beginning Thursday the attrac- tion will be the exclusive local show- ing of “New Babylon” (the Paris Commune), one of the latést pro- ductions from the U. S. S. R. Support the Daily Worker Drive! Get Donations! Get Subs! OF THE WORLD} a ats ‘A Theatre Gail Produetto THE NEW GARRICK GAIETIES GUILD *,4 Sets ARTISTS AND MODELS Paria-Aiviera Edition® of 19390 MAJESTIC Then. 44th Sto W. of | way Eves. at §130 ats. Wed. Dy a HATE Per to “tae We Meet at the— Fresh COOPERATIVE CAFETERIA 26-28 UNION SQUARE FRESH FRUIT SODAS AND ICE CREAM U. S. S. R. CANDIES———CIGARETTES Vegetables Our Specialty 24.— || ANTI LYNCHING MASS MEETING ON WEDNESDAY NEW YORK.—The American Negro Labor Congress calls an anti- lynching mass meeting Wednesday evening at 8 p. m. in Royal Palace, 16 Manhattan St.; Brooklyn. Among the speakers will be Herbert New- ton, one of the six chargéd with incitement to insurrection” in At- janta. His offense consisted in or- ganizing Negro and White Workérs against lynching. If convicted hé will, under the Georgia law, be electrocuted. Newton will tell of the Georgia situation. “For All Kinds of Insurance” ((ARL BRODSKY ‘felephoneé: Murray Hil) 65m i ast 42nd Street, New York tie TES Cooperators! 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. ¥. AU Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx RATIONAL Vegetarian RESTAURANT © 199 SECOND AVE: JB Bet. 12th ané 13th Ste. Strictly Vegetarian Food -—MELROSE— | D $. VEGBETAHIAN aL RESTAURANT jomrades Will Always n Pleasant 16 Dine at Otr 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Brons (near 174th St, Station) PRONE INTERVA! stds. HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 5865 Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ee vIsEES A. place jouphere where ‘a rabies 302 E. 12th St. New ¥ Yort Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DBENTIST 249 BAST 115th STREET Second Ave. New York DAILY @XCEPT FRIDAY Please telephone for spoptutment Telephone: Lehigh Cor. Tel. ORChard 8782 DR. L. KESSLER SURGEON DENTIST Strictly by Appointment 48-50 DELANCEY STREET Cor. Eldridge St. NEW YORK DR. J. MINDEL| SURGECN DEN'TIST 1 UNION SQUARE Room $03—Phoné: Algonquttt 8183 Not id any other office Workers Cooperative Colony 3-4 ROOM APARTMENTS We have’ a ‘timited number of these apartments. neces he ‘Take pwn Ave, White Plaina get off at Allérton Ave, station. TEL. ESTABROOK 1400 2800 BRONX PARK EAST Our Office is open trom 9 a to 680 p.m. ly, and from a.m. to 2 on Sundays, FOOD WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION OF NEW YORK 16 W. Zist ee Cheleea 29976 Grees Headauarters, 2994 Avenue, Melrose 9138; Brooks eimahe 16 Graham Avénue, Pulas asky ( 0634 eShop Del ater Cou: the first Tue ae ee $s P.M, aie ‘West meee Shop In the. the Basic Onit, vr a Advertise your Union Meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. | 26-28 Union +. New York City