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Hage Two _ PAYROLLS WERE CUT 10. Pp. CG IN JULY ADMITS DEPARTMENT OF LABOR Automobile Industry in “Threatening” Condi-| tion As Market Shrinks Admit Their Predictions Fall Flat; Steel Bosses Bitter Win taken off the lustries during , according to the latest report . Department of Labor. , dropped 454 ‘olls were cut! payrolls { month, A huge slice wa ut in ued month after ce the stock market crash. But nearly 10 per cent ges, indicating wage-cutting for the still left on the job and read part-time employment. | 2 is but one indication of the lesale he is becoming The Annalist index of inese activities has dropped to rly the lowest level of the 192 And this at a period is was supposed to be ‘easing of | All basic ies are effected. Regarding the auto plants, about} which so eate statements were made this month, the Annalist has this to say: “Conditions in the automobile industry may reasonably be con- sidered rather threatening, For the remainder of this year, at any rate, it seems clear that the manufacturers will be able to sell only a very moderate percentage of their output capacity; and even though the present business situa- tion is a depressant of unusual force, all the circumstances of the industry indicate that the market for automobiles has practically reached the saturation point as measured by population, and that some diminution of manufactur- ing capacity will presently be forced by the disproportion he- | tween profits and overhead.” | Here is a promise of permanent unemployment for thousands more of auto workers, and no indication | of immediate “alleviation” of the| crisis in this important basic in-| dustry. Latest figures for building activ- ities also show severe declines. Con- tracts awarded for the first eight) days of August showed a decline of | Will Fight Fake ter Ahead per cent below the same per- iod in 19: 0.9 per cent below 1928, and 58.8 per cent below 1927, A telegram from Pittsburgh (Aug. 16) to’ the Evening Post, smashes the predictions of a month | “Steel men of the Pittsburgh | Above photo shows workers in the P. | DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, AUGUST 18, 1930_ [— Today in 5 iste of he Workers ork at Stuttgart, Germany. 192)-—-Wom- | |en’s Suffrage amendment to United 1929__Emil Hoellein, German Com- munist agitator, died. 2 obless Insurance sent state mailitia to Buffalo to | has switchmen’s strike. 1907—In- | | = | States constitution ratified. 192: Boss Gov’t Rushes War | Detense batallions formed by str | A ford, Engl | Pr eparations ing miners at Ammanfor nglant In Williamstown, Mass., where | as | the big Intellectual guns of the| bosses have gathered to discuss world political problems, the discus- sion now evolving around the stion of the world crisis leading |to war, While all of the professors GREET RB, I, b U. | admit the present world depression Ly is leading to war, some of them, i i apitalis rs hai 2Y heme for “unem ent in- inly to fool the workers, say there ago issued by the Board of Direc- Capitalist papers hailed the Young scheme for “unemployment in mainly to e wo say the Itors of the U. S. Steel Corporation| surance” for the General Electric workers, but today are silent when a Beye out. Beotessge Ci. Dellslg Many aid © OP AG Big that production would turn upward| 5,000 in the Schenectady plant alone are jobless and donst get a red urns, former member of the “La- | in August, The dispatch says: cont for relief. General Electric workers must demonstrate with all | bor” government, takes the view Nabisco Plant jobless workers on September First for the Workers Insurance Bill. point that was is inevitable, An- swering him, with worn-out argu- | eral business, whereby steel would enjoy a couble improvement. Signs of both should be visible by this time if they were to come, iam sevatiety | PAPERS i FIED As the crisis grows worse in the White Guard Tries to U. S, and throughout the world, the Say “Reds” Did It bosses make more frantic efforts | for foreign markets. Thus far they | ave met tremendoas reverses. | NEW YORK. Yesterday the of-| ficial interpreter of the Fish Com- have met tremendous reverses. In July foreign trade dropped 30 per u cent below 1929. Exports for the mittee admitted to the press “that | first seven months of the year were | the Whalen documents are forgeries $680,629,000 under those of the) The interpretor is Gregory Bernad- sky, owner of a gambling den at 138 West 119th St., and a close a same period last year, while im- ports were $684,477,000 less, 2 ciate of Congressman Carl Bachman of the Fish Committee during With the closing down of what little building activities there are s hearings in New York. Bachman brought Bernadsky to the ions; | in the fall and winter, with the Bernadsky sat with the committee | certainty of lower steel production, and prompted Bachman in his quiz- lower output of automobiles, wors- ened agrarian crisis, increasing un- zing of Amtorg officials. Bernad sky is also the president of a pub- employment, wage cuts, the condi- lishing company that has just put tions of the workers in the United ates this winter will be worse This discussion calls to mind the | the working class from the capital- | mee ,,| Statements of Herbert Hoover’s| ist’ system and the establishment of | Ca sources report / brother, who is a professor of en-|_ workers government all over the gloom in the tanker st ci les both | gineering at Leland Stanford Uni-| world as you have. i and England over the gen-| versity, Professor Hoover said was| lee situation, The ability of is not only inevitable but necessary ot eel Morkerts tek ial Union, | andhi to betray the independence | for imperialism. He said the better) "°1™T SNE Bente Mey movement as he did several years) the “responsible heads” of govern-| 44 4, Ras ped oes | ago pected. The practical re-| ment understand it the more they} ,At the National Biscuit Company | |volt against him of the council of | will prepare for it. Imperialism, he plant Jaat Nido there were 174 | war of the Indian national congress | said, must have colonies. He favored | Workers laid off; 32 were laid off startled the imperialist optimists. | arming to take them. Presiden | Monday, 100 Wednesday and 42 on In Peshawar martial law has been | Hoover shares the same views—| Thursday. Also workers in differ- ieclared, which does not mean any-|more, he speeds war armaments to| ¢M departments in the factory are | | district make a less favorable ap- hiladelphia. General Mlectric plant. | ments, was Professor Edwin F. Gay, | Council of the Food Workers’ Indus- praisal of conditions and pros- |head of the Department of Econ-| trial Union has sent the following pects now than thirty days ago. omies and History at Harvard, The | cablegram to the opening of the Then they were in a mood to ex- brilliance of Professor Gay consists | Fifth Congress of the Red Interna- pect both seasonal improvement AD T lin saying that “Since war would be| tional of Labor Unions: Ss in steel and improvement in gen- |a mistake, it won’t happen.” At the| “Profintern, Moscow, U.S.S:R.: | same time Gay kept on enumerating war—growing world rivalries be-| tween the imperialist powers; strug- gle for markets. “The economic | Sides Reinforce | pressure already existing will doubt- less be increased,” he admitted. The Food Workers Industrial Union sends greetings to the Fifth Con- gress of the R.I.L.U. and the tenth | | anniversary, We have full confidence | | that your decisions will bring us | towards the goal of all revolutionary | | unions, that is, the emancipation of Both in Peshawar Area | being forced to take two week vaca- tions without pay, This is becoming | a general rule ir this plant. They are preparing the workers ideologi- them out. ith the crisis shrinking the home markets in the United States to an enormous extent, the struggle| ca thing practically as the whole terr tory on the Northwest is a battl d, insurgent peasants di ing over much of it, and .he B YOUNG FOOD WORKERS | IN MASS MEET TONIGHT, NEW YORK.—The Youth section | of the Food Workers Industrial Union has sent out a call for a mass meeting of all young workers in the food industry, organized and | unorganized, for Monday, August 18, 8 p. m. at the union headquar- ters, 16 West 21st St. This meeting will be one of a series of mobilization meetings to | organize the young food workers against the wage cutting, speed-up and lay-off campaigns of the bosses. The program for the young food workers will be presented at this mass meeting together with the elec- tion of a Youth Committee of ten. A proposal.to organize a sports club affiliatedto the L.S.U, will be made at the mass meeting, and pi2parations made for the mobiliza- | tion of jobless young food workers for the September 1st demonstra- tion. Among the speakers will be Kling, Obermier, Beal and Cory, of the Youth Section. Parents Can Visit WIR Children’s Camp, Sat. NEW YORK.—Parents of children attending the Workers’ International Relief Camp at Beacon, N. Y., will visit it on August 23 and August 24 and see how it functions. The par- ents will leave New York City Satur- day and arrive in camp in time for supper. The children will then pre- sent a provram, The following morning the parents will be served with breakfast, then watch further activities by the children. Dinner will follow and then the return trip, to New York. The W. I. R. has ar-! roaged a pecial rate of $5 for the! parents which includes transporta- tion to and from New York, the meals and sleeping accommodations at the camp. Those who desire to| go must : # at once at the local office of the W. I. R., 10 East 17th Street. Labor and Fraternal Midnight Performance. “The End of St. Petersburg,” a Sovkino movie, Saturday, August 23, 1930, 11:30 Pedtectt Brighton Play- house, 273 ighton Beach Ave., un- | der auspices of Women's Council, No, 17, Brighton Beach. Ex-Servicemen's Meeting. On Monday, August 18, at Third Ave. and 100th St. at 7.30 p, m. the Wx-Rervicemen’s League will hold a street meeting. Communist Activities Unit 2, Section 4. Unit meeting night has been changed to Monday at the usual place. Next méeting, Monday, Aug. 18, at 7:30 sharp. * Sectlon 1 ‘unit Ww. E. Aug. 19 at 6:15 p. m., 27 t. Discussion. ae Sa 3 Units 1, 8—Section 4. Units 1 and 3, Section 4, will meet Monday, August 18, at 1800 7th Ave. at 8 p. m. Support the Daily Worker Drive! Get Donations! Get Subs! VICIOUSLY ATTACKE TRENTON, ihe 17. — Police brutally broke up a Communist | election campaign open air meeting | in this city last night. Long clubs and blackjacks were | viciously used against the workers | and many were injured. A picked squad of uniformed thugs attacked the speakers. Besides an unknown number of workers injured, the following were beaten up and arrested: Letty Gennet, Herman Rothwell, Carl Miller, F, Ursenye, M. Wisnewski. PIONEERS SCORE ATTACK ON THE CHILDREN’S CAMP NEW YORK.—The New York District of the Young Pioneers of America has issued a statement scoring the raid and arrests at the Van Etteh camp for workers ¢!:il- dren, conducted by the Workers’ In- ternational Relief, The resolution says: “These attempts at forcing the workers’ children to replace their Red Pioneer banner with an Ameri- can flag have failed. The sheriff, deputies and state highwaymen, all part of the boss-controlled govern- ment which assisted these hood- lums, are pretending to prevent attacks. The truth is that they re- alize that if they allow these bosses’ thugs to destroy the camp and hurt any of the children it will only serve to incre: the workers of the entire country against the bosses, and they are therefore trying to prevent trouble. The workers and their children of the entire country must unite and protest these attacks of the bosses against the only workers’ children’s organizations, the Young Pioneers of America, PENN. CHILDREN PLEDGE AID TO RAIDED CAMP PITTSBURGH, Pa., Aug. 17.— The Pittsburgh* District of the Workers’ International Relief and the children of the Ella May Camp ‘at Finleyville have sent a strong telegram of protest against the ‘raids upon the Van Etten, N. Y., W. I, R. children’s camp. “We, the Pittsburgh District of the W, I. R.,” the message states, in part, “express our solidarity with these children by pledging 25 per cent of all proceeds from the Grant Children’s heunion Picnic to be held Sunday, August 21, at Ideal Park, Johnstown, Penn., to them. We: in- vite the Van Etten camp children to stay at our Ella May camp for the rest of the summer.” The telegram embodying this resolution is signed by Michael Burd, national field organizer of the Children’s Committee; Andy Wilson and Carl Moher, camp directors; Ertest Rymer, Nierone, Albereson, of the camp committee, in the documents, that Bogdanov, | head of the Amtorg, denounced them |as forgeries without making an in- vestigation to see whether they were or not, and that Yassowa, the man wto had the forgeries printed in| |Max Wagner’s printing plant has gone to the Soviet Union. Origin of the Forgeries The facts are that Yassowa did | indeed have the Moscow letter heads n ever before in the history of | out the first issue of a magazine |ich military authorities ruling with |for new world markets is becoming | Clly toy ee a offs beg ee the country. called “The American Obser an iron hand in the fortified zones|the foremost topie of discussion Sen o that effect. je wor! eh Unemployment this winter will be | which contains a long article by Fish | they still } Politically, however, | among the leading bosses and their | are soe, sone into a penieiad | well over the 10,000,000 mark.| and a full page advertisement of | it nt as an admission by | intellectual highlights. This is the| are realizing the need for the Food Worse still, most of these workers|U. S. Commissioner Chas. Wood. nment of the seriousness | Vital point behind the feverish war Workers Industrial Union. : will have heen out of work for a|Aceording to two New York police |of the situation. Both sidés are| Preparations, to the tune of a bil-| The higher paid workers in sev- year o more. Their resources have | inspectors, Bernadsky was a great | awaiting reinforcements. MacDon-| lion dollars, now going on in the eral instances are being sete and | already disappeared. Starvation be-| help to Whalen, and is an agent of |ald is sending more airplanes, and| United States. James D. Mooney,| ar; being replaced with others at | comes a stark reality for all work-| the U.S, Department of Justice. | there are further threats ‘0 blow | Vice-president of the General Motors | @ lower rate 4 pay. eas ers. Both unemployed and em-| RBernadsky now says that the docu- | ur the insurgents’ family villages if | Corporation, in an interview Thurs- | Beginning Sept. 1 the workers |ployed must be mobilized for a del are were forged by the Amtorg|they do not go home. Many vil-|4ay, before he left for Europe, ad-| will be forced to work 8 hours # day, termined fight to push through the| officials themselves, and that Police |lages have been bombed during the | mitted the headlong rush to war in|5 days a week, receiving the rate Workers’ Social '~-urance Bill, Gometlaaione® Whalen’s spies were | last ‘few days. Peasants from ie | thes siruesle for world markets, He ees po gig 40 hours ag grunts T1K Hatel hi rakzai | Sid: Nal ait Abell Beside Sidia hefore “Bekhawar, hardest | 8 in ane history of our} hours until now. | J overseas trade, which was to be ex- Nabisco Meeting Tomorrow. A a a i pected in view of the economic and} Strike Against Wage-Culs! | political fo-tors at work during the | Demand Unemployment Insurance! | past year.” —___—_————_ In their war preparations, and | struggles for markets, the bosses | do not talk much. They act. At the SEPTEMBER 7TH | same time, they attempt to keep | these actions from the workers’ view. It is rare that the capitalists | admit the nearness of war. The fact} All Organizations Must Support; | Special Price For Tickets on which the documents were forged | printed in Wagner’s shop in New York, but Yassowa is a member of the staff of Russian monarchist paper, Novoye Russkaya Slovo, and | Wagner accuses Bernadsky of ac- companying Yassowa. When things got hot, Yassowa did indeed flee to Europe, but hardly to the Soviet Union. The documents were hawked around to various newspaper offices | | before Whalen took them and pub- the rage of | lished them, receiving them from Ralph Easley and Matthew Woll of the National Civic Federation. Pub- lication of these forged documents and Whalen’s defense of them was the occasion for the appointment of the Fish Committee (“Congressional | Committee to investigate Commu- nism in America”). Apparently the former police com- missioner’s white guard friends are | willing to represent him as an idiot in order to save him from charges | of being accomplice to a forgery. Vote Communist! . Woods to Present “The Ninth Guest” at Elti Owen Davis’ newest Ere “The Ninth Guest,” is set for the Eltinge Theatre, according to an an- nouncement sent out by A. H. Woods yesterday. The new play, which has been received with favor on its try- out journey in /tlantic City and elsewhere, will have its Broadway premiere at the Eltinge Theatte on Monday evening, August 25. At the Theatre Masque this eve- ning a new comedy, “Through the | Night,” authored by Samuel Rus- kin Golding, will have its initial showing. Helen MacKellar is the star. Noel Tearle, George Mac- Quarrie and John Westley are oth- | ers in the cast. “Blind Mice” is now the title A the Vera Caspary-Winifred Lenihan play, formerly called “Beautiful Evening” and “Saturday Night,” which Crosby Gaige placed in re- hearsal yesterday under the direc- tion of Miss Lenihan. Claiborne Foster heads an all-female cast ¢f 22 players. Leo Donnelly, last seen here in the short-lived “Spook House” at the Vanderbilt Theatre, has been engaged by Louis Gensler “or an important role in support of Lenore Ulric in the forthcoming William DuBois drama that is currently in the throes of a title change. Jan Fabricius, one of Holland’s most widuy known playwrights, will make his il | that it is an ABA day be ie ae a |the urgency of the immediate dan- NEW YORK.—The annual picnic | 1° e' mporlalist war With fhe of the International Labor Defense) jaya) “treaty” passed, the imperial- | will be held September 7, at Pleas-| ist governments have lost no time ant Bay Park, as a meeting of all| in building up aor aa machines. | nauilsndin i ‘ izati They are rushing headlong to war. workers) So ue eee There is a way out, but it is not the that are part of the struggle for! ¥oy suggested by Professor Gay. release of class war prisoners. His “solution” is merely a matter The International Labor Defense | of intensifying the basic antagon- in now conducting hundreds of | isms of the imperialist powers, cases over arrests, persecution and| namely, more trustification, cutting deportations of workers and calls| production costs, the better to win upon all to support it in its work. | world markets away from competi- All organizations are urged to} tors, and in general magnifying the immediately buy tickets in quanti-| violent efforts of the imperialists. ties. The tickets are sold at 25| The way out is revolutionary work- cents to the organizations and 35/ingclass organization against im- |cents each to the individual work- | perialist war and for the overthrow | ers. Send to the office of the LL.D.{of capitalism. Steps towards this | 799 Broadway, Room 410 for tickets. | end must be undertaken now, by | A good program has been pre-/every worker, consciously organizing pared. The food will be truly In- | against imperialist war, and for the ternational: Hungarian Gulach, Ar- | overthrow of capitalism. The Soviet | menian Saslick, Russain, Polish and| Union has shown the “way out,” American dishes, prepared by the! Pacifist and ultra-imperialist talk ILL. branches. A movie of the| are the smoke-sereens useful for | work of the M.O.P.R. internationally | the every-day war preparations of will be shown for the first time. | the imperialist bandits, PARASITE BUMPS OFF NEW YORK.—William Swift, son of the millionaire exploiter of Negro and white packing house slaves, killed himself by shooting in a priv- ate sanitarium on Park Ave. yes- —— |terday. He was insane from too | much booze, He never worked a day in his life. | nge, August 25 ROBERT AMES FOOD WORKERS INDUSTRIA! UNION OF NEW YORK 16 W, 2st Chelsea 2274 Bronx Hesdduarters, 2994 Thiro | Avenue, Melrose 0128; Brooklyn Headquarters, 16 Graham Avenue. Pulasky 0634 | : Council meets t f every month |) M. 16 West 2ist St |) The Shop ts the Baste Unit. Advertixe your Union Meetings here For information write to | The DAILY WORKER - | Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union ©~ Now York City | ROOMS | 138 EAST 110TH ST. LARGE, tgsonr} urnished rooms, convent subway. Lehigh 1890, Who plays the leading vole in “Holiday,” now in its third and final week at the Cameo Theatre. | try early in September, to be prec- ;ent at the New York premiere of his drama, “Insult,” which is being produced here by Lee Shubert with an all-English cast. Fabricius is the author of 28 plays. The Eng- lish adaptation has been made by J. KE. Harold Verry and Harry Phone: LEHIGH 6382 International Barber Shop SALA, Pr ev York w. 2016 second Avenue, (bet. 103rd & 104th Robs Our Specialty Private Beauty Parlor Ladie There will be an open air meeting | at the National Biscuit Company | Tuesday, at 12 o’clock with speakers from the Food Workers Industrial | Union. All comrades are urged to be there. The unemployed council of the food workers will hold its regular | weekly open air meeting on Monday noon at 11th St. and Fourth Ave. A general membership meeting of ATTACK ON INFANT ROUSES NEGRO WORKERS, Storm Home of Man Who Hit Child PASSAIC, Aug. 17- | talyno, a 37-year-old b | worker, who was taugl |to hate Negroes, yeste | something he did not finish. Returning home from work and finding his daughter, Aline, 5, wres- | tling with two Negro children,} Wille 5, and his sister, Irene Wal- ker, 2, over a battered rag doll, Mattalyno grabbed the doll and struck two-year-old Irene over the head, knocking her unconscious. Paul Mat- ard white | on his job y started NEW YORK. The Executive | Then, seizing a milk bottle, he felled | the child’s uncle, Richard Hunter,| 46, who had dashed to her aid. Negro workers, thoroughly} aroused, chased Mattalyno into his home, where he had barricaded him- self, and began shooting into the} ‘crowd. One of his bullets pierced | the leg of little Willie Walker. Meanwhile, Mattalyno’s wife, caught in an alley between two houses, was knocked down and kicked by a group of Negro women workers. PARTY ENTERS TEXAS ELECTIONS State Convention Well | Attended HOUSTON, Aug. 17.—The State Nominating Conventon of the Com- munist Party meeting in the Marine Workers’ Industrial Union Hall, today made the following nomina- tion for the Texas state elections: For Governor, J. Stedham, for Lieutenant Governor, J. L. Swan, and W. A. Berry, for United States Senator. Greetings were extended the con- | vention by L, J. Kelly, acting secre- tary of the Houston branch of the Marine Workers’ Union. B. H. Lauderdale acted as chairman of | the convention. | Downtown Section headquarters, \ all food workers will be held Wed- | nesday at 8 p. m. sharp at Irving Plaza Hall. The order of business will be as follows: Report on or- ganization activity, past drive and recommendation of the Executive Council for the future; immediate tasks of union members; report of General Organizer Obermier on tour in the packing house and food cen- ters. All food workers are urged to be there. ——With Talented —"A Theatre Guild Production’ THE NEW GARRICK GAIETIES GUILD W. 524. Byes. 8:80 Mts.Th &Sat.2:30 THE PERFECT TALKING DRAMA! “HOLIDAY” BASED ON PHILIP BARRY'S SPARKLING PLAY “One of the best films of the year .. Must be seen to Ann Harding — Mary Astor — Edward Everett Horton Robert Ames — Hedda Hopper R gm 00L 42ND STREET |! 3rq and CAMEO wa teure | Frdand ok e apprecint —DAILY W Cast of Players— LOBE Brosdway|Dally from & 46th = 110:30 A.M SECOND FUN WEEK! JOE COOK IN “RAIN or SHINE” PREPARE FOR THE DAILY WORKER MORNING FREIHEIT BAZAAR MADISON SQUARE GARDEN THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY AND SUNDAY October 2, 3, 4,5 PRESS, Inc. 26-26 UNION SQUARE NEW YORK CITY (CARL BRODSK League. Members Attention! All league members in the-city of New York must report to the at 27 East 4th St., at 6:00 o’clock™ sharp for signature~ collection. t All meetings between 6 and 8 3 are hereby called off. A check-up will be taken. : DISTRICT BURO. f strict |? TOILERS PROTECT ‘N. LONDON MEET | Repel Attack By the Fascists NEW LONDON, Aug. 17.—One | thousand workers massed solidly around speakers of the Communist | Party at an open air anti-war meet- |ing in this naval base city Saturday | night and lustily cheered the anti- war program and Social Insurance | Bill put forward by the Communist | speakers. | An effort by the fascists of the American Legion to break up the meeting was sternly repelled by the workers and their defense squads | who then massed so closely around | the speakers that no further ef- |forts were made to repeat the August 1st experience when the | workers demonstrations were smashed by the police, with the co- operation of the Coast Guard, naval | police and the American Legion. JOBS DECREASE AND PAY- ROLLS DROP. MADISON, Wis.—From May 15 |to June 15 factory employment in this state dropped severely. - Com- pared to the same period of a year | ago employment has decreased 11.5 | per cent and payrolls have de- creased 19 per cent, Vote Communist! - “For All Kinds of Insurance” ‘Yelephone; Murray HID KY 7 Kast 42nd Street, New York All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Cleremont Parkway, Bronx RATIONAL Vegetarian RESTAURANT : 199 SECOND AVE, JE Bet, 12tb and 18th Sts, Strictly Vegetarian Food MELROSE— D: VEGUTAMIAN ai an eraee NT marades 4 Buy leasant Ni ise at 7 Pisee. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD.- Brona (near 174th St Stati PHOND + INTERVALE. HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE, Phone: UNIversity 5865 Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: (TALIAN vISHES A place with atmosphere where ell radicals meet 02 B, 12th St. New York Boulevard Cateteria 541 SOUTHERN BLVD. Cor, 149th Street Where you ent and fee} at home. 3y6naa Jleve6unua ; "DR. A. BROWN Dentist ‘302 East 14th st. Web Alu Second Ave Ts Hel, ONChard 8788 DR, 1. KESSLER SURGEON DENTIST Strletiy by Appointment 45-B0 DELANCBY STEEL Cor, Bidridge mt NEW YURK (DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST - 1 UNION SQUARE Kom 803~ Phone: grt ig Not connected uth any other office CHEMIST > 667 Allerton A Set-prook 8215 Bron N.Y. 5 4 r 4 '