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Page Two ELECTION CAMPAIGN IN GEn MANY SHARP:#NS AS UNEMPLOYED INCREASE Communist Party Carries On Active Election} wds Hear Speakers Campaign; Big Cro Fascists Further Bloody Attacks On Toilers} Want to Keep The German Communist Party is, n the midst of a tremendous elec- tion campaign. On September 13 general elections will take place in| for seats in the Reichstag. vhile, there is a dictatorship r Article 48, headed by Herr Bruening, finance minister. A wireless from the International Press Correspondence to the Daily Worker today states: “Comrade Thaelman spoke today) in Hanover to overcrowded election meetings. The Hessian ministry has prohibited the Communist Party election demonstrations.” With thousand of workers being thrown on the streets every day the unemployment situation grows al figures admit Com- mui y I are in reality well over 5,000,000 workless. The economic crisis deepens every day. New fas iances have taken place. The fascists, headed by| Adolph Hitler, of the Steel Hel-| mets, and Dr. Alfred Hugenberg, are especially active. On many oc- easions there have been severe etween Communists and clashes bi fi . The major feature of the elections is the struggle of the Com- munists against the fascists. The social-democratic party in its cam- paign is aiding the development of | bourgeoisie cannot obtain a “strong” | the fascist forces. The social-democrats have been| Up Dictatorship trying to help the bosses out of the present crisis by proposing wage- cuts for all workers. They support the Young Plan and the placing of the burden on the backs of the work- ers. The fascists Young Plan, from a nationalist and impefialist viewpoint, hailing the recent bid for alliance offered by a ction of the British capitalists in suggestion for revision of the They want the Young Plan revoked to aid the German bosses and their imperialist ad- vancement. The Communist Party points out that capitalism in Germany and throughout the world is in a severe crisis; that the conditions of the workers grow worse. They demand a Young Plan. the smashing of the Young Plan, | because it puts the burdens entirely on the backs of the workers. They demand an extension of the unem- ployment insurance measures and more adequate relief. Mobilization is going on against the fascist bands who are becoming more ag- in their attacks on the Meanwhile, talk from official sources show that President Von Hindenberg and Herr Bruening pro- pose to continue the distatorship under Article 48, in the event the parliamentary majority in the next elections. MANY ARRESTS IN CHICAGO and Sept. 1 Meets CHICAGO, Ill, Aug. Mail)—The police are increasing their efforts to shatter workers’ protest by mass arrests and intimi-| dation of the workers, and are try-| ing in vain to prevent by terror the| huge Sacco-Vanzetti and Unemploy- | 16 (By are attacking the | ty | | largest steel plant in Europe is wné Right: From a Soviet pos its lackies to war on the Workers’ he Land the Bosses Fear On eft: A steel plant in the Soviet Union, where at prese ‘MULROONEY OPS CLUB JOBLESS AT “FREE” AGENCY, Ex-Serviceman Gets) Lesson in “Liberty” | | Large groups of workers mill |}around in a vain quest for work, in front of the Municipal “Free” | Employment Agency. | “Thi a free country. Why, | | there’s just as much liberty as there ever was.” These were the final | words of an unemployed ex-service- | man before he was whacked on the head by several Tammany uni-j{ der construction. lepicting capitalism sending forth Republic. TENANT FARMER | DEMANDS ACTION Tenant Mass Strikes Must Be Method (By a Farmer Correspondent) MINOT, N. D.—I have seen in the “Daily Worker” that the United | Farmers League calls for strikes against high taxes, strikes against | paying mortgages and_ interest, | physical fight against foreclosures jand evictions. In my opinion this is a real, prac- tical way of fighting. We have had lenough of soft-peddling and harm- |less educational programs — which jnever got us nowhere. The time for | action has arrived and it is none too soon. Demand Action. | What we demand now is a real, ‘live farm movement, which is aided formed thugs. He was arguing| with a member of the Young Com- | munist League, { “You stand here five minutes longer,” the Young Communist told | him, “and you'll see how much lib-| erty you've got.” He had overesti-| mated the time. Hardly had he} GASTONIA FIRST FOR NEW PAPER {finished speaking when the cops| Ear swooped down. The workers scat-! Communist “Southern | terea, but the ex-serviceman, to Torker”? Te a] prove his statement, stood his| Worker” Is Hailed [2ryiha, the cops’ clubs clinched RTP TCHTAR ? Z the argument, | BIRMINGHAM, Ala., Aug 18—|"rhousands of workers gather in| The first subscriber to the Southern Worker, new Communist weekly for the South, is a worker of Gastonia, N. C., scene of the historic textile |’ strike last year. front of the Tammany employment | agency. They never hear of any| Word goes around, “There | bs here. No use hanging | The workers break up in q x sure am ae we will ay little groups; they discuss unem-| ave a paper about our own people | )j5¥, ‘ : scare: 4 ; ‘ f loyment. Stool pigeons weave in} and conditions down here,” the first | 9 ne among the crowds. The police fol- | * low and beat up the unemployed. | On Worth and Lafayette, a little | ; i way from the “agency,” a Commu-}| will be the first speaking we have| rey held an imoromotu meeting, liad hore eirice last) year, |He told the jobless about the Work- | The great number of workers| ers Social Insurance Bill. He ex- subscriber writes, “In Gastonia Here we are going | to have a speaking the 23rd, which who are out of jobs here help the workers to realize that it is only through our unions and the Com- munist Party that we have any hope posed the fake employment agency. He showed the causes of unemploy- ment and the way out. A stool pigeon sneaks out of the crowd./ | and guided by revolutionaries (none | | others can do the job), to go right | lists and the of getting steady work and better) Very soon the police jump in. They conditions. | seem to know.who the speaker is. CALLS DEFEND SOVIETS MEET Try to Prevent Sacco| FSU Also Holds Dance} This Saturday The Friends of the Soviet’ Union is mobilizing the New York work- ers in defense of the Soviet Union and against the provocations of the Fish red-baiting Committee. This Saturday night a shore dance ar- ranged by the F. S. U. will be held jat the Casa D’Amor Hall, Mermaid ment Day Demonstrations scheduled Ave. and West 31st St. Coney Is- here. On August 12, at a regular meet- | land. According to Harriet Silver- man, local secretary, an extensive ing of the Unemployed Council, not! program of entertainment has been a mass meeting, held at 900 South) arranged. © The funds raised will be Paulina Street, in Chicago, detec- tives arrived and refused to leave| when requested. At about 9 p. m.| they went out, only to return with a patrol wagon and arrest eight of the workers taking part in the meeting. A. Camera, Al Parker, Ed Jem- fnez, Wallace Gibson, Raymond, Fantl, and two other workers whose names were not red, are being held at the detective bureau for investigation. used for F. S. U. activities. “A Defend the Soviet Union Con- ference” called by the F. S. U. will be held Thursday, Sept. 4, at Man- hattan Lyceum, 66 East Fourth St., at 7:30 p. m. at which delegates will be present from industrial and trade unions, fraternal organiza- tions, sports organizations and | workers’ clubs, at which the ques- | Carl jtion of mobilizing the workers of | Frank |to mat with the capital | capitalist authorities. Such a farm | movement cannot fail to revolu- | tionize the farming masses, and I don’t see how we can struggle for our demands effectively in any other way. Imagine mass demonstrations of | poor farmers in hundreds of county seats in the United States, demand- | ing immediate relief for the drouth- stricken poor farmers, no taxes for poor farmers, refusal to pay mort- gages and interest! My idea is that the strike plan of the U. F. L. is bound to become widespread, and we should support it and also help spread the United Farmer, It is a shame the mili- tants are not doing more already, but I am sure they will wake up soon. | —TENANT FARMER. 42-YEAR PRISONERS GREET DAILY WORKER LOS. ANGELES, Cal., Aug. 18— Sklar, Tsuji Horiuchi and Spector, sentenced to three | | In Center of Reaction. | He is chased into a subway station | The first issue of the Southern! and is soundly clubbed. Then he, Worker, published from Birming-| is lead over to the police station. {ham, Ala. black core of Southern} An unemployed worker who |reaction, and dated August 16, has| mingled with another group tells of | alveady been widely distributed at| another discussion on employment | Charlotte, N. C.; Bessemer City,| which was ended by cops’ fists. An |N. C.; Birmingham, Ala.; Chatta- | unemployed worker was saying he |nooga, Tenn.; New Orleans, Hous-; thought unemployment could be |ton, Texas and other Southern cit-| solved if the republican party was lies and mill villages. The workers {returned in New York in the next) |are receiving it with open hands at/ election. No Communism there. Aj |the factory gates, at street meet-|worker disputed him. “Tammany jings, at their houses and in the/|Hall’s got the goods.” A bunch of villages. | cops swooped around the corner, and The issue just published is a/ without even ordering these good sample copy and is meant as an in-| Supporters of the capitalist parties | | troduction to the workers and tarm-|to disband they began a general at- {ers of the South. The first regular|tack, slugging the workers right| issue will be published August 30,| and left. now at the Globe Theatre. }and the Southern Worker will ap-! In order to hide the extent of un- pear regularly every week after! employment and the utter failure of that. employment especially low so that workers can| agency, the unemployed are not al- afford to buy it regularly, at 2|lowed to gather in groups of even cents a copy, or subscribe at $1 a|two or three, They seem to come year or 50 cents a half year. The too fast. There are far too many address is Box 85, Birmingham,| for the comfort of the bosses and Ala. \their Tammany sluggers. Then, too, | hey discuss unemployment. Most f them are on the brink of starva- ion. They listen to Communists. ‘hey want unemployment insurance. he boss police give them clubs and |fists. The ex-serviceman had a The prices have been made|the Tammany fake PARTY PRESS BAZAAR, OCT. 2 TO 5 the metropolitan district against an|to 42 years in the Imperial Valley | imperialist attack on the U. S. S. R.| ease and brought back for trial in The National Communist Press political education in “liberty” and On the same day, in Cicero, Illi- nois, Joe Dallett was arrested for speaking at a factory gate meet- ing before the Western Electric plant. He is being held on a $500 property bail, secured by the Inter- national Labor Defense. Crowd of 3,000. Previous to these arrests a street meeting in Chicago, held at the} corner of Belmont and Wilton Aves., resulted in the arrest of 12 work-) ers, when the police’s attempt to} disperse a crowd of 3,000 met with resistance. Those arrested were held from Saturday night until will be taken up. For information communicate with the local office of the F, S. U., 799 Broadway, New York City. CARPENTERS GET SLAVE CONTRACT Philadelphia Conference Adopts Compulsory Arbitration PHILADELPHIA, Pa., Aug. 18. —The district conference of the United Brotherhood of Carpenters jand Joiners of America (A.F.L.) | dominated by Allen of the national On August 1ith, the trials re-|©*ecutive board of the union and by sulted in the dismissal of six, Nick|# "epresentative of the U. S, de- and Joe Barta, Arthur Johnson, Al-| P&rtment of labor, has sold out the vert Pierre, Henry Hollman, and| ¢4tPenters here to a five-year slave Mareus Dahl, were charged with| Cestract, which provides for the 48- Sunday night without booking; then bail was set at $400 for each, inlawful assembly, violation of city} ordinance, and sedition, and exorbi- tant bails have been set which ange from $1,400 to $4,400 each. The police station claims to have sent these defendants to Cook County, but the International Labor Defense representative was unable to locate any of the arrested work- ers there, The Chicago Sacco-Vanzetti dem- stration will be held August 22 at hour day and compulsory arbitra- tion, with wages of 90 cents an hour. A representative of Local 1051 made a motion to adopt the 44-hour week with a one-year contract and without arbitration. He pointed out that the situation was excellent now for a fight, and that the shorter working day would give employment to many of the unemployed in Phila- delphia. He showed how the labor 3p, m. at People’s Auditorium, 2457| department man and the represen- the April 26 Unemployment Demon- \ stration case are now confined ih | Los Angeles jail, apparently» for | several months, awaiting retrial on the unemployment case and trial on case arising out of the Paris Com- | mune meetings. Sklar is ill and) frequently in the prison hospital. | They request copies of the Daily Worker, saying, “We would rather go without our beans than without the workers’ paper.” f , They send out word: “We are in the finest of spirits, because we) know the mass pressure of the toil- | ers will force, not only our release but also the release of all class war prisoners. We send our revolution- } ary greetings to the Daily Worker and to the six Atlanta comrades | |now facing the chair, to Foster, | Minor, Amter and Raymond, and all class war prisoners. “Long live the Communist Party, | and long live the Daily Worker!” Boston TUUL Calls Special Board Meet BOSTON, Mass., Aug. 18.—The Trade Union Unity League Bureau has decided to call a special T. U. U. L. enlarged executive board meeting. The meeting is to take | Bazaar of the Daily Worker and the| his “rights.” The workers are be- Morning Freiheit will be held this| coming disillusioned. They must) year in Madison Square Garden and |be organized for the fight to de- will show more than ever the unity hmand the vassage of the Workers of the working class and its soli-| Social Insurance Bill and for the darity. | overthrow of capitalism. “orkers from all over the country | _Whalen’s March 6th policy of should send in their contributions | “clubs instead of bread” is being in the form of useful articles,|¢xt-1ded by Mulrooney to include | Groups of workers and working|®ll workers who apply for jobs at | women should arrange small affairs ‘the Municipal “Free” Employment for the purpose of collecting ma- | Agency, and have the nerve to wait terial to be sent to the bazaar. The ore than a few minutes and in the chief characteristic of this year’s|™eanwhile talk over the unemploy- bazaar will be the selling of useful | ment problem with other jobless, articles to th eworkers which were | MUulrooney and his men don’t talk see aco eos 0 FURY OES Labor Union organized in Chi- cago. 1875—Unity convention of German socialist oPganizations at Gotha. 1917 — James Rowan, secretary of northwestern I.W.W. IND, LYNCHINGS arrested without warrant by : : soldiers to block general strike. | Protest Meetings in 1918—14,000 London tramway Middle West CHICAGO, Aug. 18.—Under the leadership of the American Negro | Labor Congress thousands of Negro |and white workers in the Middle West were mobilized last week in the nation-wide working class pro- and omnibus workers struck for equal pay for women and men. 1922—30,000 Hungarian metal workers struck, 1923—General strike in Athens and other Greek cities; martial law declared. ‘ test against the Marion double lynching and the bosses’ lynching | terror generally. In this city, workers packed Odd Fellows Hall, 3335 South State Street Thursday evening, 14, and accepted unanimously a BRIGES AUTO CO. Workers Must Fight This By Organizing (By a Worker Correspondent) DETROIT, Mich.—The Briggs Manufacturing Co. laid us all off for three weeks and when we came back to work, they gave us so much work on piece rate doing 8 hours for only a little over $2. This would make it come to about 33 cents an hour. I have one piece work record for 8 hours, which amounts to $2.66, another for $4.88 and 10 hours for $4.06. The first day after we came back we worked 10 hours, and some made $3, some $4 and some $5. The whole department is working 3 days, making $10 or $11 a week. Family men have to support their families on this, and they say we have the biggest prosperity, for $10 a week. We come to work one day 6 hours, one day 12, 14 and 6 hours. We used to have day work, now they ask nothing and if we do not make the amount we get nothing for it. If you go to the foreman he says “Don’t you like it? Go ahead and Joe Cook’s First Film Merry Farce Riot at the Globe TOM HOWARD. calling upon Negro and white work- ers to organize self-defense squads against the workers. Speakers at this meeting included Phil Frankfield, T. U. U. L. organ- izer; N. A. Allen, field organizer of the A, N. L. C.; Lydia Bedell, from the Communist Party. At Indiana Harbor, Ind., two hun- dred Negro and white workers joined in a street meeting to pro- test the lynchings in Marion, Ind. Sol Harper was the main speaker, together with a representative from the Young Communist League. At Hammon, Ind., a large crowd filled Workers Hall, and pledged full-hearted support to the A. N. L. C. fight on lynching. At Gary, Ind. another large crowd of workers pledged support to the fight. Indianapolis workers expressed their protest by packing City Audi- torium, and supporting the call for the organization of self defense corps of white and Negro workers, quit.” The biggest wages are from 50 to 55 cents an hour, the jobs which used to pay $1. One of the most satisfying films that has reached us in a long time is “Rain or Shine” with Joe Cook, The only regret is that he has not entered the film field before, for by not doing so, he hes derived us of many a joyful moment. By the above it is easy to guess that Cook has more than made the grade. “Rain or Shine” is a riot of fun from beginning to end. Cook’s first film effort is based upon the play of the same name in which he was starred in. In adapt- ing it for the screen Columbia Pic- tures omitted the musical angle and turned it into a straight, honest to goodness farce comedy with several well situated dramatic sequences. In addition to Cook, others in the cast are Louise Fazenda, William Collier, Jr., Joan Peers and his two stage cronies, Tom Howard and With Joe Cook in “Rain or Shine,” at the Globe Theatre. |Dave Chasin. The direction was handled by Frank Capra. Third and Last Week. OOL R PHILIP BARRY’S SPARKLING STAGE PLAY CameO o SAME cameO | HOLIDAY AND BROADWAY “One of the best films of the year .. WIS. 1789 Must be seen to be appreciated.” “ —DAILY WORKER. —with a superlative cast— THE PERFECT Ann Harding, Mary Astor, Robert Ames, TALKING DRAMA! Edward Everett Horton, Hedda Hopper August | resolution denouncing lynching and} lynching of Negro} | SEAMEN’S UNION SHIPS | MEN OUT AT SCAB WAGE NEW YORK.—'The International Seamen’s Union is shipping men right from the union hall for scab wages. Men pay $1.50 a month | dues to Andy Furuseth’s outfit for jthe privilege. The LS.U. then, | scabbing on the shipping masters also (for to a shipping master a | man does not have to pay any dues) |sends men to Moore McCormick |line and others for $55 a month, | The shipping board wage is $62.50. AFL. WORKERS GIVE LL.D, FLOOR |Defeat Reactionary Officials | SEATTLE, Aug, 18.—On Aug. 8, | the secretary of the International | Labor Defense, A. Frommer, spoke to the members of the Cooks and | Assistants Local No. 33, American Federation of Labor, which meets at 1431% First Ave., Seattle, on the | second floor. She sent in her «red- ential, asking for the floor. A well- organized group of reactionaries, | members of the Central Labor Coun- | cil, tried to prevent this but the | rank and file members of the local | wanted to hear about the Interna- | tional Labor Defense, | The secretary of the LL.D. spoke on the work of the L.L.D,; some of | the big outstanding cases handled | by the LL.D., about the need of a strong defense organization to com- but the growing terror of the bosses. The workers listened attentively. This shows that workers in the American Federation of Labor want to hear about the International La- bor Defense but the officials put all kinds of obstacles in the way. few weeks ago, the reactionary of- ficials refused the floor to the rep- resentatives of the I.L.D. } | A Strike against wage-cuts; de- mand social insurance! “For All Kinds of Insurance” ARL BRODSKY ‘Telephone: Murray Hil) 555: 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. 12th and 18th Ste, Strictly Vegetarian Food . VEGETARIAN Dairy aestavnant Comrades Will always Find it Pei to Dine at Our Place. 1787 SI HERN BLVD., Bronx (near 114th St, Stati CHONDA. INTERVALE. 9140. HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 6865 eee West Chicago Ave., and will be pre- eded by seven preparatory open air neetings. | | Socialist Leader Has Only Praise For Cops READING, Pa., Aug. 18.—James 4. Maurer, socialist councilman of his city, addressed the convention of the Fraternal Order of Police just nded here, and openly aligned him- elf and his party with the men who slackjack, club, arrest and frame-up he militant workers. The socialist varty here and elsewhere and the teading socialist’ administration has veen united with the police against he workers for a long time, but it seldom com?s out in such an open idmission as Maurer made in his peech. He said: | “Since I have been in city hall) { have been drawn close to our city police foree and am proud of it. The| contempt I had for cops when I was | young has changed into a real ad-| miration for the men who upheld| che law.” Vote Communist! tative of the national office were | Place Saturday, August 28, at 3! eager to keep the carpenters from|P. ™. at 22 Harrison Ave., Boston, struggle, and were not for the in- | Mass. | terests of the men. After a heated discussion, during which both Allen and the bosses’ government agent defended the con- tract and threatened the carpenters, the five-year, long hours and no strike agrcement was adopted by 2. to 11, The Trade Union Unity League calls on all carpenters to join its Building Trades League, to organize rank and file committees on each job and to fight the long hours and | any wage cut or compulsory arbitra- | tion in spite of the treacherous of- ficials of the carpenters union. ’ Strike Against Wage-Cuts! Demand Unemployment Insurance! SOCIALISTS BOOST “G. E.” SCHENECTADY, N. Y., Aug. 18. —The whole back page of “The Citizen,” socialist party paper in this city, is taken up with an article by the General Electric publicity man, C. M. Ripley, giving details of his employers’ fake unemployment relief plan, All members take notice, don’t} fail to come. This meeting will} take up the building of the unem-/ ployment movement and the role of the T. U. U. L, in the election cam- paign. 394 Railway Workers Were Killed in 1928 WASHINGTON, D. C.—On rail- |roads with operating revenues of $1,000,000 a year or over 394 men were killed in 1928 and 19,051 were injured, according to reports of the Interstate Commerce Commission. | MIND GIVES WAY UNDER INHUMAN STRAIN. PITTSBURGH.—The mind of a girl, who for 13 years has been em- ployed in a department store here, contributed by the workers them-| selves, ‘ The bazaar will popularize the press of the working class and in- erease the circulation of the Daily | Worker. Make this ennual National Press } Bazaar a ringing answer to the! Fish Committee “investigating” | Communism in the United States | and preparing the ground for an| attack on the Communist press. | Help make this bazaar a mighty blow against this attack of the Fish Committee and the bosses generally when they reconvene again in the fall to complete their “investiga- tion.” Form united front ‘confer- | jences of all working class groups and committees at workers’ shops | factories. Invite individual | illing workers to participate in this conference. Set up your com- mittees and begin your work of sending in material immediately te | the National Press Committee, Communist Activities Section 1, Unit W. E. Tuesday, Aug. 19 at 6:15 p. m., 27) | E. Fourth St. Discussion. | ek Be Campaign Committee, See. 1 Has moved to East Side Workers | Club, 196 B. Broadway, near Jeffer- n St. Call for signature collections there on Sunday morning, 10 o'clock. a | Y.C.L. Bronx Unit 4, | Executive will meet tonight at 7) | PD. m. at 1400 Boston Rd, ri ea ae Notice! _., Advertise your unit meetings in th Communist “Activity Column, A nounce all activities of every b of activity of the Communist. F in New York and_ vicinity, revolutonary calenda | rt in this) supporting her invalid father on the huge salary of $18 a week, snapped) completely under the strain of being | told continually that she might be! laid off. Demand the release of Fos- ter, Minor, Amter and Kay- mond. in prison for fighting for unemployment insurance. about it; they sock them. Starving workers will fight—with the proper leadership. Labor and Fraternal Notice! organizations, All unions, sports clubs should make it| their habit to announce their meet- ings and activities in this column. Make it a guiding post where the workers can look for meetngs and other revolutionary social announce- ments, i ey Soles Midnight Performance. “The End of St. Petersbura@,” a Sovkino movie, Saturday, August 23, 1930, 11:30 p. 'm, at Brighton Play- house, 273 Brighton Beach Aye., un der auspices of Women’s Council, No, 17, Brighton Beach, workers trade Support the Daily Worker Drive! | Get Donations! Get Subs! Workers Cooperative Colony 3-4 ROOM APARTMENTS vail yourslet of the 0 portunity to Hive tm a comrade! atmosphere! Take White Plainy Subway Allerton TEL ESTABKOOK 1400 2800 BRONS PARK BAST Our Office ta fo 60 p.m. en fi “A Theatre Guild Production} THE NEW GARRICK GALETIES GUILD W. 524. Bvs. 8:30 Phone: Stuyvesant $816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES | LOBE Pecan heat An" SECOND FUN WEEK!! Mts.Th &Sat.2:30 PREPARE FOR THE DAILY WORKER MORNING FREIHEIT BAZAAR MADISON SQUARE GARDEN THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY AND SUNDAY October 2, 3, 4, 5 ACTIVE PRESS, Inc. | FOUND PAIR OF GLASSES AT | DAILY WORKER PICNIC, CALL | BUSINESS OFFICE OF “DAILY.” 26-48 UNION SQUARE NEW YORK CITY JOE COOK Whore all radicale, est IN 02 E. 12th St. New York ‘RAIN of SADE OS R. J: MINDEL SURGEON DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Room 803—Phone: Algonquin 018% lot connected with any other office Cooperators! SERO Patronise tg CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook $215 Bronx, N. ¥. EAST 110TH ST. LARGE, SMALL ished rooms, convenient, near Lehigh ¥ FOU WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION OF NEW_ YO! 16 W. 2tst St. Petit ag re betadiny fret! 8 the cite? ae y of every month at 8 PM. 16 West 2ist St —- ‘The Shop ts the Baste Ontt. Advertwe your Union Meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq.. New York City