The Daily Worker Newspaper, August 25, 1930, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

MAN K BUT BOSS PRESS HIDES | THEM FROM WORKERS oeeto'sete, Four Gary Banks Shut; “Labor Bank” Goes Under As A.F.L. Fascists Gamble in Stocks Negro Banks in Chica go Close; Workers Are Hard Hit By Failures That e NEW YORK Journal of Co’ stating recently the United Sta gerous condit f bank res which proven | wave The Federal Aug. 21 publis ing the first six banks failed. amounted to Mainl. were more closer There are thous that are collapse oard was not capitalist press at all to months of 1930, 47 Deposits involved over $210,881,000 weak se) he of the the fac’ posit The news given, is published obscure pages so as n depositors. On .Wedr ample, the N. Y. isis from that milli ave been arm the for ex- publishes under a headline or one line in no larger type than that used in w le is written, the urth bank to fail in Indiana, has jus closed its doors This Gary: ba fourth to so bankrupt within “Labor” Bank, one schemes which, of L. react going to v talists. The result is sands of workers are life savings, while the labor fakers became bankers and ed in N.Y.) stocks. When last October’s crash came, it was reported that many high of- ficials of the A. F, of L. unions in Wa ton had been playing the | rket with their trade union | Up to now they have man- | aged to get away with it, because of | general policy of the banks to allow borrowers against stocks held | “security” to just.go along, al- though the stocks have become} worthless so far as being sold for enough money to repay the loan. The banks do this in hopes that the stock prices will go up again. But with the crisis getting worse there had to be an end of this “generos- ty.”” Hence the banks with “frozen” are going under, the little ones first Wednesday’s N. Y. Times also ad- | s that the Brownsville, Pa., Company bank was closed on uesday, with deposits of over $500.- 000. stock th the as ets The Negro workers of Chicago re- cently lost their savings when banks known as “Negro banks” went bank- t. The suffering that follows new development of the crisis, ving that even in the habit of | aving there is no security for work- | under capitalism, again empha- zes the great need for Workers’ ial Insurance, to be paid for by the capitalists only and used as com- pensation for all unemployed, dis- led and aged workers. In view of the suffering caused this wave of bank failures, sweeping away the workers’ little say the workers should rally jto the demonstrations in all parts of the country on Sept. Ist around the demand for unemployment and social insurance. Soc | otk Hold Anti-War Meets in Latin America BUENOS AIRES (By Mail).—] Twenty thousand workers in Buend Aires to part in the ar demonstration. S ¢ demons tions also took place in the prov- inces in the Argentine, for instance in Rosario, where 8,000 workers demonstrated, and Cordoba, where 4,000 workers demonstrated. In Montevideo 7,000 workers took part in the anti-war demonstration. There was a strike of the building workers, the leather Urge*General Strik workers A United Press report from Toulon, France, states that the rev- olutionary unions and the Commu- nist Party is calling for a general strike in the Toulon district. Agi- tation is being carried on in the and | the printers, so that no newspapers peared. In the province of Uru- demonstrations also took guay place. The anti-war demonstrations in Brazil were prohibited, but demon- strations and meetings took place in Rio de Janeiro, as a result of which collisions with the police took | place. Bolivia reports @ fine demonstra- | tion in La Paz and other demen- strations in the provinces. e in Toulon, France French arsenal urging the workers to strike. The report also states FAILURES | American Worker Who Attacked Negro Now Regrets His Act AD, Aug, ee who is employed in the tractor works here and is charged with as- saulting the Negro worker, Robin- | son, declares that he for what has happened. In a petition to the trade union committee of the factory he asks the workers of the Soviet Union to excuse him for his act, declaring “I now understand my crude mistake.” He severely criticizes himself for being under the influence of the imperialist ideology of race hatred and preju- dice, and says he now understands the mistake of workers permitting themselves to be influenced by the imperialist ideology. The Negro press in the United States is showing the greatest in- terest in this case. Within the past ten days hundreds of Negro papers have carried articles on the incident and on the reaction of the workers and press of the Soviet Union against the expression of white chauvinism involved in the attack. In addition to news articles several papers have published editorials ap- plauding the action of the Soviet workers in denouncing race preju- dice and holding Lewis for trial. TELLS MAN WHO is sorry FRAMED MOONEY More Proof Of Bosses Persecutions SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 24.— Maxwell McNutt, attorney for Tom Mooney and Warren K. Billings, con- fronted the California supreme court with the story of who fas- tened the Preparedness Day bomb explosion on his clients. The court is conducting hearings on Billings’ application for a pardon. A day or two after the bomb ex- plosion, McNutt met the late Martin Swanson, Pacific Gas and Electric detective. Swanson as good as told him they were framing Mooney and Billings for it and intended to hang Berkman, too. Swanson had threat- ened to get Mconey after the Mar- tinez dynamiting episode, when two juries disagreed on convicting Mooney and a third freed him. Mc- Nutt had told Mooney that if he did not lay off the strike against the street car company, with which the P. G. and E. was closely asso- ciated, he would get into trouble. Swanson also said, McNutt testi- fied, that he had both Mooney and Billings under surveillance all of July 22, except that he lost Billings for a few minutes in the morning; so if Swanson were alive and could be forced to tell the truth, he could prove Billings’ alibi. Tom Mooney and his wife Rena had gone to Mc- Nutt to complain of Swanson’s con- stant surveillance of them, telephon- that several Communist meetings |ing to them, ete. This testimony of were broken up by the police, | McNutt’s was given in the original : es i trials of Mooney and Billings, but Twelve workers were arrested. |the jury chose to disregard it in DETROIT BOSSES SLASH WAGES Leading Campaign On Workers’ Wages DETROIT, Aug: 24.—The Detroit auto magnates are in the lead in the national wage-cutting campaign. The Chrysler Automobile Company has officially announced a wag of 10 per cent for all wor employed in the plant. Briggs fol- lowed immediately with a new wage-cut of 20 per cent and some departments the wages have been reduced as much as 50 per cent. | In speaking about. the wage-Ccuts, the Detroit capitalist papers do not | make a secret of the fact that this campaign of the bosses to reduce the wages of,,the: workers is only | in its early stages and that other manufacturers,will follow the lead- | ership of the Briggs and Chrysler manufacturers. This new wage- eutting on a/national scale, in ad- dition to the constant lay-ofis and increased unemployment, are means of the bosses to put the burden of the present tohomic crisis on the shoulders of the: worl 6 The Detroit capitalist press speaks openly of “readjustment to a new scale of prices being inevit- able” and that many industrialists “are faced with, the alternative of reducing wages Gr leaving their em- ployees without! work.’ The workers of Detroit feel how- set, that both things oceur at the same time, lay-offs and unemploy- | ment increase which have ected 150,000 workers.and cheir denend- ents already ‘at the same time as wage-cuts for thése who are still working. W.LR. HOLDS DANCE. The Workers’ International Re- lief will hold a Seashore Dance on Sunday evening, Aug. 31, at Casa D’Amor Hall, Mermaid Ave. and W. 3ist St., Coney Island, Beatrice Carlin, local secretary of the W. I. R., announced last night. The f ture of the program will be a Chil- dren’s Pageant, in which 100 chil- dren will participate. Admission will be 50 cent: in advance, 75 at the door and children free. Tickets can be secured at the district offic of the W. 1. R., York City. ae 10 E, 17th St., New ; view of Mooney’s radical pro-labor DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, AUGUST 25, 1930 st WAITERS ROUSED “OVER SELL OUT Rank and File Calls} Mass Meet Monday | NEW YORK.—The members of | Loca! 1 of the A. F. L. waiters and} | waitresses’ union held on Thursday | the meeting in a year, and got their first chance to pin some of | their reactionary officials to the] wall. he local has been “under re- ceivership” by the International, and one of the demands of the mem- | bers was for autonomy. questions asked Lehman, ary of the local, were: Why did the officials take a re- |duction in wages in the Goldman place? “Why does the new contract made at the demand of the bosses allow the bosses to control the conditions of the workers and the workers have nothing to say?” He “Lost” the Books. | Lehman wouldn’t answer because, | he said, he had “lost the rece The workers know that Lehman, | McDavitt (the receiver) and Gen- eral President Flore have sold out} the workers, and that the waiters and waitresses will have trouble un-} til they throw out all of these and | their clerks from the United He- brew Trades and bring the waiters into the Food Workers’ Industrial | Union, | The Rank and File Committee of | Local 1 is calling a meeting of all waiters and waitresses, both mem-| bers of Local 1 and the unorgan-| ized, to a meeting Monday, Aug. at 8 p. m., in Bryant Hall, where | |the facts of the whole sell-out and the making of the contract will be| exposed, and plans made to fight |for something for the workers themselves. Mike Obermeir, gen- eral organizer of the F? W. I. U., recently come from Cleveland, will tell of the International officials’ corrupt alliance with the bosses there. Where Is the Money? The leaflet distributed calling | this meeting tells of the disappe ance of $7,000 from the local tre: ury in the last two months, with no organizing done on which it could have been spent. According to the fakers it seems to have cost $1,000 a block to move the office from rd St. to 28th St. | The Rank and File Committee | proposes demands for the eight hour day and five-day week, wage increases, and unemployment insur- ance. ELECTION DRIVE ON IN DETROIT Our Candidate May Soon Be On Ballot DETROIT, Mich.—Despite the or- ganized silence of all the capitalist | sheets here and the intimidations | | and tricks to keep the Party from in} WORKERS EXTEND iYR, PLAN AIMS Revise Estimates of! Experts MOSCOW, (IPS).—The workers of the Leningrad engineering works “Karl Marx” have evolved a new | form of volu:‘~ ; effort on the part of the masses of the factory work- ers in their struggle for socialism. | This new form is known as “the |supplementary plan” and is oper- ated as follows: | ‘hem, the plans of the economic | experts for the particular factory | or works are put forward, the work-| ers examine the proposals, each de- | partment dealing with the provi- sions which affect it, and then on the basis of their own experience they correct it. For instance, in this fashion the iron foundry of the | Leningrad works “Karl Marx” was able to increase its program from 11,008 to 15,000 tons. The tool- mak@'s d *lared that their depart- ment was able with a rational util- ization of its equipment, labor pow- er, ete., to produce 100 per cent more; than provided in the experts’ plan. Similar suggestions were made on the basis of their practical experience by the workers of the other departments, the net result of all these proposals was that the j original plan of production was in- ereased ty 120 per cent for the whole undertaking by the workers themselves, Such an action on the part of one |large undertaking of course in- creases the demands placed on other | factories. The Karl Marx” works | has now issued challenges to other | works calling upon them to work ,out their “supplementary plans” and improve on the originals. The workers of the Kertsch iron foundry | have already accepted the challenge jand other works are following suit. | BOSS GETS YACHT; WORKERS STARVE. FLINT, Mich.—While the recent trike at the Fisher Body Co. was | in progress Frederick Fisher, one j of the owners, purchased a new steam yacht, the Nakhoda. The “pleasure ship” cost. $1,500,000, | ¢ The workers struck because they ;were unable to exfst on the pay | they received! |dic and another in Mooney’s pos-| police who took away signed peti- | and the San Francisco hearings will | Ave. and severely beaten. However, |district. Haywood Maben, a Negro City Hall, on Wednesday, at 2 p. m. id tion with which to shoot down work- | Strike Agains: Wage-Cuts! record. Police lieutenant Reavis showed by the book of the Richmond police station that Billings had been the enly prisoner in the station when McDonald, degenerate and self-con- fessed liar, was brought out to “identify” him. Officer Smith of the city station testified to a camera} having been found in Mooney’s stu- participating in the special elec- tions for mayor on September 9, the Party has succeeded in getting 10,000 signatures by Saturday morn- ing. The law requires that 15,000 signatures be filed for candidate. This must be done in the short period of 14 days. Although faced with tremendous difficulties through interference of session when he was arrested. The | tions and the demagogy of Judge prosecution claims that Billings) Murphy who with fake promises for called on Mooney just before July “unemployed relief” has succeeded 22, not to deliver a borrowed cam- jn temporarily fooling many work- era, as he and Mooney both assert, | ers, the bosses were unsuccessful to but to deliver some part of the al-| hinder our activity. On Friday night leged bomb. |a worker out to get petitions was The entire court has now gone to attacked by hoodlums, connected Folsom prison to interview Billings, | with the “purple gang” on Oakland be resumed the-eafter. PARTY NOMINATES ines Bevan NEGRO FOR GOVERNOR) the tast tree ane is neces: {sary for us to intensify the drive DETROIT, Aug. 24.—In announc- | to get the required number of signa- ing the candidates put forward by tures. We must still get 3,000 to the Communist Party in the Novem- | 4,000 signatures. This can be done ber state and national elections, Ne-| if we continue to receive the full gro workers occupy a prominent) Support of all sympathizers. We place. Joseph Billups, Negro work-| urge every Party member as well as er, has been nominated as candidate | sympathizers t ocome to the head- for governor on the Communist) quarters, 1967 Grand River, or hall ticket. This is the first time that| nearest to your home and get peti- a Negro has been nominated for! tions. All workers having signed governor in Michigan. William | petitions are urged to bring them Nowell, an auto worker, has been! Tuesday night. | the gang did not succeed in grabbing | the petitions from him. Final Drive—All Workers Bring in Petitions Latest Must NANKING ASKS INTERVENTION Twenty Communists Arrested At Nanking A recent issue of the New York “Nation” carries an article from its Shanghai correspondent, Mr. Max- well Stewart, which definitely states that the Nanking Government has “invited” imperialist powers to “co- operate” with government troops to suppress the Workers’ and Peas- ants’ Red Armies. This report} clearly exposes the role of the | Nanking Government in China. Nanking’s role as the tool of the| imperialists has become so obvious that it does not even hesitate in openly “inviting” the imperialists to intervene in China! From the report from Nanking that twenty Communists have been arrested recently, it can be seen that the revolution is not only| spreading far and wide in the| country but also inside the major) cities. The occupation by 2,000 | armed peasants of Hanchengchen | in western Honan province is an-| other indication that the movement is spreading to the North, BOSS THEORY OF INTERVENTION Latin America Called U.S. Mandate WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass., Aug. 24,.—The class nature of interna- | |tional law and the fact that the| so-called jurists are tools and apolo-| gists for the boss class are clearly revealed in a recent discussion on) the question of intervention in in-| ternational iaw in the Williamstown | Institute of Politics. During the discussion a professor | from Princeton University by the) name of Phillip Marshall Brown} pronounced a theory of intervention in international law which would consider Latin America as ‘.n im-| plied mandate under the control of | Yankee imperialism and wouid also} give full legal sanction to imperial- ist interventions. In regard to Latin America, he says shamelessly: “The United States is in the curious situation of having virtually assumed, because | of its long experience, peculiar in- terests and immediate responsibili- ties, an implied practical mandate | in the Western Hemisphere.” In regard to the question of in- tervention in general he upheld the right of intervention in the affairs of a nation whose sovereignty has/| been impaired. His definition fcr a nation having impaired sovereignty | is a state which is not able to ful-} fill its international obligations. He also maintained that a single state) has the right to uphold international lev in cases where all nations or} even a small number could not reach an agreement to act together. It is clear that the “theory of in- tervention,” formulated as a ge: law, is not only intended to justify | American interventions in Latin) America, but also provides a ready | excuse and legal justification in im- perialist interventions against the| Soviet Union and the Chinese Revo-; lution, Academic utterances such as the above has considerable political sig- nificance. As unofficial theoreti- cians and propagandists of the boss class, professors of the type of Brown usually make utterances that clearly reflects th> stand of the boss class. It is Wall Street talking through the mouth of Prof. Brown. BOSSES EXPLOIT THE BLIND. VANCOUVER, B. C.—Blind workers in the broom factory of the National Institute of the Blind here | have been subjected to severe wage | slashes and greater speed-up. Their week has recently been increased from five to five and one-half days. Vote Communist! Communist Activities ‘Unit Organizers, Section 4 Will meet Monday, Aug. 25 at 7 p.m. at 308 Lenox Ave. eames Unit 7, Section 5 A special meeting will take place tonight at 8 p. m. at headquarters. : es Unit 2 Section 5 Will meet tonight at 8 p. m. instead of Tuesday. Everyone must attend. se nominated for candidate for Con-| A committee of 50 is now being gress in the second congressional | organized to file the petitions at worker, has been nominated as can-| Representatives of the Auto Work- late for the state senate in the ers’ Union and other sections of the | third district. | T.U.U.L., also of the A. F. of L,,| In the same district where Com- besides representatives of the Com- | rade Maben is running the bosses; munist Party, will comprise the | have put forward the candidacy of | committee, | the well-known Negro politician,| The District Committee of the | Mr. Roxborough, an agent of the| Communist Party calls upon all its | bosses, to drive the Negroes into| sympathizers to be at the city hall submission. Mr. Roxborough, in| at the time of the demonstration. speaking to the Negro workers on| This is the first time in Detroit | the issues in the campaign did not that the Communist Party is placing | mention a word on unemployment,| its candidate for mayor on the race discrimination, and lynching. | pallot, On the contrary, he, as a bosses’ friend, tried to justify the present FOR MORE EFFICIENT KILLING $150,000 FOR EX-WIFE. CHICAGO, — While Montgomery-| Ward v-rkers » being laid off, WASHINGTON. — Battleships | speeded up and having their sal- Wyoming, Utah and Florida will be | aries slashed,e Gordon D. Thorne, | scrapped this year. Under the cloak | son of one of the founders of Mont- of saving four million dollars by | gomery-Ward Co., is getting out of scrapping these ships, the bosses’ | divorce entanglements by paying h's | government will replace them with first wife the sum of $150,000! more powerful engines of destruc- | ers in the looming imperialist war. | Demand Unemployment Insurance! e ¥ Unit 14, Section 5, Meets tonight instead of Tuesday All must attend. 8 * Units 1 a Section 4 Meet tonight at 8 p. m. at 1800 Seventh Ave. oe oes. Units 6 and 7, Section 4 | Meets tonight at'8 p, m. at 308 Lenox Ave. Oh, erued.. Unit 14, Section Meets tonight at 27 EB. Discussion will be held. ee Fourth St. Hotel and Restaurant Workers Of the F.W.LU. will meet tonight at 8 p.m, at Bryant Hall. All mem: bers must attend. "abor and Fraterna’ Hotel and Restaurant Workers Of the F.W.LU. meet tonight at % p.m. at Bryant Hall. All members must attend, RN, ae, Workers Ex-Servicemen Will hold a meeting tonight at cor- her of Tenth St. and Second Ave, * * Printers Attention? All members of the Printing Work. Industrial League will meet after te at 13 W. lith St. for important ork, . 8 .. Workers Laboratory Theatre Will meet tonight at 8 p.m. at 339 KH 11th St. apt. 12 to take up work of Summer, |“I am more than ever | A third production announced for drama by Owen Davis, which will) |this week is due on Thursday eve-| have its initial showing at the El-| {Mary Mannes, and will be seen at Church Authorities Try to Bribe Children Away From WIR Camp PITTSBURGH, Aug. 24.-;The al- liance between the church and the} |public school authorities against the : : | orkers’ Toternational Relie chi: Nothing For Labor in| cren’s Camp has been exposed here. | <s sme |" "The Methodist Episcopal Church|. PYice For Treason | Union attempted to bribe a member tare jot the Young Pioneers to attend its| | Capitalist press ser |so-called Espworth Fresh Air Farm| to give bits of details about the | lon condition that she would leave| bargain evidently struck between the | | the Young Pioneers. | Gandhi leaders in India for the call- ) “After attending the ing off of the independence cam- camp and learning of paign and the betrayal of the In-| struggle,” said Anna B. |dian workers and peasants—inso- convinced | far as the now partially discredited that it is the best organization for| Netional Congress clique is able to me, In the W. I. R. camp I had aj carry out its treason. good time. There was no race dis- Yesterday the government emis: crimination, wnite children and Ne-| saries who attended the conference gro children play together. I will) assembled under the protection of | try to help prevent’ other children the imperialist government in Poona from being bribed by the Methodist) fortress delivered to Viceroy Lord Episcopal Church cf Pittsburgh like) Erwin a letter from Gandhi, Gandhi it tried to bribe mie.” | wrote the letter at the conference, Funds for the development of the| which was attended by the two W. I. R. camp in the Pittsburgh dis-| Nehrus, Patel and Mrs. Saironji trict, the camp at Van Etten, N. Y.,/ Naidu. The letter is not made pub- recently attacked by the Ku Klux ic, but the declaration Wednesday | Klan end the “American Legion and| of the boycott committee of the In- others throughout the country! dian National Congress can be con-| shou'd be sent to the notional of-| sidered to be in line with it. It is| fice, W. I. R., 949 Brvaiway, New! entirely for the gain of the Indian | pnt oie bourgeoisie that the price of Gan-| dhi’s treachery is paid. Nothing For Workers. There is not one word about, any ‘ improvement of the condition of the | workers. What is asked by the Con- | gress Committee is that firms doing | business in India have on their board | of directors two thirds Indian capi- | talists, and that the managers be | GANDHI SELLOUT ices continue We ok: the clas Charnay, The “socialists” work hand in glove with the Tammany judges. The grafter, Ewald, has sent hun- dreds of prison at the instigation of the “socialist” company union—vyote | Communist! “The 9th Guest” Opens Tonight--Hobkins Play Wed. This evening at the Eltinge Theatre, A. H. Woods will open his new season with “The 9th Guest,” by Owen Davis, from an unpublished | novel of Gwen Bristow and Bruce Manning. The play is described as a mystery-melodrama. In the cast are Allan Dinehart, Berton Chur- chill, Brenda Dahlen, Grace Kern,) Thais Lawton, Frank Shannon,) William Courtleigh, Owen Davis, Edwin Stanley, and Robert) jan, Arthur Hopkins announces the | opening of his first production of |the new season, “Torch Song,” a/ new drama by Kenyon Nicholson, at the Plymouth Theatre onj| Wednesday evening. The cast is} jheaded by Mayo Methot, Dennie Moore, Henriett Kay, June Clay- worth, Aphie James, Pearl Hight, | Reed Brown, Jr., and Guy Kibee.| The settings for “Torch Song” were! g designed by Cleon Throemorton. | Hopkins is staging the play. | left-wing furriers to | BRENDA DAHLEN In “The 9th Guest,” a new melo- ning, when William A. Brafly pre-| tinge Theatre this evening. sents “Cafe.” This is a comedy by} i Ye Angelis will be starred on the| ENRICHES BOSSES the Ritz Theatre. Some twenty-five players have speaking parts in the| play. “Apron Strings” will wind up its| seven months run at the Forty- road tour. | Jay C. Flippen has been added to} | the cast of the Second Little phe | which has been held over for a third | week in Boston, New material is} still being added to this revue. The New York premiere will take place Tuesday, September 2, at the Royale Theatre. | Eighth Street Theatre Saturday evening. It will then depart for Boston, opening at the Plymouth Theatre on Labor Day. Jefferson '¢ Guild Production" THE NEW GARRICK GAIETIES } W, 624, Bvs. 8 GUILD Yj Sith eset “A The: Broadway and | . AME O 42nd Street | JOE COOK “RAIN or SHINE” LOBE "ssane7 yy srar “THE STORM” with LUPE VELEZ CAVANAUGH — WM. BOYD —— | OPENS TONIGHT | A. H. WOODS Presents = THE 9TH GUEST pact A Mystery Drama by Owen Davis | with ALLAN DINEHART and All-Star Cast ELTINGE THEA,, 42 St, W. of B'way Mats. Wed. and Sat. Strike against wage-euts; de- mand social insurance! PRESS, Inc. 26-26 UNION SQUARE NEW YORK CITY | PREPARE FOR THE DAILY WORKER MORNING FREIHEIT | LAZAAR MADISON SQUARE GARDEN THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY AND SUNDAY | October 2, 5, 4, 5 Indians, with the capital stock 75 pe cent controlled by Indian capital. From London comes an admission in the speech to the Conservative fete by. Winsson Churchill, that at Peshawar, “What hapfened has shown we have reached the lowest ebb in British authority and pres- tige in India.” Churchill blames the labor party government, but there is nothing in the way of mass mur- der and brutal suppression that MacDonald has omitted or Churchill could have intensified. The fighting has quieted in the Peshawar vicinity in the last few days, the tribes holding meetings to decide internal difficulties and re- cruit. The followers of the Haji of Turangzai have won over for the attack on the British sections of the Baszai and Kwaesai Mohmand tribes. LEAGUE. See the Daily Worker of tomor- row, Tuesday, Aug. for full schedule of Workers’ Service- men’s street meetings for this week. “For All Kinas of Insurance’ ARL BRODSKY Yelephone: Murray titi son 7 Kast 42nd Street, New York ———— All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx RATIONAL — Vegetarian RESTAURANT | t 199 SECOND AVE, JE | Bet. 12th and 13th Ste. ! Strictly Vegetariin Food —MELR OSE— &, VEGETARIAN Dair RESTAURANT omrades Will Always Find 11 Pleasant (o Dine at Oar Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD. Brons (near 174th St. Station) PBONE:— INTERVALB $149. HEALTH FOOD | Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNI versity 6865 1 eeeennmemetannatnanaimmaaemmatatee teal Phone: Stuyvesant 3316 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN vVISHES with atmosphere 1) radicals meet 102 KH. 12th St. New York Boulevard Cateteria 541 SOUTHERN BLVD. Cor. 149th Street Where you eat and fee} at home DR. J. MINDEL| SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Reom 803—Phone: Algonquin 6152 Not connected with any other office Sy6naa Jlevebunua DR. A. BROWN Dentist 801 Bnat 14th St. Cor, Second Ave. ‘Vel. Algonquin 7345 Tel. OCharad 8783 DR, L, KESSLER SURGEON vENT Strictly by Appointment 48-50 DELANCEY STRERT Cor. Wldridge St. NEW YORK 657 Allerton Avenve Estabrook 3215 Bronx, NY. Phone: LEHIGB 6382 'nternational Barber Shop M. W. SALA, Prop. 2016 Second Avenue, New York (bet. 108rd & 104th Sts.> Ladies fobs r Specialty Private Beauty Parlor WORKERS INDUSTRIAL 10N OF NEW YORK iat St. Chelses 2274 Bronx Hesdfvarters, 294 Whira Avenue, Melrose 0128; Brooklyn Headquarters, 16 Graham Avenue, Pulasky 0634 The Shop Delegates Counci) meets the first Tuesday of every mot... -8 P. M, at 16 West Zist St The Shop ts» the roop t 16 Ww. ate Unit. Advertise your Union Meetings here. For informstion write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Depé | 26-28 Union &~.. New York City ROOMS 183 BAST OTH ST. LARGE, furnished rooms, invenie: subway, Lehigh 1890, e y s s os s s s s n iS i

Other pages from this issue: