The Daily Worker Newspaper, August 30, 1930, Page 2

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vUST Page Two 4 DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, AUC 30, 1930 S =" "SECTION | MEETS|WORKERS GREET RALLY JOBLESS HUSA, To Speak Sunday At! W.LR, Affair \ILD Picnic to Register |Demand for Release of HOLMES). Delegation “We will make the September 7th paar Annual Solidarity Pienic of the New York International Labor Defense Branch at Pleasant Bay Park a mass demand for the immediate re- |lease of the only workers’ candi- THREE JOBLESS COMMIT! assiens postions SUICIDE; ONE FIRST) rorsertenser ist KILLS WIFE AND SON Faced With Continued Unemployment and | All unions, leagues and groups | j have been -assigned — starting | {points from where they will! lGnarch to the demonstration. ‘The|| On to Union square’ | following are the starting points: | } “ [Neate Water nwt sc;|| Slogan of Meets Starvati ret Despondent . Bree are ae Vantec Sth Uy ages Starvation, Three Get De p Food and Shoe Workers, 16 W-// NEW YORK.—In eight successful| Aliene Holmes and Mabel Husa,|qace#—she Unemployment Delega:| Bee Le eats - , . General Unemployed Council, | | CPe™-8it meetings throughout lower Jeaders of the Workers International |for "leading the unemployed on Suicide No Way to Fight Bosses’ Hunger Drive || yranhattan Lyceum: 66 E, 4th St, | @owntown Section 1 of the Commu-| netief children’s camp at Yan Et-/March 6th,” says the local Interna- nist Party rallies several thousand ane) workers for the great September | All the rest of the unions sentenced to 90 days in| tional Labor Defense office today. € On Workers; Organize! Demonstrate Sept, 1!| Jesmucs a eee * aL iets 1st unemployment demonstration. I nely Sunonced anf qe Haass F eter, Biron} Sileides driving ont af wnemploy- just the drab || S& on Monday, Sept. Ist, at) | “More than a thousand workers| fed 15 New Cork (City) armter ands Raymond; | need) sh sat continue to increase, Hardly - amplovmente bunwan lias joined in the mobilization meeting Sa ee ee te eee ey, F ent continue to increase, Ha nemployment, hunger | @—————-—--_—__ -— greeted at the Grand Central Sta-|leased immediately. We are not| held Friday night at Seventh St. and Ave. B and pledged hemselves to join the “March on Union | Square!” on Monday at noon. J. Louis Engdahl, the candidate for lieutenant-governor of the Com- 1 day goes by without bringing news f several such tragedies. terday in Pittsburgh, an un- worker, F. M. Fish, shot ig. This is exactly how | bosses would like to have the |tion by a delegation of the Work-| content to wait without raising our Jers International Relief. Banners| voices in protest until the capitalist of greeting included one that read:|ecourts have exacted a penalty from “The W. I, R. Greets Holmes and| them for the crime of leadership in Husa.” |the militant labor movement.” th e YOUNG WORKERS workers act in the present situation | of mass unemployment and starva- | mp nd kil} his wife, Ada, 49, and v ae This is the tattoo that police iocey ebay Sa, ee eee eens eat on workers’ heads when OUT ON SEPT, ean Party, was the principal) The two girls will be officially! Organi. ‘ons should get their Spe ape aerate ye demonstrate in. protest speaker. weleomed by New York workers/ tickets now at the local office of| ? ees i - s i aH Sunday night at the Sea Shore|the International Labor Defense,| gh oak ‘i tial employment: starve quiet- > a pe | Workers Must Fight. y 1 E : h f B : - aI se press Bure ee annoy the bosses with} TUUL Youth Section) “workers, both employed and job-|Dance of the W. I. R, at Casa| Room 410, 799 Broadway. They are agedy gown to “insanity suy Tueteeake ait |less, will join their demand, Monday |D’Amor Hall, Mermaid Ave, and/25 cents to organizations; 35 cents your hunger cries! to the cemetery and die like a dog. } Needless to say, suicide is not the that workers should meet the | of the bosses, the throwing Issues Call NEW YORK,.—Pointing out the bad conditions of the young work- . ers, who are severely hit in the f millions on the streets to starve, . af . the speedup of those yemaining at |Preeen’ economic crisis, the Youth ek eo auto cerablatha employ- | Section of the Trade Union Unity hide f the smallest number pos- | Leaeue> issued a eall to all young anent of: the ‘amalles i PoS- | workers to participate in the Sept. uced by poverty.” In Dover, N. J., on the same d n Clark, another work lent because he had been out f work so long and practically des- attempted suicide, He is ex- ‘0 recover. West 31st St., Coney Island. They} to individuals, will deliver short addresses telling of the Ku Klux Klan and American} Legign attack on the camp, Other| |for the Communist program of so- cial insurance, of relief for the un- employed,” he said, “They will de- mand the release of Foster, Minor, Amter and Raymond, no payment) of rent by jobless, all war funds for of 100. |the workless, as well as fight| ree. against wage-cuts and the organiza-| advance and 75 ¢ Music will be furnis' SOCCER LEAGU i MEETS wa’ In Port Huron, Mich., on the very ame day, another unemployed work- ts at the door.| Street, hed by the Cas-| i mee ae Sible, the wage-cut: i : 4 i tion of the unorganized. Tammah All managers and paylers " =, Luigi Visconti, of 285 Littleton | ible, the wage-cuts and continued | 1<+ demonstrations to push the fight | Fm jac Hee Ai a io te rly | car Harlemites. bcged ts heceresent. jers’ Inrustrial Union and other fea- Ave., who had been out of work for | /ayotts. ., |for the Unemployment Insurance| °° To. will give the final Attar sihelp-walengaicen bail on : ptures, There will also be a hot ver a year, shot himself at the| Workers! Refuse to starve quiet-|Bjl], The statement issued by the|°rS: “abor will give the final re-| | * ler ©) ; ai | ‘ ; fas bard teeth’ Street entwance to Fair-| ly] Don'y lat the bosses foros youl vaveh Sect i eae: jply to its oppressors,” Engdahl de-| Wednesday, the two girl militants; Write as you fight! Become a |! and, Eighteenth Street entrance a yt t | Youth Section, says, in part: cla¥ed amid cheers. | were welcomed by the Rochester! worker correspondent. Fraternal delegates are expected| His body was dis- s woman who “to _en- For nont cemeter, covered by goes there every oy the be: ful Viseonti there had been “We must organize into unem- ployment councils and build youth} sections in the unemployment coun- cils and fight with our fellow work- ers in the shops for unemployment to commit suicide! Fight back! | | Demand work or support! Fight | for social insurance! Demonstrate | September First against unemploy- ‘ment and for social insurance! Calling upon the crowd of seafar-| Workers, the city in which the jail) ing workers gathered at South and | iS located, Wednesday evening they | Whitehall Sts. togjoin the great|Were the guests of honor at a ban-! interviewed at the W. I. R. of the demonstrations of unemployed and| Wet arranged by the Progressive | conditions in jail where they were employed workers for the Workers’; Women’s Council, Thursday they|held for nine days before being re- rgec mor! no | in Eee — ~ jinsurance paid by the bosses, We U ‘ |spoke at the Rochester Labor Ly-|j, bail. Th all cells, they | ji i i : i e Pt imem | Unemployed Bill, speakers at the| Rochest b Y- | leased on bail. ‘e small cells, they | olutionary unions realize their | i : ‘ ‘ “i re- | 7 8, A. ; , |rats and the fodd was uneatable.| st i i i iLiUs {by the Communist Party and Young |#i meeting met with the hearty re-| C00 CU o™ ain steps to draw them into active union However, food was sent them by the The two girls teld yesterday when i Rochester workers. | sponse of the workers. Cheer Newton. Henry Williams, Negro seaman, | }and Herbert Newton, Atlanta de-| fendant, were greeted by the work- Communist League and endorsed by | the Trade Union Unity League and the Youth Committee. | “One of the clauses in the bill is IN BODY SEPT. 1 p NEEDLE YOUTH HAS CONFERENCE Opens On Sept. 20th At Harlem Casino ‘oing ahead full swing | Trades Workers’ Industrial Union, {to be held in sino, 100 W. 116th St., New York | City, Sept. 20 and 21, have already elected delegate: The Social and Sport Club, which | is being formed by the Youth De- |~ partment, held its first meeting on|/ Thursday, August 28. needle workers plan to have their jteams formed and in practice by the time the conference opens, and will elect delegates from the club e New Ha: 9 the conference. The conference will open on Sep-} tember 20, with a concert and dance, The young workers feel that the | best way to have the adult workers | |pertake in their conference ‘3 by The L.8,U. Metropolitan Soccer arranging a crackerjack concert. features will be a children’s pageant | league will hold its first re-organ- They plan to have a group dance Children will be admitted | izational meeting Tuesday, Sept. 2,| arranged and participated in by Adults will pay 50 cents in| 1930, 8;00 p. m., at 350 East 8ist | Nadia Chilkofsky, a song recital by |a contralto, two speeches by the are leaders of the Needle Trades Work- from nearby cities, This is the first youth conference | arranged for needle workers. reactionary unions have always ig- ored the young workers, work. Support the Daily Worker Drive! | Get Donations! Get Subs! Many The young | { for the tlem Ca- | shops | | The The rev- OPENS IN SEPT, i=: | Many Courses For the! employed workers is $25 and $5 for ers when they told them about the | |need for Negro and white toilers’| f <a ° x. 4 * To Protest Workers Brownings’s ‘Outside the Law r leach dependent. This, fellow work- |. olidarit | bs Persecution W orkers | erm 8 certainly something to fight|""Havey Chandler was chairman, | Premiere at Globe Today re NEW YORK.—Special attention |*°F Reports received from other | The International Labor Defense will be represented in the Septem- ber 1st Unemployment Demonstra- tions with its membership mareh- ing to Union Square on Menday in nass formation, with speakers on! the platform, and with its organiza- | tional forces prepared to defend all | ono ee as Fundamentals of workers whose protest meets with] ,, : , |Communism, Elementary Marxian repressive police measures. onomies and History of the Amer- “Officials throughout the courtry |ian Labor Movement should be have met the demands of workers|¢yen by all revolutionary workers for unemployment insurance, work | who desire and need a grasp of the or wages, with police clubs,” says @| fundamental theor; of Communism statement today of the International land a knowledge of the history and Labor Defense. | development of the American Labor “This has not silenced the work-| Movement. the Workers School this year to the organization of suf- ficient courses for revolutionary | workers that will fit for better par- ticipation in their unions, mass or- ganizations and for the daily strug- gles and needs. _ “The funds for unemployment re-| meetings, still going on as we go to| lief are to be raised by taxing the jyess, indicate successful mobiliza-| bosses’ prpofits and by having mon- | tion meetings. ey turned over for the relief of the| unemployed. At the present time the government spends tremendous amounts a yea. for battleships, air-| planes, and poison gas. This money | aust be turned ever to the workers to be administered by them for the relicf of the unemployed workers, “Young workers must demon- strate togeth 2 with the adult work- ers on Sept. Ist, 12 noon, with the Youth Section of the T.U.U.L. at Union Square. All young workers, 25 years old or younger, will meet! with the youth section at the Food was devotel by “Outside the Law,” an all talk-| Five hundred Oriental types were ing screen melodrama, forms the/employed in the Chinatown se- | chief attraction at the Globe The: | quence. a, A |atre, opening its engagement today. The original story was written by Fight For Social Insurance! |" yr,,y Nolan has the principal | Tod Browning who also directed the | | vole with Owen Moore playing op-| photoplay. Browning previously posite her. Edward G, Robinson,|won fame by his direction of more {noted Broadway stage artist, plays{than twenty of Lon Chaney’s mys- the character of the gang leader.| tery plays. |“Outside the Law,” is one of Uni-| “Journey’s End,” the screen ad- 0: Ree | versal’s 1930-31 special productions, | aptation of the internationally Gx, Shine” at the Cameo Theatre.| One setting, constructed on the) known play by R. C. Sherriff, will | ‘oe Cook continues his antics in the | <tudio lot, representing a section|be presented for the first time at Roe haiti film, oe Fase | of Chinatown in a large city, cost] popular prices at the Roxy Theatre, Seuks: Whine Goce hice chia |more than $60,000 to construct. ! beginning today. in the movies, and he has made High Praise For’ New Soviet Film This is the final week of “Rain 25% REVUCTION TO OPTICAL CO. under persogal supervin! Optometrist Corner 13th Street NEW YORK CITY Opposite New York Ey Ear lofirmary AND USTON WORKERS Have Your Eyes Examined | and Glasses Fitted by WORKERS MUTUAL - DR. M. HARRISON 215 SECOND AVENUE ers, just as it has not provided them | with bread, with work, or with wages.” ; Classes in the Fundamentals of Communism will be given every |night in the week, to accommodate Workers Hall at 16 West 21st St., at 11 a. m. on Monday, Sept. Ist.) quite a hit. The Cameo especially | has been crowded in the last two weeks of showing. Beginning next Friday, the man- | agement is offering a distinct treat, | getting away from the Hollywood | From there we will march to Union Square in a body.” The Unemployment Demonstration | the largest number of workers. ushers in the International Labor | Special instructors have been trained Defense September-November “Class | for the course. For night workers, War Prisoners Defense and Libera-| there will be Fundamentals of Com- A Theatre Guild Production. | | Telephone Stuyvesont ALL ALLERTON IN TANTS AND CO-0) tion Drive,” coinciding with the opening of the capitalist courts’ fall and winter sessions with their threat of more “capitalist j militant leaders of test. This drive will call for a tremen- dous fight aga’ tences planned for the six Atlanta workers who come to trial in Sep- tember. Renewed drive for the immediate release of Foster, Minor, Amter, and Raymond, who may be framed up on new charges even while they are in prison, in spite of the fact that the felonious assault charge has been dropped. Fight against sedition cases and| criminal syndicalist cases with their } threats of long prison sentences and | deportation, Fight against continuation of the Fish Committee investigation, and a consistent policy of protest against persecution of foreign born, lynch- ihg, and the mass arrests to intimi date militant class protest. PASSAIC JOBLESS OUT SEPT. FIRST AT NOON PASSAIC, N. J., Aug. 29.—De- spite the arrest of two workers giv- ing out leaflets for the September ist unemployment demonstration here, preparations are going ahead for a big meeting to be held in the First Ward Park at noon. The arrested workers are now out on bail of $50 each. Unemployment is severe in this mill town and the suffering and | misery of the workers grows daily. Mills are operating with half forces —and even these get short time— three, four days a week, Thou-| sands of jobless mill workers are out of work and vainly look for jobs that are non-existent. Brooklyn Dance For Training School Preparations for the Build the} Workers’ Training School Dance, to be held Saturday, September 6, at Laisve (Liberty) Hall, corner of Lorimer and Ten Eyck Sts., Brook- lyn are completed. A good orchestra for the dancing couples, revolutionary songs, speeches from working class lead- ers and from the Workers’ Train- ing School students will feature part of the gala evening. The tickets which will admit you to the dance cost only 35 cents and are now for sale at the Section six, Communist Party headquarters, 68 Whipple St., Brooklyn, the sponsor of the affair. Get your tickets now, | |munism during the day. The English courses have been {reorganized with the object of ice” for the|training foreign born and native | workers’ pro-| workers in expression, spelling. and | writing, in the shortest time pos- |sible. The courses are carefully inst the death sen-| graded to suit the requirements of| |workers of various degrees of knowledge of the language. | All classes will begin in Septem- |ber. Register early before classes |fill up! Register at the office of |the Workers School 26-28 Union | Square, 5th floor. Section Six Mem- | bership Meeting Come For: Jobs; Sent Home With Blank Card NEW YORK, Aug. 29.—At the City’s “Free” Employment Agency a bit of strategy has been enacted by the bosses who, in order to keep appearances up and to have things run Smoothly, work hand in glove with the police. The thousands of unemployed who daily mill about the doors of the fake employment agency are given application blanks by the police and told to go “home” and fill them out. | | | would normally remain around the agency, They are getting too num- erous and too militant for the po- This minimizes the number who} lice and whenever a group of job- A special general membershi a : “4 less workers form they immediately meeting of Section Six, Communist |Party, will be held Thursday eve- | fall into a discussion of their prob- ning, Sept, 4th, at 8 p. m. sharp, at | the section headquarters, 68 Whip- jple St., Brooklyn. Comrade Huiswood, District Ne- gro Director, will report on very | important problems confronting our {section and our Party in general. lems. Another tactic of the bosses lis to send the jobless applicants out on “wild goose” chases—in quest of jobs which-do not exist. This les- sens the number who would other- wise remain about the place and among those who are lined up out- jall comrades are de~'t mice eurh an affair. side it creates the illusion that Party members are warned not to Ahesics workers are getting jobs. make any other arrangements for that evening and come to the backers meeting. Strike against wage-cuts; de- mand social insurance! Labor and Fraternal Communist Activities Dance of Y.C.L. Of Bronx Unit 4, will be held this Labor Defense Agents Saturday, August $0, at 1400 Boston Are to report to the IL.L.D, office |'Rd. Admission 25 cents, at door 35 to get the New Labor Defender and | cents. Dance Given by the Harlem Progressive Youth Club will be held Saturday, Aug. 30 at 1492 Madison Ave. Rese Me gate to get literature for the Sept. 1 dem- + - fe onstration, Social : OS Wie Given by the Young Communist U.C.W.W. Attention! League of Coney Island will be held All members and sympathizers of | Saturday, Aug. 30, at 9 p, m. at 290) he U.C.W.W. are to come down to|Mermaid Ave. Admission 25 cents. 0 B. llth St. on Menday morning * * i at 11 a.m, to march to the demon. Proletarian Banquet stration. Given by Unit 6, Section 7 will be Be oe held Saturday, Aug. 30, at 8:20 p. m. : Bx-Servicemen at 3068 Brighton Beach. Admission Marine work food workers and ) 25 cents. asked to attend a protest meeting by the Down Town Unemployed Council against the po- lice brutality at our open-air meet. ings today at 8 a. m. at Leonard St. of Lafayette. eR LY.D. Committee Attention! All ‘members of LY.D. committees and cast for district are to report Monday Sept. 1st at 26 Union Sq. im- mediately after the demonstration. DON’T MISS IT! DON'T FAIL TO GREET THEM! W.I.R. Seashore Dance and Children’ Pageant SUNDAY, AUG. 31, at 8 p.m. Casa d’Amor Hall MERMAID AVENUE, at Went Sint Street CONEY ISLAND 100 CHILDREN IN A MASS PAGEANT Dancing to Music of Cascar Harlemites Mabel Husa and Aailene Holmes, just out of jail, will be there! DIRECTIO! ‘Take BMT Sea Beach expres then take Shuttle Car to 31st Street, to Stillwell Avenue, vr Hall | | |‘The End of St. Petersburg’ and} film products. “Storm Over Asia,” | a Soviet film, which most of the| continent has had an opportunity to | see and praise, will have its first! showing in America. Berlin and Paris critics praised the film highly when first shown there, The pic-! ture played in no less than fifty-/ two theatres in the German capitol. | Walter Duranty, in a cable from Russia, published in the New York | Times, writes as follows on the first showing of “Storm Qver Asia”: , “Motion picture enthusiasts in Moscow raved at the new film di-| rected by the brilliant young} director Pudovkin, who produced ‘Mother.’ The story of ‘The De-| scendent of Ghenghis Khan’ (as the picture was called in the Soviet; capitol), places Pudovkin in the | front rank of the world’s great di- rectors,” Vote Communist! GUILD GREATEST J EVER SE “ARRICK GAIETIES mendous}. ainment t in th MA THE THE "WwW y clever, sparkling, witty and bright, offering that is just about as good as anything now ese heated months . .. It should be seen,” NING JOURNAL. ind STREET, EVENING AY AND SATURDAY WEST THUR AT 8:30 ATP 2:30 THE FIRST BIG SM OF T 9 NGUEST Biway and AMEO fini’sitte: JOE COOK “RAIN or SHINE” (CS LOBE “" HE SEASON! Presents rERY PLAY N & 46th 170-30 AM, |NOW oedway Daily from ATIVE HOUSE 691 Allerton Avenue, Airy, Large TO HIRB Suitable for ! Workers House, 347 E. 72nd St. New Telephone: Rhinelander DAVIS « f Yee coi av ae| CTOUTSIDE THE LAW AND AN ALL-STAR Goi | owEN een, a} oe ELTINGE THEA. Wingy ARTHUR HOPKINS Presents Rally to Release the Communist Candidate for Governor Wm. Z, Foster and the other members of the unemployed delegation, Come to the I. L. D. Solidarity PICNIC SEPT. 7 SUNDAY Pleasant Bay Park Do Your Workin; Clas Duty Organizations! Attention! OCTOBER 22 reserved for very im- portant event. Eves. 8:30; Mats. Wi Biggest Event of the Year! DAILY WORKER MORNING FREIHEIT BAZAAR OCTOBER 2—rhursday Madison Square Garden Don’t Buy Anything Now, You'll Get It at the Bazaar! 50 Vv ‘ed. & Sat. 2:30 TORCH SONG | PLYMOUTH THEA., 45 St., W.ofB’way Eves. 8:50—Mats. Sat. & Labor Day bi 3—Friday ee 4—saturday ivy 5 Sunday VOR BETTER VALUES IN MEN’S AND YOUNG MEN’S SUITS go to PARK CLOTHING STORE 93 Avenue A, Cor. Sixth St. 22° New drama by Kenyon Nicholson | Gottlieb’s Hardware 119 THIRD AVENUE Stuyvesast 6074 Near 14th St. All kinds of CUTLERY ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES MAZDA Hutbs Our Specialty. Colony We have a these Take Lexiny Subway ai on Ave. Ave. station. Our a i= open from Phone: LOHIGH 6869 International Barber (det 108d & Josh Bt Wendrow’s Bakery Meeting Rooms and Hall itings, Lectures and Dances in the Czechoslovak WORKERS’ CENTER BARBER SHOP Meved to 86 Union Square CRUIBEIT BLNG——eMain Floor Workers Cooperative 3-4 ROOM APARTMENTS toi tae nugnber Waite Plaine at Allerton TEL. ESTABHOOK 1400 2000 BRONX PARK AST m. daily, and from 13 io 2 p.m. Om Sundays, 2016 Second Arenive, lew York Ladiew Robs Our Specisit; Private Beaety Parlor . cry | fon of je and 3836 HABI. PER- Ss Bronx Inc. York 6097 Shop o7 (ARL BRODSK —MELROSE 133 BAST 110TH 8! furnished room: webway, Lehi UNFURNISHED viel f LARGE SUNNY “For All Kinds of Insurance” Y Velephone: Murray HIN sam 7 Mast 42nd/Street, New York All Comradea Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant | Youth Conference of the Needle|! 658 Claremont Parkway, Bronx RATIONAL | Vegetarian RESTAURANT ¢ 199 SECOND AVE UE Bet, 12th and 18tb Ste, Strictly Vegetariun Food Dairy (euprautan omrades Will Alwn agant (o Dine at Onr Pines. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD, Bronx ir Itith St, Station) INTERVALB 914i } HEALTH FOOD * Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 6865 Phone: Stuyvesant 3316 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: (TALIAN DISHES A place with atmosph where all radicals m 028, 12th St. New York | Boulevard Cafeteria 541 SOUTHERN BLVD, Cor. 140th Street Where you eat and feel at home. YOUR FOOD will do you more good if you eat under conditions of QUIET There is Comfort and Protection in CLEANLINESS Eat with people who have the wit to know that FOOD and HEALTH are RELATED COME TO THE SADER SERVICE) Restaurant 113 EAST FOURTEENTH ST. (Near Irving Place) R. J. MINDEL), SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Reom 80%—Phone: Algonquin #183 Not connected with any other office Sy6uaa Jlevebunua DR. A. BROWN Dentist 301 East 14th St. Cor. Second Ave. Vel, Algonquin 7245 Tel. ORChara 3783 DR, L, KESSLER SURGEON vENTIS 7 by Appotm 48-50 DELANCEY STREET Cor. Kldridge st. NEW YORK Cooperators! Patronize SEROY CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. ¥. FOOD WORKERS UNION 10 W. ist INDUSTRIAL OF NEW YORK Chelsen 2276 Bronx Headduarters, 2994 Third Avenue, Melrose 0128; Brooklyn Headquarters, 16 Graham Avenue, Pulasky 0634 Vhe Shop D the fi es Counci} meets y of every month 16 West 21st St The Shop Is the Basie Unit. Advertise your Union Meetings here. For information write to The*DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28"Union &-., New York City ROOMS iT. LARGE, SMALL convenient, near 1890. ROOM—AIL improve- ments, telephone. 71 E. Seventh St, Chernomovsky, CO-OP. APARTMENT suany, airy, In venien Tel: Ui room, with all eon? US LENOX AVE, Apt. 62 weralty T12t. -

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