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Page Two HOW CA Most Prisoners Are Unemployed, Sick or Aged Workers Who Have No Jobs ich Revelers Who Are Arrested for “Disor- derly Conduct” Are Apologized To By VAN VEEN NEW YORK.—Anyone who goes » the department of corrections to btain a permit cannot fail to ob- serve that the lire waiting “or the passes are poverty-stricken and rushed. Here a no well dressed adams from Fi Ave. 1 n: with their maids and poodles. Here are not to be found bu: er f en of adies and gentle’ ne outside to em ove e or Rikers Island pens, or any other cars ex- ept ubways. In for per o vis s are poor work- rs, men and women, young and old, olored and white. them desperately poo Their faces are sea wi care verwork and fea They line up at the Tombs or at Welfare Island, wneast, Le- draggled, hungry; jobless, evicted, | Gespairing. Most of them led with the prop: tate that they f where th e state teaches them that prisoners are criminals and in the eyes of the officials the visitors are not mu Small wonder they looked crushed. And what are the crimes of the nmates of the penitentiaries whom they go to visit twice a month for a short half ‘our barred from the prisoners by heavy iron screen They are for the most only of poverty. Their crimes are the theft of a few cents or a few dollars; taking a drink and getting caught; out of a job and arrested m “suspicior.” with no one to go, bail or to defend them. There are many cases particularly among the Negro workers where the victim found himself beaten and arrested and given anywhere from six weeks to six months on any old charge. Many of the prisoners were just hard up and trying to find the price of a meal, or eating in a chop joint without paying the bill. Among the women prisoners may e added the poor street walkers. The rich prostitutes, like the rich ootlegger and the rich grafters get away with it. Of course bes these are the narcotics and con- firmed alcoholics, but all belonging to the poor. The narcotics of the bourgeoisie don’t go to They | stay at home under doctors care or they go to expensive sanitariums. Disorderly conduct applic to the unemployed or home worker; of course it applies to strikers and all militant worke who resist by any means the of pression of the bosses. Of course it applies to all arrested strikers and to workers who distribute leaf- lets calling’ for organization. applies to those who sell the Daily Worker or other working class lit- It} Jerature. Sometimes the charge is ged for the sake of variety to rioting” or “incitement to riot” The charge doesn’t count. Any old charge will do to get the work- ers behind the bars. et Only poor are arrested for “dis. orderly conduc’.” Only the poor are arrested for theft. The big , thieves of the bourgeoisie are'never alled thieves. When any pretense ade at indictment it is called yers long complicated statements are ma go free. Sometimes a goat is needed y the big grafters higher up; in that case they let one of their own go for a few weeks just to show that even the rich are punished by the majority of the law. So it is the poor and suppressed workers who fill the jails to over- crowding throughout the country. The families of the prisoners are in the same class. Most of the pris- *|oners and many of the visitors are | beginning to understand that there is no justice for the workers in the courts of the capitalist class. have spokne to many of these poor men and women. “There is something wrong” they say; “My husband was a good man, only he took a drink once in a while and they gave him six months—and I so high—what’s this world coming to when poor people can’t even eat?” e and they nearly always | PITALIST JAILS, ARE USED TO TORIURE AND HARRASS WORKERS I} n’t get a job and everything is | | Today in History of the Workers September 4, 1833—Baltimore city central trades union organ- ized. 1891—Tennessee legislature voted down bill to abolish convict lease system. 1894—12,500 New York tailors struck against task work system. 1920 — Railroad workers of Erfurt, Germany, destroyed munitions shipped for war against Soviet Rus: 1923 —Berlin “Rote Fahne,” Commu- nist organ, suppressed for calling for building of workers’ defense hundreds. 1926—5,000 workers on government railways of Colombia and longshoremen struck. LEAVE FAKE JOB LINE TO JOIN TUUL mbezzlement. Through their law-| Worker With “Promises” Hundreds of workers came out 0 the jobless job line before the fake’) which will unite all tailors in the city employment agency yesterday | shops into a struggle against wage- UNITED NEEDLE 3 Are Disgusted | DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, KICK BOSS OUT OF WORKER MEETS NOONDAY MEET N.T.W.LU., Registered | Laundry Workers Beat Members Form Front | Off Nine Thugs NEW YORK—Two weeks ago NEW YORK.—The conference | jfor men’s clothing workers, called | the boss at the Coney Island Laun- by the Needle Trades Workers’ In- | dry, 22nd St. and Mermaid dustrial Union to meet Saturday | Coney Island, called out his gang noon, at Stuyvesant Casino, is to be ; of thugs and beat up the speakers a real united front of organized and | at a noon day factory gate meeting. unorganized, of the rank and file in the Amalgamated Clothing Workers and the members of the Needle Trades Workers’ Industrial Union for a smashing fight against |the piece work, the race divisions, the cut wages and speed-up, the di- vision and exploitation of the | dust tailors. | Unity League. The call sent out by the Indus- trial Union, announcing the confer- ence, explains its program: | “The Needle Trades Workers’ In- | ; dustrial Union is carrying on the| that he was not against organiza- campaign for Unity among the| tion, but that when he saw that the |tailors. The Industrial Union | Hanae ey inn Be et 5 porn broke up sting. Abou f| worked out a plan of organization |this time the boss and his thugs | | launched their attack. The workers the worst of it. | strongarm men were booted out of |a meeting of some 75 workers, afternoon to hear the militant mes-| cuts, speed-up, piece-work, reorgan- sage of the Trade Union Unity| izations and unemployment. The | League and to support its demand | tailors in every shop must come for social insurance as against the| together and organize a shop com-| bosses’ program of starvation and} mittee which is to lead the struggle suicides for the unemployed workers. | of the workers in the shops. The following speakers held the|ings having more than one shop workers: | must organize a Building Commit- Comrade Ciprini, who opened the | tee. attention of the jobless meeting; Comrade Guido, unemployed workers; uild- | In the sections where the who | men’s clothing shops are, the cloth- stressed the struggle of the young ing workers must organize free! Comrades | markets, there the tailors of the | Williams and Primoff, who empha-| shops are to come down and to- sized the necessity of Negro and/ gether with the unemployed mobil- white workers uniting in the com- mon struggle against the bosses; Comrade Murphy, a seaman, who exposed exploitation in the marine ize and organize for struggle against the bosses and their agents. Send Delegates! “This is only part of the pro- industry, and Stone, a discharged | gram of organization for the tailors. post office clerk, who told of the | The full program of organization as | speed-up and graft in the post of-| well as a plan of action and acti- Another says; “I have to leave | fice. y baby with a friend and go to work, keep husband o for a dollar a week for cigarettes m: About two hundred workers “socialist” party denounced the | | and stamps, but I just can’t afford | leaders of the bosses’ third party | to give it to him. for ed colored woman worker I “T don’t know what he got in there for. He don’t know him- self. He got into an argument with the landlord on aecount of the rent and the judge gave him six months. No, I didn’t get a lawyer; how can a poor woman like me get a lawyer?” Yes the jails of the U. 8. house only the poor. The rich murderers, | grafter: bootleggers, prostitutes, | gangst embezzlers and what not y'get away with it. What else can be expected under the rule of the 59 owners 6f the’ ment d States? U } } He got sent up| and pledged himself to join the stealing an automobile with | Communist Party and become an some other fellows; they were all | active fighter for the working class. | out of a job. He was always steady | Numerous workers joi ‘till then.” At ned the Un- employed Council. NEGRO REVOLTS AT JOB GRAFT Unemployed INDIANA HARBOR, Ind., Sept. 3.—Hundreds beseige the employ- office of the Youngstown Sheet and Tube Co, here. The ‘0 there are no jeweled and satin) workers still inside are “all pepped clad crooks lined up waiting for | up” over a rumor circulated by the passes to visit the prisoners. The management that they are going to swell crooks are gambling in the! work four days a week instead of Riviera or |Hampton, or going to queen in London. meet the “COURT” ASKS SOVIET TO PAY Lena Goldfield’s Outfit Gives Itself Decision LONDON, Sept. 3.—A self pointed “arbitration court,” com- posed of two lackeys of the Lena Goldfields corporation, today “ordered” the -Soviet Government to pay the company $65,000,000 be: cause the Soviet Government ended a concession contract, due to the violations by the foreign concession- ists. Phe Soviet Government from the very beginning refused to recog- nize the rump court, as the all con- cession’s law of the Workers’ I public had been violated, and the terms of the contract itself had been annulled. Frustrated in their counter-revolu- tionary activity and sabotage, the Lena Goldfields corporation got two highly paid lawyers together to “order” the Soviet Government to pay for not allowing the foreign imperialists to continue their ex- ploitation on their own terms. it Red Dance in Negro Harlem This Saturday A Red Dance will be given Sat- urday night, September 6, at 308 Lenox Ave., for the benefit of the Functionaries Training School in ap: | CHANGSHA IS NEAR GAPTURE New Formed in Peking NE W YORK.—Despite the ar- ival of 0 government reinforce- ments, “the capture of Changsha again by the Reds is considered by foreign observers to be a matter of vs,” according to a special cable ispatch to the New York Times uesday. Si king troops are unpaid and mutin- ous, whether the reinforcements will | partments, horse-racing at South | three, One “Steve” of the company’s employment department has been selling jobs to Negro and Mexican jobless workers for $1 each, The men work a couple of days and are fired, without reason given. “Steve” is now in the hospital pretty badly beaten up. The story is that a Ne-| gro treated in the usual fashion de- manded either his money or his job be returned to him, and when told Militarist Gov’t) be couldn't have either, “took it out of Steve's hide.” The T. U. U. L. is agitating for organized action instéad of such spontaneous in- dividual revolts. 3a Fire R. R. Shopmen. MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., Sept. 3. —The Milwaukee R. R. shops here have had a constant lay-off of men resulting from the economic crisis, . ce most of the Nan-| On Aug. 29 another 200 men were laid off from car and machine de- The fakers of the constitute a negative or positive | “Brotherhood Union” have approved force for the Nanking parasites still | this, and it is expected that in the remains to be seen. a new government is announced in Peking, with Yen-hsi near future there will be another In the meantime, the formation of | lay-off in the same shop. The Trade Union Unity League shan, the Shan-| has held shop gate meetings and | si war lord, as chairman, Feng Yu-| also issued special leaflets to the Hsiang, the Christian general and | workers in the Milwaukee shops. the “left” as well as right Kuomin- | The workers of the Milwaukee shop |. The Jap- | are tang leaders as partne learning that the A, F, L. anese imperialists have definitely | unions are nothing but company put the stamp of its approval on unions and that the only militant the government ky representatives of the Mukden clique to take un triee of the most import: ant mizister’ ernment. ington Koo, a very handsome fellow destined to play the role of cater- ing to the imperialists in “fairy” fashion on behalf of whatever mili- tarist masters he would be serving | at the mo:sent, has again emerged jas the minister of foreign affairs. | The following period in the rela allowing three Organization is the Railroad Indus- trial League, which is affiliated with the T. U. U. L., and they are 1 portfolios of the gov. | Joining up. The notorious Dr. Well- Section Six Women’s Red Election Rallies Section 6 of the Communist Party has devoted Friday night, Septem- ber 5, as Woman’s Red Election Night, by arranging five rallies, the district. Good music and tasty | tions between the old Nanking gov | where workers will hear the voice refreshments are promised. All workers invited. Admission 35 cents. LL.D. Calls For Volunteer Workers Volunteers wanted to assist with office work. Comrades are urged to report at once to National Office of the International Labor Defense, 80 East 11th St., Room 430. Demand the release of Fos- ter, Minor, Amter and Ray- mond, in prison for fighting for unemployment insurance. jernment and the newly formed | Peking government will be a period of intensifica civil war as well as |a competition for better opportun- | ities of servi, the imperialist mas- |ters. To put the matter plainly, | the so-called divlomacy of either one of the two yovernments will in no | way be different from the maneu- ers of two prostitutes, vieing each | other for the }leasure of their mas< | ters. |childven in their arms, joined the | unemployed demonstrations here for “Work or Bread.” brutally attacked the workers’ dem- j onstrating of the revolutionary working woman in this present election cam- paign, The central demonstration will take place at Grand §t. Extension, Brooklyn, to begin at 8:30 p, m. Other rallies, all of them starting at 7:30 p. m. and ending 8:30 p. m., then march to Grand St. Extension, will take place at Cook and Morrell Sts. Grand and Robling Sts., Gra- ham and Debovoise Sts., and Fleet and Myrtle Aves. All class-constlous workers, and especially the working women, are called upon to participate in these The police | patties, Vote Communist! | On the same day, Saturday, Sept. | }at 1p. m | have been swindled by fake strikes | | company | cloakmakers of the Industrial Union Cruel Fleecing of the} call to their fellow workers, unor- | | ganized or misorganized, to come I work at the five and ten| marched to the Unemployed Council | [ndustrial Union at the conference and I don’t even make enough to| headquarters after the meeting, and | to which all shop committees are elf—Twelve bucks. My | took part in a lively discussion. A /to send delegates. Tailors, meet in r in the pen is asking worker who was a member of the your shop now, organize a commit- fice Workers L day, Sept, bn opm. at Madison | Ave. the same place 6 which resulted vities will be reported by the lead- ers of the Needle Trades Workers’ tee and send your representative | to this conference!” 6, a similar conference of cloak- makers, is called by the Industrial | Union, to meet in Irving Plaza Hall, | The cloakmakers are as | badly exploited as the tailors. They | have been as badly betrayed by the International Ladies’ Garment | Workers as ever the tailors by Hill- man of the amalgamated. They | and by sell-out agreements hy the unionized I.L.G.W. The in a body to this rank and file con- ference, and plan united struggle. } Brooklyn Vote Com- munist Club Meet The first meeting of the Vote tion 6, Communist Party, will be held Friday evening, Sept. 5, at 8! p. m. in the Communist Party Se: tion headquarters, 68 Whipple St., | corner Broadway, Brooklyn. Ali workers who agree with the election platform of the Communist Party, or who want to become ac- quainted with it, and all those work- ers who understand the necessity of building a strong revolutionary | movment, must attend this meeting. Sections 2 and 3 | Holding Dance Sat. Saturday, September 6, Sections 2 and 3 will hold a joint entertain- | ment and dance at the Food Work- | ers Hall, 16 West 21st St., for the purpose of raising funds for the Functionaries Training School. A lively program has been ar- ranged, with dancing, movies and other entertainment. Admission 25 | cents. | Communist Activities . Bronx Section z in LY.D, program con for rehearsal today at 8 p. m. i Outdoor meetings before L.Y.D_ af- | fair: Unit 1, Units 163rd St. and Prospect a and 4, 149th St. and | ; Units’ 5 and 6, 16ard Blvd.: Labor and Fraternal LED. Plenic Sept. 7, Pleasant Bay Park your ticket now. * Gast Chit Man- Rich Frida . hattan Lyceum. Chinese program. Admission 35 cents in advance. Volunteer to sell tickets, apply Chinese Vanguard, 26 Union| Square, s 2 +& Yorkville Open Forum At 350 EB. Sist St. Beginning Fr day, Sept. 6. every, Friday at 8. p.m. This Friday, June Kroll, meni- ‘be f Executive Committee, T.U.U_L on “The Problem of Unemployment.’ Admission 10 cents, 8 # Ex-Servicemen’s Lengue Street Meet Thursday, Sept. 14th St. and University Pl, 7.80, p.m. * | Inter.Racial Dance At 208 Lenox Ave. Saturda: 6. Benefit District Funct School, Tone onaries Ce Gane Plumbing Workers Meet Thursday, 8 p. m. at 13 W. 17th St. \ ee cture, Council 16 U.C.W, riday, 8.30 p.m. at 241 St., Brooklyn. Get off at Sut Station Ww. + * * The Unemployed c n Wil meet _on Fri+ in the brutal beating and arrest. of four of the speakers, | with the wagon. | of the clear were victorious, though during the battle the thugs managed to break up the chair from which speaking was conducted and tried to beat the speakers with it. The boss called in the police, a sergeant, four patrolmen and two Harris and Wil- liams were arrested near the meet- ing place, after both speaking and fighting were over, and the cops PTEMBER 4, 1930 | “Sicgtried ” to Be Presented | Frank Williams, | writers of the contempor | chairman, and Jack Harris, speak- | | er, had the meeting opened, and had | Miss Le Gallienne will use, is the | reminded the workers that at the| work of Philip Carr. meeting before, the boss announced | hardt may produce “Siegfried” in | also picked up the other two mem-| bers of the committee, who were not there during the fight at all. They are Alice Holmes and Fred Repin. The arrested workers, herded | into the laundry, saw the audience 7 ig eagerly reading the International | issued a call for mass demon Youth Day perse by the boss, who urged the cops to drive them away, but even | | By Civic Repertory Theatre wopvene SCHOOL The Civic Reportory nounces the American premiere of “Siegfried,” by Jean Giraudoux, on Monday evening, October 13. Jacob Ben-Ami will have the title role, played in France by Pierre Renoir; Miss Le’Gallienne will play Ave,,| Genevieve, played in France by cang| Valentine Tess Egon Brecher will also have an important part. “Siegfried” was first produced in | Yesterday he tried it again, and got | Paris at the Comedie des Champs The boss was him- | Elysees in 1928 and proved the hit self beaten up, and he and his nine |of the season, It ran for a year. It is a modern story against the background of Germany and the The meeting was under the aus-| frontier of France directly after the | pices of the Laundry Workers’ In-| world war. dustrial League of the Trade Union| author, Jean Giraudoux, the | is one of the best known! stage. The English ve ‘ion, which Max Rein- Germany during the coming winter. The Civic Repertory Theatre opens on Monday evening, Sept. 29, with “Romeo and Juliet.” F new plays will be produced during | the season. These are, besides “Siegfried,” “The Nobel Prize” by Hjalimar Bergman, “Alice In Won- derland,” “Grauch” by Gordon Bot- tomley, “Ardvotlich’s Wife,” also by Bottomley, and Ibsen’s “Ros- mersholm.” In addition to the new productions, the revivals of last year will be included. Mass Demonstrations Against Fascism in Poland On Sept. 12 The committee for the struggle | against Polish fascism has just leaflet distributed to| tions in solidarity with the Polish, | tival. them. They were ordered to dis- Ukranian, White-Russian and Jew- | tially shot in technicolor. Bill Rob- | the School. ish workers and peasants in Poland after the Tammany police did their |@Nd for the defense of the Soviet back again. An attempt to put charges of as-| on September 12, | Sault against those who fought the boss and his gang failed, because evidence of self de- fense. The four are out one bail, charged with “standing in front of the laundry,” “distrbiuting leaflets,” “intimidation,” and trying to stop business by preventing customers from entering. Harlem LL.D. Section Conference Tonight. The Harlem Section of the Inter- national Labor Defense will hold a Section Conference of all branches in Harlem on Thursday, Sept. 4, at 8 p. m, in the Spanish Workers’ Center, 26 West 115th St., N.Y.C. | Moscow, Berlin and Paris Acclaim New Pudovkin Masterpiece! The purpose of the conference wiil | be to organize a section of the I.L.D. in this territory and take steps to put the branches here in proper function basis. All comrades, func- tionaries on LL.D. branches in Har- Lower Bronx I.L.D. Meets This Evening The International Labor Defense Branch of Lower Bronx, will have a re-organization meeting on Thurs- lem, are urged to attend without «Communist Club organized by Sec- | fail. | day, Sept. 4, at 8 p. m., in the Non- | Partisan Schule Building, Bryant Ave., Bronx, N. All of the former I.L.D. members of this branch are urged to attend this meeting and help put the branch on | a proper functioning basis. Also all members of the Workers’ club, which meets in this section are in- vited to attend this meeting of the LL.D. branch. — Rally to Release the Communist Candidate for Governor Wm. Z, Foster and the other members of the unemployed delegation. Come to the LL.D. Solidarity PICNIC SEPT. / SUNDAY Pleasant Bay Park Do Your Working Clas Duty! Organizations! Attention! OCTOBER 22 reserved for very im- portant event. 2061 | | duty by capitalism, the crowd came | Union. The demonstrations will be held , at 8 o’clock p. m. One of the meetings will take place at Manhattan Lyceum, 66-68 East 4th St., New York City. The other meeting will take place at Finnish Hall, 15 West 126th St. Speakers will address the meet- ings in English, Polish, Ukrainian, Jewish, Russian and Finnish lang- uages. Admission free. Theatre an- | y French j FALL TERM OF IN “STORM OVER ASIA.” | Don’t Fail to Register | At Once The fall term the Workers’ i School, the central school of the Communist Party, will open within three weeks. Registration for the |! many carefully selected courses, which are of immediate interest to all revolutionary workers, is now on at the office of the School, 26-28 Union Square, fifth floor. An especially heavy registration is already indicated in the trade union courses, and such courses as of i, hala Fundamentals of Communism, A native of Mongolia, in the new | Marxian Economics, Organization Soviet film, directed by Pudovkin,| principles, Principles of Marxian- | | is having its American premiere at| Leninism, Program of the Commu- | the Cameo Theatre, beginning to-| nist. International, History of the morrow. | American Labor Movement, etc, | | ener e = — | which are indispensable to active “DIXIANA” PREMIERE TONIGHT | rls erat AN aa ee AT GLOBE THEATRE. | Spanish and Esperanto. Capable instructors have been | procured by the Workers’ School for all these important courses. Radio Pictures’ _loag-expected “Dixiana” has been definitely set | debut in the film picture. ] | Daniels, too, has a singing role. Communist Party U. S. to open at the Globe Theatre at 8:30 this evening. The principal]! Some of the feature courses ‘is play: inelude Bebe Daniels, Ev-| year are: Earl Browd course in erett Marshall, Wheeler and Wool-| “Problems of jalist Construe- sey and Dorothy Lee. Everett) tion,” M. J. Olgin’s two courses in Marshall, Metropolitan Opera bari- | “History oi Class Struggles Since tone, is making his talking picture | 1789” and “Capital, by Marx, Vol. Bebe |I,” Max Bedacht in “History of the A.,” Leon Jheeler and Wools the come- | Platt in “History of the Communist dians of “Rio Rita,” and “The | International,” A. Landy in “Dialec- Cuckoos,” furnish the comedy. Jo- tic Materialism,” and 5, Mindel in seph Cawthorn and Jobyna How-| “History of the Communist Party land are also seen in important | of the Soviet Union.” roles. || The Workers’ School urges il The locale of the film is New| workers not to delay registration. Orleans, during the Mardi Gras of| Classes will be limited this year in 1840, with Bebe Daniels as the) order to assure the maximum per- j chosen queen of the famous fes-|sonal attention of the instructor to The carnival scene is par-j each student. Call at the office of It is always open. The inson, renowned tap dancer, will do | director will be glad to discuss your |his famous stair dance. Members | educational plans and problems ; of the cast are to be present at| with you and will assist you in se- this evenirig’s performance. |lecting the proper courses. Regis- ter NOW before classes fill up! SECTION 7 MEMBERSHIP MEET | All comrades of Section 7 must be| “For Alt Kinds of Insurance” | present at the membership meeting (ARL BRODSKY | | } | tonight at 48 Bay 28th St., Brook- Velephone: Murray Hit 5550 lyn. A representative from the dis- | trict will give a report on very im- |@ Wast 42nd Street, New York | ~ | portant organizational questions. All Comraaes Meet at Strike against wage-cuts; de- mand social insurance! BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx AMKINO PRESENTS RODUCKD BY 4: AND A. H, WOODS (by arrangement with) S. M. BIDDELL) pr Greatest Mystery Play Ever Seen THE 9TH GUEST by OWEN DA Storm Over Asia : MEJRABPOMFILM OF MOSCOW Directed by One of Soviet Russia’s Foremost Directors VSEVOLOD PUDOVKI WIS, 1789 Joe Cook in “Rain or Shine” RATIONAL Vegetarian RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVE, UE Bet. 12th and 13th Ste, Strictly Vegetarian Food AMERICAN PREM! Director of “The End ot St. — Petersburg” and “Mothe | Beginning This Friday D STREET BROADWAY ‘ VEGHIAMIAN Dairy RESTAURANT Comrades Will Always Pine St Pleasant (o Vine at Oor Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD. Bronz (near 124th St, Station) ®HONB:— {[NTERVALB 9149. HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNI versity 5865 A Thea Gaild Production" THE NEW GARRICK GAIETIES Brosdway(Vaily trom 46th 10:30 AM. ARTHUR HOPKINS Presents TORCH SONG Phone: Stuyvesant 3516 | “OUTSIDE THE LAW") ow arson menzan sihtnn John’s Restaurant with MARY NOLAN THEA, 45th Street | bier ine Ad IVALIAS : 4 aa | place with OWEN MOORE—EDWARD G.ROBINSON | EV where al! radii meet aeae ae wg 6. 12th St. New York | OPENING TODAY! G. M. BAKERY 716 Burke Avenue, Bronx DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Rcom 803—Phone: Algonquin 8188 Not connected unth any other office We have settled with the Food Workers Industrial Union! The Best BAKED FOUR TIMES A DAY Cooperators! Patronize SEROY Bakeries — — BREAD, ROLLS, CAK CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue MORNING OCTOBER “ “ “ Biggest Event of the Year! DAILY WORKER BAZAAR Madison Square Garden |} Don’t Buy Anything Now, You'll Get It at the Bazaar! | Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. ¥. FOOD WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION OF NEW YORK 1G W. 2ast st. Chelsea 2274 Bronx Hendauarters, 2994 Thira Avenue, Melrose 0128; Brooklyn Headquarters, 16 Graham Avenue, Pulasky 0634 |[ whe Shop Delegates Counci! meets | the first Tuesday of every month at 8 P. BM, at 16 West Zist St The Shop Is the Basie Unit. FREIHEIT Adveritse your Union Meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union &>., Now York City 2—Thursday 3—Friday 4—sat urday 5 Sunday | 14s EAST 1101 LARGE, SMALL ‘furnished — room enient, gear jMubway. Lehigh | 1890,