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VEMBER 3, 1930 Page ‘Iwo DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MON Down With Charity and Clubs! Fight for Jobless Insurane! Vote Every Hammer and Sickle! 6 { By RAYMOND BAKER Organizer, Communist Party U. A. District 2 Mayor Walker discovered unem- ployment on October 16 when 15,000 hungry workers came to the City Hall to support their delegates’ de- mands for Unemployment Relief. fF ésident Hoover discovered unem- ployment when tens of thousands of unemployed greeted him in Cleveland and Boston with stern and deter- mined demands for unemployment relief. All these militant demonstrations were crushed with policemen’s clubs. Charity and Clubs, But the determination of the un- employed workers to fight, raised the unemployment problem sharply throughout the entire country Scores of charity schemes, soup kitchens and flop houses, are being planned in every city. Behind these frantic schemes of } charit##and pitiful fairytales of jobs a sinister preparation against the unemployed is proceeding, Walker | and his Board of Estimates vote a million dollars to feed the 800,000 un- employed of New York and simul- taneously hired 600 more policemen. ‘The next day he gave orders vo mer- cilessly crush every attempt at further demonstrations of the unem- ployed. The unemployed are being regis- tered by the police The most poverty stricken and homeless unemployed are being ar- rested and sent to prison. The leaders of the unemployed face charges of “inciting to riot.” Resist Evictions. Evictions continue at a growing pace. The workers of Harlem have already begun resisting evictions by carrying back the furniture of evicted workers and posting pickets to pre- vent evictions. Walker had ten of these workers arrested, but the landlords of Harlem think twice before proceeding with evictions. Only the determined resistance 01 workers will stop ‘evictions. The Communist Party is the lead- ers of all struggles for unemployment relief. ‘The Communist Party pro- poses the enactment of the Unem- ANGRY WORKERS | SCORE S.P. MAYOR, Big Milwaukee Protest Meet, Nov. 3 MILWAUKEE, Oct. 31—In Mil- | waukee where there is a “socialist” mayor we find the most horrible con- ditions existing with over 50,000 THE ADVENTURES OF BILL WORKER ro QUST AR HEND - Buy” ‘tun ME WHY Don T You Have Goon CLoTHes? setae HERES AN OveR- PRoducrion OF SHOE J, TM FIRED % ND CANT Buy Igor Bars INMY BELFRY- Just oor i OF THE"No BRains Houre. Bor Yet oe way qou Dewy ST Good Juoes7 Vie vy workers unemployed. The “social- ists” have shown their “friendship” | for the unemployed workers by a/ fake proposal for a $10,000 soup kitchen and by endorsing Hoover's stagger system which means in plain words putting the entire working class on & hungér ration. In this situation the Trade Union Unity League Unemployed Councils of unemployed the Common | while a committee workers will be in |Council demanding immediate relief for the unemployed workers, average wages to all unemployed workers, no evictions, etc. All money to be raised by special taxation of the ‘bosses to provide relief in this emergency, All workers come to the Demon- | stration. Force the bosses and their “socialist” servants to act. Join the unemployed and employed workers. Vote Communist! I. AMTER HEARD | IN YOUNGSTOWN Workers to Demand Jobless Relief Nov. 3 YOUNGSTOWN, 0., Oct. 31.— In spite of the rainstorm last Mon- day, a large crowd of Negro and DAY, OVER PRoducri OF CLOTHES. 1) FIRED -AND Gave NO MONEY To Who’s Crazy? You JAY You Fj BOLT THis House AND You are Evicted Because OS CANT PAT ReAT FoR ir? So Mucy Fo BEEY Peopie IT CAN’ NEAT Sve + YES, IM STARVING. RODUCED V4 TBE si By RYAN WALKER. M CLUBBING AIM Because He Dosen Tyrie THIS (8 THE EST SYSTEM. On EARTY COT BAe To WHERE 7 CAME FROM: THERE T HAVE Foon, Chor, AND SHELTER 4 HAS soetcencs." Civil Liberties Union Blow at Gastonia Boys is Socialist Trick, Says Foster,. Resigning Vote Communist! Bust) dict—you set yourselves to raise a hue and cry against the victims of | that verdict, because they escaped | from capitalist class vengeance. | Thomas’ Treacherous Attack on Workers! Attack On Workers. | Not content with this fundamental | (Letter From Foster To The Civil | betrayal of civil liberties, the Civil | Liberties Union.) Liberties Union attempts to interpret | « 2 oe . * this escape as an act of the Commu-} American Civil Liberties Union. F | Gahiiseners: “Sox wet: th | nist Party (although the individuals Gustigils. bana tteenertad i ce ae composing the Civil Liberties Union le : ; York Telegram of October 30th) | 1 ANAM oe UO Ca ar ngage : : i Party is “warned” that until it give taken together with interviews given adenisite paaranbest that it Teal to newspapers by spokesmen of the} not 5; t ls ” ; | Civil Liberties Union some weeks ago, | Pe oe oe pe aoe ing that the Civil Liberties Union demonstrates that your organization | yi}] go everything it has placed the question of civil liber- Aedhd Beat Sen to. Deen cia any Communist fi i il i ties in a secondary position, and that y pcramneiey ck, Betas: ae in the future. first place is now taken by the poli-| “adequate guarantees,” you have tical interests of Mr. Norman Thomas} already made clear by your news- and his kind. It is quite evident) Pe paper interviews, means that you de- | that these decisions were dictated by| mand t | the “socialist” Thomas, whose role 2 ny eae WRC cacare shall physically seize the escaping | all their principles when faced with talism, and to establish our own © @ concrete problem; now, the Civil! class in power, to make impossible | Liberties Union has gone the way of the repetitién of Gastonia. all “liberals.” But the Communist Party has nothing but contempt for such a demand; it is not a policeman for capitalism, but the unrelenting fighter against capitalism and all its; policemen and servants. And the) Soviet Union, we can assure you, will Bonds or Lives? Your Mr. Pinchot is reported to have summed up your attitude in the} wisecrack: “Gentlemen prefer bonds.” | It would indeed be a tragedy if tn2) Civil Liberties Union should lose any | never close its doors to a worker/ Of its bonds in the fight for civil fleeing from capitalist “justice”; your | libertigs; it is a tradition of Amer- demands in that direction are just| ican “liberalism” that the only cas- as effective as Hoover’s demands that ualties in this fight should be the the Soviet Union abandon the build-| lives and freedom of Communist) ing of socialism. workers, The Civil Liberties Union, | Contemptible Lies. therefore, finds nothing unfitting in Particularly contemptible are your calling a special meeting to adopt | charges in the press that the Gas- motions against the Communists; in- | tonia boys are being held in the So- deed, it has a special enthusiasm for viet Union against their own will, Such @ meeting, which I am informed You know quite well that they acted| Was “the best-attended meeting in entirely as free agents in going there, | #8 history,” many faces appearing as well as in staying there. No one, which had been absent for years. CLEVE. WORKERS - FOR RED PROGRAM | Jubilantly Greet Amter Communists and Soviet With Parade Union Will Never CLEVELAND, Oct. 31—A jubilant Aid Boss’ Police crowd of Negro and white workers ture for the d, without enth greeted Comrade Amter at the sta jure record, wii enthus-| |. i jasm and without any effective ac- tion, and paraded with him through tion to help the fight to release those | the Negro section of the city to Car- splendid boys in California who are| penters’ Hall, where he addressed a condemned to rot their lives away! full house, with many workers forced if Folsom/end' Ban Quentin. to stand and others not able to gét in. Foster Withdraws Name. The meeting was a stirring incident For many years I have allowed my|in the Communist election campaign. name to stand on the list of execu-| Unemployment, which admittedly is tive committee members of the Civil) wide-spread in Cleveland, with over Liberties Union. I wanted to sup-| 115,000 workers out of work, wes the port every organization which con-|main feature of Amter’s speech in tributed, however indirectly, to the| which he pilloried the city authori- struggle against the brutal oppres-| ties for the brutal attack on/the un< sion of American imperialism. But I| employed on October 2, when Hoover am forced to the conclusion, by your} addressed \\the bankers convention actions on the Gastonia case, that] and the workers turned out militantly hite workers turned out to greet Comrade Amter and to hear the working class issues of the election campaign. Over 20,000 workers are jobless here, with the steel corporations putting across wage slashes on those (together with his party) is to divert the indignation of the masses away from the murderous capitalist state and against those who are fighting capitalism, primarily against the Communists. dd At a moment when even a decent sti prisoners and turn them over to the| and no organization, has made their police; or, since they have escaped! decisions for them. But your out- | seven young Communist union or- to the Soviet Union (the only land! rageous slander is designed to sup-| where persecuted workers can find! port the capitalist propaganda that} tences of 42 years for calling a meet- asylum), that the Communist Party | “an American jail is to be preferred; ing to organize agricultural workers shall put a demand to the Soviet! to Soviet freedom,” and a sly offer|in Imperial Union to deport these workers back|to the refugees of pardon and ma- At the same moment, in California, | ganizers were in prison serving sen- Valley—a little fact you are no longer seriously engaged in the fight for civil liberties, that you have become a tool in the hands of Norman Thomas and his party of apologizers for capitalism, and that the workers have nothing to expect from you in the way of assistance in ployment Insurance Bill as the mo: employed. The workers are effective immediate relief for the/qoeply discontented and strike talk misery of the unemployed workers. |j; spreading. The Youngstown The Communist Party rallies the/ Sheet and Tube Co. is laying in workers for determined and syste-|cots and machine guns, it is re-| matic struggle for immediate Unem-! ported. | ployment Relief and the Insurance| The workers loudly applauded io ‘Amter’s speech in which he slashed | ‘With 800,000 tmemployed In New) into the fake issues of the capitalist | York the vague plans of charity will| parties and their mockery of the|{ not even begin to solve the problem.| unemployed. The Negro workers, | ‘The need of the hour is Unemploy-|the worst sufferers in the crisis, ment Insurance. were especially responsive. All pres- Unemployment Insurance can only'|ent pledged to vote Communist Nov. | be secured by relentless and deter-|4 for social insurance and against | mined struggle. An important part| the bosses’ fake schemes. of this struggle is the election cam-| George Dixon and John Marshall boige as b also spoke. L. Karson acted as| _ Each bote for the Communist Party | chairman. A demonstration of the! is a vote to continue the struggle for | unemployed at Public Square on| Unemployment Insurance. Monday, Noy. 3, to make demands Demonstrate for Unemployment on the bosses and their city and na-| Insurance on Union Square Novem- tional governments for immediate | ber 3rd at 5 p.m. Vote for Unem- yelief was announced. ployment Insurance Struggle on No- Bait vember 4th at the polls. iF Celebrate the 13th Anniversary of 700 H AIL FOSTER the Soviet Union on November 7th at | the Bronx Coliseum. Workers Calendar | a | nist, were invited to address the| ‘The McGregor Institute has a | | meeting. Comrade Moses asked’ for | Monopoly on the “food and fiop” re- | the “liberal” (no one, of course, expects the Civil Liberties Union to go be- yond the bounds of “liberalism”) would necessarily be intent upon one single purpose—namely, to rouse popular protest and indignation against the infamous Gastonia ver- to the United States. You attack the Soviet Union because it, alone of all states of the world, maintains really, in earnest, that old institution of | “liberalism,” the right of asylum. The world has long been accus- tomed to witness “liberals” abandon| | jumping. Our business is to organ- which seemed not to arouse any in- terial rewards if they will only return terest among all your “gentlemen and speak along these lines. who prefer bonds.” If the Civil Lib- The Communist Party has not ad-| erties Union has acted, or in the fu- vocated and does not advocate bail-| ture acts, upon the Imperial Valley j | case, it is safe to predict that this ize the working class of this country) will not be “the best attended meet- to smash the class “justice” of capj-| ing in its history,” but will be a ges- TOILERS PROTECT | Charity Shows Class | Lines; Favor Middle RED CANDIDATE Class Over Workers DETROIT.—That ordinary work- * | ers should not expect the same treat- | Follow Him Out of, ment as “sniddle class citizens who | Church jare jobless and facing destitution,” jis the gist of report of the aims of MINNEAPOLIS, Oct. 30—Comrade | the Detroit Council of Churches dur- Moses, candidate for congress in the | ing the present economic depression. 10th Congressional District, was bad-| The Rev. Eli J. Forsythe climaxed | ly beaten up and thrown out of a/ it by saying that “nearly every day) | political meeting held in a syna-|@ business or professional man of | gogue by the bosses politicians in| high standing comes to me and tells | order to get votes from the yewish| me of his desperate needs. Do you | workers of Minneapolis. | suppose I would send a man of this | All candidates, exeept the Commu- | '¥Pe to the McGregor Institute?” — | systematically | lief of the mayor's unemployment | He committee. floor, but was avoided through the meeting. | * * | Pledge Support for the then insisted on “getting the floor, a x Fred Walkers one of the Portinnd |and finally commenced to speak. He “Hoover Prosperity? defandants “charged with | erin inal Red Program emphasized the fact that this dis- hy | svndicalism will tour, this district ee |erimination against the Communist, Bah!”—Broke Farmer) tour takes in the following: Oct, 2 7, 28, Astoria, Ore; Oct SYRACUSE, N. Y., Oct, 31.— | Party i ffort - | ee | rty ts an effort to keep the PrO8-| SAVANNAH, Ga., Oct, 3L—Hoov- | 30, Cloverdale. Oct. "31, Kelso and | William Z. Foster, Communist ean- | ram of the Communist Party for so- | , ars ey mee net Nov. |didate for governor of the state of | cial insurance from the working | a piesaeted ee ast ee y | burg: Nov. 7, 8 Portland: N New York, was enthusiastically | class. The signal was given. The *!! 1s gone save the seh Aberdeen, Grays Harbor; Nov. welcomed in Syracuse by a delega- ‘Tacoma: Nov. 13, 14, Seattle; Nov. pes “* Bverett: Nov. 18. Mt. Vernon: Nov. |tion of 200 workers at the station, “1,18, Bellingham, =, | and by 700 workers in the scheduled hall. . The enthusiasm was high as Fos- Cleveland The Cleveland Workers Forum. at 1245 Prospect Ave., 7.30 p. m. presents | synagogue gangsters turned out the| Stead and I am begging this out el lights, pulled Comrade Moses from| the corn, potato and cane crop,” says | the stand and beat him severely. | # bankruptcy petition of Cleveland | The workers rallied around Com-| | vade Moses and defended him against | Pia esis ctr Doors Ba ©. Caldwell, farmer of Metter, Ga. | the following for the month of No- .—“What Will the Hlection | ter clearly put the issue in the pres- ent elections as that of a struggle He the attack. They led him out of the synagogue and circled around him to prevent a second attack. Comrade | syrup, about. $400 worth, and my) | creditors are tryingsto take it all.) I have a wife and five minor child- | for unemployment insurance. pointed out that the boss parties were speaking about unemployment insuranee but with the help of the American Federation of Labor would attempt to squash the issue, unless mass action and struggle around the Unemployment Insur- ance Bill proposed by the Commu- nist Party was begun. Comrade | Foster exposed the socialist party jas “the most indidious force used by the capitalists against the work- ing class, who is endorsed by the republican Herald-Tribune and by the democrat New York World.” Q—Youth and the Coming | he Right Against Militarism.” Noy. 23.—The Negroes in America— “will They Turn Red?” Nov. 30.—The Coming Struggles of the Working Class.” Admission 50 cents. mates. Bring shop “8 # Chester Thirteenth anniversary of Russian Revolution Friday, Nov. 7 at 8 p. m. at St. George Hall, Third and Lloyd ~ ee Pe Pittsburgh All comrades and sympathizers who can act as watchers must call up or communicate with M, Jenkins, Cedar 7819, Do not delay, act at once. ‘Wilkes-Barre Concert and M Meeting, celebra~ tion 2th anniversary of the Russian Revolution, Friday, Nov. 7th, 7 p. m., at Workmen's Circle Hall, 69 So, Hancock St. rf: Ci a“ Seranton Concert and Moss Meeting, celebra- tion 13th anniversary of the Russian RevolutionSaturday, Nov. 8th, 8 Pp. m., at International Workers Order Hall 508 Lackawanna Ave, Philadelphia, Pa. Philadelphia will celebrate the 13th pani vernery, of the Russian jovembe: Vote for a fighting party! The capitalists will give nothing will- ingly! The Communist Party has begun the fight for the un- employed when all parties kept silent. The Communist ‘Party has forced the issue of unem- ployment insurance on the re- publican, democrat and sociglist parties! The Communist Party th Pi i a ithe Broadway Arena. Ail workers | Will continue the fight! Vote for are invited. | a fighting party! Vote Commu- nist! Oakland Celebration 13th Anniversary Rus- 1 . Nov. 7 Workers’ . inter. 1018. Fran Bets a eh: Don’t miss full, cireula- The Communist Party holds open tion tabi each Wednes- day in the Daily Worker. forums every Sunday at Workers’ Center, 1013 Franklin St, at $ p. m. All workers are invited to attend. * MARYLAND imore Celebration 13th Anniversary Rus- sian Revolution, Nov. 7, # p.m. at the Pride of Baltimore Wiks Hall, 1112 Madison Ave. it CHICAGO, ILL. Stelzer’s Restaurant “Just a Good Place to Eat” 2762 W, DIVISION STREET Phone Humboldt 6252 lebratlon aah wy is R Celebration, 13th, Anniversary Rus- sian Revolution, Nov, 7, 8 p.m, at ingi Seventh St. N. ¥. Vote Communist! ren, but they do not want to leave | Pibecs: then anata ee ee ae enough to even feed them. Hoover | outside the hall, the gangsters not | ity—bah!” daring to make any further attacks. | prosperity: ! | | \CANTON PREPARES FOR | NOV. 7TH CELEBRATION CANTON, O., Oct. 31—On Nov. 7 focallt? prepare Suber eee Denver. Comrades are asked to} | Revolution, At Akron, Ohio, at 50) give her the fullest cooperation on |Howard Street the meeting will be | addressed by Comrades Larkin and | Sabol; at Alliance at Summit and | Willow Sts. by Comrades Guillod and Berg and at Canton at the Germrn Music Hall the meeting will be ad- dressed by Comrades Horvach and Parks, Great turn-outs of workers are anticipated, the election cam- paign being utilized to rally support. All meetings to be opened at 7:30 p. m. On Nov. 9th, Comrade Richard B. Denver, Colo. | | Jean Feldman, now on tour for the| DAILY |WORKER, will next visit obtaining subs and renewals, GLENSIDE UPHOLSTERY ALL REPAIRS DONE AT REASONABLE PRICES Roberts Block, No. 1 GLENSIDE, PA. Telephone: Ogontz 3165 their desperate struggle against.capi- to demand real unemployment insur< ance instead of fake promises. I. O. Ford, Ed Williams, Tom Scott, |and Sadie an Veen, who is well< known in Cleveland, were the other speakers. Herbert Benjamin, Com< munist district organizer, acted as chairman. talism. I therefore withdraw my name from your executive committee and from membership in the Civil Liberties Union. Very truly, (Signed) W. Z. FOSTER. Hail the Anniversary of the Bolshevik Revolution with greetings in the Novem- ber 7 edition. M. MINZES PHARMACY Workers in Milwaukee Plant Pledge Full Red Vote November 4' PHILADELPHIA, Pa., Oct. s1—| MILWAUKEE, Oct. 31.—One of ; The strike called by the Needle the meek ronortent: shops Ba the | Prades Workers Industrial Union at Milwaukee territory is the Seaman|the Palmer Dress Shop, 124 Vine | Body Plant, where formerly as | St., is still progressing. Picketing | many as 3,000 were employed, and | is going on. y today less than 1,000 are employed,| Three girl pickets, Anna Krass, due to the speed-up and other effi-|Clara Stoler, and Gertrude Green- ciency schemes.. Today the Commu-| berg were arrested yesterday. nist Party held its regular weekly| The dressmakers here are contin-| shop gate meeting at the plant. The| ving their organization for a gen- | republican Congressman in the 6th | eral struggle against low wages and | District, Stafford, running for re-|Totten shop conditions. election was also present and suc- JAIL THREE PICKETS IN PHILADELPHIA STRIKE The Busy Store of the Busy Corner 4000 GIRARD AVE. PHILADELPHIA, PA. PHILADELPHIA The work we make is good. Drganizations work—our specialty Spruce Printing Co. 152 N. SEVENTH ST., PHILA, PA. Bell—Market 6383 Union Keystone—Main 7040 Printers PARISH PHARMACY N. W. Corner Sixth and Parish Streets PHILADELPHIA, PA. Physical Culture Restaurants Quality Food at Low Prices 19 North 9th St., Philadelphia 77 Bleecker St., New York City 21 Murray St, New York City | Greetings from | B. GLAZER Unit 203, Communist Party PHILADELPHIA, PA. ceeded in addressing about 3 work-| ety militant and are wise to the| ers, although a couple of hundred class collaboration schemes which men had been laid off at 11.30 a, m.,| Were Proposed to them by Benson, the rest of the plant numbering a| ‘S0cialist” candidate for sheriff. few hundred, listened to the Com-| The Seaman Body workers will munist Party speaker, David Mates, | vote for the Party which organizes Section Organizer of Wisconsin. |them into shop committees, and The eSaman Body workers are | !eads*them in militant struggle— the Communist Party. BOSTON Dally Worker Readers Meet at The New Garden Restaurant 32 Causeway Street Delicious meals. Comradely atmosphere Special arrangements can be made | CHICAGO Readers of the Daily Worker are asked to patronize the SACRAMENTO AUTO GREASING PALACE MECHANICAL WORK DONE 24-HOUR SERVICE Sacramento Bivd. and Harris St. for groups and parties. . BE, Corner PITTSBURGH Remember DR. RASNICK When You Need a DENTIST 6023 Penn Ave., Room 202 Phones: Oftice HL 7699 Res, MO, 8480 GARY, IND, GARY WORKERS Eat at a Real Workers’ Restaurant! Patronize Gary Workers’ Cooperative Restaurant 1733 BROADWAY | Phone 2-4655 Gary \ We serve to the werker the best food }| | \ and at a price that he can pay. J COHEN FRUIT AND PRODUQS CHICAGO | 4044 Girard Avenue PHILADELPHIA, PA. Humboldt Beauty and | : Barber Shop NEW COLONIAL Guaranteed Permanent |! ota) 0 Big is en PHILADELPHIA, PA. We gpeciaize in hair bobbing ant Market 6462 Prie’y Ae ices Vel easonabie 9 Hours: 9 a. uA to 7:30 p. m. SHUCHMAN Saturdays: 9 a.m, to 9 p.m. 2821 W. DIVISION STREET Phone Humboldt $159 UPHOLSTERER AND CUSHION MAKERS 1118 North 42nd Street Moore, Negro worker candidate on the Communist ticket for secretary of state of New York, will address an AN.LC, meeting in Canton at the Workers’ Unity Center, 1101 Tusc Ave. By This meeting will be held at 2:30 p. m. on a Sunday. A tremendous vote for the Communist Party will mean an endorsement for the fight for un- employed relief the Communists have been carrying on for the last year. Vote for $25 weekly relief! Vote for the Unemploy- ment Insurance Bill! 1628 W. Division Street MEAT MARKET No. 1 2051 W. Division Street Tel. Brunswick 9468 CHICAGO Compliments of Russian Workers Co-op. Restaurant PHILADELPHIA, PA. Old Ukrainian Restaurant: Seventh St, and Fairmont Ave. i WILL MOVE TO Tel. Humboldt 2864 MEAT MARKET No. 2 2729 Ogden Avenue PHILADELPHIA, PA. Michael Nasevich ‘UNDERTAKER N. E. CORNER FRANKLIN AND BROWN STREETS Market 1320 Havis Barber Shop Fifth St. and Fairmont Ave, PHILADELPHIA, PA. GREETINGS FROM PHILADELPHIA | Rinaldo Mariolo J. Lowell Walter Stacyk |M. Gittelman B. Fagin Charles Richard Simonian G. Tissian John Fostyk Appelbaum. e ‘Wm. Bordin Gagsnas | Burt M. Karp ‘W. Babbis B. Gittelman ‘Tabachnick J, Biberman Lee Leon Rosenberg M. Biberman E. Miller Weinstock EAT STANDARD CAKES Most sanitary plant and clean baking of package cakes in Philadelphia Ninth and Jefferson Sts. Phone: Columbia 9371 CLEVELAND! CLEVELA’ CELEBRATION OF THE © 13th Anniversary of the RUSSIAN REVOLUTION Friday, November 7, 8 P. M. SLOVENIAN AUDITORIUM 6417 St. Clair Avenue PROGRAM:. National Speakers. Workers’ Choruses. Freiheit Gezangs Farein. Hungarian Singing Society. Lieder- tafel Eintracht. Lithuanian Singing Society. South 622 Fairmont Ave. PHILADELPH! PA. 4 KRAMER, Prop. Tel. Rockwell 8286 Slavic Singing Society. Play by the Pioneers.