The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 13, 1930, Page 3

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ERAT ESA ile i WUnn ma, ivy 10ah, anvulisw. fay uy Maida 405 dowd i ieee tase Ss >i we > Ee Ss Chicago Sweeps Into =-_ FR ay rs SHorws “ wees: KEK’ 232 = SPEEDUP ON JOB, WEAK LADDER CAUSE ACCIDENT Demand Safety Devices Fight Speed-up (By a Worker Correspondent) NEW YORK.—A feeble step ladder and an intensive rush on the job were responsible yesterday for an ac- cident to a worker that resulted in a badly broken hand. Samuel Baskoff, a carpenter in the middle forties, was working at 43 Montague Ave., Brooklyn on a..job. ‘This was his first job in a long period of time. He ad the other carpenter, Joe Kisin, grumbled over the fact | that the step ladder that was sent | them from the factory was too feeble and insecure, but as there was no other one they had to use it, in order | to erect the fancy cabinet beams to the ceiling. While on the job, Samuel Baskoff broke through the steps, dropped down and fell on his hand, breaking | and crushing it badly. Baskoff has a wife and two children. This as- | Faker Pinchot Sets Up ‘Study’ Committee to Fight Unemployed | (By a Worker Correspondent) PHILADELPHIA, Pa.—Not to be | outdone by any other faker on “Com- | | mittee for Relief of the Unemployed” the newly elected governor of Mel- lon’s duchy, Pennsylvania, Gifford | Pinchot has appointed his own com- mittee. labor exploiter of Bristol, Pa., Grundy | Will pay the expenses of the commit- tee work. Phew, what a smell! . The old standbys: “Building Pro- gram,” Buying Movements,” and “Surveys” will be used by this com- mittee for “relief.” In fact the hundreds of thousands |of unemployed workers will get from other similar committees, nothing*but | |further unemployment, misery, and | starvation. Only by giving these committees a horse laugh and building up strong, | powerful Unemployed Councils to be | affiliated to the Trade Union Unity | League and composed of actual work- ers, can the workers of Pennsylvanai fight for real relief. SHINGLE WEAVERS No less a personage than the child | this committee the same ts from all} cident, which will mean many weeks | of recovery and enforced unemploy- ment for Baskoff, is one of the three and a half million industrial accident estimated by the Workers Health GET MORESLASHES Conference to happen in the United States each year. All except a small number of these accident are avoid- able. The terrific speed-up of work- ers on the job, the refusal of em- | ployers to install safety devices and trusty machinery are responsible and | both are caused from the ferocious | drive for profits. REFUSE MEDICAL . AID TO MESSMAN Mistreat Worker on S.S. San Felipe (By a Worker Correspondent) SAN FRANCISCO. — I want to tell of my suffering and experience on board the ship S. S, San Felipe State Line, freight boat, registered at Portland, Oregon. My work as salon messman from 5 a. m. to 7:15 p. m. meant always on my feet. Rest hardly no time. At 5:30 a. m. I have to make toast and coffee and carry it in rain or storm o rwhat may be to the cap- tain’s bridge. And I have to battle for everything, even to get it. Worked Like Slave. Layoffs Spreading Too Men Must Fight (By a Worker Correspondent) |in Gray’s Harbor. | The workers in the Schafer mills at | Montesano have been cut another 12) jper cent. The shingle weavers were Teduced 5 cents per thousand for cutting 24 inch shingles and 2 cents | per thousand on short shingles. The packers were reduced from 13 cents per thousand to 10 cents. This is as Jow as the 1910 scale, the main dif- ference being that in 1910 and in 1911 there was not such an assortment of shingles to cut and pack as there is now, and then the timber was of a better grade than now. Then the sawyer could agerage 40 thousand per day and the packer would work from one packing bin, but now he has to slide his packing frame back and forth to three bins with the sawyer having to throw the shingles into {these different bins. It slows them \up so that now they do well if they | cut 22 to 25 thousand per day. In the Schafer Bros. sawmill, the common labor was cut also from a \Jow of $2 to $1.75. This means starva- tion for workers in this plant. | The weavers in the Saginaw Timber Co. Shingle Mill, in Aberdeen, were HOQUIAM, Wash.—More wage cuts | | tor the workers in several of the mills BOSSES BEAT GIRL’ DEMANDING PAY I get little rest, make beds and | greeted with a 105 reduction on Sat- rooms, cleaning and work in the din- jurday, the first. This mill was ing room and must work like @)manned by strikebreakers who ac- slave. All this for $42.00 monthly. | cepted the first cut. The result is a Conditions are rotten as could be.| general lowering of the standard of ‘The stewart keeps me to take all the | jiving for all the workers. Even this blame from the officers and treated | is not going to help the timber bar- me very rotten. It was unbearable. | ons out of the depression and chaos I got hardly anything to eat while | from which the lumber industry is on the trip, The stewart put 4 | suffering. They try to place the whole stoaway in my way to make it mis- | burden on the workers, but the lum- erable for me and take away my meals. All the other messmen did ber industry is going into a worse depression than ever. not have it so hard, but it seems that | the stewart had a grudge against me | contemplating a further reduction of Several of the sawmills here are | and I couldn’t open my mouth to! say anything. Got No Medical Aid. I slipped on the deck one day and reported to the stewart that I was badly hurt and the stewart did not report it to the captain until we got to Panama. My back felt very bad and the captain noticed it and then the stewart had to tell him what ‘it was. I did not get aid or hospital at- tention. I was forced to work while | sick and hurt. At the Canal when a| doctor came aboard I asked for treat- ment but was refused. I asked to be paid off at Colon | to get hospital treatment there, but | was refused again. This was the rottenest treatment that I ever got on any boat I worked on, The sleeping quarters conditions are bad. N o bucket or washing basin and the noise of the engines were so loud that I could only sleep about 3 hours a night. —Salon Messman. REALIZES THAT DAILY FIGHTS FOR THE TOILERS, (By a Worker Correspondent) I want 100 coptes of the Daily ‘Worker to help break the strangle- | hold which capitalism has on the en- tire working class of the United States. There are thousands of men here from every branch of curtailed capitalist industry seeking to ward off starvation. Many of us realize that back in New York we have the Daily Worker and Communist Parsy pulling and fighting for us, An% through them we will win! H. 5., Latimore, N. D, ~ Workers! Call the Bosses bluff! Boost the mass ciroulation of the Dafly! On it to 60,000! The Daily Worker melts a million steel wills into one battering ram to smash the boss system. On to 60,000. Be a Daily Worker worker | we will explain. 35 East 12th wages or a ee celalet G, shut-down. ROB STEEL MEN IN ‘RELIEF’ GUISE Short Time In Ind. Harbor Mills (By a Worker Correspondent) INDIANA HARBOR, Ind.—The In- land Steel Co. two months ago cut | the wages of workers 10 per cent on tonnage and 16 per cent on bonus. On October 22 to 25 the Inland Steel Co. laid off one thousand men while others are only working 3 to 4 days a week. On November 1 the bosses decided to give “relief” to the 12,000 unem- ployed here by taking from the poorly paid workers who work’3 to 4 days a week, 5 per cent of their wages. The heaters of the Inland Steel Co. who work piece work had to give $8 each to this so-called relief fund but the \only ones who got any of this is bosses who put in their pockets. Burden the Workers. One Mexican worker was fired be- cause he tefused to give in to the bosses. Another thing the bosses are doing is telling the employed work+ ets that the unemployed are to blame | because they don’t want to work. "That is the way the bosses can rule. We workers, American and foreign- born must organize to fight the lousy bosses, Lots of the foreign born say that | the American worker will not organ- ize together with them. Some say the Mexican workers will not or- ganize. But here is a Mexican worker who had the guts enough to try to fight the bosses by himself by refus- ing to give $8 to the so-called unem- ployed relief. Out of a job? Got spare time? You can earn a little money and take a crack at the system by sel- ling Daily Workers. Come ink and St. MASTER HOSIERY WORKERS STRIKE | "AGAINST 11 HOURS | Hosiery Fakers Here, to “Conciliate” (By a Worker Correspondent) PHILADELPHIA. A spontaneous strike broke out at the Master Hosiery Co., Third and Somerset Sts., where girl examiners work for as low as $5.50 a week, when the company put out notices that an eleven (11) hour day would be put into effect. All the workers struck except one German, @ member of the Hitler German fas- A lone scab amongst 80 work- |cisti. ers. All leggers, footers and all girls went out. Cops were already around the plant in the morning and at 5 in the afternoon the entire neighborhood ‘was surrounded by cops, who tried to intimidate the strikers but unsuccess- fully. The neighbors booed the po- lice. One policeman yelled at the pickets, “We don’t want any Aberle situation here. Get out.” The picket line held firm. The workers held a meeting and elected a strike committee demand- ing 48 hour week, price as specified in agreement and recognition of shop committee. | The strike is under the leadership of the American Federation of Full |Fashioned Hosiery Workers and the | workers in this shop should remem- ber the arbitration betrayal of the Aberle strike and watch the officials. Cop Called in to Side With the Bosses (By a Worker Correspondent) NEW YORK.—I went to work for the Madeleine Negligee‘shop at 43 East 30th St. second floor. After working three and a half days for four dollars and eighty cents I went up to collect my money. I received $3.60. I questioned if it was correct. The boss told me to take that and go. Because I would not go with that he started to beat me up. The other boss came and and parted up and sent for an of- ficer. When the officer came up he said to the officer: “Here she is, take her out of here.” Cop With Bosses. The officer asked what’s the mat- ter. I told him. The other boss said: “Give her the $1.20 that’s coming to her and let her go.” The officer took the bosses’ side. What he told them I do not know. Not one of the workers heard me screaming came to my assistance. You see if this shop was organized this would not have happened. You see why it’s necessary to organize our | Work. —A. C. JOWA MINERS IN Mines As Workihé 2to 3 Days A Week ~ (By a Worker Correspondent) CENTERVILLE, T&—I enclose a clipping from the Centreville, Iowe- gian where they state, “Few Commu- nist Votes Cast Here.” Well, we got 41 votes and when one considers that the Communist Party only polled 3 votes in Appanoose County in the general elections in 1928 we did not do so bad, but the bourgeois papers calls that “few votes.” About two months ago I read in the Des Moines Register and Leader about the sewers been clogged up in that city. Workmen who went and looked for the trouble found 1,000 ladies silk hose in the sewer pipes and they had all come from the Des Moines Hosiery Mills. The girls, working in these mills, being afraid of being fined for imperfect work had dumped them in the sewers. An- other example of capitalist anarchy. Part Time in Mines. We are having tather cold weather here now but the mines are only the Empire Mine no checkweighman is allowed and Wm. Krapfel and Reipe, owners of the mines, steal about 400 pounds of coal from every car of coal the men load. The Iowa state law rules that there shall be stools in all department stores for women workers to rest on. Heck, you couldn’t find one with a microscope in any store in this city. CHINESE PROTEST AMERICAN DUMPING SHANGHAI. Five | hundred repre- sentatives of municipalities in the provirices of Kiangsu, Chekiang, Kiangsi, Anhwei and Honan have sent a joint telegram to the Nanking government calling for an official protest against the wdie-scale dump- ing of American wheat at spot prices as this ts ruining 0) oe Red Drive Sends Detroit Challenge With banners flying Chicago sweeps into the red cavalcade pounding no! Chicago's first shout is | to the goal of 60,000 readers for the Daily Worker. \® challenge to beat Detroit. The bulletin, just received from re Thomas, Daily Worker represen- ative of District 8, bristles with Sree ideas and shows that band? functionaires understand political importance of the | SeRinigh and have every intention | of making their quota. Detroit, as yet, hasn’t picked up the challenge hurled at it by Phila- delphia. Everybody expects real ac- tion in this campaign from Detroit. All eyes are now on the automobile center of the world. Chicago says concerning the challange. “Special meetings to be held when the chal- lenge is officially made with a De- troit representative present.” Here are excerpts taken from the 4-page bulletin put out by District 8 and from Thomas’ letter, which show Chicago understands the task before it: “We propose to organize Daily Worker Booster clubs. .The role of these clubs will be to spread the | meetings of all Daily Worker readers dations for such clubs.” and organize sales.” | before the factory gates. The bulletin circulation of the Daily Worker in the factories, house-to-house sales of | the Daily Worker in front of union halls the getting of more subs etc. Call “The function of these clubs will also be to write for the Chicago page . Chicago has also laid plans for building up the sale of the Daily Worker Each unit and booster club to concentrate on one factory for 60,000; on a section scale and lay the foun- says: INTE RNATIONAL RNEWSs BERLIN WORKERS BATTLE COPS; METAL BOSSES LOCK OUT MEN Belgian Move Price Cut Promise of| Cuban. Students Clash Against Trade Bruening Is a Fiasco (Cable By Inprecorr) BERLIN, Nov. 12.—Viciously wield- | ing their clubs, police yesterday noon | dispersed a demonstration against the metal wage cut, and against the pro- hibition of the Rote Fahne, Commu- | nist newspaper by the chief of police. Last night various collisions oc- curred between the demonstrators | and police. At Buelowplatz, police | fired shots without wounding dem- | onstrators. Police alleged the work- ers sang prohibited songs. | The metal bosses of the Bielefeld area locked out their workers today. | Nine thousand are effected. owners wish to enforce the wage cut. | The Labor Minister is mediating | with the bosses. The Siemens concern, one of the | nationalist and revolutionary With Bloody Machado | | Soldiers; 6 Are Hurt ‘USSR Answers BRUSSELS.—The counter-measures taken by the Soviet government against those governments discrimi- HAVANA, Nov. 11.—Severe fightnig | “° took place at Santiga de Cuba, 475 miles southeast of Havana, between stud- ents and Bloody Machado’s troops Six students were reported wounded, and many arrests made. Troops are patrolling the streets. The nationalist students have been attempting to get petty-bourgeois shop keepers to join a general dem- onstration against the Machado dic- tatorship. Reports from Santiago de Cuba State “Feeling against the govern- ment is running high.” The Mayor troops. The present clash follows a whole jseries of clashes between students jand Machado's troops. The economic nating unfairly against Soviet goods are already making themselve. here. The civic authorities in Anty have sent a memorandum to the gov- ernment pointing out the damage done to the town by the government action against Soviet imports. rp Big business men in Antwerp have sent telegrams of protest against the interests of Antwerp. “Peuple,” the central organ of the Belgian socialist party reports that in accordance with the decree of the Council of People’s Commissars, 22 The |of the city has asked for additional | vessels on their way from the Soviet Union with Soviet goods for Antwerp have been ordered to proceed instead to Rotterdam where the Soviet grain trust has hired an elevator for 300,- largest metal plants in Germany is|crisis in Cuba is growing sharper | 000 tons of grain. ignoring the metal decision which goes into operation on the 17th of this month, and has already intdo- duced wage cuts at its Elmoworks. every day, despite attempts by Amer- ican bankers, who own the Cuban sugar industry, to “alleviate” the sit- uation. Machado has been increas- Wherever possible the comrades selling the Daily Worker should wear badges like the newsboys and should display signs on the hole of the | Daily Worker.” “In many instances it is best to have boxes where the workers will drop The wage cut thus introduced jing his fascist pressure, and the na- amounts to over 8 per cent. | tionalist leaders are endeavoring to| The action of the government, | do their utmost to keep down the de- | promising to reduce retail prices fol- | mands of the nationalist rank and| MARINE WORKERS TRIAL NOV. 19 IN HOUSTON HOUSTON, Texas, Noy. 12.—Edgar, their 3 cents for the paper. | scription list of the Daily Worker. | “At all Daily Worker distributions Chicago will make special efforts to build up the paid-in-advance sub- should have with them sub blanks for the Daily Worker.” and sales at factories the comrades “In this work | On the question of house-to-house routes the bulletin says: | all the comrades must be involved, newsboys, members of the Boosters clubs, members of the various organizations and members of the party. “The units and the Daily Worker boosters clubs under the direction of the section are to appoint committees to sell the Daily Worker” at local unions and clubs. “The unemployed councils more than any other organizations could and should be utilized in the building of the Daily Worker. Chicago also intends to build up its special page.” “The task of the sec- tions and units will be to give the Daily Worker boosters especially to build up the Chicago page issues.” Charts showing the progress of the drive will be hung in unit section and district headquarters. Slogans and caricatures will be made. Thomas also writes that Chicago distributed 10,000 leaflets on the Garvey series of exposures maing use of the mat sent from the national office of the Daily Worker and writing of local issues on the other side of the leaflet. WORKERS RALLY (Continued from Page One) to organize the working class for Defense of the First Workers and Peasants Republic.” Fish In Plot. ‘The F.S.U. points out that the Fish Committee investigation has taken on new life and is an essential part of the war propaganda by which the imperialist governments hope to pave the way for armed assault on the workers and peasants of the Soviet Union. “Names of all delegates to the No- vember 20 conference should be sent immediately to the Friends of Soviet Silverman. The program of the meet- ing includes an address by Anna WAR PLOT AGAINST SOVIET UNION Union office, 799 Broadway,” states | TO FIGHT NEW fessed to various parts of it, and that Roumania was to be the country to start the war, not Poland, as seemed from the preliminary reports Tuesday in capitalist news services. The war was to start over a frontier incident, which all through the summer, the Roumanian border guards were in- dustriously manufacturing. Poland was to follow, and also Finland. The British fleet was to attack Leningrad, and General Denikin, then alive, was to lead an army of white guards re- fugees armed and officered by France, to assault the city. At the same time, the White Guard | general Lukomsky was to lead 600,000 men similarly equipped, in a march on Moscow, with the French and| British fleets covering his rear in the lowing the wage cut in the metal in- dustry, is a complete fiasco. After a month’s negotiations the price of a quartern loaf of bread has been low- | ered four pfenning (or about one| cent); milk was reduced from 30 to 29 pfenning (about %4 of a cent); Pork was glutting the market and) the price reduction was due anyway. | All other prices remain the same. fe | Note: The Bruening government in putting over the wage cut in the metal industry, which was to be fol- lowed by a general wage cut for all workers, promised a proportional re- | duction in retail prices. The above | facts show the complete bankruptcy | of this attempt. While a few prices | were cut a fractional amount, wages | | were cut from 6 to 8 per cent. FURRIERS RESTIVE, UNDER C0. UNION Will Fight Again for Decent Conditions (By a Worker Correspondent) NEW YORK.—The president Kauf- man made a statement at the last membership meeting on Wednesday October 29, that since his admin-/| instration fur workers flocked into his “Union.” | President Kaufman, I want to tell | you that the workers did not join! your “Union” on their own free will. The workers were forced through terror to join the bosses’ union. One| example is of E. Lande & Co., the | workers were forced through gang- sters to join your scab agency. Mr. Fisher, business agent of the| file for a general attack against the | B48et) McRae, McCrae and Ward, ; Machado regime. Machado has di- rected the main brunt of his attack against the revolutionary workers’ organizations, arresting hundreds. “TEMPORARY” WAGE CUT ‘FOLLOWED BY ANOTHER ° PHILADELPHHIA, Pa., Nov, 12.— Philadelphia shoe manufacturers | | have declared a “temporary” wage | cut ranging fromm 10 per cent to 40 per cent, Four months ago the workers took a similar cut of 20 per jcent. The industry is in turmoil, with half the 3,000 normally em- Ployed jobless, the other half on short time. If the reduction is accepted, cutters | ters and lasters, $20 to $25, and week | workers $10 t) 12 for 49 hours. Bosses as usual are promising more work to follow the cut. Workers remember how past promises have come out and resent further paring of their standards of |living. “We need a militant union,” | declare veterans of the trade. The which conducted the Laird and Schobler strike 16 months ago is re- | doubling its organizing efforts. The | Shoe Workers Protective Union is |trying to get in and help the boss. man, they threw him out of the un- ion and accepted the leadership of Ben Gold and Jock Shneider and other militant leaders of the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union. Furriers Will Fight. will average $20 to $25 a week; fit-| | Independent Shoe Workers Union, | Black Sea. It is directly charged in the in- Louise Strong, just returning from the Union of Socialist Soviet Repub- lics, where she is managing editor of The workers themselves in the Kaufman Co. union, came to E.| company union shops, in the open Landy, the boss himself, and col-| shops, will make the united front lected dues from the boss that the! and follow the leadership of the He did not COMMUNIST VOTE, working 2 and 3 days a week. At |‘ the Moscow News, the first newspaper to be printed in Moscow in the Eng- lish language. New features in the war plot are the statement that the renegade Sov- iet. employee, Bessedowsky, is to be) given a visa through the intervention of Fish himself, to come to Wash- ington to add his lies to those of the Catholic priest Walsh and Mar- thew Woll as part of the anti-Soviet propaganda. Bessedowsky is part of the clique of grafters and sabotagers, | the Russian heads of which have now been arrested in Moscow, and whose confessions implicate the war depart- ments and general staffs of France, England, Poland, Rumania and Fin- land in the plot to start war against the Soviet Union this summer. The ‘war was postponed to next year. Bes- sedowsky after being found out and} discharged, has been writing fanciful tales about the Soviet Union. “Bes- sedowsky’s testimony should be very valuable,” said Fish yesterday, indic- ating that a special meeting of the Fish committee would be held next) month to hear him. Monday the American Manganese Producers Association sent a formal juest to the Treasury Department | for an absolute embargo on Russian manganese. It is reported that the notorious ton B. McCans, has now been hired by the strike breaking National Civic Federation to “spy on the Commun- ist Party,” which means that he has @ mandate now to present realms | of his already prepared lies to the Fish committee. It is said that he has already arranged for his appear- ance before the committee. William Philip Simms, the Soripps- | Howard Foreign Editor, talks openly of the practical certainty of war) against the Soviet Union, “following the revelations of the charges made in Moscow.” He says in his syndicated article yesterday is “once again bang- up against a crisis similar to that of July, 1914.” The revelations of the indicted sabotage chiefs in Moscow continue to expose details of the plot. It now @ppears that all of them haye con- \ spy used by President Harding, Gas- | \dictment, and supported by the sabot- | crusade launched early in the year! by the Pope and taken up by all protestant churches, was part of the} plot, intended to prepare the way for} war. | present “anti-dumping campaign” in| |U. S. and Europe which suddenly | | sprang into life without any adequate | obvious reason back of it, was in- | stigated by the plotters, as part of| the war preparations. This program is still going on, the attack was post- | poned only because of the reaction | of the jobless workers and anti-war demonstrations also, because of the) friction between France and Italy. France took the most leading part among imperialist nations, Poincare, former premier and the present min- ister of foreign affairs, Briand, ac-| tually meeting with the conspirators | and leading them. The connection between the Moscow sabotage ring and the French general staff was maintained through the French em-| bassy at Moscow. The confessions show that the Chinese Eastern incident, and. the| war provocations by Russian white) guard bands on the Manchurian bor: | der were instigated by the French| and British foreign Offices, as a means of testing out the Red Army. | The Red Army showed up so well that this became an additional reason for postponing the assault. The British angle of the plot was | worked out at meetings of Deterding, | Vickers and Co. The British angle of the plot was worked ‘out at meetings in London and Moscow, at which Russian white guard chiefs met representatives of Sir Henri Deterding, Vickers, Urqu- hart, and others interested in exploit- ation of Russian natural resources, representatives of the British general staff, and the infamous spy, Lawrence of Arabia, The money in France for financing the plot was partly supplied by a fund to supply $400,000 a year from the French “Trade and Industry Committee” of capitalists with former holdings in Russia > workers had to pay. to the boss. Is not this treacherous | act an act of agents of the bosses. Gang Rule, Kaufman says he has the thou- | Where were the fur workers at his} membership meeting? Out of 12,000 fur workers, about 200 workers were present at the meeting. When the’! rank and file workers asked for the floor they were told to keep quiet, and if not they would be beaten up. Kaufman says he will not make peace with Jack Shneider, of the N.T.W..U. When the fur workers in 1925 saw the real role of Kauf- | Needle Trades Workers Industrial | | agers’ confessions, that the religious | Ven speak to the workers but only| Union and not the scab agency of the‘ bosses. | Kaufman helped to imprison many | fur workers who fought for better conditions. Kaufman and his clique It is similarly charged that the sands of fur workers in his union.| are only fakers, grafters and crooks. | The fur workers today are looking towards the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union for leadership. I as a forced member of the Fur Work- ers Company Union and as a mem- ber of the Needle Trades Workers | Industrial Union, pledge always to| stand with the N.T.W.LU. in the| struggles against the bosses and all} of their agents. LF. | JUBILEE of Comrade MORRIS Vi (The Pioneer of Jewish will be celebrated by all revolutionary workers Saturday Evening, November 22 at MADISON SQUARE GARDEN Four of the Most Famous Poets from the Soviet Union are coming to extend their greetings. They are: I. CHARIK, I. FEFER, Y. BROWNSTEIN and SH. GODINER Freiheit Gesangs Far Artef and Others Tickets on Sale at the Office of the Morning Freiheit 35 East 12th Street, New York City | Prices: 50c; NCHEVSKY | Revolutionary Literature) ein — Red Dancers 75c3 $1.00 members of the Marine Workers In= dustrial Union arrested at the Thir- teenth Anniversary Celebration here of the Bolshevik Revolution are re- | leased on bond pending their trial | November 19. The International Labor Defensé provides the bail. There will be an L.D. meeting Sunday to plan their ~fense and to protest the police per- # ution. The N.W.LU. delegate meeting was successful, “For All Kinds of Insurance” ([ARL BRODSKY ‘Telephone: Murray Fil) S55: 7 East 42nd Street, New York “SER OY 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook $215 Bronx, N Y¥ od DEWEY 9914 — Office Hours: 9A. M9 PLM. Sunday: 10 A. M.-1 PM. DR. J. LEVIN SURGEON DENTIST 1501 AVENUE U Ave, U Sta., B.M.T. At East 15th St. BROOKLYN, N. ¥. DR. J. MINDEL| SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Room 803—Phone: Algonquin 8152 Not eonnected with any other office -—-MELROSE—, . VEGE1ARIAN Dairy RESTAURANT Comrades “Will Always Find ft Pleasant ¢o Dine at Our Pines 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD. Bronx ‘near 114th St. Station) OND» INTERVALD 9146. RATIONAL Vegetarian RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVE: UB Bet. 12th and 13th Ste, Strictly Vegetarian Food HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian ESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. UNI versity 6865 “hone: Stuyvesant 3316 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A piace with atmosphere where al) radicals meet 02 K.12th St. © New York Advertise your Union Meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 50 East 13th St. New York City For Rapid Relief of Kidney an Santal Midy has been prescribed by doctors for nearly a hundred years, Burning pains, yy rising, back- aches, ee not be neglected. Go our druggist at once Oe bok fara ntl

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