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FOUGHT IN BOSSES RY en a ata " DATLY WORKER, NEW MONDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1931 ' WARS,NOW As THE ADVE 7 NTURES OF BILL WORKEE —Washington—The Slave Holder - wes a | Pg WE TRDRKERS AND FARMERS — By RYAN WALKER TING —s Cok Negro Slaves under Overeey) He z OM of Office : ie, TRIED FOR FIGHTING HUNGER vga Mashing en fis eit ies Groped Thoysaryh SNe Listed Als FAV, endent a. f ey is y st, Beer, pang ng SN Worker Fought Bolsheviks In 1918 Comes to Revolution Pe Mergied ie Kachet Wie aA he Boe 3 e County Bis Vo E DESCENDANT OF THE | Trial on Woinwiny for Participating , Wiclow th ee | SHE 1 : &, In January 20th Hunger March Its all right to fight against the that time with the propaganda of workers of Soviet Russia, but if you the capitalist plunderers and failed are out of a job and fight against | to understand the message contained | starvation, that’s another matter en-/ in the leaflets. In 1926, being out of | tirely. This is the Tesson fm capitalist “democracy” that has been learned by Serop Soghomonian, an Armenian worker who goes on trial Wednesday a job, he entered the army again, and served until April, 1930. He went to San Francisco and got a job |im an American factory, but when |he had to leave for an appendicitis ec}, | Operation the boss hired somebody Sie BL : a bs : Bae Ne anh | ote at a $3 reduction in wages. THIS Lang the police, is being charged with fel- | 58m Francisco Unemployed Council To G fo} ! onious assault. The New York Dig-/ 8nd began realizing his solidarity Wasnint@ trict of the International Labor De- fense is defending him. to Siberia to aid in the task” of crushing the Bolshe- and the new workers’ republic of Soviet Russia. “I was a member of the 31st Infantry,” he told a rep- resentative of the New York I. L. D., and served in Siberia for a year. 1918 Soghomonian was drafted | | with other workers. A few months ago he came to New York and joined the local Unemployed Council, as well as the Workers’ Ex-Servicemen’s League. | When he was arrested, after being | beaten up, the police said to Sogho- monian: “You've got a good record, | why did you take part in this Red +| demonstration?” “Because I’ve got no job, I’m hun- WORKING WOMEN'No Forced Labor in Soviet ELECTING USSR Six British Weavers | | Expelled for Strike) Our regiment took no part in the| gry and I want relief from the bosses I Tanz S [ y S W k | mC | ; poe mie aN. p actual fighting, but we helped the| whom I fought for in 1918.” | T (0) MOBI Z | non, ay ¢ . or. ers M 1 aL A ES | Ae aie ‘ ie ae Hann | b white guard troops in other ways.| Then they asked him the question | si ete Sere ies aes i I saw the Red Army capture Vladi-| that has been asked of thousands of RvR j pe has wena ee vostock and drive out the ‘whites’ from that district. Bolshevik air- planes would scatter leaflets in Eng- lish among the American troops, urg- imperialist intervention. Of the 27th American Infantry that were there with us 300 went over to the Red troops.” | workers wro refuse to be docile | slaves: “Why | where you came from?” Y “This is my country,” came the and the system that are no good.” Soghomonian says that the next time he goes to war he hopes it will be in the American Red Army fight- don’t you go bed For Int’l Women’s Day; March 8th her right as a worker. She has an invalid husband and a small boy, For years she has been | struggling to get enough to eat for) (Cable by Inprecorr) MOSCOW.—A group of Phila- delphia workers returning to the United States after six weeks in the Soviet Union, declared the fol- cerning forced labor, are insolent lies. During our stay im the Soviet Union we, American workers, have |the American prison factories are running full power producing com- | modities, the “House” passes a bill | ations of goods from the Soviet Union or forced labor.” Even the British “Labor” prime minister, MacDonald, was forced to | to.more strictly prohibit the import- | g S: U. S. Workers Sendin Tractors organized by the Friends of the So- viet Union will be the most repre- sentative that has ever been sent tried to cause a strike of weavers in a factory given permission to continue | work by the unio. ‘POR DEPORTATIO Scientific Examination of eye glasses—Carefully adjusted by ing us not to shoot our brothers and/ quick reply, “it belongs to us; the| Mrs. Adams has learned ty Bs lowing to the prese: “The allera. |handled, transported, loaded, or un-| NEW YORK.—The May Day dele- ARREST MANY expert iabtase' bri, hacia telling us the real meaning of the| land is beautiful, it's the conditions CXPerience that she must fight for’ J) 44) bith Commission con- | loaded in whole or in part by “convict &ation to Soviet Russia that is being | {MAUR MALS. o D.Goldin, snc. ~ ‘@ OPTOMETRISTS-OPTICIANS M witnessed tremendous labor enthu- admit that there was no proof of, ‘ Be ; = Ht % 1690 LEX. AVE]609 W. 181 st ST. h But Soghomonian was still filled at| ing the capitalists. | her family and to pay her rent. | stein a8 ha MOS Sete, She |the existance of forced or convict | from this country, preliminary re-} NEW YORK.—A number of Latin Gor 106 vs Siren | Cor Solace bet f Mass Picketing Starts ‘Again Tomorrow as Strike Stops Wage-Cuts' (CONTINUED FROM PAG | “apartment,” she appealed to the Un- | | Last March, when she was being | evicted because she could not pay |a@ paltry fifteen dollars for her employed Council to help her. Mem- | bers of the Unemployed Council | visited the other tenants of the house, | they found people who were certain- facts of socialist construction have far exceeded the delegations’ ex- pectations. The tremendous achiev- labor in the Soviet Union. Secretary of the Treasury, Andrew ports indicate. Every section of the country will be represented and there syst ments of the Soviet impossible under the forced labor pledge to spread the truth con- | cerning the situation in the Sov- | Union are em. We, American workers, | Mellon, is authorized under the terms |of the bill to prescribe such regul- | ations as he may think fit for car- rying out its provisions. Hawley, brought out that “The ers’ organizations in behalf of the| ly not living in plenty. Some flats XE) cting which will start tomorrow Will| Gressmakers' strike fund. Tomorrow | Were miserably cold because the| iet Union on our return to Phila- delphia.” | most serious difficulty experienced in | the enforcement of the law is the in- | will be delegates for each of the | three categories: industrial workers, | working farmers id agricultural workers, and professionals. The tentative list of delegates thus | far includes the following: two coal | miners from Southern Illinois, one ; American and Scandinavian workers | living on Hamilton Avenue and Court Street were arrested and held for de- | portation yesterday and today. Foreign born workers who have! |slaved away the best part of their |lives to make the American bosses \richer are now faced with deportation. Workers having families are living in | |constant fear of being arrested and DR. J. MINDEL - Surgeon Dentist 1 UNION SQUARE Room 803 Phone: Algonquin 8183 Not. connected with any other office provide a method through which the dressmakers still working will be in- spired to join those fighting for the elimination of slavery in the in- dustry. Not many workers realize just how much these dressmakers are ex- of them @ Negro; a steel worker from |i¢ deported to know what their wives Youngstown, O., and another from| and children would most probably | Cleveland; an iron miner from the | starve to death in this country of Mesaba Range; a longshoreman from pfenty. This discrimination against| Galveston, Tex.; a lumber worker |the foreign born workers is a clever from Juneau, Alaska; a worker T@P- | move by the boss class in order to Lotker will be in Worfolk, on Wed- | People living there had not enough | roe eae | | ability to secure evidence concerning nesday he will speak in Portsmouth,/ money to buy coal, WASHINGTON, D. C.—The House | ‘he use of convict, forced, or indent- | {in Savanah on Thursday, in Jackson-| “Here.” said the Unemployed Coun- of Representatives passed by an over- | ured labor.” ‘ | ville on Friday and in Miami on ‘il, “ls Mrs. Adams being put on the wneming vote the Kendall-Hawley| In order to make it easier to fake | Saturday. street. because she hasn't enough 111 t make stricter the ban on the | this “evidence” and to give it a bona- Lifshitz will speak in Pittsburgh|™Oney to pay her yent. Get to-| tations of Soviet goods. | fide and Iegal form “provision for | ALgonquin 4-7712 Office Hours: 9 A. M.-8 P.M. Fri. and San, by Appointment Dr. J. JOSEPHSON SURGEON DENTIST ploited by the parasites who employ them. Forty and fifty dollars a week was the average wage paid to pared with their previous condition. 50 for Day’s Work There are thousands of dress- makers today who are paid $6, $8, £10 and $12 a week for fifty and ty hours of work under the most ferocious speed up system. A salary |.” under, We must organize and fight | Huston, Adele Sanderson, Mary Sil-| Sergei Radamsky has spent three| S#lingrad, as a gift from American | letariat, for the proletariat, a workers’ <* 8°) is considered high. In the | $90! * pense $50; Jack Roach, | against it. Mrs, Adams is not dis-|veira and Maria Burgess head the| years in the Sovict Union where he, WOrkers, farmers and other friends | republic. —M. S. |] Cooperators' Patronise ing sections of the city condi- i seem eee oe iatiey a couraged. She will fight and we|cast of players. gave over 200 performances and was: °f the Soviet Union. S E R re) Y eee aie ecg ae 271, $8; B. Bellman, $340; Downtown ising bry ry He bor sau S | Gre Weceaeday sigs Mary» Nes ateibiesiioaliy’ -rectived | by tae Bers Des crttb ct ie TWAS Us cinau tea egw maiiis’ pal mie in the Daily or! ieakieh a page 4] home, must get together, we mus lw “ i ization i chowed What one woman dress-| Unemployed Council, $5; Prospect Bet tog Ty will be seen in her new play, “A| masses and the press. He is the only| Taised by each organization in the New Seek ais’ Rating in she CHEMIST paid for four days’ work— ¢ are shops in Harlem wh‘ch force dressmakers to work one weels without pay ,before they pay makers the starting wage, whieh is $3 a week. There are shops - 4 they are not exceptions—in which dressmakers start work at 8 in the morning and finish at eight at night, all for $5 a week. Every week sees a new wage cut or speed- up. system introduced, and it is for this reason that the dressmakers are displaying such eagerness when the members of the Industrial Union ask them to join the strike. Strike Stops Wage Cut. Aside from the employers who have applied for settlement of the strike, the stopping of all wage cuts since the strike began can also be coynted as a tremendous gain for the dressmakers. These dressmakers, however, are not satisfied with the gains so far made: they say that they will win the strike, and all they ask of their fellow workers in other industries is that they join in the mass picketing which starts today. The Strike Committee of the NT, WLU. will issue a call today to all Gressmakers to join the strike. Part of the call will read: “prossmakers, join the strike. Go to the Strike Halls, to the picket lines. See the valiant spirit of the strikers, Their fight is your fight. The misery under which they slave is the one you are subjected to. The enemy they afe fighting is your enemy. ‘The bosses and the LL.G.W. union) are against you. today, in Youngstown tomorrow and Solidatity Certificates for the be- S. Newman, $2.20; Prospect Work- | ers Club, $10; Bella Kraft, | Carpenter Group Loc, 2717, $6; LW. O. Branch 122, $15; Sarah Marden, | $3.05; Ukrainian Women’s Educ. Org. | $5; I. Gral, $.75; J. Greenberg, $.50; | J. Greenberg, $: Workers Club, $50; Workers of Mal- | vin Dress, $3; G, Mendelowitz, $2.75; | Irene Havany, $5.25; Hungar. Needle | Workers Club, $2; Hungarian Work- | ers House Society, $5; M, Rubin, $5; | Printers T.U.U.L, Local+905, $5; J. | Rothman, $1; Sarah Gulkowitz, $5.50; | Ray Ragozin, $11.50; Rebecca Shuld, | $7; Chas. Galanis, $3.55; Downtown | & East Side Workers Clubs, $1; Bella | Stern, $2.10; John Gudichrez, $.50; | Louise Schevhter, $2; Fancy Leather Goods Group TUUL, $26.50; Brigh- ton Beach Workers Club, $44; Anna | Schapiro, $2.70; Minnie Schigman, $2.75; Wmsburg School, $10; Manya Stashne, $4.05; Middle Bronx Work- | ers Club, $20; Lillian Dunn, $3.90 B. Bellman, $.50; Hyman Otosky, $.50; | Cuban Workers Club, $10; May Helf- goth, $1.35; Workers B. Miller, $4.35. . PHILADELPHIA.—The strike of the dressmakers in Philadelphia | against starvation wages and sweat- shop conditions has already begun | to bear fruit. Several needle trades bosses have settled on the terms laid down by the Needle Trade Workers Industria] Union, affiliated with the T.U.U.L., and the workers in these shops will go back today after at- tending an open air demonstration |in the “market.” | makers inelude the 40-hour 5-day week, wage increases, recognition of the Industrial Union and of the shop | committee. A special call will be made by the |N.T.W.LU. today to all dressmakers, | urging them to join the strike of dnesday and in Cleveland on Fri- $3.80; | | The demands won by the dress- | | gether, and don’t let the landlord put her out.” > | “Oh, no,” answered some of them, | “jt's not because she has no money, | ; “I'm praying to god for her,” said | another. } | The praying didn’t help. Mrs. Adams was put out and her boy was | teken away from her by the char-| ities. This is the system we are living | to organize all the women in our) house, so that if one of us is evicted | because our husbands are not given work, we must get together and not) Jet the landlord put us out on the | street. We must organize to demand | | lower rents, In most of our families | | the wage earners are unemployed. | Where they are working, their wages | have been cut. When we get less from the bosses, we pay less rent to the bosses! | With the help of the Unemployed | | Council we are now beginning to or- ganize. We go from house to house ‘and the women are joining up with | |us, the more women we line up the | better we will be able to fight. Soon | we will form a Tenant’s League to) ‘demand and get lower rents and | no evictions, | Other working women in our) | Neighborhood are organized. We) The Communist Party is planning a big demonstration in our neighbor- hood for March 8th which is a work- ing women’s holiday. We should | come there in hundreds to voice our demands. |Armed Guinea Natives Fight British Troops; \Waylay, Kill Officer LONDON, Feb. 22.—Arined natives from French Guinea invaded British territory today. Troops were rushed to resist. They were ambushed and | one officer was killed and several The bill enforces the ban on April While hundreds of poor Negro 1, 1931, instead of January 1, 1932.) | depositions by agents were included.” | This action is a continuation of | anti-Soviet War policy of the United | “The Venetian Glass Nephew,” styled a comedy-opera is scheduled to open at the Vanderbilt Theatre this evening. The libretto is by Ruth Hale and the late Elinor Wylie and score by Eugene Bonner. George ‘Woman . Denied,” by Gennaro Mario Curci, opening at the Ritz Theatre. ‘The play was adapted from the Ital- ian by Jean Bart. Others in the cast include: McKay Morris, Herbert Braggiotti and Horace Sinclair. “Paging Danger,” a new comedy by Claire Carvalho and Leighton Osmun will open at the Booth Theatre on Thursday night under the manage- ment of Staten & McKay. Eric Dressler, Dolores De Monde and Betty Blythe play the chief roles. Special holiday matinees will be given ‘today by “Green Grow The Maxine Elliott; “Five Star Final,” at the Cort. yy Tuesday evening, February 24th at | 8:30 p. m. Sergei Radamsky will give | jhis last performance in New- York) City. outstanding tenor in America who gives songs of proletarian composers of the Soviet Union. In Tuesday’s program he will in-| |troduce many songs that he has not| yet given in New York City. These are the favorite songs of the masses in the Soviet Union, Fight lynching. Fight deporta~ tion of foreign born. Elect dele- gates to your city conference for protection of foreign born. | must join up with them. | || Green Grow the Lilacs’ W. 2nd, Bves, 8:60 GUILD Ni. th. a sor. 2:4 Extra Mat. Monday Feb. 23d Elizabeth the Queen Lyon Fontanne Alfred Lunt | Morris Carnovsky, Joanna Root and others Martin Beck "y"3t'gcy Ove. 3:40. Mtr. Th. & Sat. 9:40 Extra Mat. Monday Feb. 22d AS YOU DESIRE ME By LUIGI PIKRANDELLO with “JUDITH ANDERSON MAXINE ELLIOT’S Thes., 49th E. of Eves, 6:50 Matinees WAR! ..+ WAR IN TERROR- STRIKING RBALISM! The German Side of the War — By the Germans! “COM OF 1918" ——B. Z, AM MITTAG 5 6th Ave. H!PPODROME art IGGEST SHOW IN NEW YORK on “{LLICIT” resenting the Trade Union Unity League; a Mexican agricultural work- er from Palo Alto, Cal.; a farmer from Minnesota and one from Mon- In conjunction with the May Day delegation, the Friends of the Soviet | Union has started a campaign to send $25,000 worth of farm machinery to Strana Sovietov (Land of the So- viets) a great collective farm near farm machinery campaign will go toward paying the fare of its dele- gate. Organizations and individuals are urged to get collection lists at once from the Friends of the Soviet Union, 80 E. 11th St., room 335, New York City, FOX’S NUT SHOPPE 123 EAST BURNSIDE AVENUE Tel. Raymond9—9340 One block west of the Concourse We carry a full line of Russian Candies “Every Fine Nut That Grows” CANDY NUTS GIFT BASKETS Phone: LEHIGB 6382 ‘ternational Barber Shop M, W. SALA, Prop. 2016 Second Avenue, New York (det. 108rd & 104th Sts.> Ladies Robs Our Specialty Private Beauty Parlor stir up race hatred between the | American workers and the foreign |born, to make the American workers think that by deporting the foreign | the parasites live P The only way out of the miserable conditions under which we exist, such’ as, bread lines, unemployment, star- , vation, ete., is by throwing the para- | Sites off of our backs and creating a | new world, a world run by the pro- East New York Cafeteria 521 Sutter Ave., cor. Hinsdale St. fresh, good meals and reasonable prices Patronize the Concoops Food Stores @ AnD Restaurant 2700 BRONX PARK EAST “Buy in the Co-operative Store and help the Left Wing Movement.” | MELROSE DAIRY VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT Comrades Will Always Find It Pleasant to Dine at Our Place. |] 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx | (near 174th St. Station) TELEPHONE INTERVALE 99149 DAILY | Entertainment and Ball Given by the and the ANTI-FASCIST ALLIANCE OF NORTH A. WORKER 226 SECOND AVENUB Near 14th Street, New York City Dentist 301 EAST 14TH STREET (Corner Second Avenue) Tel. Algonquin %248 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook $215 BRONX, &. 3. Advertise Your Union Meetings Here. For Information Write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Department 50 East 13th St. New York City Rational Vegebarian Restaurant 199 SECOND AVENUE Bet, 12th and 13th Sts, Strictly Vegetarian Food HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian Restaurant 1600 MADISON AVENUE Phone University 5865 Phone Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atm sds Ail” ceaheats elect 302 E, 12th St. New York = AU Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S hk : os farmers are actual slaves, and while | States government. tana; | 8 ni; ears. ago. 5 ina; and one delegate each f: I "1 ’ Ree ear ante nefit of the strike fund. in denomi- | PUP oe belp ee ae anal att 7 the International Workers! Order, “the a ssi eid pats hia a 0 rtoerats” of the New York [Rations.from $10 to 495. are being | Mot Stouty (“The Venetian Glass|p"a.cyim Guild and “slimibeth | John Reed Club, the Prolepen, the |” "Works's dow be tooled by the few |) SYOHAR Jleveguua i x ad ‘i sold to these workers’ anizations, “ FS ie Beck; “The Tru ssi ‘ oaks ans { is od by ‘ «I ers. Today the misery of these | °° : ores " se ” 4 organization of the Yiddish prole-| ] thing came dressmakess is almost unbe-| 4 further list of contributors to| y, Pat het Bray 10 €od. and she won't) Nephew” at Vanderbilt Toente: "Ae Tek Tae IeTmaT® ltarian writes, and the ‘ederated|'n this world even the saves On wy DR. A. BROWN : : : when it is com-/ the Dress Strike Fund follows: {-be. Pub aut. eatre; “As You Desire Me,” at the | prog. | in this world even the slaves on whom "i x ee © & SS s+ & ie ae oe — a ey rr ow —— (compeny their fighting fellow-workers. soldiers were wounded. ‘The French | Extra Mat. Washington’ with Barbara Stanwyck To Be Held At | They will reduce your pede The LL.G.W. (company union) | and British forces are cooperating. C REPERTORY 142 st. én av. REO! and Jemes Rennie MANH ATT ‘AN LYCEUM Vegetarian Health living still more if you don t strike |L0C@! 50 is panic-stricken over the Evenings $:30 66 EAST FOURTH STREET Restaurant ‘The very fact that the papgeiaees a | Success of the dressmakers in the wa BA ‘EEE gene tee Ses? 558 Claremont Parkway, Broas P ae iar tke contemplated woge cuts dustrial Union and has issued ap-| ORGANIZE TO END) east ia urite Tax" "Songs of Proletrian Composers of Saturday Evening, February 28, 1931 2 | , : outa ns “a in the shops where you are em-| Deals to its cance ia da bisa STARVATION; DEMAND Tonighe . ‘ROMEO, AND JULIET” SOVIET RUSSIA TICKETS:—50 CENTS At 8:00 P. M. Ployed, should be proof enough tO) 6.” 0 priday declared that 1,500/RELIEF! Town Hall, 113 W. 43 Street persuace you that only by manifest- ing your strength can you enforce your just demands.” At a meeting of the Strike Com- mittee Saturday, the settlements al- ready made with the needle trades employers were approved. Louis Hy- Inge AcAO. Mate, weet, ‘ 5 | rian, chairman of the committee, re-|We Invite Workers to the Spec. Mat, Washington's Birthday (¥eb.23) 66 West 12th Street A R | INIT Where the best food and, freq ported on the activities of the strike, Mabe ear y CHT ee a . 9 : Rac vegetables are served | ena plans were made to organize BLUE BIRD aan howe EDGAR WALUACE® PLAY Tuesday, Feb- 24th, at 8:30 Witt be petrited caniathin tndovrasit materiel dealing WON the Wash all your round » the mass picketing which starts to- bast mises ON THE SPOT Last appearance in New York City ington Delegation, the next steps in the struggle for Unemployment 4 WEST 28TH STREET A Morrow. Renle Riano with CRANE WILBUR and Insurance, the. coming strikes and the Defense of the Soviet Union 37 WEST 32ND STREET ii Mase Mestings Tomorrow, ¢ 'AFETER] A & (oe. pee ig) NL Also important information of the struggles in other countries 225 WEST 36TH STREET | Mass meetings Pia Had 4 a e Kort fasted hag Bred aeewey pe SPECIAL OFFER held tomorrow an ursday at Bry- nings 8:50, Mats, Mon, and Sat, 2: m S14 per month, Or i Seeman arin oo ve i ‘f ti 82h the AN Bundle orders of 1,000 or more at the rate of $10 per thousand | na ‘at irving Plaza “sth ‘st and cos, nna oe BURKE *"4 vor NOVELLO} improv ast 10}y@ St. Apt 3 Orders of 100 or more at the rate of $1.50 per hundred Comrades are welcome to Ete biace, “Well known Ishor lead ices OE lcd acaba Bed gee i PST MEINE THESE RATES FOR THIS EDITION ONLY BORDEN’S ii ers will address the dressmakers.| A Comfortable Place to Eat |[lrrank nichara- T HE TRUTH GAME ea Order through Dairy-Vevetarian Lunch Room 3 John Reed Club artists will draw on Se fe WANTED—Furnished Room for twe with the stage, and a short be given. concert will and S. Lifshitz are now conntey addgessing work dressmakers are now on strike. This | was a mistake. The number of dress- makers now on strike in #hiladel- phia is 800. 827 BROADWAY Setween 12th and 13th Sts. WOODS Presents NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES EAST §1)F—BRONX AYS A GooD SHOW! Presler & Klaine Michael Parti coil a. B, Al TAYE STAR FINAL Star Final’ ts electric Lia Ly CORT THEATRE, Wert of 48th with Phoebe FOSTER #949 Viole TREE ETHEL BARRYMORE THEATRE 47th Street, West of Broadway Evenings 8:50, Mats, Wed. and Sat, 2:30 Extra Mat, Wi ton’s Bixthday Feb, 23) RTHUR BYRON *| SERGE] RADAMSKY TENOR at the NEW SCHOOL light cooking facilites near Union Sq. from Mareh Ist, Gordon, Kefer Daily Worker PURNITURE FOR SALE—argain eight rooms furniture, together, or separately. Gisth Street) | Thorp, 1885 7th Avenuoy 100,000 COPIES OF THE INTERNATIONAL UNEMPLOYMENT DAY EDITION LABOR UNITY 2 WEST 15TH STREET—Room 414 Subseription rates:—$1.50 per year and special offer of 4 months for 50c RESTAURANTS 240 EAST 14TH STREET Hl (Next to Labor Temple) Home cooked food at reduced prices