The Daily Worker Newspaper, September 16, 1931, Page 2

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al a ed mn Si0 Page Two ° é fie £1! * —— Pereetised ey | i f aif Wo: kers of Many Cities Make I. L. D. Amnesty Preparations To Raise Demand for Unconditional Release Of Tom Mooney, Harlan Miners and All Class War Prisoners tions of Philadelphia, St. Louis, Cleveland, Cin- sinnati, Toledo, Akron and Youngstown, have just joined those already lined up in hundreds of other cities for the United Front Amnesty d strati called by the International Labor Defense. demonstrations will be held within the next two weeks. y will raise with new vigor and determination the working r the unconditional release of Tom Mooney, Negro and white miners, the Scottsboro bo; i all ass demands fc Ky , Oct. 8 at 7.30 pan. Fraternity Hall, 1626 at the Grand h St. St. Louis, Mo., Sept. 26, with a con- | ference on Sept. 29. Oother demonstrations are being rranged for Erle and Columbus, O. ytown and Reading, Pa.; Balti- more, Md.; Washington, D. C.; an Trenton, N. J. Most of these are being prepared for the week begin- ning Oct In connection with the United Front Campaigns, tours have been ar- a. ves Sept St and Ce: io, Ohio, | (CONTINUED ON PAGE THREE) WORKERS REFUSE 10 HEAR IWW PAKER; SCAB FORCED RETREAT By R. B. HUDSON he tering heat | faint breath of in in On r of 7th and { workers mills to speak. The sound of his voice, which is renowned for its power, is drowned out, with a tremendous rol- ling— “Boo—IWW faker!” Everytime the speaker attempts to speak he is greeted decisively with usands of them. All! this contemptuous, sneering denun- | fen, women | ciation from thousands of voices. In | and — Russain, | the whole crowd only one man rises to defend the speaker. He is seized by 30 angry hands and is deposited | outside of the crowd, like a whipped puppy. A voice challenges the speaker, “Why did the IWW organizer in Harlan turn over the membership list to the police for his freedom?” The speaker's attempt to answer is drowned out in a gigantic roar “Be- trayer of the workers!” Another voice addresses the speaker, “Flet- Polish, Lett, Americans and Jews. en out of their tenements by the sticky heat at crowd encircles a speak- d upon which there is a Ne- h thick scornful lips. These ich are usually defiant are now drooping. He is not speaking to the assembled crowd, but is lean- . uncertain. ne crowd is jammed up around the speakers stand. There is a hub- ers’ sta 2ub of conversation, indistinct, ih | cites’ atiy (alan aa. Rica eeme now and then an angry, strident | <ious worker, write leaflets for the | voice ra g above the crowds voice L.A, last year, and accuse the re- revolutionagy unions of being in the pay of the police.” | The police arrive but are unable | to do anything with the crowd, which hhas grown to menacing proportions. —remonstrating. The crowd is not | angry—but is the next thing to it, indignant. Indignation seethes from the crowd. It is restless and menac- ens up. He holds up his arm, com- The police worn their way into the ( | StE No This WINye! ErACKERATE one | FOR KENTUCKY | MINERS THURS. OM PAGE ONE uty, and the mere possession of lit- erature carried by the U. S. ma‘ has brought high-sounding indict- ments for criminal syndicalism, car- rying 21 years or $10,000 fine or both. Yet plenty of people are not afraid to tell a newspaper woman they be- lieve in unionism. “The N.M.U, organizer claims 5,500 218 members at the time their secre- tary was converted to ours, A well- informed man who favors the I.W.W., though he is not a miner, says the I.W.W. have 500 members and gives the N.M.U. 4,000. At the peak the U.M.W.A. had only 3,000 dues-paying membership, this man says, although 15,000 people, including families as well as miners, signed a union peti- tion against Sheriff Blair last spring. 100 in the whole county. “I looked in vain for U.M.W.A. members. Finally the jailer said one day, ‘There are some good union men here, not all reds.’ I asked him for names and he told me two. One I | could not find and the other showed |me his card with dues unpaid since April. ‘The U.M.W.A. sold us out,’ he said: ‘I think the National’s tak- in’ the day here.’ Bob Childers, U.M. W.A. organizer, resides in Pineville, Bell County, and no longer works the Harlan district. “Dues are a big factor tn union ADMINISTRATION, CAr/ CAUSE FOR ANY ALARM THE DIFFICULTIES | OF UNEMPLOYMENT ARE GREATLY/ a 1,000a0 and concedes that the I.W.W. had| Now he does not know of one, but. to} be fair he concedes they might have a DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, W: ‘THE ADVENTURES OF BILL WORKER DNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1931 —Pity the Poor Lunatics Now— 6 ——— By RYAN WALKER | HANG OUT A} KEEP Smiting, Sign T HAVE | \ RFou Rey | Pays Sey, PAPLOY GID t ‘SAY, } Workers | Listen To |i Ys Retort Tad Jonesy as) es Wf Factory } a \§You Dower} Beieve THis- ‘TS ONITED Press Disparct}| DATED SEPT 12 | Say toe NAUGHTY! NAUGHTY! You Age @ HoaRDING. SPEND Tar i 300,000,000 WW CASH AND | USE THE $'700,000,000 17} | BUYING Things on 4 UEHE INSTALLMENT PLAN J SHEN You WwouLD Area MAKE A308 for 4 THe CHoRcH Sey UseYoure 2 Ke Ne “To IMPRovEYo Vi is - RET Youp 73 : AND Pana ae 2 9 Rigur were op” beoar ic, Ans one! (OUR Doo The Ceraz oud CAPITALIST. SISTEM IF HEADED Your WAY Back To Tae ond CRary Hovye Again Fur Workers, Sept. 17} NEW YORK.—Tommorrow at 6 p.! m. all fur workers are called to Coo- | per Union for a meeting to discuss the ylan proposed by the Industrial ; Union for real unity in the ranks of the workers. The Industrial Union, which was organized and is con- trolled by the workers, will take up the most important problem of uniting the furriers to struggle for better conditions and will be guided by the decision of the workers, mem- | bers of both unions and the unor- ganized are invited. The Cooper Union meeting has aroused widespread interest among the fur workers. The successful shop strikes for better conditions conduc- ted by the Industrial Union for the past two months has convinced the thousands of fur workers of the real desire of the Industrial Union for junity in the ranks of the workers for militant struggle, ‘BRONX FAMILY OF 11 STARVING Protest Meeting | Tonight | NEW YORK.—The Middle Bronx Branch of the Unemployed Council, in its daily fight against evictions {and for relief for the unemployed, | fings that thousands of families in | the’ Bronx are going through actual | starvation, | A typical case was found by a committee engaged in canvassing the MOTHERS, KIDS STARVE, DEMAND FREE FOOD Rally Workers for | Protest Friday at Board of Health Preparations for the “free food” demonstrations this Friday, in front of the Board of Education, 59th St. and 5th Ave. and the Brooklyn and Bronx Boro Halls, are going ahead | at full speed, Y Tonight, in the Bronx and Down- town, indoor mass meetings will be held to mobilize for the demonstra- tions. At Ambassador Hall, Third | Ave. near Claremont Parkway, the Bronx meeting will take place, and | in Downtown at 643 8th Ave. Athong the delegates to see Boro | Pres. Bruckner of the Bronx will be Mrs, Goldsmith, of 1471 Washington Ave. a widow whose children are starving. When she applied to the Social Service on Tremont Ave. for relief, she was refused. Another de- legate will be Mrs. Santini of 3802) Park Ave. a mother of 11 children, | whose husband is out of work for the last 7 months. ‘The campaign for free food and clothing for the children of the un- employed is led by the Young Pion- eers of America and the Unemployed Councils, In a statement issued yes- terday the Young Pioneers declare: “Health Commissioner Wynne says that our parents should give us good H food, vegetables, and milk. How can Polish Fascists Raid South Brooklyn YCL Headquarters Sat. Last Saturday night, after at- tempting to break up a mass meet- ing of Polish workers at 136-15th St., South Brooklyn, a gang of Polish fascists raided the headquarters of the South Brooklyn Young Commun- ist League at 557 Third Avenue. Windows, furniture and literature were destriyed. The red flag and a hammer and sickle insignia were torn from its place and an imper- ialist flag substituted. NEEDLE SHOPS WELL PICKETED 10 Arrested But Drive Goes on Everywhere NEW YORK.—Good picketing de- monstrations were carried through yesterday morning in front of a number of needle trade shops on strike for better conditions. In many instances the scabs sent by the com- pany union were driven off the pick- et line despite the protection of the police and the thugs of the company union. Ten workers were arrested in front of the J. H. Engle and G. K. Rosenberg shops when they began to drive the scabs away from the shops. The arrest of the ten girls only served to increase the militancy of the workers. } The picket line at the Vanity Mill, | Where the knit goods workers have | been fighting a lock-out for the last egiht weeks, found the boss had hired a professional gorilla to attack them. They drove him and ‘his gang from the block, A meeting of the Organization Committee of the knitgoods workers will take place Thursday right after work, re Millinery Meeting A membership meeting of the mil- linery workers will be held tomorrow right fater work at Bryant Hall, 6th Ave. and 42 St. At this meeting a report will be given on the organi- zation campaign which has resulted in the unionization of a number of shops and has brought a consider- able number of new members into the union. The strikers of the G. J. Engle and H. A. Rosen will report on the mil- itant struggles conducted by the workers of these shops against the | combination of the bosses and the strike breaking officials of Local 24 who are attemptihg to break these strikes by sending scabs, All millinery workers are called upon ‘to attend this meeting. 14 Shops Struck Since Monday, 14 fur and dress | shops have been struck in the drive of the Needle Trades Workers In- dustrial Union for better conditions. A number of these have already ap- plied for settlement. There are no stttlements without wage increases. Workers in all branches of the needle industry are urged to bring their complaints to the union office, 131 West 28 St., and help to unionize their shops, All underwear workers are espe- cially called to report their shops to the union office, which is open daily from 8 a.m. to 8 pm. A statement. of the industrial union yesterday ex- posed the maneuvers of the company union for a fake strike in the un- plan for organization for a real fight against wage cuts, HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian Restaurant 1600 MADISON AVENUE Phone University 4-081 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 BRONX, N. ¥. Sy6naa Jleyebnnua DR. A. BROWN Dentist 8% EAST 14TH STREET (Corner Second Avenue) Tel, Algonquin 7248 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 9—9149 derwear industry, and laying down a” The squat, sturdy speaker straight- | Eig Mh ngage er | are out of work! Only if we put up 8 fight for free food and clothes will be able to win anything.” © es) Among the organizations backing | the mass meetings and demonstra- tions is the Food Workers Industrial Phone Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 302 E. 12th St. New York enrollment. ‘The N.MU. requires no | payments at all from the unemployed, | and payments only in proportion to earnings from those at work—per- | haps 10c to 25¢ a month. The I.w.w. charges $1 initiation fee, 50c to the | jobless, and 50c a month dues. speakers’ stand and stay there pro- tectingly. The speaker again tries to tlak, but with the arrival of the police the crowd has grown more determined and drown eyery word out. ‘The speaker relinquishes the neighborhood. Mrs. Santini and her 11 small children in their congested flat of 5 rooms at 3802 Park Avenue, were found with no food whatever in the house and the children suf- fering from starvation. Mrs. Santini manding attention. His mouth opens | What’s On— | AMUSEMENTS 6th “Ave, & 430 Bt. WEDNESDAY stand to a white chairman who be- CAMEONOW © 42 nd STREET & B'WAY “The N.MU. gives relief at Evarts | told the committee their last meal Union, the Womens Council, and the ee HOw IN NEW YORK Steve & in ILD gins: Shai Ne ine | COnSisted of stale bread and water. ‘i Relief. e | A “ ” Sensational Drama gd ihe i An open ait meeting will be hela] “We have @ permit to hold this CHL Ebi boa Eetiab, ti ancas fo | Hee pusbawnd who bas been unas. | Seer nie Geos a aatehaty cout | arc BAD GIRL he TERLO Rational Vegetarian at Tth St, and B. at § pm., Sept. 15 | meeting” a : ‘ood | Ploved for 7 months was out at the i | pase 2 1 W A o " r th spices of the’ Interna- s vood | ing upon the food workers to par- || HmALY and JAMES DUN Restaurant r | or ” open others at Molus and Cawood ig Upol Pe A ALLY EIB tional La bo Defense, oe mastng Echo “Boo—IWW fakers! fit pluie ais Alenia to FANN than | time in the vain search for work. ticipate in the free food demonstra- CROSS SALLY EILER:! “Some one called the police.” Again the echo, taunting, and like a slap in the face. ‘The speaker tries to be defiant, “We are merely asserting our con- stitutional rights.” will be h Com d at 10th St. ub will speak. at 8 p.m * Turner ILD jail r_ membership | it 136th St, at S HELPERS BALL t Workers Attention! ‘or a swell time? been insulted, becomes really angry ted on seeing the| and roars again — “Boo — IWW First Ameriean Youth Union grow | fakers!” d succeed? ‘ sh, Seine to the Plumbers Helpers Ball | The chairman cringes and whines to be held Saturday night, Septem-| “Don’t you believe in free speech?” ber 18, at Hoffmans Mansion, 142] “arooeingty the ch Watkins St. Brooklyn. Phil Conn| ‘ockingly answer lung at and his famous Variety Club Or-/| him from thousands of throats, “Not entertain with some | There will be danc- Attend and chestra will snappy music. ing and all the rest you will not forget it. aes for the fakers of the IWW. Booo.” The chairman hastily adjourns the | meeting. The police leave a passage Building Maintainance Workers. | through the menacing crowd for the will hold its regular membership | clique of TWW. They beat a hasty Tek Bivect. rd tinge. ™ ** 228 E- | retreat with the platform on their Se ae | back. Their retreat is covered by the cops. Denounced and exposed by Bro will hold ite Tr the wrokers they slink furtively off meeting at 1844 Pitk | te “senb—bat” fis rae ba ¥al- Lecture and disoussior eco! ley cat”... A final warning from the workers floats to them—“Don't come back. Fakers!” All workers are invited, | | Sheet Metal Workers | will hold meeting at 5 E. 19th Street to discuss the building up et A few minutes later another stand the Metal Workers Industrial | ; League. All members must attend, | 8 Set up. The platform seems to be |@ magnet to the crowd and they East Bronx Branch, FSU | sumge toward it immediately. A Pauli Rogers, recently returned | from the Soviet Union, will speak at | Speaker mounts it and tense, eager the ost, Bronx, Branch of ,the | faces, flushed a bit by triumph, are Boston Road, at sp, my on “the | turned upward to him attentively. American Crisis and the Soviet Un- | His first words are greeted with a jon, All invited. tremendous ovation, “Only under the leadership of the Communist Party, the revolutionary unions and the Unemployed Coun- cils, can the workers successfully fight against their enemies, the cap- italist class and therl tools — Woll, Green, Thomas, Muste and the re- | actionary TWW. Long live the in- ternational class struggle!” * Downtown Unemployed Council Will hold an open air meeting at | 14th St. and University Pl. at 7 p.m, cee 8 Alteration Painters Will have a meeting at 161 Boston Ra. at 8 p.m, Alteration painters | invited. ee International Workers Order, Br. 521 ‘Will have a lecture on the “Recent Developments in England,” at its regular meeting, September 16, at/| 8.30 p.m, at 1645 Grand Concourse The crowd then become silent and entrance on Mt. Eden Ave. Admis- | angorbed with the speakers proposals sion free! * * Workers Dramatic Council A report on the International Workers Theatre Conference held in Moscow will be given by Comrade Edith Segal at a meeting under the auspices of the W.D.C. at 35 EB, 12th! St. room 306, at 8 p.m. Yee? yaa of how through organization and militant struggle, can they stop the growing number of evictions of the unemployed in the district. ber 17th at 7 p. m. at 5 E. i9th St. | All members are urged to attend. BRR eta PLUMBERS HELPERS BALL Young and Adulf Workers Attention! Are you out for a swell time? Are you Aptaronren in seeing the THURSDAY Metal Moulders | will hold an important member- ship meeting at 5 BE, 19th St. as part of the drive to build up the MWIL. Pe International Labor Defense Brownsville Br. will hold an_ open-air meeting at Oswin St. and Dumont Ave., at 8 p.m, +, Ven. © First American Youth and succeed? Come to the Plumbers Helpers Ball to b® held Saturday night, Septem- ber 19, at Hoffman's Mansion, 142 Watkins St, Brooklyn. Phil Conn and his famous Variety Club Or- chestra will entertain with some snappy music, There will be danc- ing and all the rest. Attend and you will not forget it. ee Union grow International Workers Order, Br. 500 will hold a regular meeting Sep- tember 17th, 8 p, m, at 35 E. 12th St, There 1 be a discussion on the militarization of the American Youth, All are invited, * + * Printing Workers Industrial League TL D, Steve Katovin Br. The regular membershsip meeting Will hold an open air meeting at # the PWIL will take place Septem 10th St. and 2nd Ave. at 8 p.m, ‘ The workers voice, as if it had/| |facilities, The soup kitchen near | Harlan where two men were killed | |may be reopened—if men brave |pnough to take their places can be | found. Nine cases of clothing re- cently came in for the N.M.U. from | Pittsburgh and seven cases of milk j from Atlanta, but the need of course is much greater. “One of the outside N.M.U. organ- izers who is not even indicted for anything had two bullet holes in his | windshield—from deputies, he claims |—and the bullets missed him by an inch. He merely got a faster car and | continues to ride up and down Har- |lan County organizing. “One thing all the different taxi | drivers who ever drove me in Harlan | agreed on: ‘Something is bound to take place this winter. Things are getting tenser and tenser. Now that | they're driven underground you can’t county is so on edge that if a kid was to set off a firecracker on Main St. probably a dozen men would be dead before they'd stop to find out what happened.’” Alice Brady In ‘Mourn- jing Becomes Electra’ Alice Brady has joined the cast of Eugene O'Neill's trilogy, “Mourning Becomes Electra”, and will play the role of Lavinia, Rehearsals are un- der way at the Guild Theatre. made from J. B. Priestley’s novel, will open at the 44th St. Theatre Thursday, October 1. Fay Wray, the picture star, has been engaged to play the title role of the John Monk Saunders’ short stories, opening at the Longacre Theatre, September 21. The Colonial Theatre will open Saturday, September 19, as a pic- ture house. Films announced are: “Silence”, starring Clive Brook, Sat- urday to Monday; “Huckleberry Finn”, Tuesday and Wednesday; and “Traveling Husbands”, Thursday and Friday. “Zwei Herzen im 3-4 Takt” (“Two screen operetta, is announced to end its record engagement at the Europa on September 22. VOLUNTEER FOR HARLAN WORK Volunteers are wanted to address envelopes for the Harlan Campaign any time at the International Labor Defense offices, 80 E. 11th St., room 430, tell what they’re going to do. This “The Good Companions”, the play | in “Nikki”, the musical adaptation | Hearts in Waltz Time”), ViVennese | | Two of the children have been bit- ten by rats which infest the flat. One child has been in the hospital, and Mrs, Santini had to beg them to keep the child a little longer as it was still sick and she had no food to bring it back to health, but the hos- pital officials insisted on sending the | child home to starve, | The committee, together with some | neighbors, collected food from near- | by stores to feed the family until | real relief can be forced from the | borough authorities, The Branch calls upon alle workers and workers children of the Bronx to attend a mass meeting this evening, Wednesday, at the Ambassador Hall, | 8rd Avenue, near Claremont Park- | way, at 8 o'clock, This meeting must elect a committee to make demands on the borough and the city for free food for the children of the un- | employed in the schools, HIPPODROME “Bad Girl” is the screen feature at the Hippodrome this week, with James Dunn and Sally Eilers, Vau- | deville acts are: Healy & Cross, Med- ley & Duprey, the Rimacs and Ha- vana Orchestra; Lou Kaye & Co., Al "Gordon's Dogs, Terrell & Fatwcett, the Lordens ahd Doris Girton, Intern’! Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT | 1 UNION SQUARE 8TH FLOOR All Work Done Under Personal Care | ot DR, JOSEPHSON } All (omraades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Clermont Parkway, Bronx Gdeal DAY AND EVENING Commercial—Secretarial Courses Individual Instruction Open the entire year 14th St. at 2nd Ave., N.Y.C, tions. Women’s Councils Mobilize The Central Executive Committee of the Council of Working Class Wo- | men calls upon all council members and other working class women to | Join in the protest demonstrations on | Friday, to demand free food and) clothing for children of unemployed | workers and better school conditions. | All the Bronx members of councils | are to meet on Tremont and Third | Ave., at 12 sharp—there join the rest of comrades. All the comrades from Brooklyn— are to go to Fulton and Court Sts., at 12 sharp. Ali the comrades from downtown and Harlem are to go to 59th St. and Lexington Ave, New York City, at 12:30 \sharp. Bring your children with you, also your neighbors, Soyiet “Forced Labor”—Bedacht’ series in pamphlet form at 10 cents per copy. Read it—Spread it! NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES EAST SIDE—BRONX RANZ LEH oT TA “THE MERRY WIDOW” With DONALD BRIAN ————————-_ Mats. 500 ta $1.50 ERLANGER THEA, W. 44th Street PEN. 6-7963. Evenings 8:30 Next Opera beg. Mon., Sept. 21 “THE CHOCOLA' OLDIER” BRIDGE” With MAE CLARKE Build a workers correspondence group in your factory, shop or neighborhood. Send regular letters to the Daily Worker. LIVE IN A~— WORKERS COOPERATIVE COLONY We have a limited number of 3 and 4 room apartments NO INVESTMENT NECESSARY — OPPOSITE BRONX PARK 2800 BRONX PARK EAST Comradely atmosphere—In this Cooperative Colony you will find a library, athletic director, workroom for children, workers’ clubs and various cultural activities Tel. Estabrook 8-1400; Olinville 2-6972 Take Lexington Avenue train to White Plains Road and Get off Allerton Avenue - Wednesday to Friday | “CAUGHT” With JEEFERION 8 is? s ACTS New Reduced Summer Prices 9:45 am, 25° to 3 p.m, Prospects teist. RICHARD ARLEN | LOUISE DRESSLER FRANCES DEE Billy Arlington Greshar and Blake Byers & Gretta Othe: Patronize the Concoops Food Stores AND Restaurant 2700 BRONX PARK EAS “Buy in the Co-operative Store and help the Left TOmpkins Square 6-6584 Wing Movement.” Office open from: 9 a, m, to 8 p. Saturday 10 9, m. m. every day; 9 a. m. to 5 p,m to 5 p.m. Sunday ATTENTIO Lecture on role of the RUSSIAN MOVIE N—Daily Worker Readers of the Bronx Meeting of readers will be held on September 18th, at 8 P. M. At the BRONX AUDITORIUM HALL 2700 Bronx Park East a leading member pf the Editorial Staff, also DISCUSSION ON THE DAILY WORKER Adm, Free—Bring ‘Your Friends—Refreshments Will Be Served press will be given by WILL BE SHOWN 29 EAST 14TH STREET NEW YORK Tel. Algonquin 3356-8843 We Carry a Fall Line of STATIONERY AT SPECIAL PRICES for Organizations Unusual Wholesome Di Made of FRESH VEGETABLES & FRUITS APTER THEATRE SPECIAL LUNCH 50c : DINNER 65¢ ARTISTIC SURROUNDINGS: QUALITY FooDS Trufood VEGETARIAN RESTAURANTS 153 West 44th Street 110 West 40th Street (East of Broadway) ‘rue Food In the Key to Health 199 SECOND AVENUE Bet, 12th and 13th Sts. Strictly Vegetarian food A NEIGHBORLY PLACE TO EAT Linel Cafeteria Pure Food—100 per cent Frigidaire Equipment—Luncheonette and Soda Fountain 830 BROADWAY Near 12th Street Come and Dine at the New AER TAE J SHANGHAI CHOP SUEY RESTAURANT 220 East 14th Street Near Jefferson Theatre Week Day Luncheon 30¢ Supper 45c Open daily from 11.30 a.m. to 2.30 a.m a TT Advertise Your Union Meetings Here. For Information Write to Advertising Department The DAILY WORKER 50 Bast 13th St. New York City BUTCHERS’ UNION Local 174, A. MO. & BW, of N. A. Office and Headquarters: Labor Temple, 243 Hast #ith Street Room 1 Regular meetin, third Sund: Employment Bure: at 6 every first and 10 A. M. open every day P.M. WORKERS’ HEADQUARTERS— LABOR TEMPLE 15 WEST 126th STREET Telephone HArlem 71-5750 RESTAURANT, POOL ROOM, STEAM BATH, SWIMMING POOL, HALLS FOR RENT FOR ALL OCCASIONS

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