The Daily Worker Newspaper, July 1, 1933, Page 4

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age Pour ATL LY WORKER, NEW YORK, J. S. Mediator Sent to Break Strike CUT IN RELIEF of 5,000 Hosiery Workers ses Fear Spread o: of Strike, Call on Govern- Public Works Plan t for WASHINGTON, D. c, Aid Under Recovery Juné 30.—U. ) Act Frances 7 (Slavery) S. ecretary of Labor ns today ordered Benjamin Squires of Chicago to intervene as medi- n the strike o it. ers in the 3 oking the ) Law to Obtain government ; cing the workers back to on the employers’ terms plants are already in- he strike which led by Work- The strike spread to the cotton ders and spinners of the and Sons Co. and the mills have walked out. ed knitters in the sec- | plant here are reported ick today swelling the the strikers to nearly king eve socialist president ot Fashioned Hosie: Work- ers is renorted as saying that “No consideration will be given to any; Tequest that the strike be called off unless binding assurances are given that the right of peaceful unioniza- lion and collective dealings with man- agements will be respected as the Na- tional Recovery Act requires.” Rieve clearly reveals that he will surren- der to the bosses under the guise of | getting benefits through the Re- overy (Slavery) Act as he did in he case of the general strike which | vas called off erkins’ request. in Philadelphia at| He does not de-| | and assurances that improved con- | tions for the workers anted. will be| the hosiery workers in Reading with the purpose of Manufacturers are reported to be aroused by the fact that largest plants here are responding to the strike and are Recovery #— Meeting of Small Property Owners Ask ‘for No Foreclosures NEW YORK. — Five hundred, a majority of them small property- | Owners, meeting in the Astor booed |a speech by Joseph P. Day, largest real estate auctioneer, and called for a@ moratorium on foreclosures on property, demanding that Governor Lehman call a special session to take immediate action on this matter. The meeting decided in favor of “no further tax exemption be grant- ed to real estate in New York City for any purpose whatsoever.” Out of $22,500,000,000 assessed property va- lue, $4,625,544,604 is tax exempt. This amounts to about 20 per cent. Most of these properties, such as the Y M.C.A., Salvation Army, Columbia University, Knights of Columbus, | hospitals and other institutions who |* own these properties have consider- | able profits as a result. A resolution was adopted calling for a reduction of 33 per cent in sal- aries over $3,000 for city officials. Many big real estate owner? were unable to stem the move:nent among the small property owners. | Public {Proposed by Workers in Highlandtown, Md. HIGHLANDTOWN, Md hundred workers, many of whom w steel workers met last night on corner of Third and Eastern Ave to |hear proposals from the Peoples Un-| ll o tha employment League Local No. Workers construction would benefit the working man Last week a committee was by the workers of the local to inves- tigate Highlandtown and Canton ter- ritory to determine where public works could start. The most outstanding feature of the committee’s proposals was the recommendation that “Hog Alley” which is really Dean Street in High- landtown, be paved, and the building be made fit for human beings to li in. The other proposals for street pav-| ing, sidewalk paving, changing of lo! into parks and swimming pools, the erection of a comfort station in High- landtown, the opening of the closed building that was formerly a YWCA to be used as a recreation center for the young workers, the minimum wage of 50 cents an hour on these jobs and union wages for union men all were unanimously approved. At the City Hall Tuesda: :30 p.m. the politicians, industrialists and business men are sitting into session for the purpose of dividing the of the $16,100,000 reecived by Batt more under the National Recovery Act. Y from labor will be a virtual “bomb- shell” to their public works plan. NEWS BRIEFS Loses Boys, Ends Life. AMDEN, June 30—Wesley G. we committed suicide by turning he gas today. ‘ork for more than a year. il, Then his boys were taken | him—two of them sent to the! iden county home, the third to of Roosevelt's forced labor aps. He wrote “If they hadn't | en my boys I would never have | ae this” and turned on the gas. | Kins Man; Goes Free. NEW HAVEN, Conn., June 30. alter C. Teagle, Jr., son of the ew Jersey Standard Oil magnate, | absolved of responsibility for the of August E. Meyer, whom he with an automobile while yak, O’Brien Rides Subway. “EW YORK, June 30.—Mayor 4 P. O'Brien drove his luxuri- g@utomobile to a subway kiosk Ste, -day afternoon, rode one sta- ™ on the city’s newest transit the Bronx Concourse line, and is car again and returned iall. That subway is not ally opened so O’Brien did in any subway jam. ght U.S. Shipping YORK, June 30.—A concerted oy European countries against san merchant marine is under according to Basil Harris, vice- ident of the Roosevelt steamship mpany. Harris urges more gov- nmment subsidies to meet deficits on rats of his line. Kills Starving Children. MUSKOGEE, Okla., June 30.—J. igram, 35 years old is in jail charged ith killing his two children. Out £ work Ingram said his children rere starving to death and he would ather see them dead than starving. * School Children Starve. DALLAS, Texas, June 30.—Be- cause of mainutrition induced by hunger among children of unem- \ployed parents 90 per cent of those ‘attending Dallas elementary schools have defective teeth. ae Ulm Files Over Iraq. BASRA, Iraq, June 30.—Charles P. T. Ulm, Australian aviator, on a flight from Sydney to London, pas- sed over Basra this morning on his ‘way to Allepo, North Syria. Basra is near the head of the Persian gulf. ‘The worst part of the flight is com- pleted. Khaki Shirt Suicide. ADELPHIA, June 30.—Daniel #rnton, one of the Khaki Shirt 48, with the title of “economic ‘sor” to Art Smith, adventurer is organizing the Khaki shirts, found dead today in a gas-filled Thornton was a former cap- In the United States army. “8 8 U. S. Bank Quits Turkey. 3 fANBUL, Turkey, June 30.—The American Express Company, only Inited States bank in Turkey, quits vusine: gust ist. It did not want the new Turkish law ‘inimum capital of 1,- lire ($4,400,000 at tern’ Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT . 80 FIFTH AVENUE 15TH FLOOR jl Wor! Done Under Personal Care of Dr. C. Weissman JULIUS LITTINSKY TOL STREET t. Pitkin and) Sutter Aves., Brooklyn ‘fice Hours: 8410 A.M, 1-2, 6-8 P.M. | | | P,|for women. Civil Service. Ousts Men; Rehires Jobl ess at Less Pay (By a Worker Correspondent.) CHICAGO, IIL, |$5 to $5.50 a day, are now working ten days a month at $3 a day in the | place of the laid-off government em- ployees . Many union DRAFT INDUSTRY CODES WITHOUT HEARING TOILERS Employers’ groups are drafting codes for adoption by the government covering wages, hours and working conditions without consultation with the workers in the industry, exposing the ballyhoo of the Roosevelt admin- istration which emphasized particu- larly that the codes would’ be pre- pared on the basis of “united action of labor and industry.” The tobacco industry is reported as having virtually completed a code. The code will cover conditions in the cigar and cigarette factories, the chewing tobacco and pipe manufac- turing, and smokers’ supplies indus- tries. The code for the oil industry is reported as ready. Carpet manu- facturers are preparing to submit a | code. A code covering woodworking and cabinetmaking is being drafted, and one has been drawn up for the lime industry. Retail Grocers Slash Union Scale The Retail Grocers’ Association has drawn up a code providing a mini- | mum wage scale of $16 a week for men in the North and $15 a week in the South; for women the wages are cut to $11 in big cities and $9 and $10 in smaller cities. Managers will re- ceive $30 a week. The minimum wage for grocery clerks is practically 50 per cent lower than the union scale established by the militant Food Workers’ Industrial Union for its grocery clerk section and it is a chal- lenge to the workers to organize to prevent the establishment of this starvation scale. Hours of work are set at 10 a day for men and 9 a day men, with skilled Hosiery manufacturers are also re- ported to have drafted a code. What the Workers Must Do The workers in these industries must immediately take steps to make their demands heard regarding the conditions to be imposed upon them. They must immediately arrange shop and department meetings, @discuss their wages, hours and working con- ditions and organize committees to draw up demands for higher wages, shorter hours and better conditions on the job. Committees of workers should be elected from each factory involved to go to Washington with these demands. But the administra- tion of the Slavery Act cannot be re- lied on to gain these conditions. The workers must themselves mobilize their forces and prepare to strike to win these demands. MOT THAVEN 9-8749 DR. JULIUS JAFFE Surgeon Dentist 401 EAST 140th STREET (Corner Willis Avenue) Office Phone: Estabrook 8-2573 Home Phone: Olinville 5-1109 DR. S. L. SHIELDS Surgeon Dentist 2574 WALLAVE AVE. corner Allerton Avenue Bri Alg. 4-9649 Strictly by appointment Dr. L. KESSLER SURGEON DENTIST 453 BROADWAY Spite 1007-1008 Cor. 14th Bt. New York June 30.—Hundreds of government civil service em- He had been out | ployees working on the U. S. Army Depot, 6th Corps, He | Pershing Road, have been laid off. Three hundred of them were laid off to steal milk, was caught, sent | jas¢ Friday, while three thousand relief workers who formerly worked in the forest six days a month at from ¢———H—H-—+—_—_—_— area on Wood and trades, whose scale is $8 to $12 a day, are working as painters, plumbers etc. | for $3 a day. Single men are only re- ceiving $1 a day. Every 60 feet there is an armed guard. The depot is being renovated to lempoy 10,000 workers. An army bar- racks is being built; nine hundred | office girls have been hired and this | depot, only a few months ago barely |moving, is now a beehive of activity jin its war preparations. From 10 to |16 carloads of material are being shipped daily to the various forts in this area. From the Western Electric Co. come tent poles tent pegs and light and heavy machine guns and ma- army overcoats are being shipped and large quantities of army cloth is being shipped to the clothing fac- supplies. Many light field guns are also being shipped. Some of the relief workers have been warned by their case workers at the relief station that next month they will receive only $2 a day and later $1 a day, and that the relief stations will be closed putting every- one receiving relief at this starvation wage. Here we have a clear example of Roosevelt's “New Deal” in operation. WILLIAM BELL Optometrist 106 EAST 14TH STREET Near Fourth Ave., N. ¥. ©. Phone: Tompkins Square Russian Art Shop Peasants’ Handicrafts 100 East 14th St., N. Y Imports from U.S.S.R. Tea, . Smocks, Shawls, Novelties, Woodcarving Lacquered Work Phone: ALGONQUIN 4-0094 ‘COTTLIEB’S HARDWARE 119 THIRD AVENUE Near 1th St. TOmpkins Sq. 6-4547 ALL KINDS OF ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES Cutlery Our Specialty Manhattan Lyceum Hall For Mass Meetings, Entertainments Balls, Weddings and Banquets 66-68 E. 4th St. New York (Russia) Toys LARGE Meeting Rooms and Hall To Hire Suitable for Meetings, Lectures and Dances in the Czechoslovak Workers House, Inc. 347 E.72nd St. New York Telephone: RHinelander 5097 AIRY, HUDSON Army and Navy Store 97 THIRD AVENUE Between 12th and 13th Street _| Tents, Cots, Blankets, Hik- ing Clothes, Camp Equip- ment, Cooks and Waiters’ Supplies Lowest Prices s elected t »| stopped ,| may Without a doubt these proposals | chine gun parts. Thousands of O. D. | tories for uniforms and other army | TO AFFECT ONE MILLION INN. Y. ssuance of Food Tick-| */ sued in | ets Already Stopped NEW YORK.—Cuts in relief and removing thousands of families from | relief was discussed by the | Eme: ency Work and Relief Admin- tion at its meeting on Thursday. The decision to cut relief affects a million men, women and children is the approximate figure on h lief s at-present. And thou- sands of families who are waiting to get relief for the first time! The Daily Worrker received reports from workers in many parts of the city that their relief was already It is stated that due to a mistake of $500,000 in relief disburse- ments which must be corrected, Home Relief Bureaus have temporarily dis- continued giving out food checks. HN be discussed by the Board of timate. The relief budget undoubt- ed will not exceed $2,500,000. The minimum necded for relief is $8,000,- 000. At the meeting of the Board of Estimate on June 6, Commissioner \"raylor asked for $5,000,000 es the month’s needé. This will now be cut to a third ui the minimum needed. | O’Brien’s Figures O'Brien states that besides |the city’s appropriations, the state allot an additional $4,000,000. At the meeting of the Board of Esti- }mate on June 6, where the United Front Committee Against Relief Cuts |and Evictions appeared, the mayor |admitted that the state appropriates | 40 per cent additional to the munici- pal appropriation. When taking its budget, however, it takes into consideration the state’s 40 per cent and adds it to its funds. This means that the $2,500,000 of the city obviously includes the sum ex- pected from the state. Mayor O’Brien a few weeks ago |indicated that Home Relief Bureaus | will be shut down and relief will be placed in the hands of private char- ities. This at a time when the Gib- son Committee admits its bankrupt- |cy and will close down its offices in ' September. Workers’ Ordinance May ers’ Ordinance to be presented to | the Board of Aldermen is now the only resort for the million and a half |New York workers who are depend- jent on unemployment relief. The ordinance containing 12 demands has as its first point that “a minimum base rate of $10 weekly cash relief The demands raised in the Work- | tnot the city government is contem- for every unemployed couple and $7 | for each single unemployed worker, plus $3 for each dependent. shal] be provided by the city.” To raise funds | for this purpose it a 10 per cent levy on all fortunes. taxa- tion on tax exempt properties of Rockefeller, Morgan and other mil- lionaires, as well as a number of other measures, SQUARE DEAL ARMY and NAVY STORE 121 Third Avenue WORKERS’ CAMPS SUPPLIED WITH TENTS, COTS, BLANKETS, COOKS OUTFITS, ETC. , at LOWEST PRICES | in the city for individuals and groups | == ————— IMIMEOGRAPH SUPPLIES STENCILS $1.90 INK 85c New Rotary Duplicators $18.50 up All Other Items as Reasonable Union Sq. Mimeo Supply 108 EAST 1TH ST. ALg: 4-4763 705 ALLERTON AVENUE AT WHITE PLAINS ROAD Every Bite a Delight STATIONERY At Special Prices for Organizations PHONE: ALGONQUIN + 4-3356-8843 | Lerman Pros. —INC.— 29 E. 14th ST., N. Y. Are You Moving or Storing Your Furniture? | CALL HARLEM 37-1053 COOKE’S STORAGE 209 East 125th St. Special Low Rates to Comrades | ARMY TENTS 16x16 $8.00 up Cots—$1,00 Blankets $1.25 up | Full Line of Camping Equipment MANHATTAN MILITARY 478 WATER STREET Absolutely Lowest Prices ~D. BACKER INTERVALE | ‘Moving & Storage Co., Inc.| | BRONX, N. ¥. | by the union lawyer. The other work- RESTAURANT & CAFETERIA SATURDAY, JULY 1, 1933 ‘Use 1929 Injunction to Arrest 7 Workers, at Severn Cafeteria} A general strixe mting of th union, NEW YORK.—An injunction is- the general cafeteria strike of 1929 was used to arrest seven | | workers picketing the Severn Cafete- | ria, 30th St. and Seventh Ave., where the Food Workers Industrial Union is leading a strike for a 25 per cent | wage increase, a 10 hour day and }recognition of the union. The workers weie¢ later paroled in custody of the union attorney and will be heard in the Jefferson Mar- ket Court, 425 Sixth Ave., Monday | morning. The injunction, used by the United Restaurant Association, the mem-= bers of which, the tood bosses, pay | an initial fee of $1,000 for this type \of strike breaking service, was taken | out against the Amalgamated Food Workers Union. An attempt made by the court to frame the leader of the strike, Sam | Kramberg, organizer of the Cafeteria Section of the union, was frustrated ers arrested are: Frank Garcia, Jesse | Hernandez, Tony Valle, John Mazu- | chuk, Peter Hudyma and Albert AGAINFOR MAYOR FAVORSSALESTAX NEW YORK, June 30.—After pay- ing a visit to the Tammany Boss Curry, Mayor O’Brien announced that he will be the Democratic can- didate for Mayor in the November Mayoralty elections. A letter which the Mayor sent to the Wall Street bankers on the 5-cent fare has never been made public. Reports that it contains a pledge to raise the fare to 7 or 8 cents after the elections have never been denied by the Mayor or any Tammany offi- cial. The Mayor has consistently refused to comment on this report. O'Brien has promised the bankers that he will raise $30,000,000 before December 11. This is the day on which the next payments to the bankers fall due, and it is safely after the election campaigns will be over. O'Brien has publiclv exnressed his; wholehearted approval of some form of sales tax, saying, “I think it is the fairest tax.” This foreshadows plating the imposition of such a tax. | The subject of wage cuts for the City’s Civil Service employees is also receiving constant consideration among leading city and Tammany officials. 4 DAY BAZAAR Workers’ Center 21 HUDSON STREET Yonkers, N. Y. FRIDAY SATURDAY June 30 July 1 SUNDAY, July 2 Entertainment, Dancing Every Night CLASSIFIED SEA GATE—Attractive rooms, rates, Phone ESplanade 2-9199 reasonable TO SHARE—3 room modern apartment with girl, Separate room for one or two per-| sons. ALg. 4-7121 FURNISHER ROOM—Light, shower, steam. Inquire all week. Kleinman, 317 E. 18th St. BROOKLYN for Brownsville Workers! Hoffman's Pitkin Corner Saratoga Aves. FOR BROWNSVILLE PROLETARIANS SOKAL CAFETERIA 1689 PITKIN AVENUE / “Paradise” Meals for Proletarians Gar -Feins Restaurant 1626 PITKIN AVE., BKLYN Williamsburgh Comrades WELCOME De Luxe Cafeteria 94 Graham Ave. Cor. Siegel St. EVERY BITE A DELIGHT ‘LL. D. SMASHES RAPE FRAME-UP| OF TWO NEGROES Homeless Boys Jailed |While Seeking Place | Sleep in Park NEW YORK.—Herman Hunter, 23- year-old unemployed and homeless Negro worker, wes released as as | West Side Court Fridav framed-up charge of rape agalnst him crashing completely under the blows of the local International Labor De- fense, which defended him. Hunter was arrested Thursday night in Riverside Drive Park while looking for a bench to sleep on. Hearing shouts nearty he went there to see what was wrong. Three men grabbed him, shouting, “This is the man!” A white girl then accused him of having attacked her. Beaten With Rubber Ho-e jail that night, Hunter In Need | third-degreed by detectives with their xt Wednedday the réllef budget | Ne | O’BRIEN TO RUN fists and rubber hose, but he refused to be beaten into making a false confession. After the frame-up was exposed in | court Friday morning, police tried to | hold Hunter on a disorderly conduct charge, but the I. L. D. forced the ! dismissal of this charge, too. Kenneth Hamilton, 20, also an un en.ployed and homeless Negro worker, was arrested Thursday night in | Riverside Drive Park, charged with having beaten up the companion of a white girl and then attempting to attack her. Hamilton claims that as he passed | | by the white man started a fight with him and when he defended himself the girl shouted for help, then lodged | the attack charge against him. The I. L. D. is investigating this case. Have you approached your fel- low worker in your shop with a copy of the ‘Daily?’ If not, do so TODAY! Brighton Beach Brighton Beach Workers | WELCOME AT Hoffman's Cafeteria 282 BRIGHTON BEACH AVENUE OPEN DAY AND NIGHT SHeepshead 3-10447 Nigberg’s Bakery and Lunch Room 314 Brighton Beach Avenue Orders Taken for All Occasions DOWNTOWN CHINA KITCHEN RESTAURANT and CAFETERIA 233 E. 14th St., Bet. 2nd & 3rd Ave. A nice quiet place to eat our 25¢ LUNCHEON 35c DINNER WHERE COMRADES MEET Starlight Restaurant 117 EAST 15TH STREET Irving Pl. and Union Sq. Low Prices Bet. Best Food Managament—JURICH from Pittsburgh Phone: TOmpkins Square 6-9554 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY—ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 302 E. 12th St. New York JADE MOUNTAIN American & Chinese Restaurant 197 SECOND AVENUE Bet. 12 & 13 Welcome to Our Comrades | i GARMENT DISTRICT Garment Section Workers Patronize Navarr Cafeteria 333 7th AVENUE Corner 28th St. Phones: Chickering 4947—Longacre 10089 COMRADELY ATMOSPHERE FAN RAY CAFETERIA 156 W. 29th St. New York All Comrades <-—~~ Fresh Food—Proletarian Prices 5° NEW HEALTH CENTER CAFETERIA Meet at the ———— 13TH ST., WORKERS’ CENTER ; Tanks, now held solid under the lead- »--— * | bosses’ association, yesterday called | ‘Laundry Strikers at-Meeting Dety Attempt to Split Ranks NEW YORK.—A decision to spread the laundry strike to shops in the Bronx not yet out was made by the laundry workers who gathered Thurs- day night at the mass meeting in Ambassador Hall. This decision is the answer to the laundry besses who in the last few days have tried to get separate groups to settle, by which the bosses hope, to split {he strikers’ Yesterday. the ose, arrested two |laundry workers;-Harry -Baum and * ‘Leo Thomas, a Negro workers, on a ;frame-up charge of assault. ership of the Laundry Workers’ dustrial Union. Organization committees to spread the strike have been formed. | Hr. Thurman, head of the Jaundry | in- APPEAL TO WRITERS The Laundry .Workers snuustrial in drivers from several shops in Har- | Union calls upo:1-writers and artists, lem to a meeting at 523 West 93rd including members-of the Jchn Reed Street, attempting to induce them to! Club, to help make public the sweat- form a company union and to use|shop conditions against which the these drivers as scab agents. But |lavndry workers are striking. the answer of the drivers was that| The laundry union’s headquarters they would not deal with a strike-, are at 260 East: 138th Street, the breaker. | Bronx. Visit the Soviet Union via THE FRENCH LINE See MOSCOW Capital of U.S.S.R. The Kremlin of the Czars, Headquarters of the Executive Forces, Red Square of the Revolution, Lenin's Mausoleum, Workers’ Clubs, Operas, Theatres, etc. City of Palaces. The beauties of Museums. Impressive Monuments. Humming Industries. Grand Winter Palace of the Czars, now a Museum of the Revolution. DNIEPROSTROY; CHARKOW; KIEW; and the VOLGA RIVER. LENINGRAD ODESSA CONVENIENT SAILINGS FROM NEW YORK 8. S. ILE DE FRANCE July 6th, 28th, August 19th, September 5th S. S. PARIS August Ilth, September 9th, September 29th Immediate connection with SOVIET STEAMERS London Direct to Leningrad or by rail through Europe from. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION APPLY TO ANY OF OUR AGENTS 19 STATE STREET NEW YORK. Spend the 4th of July Week End and Your Vacation in Camp Kinderland A WORKERS’ CAMP FOR ADULTS AND CHILDREN Vacation Rates: $13.00 Per Week (tax included) Vacation Rates for Children FOR THOSE WHO ATTEND OUR SCHOOLS, AND MEMBERS OF THE INTERNATIONAL WORKERS ORDER $15.00 ve” [REGISTER YOUR| 30,00 | CHILD NOW! Cars leave for Camp daily between 9 to 11 a. m. from 2700 Bronx Park E, For Information CALL TOMPKINS SQUARE 6-8434 2 weeks .. 5-2. 5 weeks . 2... 8 weeks . Ulster Park, N. Y. AVANTA FARM (Near Station) PRICE $10.00 and $12.00 Per Week BY TRAIN—West Shore R.R., 42nd Street BY BOAT—Hudson Day Line to Kingston. .Round tip, $2.50. (Bus at Kingston to’ West Short Station, 10c; train to Ulster Park, 21c) GRAND PICNIC. Arranged by the I.W.O. in conjunction with the Workers and Fraternal Organizations of New York and Vicinity for the Benefit of the “UJ ELORE’’. All Day Sunday, July 2nd, 1933 In WORM’S PARK—41-15 Astoria Blvd., Astoria, L. I. GOOD MUSIC, DANCING, SPORTS, AND MANY OTHER ATTRACTIONS GOULASH and GYPSY KITCHEN ALL DAY LONG TICKETS 25 CENTS TICKETS 25 CENTS DIRECTIONS: Take the Astoria Subway or Elevated ‘Train to’ 25th Ave. (previously Hoyt Ave.) Station, from whichthe Park is only # few»minutes. walk \ WORKMEN’S SICK AND Main Office: 714-716 Seneca Ave. 58,235 Members Death Benefit: $1,888,210.93 Total: $1 Workers! Protec In Case of Sickness, Death voth classes. CLASS A: 4U cents per wouth—Dea at the age of 44. CLASS ‘Br 50 cents per month—Dei Parents may insure their children Death Benefit according to age $20 fo Sick Benefit paid from the third day another forty weks, for another forty weeks. For further inform: 962 WESTCHESTER AVE. ‘ Secretary, or to the Financial Secretari OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA ORGANIZED 184—INCORPORATED 1890 Total Assets on Dooember 31, 1931: %3,488,395.98 Benefits pafd since its existence: Beuett according to the age af the une of (uitiaation in ope oF $15. respectively, per week. for the first forty weeks, half of the amount for Sick Benfits-for women: $8 per week for the first forty wecks: $4.50 each jon apply at the Main Office, William Spur, DEATH BENEFIT FUND , Ridgewood Sta.. Brooklyn, N. ¥ in 351 Branches Sick Benefit: 7,050,262.66 $12,162,051.75 t Your Families! Accident or Death! th Benefit SHA at the age of 16 to S17! ath evetit $550 ty $230. th cane of death up to che age of 18 of tiling the doctor's certificate, $9 and National jen of the Branches. GRAND NOVY MIR PICNIC IS BEING ARRANGED a SUNDAY JULY 2nd . At PLEASANT BAY PARK, BRONX, N. ¥. PICNIC STARTS AT 11 A.M. «ADMISSION 35e Among various amusements there will be featured WRESTLING (French style)—Russian and Ukrainian Wrestlers, 2 pairs DIRECTIONS—Take Lexington Ave-Rronx Park ‘Train to With St..” trom there “Union Port Car" to last stop, then by bus to picnic grounds, or: Any Lexington Ave. train to 125th St., from there with Pelham Bay Local to ‘‘Zerega Ave., then by bus to pienie grounds. ¥OR FINE CLOTHING AT PROLETARIAN PRICES SEE ABE ‘'FLAMM NowWith SAM and ADOLPH 142 STANTON STREET ABE FLAMM IS GRATEFUL for the response from: ‘old & new friends

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