The Daily Worker Newspaper, January 8, 1934, Page 2

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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, JANU. N. Y. Jobless Meet Prepares March On City Hall Feb. 5 Elect 26 Delegates To Washington; Adopt ARY 8, 1934 GUTTERS OF NEW YORK » = S set & ‘nemployment and| lacklist Is Plan ‘or Longshoremen _Geyernment to Register | Dockmen, Outlaw Will You Take the Initiative? NEW YORK.—The immediate need for funds to defray the expenses of the National Convention Against Unemployment, to take place on Feb. 3, 4, and 5 in Washington, D. C., is emphasized in the following statement of the National Committee of the Unemployed Council: “For nearly two weeks we have been appealing for help—with little result. Babe Ruth Saga | All Strikes “Three thousand dollars is needed in order to carry through the Demands ‘ * preparations for the National Convention Against Hunger and Unem- TORIANS of the future, poring over the archives of they’ ¢ ployment, ere WALDMAN “Food and lodgings must be made available to the delegates at the NEW YORK, — The New York | gay pre-depression twenties, may or may not term the, ji (Dally Worker Washington Bureau) | past twelve years the Ruthian Era, but if they choose ' County Conference against Unemploy- WASHINGTON, D. C., J 7—A| 7 special rates consistent with their limited means. Jan, 6, in Christ Church, ’ Plan to Decasualize Longshore | “Meeting halls must be secured in Washington. h St., with 83 organizations | Place some other appellation to this period, it will not be for ! gabor” is the innocent name of the| “Other provisions for a successful convention must be made by |throughout Manhattan and Harlem lack of material on the person of George Herman Ruth. just proposed by the the National Commitice, represented by 150 delegates, endorsed Department for incorporation %o the pending shipping code Sn up by the American Ship sers Association. mis report, written by Boris Stern | she United States B: Li ‘i Statistics of the L: : » Proposes as 0! fun- damental planks “the complete registration of sii longshore labor available” in every American port. Blacklist Plank Tf adopted, the decasualization plan) will not only increase the effectiveness of the b! st. against snilitamt labor, especia! the mem- bers of the Marine Workers Indus- trial’ Union, but also will be the Spearhead of the attack against anti-war activity on the doc! Decasualization is defined in teport as “primarily a problem in the technique of yy t d work distribution y the interests of emp werkers alike,” and “an authorita- tive’ and impartial agency with un- questioned trust ar rt from @i interests involved,” therefore, says the labor department, should do “the actual work of decasual- izing the port and of maintaining a sgentral employment station for longshore labor.” Board of “Final Authority’ It is proposed Authorita- tive and Impart y should be ation of the 1 Recovery Department the product of the strike-breaking W Administration and the of Labor. The report “The National Recove tration shall appo’ Casualization Board, co! ing of the administrator of the shipping eode, the director of the employment service of the Department of Labor, and an advisory board of three em- Ployers selected by the code authority and three workers approved by the president of the International Long- shoremen’s Association (A. F. of L.). This National Decasualization Board shall be the responsible and final authority for the decasualization work in all the ports.” To Register Workers Adminis- al De- | ‘The expenses of this board are to| be borne by employers and workers alike, despite the fact that ‘hipping companies receive a total of -28,000,000 .a year in gifts (‘“subsi- Wies”) from the Federal Government ost of the eneral requirements without which Qecasualization is either alto-| workers. gether ssible or, if attempted, is doomed tc fail of its main objec- tives” are: |condemn discrimination against “(1) There musi be complete regis-| negro longshoremen. Such discrimi- tration of all longshore labor avail-| nation is one of those “matters” able in the port. | which “are not discussed here be-/| “(2) Only those on the should be permitted to work on the waterfront. “(3), All employers must give up their right to hire longshore labor individually at their piers or else- where and must agree to secure their labor through agency only.” ‘The main points of the proposed coordination of longshoremen follow: the decasualizing “Immediately upon the approval of the employment director the plan shall proceed with the registration of all the workers in the port. At the time of registry each longshore- man shall be given a permanent port port number work number. This the’ the | lofigshoremen | register | “The eyes of the entire country will be focused upon this convention. | We must display a capacity for organization which will encourage and stimulate the organization of the millions of unorganized. “DON’T WAIT FOR SOMEONE ELSE! who may be expected io lend their support. “Visit them and get each one to make a maximum contribution. “Immediately send in all money collected to the National Committee | Unemployed Conncils, 86 East 11th Make up a list of people Street, Room 437, New York City.” Needle Trades Union |} Asks Mass Picketing NEW YORK.—Undeterred by police brutality, strikers will mass before Maiman and Sanger be- tween 8 and 9 this morning in a great picket demonstration. The Needle Trades Workers’ Industrial Union calls upon all workers to join the picket line. Besides the above demonstra- tion, the union announces a meet~ ing of unemployed workers at the inion hall, 131 W. 28th St., at 1:30 p. m., where the question of ob- taining C, W. A. jobs will be dis- cussed. ‘Neckwear Workers Vote For Officers |Rank and File Select Own Slate | wear Makers Union, A. F. L. Local 11016, will hold their annual elec- tions Tuesday, 12 o'clock noon, at 7 |B. 15th st. ‘Fuchs and his henchmen, Stearn, Feldheim and Friedman are uphold- ers of the present burocratic machine, while the fake progressives, Glick, Clausner and Fruchters are ac- tually nothing more than a sham op- position,” a leader of the Rank and File Group of the union stated yes- | terday to a Daily Worker reporter. The Rank and File Group has been | active all year exposing the evils ex- isting in the trade and union. The Rank and File Group stand for full trade union democracy, against wage cuts and for the enforcement of the agreement, Unemployment insurance, that no official get a salary exceed- ing $40 weekly, and that jobs are to be distributed by a committee of cause they properly belong within the realm of the individual ports rather ports.” The report admits that even in “normal” times few longshoremen earn “what may be considered a de- cent wage.” “At the present time & very conservative estimate would probably place more than 50 per cent of all the longshoremen on the relief roles.” ‘The Labor Department tacitly en- dorses the proposed shipping code which was so strenuously objected to during the early part of November by a delegation of 85 delegates of NEW YORK.—The United Neck.” NR.A. Beats Living Standards Down, AFL Report Admits (Continued from Page 1) to break the militancy of the work- ers resistance to the codes, they have utilized such A. F, of L. officials as Lewis in the mine code, Green in the auto code, etc. They do not inform the workers that representation on these boards of the A. F. of L. offi- cials only makes the A. F. of L. unions part of the strikebreaking ap- paratus of the State, that the best way to fight the N.R.A. strikebreaking codes is by militant organization in the factories and mines, and not in negotiations with the employers’ agents on the N.R.A. Ignore Jobless Menace Not a word in the four page print- ed survey is said about federal un- employment insurance, despite the fact that the A. F. of L. is officially 1 record as favoring it. Instead, “10,702,000 workers”—the total nemployed is nearer 17 million than 10—who had no industrial employ- ment in November are told to watch out for the danger of ‘inflation by fiat money,” So that the unemployed will be able to eat rising prices, The poor farmer who has been evict- ed from his farm or forced off the land by the Roosevelt ploughing- under program will be puzzled to read that: “The year-end finds the huge un- marketed supply of cotton reduced by over a million and a half bales or 22 per cent, unmarketed wheat, less by one-third or over 130 million bushels, and other farm surpluses also reduced. These reductions have raised farm prices and the gains in farmer buying power have already put men to work in the industries making farmers’ supplies.” AFL Laundry Workers Strike Despite Pleas Of Union Officialdom NEW YORK—After waiting months for a promised N. R. A. code for laundry workers that never material- ized, workers of the Quick Service than in a general analysis for all} Laundry of this city, organized in Local 280 of the A. F. of L., struck for hetter conditions, despite the plea of their union officials to wait until the code is completed. Workers of the Oak Laundry, to- gether with one of the officials of the militant Laundry Workers’ In- dustrial Union, presented demands for a minimum wage of 31 cents an hour, a $2 increase for those earning above the minimum, a 45-hour week, time and a half for overtime and recognition of the L.W.LU, Organization sentiment in many laundries is high and strike action is expected in a number of them, and pledged their support of the Workers Municipal Relief Ordinance and the Workers Unemployment In- surance Bill. The delegates came from A. F. of L, locals, Rank and File groups, In- dependent Unions, shop groups, T. U. U. L. affiliates, fraternal orders and neighborhood otganiaztions and clubs. A permanent New York County Un- employment Council of 47 members was elected. Twenty-six delegates were elected to represent the county at the National Convention against unemployment, Feb. 3, in Washing- ton. A plan of action and organiza- tion was adopted. A committee of single unemployed and homelss work- ers was formed to protest and fight discrimination against these workers and against the transient camps. ‘The plan of action adopted included the demands to be made on Mayor La Guardia at the city-wide dem- onstration on Feb. 5, at the City Hall. The program of action points out that the “economy” program of La Guardia, cuts wages of city employes, refuses the unemployed adequate cash relief, and abolishes the hot lunches for children in schools. The conference demanded that La Guardia give an immediate reply to the delegation which visited him on Jan, 2, and which he refused to see. This delegation was demanding the passage of the Workers Relief Or- dinance and endorsement of the Workers Unemployment Insurance Bill. The conference demanded that La Guardia personally receive the del- egation which will visit him Feb. 5, the day of the demonstration. I. Amter, national secretary of the Ufiemployed Council, reported on the campaign for the national convention against unemployment on Feb. 3 in Washington, Additional delegates will be sent by the organizations. The question of raising funds for sending he delegates to Washington was strongly emphasized. Soviet Envoy Arrives in U. 8. (Continued from Page 1) bassador Troyanovsky will present his credentials to President Roose- velt. In the morning he will pay a short visit to Acting Secretary of State Phillips. It is understood that Mrs. Troy- }anovsky and her son, Oleg will ar- rive in this country next week aboard the S. S. Olympic. William C, Bullitt, the first Amer- ican ambassador to the Soviet Union, accompanied by his nine-year old daughter, Anne, returned with Troy- anovsky to spend three weeks here Superintending the organization of his staff. He appeared very pleased with his Russian trip. Asked what had transpired between him and Troyan- ovsky during their long voyage over, Bullitt replied: “We talked about everything under the sun.” An American exceedingly close to Bullitt predicted that Troyanovsky, “is a very charming fellow and will have great success here.” George A. Morelock, secretary to Bullitt, was in high spirits and eager to talk about his trip with his chief. “How do you like Russia?” several correspondents asked him, “Fine. When It gets cold there you get warm right down to your toes.” “How did Ambassador Bullitt get along with the Russians?” “The Russians are crazy about Mr. “TI still think the installation of a shower and cooling system for my benefit is a proper government expenditure.” —Secretary of the Treasury Henry Morgenthau, Jr. {A bill of $1,406 for the above was to be paid from the | emergency credit relief fund.) ~ Thruout Country (Continued from Page 1) thousands of individuals showed the esteem in which th? Daily Work- er is held. Huge ads showed that a number of business firms had come to realize the box-office value of ad- vertising in a paper which was to Teach no less than a quarter of a mil- lion readers. These ads—if they con- tinue to come—will pay operating ex- penses and help enlarge and improve the “Daily.” We therefore put for- ward the prosaic slogan, Patronize Our Advertisers; Mention the Daily Worker when (and if) making pur- chases! cee bd HE Daily Worker was only a few days old when Lenin, great leader of the Proletarian Revolution, died in 1924. Lenin’s life, his work and his teachings—as applied to the task of the American revolutionary move- ment—will be described by leading figures in the Communist Party of the U.S. in the special Lenin Me- ois Editien to the published Jan. This edition will appear in twelve pages, and will be well-illustrated with photographs and drawings. Judging by the response to the An- niversary Edition, it is expected that cooperation from the districts will en- able the publication of a minimum of 100,000 copies. Orders should be sent in at once in order to aid us in de- termining exactly how many to print. the Russians. Toshiko Take-Tomy, counselor of the Japanese Embassy, and his wife were at the station to greet and wel- come Ambassador Troyanovsky, They knew each other in Japan where Troyanovsky recently was Soviet Ambassador. Several newspapermen smiled at the meeting and character- ized it as a “gesture.” Just before the big car in which Troyanovsky, Skyirsky and Patterson were seated, started, Troyanoysky dis- covered that Bullitt was not around. Skvirsky and Patterson hopped out and looked all over the station for Bullitt. The latter, however, had left alone, not having been informed by the State Department that a car awaited him, Troyanovsky then sped with Kelley to the temporary embassy on Mas- Anniversary Issue’ Hailed By Masses Budget To Protect Wall St. Mortgage Holder Investments, (Continued from Page 1) | lion for “emergency” expenditures, and four billion to pay off or meet | bond maturities, The R.F.C, will require $3,969,000,- 000 for purposes not made explicitly clear by Roosevelt, but which are admitted to entail tremendous sub- sidies to monopoly industry. The Civil Works program will re- quire $400,000,000, while the mili- varized C.C.C. camps will need $342,- 000,000 according to Roosevelt. For the carrying through of the destruction of crops under the A.A.A. the government will require $515,- 000,000, Roosevelt said. The way in which these funds will be raised has not yet been made fully clear, but the appropriation of $3,650,000,000 of gold from the Fed- eral Reserve banks through a close to 50 per cent devaluation of the dollar, and the pumping of three billions worth of bonds into the Fed- eral Reserve banks through the pow- ers granted the Roosevelt government by the Thomas amendment, are seen as early possibilities. In addition, new heavy taxes are in view, as well as further reductions in the wages of Federal employees. ° An analysis of the budget reveal that the huge 7 billion dollar deficit that Roosevelt vredicted for the com- ing year, will be due largely to tre- mendous war preparations, subsidies to Wall Street monopoly, interest and loan payments to the monono!y capi- talist bondholders. The so-called ordinary budget pro- vides for $510,000,000 for the Army and Navy, while the “extraordinary” expenditures provide for over one billion dollars for the so-called “pub- lic works” which include aeroplane and battleship building. The “ordinary” expenditures pro- vide for over $740,000,000 for the payment of interest to Wall Street bondholders, while the “extraordinary expenditures” provide for nearly four billion more for subsidies to banks and monopoly industry. It is becoming more openly ad- mitted that the Roosevelt rate of proposed expenditure of one billion on Babe Ruth’s It if won't be called the sport writers of this epoch. God knows they tried hard enough, SDH ie ‘T’S Success Story, that’s what it is. Rags to Riches and all that. George Herman, if you follow your biographies fairly closely, was something of a Peck’s Bad Boy on the Baltimore waterfront, an in- veterate hookey player (hookey, not hockey, please brother linotyper), a fruit swiper, a young lout of parts, in short, Persisting through the years is the legend of the youthful George’s throw- ing arm and the catastro- phic happen- ings that befell various truck drivers who had the temerity to object to the depredations of George and his band. Accord- ing to the fable, Ruth’s unerring accuracy in hurling tomatoes in various stages of decrepitude was one of the things that originally at- tracted one of the fathers of St. Mary’s Industrial School to the overgrown youngster. Various cynics, however, speaking in a more modern temper, have suggested that it was nothing of the sort and that Babe was put away in a re- form school as something ap- proaching a potential enemy of society, Be that as it may, George devel- oped amazing deficiencies in mathe- matics and all the finer elements of an education, but made it up to his own and the satisfaction of the gentle fathers with an amazing skill at pitching a baseball, So good was the Babe at what our contemporaries insist on saying is flinging the pellet, that soon the Baltimore Orioles picked him up for a@ mere $25 a week, the aforementioned gentle fathers of St. Mary’s acting as scouts and the negotiators of the agreement. The rest of the story is by now commonplace. Babe went to the Boston Red Sox shortly, pitched in the 1915 World Series and was sold down the river to the Yankees when he demanded a salary of $15,000 a year. Miller Huggins took the stout pitcher, transformed him into an outfielder and the boys in the press box did the rest. Babe Ruth ary | paseo was reeling from the ef- fects of the 1919 World’s Series. The little boy pleading with Shoeless | Joe Jackson, “Joe, say it ain't so,” be- j came a national symbol of a stricken populace. The appointment of Kene- saw Mountain Landis as lord high commissioner of the pastime wasn’t enough to fire the imagination of @ 100,000,000. To wipe off the mark (Classified ) ATTRACTIVE furnished room; sacrifice; front; private; adult family; separate en- er, 143 Second Ave., apartment 20. GR 7-2088, Scholars of 2,000 A.D. may have their difficulties in re- creating modes ‘and styles of the nineteen-twenties, but facts mid-riff,@ nkles, biceps, and dietary va-| garies will be nothing short of | plethoric. | Era of Ruth, it'll be no fault of the of the fixed series, more than a few goats and a baseball czar was needed, New color, new life, comrades ... An emperor was born, the Sultan wat, The haleyon days, 22-28... Herman's salary rose in direct prov, portion to his home-run figures. Jake Ruppert built the new stadium for the Yanks, The Babe's gastro- nomic exploits pushed the Ohio gang off the front pages. Fifty and sixty thousand dollar salaries for the Bat- tering Bambino, the Gargantuan George, was the accepted order of the day. tah eee | EN Came the Flood Tide of Reaction. Even before the stock market broke, Babe’s physique and bankreli crumpled under the com- bined assault of his uncontrollable appetite for frankfurters and his lack of wisdom in placing bets on the bangtailed Havana ponies. The Great Collapse was flashed imme- diately from the Carolinas to Tokyo. Ruth’s case of acute in- digestion was the beginning of his downward slide on the baseball toboggan. Ruth Was Going, and a& new furrow was added to the national brow. Fate, however, in the person of the percentage-taking Christy Walsh, soon intervened and a good portion of Ruth's money was taken away from him and put in a trust fund. A Spartan diet and a strict avoidance of the seductive weiner was pre- scribed. Steam baths and lar sym. work to slice off the roll of lard that appeared in the region of our hero's navel was insisted upon. The anxious public was spared none of the details, either. Today Ruth as a national figure is gone, along with Volstead and rugged individualism. And who is there to mourn, so long as we have Gehrig and Jimmy Foxx? MARKMAN WINS TABLE TENNIS TOURNEY NEW YORK. — Alex Markman, Prospect Workers Club entry, was the winner in the advanced division of the Jewish Workers Club closed table tennis tourn.ment, held here last Wednesday evening. Markman de- feated Sirulnick of the Hinsdale club after a hard struggle 21-16, 16-21, 21- 14, 10-21, 21-15. Magarik of Browns- ville won in the finals of the Inter- mediate division over Blank of the same club, ~ i SPARTACUS BEATS UNION CITY” NEW YORK.—Traveling to Unio: City, Spartacus A.C. “A” team tie: the fast Union City club of the Work- ers Gymnastic and Sport Alliance 1-1 last week in one of the most inter- esting soccer games seen in those parts of New Jersey. Spartacus “B” beat the Union City seconds by 1-0, Fink scoring the lone goal. The Spartacus, Bronx Labor Sports Union organization, will contribute six men to the all-star Labor Sports Union team to play the picked Workerse .” Gymnastic and Sport Alliance tea Jan. 28 at Crotona Park. ig DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet. Pitkin and Sutter Aves., Brooklyn PRONE: DICKENS 2-301¢ Offtes Hours: 5-10 A.M., 3-8, 6-8 P.M. a shall be the only work number used to designate the particular worker by all employers of longshore labor sachusetts Avenue where he settled| dollars a month will require, in lieu down for a night’s rest. of a real public works program, huge The Russian Party which accom-| Subsidies to private industry and BRONX GERMAN WORKERS CLUB ‘The recently organized German Workers Bullitt. And they did everything they could to make him and his little daughter, Anne comfortable. Mr. Bul- the Marine Workers Industrial Union. At these November hearings, W. C. McCuiston of the M. W. I. U. spoke COHENS’S WORKERS--EAT AT THE : lo Cul, mee et been He dy see : panied Troyanovsky to this country|banks, and this seems one of the P; arkway Cafeteria in the port, for the longshoremen, citing the 300 Yorkers Home,” Soutnern Bi, verses: | gitaticny Soo Te een ental de bao Purposes of the proposed bud- i} | HT ORCHARD STREET 1688 PITKIN AVENUE No Protection for Negroes percent increase in the Philadelphia |(sv ot % p.m. All German-peaking work-| “How about little Anne Bullitt?” Gregory Gokhman, the second sec- | 8¢t. Ree Oe Sty) DEY Eee Cay Near Hopkinson Ave. Brooklyn, N, ¥. The Labor Department refuses to! rate because of the terrific speedup. siteng,” "NS VEIRIEY ae urged to] ce a ate it with Gokhman; Onker Cokiean and me| Meanwhile, the RC, has an-|| ere exammmp Wr" stl Opicans d - |] By pr. a. . 0: s-4520 — ~ $$$ — nest Gokhman their sons; Vasili Fares BUA Me Oe eee Toyeneanne Factory on Premises AU omraces Meet ai ; 2 Mrs, Kotov;, Peter, Khrissanfov, t-|the stockholders of bankrupt banks, BRONSTEIN’S chee, and Mrs, Khri ‘Ov, in addition to the billion that has rp} SP | Our Readers Extend Revolutionary Greetings|# 7 Sis ./ohS58 SS") aimersroume —)| Nome teat pticlan staurant © ° eo) rf 558 Clare 1 Parkway, Brom to the Daily Worker on Its Tenth Anniver “ers wtntta INNES | ee ——— y Sary TENTH ANNIVERSARY la RR PME AS - psoas SESS Fe ASRS See 73 Chrystie Street LEARN Fre= ingi ; ¥ Cor. Hester St., N.Y.C. ‘Teacher, DISTRICT 8 Preiheit Singing |C. A. Makar Silver A’ Josephson H. Harris Unit 26, Sec.2 ©. s ‘ 80 E. 95th St., + Chicago, TL |Lineoln Ave. | Society J. M. Essenberg | A. Rad Paul Mobius, piston °? |] H.C. VITANZA ee ee RUSSIAN hone? "Siocsin“ecanse | 4 u ‘Unit 303: z Shoe Repair | 'T. N. Carlson ens ey cise eee Newark, N. J. Club pee TENERRTRASCRERR ET Ry ’ Sam Peretz ockford, Il. Mary Wiitanen iheed . datte vi : i ARRANGE YOUR DANCES, LECTURES, Tom Kochilo | Unit 6,C.P. |G Melamed C. Wert Lenick A Friend Hee ea | Newark, A. Saratoga Press UNION MEETINGS " Tai D ‘ y half H. Gr n eter Krutuk at the Paul Shablikoft it 4, C. P. Michael Ball M. R. 5 B, Chalfen — i, Granman Elliott Appel Mike Kurvaluk : race nion ; BAe eet [Mintle and Joseph | ean Sa G. piecewier |G. 'muben | pigrmior six (S20 Sickel | Maria Tenteg << Fes rene 1S Br furkkutz {Marie and Joseph | Pay abiny . cewiez . Ss : 2 ‘, ‘i s x N.S. Rajkovicn | Mosetich A. Jakubowski |Mildred Maker |Jos. Pearlman | Teo Jones Tapes Vatey: «| Ls Muee At Proletarian Prices WORKERS’ HOME Directory 9 SA FP. Rajkovich A. Feinberg W. Cienki West Side Work-|Harry Levites Joe Lukas Br. 1LD, Lytwyr bE iB 27-29 West 115th Street BUILDING MAINTENANCE WORKERS Chicago, Ill. Lithuanian D. Saweayn ers Club {. Shuman Mitchell J, Roth Nena § DIST. 15 75 LIVONIA AVENUE New York City UNION (WO Branch 216| Workers Org. | Alex. Cinkis M, Milian Maen John Malo Newark Scandin- | New Haven, Conn, Brooklyn, N. ¥. RESTAUR Reagent i= orP dh ae TWO Olgin Br. Chicago Mike Gonko Al Berniz |J. Yashin Dave Jones avian Wkrs. Club | Dr. S. Weissberg i ANT and ruaNG us 107 ... C. A. Archerson | § Dadierio Unit 505, C. P J. Baxter | Belleville Workers | L. Eisenman e Dickens 2-9160 BEER GARDEN SUMANERS, DERE AND FRESIRE Brie Munsen L. Sandback =| 4. Strom | Unit 520, Sec. 5 | Ramkey TE ee aaa ae . E. Bradbu: Medes I. M. Good C. Milnanovich - bea Jim Roons Finnish Workers Club, Mass., Mich. . € D Wo S INDUSTRIAL UNION fotarh Kepeco oat G FE. Smith N. Mihanovich pageant M. Gianos Finnish Workers Club, Wainola, Mich. Lorestegegeay MEMBER OF T.U,_U.'L. Allerton Ayenue Comrades! § Wrest. ih aieeet, Now reek Oly A. M. Galler J. Movi | Unit 908, C. P. A, A’Ambrois ot " M. Gianos Finnish Workers Club, Simar, Mich. Darema “A Student of Lena Pou | Unit 303, Com- |G. Asposito Or. O. Kolb D. Kronides Finnish Wkrs. Club, Woodspur, ee: pasta The Modern Bakery — bik gg paket I Section 6 B. Kaplan | munist Party B. Pabrono 8. A. Dropole D. Barbis Finn. Wkrs. Club, Ontonagaon, Mich. ASG was first to settle Bread Strike 31% Broadway, Now York City e Perking | L. Kaplan | Chicago, Tl, M. D’Ambrono | J: 8. Ruppert G. Koicheff Finnish Workers Club, Green, Mich. orci S 9 se e Gramerey, 5-8956 V. Yern F, Berezner cs, M.B aradiso J. Norton T. Vasiliades Finnish Wkrs. Club, Firestell, Mich. F h Pickle Work. and first to sign with the we taineaear New tot Oe C. Chao A. Shychet | T. Stern J. Ray A. Drexler A. Fabria Finn. Wkgwomen’s Club, Mass., Mich. rene icKkle orks FOOD WORKERS’ Gramercy’ 7-184 Hoffman Esther Young R. Apsit D. DeAngela Prank H. John Druumal Finn, Wkgwmns Club, Wainola, Mich. Dell & Rosen, Prop. NEEDLE TRADES WORKERS or, Olga 3, Kass M. Skulte D. Coccozr0 W. 8. Becker L, Bryan Finn. Wkgwmns Club, E. Br., Mich. OLIVES (Plain & Mixed) INDUSTRIAL UNION INDUSTRIAL UNION uori Gallin 4. Horman 4. Cink & Bie Steve Petrunic | Finn. Wkgkmns Club, Green, Mich. Top ViEvI OF Foor 1 ALLERTON AVE. 191 Wost 28th Strect, New York Oty Oscar Mehto B, Roos Karkus C. Hild A Friend Anton Ronceyich | Finn. Wkgwmns Cl., Woodspur, Mich.!] ORTHOPEDIC SHOES FOR DE- PICKLES : 69 oa Tactawasin | (58 - Ailja Rasane &, Levin Strosch J. Vancura pein operas I, Koyrek Finn. Wkgwmns Cl., Firesteel, Mich.'| FORMED FEET A SPECIALTY Hotels and Restaurants Supplied -—| E , Tom Haka - pone C. Michaelson Dave Skach Fis Chiptatcaens 4. Malnar DISTRICT 12 Arch Supporters saade to Order 304 HENRY STREET DOWNTOWN ection 3 me &, Masasal Jos. Phol ‘Anna Isaacson | C°V@land, Ohio | svenson Farmers & Workers Club 1823 SO, BOULEVARD New York City CARL BRODSKY oe en ae = Etre John Gesko Me tareon a Gordon | Working Womens Club Bronx, N. Y. Ai Ds toi ler * . Peskeritz James Pechoja ‘ eorge Kiroft Communist Party Unit Inds Schraun |B. Ginsberg Gulberg Arnold Miller | John Storm A. Tzonchett Byetiseh Cocenendioe Neds ee Golk Ua SUL GE JADE MOUNTAIN in Schraum | M. Milstein c. Klints Nucleus 166, Sec.1|Amnle Swanson | pete Koloft = Lain : : SURAN American & Chinese Restaurant j eo Son tous Winter" | fohamoa [a tora | Sremeen, owns once IN E || “tr'seconp avenug’ | Anonymous . a aes Winter Michael Singer | tog Angeles, Cal Marcoft Knappa, Ore. ’ PERE SURPRISE BAKERY ||| 799 Broadway Ni®. GC) Bet. 12 & 18 ‘ Bae! i. brug -y B. > iN. Galutz (Coed (co Jewell Jack ‘Serekin cart Bent say Hpaed as: roerngs Bread and Cake at Lowes! STuyvesant 9-5557 Welcome to Our Comrades ee ei penne frving Liss pent: Cok | 5. Fromholz icici i MESSINGERS Prices in Harlem soe nnmsenoat C. Williams | 2elia Ginsburg |. Lukis |. Fridm Lifton jH. Green International Workers Order sid ee: Gaui weln New York City yD i 7 ea uams | 2 Sonica 8. Fridman bees |H. Bohn Meets every 2d and 4th Fridey fesaeat bani ; in © Urowies {, Appel Petkentz | Baron | A Friend Ruth Martin a Natiinal Dalace Bronx, N, Y. ue ouchwotiz Chicago, Hl. K. Masasai Wells | Malvina Levy iS J, Laibman Second Ave. and Houston St. N.Y. Fresh Food—Proletarian Prices—30 FE. 13th St.—WORKERS’ CENTER er

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