The Daily Worker Newspaper, July 14, 1934, Page 2

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Page Two Bloek Police Terror! Nazi Lynch Court | Mass at Union Square Tonight at Downtown Councils Call Mass Meet; White Collar Workers Picket Today YORK.—The Downtown yment Councils has again led to all workers to mass at i Square tonight at 8 P. M to defeat any police plans to smash the regular Saturday night meet- ings of the Councils and terrorize the workers. Twice in the recent past police have smashed the regular Satur- day night meetings, clubbing the assembled workers while other po-| lice covered the défenseless workers | NEW with drawn guns. On Saturday, June 30, cops fired guns, brutally assaulted the workers, and jailed Freida Jackson, organize: of the Upper Harlem Unemployment | Council, and Paul Block, city or- ganizer of the Relief Workers’ League. On Tuesday, Magistrate Leonard McGee fixed bail at $500 each for these two workers and held them for the Grand Jury. Already the frame-up machinery of the police ee ge in well-oiled and in motion. Cops have produced pipes and black jacks which they claim were used by the workers. Block} and Jackson are charged with as- saulting two arméd cops who held leveled guns at the workers. In court, E. J. Peters, one of the cops, | admitted that he fired two shots,) and had beaten Freida Jackson. Only a mass outpouring of workers determined to defend their rights to the use of Union Square will prevent another sav- age attack by the LaGuardia ecps. In the past, when police broke up the Saturday night meetings, huge outpourings of workers on following nights forced the police to allow the} workers unmolested right to the Square. Mass at Union Square tonight at 8 P. M. Defend the right of | the workers to the use of Union Square. Demand that the La- Guardia cops keep their hands off employed and unemployed workers. White Collar Workers to Picket Relief Office NEW YORK.—A mass picket line of white-collar and professional) workers and their wivés and chil- dren will form at 12:30 Saturday before the headquarters of the Work Relief Division at the Port Authority Building, 111 Eighth Ave. The picket line, composed -of work- ing and fired relief workers will de- mand the immediate re-instate- ment of the 6,000 relief workers fired last week and an end to future firings. * School Teachers Demand Relief Jobs Continue NEW YORK.—Hundreds of relief teachers on projects 69 and 177, remedial teaching; project 270, con- tinuation, and project 279, adult education, demonstrated at the Port Authority Building Thursday night in protest over Col. DeLam- ater’s refusal to meet with their delegation demanding immediate re-instatement of laid-off workers. Speaking from the stand, teach- ers expressed their indignation at the manner in which their deie- gates had been treated. Florence Turnansky, chairman of projects 69 and 177 ovganization affiliated with the A. O. P. E. E,, scored the use of police, adding: “Many of us have been unemployed for five years. We will fight for the continuation of these relief jobs while at the same time continuing the struggle for wregular appointments.” The meeting was adjourned to Saturday, July 14, at 12:30, at which time the teachers will join the white collar workers’ picket line at 111 Eighth Ave. eae he ae Lincoln, Neb. Jobless Win. LINCOLN, Neb.—A three weeks’ struggle here won a 50 per cent. in- crease in relief to the county, and a rise of 25 per a, in rélief. to families. = Duluth Seamen Spike Heed Labor. DULUTH, Minn.—Duluth seamen won decent quarters, three meals daily, free medical aid and razor blades to all unémployed seamen. Meet Sunday at Irving Plaza at 1 P. M. NEW YORK.—Elected delegates from the city. work relief projects and members of the Relief Work- ers League will meet at Irving Plaza, Sun., July 15, at 1 p. m. to plan action against the mass lay- offs of relief workers and to lay the basis for strugglés on the jobs. Struggles and s‘rike actions similar to the strike of the workers on the Fort Jay Governors Island military project will be planned, and a city-wide campaign against the layoff of 15,000 relief workers will be started. Elected delégates from the work projects will report, and actions will be started leading to strike votes on the jobs. Connecticut Relief Cases Soar HARTFORD, Conn—Relief rolls for May for the state, as a whole, totalled 185,915 persons, an increase of 86,000 over Jan.-1, state relief reports show. Figures for Hartford alone show an increase of 10 per cent from April 1 to May 1, and & further increase of 8 per cent to June_ 20. . 8 O'Clock : A. F. BLANCHARD Negro veteran elected to the 7th International Congress of War Veterans. ‘Negro Vet To Go To Int'l Congress As WESLDelegate Nat'l Collier Launches $5,000 Drive for Fighting Fund NEW YORK—The Committee in charge of the $5,000 Veteran Fight- ing Fund has mailed out 5,000 sub- scription lists containing space for ten names for contributions. Their slogan is 50.000 contributors to the Veteran Fighting Fund. The two regular delegates to the 7th World Congress of the Inter- national Association of Veterans are Emanuel Levin, National chairman of the Workers Ex-Servicemen’s League and A. F. Blanchard, a Negro war veteran from Chicago. These were elected at the meeting of the W.E.S.L. members at the recent Rank and File Convention in Washington last May. Blanchard is a native of Louis- | and a fireman by occupation. | He was discharged as a Sergeant from Company I, 803 Pioneer In- fantry. He was engaged in the A. E. ‘F. and on the Meuse-Argonne front. Comrade Blanchard is well known in Chicago as an active fighter not only in the veteran movement Of the W.E.S.L. but also in the militant struggles of the unemployed and employed workers. He is a member of the National Committee of the Veterans National Rank and File. In 1933, he was in charge of sup- plies at the Rank and File Con-/| vention and gained the full sup- port not only of the white and Negro veterans of the North but also of the Freiheit Outing On Hudson Today, NEW YORK.—The annual ex- cursion of the Morning Freiheit is to be held today on the Hudson River steamer “Clermont.” The destination of the excursion Bear Mountain, where a_ shore program of athletics, games and entertainment has been arranged in addition to the shipboard pro- gram. There will be dancing on board to the music of King Da- vid’s Orchestra, and group singing. Every passenger will hold a stub which will give him a chance to win a free round trip to the Chi- cago World Fair. The Clermont leaves Pier “A” at Battery Park at 2 pm, Tickets at the boat are $1.10. Children under 14 will pay only 50 cents. ‘Cops Murder Three Relief Workers To Plan Layoff Action Cleveland Jobless (Continued from Page 1) a vicious injunction, were arrested Thursday afternoon. A. V. Cannon, chairman of the Cuyahoga County Relief Adminis- tration, on Friday asked that police be stationed at the 13 district relief offices. A short time ago, in fact, immediately after the events in Toledo, the city of Cleveland appro- priated $700,000 for the police de- partment, and bought radio equipped cars and more horses for the mounted police. The enraged working population of Cleveland are developing a big protest movement and sending mass delegations to the mayor and the city councilmen, who, together with the City Council, under the pressure of mass demonstration, were forced on June 15 to adopt resolutions favoring cash rent. payments to small home owners, against the relief cuts and against evictions: The massacre today shows the true face of these politicians to the working. popula- tion. A mass protest meeting is being arranged, and all working class mass organizations are preparing a mass funeral to the murdered workers. Workers everywhere should rush protests to the mayor of Clevelend, to the governor of Ohio, Chief of Police of Cleveland, and to the Cuyahoga County Relicf administration, to the} DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, JULY 14, 1934 Begins Work Today, 1) (Conkcnued. from ities neh tribunal—the newly ogus “People’s Court”—has_ been | forward for today, 14, in-| ead of July 16, as previously an- nounced by Nazi authorities in| Berlin. | Hitler's hangmen who will preside over the lynch court soon to begin its work of railroading Ernst Thael- mann, leading German anti-fascist | fighter and other anti-fascists to} the executioner’s axe were named | yesterday. Dr. Fritz Rehm, who heads a divi- on of the Prussian Supreme Court, | 11 head the new Nazi tribunal | | designed to prevent another defeat |to the Nazis such as administered | by the heroic Dimitroff and world- | wide mass pressure in the trial of} the four Reichstag defendants be- | |fore the Leipzig Supreme Court |which, despite a personal appear- ance of Prussian Premier Hermann Goering, was forced to acquit the | four defendants. | _ Hitler himself named the judges. | There will be 32 of them, to hold office for five years according to Hitler's hopes. Twelve will be hand- | picked career jurists, two high army men, two high naval officers, a rep- esentative of the Reichswehr ry, five Nazi party officials, | | five officers of the Hitler troops, and | four aviation department officers, | Ernst Thaelmann, tortured, cour- | ageous leader of the German work- | }ing class and head of the heroic) | Communist Party of Germany is | slated to be one of the first victims | of the lynch courts, which are em- |powered to pass and execute the |death sentence within 24 hours, and |from whose murderous decisions there is no appeal. The judges will be sworn in at 10 a. m, Saturday, July 14. The setting forward of the date for the opening of the courts clearly cal- culated to take the world working class and anti-fascists off their guard. This maneuver and_ its threat of a speedy murder of Ernst | Thaelmann must evoke tumultuous protests from the workers and all anti-fascists throughout the coun- try. An urgent. appeal for intensifica- tion of the mass fight to rescue Thaelmann was made yesterday by Dr. Kurt Rosenfeld, Germany’s most noted political defense attorney and former Minister of Justice of Prussia, in an interview with the Federated Press. Dr. Rosenfeld declared, in part: “I am firmly convinced that the Reichstag fire defendants, Dimi- troff, Popoff, Taneff and Torgler, would have been convicted had not world pressure been brought to bear upon the German govern- ment. This will be true in the case of Thaelmann and all other political prisoners. Only con- | nued and growing pressure from | workers and sympathetic intellec- tuals from all over the world will force the Nazis to free their vic- | tims.” created Calls For Mass | Outpouring For Monday’s Meeting NEW YORK. — The Anti-Nozi | Federation of N. Y¥. yesterday ap- pealed to all anti-fastists to sup- port the “Free Thaelmann” demon- stration before the German Con- sulate today, and to rally to the Mass Trial of Hitler and fascism to be held Monday evening at the St. Nicholas Arena, 69 West 66th St., under the auspices of the Federa- tion. Dr. Kurt Rosenfeld, one of the major witnesses at the two-day hearing of the American Inquiry Commission, which condemned the Hitler “People’s Courts” as instru- ments of legalized murder, will tes- tify on the atracities of the Hitler regime of hangmen. Dr. Rosenfeld, defense lawyer for Thaelmann and Torgler, has been forced to flee Germany where his right to prac- |tise law has been taken from him. Other witnesses at the Mass Trial, most of whom also testified at the American Inquiry Commis- sion, will include Aneurin Bevans, member of the Welsh Miners Fed- eration and Labor Party member of the British parliament, Maria Hal- berstadt, former German High School teacher, James Waterman Wise, who recently returned from Europe, Hans Baer, German ref- ugee, and Rabbi Benjamin Gold- stein. Allan Taub, who participated in the American Inquiry Commis- sion, will act as prosecutor. Anti-Fascist Rally In Baltimore Tonight BALTIMORE, July 13.—A huge open-air meeting against fascism and for the freedom of Ernst Thael- mann, Angelo Herndon and the Scottsboro Boys will be held to- morrow night (Saturday) 8 o'clock, at Bank and Broadway. The Communist Party which is organizing the demonstration has invited all working class organiza- tions and anti-fascists to actively participate in the action. Boe ie Workers Clubs To Picket Consulate Monday NEW YORK.—Monday’s picketing of the German Consulate, 17 Bat- tery Place, will be conducted by the Associated Workers Clubs, which is calling on all of its member clubs and their memberships to mass in front of the consulate from 9 a. m. to 5 p, m. Monday. Pee * Chicago Cops Arrest Consulate Pickets (Daily Worker Midwest Bureau) CHICAGO, Ill, July 12, — Five Negro and white workers picketed the German Consulate here yester- day for nearly an hour, when they were surrounded by police and ar- rested, This was the most successful picketing demonstration held here in the Free Thaelmann campaign, as previous pickets were arrested as soon as they appeared. Thousands of passersby greeted the pickets and their banners de- | manding the release of German clas3-wer prisoners: with a sym- | pathetic respo; The International Labor De- fense raised bail and won the re- | Painters Rank and File Protective |cept a resolution condemning the GUTTERS OF NEW YORK 1K “An X inv: ented. z —News Item. BETWEEN ~The LINES Police BRUTALITY FOR, WORKERS — MILLIONS For WaLL Sr. X-ray lens to be attached to spectacles has been | janother organization had already by del WuTIOnARY xt Committee exo me ERD = | ‘Painters Will Meet Today To Plan New. Fight on Zausner | 800 Members Mass at} District ‘Council Offices NEW YORK. — Rank and file painters will strike another blow at | the weakened Zausner machine to- day at a mass meeting in Irving Plaza Hall, 15th St. and Irving Pl. where plans will be outlined for further action to oust Philip Zaus- ner, district council secretary and his illegally elected henchmen from the district council offices. The meeting is to be a follow-up of the thunderous but well-disci-~ plined demonstration held on Thursday, in front of the District Council headquarters, 24 W. 14th St., by 800 rank and file members of New York locals. Massed be- fore the entrance, the painters raised ear-splitting shouts of “Down with Zausner” and “Out with the racketeers and the gangsters.” The demonstration, called by the Association and the Joint Action Committee, started with a mass meeting in Union Square. Later the painters marched in a body to the District Council offices. They elected bes delegation of seven to present to Officials the demands of the rank land file Zausner and the other get out of office and that new elec- tions be called at once, 2 Protest Meets in Pittsburgh Tonight (Continued from Page 1) drawing his gun and shooting Sos- nowski in the knee, The latter is now in the hospital and will be arrested on his release, on a charge of “disorderly conduct.” South Side workers are demand- ing the discharge, arrest, and pros- ecution of Chapman, and a delega- tion will force these demands before the Police Research Commission at its next session, A mass trial will also be held to- morrow night in tr- Foster Hall, 4310 Butler Street, Lawrenceville, at which Police Lieutenant Knopf and the four patrolmen who assisted him in beating up Leroy Davis a week ago will be tried before a working class jury. Witnesses will describe the bloody assault on Davis, Negro worker active in the Unemployed Council, who is now serving 30 days in Blawnox on a framed up charge. Harry Haywood, National Secre- tary of the League of Struggle for Negro Rights, will speak at the mass trial, on the subsect of Negro op- pression in the Pittsburgh District. The trial begins at 8 p. m. Haywood will also speak at an L. S. N, R, mass meeting in the Pythian Temple, 2133 Centre Ave- nue, Monday night at 8 p. m. charged with “disorderly conduct” by cops of the Lincoln Park force, Pe ueer cca i Cyclists, Roller Skaters To Head Brooklyn Thaelmann Parade BROOKLYN .—Bicycle and roller- skating brigades of young workers will head a “Free Thaelmann” parade starting at 5 o'clock this af- ternoon from Pennsylvania and Sutter Aves. The parade will proceed to Rut- Jand and Rockaway Parkway, where a demonstration will be held. The action is organized by the Brooklyn section of the Associated Workers Clubs. © . London Anti-Fascists Demand “Free Thaelmann” LONDON, July 13.—Placards at an anti-fascist demonstration here yesterday carried slogans reading: “Fascism is Murder and War. Hitler’s Real Debt is 2,597 Mur- dered and 160,000 im prison. Fas- cist assassins, Free Thaclmann.” Co ee Philadelphia Picketing PHILADELPHIA, July 12.—Mem- bers of the Communist Party pick- eted the local German Consulate yesterday. A delegation from the Haywood Patterson branch of the Interna- tional Labor Defense forced its way into the Consulate, but found the Consul, Arno P. Mowitz, locked in his office. His clerk refused to ac- Pittsburgh Masses! Demand Cops Stop ? Attacking Negroes Delegation Protests the) Slugging, Jailing of Unemployed Worker PITTSBURGH, Pa. July 13.—A mass delegation of over 40 Negro and white workers from the Penn- Butler district in Pittsburgh visited the office of the superintendent of | police, A. Marshall Bell, last Mon- day and demanded that police brutalities cease in Penn Butler district. One Negro worker, an_ active Unemployment Council member was attacked and brutaily slugged by police. His bloody shirt was saved as evidence by his friends. Later on, he was arrested and sent up to the work-house in Biaunox. Another hearing was arranged in the afternoon. A smaller delega~ tion of 15, produced witnesses and evidence on the brutal police at- tack. The director of public safety, Marshall Bell, a former Spang Chalfont official, was forced to promise an immediate investiga- ion. He promised to visit this Negro worker, together with a representative of the I. L. D.,, at the work-house. Pickets Today Hit Scab Ship Sailing (Continued from Page 1) West Coast Strikers!”; Scab—Strike!”; Cargo!” Over thirty cops lined the street ready to attack the pickets. The orderly, militant and forceful manner of the pickets and the fact that many sympathizers lined the entrance to ths dock kept them standing in line. The mass demonstration this morning must strike a strong blow for the strike of the West Coast seamen and longshoremen. The M.W.1.U. is mobilizing its forces and calls on all militant workers for special cooperation in this fight. Joe Ryan (I. L. A. President) had his “delegates” at the pier yes- terday to try to incite trouble against the picketing seamen, and tO intimidate members of the I.L.A. to lead the scab ship. One of these gangsters whispered something to @ policeman. The policeman an- swered: “You can’t tell me that, These fellows are all seamen,” which was right. The seamen on the New York beach are arouse‘ over the strike issue, and are keep- ing a sharp eye out for scabs and scab ships. This is the second time this week that the M. W. I. U. has organized picketing against scab ships, The “Don’t “Don’t Load Scab ‘| first time, Monday, when the Vir- ginia came in a mass demonstra- tion of 1,500 workers took part. In addition to its picketing acti- vities the M. W. I. U. in New York is conducting a campaign for funds for the West Coast strikers. The union urges all who can to con- tribute for this struggle of the heroic workers on the West Coast. With a general strike in prospect, support is absolutely necessary to the strikers, kitchens and relief funds. Semd all funds to the M.W. IU., 140 Broad St. or direct to San Francisco. “ 1,700 Textile Workers On Strike in Gadsden, Ala. GADSDEN, Ala., July 13.—Picket- ing continued today at the Dwight Manufacturing Co. cotton mill, where 1,700 workers are out on strike against general working con- ditions, especially the stretch-out system, FREE FOR SOLIDARI lease of all of Ve pickets, who were Hitler murder regime and demand- ing the freedom of Thaelmann, 'L.S.U. Meet at M’Combs Dam Park Support of Paris Anti-War Congress NEW YORK.—In preparation for the International Sports Congress Against War and Fascism, which will be held in Paris, Aug. 11 to 15, track and field meets will be held in New York and Chicago, to- morrow, under the auspices of the Labor Sports Unién. In New York the meet is scheduled for McCombs Dam Park, at 4 p. m, Although the New York District of the Labor Sports Union applied for a permit to use the fleld from |12 noon, they were shunted to the four o’clock hour on the excuse that been granted the noon time. The Red Sparks A..C., the Spar- tacus A. C., the Brooklyn A. C., the Sterling A. C., the Rutgers Club and the Young Workers A. C. are |among the organizations which are participating in the meet. In the Chicago events workers from fac- tories and shops in Southern Il- linois, Gary, Indiana and Chicago are entered. Paris Delegates Leave Aug. 1 Delegates to the Sports Congress will leave for Paris on the mid- night of Aug. 1, the International Day of Struggle Against War and Fascism. Detroit, Cleveland, Phila~- delphia, Minnesota and Upper Michigan are among the other dis- tricts taking part in the campaign for sending them. Tonight, the proceeds to go for | the benefit of the Paris meet, the Bronx Hungarian Workers Sports Section and the Young Workers of Yorkville will stage their annual sports carnival at the clubhouse of the former, 642 Southern Boulevard. BASEBALL NATIONAL LEAGUE Pittsburgh New Yorw Cincinnati Brooklyn Cincinnati Chicago Boston i Chicago at Boston. AMERICAN Leguae New York... Detroit Washington .. Cleveland ....... Washington at Cleve Frisco Strike Action Grows (Continued from Page 1) coast aa pom 2oce 100 miles radius from San Francisco will be completely in the grip of the general strike. In Oakland 260 pickets visited several cafes and night clubs dur- ing the early morning and forced them to close. ss San Francisco building trades workers announced that they were preparing to join the strike move- ment. The main highways of the city were onimously silent today. The only means of transportation still on the streets were the street-cars, but the street-car men are prepar- ing to join labor's great walkout, ° Light, heat and telephone serv- ice continued today. Strikers, how- ever, are pressing to draw all work- ers in these services into the strike, The owners of industry are terror stricken. A veritable stampede of the gasoline station and food stores continues. Governor Merriam, failing to halt the spread of the great strike by ordering troops to the water- front, announced that General Seth Howard had-been given full power to extend the guard patrol through- out the entire city. Thousands of telegrams have ar- rived at the office of the governor from labor organizations all over the county protesting the use of troops in the strike area. The Western Worker, official or- gan of the Communist Party on the west coast, has issued a call to all workers to repudiate the strategy committee and follow the teamsters, hackmen, butchers in the general strike movement. WEINSTONE SPEAKS AT PARTY PICNIC GRAND RAPIDS, Mich.—William Wein- stone, veteran Communist leader, will speak at the Communist Party picnic at the Workers Camp, Greens Lake, on ‘War =e Fascism” on Sunday. Admission is ree. WILLIAM FUCHS |A.F.L. Member Chosen] |As Philly Delegate To|| Dr. Maximilian Cohen Internat’nal Sport Meet | Tomorrow at 4 p.m. Chicago Events Also In} | at Against War and. Fascism, in Paris, August 11-15. The elec- tion took place on July 8, during a two-day sport rally to support the International meet. Petcoff is a hard young worker who has been blacklisted by em- ployers because of his activities in the recent knitgoods strike. Union Bares Plan Of Knitg’ds Heads To Dodge Contract Bosses’ Secret Parley Exposed by Knitgoods | Industrial Union NEW YORK, July Knitgoods Workers 13, — The facturers have laid secret plans to withdraw from contractual rela- tionships which they now have with the industrial union and sign new agreements with officials of the International and Textile Unions during the impending strike in the industry. The obvious reason for this move, the union declared, is to liquidate gains made by the, work- ers during the last strike. A state- ment issued by the industrial union declared, in part: “Any attempts made by some of the manufacturers to intimidate and compel our members to be- long to a union not of their own choice, will be answered by such a fight whieh will prove costly to the manufacturers. “Our union is confident that we will, in the course of the General Strike, not only be able to secure the renewal of contractual rela- tions with our manufacturers, but additional International and Tex- tile members, as well as thousands of unorganized workers, will come out on strike in support of our de- mands, under the leadership of the Knitgoods Workers Industrial Union.” Strike of 3,000 Painters Ends PHILADELPHIA, July 13, —The strike of 3,000 painters in the Philadelphia district ended to- day when several large decorators agreed to pay the current wage of 90 cents an hour. Join the Red Builders! Earn Expenses Selling “Daily” Classified FURNISHED ROOM — Entrance entirely private; kitchen use small family; down- town. Call Franklin AL 4-5707. FACING BEACH, boardwalk, park. $3. Double $5. Bayview Place 2233 at Bay Parkway. GIRL COMRADE wishes to share fur- nished room; kitchen privileges. 382 E. 19th St., Apt. 15. SACRIFICE attractive airy room (man), private, shower, elevator. 145 Second Ave. Apt. 20. GR. 17-2088. TO RENT Furnished room, 243 F. 18th St. near Second Ave. Sollins. BEAUTIFUL sunny room for 1-2 persons. All improvements. 58 H. Seventh St. Kaploff. Inquire all week. COUPLE want furnished airy apartment. Few months or longer. Reliable, Call AL. 4-7954. MALE COMRADE going to Soviet Union wants to meet and study Russian with comrade (male) who also intends going. ‘Write Box 1, Daily Worker. COMRADE GOING by car to Los Angeles has room for 4, Share expenses. Jack Levy, 1844 74th St., Brooklyn, Beech- view 2-862. CAPABLE stenographer wanted. Come between 10-12, National Committee De- fense Political Prisoners, Room 534, 156 Fifth Ave, ATTENTION! Astoria Comrade who wanted to sell his truck to children camp call AL, 4-5%07. 250 FOLDING CHAIRS 55c John Kalmus Co. *“wuzy nin ise NEW HEALTH CE PHILADELPHIA.—Manny Pet- coff, a member of- the American | Federation of Labor, and a knit- | the International Congress | Industrial | Union charged today that manu-/ MUr’y Hill 4-5447 All Comrades Meet at the DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet. Pitkin and Sutter Aves., Brooklyn PHONE: DICKENS 2-3012 Office Hours: 8-10 A.M., 1-2, 6-3 P.M ‘ Dental Surgeon 41 Union Sq. W., N. Y. C; After 6 P.M. Use Night Entrance 22 EAST i7th STREET Suite 703-GR, 17-0135 goods worker, was elected to re} | the Philadelphia sec- | EERE. = tion of the Labor Sports Union | DR. EMIL EICHEL \ DENTIST 150 E. 93rd St., New York City Cor. Lexington Ave. ATwater 9-8838 Hours: 9 a. m, to 8p. m. Sun. 9 to 1 Member Workmen's Sick and Death Benefit Fund WILLIAM BELL—_—_—_ OFFICIAL Optometrist gftars | 106 EAST 14th STREET Near Fourth Ave., N. ¥. C. CAthedral 8-6160 Dr. D. BROWN Dentist 317 LENOX AVENUE Between 125th & 126th St., N.¥.C, COHEN’S 117 ORCHARD STREET Nr. Delancey Street, New York City EYES EXAMINED By JOSEPH LAX, 0.D. Optometrist Wholesale Opticians Tel. ORchard 4-45%0 Factory on Premiss PANTS TO MATCH Your Coat and Vest Paramount Pants Co., Inc. 693 Broadway SP 17-2659 WE MATCH ALL SHADES AND PATTERNS LERMAN BROS. STATIONERS and UNION PRINTERS Special Prices for Organizations 29 EAST 14th STREET New York City ALgonquin 4-3356—4-8843—4-7823 Comrades Patronize JADE MOUNTAIN American & Chinese Restaurant 197 SECOND AVENUE (Bet, 12th and 13th St.) N. ¥. U. Comrades Patronize VIOLET CAFETERIA 28-30 WAVERLY PLACE New York City WHERE Our Comrades EAT | RAPOPORT'S DAIRY and VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT 93 Second Ave. N. Y. City 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 Garment Section Workers Patronize Navarr Cafeteria 333 7th AVENUE —————o—— Restaurant and Garden KAVKAZ" Russian and Oriental Kitchen BANQUETS AND PAR’ 382 East lith Street New Nore City Tompkins Square 6-913% NTER CAFETERIA |_____Fresh Food—Proletarian Prices—50 E, 13th St.—WORKERS’ CENTER. SUNDAY (Music, Dramatics, Satires, Etc.) (Concert Trio, Theatre Brigade, Pantomines, Chorus, JULY 15 10 A. M, to Midnight SECOND ANNUAL LR.T. or B.M.T. subways as GAMP NITGEDAIGET BEACON-ON-THE-HUDSON, NEW YORK ALL NIGHT! TY CONCERT Ete.) WE'VE ROOM FOR YOU NOW! FIVE PIECE REGISTRATION AGA Cars leave from 270 Bronx Park Fast daily at 10:30 A.M. Fridays and LE LS Strays at 10 A.M., 3 & 7 P.M. Tel. BStabrook 8-1100. Rate—sit a Wk. (Swimming, Tennis, Dancing, Etc.) INSTRUCTION IN SPORTS (Swimmjng, Tennis, Dancing, Etc.) Improved Athletic Field North Beach PICNIC PARK ASTORIA, L. IL. Trade Union Picnic Dancing — Games — Sports — Theatre Prominent Labor Leaders Will Speak Auspices; TRADE UNION UNITY COUNCIL DIRECTIONS: Second Ave. L to Ditmars Ave., Astoria, L. I, buses to the Park, well as Thence Admission 5c JAZZ BAND IN OPEN! !

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