The Daily Worker Newspaper, August 28, 1934, Page 2

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Page Two DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUE AY, AUGUST 28, 1934 National Guard Company Elects Anti-War Congress Delegate; Special Train Will Curry Eastern Delegations to Ark on sas ToSend 15 To Parley Guardsmen in Illinois Respond to Appeal of Committee CHICAGO. Nations ted a dele- S. Congress r and Fascism, in Chi- t 29 and 30. Requests mation about this Congress have come from several other regi- ments of the National Guard. In none of tt the commit- contact with the Guar r Two delegates have already been from a Methodist Church or side. The Youth Arrangements Com- mittee is nning to mobilize the youth of Chicago in a tremendous} parade on the eve of the Congress Friday, Sept. 28, which will start from Twenty-Second and Went-| worth Streets to march to the great mass meeting in the Coliseum which will open the Congres: Ail who can off to help the Arra s services | Commit- tee of the Youth Section should report at 5 Norin Wabash, Room 1500. pecial Train to Chicago NEW YORK jal anti-war Special train to cago at low rates has been chartered by the America: Fascism, to carry deleg: Second Congress Against War and in Chicago, Sept. 28, 29 1 will make con- Newark, Patersor Buffalo, Jamestown, Pittsburgh, Youngstown, Cleveland, Akron and other cities. Delegates from Phila delphia, Boston, etc., will take the train in New York. The delegates’ rate is $18.95 round trip New York! to Chicago and includes two meals on the train going to Chicago. Vis- itors may obtain a special visitors’ rate of $20 round trip. Arrangements for the special train have been made by the Amer- ican League Against War and Fa: cism through the World Tourist: Inc. Tickets can be obtained onl} through the National Office of the League in New York City. Both delegates and visitors have the privilege of staying ten days in Chicago if they wish. with Dozen Delegates from Arkansas GREENWOOD, Ark., Aug. 27.— The Provisional Committee for the | Second U. S. Congress Against War | and Fascism announced today that | Arkansas will send from 12 to 15 delegates to the Congress Against War and Fascism. | At last year’s Congress Arkansas was one of the few states which Was not represented by one dele- gate. The delegation will travel by | truck and will include miners, farmers, sharecroppers, students, members of church organizations, Socialists, Communists and others. a Classified MEN WANTED—Energetic, with some sales experience. Knowledge of newsstand con- tact and distribution desirable. Must have appearance and personality. Write briefly, giving experience and references, both political and commercial, Box 71, care of Daily Worker MAN OR WOMAN WANTED—Sales experi- ence, preferably advertising. Good ap- pearance; pleasant personality. Small drawing account against commission. Write briefly, giving experience. and references. Box 70, care of Daily Worker 2 ROOMS—Partly furnished, in rear of club. Good for 2 comrades. $20. Box “C’ Daily Worker. EXCELLENT 1- 2-43 studios. Furnished or unfurnished. (Vicinity Union Square) Reasonable. Modern (elevator). 145 Second KITCHENETTE, room and bath, upper West Side. Furnished. Modern ‘elevator apartment, Until Oct. Ist. Extremely reasonable. Box 18, care of Daily Worker. FOR BROWNSVILLE PROLETARIANS LEADING COMMUNIST PARTY CANDIDATES FOR NEW YORK STATE ELECTIONS IN NOVEMBER Hunt Negroes | After Attack’ By Overseers Lynch Posse Seeks Two as Invading White Slave Drivers Die CHARLESTON, Mo., Aug. 26—A man hunt was started yesterday in this Missourn community for two itinerant Negro field hands, follow- ing a fight between Negro laborers and white slave-driving overseers on ~% the Tynearson Plantation at Wolf Island, southeast of here. In the fight, Jess and Don Cofer, two of| the m t were killed. Mose Hurley and his brother are brutal of the overseers, being hunted by lynch posses, aided by the sheriff’s forces, Four other Negroes are under arrest. Relations between the white ovez- seers and Negro laborers have been tense for some time, as a result of repeated brutal attacks on the workers, intensive speed-up and terrible working and living condi- tions. The final provocation oc- curred Sunday night, when over- seers with drawn guns invaded a dance being held at the shack of Hurley's brother. The dead overseers were killed with their own guns, wrested from them during the ensuing struggle. Although the Negro workers acted in self-defense, and it is also is not known who fired the fatal shots, Hurley and his brother are charged with the death of the two overseers. Their oppression and plundering | of the Negro masses challenged by the militant self-defense of the gro laborers on the Tynear Plantation, the whole rich landlord class and their hangers-on have joined the man hunt for the Hur- ley brothers. Gorman Moves To Block Strike rom Frage 1) will have to be answered by the Board.” “Will you allow the strike to be mediated by the National Labor Relations Board without the grant- ing of all the workers’ demands?” “None of the principal demand that is, hours and wager. We | ize, of course, that ther | technical problems i: |the stretch-out. We wan’ | that and we want a will! e are certain £ on ness on _|the part of the employers to give some relief. We want an agreement jon their part on some specified for- _|mula for reducing the machine load.” | pobeeter dt ESAS | Painters’ Local 499 | Will Press Fight | | | Su || NEW YORK.—The campaign o ~'chows himself to be a gangster or- | for Charter Return| The candidates (I. to r.) are: Isr: Burroughs, for Lieutenant-Governor; Fred Bruel, for Attorney-General; Max Bedacht, for U. S. Senator; Ro: ‘ael Amter, for Governor; William J. Wortis, for State Comptroller; Clarence Hathawny, for Congressman, Seventh District, Kings County; ‘Terror Against) ‘Militant Group | NEW YORK.—A terror campaign | against left wing members of the International Ladies Garment} Workers Union was discussed at its last Joint Board Executive meet- ing, the Daily Worker yesterday | Jearned on unimpeachable autho. y. Proposals for a thuggery drive | vere brought in on the bi of complaints by Char Zimmerman, | manager of Local 22, against left Organization Manager Charles Cherkins, according to the report, has been assigned to get the neces- sary thugs. “The Turk,” notorious | throughout the needle trades mar- | ket, as a knife-wielding gangster, | will lead the campaign of attacking | workers who are active in their op- sition to the treacherous policies of Zimmerman and the rest of the I. L. G. W. U. leaders. All these elaborate preparations jto “break up the opposition,” it was pointed out yesterday, are leading |to a stoppage in the dress trade, |which the union leaders fear wiil| |be turned into a genuine strike by| | the militants. | Left wing workers when inter- viewed by the Daily Worker re- porter assailed Zimmerman in par-| ticular. “Zimmerman who has posed as a progressive all this time now 2 ganizer against the workers,” one worker said. “The left wing will jtake necessary steps to defend |themselves against ‘Turk’ and his| crew and defend their rights to op- pose treacherous policies in the} | union,” | | Zimmerman is a member of the renegade Lovestone group, expelled} from the Communist Party in 1929 |fot propogating opportunist theories | and for carrying on anti-Communist Policies, ih cad ° om] Plans Communists Name 187 On State Ticket campaign manager, ever to be waged in New York by the Communist Party. Included in the campaign activities, he said, will be the distribution of 2,000,000 pieces of literature, more than 100,000 “Vote Communi buttons, as well as additional millions of leaflets, posters and stick Ail sympa- The complete list of Communist State candidates follows: STATE TICKET Governor—Israel Amter, New York City Lieutenant-Governor—Williana J. Bur- roughs, Jamaica, L. I. State Comptroller—Rose Wortis, Bronx Attorney General—Fred Briehl, Walkill Chief Judge of Court of Appeals—Richard B. Moore, New York City Associate Judge of Court of Appeals—Ger- trude Welsh, Rochester United “tates Senator—Max Bedacht, Brooklyn Two. Congressmen, elected at large—Henry A. Sheppard, Buffalo, and Emanuel Levine, New York City New York and Bronx Counties Justices of the Supreme Court First Judicial District Leo Hofbauer Grace Hutchins Herman Mackawain Harry Haymond James Steele Kings, Queens, Richmond, Nassau, Suffolk Counties Justices cf the Supreme Court Second Judicial District Nat Stevens George Powers Susie Busse LIST OF COMMUNIST PARTY CANDI- DATES DESIGNATED FOR PRIMARY ELECTIONS SEPTEMBER 13, 1934 anizations will be | a Carl Brodsky, for Assembly, E ighth District, New York County; Emanuel Levin and Henry Sheppard, for Congress-at-Large, and Ben Gold, for Assembly, Seventh District, Bronx County. Biggest Campaign Ever Waged by Party in State | Planned by Committee—Amter and Williana Burroughs Head List NEW YORK.—The complete state ticket of the Com- munist Party in the Fall elections, consisting of 187 can- didates, was announced here yesterday by Carl Brodsky, state In releasing the list, Brodsky announced details of one of the most widespread campaigns®- cond District—Morris Send third District—Jack Schiller Alderman Fifteenth District—Alexander Trachtenberg BRONX COUNTY Municipal Court Judge Second District—Leon Blum Congressmen t (includes part of ) Richard Sullivan Moissaye Olgin District (includes part Westchester County)—Pat Toohey Twent Twenty of State Senators -first Distric! 'y Lichtenstein nty-second District—Abraham Skolnic’: y-third District—Nafhan Schaeffer Assemblymen First District—Helen Lynch Second Distri Third District Fourth District—Philip Novack Fifth District—Clara Bodian Sixth District—Sam Nessin Seventh District—Ben Gold Eighth District—Eddie Smith Alderman Thirty-second District—Lawrence Barron QUEENS COUNTY Congressmen First District (also includes Suffolk and Nassau Counties)—August Hankel Second District—Paul P. Croshie Ninth District (inciudes part of Kings County—Tillie Littinsky State Senators Second District—Willie Deniels Third District—Booker T. Morgan Assemblymen First District—George Willner Second District—Celia Balogh Third District—Oreste Menegon Pourth District—Otto Popovich Fifth District—Abraham Goldstein Sixth District—Alfred Wagenl-necht KINGS COUNTY Municipal Court Judge Seventh District—Dan Truppin ®State Senator 25th District | State Senator 26th District Kenneth Wal- ters, New Rochelle Lucio Fellepa, Mount Vernon | Assemblyman i A.D.—Domenic Tuccillo, Mount Vernon i; Assemblyman 2. A.D.—Louls G. Haas, Jr., White Plains Assemblyman 3 A.D.—Max Shelkan, Yon- k Assemblyman 4 A.D. Yonkers Assemblyman 5 A.D. Samuel N. Greene, ‘William R. Gill, Yon- kers District Attorney—Evin Wagner, Yonkers SULLIVAN COUNTY State Senator 27th District—Abraham Mal- isoff, Woodridge Assemblyman—Charles Steffens, Monticello County Treasurer—Morris Balin, Monti- cello DUTCHESS COUNTY man 1A.D.—Edward Deutsch, Beacon Assemblyman 2 A.D.—Ignacio Capuani, Poughkeepsie Commissioner of Public Welfare—Lewis Owens, Beacon NASSAU COUNTY Assemblyman 1 A.D.—Aryo Mattson, Elmont Assemblyman 2 A.D.—William Meyer, Mineola District. Attorney—William Wimberley, Great Neck Comptroller—Jofferson Wallace, Mineola Surrogate—John Blazier, Hicksville Sheriff—Morris Feldman, Glen Cove SUFFOLK COUNTY Assemblyman—Maurice Berto, Babylon Sheriff—Kerl Waisane, Huntington County Clerk—Joseph Chester, Glen Cove Nassau and Suffolk Gounties State Senator Ist District—Mauro LaFor- gia, Glen © ALEANY COUNTY State Senator 30th District—Stephen L. Gleason, Albany Assem Assemblyman—Marvin Lake, Gloversville Sheriff—Ernest T. Johnson, Northampton Comimissioner of Public Welfare—Leona O. Sweet, Johnstown County Clerk—J. Dake, Gloversville SCHENECTADY COUNTY Assemblyman 1 A.D.—Dan Micole, Schenec- ady Assemblyman 2 A.D.Margaret Walker, Sche- nectady County Clerk—Marvin Neil, Schenectady Saeriff—Harry Daniels—Schenectady ¢ Fulton, Hamilton, Herkimer and Lewis Counties State Senator 35th Dist—Fay Thompson, Gloversville Schenectady, Montgomery and Fulton Counties Congressman 30th Dist.—Clarence Carr, Gloversville Onondaga County State Senator 38th Dist.—Philip Zimmer- man, Syracuse Courtiand, Chenango and Broome Counties State Senator 40th Dist—Sofie Schether, Binghamton Schuyler, Tompkins, Tioga and Chemung Counties State Senator 41st Dist.—Arvo Salo,Spen- cer Steuben, Yates and Ontario Counties State Senator 43rd Dist.—Lawrence A. Van ‘Demands En Of Yellow Dog Rule on LR.T. Workers Demands Mrs. Herrick Act NEW YORK.—Protesting against the notorious yellow dog contract that employes of the Interborough Rapid Transit Company are forced to sign when entering the employ of the company, John Santo, gen- eral secretary of the Transport Workers Union (Independent), has | written to Mrs, Elinore Herrick of the Regional Labor Board demand- ing that the board “definitely as- sure all I.R.T. employes of their irrevecable <i bargain collectively.” The yellow dog contract, which employes aie compelled to sign at the time of hiring and which forces them into a company union says: “In conformity with the policy adopted by the Brotherhood and consented to by the company, and as a condition of employment, I ex- Pressly agree that I will 1emain a | member of the Brotherhood during the time I am employed by the company and am eligible to mem- | bership therein; that I am not, and will not become identified in any manner with the Amalgamated As- sociation of Street and Electric Rail- way Employes of America, or with any other association of street rail- way or other employes, with the exception of this Brotherhood, and the Voluntary Relief Department of the company while a member of the Brotherhood or in the employ of the company, and that a viola- tion of this agreement or the in- terference with any member of the Brotherhood in the discharge of his duties or disturbing him in any manner for purpose of breaking up or interfering with the Brotherhood Shall of itself constitute cause for dismissal from the employ of the company.” — WORKERS WELCOME — NEW CHINA CAFETERIA Chinese Dishes __.______ 20e. American Dishes 250 848 Broadway bet. 19th # 14th st. Williamsburgh Comrades Welcome De Luxe Cafeteria 94 Graham Ave. Cor. Siegel St. EVERY BITE A DELIGHT I, J. MORRIS, Inc. GENERAL FUNERAL DIRECTORS 296 SUTTER AVE. BROOKLYN Phone: Dickens 2-1273—4—5 Night Phone: Dickens 6-5369 For International Workers Order Secretary of Transport) ght to organize and} Chicago Reliet Low As Distress Increases Hodson Admits Fourth of N. Y. Population Lacks Food NEW YORK. — Declaring the | 400,000 families in the city a jmow receiving “substantial a: | sistance” in various forms of relie | Commissioner of Welfare Willia: | Hodson, in a semi-annual repor. stated that relief funds here a: | “still inadequate in“ many cases The number, he admitted, will be | about 500,000 families by winter. | “More and more people seem to | come to the end of their resources | with each new month,” Hodson said in commenting on the in- {creased demand for relief. | Hodson’s report on the present relief set-up in New York City, was itemized as follows: | 190,000 families are on home re- | lief, receiving $5 to $15 a month, | 125,000, mostly heads of families, on work relief average wages of $60 @ month, 23,500 children are in institutions at the expense of the Welfare De- partment. | 19,000 other children are being | cared for in homes other than in- stitutions. 9,000. homeless men and women | were given food and lodging dur- ing August, 22,500 aged destitute are being }cared for in their homes through the Old Age Security Act. | 2,900 families of veterans are re- | Ceiving relief in addition to 10,000 | on the home relief lists. | 800,000 free lunches are received by children in the schools. 7,500 families got medical aid. Although the report does not list | itemized expenditures for each re- lief item during the month, by | Hodson’s own admission, echoing statements by LaGuardia last week, the relief given is termed “inade- quate.” WHERE Our Comrades EA’ RAPOPORT'S DAIRY and VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT 93 Second Ave. N. Y. City WEST END TIRE SHOP Battery Service ..:-: ..Tires-All Makes 140 West End Avenue Cor, 66th St. Joe Litt DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY Office Hours: 8-10 A.M., 1-2, 6-3 P.M PHONE: DICKENS 2-3012 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet. Pitkin and Sutter Aves. Brooklyn Dr. Maximilian Cohen Dental Surgeon 41 Union Sq. W., N. Y. G After 6 P.M. Use Night Entrance 22 EAST 17th Suite 7083—GR. 1-0135 | DR. EMIL EICHEL DENTIST 150 E. 93rd St. New York City Cor. Lexington Ave. ATwater 9-8838 Hours: 9 a, m. to 8 p,m, Sun, 9 to 1 Member Workmen's Sick and Death Benefit Fund PAUL LUTTINGER, M. D. — AND — DANIEL LUTTINGER, M. D. Are Now Located at Local 499 of the Brotherhood : Workers Foil Nazi Picea to force the return of »e’ Actions at Rallies City and Local Offices NEW YORK CITY Delinder, Hornell c Dominick P Chatauqua ‘and Cattaragus Counties i a 5 WASHINGTON SQUARE NORTH, YEW YORK CITY Third District—Dominick Plaiant Sokal Cafeteria local’s charter, revoked by Philip Gly Qompigallestalgon, Bayon Fourth Distriet—Joe Roberts Biste) Ceoaibe flab. Dist wawiny” Lire, Fiona bare eel Eee la fa th som #4 NEW ¥ NTY Fifth District—Abraham Markoff the x 1989 PITKIN AVENUE Zausner and other leaders of the | seas Sixth Distriet_Robert Alfred Campbell | Otsego, Delawere, Broome and Chenango ee | Painters’ District Council No. 9, will | (Continued from Page 1) pp Seventh District—Ciarence Hathaway Counties — From Far and Near Workers Come to — a | be pushed at a mass meeting of all 2 é 1 PF cha ai Court Judge Kighth District-—Hyman Soe gies iti niet UTA atl J, Max- = Fear panp abe sapean Se ASTRA APSE TS! cond Dis rn Ninth District (includes part c - . Bingham TYPEWRITERS painters tonight at 8 o'clock at Man-|the terror rages against workers, | Third Dis wile eadtin Onondaga and Cortland Counties Cam Nit edai et mare hattan Lyceum, 66 E. 4th Street, }and all people who think that | Ninth Distr Is Congressman 35th Dist.—Sam Belkowitz, nts ; | in 6 me tha’ | Ninth District—Rut Syracuse REBUILT, | Local 499, whose charter was | their families should have the right Congressmen Fourth Distri hi Tompkins, Tioga, Chemung, Schuyler and Beacon-on-the-Hudson, New York GUARANTEED, || taken away as part of William/to eat and live. | Eleventh District (includes Richmond)— | Fifth District— jadimir Steuben Counties pg |Green’s drive against Communists} “In Los Angeles our meeting was in atssie Reed | Day Sixth District—Dennis Manning Congressman 37th Dist—Sammy A. Abbott, FOR THE YEAR’S BIG EVENT . } ‘a x i triet—Jos ri — iad QUICKEST | and militants, is sending out a pam-| attended by vigilantes, Nazis and |qhirteenth District trenry Forbes Rain Sti wags were Monroe County bor Day Week P: , SERVICE, _ giving the complete history of | silver Shirts, who tried to disrupt it. | Fourteenth District—Peter E. Cacchione | Ninth District—Joseph Garrafa Congressman 38th Dist.—Gertrude Welsh, ++ Labor Day Week Program! — \the case, to locals of the Painters | i j_| Fifteenth District—Dale Jones = Tenth District—Nathan LeRoy rochester F = Bi RENTED | Brotherhood throughout the coun- However, the workers in the audi~| ci(centh District—Pauline Rogers Eleventh District—Harry Cantor | congressman 39th Dist.—Canio Parrini, || NITGEDAIGET FOLLIES Theatre Brigade and Big Ohorus Underwoods, Remingtons, Royals, L. C. rey ands re fr thal scr ence surrounded the disrupters by | seventeenth District—William Albertson ‘ssaeemin Rochester Directed by Jack Shapiro of the Theatre Brigade Smiths and all other’ makes’ sold, || try is requesting their suj \sitting on the seats next to them,| Eighteenth District—Sicney Leroy rarer eee eit Chateuqua, Cattzragus and Allegheny || gee a NEW Progra Been ane vatinistea, Gharentan ine || io the fight for reinstatement. land ihe audience rejoiced and wildly | Winetesnth District Peter Uftre Second, Diskrict- Michael Davidor! oer On eed ae therpeiseryinning te Se a ee ‘ee ebuilt and refinished. Guaranteed for “| Twentieth Distriet—Osvaldo Eusepi " . fongressman 431 ist. Hower TO, i io—Five-Pi azz one year, the same as new machines. || The mass meeting tonight will applauded when the fascists present | qwent arst Dietricts nay oe Dard Third District—Louis Candella i oaneaieee Pierre Degeyter Trio—Five-Piece Jazz Band Fourth District—Hymen Hodes Fifth District—Sel Rosenblum Sixth District—Irving Kaufman Seventh District—Trygue Guatav Pedersen Bighth Distzict—Joseph A. Hanseme Ninth District—Louis DeSantes Tenth District—Dorsetta Loew Eleventh District—Sidney Spencer Also Russian and Yiddish machines. J. E. ALBRIGAT & CO. 825 Broadway, N.Y.C. Bet 12 & 13 Sts. Established 1896 ALgonquin 4-4828 Enlarged Quarters to insure your comfort. demend: | Were finally escorted out of the hall. 1) The removal of Philip Zausner| “The same interruptions occurred from the office of secretary-treas-|in Pertland. In the four cities on urer of the District Council. the west coast, Los Angeles, San 2) A democratically elsci=d ra Francisco, Po:tiand and Seattle we ‘Twenty. cond District (includes part of Modern Hotel Bungalows or Tents. Modern Improvements. Finest Foods, $14 a week. Cars leave 10:30 A.M. Daily from 2700 Bronx Park E.; Fridays and Seturdays, 10 A.M.,.3 and 7 P.M. Phone EStabrook 8-140. Bronx) Richard fullivan State Senators Our Readers Must Spread the Daily Worker Among the Members ef All Mass and Fraternal Organ- izations As a Political Task of First CAMP UNITY WINGDALE, NEW YORK Pifteenth Distriet—Frederick A. Kane 250 FOLDING CHAIRS and file strike committee to lead the | addressed a total of about 5,000 Sixteenth District—Joseph J. Kahn Twelfth District—Frenk Guida Importance! present strike of the painters in) peop! Our meetings in Canada | S:ventecnth District—Oakley Johnson ‘Thirteenth District—John Siurba New York. Eighteenta District—Sadie Van Veen Fourteenth Distreit-—Martna Stone : % | were exceptionally successful, mect- 3) No arbitration. ing great response from the popu- 4) The immediate return of the ‘lations of Vancouver, Calgary, Wini- charter of Local: 499. | peg, Toronto and Montreal. B “Our audience everywhere were |16 Pickets Arrested very interested to learn about the fate of Thaelmann and Torgler, and Ninetecnth District—Charles White Twentieth District—Milton Stern Assem>lymen First District—Arnold DeLutis Second District—Guiseppe Magliacano ‘Third District—Howard J. Farmer Harry Friedman Marie C. Stuart at Fifteenth District—Wiiliam Shine Sixteenth District—Harry Tobman Seventeenth District—Osear Nicholas Meyers Eighteenth District—Bessie Polonsky Nineteenth District—Timothy Holmes ‘Twentieth District—James Field ‘Twenty-Arst Distriet—Israel Gabin ‘Twenty-second District—Jack Rosenberg Twenty-third District—coscph Giibert 60c John Kalmus Co. “ype minis SACKS FARM at Brooklyn Market aomandea by cesoluti S Vibeee RICHMO! Ney Rt. 1, Box 304 Saugerties, N. ¥. |) ee demanded b pa ae ; iDisirlet Attorney Cream of the Season’s Fun FOR LABOR DAY WEEK! Real farm. Good, clean Jewish || NEW YORK. — Sixteer _picl S eapepeiaa In Open Air Theatre Sports’ Field on the Lake Phil Bard, Yale Stewart, Alex Solomon, | were arrested at | way, Brooklyn, yes and taken to the 61 P foed produced on premises. Modern bathrooms . . . Pine of New (ipeludes part ty)—Gussie Reed te Senater | scweltthn y afternoon ‘Thi ‘inct Police Woods, brook, beautiful country- }! station. The pickets g Fitteenth Distriet—Clarina Michaelson. Bio soup o The Hans Kisler Trio and Theatre Group BUtterfield 8-9683 or HAlifax }| was declared on strike early in the cr Can Better Aid| Eighteenth Distriet—Antonio Reono Second District—Tom Siracusa $14 a week. Cars leave daily at 10:30 A.M. from 2700 Bronx Park East. Fridays and Saturdays, 10 A.M.,3and7P.M. 5-2383. morning by the Food Workers In- |Your Struggles if You Build its| Wnctcenih District Haury Heywood Odette Bor Orne teaie seebiis Tel. ALgonquin 4-1148 —. ate Union, Circulation, 4 Swenty-first District—Merrill Work yon, Yonkers ‘

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