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THE DAILY YURKKERK, NEW YURK, MUNDAY, DECEMBEK 3, 1928 cage vive canadian Government Tries to INVESTIGATION” | WHITEWASHING | AMPORT & HOLT Testris Probe Fakery| Shelters Company As expected by all who understand at capitalist government “investi- ations” of capitalism's crimes re- ilt in nothing but whitewash, U. District Attorney Tuttle has aided his “investigation of the sink-| ig of the Vestris with the follow- \g announced “measures”: Congress will be asked to require ifer lifebelts to be used than those | 1 the Vestris; all vessels should | so be required to install wireless; id the U. S. representative to the to labor for hours in an effort to Truck Drivers Fight H2avy Heavy snowfall made Mill Hill at Herman, Me., almost Maine get thru. Photo impassable and truck drivers were forcett shows a truck stalled at the side of th Snowfall MEETING JOINS NEW MILL UNION : for Strike Aid Continued from Page One strike tactics litant be made more m | in order to assure victory. After i gaining a majority on the strike committee, the membership saw i their officialdom adopt the A. F. 0 14 L. bureaucratic tactic of “dissolu- tion” of that committee. Their con- | tinual demands for a membershiy | meeting of their department was met with refusals, When the pr sure from the membership beearm road, iternational “Safety at Sea” eon- srence to be held in England some- me or another might be expected ) say something about the Vestris. | A Fake Investigation. As the Daily Worker charged} inni ion is|beld in Madison Square Garden Sat- om. the beginning, no action iS) yrgay evening, January 19. All Party sen against *he Lamport-Holt| and sympathetic organizations please ine in shite of its proven guilt.) ee nts requested not to arrange othing is charged against the gov-| any conflicting dates, The Lenin ‘nment inspectors whose constant ailure to really inspect ships caused ie loss of 111 lives in the case of ie Vestris. No indictment of these inspectors v officials of the company ot offi- pre of the Vestris, although their) ii ct on Balivaay’ Svaning, xeompetence and guilt has been/ 92, at Harlem Casino, 116th St. Lenin Memoria! Meet. —= a powerful demonstration against fense of | the Soviet Union. Dis: ‘ict Executive Committee, York District. aaa) New Party Units Attention! Dee. and roven by mountains of testimony.| Lenox Ave. Proceeds will go for the! rears jorganization of Spanish’ speaking fot even an opinion on why the workers and for the support of the estris sunk. Whitewash. Protec- oka. ¢t is Spanish areas “Vida ital i italist | Obrera.” Please, keep this date open on of capitalist profits by capitalist | ana: give this affair your greatest overnment officials—that is Tut-| support. e’s “findings.” Bronx Y. W. b. Dance. Guilt of Company Concealed. The Bronx section of the Young i : ., Workers (Communist) League will Tt is even concealed, by ignoring | jold a Section Dance on Saturday, ie Daily Worker charges that the tee ES Curdend, Hig | de ‘ : oston ‘Road, ‘There will be enter- estris log is secretly held by Lam-|tainment and an excellent jazz band. ort-Holt officers, that radio mes-| ax Soaks ies me ‘oynts Opens Yorkville Foram. zes may have passed between the} Juliet Stuart Poyntz, Communist npanv and the ship stopping the |jecturer, will open the Yorkville DS call. The established fact that| Forum with the subject “War Dan- i - | wer, E be held at La- re Vestris captain refused aid fro: hor Temple, 243 1. 84th St, on Thurs- he White Star liner Cedric is calmly | day, December 6th, 8 p. m. mmored, though proven by messages | leared thru the Marconi Maritime) ¢ Unit 36, Subsection 2C. Unit 3F, Subsection 2C will hold The Denartment of Commerce, | Leon will lead a discussion on ‘The eaded by Herbert Hoover for years,|W@" Danger” | | uring which this “efficiency éx-! Unit 2F, Section 1. ert” allowed dnéient tube with}, Unit, 26. Section 1 will hold a -eaky lifeboats and lifebelts’ that! it go st, Marks Plac ctivitiza | rowned anyone who got into water tio nof the member " is one of vith them, to be passed regularly by | {© Points. on, the order, of business. o-called “inspectors” who never in- | Subsection 30. ii reat ‘indi: ‘id All units of Subsection 3C_ will pegs * be. even the findings’ meét this evening At 6:30 at 101 o pigeon-hole in dusty files until—| weet 27th . Unit’ 1F will he end of capitalism. | have iscussion about the. Cannon .., {question, All comrades must be Hoover Ordered Lax Inspection! | present. : soe Yesterday’s hearing gave other | Subsection 36 Executives, nd better evidence that the Depart- | rent of Commerce under Hoover is o blame definitely for the Vestris| All members of the ex witttes “of fubsection 3 this Wedhesd: m., at 101. W. 27t P, Matters of h inking. “Inspector” Keane, who | great importance Will be ‘taken up. y as charged by a letter which was} Section 2, 3, Menthership. ad by Tuttle, but ignored other-| Sections 2 and 3 of tHe rkers = ‘ .|(Communist) Party will hold a joint i se, to have been drunk when €x- rombership meeti & p ,»*’ aining the Vestris, brought in ajm., at Irving Plaze, 15th Sti and f erce| Irving Place, William Weitistone eupe ob Depa kementy ef Commas | it load € didat belo on. Rev nstructions not to inspect lifeboats | horoughly on foreign vessels! Why, | loover only knows. Since American ships are also 1ever inspected thoroughly, the evi-| lence of failure to inspect foreign oats makes little difference except | o show that shipping intgrests who | ‘islike spending money for safety| ‘uled Hoover’s action against any Draft Program of the Communist In- ternationa Unit 36, 16. Unit 36 1 will Hold & very im- portant meeting tomorrow at 6:15 p. m., at 101 W. 27th St, The subsection Executive Commit. tee of Unit 3E will hold a very im- portant meeting today at 6:15 p. m., at 101 W. 27th St. Unit 38, ‘eal inspection of any boat. eiunts 3H of the Rete it-| Branch No, 1 will hold a very im- The Department of Commerce it lporant teeing cogy ct ek ta elf resumes its “investigation” of tself next Tuesday. We can antici-| vate the same sort of whitewash. at 101 W. 27th St ss Unit 36, 2F. Unit 38, 2F, will hold a very im- portant meeting on Wednesday, cember 5, at 6:15 p. m., at 101 Davis Boasts Doubling 27 streee of Arrests of Foreign | .,.%,qrethize Xt Bana Born During the Year sical instrument and is interested in WASHINGTON, Dec. 2.—The Department of Labor has just i) Wiamspureh Y. Lb. Dance. sued a yveport boasting eh i wine Noung “Workers ‘League of border patrol has during the fiscal Williamsburgh will hold its annual lips just ended arrested twice as{@ince Saturday, December 8, at thé development of a Y, W. L. band is asked to get in touch with B. oldbergy 152. W, 72nd St. or Will erberg, at 26 Union Square. deaiks sc | he United State: eatese palace iG Manhattan Ave., E iens in the United States as| Brooklyn. ‘Tickets are on sale at the ‘e vahlind Workers Center, 56 Manhattan Ave., t the pi nd 73 in former years. The total number | 5 yookl is at aente is year is 25,534, The widespread | advance ents at the door. strike movements during the last Welwek € Westibi 6 12 months, in the mine fields and iA membership meeting BAd. alseiis: ‘textile mills especially, have given sion on “War Danger” will be held the government opportunities to do saat ithe cies Bic ciptinwest ia strike-breaking work by persecution. Fpt ss2c. i ‘ Wednesday, Dec. 5, at 6 p.m. at h Het 0) ae i ah who happen to 39 Union Sq are, pt 88 20 Will dis- ‘be foreign-born. cuss the C. BE. C. statement. Hyvery Secretary of Labor Davis says ep noeting: present at this im- his report that 28,896 aliens were | ; ( Fed . turned over to the immigration ser-) 4 Malt, Thedine ee Unit Br, Sub- vice for deportation. ane Labor | section 34. will be hell today Department border patrol egan | at PD. m. sharp, at 26 Inion July 1; 1924, with an appropriation | Sauere, (Workers Center); 4th floor, of $1,000,000 and a personnel of re tee tints bas been ealled for rs @ purpose of discussing the Trot- 472, it now has 747 members, and) <1'5.Cannon question, and the tht last year operated on an appropria- | wing san ges DUC nary measures ; wi e taken against those comm- tion of $1,600,000. Transportation | TiGen who fall ‘to, appear at thi equipment be cae i ee he meeting. mobiles and 13 trucks, saddle “horses and seven packhorses. | Attention Section 5. A general section membership meet- ing will be held tomorrow at 8:30 4 p. m., at ee Wilkins ain Import- ' ant questions will be discussed and “ 39 Bosses “Fix” Law; eT BPO Bes esc Unit GF, Section 1. Unit 6F, Section 1. will meet to- | Morrow at 6 p. m. at 60. St. Marks PI, vif 70 Hour Week for 1 \| Milkmen in London International Branch 1, Section 1, | LONDON, Dec. 2.—Altho the | will meet Wednesday at 7:30 p. m., at i “hours of milk roundsmen have been | §0 St. Marks, Pl. | x fixed by the law at 48 a Wraehr ce Wah SNM “mil i Unit 4F SS2A will hold cial waltnnien: ae ele net OS 8 | lel todag tn tle at, Freiheit office, 30 Union Sq. ‘Tins bosses have “fixed” the Board of | mceting is called for the pursose ot | Trade, International Branch 1. disetigsing the Trotsky questivn. All meinbers bier f'? “ry LABORER KILLED. MILWAUKEE.—William Spill, a laborer, was struck by a steam _ shovel while at work on an extava- tion. He suffered a fractured pel- vis. Unit 5F, an, Unit SF, 8D will Meet on Weaies- day dt 6 p. Mm. Sharp, at 101 W. 27th | St. The party statement will be dis- i cussed. a Attention Members of Section 6. During the next week the units in A Lenin Memorial Meeting. will be| Memorial Meeting this year will be| the imperialist war and for the de-/ The Spanish Fraction will hold {ts | at this} Workers Party Activities "EGRO WORKERS Scetion 6 are to meet at a special nieeting and take up the question of Trotskyism and the right danger in our Party, ictory Unit 2, 6 o'clock, I ‘Thursday, ne 6 o'clock, today, at Brooklyn 4, 6 o'clock Thurs- nhattan St., Broollyn 5, 8 o'clock, today, » Brooklyn. ; 6 o'clock Wednes ic Ave., Brooklyi nit 8, 8 o'clock Wednes- da Linky aspeth, L. 1. international h 2, today, at [56 Manhattan Brooklyn, | at Av ‘Labor and Fraternal | Organizations Spanish Workers Dance. | The Spanish Fraction of the Work- Jers (Communist) Party will hold its first dance Saturday evening, Dec. 22, at Harlem Casino. 116th St. ané Lenox Ave. Proceeds will go for the organization of Spanish workers and | the support of their organ “Vida Obre As this will be a real in- ternational affair, please, dot not| arrange any other affair on that | date, ee Lode Clase War Pri « Concert. Concert and dance for -the benefit of class war prisoners; Sa ; Dec. 8th {8 p. m., at Bronx Workers Centre; 1330 Wilkens Ave. (near Freeman | St. subway station). Admission 85c. | Auspices. f acco-Vanzetti Branch eh paren | Working Women's Notice. A. delegates’ conference of New |York Working Women's Federation | on “Organization Among Working | | Women” will be held Dec. 13 at the |Labor ‘Temple, 14th St. and 2nd Ave me and represent pur shop. Bronx Ix Lecture, The Wo with ghe F 1 ha y, Dec. hington Ave., Moskowitz will and Mental y on Training of Chi shor Spgris Evening. meeting, under the aus- Labor 8 s Union, will 9, at ps m., at Lhd Brooklyn, This meet- A sports | pices of the |be held Dec. Watkins St., ing Has jof organ eh called for the purpose sports étball sports to ng a Brownsville \club. Soccer teams, —_ bad jteams and teams in all other [will be formed. All are welcome attend. Offive Workers, : Union has a Washingtoy at Vebs | Manor.” _§y oreatiizations | jare asked not to arrange any affair | if that evenin i \ Pe | I. L. D. Needs Volunteers. Volunteers are wan Christmas Defense |ture at Internati urday and Sunday, | base 3 Inter-Racial Dance. | Notice to all and labor and |fraternal organizations: ‘There will |be an inter-racial Dance on Decem- ber 29. It would be greatly appre- |eiated if no affairs were arranged | that will conflict with this one . 'Clash With Police of | Zagreb ZAGREB, Yugoslavia, Dec. 2. While governmental edi¢ts called for general celebrations on the tenth anniversary of the foundation of the! | Yusoslav kingdom, papers in Bel- | grade attempted to whip up a ho | day spirit with special editions, Za: |greb, the center of the Croatian | minority revolt, was the scene of| | counter-demonstrations and clashes | between Croatian autonomists and) | adherents of the Serbian hegemony. | | When Croatians pulled down three | jnational flags from a cathedral, | | where an attempt was being made ; at a celebration, and replaced them | \ by black flags, expressive of pro-| tess against the present regime, Serbian students and police attacked | |them. An open conflict resulted, in | | which firearms and clubs were used freely. Two are reported to have) beén seriously wounded and many | | others suffered light injuries, | | The population of Zagreb refused | to celebrate the holiday altogether, as a protest at the Belgrade regime | of oppression. Similar counter-dem- onstrations are reported to have! takén place in other Croatian and. Dalmatian cities and towns: Jobless; Cuts Throat | MILWAUKEE, Wis., Noy. 2—|} Because he was unable to find em-| ployment in any of the factories or} offices of this’ city, Anton Fabian, | sixty-three years o]d, slashed his| own throat today. | Physicians who were called after the slashing had occurred, gave as their opinion that the worker will live, |the hundreds of jobs in New York 8 together i id y -GROATS PROTEST. AT CELEBRATION oe too strong the officials called a membership meeting, but of al! branches of the union. At thi meeting they railroaded thru en- nt of their strikebreaking expulsion tactics and enthroned a reactionary clique of their own choice as a new “strike committee.” The calling of the broad silk meet- ing was then undertaken. “NOT WANTED” Bricklayers Tell of Discrimination | Tried To Stop Meeting. Fred Hoelscher, chief ,of the bur- eaucrats, and his henchmen tried (By a Worker Correspondent) their utmost to break up and harm I am a Negro bricklayer and a the attendance at the meeting. They uaion member. 1 find that work for | thundered of its “illegality.” Hoel- a colored man is very scarce, due | Scher tried to have the hall owner to discrimination. When you go to | cancel the contract and right wing- ers were sent to the meeting. All this was of no avail. The meeting, highly enthusiastic, accomplished its aim with inspiring dispatch and ef- ficiency. Albert Weisbord, national _secre- | tary of the National Textile Work-| ers’ Union, came to pledge his or-| ganization’s aid and support in the) silk workers’ strike, and “was ac-| corded a tremendous ovation, which Lwas equalled only by the outburst of sustained cheering when the mo- and see from 25 to 50 white masons and two or three Negroes workir7. no more Negroes may apply. On many jobs they will nct hire a colored man at all. Two other Negroes and myself were sent from a job in Astoria to Staten Island to work. The foreman in Staten Island refused to let us start. When we returned to the job, where we had fi been working. this foreman asked us, “How many col- ored men were on that job?” We tion to affiliate was carried. Fred said that there were two, It is no-| Biedenkapp, head of the Workers’ ticeable that he did not ask how ternational Relief, also was cheered when he told the workers | that his organization was willing to step in and provide relief fo: those carrying on the fight. mahy masons were on the job, but how many colored. Promised a Job. Another time, while 1 was living in Jamaica, L. 1, I had been out of work for four weeks and had] | searched New York over, but in Mitte, Gertrude Mueller showed in. I came across a big. job near ead ve eastgrtes ae, Jett bi home? this was $ bios were foug! it by the officialdom, and “ ee wee noe Block ot that if the strike were to be won these policies only were to do it. She concluded by pointing out that it was the officials who had adopted Correct Tactics. | In repotting for the Strike Com- ork, with about seven men work- just finishing the cellar. I the foreman if he needed any The atiswer was, “Are you a bricklayer? What local do you belong to? How long have you laid bri¢ks? Who have you worked for?” This was none of his busi- in, | sions, and that their joining with a national organization was the only recourse left in improving condi- tions in the shops and winning the ness, although I answered each | sttike. question. He said: “€ome back | * . . ; Monday, and Til put yott to work |, Lena Chernenko, Strike Commit- tee organizer, took the floor after | fifteen more workers were added to the Strike Committee from the This did not worry me, because my | Sorkers ortega She spoke of the ork is much better than that eeaatdisn oe it Lai Sing ce ew + ah ‘ .| conditions in the shops. e new hich they were doing. That was | Strike Committee will take up these and seé what you can do. If you can do the work, I'll let you stay and if not TM pat vou in the street.” morning, so sure was I that I had the job. : oS : Swedish Match Trust Only White Men Hired. St | M t ] Monday the foreman took on rengt one etals about 25 men—all white—while I Interests in Market stood and waited. For the second time that morning I went to him. STOCKHOLM, Sweden, Dee: 1.— but the reply was, “Nothing doing.” Announcement has been made here the splitting tactic by their expul-| Two white men and myself were that the great Swedish Match Trust ; standing together, when the fore- is now a large shareholder in the man said: “You men will have to Swedish Iron Corporation, the wait until I get straightened out |Grangesberg Trafic Aktiebolaget. here.” We walked away, the white The addition of the Swedish mateh men going one way and I going an- interests has so strengthened the cther. I did not go to the job the |iron group as to greatly increase its next morning, but” went there about place in the international iron a quarter of one in the afternoon. market. At this time there were about fifty | men working. At five minutes to m1sLEADERS EXPEL MILITAN' ene I asked him fer work again. « id “No.” : 2 COVENTRY, England, Dec. 2.— He said “No.” After the men had Hh eeeaidlde Hayy been expelled started to work another white man |)" 1, Reynolds has been expelled approached him and spoke to him. | i 48 Ys He was put to work immediately, |"@ Sold copies of the “Philip Snow- T then went to him and said: “You |e Special,” a paper printed by To- c ee jeal Communists when Snowden, no- Force British Jobless to Scab on Alberta Mine Strike SILK WORKERS’ MJCHELIN WORKERS BOUND BY CONTRACT MILLTOWN, N. J., (FP).—Near- ly 2,000 workers are held in the grip of Michelin Rubber Co. in its company town at Milltown, through a labor contract that binds employes W. I. R. to Open Drive to their jobs. Proof that the con- tract is successful in its purpose lies in the fact that a majority of Michelin’s tire workers have been on the job for more than five years, hough their pay is probably the lowest for similar work anywhere in the United States. The highest wage in Milltown is 45 cents an hour, Michelin’s contract, signed by every worker before he gets a job, provides for a weekly premium ranging from $1 to $2. This sum is set aside in a special fund which the employe may not touch. It At the end of five total $500. A Chained Gift. But the worker has no claim to the atcumulated premium when he quits or is discharged. Instead, he must wait three years to obtain the money he has earned. If he is job- less, he may draw 1-36th of the total premium each month. < The company assumes that the premium can be changed any time without consulting the worker. Vital changes are made in conditions and premiums and the worker is told to sign on the dotted line. The com- pany also assumes that the money belongs to Michelin, and not to the worker. In this way it is a “gift” to which the worker has no legal, claim. In the 21 years of Michelin’s functioning in thé United States, the contract has never been tested in the courts. Other features of the contract bind the employes never to make publie its contents, to keep silent about secret processes in the plant, to refuse to discuss publicly any- thing that happens within factory walls. Michelin imports French peasants and fishermen from Brittany to work in its American plant. While om the firm denies that it contracts doorway as he was backing his team |}... with workers in France to import them to America in defiance of the contract labor law, its agents spread tales of high wages and good condi- tions along the Breton coast. As a result, when the peasant packs up his satchel, he knows he is going to Milltown, N. J., where there is al- ways a job open to him at double the wages he made at home. Arriving in Milltown, he and his family are herded into shacks which rival the shabby mill towns of south- ern textile barons. These shacks lack most of the modern home es- sentials. Into their bare, ugly, un- furnished three rooms, the fisher- man leads his wife and children for their first experience in America, the “land of opportunity.” $14 Per Week. Within a month he will wish he were back in Brittany. But 35 cents an hour, the beginning wage at Michelin’s, means only $14 a week when the plant operates five days a Week. Rent is $20 a month and DR. L. HENDIN SURGEON DENTIST 853 Broadway, Cor. 14th St. MODERATE PRICES Room 1207-8 Algonquin 6874 DR. J. MINDEL/ SURGEON DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Room 803+Phone, Algonquin £183 Not connected with any other office | Or. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST Office Hours: Tues. Thurs. & Sat.. 9:30-12 a. m4 2-8 p, m. Sunday, 10:00 a, m. to 1:00 p. m. PLEASE TELEPHONE FOR APPOINTMENT 249 EAST 116th STRHET Ave. New York ne: Lehigh 6022. colored man with the same union | 8Poke Here. Fa ee card as whites had. This was in| New York and not in the south. CO-OPERATIVE All Negro w injustice here. the majority are out. anics suffer this | Where a few work, T. A. M. Dental Clinic | 2700 Bronx Park East Apt GL TEL. ESTABROOK 0568. DR. I. STAMLER Surgeon-Dentist DIRECTOR OPEN; Mon. Tues. Wed., Thurs, trom 10 to 8 P. M." Saturday and Graft Disclosures in| Chieago Force 300 Cops | to Enter Fresh Fields CHICAGO, Dec. 2—Recent grand | jury investigations, forced by wide-| spread gang wars, election murders | and kidnappings, have so discredited | the police department that Police | Commissioner William F’. Russell to- | day resorted to the usual “shake-up.” Grafters from one district will be removed to another, where they are not so well known, and the mantle | of respectability will thus be drawn again over the somewhat expe d rottenness of the department. Three hundred officers and men are transferred. This includes six | captains, 19 Lieutenants, 82 sergeants, and six detectives. Sunday from 10 to 7 P. M. Workers Cooperative Clothiers, Inc. SUITS MADE TO ORDER. |, READY MADE SUITS. ||! MILITANT WORKERS MEET. LONDON, Dec. 2.—A: conference of railway workers to be held by the | minority movement in London on) Jan. 5-6, will give special attention to the development of rationaliza- | tion. Quality—Full Value ‘72 BROADWAY, N.Y. Cor, 18th 8t.—Tel. Algonquin 2228 Eron School 185-187 FAST BROADWAY, NEW YORK c JOSEPH E. ERON, Principal THE LARGEST AND BEST AS WELL AS OLDEST SCHOOL. to fearn the English language, to prepare oneself for admission to college ERON SCHOOL ts registered by the REGENTS of the State of New York. It has all the rights ichool. for Catalogue. REGISTER NOW! Our 25,000 alumni are our best , witnesses. PELEPHONE ORCHARD 4473, CENTRAL ~ BUSINESS SCHOOL —Bookkeeping —Typewriting CLASS LIMITED 108 E. 14th STREET —Stenography | Individual Instruction }) food and clothing are far more pensive than in the little fishing villages. Without savings, the married worker stays on Michelin’s, and ag Without sa ings, the married worker st at Micheli nd as the by the, premiums accumulate until there is $1,000. But it is not his— until three yea after is fired. And if he violates his part of the contract, the whole sum is confiseated. Only when his daughter can the pinched French ‘vorker hope to move out of the shack district to a better house, where rent ranges from $25 up. His girl starts in at 25 cents an hour or $2 a d Her $10 a week looks big to her father, whose maximum wage, on a 5-day basis, can be only $18 a week, plu a small bon’ | Efficiency is known to Michelin’s | workers as speed-up. In every de- partment there are wall charts, with each worker’s name on it and room for daily scores. ‘Three points for a small tire, more points for larger ones. The speediest workers weekly bonu ranging from $2 to $5. Those in the middle keep their . Those at the bottom are sent irable jobs or are fired. Mond, British Trust King, Plans Scotch Agriculture Combine EDINBURGH, Scotland, Dec. 2. —The huge Imperial Chemical In- dustries Trust, dominated by Lor Melchett (Sir Alfred Mond), author of the elass collaboration plan f: jvored by the misleadcrs of the Bri ish labor party, is forming anothe | huge trust, the Scottish Agricul- tural Industries. | Siero es Driver for Tannery Is Injured at Work | MILWAUKE | When his head struck the top of 2 he quits or ows up get Wis., Dec. |from a shed of the Trostel tannet 859 North Water St., last week, Jo- seph Trauendorf, 73, 481 18th St., was thrown from his wagon and suffered a possibie skull frecture and fractures to his nose and hip bories. BUILDING WORKERS WIN. FORT WAYNE, Ind., Dec. Workers in the construction of the Grand Leader department store here won their strike for the union wage scale. MARY WOLFE STUDENT OF THR DAMROSCH CONSERVATORY PIANO LESSONS 2440 Breas Park East Near Co-cperative Colony. Apt. Telephone BASTABROOK 2? special rates to students from the Co-operative House. AMALGAMATED FOOD WORKERS Baker's Local 164 Meets istSaturday inthe month at 3468 Third Ave. Bronx, N. ¥. Ask tor Onion Label Bread Hotel and Restaurant Workers Branch of the Amalgamated Food Workers 183 W. Sist St,, Phone Circle 7336 BUSINESS MEETINGS] eld on the first Monday of the month at 3 p.m, One Industry—One Union—Join and Fight the Comnion Bne: Office Open from 9 a. m. to 6 p Advertise your union meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City Patronize No-Tip Barber Shops 26-28 UNION SQUARE (1 fiight up) 2700 BRONX PARK EAST (corner Allerton Ave.) Individual sanitary service by Experts—Ladies Hatr Bobbing Specialists, COUPERATORS PATRONIZE J. SHERMAN Your Nearest Tailor Fancy Cleaners and vyers s63) ALLERTON AVE. BRONX Unity Co-operators Patronize SAM LESSER Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailor 1818 - 7th Ave. New York Between 110th and i1ith Sts, Next to Unity Co-operative House | PATRONIZE | E. KARO COOPERATORS! Your Nearest Stationery Store Cigars — Cigarettes — Candy 649 ALLERTON AVE.. Cor, Barker, BRONX, N. Y. Tel. OLinville 9681-2 — 9791-2 | greene euanrrmerse tes with k | HOAXED BY TORY GOV'T MEN LURED DARICE BIR TO STRANGE LAND Penn less, Thousands Were Stranded 7DMONTON, A harges h been sent to by the an easy way . that the Can- cting in nment a disposing of th con. of the op- them to mises of the the harvest nthe mployed wo founc in whieh u would be forced to scabs nst Can. adian wor Thou. f the hoaxed workers were on the verge ¢ rvation.as a result of being condition of miles from their homes. Reactionary Regime of New South Wales Attacks Pay Income SYDNEY, Australia (By Mail) In the New South Wales state parliament, nt, which eat the “labo: ast elec- tion by the labor par! own cow- ardice when the reactionaries raised the ¢ of “Reds” in the labor party, has made k on the workers by lower the exemption on incomes ft 300 to 250 pounds per year. Most of the fuss over “Reds” »s from reactionaries in the la- movement » coupie Jock Gar- cen, head of the New South Wales Trades Council, with both the Com- munist Party and the labor party. While Garc member neither party, but endeavors to re- in friendly to both, he oceupies ich the same position in t tralian trade union movement as Arthur Cook ir Englan nm is a of “For Any Kind of Insurance’ ([ARL BRODSKY Tetephont Warens Hill 5350 7 East 42nd Street, New York COMRADES BAT at the SCIENTIFIC VEGETARIAN RESTAURAN 1604-6 Madison Ave. Between 107th & 108th Sts. Health Food Vegetarian Restaurant 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: University 5365 For | RATNER’S ! Parry and Vegetarian Restauraat | 103 SECOND AVE. | H. L, HARMATZ, Prop. Self-Service Cafeteria 115 SECOND AV ear 7th St. BAKING DONB_ ¢ PREMISES Visit Our Place While on 2nd Ave, | fel: Dry Doek 1268; Ulehard (430 | Good Wholesome Fosd MEET YOUR FRIENDS at | Messinger’s Vegetarian and Dairy Restaurant ‘| (763 Southern Bivd., Right Off 174th St. WE ALL MEET at the | NEW WAY CAFETERIA | 101 WEST 27th STREET | NEW YORK Vegetarian Restaurant if, SECOND AVE, Bet. 12th and 13th Sts, Vegeirrian Food. Strictly All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S VEGETARIAN HEALTH RHSTAURAN 658 Claremont P’kway Bronx | Pho John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN [SHES A place with atmosphere } where all radicale meat 802 B. 12th ST. NEW YORK Stuyy ; init ie ee