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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, MARCH 1° 1929 w York int’ Labor Dejense Pledges Its Support to ih. sivike of Window Cleaners ae : Driver |. J. Lenin on Materialistic | Conception of History | (Continued from Page Three) | contraposed classes: bourgeois and duction among the various classes proletariat... . of society; discarding subjectivism classes that con- and free-will in the choice of distinct) front the bourgeoisie today, the pro- “leading” ideas or in the explanation Jetariat alone is really revolution- of these; showing how all the ideas’ ary, Other classes decay and perish and all the tendengies, without ex-| with the rise of large-scale indus- ception, had their roots in the con-| try, but the proletariat is the most CHT IS NOW ON ‘National Miners Union Warns Thrills for the Rich Spel. Deat!: FOR UNION AND of the Watson Anti-Strike Bill | at Of fundamental importance to coal| Watson bill recognized that “there miners and to workers generally is|are other lines of legislature in P AY INCRE A F | Senate. Bill No. 4490 to establish| which the industry is interested.” government regulation of the bi- | : rp tbe ies Semi-Company Unionism. tuminous coal industry, This. bill, a % i introduced into the Sena.» by Sen-| | Tis Plan of Lewis, to turn the ‘enounce Brutality of |ator Watson, and upon which ex.|Te&Ulation of the miners’ wages over for Auto Driver a — While driving a Triplex racer more than 202 miles an hour at the Daytona Beach speedway in an effort to break the automobile speed record, Lee Bible, auto mechanic, lost control of his ma- chine and plunged to his death, The bro Bible is shown being placed on a stretcher before n body of being removed to a mortuary. = tevin . _|to this cupitalist-controlled coal Police ensive hearings have been held re. cbrutittelon enue kas: uni 6ya- tem of semi-company unionism, backed by the checkoff and used as officialdom of the United Mine| #0 instrument to speed the miners Workers. It institutes the ‘latest! "4 to break the strikes of the na- and most insidious effort of the tional miners union, is a menace not Lewis machine to enslave the miners| Ty to the miners but to the work- to the operators, to still further de.|ing class generally. It must be generate what is left of the U. M,| fought resolutely and on all fronts. W. of A, into an auxiliary of the| The T. U. E. L, American section employers, It is part of the gen-| °* the Red International of Labor eral attack of the employers against| Unions (R. I. L, U.), must carry on ji 5 this fight resolutely. The new re See arene a hae oe Aares| volutionary unions, with the TUEL ican imperialism’s program of re-| ®S the center, must take up this organizing and “modernizing” the| fight as their own. industries in preparation for the ap- t is ict the task of the tainers to proaching war. co-operate with the operators and To Liquidate Crisis the government to stabilize and trus- The expressed aim of the Watson| tify the coal industry, in the illusion Bill is to liquidate the deep going that they will reap some benefit crisis in the coal industry, brought | from it. The treacherous proposal about by overdevelopment, mechan- % peril ae Sandon Hits Spe ization, speed up, use of substitutes | Tha -weasked UMWA: even shore inte for coal, etc, and manifesting itself! in an excess productive capacity of|@" agency of the coal operators. For 300,000,000 tons of coal, regularly|the workers it means more wage idle miners, vast unemployment, etc,,|CUtS; more unemployment, more de- by abolishing competition between| SPicable conditions in the industry. the 5,000 bituminous coal operators} The national miners union cor- and setting up monopoly conditions.| rectly rejects all such class colla- Lewis’ treacherous ‘inferences are! boration propositions. It pins no that the workers will gain in wages|hope on the capitalistic re-organi- and economic power by helping to zation of the coal industry. The bring about this trustification, But) government, the coal operators, and in reality the whole thing planned at|their agents, the Lev'3 clique are the expense of tho miners, | enemies of the miners, The National The bill proposes to abolish com-| Miners Union relies only on the eco- petition by declaring soft coal a nomic and political power of the public utility and, by setting up a| workers to improve conditions now federal bituminous coal commission; 2nd to eventually overthrow capital- { The New York District of the ternational abor Defense yester- y pledged its support to the Win- w Cleaners Protective Union in e struggle it is conducting to iionize the trade. One of the largest of the open- op companies the union is striking sainst is the Commercial Window leaning Company. This company is contract with the Roxy and apitol Theatres and pickets at ese theatres have been made the rject of police attacks. Several ar- ‘sts have been made and two rikers have been convicted. The en are demanding recognition of veir union, a $45 a week minimum age, an eight-hour day and ade- aate protection, The I, . D,, in a statement signed vy Rose Baron, secretary, declares: “The New York District of the iternational Labor Defense pledges s utmost support to the struggle eing conducted by the Window leaners Protective Union against ie open-shop conditions in the trade, Ve demand a cessation of the strike- reaking activities of the Tammany olice, as examplified by arrests of ickets at the Roxy and Capitol ‘heatres, “We urge the striking window leaners to remember the lessons of he dressinakers’ strike. Mass ar- ests and police brutality were pow- rless to break the spirit of the cently before the Interstate Com- merce Commission, was drawn up and presented at the instance of the Entertainment, New York Drag Dental Mechanics Mass Meet. Clerks, | vm Dental Laboratory “Wor The New York Drug Clerks Asso-| Union will hold a mass clation will hold an entertainment tomorrow night at § o'c and dance at Lesiie Gardens, 83rd Labor Temple, 14th St, St. and Broadway, Sunday evening, | Ave. March 31, 8 p.m, All organizations please keep this date open. ee ee Dorsha Company Da Dorsha and her compar Inter-Racial Dance, Jsent a repertoire of dances An inter-racial dance, for the bene- Booth The: h fit of the Negro Champion, Daily /24, “Th Worker and the Obrano has been ar-| of Lov ranged for Friday evening, March 22,/ will be at Imperial Auditoriua, 160 W. 129th it. * * * Comrades of Bronx Workers Sport Club. jclety who are \ A sport carnival and ball will be|17-scene opera should < given by the Bronx Workers Sport|S#! tonizht at the, clu) Glub Saturday, March 23, Rose Gar- den, 1347 Boston Road. aaa Anti-Fascist Ball. An entertainment and ball will be Cutters Loe: A ball will be give Local 68, N.T.W.LU, at dition of the various forces of pro- characteristic product of that indus- duction, try. The lower middle class—small How people make their own his- manufacturers, small traders, handi- Labor and Fraternal Organizations tory; what determines their motives,| chaftsmen, peasant proprietors — or at any rate the motives of people! one and all fight the bourgeoisie in | in the mass; what gives rise to the, the hope of safeguarding their exist- clash of conflicting ideas and en-| ence as sections of the middle class, deavors; what is the sum total of all' They are, therefore, not revolution- these clashes among human societies; , ary, but conservative. Nay more, what are the objective conditions of/ they are reactionary, for they are production (the material conditions| trying to make the wheels of his- of life) that form the basis of peo-| tory turn backwards, If they ever | ple’s historical activity; what is the | become revolutionary, it is only be- law of the development of these con ditions — to all these matter: Marx | ause they are afraid of slipping own into the ranks of the proleta- | directed attention, pointing out the| riat; they are not defending their way to a scientific study of history! present interests, but their future as a unified and law-abiding pro-| interests; they are forsaking their cess despite its apparent multiplicity| own standpoint, in order to adopt and contradictoriness | that of the proletar’at.” h of the LL.D. e the Paris Commune at address the meeting . * I. L, D, Meet. given by the Anti-Fascist Alliance ot North America at Manhattan Lyceum. 66 K. Fourth St. on Saturday eve-| ning, March 23, at 8:30 p. m. see ae 2 Dr. Liber Speaks. Dr. Liber w 1 speak before Coun- | parent chaos. His clue is the theory | ,of the class struggle. Nothing but Activities That in every society the wishes} Since the time o. the great French | of some of the members conflict with| revolution, the class struggle as the the wishes of others; that social life| essential motive force of history has is full of clashes; that history dis-| been more than usually manifest in | closes to us a struggle among peo-| all the countries of Europe, During ples and societies, and also within} the Restoration period in France, each nation and each society, mani-| there were already several histori- festing in addition an alternation be-| ang (Thierry, Guizot, and Thiers, tween periods of peace and war, rev-| for instance) who could not but rec- {olution and reaction, of acceleration ognize in the class struggle the key or retardation of progress or re-| to the understanding of all the his- gression — these facts are generally| tory of France, known. Le - ‘ n the modern age — the epoch of Marx provides a clue which en- A es 3 th bs victory - Giiai da tautacuen theccign of lam her cce mplete victory of the bour. i A Meee is i | geoisie, of representative institu- in this seeming labyrinth, this @P-| tions, extended ‘where not univer- |sal) suffrage, cheap and widely cir- 4 r ~ | culated daily newspapers, powerful the study of the totality of the im-| and ever-expanding organizations of pulses of all the members of a given! 14ers and employers, ete. — the society, or group of societies, can| eat teabied a trikers. B: it he lice and 4 . 2 f Work: 7 ene ais eeee ~ 4. | class struggle, though sometimes in aN taice SEE Enuee despite |#long the lines of the interstate com-|ism. : : Svomen: Mriaay night, Match a2, 418|” Av entartaiemant at dane lead to the scientific determination | Peaceful and constitutional, form ttacks, the a Kk ded {merce commission, to regulate this| It realizes that its task is to de-| Hinsdale St. Brooklyn. Proceeds tu|the auspices of th | of the result of these impulses... Now, | has shown itselé sell more Sbuloualy a ee Sree ee tt The coal commission would | fend in struggle the interests of the|! © D- ts of the’ Your | the conflict of impulses depends upon| , ~ reeset ey. a thwarting these strikebreaking | dustry. 5 4 eB) : eo * 1 be held at H ‘ ; oe to be the mainspring of events. i id won thei 1 strike, | have vast powers, all going in the, miners, not to subordinate them to|pretnett symphony Orchestra Con- and Lenox Ave., the differences in the conditions of| pecan acticg ANE Woh Wee RenerOL ft 0: atvection of concentrating the soft|the coal barons, It militantly fights cert. ds to the Young W life of the classes into which society| In @ number of historical works, Vindow cleaners, fight for your ri ., | :, d-|, A concert and dence will be given | * * * is divided | Marx, on the basis of the materialist ight of peaceftl picketing. Keep|©0#! industry and the coal miners) against wage cuts and for wage ad-}),. he "yrreiheit” Symphony Orches- Biednasa ume, is divided, a ¢ histor ye brilli k Ps sect P| under the control of the giant oper-| vances, for the six hour day andjtra at 2075 Clinton Ave, Bronx,| A dance for the benefit of the “The history of all human society,| CONCePtion of history, gave brilliant Pp pa struggle i heat be ue ators | five day week, for the abolition of|4Pril 13. OS See a Negro Che mpion and | the Vida pasbranids prevents hassheen (ie fils | and profound examples of historical vy of the open-ship! You have the | ¥ ‘1 ies ; Obrera will’ be given ion | 2 picked | studies containing an analysis of the y M issih | the slave-like working conditions in 1, $. 8. RR. Moti ieture. of yorkers 3 o'clock. Al ” ae 3 vee Commission of 5. jave-lik U. S. S. R. Motion Picture. { of the Worker p'eloe tory of class struggles,” wrote Marx position of each separate class, and upport of the I. L, D, and of every A .| “A Visit to Soviet Russia,” a ten| Party at th lass-conselous warker behind “you:"'|’ ‘The’ ‘coal commission’ would conc| coe, wun, f0e the relief of unem-) oh Tine tO lente wilt bs ahown [fare yee sist of five members, appointed by|Ployment, and for tho building up}for once only in New York City on svening, March th, id f th ‘v ses Stat : |of a solid fighting union in every | Sunday, March 24, at the, Waldort $1 y the president 0! ie Unites a €8-| coal field of the United States. Down Theatre, 50th St., east o! roadway. | » aries must be present with- | in “1948, in the Communist Mani- neeting wil’ | festo. (In a note to later editions fternoon at) i ene Gira’ races | Engels pointed out that primitive sometimes of that of various groups and strata within a class, showing plainly why and how “every class and the future, and drew up the bal- "| perpetual warfare, sometimes mask- ae eae ae the resulting histori- Jed, sometimes open and acknowl- es , i ledged; a warfare that invariably] Marx’s economic doctrines are a |ended, either in a revolutionary|™ore profound, more many-sided, change in the whole structure of so-| and more detailed confirmation and ciety, or else in the common ruin of | application of the foregoing theory. | the contending classes. ..« | “Modsrn bourgeois society, rising unit The Followers of the Trail wil!| the ben |gwive an International peasant cos-! urd, Bi |tume Party and dance March 30, 2075 | Gronx Park East: A 12-scene opera at { |Clinton Ave. Bronx. Prizes for best| show and imported souvenirs will be | |costumes, Proceeds to International among the features. | haan aa Sut \ Ae is Spiel There ‘will be four performanc ntative on Wxecut communism formed an exception to a fas 5 | This would ensure its domination by | ith the Watson coal bill! starting at 2 p. m, The picture will Bookshop, 26 U mmittee will render a report. | thi lizati “fF, d| Struggle is a political struggle.” He * y 4 I P. this generalization.) ‘reeman an : fUUU p big capital. Among its many powers | z show the visit of foreign workers’ | }istrict Negro Committee, 28 Unior ees ee slave, patrician and plebian, baron| @i8¢losed the structure of the net- 2 the commission would have the right] Arar Cae aes Amante. AARIN SEE equate, Ph ac meet omit, Beetan Th wg neta | and Hee atidebars ula na journey. | Work of social phenomena, showing 6 1] ‘to license pools and selling coopera-| Z eee Bron “Kaptventn” Balt, Cais irulodi, ati1eaT aut. BE » & tite 8 cs 3 ¥-| the transitional stages between one iP | tive agreements formed by coal Followers of the Trail Costume Branch i Or 2 yn Ee "| man — in a word, oppressor and Op-| 1546 and another, between the past : dealers to agree on the market price! Party. will y , ey ple pressed — stood in sharp opposition ’ . Ne, doe: th 1, i of their coals. It would also have | : per) s each to the other. They carried on the right to fix maximum prices,| Many Districts Exceed | distribute the markets, ete. This * . would give it a strangle hold on the Their Quotas distributive end of the industry en-| URW GR Uh a: ass abling the commission to beat in § r si instru- "a thre (Continued from Page One) | dividual operators or groups of them CAlles Says Torreon Is) ,.Sereir, shied! "notify assist tented bythe. Bron + ’. oat | 2 : cl orkers League, shters have been unemployed for] into snbmission, | Near Capture Poe he oneeation, Sueded diane Saturday, April 3%, 1 Labor Defense. . ei ek i Bronx Section Spring Dance. “The Last Days of the Paris Com- Ml be pr veels and months. This is a mag-) pp, issi ret * Bronx. Dance will follow the play. Ss ie commission would also have — ss i : ‘ zs rt t ‘achieve r re Harlem Working Youth Dance. * * * Will meet t vy at 8:30 p, m.| out of the ruins of feudal society, Comrade p t achievemert. power ty bring about mergers and! (Continued from Page One) Ar uaiben (danee wilt, bao held. toe Perth Amboy Pioncers, At 1330 Wilk! Bronx, : ¢ maa : Cocd Work of Distriets Young Pioneers of Terth Amboy, * ty : | did aot make an end of class antag- F Pil A 4 Hi r consolidations of coal companies, to) United States war department that |Pigne et oe ntee, 2 etre ean |N. J. Branch of the Young Pioneers tional Branch. | onisms. It merely set up new class- rances 1 at der Pig! auspices of the Harlem Y. mest every Sunday, 10 a. m., 508 ting of the Morning | eg jn place of the old; new conditions | MIDWIFE nch will be held on; “All the districts of the Commun-| permit which the Sherman and Clay- je would bomb the Progreso and t Party joined in the drive with|ton Anti-Trust Laws are to be/had asked that all American ships | Naa i 4 ‘ tf by et ae x ek © | * Seti d x, at 10 o'clock at| Of oppression; new embodiments of | 7 he greatest enilusiasm and devo- Hq ppamey The pupmiay on would al- joaye the vicinity. United Counctl Annual Ball, | Unit 4F, ac, Packawe Party. Gentes se7Union ‘Bq sioiiele: Onna age nive tour | 351 cyatdeallG) poy York, N. Y. toy fi “developing eco- i " neert and ball of the) A package p: for the bi ape Sue Nip ranks bi tonal el. Rhinela 3916 ion, The units of the Party made) so have the task of “developing eco-| phe pulletin announced that Gen- cine Cee oe Wrertiae wanes (ihe Daly Worker. wil be gi Macilon: 6 Wanctloonnies: | geois age, is distinguished by this— | ree he saving of the Daily Worker|/nomies” in the production of coal.) ova] Tturbe has sufficient advance | will be given at the Manhattan Lyce Y oeir chief immediate task; workers| which would mean the enforcement | puard to take the city, it was said, |Um. 66 E. Fourth St, Saturday night, St, Apt. {C, March 23. | be held tonight at 6 anvassed their friends end enlisted| of the speed-up, mechanization and) Cavalry under General Roberto RL ee ae ea We ae may pote aha ae gene | ovelock at 56 Manhattan Ave, Bklyn, he support of their organizations.| general rationalization of the indus-| G.iy wag reported by General Itur- Stes et * | “The Hoover Administration and its Workers often gave their last few|try at the expense of the coal miners. | h Can tha: Monarl _| Downtown Workers Club Dance. | “isuificance for the Youth" will be fs . Siri +, be to have taken .the Rosario con. ‘A dance will be given by the Down- | Uscussed at the open forum of the pennies, denied themselves absolute}The commission, by reason of its| centration camp with few casualties |town Workers Club, 85 EB. Second St, McK Square Unit, Y. W._L < 4 pra rai c cow rae fey bts iy unday, March 31, 8 p.m, 1400 Bos- necessities of life to save their class/ authority to set price “with regard! saturday night. Rosario is south of |° Pm. Saturday, March 23 ton Road. Dance’ follows ‘talk, paper, The result was that most|/to wages paid to miners,” would \fazaltan, No . eine of the district surpassed their) undertake to establish wage rates.) sve been EBs iy Gena cnee | Section 8 Membersiiy Meet. quotas. New York, the largest dis-| and finally, by its general power and aotachment was said to be within I egeennn te lr BO eee trict, led the way with more than|its specific attempt to lay down ROO otine “dlatance. of ‘Masatlan to- meeting tonight, 8 p. m., 154 $8,000, considerably above its orig-| ditions for organization (reminiscent | right, e oe St., Brooklyn. Imme he home of Li ns of unit functionaries of that it has simplified class antago- nisms. More and more, society is|} Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 splitting up into two great hostile ’ camps, into two great and directly John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A_ place with atmosphere | where all radicals meet || 802 E. 12th St. New York Gordon, 49 E. 10th; A me: n 33. section 6 ubsection 2C, stion 2C meets to- at 108 EB. 14th St. Pie Meet your Friends at Greenberg’s Bakery and Restaurant 939 E. 174th St., Cor. Hoe Ave. Right off 174th Street Subway nal Branch 35, 1, mbers of t branch must end tonight's meeting at 101 W. | 27th St. at 9 p.m. * * 8 Section 3 Meet. | tion 3 of the Communist Party | arranged a series of discussions |{ All Comrades Meet at : (re the units will be di j ee | Station, Bronx BRONSTEIN’S inal quota of $5,000. of the semi-company unionism of the % 4 “ The results of yesterday’s games of Branch 2 will attend the section RSA nO cl ee aed Telephone: TREmont 4671 | + - “Now that the drive is completed,”| Watson-Parker Railroad: Law) it Piha riage held by General Jaime. ‘tne Metropolitan Workers’ Soccer | eetins Inevend of the usual’ unit Hapol Willa noses ed geting | VEGETARIAN HEALTH N ' ? ‘ arrillo, who fled from northern meeting on Monday night. y Adams; Thursday, | j, J, I Ravitch continued, “we want to! Would seck to dictate the character| <0. Dispatches from the United |e2eue were: cit mM ale acmenttin or aak Ida Dailes, All members are urged | | RESTAURANT thank all those, both individuals and|0f the workers’ unionism. ¥ Division A. re CUA aera eein to etentl \] 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx organizations, Party members and non-Party workers, who answered our. emergency call and showed themselves real fighters for their class by saving their class paper. The conclusion of the drive should, however, riot be interpreted as a sig- nal for forgetting the Daily Worker. The ‘Daily’ must continue to depend The Watson coal bill is not only ize the coal industry’ for the big ca- pitalists through instrumentality of the government. It is also a scheme to turn the regulation of the min- ers’ wages, working conditions, and the control of their union organiza- a proposal to trustify and monopol-| tion over to the coal commission) Press correspondent at Mazatlan said that General Carrillo was mak- ing few preparations for defense. The first “vivas” here since the outbreak of the revolt two weeks ago were heard today when General Fausto Topete, governor of Sonora, arrived with troops expected to aid in an attack on Naco, Sonora. Naco Fordham 2, Martians 0; referee,» dis: io nd the M : | Today Friedman. oh ja joint meeting fo Division B. Section 2, tonight, Scandinavian Workers 6, Freiheit U on Square, 1; referee, Gleit. Scandinavian 13,| t Unit 2, Section 4, Goldenberg. Workers 2, Red Star 0; | tonight. Tear pale 3 For a Real Oriental Cooked Meal INTERNATIONAL PROGRESSIVE CENTER © *101 WEST 28TH STREET (Corner 6th Ave.) RESTAURANT, CAFETERIA RECREATION ROOM Astoria 2; referee, O’Farrel. Hun-| The next meeting of Unit 3, Section | coM Be tod EAT SCIENTIFIC VEGETARIAN , RESTAURANT nee 1604-6 Madison Ave. Between 107th & 108th Sts, VEGETARIAN ¥, RESTAURANT |] Comrades ‘Will Always Find it Plensant to Dine at Our Place. |] 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx | (near 174th St. Station) for support on the workers. Con-| dominated by the big coal operators, |!5 held by General Augustino Ole- tata ons e. Gaakes Pancnitan nian —— cae re Nae stant support, particularly in the| What that would mean to the min- chea, “rebel” who turned federal. The results in the Brooklyn Work- | the All-America Anti-Impe ey Cooperators! Patronize i ers may better be imagined than| The anti-government force will be |ers’ Soccer League were: gue, will speak on “American Im- A form of subscriptions, will make 2 x x perialism in Latin Am at the Comrades, Patronize emergency campaigns unnecessery| described. This project, put for-jconcentrated at Del Rio, Sonora, Division A. {educational meeting of Unit B, Sec- S E R O bg i future.” ; ward by that notorious agent of the|Governor Topetes force will be| Atlantic 2, Scandinavian Workers | tion 4, Wednesday, March 20, at Th Tri J D. * in the futu | 7 |p. m, 350 E, 81st St. e angie airy ee 8 | coal operators, John L. Lewis, is one|strengthened by 100 cavalrymen un-/1; referee, Szanto. | BG HE 141 SECOND AVENUE, Cor, 9th St CHEMIST = of the most treacherous proposals |der General Enrique Estrada, now Division B. Branch 4, Section | Phone, O¢chard’ 2333, 657 Allerton A Restaurant Final Totals in the history of the American la-|at Cananea and 400 Yaqui and| Aurora 4, Freiheit 2; referee,| ,pueMgisf Section. ®, will meet to- | In case of trouble with your teeth Estabrook 2218 5 Bae Y 1379 Intervale Avenue The final totals are: bor movement. It is flatly in op-|Mayo Indians under General Yucu-|Scheil. Mohawk 0, Red Star 0; ref- |. - _—____- ee, ok aa eure . sare BRONX District 1. 803.51] position to the miners’ interests andjpicio, stationed at Agua Prieta, Aleree, Schafler. Vagabond 2, Red YGSP Phone: Dickens 1096 reful treatment, District 2 . 8,595.02} in line with the interests of big ca- vite haegied nae as at to|Star 1; referee, Klein. - 1 @ ° = Adverti Union Meeti District 3 . 926.73] pital in the coal industry. already have gathe: at Rio, Bl BR d St di ~ | vertise your Union Meetings District we 551.96] Lewis’ plan is the program of big] It was predicted here that the ad- STOCKS KEEP RISING. | le Dir UIE | | br. ABRAHAM MARKOFF || here. For information write to ||| MEET eng FRIENDS, at District . .95! capital in the coal industry. Its|vance on Naco, which General Ola- i i f “ ” ae tt The DAILY WORKE ; 7 Biplaatss bets basic iinet are endorsed by cee is til with . aor of about ane proete ans shes aad Res A lie St SAL a0F a! nytt peme bos Advertising Dept. My Messinger s Vegetarian istric 172.93] many prominent economists and ca- men, start Tuesday. ‘i | BROOKLYN, N. Y. ag Mieke ak Pagel acd gi ta aM 26-28 Union Sq., New Yor i . District 8 2,062.68 pitalists, qatnaer® here denied that, General Seto rete Conon le pga te om Sa» New York city |i! and Dairy Restaurant ric rs It is instructive that rather than|Gonzalo Escobar, commander in| america shares which soared to new = 1763 Southern Blvd., P-onx, N.Y. District 10 148.75] put the plan out themselves the|chief of the reaction, had evacuated record levels. ae Automobile Cor. Ganetaia ao saw Took AMALGAMATED. | |[_Right off 174th St. Subway Station District 12 545.40) operators do it through their labor! Torreon as reported. They said). INSTRUCTION TAUGHT. Complete Telephone: Lehigh 6022 FOOD WORKERS | District 13 1,209.98 agent, Lewis. It is a sort of flying Escobar and 1000 men were well HURLEY IN WAR DEP'T. Course $10, until Lcense granted zlso | Beate LatSaser@ay Da 277.01 | kite, a feeler to begin the solution fortified. WASHINGTON, March 17 (UP).|] Frege "AUTO nas” fost, ed ahied are We All Meet A tur: wien for the capitalists of their compli- —Patrick J. Hu ey, of Tulsa, Okla., | Empire SCHOOL A veaca Beet DR J MINDEL | es Canada... ‘ 8.00| cated problem of consolidation and * spree "PT aNTervate 10019 (Cor, Prospe oe bay i proms cae Much Livestock, Hides, |was sworn today as assistant secre iced SURGECN DEN’ rou Tprasoeda) Como! in the coal industry. Con- tary of war in the presence of Col. TIST NEW WAY CAFETERIA ‘wo Polish Communist Jeputies Handed Over to Courts for Trial WARSAW, Poland, March 17.— Che Communist deputies to the Sejm, r Polish parliament, Bittner and ‘arski, have been handed over to ae authorities for trial. They are recused of action hostile to the state. Uhe specific charge is that last year ‘uring the Hromada trial these two siderable opposition was made to the bill at the hearings by coal operators. But this should not mis+ lead us. The coal industry is highly competitive, with violen.y conflict. ing interests between the operators in the various coal fields. Big ca- pital will have much difficulty in whipping the refractory elements into line and putting through its rationalization program in the coal industry. Lewis’ Bill will probably not be fully accepted in its present form. Its proposals will doubtless be much amended, and certainly not Leave Uruguay to the USSR in Oil Exchange MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay, March 15—The commercial office in Monte- video of the Soviet government con- tinues shipping live stock to the Soviet Union. Today the steamer “Denghan” leaves with a cargo of 5,000 sheep, ‘The U. S. $. R. has made heavy purchases of Uruguayan hides. As a consequence of this trading, Soviet | gasoline and kerosene is being sold to the detriment of the big capitsl-| heavily on the Uruguayan market, C. B, Robbins, whom Hurley suc- ceeds. Tel: DRYdock 8880 — | FRED SPITZ, Inc. “For Any Kind of Insurance” ! FLORIST ‘ + | NOW AT 31 SECOND AVENUE ARL BRODSK (Bet. Ist & 2nd Sts.) ; flowers for All Occasions 7 East 42nd Street, New Yor ——SS Patronize "> -Tip Barber Shops Unity Co-operators Patroni-: SAM LESSER Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailor 1 UNION SQUARE Room 803—Phone: Algonquin 8183 Not connected with any CO-OPERATIVE Dental Clinic TEL ESTABROOK 0668, DR. 1. STAMLER Surgeon-Dentist 101 WEST.-27th STREET NEW YORK Hotel and Restaurant Workers Branch of the Amalgamated Food Workers 123 W, Sint S¢,. Phone Cirete 723¢ USINESS MEETING=}) ws eld on the first Monday of the month at 3 p. m, 1 0. Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 199 SECOND AVE. JE Bet, 12th and 13th Sts, Strictly Vegetariun Food Cooperators! E. KARO Your Nearest Stationery Store HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian Cigars — Cigarettes — Candy 649 ALLERTON AVE. Cor. Barker, BRONX, N. Y. Tel: OLInville 9681-2—9791-2 stilized a peuse in the proceedings to ists nor to the interests of the work |displacing American and British rreet publicly the accused in the/ers, It is signifier. that the na-joils. The Soviet commercial agent same of the workers and poasanis of| tional cool association although re-|states thet soon cther Soviet prod- | 2oland and Ukrainic. Jccting the specific terms of thejucts will be imported into Uruguay. | 26-28 UNION SQUARE (1 flight up) 2700 BRONX PATK EAST (corner Allerton Ave.) DIRECTOR OPEN: Mon,, Tues. Wed., Thu from 10 to 8 P. M. Saturday a: Sunday from 10 to 7 P. M, RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNI versity 5865 1818 - 7th Ave, lew York Retween 110th and 111¢ hs Next to Unity Co-operative Houine | «U0 Bronx Park Bast | |