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Princeton Hat Company Strikers Issue State “PECTER CALLS | Communist Activities BROWNSVILLE {| May Day for unit discussion can be| a : GIRL PICKETS ep 5 |discussed by J; Louis Engdahl, act- | VR TC | ing editor of the Daily Worker, at BROOKLYN || 8 p. m. tomorrow, before Section 8 at ——————————— | the Brownsville Workers Center, 154 Coney Island Unit. Watkins “The Significance of May 1” will) Reactionary Local Got | Ingvof the unit at 8:90. p. mm, tonleht | — MANHATTAN 1 35 Workers Fired | **2!0t,Menmaid Ave, _A mandolin orchestra and a Rus- sian opera singer will entertain at St. Party Members, Tickets for the May First demon- Notice! E the package party and concert, Sat- Sharply refuting the charges of urday, 2001 Mermaid Ave, |#tf@tion. at the Bronx Collseum may ; . Finan- gangsterism made by Spector of * [cial secretaries should secure their he right wing Local 24 of the Cloth Units Section 6, qucta through the section machinery as »|,,4 combined educational meeting of|at once. Sections and units should Hat, Cap and Millinery Workers’ the units will be held today, at 6: 0} organize machinery accordingly. Union, the 35 girls on strike at the|P, ™., 56 Manhattan Ave. Ray Rago-| Comrades are wanted for the ni i zin will speak on “Women in His-| pageant rehearsal every Sunday, 2 p. Princeton Hat Co. have issued the} tory.’ m., at the Workers Center, 26 Union following statement telling exactly quare, Further aow the strike originated and how, ,, EP EOE ES EAS uneniae oe tce x é f uiterature ape BOP d Spector united with the police to! meet at 8:30 force their arrest. |hattan Ave. ‘ . fi “ i i bss | iscussed at the meet of th it, ‘The Jewish daily paper called|path mench Young Workers League,|6 nine Mondan, Aor eat Oa he Day’ had a statement published | sa May dance and revel will be held | z7th St. Tuesday, April 28, by Spector,|3sin'st’ ursckiym 1 St 48 Bay) anager of Local 24, Cloth Hat, * ‘* ‘ap and Millinery Workers Inter-| Section § Membership, Meet, The, section meets Mond: cag aah, Section 6. agents of the p. m. today, section 56 Man-| Unit 5F, 3D. Arrangements for May 1 will be Ce ane Unit 2B, 5F. * || The unit meets today, | 102 W. 27th st. * 6 at p.m, * rational Union, referring to the|p. m.,’April 29, 154 Watkins ‘ he | Young Workers League Jazn Band. strike of the Princeton Hat Co.,|membership drive and reorganiza-| ‘The first rehearsal will be held. at tion will be discussed. 2 p.m. Sunday, at 143 E. 103rd St. which was called by Local 43. “In that statement the facts are aot true and we, the 35 strikers, | vish to have your paper publish the | eal facts of the matter. | Organizer Bleker, were arrested and Fought for Better Conditions. | kept in prison until 4.30 p. m. and) “The Princeton Hat Co. employed! paid fines besides. | 5 girls, members of Local 43. Most} “Monday morni:g when we began | of us girls worked for the firm four| picketing the shop, the organizer of years, since the firm has been in| Local 24, Mendelewitz pointed out »xistence. Almost all of us have certain girls to the policeman, and 10 parents in this country and we/| nine were arrested, again. were making an honest living| Soar of us ay Pages cue cell hrough our work with this firm, | With criminals and prostitutes. a tees “Conditions, thanks to our organi-| _ “We girls believe that we have Ce Haiernenias oo. yet ‘ers and the solidarity of our girls,|Tight to belong to any union we) i thank” is N@le quite fair, We have always | Choose, and that no union has aj 4 fraction of a “hank” is never f Me: ery Pas |counted, and since it i im- ried to improve our conditions and| Tight to force any opinion on us 4 is almost im: : ' “We especially with the help of police, | Possible to make the clock register fe por ay between: the: girls BESTA i a or pouce- Jan even number of “hanks” the | i f arts of “hanks” ri “Last Tuesday one of the organi-| “This letter is not a story but PF a Wak a ue Brett vee ‘ers of Local 24 came up and in-!are real and true facts. It is also S : s | textile b: % ormed us that we could have one/ the expression of the pain of the 35 a id pase lay to make up our minds to drop strikers of the Princeton Hat Co. | ,, ny Strikers state that they be- vur affiliation with Local 43, but we | SCEESSISInsSe sane ater Sees chat fee! st doi 6 | each “hank” ee eo ke in the name LADor and Fraternal segisterea, ‘f all of the girls and replied that! Organizations _ The mill barons here are so wor- > have a union and don’t intend Pei He At the ane leadership of change our affiliation. e strikers here that they have Threatens Girls | BRONX tae alee Joe Mitchell Téa F apple, editor of “The Nati 4 The next day, on Wednesday, the United Council 22. | Magazine,” to lecture a; nlaat thet oss called in the chairlady and the) Ann Eaton will lecture on “Chil-| i) Ga stoni ai ts em ‘ a told them that they|@"en’s Books” at_ the Cooperative | astonia, under a general title ommittee “ OoL Ai a Auditorium, 2700 Bronx Park East,/ “Americanism versus Communism.” weet aha i eeg isdetoel me eho anes | The rey soe that this lecturer is is tails Gina re | imported speaks of the fear the em- ‘The chairlady replied that it is 1 ployers have of their strikers. Imost unbelievable that the opera- | to montane sae § aes easy ors would stop on account of poli-|“ ™ °° *' ae | S ies and deprive 35 girls of their| MANHATTAN 1) Tag Day for Relief. obs. OO], The Workers International Relief “The firm agreed to permit us to i =~ ator tes es ae 18 carrying on a campaign to aid the it down to work the next day. | atthe May Day Celebrations at the ae textile workers and the “The next day at 11:30 a.m., the a Coliseum will, be held at 6:30 p. AN pie nurse miners, For perators were stopped for an hour|P-™., today, at the Workers Cen-| this purpose the W. I. R. has desig- finda half, and then came back to‘ “Our fpom 28 Talon Sauare.- nated Thursday and Sunday, May 2, orl, Mois pee eae ciieth Wl er ee ce oar er ate | Urea Moissaye Olgin, o: it, will | i ‘ és “You'll Lose Jobs.” Head discussion on “The Importance | ene i ures 4 ay to carry vocal 24 called in the chairlady and|p. m. today. GASTONIA STRIKE PICKETS ON DUTY (Continued from Page One) | yards, and register it as a standard hank. In 1924 the “hank-clocks” in the of Local 24 and the police w: proven to us immediately. “Fourteen of our girls, including ane eer 3 SAT Club Hikes. The club will row from City Island y. Meet 9:30 Far. | WwW information from | DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, APRIL 25, 1929 tement on Piceture on Curent SOCIALISTS, AFL, Soviet Drama Friday IN st AB i 0 y F “The World Revolution Dramatiz- ed,” the last of a series of four lec-| Aim to Break Strike in Cafeterias | A |tures on Revolutionary Russian \Fakers Sanction Mur- | Drama will be given by Harry Dana (Continued from Page One) with the charge that their jurisdic- INO PROTEST ONS BUILDING DEATHS ders by their Silence at the Workers’ School Auditorium, 26 Union Square, at 8 tomorrow} (Continued from Page One) | | night. {to which the dead man had be-|the Soviet Union Dana, who studied 200 plays in last year, will longed. | analyze current plays, which deal tion has been infringed upon in the Live in Three Rooms. | with the spread of the revolutionary calling out of the cake nee he | Both M: Ronning and Signe ; movement over Europe, the conflict strike with the rest of the cafeteria of the world revolution with Ameri- Workers. ; jean and British Imperialism, the| That this is a false issue can be spread of the revolution to China| clearly seen from the insignificant and the Far East, and plays dealing | number of workers so involved, and with imaginary revolutions, Plays|is raised only to hide the strike- like Roar China, The Red Poppy,| breaker tactics they employ. The | When the Cocks Crow, the Spread| appeal uses all the tricks of the Eagle, will be described. bosses to split the workers’ ranks FOR MAY 1 MEETS ;Ronning, sister of the killed worker, were interviewed yesterday+at the little three-room apartment of a two- story house in Brooklyn. Originally intended to be a two-family house, each flat has been split in two to accommodate four families, For two reasons—the profits of the land- lord are bigger, and few families in the neighborhood can afford an en- tire flat. | The death of Otte Ronning left his two young children, Otte, nine years old, and Sven, four, without any further means of support. Mrs. ‘Ronning, nearing old age, is left as the sole breadwinner for the little union will- under the mask of r lution and under the excuse of str the bakery workers.” Spread Lies on Lefts. The hypocrisy of the role being played by the officials of this local family. She was desperate when | is especially brought out in their ac- sys : is especially brought out in asked what she would do. “I don’t /Socialists WillSabotage cusation contained in this statement know what to do. I don’t know | that the left wing local No. 164, Labor’s Holiday (Continued from Page One) sabotage or to smash the May Day demonstrations being prepared by the militant workers and peasants a 8 most fifteen years ago. A longand|under the revolutionary leadership already having agre: ents with miserable apprenticeship as a la-|of the Communist Parties. Local 500 approached the Amalga- borer and helper, and the union bu-| To review some of these coun-| mated Food Workers Local 164 for jveaucrats had finally given him his |tries briefly: In Poland, hundreds of contracts. These were refused. A card as a full-fledged’ bricklayer. | workers have been arrested by the] letter dated April 20 was sent to The union scale was fine, Mrs. Ron- | Pilsudski police, and many prole-| Local 500 by registered mail inform- ning said, “$14 a day; but he could |tarian organizations raided, includ-| ing them of these facts, citing the jonly work four or five months aling the printing plant where hun-| demoralizing conditions | year.” The dead worker had been unem- ployed for more than two months before he got the job on the West- erm Union building. He started work on the same day with Coiro what I could do!” she repeated over | and over again, greatly agitated. | Five Months’ Work a Year. Ronning, she said, had come to Amerios from Norway with her al- Amalgamated Food Workers’ Union, |is approaching bosses for agree- ments which lower the scale of the bakery workers. |Party May Day leaflets were being| the locals and proposing measures inted, the headquarters of the left! to overcome the bad situation. £ wing of the Polish socialist party,, The officials of the right wing and other centers. As is usual the| local refused to accept this letter yellow socialist organizations. -| when it was delivered. This fact is his helper. And the collapse of the |cialist party, Jewish Bund, Paole| given greater significance by the scaffold on which they were work-| Zion—are not only not observing) fact that the attorney hired by these ing ended their lives the same | May Day as a day of militant dem-| socialist officials is the same attor~ moment, onstrations (they have announced| ney who obtained an injunction for Still Mouths to Feed. |that they will hold no public meet-| the employers against the Amalga- At the home of Mrs. Coiro, 326 E. ings), but are sabotaging and try-| mated Food Workers Local 164. |418th St. yesterday, - deeper lines |ing to smash those of the Commu-| Police Aid “Socialists.” jhad settled on the faces of the rela- | Mists and left wing. — z This conference completes the tives of the dead worker. Looking|, In the West Ukraine, the Polish) united front of the police, the “So- at them, especially Mrs. Coiro, one | fascist government is observing May ciglists” and the re-actionary Cen- jean read their thoughts: Antonio | Day by trials of dozens of members’ tra} Trades and Labor Council, that \Coiro is dead. That is ended. But |0f the West Ukrainian Communist) with the bosses have to date failed |there are still mouths to feed, bod- | Patty. to stem the rising tide of the strike. lies to clothe. Police Prepare in France. ‘The specific task of the United He- Only the wealthy can afford elab-| Im France, the police are already | brew trades is especially to prevent jorate and long periods of mourning announcing their preparations for|the spread of the strike to the lower |to exhibit their grief. But the poor attacks on May Day demonstrations,| downtown section, Second Ave., must immediately take up the added jikewise the police of all capitalist, Delancy St. East Broadway, etc. burden and continue the struggle countries. The acts of the united strike- for existence. _ | The Second Socialist Internation-| breakers can only spur the activ- “They are trying she should not al, through its Zurich Bureau, has! ities of the workers in building the get anything,” the dead work i brother said. “The union, it sleeps. | All his life it takes his dues every ; month, but when he is dead, he no |longer can pay dues, so why should armament call, asking that Wilson’s | conference for the setting up of one and “that the solemn pledges to dis-| ers’ organizations in this city which arm shall be fulfilled.” There was a bitter- This hypo-| shall send a substantial delegation | break up the hard earned gains of | | The facts are that several bosses | being | |dreds of thousands of Communist) brought about by the antagonism of | ng’s 3 Use joined in the defence of the com- mittee and a squad of policemen was called. Twelve pickets were ar- rested and charged with disorderly conduct, Three were sentenced by Magistrate Maurice Gottlieb of the t 57th St. Court to 380 days in| the workhouse. They were George Gelepis, 35, 101 West 38th St., Tony Odell, 2 234 46th Brooklyn, and Phillip Shanoway, 31, of 304 Wi 16th St. This was the second time that Globe has been “pulled out” on strike. Today all but three walked out in response to the strike com-| COAL BA TRIES 16 MOONEY Wie of Pol nu 1Ce N ST EE Sigs U 1 OP TING ¢ the Radical Students Say They Will Fight mittee’s call. (Continued jrom Page One) Forty-eight were arrested up to} made their way to the steps of 3 p.m. and about 15 later in the aft- Thaws Hall to hold their meeting ernoon. Forty-three were fined $1 there, and Professor Whiting, who each by Magistrete Hymal Bushel in Jefferson Market Court. Five were discharged. Fifteen others will be arraigned in night court. Thirty-two strikers arrested earlier in the week in the campaign of wholesale arrests initiated by Po- lice Commissioner Whalen at the wi fi B lp, behest of the United Restaurant Owners’ Association, for alleged violation of the injunction r, | ions were held today for special se: under Section 600 of the Penal C violation of a court order or con- meeting. dents were taken to the dean’s of- ing was over. baugh, one-time gu ing cou property. as to act as chairman, opened the Two of the leading stu ice and held there until the meet- As Dr. Harry Elmer to speak, Dafaun- rd a Vestern ry, told that the meet- not be held on univer: arnes started enitenti de, Shoe Strikers Fight Against Injunction tempt of court. Eight were sen-| tenced—$10 or three days. A sum| (Cone F , 7 of $103 fuoby the union to | anaes gd ae ey day to fines inflicted on| ‘he President, Alex Ande strikers arrestedwhile picketing | U8ion arise and declare in co peacefully. A Working Women Will Meet in Union Confab (Continued from Page One) delegates to the conference called by the T.U.E.L. in Cleveland, Ohio, | on June 1 and 2, where a new trade} union center will be established, Important Meeting. The Shop Delegate Conference |} will take place says the call “where the representatives of shops from needle trades, textile, manufactur- ing and stores will gather to discu: their problems in connection th the Trade Union Unity Conference and begin a widespread campaign b: a e t | ai | York under The judges re The American Shoe Co | gaged in a dispute with its wor made any disturbance many strike breakers, who had be imported from out of tow the shop of their own acc learning that they have been fooled e was here waiting to be in court There were present Ar- thur Bender, whose shop k y the union, and M Q | representing the American Shoe Co. pany is en- nd may have any day. The company f: to produce any vidence to show that the worker around it hop during the entire five weeks of he strike, and had to admit that have left d after nd tricked into coming into New e promises arved decision until today. throughout the entire city for the election of women delegates from unions and from shops to the Cleve- land Convention, so that the voice of the woman workers of this coun- try, against exploitation, against the impending imperialist war, against | open shops and speed-up systems and against the treacherous bureau- Comrade Frances Pilat MIDWIFE 351 E. 7/th St., New Yor! Nu:¥- Tel. Rhinelander 3916 eracy of the A. F. of L. and the Right wing, will be heard through- out every corner of the country, bring a message of hope to the mil- lions of exploited women workers and rally them around the unions and around the New Trade Union | Center.” | issued its “May Day” call as a dis-|strike and strength of the May 3 on May 4, 2 p, m.,, 14 fossilized points be carried out,| trade union center for all food work- | Take up this call in your shop whether organized or unorganized. COMRADES MEET AT Giusti’s Spaghetti House 5-course Luncheon 50c—11 to 3 6-course Dinner 75c—5 to 9 A LA CARTE ALL DAY 49 West 16th Street | —__—— Elect delegates for the conference at Irving Pl., 15th St. and Irving Pl. aie ae | Nearing Lectures on Mect your Friends at GREENBERG’S Bakery © Restaurant 939 E, 174th St., Cor. Hoe Ave. “Every working woman should) they worry.” make special | efforts to act as ajness in his voice, but a subdued bit- Il'tése our jobs: ‘The girls should ae s Fallot volunteer during these tag days, Get|terness. He had known too many | ither register or get out of the|%: m will be held at 6:30; Your friends to do the same. Sis-! other cases of the same kind to be . m. today at the Workers Center,|ters: Join with us in maki Hie | Fivoer-nansitt , ace immediately. fourth floor, 26 Union Square. making this hyper-sensitive now. “The girls all refused to join and * j tag day a success, and thereby help| In a few days Mrs. Coiro and Mrs. i the striking textile workers of the}Ronning must go out to look for critical gesture continues to urge) to the big Trade Union Unity con- the workers to fight for peace by ference in Cleveland on June 1. | petitions to the militarist imperial-| eS eae “What is Happening in the So- jists assembled in Geneva, begging! In addition to the Sheldon Cafe-| viet Union?” will be the subject of |“that the will t> peace of the peo-| teria, which signed an agreement a lecture by Scott Nearing at Hunts ples of the world will at length be) with the union yesterday, the Moon) Point Palace, 168rd St. and Southern |expressed by the representatives of| Cafeteria, at 1315 West 27th St., Boulevard, Bronx, at 8 o'clock to- * * «& ommittee informing us again that) May Day Ballet. nless we join Local 24 we would! Right off 174th Street Subway Station, Bronx USSR Tomorrow Night | * | May Day Demonstration Tickets. All Comrades Meet at |are responsible for all the misery | forced upon the workers, 8} id refused to register in Local 24./ers are asked to call at Room 17 “At 4.30 our organizer, Sylvia | National Textile Workers’ Union, 1 Ave., between 9 a. m, and lecher, came up to speak to the! p. m. ante “All materials for the tag days | should be called for at the central “The next morning, Friday, we all | St- ume up to work but found our/ aces were taken by scabs, which ocal 24 provided for the firm. Call Strike. i We declared a strike, and con- pie, Nétucteaunie.” ary to the statement of Specter; The English section will hike to 1.35 girls went down, even a sister | Sleepy Hollow Sunday. Meet at 42nd Shale ioe oss and the firm gave us “good! 2 whites 4 ‘ Papi ‘ v Mirror, 3 St. and Fiftl 2 Pi “ unit mete Mite Bor w. arm| Setice of the U. C. of W. W., 80/killed by company greed and the|national minorities all over the See Mehr aan Becane Cipreamet verutanet Our bina ¥ " “U0) East 11th St. Room 533. Office | vicious speed-up which they sanction | country. le objectives of this ¥ ; 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx |open every day from 10.! i “Radnik,”—“H Lavatore” luntil event Be a papa? An entertainment and il evening. Saturday, 1 p. m. |be given Saturday, & * ‘f he [Italian Workers Club, St. dance will p.m. at the 314 B, 104th} . Chicago I. L. D. Protest. | following telegram of protest has t. station, Van Cortland Park, at 8/ been sent by the Chicago district of the bass, and began walking up/a.'m. Fare, about one dollar. | the Inte i La ASeeNC RIBERA ALG GBba: 01 ar | nternational Labor Defense to ‘The monthly social meeting will be | G 1 : jovernor Gardner of = “The alliance between the officers yia11, 350 &. Ssth St. Ne cere held tomorrow night at the A. F, W.| 7 jlina: | been made, no effort to obtain com- pensation, no inkling have they |given of the fact that they even |know that these workers are dead, | by their silence. * ele 3 Write to the Daily Worker. | | Workers employed in the building CHICAGO, Ill, April 24—The trades of New York City and goainst the observance of the reli- | throughout the country are urged to send stories describing the con- | ditions under which they ‘work and | conditions in their locals to the Daily Worker. A thorough expose of the | vicious speed-up system and a more | militant fight on the part of work- |ers for social insurance against the | growing dangers confronting work- \ers in the industry must be the an- The Soviet Union is observing places went on strike today. They May Day by demonstrations of mil-| ate the Monroe, 26th St. and Broad- lions of workers and peasants and|Way, the Sun, 38th St. and Sixth year’s May Day are two-fold: first,| W4Y- to lower the working day to seven! _ When s hours in as many additional plants| Globe Cafeteria, 14th St. and Irv- as possible; secondly, to fight re-| ing PL, to persuade the workers to ligion by nation-wide propaganda| Join the strike, they were attacked by the private detectives who were 'gious Easter holidays. Moscow will] Suarding the place. Ten of the | again see 750,000 to 1,000,000 work-| Workers who walked out on strike |ers demonstrating on the streets and | === in the Red Square from dawn to DR. he MINDEL dusk, SURGECN DENTIST Socialist 1 UNION SQUARE Room 803—Phone: Algonquin 8188 Not connected with any a committee entered the Counter-Attack York. Here in New York City the so- cialist party is arranging a counter- in New “For Any Kind of Insurance” Telephone: Murray Hill 5550 '. East 42nd Street, New York Patronize | No-Tip Barber Shops 26-28 UNION SQUARE ai flight up) 2700 BRONX P/“K EAST ‘used to leave “e place. M - a stic! ayia x . 3 3 , ‘a ie afuanker Go et nd Dey See ration are now ready’ at mca Nias Ae strike, and feed the |jobs, They may have to live in| the governments in Geneva.” and the Consolidated, at 460 Broad-) morrow night. BRONSTEIN’S ulled up a policeman and demanded | fnetrucied to come for them without of the United Sti and their children | crly one room from now on instead | This appeal ends with the slogan, way, came to terms with the union. | 1a ANI VEGETARIAN HEALTH rat we be removed by force. We! jelay. ee ee Seniors Sh Bri-|of the moioranle eatee pore ae “Carry out the disarmament, This makes 18 cafeterias where the; Down with discrimination against RESTAURANT gre threatened with being taken) vationat Textile Union Wants Volan-| building of the new tnions and will |Iivieklavers Union. and the Building |cdees” Such is the way of the|strikers have gone back to work n-) the foreign-born, women and || 555 cy, Parkw 2 ese threats we refused to go down nooks for the Southern textile strike | ? b ~| May Day in Soviet Union. Besides the Globe, four more solidarity on May Day ‘ Pisa Aa Dairy » (nea 174th § itatio: PHON ALB INTERVALB 9149. MEET YOUR FRIENDS at Messinger’s Vegetarian and Dairy Restaurant 1763 Southern Blvd., ™ onx, N.Y. Right off 174th St. Subway Station (corner Allerton Ave.) For a Real Oriental Cooked Meal VISIT THE ; ~| demonstration to the huge mobiliza-; other office Tel.: DRYdock 8880 INTERNATIONAL | a ed pees ee vba ed RTE of the Communist Party on|/'=== FRED SPITZ, Ine. |others. By writing to the Daily Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF FLORIST | Worker all building trades workers can participate in this denunciation of and protest against the ever-in- creasing perils that accompany capi- talist rationalization in industry. \calls upon the workers to down tools | (and demonstrate against imperialist |war, for the defense of the Soviet | Union, against colonial oppression, for the shorter working day and | SURGEON DENTIST 249 BAST 115th STREET Cor. Second Ave. New York Office hours: Mon,, Wed., Sat., 9.30 a.m. to 12; 2 to 6 P, M. Tues. Thurs., 9.30 a. m. to 12; NOW AT 31 SECOND AVENUE (Bet. 1st & 2nd Sts.) Flowers for All Occasions 15% REDUCTION TO READERS OF THE DAILY WORKER 101 WEST 287 STREET (Corner 6th Ave.) RESTAURANT, CAFETERIA RECREATION ROOM Open trum 2% a m te 12 p m PROTEST | social insurance, for solid support of | % to 8 p.m th ilitant South ill ‘ik- s 4 _m . mM. AGAINST jens and ‘other’ strikers throughout! Pronag seine Fc apvelatient \| Unity Co-operators Patronize HEALTH FOOD Police Brutality | the country, vi ait ls ‘AM. LESSER Vegetarian Injunctions : i‘ |e GET Suig cI asd aE MIT UE ERSMRISR oa | PRO ee Ce Ma | REST AURANT rests o. | 1600 MADISON AVE. Workers MODEL HOUSING ' MASS-DEMONSTRATION 4) oct Ae ana Nee ao Phone: UNIversity 5865 Next to Unity Co-operative House Fight Imperialist War Organize the Unorganized Defend the Soviet Union | Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 | John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES OPENING of the FIFTH NATIONAL CONVENTION lords. They would therefore like Advertise your Union Meetings i hi vor to sell to the city at 25 per cen! here, For information write to | (Continued from Page One) | 4 | above the assessment value, and get | | SEAR SOCRNS HBR esc more than they ever expected. 4 The DAILY WORKER A place with atmosphere JAMES PHILLIPS | The proieee is primarily for YOUNG WORKERS (COMMUNIST) LEAGUE | iy Advertising Dept. 302 1B, 12th St. New York | widening the streets to the Brooklyn | Bridge in order to raise the value | ff the property in the vicinity and | | inerease business. To give it a hu-| |manitarian flavor they have added | the “model” housing scheme, which | proposes to build middle-class apart- | | ments on the remaining property to | | rent at $12.50 per room. Even if! this works out—which is improb- | | able, due to the city graft in giv- | ing out contracts—the rentals would | National Speakers. Reunion of the Hawaiian Communist League Paul Crouch, Walter Trumbull, \( Hotel and Restaurant Workers George Pershing, Harvey Steele | Branch of the Amalgamated | i Food Work | Mass word wea 133 W. Sist St, Phone Clsate Tase || on BUSINESS MEETING] Sports’ Exhibition—Labor Sports’ Union eld on the first Mondny of the APRIL 26TH AT 8 P. M. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City COMRADES BAT t thi SCIENTIFIC VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT | 1604-6 Madison Ave, | Between 107th & 108th Sts, Celebrate May Day The International Labor Holiday. WEDNESDAY, MAY FIRST BRONX COLISEUM Doors Open at 4 P. M. (EAST 177th STREET STATION) EXCELLENT PROGRAM—Dixie Negro Choir will sing Negro Labor Songs—Guild | hb al Fratcal oy bang od ein cee Phillips, noted Basso — Nationally lee enol oe ee | sae sd Ls Codparetars! Fatronine own Admission 5c; through your organization 25c. C CARPENTERS’ UNION ; entral Oper / S E R O Y Auspices ut the May Day Conference of Unions and Fraternal Organizations, Commun- pie sion amas cpoewt ae ae ma nes struggie against colonal cppres- sion! Long live the revo'nt’onary struggle for the liberate cf the oppressed peoples! Tickets on Sale at: Daily Worker office. Young Workers League, CHEMIST 26-28 Union Square, Young Workers League, 43 E. 125th St. 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. ¥ Meets every Thursday, 8 P. M., at Labor Temple, 243 East 84th St. Office and headquarters are in the af Labor Temple, inges. | NOE, Jat Party, Diatriet | | a Od baal etched ed ed ee el hel ne ed et ett TT om