The Daily Worker Newspaper, May 6, 1929, Page 5

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DAILY WORKER, ah YORE, MONDAY, MAY 6, 1929 ——EE [Reactionary Women’ s Trade Union League Convention Opens i in , Washington Today -HOMEN’S DEPT. Communist Activities [MOBILIZING FOR." "=" FENG MANEUVERS NEW MEMBERS IN 3 Children of Worker Are Burned to Death i | ATTA | eas : NEW CASTLE, Pa., May Ue OF Pp R APS THE - TUNSIEVETAN TUEL CONVENTION. T0 Three children were” burned ranch 4, Section 5, Um! ', Section 1. death yesterday when a gas¢ Branch meets today at 8:30 p. m.| A ducational ti vill be ne ateuidiupei ae et [held today, at 65 prim, at 98"Ave Me War Near, Chiang for | rr ree cutiien of Be ve O izationCampaign ection . ba . . i ss ie ANTI- LABOR GANG. Industrial Sees Sees Section 3, Subsection E. N. Y. Local Reports Anti-USSR Hatred Mrs. William Stevens—Dorothy, 14, ugan Ais ans fs 30 330 W n a I rial Citi p.m. today at 1330 Wilkins Ave.| section meets at 9 p. m. today ‘at Progress William, 13, and Virginia, 9. | in Industrie 1tles N [101 W. 27th St. | The mother escaped with her (Continued from Page One) “Support Im mper ialist| —— * Downtown Protest Meet. oe In a statement issued by the local | Feng has made an agreement with four-year-old daughter, Eleanor, But (Continued from Page Ona} Branch 2, Section 8 : Aare aa s The 1 seantl ” Reorganization of the unit and the] A meeting protesting against po-| New York, T. U. E. L. it is reported = they were seriously burned. he | specia ve recently Policies of U.S. membership drive will be discussed lice brutality in the Berlin May Day | that preparations are in full swing ne Ryengs! mulitary selique;-butits three victims were asleep in an up-|has added Negroes to jat peting a \e . ay, rat vi . e Sea- Par . : 5 ig s “sg - 5, 7 sits > - + PY See eee eee ea eee te ted cee icrtocen | for anobilixing unions)”. minority keeping it secret “so as not to an-| stairs room when the fire broke out. the Party, An inter-racial dance is The conference of the Women's groups in existing unions, shop tagonize the Soviet Union, whose | Stevens, an electrical company to be held this month, and special Trade Union League that opens to- . . groups and shop committees for the aid he is trying to procure.” employe and the oldest daughter, tribution cam- toe Ramunaon woe domed raternal Organizations) i,t, fa swat Be eee epee nine ces vay Wale ae in the following statement issued be held in Cleveland, Ohio, on June les mora thatthe: U.S. -acRiia cue their work when the explosion and taken. Open Party meet- last night by the Women’s Depart- Tuteteaiioual Taher wetesse: 1, and for the Metropolitan Area |§ a ba liso ee fire occurred. The house was/ings are held month, to which ment of the Communist ‘Party. TC BRONX J], Te New, Fork District of the ‘t. u,| Conference, to be held May 18 and fitting Feng for the renewal of | destroyed. known sympathizers are invited, and abe right wing reactionaries ae pee i Se eicale Sun- 19, at Irving Plaza, 15th St. and hostilities so that they can have an educational di ions held. the women’s trade union movement Hardware Setters Club. ‘ ray . * | Trvi Ww ity. y i Fy ea . * meets in Washington today when|, 1. Zimmerman will speak on the! Neegie Teadas Workers’ Industrial ane Pept, Sot ONY: h di excuse for increasing their own : hi Ww oa eadaUaion ea |fight against the war danger at the| ~ Uatosr rial e statement points out the nee forces in case their puppet nation- Prepare Unity Congress. bens Sa ceueih s fee ene | eecenonal meee a re Members are requested by the or- for : ee and ase! cae fe alist government collapses, as it | DETROIT ng to- . - | Ha is SIRS Be | §2 ization department to report at{coordinate the struggles of the likely will. r arie: ill "|p, m., at 1400 Boston Road. NARUC Aves Gt Atte on : 2 y will. . day eries gs will pon The conventi: ne ote al, | eae! ahikace Odktcod. tomorrow, to concentrate on getting workers in the many sporadi The local press is frankly eu be conducted b3 here in propriately in the Y. W. C. A. hotel Pe ch Mont ane Helaneronaos an aby, ee porate from 27th St.|strikes into a definite center e: W |pressing its alarm at the tremen- | the Communist which | etween § a Sev Aves. , pki ai A | ; 7 ae Gree paces Hotel. Cee a Tuesday evening at 1400, Boston | 2°street meetings. Ven AV@® fF [leading these workers in their strug-| 6 6,67q1 Lejuene, of the Wall 2Us growth of Communist strength | members mates and . which has many times refuse | Road, conducted by Arnold Powe! | * * * gle for improved conditions and for 5 : here, especially as expressed in ae | sympath meetings shelter to organizers of wonen| Tiowatosauiecotaer wesc, Street Marine Corps, and General | E workers in the textile, needle and other industrivs, en’s Trade Uaion arms. “The convention call is issued in| the hame of Mrs. Raymond Robins, | honorary president, and other} accepts the Wom-| Leagne with open | MANHATTA National Textile Union Wants Volun- teers. | Volunteers to prepare membership books for the Southern textile strik- ers are asked to call at Room 1707, | National Textile Workers’ Union, 104| A meeting protesting against po- |lice brutality in the Berlin May Day celebrations will be held at the Sea- men’s Club, 28 South St., at 12 | tomorrow. noon Binet Ve: Workers International Relief, A meeting will be held at the W. I. R. offices, 1 Union Square tom row to organize a photo the organization of the unorganized. T.U.E.L. Guides Many Struggles. “New York has been the scene social reformists and treacherous so- cialist party leaders in the trade unions,” the statement continues, Malone of Wall Street’s Army de-| parting on the army transy Somme to lead the U. S. imperialist of left wing struggles against the | forces in terrorizing and murdering, if “nec ” Chinese worke: peasants. s and sary, |support of the Soviet Union among vort | the masses, Eye ees | Mme. Sun Scores Kuomintang. BERLIN, May 5.—Mrs. Sun Yat- Sen, wife of Dr. Sun Yat. vealed here today that his bod: Gastonia Workers Speak Wednesday The Women’s tag day the striking textile workers south, is now going on and will con- S' Will ¢ bringing i tion to 1 | Fifth Ave., between 9 a. m. and 8 ry “ 5 soon b ved fr ite. present di f th italist | Comrades owning still or motion p: the workers of the east, especially oon be remov ‘om p 0 x 0 clei, wees SEs aasee ne Leepae “and | LIAS eal ture /cameras are,asked to attend. in New York and New Jersey, have tomb and be placed in the purple | tinue until May 12. It is pane ing, with 7 ee a i g mo ; y] cy 1 j i 2 ons re) ) rg etri of their proteges, Rose Schneider- | 1 seen the A. F. of L. exposed as an eae where he wished to be ale in national Bl with the | tion 5 yore a 2 steal man, and other officials of si MASS PICKETING POSTPONE i) DAY agent of the bosses within the work- buried. | The International Relief, : ae call specia meetings paguejee ‘ i ing class. M ‘ -| The five textile who /for the purpose of ng new with Sie women or the cae wing, under the guidance of the T. vise the removal, She also re-em- ; | funds tor the srking workers wl a aoe ag apr Ove ee ae Fete Me Maacy? 2 k th talwart m _|speak at a mass meeting Wednes- the Trade Ur nity Conv pe para nty ee ety ean | IN FOOD STRIKE | BUILDING WEEK ieee of e tvel workers rope i gt es day at 8 p. m. at 1800 Seventh Ave. enc pledge 100 delegates from De- talist ‘i i both the | tisteat anc | victories against the bosses, defeat- Active in 1 Communist Kuomintan, th olitical party of |4 Harlem section of the W. I. R. | troit added Gales oe ee SS ing the holy alliance of the labor| Youth Work fs Nachiie. paneer will be organized at the meeting. | The Ford hep nuclei cleo actives : ; i i | i hdres The strikers who will speak are ly organized tlir part ic the prepa- No Informstion Available. ‘Hundreds Der Demonstrate Trades Council, Bosses a aNeee aoeraD Cooma 0d ol | She said her withdrawal was due Viola Hampton, Raymond Clark, W, rations for the May Day celebration “The convention of the league is} at Noon Today Put It Off to Aug. 24 “The masses are seething with} BUFFALO, May 5.—James Rush, to the counter revolutionary policy | of the Pauly sXe 's exes council, - Bledsoe, Kermit Hardin and C. at this meetin something of a mystery. No infor- discontent and many spontaneous, | former Buffalo district organizer of ine Hallaway. Silverman, See tees. mation is available at league head- (Continued from Page One) (Continued from Page One} unorganized strikes have broken out.| the Young Workers League, and a} |secretary, Local New York, Workers Hartford Workers Conle quarters as to order of business, ments. Some 2,000 union members |signed a separate peace with the|in which the workers are fighting | member of the National Executive | International Relief, will also ad- program of the conference, etc. Per-| haps the league hopes in this way) to escape the notice of the militant workers and be left in peace. The convention is organized to give rep- are now behind the strike. Twenty-five strikers were arrest- | ed Saturday and arraigned in Jef-| ferson Market, Essex, the First Dis- trict (Tombs), and 67th St. Court. | ruling clique in the Electrical Con- tractors Association and left the |cther union workers to their fate. | The Electrical Workers got a raise from $12 to $13.20. valiantly against wage cuts, speed- ups, for shorter hours, and the right to organize; such as the oil work- ers of Bayonne, N. J.; ;Committee of the League until its | last convention, has morning of been mysteri-| the rubber | ously missing since the workers of Milltown, N. J.; copper; Wednesday, May 1. CHICAGO WILL HOLD TAG DAYS © dress the meeting. ‘Rubber Co. Militarist Balloon Race Failing ‘Out for Speeches at ‘Communist May 1 Meet HAR’ : pathy as ; 3 3 | speaker, a Young Communi TE eas te aes Two were pal 7 a of) This gave an opportunity for the | workers of Perth Amboy, N. J.; the) Because Rush has been ren | ss 3 or dad a: Comtntnisehest ions an he Aa ot Lk will be thers nacht were journed for trial to- |application for injunctions against | traction workers in New York City, jan health for over the last year, his | a ‘- PITTSBURGH, May 5.—One by Ge the. Frethelt (chown sania ite , ments. le A. BP. 3 lay, and the rest held for night | the electrical bosses, to restrain | etc.” | disappearance has caused his family | Workers “There Hear | one, the twelve balloons which in full force, its internationals and court. | them from paying the increased | started last night in the 1929 elim- | Lithuanian chorus contributed to the s ; ‘ Needle, Shoe Trades Represented. | and comrades to entertain the grav- | ] Lets : success of an enthusi mass ae segs adn ner phrase oe a pare eine wage, and spontaneous walkouts fol-| The statement further reports that | | est fears regarding his w hekeatoute | Mill Worker |ination race were dropping to earth meeting here for Tnternatloniatas flair for uplifting the ‘poor work-| tives attempted is frame a Satan one This was quieted down. the Needle Trades Workers Indus-| Starting for the City Hospital on) CHICAGO, May 5.—Chicao work-| | today. aie sonnel neon Boelt hor (Day, ‘Three hina ing girls.’ But the women workers | They are Sol Davis, 81, 12| Meanwhile the building boom, the| trial Union, and the Independent Wednesday morning, where he was ers will take part in the Tag Days | *dvertize eee a eserveiher | Workers were sold, and there was from the shops and factories, the|Ititze St, end Joe Weinstein, 27,|2YoBtessives point out, also died| Shoe Workers Union are arranging | scheduled to receive a treatment for for the relief of the textile strikers! Service, and the Goodyear Rubber a good collection, ‘Ss great mass organizations of women|152 Norfolk St. ‘The tole told py|4W2- It became evident this spring | for shop delegates’ conferences {0 the skin trouble from which he has of South and North Carolina on ©® 3s turning out badly. i eee us in the textile needle trades and the| james Rogers, detective of the Sixtn| that if the building trades workers) elect delegates to the convention. suffered for some time, Rush left) Saturday and Sunday, May 11 and;. The Detroit Balloon Club's ABC Gaxicatie unorganized will be entirely absent.| Precinct, at the Essex Court Satur- jean be kept on the old schedule for| The striking cafeteria workers and! his home and has not been seen or 12, jhad the most adventurous descent ss Their representatives have long| day, was that Davis and Weinstein|? few months more, there will be|grocery, fruit and dairy ae 28 |heard from since. He failed to ap-| Dewey Martin, striking textile | i uel SAMS Ne i Frances Pilat since been thrown out of the WTUL,| attacked him while pizleting Rat-|™¥Ch unemployment, and the ten-j well as the Office Workers’ Union pear at the hospital. Comrades be-| worker from North Carolina brought | SHKoff and T. Larsen, its pilots, which now devotes its energies to ner’s Dairy Cafeteria, 115 Second] | dency already begun, of forcing will also send delegates. came alarmed when he also did not preetings from the struggling work- were badly shaken when their craft MIDWIFE hh a % Forest |] 351 E. 77th St., New. York, N. Y. scabs tc break their! Ave, T |union workers to actually accept Arrangements are being made for| yt in an appearance at the May)! struck a barn at the Black Fores 5 a ibang ids Lae, ony Pa eee lower pay than the union scale, and| the election of delegates from large | fay ane mae eveningreliw MMe yee et eae the pe Club in Lycoming county, seven Tel. Rhinelander 3916 ee t sista kevin twigs, Monee |bad conditions of work, will be in-| unorganized shops, such as N. Y. he was listed to speak. | Workers. celevraving we reve ej miles, tortheast of Slate Run, av} anh etty Bourgeois Statement. “The strike for the eight-hour day | creased. Edison, Bliss Manufacturing Co., ‘ jtionary holiday, May Day, at the| 19:30 a. m. The ‘call’ for this convention is j, practically won,” Sam Kramberg, What the Wants Nichols Copper Co., (Rolls Royce Rush is about 5 feet, 3 inches, | Ashland Auditorium. He told of COMRADES ™ AT typical of its spirit—a feeble, vague, petty bourgeois meandering. ‘A girl—her job—the relationship be- union secretary, declared yesterday. “Tt is cnly a matter of days before w? are able to sexi most of the| The progressive groups point out |today that this is accomplished by auto shop, -I. R. T. and B.-M. T. Shop committees and shop groups are being arranged where the need} | weighs about 115 pounds, has gray-/the slave conditions of the 300,000 He textile workers in the south, and of speaks with a slight Scotch accent. | | their determination to organize a ish eyes and light brown hair. The Reformists Are Now Act- ing in Unison With the Employ- ers! Set Up the United Prole- || Giusti’s Spaghetti House tween them: this is the first con-|ctrikers back to work under union|2¢W “five day week agreement,” * A | When he left home he was wearing) strong militant union under the peal t ent the Binley. 5-course Luncheon 50c—11 to 3 cern of the Women's Trade Union| conditions and call out other strikers Which is still quite informal and| fo" ees ree wen ea la brown suit, a light gray top-coat | ner of the National Textile Workers | (2718 f sant Ae eee 6-course Dinner 75c—5 to 9 League of America’ So it rums!|thmughout the city. ‘The cafeteria |ca" be repudiated by ont ees. Delegates from the Smith Carpet and cap, black oxfords, and a white) Union, Martin, who had gone to| A LA CARTE ALL DAY ‘One day will be given over to an organized discussion of the relation- ship between the girl and her job. onus staked everything on break- | ing the strike by wholesale arrests and excessive fines and injunctions. set for granting 125,000 workers the | five-day week is August 24—with plant, Yonkers, employing over 6,- 000 workers, and from the Otis Ele- vator Co., employing close to 3,000 shirt. ing shell-rimmed glasses. His eyes were red and in-| work in the mill at the age of 11, in) flamed and he may have been wear-| greeting the Chicago workers said: His face|“We textile workers in the south| Dr. M. Wolfson Surgeon Dentist 49 West 16th Street {Is there a demonstrable wage|They have failed miserably. In spite the number of building permits fall-| VO" 0" nun oval appeared red and irritated from the| have never celebrated May Day the|] 141 SECOND AVENUE, Cor. sth St. Meet your Friends at theory ? Are there wage levels thet ce the treiendaua” obstacles the | ne at an unprecedented rate. New Jersey, the open shop state, skin disease which he was having | way you do up here, but next year I! Phone, Orchard 2333. GREENBERG’S can be estimated?’ Questions such| workers are winning their first| The Building Trades Counsel, ac-| ;, responding splendidly, the com-| ‘Teated. am sure we will have May Day) tome to sec your triend, who bas / the militant labor movement, as these will challenge the dele- gates’ thinking.’ “Convention deliberations will cov- er other phases of the women work- ers. ‘Organizability—her chances for education and the direction of public opinion toward an understanding of her workaday life; and industrial legislation which follows the dic- tates of that opinion and brings up | the laggards in industry. To this| eleventh convention of the NWTUL} of A we summon you that its col- lective thinking may be the richer for your contribution.’ “Such is the mixture of liberal re- | formism, cheap sentimentality and gengral slip-slop that covers the re- actionary character and program of the Women’s Trade Union League, | whose function is not the organiza- tion of working women but the; breaking up of their organizations, which is allied with the worst cor-) ruptionists of the republican and courageous battle for unionism.” Former Magistrate Hyman Bushel, engaged as counsel by the Wil-low Cafeterias, Inc., which is leading employers in a fight to break the strike, appeared in court for the strikers Friday. During his term as magistrate Bushel imposed severe sentences on pickets brought for | trial before him. As an A. F. of L. lawyer for 20 years, Bushel gained a rich background of all forms of legalized anti-working class activity. HEAVY TOLL OF MINE ACCIDENTS | first time to testify against the} cording to joint statements by John Halket, its president, and Christian G. Norman, chairman of the board of governors of the employers’ as- sociation, agrees to “cooperate in every way to preserve industrial peace.” | The statement says: “Both sides reaffirm their support |of the general agreement calling for the arbitration of ell disputes and the recognition of certain conditions and the prevention of strikes and lockouts.” | yesterday morning by a fall of rock |in Haddock Mining Co.’s Black Dia- | mond eoneey at Luzerne. He is survived by his widow and the fol- lowing brothers and sisters: John, George, and Anna Litvin, all of | Czecho-' Slovakia. 2 Injured. mittees report. Shop committees and terest. quests all organizations sending | Convention to begin to elect dele-{ to May 17th inclusive. World Tourist Groups Witness USSR MayDay | Two parties of American eourints delegates to the Trade Union Unity ORGANIZE TO D gates during the period of May 3d,\ defense for poor Any reader of the Daily Worker, demonstrations like this throughout | groups afe meeting, leaflets dis-| who has seen Rush or who has any | the South.” tributed and the workers in these | information basic industries are responding to| abouts, kindly communicate imme-| the Workers International Relief in the call of the T. U. E. L. with in-| diately with I. Green, care of Com-| furnishing food, so that the workers | regarding his where- munist Party, 408 William St., Buf-| Local New York, T. U. E. L. re-| falo, N. Y. YD WETS | (UP). persons h violation of the Jones nd ten” law will be provided by “Civic Defense League,” |tion of which was announced today | —————- by Attorney Harold Jackson. The league, Jackson said, will de- fend free of charge any person in- CHICAGO, May ‘ged the which left recently for the Soviet | dicted in federal court under the Union,“and which are now on the | Jones act who is unable to hire an high seas, witnessed the impressive #ttorney. May Day celebrations in Moscow “legislative lunacy” that does not this year, according to World Tour- | \affect the big bootleggers. Several | ists, Inc., 175 Fifth Ave., authorized | Chicago lawyers will be associated | 11 Killed in ae Days) Thomas Evans, aged 21, of 148 Free | pate in the Tag Day to be held in| ive | May 11th and May 12th, for the re- organiza- | He charged the law was |: He told of the important role of! can continue their fight against the | | mill-operators, the soldiers, the! | hired gangsters. A special appeal | ‘was made to all workers to partici- Chicago on Saturday and Sunday, | lief of the southern textile strikers. “For ‘Any Kind of Insurance” Kind of Insurance’ BRODSK ‘elephone: Murray Hil. 5550 . East 42nd Street, New York | —————— (att long experience, and can assure you of careful treatment. DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Reom 803—Phone: Algonquin 8183 Not connected with any other office Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST 249 BAST 115th STREET Cor. Second Ave. New York Office hours: Mon., Wed., Sat., 9.30 a.m. to 1 to 6 P.M. Tues. Thurs., 9.30 a. m. to 12; 4 to § p. m. Sunday, 10 a. m. to 1 p. m. Please telephone for appointment. Telephone: Lehigh 6022 Cooperators! Patronize Bakery & Restaurant 939 E. 174th St., Cor. Hoe Ave. Right off 174th Street Subway Station, Bronx All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S iSTAURANT 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx + VEGETARIAN 'Y RESTAURANT omrades Will Always Find It Pleasant to Dine at Our Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx (near 174th PHONE :— C INTERVALE 9149. A representatives for Sov-|with the league. ||) COOPERATORS! PATRONIZE, — sue dear Lites ial fata ae of Slaughter eet Sees eure eae rite sore government official | M. FORMAN S E R O Y MEET YOUR FRIENDS at jonary capitalist \- . i | R { ‘ ; # an aeepalislen: tick is the tool sunpal es Mens apetoertfeta travel department. The groups ar- | ANALGAMATED )) Allerton Carriage, Bicycle CHEMIST Messin g er’s Vegetarian and servant of the right wing bu-| WILKES BARRE (By Mail).—A)| tween a car and a timber this after-|"V¢d in Moscow April 30. FOOD WORKERS and Toy Shop yeaucracy of the A. F. of L. and its Internationals for the crushing of Not a ‘ note of the class struggle in this | center for workers and working} | stitution, | | | | convention. No word of the great struggles of the workers raging in America today, of the war danger. Not a mention of capitalist ration- alization and the speed-up with its terrible results for the women work- ers! Not a word of Soviet Russia and its achievements for working women! Working Women’s Reply. “Women workers have only one answer to the ‘cal’ of the National Women’s Trade Union League Con- vention. That is, ‘Away with you and all your works! Down with the betrayers of the class struggle, the traitors to the cause of the workers | and of working women! On to | Cleveland to build a new trade union | women, to lead them in the bitter struggles that lie ahead! On to the ; | Trade Union Unity Congress on) dune dae PERU 5 CABINET QUITS LIMA, May 5.—The Peruvian ‘ cabinet, in keeping with the con- resigned yesterday, two months before the new elections. The new cabinet will be -Sppointed, May 7. Struggle Against Imperialist War! Get Ready to Turn an Im- perialist War Into a Class War) . wave of mine accidents has struck vania, two days toll being 11 killed |and three seriously injured. Gas and dition of the tunnel supports killed. the ten, most of whom left large} families. Plunging down ths’ shaft~of the | Auchincloss colliery, of the Glen Al-| den Coal Company, one of the deep- lest mines in the anthracite field, early this morning, John Brushkow- | ski, 39, of 101 West Ridge Street, | Nanticoke, father of nine children. | was instantly killed. His body with both arms and legs broken, head badly crushed and the torso prac- tically cut in two, was found by fel- low workmen in the sump at the foot of the shaft a distance of 1800 feet | from the surface. Killed By Runaway. | Struck by a runaway timber truck | in the mines of the South Shaft, No. |7 colliery, Susquehanna Collieries Company, at 9:30 this morning, Per- cy Parfitt, 18, suffered injuries re- sulting in his death while on the way to the State Hospital at Nanti- coke. The victim was a native of Wales and came to this country only two months ago. He is survived by his parents, two sisters and a brother in Wales. | Killed By Rock, Andrew Litvin, aged 3b, @f 339 Main Street, Swoyerville, ¥ was ieied | the anthracite district of Pennsyl-| | rock falls, caused by the poor con-| He received brush burns on the hips and was taken to General | Hospital. Richard Davis, aged 22, of 88 West | Jackson Street, who was injured yes- | terday afternoon by a fall of rock in | Laurel Run Colliery, Hudson Coa! | Co., was obliged to submit to the am- | putation of his left hand this morn- ing in General Hospital. The mem- ber was so badly crushed that its | usefulness was destroyed. 3 Killed. | Two brothers sacrificed their lives at Mount Carmel to rescue a fellow! worker overcome by gas. All three were suffocated in a death-laden chamber while a fourth escaped a | similar fate by seeking help for the | others. The dead brothers are Larry pea 85; Leno Bridy, 31 and Oscar Bozetti, all of Connerton. The men worked in the East Bottom split in the Locust Spring mine of the Philadelphia and Reading Coal and Iron Company. Gas had seeped into the mine when | | the workers bored through the fac of an old breast into a chamber in which the deadly poison had been stored for a long time. * * ° JOHNSTOWN, May 5.—Fractures of the skull sustained Saturday when caught beneath a fall of rock in a mine accident today caused the death of Conrad Kartovich, 42, of veronie, aN Memorial Hospital here, | noon. It was also announced that tour- | ist groups are now in the process of formation and will leave New| York for the U. S. S. R., May 25 and 29, The world tourist trips in- | clude visits to Leningrad, Moscow, Odessa, the Caucasus and the Geor- gian Republic, with stopovers en- ioute in Paris and Berlin or London and Helsingfors. Down With the Employment of Children! FURNISHED ROOM with kitchen and dining room privi- leges for couple. WOLLISON, 789 East 180th St., Cor. Mapes Ave., Apt. 9. Call between 7 and 9 eve- nings. | Meets IstSaturday {n the month at 3468 Third Ave. Baker's Loca) 164 N.Y. Ty Hotel and Restaurant Workers Branch of the Amalgamated Food Workers 183 W. Sist St. Phone Circle 7336 BUSINESS MEETING] 7) eld on the first Monday of the 0 ‘ig! Common Enemy! Office Open from D a. m. to 6 p, m. Advertise your Union Meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sa., New York City Revolutionary Greetings 5F, 2B New York City The Millinery Hand Workers, Local No. 43 GREET THE DAILY WORKER THE OCCASION OF INTERNATIONAL MAY DAY ' THE DAILY WORKER is the only English labor daily that is carrying on a struggle against the labor bureaucracy and for the Left Wing. | | 736 ALLERTON AVENUE (Near Allerton Theatre, Bronx) Phone, Olinville 2583 maT aes EaT t the SCIENTIFIC VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT 1604-6 Madison Ave, Between 107th & 108th Sta, Phone: LEHIGH 6382 International Barber Shop W. SALA, Prop. 2016 Second Avenue, New York (bet, 108rd & 104th Sts.) Ladies Bobs Our Specialty Private Beauty Parlor ON 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. Y. Patronize No-Tip Barber Shops 26-28 UNION SQUARE (1 flight up) 2700 BRONX P/ “K EAST (corner Allerton Ave.) Tel.: DRYdock 8880 FRED SPITZ, Inc. FLORIST NOW AT 31 SECOND AVENUE (Bet. Ist & 2nd Sts.) Flowers for All Occasions 15% REDUCTION TO READERS OF THE DAILY WORKER Unity Co-operators Patronize SAM LESSER Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailor 1818 - 7th Ave. New York Between 110th and 111th Sts. Next to Unity Co-operative House 0s? FROM FACTORY TO YOU! HIGH-GRADE MEN’S and YOUNG MEN'S SUITS From $12.50 to $25.00 PARK CLOTHING STORE 98 Aye. A, Cor. 6th St. N. Y. C. and Dairy Restaurant 1763 Southern Blvd., T-onx, N. ¥. Right off 174th St. Subway Station For a Real Oriental Cooked Meal VISIT THE INTERNATIONAL PROGRESSIVE CENTER 101 WEST 28TH STREET (Corner 6th Ave.) neerey RANT, CAFETERIA ECREATION ROOM Ma Open Troe ™m HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNI versity 5865 ii Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere Where all radicals meet 302 E. 12th St. New York Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 199 SECOND AVE] UE Bet. 12th and 13th Sts. Strictly Vegetariun Food

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