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RON STRIKERS EXPOSE FORWARD Follows the Tradition,’ Statement Says (Continued from Page One) he other delegate, were officially lected at a well-attended meeting of the union just prior to the con- ‘erence. Who Are “Splitters”? “Talk about unions ‘which are sep- wated from the rank and file’ is ery unconvincing, coming from the *orward and its gang. “The experience of our own union ind the experience of thousands of reedle trades workers will show that t is the corrupt right wing bureau- ‘racy and not the left wing which is ‘ollowing ‘splitting tactics.’ Our own union, through a pretext, was hrown out of the International, and n spite of the fact that we have nade repeated applications for re- idmission during the past five years ve have met with nothing but eva- sions. For Fighting Union. “Our only alternative now, and it s a good alternative, is to affiliate vith a new, fighting, militant trade inion center which will embark on he job of organizing the thousands of unorganized workers—a job vhich the reactionary labor official- lom, blessed and supported by the ‘orward clique, had deliberately ne- | slected. “The Forward charges that Jeorge Powers is a Communist, and rets a weekly salary from the Ar- ‘hitectural Iron, Bronze and Tron} Workers Union. This is almost aughable. In the first place, dur- ng the present strike neither Pow- *rs nor any of the other paid work- ors in the union have received one denny in wages. How does this com-)| yare with the record of the labor) yureaucrats which the Forward iolds close to its bosom? “Don’t You Talk of Salaries!” “About a year ago Morris Sigman, ‘ormer president of the Interna- ional Ladies Garment Workers Jnion, admitted under cross-exam- nation in court that he received $125 each week during a 17-week strike period, while thousands of reedle workers were starving. And 3igman is not alone in this distinc- ion, Practically all of the high- salaried officials of the right wing inions, for which the Forward is the | thief spokesman and apologist, live | n luxury not only during the time) vhen the workers in the shops! struggle on miserable wages, but) luring the most terrible strike peri-| rds. “The Forward should not talk of splitting policies.’ When our union vas first formed, in 1913, we were 100 per cent organized. But the In- ernational split us into three locals, ind our membership and influence vent down swiftly. “What has the officialdom which he Forward praises done about or- ranizing the thousands of unorgan- | zed workers in our trade? There ire tens of thousands of inside vorkers, and no attempt has been nade to organize them. Organize the Unorganized. “But our independent union, un- fer left wing direction, has made | sreat strides in this direction. Since he strike began we have enrolled, yver 800 new members, while the corrupt building trades gang never yas willing to recognize these work-| ors as part of the building trades. “The members of our union will | ,ot take seriously this slanderous | \ttack upon our organization. They | vill know that it is part of the cam- yaign to discredit the growing move- nent for the establishment of anew rade union center, which will be naugurated shortly on a national cale at the significant conference o be held in Cleveland.” | pias ae Enthusiastic Mass Meeting. Nearly 1,500 striking iron and yronze workers attended an enthusi- istic mass meeting held Saturday \\fternoon at Webster Hall, 11th St. ind Third Ave. Reports were made ‘mn the progress of the strike, which neludes’ nearly 4,000 workers, and slans made to intensify the picket- ng at all the struck shops. : One striker was arrested while vicketing the shop of Gaynor and Rosenbloom, Stagg St., Brooklyn. Je was charged with “disorderly | conduct” and later released on $500 rail, 3us Company Takes Over Street Car Line The Omnibus Bond and Share corporation has completed negotia- | ions for te purchase of th> Second | Avenue Tsilrewd Company for $450,-, 00, Should the board of estimate and the transit commission approve he deal, the Omnibus Company lans to replace surface cars with uses. SAYS “T.B.” CHECKS CANCER. | An article in a current medical | ournal by Dr, William Mayo of the} Mayo clinic sets forth a theory with considerable évidence, that tubercu- osis germs are good for cancer, and pens the possibility that if the ‘T.B.” bugs can be rendered less leadly to humanity, they can be ised to wipe out cancer, At pres- nt the cure is something like hang- ng a man to keep him from starv- ng to death. NEW EVOLUTION PROOFS. LOS ANGELES, Cal., May 26.— discovery of bones of an extinct loth and human remains in a cavern n the slope of Bishop’s Cap Peak, jew Mexico, throws a new light on he, history. of evolution in America, cientists at the Los Angeles Mu- eum stated today, Bedacht, Foster, Bittelman Urge Support of Address (Continued from Page Onc) Right danger, for the final liquidation of factionalism, for the proletar- ianization of the Party leadership and unification on the basis of Comin- tern discipline and the line of the Sixth World Congress. “With this decision the Party ean confidently proceed to mobilize the working class for developing big struggles against rationalization and the war danger, against the treacherous reformists, the A. F. of L. and the socialist party, and for the proletarian revolution. The first condition for the realization of these tasks is the im- mediate dissolution of all factions and the merger of all Party forces to follow the Comintern leadership. “We specifically appeal to all comrades associated with us to im- mediately disband as a faction unconditionally, to abandon all forms of factional activity and to support energetically and in deed the carrying out the Comintern letter.”—Foster and Bittelman. HUNGARIAN BUREAU PLEDGES UNRESERVED ACCEPTANCE. Unreserved Acceptance of the decisions contained in the Comintern letter is pledged in the resolutions adopted by the Hungarian Bureau of the Communist Party at its meeting, Thursday, May 23 and sent to the Central Committee of the Party through J. Peter, secretary. The reso- lution declares: 1. The Bureau fully and unreservedly and without any criticism endorses and accepts the Comintern letter and the unanimous decisions of the Polcom. The Bureau will do everything within its power to mobilize the membersrhip behind the Comintern letter. 2. The Bureau endorse the criticism of the C. I. letter when it says: “Both groups are guilty in opportunistic errors . . . both the Majority and Minority placed their group interest above the interest of the Party . . . the self criticism has been banished in the interest of the groups.” 3. Some comrades of the Moscow delegation refused to submit to the C. I. line laid down in the address to the E.C.C.I. The Bureau sharply condemns their wtitude, 4. The Bureau calls upon its members to severe relations with both groups. The factional struggle threatens the very life of our Party and must be stopped by all means. The Bureau pledges itself to do its ut- most towards the unification of all Party forces. 5. The Bureau calls upon the Central Committee to take organi- zational steps against those who attempt to take a stand against the C. I. line. 6. The Bureau will work on the line of the Comintern Open Letter and will liquidate all the survivals of language federationism and build the Communist Party of the United States. TO UNIFY DISTRICT 13, CALIFORNIA, ON BASIS OF DECISION AND CORRECT LINE. “I fully endorse and accept the Comintern letter and pledge myself to carry out the decision and to secure unanimous acceptance by the District Executive Committee and by the membership here. With Dis- trict 13 torn by factionalism and facing a dual, anti-Party organization, we expect that the Communist International decision will speed up the complete unification and building up of the Party on the basis of its correct line.”—Emil Gardos, District Organizer, California. ACCEPTS WITHOUT QUALIFICATION. “I endorse the unanimous action of the Polcom on the Communist International Letter and agree wholeheartedly with the letter and ask all Party members to accept it without any qualifications.”—Nels Kjar, California. “UNQUALIFIED ENDORSEMENT.” “I unqualifiedly accept and endorse the Address to the Party mem- bership by the Executive Committee of the Communist International, which I have just read in the Daily Worker on arrival at Seattle today. } pledge myself to carry support of the letter to the district member- ship, whose acceptance and endorsement I shall make my task to secure. iam calling a Bureau meeting for discussion on the letter.’—Sorenson, liistrict Organizer, Seattle, Washington. UNRESERVEDLY ACCEPTS ADDRESS. “I unreservedly accept the Comintern Address to the membership and the polcom decision in connection with the letter."—V. Tauras, Brooklyn, N. Y. PORTUGUESE PARTY EDITOR ACCEPTS. “I endorse and acept the Comintern letter.”—Martin C. Correia, Portuguese Editor, KOPPEL SUPPORTS WITHOUT RESERVATION. “TI fully endorse the Open Letter of the Comintern to the member+ ship without reservations."—A Koppel, Brooklyn, N. Y. . VILNIS STAFF FOR LETTER. “AIL ‘Vilnis’ Staff is for the Comintern Address. We support the decisions and line of the address in letter and spirit.”—Andrilulis, Bimba, Gasiunas, Bacevicius, Strazdas, Vilnis, Lithuanian Communist Daily, Chicago. FIGHT AS SINGLE UNIT. “T unreservedly accept the Comintern letter, and pledge my utmost to carry out its de ns. The Party must shake off the last vestige of factionalism and fight on as a single unit.”—John Lucas, Armenian Fraction Bureau. ENDORSES LETTER UNCONDITIONALLY. “We endorse unconditionally the Open Letter of the Communist In- ternational and the decision of the Polcom of the American Party relative to the letter.’—Editors, Toveri, Finnish Communist Daily, Astoria, Oregon. JEWISH BUREAU FOR COMINTERN A call for unanimous acceptance of the Comintern Address to the membership by the members of the Jewish sections of the Communist Party was made in the resolutions unanimously adopted by the Actions Committee of the Jewish Bureau of the Communist Party last Thursday. “The Jewish Bureau of the Communist Party of the U. S. A. fully accepts and endorses the letter of May 20 of the Executive Committee of the Communist International to the membership of the American Party,” the resolution states. “The Jewish Bureau greets and endorses the decisions of the Central Committee to mobilize the membership of the Party for the decisions of the Communist International. “I fully accept and endorse the Address of the Communist Inter- national, which tend to liquidate factionalism in the American Party. “We pledge ourselves to help bring to a full understanding of the line of the letter and its proper application against unprincipled fac- tionalism, against right wing deviations and aganist any split tendency. “We call upon all members of the Jewish sections to unanimously accept the letter addressed to the members of the Communist Party, U. S. A., and carry out the decisions of the Communist International.”— Jewish Bureau of the Communist Party, U.S. A., S. Freeman, Secretary. JEWISH BUREAU SECRETARY ENDORSES LETTER. “TI fully accept and endorse the addrress of the Communist Inter- national to the members of the American Party. “I pledge myself support to the Central Committee which has un- animously accepted and pledged itself to unconditionally carry into effect the decisions contained in this address, I will do all in my power to mobilize the membership for the support and decisions of the Communist International, for the liquidation of factionalism and against right deviations and against any split ten- LINE. DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, MAY 27, 1929 Page Ba, MUSTE GROUP AS A. F, OF L, AIDS Socialist Traitors Seize | Most Jobs (Continued from Page One) | means be limited to “labor organiza- tions.” Ludwig Lore, Communist rene- gade and editor of the Volkszeitung, and J. B. S. Hardman, editor of the \“Advance,” both expelled from the ;Communist Party, were honored delegates at the convention. Lore was an active member of the Com- mittee on Policy and Organization and Hardman took the floor almost continuously. It was reported from the committee that Lore was one of the most active proponents of the paragraph denouncing the Commu- nists. Muste, in a bitter speech against the left wing, declared that he was |opposed to the Trade Union Unity |Congress to be held in Cleveland, |and to the formation of a new trade |union center. “You cannot unite janyone if you are ‘‘entified with either the right or the left wing,” he said. | Saturday’s sessions of the confer- }ence were devoted to reports by | Clinton Golden, business |Brookwood College, Tom Tippett, ex- tension director of Bz>-wood, and Louis Budenz on the inactivity o! anager of | FOOD WORKERS TO DEMONSTRATE Mass Picketing at Noon Today (Continued from Page One) which was read at their meeting, | and given a great ovation. | The injunction hanging over the | | food strike is something which goes |far beyond anything in its line at- |tempted before, and constitutes a | menace to every worker. If the judges and police and bosses find they can get away with a court writ which prohibits even one worker, | carrying no matter how small a sign, from speaking to patrons or prospective strikebreakers or even from walking up and down in front jof a struck job, such tactics wil: “TELEPHONE: HANOVER 181} p< cotons womans 1 be used again and again in every kind of a strike. This is just what the cafeteria in- |junction does. The injunction was | granted by Judge Sherman, on the basis of affidavits from bosses and scabs. A.F.L.BETRAYS PRESS STRIKE the A. F. of L. among the unorgan- | ized. he -aost recent case in which the American Feder=tion of Labor |has sold « it *he worker by A. J. Muste “as the one bright spot,” at Saturday’s session. “The labor movement has fa to capi- |talize the great interest in the south,” he said. “Elizabethton is the one bright spot.” Over three hours of Sunday’s ses- sion alone was devoted to an organ- ized attack against the Trade Union Educational League and the Com- munist Party of the United States of America. Those who joined most actively in this attack were James Oneal, ed- itor of the New Leader; Louis F. Budenz, editor of the Labor Age and organizer for the Full Fashioned Hosiery Workers Union; J. B. S. Hardman, editor of “Advance”; Abraham Lefkowitz, for many years an active co-worker with the Tam- many gang in the New York Cen- tral Trades and Labor Council, and A, J. Muste. Oneal declared that “Commu- nists are suffering from a patho- logical disease.” J. M. Budish, editor of the Head- gear Worker, who was fired by the reactionary gang at the last ma- chine-packed convention for protest- ing the expulsion of militant locals from the International, and Robert L. Cruden, of the Detroit Auto | Workers Union, both condemned the anti-left~wing atmosphere of the conference. den declared that the only unions not having the boss psychology were the left wing unions. “The only people in the field are the Communists,” declared Cruden, who denounced, incidentally, the barring from the conference of the Daily Worker representative and of Grace Hutchins of the Labor Re- search Association. | Cruden pointed to the betrayal of the Detroit auto strikes by the A. F. of L., and charged that the direction of the conference was not in the path of organizing the great mass of unorganized workers. The utter absurdity of the “pro- gram” of the conference was shown in one of its high points, which calls for the “immediate organization of the unorganized— into study groups.” A resolution introduced by J. M. Budish and Robert Cruden, calling for the election of a delegate to the forthcoming Trade Union Unity Congress in Cleveland, was over- whelmingly defeated by the confer- | ence. Railroad Gamblers Cry for Detailed Ruling to Raise Profits on Stock Railroad executives and Wall Street speculators who have been making or losing money on the re- | cent sudden rise and subsequent fall of railroad stock prices, following the announcement of the O'Fallon rate decision by the supreme court, are now demanding legislation or \decisions to clarify the situation. | They say that the decision does not clearly enough give permission for raising rates, and so far is only certain to cut down the amount of jexcess profits going to the govern- |ment. They want a law declaring |that all railroads shall be valued on their current cost of reproduction, was hailed | Both Budish and Cru-}| ‘Pressmen’s Union Aids | Schweinler Co. One more betrayal was added to the long record in this line of the American Federation of Labor, when ‘the executive board of the Press- men’s Union, Local 51, refused any aid to the strikers of the Schwein- ler Press, at Hudson and Leroy Sts., ers School. ‘urged the members of their local to scab on the strike and ‘ upheld |Schweinler, the millionaire owner of | of Se the company, against which over 150 unorganized young workers were striking for better conditions and wages. Powerless to win against the mil- lionaire company without the aid of | the pressmen and other organized | 27th St. RECEIVED Ss fet Union Workers Greet DEMONSTRATION Huge Protest Meeting Held Last Night (Continued from Page One) DFWLD Daily Worker would give its full T 238 PR2359 MOSCAU 43/39 24 1040 BR 8 support in the fight against the landlords and for better conditions for working class tenants, as it has AMALGAMATED FOOBWORKERS 793 B0RF done in the past. He also pointed ON BEWALF OF 320,990 ORGAM out that the Communist Party will NGWORKERS USSR PLEASE make the housing ion one of TENDER STRIKING NEW YORK CATE ERS QUR REVOLUTIONARY its main points in its municipal elec- tions campaign, and that it will con- GREETINGS AND ADMIRATION OF S N FIGHT AGAINST EMPLOY- ERS STOP WISH YOU EVERY Ss S USSR CATERINGNORKERS UNION tinue to fight for the tenants, ex- posing the fake legislation on hous- ing by the state legislature and the fake “model housing” schemes spon- sored by Mayor Walker, the cham- UCCES: CC CHAIRMAN KOKSHAROVA bers of commerce and Rockefeller, who is planning to repeat his Dun- bar flats on the East Side. Radiogram from 320,000 food work in Catering Union of pias : i WR. greeting and complimenting the cafeteria workers of New Harold Wiese ict Nea York on their splendid fight. This expression of working class soli- 0'@anizer of the Communist Party, darity has made the New York kers more determined to win than | Who was chairman of the meeting, ever. also pledged the full port of the Communist Party. [T_T MANHATTAN ___I cu | Communist Activities aE For Mass Organization. During the week tenants from all parts of the city are to be acquainted with the mass demonstration before City Hall on Saturday and will be called to join in the protest. The general concensus of opinion Unit 20, Seeti Addre ead a > member- cussed 7 faced’ meeting of the unit, at the meeting yesterd was that Party Picnic. 271 , 6:15 Dp today only by forming a ma: 1 - , the date of the Party # ee) ie oe anctucdan hed Pleasant Bay Vark, open. | Yorkville Communist Youth League. anization could the landlords, thei: 2 . executive committee will meet | legislature and their courts be See 4, at §:30 p,m, Wednesday, at 350 E. | forced to grant the least concessions. Unit literature nts ‘ ; 4 i ee Communist Platform tomorrow evenit i 7 = . Gemeveeed a” . 3. ‘ section headquar Loged | | BRONX The platform of the Cémmunist Sa AS pea pace : Party on housing demands no segre- the will ddress the meetin gation in apartments, rents not to nnot exceed 10 per cent of the wages, no lit The ust bership ts ¢ will today u Ave. Dues payments will be checked and | dispossessions, free housing for un- ; ; roll call will be taken. employed workers at the expense of one ee , BRANCH 5. the government, sanitary conditions 1e Executive Committee will meet | and playgrounds and parks in the eit p. mi. today. it be discussed | Working class districts. Asean: branch at 8:30 p. m. tomor-| The next meeting of the Harlem | Tenants’ League will take place oy : eae Ww “section 5. | Monday, June 3, 8 p. m., in the lec- 129th Q ec aan Bence will be ane ture room of the Public Library, George Pershin y Eo eye | A SRE izer 1 x ae ue BROOKLY Build shop committees and draw will speak on_ the ae A strike today, 6:30 m TW ae eee ae the more militant members into Wast New York Youth he the Communist Party. * printing trades workers at the Units 11-10-15 F. open a ng will be held Schweinler plant, the strikers sent} An educational Wednesday 1 eons corner of a delegation to the executive board held § p.m. Wear hua der eee “For Any Kind of Insurance” mecting of Local 51 and were told | W°"*ers Center ee : | to come back later. After a wait | Unit Re Make every factory our fortress. L BR D of several hours they were shunted | An important m eeting of t n Organize shop meee ane shee : i ; . (International h) will be arene: ; ie i to a side room, in which they over-| Wednesday evening at 7:20 at 27 1 | nae Build the Communi ates inne: Maeeie Ws aakE \ heard what went on at the meeting. | 4th St. any: 1 Members of the strikers’ delega- jtion heard a member of the press- men’s executive board state that he had spoken to Schweinler and that the latter had told him to refuse to jhelp cr organize the strikers. The Pressmen’s Union official therefore urged that Schweinler’s request be heeded and no aid be given to the strikers. The strikers’ delegation also over- heard the executive board attack the | strikers as “Bolsheviks,” ete, They were later told that the Pressmen’s Union would give no aid to the strikers. Fraternal Organizations | Harlem International Labor Defense. An open air i East 42nd Street, New York Cooperators! Patronize SEROY CHEMIST Road and Allerton Ave., at 11:30. Harlem Interracial Club § | BROOKLYN i 657 Allerton Avenue dane ven we 8:30 erie at 145 Wo 136th éecHaciai Olah. Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. Y. i s és rom the Amer- ad- ongress will meeting will be held ion meeting of the Jat 110th St. and Fifth Ave., at 8 p.m. Fah Label Comrade tomorrow. Friday. | F Pil (pea RON | rances Pilat | ceetinseebneisiseca ee eS Not only has the hourgeoisie a | U.C.W.W.—International Labor De- | forged the weapons that bring MIDWIFE Organized pressmen at the plant had previously called up Local 51, misleaders ordered the union mem- bers to scab on the strikers, and the efficials of another A. F. of L. Union, the Women's Bindery Local, | ordered its members to do the work of the striking press plant hands. | Great dissension is again break- ing out in the Schweinler plant, due to the low wages and speed-up. RESUME ‘INQUIRY’ ON BANK SWINDLE More Dirt on Tammany Today (Continued from Page One) many Hall leaders, the Rothstein dope ring, and the editor of the fas- cist New York newspaper “Il Pro- (gresso” are deeply involve Graft Starts Series of Suits. A long series of litigation proceed- ‘ings are developing in the course of the hearing. The first, directed | against the banking superintendent | |as custodian of the City Trust “as- sets,” has already been started with the object of the recovering notes stated to be “unlawfully converted.” Notice of suit has been served on \the banking superintendent by Ed- ward T. Fozley and Adolph Fassler |for notes for $16,250 and $6,450. Fozley and Fassler both admit) that the notes had no actual value! \whereas the supreme court decision and that neither would have borne, ‘merely chides the interstate com- close investigation under examina-| ‘merce commission for not hitherto|tion from a soundly-functioning | giving enough weight to that point state banking department. Those’ in its valuation rulings. |close to the inquiry believe that they aie ‘are filing suit in self defense since’ Plane in Air More Than ™ the course of the inquiry it is ‘Week;War Department dreds of notes sent to banks under, ‘probable that the validity of hun-! fe Warder’s supervision will be ques- Enjoys New Armament , 5 Ae i the music: asking the officials to aid the strike, bers of th with whom they sympathized. The | Orchestra at Day demonstrations by getting into the Communist Party work- ers who participated. death to itself; it has also ealled into existence the men who are to wield those weapons—the modern working class—the proletarians.— Karl Marx (Communist Manifesto). | fe Prominent solc 351 E. 7/th St., New York, N. Y. Tel. Rhinelander 3916 COMRADES EAT at the SCIENTIFIC © VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT 1604-6 Madison Ave, PATROD ‘BERGMAN BROS. Your Nearest Stationery Store Cigars, Cigarettes, Candy, Toys 649 Allerton Ave. Reap the benefits of the May HA GRE eee Surgeon Dentixt Bakery & Restaurant Nets Unity Co-operative House )ND AVENUE 939 E. 174th St., Cor. Hoe Ave. ERONS BRONX, N. Between 107th & 108th Sts. Telephone: Olin Unity Co-operators Patronize SAM LESSER Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailor Dr. M. Wolfson Meet your Friends at GREENBERG’S Phone, Orchard’ In case of trouble with your teeth come to see your friend, who has long experience, and can assure you of careful treatment. Right off 174th Street Subway Station, Bronx CHOOL Moved! All Comrades Meet at The Eron Preparatory School, BRONSTEIN’S which holds a Regents Charter as DR. J. MINDEL VEGETARIAN HEALTH a private high school and which SURGECN DENTIS RESTAURANT was located for a period of thirty years at 187 East Broad now moved and is now lo larger quarters at 853 Broadway, Corner 14th Street, facing Union Square. runs courses in: () Regents and College 1 UNION SQUARE Rcom 803—Phone: Algonquin 8183 Not connected with any other office 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx and more con : VEGETARIAN Dairy RESTAURANT omrades ‘Will Always Find It Pleasant to Dine at Our Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx (near 174th St. Station) PHONE:— INTERVALE 9149. 2 D>, Schoo! . The Eron Preparatory School) | yy. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST 249 BAST 115th STREET Cor. Second Ave, New York Office hours: Mon a. m. to 12; 2 Tues., Thurs., 9.30 a ontrance colleges preparatory for all sities nd Secretarial Electr Book- s to$ pm ‘ ping jectric Billing. Sunday, 10 a. m. to 1 p, m. MEET YOUR FRIENDS at (4) All grades of lish for intel~ Please telephone for appointment, relephone: ligent foreigners. Registration for Our Summer Term Dpen. ANT Telephone: Lehigh 6022 Messinger’s Vegetarian and Dairy Restaurant 1763 Southern Blvd., P-onx, N.Y. Phone: LEHIGH 6382 International Barber Shop M. W. SALA, Prop. 2016 Second Avenue, New York (bet, 103rd & 104th Sts.) Ladies Bobs Our Specialty Private Beauty Parlor Right off 174th St. Subway Station AMALGAMA1 FOOD WORK Meets Ist Saturday nthe month at 3861 Third HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Avenue. ie dencies. “With more determination let us proceed towards the building of a Stronger section of the Communist International in the United States, a mass Communist Party of the U. S. A.”—S. Freeman, Secretary Jewish Bureau, C. P. of U.S. A. WORKER KILLED. FLORENCE, Italy, May 26.—) Giacomo Guerrieri, a workman, was! Jones, a carpenter, was killed, and officers on hand to take full advan- | CYCLONE KILLS WORKER. YUMA, Ariz., (By Mail). — Ed tioned, | Warder Got $30,000, FORT WORTH, Texas, May 26.—) Fozley and Fassler belonged to a! The civilian plane Fort Worth, with group formed to buy City Trust two civilian aviators descended to- stock through the Federal Securities day after over a week in the air, Corporation, another interest of the. kept aloft by refueling and beating |late Francis M, Ferrari, whose loose | the record of the army “Question | “administration” of his banking ven-| Mark.” tures was covered by his close friend | The war department, however, had | Warder who got away with a modest | $30,000 before being forced to re- killed and his son, 7, and two farm- another worker critically injured|tage of the principles evolved by sign to save himself. | ers were seriously injured when after the pair were caught in the the flight, and will seek to equip, lightning struck the cabin in which| wreckage of a school house struck long distance bombk-:s for flights they sought refuge from a terrific by a cyclone at Somerton, | storm in the vicinity of Sansano. The farmers, Liberate Petri and Giovanni Bruschi, worked on a near- by fara, ‘ Build Up the United Front of | the Working Class From the Bot- | tom Up—at the Enterprises! | The latest source of graft to |Warder was revealed at the last) Moreland hearing to be his practice | \of forcing savings banks putting up) new buildings to use the services of | ;a Tammany-connected group. of architects with offices on Fifth AYE over Latin-An--rican victims, Long Live the Revoiutionary Struggle of the Oppressed Colo- nial Peoples! Hotel and Restaurant Workers Branch of the Amalgamated Food Workers 133 W. Sist St, Phone Circle 7336 BUSINESS MEETING'=~)) eld on the first Monday of the month at 3 p.m. One Industry—One —Union—Join ad Fight the Common Enemy! ice Open from 0 a. m, to 6 p.m. Advertise your Union Meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City a laa i Ai 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. 1st & 2nd Sts.) Flowers for All Occasions 15% REDUCTION TO READERS OF THE DAILY WORKER Phone: UNIversity 5865 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 AVEI.UB Bet, 12th and 13th Sts. Strictly Vegetarian Food