The Daily Worker Newspaper, May 28, 1929, Page 5

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y m vs to ro- the ca his 30. ed ne- hec vi sor 2 pDaILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, MAY 28, 1929 Page Five SENATORS VOTE PROBE TO SLAP TEXTILE. STRIKE Xeverse Decision Made! to Turn It Over to the Trade Commission | \larmed Over Gastonia strikers in Tent Group Determined to Win WASHINGTON, May 27.—Im- iediately on receiving news that ne American Federation of Labor nd the Department of Labor had} ianaged to betray the strike of the | ‘Hzabethton rayon workers, but rat the Gastonia strikers were in o way discouraged by the sellout in | ennessee, but were standing | taunchly behind the National Tex- | le Workers’ Union and fighting to | victory, the senate manufacturers’ | While the best of the beac the workers are forced to seek MOBILIZE!"IS (CHARGE GRAFT IN FURRIERS’ CALL WAITERS LOG rowded Beach Joint Executives of the Lehman, Foe of Foc Needle Union Meet Strike, Accused (Continued from Page One) Page One) next Sat y noon, Gold said that thousands of workers are expected to join this demonstration. | Cooper Union Meet Tuesday. Secretary Lehman they were cor At the same time he announced | stantly stalled off; that final pre- that the date of the giant Cooper) parations were made last week f Union rally, which will be the last! a str ; , ike; end that after a meeting prior to the actual calling call the strike officially, I (Continued fro themselves two mc for memlership intc when they sought the eeing to e ld n told of the fur strike, had been set—this| the men that “the finances of the meeting which is expected to be one| union” would prevent the walko of the most enthusiastic held in) Despite the opposition many months, will be held next/ynion leadership, however Tuesday evening, June 4. Leaders fio prossure forced imite-toihe of the Needle Trades Industrial called at this restat Workers’ vabiliche Union will speak at this |jine was eatahiil meeting and lay final plans for the Hi Bee great struggle, which in militancy, Committee of two, 1 spirit, and courage on the part of the Baven weiters who ha the great mass of the workers, is “ith the union, told the expected to exceed even the heroic|*t the meeting how som fight of the furriers in 1926. at worked in the: x hes in this country are set aside as private preserves for the wealthy, 2. ommittee reversed its ‘ecision of everal days ago and voted today to ecommend favorably the Wheeler | esolution for a probe of textile tarvation by a senate committee. | By a vote of six to five the com- iittee rejected the amendment pre- | JAIL PIONEERS ommission and the taritt commis- ‘Terror, Race Prejudice ion jointly instead -f by the sen-| Coma io ee ” * Pi (x mead in “Cruelty” Prison To Assail Gastonia Strike. ae eas By the same vote, the committee | By FRAN BAILINSON oted to favorably report to the sen-|, On Saturday night the Young te the resolution authorizing the | Pioncers of America, downtown sec- avestigation, amended to enlarge |tion of District 2, held a recruiting s scope to include the entire indus-|meeting at Fifth St. and Ave. B. 'y instefid of confining it to the| While the meeting was going on ate of North Carolina, South Caro-|# cop came over and asked for the na and Tennessee. |permit ay the inh 1 pore The action of the committee is/!nson, who was speaking, notifie sen here as an attack on the Gas-|him he had called up the police ynia strike, along the lines of the jheadquarters and had told them of otorious senatorial investigation of |the meeting and that they had said re mining s’ “ation during the | it was 0. K, crike last year, when after killing) “Yer under arrest fer holdin’ a me for several months, talking to |reetin’ without a permit,” said the osses and reactionary union of-/ policeman, Rogers. “And, further- cials, the sree Benen a qos, Ms Me an po ae Hee »port praising the United Mine flag” (the flag was two feet a Ties. officials who were selling | foot and a half). if ut the strike, and assailing the “Delinquency.” ulitants. Thus the burly “officer of the law” arrested Frank Bailinson and Charles Rosen, 18 years old, who was selling “The Young Pioneer.” They were taken to the Fifth St. police station. After having their names taken the prisoners were us a taken away. Rosen was taken to extile Workers’ Union. night court and sentenced io two Guard Against Poison. | days in jail for violation of the cor- Last night armed strike pickets) poration ordinance. Bailinson was aarded not only their newly erectc | | charged -with “juvenile delinquency” sadquarters building, which the and taken to the “Society for the anville-Jenckes thugs have threat-| Prevention of Cruelty for Children,” ied to destroy as they did the last to be kept for trial yesterday morn- radquarters, but also the spring | ing, om which water for the tent col-’ When Bailinson was taken to the is obtained. Yesterday a mill’ pC. Che had to go through all wners’ spy was found lurking ‘ound it, the same man who | Ck eee 3 Gastonia Stands Fast GASTONIA, N. C., May iilitant textile strikers are en- :mping in a tent city here today, stermined to continue their fight nder leadership of the National wught trying to enter strikers’ yuses before, where after he left e water supply was found poisoned. | oa les Miners’ Tents Sent. | PITTSBURGH, Pa., May 27.— ANHATTA. j he “workers. international, Ralf) = ‘anch here is collecting some of the nts used to house miners during e great strike here in 1927 and_ 128. They are being sent to Gas- Night Warkers eke Wotlce. fi victed tex-| Special meeting to discuss the nla for the use of the e : jComintern Address and other Par e strikers. matters will take place Wednesd Party Pienic. Keep June 23, the date of the Party picnic to Pleasant Bay Park, open. a0 cere. oe afternoon at 3 o'clock at Section 1 | headquarters, ast Fourth St. A roll call will be ken. 3 /ARDER ay Unit literature agents will meet today, 7:30 p. m., s ion_ headquar- ters, 143 E. 103rd St., Room 1 representative from the District Li erature Committee will address the ~ OWN BANK LAWS meeting. If literature agents cannot | jattend they must get a substitute to jrepresent the unit. robe Reveals More} unt 7, 24. The reading circle will meet today jat 7 p. m. at, the Workers School. * Py Corruption (Continued from Poge One) | Unit Negro Directors. A_meeting of Unit Negro directors of Section 4 will be held today, d bought a car through the Tan- ja: “7:30 p,m. Room 2 of. the t Motors, also a Ferrari concecn, | 1p opin Labor Center, 235 W. ¢ less than cost price. : led 3 ia ig Relations of Warder with Ferrari | rs Units 11-10-15 F. ‘ ‘ ises the n educational meeting will be dshie syarious janterpriges \Are held § p.m, tomorrow, Room 402, _ bject - of the Moreland probe, ich arose out of the bankruptcy arings on the Lancia Motors, Inc. had been proved at past hearings at the work of the auditors at the ty Trust examination shortly after vrrari’s death had been deliber- oly sabotaged by Warder’s aides. ,,°, e examiners in this instance had | 81st St, on sent by Dr. Giannini, to whom “arder was endeavoring to sell -y Trust interest. Warder Owned Bank Stock. James L, Miller, manager of the orth St. branch of the Chase Na- nal Bank, testified that Warder ned stock in the Harlem Bank Commerce. Personal checks of ler were introduced to show he | paid Warder dividends on the x¢k. However, when asked whether ‘had occurred to him that owner- vy of stock by a bank department icial was “against the law,” Mil- yeplied, innocently: “Oh, it did occur to me.” Workers Center, 26 Union Square. * Unit R2 To Meet. An important meeting of Unit R2 (international Branch) will be held tomorrow evening at 7:30 at 27 E. th St. * * 8 Yorkville Communist Youth League. The executive committee will meet p.m, tomorrow, at 350 5. ee Maha Morning International Branch, A District Office speaker will lead discussion on the Comintern Address at the meeting of the branch at the [MANBATTAN"] Baron Interracial cue Dance. lance wi be Ven toda, t 8:30 p. m., at 145 Wwe Taeth St. mee + ee Amalgamated Clothing Workers, ‘. E. lL. An open forum will be held today y 10 Satori a 26 Paton Square. . iscussion on e problems of the The evidence introduced at the| situation in. the needle trades. will be lead by A. Wise, manager, cloak Tr We dae Os mt vine. continues to drag Tammany department, nd ll leaders deeper into the mess of | §‘ Cea UR RE GP aL ruption revealed in the scandal. |c. W.—-TUEL, 2 ading figures implicated so far Social Committee, U.C.W.W. Iude Judge Francis X. Mancuso] « meeting will be’ held at" 8:30 . ;|]D. m. tomorrow a’ he ‘kers Cen- I his father, Pasquale ay jouer ter, 26 Union Square, 6th floor. ‘two ward Glynn, nephew of former /members must. attend from. every vernor Smith; Warren C, Hub- council. d, Harlem Tammany man; Dr.|7————BROOKLYN 1 tries Brancati and the editor of |—————————-—___! ‘ ‘i “« 4 Workers Inter-Rncial Club. garciat, newsppnetis: Ae 240-1. Merona ipeeven tem ae aan: Iocan Negro Labor Congress will ad- dress the organization mecting of the club at 56 Manhattan Ave. at 8 p.m. Friday, a er) { Council 7 U.C. Wa. “Imperialism in America’ Long Live the Revoiutionary vugle of the Oppressed Colo- al Peoples? relief from the summer heat at a comparatively few beaches, into . long x and nine spa a : oe ed : aes Ath ’ Gold told of the success of the in-/ (PS 88 Six and nin which hundreds of thousands are jammed, Phot» shows a scene at Coney Islaud Sunda dividual strikes called by the fur/4M%ious they were to — = Sn —————> | department against the manufactur- £0" the past two y Communist Activities Fraternal Organizations ge of management ers, and said that “this is a sure ‘ani |the “entrees,” take a bath, change } sent to bed. The night sergeant sign of the way in which the gen-“0"Se conditions, and how thc eral strike will go.” officials had failed to tak acted very bad to Bailinson, Gold said that the fur workers after just one conference Frame-up Fails |were well aware that “our enemies | 2° Following th f The next morning Ba’ n awoke are preparing themselves for our|¢VeTy union waiter was fired. to find himself in a dormitory of | struggle.” The company union,| Remove Pickets, the S. P. C. C. The monitors, who are themselves children of the C class, acted like bullies to the chii- known as the “Joint Council,” the! The official strikebreakers of the Amer-| taki ican Federation of Labor, the police er present accusation of ¢ g against Lehman and the s the cl of a series c Silk, Wool, Dye Labor dren. They would beat them atthe) Convene in Passaic and the courts will be on hand, he picious circumstances slightest offense, especially the | coe said, in an attempt to crush the have been involved. small children, Then the children! PASSAIC, N. J., May 27.—With strike of the furriers. recently put in front of R went to breakfast, which consisted all speakers expressing the lest “The fighting spirit which made Restaurant, 125 Fifth Ave., we of “mush,” cereal, cooked peaches confidence in the rising spirit for the struggle of 1926 historic for us,” |@enly removed without notice and “milk,” which never saw a cow. After breakfast the children were taken to the roof to “play.” When visiting hours came Bailin- | son was called down to see his | #athered here father. After coming back from | convention of I 5 of the N. T. Hyman Speaks. this he was called out again. The |W. U., elected an incoming rank and| Louis Hyman, president of the sergeant wanted to see if he had/ file executive board of 9 (every | union, exposed the latest transparent | brought a “dangerous weapon with ™an an actual wor in the mills) | maneuvers of the cloak manufac- him,” for the whole building knew | 8nd planned a sir anization turers’ company to engineer their that he was a “Bolshevik.” Never- campaign on a district scale. fake stoppage for the purpose of theless, the frame-up failed. No Weisbord reported on the national squeezing a few thousand dollars : the te freapan wan Sound: situation in the textile industry, /out of the exploited cloakmakers. 7 .*8scssmnent on the membe: Race Prejudice. jpointing out especially that District “The fakers in the company union|*° finance the “Food Counci Borate acer aa of | the country ; 75 per cent of |on,” Hyman declared. “The answer| United Hebrew Trades to iets eine ented k wo: hin it, and being of the thousands of cloakmakers to | Cafeteria bosses destroy the A the s seat and vegetables and so on; the | SI 5 ; |gamated Food Workers : 3 ink bety e textile distric' ° 4 gamated Food Workers. Master Wilk © & banana “sous nk between the textile district |this despicable fakery and gamble struggle against rationalization and |Gold declared, “will make this com- ynion membership, the wage cutting in the New Jersey |ing struggle historic. Neither trait- finally explaining that “th section, 35 delegates from units of |ors, police nor courts will stand in jad heen threatene the National Textile Workers’ Union| the way of the furriers in this terday in the first | fight.” ed up with n the Rubinfeld t present bosses, into office nion oppo by Rubinfeld. led fake progressive, groceries to the aly in getting back recently helped Lehman put interc » | Hen «7... |in New England, and the mill cen- on the workers will be to join in a} Involved with Rubinfeld and Orgel | ety. aiter dinner the children tors in Pennsylvania, and farther real mass struggle, under the lead-in the present alleged “exposure” o iwere taken to a large, barren room outh, ership of the Needle Workers In-| Lehman are Shaffer, labor editor pie given books to read and toys es qiimy iwithee Abthin tained one oF I, Russak was elected permanent dustrial Union, which will wipe the!the “Forward,” and A. I . chairman. Credentials, resolutions,| company union out of existence.” the monitors had to go away, and /finance and organization committees| Tells of Revolt Against Hillman. |are holding the $200 Orgel he appointed a Negro boy in his were elected and reported. The| In concluding, Gold told of the|in trust, pending the inv place. Upon this the matron said | Passaic situation was reported upon | growing revolt against the Hillman|No explanation ha that no Negroes were allowed a$/p, Gus Deak, who told of the small| machine in the Amalgamated Cloth-|\to the many wee monitors. After a while Bailinson’s | present membership but large in-|ing Workers of American “W, egies Father SAtEGE hin awd he’ Was eee ip arg ig Workers of America. “We look the matter was | fluence of the N. T. W. U., and the | forward to interesting developments membership, How taken cut of the S. P. C. C. history leading up to this situation.| among the clothing workers,” he| socialist waiter, ned the 1 | At the trial the officer tried to} Martin Ru: th reported on the|said. “We are an industrial union, and filo to go careful with the i |prove that Bailinson had spoken | Paterson field, its great organiza-|it should be understood,” Gold con- vestigation so that the Communists against the constitution. He had tional possibilities and the struggles | tinued, “and we make no secret of “won’t find out about it.” no proof and the case was dis-|during which the local was estab- the fact that we will give all co- Says They “Got Their’s.” charged. Seems like the cops are |lished there. operation to the clothing workers ee can awn lalways “hickey.” | There was a full discussion in) who will soon enter a real struggle, Acco*ding to Orgel, who “spilled iwhich nearly all the delegates took! to free themselves from the corrupt the beans” at the meeting, the part, and the general tone was that Hillman gang. [vas sehyel tin dine the form of there must be a district strike soon.| J. Borochowitz, general manager bills by Philip Haberman, former | Wistotonbssrare/tecaaa) faa (ah eat [at the Joist ened ee che ieee union chisty/ who vay the, seme time paign to rebuild the organization in Union, officially opened the meeting i"formed Orgel that the rest of the 'Passaic, to spread the dyers’ cam- on behalf of the union. committee also “received their th paign on a district scale, and to re- + ae Haberman, who is planning a tour Olieel tant. te national oetice toseall Senn ae to Europe this week, denied Orgel’s nation-wide conference of workers) 4 mass meeting of all dressmak-|St0™Y» and declared that the only in the silk industry. ers will be held tonight at 7:30 sharp |(aing he had had with Orgel w -|_ Resolutions were adopted on the) a+ Manhattan Lyceum, 66 E. Fou: |when the latter came to his ;Workers Center, 28 Union Sau floor, at 10:30 p. m. tomorrow. unit ‘members are invited. | * * * German Parity Fraction Members. | The ¢ Letter will be diseu jat the meeting at the Workers ( ed ter, 28 Union Square, at 8 p.m. Fri- | Passaic campaign and organizati i : rth | several weeks ago, demandin Jday. Only members’ in good stand- Be eats) Canaan. end Greenies tion A detailed report of the activi-') oy why he was never “let in on ing will be admitted; if time allows, ,drive, on organization of women, ties of the dress department of the, .\ y as A y\the “Arbeiter” picnic and other mat-|the youth, Negro workers, for the . the cake and coffe Lehman eee & 5 : sunion will be given, it is announced, recognition of the Soviet Union, to| . : endorse the Trade Union Unity Con- ters will be en up. * | Lasher and Turtel likewise piously and plans will be made to extend the| jon:04 the chanae, Unit 3E, ACDINee ae aonoanen tative wil he fe Trade UnionUn work of the organization. The dress- Se aaa ra enene lead discussion on the C. I. Address Vention at Cleveland, against the| makers will also mobilize to join| Lehman, both in his own i the.we t 6:30 p. m. tomor- war danger, against rationalization, | 's: : b Join and in the Central Trades ani ow Lok " iad Se 2 Ry ae “ON; actively in the coming fur struggle. : 3 : ney reg and for the issuance of a propa- Sais bor Council, has led the vici | Greck Fraction. ganda leaflet for organization and . bo tack of the / of L, 2ucrat Bring membership books to the | struggle. Hungarian, German, Slovak Workers | zgainst the courageous strike of the fraction meeting at 101 W. 27th St., | A meeting of the Hungarian, Ger- | cafeteria workers, 8 p.m, Thursday. r man and Slovak workers tonight | pees ‘The Open Letter Cr ty will be dis- will hear a report on the furriers’) REVOLTING STUDENTS BACK. cussed at 6:30 p. m. today at 27 1. | strike and the fake stoppage of she | MADRID, Spain, May 27—With eas #8 ie company union in the cloak trade at! foot and mounted pol!ze on guard the Hungarian Workers’ Home, 350 E. 81st St. Unit B, Section F. | Robin, Braverman and Kaplan will} th it outside the University of Madrid to OF RENT LAWS ae hig ew | Prevent: street gatherings, the s Pate ing students resumed their classes BORE OnE iarkerk: \today after a lapse of two month iSpeak at the open air meeting at St. and Ist Ave., at 8:30 p, m. to es anes ge Units 10, 11, 15 F, Section 2. An educational meeting will be! (Continued from Page One) , A meeting will be held tonight, | During classes, 1 held at € p.m. tomorrow at, the | eeNae eosin sin Oho immediately after work, of the Fur | shouted, “Release Sber Ae cal aS | of those papers which is putting the|Z0its Who are entirely unorgan-/the minister of public instruction.” Paterson, New Jersey. of those papers which is putting the|;/.q fcr the purpose of forming a| _ si i ae social Sat, Annee i Lai ol n|gag on the protest of the tenants: |igcal of fur pointers of the Needle | js % strikers Saturday, June 8, at 3 Gov- | One must not go far to find the rea-|m..4eg Workers Industrial Union. Unity Co-operators Patronize ernor St. ees ant BRANCH 5. The C. 1, letter will be dis |by the branch at 8:30 p. m. to son for this. Moore is a director in Rockefeller’s Dunbar National Bank, which is a part of the Dunbar | “model” housing scheme, segregated ussed |and highly ble,” the de- ash clared purpose of which is to help |the growth of the bourgeoisie in |The meeting will be held at the of- | lfice of the union, 131 W. 28th St. | ieee SAM LESSER Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailor 1818 - 7th Ave. New York Between 110th and 111th Sts. Next to Unity Co-operative House Committee of 100. The Committee of 100 of Furriers, elected by the Trade Conference, | |Harlem. His paper also has a sub- | Will hold an important meeting to- | | stantial income from the advertise-|M&ht, immediately after work, at |the office of the Industrial Union, The Newea: Wranld: tha vorgan of 131 W. 28th St., it was announced last night. | the Marcus Garvey officials, is also | strangely silent, in view of the fact |that it claims to take the side of Imperialist Morrows ,the Negro masses. It would evi-| yrs * ’ dently rather be silent on this ques-| Finally Annex ‘Lindy Marriage in N, J. tion than excite the fury of the) | tenants. The rent raises, as foreseen by ENGLEWOOD, N. J., May 27.— The millionaire Morrow family, im- perialist agents of Morgan & Co., the Daily Worker in its exposure of the housing conditions in Harlem, for the elder Morrow was Morgan’s partner and is also ambassador to are already threatening a large num- Mexico, burned their brand into ber of working class tenants as the result of the expiration of the rent laws. Many tenants have been no-|Charles Lindbergh last night. Some tified of raises to be effective June |time ago it became known that Mor- |row had got his daughter Anne the \flickering, glittering, loudly bally- _—_—_———— THE ARCHITECTURAL IRON, BRONZE & STRUCTURAL WORK- ERS UNION meets every second and fourth Tuesday of the month, at Rand School, 7 East 15th St., . Headquarters: 7 East 15th City, Telephone: Stuyvesant 0144 and 2194. A. Rosenfeld, Secretary, East New York Unit, Communist Youth League. i An open air meeting will be held | ments of the real estate men. jtemorrow night at the corner of Hinsdale and Sutter Ave. ARBEITER BUND, Manhattan)) & Bronx; German Workers’ Club. Meets every 4th Thursday in the month at “Labor Temple, 243 E. 84th St. New members accepted at regular meetings. German and English library. Sunday lectures. Social entertainments. All Ger- man speaking workers are wel- co! discussed by Jacob C. Hoffer at the meeting at 154 Watkins Ave, at 8:30 p.m. today, y * Coney Island Unit. Weitz will lead discussion on “Why Every Worker Should Join the Com- munist Party” at the meeting at 2901 Mermaid Ave, at 8:30 p, m. tomor- row. CE Ee SACRE 3 Patreson, N. J, Protest Meet. Speakers tor the meeting to pro- test police’ brutality and race dis- crimination at 3 Governor St. tonight inelude Mary Adams, American Negro Labor Congress; Richard B, Moore, Hotel and Restaurant Workers Branch of the Amalgamated Food Workers 138 W. Slat St,, Phone Circle 7336 1, and as a result many are moving rather than face eviction. The protest mass meeting ar-|hooed aviator to play with, and yes- president, Harlem Tenants League; play , and yes: BUSINESS MEETING=j) Harold Williams, secretary, District |ranged for Saturday before City| Ww ie Negro Committes, Communist. Party, r Mears Cd bee E Es Ci Daas (RP CaE pees iad com) Hall under the auspices of the Har- lem Tenants’ League, is arousing enthusiasm among many more ten- ants than the large number of ten- ants present at the mass meeting |the marriage ceremony was per- formed. Lindbergh, forgetting that his father suffered insult and was mobbed because he fought against month at 3 p. m, One Industry—One Union—Join and Fight the Common Enemy! Office Open from 9 a. m, to 6 p, m. and James Jackson, chairman, Co ae International Labor Defense, Louis A. Baum, secretary of the Photographte Workers’ Unton, will | last Sunday, |, eomlltg |the imperialist world war sold him-|] Advertise Union Meeti speak t thi 1 th oF i + oan } your Union eetings “Police ‘Brutalltee at loth Ber acd |. rhe New York district of the/|self to imperialist use and began|| here, For information write to Fifth Ave. at 8:30 tonight, R. Hese| Communist Party, has announced to make “good will flights” to ter-| |rorize the Latin Americans soo: af-| ‘ter his first flight over the Atlantic. will be’ chairman. * * The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. é that the Communist Party is making the housing situation one of its main Fretheit Symphony Orchestra. Rehearsals conducted by Arnold | issues ii i ici - rythi i y . i Powell are held every ‘Tuesday ove- | Hea, in the coming municipal elec- | Everything _else followed in due | 26-28 Union Sq., New York City ning at 1400 Boston Road, HONS, bg b Soureee: ght ‘ Jne Dead and Several — iurt in Police Test to i Strikebreaking p= eet plift trength test, introduced for the po- lice for here as part of a wide- ce npaign for efficiency in and all forms of ssicn, has al- th and several >» here. nds for inquiries ure of the tests and to which it applies, has_ indie: i that “give the matter his per- tion” as soon as his two 1ides return to the city. present “resting” out , police officials making reveal that while Ny interested in the ntees of violence working class provided tests, they fear that le of the department hattered if the present examination were allowed REFUSES TERMS Last Minute Efforts to Save Parley perhaps ir May 27.—A new plan— luding the matter of po- litical essions to the Reich-- rep d to be the object of the ing of Owen D. Young, Sir Jo- tamp and ile Moreau, cap- s of the United States, Eng- land and France, respectively, this rning, on the continued refusal the German delegates to accept the terms and reservations of the former allied imperialists é pposed to be drawing cheme, on the failure of which, it is announced, the matter would be turned over to the gov- ernments for action. Dr, Schacht, heading the German lelegation, has failed to make a ‘written reply to the Young plan containing the last minute reserva- tions, end the delegation says that they will not do so. This indicates ire to leave a wa; should Morg n and Company ssure to hear. y revolution marking a phase in the class strug- purely repressive character the State power.stands out in bolder and bolder relief.—Marx. ERON SCHOOL Moved! The Eron Preparatory School, which holds a Regents Charter as a private high school and which was located for a period of thirty years at 187 East Broadway, has now moyed and is now located in larger and more commodious quarters at 853 Broadway, Corner lth Street, facing Union Square. The mn Preparatory School runs courses in: nts and College Entrance all colleges reial and Seeretarial Electric Book- ‘trie Billing. lish for intel- Patronize Cooperators! SEROY CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. Y. DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Rcom 803—Phone: Algonquin 8188 Not connected with any other office Dr, ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST 9 HAST 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; & to &§ p.m. Sunday, 10 a. m. to 1 p.m, Please telephone for appointment. Telephone: Lehigh 6022 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 i. Patronize No-Tip Barber Shops 26-28 UNION SQUARE (1 flight up) 2700 BRONX PA°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 \ y open for re- | EXPECT BRITISH VOTE THURSDAY TO BE CLOSED No Differences Among 3 Capitalist Parties LONDON, May 27.—The casting of the final vote Thursday im the British general election for the house of commons may result in the failure of any of the parties to ob- tain a clear majority. Because of the similarity of the election platforms and speech the candidates of the three capital- ist parties, and their metho tempting to cover their imperialist policies ler a flood of oratory, the voters have been effectively be- muddled and are now lurgely at sea. Expose Fraud. The Communist Party this cloak of bringing the real issues before the workers. Under the slogan of s against class” they are put- ting forth the only real solut.on for the problems facing the masses, There is a great deal of specula- tion here on the possible outcoma of the elections. It is pozsible that neither the conservatives nor the laborites will obtain enough of a majority in the house of commons to form a cabinet. Ramsay MacDcnald has stated that he will form a cabinet if called upon, no matter how small his ma- jority may be. Baldwin, however. tried to intensify the efforts of the jteries by announcing that he would 1efuse to form a cabinet if he has erly a small majority. This is, of course, mere “talk.” is tearing aside and Present Regional Plan | as Hoax on Housing A further hoax which took seven years to formulate at a cost of $1,000,000, with which to attempt to fool the workers of New York City on the question of housing as the municipal elections draw near, was presented last night by the Re- |gional Plan of New York and its Environs Committee of the Russel Sage Foundation. The plan includes among other things the erection of sixteen air- ports, using Governor’s Island as a center, in preparation for aerial at- tacks in case of war. Cooperators! PATRONIZE BERGMAN BROS. Cigars, Cigarettes, Candy, Toys 649 Allerton Ave. BRONX, N.Y. |] Telephone: Olinville 9681-2—9791-2 |“For Any Kind of Insurance” (CARL BRODSKY Telephone: Murray Hili 5550 East 42nd Street, New York Comrade Frances Pilat MIDWIFE \ 351 E. 77th St., New York, N. ¥. Tel, Rhinelander 3916 Meet your Friends at GREENBERG’S Bakery © Restaurant 939 E. 174th St., Cor. Hoe Ave. Right off 174th Street Subway Stgtion, Bronx All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S VEGETARIAN HEALTH RESTAURANT 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx —MELROSE Dai VEGETARIAN airy RESTAURANT omrades Will Always Find It Pleasant to Dine at Our ee, 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx ¢ lv4th be PHO a TNTERV A 9149, MEET YOUR FRIENDS at | Messinger’s Vegetarian and Dairy Restaurant 1763 Southern Blvd., Ponx, N.Y. Right off 174th St. Subway Station HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNlversity 5865 SF Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A_ pli with atmosphere where all radicals meet || 302 E.12th St. New York Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 199 SECOND AVE] UE Bet. 12th and 13th Sta. Strictly Vegetarian Food ue —_ ~ a eo]

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