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| | DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, JUNE 8, 1929 rage ive —— Communists Urge Cleveland ‘TRIKE BOUND TO OME, MEN SLAVE INDER OPEN SHOP Inion Officials Wild .bout “Daily” Expose CLEVELAND, Ohio (By Mail).— | ie Communist Party issued a bulle- n to the Cleveland carmen, who are msidering the question of a strike arning them to “be on guard xainst fake promises of your union ficials.” At the meeting of the carmen held 1 Tuesday, May 28, the officials rtainly did make their fake prom- es, Fred Schultz, president of the aion, has decided dthat it is no use gotiating with Mr. Alexander, esident of the street railway com- iny. Alexander refuses to sign any zreement with the carmen, even an »pen shop” agreement. He told thultz point blank that there would » no increase in the scale this year, ne men demand an increase of five nts and an improvement in the con- tions. Faker Excited. At the meeting on Tuesday, three en were the “stars.” Walter Arndt, t vice-president, was all excited ver the fact that the Communists stributed the leaflet at the meeting which it stated that “Schultz says s hands are tied.” He declared at this should form the basis of 1 action aaginst the Daily Worker. ‘hy, he did not state, but he was lvised not to start anything for » would have more to prove than » wished. Another recommended at the men tear up the leaflets id throw them in the hands of the stributor. Shea, one of the international offi- als, warned them to do nothing of ie sort. “They don’t know any- ing, these Communists. They are iid by Moscow, so I advise you to row the leaflets in the waste isket.” No leaflets were thrown into the aste basket, for the leaflets told e men the truth. More Comes Out. More than this came out at the eeting. At the conference with lexander, Shea, Schultz and Rea, e secretary, were called over to eorner for a whispered talk by lexander, and when it was over ey reported to the committee of x which was sent by the union. hat took place in this whispered lk? What was promised the union ficials? What dicker was com- eted? This the men demanded to 1ow, but they learned nothing. | A Sell-Out. This deal is a clear sell out. The en accused the officials of cheating ‘em and although they are not as tspoken as they would wish to be, ‘ving to the fear of being denouncea the union officials to the company id losing their jobs, this is the pro- vunced feeling. The Communist leaflet, which was gerly received by the men, reads | part as follows: '“The main question is that of an iveement. “What is an ‘open shop’ reement? It is an agreement ‘nich allows the company to hire m-union as well as union men, The mpany prefers non-union men, for en it can handle the men as it eases. The Van Sweringens are king over the street railways, and ese people are the most vicious emies of unionism. What they int is no union or a company union. “An open shop agreement will ean that one by one the union men ll be fired and non-union men be tt in their places. You know that ‘en today the company fires good sion men, and you have no come- heck.” Call for Fight. ‘The leaflet calls on the men to isht for the closed shop. It advises ‘em to throw out their cowardly tficials, and put real fighters in eir places. It also recommends ‘e organization of barn committee, .d the preparation of a strike, The Carmen of Cleveland will be reed to fight for the closed shop. sey will have to fight for the union- ation of the 350 busmen, and 500 op men. They will have to fight spite the court decision which de- ared that owing to the fact that e street railways are a monopoly, ' can sign no agreement with the orkers. This is an unheard of de- Fon and will have to be fought as 1 such decisions must be fought. Strike Inevitable. This fight will not take place in se courts but in a defiant strike. he men will not be able to improve 1eir conditions or get recognition a union, unless they are prepared ‘fight. A strike is inevitable on the Cleve- ind street railways, and the pro- -essives are now mobilizing their rees for the fight. The Communists pledge the men ll support in their strike and in eir leaflet state that: “The Communist Daily Worker ‘Il publish the truth about your uggle, for the capitalist news-~ pers will line up with the street ilway company and the Van Swer- gens, as they support the capi- lists in all strikes of the workers.” 4 —CARMAN. | DITCH DIGGER KILLED. BALTIMORE, Md. (By Mail).— mes Letts a worker was killed en a ditch he was digging caved on him, \ Racing Driver Dies—For Auto Bosses’ | | | Profits es | | | Two were killed, including a racing driver and a spectator injured on Decoration Day when a racing car plunged into a crowd of spectators at Metropolitan Heights Fair Grounds, Queens. These drivers sell their skill for the benefit of the auto magnates, who profit from the publicity. FOOD STRIKERS 'Brookwood Students AWAIT RESULT 0 | Denouce Muste | | CHINA INTRIGUE at Fiery Meeting (Continued from Page One) en itself is in measured, half-friendly Lords Offer to Retire for Imperialists terms beside which the section of (Continued from Page One) the left wing is denunciation. go into exile after the reburial of Demonstrate Against The memorandum boasts of the | Jajlj j i fact thut Brookwood can co-oper- Jailings and Injunction Sun Yat-sen, which was completed, on Saturday. These declarations of | (Continued from Page One) |fine against each of them imposed |by the Supreme Court for defiance | Carmen to Fight Sell-Out by Treacherou THOUSANDS HAIL MASS PROTEST OF HARLEM TENANTS Resolution Passed at Big Demonstration (Continued from Page One) ing Conditions. Fall in Line. Har- lem Tenants’ League!” This organization should be car- ried out on the basis of the forma- tion of house committees in every! tenement, they said. How the bourgeois Negro press of Harlem sabotaged the parade of the tenants and attempted to defend the landlords and real estate men against the protest of the working | class tenants was told by Solomon Harper, Negro member of the Com- munist Party and of the Harlem Tenants’ League. He told how the Tatler, sensational society tabloid, had gone to the extent of holding the landlords up as “heroes” for “do- ing away with race lines.” In reality they accentuated the exploiters busi- ness of prejudice by using schemes, | based on color, for raising rents. He also explained how these papers were supported and financed, chiefly by means of advertisements, by the landlords of Harlem. Communist Party Support. Harold Williams, district Negro organizer of the Communist Party, outlined the demands of the Party on the housing issue and exposed the maneuvers of the white and Ne- \Fire Negro Waiters, Hire White Girls on Northern Pacific Ry. SPOKANE, Wash. (By Mail).— Waiters on the dining s of the Northern Pacific, who are Negro workers, will be replaced by white girls on the Yellowstone Park trains after June 20. The railroad an- nounced that the girls are being trained to replace the waiters, chefs and assistant chefs on trains run-| ning between Livingston and Gard- THOUSANDS MAY STARVE IN PENN Overproduction Is the Cause ner, Montana. ‘The girls will be yppER PITTSTON, Pa. (By paid much lower wages than the )faji]), — Over six hundred coal men are. miners were thrown out of work by the closing down of the Seneca Col liery of the Lehigh Valley Coal Co. here, which was shut down when the company had produced a surplus by speeding up the men. The colliery, ANTLIMPERIALIST before shutting down, had worked only six weeks since January 1, 1929 Over 1000 persons, members of miners families, face starvation, and are in a destitute condition. Meet Held to Mobilize for World Congress A conference of representatives of Latin-American organizations op- posed to imperialism was held yes- |terday afternoon at Lexington Hall, |109 East 116th St. sumption of operation of the mine The purpose as expressed by Julio jg seen for a long time. Martinez, chairman of the gathering, * «3% was to “prepare for the mobiliza- = i “ i tion of the greatest possible number , TREVERTON, Pa. (By Mail).— of organizations and individuals for Suspension of two large collieries participation in the anti-imperialist here has been followed by destitu- movement, and particularly in the tion and poverty in which more than id 100 families, including 400 children, eee LUZERNE, Pa. (By Mail).—Over 450 coal miners, many employed by the Haddock ¢ Co. for years, were ‘thrown out of work when the Had- dock Co. closed its Black Diamond Colliery here. No prospect for re- | Anti-Imperialist Conference to be held June 15th in New York, at Ir- ving Plaza. This June 15th Confer- ence will send delegates to take part in the Second Anti-Imperialist World are really in want of bread and the bare necessities of life. | A mother of five children whose husband’s appeal for aid from the ate with the Y. W. C. A. and labor | the tools of the rival Anglo-Japanese | colleges in Salem, Philadelphia and elsewhere, while unable to win and Yankee imperialists, may point| to negotiations between the imper-| the confidence of the Communists, {ialists for the stopping of actual | jof the injunction. | The fines were imposed by § preme Court Justice Thomas Crain on May 18th who ordered them paid Can a left wing institution main- ronan} A to the Wil-low Ca ria vB hostilities pending an agreement for Racin uur OVe, Une Eze) IRE De tain its integrity in such a situa- tion? | setting up a central government at | Nanking, which, with the removal of It further claims to have the support of the “more vigorous ele- |fore May 28th. Further legal ace the chief warlords, would be able to maintain peace in China, for the im- ments in the socialist party.” Is | tion to appeal the case is bei ; ee hig s eing taken Brookwood, then, to line up with |by the aie lawyers. | re perialists to exploit it all the more | viciously. the socialists, whose union recor are ' it too notorious to a ee sonora contenant proceedings Hpchece? against the strike leaders has been sd |started by the United Restaurant The memorandum even goes so |Owners’ Association. One hundred * # * | far as to state, “Brookwood sets |and fifty strikers are scheduled to Recall Nanking Envoys. itself a particular kind of educa- gro politicians of Harlem—many of whom are vicious landlords them- selves, in an attempt to gain the Ne- gro vote. He expressed the full sup- port of the Harlem Tenants’ League by the Communist Party and its pro- gram of the solidarity of Negro and white workers againstt he exploit- ing class, “It is only by voting for the Com- munist candidates in the city elec- tions, joining the Cémmunist Party and participating in its work as the Congress at Paris July 20th to 31st. poor board was refused because he It will also take steps to cement the had Jived in another district, threat- alliance between the various organi-/ened to go home and kill her chil- zaitons in the United States which!dren and then take her own life if are fighting the aggression of Wall ica and in every corner of the world, with the organizations of the op- pressed peoples in those colonial and |semi-colonial lands.” Louis Gibarti international repre- |sentative of the League Against Im- perialism and for Colonial Independ- St. and Washington in Latin Amer- | she did not get relief. | | The North Franklin and Kathryn ‘collieries, the former operated by the Philadelphia and Reading Coal and Tron Company and the latter by an individual corporation, closed down recently and brought on a depression. The North Franklin worked about 70 days through 1928 and only a tional task in order to advance a militant, realistic, progressive la- bor movement. Members of the staff should be chosen for their willingness and ability to take part in such a task.” Hereafter no left wing instructors will be tolerated. Muste in Wild Attacks. BERLIN, June 2.—Reports re-| ceived here from Nanking state that the diplomatic representatives of the Nanking regime and consylar of- ficials at Moscow have been recalled. The Soviet Government protested | sharply against the provocative raids on the Soviet consulates in Northern Manchuria carried out by | Chiang Hsueh-liang, the Manchurian |appear in the Court of Special Ses- Jeader of the toiling masses, that all | sions today, charged with violation] of us can, together, do away with jof Section 600 of the Penal Law, | this system of landlordism and capi- which is a loosely worded, antiquated talism, one of the products of which |law utilized by the capitalist courts/ js segregation and discrimination to “punish” strikers for violation of against Negro workers, and the ter- an injunction. As the strikers re- fuse to stop picketing the courts| |are growing more desperate in their | determination to help the bosses} warlord on the orders of the Nan-| this. A, J. Muste, dean of Brook- | raigning the strikers as fast as time |king regime. wood cy yea g the BA Aa Be Ene ee permit for defying ” | Sive” forces, tool e opportunity to the order of the supreme court to Seamer ve fe Mas savagely attack Arthur W. Calhoun, |stop “interfering with the business” that the! Palla wake “ct ‘violet and .cft wing Brookwood instructor and |of the bosses. unlawful character, and declared|‘Titi¢ of progressives, and Robert) Kramberg and Obermeier, in their | that the reports‘of Communist meet-| Cruden, who condemned the anti-\last speech io the strikers before] |ings in the consulate at Harbin were) 10@ character of the progressive|going to jail, urged them to keep! senseless inventions and a futile at-|COference held in New York City /up the fight in spite of the great tempt to evade responsibility for the |I@8t | week-end. “The faculty of ‘difficulties and obstacles placed in cireibue action: | Brookwood,” said Muste, “is heartily their way by the united front of| ita se jin sympathy with the progressive | bosses, police, courts, big chain cafe-| ‘ : jmovement. Arthur Calhoun is out |terias, and the reactionary A. F. Sun Yat-sen Buried. jto Kill it. In view of the circum-|of L, misleaders. They have asked | NANKINK, China, June 2.—The stances the faculty feel that they |the Daily Worker to appeal to all memorial farce enacted by the Nan-|can work no longer with Arthur Cal-| workers to rally to the aid of the |king regime is ‘now finished. The|houn.” Students generally regard |cafeteria strikers: whose ranks are body of Sun Yat-sen, one of the it as notice of dismissal to this left | holding firm in spite of police bru-| jleaders of the Chinese revolution| wing instructor. This is especially | tality, in spite of the injunction, and while it was in full swing, is buried ironical in view of the fact that at | although weakened somewhat by the |on a hill outside of Nanking, falsely workers’ education conferences the |fact that so many are in jail. |claimed by Chiang Kai-shek, who|Brockwood faculty has always | jhad sold out the revolution to the |prated at great length about “acad- | imperialists. jemie freedom.” Cruden’s request to has aroused great indignation of th: | answer charges of A, J. Muste was | rank and file, who report the strike- | vefused by James H. Maurer, white breaking tactics to the Hotel Res-| hope of the progressive movement. /tayrant and Cafeteria Workers The Brookwood board of directors | Ynion. The bureaucrats are still Continued treachery on the part} jof the corrupt A. F. of L, fakers| BETRAY SHOVEL STRIKE | WYOMING, Pa. (By Mail),—The strikers of the Wyoming Shovel | becomes rible housing conditions against which we are protesting now,” he said. There were also speakers for the On the occasion of discussion of |break the strike, and are now ar-| United Council of Working Class Women and the American Negro Labor Congress, organizations which are giving full support in the fight against landlordism. Williana Bur- ence, declared that the calling fo a Second Anti-Imperialist’ World Con- gress has been made necessary by | few days this year. About 800 men | are employed, most of them residing | i ; in Treverton. The Kathryn mines, a} far-reaching changes in the interna-| ater operation, closed down sev-| tional situation, and that the “stead- eaalweele lags ily increasing aggressivness of Yan- eS | kee imperialists” has created urgent| The community, located in Zerbe| tasks of major importance for all| Township, has a population of about | opponents of imperialism, and he) 3,500. It is situated in what is con- emphasized the immediate need for |sidered the richest bed of virgin an- an intensified fight and enlargement | thracite coal in the hard coal belt. of the Anti-Imperialist League. Other speakers were Albert Mo-| reau, secretary of the Latin-Amer- roughs, of the Teachers’ Union, also |ican department of the A. A. A. I. L., spoke, as well as other Negro and white workers. A resolution adopted at the close of the protest meeting at Brooks Square summed up the demands of the tenants. The resolution follows: Resolution Adopted, “The Harlem Tenants’ League, a working class organization formed for the protection of the tenants of Harlem against landlord exploita- tion, adopts the following resolution and makes the following demands: “Whereas, the Harlem tenants are faced with a housing situation that imereasingly worse, and overcrowding is the common prac- tice, which, together with the cvil of segregation, makes for a condi- tion where real estate agents and landlords can squeezé from 50 to 100 per cent more rent for flats than is paid by tenants in any other sec- |Luis Martinez, delegate from the Venezuelan Revolutionary Party, land Manuel Gomez, of the executive committee of the Anti-Imperialist | League. The Centro Obrera and the} | Sociedad Mutualista Mexicana sent) delegates who participated in the| discussion of the problems confront- ing the emancipation movement in| the Latin-American countries under | the political and financial domina-| tion of the United States. | Floods Cause Train | Derailments in Neb.; | Believe Boy Drowned FALLS CITY, Neb., June 2.—One | boy was believed to have been drowned in floods which prevailed in | this section today. The high water | “For Any Kind of Insurance” | ARL BRODSKY, elephone: Murray Hil. 5350 | | 7 East 42nd Street, New York) 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 moved and is now located in larger and more commodious quarters at 853 Broadway, Corner 14th Street, facing Union Square. || The Eron Preparatory School || | Works, out for three months, were passed a resolution providing for |providing “union” signs to the cafe- active co-operation with the new|teria owners whose places are council for progressive labor action, | struck, In these places, only one or which is a socialist party, Lore, Sa-|two cake bakers members of jlutsley; “combination. |the A. F. of L. Local 500. Flagrant Jinstances of graft accepted by the Habor fakers from restaurant and cafeteria owners are reported by | these rank and filers who are thor- | misled by federal and state media- | tors into returning with little gain, | ales vlan MINER KILLED. NANTICOKE, Pa. (By Mail).— Louis Cenci, 39, a laborer at the Auchincloss colliery of the Glen| HAZELTON, Pa. By Mail). Alden Coal Co. was killed in the | Recognition of the union and an in- i i hly disgusted with their “lead-| ee caught beneath a fall | crease varying from $1 to $4 a week aa seus | asouinlone OR sbroaeaNel [have been won by bakers here.|sives who are supporting the cafe-| Long Live the Revolutionary | There contract calls for an 8 hour teria strikers re expected in the Struggle of the Oppressed Colo- [aay time and a half for overtime, 2¢@% fuutre. nial Peoples! no work on legal holidays. Indefinite postponement of the, Communist Activities Italian Fraction. jformer chief of staff of the Second | nm The C. I. letter will be discussed at | Corps Area, originally set for today, | the membership meeting to be held 6 Section 6, Unit 6F. at the Workers Center, £6 Union Sq. | {8 announced at Governor Island, {Speakers from the Industrial De-|Room 402, Wednesday hight. Representatives of the Judge Addvo- a e section membership meeting | Downtown Unit 2, © Y. 1. it i i at Turn Hall, Broadway and 1ith| An open air meeting, will’ he neta | cates office in Washington arrived Ave. Monday, June 4, A District Of-|at 39th St. and §th Ave. at 7 p. m,| today. It was said the case has not fice ‘speaker will lead the discussion. | today. ‘been prepared and that a date for Bars tee | ' ‘ | |the court martial will be decided {upon later. | Charges were preferred against) | Col. Enochs by Major General Han- son E. Ely, corps commander. Re-| |ports indicate that the charges are are BAKERS GAIN. ‘Court Martial Put Off ‘in Militarist Quarrel, BR £2) 45 @ Cc. Y. L. Iron Strike Beneti¢ See nm 8. | A garden party and dance for the A meeting will be held at 8:30 p. m. | benefit of the iron strike will be held today at 313 Hinsdale St. Meetings |at 143 E. 103d St. at 8:30 p. m. Sat- will continue on Monday till further | urday. notice. | a init 2F | u [MANHATTAN 1}. A meeting will be held today at 6:30 p, m., at 27 B. 4th St, The execu- : éneik Soin Oheambions tive committee meets at 6:30 p. mi, at | the outgrowth of a quarrel over the Urgent matters will be discussed at |the same address, officers mess, supervised by Col, the meeting of Unit Womens’ Work BRON | Enochs, | Renate at the pA Center, | IX —_—__—— | 2 Jnion Sq., at 8 p. m. ednesday. | Yorkvill 2 " ve x er if Di ton of the Ged, nad n aan yh orkville Communist Youth League. scuss the C. I, address wi 7 The Hlecutive Committee wilt meet |be continued at the meeting at si30 |, NANTICOKE, Pa. (By Mail),.—| Wednesday, 6:30 p.m. at 350 H, Sint’. m. at 1380 Wilkins Ave, today. | Arthur Wells, 80, a worker for the | St. Brown-King Construction Co., re- Bring membership book, ceived severe leg injuries when he| was caught between falling lumber | while at work. WORKER LOSES FINGERS, | Fraternal Organizations GREENEVILLE, Tenn, (By Mail), | [MANHATTAN _| [= BRONX] — Charles Payne, worker at the ©.) nr M. Smith Meat Co. had all the) fingers of his right hand amputated East N. Y. Inte ational Branch, United Council Working Class Women te Jalint League. AOU TD OALISE Sea gne Sydney Bloomfield will lecture on justified rent increas: jtion of the city; and “Whereas, many of the Negro ten- | ants are unemployed and many oth- | ers are working for wages ranging | from $12 to $18 a week and are un- able to pay the excessive rents charged; and “Whereas, even, the meager and inadequate protection provided by the Emergency Rent Laws, passed five years ago, has today expired, and the landlords are now planning to tale advantage of defenseless tenants whom they will ruthlessly exploit because of the situation, the Harlem Tenants League makes the following demands: Low Rents. “1, The fixing of rents of wage- earners upon a basis commensurate | with their wages; such rents to be | fixed by a Board of Labor Repre- | sentatives. “2, No discrimination on the basis of race in the renting or sale of houses. “3. No ovictions of unemployed workers. Right of Organization. “4, Immediate establishment of a real Sanitary Code and a rigid en- forcement of all sanitary regula- tions, “5. And, above all, the Harlem Tenants League upholds the right | of tensnts to organize themselve: and refuse to pay oppressive and w and that | here such increases are demanded, evictions shall not be permitted. “6. We demand that the state jand city construct homes for work- ers, to be rented to them without profit.” Standard Oil Gobbles Up Louisiana Wells SHREVEPORT, La., ¢ ne 2.—The Standard Oil Company of Louisiana A membership meeting of the New York Branch will be held at 8 p. m. Wednesday at Irving Plaza Hall, 15th St. and Irving PL, to prepare for the astern Conference to be held June 15. ouls Gibartl, International repre- sentative of the League Against Imr perialism will be the main speaker at the membership meeting, the Negro situation at 1387 Wash- ington Ave. under the auspices of Council 8, Hopight,: . Saceo-Vanzett! I. L. D. EB rd ight will lend discussion on e International Labor Defense jana Jand the Fascism in the U.S." at the jngeting at 1172 Boston Rd, today at 8:30 p.m * Its Relation to Labor Struggles | when his hand was caught in a sau- sage grinder, STRIKE FOR 5 DAY WEEK. PORTSMOUTH, N, H. (By Mail). More than 100 organised carpen- ters here are striking for a 5-day week and a wage of $9 a day, took over yesterday all producing | wells and acreage owned and opere- | ted by the Humble Oil and Refining | Company in North Louisiana and South Arkansas. This embraces 150 producing wells with 4,000 barrels \daily runs. The consideration in- ‘volved was not made public, runs courses in: (1) Regents and College Entrance || preparatory for all colleges || and universities, (2) All Commercial and Secretarial Subjects. | (3) Comptometry, Electric Book- keeping an lectric Billing, (4) All grades of English for intel- ligent foreigners. Registration for Our Summer Term Is Now Open. Telephone: STUYVESANT 2387. J. E. Eron, Principal. caused two train derailments, marooned other trains and resulted in loss of crops and livestoc Tel: DRYdock 8880 FRED SPITZ, Inc. | FLORIST NOW AT 31 SECOND AVENUE (Bet, Ist & 2nd Sts.) | Flowers for All Occasions 1)% REDUCTION TO READERS OF THE DAILY WORKER | Cooperators! Patronize | Cooperators! PATRONIZE S E R O nN BERGMAN BROS. CHEMIST | Your Nearest Stationery Store 657 Allerto Cigars, Cigarettes, Candy, Toys |! Estabrook OaiE ” pals y. 649 Allerton Ave. BRONX, N. ¥. Telepbone: Olinville 9681-2—9791-2 Dr. M. Wolfson Surgeon Dentist 141 SECOND AVENUE, Cor. 9th St. ]| Unity Co-operators Patronize SAM LESSER Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailor 1818 + 7th Ave, New York Between 110th and 111th Ste, Next to Unity Co-operative Hou: Phone, Orchard 2333, In case of trouble with your teeth come to see your friend, who has long experienc you of cai and can ansure } trentment. DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Reom 803—Phone: Algonquin 8183 Not connected with any other office AMALGAMATED FOOD WORKERS Meets Ist Saturday in the month at 3861 Baker's Local_ 16: Bronx, N. ¥. Ask for Union Label Bread! Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST 249 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 Hotel and Restaurant Workers Branch of the Amalgamated Food Workers 183 W. Sist St, Phone Cfrete 725: BUSINESS MEETING} } id on the ue a lay of the a Lal the Office Open from Patronize No-Tip Barber Shops 26-28 UNION SQUARE (1 ftiight up) 2700 BRONX P/“K EAST (corner Allerton Ave.) Advertise your Union Meetings here, For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept, 26-28 Union Sq., New York City cherous Misleaders MINES CLOSED, HUGE TOLL OF COAL MINERS; NO SAFEGUARDS Bosses’ Greed Causes Accidents WILKES-BARRE, Pa. (By Mail). —In one day, Memorial Day, eight miners were severely injured in col- lieries in this section, all the acci- dents resulting from negligence on the part of the coal operators, While at work in the Lehigh and Wilkes-Barre Coal Co. mine, John Potazy, 20, of Ashley, received severe head injuries when a rope broke as he was placing a coal car on the tracks with a block and tackle, Walter Lipinsky, 27, of Nanti- coke, miner at slope number 1, Sus- at Nantico to the left leg quehanna Collie received severe inju when struck by a mi Caught in a premature explosion, Alex Dubek, 39, of Buttonwood, re- ceived severe injuries to the face and body while working at the Loomis Colliery of the Glen Alden Coal Co. Rock Falls Injure Miners. While working in Shaft 2, Sus- quehanna Colliery, at Nanticoke, Joseph Buhalski, 38, of Nanticoke, s severely burnt. gun the day’s work. Frank Gayosky, a young miner, aged 18 of Plains, a door tender for the Lehigh Valley Coal Co. at Dor- rance colliery, suffered lacerations to the eyes, head and hands in a fall of rock, Mike Safulka, 25, of Edwardsville, runner for the Kingston Coal Co., suffered a compound fracture of the right leg under a fall of rock. Walter Victor, a 21-year-old miner for the East Boston Coal Co. mine, was also caught under a fall of rock, fracturing a leg. These rock falls are due to im- proper supports. He had just be- Nbt only has the bourgeoisie forged the weapons that bring death to itself; it has also called into existence the men who are to wield those weapons—the modern working class—the proletarinns.— | Karl Marx (Communist Manifesto), Comrade Frances Pilat MIDWIFE 351 E. 77th St., New York, N. Y. Tel. Rhinelander 3916 COMRADES EAT at the SCIENTIFIC VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT 1604-6 Madison Ave. Between 107th & 108th Sts, For a Real Oriental Cooked Meal VISIT THE INTERNATIONAL PROGRESSIVE CENTER 101 WEST 28TH STREET (Corner Oth Ave.) RESTAURANT, CAFRTERIA ECREATION ROOM Open trum 18 a m te 12 p m, : Meet your Friends at GREENBERG’S ° Bakery & Restaurant 939 E. 174th St., Cor, Hoe Ave. Right off 174th Street Subway Station, Bronx All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S VEGETARIAN HEALTH RESTAURANT 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx Dairy nestaunayt omrades Will Always Find It Pleasant to Dine at Our Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx (near 124th St. Station) PHONE:— INTERVALB 9149. MEET YOUR FRIENDS at Messinger’s Vegetarian and Dairy Restaurant 1763 Southern Blvd., ™ onx, N. ¥. Right off 174th St. Subway Station —————— HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. 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 AVEl UB Bet, 12th and 13th Ste Strictly Vegetarian Food