The Daily Worker Newspaper, June 8, 1929, Page 5

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Ce i /; f DAILY WORKER, "STRIKE OF FOOD Fraternal Organizations TENANTS FCuT. ' WORKERS ENTERS —masmmmns—) Negro Champlon— will appear. en at the outh St. tomo: 5 will ald the an of ‘Gongress. Union Sau: 4 Bookshop or Labor at ITS TENTH WEEK | More Pickets Jailed in Demonstrations mn,” oO ibor. Jontinued fr 5 : ; nd swimming | ELE bait d from Page On periy ao Alpines woole George Simnson in Jeffe: ae de. ih : Jefferson Market| sree subway sta- court yesterday. Five received jail| tion at Se Leyo the sentences, They were Santiago Para- | @uartiesf z |English section tomorrow. isco, 20 years of age, who got 10| 8 days in the workhouse; Espiro Pera-| 3,24! aborixta "Experan % tis, of 443 W. 57th St., 10 days; Wil- |near Westchester. Ave liam Straus, who was arraigned on|# oe two charges of disorderly conduct, A Lents receiving a suspended sentence on| pup. 180th St., and Boston tomorrow to ur ee. 8 I Lavatore Picnic. men Entertain- “Center, s, given by the at 8 p. m. at 235 W. 29th St, Euan hea) Section One Celebration. A celebration and house-warming will be held by the s its new headquarters at t| 8 p. m, Saturday June 1 y |ionette’ sho the Pioneer dance festival will be Women’s Unit Organizers. A conference will be held at 8 p at 26 Union Square, [oo DBROORTYN = Brownsville International Defense. A concert and package party will be given by the Dramatic Section of |the Youth Center and the children | of the Impartial Schools at 8 p. m. Sunday. m. Labor Cie eee Section 6, Unit 48. An open air meeting will be held Myrtle Ave. Lawrence St., ay evening. * and * * East New York International Branch. one and 5 days on the other; Steve | 47h annual picnic and outdoor fes-| Jim Cork will lead discussion on Holochuk, who got fiv 1 : aS the Muste movement at an education- olochuk, who got five days. All of |Communist \al meeting of the 1 ch at 313 Hins- © strikers have en arre: tomorrow, | d St, 8:30 p. M these strikers have been arrested aaneln : itcand taper: ai | 2 le St. 8:30 p. m ‘ond five to fifteen times during the gurpri will on the program. > CRS | strike, is is ec ; cial Italian dishes will be ava BRO Y i e, and this is the second jail |3fie throughout the dav. 2 sentence for each. | * * . Council 8, U. ©, W. W. ‘i Thirty-two got suspended sen-| : Brogumine (Centers [gaye ion pkmeton mall Bee ae tences, 3 were discharged and 5}. The meer arill be closed on Sun- | McLaren St. and Sherman Ave, at 4 durin he Summer, beginnin, a 88 ‘aft a Fein ses adjourned to next week, Sundae, ie lp. im _ today. Jessie Taft and i strikers charged with erase ee a Unit 2F. Section One, violation of the pEiuneHon granted! An educational meeting of thi unit Textile Strike Dance. | A social and dance in aid of the to the Willow Cafeteri: Ine held on Monday, ae m, ikers will be held at 3 the United Restaurant Owneh As aiohe election’ tea fs fontant: sociation by Supreme Court Justice Newark Hike. 2 before J ices Meet at 93 Mercer St., corner olomon and Herbert eens e | Springfield Ave. for the “hike to a is A meeting will be held every Mon-!Okecchobie at 9 a. m. tomorrow. ecial session: Part found guilty—John Sate) h, Theodore Pappas, Joe Ko- ‘ kos and James Katsouli- Sentence will be pronounced | upon them on June 14. Six others Thursday evening, June 13, at Ar- were dismi and continued on bail. Kramberg and Obermeier Bailed. | ©. ¥. 1, Iron Strike Benefit A garden party and dance for, the * * Sam ©Kra: 4 benefit of the iron strike will be he Office Workers Open Air Meet. Y m Kramberg, secretary and |*xPciis So ‘Tuard St at 8:30 p.m. to-| The Office ‘Workers’ Union will lichael Obermeier, organizer of the | night. |nold an open air meet at 2etn t. | Hotel Restaurant and Cafeteria « * * Jand Madison Ave. on Tuesday at Workers: Ua | a 3 a ey Pioneer Teams, |12:30. Speakers will include I. Zim- orkers Union, were released yes-) Comrades who played baseball at |merman, Primoff and Ray Heim. terday from the W. 37th St. jail! the oper, hike gone sane in their | fe oe See 7] o ev were ta lay |= es to the District Office, care o: lee he where they were taken | t Monday leaner, | Pha Osea worksta Unions will for refusal to pay fines imposed re ting will be held Tuesd _|old a roof dance next Wednesday, m by Jus s C meeting will be held Tuesday at|June 12, at 8:30 at the Heckscher BBon) they bys a untios (PMC Rins Gs. lady ig) maidat Bet 8 Foundation, 104th St, and Fifth Ave. Crain for violation of the tion. This release was secured by Counsel for the union pending ap- Despite th imprisonment howed the same militant spir sent them there. “We are just} determined as ever to continue |? trike” declared Kramberg. “All}¢ ry to carry on al for unionism will], Harlem International Labor Defense. ‘The branch meets Wednesday, 8 p. the Unity Cooperative House, enth Ave ksi speak upation in the Virgin at the Forum at 4 p, m. Sun- ‘W. 129th St, CHEE eee hoe Workers Mass Meet. Independent Shoe Workers’ s calling a mass meeting next , and 13 adjourned | MANHATIAN 1 ia Hall, 918 Halsey St., Brooklyn. kers will include Ben Gold, Fred Juliet S. Poyntz, and J. Jc {Sp |Biedenkapp, Magliacano. [BROOKLYN Section 6. A section membership meeting will | be held at 56 Manhattan Ave. at 6:30 p. m. Monday, Open Air Meetings Saturday, 62nd St. and Amsterdam, Williams, Glassford, the police brutality .|Fruit Clerks Declare Finnish Co-Operative Is Non-Union Place The Daily the following communication from the Fr Grocery and Butcher med of the many | ences imposed upon in their absence, Michael ermeier characterized the action of+the courts as proving the charge of the union t the courts as well as the police 2 been on the side gainst the workers. ees lone indicate the | Workers Union: the courts”, said| “Dear Comrades: This is to in- ding to the in-|form you that at an executive ses- counsel, Justice} sion of our union held June 5, the class chara: Obermeier. our in spec judge. Whenever |tion was taken after several com- ict purse overlooked aj} mittees of the union failed to have the strikers, Solomon | the above mentioned Finnish Co-Op- Stores unionize their stores. His remarks to our| “In an advertisement published also showed his inability|jast Saturday in the Daily Worker to live up to the pretense of imparti-| the Finnish Co-Operative announced | ality, his class prejudice, his hatred| that it is a union place. zed labor and its struggles false, for they never employed union for better wages and short hours.” | help, The appeal in the case of Oberme “We ask the cooperation of the| and Kramberg will be heard in the | Daily Worker and request that this | Appellate Division next week. leeaeacuk be published. Vicious Sentences. (Signed) the point against did not fail to participate in the/ erative § Union.” Workers Relief Open Air Meeting Monday sentenced to the workhouse. SImer Smith, of 2144 Bronx Park who got 10 days; Angelo Vivoletis, 7 West 9th} St., 5 days; Anthony Millios, of 667 8th Ave., 10 days, and Morris Baer, 76 Garden St, Bronx, 5 days. | at 10 St. and 2 Ave.| This is the second jail sentence | served by Smith. Vivoletis was| The Workers International Relief given the alternative of putting up | will hold its first open air meeting ‘a $500 peace bond to stay away from|of the season, Monday, 8 p. m. at the picket line which he refused, Mil-| 19th St. and Second Ave., when the lios was accused of throwing a brick | message of the sont wen textile thru the window of the Sparkling | strike will be told by several Gas- | Cafeteria at 18th St. and 6th Ave.|tonia, N. C. strikers. Support for | Baer was first given 10 days, but | |the New York cafeteria strike and| the defense protested as there was/iron and bronze workers strike will | no evidence against him, \also be stressed. Other speakers will The magistrate imposing these ex- | include Sylvan A. Pollack, Louis A. orbitant sentences was George Wash- | Baum, and Mary Himoff, ington Simpson, in Jefferson Market | —————~ Court, who next to Hyman Bushel, has been the most severe and openly anti-labor judge during the strike. Tel: DRY¥dock 8880 FRED SPITZ, Inc. FLORIST NOW AT 31 SECOND AVENUE (Bet. Ist & 2nd Sts.) Flowers for All Occasions BLAST KILLS WORKER | OSLO, Norway (By Mail).—A} workman was killed and several se- verely injured when three buildings of the Norwegian Mines, Ltd., ex- plosives factory were destroyed by nm detonation. The surrounding woods caught fire. 15% REDUCTION TO READERS OF THE DAILY WORKER Cooperators! PATRONIZE BERGMAN BROS. Your Nearest Stationery Store Cigars, Cigarettes, Candy, Toys 649 Allerton Ave. N.Y. ile 0681-2—9701-2 Pjhone: LEHIGH 6382 Hnternational Barber Shop M, W. SALA, Prop. 2016 Second Avenue, New York (bet, 103rd & 104th Sts.) Ladies Bobs Our Specialty Private Beauty Parlor t=a2> FROM FACTORY TO YoU! HIGH-GRADE MEN’S and YOUNG MEN'S SUITS From $12.50 to $25.00 PARK CLOTHING STORE 93 Ave. A, Cor. 6th St, N. ¥. C. Airy, Large Meeting Rooms and Hall TO HIRE Worker has received | 1 sessions today | Finnish Co-Operative Stores was de- aying the role of pro- | clared a non-union place. This ac-/ This is| “Dave Vacker, organ-| of the strikers and|izer, Hyman Kowarsky, vice-pres.,| ‘3 were arrested in|Max Rappaport, rec. sec., Fruit, | demonstrations. Four| Grocery and Butcher Workers} ‘Harlem Latin-America | Tenants Organizing to. Fight Rent Increases Under the leadership of the Har- ‘lem Tenants League, with headquar- American workers living in Harlem are organizing committees to fight against the attempts of the profit- |glutted landlords higher rents than they are at pres- ent. The Latin-American tenants, who Harlem, in the section between 110th |conditions as bad as the Negro | Workers. Since the expiration of the emergency rent laws on May 31, the landlords have begun to raise rents | sky-1 high. The rent of one 7-room apartment has been raised, begin- ning July 1, from $63 a month to $115! All Latin-American tenants are urged to attend a special meeting of the Harlem Tenants League Mon- lic library at 103 W. 135th St. where | steps for combatting the landlords’ rent-raising orgy will be considered. | Long Live the Revolutionary | Struggle of the Oppressed Colo- nial Peoples! Comrade Frances Pilat MIDWIFE 351 E. 77th St., New York, N. Y. Tel. Rhinelander 3916 | AMALGAMATED AT, FOOD WORKERS | Mets Ist Satui in the month at | ‘Third Avenue. Tel. Bak Jerome 7090 Local_ 164 ‘Ask for Union Label Bread! 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 { |eratic flunkies, ters at 235 W. 129th St. Latin- to extort even| are concentrated chiefly in lower! | St. and 120th St., are living under | day evening at 7 o’clock at the pub-| VOTE SNATCHERS |Give Out Daily Worker isi and Leaflets |. _ (Continued from Page One) led by Harold W ns, head of Ne- gro work of District 2, Communist Party, and Solomon ents League. ing copies of a leaflet con | resolution g the demands the Harlem Tenants League and u ing attendance at the next meetin of the League, to be held Monday {7:30 p. m. at the Public Librar 103 W, th St. Copies of Th ly Worker, containing a cartoon by Fred Ellis on landlord- ism, were also distributed. The |group of workers was soon rein- forced by members of Scction 4 Communist Party. | While the di bution was going cn, Williams demanded the floor, but was refused. | Succe While this meeting, italist party politi Harlem tena in progress, another meeting, aiming to en- lighten and mobilize the tenants for a real fight against the landlord leeches, was being held at the cor- ner of 187th St. and Seventh Ave. This meeting, organized by the Com- |munist Party, was the most success- |ful open-air meeting held by the |Party in Harlem this season. Rich- jard B, Moore, president of the League; M. Glassford and others spoke. After he had finished speaking at jthe open-air meeting, Moore entered |the Communist Forum meeting. By this time the republican and demo- urable longer to re- |fuse the floor to the representatives of the Harlem Tenants League, al- llowed Moore and Grace Campbell, League, to |vice-president of the minutes each. Get Big Applause. Such effective use did jspeakers make of the time allotted ' to them that they completely won over the tenants present, who ap- |plauded them loudly. Campbell out- jlined the past activities of the League and urzd all those present to come to the meeting League on Monday and to take part in the demonstration at the Board jot Aldermen on Tuesday. Moore exposed the various repub: !lican and democratic mislead of the Harlem tenants, like Grenthal {and Fred R, Moore, and called on |the tenants to organize under the leadership of the Harlem Tenants League for a determined fight Jagainst the rapecious landlords, |both Negro and white. | pacman: Women Organizers to Meet on Monday Urgent matters will be discuss: at the conference of Women’s U: Organizers of the Communist Nev York District of the Communi Party at 26 Union Sq., 8 p. m. Mon- day. Communists fight on behalf of the immediate aims and interests of the working class, but in their present movement they are also de~ fending the future of the move- ment.—Marx. ERON SCHOOL | Moved! The Eron Preparatory Scho which holds a Regents Charte a private high school and which was located for a period of thirty years at 187 East Broadway, ha now moved and is now located larger and more commodious quarters at 853 Broadway, Corner 14th Street, facing Union Square. The Eron Preparatory Schoo} 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 and Electric Billing. (4) All grades of English for intel- ligent foreigners. Registration for Our Summer Term Is Now 0; Telephone: STUYVE 23 E. Eron, Principal Cooperators! Patronize SEROY CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. Y. Hotel and Restaurant Workers Branch of the Amalgamated Food Workers 183 W. Sist St, Phone Circle 7830 re eee MEETINGS) eld on the first beg of the month at Advertise your Union Meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City Suitable for Mcetings, Lectures and Dances in the Czechoslovak Workers House, Inc. 347 E, 72nd St. New York Telephone: Rhinelander 6097 COOPERATORS! PATRONIZE | and Toy Shop 736 ALLERTON AVENUE (Near Allerton cusatrs. 2 Bronx) . hone, Olinvilte 26-28 UNION SQUARE (i flight up) 2700 BRONX P/"K EAST (corner Allerton Ave.) Dr. M. Wolfson; Surgeon Dentist 141 SECOND AVENUE, Cor. 9th St. Phone, Orchard’ 2333. In case of trouble with your teeth come your friend, who has long experience, and can assure ‘you of careful treatment. DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE ||] Rcom 803—Phone: Algonquin 8188 Not connected with any other office Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST 249 EAST 115th STREET New York ny Wed. Sat., 9.80 6PM. a. m. to ie j Tues, Thurs., ® 30 a. m. to 12; % to 8 p, 10 a, m. to 1p, m. sla for pepincment. Telephone: Lehigh 6022 Sunda: speak, but limited their time to five | the two | of the} | tion under Affair at| fF > Champion’ Seamen Club Tonight; Outdoor Meeting Today sion of soli- Club at 14 South § will f group Many « fit of th cla: 1 outdoor meeting will be held uth St. The meeting the au f | 0 fe ST Meeting Sets Up List of Demands ination to ticipate in the coming general strike furrier expressed at a ended id enth stic meet- ing the Youth Section of the Needle Trades Workers’ Industrial on held at the office of the union Thursday night. Organization Drive. Irving Potash, head of the organ- ization department of the Industrial Union, sounded the keynote of the meeting when he declared that “for the first time in the history of an: junion, we will undertake to organ-| ize all the workers in and around the fai from the most ex- ploited shipping clerk to the most skilled worker.’ This is possible only in an industrial union, he said. The young workers pledged to} fight for a six-hour day, five-day| week for all workers under 21, and for the following additional de-} mands: four weeks vacation with| pay; minimum wage of $20 a week;| limitation of period of apprentice-| ship; union control of apprentice- ship, ac- or Fifty Join. At the conclusion of the meeting, | i young workers joined the or- gani ‘ation department of the union nd will proceed to immediate ac-| the direction of the five captains which they elected. Besides Potash, other speakers were Jack Rubinstein of the Youth Section of the T. U. E. L., J. Rosen, A. Klinghauber, E. Marshall, of the All- America Anti - Imperialist League, who urged the meeting to} § egates to the coming con- ce of the League at which a n will be formed. The} : z elected delegates to the con- fe e and passed a resolution en- dorsing it. _ For a Four Weeks’ Holiday for s Workers! 29ET YOUR FRI DS at Messinger’s Vegetarian and Dairy Restaurant 1763 Southern Blvd., P-onx, N.Y Right off 174th St. Subway Station | Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 || John’s Restaurant CIALTY: ITALIAN DISHE* A place with atmosphere radicals meet New York where all 202 E. 12th St. RATIONAL Vegetarian RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVEI.UE Bet, 12th and 13th Sts, Strictly Vegetarian Food | For a Real Oriental Cooked Mea! | VISIT THE | i INTERNATIONAL PROGRESSIVE CENTER 101 WEST 28TH STREET (Corner 6th Ave.) RESTAURANT, CAFETERIA \ RECREATION ROOM Open trum 1@ a m te 12 pm 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 VEGETARIAN Dairy RESTAURANT omrades Will Alwayn Find it Pleasant to Dine at Our Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx (near 174th St. Station) PHONE:—, INTERVALE 9149. HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. .|to follow your exar _| Commissioner |general strik MELROSE—, FUR BOSSES IN PANIC INCREAS TERROR METHODS AS STRIKE “Inform all the workers in shop that you will not tole “Do not permit v tives to enter you ecompanied | ed representatives ciated. “Do not a building, and inst Then ets ii the event of ‘ should apply ithe the Associated or police station. Yesterday, the forces continued to mobi. the impending struggle President Green of the A. let it be known t Federation would ev soruce” to the bosses’ com union in their attempt to bre: and a com 9m the scal cil” met with Po’ Whalen for the rp pose of mobilizing police in a t campaign against the fur worl soon as the strike is called. Matthew Woll and Edward F. Grady yesterday conferred Samuel Untermeyer as ps “violence” cry against the Trades Workers Industrial hile the si ng the underworld Charles Stets of two others f: riers Joint C Me- with t of the Needle Union } b Joint Council is mob- against the the Industrial Union in commenting on these “instruc- tions” and these various “confer- ences” yesterday pointed out that it shows the close collaboration be- tween the bosses and their strike- breaking agencies | these threats the furriers, racked by two and a half years of sufferin are determined, by means of the general strike to establish real unionism in the trade. Everything is in readine: strike, and although the has not as yet been set, there is no doubt that the strike call will be issued soon. Whose Guerillas? Officials of The Joint Board cited the case of § Samuel Weissman, a hired gucrilla |§ | cf the Joint Council, who yesterday in Jefferson Market Court was held “For Any Kind of Insurance” CARL BRODSKY Telephone: Murray Hil, 5550 7 East 42nd Street, New York that in spite of} E NEA vour| Stra a pol rested Wei issman on the seen hi The 2 cop w le, an elev 4 W. 30th St., test seen Weissinan in comy other m he elev an open ing m: sed hir Page Five <a C fetertn Strikers at Office Workers Dance Next Wednesday Nite dhe Ane y will join with t aphers, and t R Dance rand Jur of the V Jnion, next - illuminating in view Wednesday, June 12 at 8:30 p. m. aised by the right wing i The dance will d on the roof critical request for of the Hecks ndation, Fifth tion” into viclene Ave. and 104th he resy office workers 1an was held for trial on|to the 5,000 anr the charge of feloni eine diatribe against S. G é the John G es testifi Negro 1 will pro- aulted Ge peppifyin z music; ample re- Goldman Fur ll be on hand; and a St., with a p will add to the enjoy- Or Ponymon, the union’s early summer for sc NATL TEXTILE “sr: BOARD MEETING mes Today in the offices {of the Workers -| Union, 1 start the m t ployed at d to having h va 30 p.m. ational Te 104 Fifth Ave., stile fc fined seca Wed first of four of the nati a executive 1@ unio! will be three s »f violence against 2 prepa of violence agai {| The N. T. W. U. ading : q| teat texti k stonia and Bimosy can) z ACSUECL and | other Ca and is strug- these are the acts which the “Joint ° ee : 3 ; : ling to smash t and re- Council” seeks to conceal with their empty prattle of an the Joint Board declared. Bosses Steal Inve InventorHangsHimself him in the usual way with in America, hanged him yesterday morning by a sash roy ent at 1646 port on the southern situation; re- from a pipe in the basen Madison Ave, where he w: He left a note into the world with nothi to leave it the same wa inves' y the Uni- Inion in Eliza- Iso busy on tigation, ntion; |New ern Penn New Jersey and east- ania, Much on Agenda. Golden, inventor of sral| The order of business will be: in- ful electrical devices, the) ternational relations, action on com- s of which were stolen from! munications from organizations in other countries; national changes in pers the report of the important 1; a special re- i ports from each district; the # as living. ying that he came/| rangements for a national silk work- ng and had next national Te Wisi ers’ conference; the ‘convention of the } EAE, Restaurants Main Office: Telephoi MANHATTAN BRANC 4303 Eighth 4301 Eight Avenue 8 Avenue Cooperative Food Services COOPERATIVE TRADING ASS’N., Inc. PATRONIZE CET — Bakeries — Markets 4301 Eighth Avenue, Brooklyn me Windsor 9052 and 9092 H: 2085 LEXINGTON AVENUE, N. Y. C. BROOKLYN BRANCHES: u 6824 Eighth Avenue f 4005 Fifth Avenue 06 Forty-third Street Trip on the Atlantic CLAREMONT Phone: UNIversity 5865 Freitheit Excursion a day at one of ihe most picturesque sea shores in America TODAY Boats Leave 2:00 p. m., Pier A, Battery —TWO BOATS— ONTEORA will glide along the ocean and stop at the very beautiful ATLANTIC BEACH where there will be BATHING, BALL GAMES, SOCCER GAMES, etc., and where we will spend a pleasant after- noon and evening together. Price for Tickets Md in Advance $1.25 Qh at the Pier $1.50 Children. . . 75¢ sain caensuuat

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