The Daily Worker Newspaper, August 1, 1929, Page 5

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CNET | Sn A ts v to ¢ a fon oroad seale for the eight-hour day, nerease in wages, abolition of the unsanitary conditions in company houses, and freedom for the Gas- tonia prisoners. . Page Five DAILY WORKER, } EW YORK, THURSDAY AUGUST 1, 1929 W | Communist Activities { — IEFENSE IN. NE SFFORTS IN MILL All units and all members attention! Main tasks for the Unita:! (1) The Greater New York Work- ers Anti-Imperlalist War and Defend the Soviet Union Conference baw ¢ ablished a permanent body to fight e duty of mperialist war. nits to take STRIKERS’ GASE nions and a labor bo object of affiliating them to the conference, Union Mobilizing All’ Pe acriiermene eon August 1, what made in hix ols Aug. 1, 4 p. ms March to Union Square and Demon- strate” is the slogan, At Coming Conference shop. “Down (Continued from Page One) organization to issue a rallying call struggle, real struggle on a! (3) This week is Gastonia Defense the defense of ns with the anti- The demonstration war campaign Aug. 1 for the defense of the Soviet Union will likewis® be a demonstra- tion for the defense of the Gastonia textile workers, Spread widely the i |signatures of protest and help to ob- Last night a meeting of the Rex |tain the 1,000,000 signatures, mill workers took up the question} (4) pefend the Soviet Un of a campaign against the bosses’ |agatnst the war danger. recent and continuing discharges of |™#i task of the Party units. ‘ i (5) Discussion in the units on Len- Workers for belonging to the union, | imine war faction and alms of Iniers and evictions from company houses. !natonal Red Day. The speakers were Organizers Ger- son, Wells, Phyfer, Mrs. Crouse and Mrs. Roseberry. _There will be another meeting to- night with Murdock and local speak- ers, and a struggle is expected un- mn Fight ix the (6) Prepare the election machinery |for putting the Party ticket on the | ballot, | (7) Take the preparatory steps |for the TUUC and the conference on August 20th in preparation for the Cleveland Conference. less the boss backs down on his nae ReLaiste tances eats are policy of-firing and evictions. PEL CE RA EG FAR oe dal Word was received from the na- TO ALL FRACTIONS tional office of the International La- | NIONS AND LABOR ATION (Fraternal, wo- bor Defense that the $5,000 bail each | for Amy Schechter, Vera Bush, and Sophie Melvin, originally charged with first degree murder, but with organizations, workers’ clubs, ete.) Meet immediately on the war dan- «er, as follows: To prepare for rais- i “ |ing the question of the tasks in rela- the charge reduced at the Gastonia ton to the defense of the Soviet court y 5 Union, Mobilize the masses for a court yesterday to second degree, is |siruggie against the war provoca- on the way and the prisoners will | tions. probably be released tomorrow on! Do everything to make the events bail. The bonding companies re- |!" which the Party participates suc- ful fuse to handle the case, and cash cee is a Pee tee ee 5 i * mmediate tasks for all New Jer- bail has to be provided. ; |sey and up-state New York units in Amy Schechter, director since the |line with « program of work sent early days of the strike of the Work- |°"t today are: ers International Relief station in| jtersorgantentions for defense of beri stated ey the Sexist — mer the war “Of course we are glad to be freed, PFovecations of the Nanking govern ever work is assigned us by the Na-|9Pen air meetings on issue. tional Textile Workers Union or the| (2) Immediately send material for International Labor Defense. But we |Tayer we tusue, nue Of every shop object to any favored treatment on! (3) lect committee’ of three to account of our sex. The other pris-|carry thru other. preparationy for oners are no more guilty than we |‘ign'in every town must be arranged, are, and if we are released on bond, (4) Immediate mobilization for they should also be released, Second Metropelitan woenee junion “We do not regard the change | U7it7,Centeneace in New Xork Au- of venue or any of the peainen Glevelana i jeune Sat. ee of the prosecution as any sort of (5) Arrange house to house col- guarantee that we will have a fair | (Unt May eeepc sone (ne aay for trial, Workers and especially rey- | : olutionary union organizers or militant strikers can never ex- trolled by mill owners just the same as the Gastonia courts. If we are saved from the vengeance of BACK RED DAY America, by the International La- | tor Defense, and not by any ‘im. |Shop Conference Hears partiality’ or pretense of justice | Vital Reports | the firs: degree murder charge) ar-) antiwar demonstration at Union | rived. today. from Kannapolis. He | Square today in a resolution unan- | Sore nn mill job of $12 a week to imously adopted at a meeting f NEW VESTRIS. REPORT AGAIN "SHIELDS GUILTY ‘British Board of Trade | Hits'U. S. Firm (Continued from Page One) derson & Sons, New York agents of | the Lamport & Holt Line, owners | of the vessel. | | The Board of Trade report lists as the main causes of the sinking | of the Vestris, in which 112 lives | were lost: 1. Loading beyond the load line, 2. General condition of the ship. 8. An insufficient margin of | stability and resorve of buoyance. 4. |The heavy weather and high wind and seas, which caused the vessel to list to starboard. 5. Water in the lower bunkers sai ating the coal, | causing a list and probably prevent- |ing the pumps from working ef- | fectively. | The Board of Trade had only jmild censure for the Lamport and Holt Line itself which, in addition |to maintaining a vessel that was rot- |ten and leaky, regularly gambled with’ human lives by ordering its captains to delay sendi.~ out an |SOS as long as possible in order that the company ~1ay save the sal- vage money. Had Captain Carey sent out an SOS in time, the Ves- tris would probably have been saved. The officers, who during the in- vestigations in New York shamelessly in an effort to throw the blame on the crew, are com- pletely whitewashed by the Board of Trade and the report, while blaming the American firm, tactfully says nothing about the criminal action of the federal authorities in New York who okayed the leaky coffin ship and its lifeboats prior to its depart- ure. In this it follows the line of the American “investigations” which ignored evidence showing that the federal inspector had been drunk. The. lifeboats, it was also shown by many witnesses, were so rotten that |many of them sprang leaks as soon as they touched water. ys ae * | Fake Investigation. | | “No more will result from the report of the British Board of Trade on the sinking of the Vestris than | resulted from the four reports is: j}sued by official ‘investigators’ in ‘this country,” declares a statement issued by .the Marine Workers League, 28 South St., yesterday. | “Workers have not forgotten the disgraceful exhibition immediately | following the Vestris disaster when | officers, ship owners, many passen- | gers, and government ‘investigators’ combined in an effort to fix the blame on the crew, particularly the Negro members. This campaign of lies and slander col!apsed so com- pletely that the government ‘inves- tigators’ were compelled to cease their efforts to victimize the crew and through the agitation of the Marine Workers League and the lied | MOTLEY CREW T0 BOARD BOAT FOR MOONLITE CRUISE Hoist Red Flag Over Franz Josef Land in Northern Polar Ice MOSCOW, U. S. S. R., July 31.—| The Red Flag of the Soviet Union| tonight flies in Franz Joseph Land, where the most northern colony in the world will be established by a Soviet scientific polar exploration | oe party. le“ £1299 aa The party, aboard the Soviet ice-| Daily Affair Aug. 9 breaker Sedoff, arrived at Franz/T'o Be Great Spectacle Joseph Land last Sunday, according | to word received tonight from Pro- fessor Samoilovitch and Professor Vize, two scientists who won inter- national acclaim for their part in the rescue of the crew of the fascist dirigible Italia last summer. Cleopatra dancing with a circus clown; a Red Army soldier taking a®hula-hula girl for a whirl; a bare- back rider hanging onto the arm of a swashbuckling Corsair; Happy |Hooligan playing the Queen of Professor Otto Schmidt, chief edi-| Sheba; a group ccmposed of a Chi- tor of the new Soviet Encyclopedia,|nese mandarin, Columbine, the is head of the expedition, which will |grown-together twins and a frock- |establish meteorological and radio|coated clergyman whooping it up in ‘stations in the bleak Arctic land.|one corner; a Mack Sennett bathing These stations will aid atly in| girl chasing Beau Brummell; Pier- forecasting weather conditions, Pro-| rot and a bold, bad bandit with a |fessor Schmidt said before leaving brace vf six-shooters on his hip | Moscow. playing ring-around-a-rosie with a flamboyartly attired gypsy; a Rus- | | sian peasant girl and a hoop-skirted | female of Victc'’.. vintage; a 5 bearded Russian moujik cutting up with a lady pirate in red blouse, black shorts, ven-league boots and a carving knife stuck through her sash; a chain-gang of class war |prisoners measuring out a dose of | Tammany medicine to a movie com- jedy harness bull— UNION SQ. MEET T0 5 E DAY | These are only a few of the sights, oe [never before seen on land or sea, r i] | with which the workers who are Seva War ng [fortunate enough to get tickets for 'e |the Daily Worker moonlite cruise on Friday, Aug. 9, will be regaled. (Continued from Page One) The cruise, arranged to swell the Darcy, Rebecca Grecht, Ben Lifshitz, | “Daily’s” $50,000 emergency fund, Fred Biedenkapp, George Pershing, | will not only be a spectacle for sore Nat Kaplan, Ben Gold, Rose Wortis, |eyes, but a treat for jaded ears as Sascha Zimmerman, Harold Wil-| well, for Vernon Andrade’s famous liams, Grace Lamb and Alexander. |Negro Renaissance Orchestra has Previous to the demonstration, | been hired for the occasion, factory gate meetings at which the| ‘The Peter Stuyvesant, which this workers will be mustered for the| motley crew will board on Red Fri- general strike at four o’clock are/day, is one of the largest boats on to be held before every large shop|the Hudson River Day Line fleet; in the city. ee ballroom is second to none. It | Torchlight Processions. will leave the pier at the foot of ; |West 42nd St. at 8 p. m. sharp. In the evening the streets of the | Tickets in advance are $1.50 and can city will be electrified by a whole |}. gotten at the Daily Worker of- More than. $1,000 was pledged for the defense of the Gastonia frameup victims by the representatives of 89 workingclass organizations taking part in the big conference for Gas- tonia defense Friday under the aus- pices of the New York District of the International Labor Defense. DISTRICT COMMITTER. pect justice in a capitalist court. the mill owners ** will be by the power of a growing union and by the mobilization of the workers of on the:part of either the prose- cution or the judge.” | “an “ ‘ shoe workers are called to K pene eee (Busaell janswer the strike call at 4 o’clock Ser GE one. e Pc REORETA OR: today and then join in the great it his son. He was given shelter at, the W. I. R. tent colony, and (will return tomorrow, Steel Trust Extortion At a New High Mark shop delegates of the Independent Shoe Workers Union held Tuesday night in Irving Plaza hall, 15th St. and Irving Place, Resolutions were also adopted calling for the defense of the So- viet Union and against the frame- up of the Gastonia strikers and Daily Worker, the truth became known: that the members of the crew, despite the terrorism to which the officers subjected them, had be- | haved heroically, one Negro seaman, Lionel Licorish, saving about twenty people. |This conference constituted itself a |standing Conference for Gastonia Defense until the trial is over. It |will function through a Committee of Action of 35. ae The 89 organizations represented included 15 trade unions, 13 shops, |three political organizations, 19 industry, and basic peace time in- || workers || —The local branch of the Interna- | "street meeting on last Thursday, The United States Steel Corpora- A strike leaders. ion, the steel trust, that big war Eres seas The conference, which was at- tended by nearly 400 delegates, rep- resenting 88 organized shops and nine struck shops, heard reports on preparations for the Shoe and Leather Workers Conference to be ing to its latest report. The quar- 2 ra ter ending June 80 showed $71,995,-|feld in. Irving Plaza hall, August 461 as against $60,105,381 for the | Z preceding quarter. The conference, to be held in co- Mother Bloor Aids jand means for laying the founda- I. L. D. Campaign In tion for a national industrial un- jion of shoe and leather workers. Great Falls, Montana) General Manager Fred Bieden- GREAT FALLS, Mont. (By Mail). dustry, made more profit this year, in spite of strikes by unorganized against wagq cuts and| speed up, than ever before, accord- | kapp and Steve Alexanderson, pres- ident of the union, reported on the ; : “ activities of the union, and prepa- tional Labor Defense in conducting | zations for an extesive campaign a campaign for financial aid was |to organize the thousands of unor- assisted by “Mother” Bloor, who i hi vorkers in New York spoke before the Cascade Trades and | Mo er aie as er naen ener Labor Assembly, who made their second donation t the I. L. D. of | $25.00. Many of the other labor | unions haye also donated various sums to our great cause, “Mother” Bloor, who spoke at a The Gastonia Textile Workers’ trial began July 29! Twenty-three workers face electrocution or prison terms! Rally all forces to save them. Defense and Relief jalso Saturday night, made great progress for our Local, Twenty-two new members were enrolled, and the total collections were $98.000, Week July 97—..ugust 3! Sign the Protest Roll! Rush funds to International Labor Defense, 80 East 11th Street, New York. Can Daily Survive? funds vital if our press is to live Respond immediately to the abbeal of the Daily Worker for aid in its present crisis! The Daily Worker, 26-28 Union Square, New York. After reading the appeal for aid in the Daily Worker I am sending you the enclosed amount, $ Name Address Names of contributors will be delay, Steen eee nena ten eenseeeeeeetenesneeseeseeseeeeeseees e “Daily” without | operation with the Trade Union Ed- | ‘ucational League, will discuss ways | “The Marine Workers League |repeats what it said lac: November, that only by the organization of the seamen i: a strong union that will force the ship owners to stop |treating them as cattle and will com- | pel ship inspection by committees of |seamen instead of the present cor- rupt inspection service — that only |then will disasters like the Vestris | be avoided.” MAXTON SCORES | LABOR PARTY ‘Capitalist’s Guardian’; Ballam Speaks for U.S. (Wireless By “Inprecorr”) | FRANKFORT AM MAIN, Ger- |many, July 31—Speaking before the Friday evening session of the world | congress of the League Against Im- perialism, Maxton, of Great Britain, explained his personal situation and replied to attacks which have been levelled against him. He denounced the Labor govern- ment for continuing the imperialist policy against the colonial peoples. In taking over the minority govern- ment, he said, the Labor Party has become the caretaker of capitalism. Asks Meerut Victims Be Freed Maxton further demanded the re- lease of the Meerut, India, prisoners and pledged himself to work for their unconditional release. Ballam Speaks for U. S. At Saturday morning’s session, Darsono, of Indonesia, spoke, as well as Ford, for the Negroes, Huan- ping, of China, Martinez, of Mexico, ~ at 6:80 P. M. All Daily Worker Agents must be present at a special meeting this FRIDAY, AUGUST Very important matters will be taken up, and everybody must be present. series of torchlight processions. | fice, 26 Unicn Ssuare, (.e Workers When the demonstrators disperse at| Bookshop, 30 Union Square, New seven o'clock, the hour set for the/ Masses, 39 Union Square or tang close of the Union Square meeting, | Communist Party station. they will go to gathering points to ‘ which the section leaders have as-| plied with banners and torches. PLEDGE 1 000 T Then, burning red flares and sign- | y ing revolutionary songs, they will a parade the streets, finally converg- | ing at the following places to give further demonstrations: 10th St. and 4 Second Ave.; 110th St. and Fifth| 79th St. and First Ave.; Intervale and Wilkins Aves., Bronx; 50th St. | j and Fifth Ave, Brootlyr; foot of| art in Conference Whitehall St. and South Ferry; Rutgers Square; 149th St. between 8rd and Bergen; Grand St. Exten- sion; Stone and Pitkin; Steinway Resolutions Pour In. Resolutions in support of the strike call continued to pour into the office of the Daily Worker yes- terday. Among many other working class organizations, the Retail Gro- cery, Dairy, Fruit and Butchers’ ship meeting Tuesday night, the call, recommended for adoption by the executive committee, was pre- sented by the chairman and unani- ; Fi Pai es jcouncils of the United Council of Pously and enthusiastically endorsed /Working Women, 24 fraternal or- Piet Gaaee ated < cae ¢ the |#anizations and 15 I. L. D. branches. aD ee at ee fect inte |Many other organizations, unable to forecasts a New York demonstration | | i ir that will strike fear to the hearts of SUPPOr anal ee pee eh - the American imperialists and their |°PSh Gastonia ctvikern toadies. Thirty thousand toilers © ‘Ne Gastonia strikers. turned out to the fifteen street meet- All Pledge Activity. ings arranged by the New York dis-| All the delegates at the conference trict of the Communist Party. ndertook to distribute protests lists, | buttons, stickers, leaflets and coupon signed them, where they will be sup- Ave.; 138th St. and Seventh Ave.;| RE 89 Organizations Take and Jamaica, Astoria, L. I. Union reported that at a member- final mobilization rallies last night | ong delegates, also expressed their Huge Turnouts. In each case the speakers reported books to enlist thousands of workers unusually large turnouts, an intent in the Gastonia defense campaign, reception of the speeches, punc-| particularly this week which is Gas- tuated by outbursts of mass resent-|tonia Defense Week. The delegates ment against the imperialists as|are also mobilizing the membership their plots were laid bare and pro-|of their organizations for the Tag |longed cheering for every allusion | Days this week. to the socialist fatherland of the} Among the plans for the immediate working class. The meetings notjfuture are the arrangement of only voted unanimously to join the|demonstrations and open air meet- strike demonstration today, but! ings in all sections of New York and many of the workers participating | Brooklyn, widespread shop collec- in them signed applications for|tions, and conferences in every city membership in the Communist Par-|in New Jersey. ty. Party literature was eagerly 300 Cemetery Workers Strike Over Discharge Three hundred employees of Cal- vary Roman Catholic Cemetery vaurel Hill and Woodside, Long Is- land, sre on strike against the ex- ploitation of the ecclestiastical bo: es who run the place. ‘Everything apitalised under capitalism, and the rs of this catholic church burying ground have been trying to rationalize grave digging, only to meet with the present resistance. All burials for some time to come are .ff; 12 were to take pla morrow. The immediate cause of the strike was the arbitrary dis- charge of members of the recently formed union. is own ARMED MEXIGAN PEASANTS. FIGHT 22 Reported Killed in Vera Cruz Battle MEXICO CITY, July 31—Twen- ty-two persons, many of them be- lieved to be armed peasants, Ag-! rarians, were killed today,jn a battle near Acultizingo on a tract of land in Vera Cruz over whose posses- sion the struggle was fought. The number of wounded is placed at 17 but no distinction is made between the peasants and their adversaries. Exiquio Cid, said to be the leader | of the peasants, is reported among the fatally wounded. Advices state that both sides were well armed and that the battle lasted until ammunition gave out. "ESSEMER MEET HISTORIC, HEAL OF N, T.W, SAYS Second Southern Meet Oct. 12-13 (Continued from Page One) slaves of the south to accomplish the betterment of their miserable working conditions and their low pay, through the oniy instrument they cen rely upon — a strong fighting union.” The union leader said that the econd conference to be held in Char- lotte, C., the ne of the trial of the Gastonia strikers and strike leaders, will bring together de gates “from every mill, of any size, south of the Mason-Dixon line.” ‘The conference will be held on Oct. 12. Will Add 50,000 to Union. Coneluding, Reid said: “From this second conference the National Tex- tile Workers Union will come North with at least 50,000 membe to con- solidate the textile workers’ forces of the whole country: And at our national convention, to be held in the fall, we will prove that thé ma- jority of the organized textile work- ers will at that time be under the banner of the N. T. W. U., and that the faker-ridden craft unions, such the United Textile Workers, American Federation of Textile Op- eratives and the Associated Silk Workers, and other smaller outfits will no longer be ble to sell them as ‘out to their mill-owner masters.” Refute Slanders of Yellow | | | First nominations for were made at a meeting of the Ar- chitectural Iron and Bronze Work- ers Union held in Irving Plaza Hall, 15th street and Irving place. At the same time a committee was appoint- ed to enter into negotiations with the Interriational. Raps “Forward” Lies In an interview with a Daily Worker reporter, J. Rosenfeld, sec- retary-treasurer of the union, yes- terday assailed an editorial on the | strike just ended, which appeared in a recent issue of the yellow Jewish | Daily Forward. “In this editorial,” Rosenfeld said, | “the Forward sheds crocodile tears over the fate of the iron workers, | | pretends to cry over the fact that |the strike was not won, and urges | the workers to investigate their | | present ‘condition.’ | “This kind of hypocritical talk,” he said, “is strange coming from the Forward, which, during the entire period of the struggle conducted an | actual strikebreaking campaign | against the iron bronze workers by | | its vicious attacks on the strike lead- ‘ership. | Tried to Breck Strike. | “The Forward talks about the strike being ‘lost.’ Why doesn’t this | | sheet mention the 1,200 new mem- | | bers who joined the union during | | the strike? Nor the fact that a large number of open shops were | forced to reduce the hours of work, lor that hundreds of workers, as a| |xesult of the strike, were able to get higher wages? | “The Forward is really not inter- | ested in the economic interests of | the union. It is simply utilizing this opportunity to attack the Commu- nists and hold them responsible be- cause the strike was not a com-| plete victory. This yellow sheet says the strike was not won because our union is cut away from the Ameri- can labor movement — meaning the | International. It knows that this is a lie. The iron workers lost out) officers | in 1921 and 1923, after bitter strug- gles, and on both these occasions | | were affiliated with the Interna- tional. Local 40 of the International |had a strike a short time ago and| jlost, simply because the other lo- \cals did not show any solidarity with | | their struggle. Even now Local 40 | remains unrecognized by the bosses. “As for being cut off from the “Forward” on Iron Strike International, it is well known that we approached the International several times through letters, com- mittees, etc., but it alw erected obstacles. On one occasion it de- “For Any Kind of Insurance” ARL BRODSKY Telephone: Murray Hil. 5 7 East 42nd Street, New York manded the neat little sum of $165,- | 000 before it would admit us. “The strikebreaking role of the Forward and of some of the A. F, of L. locals contributed as much as any other factor to the failure to win the strike. Outside locals af- filiated with the International did scab work. As for the Forward, a resolution of condemnation against this yellow sheet was adopted early in our struggle by the strike com- mittee as a result of its slanderous, trike-breaking articles and editcr- als. “We deny that we are opposed to the International. We are willing to affiliate with the International, and we are for the unity of al! locals in the trade. We should like nothing more at this time than that the In- ternational should (if one may ex- pect such a thing) inaugurate a campaign to organize the thousands of unorganized in the trade.” The Gastonia Textile Workers’ trial began July 29! Twenty-three workers face electrocution or prison terms! Rally all forces to save them. Defense and Relief Week July 27—August 3! Sign the Protest Roll! Rush funds to International Labor Defense, 80 East 11th Street, New York. BE WISE! GET YOUR TICKET IN ADVANCE FOR THE MOONLITE CRUISE. FURNISHED ROOMS Now is your opportunity to get a room in the magnificent Workers Hotel Unity Cooperative House 1800 SEVENTH AVENUE OPPOSITE CENTRAL PARK Cor. 110th Street Tel. Monument 0111 Due to the fact that a number of tenants were compelled to leave the city, we have a num- ber of rooms to rent. No security necessary, Call at our office for further information. Patronize SEROUS CHEMIST Cooperators! Avenue Bronx, N. Y. 657 Allerton Estabrook 3215 Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF 240 WAST 115th STREET Office hours: Mon = DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Rcom 803—Phone: Algonquin 8183 Not connected with any other office Unity Co-operators Patronize SAM LESSER Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailor 1818 - 7th Ave. New York Between 110th 111th Sts, Next to Unity ¢ tive House Comrade Frances Pilat MIDWIFE 351 E. T/th St. New York, N. Y. Tel. Rhinelander 3916 Dairy omrades Will c] Pleasant to Dine at Oar Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx (near 174th St PHONE:— ID MEET YOUR FRIENDS at Messinger’s Vegetarian and Dairy Restaurant 1763 Southern Blvd., 7 onx, N. Y Right off 174th St. Subway Station Vegetarian RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVEl UE Bet. 12th and 13th Sts. Strictly Vegetariun Food All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Clarement Parkway, Bronx HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 5865 an ne re Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 302 E. 12th St. New York | | Comrades in Brighton Beach, Patro! Laub Vegetarian & Dairy Restaurant 211 Brighton Beach Ave. at Brighton Beach B.M.T. Station ee RPT LS Advertise your Union Meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City seized upon, and substantial re- sponse met the plea for funds to! save the Daily Worker, the only, English language labor newspaper. | SUPPORT THE DAILY WORKER COME TO THE | MOONLITE CRUISE | | Andrews, of South Africa, and Bal- . lam, of the United States. | The report of the credentials com- | mittee showed 124 organizations and .11 League sections, represent- ing 33 countries. Various resolutions were adopted unanimously, The anarchists made a statement | concerning the political situation | after which they also joined:in mak- | ing the vote unanimous. Saturday at ULMER PAR Sports, 50,000 Workers Must Come ) August 3 NOON AND NIGHT TO THE GREATEST Morning Freiheit PICNIC West End Refreshments, Games TICKETS 40 CENTS—at the Morning Freiheit, 30 Union Square, New York B.M.T. Line to 25th Avenue Station 2 SOCCER GAMES at 1:30 and 3:30 P. M. Music, Dancing, Entertainment Hotel and Restaurant Workers Branch of the Amalgamated Food Workers 138 W. Sist St, Phone Circle 7336 738° BUSINESS MEETING eld on the first Mondny of the month at 8 p. m, One Industry—One — Union—Jot and Fight the Common Enem Office Open from 9 a. m, to 6 p, Patronize No-Tip Barber Shops 26-28 UNION SQUARE (i flight up) 2700 BRONX P’ ~“K EAST (corner Allerton Ave.) Cooperators! PATRONIZE BERGMAN BROS. Your Nearest Stationery Store, Cigars, Cigarettes, Candy, Toys 649 Allerton Ave. BRONX, N. Y. Telephone: Olinvilla 9681-2—0793-2 Tel.: DRYdock 8880 FRED SPITZ, Ince. FLORIST NOW AT 31 SECOND AVENUE (Bet. 1st & 2nd Sts.) z Flowers for All Occasions 15% REDUCTION TO READERS OF THE DAILY WORKER

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