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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, AUGUST 2, 1929 Page Five GREAT FIGHTING MILL CONFERENCE \OTOBER 12-13 Arrange for Struggle Against Conditions . (Continued from Page One) South for putting an end to the stretch-out system, to secure sub- stantial wage increases, to establish the 8 hour day, to stop child labor, te., and to unite the 300,000 textile workers of the South into a great movement to definitely put these | iemands into effect in the entire in- lustry, Conditions Unbearable Conditions in the textile industry f the South have become unbear- able and impossible, The stretch- jut and speed-up system has been arried to the point of physically de- jroying the workers. Wages are dt starvation levels. Pellagra, that foul » Sear of malnutrition, is | widesp’ ead, The 60 and 70 hour | week i is a crime against the workers. | |Child Iabor is a deadly menace. These evils, with the other terrible conditions in the mills, constitute an altogether intolerable situation. And the employers add insult to in-| jury by advertising throughout the | country, in their attempt to draw jmills into the South, that we work- | ers are of a slavelike docility, that we will work practically endless BS for wages lower than any | place else in the country, that we} |will submit to limitless speed-up | and that we don’t want a union} and make no demands upon the em- | ployers for better conditions. | Strikers Prove Revolt | We can and will end these un- bearable conditions. textile workers of the South ‘are | in a deep-seated revolt against the |i intolerable situation, enforced by | the employers in the mills, aided | openly by the city, county and state | | authorities. | The many strikes in the various textile centers are proof of this | 4 spreading discontent. We call upon he great mass of intensely exploit- ed workers to act in one body and} in one great movement throughout | the textile industry of the South. | So acting we will be irresistible. | By uniting all our forces for one great effort we can fundamentally | improve the conditions throughout the entire textile industry of the South. The Charlotte conference will be the point at which textile workers from every mill in the South will- come together, unite upon aj program of demands, and set in mo- tion a vast movement to put these | fundamental demands into effect. This movement of the textile workers in the South will have its effects in the Northern textile cen- ters. The vast armies of workers there will support the struggle of jand nationality. |must be set in motion at once for company unions. We must stand firmly together, notwithstanding all violence of the bosses. We call upon the rank and file of the U. T. W, te join hands with us against bosses and bureaucrats, Must Organize The matter of improving our con- ditions rests with us, To remain un- | organized any longer is to sink fur- | ther into conditions of semi-slavery. We must unite, We must build a great union of all textile workers, | regardless of sex, race, craft, age All these forces the realization of our demands. Every mill in the South must be represented in the -conference in Charlotte. This conference, with ir- | resistible power, will then be able | to present and enforce to the textile | manufacturers of the South, the de- mands of the textile workers. Now is the time to move for im- proved conditions in the mills, This can be accomplished only through organization and decisive action. Form local mill commitees in every mill in the South! Hold local con- | ferences in every Southern textile | Bureaucracy Are Send delegates to the Char- | A center! lotte conference. Rally to the sup- port of our leaders on trial in Gas- tonia! We call upon all the South- | 10,000 WORKERS INN. Y. ANTI-WAR: DEMONSTRATION ‘Many Thousands More) Stop Work (Continued from Page One) participated, making a significant |advance of the revolutionary work- ing class of this city. The north side of Union Square was a forest| |of banners, bearing such slogans as: | “Fight Against Imperialist War”; | “Pacifism Is a Screen for War Prep- arations”; “Smash the Gastonia Frame-Up, Establish the Right To! Organize”; “Defend the Soviet| Union”; “The Communist Party | Enters the Election Campaign to} Fight Imperialist War’; “Down With Fascism”; “The A. F. of L. the Recruiting gents for the Imperialist Armies”; | ‘The Struggle Against Imperialist ern local unions of the National | Textile Workers Union, the United | Textile Workers Union, as well as |to the great body of unorganized textile workers, to send rank and file delegates tg the conference in Char- lotte, N. ©. October 12 and 13. Write to us for organizers, Textile workers of the South! the stretch-out system? Do you want to end forever the! ten, eleven and twelve hour day? | Do you want to put an end to! War Is Also a Struggle Against Capitalist Efficiency and Speed-Up”; “Demand Immediate Release of All Imprisoned Gastonia Textile Strik- ers”; “Black and White Workers, Unite Against Lynching, Jim Crow} and Discrimination”; “The Commu-| nist Election Platform Is a Weapon Against Imperialist War.” Cheers For USSR, Gastonia, Party Nominees. Speaker after speaker exposed the war machinations of the imperialists and called on the workers to fight against the war plots and for the defense of the Soviet Union. Every Do you want to end starvation| mention of the Soviet Union, of the wages? Do you want to end child labor? Do you want the eight hour day? Do you want to end night work, especially for women and children? |Communist Party and the Commu- |nist International was greeted with | © enthusiastic cheers. The crowd also | roared their approval and support of the fight to save the Gastonia \frame-up victims and gave great Do you want to build a powerful | ovations to the Communist candi- to set up good working conditions in the textile industry? THEN SEND DELEGATES TO THE GREAT SOUTHERN TEX- TILE WORKERS’ CONFERENCE \IN CHARLOTTE, NORTH CARO- LINA, OCTOBER 12 and 13. Now is the time to act! Fraternally yours, D-vey Martin Wes Williams C. D. Saylor, C. Grier - Daisy McDonald Hugo Oehler For the Provincial Executive Com- The 300,000 |union that will unite your strength | dates i in the municipal elections who | spoke, When Bertha Crawford, one of the Gastonia strikers, arose to speak, though the rain was already falling heavily by that time, the crowd burst into spontaneous cheers. Delegations of Latin-American workers, Chinese workers, Italian workers, French workers, workers of various trade unions marched to the Square and joined with the thou- sands of others who came there in- | dividually in a united front demon- mittee of GENERAL SOUTHERN | TEXTILE CONFERENCE N. T. W. | UL Labor and Fraternal Organizations [BROOKLYN 4} Brighton Beach I. L. D. Bill Haywood Branch of the D will meet to hear a report of the 3 L. D.-W. I. R. Conference stration that was truly international in character. Many Speakers. Among those who spoke were Wil- liam Z, Foster, secretary of the Trade Union Educational League; | William W. Weinstone, Communist candidate for mayor; Jack Stachel, |for the Central Committee of the Communist Party; Rebecca Grecht, |Communist candidate in the Fifth | Assembly District, Bronx; Fred Bie- denkapp, candidate for borough | president of Brooklyn; Sam Darcy, Ben Lifshitz, Harold Williams, head of the Negro Department of Dis- trict 2, Communist Party; James P. Reid, president of the National Tex- {| Square hue the demonstration there had disbanded, gatherdd out- Inde ey Workers Center, 26-28 The police spared | ne women nor children and re- fused for a time to admit anyone into the Prolectos Restaurant or the | Workers Bookshop. When the police | found that newspaper photographers were ene pictures of the scene, began chasing them away eas that there might be no coed of their brutality. But the outstanding features of | courageous way in which the work- that they had no weapons or clubs. The great anti-war demonstration |was continued at night with meet-/ ings in all sections of the city and \demonstrations before socialist party headquarters and before the white guardist centers in Harlem. As this edition of the Daily Worker goes to press, reports are received that the police are attempting to break up demonsirations in various parts of the city, but that the workers are courageously holding their ground. * * * Form Defense Corps! Urging the formation of workers’ | defense corps, the maintaining of | the Workers’ Anti-Imperialist War and Defend the Soviet Union Con- stration, as a permanent body, and the organization of anti-war com- mittees in the shops, District Two, Communist Party, last night issued | the following statement on the In- International Red Day demonstra- | tions: rain, the masses of New York today gave their answer to the imperialist war mongers that are making war) on the Soviet Union and are prepar- ing to plunge the workers into the | shambles of a new world war. Tens of thousands of workers in shoe, | needle, food, and other shops downed tools and gathered in Union Square from the electric chair and for the revolutionary struggle against war. “August First today was estab- | lished as the red banner day of struggle against imperialist war. All | lreformers to Trotskyist and Love- stoneite defeatists, were given their proper answer by the masses who} with unparalleled militancy and self- sacrifice, understand the meaning | of International Red Day and dem-| j onstrated for their class against | the imperialists and pacifist lackeys. Internationalism. “The demonstration was character- jized by its internationalism |united front character and by the display of police brutality. The dem- onstration was orderly except for |the provocation and violence of the police who attempted to break up} the parade of Pioneers and who con- centrated their full power to break munist Party. The violence of the sity for the workers organizing thei demonstrations. T he uniformed members of the Young Communist | the clashes with the police was the | ers, including the youth and the chil- | dren, refused to be terrorized, and | defended themselves despite the fact | ference, which arranged the demon-| “Defying the police, bosses and} and | up the recurring demonstrations be- | fore the headquarters of the Com-| police shows once again the neces- | SEVEN DEAD IN PRISON MUTINY IN LEAVENWORTH 'Porter, Strike Leader, Prisoner There (Continued on Page Five) were able to crush the resistance of the prisoners. | During the entire afternoon rifles blazed from the walls and loud blasts [could be heard from the interior of | the prison. The prisoners dashed for the walls | their cells, even to mess, except in| small groups closely guarded by avily-armed men. They were searched on leaving their cells and | again on quitting the mess hall. All ¢ were saerched, even the mattre: being examined for pos: | sible concealed weapons. The old dormito: where for many years 200 prisoners had lived and anc to ccllectively, was locked, isoners were transferred a newly opened cell block. This w the first time in 50 that eve prisoners in Sing Sing occupied a ; Separate cell. slept the pr oe as guards were rallied to drive them | back to the cel] houses. Guards in wall towers opened fire on the run- ning men in the prison yards Admit Crowding. When the riot broke out of con- trol of the guards on duty, Warden White called in the guards of two shifts off duty. The reinforcements | manned the walls with shotguns and |rifles. Machines guns were mount- | ed in strategic positions. Their rat- |tat-tat could be heard throughout the city of Leavenworth. Crowded conditions have long ex- isted in the prison. Observers out- side the walls said there have been many rumbles of discontent among |the prisoners recently. The recent |rioting at Auburn and Dannemora | prisons, New York, was believed to |have helped to incite the outbres Warden Silent. | Warden Thomas B. White declined |tc discuss the riot. The firing and |the screams of the wounded, how- |ever, could be heard far outside the | walls, It was believed the prisoners were well armed, both with firearms and explosives. Several heavy blasts at the start of the insurrection near the | way to freedom. Porter One of Prisoners, | John Porter, one of the leaders | of the New Bedford strike and a Youth League, is one of the prison- | crs in Leavenworth where he is ser- | ving a sentence of two and one-half | years at hard labor. Porter had de- | cided that he. had enough of the! . S. army when he discovered that lit was being used for strikebreaking | purposes and to fight Wail St. wars. He became active in the New Bed- | ford strike, and during the heat of the struggle was arrested and con- vieted. At that time, Porter was of- } | fered his freedom if he would prom- ise to desert the strike. This offer Lions contemptuously rejected, and {it was then that he was sent to | Leavenworth. * * OSSINING, Y., Aug. 31.— Smarting under the recent revela- * tions regarding overcrowding and | vile food in all the prisons of the state, officials at Sing Sing, in an own defense corps to protect their | effort to befog the issue, declared | today that they were “taking all precautions” to prevent an outbreak | for the defense of the Soviet Union, | prison walls, indicating prisoners |Sandy Williams, the freedom of the Gastonia victims | were attempting to dynamite their |dia Bennett, ies reneeadea’ “fromthe socialist | leading member of the Communist |* MORE SERIOUS INDICTMENT OF 27 IN GHICAGO Gastonia Protest Case Postponed to Sept. 9 (Continued from Page One) trial were seized when demonstra- tors on June 15 insisted on march- ing in parade through the street and speaking at two parks against the Gastonia frame-up. They were | f held on over $100,000 bail and | were railed at and denounced by; Judge Lyle. Attempts were vainly made to get the young workers in the group to promise not to demonstrate again The Defendants. Those held for trial include J. Louis Engdahl, of the I. L. D.; William F. Kruse, Anthony Bimba, rl Sklar, Jack Childs, Jack Ninel, Anne Newhoff, Irving Herman, Carl | Carlson, Max Meltz, Edward Stev- ens, Morris Fein, Benjamin Horo- witz, George Repressas, John Haecker, Paul Cline, Clara Cline, Charlotte Meiamed, Ethel Stevens, Mary Dizoff, Ly- Lydia Hilden. Alise Nasarak, and Theodore Asnes. | Czarists Try to Grab Soviet Government’s Funds in U. S. Banks Russian czarists and white guards, | seeking new funds for the carrying on of their counter-revolutionary plots against the Soviet Union, are now trying to lay claim to funds in | American banks that previously be- longed to the czarist government and |are now the property of the Soviet government. Using the ezar’s mother, the Dowager Czarina Marie Feodorovna, and 32 other members of the Romanoff family now idling) ¢4, pri in the capitals of Europe as dum- \any |mies, the monarchist groups are ‘planning to lay claim to $5,000,000 | on deposit in the Guaranty Trust Company and $1,000,000 in the Na- tional City Bank. money was part of the state funds] of the former government, the white | guards declare that these funds were ‘the personal property of the late! | Nicholas II. The Soviet government, |habeas corpus hearings, the line of -WAR IN AMERICA FIGHT POLICE fcn7so w many emmigs CARL BRODSKY OF EUROPE, ASIA = Great Stril in Paris Berlin, Shanghai (Continued from Page One) tke conflict. Telephone 7 East 42nd Street, New York Cooperators! Patronize Se © CHEMIST 657 Allerton Estabrook 3215 NS) Avenue Bronx, N. Y. + # 200,000 Demonstrate in Berlin. BERLIN, Germany, Although orders were is out Germany by the police to pro- hibit demonstrations, 200,000 Berlir workers started their meeting nonstrations at police attempt another assault as on the First of May, there will be more street fighting. Mamburg, Frankfurt, Mu- Nuremburg and many other showed similar scenes. Dr. ABRAHAM M ARKOFF such bloody DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Rcom 803—Phone: Algonquin 8183 Not connected with any other office 2a ees BOMBAY, India, August 1—Bom- police were out in full force try- ing to break up workers’ demonstra- le tions, led by Communists today rades were stopped, but many ings were held. 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 MASSES PROTEST Comrade Hold Demonstrations | Frances Pilat Thruout me ountry MIDWIFE 351 E. 7/th St. Tel. ew York, N. Y. (Cutenueee: Pon Page One) Rhinelander 3916 National Miners Union, In some cases they have resulted in clashes S sii tie benneelyenie tate teooe- >-MELRO E— ers. Dair SIAN In. Wilkes-Barre, A, D. Gorman, || ~omesc ya URANT lthe speaker for the Wilkes-Barre || C‘pieasant to Place. jdemonstration, was arrested last | 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx night and his room raided, leaflets station) Though they admit that all this) \Govarnor Sets Trial 174th IN’ (n PHONE :— RVALB | 9149, confiscated, ete. Julius Leber, while ibuting anti-war pamphlets was arrested. ! Two Communists were arrested in Wheeling, W. Va., according to re- ports from the local press represen- tatives. They are charged with “dis- tributing inflammatory literature.” Se dis MEET YOUR FRIENDS at Messinger’s Vegetarian and Datry Restaurant 1763 Southern Blyd., onx, N. Y. Right off 174th St. Subway Station RATIONAL Vegetarian RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVE1.UE Bet. 12th and 13th Sts. Strictly Vegetarian Food Pittsburgh Demonstration. Pittsburgh, Pa., Aug. 1.—Pitts- | burgh workers protesting against imperialist war were attacked by the city police, who are evidently under orders to save the big steel trust, incipal profiteer in war, from trouble with Communists. The police admit that a permit was issued for the mass meeting but they attacked it just the same. All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant In Charlotte Aug. 26 (Continued from Page One) the textile workers here to improve |: 7 Brighton Beach Ave. tonight. |tile Workers Union; Rose Wortis, of |League that formed a protecting! similar to the one which occurred in | however, as the successor of the|the argument developed by the pros- |{ 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx conditions. It is a necessary part} ——— —— the Needle Trades Workers Indus- | body around the demonstrations and| Auburn on Sunday. | ezarist government, has no intention |ecution in the two days of trial in of their own struggle. The South-| ~ HARLEM trial Union; Grace Lamb, of the|who showed real fighting spirit in| _Reports that en outbreak was pos- | of relinquishing claim to these funds | Gastonia, before the change of venue | ern textile workers are blasting the | arpheurta Harlem Tenants League; Ben Lif-|carrying through their part of the | sible were made to Warden Lawes | which are the rightful property of | te the prosecution introduced a HEALTH FOOD way for a general improvement in| pe earth. Piece sy pigs Bes Leonard Patterson, a Negro/demonstrations is surely a good be-| ly prisoners whose names he 1e-|the workers and peasants of the U. | file of the Daily Worker as evidence 2 onditions of textile workers all|Ciub will “celebrate the second anni- |member of the Young Communist | ginning for the workers’ defense fused to reveal. The reports were |S. S. R. out of whom they were |and the continuous intimidation and Vegetarian over the country and are taking the | lead in the struggle of the Southern | working class. In this great move- ment this will have the support of all American workers. Fight Bosses and U.T.W. We must not be swerved from our great purpose by the oppdsition of the employers. The textile bosses will try to demoralize our movement with the assistance of the leaders of the American Federation of La- bor and the United States Te: Workers Union. These offic: with their huge salaries and close | affiliations with the employers, have nothing to offer to Southern tex- |tile workers, except betrayal and | defeat. The United Textile Workers | Union is a semi-company union. It | bases itself only on the skilled and | more highly paid workers. Its lead- | ers are tools in the hands of the | bosses to enforce the speed-up and | low wage levels upon the workers. | The record of the U. T. W. U. in |the North is one of treachery and | betrayal. Its record in the South exemplified by Ware Shoals, Eliza- bethton recently, Gastonia and clse- where in 1920-21 is of a similar character. Gastonia Case Nor must we allow ourselves to tye turned from the development of a great united movement through- out the textile industry of the South by acts of terrorism on the parts of the employers. They will use their policemen, gunmen, troops, courts, ctc. against us, in order to prevent the establishment of a real union and better conditions for the workers. Already we have seen this in Gastonia, The 23 defendants, leaders of the National Textile Workers Union, on trial for their) lives and liberty, are being per- secuted because they have dared to lead the textile workers for a real | struggle for organization and im- prove conditions. Such attacks upon us will not break our forces but will unite them and fire them with a spirit of determination. We must support the Gastonia defendants with every resource in our power. The textile workers must unite in every center of the South. Our ovement can and will triumph Aver the bosses’ two-sided policy of the betrayal of our movement through reactionary A. F. of L. of- ficials and attempts to break it up with violence of the Gastonia type. We mu:t reject comple‘-!y the A. F. of L. leadership and their semi-| ersary of its sports section with a/| League; M. J. Olgin, editor of the concert and banquet on Sunday, Aug 6 p. m, at its club rooms, 1493 Madison Re ports Union and the City Club Committee will greet the mem CALL FAKE CLOAK STRIKE IN PHILA I. LG. W.. Stoppage Grim Joke (Continued from Page One) “demands” which the clique has pre- sumably put forth, and are con- vinced of the validity of the charge of the Needle Trades Workers In- dustrial Union that the only pur- pose of the “stoppage” is to inter- fere with the work in those shops under the control of the Industrial Union. In a call to the cloakmakers of Philadelphia, the Industrial Union strips the mask of hypocriey from the I. L. G. W. outfit and reveals the treacherous character of this lat- est maneuver, “Ignore the orders of the company union,” the cal says. “Organize in the shops to maintain and improve your conditions. Affili- ate with the Industrial Union, which leads the struggle to improve condi- tions of all workers throughout the entire country,” * Postpone Thugs’ Hearing. The shearing of the three Schles- inger thugs who invaded a cloak shop last Saturday, and which was to have come up in Jefferson Mar- ket Court yesterday morning was postponed to Aug. 27., The three underworld characters are “Little Frenchie,” “Soldier Bart- field,” and another worthy whose |aliases are too numerous to record. 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 Strest, New York. COSTUME BALL ON HUDSON AUGUST NINTH. GET YOUR TICKET IN ADVANCE, e Mo, a Chinese worker; Tom Di Fazio, esentatives from |Mo, a Chinese worker, Tom Di Fazio, Y |of the Anti-Fascist Alliance; I. Ri- |jak, organization secretary of the} | Young Communist League; Morris | Pasternak, Kate Gitlow, of the United Council of Merete Women; | several Pioneer speakers and many | others. A resolution denouncing the im- perialist plots against the Soviet | 4) Union and demanding the release of | ‘the Gastonia prisoners was unani- | mously adopted with a great show 1S | of enthusiasm. The calling out of the squad of _armored motorcycles with machine | guns, merciless clubbings of work- | ers, the tearing up of placards, at- | tacks on children — this was the in- furiated reaction of Tammany’s strike breaking watchdogs to this great mass challenge to the plunder system that they are paid to defend. Even after the Union Square dem- onstration had finally been forced to disband because of the rain, work- ers thronged back to Union Square | and there were recurring demonstra- tions for a long time, whereupon the police lost the comparative self-con- trol that they had shown earlier. They were still smarting under the ignominy of the defeat administered to them by the Young Pioneers who at the start of th> demonstration had led them a pretty chase for sev- eral blocks after parading with ban- ners aloft despite the attempts of the police to break up their line. Two Pioneer leaders, Helen and Ly- dia Okun, were arrested during this skirmish. They were released on $500 bail each, furnished by the New York District of the Interna- tional Labor Defense, and will re- ceive a hearing today. Police Club Workers. Riding their motorcycles up on the sidewalk, the police began mer- cilessly clubbing and manhandling bodies. “The demonstration carried thru |by the united front anti-war con- | ference organized at the huge gath- Plaza must be followed up by the formation of anti-war committees in into a permanent body to against the war mongers that are {encircling the Soviet Union and working feverishly to prepare the |new world slaughter. August First jhas been made by the masses as the red day of struggle against im- |perialist war. On to the further |struggle against imperialist war, against the socialist reformers!” HAVE A HOT TIME AND COOL OFF |: (Continued from Page One) and costume ball. Then, when you knock off work sizzling shop, factory or office to plunge into the simmering street, guide your feet toward the foot of River Day liner, the Peter Stuyve- sant, famed for its ballroom and the | spaciousness of its decks. Amble up the gangplank and ye are all set. The only hot things on this eraias| in addition to the time you'll have, will be the jazz musie furnished by | Vernon Andrade’s famous Negro Renaissance Orchestra and the spec- | tacle furnished by the gayly cos- tumed workers fortunate enough to be taken for a ride. There are only a limited number of pasteboards — the line forms to ithe right, jering last Thursday night at Irving’ all shops and the conference made | war | on Friday, August 9, and leave your | West 42nd St. There, tied up to the | pier, you will find the huge Hudson | workers who, streaming from Union We'll be seeing you. ee All Daily Worker Agents must be present at a special meeting TONIGHT at 6:30 P. M. Very important matters will be taken up, and everybody must be present. | that the men were bitter because of the recent state prison policy in re- fusing paroles to those who hecome cligible, In Sing Sing prison factories were and all indus- yment suspended. 'Thirty- one additional guards were placed on the walls to augment the daytime guard of 45 men. Prisoners were forbidden to leave | closed “indefinitely” | trial emplo. | originally squeezed atton Charles Recht, | attempts at prejudicing the commu- for the Soviet government | nity by the mill owners detectiv: RESTAURANT The Same Address Over 75 Deposits m day of the oa: ASSETS EXCEEDING $29,000,000 from the ist day of the month. Last Quarterly Dividend paid on all amounts from $5.00 to $7,500.00, at the rate of Banking by Mail. AY Hay | Open Mondays (all day) until 7 P. M. Society Accounts Accepted. We Sell A. B. A. Travelers Certified Checks the Daily Worker moonlite cruise | Tel. Monument 0111 in this country, will fight any effort |police, and “Committee of 100” | 1600 MADISON AVE. of the monarchist groups to corner thugs. | Phone: UNIversity 5865 the funds. Their final disposal, he | ———____ | declares, must remain in abeyance; DON’T FORGET THE MOON. | until the United States government} LITE CRUISE FOR THE || Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 has recognized the Soviet Union, | DAILY WORKER AUG. 9th. || John’s Restaurant Ae SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES LET'S GO TO THE 0 THE MOONLITE |FURNISHED ROOMS A, place with atmosphere CRUISE, ON AUG. 9 where all r meet 302 E. 12th St. New York 1929 Now is your opportunity to Sri get a room in the magnificent Workers Hotel Comrades in Brighton each] * . Patronize Unity Cooper ative House Laub Vegetarian & Dairy Bee iene aa ape 1800 SEVENTH AVENUE Restaurant Mee HTaCne trite OPPOSITE CENTRAL PARK 211 Brighton Beach Ave. Cor. 110th Street at Brighton Beach B.M.T. Station 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. Advertise your Union Meetings here, For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City | at ULMER PAR 2 SOCCER GAMES at 1:30 and 3:30 P. M. Music, Dancing, Entertainment Sports, TICKETS 40 CENTS—at the Morning Freiheit, 30 Union Square, New York 50,000 Workers Must Come Saturday NOON AND NIGHT TO THE GREATEST Morning Freiheit Hotel Food Workers 138 WASIst st month at 3 p. m. or Indastry-——One Office Moe Patronize ) August 3 (1 flight up) and Restaurant Workers Branch of the Amalgamated Phone Cire! 13° BUSINESS MEETING held on the firat Monday of the 7336 Union—Join and Fight the Common Enemy! No-Tip Barber Shops 26-: » UNION SQUARE 2700 BRONX P’ “K EAST (corner Allerton Ave.) PICNIC Refreshments, West End B.M.T. Line to 25th Avenue Station Games BERGMAN BROS. Cigars, Cigarettes, Candy, Toys 649 Allerton Ave. BRONX, N. ¥. Pelephone: Olinville 9681-2—9791-2 Tel.: DRY¥dock 8880 FRED SPITZ, Inc. FLORIST NOW AT 31 SECOND AVENUE (Bet. 1st & 2nd Sts.) Flowers for All Occasions 15% REDUCTION TO READERS OF TH DAILY WORKER