Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, Welcome Frame-up STIMSON'S NOTE G ) GALLS FOR JOINT ATTACK ON USSR Pravda States U. S. is Victims on Monday Candidates of Comm New York City TO PROTEST RED DAY BRUTALITY || For Mayor: William W. Weinstone. | | Big Chicago Meeting For Comptroller: Otto Hall. Friday Night CHICAGO, Til, Aug. 6.—A crowd | of 6,000 is expected at the protest BOROUGH For President, Borough of Manhatta CITY TICKET. For President, Board of Aldermen: Harry M. Wicks. TICKETS. Manhattan, | | unist Party U. S. A. Elections, 1929 in: J. Louis Engdahl. 500 DELEGATES “FOR CHARLOTTE TEXTILE. MEET Prosecution Threatens Cooperators! ro a Chief Interventionist meeting at Ashland Auditorium, || For District Attorney, New York County: Vern Smith. Defense Witnesses i as Van Buren and Ashland, Friday nite, || For Sheriff, New York County: Samuel Kramberg. ee whe (Continued from Page One) to protest the police brutality visited ‘Bente (Conthiied Pom eage- O78) vane, to the cancelling of the Soviet upon the Chicago workers’ demon- |! ro. president, Borough of Bronx: Juliet Stuart Poyntz. minimum of 500 delegates directly |{ Estabrook J Union-Chinese agreement of 1924. strations against imperialist war and || fo, pistriet Attorney, Bronx County: Belle Robbins. representing 100,000 mill workers, | The present Anglo-French plans for the defense of the Soviet Union|} For Sheriff, Bronx County: Leo Hoffbauer. from five states, North and South en ore! collide with Japanese interests which regard Manchuria as an exclusively Japanese sphere of influence, and} collide also with the interests of the Mukden government which fears the | internationalization of the Chinese Still held on a murder charge, and freed on bail as a “gestture of chivalry” designed to mask the real purpose of the southern ill bosses, Amy Schechter, Vera Bush and Sophie Melvin, above, will be welcome to New York on Monday by thousands of workers. on International Red Day. | The mass meeting at Union Park | was three times broken up by police attacks, in which all were menaced | | with tear gas and riot guns, and the | police wielded their clubs viciously. For Sheriff: Hyman Levine. For President, Borough of Queens: Brooklyn. || For President, Borough of Brooklyn: Frederick Biedenkapp. Queens. George Powers. Carolina, Te Georgia and Virginia, to attend the conference in Charlotte. There were 237 delegates at the Bessemer City Conference. ssee, Oehler commented on the speech of Charles Towson at the conference Eastern Railway. | Those arrested are still held on|| For District Attorney: Paul Muller. jof mill owners at Blue Ridge on HEARSE eae Alca sareckere Swill | Labor and Fraternal ji, ‘ana the meeting will demand || For Congress, 2ist District: Richard B. Moore (Special Election). || August 3, in which ‘Towson said energetically resist all imperialist 5 Organizations \their immediate release. || For Municipal Court, 2nd District, Manhattan: Charles Zimmerman. dintinctiontahoalds Ge ch % plans against the Soviet Union. | RRS mot See TH SS Manhattan. jtween the destructive Amer eee eae | | _ Soldiers Join in Edmonton. FOR STATE ASSEMBLY. | FOR BOARD OF ALDERMEN. |! stroying, God-denying Communi NANKING, China, Aug. 6.—Fur-| __BROORLYN 1 EDMONTON, Alberta, Canada, 6th A. D.—Henry Sazer 6th Ald. Dist.—Adolph Bassen jand the hundred per cent Am ; ther dissolution in the Chiang Kai-| Brighton Peach Concert. Aug. 2, (By Mail)—Over 5,000\| th A’ D—Alex. Trachtenberg 8th Ald. Dist—Samuel Darcy jeonstructive and increasingly co-op- shek government and evidence of | ose The Brighton Beach Workers Cen- besten er uancee here bee eel 17th A. D.—Albert Moreau 17th Ald. Dist—Libertad Narvaez one American Federation of La- factional struggle took place today| i+] 7 \ter has arranged a, midnight movie | ternation et jay, In Market |} 18th A. D.—Abraham Markoff 20th Ald, Dist.—Gaetano DiFazio DOr. with the resignation from the min-| British Mill Workers |Gasecets catriicera’and’frame-up. vies [Square and after listening toll o1st A. D.—Perry Murphy 21st Ald. Dist—Fanny Austin Ochler said that Towson’s advice 1 UNION istry of the treasury of T. V. Soong, | Reject Sell-Out |tims on Saturday, Aug. 10, 11:30 p. m.,|Speeches in English and Ukrainian, to mill owners to let the U. T. W. || Rcom 803—Phone: on the expressed plea that he was| ot the eat tat aes, "ment |aad from women’s organizers,| ; Bronx ; of the A. F. of L. organize thei Not connected u discouraged because the Nanking} (Continued from Page One) are 50 cents and are on sale at the|marched in procession behind the|| 1st A. D.—George Pershing 25th Ald. Dist.—John Harvey workers shows that the U. T. W. other office army disbandment conference failed| for the selling out of the strikers.|V- ! ®. office, 799 Broadway. band of the 49th Battalion of re-|| $rd A. D.—Rose Wortis 26th Ald. Dist—Anthony Severine || works for the owners and not for —===== to reduce military expenditures be-| All the influence of Margaret Bond- Unit 48, Section 3. turned soldiers, who expressed their || 4th A. D.—Moissaye J. Olgin Both pacts bennie Gs te the workers, whose interests, ac- low 13,000,000 a month. |field, minister of labor, is being | Will meet ‘Thursday, 6 p.m., at the |S0lidarity with the demonstration || 5th A. D.—Rebecca Grecht 29th Ald. Dist—Benjamin Gold cording to the N. T. W., are oppo: 7 ¥ Bo aaae? 4 Ch | 4ubowh against the workers in the | Workers Center. and played the Red Flag. 6th A. D.—George Primoff “Tp, A. Wilson stated a few day _T. V. Soong has had charge of) * * * The hi li f . 7th A. D.—Joseph Boruchowitz ” ot. éhat ouectt Kuomintang finances since the be-| attempt of the labor party to get Unit 2R, Section 1. ie huge line of the procession, ago,” said Oehler, “that our activi the strike over with, and end the scandal of 500,000 locked out in ginning, and is a member of the enormously wealthy Soong family > of Canton, one daughter of which| England through a wage cut in the Williamsburg 1. L. D. the Soviet Union”; “Class War|| 2nd A, D.—Karl Reeve 35th Ald. Dist——Hyman Gordon ence between the U. T. W. and the married Chiang Kai-shek. |first month of the “labor” govern. |,‘ membership meeting on the Gas-| Against Imperialist War”; “Work-|] 6th A. D.—Joseph Magliacano 41st Ald. Dist—Joseph Sultan N. T. W. I agree with Wilson. Reduction Is Fraud ment, and 120,000 striking against |at 56 Manhattan Ave., Brooklyn. ling Women Fight War”; etc. It was|| 13th A. D—Roy Mizara 49th Ald. Dist.—Nathaniel Kaplan Also, the betrayal of the workers ction Is Fraud. | | Ler ae | an increase in working hours and re- | Will meet tonight, 7.30 p.m., at 27 East 4th St. hy a. N. Y. Drug Clerks. three abreast, was splendidly organ- ized, and carried banners: “Defend ist A. D—John Williamson made up of railway men, street car|| 14th A, D.—Samuel Nesin Brooklyn. 33rd Ald. Dist.—Frederick Makel 50th Ald. Di —Samuel Wiseman ties in Gastonia has given the mill owners a chance to see the differ Elizabethton has given the workers All observers have agreed since quction of pay in Calcutta, India. A general membership meeting will|™men, laborers, unemployed miners|| 16th A. D.—Morris Kushinsky 51st Ald. Dist-—Morris Pasternack ||@ chance to see the difference be- Unity Co-operators Patronize the: plan of mre of _ armies” ‘The British strikers have received be held Thursday 8.30 p.m, at 142/(the mines are shut down), garment || 22nd A. D.—Boris Lifshitz 56th Ald. Dist—Lena Chernenko jtween the two organizations. ‘The SAM LESSER was first announced, that it was @/ tologcam expressing solidarity and hucios workers, in fact, every section of|] 23rd A. D.—Rachel Ragozin bosses will choose the U. T. W. and Alin LESS: fraud, as the government of China A fi * ‘ Women Greet Frame-Up Members. |the working class here. | |the workers will choose the N. T. Ladies’ and Gents’ Tail tied. bk Gk I hi warning against the traitorous union | Yomes ele «htt nell so ‘ | [ever Hicks a . is not united, but is a loose alliance) (rr cials from the provisional com- | o¢ M¢mhens Of, Ait, the, local councils! The population here is only 70,000, | 9 Queene, W.. which is the only union that | 1818 - 7th Ave. New York of bitterly hostile generals with = : | | : all Hekestes tate ah Baie their pata’ rivate armies, ' Foreign mittee elected by the Southern Tex- NG Sr cmenanda- so the parade represents an appre- 1st A. D.—Abraham Harfield | will fig! or their interests Nes 1 imperialism controls all of them, | tile Conference, which met a week |Sopnie Melvin), who were framedvup [ible part of it, | Sh Se Bh “s pane bi fleas | So mae osenen CED NC: OhgMontaeeninit aurea car the | ' ? | file, the policies for which we have | The Workers Internationa! Relief ry Aaatane Cust uflean the tall Central Opera \House, Gitn ‘st. and) Harvester Workers Demonstrate. CUTTER HAS BARE | been agitating all these years |showed the Passaic textile strike mrad sis ee a 3 ¥0., Ci i 8 will gather N r . . Ce tary expenditures are reduced, the} inthe dhemmupetoumon the walirend [ee ISLAND, Ill, Aug. 2, (By must be put into effect. The or- | film Sunday, at the tent colony, Ga Frances lat Newnes jaiainent will dollatian | enter the meeting room in a body.|Mail)—Over a hundred workers ganization work of the Industrial | tonia. Workers came from all ICE’ ia Ale cat SS isa te hee Soneldereal |All Jocal counclis should bring their/from the powerful International Union will not and cannot be car- |around. The Priscilla, Rex and sifevorible (newatto DCHnE KAC| me on time, Harvester Company of Rock Island | | ried on by professional gangsters. | other mill workers arrived in a truck | 951 p. 7ytn | | shek’s rivals. ‘ il tcaHace a id litth TELL OF BIG TRIAL JITLOW, Secretary, eecomneny, spotters and city po-| {ey Workers a ‘ | repairing, havines aecured the loan Tel Military leaders have paid little Bilgwion Oped. Ale’ Méct ice by attending the Red Day meet- +1, | _It is only you, the workers in the | of it in return for fixing it up. | heed to Soong’s recommendations. | PAIRS | eae ee ae open air mestinie win|ing held in Rock Island August 1.) Meet- Tomorrow Will) shops; you who have been in the The Loray workers spent ie day Simultaneously, the position of the foreign office under Dr. C. T. Wang ‘Schechter, Melvin and United Council of Working Women, | KATE be held at E. 7th St. and Brighton |Beach Ave. under the auspices of the Workers Club and the Working Wom- |and John Deere Plows of Moline, de- CHANCE TO LIVE. \It was the best revolutionary labor |gathering since the strike days of ‘Deal with Gangsterism forefront of the struggle against which they had spent all afternoon jeutting grass and the 4 arranging the company union; you who have | + ges h round back of one of the houses has been made difficult by various | 1 jen's Council. Speakers: Robins, Pol-|1922. The speaker was Eugene | , helped to make the general strike i ‘. ee : Nanking’ officials who issue unau-| Bush Here Monday Inek, Schechter Bechtold. | _ (Continued from Page One) | in our trade a success; it is you | Pr rvuns for, the crowd. A plat | C'pteasant to bine at Our tac. Haute le tatleuliactls dole ener (Continued from Page One) Spenkers, Agitprop. | The meeting was widely pelea condition of (arn the hear-| who must be thet ones to carry | picture itself was projected ‘against He ae eer Bernal se ilroad controve ing 0 akers 5 |by mean: ing was postponed until tomorrow. teat ofl : ed age near St. Station) benbiven nw sefoat. welotme: by the | agh meeting of ‘att Apaaieors and unit} y is of leaflets and thru the | ing postp through the present organization |the side of the house, and current ||P HONE: INTERVAI 9149. shop paper, “The Farmall Worker,”|The gangsters gave their current} workers of New York. ;open flr meetings will be held on|, drive and strengthen union control | porrowed from another house was | ‘ |Aug. 8 at 7.20 p.m. at the Workers |issuéd by the Communist Party nu-|names as “Abe Carvich” and “Sal-| of the industry. i achi : ; y , | used in the machine. Te EYHUME WAR The meeting, which has been ar-|Center. All comrades are obliged to|cleus in the International Harvester | vatore Spinalle.” | In line with the decision of the : : . MEET YOUR FRIENDS at ranged by the New York District of i rea” |Co. The response was excellent, the| Bitter indignation still reigns high| membership meeting the Joint. | SEE. ‘ is |the International Labor tense, cies ee in| Make-up of the audience being 95|in the needle trades market, and| Board has organized the machin- { Messinger’s Vegetarian the Workers International Relie: neatiocier eect nee Date ate with |per cent wage workers. Altho the | the murderous attack on Jacobs has| ery for the coming drive. Many = vcbaiss DEAD IN J § § R land the National Textile Workers 7 a ‘ # EEE) Union, will also be a protest against ‘the sentencing of Harry Eisman, (Continued from Page One) | militant young Pioneer, to six bring the bodies back to the United | months in a reformatory. States. | Speakers at the meeting will in- The committee of five have been,clude J. Louis Engdahl, National officially authorized by the state ad taastataty: of the I. L, D.; James P. Michigan, most of the dead having | Reid, President of the National Tex- been natives of that state. All five | tile Workers Union; Louis Hyman, are members of the jingo Veterans|President of the Needle Trades of Foreign Wars. Industrial Unio Ludwig Landy, Just what is the attitude of the | National Organizer of the Workers Soviet government towards this mis- | International Relief; Charles Alex- sion is not known, TKat it coincides | ander, Negro Director of the Young with the period when a new drive |Communist League, and a Pioneer. has been started by the imperialist) The three women will also speak powers against the only workers’|at meetings in other cities. A par- and peasants’ republic is probably |tial list of these meetings follows: no accident. The homecoming of the | Washington, Friday, Aug. 9; Phila- dead soldiers will probably serve as/delphia, Saturday, Aug. 10; an occasion for reviving stories of |Bedford, Sunday, the 11th; Lawr- “Red atrocities,” to whip up warjence, Tuesday, the 13th; Paterson, sentiment against the Soviet Union. |N. J., and Providence, R. I., Wednes- After lying forgotten for ten|day, the 14th; Passaic and Allen- years, the American government | town, Thursday, the 15th. Halls are “suddenly” shows a desire to recover | being secured for the meetings and the bodies of the men it wantonly | will be announced shortly. ae slaughtered during its first drive, in| Growing Union Real Defense. conjunction with its imperialist al- | “We have been cheered and heart- lies, against the Soviet Union. This | drive failed, thanks to the heroic/ened by the rapid growth of the efforts of the Red Army, the sacri-' union and the International Labor fice and devotion of the Soviet | Defense in recent weeks while we masses and to the fact that large have been in jail,” said 19-year-old numbers of the imperialist soldiers | sophie Melvin, speaking for the refused to fight against their Rus- three. “The success of the Bessemer New| sian fellow workers. Many soldiers deserted the American forces and joined the Red Army. Some of these former American soldiers are now aiding in the reconstruction work in the Soviet Union. One of the American soldiers who went over to the Bolshevik forces in Siberia is now one of the defend- ants, charged with assault with in- tent to kill, in the great class war trial in Gastonia, N. C. MANY DELEGATES AT HARLEM MEET Vinal arrangements were being rushed last night in preparation for the Conference on Rent and Housing called at St, Lukes hall, 125 West 130th St., tonight and tomorrow, by the Harlem Tenants League. Fraternal delegates from one hun- dyed and five organizations are ex- pected to participate in this con- ference, Richard B, Moore, president of the Tenants League stated yes- terday. There will also be speakers from the Communist Party, the United Councils of Working Class Women, the T. U, EB, L., the Amer- ican Negro Labor Congress and the International Labor Defense. . * Troops Fire At Mine (Continued from Page One) great clashing of parties, but all of them are anti-labor. The present Maniu regime, hich was hailed by “socialists” as a liberal government, has proved itself just as murderous and despotic as its predecessor, City conference of the N. T. W. U., the progress of the membership | drive and the plans for the General | Conference at Charlotte, Oct. 12, |prove that the mill workers are ready and anxious for organization, and point to the big fight coming in the near future — a strike much larger and more important than the |Loray strike in which we played a |part. Also, we consider that the /mass pressure exercised by a grow- ing union is our best defense. | “We do not expect a ‘fair’ trial in Charlotte. In our opinion capitalist |courts are the same everywhere — |workers can not expect justice, es- |pecially when they are militant junion organizers.” J | Campaign Still on. | The three women organizers have | been attending meetings of the Na- tional Textile Workers Union, Work- \ers Internationcl Relief, and Interna- tional Labor Defense since their re- lease. Everywhere the workers flock to greet them, and express solidar- (ity with them and with the 21 other defendants in the Gastonia case, 13 of whom are charged with murder in the first degree. Workers must not overlook the fact that the joint I, L. D. and W. 1. R, campaign is one, and will continue until the trial reopens in Charlotte, Aug. 26, Remember the aims of the drive: $50,000 for the defense of the Gas- tonia strikers! 100,000 new members by the end of the trial! 1,000,000 names on the mass peti- tion of protest! BE WISE! GET YOUR TICKETS IN ADVANCE FOR THE MOONLITE CRUISE. be given on the fifth floor of the Workers School, beginning at 7 p.m., Aug. 8 Candidates for this course |should be assigned by all units and must report before Thursday to the Workers School. Only two days are left ‘to register for the Speakers Class. Registration for entire course jis $1.00. Caren, Open Air Meetings Today. 118th St_and Pleasant Ave,, Wash- burn Wire Factory, at 12 noon. Speak- jers, C. Brody. A Je St. at 8.00 p.m. Speaker. Glassford. 7th St. and Ave, B at 815 p.m. Speakers: S. Nesin, A, Suskind. Christie and Stanton at 8.00 p.m. Speakers: Di Fazio, Pasternak, Prim- off, C. Weissberg, St . at 12 noon, 14th peaker: Guss. and Bergen at Bloomfield, R. * Party Activities. All section two units supposed to meet at 27th St. headquarters Wed- nesday at Workers Center, and Ave, C. 149th St. 8.00 p.m. Moore, Williams. * # Communist Activities 1. Wednesday, August 14, all sec~ tions are to have section member- ship meetings. Attendance at thexe meetings is compulsory. There will be a CEC and DEC representative to | spenk on the next tasks in the Party campaigns. 2. All section and unit industrial organizers are to meet Thursday, August Sth, 8 p. m, sharp, at the Workers Center, 3. A meeting of all unit and sec~ |ton women worker organizers will be held Wednesday, August 7th, at 8 p.m. sharp, at the Workers Center. 4. All spenkers and unit agitprop |directors are to attend the speakers’ conference Thursday, August 8 8 p. m. sharp, at the Workers Center. 5. Trade unton work: During the week of August 12, Party assistance | to the distribution of special issue of Labor Unity, Dixtribution of spe- celal leaflet of the TUBL, Party sup- port to this distribution, @. All Party comrades are to give special axsixtance and support to meeting to welcome the 3 Gastonia prisoners rele: August 12. meeting will alxo be protest meeting againat imprisonment of Harry Eixman, Pioneer comrade, who months’ imprisonment. + W. W. WEINSTONE, District Organizer. ; ete Pa | Section 2 Meeting Place. All units of Section 2 will meet lin the Workers Center, 26 Union Square, until further notice, our got six Units of Section 3 Note. Units of Section 3 which have been meeting at 101 West 27th St. will meet at the Workers Center until new headquarters are obtained. “ 8 8 Sunday Bont Excursion. The Biellese Workers Progressive Club has arranged an excursion to Hook Mountain via the Hudson River on the steamer O&sining for Sunday, Aug. 11, There will be dancing on the boat and games at Hook Moun- tain. The steamer leaves the foot of West 35th St. at 8.58 a.m. and puts from Hook Mountain ‘at 6 p.m, in advance, $1.50; children under 12, $1.00; can be obtained at the club’ headquarters, 301 W. 29th Street. “ * ‘Unit 10F, Section 2, A discussion on the C. I Address Will be held Wednesday evening, Aug. 7, 6.80 p.m., at the Workers Center, 26 Union 8a, sixth floor, Room 600, BOOTLEG MONOPOLY INTACT MADISON, Wise., Aug. 6.—The Wisconsin Senate today defeated a bill providing for state manufacture and sale of intoxicating liquor. Its passage would have crested compe- tition for the str ‘ed boot- leg barons, | _ MANHATTAN 1 | entire police department of Rock Is-| formed almost the sole topic of con-| land and half the Moline force was |versation since Friday. “Shall mur- present thruout the meeting, the | derous gangsterism continue to ter- | workers were not intimidated. | rorize the rank and file of the cloak- | | jmakers?” This is the question which |is agitating the workers, PARTY CAMPAIGN | Meeting Tomorrow. | | | This will be among the principal] | |questions to be discussed at a meet- | 10 OPEN MONDAY jing of active members of the Needle | Trades Workers Industrial Union to| |be held tomorrow night in Webster | |Hall, 11th St. and Third Ave. The} jattack on Jacobs, the Industrial | | Union has pointed out, is not an iso- | | lated incident, but part of a consis-| In Full Swing |tent program on the part of the com- i (Continued from Page One) |pany union, whose gangsterism gives | vass, it has met exceptional interest |the lie to the claim that it controls in the Party platform, on the | the majority of the workers. ti vhich r - strength of which a number of work Aaeiser tah cent on he agenda ers, including Negroes, have filled : f jout applications for membership in| 4 the meeting will be the forthcom. | the Party, jing organization drive among the| | The waterfront meetings are held |@tessmakers, F jas part of the election campaign in| In the preparations for the organi- | Section 1 and are attracting greater | zation drive among the thousands of and greater throngs of enthusiastic |dressmakers, the Joint Board of the seamen, longshoremen and dock |Needle Trades Workers Industrial workers, both white and Negro. Union has distributed thousands of Section 7, South Brooklyn, has copies of a call in the garment dis- | \likewise made a good start in the | trict. | |signature drive, especially among Pointing out that the organization the needle trades workers, who have drive is a matter of deep concern not jbeen drawn to sign the petitions|only to the workers in the open | after Party representatives have ex- | shops, but to the workers in the! |plained to them the fraudulence of | union shops as well, the call says: Signature Drive Now ‘the cloak “agreement” fostered by Lehman. The Section is doing splen- |did work in the shops and factories, jand has distributed leaflets on the Morse drydock. Section membership meetings on Wednesday, Aug. 14 will be devoted to a discussion of the campaign, while during the week of Aug. 12 to 17 the election will be taken up by all units. Plans for the formation of cam- paign committees in the unions, shops, factories and fraternal organ- izations are being mapped out, Grecht announced, BUILDERS MAKE QUAINT GESTURE The Building Trades bosses, play- rupt officialdom of the Building Trades Council, yesterday made an- other grand-stand play. After “granting” and ing” the five-day week on various occasions, the Building Trades Em- ployers’ Ass» gation once more yes- “granting” it. Maybe! But not now. But the electrical workers, mem- bers of Local 3, must first agree to work on scab fixtures, There are numerous advantages for the bosses in this gracious ges- ture, August 24 jis still several weeks off. The building scasen is waning, it will soon come L* an end Meanwhile th? issve is throw inte the vir for arether year. ing a cute little game with the cor-! “rescind- | terday again went on record as/ Maybe August 24.) Sisters and Brothers: In a few days the organization drive in the dress trade will begin. In a few days the workers of the open shops will be called upon to leave their shops and come down to fight for the establishment of union conditions and for decent living standards. The coming organization drive in the dress trade is a matter of deep concern not only to the workers of the open shops, but to the workers in the union shops as well. You, | dress makers, know how difficult | it is to maintain conditions in the union shops when there are hun- | dreds of open shops where workers are compelled to work at any price offered by the bosses. During the generat strike in the dress trade the Union had suc- ceeded in organizing close to 400 shops, thus raising the general standards in the trade. The ac- complishments of the general strike gave the Union a solid base | in the dress trade. If we want to | maintain this base and strengthen it, this can be done only through organization work. Dressmakers! For years you have carried on a struggle against the use of pro- fessional gangsters for organiza- | tion work, For years we have in- sisted that only a rank and file organization committee of the members of the Union can make the proper approach to the work- ers of the open shops and convince them of the necessity of joining the ranks of the Union. | Now, comrades, when after two | and a half years of struggle | against the company union we j have organized the Industrial | Union controlled by the rank and “ | Call them. | tion. The success of our work, the | success of our Union, depends on | Union, active workers have already joined the Organization Committee. Many are on the job gathering information and establishing con- tacb with workers in the open shops, so as to have them respond to the call of the Union, The coming organization drive is a drive to improve the condi- tions in your shop. The coming organization drive will help you to fight and secure better prices ‘or garments in your shop. The coming organization drive will prove to the bosses and the com- pany union that there is a Union in the industry that is ready and able to fight for the interests of the workers. Join Organization Committee. Have you joined the Organiza- tion Committee already? If not, come down to the office of the Union immediately and give in your name as one of those who will be ready to go out and call the workers of the open shops to rally to the ranks of the Union. Investigate the open shops that are located in your building. Talk to the workers of the open shops. Explain to them the importance of being organized. Show them that fighting as individuals the bosses will always get the best of them. Awaken them to ac- your active co-operation. Dressmakers! You have demon- strated in the past that you are ready to answer the call of the Union. You have demonstrated | that regardless of the sacrifices, you are ready to fight side by side with your fellow workers for the building of a strong and powerful Now the Union once more calls to you to action. Do Your share in the coming organization drive, In a few days the drive will be- gin. Join the ranks of the Organ- | ization Committee, Do your bit to | assure the success of the drivel JOINT BOARD NEEDLE TRADES WORKERS INDUS- TRIAL UNION, Joseph Boruchowitz, General Manager. Chas. S. Zimmerman, Manager Dress Department. MOONLITE CRUISE (Continued jrom Page One) vesant’s bizarre crew is warranted to tone up the toniest blowout, not | to mention the hearers. Fall in! can still be had at the Daily Worker business office, 26 Union Square; | the Workers Bookshop or New Masses, 30 and 39 Union Sa., respec- tively; Sollin’s, 216 E. 14th St.; Needle Trades Industria! Union, 131 W. 28th St.; Millinery Workers, 4 E. 37th St.; Unity House, 1800 Sey- enth Ave.; Bronx Workers Colony, 2800 Bronx Park East, or any Com- munist Party station. | Tickets at $1.50 each | August 18 Daily Worker id >) A Pleasant Bay Park picnic (eocmeenrsereencnss me SEEN Ate Watch for Announcements Patronize No-Tip Barber Shops 26-28 UNION SQUARE (1 flight up) 2700 BRONX P’~K EAST (corner Allerton Ave.) 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. | | and Dairy Restaurant 1763 Southern Blvd. Right off 174th St Subway Station RATIONAL Vegetarian RESTAURANT | 199 SECOND AVE) UE | Bet. 12th and 13 Strictly Vegetariun f All Comrades Meet at | BRONSTEIN’S _ | Vegetarian H i Restau | 558 Cleremont | ROM rOU D | Vegeta RESTAUR I 1600 MADISON | Phon UNIversity § Phone: Stuyvesant | ’ = y John’s Re SPECIALTY: ITALIAN | where all radicals | 302 E. 12th St. Comrades in Patri Laub Vege R Advertise your Union Meetings here, For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City ALBERT MODIANO Violin Instructor 8224 BRONX BOULEVARD (Blocks North Bronx Co- operative Houses) For Arrangem: OLINVILLE 7! Phone; LEHIGH 6382 | International Barber Shop | M, W. SALA, Prop. |] 2016 Second Avenue, New York (bet, 103rd & 104th Sts, Ladies Bobs Our Specialty | Private Beauty Parlor | Hotel and Restaurant Workers Branch of the Amalgamated Food Workers W. SIst St. Phone Circle 7336 BUSINESS MEETINGS] Leld on the first ™ month at 3 p. mn, One tndusiry—One Lalon—Join and Fight the Common Enemy! Office Open trom 9 a. m,. to 6 p.m. —— 20D WORK st rday month at $86) Third Avenue, Bronx, N, ¥. Vet Ask for Ba F's Local 164 Label Bread?! hla 9 Vo Tel.: DRYdock $880 | FRED SPITZ, Inc. FLORIST || NOW AT 31 SECOND AVENUE (Bet. Ist & 2nd Sts.) i" Flowers for All Occasions 18% REDUCTION TO READERS OF THE DAILY WORKER {BUTCHERS’ UNION Local 174, AMC. & BW. tirst and | Sunday, . M. Employment Bureau open eveet day at 6