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waILY WORKER, Page Five EW YORK, FRIDAY, AUGUST 23, 1929 CASTON WOMEN’ DEFENDANTS AT HARLOTTE MEET Oehler Scores U.T.W. Betrayal at Marion (Continued from Page One) day night, two days before the trial opens, for a huge International La- bo Defense rally, and demand free- | dom for the 13, the Manville-Jenckes | attorneys now representing the state insist be put to death, and the ten cthers for whom they demand long penitentiary terms. | The principal speakers will be | Vera Bush, Sophie Melvin and Amy | Schechter who will return here by* then. D, E. MacDonald and Robert | Litoff, who will face trial along with ive others in Gastonia, Oct. 15, on tharges of asasult with secret | weapons with intent to kill, and Dewey Martin and Hugo Oehler will speak for the National Textile Work- ers Union, and tell about:the grow- ing struggle that the terrorism of mill operators and police have not been able to stem. Scott Nearing, | prominent lecturer, and Juliet Stuart Poyntz, representative of the I. L. D. will also speak. ¢ Hear Milvin. At the first National Textile Workers Union meeting ever held in Wake Forest, N. C., last night, more than 500 textile workers heard | Sophie Melvin tell about the union’s program for struggle. A local union will be organized here within a few | days, organizers state. | The night before, Franklinton mill | workers heard Melvin, Binnie Green, 14-year-old but already a textile worker of years experience and Robert Litoff, one of the defendants. Other meetings were held in Hender- son, Gastonia, Bessemer City, and | scores of other mill towns. Meetings in Kannapolis, Greens- | ville and Hickory were arranged by | the newly established sub-district office in Greensville, S. C., which William Murdock and a corps of local organizers are using as a union | center for that state. Many of the | Pr atinia are hela under the joint | fpuspices of the union and I. L, D. ie ae New U. T. W. Betrayals. CHARLOTTE, N. C., Aug. 22.— Hugo Oehler, Southern District or- ganizer of the N, T. W. U., today characterized the action of Alfred Hoffman at Marion as “capitulation to the mill owners and their agents. The present situation at Marion,” Oehler stated, “is one more addition to the long list of surrenders of | which the U. T. W. officialdom has | been guilty. Before the clash with | the millowners the Hoffmans and MacMahons could get away with their pose as leaders of the workers, but when the bosses brought in sol- diers as strikebreakers, the true role of these misleaders was made clear. When the bosses decided to open the | mill, Hoffman retreated, stopped the | mass-picketing and went over to the camp of the enemies of the workers by relinquishing the most effective veapon of the strikers—mass picket- an, z- | “At Elizabethton, at Ware Shoals, | at Greenville, and now at Marion the | U. T. W. bureaucrats have served | the bosses by stemming the tide of | workers revolt, and thus helped the bosses defeat the struggle for better | conditions. The agreement reached between Hoffman of the U. T. W.,| Judge Townsend, representing the Governor, Mr. Hart, president of the mill, and a representative of the De- partment of Labor, is a complete | surrender to the mill owners. Desert Strike. “What is the present situation at Elizabethton and Ware Shoals? The mill owners at Elizabethton are dis- criminating ag~.nst the members of | the U. T, W. Thosetwho were most active in the strike have heen dis- | charged and forced to leave town. Unrest and dissatisfaction are in- creasing. There is much talk about a new strike. The mill owners are transferring the workers from the | Glanztoff to the Bemberg mill and | from one department to another, as a camouflage for a wage cut. Most of the workers who were recently sold out by the U. T. W. bureaucrats are now geting lower wages than before the strike. They are rapidly fis. the little faith they have in the reactionary organization which trayed them.” - In Ware Shoals the situation is worse still, Oehler said. The strikers there were deserted by the U. T. W. “labor leaders” who left town two weeks ago, and have not returned. They stopped relief two weeks be- fore the strike was called off. “The workers are asking that a N. 'T. W. U. organizer be sent there,” Oehler sait. “Now the same story of surrender is being repeated’ at Marion. This brings into sharp con- trast the class struggle program of the militant National Textile Work- ers Union as opposed to the treach- erous policy of class colloboration of the U. T. W. Better conditions for the workers will never be won by surrender, at conference with’ the bosses such as Hoffman had with Hart when he agrees to suppress the strikers ready to fight for their rights and their demands.” Sacco Meets Tonight. Sacco-Vanzetti-Gastonia meetings ill be held tonieht in: Boston, New nternational Wall, 42 Wenonah ‘all, Roxbury; Rochester, uyceum, 580 St. Paul Si Grace Park; Kansas Cit Forum Hall, 1218 E. 12th St. Those on Saturday will be at Lud- low, Mass., at 2 p.m.; Palmer, Mass., at 5 p.m; Springfield, Mass., at 8.30 p.m.; Stamford, Conn., on the City Hall steps. b) | tense sheed-up, On night ,and in Los Angeles, Sunday. Training Them as Strikebreakers . | Boy Scouts at Waretown, N. J., camp learning woodchopping. | The officials of this boss organization have often used the scouts to | break strikes, particularly in Western lumber camps. | $300 OBTAINED BY NEEDLE UNION — UNION RACKETEER GEB. TO MEET Amalgamated Official Sessions Tomorrow and Pockets Strike Tax | Sunday (Continued from Page One) (Continued from Page One) | favor and 10 against, The other York, Boston, Philadelphia, Newark, workers did not vote, for fear they | Baltimore. Chicago and othe: mid-| would lose their jobs or otherwise) western cities, the Pacific Coast and | be discriminated against by the|a representative of the Industrial | Amalgamated clique. | Union of Needle Trades Workers of | Two additional hand pressers, who) Canada, have been hired by J. Friedman,| To Take Up Important Questions. will have to be paid out of the wages| _ The of the other pressers in the shop,|Cludes discussion of questions of | according to an agreement the firm| ™ajor importance to the needle | has with the union. The Amalga-|ttades workers, The discussion will mated agreed that the price for! Consider the conditions of the work- agenda for the meeting in-| i aes ee FIGHT “LEADERS? (Continued from Page One) most of the trolley and bus men are forced to put in from 12 to 18 hours a day to get credit for nine hours’ rush hours. trolleymen, of course. cents an hour for a ten-hour day,| That’s why I want to see a strike,” a car washer said yesterday.” Organization of car barn com- mittees to demand militant strike | action for the 25 per cent wage in- 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 pressing would not exceed a certain ¢"S a8 a resuit of the campaign amount, and all additional pressers| ®&ainst them conducted by the em- would be paid from money deducted | Ployers and the scab In:ernatioral | Workers of the Friedman shop) wo qouccbeaki eet ied yesterday pointed _ out that this) ip extensive contracting, picce-work, agreement, made without the knowl- i ee will receive one production ae Bas ate will’ farmplate gol @ same amount of money, at the|. . sales Pate ee same time reducing the wages of| ities to be followed by the union to level as the firm desires, as each | the united front of the bosses and| additional presser engaged means al | iste Te iit alae ake one general reduction for the other | ghd ale we Eine ees Selous Conference to be held in Cleveland, Cee Aug. 31, and take up the question | Do Bosses’ Bidding. of rallying the needle trades workers the shirt manufacturers, the Shirt] strikers and strike leaders who go on Makers’ Section of the Amalgamated | trial for murder in Charlotte, N. C., | Clothing Workers’ Union has writ-| on Monday. that no shirts be manufactured in! any prisons in this state. The union} AMERY UNION | has made this request to the Tam-| i! many Hall governor on the sugges- tion of the shirt manufaccturers, DONATES $1 000 have most of their shirts made by} ’ open shops in small towns of New! York, Pennsylvania and New Jersey. (Continued from Page One) stated that the shirt manufacturers Drive, and in the meantime to ad- are using the right wing controlled | Y@"¢e $1,000 from the union treas- union as an instrument to secure wy while the assessment on 1,500 the mass of shirtmakers. Instead! In addition to this, the motion was of appealing direct to the governor | Catried to close the doors and take against convict labor being used,|UP 8 Collection, which brought in ally, the right wing union official-| (ested be sent immediately to Gas-| dom, who made the appeal to Roose. | tonia tor. the ‘Yelief of ‘the women velt, to create the impression that| #4 children. Would gain if the manufacturing was |@"8" Local 3 ASA Ue not allowed to continue in the state|/3 militant workers from the sleniey prisons, jchair, is an indication of splendid instead, promised to have it done); isati by members of the union. While, Uns and fraternal organizations. some of the cutting will be done by) ‘ | . : .” | The membership of the local union Union “nlembers) in New York. Citys! stowed’ a tremendous interest and be done i -uni i cmall towns numer shops in the| great fight against the textile mill) ‘a i _ _|barons’ conspiracy to continue the ‘any manufacturers employ union’ struggle to organize the unorganized | operators in the outlying sections.|of the National Textile Workers’ ane union is not making any at-|/Union, and expressed coneretely| empt to organize the operators,| their datermination to support to th a week for long hours under an in-| tant fighters from the electric chai when the trial reopens on Monday, | Aug. 26. | PORTLAND, Me., Aug. 22.—One | by Harriet Silverman, secretary, Lo-| man was killed and two companions cal New York, Workers’ Interna- perhaps hurt in an automobile colli-| tional Relief, and Bertha Crawford, Frank O’Brien, 49, was dead on cast as an example to all other arrival at Maine Central Hospital. | workers’ organizations to follow. pees Pair ies a Ns i kL a aS held at San Francisco, Musicians Hall, 230 Jones St., when Mother Bloor, will be the principal speaker shown, A mass meeting will be held in Washington, D. C., Aug. 28, when Other Meetings. Youngstown, O., will also demon- strate at a Sacco-Vanzetti-Gastonia in the Workers Hall at 120 Wicks Ave, " Speakers from Philadelphia, in- Young Communist League, and Stephen Graham, of Portsmouth, Va., will speak at the mass meeting Va., on Monday, Aug. 26. _ The latest reports from Califor- nia are that Mother Bloor held bara on the 19th; San Pedro, the 20th; Los Angeles, the 21st. She will speak today at San Diego, in from those already working. | Ladies Garment Workers Union and | edge of the workers, means that the| Pct uP, eduction of wages and | the individual workers to as low a| Meet the conditions resulting from pressers, to the National Trade Union Unity In return for small favors from|in support of the 16 Gastonia | ten to Gov. Roosevelt, requesting who, nevertheless, will continue to| Militant shirt workers yesterday | nd Gastonia Defense and Relief more profits, but no advantages for, ™embers is being collected. the manufacturers called upon their! $84.30 which the membership re- the unionized shirtmakers would| One thousand dollars, which Bak- hy phaniitamalseres hace greed eee class solidarity and of the Others Should Do Likewise. | the bulk of the actual finishing Will) onthuntasin in carrying forward the cutters in New York, and non-union in the South under the leadership | whose average wage is $14 to $16| limit the struggle to save 13 mi KILLED IN AUTO CRASH This response to the appeal made sion here today. a Gastonia striker, should be broad-| Sunday, the 25th, a meeting will be and movies of Gastonia will be H. M. Wicks will be the speaker. mass meeting, Sunday, at 2 p.m., cluding’ Rudolph Shohan, of the in Portsmouth, Va., and Norfolk, successful meetings in Santa Bar- Oakland at 6449 Benvenue Ave., to- JERSEY CAR MEN. work, since they are laid off in the) ~ The revolt is not confined to the © “T get bed | 15000 IN SACCO-RAISE FUNDS TO'Fraternal Organizations WORKERS SCHOOL “Vee N CLASS WAR ts annual concert, to take placé its si in Town Hall next April, and invites} (A m |workers who play the mandolin to] of the t join, Exceptional players will pe in-| called { Tompkins Ave.,. ducted into the orch: others will | receive instruction in the classes now nbers an¢ pune being ppnduoted The ae ranma, Brookly are urged to a be ane ones ‘ bs By TN eye i *, 44/106 B. 14th St, are open Mondays and | . C * ce ce yori Workers Pledge tojGary, West Frankfort) thursaays at’s00 pom ene nnress Special Courses for Fight Conspiracy | Plans Meets W.LR, Brass Band. | Trade Unionists. | zee The W.LR. is organizing a brass pee 20% (Continued from Page One) (Continued jrom Page One) _| beristar ‘with Gamrade Cohen at its | Workers Scho 8 Une 8 rs for defense and re-| a ° conferent vards the $3 office, 1 Union Sa, room 606, any day tee Sanake: wh ae = tands of dollars for defense and re-/at the conference towards the $3,000 |tfice, 1 Union Ba. room, 0 any, day) 1 ion Square, which has just an lief. e, which, according to the deci-jcations by mail| A meeting wll be ed its fall opening for September: called as soon a’ a sufficient number jof players have signed up. + * Police On Hand. As on International Red Day, the ace. Communist Activities ion of the body, will be payable to- ion to begin on Sept 2; registrat Tammany police were plentiful, a Two Headquarters. é : enters upon its seventh year of ser- 4 Bete’ vetetioneal Soviet Fliers, Reception Bee students witha cae cordon of them being stationed Because the work of the Metro-| "The delegates who represer iee to ratndents around the demonstration and an-) politan Area is broadening out to | {9loWing organizations at the At Section 7 Open Afr Ralltes, eed coaaerrtes Uh 3 other squad outside the Workers’) yeach more and more of the unor-| are to take part in the special ng five 2 sin a Center. los Ds epaditen: cette fins atl abel ings as noted: | t ria total r tion of ( eae Misuse iad 4 ganized workers within its district, | "3,88 Noted: |. wrigay, Aug. 2 pA aia ca A be he militant spirit of the demon the conference made provision -for a| 6.30 p.m., 175-5th Ave., room 304 ions 4 . Py stration was embodied in countless | headquarters in New Jersey, and * * * Way in 1928-29, offering over 70 course: Scandinavian Workers. Outi | to a student body of over 1,500. banners and placards which expo: ed the hypocrisy of capi tice” and called on the w smash this new conspi¥acy same class that tortured and legal- ly murdered Sacco and Vanzeiti. Some of the slogans carried were: “Fair Trial? That’s What the Capitalist Courts Gave Sacco and} 9 coin nzetti”; “The Gastonia I a Fae The Si Work larger quarters for the head office in New York City. | of Brookly , "h | ranging an outing by bus to th | Sazer announced at the conference | summer festival in Bridgeport, Conn., | andinavian Workers | \ holding on Sunday, |? worker who wi S ndinavian yn and New York chool is x Worker of the | that a workers defense corps has | Which | th been organized to protect picket lines | Sept. 1. ‘y {rom gangsters, whether they appear | to #0 along should send his * . address to E Carlson, 16) in uniform or plain clothes, les cnuer vores | aul carel of the labor movement It supplies speakers for strike meet- ings and organizers for unorganized |workers. Its student body, and the school as an institution, participat- is a pa s, will meet to di he Tenth Plenum of t u ma and jst. New York. All welcome. ed the young workers especially * * = Harlem Dance. * ¢ * Phe Manley uragrcaatye, Club te n ampaigns as the fight re 3 : nt give its fourth summer dance this ie 5 ges Say All 13 Must Burn. Will You ND ree Batcraky ane fein ite alane roe 4 and Vanzetti, for Miners Let Them?”; “Down with Bayoncts | Hee og jat 1492° Madison Ave. A good ja | Rel 2 uggle agains and Clubs ‘against the Working| GARY, Ind, Aug. 22.—The Lake | band has been booked for the ev |perialist war. It has stimulated tape ‘ pA rot > De U j ning, All workers welcome. a {EF Rate ove : Class”; “Support the Fighting Tex- County Trade Union Unity Confer-| ‘8 * 11| workers’ education in the trade un- tile Strikers”; “Workers, Unite,|¢nce will be held in Gary, a steel) Workers School Volunteers. 1 t atlions of New nd many: ether i & Voenter 25 5 | The W rs School is vo ers, 1179 Broadwa : i. is Beat Back the Murderous Attacks | conten ae oe recente RTS | decrito Ae werk ce thecorace tm ire Be SN SS ORS IAT citloy cooperated with work- of the Bosses”; “Don’t Let the | Clected by shop committees in many | aration for the fall ter: All co. * ba jers’ fr zations and va- Change of Venue Fool You”; “Up- ndnserie Bub pee mill Fees ra who are Rpemployada on: vac 2 oan bs ia the Setane hold the Right of These Workers | tives wil Drepominare nt’ is expected. whatgoever are asked. to report a lishment 0} eee Tere paar ot * « e Workers Center, 5th floor. Ne 2B : to Defend Themselves”; “Hail the =e lche ea knowledge of office’ work is neck the 0 sessions, the New Trade Union Center, Cleveland, RANKFORT, Il, Aug. | sary Ne ore! Wor Reliool’ has) aera necaenvane 21%. Ry Tinian = aes 5 eo ee A ae ; ‘, Section 2. d . Aug. 81”; “Fight to Free All Class tional Miners Union is Bete eins iG Oni avin fection 2. orkers {ties of group courses, especially de- War Prisoners”; “The International youth conference here on| The Brownsville h, I. L. D.,| Center, 5 6.00 p.m, to dis- s of workers ae signed to train grou yum. | has arranggd a concert and package |ouss the qeading: position thels choca 2 r leading positions in their chos Labor Defense Is the Shield of the Working Class, Build It”; Aug. 25, five days before the Cleve- “The! land Trade Union Unity Conference Ty fields of work. Such classes will be Workers International Relief Is opens. Problems facing young work- | D TRIA |Brownsville Tenants {iia for trade union peti cen |Your Strike Weapon, Build It.” ers in the coal fields and other in- | | Holding Mass Rally [Negro worker en workers, Many Speakers. dustries will be discussed, and a ; ‘i Latin young At Eight Tonight , leaders From three, platforms a large|Progtam of offensive against them | number of spe&kers addressed the| Wil! he drawn up and presented in| 5 8 | Cleveland, Aug. 31, demonstration, being frequently in- Oe ills ess meeting to rally Browns: | Classes for Trade Unionists. terrupted by cheers and outbursts| ois ny “pa” Aue, 99,--Two! vile tenants against high rents, bad | The school offers @ & of approval. Among the speake SHLEY, Pa, Aug. 22.—-Two * “ f A oF Seems ° = union workers See Ue Utes Goes wre ates to the Cleveland Conver |UeNtiment Strong for | wages will be held at 154 Watkins |{0 fade union worker nor, William W. Weinstone, J. Louis | tion were elected by the anthracite | Organization et Brooklyn, at 8 o'clock tonight |r. teading po effective Engdahl, Max Beda red Wa-|™iners of the Ashley pit. When a Bader ithe auspices) of} tha Beoyms: )arvice to” work izations. genknecht, H. M. Wicks, M. J. Ol-|™ass meeting was called by the! Widespread sentiment for the|”/¢ Tenants League. Pee aes the #ailee ins gin, Rebecca Grecht, Juliet Stuart|Ttade Union Educational League a establishment of a Laundry Work-| The speakers will be Frederick | sievs have bo anged: His- Poyntz, George Pershing, Rose | Week ago, police arrested Anthony | ers’ Industrial Union is to be found| Makel, president, American Negro tory of Americ Moserene Wortis, George Maurer, Fred Bie-| Minerich, organizer of the National among the laundry workers of this Labor Congress and Communist 31g Choice of l 7 denkapp, Harold Williams, Solomon | Miners Union, an affiliated union of | city, according to a statement is- Candidate for alderman, 33rd dis-| Communism ot of Mae Harper, Sidney Bloomfield, Harriet| ‘he T. U. E. L,, and held him until sued yesterday by the Laundry) ‘tict; Rebecca Grecht, Communist jy) eee Silverman, Walter’ Burke, Joseph | te meeting was dispersed. | Workers’ Section, Trade Union Edu. | Candidate for alderman, Sthe district ; es Another meeting was called yes- 2 jand election campaign manager of _. Also choice of Theory and Prac- Shandler, Ruth Youkelson, George E. Powers and Ben Intrator. | Practically all the speakers also ny nay denounced the new attempts of the| CLEVELAND, Ohio, Aug. 22.—| imperialist powers of the world to| Credentials for 75 delegates have provoke a war against the Soviet | already been received by the Trade held at Irving Plaza on Tuesday w Union thigh’ there wnilitarts |Union Educational League head- |v; seal aihe n through their militarist pup- A 4 night. These included delegates} pets in China, and pointed out the | «uarters, from unions and shop com-| from several laundries which have connection between these imperialist | mittee! | | cational League. The statement points out that delegates, representing 15 laundries} were at the Second Metroppolitan Area Trade Union Unity Conference, tise of Trade L New York m; Lessons of the Communist Party, New York district; Richard B. Moore, presi dent, Harlem Tenants League, and Grace Campbell, vice-president, m Tenants League. Harold jams will preside. terday which elected the delegation. foo} Rubber, steel and coal mine | agreements with the Laundry Dri-| “For Any Kind of Insurance” war plots and the attack on the| workers are listed among them, vers’ Union, Local 810, affiliated American working class represent- | o_# os ; mer! rati | by fie Ghatania case. P CHICAGO, Ill, Aug. 22.—A dale. |rict the American Federation of A resolution was adopted express-| ation to the Cleveland Trade Un- | ing “revolutionary solidarity th|ion Unity Convention was elected | the workers and peasants of the|at a meeting of stockyard workers Union of Socialist Soviet Repub-| here, called by their shop commit- lies,” and calling upon the workers| tee. Hight new members were add- of this county “to rally for the de-|€d to the shop committee at the feat of the new imperialist war meeting. against the Soviet Union, the So-| William Z. Foster, secretary- cialist Fatherland of the wor surer of the Trade Union Edu- workers.” cational League, whose name is A tremendous “Aye!” greeted the ed to the convention call read reading of the resolution which d he mecting, is well known to manded the immediate, un ard workers as secretary of tional release of all the prisoner committee which built up a mass declared the right of workers to de ion in the stockyards in| fend themselves, and pledged the|1918. Since then the organization| workers of New York to strive un-| Which was in the hands of the A. F. remittingly t9 secure the freedom |of Ly fell to pieees and conditions | ag eegnyias of the Gastonia prisoners, and wages in the stockyards are at| OPEN AIR MERTS wake me Bn se One) OW Level 110th St. and Fifth Ave. 8 p.m, phone for appointment Telephone: Lehigh 6022 DR. J. MINDEL} SURGECN DENTIST | 1 UNION SQUARE Rceom 803—Phone: Algonquin 8183 Not connected with any other offre Among the open-shop laundries Telephone: Murray All, 5550 |that had delegates at Tuesday’s con-/? East 42nd Street, New York ference were several of the largest) = in New York, the statement con-| tinues. They included the National | Laundry, Carolyn Laundry, Sterling Laundry, Bronx Home Laundry, and the Independent Laundry. All laundry workers who are in- terested in the unionization of\the unorganized laundry workers are urged to communicate with the ; ca cd z Laundry Workers’ Section, Trade | PARK CLOTHING STORE Union Educational League, Room|{_%% Ave. 4: Cor. 6th St. N. ¥. C. 205, 26-28 Union Square, New York | ——————————= City. ts FROM FACTORY TO you: HIGH-GRADE MEN’S and YOUNG MEN'S SUITS From $12.50 to $25.00 | Cooperators! SEO CHEMIST 657 Allerton Estabrook 3215 Ptronize No-Tip Barber Shops Avenue Bronx, N.Y rach, a membe Amalgamated F le ack Joh .L. national | : " 26-28 UNION SQUA2E es Meee ed GRIST acc now touring the middle|SPedkers, S. Bleecher, J. Cohen, As- tien ee ca ae lets at the demonstrs He t also a leading figure an astavrale: Oe St end Fieat ||| 2700 BRONX P/"K EAST ged ce be deferided by the I. L, D. ays Fa aH Gare Rrakabae agen) (Becokivn sneakers, commer: Aaron: Ave.) Frances Pilat ; satpe eae te As part of its general campaign Lem ead eat on oe ar —— = MIDWIFE crease is urged by locals of the to organize the unorg@nized, the| ad ‘ae “vest || Adverti i ti | | 351 E. 7/th St, New: York, N. ¥ ye Ini Sducationa e ; ‘ i ays . M. T. te rest | vertise your Union Meetings ool BT ot. New: York, t Trade Union Educational League.|Trade Union Unity Convention| (4th St. and B Toad, ll Rake’) Roe faoniretine ierite ck | ela he For distributing T. U. E. L. outside the Carpenters’ Hall day, Joseph Shilit and Abe K baum were fined one dollar. hie i ley (Sta), speakers, M. | which opens on Aug. St Mul te | Weich; Intervale and Wilkins Ave.,| plans for, intensive work in this! j¢'s 5, m., speakers Fred Eddis, R. | hey. | sees \Grecht; Schwindler Press, 12 noon, The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City were subsequently dismissed on | street car workers say—at the open- | speaker, Guss; Stone and Pitkin, at | | Dairy rgestaunast parole. ing of the ballot. 8:90 p.m. comrades to report to | & = |] Comznges Wal Atvenye “We know what we want and we| In the traditional A. F. of L.|154 Watkins at 8 p.m., speaker, G.| (7 asant to Dine at Our are going to got it,” over 200 mem-| style, Jones denounced the militant |Lamb; Grand St, Extension and) CBFEHNTEE HCMC TeaTT 1787 SOUTHERN BLYD Havermeyer St., 8 p. m., speaker, L. Chernenko; Prospect and Longwood | Aves., 8 p. m., speakers, A. Moreau, | L. Sissleman; 138th St. and Seventh | Ave., 8 p. m, speakers, P. Shapiro, | Valla, Williams. stand of the men as being engineered bers of local ten had shouted at “Reds.” “Our whole organization Harry Jones, local president, as they | by “Reds. left the hall in disgust. With the | has becn built up by arbitration,” | Mayor of Newark and the Public | he said, to refuse it would be fatal, Service general manager, Jones of-| and especially as it is offered by ficiated—that means “fixing,” the the company itself. PHONE: IN Food Workers 133 W. Sist St, Phone Circte 7346 [Se°BUSINESS MEETING‘€q) eld on the first Monday of the month at 3 p. m, MEET YOUR Messinger’s Vegetarian and Dairy Restaurant FRIENDS at One industry—One Union—Join and Fight the Common Enemy! 6 Ee Comrades in Brighton Beach, 1763 Southern Blvd., " onx, N.Y GL r hae, pote ee ne cun erica $3 sorasne r Laub Vegetarian & Dairy = Restaurant 211 Brighton Beach Ave. ||| RATIONAL | at Brighton Beach B.M.T. Station Morning Freiheit Cmic Saturday (3) August 31 at ULMER P AR -to 25th Avenue Station 2 Soccer Games at 1.30 and 3.30 p. m. Music, Dancing, Entertainment, Sports Vegetarian RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVEl UE Bet. 12th and 13th Sts. Strictly Vegetarian Food 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. postponed postponed All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 5865 a Tel.: DRYdock 8880 FRED SPITZ, Inc. FLORIST NOW AT 31 SECOND AVENUE (Bet. Ist & 2nd Sts.) Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES _ Tickets 40 cents—at the Morning Freiheit, 30 Union Sq., New York a LA Avan HR EAA ESR PRN Flowers for All Occasions A. place with atmosphere G) or tan bArLy workur || 202B. 12th St. New York mm LAAN rs AIAN 0 ’ Sree |