The Daily Worker Newspaper, September 16, 1929, Page 2

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Page ‘Two " DAILY WORKER, NEW WORKERS SCHOOL THE WORKING WOMAN TERM WILL OPEN ON SEPTEMBER 30 in oes — LABOR DEFENSE'COMMUNISTS IN es URGES AID FOR FIGHT AGAINST GASTONWORKERS, GENERAL TERROR, |Campaign Comm. Calls | For All to Rally (Continued from Page One) |party in the U. S. which really de- \fends the interests of the working | class gwill encounter new obstacles YORK, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1929: * Cooperators! Patronize SEROY CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. Y. “Commodore Marries” ISTED as a comedy-drama by Kate Parsons, some much modi- fied versions of Smollet’s novel ap- pears as a three-act play now at! the Plymouth. It is well done, the characters of Commodore Trunnion | and his crew come through, in a| somewhat mo@gernized form, very well, The plot is a genial story of a re- tired naval officer in the sailing r ship days, who is so encrusted by } BPs J the prestige, power and dignity of This is the first appearance of the {out with prickly heat—blisters that Woman’s Section of the Daily|are painful and give out a yellow , Which will appear every | matter. These girls that slave for Monday from now’on. The Women’s | the company cannot keep a job like Committee urges all working class | that and expect to keep their health women to write stories of their ex-|and strength. periences for this section, It will depend on the women whether or not the Section is a success. By | was taken advantage of by the Calls Working Clsss to For Any Kind of Insurance” (CARL BRODSKY Telephone: Murray Hilt 5550 7 East 42nd Street, New York aRNReRcoS i RRR Working Women. As a beginner and a young girl Arrange . Courses Many Subjects The Autumn Term of the Work- ers School will begin Monday, Sept 30th. The curriculum sending in your letters in. great|boss, This I always findd to be| Nai 7 Recall Ella Wiggins out from the small section we now} boss also took advantage of the| — are until a whole page will be re- | prob- | was the fastest worker to “show her | the band of murderers that attacked lems. speed”— in order to impress me the strikers’ truck in open daylight numbers, we will be able to spread|true for me wherever I go. The! e other girls too—he told the girl who| (Continued from Page Onc) quired to take care of our It is well known that women face and make me try to do likewise. |0n last Saturday afternoon, sending for the coming Patronize year includes various courses in the many problems peculiar to them-|Thus between the girls we have|an assassin’s bullet into the frail|i" the present election campaign, | Bue enka ee tOae ue ae Ti B Sh Principles of Marxism, Leninism, |selves, ‘They are exploited in the |competition, ia body of Mrs. Ella May Wiggins, 35-/8%d we must be nN AS) est ie spars gates Mtietiee | O-1Ip barper Ops Working C! istory, Problems of Tag 4 | om: Re ni tne | vear- 31] wy, _ ~ of five (come them. The immediate task} all manner of nautical appliances, he Communist Labor Movement, me Way men workers are, but| This batik work of smearing paint | Year-old mill worker, mother of Hvel ron the next weekeslte ouake| Adna\Bten:last seen is "The Vel-|ineluding a pole to. climb instead of 26-28 UNION SQUARE even more intensely, receiving less |dyes on silk will in time poison the | children. pay for the same work, in many girls, None of the girls know what| These “Black Hundreds” that have cases. In others, women have en- the stuff is that they spill all over|grown out of Manville-Jenckes | tirely displaced men, because they themselves. Neither do I. But it|*Committee of 100” were mobilized can be forced to accept less pay. does contain strong acids. lon Saturday near the Loray Mill They are often subjected to bully-| We are speeded up towards the|where the workers went on strike ing and insults from foremen and jend of the day. The boss says we last April 1st. They operated in the Public Speaking, English, and other ubjects as well as special courses designed for new members of the Young Communist veague, for veague Functionari for Latin- Ameircan Workers, for Neg: (1 flight up) 2700 BRONX P/"“K EAST (corner Allerton Ave.) sure that the Communist Party |low Ticket,” plays a principal role ticket will be placed on the ballot./in a new comedy, “When Moscow| There must be no let-up in the sig-| Laughs,” opening at the Film Guild} nature drive. The Campaign Com-| Cinema, today, |mittee calls upon the members of | . jthe C. P. and all militant workers | a staircase. He has plenty of trou- ble, because a certain Mr. Hatch- ways (Charles D. Brown) inveigles \him into one scrape after another, finally getting him out of all but! the most serious, a marriage con-j} Tchekhov's “The ‘Sea Comrade. > wo! ‘ Se ie Veen eomorbere, and foreladies. must complete a certain number or | light of day with Judge N. A. Town, sa tre a sag anal Gull” to Open Civie ib Pde heated acet Frances Pilat rthece abs lho Wiecial: Gouibe tor hate prbiene "Scheel eae ee OY A WORKING cir. |Gove nor O. Max Gandisen the mag [Het Your assignment from the com- R t : | _ She nearly sinks the ship, by pre-| aga ar s at purses f is. 8 5 | vernor x 3 i : ” a . 3 " young workers, such as the History |forces young children to endanger e+ 8 ae Garret: the mill mittee in charge. epertory Season tending to be about to present the |] 851 B. 7/th St, New York, N. ¥. and Problems cf the Revolutionary Youth Movement and Organizational Problems of the Communist Youth Movement, Trade Union Courses. The School is offering the follow- ng courses to active trade union workers, designed to meet the urg- ent need’ of left wing and progr sive unions for trained functionari and active leaders. History of American Labor Move- ment will be gnven by Vern Smith on Friday evenings, from 7 to 8.20 P. M. An extremely int ng ymposium course on American rade Union Problems will be in charge of Robert Dunn every Mon- day evening from 7 to 8.30 P. M., and will be addressed by left wing leaders of the most important unions. Wm. Z. Foster will give a course n the Theory and Practice of Trade Unionism on Friday evenings, from 7.00 to 8.20 PM. Another sympo- sium on Lessons on New York Strike Struggles, will be given every Fri-| day, from 8.30 to 9.50 P. M Other Courses. There is a course in Fundamentals ef Communism every evening, and many other interesting courses on Marxian Theory, Economics, Im- perialism, Labor Journalism, Public Speaking, etc. There will also be seven graded courses in English and a class in Esperanto. | A catalog giving a full list of courses, fees, ete, can be secured from the Workers’ School, 26 Union Square. CLEANERS, DYERS JO MEET TONIGHT A meeting of cleaning and dye workers called by the Cleaners and Dyers Section, Trade Union Unity League, will be held tonight at the Workers Center, 26-28 Union Sq. In a_ statement issued by the|our tired bodies across the floor. | Cleaners and Dyers Section it is pointed out that “only by the solida- rity of all the workers in the shop lies our power to organize all the workers of our industry into shop committees.” The demands of the workers, which will be taken up at the meet- ing include:*an eight-hour, five-day week; equal pay for equal work; no discharge; sharing of the work in the shop; sanitary conditions and sick and unemployment insurance paid by the bosses and managed by the workers, also two weeks vaca- tion with. pay. Conference Held By Shop Delegates of Amalgamated Union More than 200 delegates attended the Shop Delegate Conference of the “Amalgamated Section, Trade Union Unity League, held Saturday afternoon at Stuyvesant Casino, 2nd Ave. and 9th St. . Bhe conference went on record to ‘yalld the shop delegate system in Amalgamated Clothing Workers’ Union shops. They will fight for a 40-hour five-day week; reinstate- ment of all expelled tailors; rank and file control of the labor bureau; one union in the needle industry; abolition of the right to hire and fire unemployment insurance to be immediately to all unem- ployed ‘and= partially unemployed workers. The conference also adopted a resolution of solidarity .|Standard products. their lives crossing busy streets four times a day. The two session | system, overcrowding and bullying teachers make life miserable for the children. Rents are now a more and more pressing problem. When the new tariff bill is passed, food prices will increase rapidly in many Wnemployment and low wages of the men are also factors in the life of the working class housewife. The woman who is both worker and housewife feels the burden both ways, There are many other things which women can write about to this section of the Daily Worker. Through this section you will ex- change experiences with women throughout the country. You will bring your women’s problems to the attention of the entire class-con- {scious section of the working class. Send your letters to Woman’s Section Editor, Daily Worker. ee a Workers’ School Courses. together three important courses into a group especially for working class women. The courses include |the history of women’s position in | society, women in present day so- ciety, and a training course in prob- lems of organizing women, besides a course in the Fundamentals of | cum equally among a group of work- | Communism. Those who take all three of these courses will be given reduced rates. Organizations send- ing members on scholarships will be The Communist Nucleus in Loft’s Candy Factory issued the follow- jing leaflet, recently: | “The the Workers of the Loft Candy Factory: “Women Workers! “Why do we workers in the Loft Factory work under such miserable conditions? “Why do we get only $12.00 to $14.00 a week for hard unhealthy |work? In the summer we are fired and school girls take our places. These girls are speeded up by a few of the old girls who are paid $18.00 or $20.00 a week. Their | higher wages are used as a false bait for the new girls. Sometimes these new girls are raised, some-| times they are put on piece work and make less than $12.00, often having to wait for work. | “Why d8 we work under such un- sanitary conditions? At times there is not hot water or soap to remove the sticky paste from our hands. | There is no medical aid when we The Workers’ School has brought |faint in the overheated rooms, and| nothing is done to protect us from drafts in the ice-box department, so naturally we are always having | colds. | “Why do we have to work in |teams? Team work is group piece work. The boss divides a lump Jers. The quickest worker speeds up | the others to her pace. | “Some of us know the reason for all these miserable conditions. It | Siven special advantages, The course js because we have no union in our is designed as a training for leader- | shop. No union “irough which we ship in the various phases of the|can fight and protect ourselves. Be- working class woman’s movement,| because we are not organized the |whether in the unions or in other! poss makes us work for starvation sections. | wages, speeds us up so that we are old before our time, ruins our health The Morris Manufacturing Co, is because of lack of proper sanitary just anoth - hell-hole, draining the | precautions. ; blood from young working girls.| “The Communist Party is the only We have to stand all day and paint political party that fights for the * * * | scarfs stretched out on frames, Gas |burners dry the paint and make the place a furnace. All day, with- out a minute’s rest, the girls toil over these hot frames—our feet get Nike pieces of lead that serve to drag The girls barely have strength to eat at the end of the day. All I could stand was one week of it and I got $6 for one week! The boss promised $12. He thought he could keep me and fire a woman that he paid $20. The girls don’t |tell a newcomer what wage they get |factory are young girls and women.|™ust be deyeloped a thousandfold. because of jealously created by ig- norance. So « beginner never knows mow much she should get. When I got through with that place every night I lay down on the bed and couldn’t move. I gave up the job because my body broke Expect Indictments in Chicago Case This Wk. |diately and round up the 26 de-| (Continued from Page One) bail of the defendants while they were in Judge Gaentzel’s court, claiming that they should appear before him at the identical moment on the June 15 charges. The de- \fendants were not present, there- fore, when Assistant State’s Attor- |ney Hutchins delivered his long \harangue before Judge Lyle against Communism and Communists, the | with the Gastonia workers, | The conference was addressed by William Z. Foster, general secre- tary, Trade Union Unity League; Ben Gold, secretary-treasurer, Nee- dle Trades. Workers’ Industrial |Union and Sam Wiseman. Many rank and file shop delegates parti- \cipated in the discussion. Communist Activities Latin-American Electoral Ball, The Spanish Bureau is arranging gn election campaign rally and ball for Saturday, Sept. 28, 8:30 p. m., at the Harlem’ Casino, ‘116th St, ‘and Lenox Ave, Latin-American dances and songs, Negro jazz band. Lead- ing Communist Party candidates will speak... Admission 75 cents, oe! Ue 10th Anniversary Celebration. The 10th Anniversary of the Com- inunist Party of the 8s i velebrated Friday, Sept. at Miller's Assembly, r ind Grand St. Brookiyn. Prominent speakers: entertainment; admission free, Auspices of Section 6, C. P., Jand_ the Young Communist of Williamsburg. | 4 . Workers Dramatic Groups. The district agitprop department calls all members of the Party and | the League who belong to workers’ |dramatic groups to a meeting in the | Workers School on Tuesday, Sept. ie at 8 p.m, League * 8 Unit 2F, Section 6. | Meets Monday, Sept. 16, 6:30 p. m., at 46 Ten Eyck’ St., Brooklyn. ae ie) Unit 1F, Section 3, Meets Monday, Sept. 16, m., at 1179 Broadway to disoui thesis of the Tenth Plenum. P. the Fraternal Organizations Voluateer Plumber, mber wanted for volunteer ~crk. See Comrade Pasternack at US District’ Office, 26 Union Square. rier tee U.CW.W. Membership Meet. <The United Council of Working Women will hold a general memher- ship meeting on the Palestine up- rising this Thursday, Sept. 19, 8 m., at the Workers Center, 26 Union Square. W, Weinstone will speak in English: good iddish speakers; ques- tions and discussion to follow, Open to U.C.W.W. members only. All are Fequested to be present, ‘ p. |p. m. |betterment of conditions of the | working class, and of its most ex- | ploited section, the working women. The Communist Party fights for the |following immediate demands for | women workers: “Equal pay for equal work. “The eight-hour day, 5-day week. |The fifteen-minute rest periods daily. | “Four weeks paid annual vacation. | “Organization of the unor; into powerful, industrial unions.” Almost all of the workers in this | They received the leaflet very en- | thusiastically. It was much talked ‘about whenever a group got to- gether for lunch or while going home. The girls in the factory are being awakened to their conditions jand its only remedy—organization. {hysterical Lyle immediately ordered) jall court bailiffs to go out imme- fendants. Police Jail 26 in Eis- man Demonstration (Continued from Page One) Framed Up Workers in Gastonia,” and “Join the Young Pioneers.” Pollice Break Meeting. They then marched to Lexington Ave., where they started to hold an open air meeting. When several speakers had told of the arrest and conviction of Eisman, a squad of police swooped into the crowd, and after beating up some of the young workers, placed 26 under arrest. They were 14 League members and 12 Pioneers. Gil Green, district organizer of the League, was speaking when the meeting was attacked by the police. He was dragged from the platform and arrested. Others arrested in- cluded Helen Oken, Miriam Nestor, Martha Stone, Ben’ Harper, Rips Forman and Phil Farber. Dismiss Charges, When brought before Magistrate McKiniry in the W. 54th St. Night Court, the charge against the 14 League members were dismissed, Jacques Buitenkant, of the Interna- tional Labor Defense appeared as attorney. The trial of the 12 Pioneers will be held this morning in the Society for the Prevention of Cruel.’ to Children. Most of the children are being held in the society’s head- quarters until today, Open Air Meetings 114th St. and Lenox Ave. at 8 G. Lewis, S. Spiro, 136th St. and St. Ann’s Ave. at 8 p.m, A. Garcia, S. Sklar. Grand St, Extension at 8 p. m. S. Nesing nized | owner, present in Gastonia with 25 heavily arr:cd deputy sheriffs re-| jeruited from ‘he American Legion, | | which is no different than the “Com-| |mittee of 100.” Gardner and Town-| |Send can make a roll of their so-| jcalled “best citizens” of Gastonia jand they will have the list of those |who joined in the assassination on an open highway of Ella May Wig-| gins, the murder bullet piercing her | |right breast, her only crime being | her desire to participate in a work- | ers’ mass meeting at South Gas-j |tonia to help build the power of| |Jabor in the industry that had| jrobbed her o° youth, of the best] years of her life, that now took her life that it might plunder and rob her children =nd generations yet unborn, | Workers! The International La-| bor Defense is fighting for all la-| lor. It supports the persecuted tex.| tile strikers of the South in their| jefforts to organize, defending them| | against | tyranny. | | Saturday's campaign of murder was the fourth attack of the fascist | “Black Hundreds” launched against the Gastonia textile strikers. First the masked “Committee of 100” in | the supply station of the Workers | International Relief, scattering the food intended for the strikers upon| the roadside. Next the police chief, | | Aderholt, on the night of June 7th, | led the “Committee of 100” in its attack on the strikers’ tent colony, this atte~ being completely frust- rated, however, by the heroic resist- ance of the strikers. Next came last Monday night’s murderous at- tack on the three strike organizers, Wells, Saylor and Lell, when the would-be lynchers even sought the| lives of the lawyers for the impris- | oned 16 strikers and organizers fac- | ing death in the electric chair. The | outbreak of violence last Saturday, | like all the rest, if not actually led | by the police themselves, was al-| lowed full freedom to satiate its apetite for workers’ blood. | Workers! The International Labor Defense calls on you to rally in great-| er numbers than ever to the assist- ance of Southern textile labor. Sup-| |port their struggle to defend them- selves, to organize, to strike, to im- Prove their standard of living, the |lowest in the whole nation. This support steadily growing, } |The standard of the International | | Labor Defense, planted in the South, | |must stand against every attack of | jthe textile mill barons and all their | hirelings. It can only. do. this! | through receiving the unswerving |Support of labor the nation over. | Workers! Fight on in the spirit jof Ella May Wiggins, Though dead, she lives in the growing ranks of j¢lass conscious labor. Labor will never forget. Workers! Help build broad de- fense conferences in every city in |the land undef the leadership of the International Labor Defense, which shall include unorganized workers from shop, mill, mine and railroad; | representatives from workers’ fra- ternal organizations; rank and file workers from the unions affiliated with the American Federation of| Labor and independent unions. } the mill barons and their mobs to. intimidate the whole population of Gaston and Mecklenberg Counties. The workers in the South are with the strikers against the bosses. Flood the Mecklenberg County Jail, Charlotte, North Carolina, with pro- test resolutions and messages- of greeting to the 13 strikers and or-/| ganizers impr‘soned there, Workers! Organize protest demon- strations everywhere! Take up this question everywhere that workers gather! Labor in the textile in-| dustry is under attack today. The | workers in steel, coal, oil, metal or railroad industries will soon be in gigantic strike struggles, to organ- ize, to fight wage cuts, to resist a lowering of their standard of liv- ing. Workers! Join the International Labor Defense! Affiliate your or- ganization. Workers! Help make the Two- Day Drive for Gastonia Defense and Reliet, September 21 and 22, the greatest effort of its kind in all American labor history. Workers! Help to organize the Southern textile industry! Adequate defense for every wroker engaged in this struggle. Remember Ella May Wiggins, the martyr of the whole American working class! In her name, and in name of all la- bor’s martyrs, the working class jelection jties. mob violenee and judicial |° Tailor Shop Delegates Endorse. ‘ A shop delegate conference of the| The cast for Anton Tchekhov's men’s clothing shops, held last Sat-| “The Sea Gull,” the fourth of Tche- urday, unanimously went on tecord | khov's plays to enter the schedule as endorsing the Communist Party of the Civic Repertory Theatre, was platform and candidates, ENS diene cae and formulated measures to carry bi connie Re a hia di a on a campaign in the shops. The|@llienne. The rehearsals have been conference was called by the T. U,|in progress for over a fortnight in E. L. group of the Amalgamated | preparation of the opening of the Clothing Workers for the purpote| theatre's fourth’ season in 14th St. of mobilizing the workers against | i the speed-up, piece work, and in- |" Monday evening, September 16. creasing exploitation which the; In the leading roles of the play bosses are putting over with the aid|that made Tchekhov and the Mos- of the Hillman machine. Comrade|cow Art Theatre famous, Merle Rebecea Grecht, Election Campaign | Maddern, latest recruit to the com- Manager, addressed the conference|pany of the Civic Repertory Thea- on the issues of the present election |tre, will have the role of Irina Ar- and the policies of the various par-|kadina; Robert Ross, Treplieff; Paul |Leyssac, Sorin; Josephine Hutchin- son, Nina Zarietchnaya; Egon Bre- PATRIOTIC “ORGANIZERS.” cher, Shamraieff; Leona Roberts, INDIANAPOLIS, Sept. 15.—In|Paulina; Eva Le Gallienne, Masha; line with the patriotic proceedings |J8¢0 Ben Ami, Trigorin. Other f the reactionary-controlled Bar-|Players are Walter Beck, Harold bers’ Union convention here today,| Moulton, Herbert Shapiro, David William F, Kenny, New York mil- | Kerman, and Betty Shelley. lionaire, was lauded for “his Amer-| The other plays scheduled for the icanism in requesting a United| week include: “Cradle Song,” “The States barber to go to London to|Master Builder; Molier’s “The cut his hair.” Would-Be Gentleman.” a nightcof ai ‘1 .|_ “American barbers appreciate|_ Monday evening, September 23, Soren ie eae CARELae) &&\|your Americanism,” the officialdom |Eva Le Gallienne will appear in i aie ‘ cabled. “The Cherry Orchard,” which will |be given its first performance of the season with Merle Maddern in the role of Mme. Ranevsky, and ‘Jacob Ben Ami as Yepikhodov. Build Up the United Front of the Working Class From the Bot- tom Up—at the Enterprises! Commodore with an heir, which turns out to be a Pekinese pup, and by stealing his money and threat- ening to have him locked up as in- sane, | Hatchways is far from insane, | but has a good job, he is enjoying life until Mrs. Commodore Trunnion comes on the scene, and he approves of the Commodore’s fantasy, “all the thrills of a shipwreck, and right here safe on land all the time.” A complete defense of dementia prac- cox, and undoubtedly striking a sympathetic chord ii: many a middle class and professional heart, dis- |traught with a world running the} way it ought not to run. } The audience seemed to be there mostly to laugh at the salty* dialog replete with double meanings which the post offfice would never pass if printed, Walter Huston does the Commo- | kle; the rest of the cast is good, |too.—V. S. | Labor | Notes FORD BEGINS LAY-OFF. DETROIT, Mich. — Unemployed workers of Detroit who all summer have been going on the promise that “things will boom after Labor Day,” are bitterly wondering about winter, in view of the rumors ‘that dore; Eda Heinemann is Miss Pie- | *AMUSEMENTS-~ Now Playing! LIVING RUSSIA Workers! Defeat the attempts of 4 A colossal cross-section of the every-day life in the Land of the Soviets graphically shown through a new and original ‘technique. —and on the same program— The First Soviet Comedy WHEN MOSCOW LAUGHS | Hilarious — Clever Genuine Humor which set all Europe laughing! FILM GUILD CINEMA 52 W. & Street (te: X.5} SPRing 5095-5050 : Continuots Daily Noon to Midnight Special Forenoon Prices—Weekdays 12 to 2—35 Cents Saturday and Sunday 12 to 2—50 Cents Cc AM EO 21d Big Week AMKINO Presents 42nd St. and Broadway Newest Russian Triumph LEONIDOFF Jn a dual role, in the newest Soviet Russian extraordinary film. Based on actual historical occurrence in Jewish Ghettoes of Old Russia. _eeas oe Freedom Produced in U.S.8.R. by "BELGOSKINO A Remarkable Double Feature Russian Program A0950K] WOIG 399351G — Eo1Z0mY BY Burmoys 29319 Star of “Czar Ivan the Terrible” “THE ACTING 18 EXTRA ATTRACTION! STUNNING SEE AND HEAR revealing, telling per- formances by Leonidoft, star of ‘Czar Ivan the Terribl in a dual role.”——Evening Sun, in a group of Russian songs FULTON Mate, Weds & See, 2300 ‘ovincetown Playhouse its GARRICK 7. 65 W. 35th. Evs. GAMBLING weaeee The Talk of the Town! nougees Openii mn 1939-80 TUESDAY EVEN SEPT. 17 FIESTA” »3iis= MATINEES THURS. & SAT, 2:30 A “ AIVIC REPEDTADY Tn or |Special Rates to Labor Groups. IVIC REPER’ lath St Eves. 8:90 aoe nse sat, 230 / INTIMATE. 18? Sf Boston Ba 50c, $1, $1.50 PLAYHOUSE sub, —" Eston EVA Le GALLIENNE, Director tpn, Wha babi dg 9 tap OPENING 4th SEASON TONIGHT Maney ptasre, Dirge ” Tonight—“THE SEA GULL” Sintec Remerroy— TEBE .ORADDE SONG | ToRD. 9902 ETHEL BARRYMORE THEATRE| Set _S!43._Mat 2:45. Bway Cant 4 My 47th St. W. of B'way. Chick, 9944] The working cannat will triumph. Eves. §'50, Mats. Sat. & Wed: 2:30]tay jaeie of th CT a te ‘ JOHN — Comed 1 machinery, M for International Labor Defense, er BIRD HAND purpone.. ve Commune (Paris :, opis ENGDAHL, Secretary. | NewaTER's led nr Mn = cardi Ford has begun another lay-off. Several thousand workers \River Rouge plant have been laid off and more are to go within the next few weeks. * * * “ANTI-LABOR JUDGE GETS A WHACK. KENOSHA, Wis.—Judge E. B. |Belden, the anti-labor jurist, re- ceived a jolt when the special law under which counties of the Kenosha class can ingrease the salaries of circuit judges over the fraximum of $6,500 was repealed. Under this law, passed in 1926 for Belden’s special benefit, much scandat has been unearthed in re- gard to the judge's lobbying for extra salary allowances before the jcounty boards of Racine, Wallworth and Kenosha counties. As a result |he was able to boost his salary to $13,000 a year, until another law cut it to $10,500. came the highest paid circuit judge in Wisconsin. Dr. M. Wolfson Surgeon Dentint 141 SECOND AVENUE, Cor, 9th St. Phone, Orchard 2333. In case of trouble with your teeth come to see your friend, who long experience, and can you of careful treatmen 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 HELP THE W. I. R. IN ITS STRIKE RELIEF ACTIVITIES! Send Vv ‘Your Cleaning, Pressing, Dyeing and Repairing to the W.LR. STORE 418 Brook Ave., Bronx | : (Near 144th Street) Tel.; Mott Haven 5654. Goods Called for & Delivered By Patronizing the W. I. R. Store you will enable us to clean and repair the clothing we send to striking and destitute workers. "Not Charity—But Solidarity!” Hote) and Restaurant Workers Branch of the Amalgamated Food Workers 198 W. Stet a Phone Ctrete 7330 || 74° BUSINESS MEETING Ueld on the tiret Mo: ( month in the; | | At that, he be-|"~ Tel. Rhinelander 3916 DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Room 803—-Phone: Algonquin 8183 Not connected with any other office Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST 249 MAST 115th STREET Cor. Second Ave. New York Office hours: Mon,, Wed., Sat., 9.30 a. m. to 12; 2 to 6 P. M. Tues, Thurs., 9,30 a, m. to 12; 4 to 8 p,m. Sunday, 10 a. m. to 1 p. m. Please telephone for appointment. Telephone: Lehigh 6022 MELROSE — 8, VEGETARIAN Dairy nestaunanr omrades Will Alwnys Find It Pleasant to Dine at Our Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx 174th St, Station) INTERVALE 9149. MEET YOUR FRIENDS at Messinger’s Vegetarian and Dairy Restaurant 1763 Southern Blvd., "ox, N.Y. Right off 174th St. Subway Station RATIONAL # Vegetarian © RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVEI1.UE Bet. 12th and 1ath Sts. Strictly Vegetariun Food HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 5865 Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY; ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 302 E.12th St. New York All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx Advertise your Union Meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City 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 AMALGAMATED FOOD WORKERS in'the month at 980i mon’ ° hied A i | Bronx, Ne Xe Tel.; DRY¥dock 8880 FRED SPITZ, Inc. FLORIST NOW AT 31 SECOND AVENUE (Bet. 1st & 2nd Ste.) Flowers for All Occasions 15% REDUCTION TO READERS OF THE DAILY WORKER FURNISHED ROOMS Now is your opportunity to get a room in the magnificent Workers Hotel ty 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. iy

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