The Daily Worker Newspaper, October 15, 1929, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Page Two DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1929 THOMAS SHOWN THE WORKING AS GANDIDATE OF WOMEN WORKERS BUSINESS MEN iGNORED BY AFL, | mothers, All women employed for wages shall be given confinement leave on full pay for eight weeks before the eight weeks after confinement. Nursing mothers shall be allowed WOM AN| CITY GOV'T LETS Nineteenth Century Morals LOOSE TERROR ON | “MADE TRUCK STRIKERS «.22 cists Civic Repertory Presents a French P| MOISELLE BOURRAT,”|scheming and intriguing old wench. No: Workers on “Non- Partisan Committee” sa from Page One) k the steady march of techni- ployment,” and ask for a for unemployment insur- Weinstone characterized this as ‘the kind of vague, sinister twaddle peddled by the socialists in an effort to di the workers that the capi- government can support ers and that it is an im- nstrument. On the con- y government an f the workers and the latter € nothing from it except reaking and police brutality.” ‘ommunist Demands. these vague demands which are calculated to into accepting t of rationalization, the st Party offers the follow- e demands on unemploy- , 5-day week; social insurance of loss of working - through sickness, injury, in- old age, motherhood, or- as well as unemployment. the insurance shall be by the state and em- shall be administered by § ives of unions and work- shop committees. veinstone said that the endorse- ist candidates by s some time ago line with the general ac- nce of the socialist party as an is workers e Communist candidates would ly scorn an endorse- uch an organization as jzens’ Union, composed as it h men as Charles Evans , Frank Waterman, open shop fountain pen manufacturer, John W. candidate for president on ic ticket in 1924 and J. P. Morgan; George W. nex of J. P. of the Citi- ollowing gen- . director of a large drug and n; vice president, , banker; and secre~ 1 A, Lewisohn, banker and cialist Party ts indicate defi |for harmful occupations. |fore holidays. ‘statement issued last night by Get Only Platitudes from Convention The A, F. of L., in its convention ‘at Toonto, rCanada, has so far had |series) for thte children of women nothing to say about women work- ers except the usual platitudes. The bourgeois organization, the woman’s Trade Union League, nearly all of the members of which are bourgeois professional women, even go so far as to fight against special protective legislation for women, as being “dis- criminatory.” Quite different are the demands issued by the Red International of Labor Unions in its last convention. The entire list of demands relative to workin gwomen is quoted. The R. I. L. U, shall fight for the |following program of demands for women workers: (1) Wages. Equal pay for equal work. General raising of women | workers’ s in correspondence with the»price in the cost of living and productivity of labor. A mini- mum wagey shall be established for women workers of the backward branches of industry, agriculture and home workers or house workers. (2) Working Hours. _Introdue- tion of a 7-hour day and 6-hour day A 4-hour day on Saturdays and the days be- Introduction of an annual monthly holiday (a month's vacation) on full pay. (3) Labor Protection. Prohibition of night work, overtime, and work jin particularly difficalt and harmful occupations, and underground work for wome nand persons under 18. Until thi sbe carried into effect, night work and overtime shall be prohibited for expectant and nursing at Eva LeGallienne’s Ci paid intervals of not less than half | lof the same period a tory Theatre on 14th St. is probably an hour for feeding the child every | the best acted play in town at this three and a half hours during the/1,500 Massed to Aid the working day. Organization of spe- % cial rooms in factories where nurs- Bosses ing mothers may feed their children, 5 SAEs Organization of free creches (nur- (Continued from Page One) |the back while attempting to make for cover and is reported to be ina workers at the cost of the employers and under the management of the workers and their organizations, * | critical condition, | Instalment in factories of special} Immediately one of the patrolmen| dressing rooms, wash rooms, shower | “escorting” the truck opened fire on| baths, a sufficient number of seats, |the strikers, and within 15 mimutes ete. for the women workers and|40 more Tammany police had ar- women office employees. rived on the scene. Meanwhile a] The whole body of legislation rel-|RUMber of truckmen, attracted by ative to labor protection and all the firing, had appeared to protect forms of social insurance shall cover theit 30 fellow workers from the, not only the industrial women work- |*tT0r. The autos manned by thugs | ;ers but all women working for drove directly Strewg: caren which strikers were riding, climbing onto wages. Ls |the pavements and endangering the (4) All unemployed shall be en- tives of all workers on the street, titled to unemployment benefit Crashing head-on into a striker’s |sedan, one of the gangster cars was’ |crumpled into a mass of twisted tin, and the gorillas temporarily gave| way. But reinforced by the police and additional squads of thugs they “heroically” cleared the street of| strikers, thrashing all on whom they | could lay their hands. Club TUUL Organizer. In one attack a striker was so vi- |ciously beaten by a police sergeant, ers to have equal representation No. 1130, that his face was a bloody with male workers on all State,/ pulp. George E. Powers and Henry municipal and other organs looking | Sazar of the Trade Union Unity after the unemployed. It shall be /League, 26-28 Union Square, were forbidden to dismiss expecting and helping to organize a picket line nursing mothers. |when Powers was attacked by po- The Trade Union Unity League is |lice. The T.U.U.L. organizers stood the American section of the R. I, L. | their ground, urging the strikers to| U. All working women should see |insist upon their*right to picket and jtha ttheir union or a_progessive | to establish picket lines with strike ‘group in the union, a group of work- | Signs, and in the end the police were | ers in the shop, or that individual |forced to withdraw. | | workers join the T. U. U. L. e At the same time that the picket-| ling demonstration was being at- which can secure the maintenance of their families and dpendants dur- ing the whole period of uemnploy- ment. | Women workers shall be entitled to unemployment benefit to the | same amount as that of male work- ers. Relief workemust include such work as may be performed by {women without danger to health. | Right of unemployed women work- I. L. D. Answers Lies (Continued rom: Page One) “easy tools of the sveculation of the Communist Party,” ete. etc. The New York District of the In- ternational Labor Defense, in Rose Baron, secret points out that with the publication of this article Hresca réveals himself completely as an open enemy of the working class, doing the work of the cavi- t hangmen. The statement de- clare: “Carlo Tresca’s article strikes a - Vote on Window Strike {defense of the Gastonia prisoners, | tacked, the T.U.U.L, otganizets say of Accorsi and fo the other victims that scores of gorillas were mobiliz- of the clases war in whose interests |!N& before the Pratt Plant under the the I. L. D. has always and will al-|!¢adership of Merrick Nittley, re- wap tigk ” 7 | publican leader of the 14th Assem- : bly District. It has already been established that Tammany Hall’s 14th District headquarters is a mob- (Continued from Page One) ers at Manhattan Lyceum, 56 E. Fourth St., at 7.30 p. m, The meeting was called by the Window Cleaners’ Protective Union, {15 E. Third St. ; The strike call of the militant |°f the district, | union is expected to bring 2,000 win- | MEL Ve Hae gangs who are being used by the} silization paint for the gunmen of the; \“Little Augie,” Yale and De Vito|copies of a leaflet formulating the calling | our dues along with them.” Rockefeller and other oil interests |upon them not to be terrorized into’ |to smash the struggle. Also, gun-|submission by the police and goril-/ about the necessity of organizing ;men have been seen riding in cars /las, urging that rank and file com-| the Negro workers to fight together \belonging to the Tammany leaders|mittees take full charge of the/ for better conditions, showing again alist class is party as a e growing mili- ing class and that familiar note, the note of all Red- Bait of all agents of the capital- ist class whatever masks they hap- pen to wear. At the very moment when the International Labor De- fensé-is fighting the capitalist ter- lror, ‘legal’ nad ‘illegal’ in North Carolina where the mill owners are trying to send seven of the best fighters of the working class to long terms in jail, at the very moment |when Salvatore Accorsi has been Thomes has been one of a al party of loyal “opposition” talist class, distinguished 1 the La Guardia campaign only > the more studied demagogy of ion of the working class. “The scene in St. John’s Lutheran Church, Brooklyn, on Sunday, when mas met La Guardia in debate, each chided the other because cach failed to endorse the other, is a pietw vuc illustration that we have he t bourgeoisie, conducting a campaign | the workers. within the limits of supporting and| tyesca writes: “They (the 1. L. maintaining the capitalist system.” (1) gre prospering on the hunger ce es T of someone. They are getting fat ‘f ) lon the imprisonment of real recolu- OPEN AIR MEETS tionists. They became opulent on the electroduction of Sacco and Van- [trial in Mellon’s courts on a framed ‘charge of murder, Carlo Tresca workers. This is a stab in the back lof the blackest treachery by a man t 12 noon. Pollock. 7 at 12 noon, V. Smith, | 2ettl. atur Ave. and Gunhill Road at} If there are workers who still 8 p. m. Bakers Local 164, L. Baum./haye any doubts concerning the real 62nd St. and Amsterdam Ave. at/character of Tresca, Ict them pon- 8 p.m. G. Ackerman, S. Brody, S./der these sentences and compare Bloomfield. {them with the attacks on the I. L. Bleeker and McDougall (Report to|D, made by any capitalist orga 27 BE. 4th St.). G. Di Bartolo, C.|including the lynch-sheet, the Gas Lippa, E. Borg, J. Codkind. |tonia Gazette. They are alll of one Paper Box Makers, Grand Man- | piece. sion, 73 Ludlow St. at 8 p. m. on| “The New York District of the Gastonia. (Indoor.) F. Biedenkapp.|International Labor Defense calls Myrtle and Skillman St. at 8 ag all workers to answer ‘these m., Brooklyn. J. Magliacano, Bel- lying attacks of Tresca by support- castro, Donaldson, Sultan. ing more generously than ever the BOYS SELL DALY IN CHARLOTTE COURT; WORKERS CALL FOR IT Gastonia Workers Spread Meaning of Their) Newspaper Thru South (Continued from Page One) mill workers of the South receive the Daily Worker every day. Working class organizations must adopt a mill town or village, and see thai the Daily is sent there regularly. 26 Union Square, Now York, N. Y. 1 want the enclosed contribution to go toward rushing the Daily Worker to my fellow workers in the South. Name .... bon 9.09 tpeeenrneeenneeene ces! SUMO ceeseeeeeeeee eres eet eeeee (Name of Organization) wish to adopt a southern mill town or village, and see to it that the | workers there are supplied with..........ccpies of the Daily Worker every day for.... weeks, @ inclose $.......... send us the cove of the mill villege or city assigned to us, for We wish to communicate with the! workers there. dow cleaners out because the Man- hattan Window Cleaning Employers’ Protective Association refuses to ‘grant union demands. | These include the 40-hour, five- ‘wage from $45 to $49 a week; em- \ployers’ provision of proper safety devices; adequate accident compen- |sation insurance, and equal division of work in slack periods. The last general strike of window lasted nearly three months. Tres Eight hundred men who ceased | demonstrated in the shooting fo|of many previous struggles, see that) |stabs in the back the organization | work last Tuesday will be included | puffy, \that is defending these militant in Wednesday’s strike. They stopped 6 work for all employers carrying Empire State Mutual Insurance ployers’ freud. | A parade from Manhattan Ly€éeum to the City Hall, where a demonstra- tion will be held, will mark the first day of the strike. Labor and Fraternal Organizations Women's Masa Meeting, A mass demonstration of protest against the Gastonia frame-up will be held in conjunction with an elec- | tion rally of women workers at Irv- ing Plaza Mall, 15th St. and Irving Pl, on Oct 17, at 8 p. m. | . - * | Paper Mass Meet, The Paper Plate and Bag Makers | Unton, T.ocal 107, is calling a mass | Meeting Tuesday, Oct. 15, 8 P.M, at Grand Mansion, 78 Ludlow 8t. New | | er: in defense of the Gastonia strik- All welcome, Workers Laboratory Theatre, The Gastonia strike play “White Trash” is now in rehi 1. Bookings [may be made with De Santos, } 1271 55th ‘St. Brookt: A_second lcast is benig Organised. (on Wednesday due to the playwright- ing class at the Workers School. Ap- Mlications for membership will be re- ceived at the, Schnol. New York Drug Clerks Dance A concert and dance will be given by the New York Drug Clerks Union [on Saturday, Oct. my at | the Park Palace, 110th St. (opposite Central’ Park). + 8 * Spanish Night. Under the auspices of Unit 2, Sec- tion 4, a Spanish Night entertain- ment will be given this Saturday, | Oct, 19, 8.20 p.m, at 26 W, 115th Rt | Music, refréshments, dancing. Ad- | mission, 50 cents. ee * Theatrical and Art Workers. An oritanization and business mect- ing of the Theatrical and Art Work- ors Will be held Thursday, Oct. 24, |p. m., ab 181 W, Bist St. Communist Activities Unit 12, Sectio Educational meeting | 15, m, Comrade Jack Hardy 6.30 p. 3 will lead a discussion on the election campaign, Wiss Shear Unit 2F, Section 6. Meets Thesday, a0 PL M.. at 4 Ten Kyek St., Brooklyn, Roll call. cai laa Unit 10F, Section 1. ducrtional meeting today, 7 P. M. |xecutive meets 6:30, Roll ‘call, . Ntgeht Workers Unit, Section 1. Meets Wednesday, 8p. m. sherp, nt 3 Union Sa, 6th floor, A District orevantative will lead discussion on [she election campaign. coe +e DY Seetion 1, Tiogular .weekly meeting Wednes- R, ba ‘wesday. Oct “All workers interested are invited to attend our meetings, Monday and Friday at & p. m.. Sunday at 7.30 p.m. at 80 |B. 11th St, room 337, No rehearsal lto each scab-driven truck, in addi-| |tion to armbed scab “helpers,” two |ing in gangsters to prevent these) policemen in armored mortorcycles | |furnished with machine gups and) ‘truck in a police automobile. More | than 1,500 men, Whalen admits, are now on strike-breaking duty. | The Trade Union Untiy League, | lin a statement issued yesterday, | | scores the menace caused to workers extradited to Pennsylvania to stand | cleaners occurred two years ago. It | by the Tammany police protection | lof the strike-breaking thugs, as More than 5,000 filling station {employees in Brooklyn, recently or- of the entire worknig class, an act!compensatio n insurance with the | ganized into a union affiliated with \the Truckmen’s Union, are prepar- lyesterday. If they walk out, prac- \tieally “every filling station lto the waterfront, despite the des- | to prevent a wide-spread walk-out. |The longshoremen who handle the gasoline barges are ready to join the strike in support of the oil truckmen, it became known yester- |day. Since the beginning of the struggle, the T. U. U. L. has been urging the strikers to bring out the rail, waterfront, filling station and oi! depot workers in a united strug- le. i The new fighting trades union cen- ter has called a mass meeting of strikers today at noon at the corner \of N. 12th and Berry Sts. The Lea- gue is urging upon the strikers the necessiy of forming rank and file strike committees in each struck yard and station, and thus prepare to frustrate the sell-out maneuvers of the A. F. L. officials. Another step toward the impend- ing betrayal was taken by Michael Cashal, vice-president of the Inter- national Brotherhood of Teamsters and Chauffeurs yesterday, when he publicly “appealed” to Mayor Wal- ker to step into the struggle and \“protect the city against the in- creasing violence’—either by break- day, 7.30 p.m. sharp, at headquarters, 27 E, 4th St, p vf z Brighton Unit, Section 7 in} | Brooklyn will be closed down. | | The struggle threatens to spread | perate efforts of A. F. L, officia’s| moment, if acting is gauged by the effectiveness | Forsytes whom Galsworthy pillo vith which the perfor- If one wants an enjoyable evening’s| of the Victorian Age The play is reminiscent of Gal 's tribulations the English trays a French family “For Any Kind of Insurance” (CARL BRODSKY Telephone: Murray #1) 7 East 42nd Street, New York cesar ea eARRRAUC TST STEIN LAND OF SOVIETS: IN US ON MOSCOW May Fly Atlantic: Is mers seem to “live the parts” they |entertainment and at the same time; Greeted By Workers is French .comedy reveals .a cross section of the upper middle Century. Madame. Bourrat, the penu- cious, grasping shrewish wife of a forlorn husband of the “substantial class” of society of that day, dis- covers that her daughter, a pathetic result of a puritanical upbringing, is about to give birth toa child. The father is the gardner. desires to understand the ideas that ‘dominated a large section of the nabobs of thirty years ago, Made- | Tuffy, 18, a bystander, was shot in |class at the close of the Nineteenth | moiselle Bourrat will fill the blil. | “CANDLE LIGHT,” A “COMEDY,” AT EMPIRE “Candle Light,” presented by Gil- In spite of all her trickery to con-|the leading lady in the play. ceal the facts from her relatives} ‘actress in comedy but is more suited and friends, a music teacher dis- covers the secret and, through a gentleman of the cloth, blackmails the old dame into consenting to her daughter’s marriage with him. The musician is wigling to accept the Gertrude Lawrence is a competent to the field of musical comedy. The story is about one of those so-called “democratic” princes, Prince Rudolph of Haseltorf, and his valet Joseph. In the true manner of somewhat damaged girl and assures | stage “democratic” princes he is in- natural child.” The old dame con- soles herself by concocting a story really a with w l|her neighbors and relatives, thus saving the face of the family. Josephine Hutchirson, as the daug-|the valet don’t know that. ter, portrays the simpleton with con- sumate acting, without descending to case with other performers in simi- lar parts. ‘the mother that he, himself, is a|timate with the valet. Through a wrong phone connec- tion the valet flirts with a “lady,” |to the effect that the musician is|and invites her to visit the apart-| bastard son of Napoleon III/ ment while the prince is away. She ch she properly impresses | accepts, and the valet impersonates;cow on Aug. 23, flying across Si- |the prince. The “lady” is a parlor maid, altho The prince returns, impersonates the valet and so on through a lot more |the burlesque, as is so often the|of such claptrap. Altogether a poor play, dignified beyond its worth by fine perfor- Alma Kruger, as the mother gives | mances by Leslie Howard and Regi- an excellent performance of the|nald Owen. ing the strike or dispatching more police into the strike zone, Sell-Out General Strike. The general trucking strike de- manded by representatives of the 25,000 organized truckmen at a meet- ing last Friday has been definitely blocked by A. F. L. officials. Mis- leaders of Local 553 yesterday noti- | fied the executives of the other truckmen’s locals to withhold action for the present and called off the meeting set for today, at which the | general strike was to have been called, The T.U.U.L. is today distributing | demands of the strikers, struggle. “The republican and democratic | The Standard Oil bosses are now Politicians are helping to mislead the | of the strikers. assigning three carloads of gorillas| workers to scab against you,” the| leaflet says. “They are also bring- workers from joining you. You have seen from experience that these day week; increase -in minimum ‘two plainclothes men trailing the | Workers are in sympathy with your | strike and are ready to join in your struggle, as they did Monday morn- Negro workers demonstrated their solidarity by walking out at Kent Ave. and N. 10th St. “From the statement of your of- ficials, we, who have the experience they are preparing to sell out your | demands. You must insist that you will not go back to work without an 8-hour day, without an increase in wages, without recognition of your e thé third party of the who poses as a “friend,"a leader fo Company, rendered insolvent by em-| ing to strike, it was learned late | union. The Trade Union Unity League calls upon you to Make it a 100 per cent strike! Fight against police brutality! Fight against the gangsters! Fight for the 8-hour day! Fight for the recognition of the union and the increase of wages! Fight for the solidarity of all workers! Fight for rank and file control to vietory! Join the Trade Union Unity League! Met. Area Trade Union Unity League, 26-28 Union Sq. Scores of filling stations in the city and Long Island weré reported either completely out of fuel or run- ning dangerously short yesterday. In many of them, only oné pump in four was operating. Youth in N. Y. Meet (Continued from Page One) to express greetings from his fel- low-prisoners. The youth met at Irving Plaza Hall, 16th St. and Irv- ing Place, Sunday. It was attended by 70 delegates who represented 38 organizations. The conference began to act yes- terday on its plans fox the defense and relief of the strikers. NEEDLE WORKERS MEET. Needle trades workers whose or- ganizations are affiliated with the Trade Union Unity League will meet Membership 8.30 sharp, at Aye. meeting, Wednesday, 227 Brighton Beach tonight at Irving Plaza Hall, 16th St, and Irving Pl. pooneereemmarrraeen magazine we are issueing in 115 FIFTH AVENUE Does the Coming of the Soviet Plane “LAND OF THE SOVIETS” Mean Anything to You? You are asked to send or bring to the office of the F, S, U. | all moneys collected for the Truck and Tractor Campaign and so for buttons and tickets for the reception of the fliers. i NOW IS THE TIME to BUY banners welcoming the fliers to New York; ORDER your tickets for the reception; INTE- REST individuals and organizations to advertise in the Rates: $100 per full page; $10 is the smallest amount accepted from any organization.—Personal greetings $1. | FRIENDS OF THE SOVIET UNION Room 612 ALGonquin 2745 Of Course It Does! honor of the Soviet aviators. NEW YORK CITY CHARLOTTE MEET. OUTLINES FIGHT (Continued jrom Page One) | were formerly active in the U. T. W. speak in detail of how they were betrayed by that aggregation. “When the U. T. W. organizers came in town in 1921,” they say, “they collected dues from us and called a strike. But as soon as there ing when over a hundred white and| was trouble, they beat it, taking Many of the delegates talked that most of the racial prejudice is on the part of the bourgeoisie, not Workers Delegation. Russell Knight, one of the orig- inal 16 defendants charged with murder in the Gastonia case, and released when the prosecution made its strategical retreat in the begin- ning of the present trial, was elect- ed by the conference as a delegate to the Twelfth Anniversary of the Bolshevik Revolution. The celebra- tion is held Nov. 7 in Moscow, U. S. S. R. He is being sent in response to an invitation from the Friends of the Soviet Union. Knight will| join other members of the workers delegation in New York City on Oct. 18. | Greetings to the conference were read from workers’ organizations all over the entire world, branches of the International Labor Defense, National Miners Union, Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union, Defense committees in vari- ous cities, the Automobile Aircraft and Vehicle Workers Union, the Marine Workers League, and one from Ben Wells, the organizer who (Continued from Page One) Navigator Boris V. Sterlingov said. ||—=-=. |The all-metal Soviet-built ship kept | jonly 15 feet above the waves for most of the distance because of the fog and winds, the maximum eleva- ,tion being 1,000 feet. | |vietim of arrested mentality as a/bert Miler at the Empire, is a very) ‘The plane followed the irregular | {slight comedy from the German of | shoreline all the way, thereby flying | Sigfried Geyer, adapted by P. G. | Wodehouse. Gertrude Lawrence is ¢.9,. Waterfall to Seattle. almost twice the air line distance | | Work will begin immediately on [the removal of the pontoons which | were affixed to the craft for the| | Trans-Pacific crossing and landing wheels will be substituted. Inspec tion of the motors will determine | whether the stop here will be for} |longer than three days before the| |hop to San Francisco is made, after | which the twelfth annivefsary of | the Proletarian Revolution, Plane Weatherworthy. | The Land of the Soviets left Mos-| beria and thence to Alaska by way | of the Aleutian Islands. Many times the plane was threatened with | |destruction, battling gales, snow,| fog and proved itself to be the equal, if not the super \the capitalist powers. | Last week it was forced down by} |engine trouble at Craig, Alaska. A new engine, forwarded from Seattle, was installed and the flight resumed | yesterday. The North Pacific route is one of the most dangerous air lines in the ‘and atmospheric data to be used in jfuture Trans-Pacific flights. |F. S. U. has announced that upon |the successful completion of the present journey, the U. 8S, S. R. may inaugurate regular air service to the | United States. (Continued from Page One) given deckhands ox single-crew! |boats. The men will not have Sun-| jday as their exclusive day off nor, |wil their allotment for lunch be| in nearly all the way, but) r, of any plane built by) |world, having been attempted but, twice before, with disastrous results. | Much of the time of the fliers was | | occupied with gathering geographic | The) ‘Sell Out Towboatmen| DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Reom 803—Phone: Algonquin 8183 Not connected with any other office Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST 248 EAST 115th STREET m. to to 6 P, Tues, Thurs., 9.30 a. m. to 12; 4 to 8 p.m, Sunday, 10 a. m. to 1 p, m. Please telephone tor appointment. Telephone: Lehigh 6022 Patronize No-Tip Barber Shops 26-28 UNION SQUARE (i flight up) 2700 BRONX P’ K EAST (corner Allerton Ave.) Uxity Co-operators Patronize SAM LESSER Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailor 1818 + 7th Ave. New York Between 110th and 11ith Sts, Next to Unity Co-operative House Cooperators! Patronize DER OY CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. Y. Comrade Frances Pilat MIDWIFE 351 E. 7/th St, New York, N. Y. Tel. Rhinelander 3916 Dai VEGETARIAN Leto RESTAURANT omrades Will Always Find It Pleasant to Dine at Our Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx (near 174th St, Station PHONE:— INTERVALE i 9149. MEET YOUR FRIENDS at Messinger’s Vegetarian including | raised from 80 cent to $1.26 as they) demanded. | Charging the ballot box was stuf- \fed, fully. half of the men refused to vote at Sunday’s meeting. Many} jopenly expressed their disgust at Maher’s tactics and agreed the Ma- rine Workers League was complete- ly justified in predicting a sellout. “The worst feature of this is the two year agreement,” the Marnie Workers League, 28 South St., said | yesterday. ‘The sell-out gives of- ficial seal of the union to the ten hour day.” and Dairy Restaurant 1763 Southern Blvd. >nx, N. Y. Right off 174th St. Subway Station RATIONAL | Vegetarian ~ RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVEl1. UE Bet. 12th and 13th Sts. Strictly Vegetarian Food was beaten up and threatened with lynching, by mill bosses’ agent re- | cently# || AU Comrades Meet at | BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx Many Greetings. | All these telegrams expressed de- termination to fight on for the Te-| |lease-of the seven defendants in the Gastonia case, for solidarity with| the southern textile workers and all| southern labor in its fight against the fascist terrorism, and long hours, low wages, impossible living | \eonditions in mill villages, stretch-| ‘out, ete. HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT SHUBERT Theas 44th St, W. of ‘way. Eve. 8:30, Mats. Wednesday and Saturday 2:30 QUEENIE SMITH in the Musical Comedy Sensation THE STREET SINGER ANDREW TOMBES 45th, W. of B'way. Evs. MASQUE . Mats. Wed.&S: 30 THE ARISTOCRAT OF THRILLERS! ROPE’S EN English Cant Includes Ernest Milton ETHEL BARRYMORE THEATRE ‘7th &t. W. of B'wi Chick, 9944 Eves. 8:50. Mats, Wed. & Sat, 2:30 seems BIRD & HAND DRINKWATER’S FULTON ws 46th St. Lited 0 EORGE M. COHAN” “1 MBLING The Talk of the Town! Cie REPERTORY 14th st a, sat 2:35 Evgs, 8:30, Mats. Wed, Sat, 2: “ee S500, $1. 61.50 EVA Le GALLIENNE, Director Tonight—"The Cherry Orchard” ‘om, Mat—Mile, Bour: Tom. Night—“The Sea William J, Harris, Jr, presents CRIMINAL CODE by Martin Flavin with ARTHUR BYRON NATIONAL, ,., St. W. of 7th Av. Evs, 8:50. Mats, Wed. & Sat. at MOMART THEATRE THE Falton St. & Rockwell Pl. Brooklyn NEWEST SOVKINO FILM “SEEDS OF FREEDOM” and NINA TARASOVA in Russian songs Coniavour 11 A. M. to 11 P.M. POPULAR PRICES 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 5865 Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES 55TH STREET PLAYHOUSE 154 W. Sdth St. (Bet. 6th & 7th Avs.) continuous performances from 2 p. m. to midnight. Popular prices. The American Premiere of GERHART HAUPTMANN’S “THE WEAVERS” World-Famous Revolutionary Drama which is a bitter attack on the land- A. place with atmospher where all radicals rect New York 302 E. 12th St. Advertise your Union Meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. ed gentry and factory owners of 26-28 Ineteenth Century Germany Ustos Bas, New York City, Filmed in a manner closely resem- bling “Potemkin’ Under the direction of F, ZEFNICK | Hote) and Restaurant Workers Branch of the Amalgamated Food Workers 133 W, Bist St, #1 Circle 7336 BUSINESS MEETING ela on the first Monday of the th at s The Theatre Guild Presents KARL? ANNA 8:50 GUILD W. 82. Bvs. Mats, Th.€Sat. 2 Enemy! 7—One ie Common rom @ to 6 p.m. Halts fore | FURNISHED ROOMS Now is your opportunity to get a room in the magnificent Workers Hotel Unity Cooperative House 1800 SEVENTH AVENUE OPPOSITE CENTRAL PARK Cor. 110th Street Tel. Monument 0111 Due to the fact that a number of tenante 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. A Sensational Melodrama OTLAND YARD ~ MOROSCO THEATRE 45th St. West of Broadway Evgs, 5:50. Mats, Wed. & Sat. 2:50 ELSIE FERGUSON Mleqrame SCARLET PAGES oF Saas” ELTINGE THEATRE West 42d Street Eves. oun Mats, Wed, & Th reat London Sue Murder | CA M EQ)OW Wisconsin 424 ST. & BYWAY | Se, ie eh MADONNA, ‘i;, SLEEPING CARS Adopted from Sensational Novel By MAURICE DEKOBRA ON THE A Comedy Drama in 3 Acts —— F 128 Ae EH eR OMS sare and all improvements; near eub- way. Tel. Lehigh 1890, pi Mee amrct abil sels een aa OT EY STOCKHOLM (By Mail).—The average wage for male workers in Sweden hsa dropped to $729 a year, it is reported. Paani

Other pages from this issue: