The Daily Worker Newspaper, October 23, 1929, Page 2

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Page Two DAILY WORKER, NEW) YORK, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER. 23, 1929, GASTONIA CASE 12th Anniversary to Mobilize SOCIALISTS JUDGE TRIES T0 Workers for Gastonia Protest BROTHERS OF THE BRIBE VICTIM Offers 3 Shorter Terms for Evidence (Continued jrom Page One) culty in securing it, nad thus pre- vent these workers even a spite from the of rigors ‘on, where they e been for the past four months. After this , Carpenter re- turned to G to complete th white was Ella May, a will see hat it is perfectly far as constituted authority is cerned, for them t “as a patri so fries Bribery. Before imposing sentence yester- day afternoon, Judge Barnhill call- ed to the witness stand Louis Me- Laughlin and W n McGinnis, two of the defendants, and made an attempt to bribe them ise of lighter senten: f they would do stool pigeon’s work against the northern Communists. Both refused, and gave Barnhill the same account of the events surrounding the killir of Chief of Police Aderholt during his murderous raid on the Gastonia strikers, as all the other defense witnesses gave. Joseph Harrison was also called to the stand, where he corroborated their statements. Then Barnhill pronounced sentence, giving the northern Communists the heavi sentences: seventeen to twenty years. Although admitting “I am in doubt about the guilt of Hendryx,” the judge gave him five to seven years. Several witnesses had testified that Hendryx was not even on the union lot when the shooting took place. This is further proof that it is not evidence, but prejudice and class hatred of militant unionism that sent the seven to conviction. In futile appeals for lighter sen- tences, defense awyers again pointed out what everybody in the court- room knew, tha tthe whole commun- ity except the workers was violently prejudiced against the defendants, and that an impartial trial was im- possible. They pointed out that “there has not been a day since June when the newspapers have not had editorials denouncing the defendants, their union and their beliefs.” This was denied by Barnhill, Determined to Jail. “The prosecution in this case rep- resented and reflected thevdetermin- ation of the mill owners to sen these boys to jail regardless of ‘the evidence,” said Johnson Mcall, of the defense staff, and continued, “They are not guilty of one unlawful act. The charges of the proseeution are absurd. The strikers were abso- lutely peaceful on their property de- spite previous attempts to provoke violence, On June 7 they were doing nothing but defending their lives and property. This jury would have found them guilty of anything in she world that the prosecution charg- ed regardless of evidence to which the jury paid no attention whatever. The prejudice against the defend- ants was so thick you could cut it with a knife and it was not kept out of the jury box. So powerful is the influence of the newspapers that | { thought them guilty myself until { examined the evidence. The very atmosphere of Charlotte is sur- tharged with hatred and malice against these defendants. A fair trial was impossible here. Their only offense was an attempt to end the slavery in the mills.” Thaddeus Adams, for the defense, ils oappealed for ligéhter sentesces. He could still hardly believe that Barnhill would be so vindictive an instrument of the capitalist class. “The only motive of the defendants was to organize to get better wages,” he said, “they had no intention of tilling anybody. If they had been sonspiring to kill police, they had plenty of opportunity when they were attacked previously. They lidn’t know the officers were com: | the truck strike in New York, many | havin militant gestures were made by the! This officials, non eof them of practical|was attempted with the cooperation importance, because no effort was|of Tammany Hall whose police acted jmade to carry them out. Longshore- as nivestigators. Simultaneous with ing and could not have conspired to murder them. Their only motive in organizing the strike was to get bet- ter conditions and on June 7 to pro- sect themselves. m Frank Flowers, another defense’ nity League’s emphasis on rank| Charles G. Woods of the “Concilia- Mtorney, declared: “If the defend- 2nq “file committees to lead. the, tion Service” of the Department of Labor sought to smash the shoe un- | ants had been tried separately, there would have. heen insufficient evi- lence to convict a single one of them. It was only by dragging in this idea of conspiracy and appealing to pre- judice that the prosecution could ob- tain convictions. This jury would have convicted under any circum- stances, such was their prejudice. ~|ers of New York behind with a prom. Celebration Will Also Flectien The great celebration of the 12th anniversary of the Russian Revolu- tion in Madison Square Garden, Sunday, Nev. 3, will be converted into a mighty protest against the vicious class verdict in the Gastoni; case and a mobilization of the work- the cam- paign to force the release of the seven defendants, it was announced yesterday at the office of Distri Communist Party, which is arrang- ng the celebration. fighters to long terms in ail brings home to every class con- scious worker the great contrast between conditions in the Soviet Union and in. the United States, the arrangements committee of the Nov, 8 rally, points out, While the seven-hour day is, as a result of the Five-Year Plan, being introduced into all textile mills in the Soviet Union and no worker works more than eight hours a day, the mill es of the South, men, women and children, work ten, twelve and even more hours a day at starvation wages and wit h merciless speed-up sapping their lives, While the tex- tile workers in he Soviet Union are 100 per cent organized, efforts to organize the southern textile work- ers in this country resulted in the 8 CHEATED DRIVERS The senencing of these seven work- | ARE Be Mobilization for the | Campaign mobilization by the mill barons of | every reactionary force and the launching of a terror, “legal” and “illegal,” of unprecedented propor- 4 ear | |tions, culminating in the sentencing (Contintedsfrom Page One) | |of seven of the leading fighters for }a paradise before the’National Tex- GASTON JAILERS Thomasvand Party | the textile workers to long’ prison |tile Union ‘organizers’ came, the | % words of allathe réspectable hang- terms. This great conttast will be given’) men who ‘are*‘trying? by terror, additional emphasis by the fact that | ‘legal’ and-“‘illegal?.to drive the N. the Madison Square Garden meet-) T. W. U. andthe Commynist Party | ing will also be the final mabili#a- | out of the-South and*tocrush the tion rally for the New York election | revolting;workers into ‘submission. °| campaign of the arty that‘is leading “The Revy Thomas’ echo, gomes at the struggles of the southern tex- |} an appropfiate time. It is ‘an ‘elec-| ile wor the Comntunis. Part Its leadership as well in he struggles’ at any €o8t. Thomas hag sihce*the of the New Yrk workers will be paid’| beginning .of the campaign outdone y tribute when the thousnds |himself to”prove to his capitaliat | of New York workers demonstrte | masters that he would make just: as | on Nov. 3 for the Communist elec- |loyal a.seryant of capitalism ‘as| tion program, for the defénse of the | Walker for LaGuardia. Now he) Soviet Union, for the Five-Year Plan | goes a “step ‘furthér;” while’ seven) of Socialiist Construction and for the | militant workers facé ‘living death | release of the Gastonia prisoners. « |in jail, the Rev. Thomas. hastens to As Madigon Square Garden is ex- | assure his éapitalist Masters-that he pected to be overcrowded on Nov. 3,/t0o is against. these -workers;: in workers are urged to buy’ their Other words, that if he, Norman} tickets in advance. They are on sale} Thomas, were @ capitalist executive | at the District office of the Com-|in a similar. situation, he too ,cauld mun P: 26 Union’ Square, | be relied on ta do. everything in, his ar |Freiheit, 80 Union Square} Needle | Power to send these. workers. to) I jail and to defeat every effort. to organize the savagely exploited and| oppressed textile workers. into..a fighting union. Trades Wo: ndustrial’ Union, 131 West 28th St. and Workers’ ! Bookshop, 30 Union Square. [ELECTION TAG DAYS TO BE HELD IN NEW YORK ON from the ‘alien’ Communist phil- osophy is the same spirit which has | made oppression of the Negroes | into an_ institution; it is the spirit | Weinstoné« Denounces | dates wil spi * * Bronx Workers Athletle Club, Unit 4F, Section 6, t Organization open for registration ‘The unit will meet day, 6.39| of new members on an its own headquarter: Myrtle | Wednsedays from 8 ; at tic Ave.| 1347 Boston Rd., also Sundays from e ew center] noon to 4 p.m reauires the attendance of all com- Ri Se 3 rades. Yorkville Gastonia Mass Meet. tion campaign; votes must Be Sotten | & | “The spirit of the South. which) ,. Norman Thomas so eagerly. defends |.” ~ Communist Activities Brownsville sections, Wednesdays, . 14th St.; Cooperative section, Fridays, 2700 Bronx Park Hast, Boro ,Park Workers Bleetion rally Th: 43rd (St. Speaker: Jewish and nglish, Gastonia protest demonstra- Club, 8 p.m. at iS oe * Williamsburg Workers S¢hool. | | tion, | Peis! een The first session of the Williams- | Hopk'rson Mansion Rall burg Branch of the Workers Schoo) | | Blection rally at 428 Hopki will be held Wednesday, 8 p. m., at | Friday ri sht 56 Manhattan Ave. All students and * ction Rally. 8 p.m. | Instructors requested to be on time. ss * NMWU Wants Volunteers. Apply any time during the day at 104 Fifth Ave., Room 1707, * * * Willimasbur, Indoor ler’s G er and | * Central Brooklyn Election Rally. + * ille Branch, I, L. D., will stonia protest mass meeting | An election rally will be held Wri- | A Pecie et I 8 p. m, at the Tivoli whi) dod & Myrtle Ave. All comrades 1 Brooklyn are urged to spate oe atend without fail. * rx Laboratory ‘Theatre. eka i 2 ip meget and_ rehearsal | Business meeting Wednesday at| ali rseedee cre avieh ith 6.30 p. m, 4 is ¥ join, the group. that is to tour the Brighton Beach Unit. Section | } ie ere pee ones. ace Meets Wednesday, 8.36 p. m., i not later than | Brighton Beach Ave. Monday, Friday ehh ay. v at 7.80 p All interest- Unit 1, Section 4. ed in workers dramaties invited, .o* Special meeting Thursday, 8.30. p.| m., E. 103rd St. Also executive ‘Williamsbure Y.-L. D. mee game night, 7p. m. General membership ‘meetthay Weds | nesday evening at 56 Manhattan Ave Unit 7, Section 5. aadoai: ad ‘ 4 ts tonight.’ All comrades“mugt| Digcutsion on the “Laber Movement d the I. L. Dy * ® Volunteers Wanted. nit 10) +, Meets Cathy isa em at. 1179] Ushers and usherettes wanted for | Brostean We wcuiie Be reception to Soviet fliers at Palo | roadway. | Mxecutive mect-at 6 w,m,| Grounds, Rogistsr at FB U, office, Unit 1F, Section 2, Buro. PTD MIELE Aye: Foens Unit IF, Section w, f Unit meeting Monday, p. m., at All Members of Y. . Note! Eiri bere eres Police pf Brownsville have prevent- ; ie * ed us: from holdnig etory. gate nciainnl ts Adigettont meets before the Independent Laun- All comrades of Section 6 must re-|4ry. All port today at 56 Manhattan Ave, im-| Nort tod «| Prediately or at the | fter work. RE | wa * ers Local Meets. on 1. IR, T. to Rocka’ O"sharp, at 27 * must attend. ; |¢andidates at the first indoor Com- ELECTION RALLY IN BROWNSVILLE To Demonstrate for the Gaston Strikers Brownsville workers will demon- | strate their protests of the Gastonia | convictions and proclaim their’ sol- idarity with the Communist Party munist electio:. rally to be held Oct. 25, 8 p. m. at Hopkinson Mansion, 428 Hopkinson Ave. William W. Weinstone, Commun- ist cayndidate for mayor, H. M, Wicks, Communist candidate for | president of Boar dof Aldermen, and! Fred Bieden}~c:>, candidate for | president of the borough of Brook- | lyn, will tell the true facts of the | Gastonia fascists activities. Workers are expected to gather in masses at this meeting to voice their protest of defiance of their local ener-igs, capitolist police and Jewish social chauvinists, answer their at- tacks, and will call for the uncondi- tiona release of the Gastonia pris- oners, i } Form Lower Bronx LL.D. Branch Today In eonnection with the I. L. D.} drive for 50,000 new members, a} Gastonia mass protest metinge at) which a Lower Bronx branch of | the International Labor Defense will | be organized is to be held at 715 E.! A general membership meeting of i 3 | Caitiové® Lene’ Meets Cutters’ Local, Six. of” the. Needle | 448th St. tonight at 8.30, Commas A general me! rship-m Trades Workers Industrial Union will|Blumfeld will be the principa: Gutteve’ cca: f° th be held at 7.20 p.m. tomorraw at the | Prades Workers Industrial te Joint Board Building, 181 W, 28th St. be held at 7.80 p. m. tomorrow at the Joint Board, Building, 131 W. 28th st. speaker. | LOOK TOT U.U, Ls saturpay Ano sunpay Active preparations are under way Ready for Irving Plaza for the Communist Election Tag Meeting Tomorrow Days this Saturday and Sunday. Thousands of dollars must be raised of the Jim Crow, of lynching boss, | of the most vicious exploitation and | . persecution of Negro ‘workers. |Labor and Fraternal Organizations “Thomas ‘asks: ‘Must ‘the course | of industrialization of heretofore! agricultural South be attended by) *AMUSEMENTS:> Under auspices of the Trade Union on these days to pay for the special | ail the stupidity ahd all the tragedy) Nationst Miticn naw Wnetta at of9 {FULTON W. 46th st Eves. &:50/ CASINO S0th St. & Bway. Eves, $:39 Unity League “and the organization pata of the Daily Worker and the that have marked similar develop-| Broadway, room si3, 0 W. LR. FORGE M. COHAN’ "tn | ERITZE MAVICTOR *SMLLE. committee of the Chauffeurs, Ga- Other Communist press that are be-/ ments in Europe and Anierica?? The Theatrienl and Art Workers: | SCHEFF in HERBERT’S MODISTE” | : ing issued, as well as for the hun-| mill owners ‘a i The formal organization meetine a | rage Work d Gi Indus- | re too stupid “for| ioe : | Evenings and Saturday Mat. $1 to $3 rage Workers and Gasmens Indus-| dreds of thousands of leaflets to he'|Thomas. He knows how the work.(?f,the hentrical and Art Workers’ | P¥eRVanesday ‘Matinee #1 t0 $2 | trial Union, a meeting of all drivers distributed among the workers of | ers can be kept enslaved more clev-| ‘Trade. Union Units ague, will be : | and gasmen will be held tomorrow | this city. erly. And he tells how: “It is rea-| Pela Thursday, Qct. 24, 9 p. m.._ at The Talk of the. Town! F 8 p, m., at Irving Plaza Hall, 15th! Volunteer collectors are asked 'to |sonable to expect the A. F: of L,,|tion picture operators, workers "in —— Tans: |55TH STREET PLAYHOUSE St. and Irving Place. The meeting | report Saturday and Sunday at the | rather than the Communist union to| #'"s,, carnivals, parks, ete, as well IVIC REPERTORY if St | 154 w, soth St. (Bet. 6th & 7th Avs.) will take up the organization of one | following stations: 27 H. Fourth St,, | industrial union for the whole indus-/ 1179 Broadway, 143 E. 108rd St, | try. 830 Wiikins Ave., 56 Manhattan | Those’ in the oil truck drivers’ Ave., Williams.urg, 48 Bay 28th’ St, | strike, attacked by a combination of | Bath Beach, 764 40th St., Boro Park, | company violence, police brutality, 29 Chester St., Brownsville and |lying press stories, and the defeatist 2901 Mermaid Ave., Coney Island, actions of their union “leaders” at aS een many places visited by T, U. U. L, RIFDENK APP TO ie tas |pany considered ringleaders in~ the SPEAK AT RALLY \strike for the eight-hour day and — workers. distributing leaflets, ex- | pressed confidence that the meeting time and a half for overtime were blacklisted. i Tells j } ' | would be weil attcnded. The drivers of the Gulf Oil Co. are many of them |not back at work. Those thercdin- How. Capitalist Betrayed. | Parties Fight Union | Among the Standard Oil drivers | | much dissatisfaction is expressed AR Ae iS : |with the sell-ot tactics of the Team- Socialist parties, the three parties |sters’ Union officials, who refused to of the bosses, are the parties that make any attempt to spread the are aiding directly or indirectly the “The democratic, republican and | guage groups requested to be pres- be the ageney of progress in boul ? ent. South.’ The progress that Thomas means is progress--for the bosses, progress in diverting the surging , a t revolt of the textile workers inta/ oP? ?evulutionsiy. "singers Patercon | harmless (for the bosses) channels.| section, apply Mondays at 3 Gover- “The A, F. of L. union that is the| Tit. ““kosten™ Road; Downe hope of Norman THomas and the southern mill owners is the United Textile Workers, which is dominated by the new fake ‘progressive’ group} wounded: - in which socialists. play theleading| “And workers must temember role. This union has during its few |that:this A. F. of L.-which Norman months of activity in the South; Thomas looks to as the: savior of achieved the glorious record of| southern capitalism is the same A. brazen betyayals in Elizabethtown|F. of-L. which at the present mo- and Marion, paying the path for the |ment in New. York Gity is engaged SPEAK FOR TAL, Neat aA 3 Join Freiheit Gezang Farein: Workers able to sing. now have bloodbath in Marion in which six} workers were killed and many’ “It is clear that the function of} the Norman Thomases, the Mustes ‘and their ilk is to keep the working {alization program of speed-up, wage | strike, refused to acquaint the strik- ers with its progress, and took the | attitude “no one can beat the Stand {ard Oil,” whieh seemed to the men jon strike a strange way, to fight. | These men point out that the offi- ials of the Teamsters’ Union are over $100 a month, whether the rike wins or -not, and have little interest, unless the company makes it to their interest to lose the strike, Most of the men mislead by these officials cry they will not continue jin the A. F. L. Teamsters’ Union. Action of the Transportation Council of the A. F. of L. in New York City, in which Pat Ryan's In- ternational Longshoremen’s Assccia- tion officialdom is a powers in vot- ing to refuse to handle scab trucks, |is weleomed by the men as evidence that the pressure of the rank and file, who went on strike on four docks in sympathy with the oil drivers’ strike has got concessions jeven from the hard boiled gang of | labor traitors. Militant Gesture. | But they point out that during | iH en now see that the Trade Union \strike was not misplaced. The |chance of ‘assisting the food truck! ‘drivers’ strike, which is spreading, | depends on the rank and file of the longshoremen watching for and stopping the scab trucks, as the of- ficials have made no effort to iden-| (tify them. Committees must be és-| government attack on the militant shoe workers,” declared Fred Bied- ‘The only. party that is. actively fighting this attempt to victimize militant workers and to smash the | Independent Shoe Workers Union is ithe Communist Party.” Biedenkapp, who is Communist Party candidate for President of the Boro of Brooklyn, will be one of the {chief speakers at the Communist ‘election rally and Gastonia protest demonstration Friday night at 8& o'clock at Miller’s Grand Assembly, Grand St. and Havemeyer, Brooklyn, Others who will speak at this meeting will be William W. Wein- stone, Communist candidate for |mayor, and Joseph Magliacano, or- ‘ganizer of the Independent Shoe | Workers Union and Communist Can- \didate for Assembly in the Sixth | District. enkapp, organizer of the Independ- | ent Shoe Workers Union, yesterday. | leuts and long hours in preparation for its next war. That is why Nor- Foster Tells of ‘A. F; L. | Yalta #3 «man. Thomas is. so weleome in the Convention, Friday . | capitalist amp; that is why he gets as much publicity, in the bosses’ press as his two capialist rivals, | A mass meeting for “all workers will hear Charles Frank, Negro | Welker and LaGuardia, | member of the Gastonia Labor Jury,| “The workers of New York must. |and William Z. Foster, general sec-|in the coming municipal elections retary of the Trade Union Unity | give a decisive answer to the _he- League, Friday, Oct. 25, at 8 p. m., |trayal and exploitation program of at Irving Plaza Hall, 16th St, and | the socialist party and its candidate, Irving Place. | Norman. Thomas, They must: an- | Frank will tell of what he saw | ewer this scurrilous attack .on those jat the Gastonia case tria where the | who daily face the, capitalist terror |whole labor jury was Jim Crowed, |in the fierce class battles in the _ but nevertheless watched the bestial | South by voting for. the party that \antics of ‘the class court, which has | just assigned workers to 20 years in \prison for daring to defend them- | | Selves against. textile mill gunmen | disguised as polige officers, °» | Foster is fresh from @ four that | began with the Southern.” Textile Workers’ Conferencs in Charlotte | three weeks ago, and has taken him ern textile workers. It is this Party cialist’ alliances with the police in the needle trades, the Party of the class struggle—the Communist Par- ty. A vote for the Communist ean- is leading the struggles of the south-! C ves, 8:30, 50e, Mats, Wed, Sat, 2:39 $i, $1.50 £VA Le GALLIENNE, Director Today Mat—*THE Tonighi—“THE CR ‘Tom, Night—"TF A GULLY | DLE SONG” 1B SEA GULL" SHUBERT Thea. 44th St, W, of B'way. Eys. 8:30, Mats. Wednesday and Saturday 2:30 QUEENIE SMITH in the Musical Comedy Sensation THE STREET SINGER ANDRE ‘WwW TOMBES The. Theatre GUILD KARL’ ANN Guild Presents WwW, 52) 8:50 Mats. Th,&Sat. 2: ETHEL BARRYMORE THEATRE DRINKWATER’ ina Melodrama of 8 Acts 8¢ | class docile and impotent while capi-|¢7th St.. W. of Blway. Chick, 9944 |talism drives ahead vith its ration-| Eves. 8:50. Mats, Wed. & Sat. 2:30 JOHN Comedy BIRD x HAND Ss A. H. WOODS PRESENTS—— MOROSCO THEATRE 45th St., West of Broadway Evgs. 8:50, Mats, Wed. & Sat. 2:50 ELSIE FERGUSON ARLET PAGES MUSIC AND | continuous performances from 2 p, m, to midnight. Popular prices. THIRD BIG WEEK ‘The American Premiere of GERHART HAUPTMANN’S “THE WEAVERS” is Revolutionary Drama iter attack on the land- re and factory owners of ineteenth Century Germany Filmed in a manner closely resem- bling “Potemkin” jee the direction of F, ZEFNICK 424 ST, & B'WAY torn ee ee | Dynamic—Powerful Most Mysterious Figure | of Medern Times RASPUTIN PRINCE OF SINNERS |BRONX THEATRE GUILD Sidney Stavro, Dir. Intimate Playouse, 180 St,, Boston Rd, Eves, Ing. Sun, 8:45; Mats, Sat. and | Sun.' 2:45, FORD 9922 ——OPENS TONIGHT- American Premiere of Ontrovsky's Greatest Comedy “It’s a Family Affair” CONCERTS NOW CONDUCTORLESS SYMPHONY NEXT Sat. Eve, Oct. 26, at 8:45 SOLOIST: Efrem Zimbalist Tickets $1 to $2.50. NOW a Hall Box Office and at 22 ORCHESTRA | \ | that ig also leading the struggles of MOZART, Symphony D Major i BEE’ N, g the New York workers, that fights eUGGL, is, “pertain against ‘socialist’ thuggery and ‘so-| MIMS SO RORSAISORE, [ntrodvetton 4 Gammenio 3, 55th St, (Steinway Piano) W.LR.- WORKERS CHORUS ENGLISH LANGUAGE Now Being Organized Register at Workers International Relief, New Address; 949 BROADWAY Room 612, Telephone Algonquin 8048 | sae ropistra. |-M0st of the industrial cities of the ey Haat tecueta Me chopa | Atlantic Coast:: ‘Inveach center, the agreements with the unions, | NY trade union center was estab- Suive against mliitant workers lished on a, flourishing basis,- with an organization drive under way jand local conferences scheduled. He | wil reprt especially on the A. F. of |L. convention in the light of the | Trade Union Unity Convention, ‘The A. F. L. Toronto .convention.was a gathering of officialdom of the re- |this, Biedenkapp said, Commissioner didates is not only a vote for the immediate demands of the working class such as social insurance and the seven-hour day, but also for the final overthrow of capitalism and the establishment of a workers’ and farmers’ government.” Dr. M. Wolfson Sergeon Dentist 141 SECOND AVENUR, Cor. Saturday Evening, at 1330-Wilkins Elaborate Program CONCERT AND BANQUET arranged by “SECTION FIVE, COMMUNIST PARTY , October 26, 1929 Avenue, Bronx Is Being Prepared ion by sending letters to all firms having agreements -with the union, urging them to break their contracts because the union is a fighting or- ganization with the Communists playing the leading role. “The republican U, 8S. Department of Labor,” Biedenkapp continued, Sth St, actionary unions, intent on saving Phone, Orchard 2333, * lits own fat jobs. The Cleveland {T: U. U. L. convention was a vast ‘gathering of workers, in hasic in- dustries, and it formed a new mili- tant trade under center, with a fight- ing program, for the man on the job. The meeting Friday is galled by the Phone; LEHIGH 6382 TICKETS 50 CENTS : ARL BRODSKY tablished to pick out the scab ears. The motion in the transportation jcouncil was’ merely to refuse those which were accompanied by police, |and Whalen: having already with- drawn the uniformed cops, and left | the job to plainclothes men and com- | pany guerillas. There is absolutely no evidence igainst Beal, Miller or Harrison, ret because they are Communists, they are convictec.” Needle’ Workers Halt Meet; ‘Rally: to Gaston Members of the Mass Propaganda Sommittee of the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union who were io have met at Jonit Board offices Me at 181 W. 28th St. tomorrow night, nave called off their meting in order | Working Women Give Aid to Gaston Protest A statement last night issued by io attend with thousands the Union | the Central Executive Committee of Square demonstration against the|the United @ouncil of Working tlass verdict imprisoning the Gas-| Women, called upon its members, all ionia seven, other working women and workers’ | wives, to show their firm solidarity Pie With the militant working class, and »|come to the gigantic protest Gas- veg tonia demonstration Oct. 24, at 5 p. ~ “sm 1m. on Union Square, et Tomorrow Night “and the democratic New York City| Metropolitan Area | Inion | government collaborated in thesé at-! Unity League. tacks on militant shoe workers. And ;- ‘ they are going t ocollaborate in the future whether the strikebreaker, Walker, is mayor or the fake pro- 1 can't incovered the ex~ in modern soctety toriaus “tone ago 2 or ssive and tin god of the fascists, da ia Guardia, wih the election, | Sftwawten, ‘an valnsten, of ee eae “With regard to the socialist | «mh the econo if ‘party, it is a full-fledged party of | {he eigenen. LP) 4 | the capitalist class, beneath the label | “tiouns 1) that the ¢: and you find a ecaitehanie bin \ eee is bong ap ma cere of the blackest hue, e, socialist | that the class, at) je. lends, party is much’ closer to Tatimany | smelly to the dictate ‘at | Hall and its police with all the com- | ts, but th |ruption that they stand for, than) it is to the working class. “Only the Communist Party fight: \eonsistently for the workipg cl ‘and the members of the Interna’ al’ Shoe Workers Union: have learned o—rrenirnienere coememmmerrairelemrtigenten == mthat is 10 te 8. nd 400" ser Cee the capitalistsan “ocialist’ International Barber Shop M. W. SALA, Pro} ‘elephone; Murray Hil, 6530 t 42nd Street, New York ( 2016 Second Avenue, York (bet. hs eats Rts _. Private Beauty i by hi 4}} Cooperators! Patronize BUTCHERS’ UNION CHEMIST Local 174, A.M.0. @ BW. ‘i 657 Allerton Avenue Ottice Estabrook 8216 Bronx, N. ¥. ‘Unity Co-operators Patronise. SAM LESSER Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailor ba 1818+ 7th Ave. New York i HT went to “nity Gocopera ive Mine _ Av ra it ye this more than once, In the present city elections only the Communist Party apnears with a fighting pro- agents. To vote Communist is the elementary duty of every worker to himself and to his class", ISHED eet h St, Hent ata 104 DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Rcom 808—Phone: Algonquin 8188 Not connected with any other office Dr. ABRAHAM MAREOFF SURG! 20) GE EEE ee Cor. Seeond Ave. New York Offlee haurae Hons regi Ber 9.20 Taek. Thurs. ‘te @ mM. to 18} Ato &o. m. Sunday, m, to) p.m, Plenee. telephone tor appointment, Tehen jone: Lenten 6038 26-28 UNION SQUARE (1 fight up) 2700 BRONX P.’"K EAST Comrade Frances Pilat | MIDWIFE 351 E. 7/th St, New York, N. Y. ‘Yel. Rhinelander 3916 cn ry, H Pleasant to Dine at Our Pines. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Brons en NE RE ae i} Always Fin@ it Messinger’s Vegetarian and Dairy Restaurant 1768 Sonthern Blvd., T onx, N, Yo: Right off 114th St, Subway Station | RATIONAL Vegetarian RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVE!.UE Bet. 12th and ‘13th sta.” Strictly Vegetarian’ Food « ** a au Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx HEALTH FOOD | | Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNI versity 6865 Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant - SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet. 302 E,12th St, New York Advertise your Union Mestinga here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept, 26-28 Union 8q., New York Hotel and Restaurant We Branch of the Amalge Food Workers - 138_W, Bet _9t,, Phone Chivie =] j Tar BUSINESS MEETING eld on the first Monday of ik th at 8 D thay L and Fig! UJ Office Open from 9 ony teen _ FURNISHED ROOMS Now is your opportunity to get a room in the magnificent Workers Hotel 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 (corner Allerton Ave.) Hot Boome large ae ire security necessary. Call at our office for further informa‘

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