Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
ee _ Page Two Le re DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, MAY 2, 1930 r N TAMU, LEADING $00 WORKERS IN GEORGIA STRIKE Fight Unbearable | Stretchout System While 900 workers in the Anchor Duck Mill at Rome, Ga., are pre- paring t r strike May Day against arable stretchout system, for a $20 minimum wage ond othe the Workers’ In- ternat ] Relief is organizing sup- port fo s newest revolt of the southern t le slaves Of tke 900 workers in the Anchor | 60 per cent are women} Duck Mil | ren who are f to wo! The recer lish stretchout system, for to do the work or nmediate cause of t v is under =» National Tex- | s the Union. Already about] 30 workers have been fired for union ng hig | Duck Mill, which] uck, is one of nine} b Philadelphia, while n Georgia and Alal ! are| Profits of ma. the West Point Manufacturing Com-| Gaenh aute GE . for the year ended Oct were $1,093,846 after all AKRON WORKERS . FIGHT THE POLICE AKRON, Ohio, — i.—Clashes | occurred between the workers in| the demonstration, organized by the Communist Party, who charged the r to capitalist press wires lice attempted to dispers rade by swinging nightstich workers fought back valiantly. Mo ris Secaunn was arrested and is charged with “inciting riot.” | and the poli according The po-| the pa- ‘The | which Fascists Insult Aged Fighter. RAYMOND CALLS FROM HIS CELL fascist A. F. of L, leaders as were} Mlected Hon. Member not helping Matthew Woll at the| : aot 1 Ietcist meeting in New Yok. wi.| at Marine Meet | liam Green and Ed Nockells accom- es panied Secretary of Labor Davis in| A At Hyattsville, Pennsylvania, May Day meant the one hundredth | birthday for “Mother Jones,” fa- mous old militant agitator, whose century mark of life, unfortunately, was profaned by attendance of such letter calling for continued jvisiting the aged fighter, whose | | struggle against capitalist oppres- | done on the request of Hoover, who confusion on the difference between sion and greeting the May Day de- these fascist “labor” leaders and/monstrations, comes from Harold revolutionary trade unionists is | Raymond, member of the committee taken advantage of by Green andjeclected from 110,000 vo in Unen | company. “Mother” urged working and demonstrating workers in U ion | women to fight and attacked the | | Square, March 6. Raymond is a capitalists who “have made them | |young seaman elected as honorary believe this wouldn’t be lady-like.| member of the convention commit- But, hell,” said Mother Jones, “who ice of the Marine Workers Conven: | wants to be a lady, anyhow!” The tion while still serving the three government who fights agai year sentence which the capitalist | thing she fought for even in- | courts of New York gave him, along | sulted her by sending the United with William Z. Foster, Robert} | States Marine Band to play here. Minor, ard Israel Amter, other) riembers of the same March 6 dele- gation. 15 AN PARADE IN Raymond calls from his prison | ell to the workers to “help defeat | this brutal capitalistic justice by | building and supporting the Inter-| §/national Labor Defense.” “The I, L. D.,” says Raymond, (By Special Wire) “must be prepared for great battle PHILADELPHIA, Pa., May 1—)/0f tomorrow. The I. L. D. was on n thousand workers assembled the job in the past, she is on the job now and it is up to us to see at City Hall Plaza at the call of the Communist Party, despite the fact that she will be on the job in the future.” | that the capitalist press tried to) over up the calling of the demon-| ration by not printing one word regarding it today. All shops in 2,000 Ma archers Mostly, } Forced, and Czarists |_ ~ PHILADELPHIA, PA the Needle Trades Workers Hindustrial Union have members| as well as several locals of and paperhangers and car- A march was organized to! I Tadapandehiss Square, where another mecting was held. In the morning two demonstra- |tions were held on the waterfront, | and participated in by 2500 sea- See men and longshoremen. The fakers (Continued from Page One) | in the International Longshore-! ,, : teks ‘ A bos hell- jmen’s Association tried to pick a fight against the bosses to & hel hole penal island. | The gist of all the speeches of | the exploiters and their thugs who spoke from the War Veterans’ plat- form, to the depleted meeting, was an attack against the Communist | |Party, and a fear at its tremendous | and growing influence. Many of! the speakers called for immediate fight, but they were quickly gotten rid of. Four hundred seamen marched 24 blocks to City Hall Plaza. The police did not inter- fere with the demonstration. Over | |50 arrests took place in the morn: ling for shop gate meetings and leaf let distribution, Twenty-five Young | |will be able finally to refuse many lthe big bosses in tax returns, | constantly fights against any relief | jular mixup began May Day at the | |to release them at the order of fault of $1,500 bail, Wy SET UP BURO TO! ‘THWART WAR VETS, To Reject Me Men's Claims. WASHINGTON, May 1—In or-| ‘der to be able to reject claims of world war veterans more efficiently the house voted yesterday to pass | a bill to consolidate all bureaus and} agencies administering relief to war veterans into an organization to be) known as the Administration of Vet- | erans’ Affairs. This central bureau jof the soldiers’ claims. This was $190,000,000 to hand over ta} but | finds § for war veterans. HIER OF PHILA. |the Young Worker. | Whitman, local attorney for the In- at Hands of Police WINSTON-SALEM, S. C., 1.—Paul Beverhoudt, organizer for the American Negro Labor Congress is missing after having been arrested by Winston-Salem police yesterday He was arrested while distributing When E. M. ternational Labor Defense spoke to COPS ARRESTED PHILA | DELPHIA, May 1.—A reg- | University of Pennsylvania here, with 300 students and no less a person than the chief of police, Schofield, all landing in jail. It istarted at midnight, when the stu- dents rioted and broke windows and nussed up the town until Schofield had 800 arrested. Then he refused Magistrate O’Malley and his cops threw O’Malley out of the police | station. So O’Malley retaliated by having the chief of police arrested and held, at latest reports, in de- for contempt of court. HUNDREDS IN IN MAY DAY |: MEET IN POUGHKEEPSIE, POUGHKEEPSIE, N. ¥., May 1.] Hundreds of workers parceieated| in a May Day demonstration here |today, under the leadership of the |Communist Party and the Trade |Union Unity League. The demon- stration was held in New Market St. at 12, noon. The chairman of the meeting was Milton Weich, or- ganizer of the Trade Union Unity League. Defatzio and Rosen of the} {Communist Party, New York Dis- | trict, spoke. Thirteen applications | were handed in for membership of official remarked that they had “got- | ten another red.” When Whitman} later phoned to find out the specific charge, he was told that they had no such prisoner. to deny having Beverhoudt today. Meanwhile, Beverhoudt is missing. nowhere to be found. Only the police know his real whereabouts. This outrage comes on top of a séries of arrests and intimidations of workers in an effort to stall off organization work and demonstra-| tions. Only four days ago the Trade | Union Unity League and National Textile Workers Union was raided. The mimeograph machine and 20,000 \leaflets were stolen. This raid was perpetrated at night, after the work- jers had left the office. The District I. L. D. is carrying on an investigation of Beverhoudt’s disappearance and holds the Win- stom-Salem police directly respon- sible, JERSEY WORKERS. RAISE RED FLAG | Newark and Elizabeth| Scene of Battle NEWARK, N. J., May 1.=About 3,000 workers demonstrated here | May Day at Military Park at 1 p. m.. cheering numerous speakers. At about 8 p. m. the workers began a FEARLYNCHING OF ‘NEGRO ORGANIZER Beverhoudt Disappears | May } some court official yesterday, tie} They continued} Negro workers have come to the I.| L.D. office and reported that he 1s} IN NORTH MUTINY. Anent India, London dispatches |state that the MacDonald “labor” |Gandhi’s fake “fight” to follow the lead of the revolutionary prole- tariat, are urging the authorities in India to arrest Gandhi, thus aiding | {hi pacifist prestige. The social- | fascis' t “left” of the fascist imper- ialist “labor” party, led by James | Maxton, is “protesting” such action. Meanwhile the Bombay Stock Ex- change gave another big drop on both government and industrial | shares, reflecting “alarming rumors from North India,” where reports are that battalions of native |rifles refused to fire on the masses Jat Peshawur, near Khyber Pass, - 7 oe In New York on May Day 500} j gathered at the British consul gen- | Jeral’s office, demonstrating for In- dian independence. Police charged | into the demonstration and arrested two men, names yet unknown, Cn | | | | LONDON.—Indian workers in London participated in the Commu- nist May Day demonstrations, 1,000 IN TRENTON MARCH, BATTLE | (By Special Wire) TRENTON, N. J., May 1—Over a thousand workers took part in the May Day demonstration and clash that took place at Monument Park A large number of Negro workers | participated. Herbert Newton and two other workers were arrested | iat cope ey, evening in connection ! with May Day preparations. The | ‘trial will take place tomorrow. WORKERS BEAT FASCISTS (ON LONDON MAY DAY | LONDON, May. DeActonding to} capitalist press dispatches, the May | |Day* demonstration here was held| in Hyde Park. About fifteen f; jcists heckled the Communist speak jers and four of them were beaten | by the workers, while the others fled, | Police did not dare interfere. |INDIAN SOLDIERY [ | Pioneers, who were marching from 3,000 IN MEET AT legislation to drive the Communist |Party underground, They called| for stronger fascist organization | the Communist Party. A thousand copies of the Daily Worker were sold. march along Bloomfield Ave. After} The May Day parade which en-/ two blocks police charged in force,|tered Hyde Park was a mile long, seizing banners and clubbing the} according to a United Press report. » made by government officials. their headquarters to City Hall, lwere put in a patrol wagon but (By Special Wire) rosea later. Three indoor meet- INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., May 1— Three thousand workers, almost | half of them Negroes, demonstrated on the plaza of the state capitol to- day and marched through the streets shouting slogans and demands of the Communist Party. Several hun- dted raised their hands on the call of Joe Dallet to join the Commu- nist Party. A committee elected at the demonstration secured the use of City Auditorium for an indoor meeting. Tremendous enthusiasm greeted the speakers. The workers declared they would rather die fight- ing than starve. Many cops were ings are being held tonight, and an | 28ainst the vanguard of the work- fede sed ies is expected. jing clana. | | Celebrate Child Slavery. Hoover’s mockery of “Child Health Day” was one of the excuses for the meetings. With 3,000,000 | child laborers sweating out their EXPOSE AFL BOSS U. S. DENIES AMTORG “PROPAGANDA” YARNS Washington state department of- ificials regretfully announced May UNITY IN § 0 UJ T H | Hoover and his cohorts, the fascists | Day that it has no evidence “linking workers, re-formed in tw groups. again charged. Broad Street was packed with sands more participating. Finally the police were defeated of the workers in a fight durin: down and a man beaten by the po- But the dispersed workers | The police | demonstrators, thou- | in attempts to seize the red banner} which one girl worker was knocked | The marchers packed around the speakers and adopted resolutions of | working-class solidarity with the Soviet Union and the revolutionary | |masses of India, The meeting jended at 6 p. m, 4 ) “AM n in Sovkino PI ted DAY “POTEMKIN" 9 S. M. EISENSTEIN LATEST SOVIET NEWS REEL American Premiere—Starting Today THEATRE, 42nd St. and B’way ’ CAMEO USEMENTS- —the most exciting and sig- W and OLD Depleting ificant problem now fac- 1g Soviet Russia explained the the ¢ aatne of S THAT SHOOK ¢ for Lite THE WORLD” POPULAR PRICES = AST SIDE THE: ATRES Now 2nd Ave. 133 SECOND AVENUB, “SHE DEMON OF | CORNER ay; STREET — Playing! Piayhouse THE STEPPES” —and on the same program— COMEDY AND NEWS REEL Theatre Guild Productions HOTEL UNIVERSE By PHILIP BARRY MARTIN BECK 43h Street 1 Of 8 Av. 50. Mats, “iinursday urday at 2:50 A MONTH IN THE pee te IVAN TURG “THE APPLE CART” By Bernard Shaw ALVIN W. 824, Bt | . REPERTORY 14th & ve, Eves. 8:30. Mats. Thur. 60c. $1. $1 EVA Le Gal TaNNG, "ire “ROMEO Sat. 2:30 REBOUND Arthur Hopkins presents a new comedy by Donald Ogden Stewart with HOPE WILLIAMS PLYMOUTH Th. 45th St. Ww. of Brway Evs, 8:50. Mats. Thu and Sat, 2:40 sapemmennsne KO THEATRES--LETS GO! “THE CUCKOOS” with BERT WHEELER and ROBERT WOOLSEY “THREE LITTLE GIRLS” Great Singing and Dancing Cast Revolving Stage THEA, 44th Sts W. of Bly 8130, Mats, Wed. and | |) 30, SHUBERT Sat ‘Thea, 45th, | MUSIC BOX #2, 88, 8 Mats. Thursday and Saturday at 2:30 — “TOPAZE” Comedy Hit from the French | with FRANK MORGAN, Phoebe Foster, Clarenee Derwent ‘Workers Clubbed in Big Oakland March Social-Fascists Line Up With Exploiters Committee in charge of the A. F. primarily against the Trade Union Unity League Unions, and two rep- resentatives of the Birmingham Labor Advocate, A. F. of L. paper, massed for the demonstration, but|vecently called on the head of the the spirit of the workers prevented interference. Soulful Weisbord for “Regenerated C. I.” Yep, Weisbord is for “the regen- eration of the Communist Interna- tional,” and is afraid the huge May Day demonstrations “do not express the soul of the masses.” He said this as one of the prin- cipal speakers at the great Love- stone May 1 meeting—all of 200 renegades, including “their sisters and their cousins and their aunts,” collected in the smal] hall in Stuy- vesant Casino to cuss the Communist Party. Weisbord said: “There is room in the Communist Party for the Trot- skyites and the Lovestoneites and all other shades.” Either because of discomfort or because of @ zealous search for allies the staunch Lovestoneites at th’= remark began looking over his shoulder, to see if maybe some of the socialist fakers might be apply- ing, too. The main topic of Rubenstein, Jonas and other speakers was de- nun¢iation of the Party. They just don’t believe in Third Period, and that is that. Each new manifesta- Manufacturers Association in Bir- mingham and asked the Manufac- turers’ Association if they would) donate enough money to distribute! 5,000 copies of the Labor Advocate a week to fight the Communists in Alabama. A local newspaper man asked Paul Smith about this matter and he told the newspaper man to go to hell. The newspaper man then made a written request to deny or affirm the statement, but Smith re- fused to reply to the letter. Strictly Pro-Boss, Bill Dunne, in his article “Soli- darity of Northern and Southern Workers—A Slogan of Action,” in The Daily Worker, April 21, quotes passages from the Birmingham Labor Advocate telling of meetings held by President Green of the A. F. of L. with state legislatures, conferences with governors, labor leaders and political heelers to pre- sent the case of the A. F. of L, and have it thoroughly understood, “especially by the employers.” According to this so-called labor paper, official organ of the Birming- ham locals of the A. F. of L. unions, and of the Birmingham central labor council, Green presented the prob- lem to the southern bosses as @ choice between Communism and the A. F. of L. which “desires only tion of it fills them with deep dis-!the good of the industry.” gust and discontent. You got to have a soul to be a good rebel, a la evestone and Weishord. issue Forged Papers Against Communists Reign Of Terror In Indo-China PARIS, (IPS). - “L'Humanite” publishes new reports of the reign WASHINGTON, May faetured documents, much the forged “Zionovieff letter, handed to Whalen and his Tammany cohorts, according to milar to | of terror instituted by the French on the Yen Bei insurrection. 52 and nurnerous persons sentenced to/| Paul J. Smith, Chairman of the | of L. campaign in the South directed | | hypocritically blahed about “Child | the Amtorg Trading Corporation Health.” \with the spread of revolutionary The outright imperialigg charac-|propaganda in the United States.” ter of their speeches was amply |The department of justice also de- | shown by the reference to the meet-|nied having such evidence—all | ling as “May Day to celebrate Ad-|likely to the disgust of Matthew miral Dewey’s ‘victory’ in Manila | |Woll of the A. F. of L., who has \Bay — signalizing the imperialist heen emitting this bunk. However, drive of Wall Street to enslave the the department of justice, lament- Filipino people as well as the Cu-| ing that there was no federal anti- ban masses and other colonial and | sedition law, hopefully stated that semi-colonial people. | some states have stich laws to use| The chairman of the Fascist )Deamnee the workers. meeting was George W. Duggan; | other speakers were Rey, Enamel BAKERS MEETING TODAY Sin, (iceman io" cess) TQ FIGHT CLIQUE TRICK Jack, Chaplain; Monroe Curtis, ! | Walter I. Joyce, National Director lice. This is the first time the red banner of revolution was successful-| OAKLAND, Calif, May Capi: | ly defended in Newark. After the | talist press reports state that a large | fight the crowd gathered at Workers May Day demonstartion, under Com- Center, 93 Mercer St. At 8 p. m.|munist leadership, was violently bro- | a big meeting was already gathering| ken up here. Many workers were | at the Center to celebrate the work- clubbed. A number were arrested. OP ae eg ge ng SCHOOL SPIES AT WORK ELIZABETH N. J.—Police forbid | The Newton High School disciplin- |tke schedule demonstration at SAGEE Gta @ciER Eel aa ail ae : aan eB ed up Haro Banca wie ties eee fap: Dallas Tuesday for inquisition as to 2 {whether he belonged to the Y weet the reli Ss thy ead \Corerey a League. As it haze | Marris.Langer, Z. Zurof and an- + other speaker weer arrested. Defy- | | know ie "ae hein "rel | ing the police, the workers marched | YoUr Own good ey said. He didn’t of Americanization; Mrs. Bessie | Hanken, National President Wom-} len's Auxiliary; Igor Sikorsky, of the Sikorski Airplane Co., which armed its white guard employees to attack workers; George W. Buckley | of Utica; Representative Hamilton | | Fish, Matthew Woll, Vice President | of the American Federation of La-| bor; Congressman John J. Boylan and former Assemblyman Phelps Phelps. Arrest Negro Rebels in Congo BRUSSELS, Belgium (IPS).—The police in Kinshasha near Leopoldville havearrested 45 natives. The Negro leader Grenard, who has just been sentenced, had many followers here. Two further officials of the Negro Association for Mutual Aid are among the arrested. The treasury lof the organization in Kinshasha was {also confiscated. The Belgian and French police are working hand in hand to destroy this first attempt of the natives to organize in their own defense. A number of protest meet- ings against arbitrary police terror have taken place. French Party Expels Renegades PARIS, (IPS).—Under the title, “The Communist Party and the! —Manu- | imperialists in Indo-China following | French Proletariat Will Smash the Renegades and Social Fascists!” the ” were death sentences have been passed) secretariat of the French Communist |Party publishes an announcement statements hard labor for life, masses of peo-| that the Central Committee of the The | ple sentenced to long terms of im-| Party has confirmed the expulsion! documents “purport to expose a net- | prisonment, villages bombed from of the Paris Communist Deputy Pi- work of alleged international in-| the air and men, women and chil-|quemal, the Paris Communist Town trigue responsible for the Commu-/ dren slaughtered, in the province of Councillor Salom and the Communist nist outbreak of March 6,” say gov-| Phu-to the village of Vong-la was! Mayor of Athis-Mons Paqueraux ernment red-baiters who are circu-| surrounded by troops and razed to, from the party. lating the forged documents. the ground. In 8 other villages {of Burkhard, head of the machine Ween are fe infeed to attend an | important meeting today in Clinton | Hall, 96 Clinton St. at 2 p. m.,/ called by the “Progressive Bakers | of the Amalgamated Food Work- | ers” and the Food Workers’ Indus- trial Union. This meeting is in pro- |test of the latest of the maneuvers in the A. F. W. CHICAGO, DETROIT, NO WIRES YET. At the time the Daily Worker goes to press no reports are re- ceived directly from Chicago or Detroit, where two tremendous dem- onstrations were planned and held. The Detroit demonstration took place in Cass Park. In Chicago the police were forced to issue a per- mit for a parade which was to cover several miles in the working-class and factory districts. TWO MORE CITI Telegraph message received at Shanghai yesterday reports that two more cities, Taihu and Twoshan in Anhwei province, China, were cap- tured by revolutionary troops on April 27. Write About Your Conditions for The Daily Worker. Become @ from Union Square to the City Hall, | where the prisoners were, holding a big protest demonstration at the hall. The speakers were released on $100 bail each to appear for trial May 2. It was the most successful demonstration held in Elizabeth. ae ee BAYONNE, N. J.—Several hun- at 23rd and Avenue C to demon- strate on May Day. They enthusi- astically applauded speakers of the Communist Bian EL DORADO MINERS IN MAY I DEMONSTRATION WEST FRANKFORT, Ill., May 1 —Hundreds of miners demonstrated in El Dorado for two hours. None weré arrested. The speakers were: Thode Tierney, vice-president, na- tional Miners Union; L. C. Rice, C. H. Leo, Broux, youth organizer, N. M.U.; Selma Dotkin and Ben Gray. |A resolution was unanimously adopt- || \ed demanding the release of the un- employed delegation. Joe Mongii was elected as delegate to the Un- employed Convention to be held in Chicago, July 4. Mobilization is go- ing on for the Youth Conference of Worker Correspondent. 17% FOR BETTER MEN’S AND Y 93 Avenue A, The three had not only refused to! Under Secretary of State Cotton houses suspected of belonging to] attack the Workers and Peasants’ | and the department of justice offi- cials said they had no information, but stated that another official de- clared that this data had been sup-/and Dong-Cao supposed to have | lated the discipline of the Communist plied to the New York City offi-! sials, 1 persons implicated in the rebellion have been burned down by the troops. The villages of Dong-Laur been centers of the rebellion have been destroyed party, founded by the Communist | | renegades Sellier, Garchery & Co.,! but also attacked the policy and vio- Party both privately and publicly on} We Meet at the— Fresh manyoccasions COOPERATIVE CAFETERIA 26-28 UNION SQUARE Miners for May 4, VALUES IN OUNG MEN'S SUITS to PARK CLOTHING STORE Cor. Sixth St. Vegetables Our Specialty. dred workers of Bayonne gathered | |and he writes the Daily Worker: “As| you are the only organization to pro-| test in the press against the invisible spy system, I am sending you the information.” FURNISHED ROOM, re ni 00 Broadway, ja sta. 7 Hat w the best dairy foods are serv Where one customer recommends another. We Meet at the pesos Morning Freiheit 7SPRING BALLN Tomorrow Night NEW STAR CASINO 107th Street and Park Avenue Misha Kritzer Jazz Band TICKETS: 50 CENTS Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DES sT 249 BAST 115th STRENT Second Ave. New York QAILY ®XCEPI FRIDAY Viense telephone for appointment Telephone: Lehigh 6022 Cor. TRIANGLE DAIRY RESTAURANT 1379 INTERVALE AVENUE Cor, Jennings st. BRONX || All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Tel. ORChard 878% DR. L. KESSLER SURGEON DENTIST Strictly by Appointment 48-50 DELANCEY STREET Cor, Eldridge St. NEW YORK “For All Kinds of Insurance” (RL BRODSKY ‘Telephone: Murray Hill 555¢ |7 Hast 42nd Street, New York | 4 ERO ¥, | 657 Allerton Avenue || Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. Y¥. | Vegetarian Health Restaurant { 558 Clersmont Parkway, Bronx “RATIONAL Vegetarian | RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVE: VE Bet. 12th and 13th Sts. Strictly Vegetarian Food 7 MELROSE— GETAINAN Dairy RESTA ANT omrades Yonik Always Find 1s ennant ine nt Our Place 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx (near 174th St. Station) Pe HOND » INTERVALB yay {HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE, | Phone: Wabhdaals 5865 | Phoner ; stuyvenant 3816 | John’s Restaurant | MALTY: ITALIAN DISEBOD | A. place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 302 E.12th St. New York DR. J. MINDEL SURCEUN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Room 803—Phone: Algonquin #188 Not connected with any other office Tel, SACramento 2592 The Szabo Conservatory of Music 1275 LEXINGTON AVENUE at 86th Street Subway Statien NEW YORK City Instruction given ko Beginners and eg cers MUSIC COMPOSITION VOCAL, VIOLIN, PIANO, ‘CE! Theory and all other instr: sane Pressing, Repairing High Class Work Done Goods Catled for and Deliverea All profits go towards strikers and their f: sHOW You SOLIDAIUTY with WORK rts) RKRAL BARGAINS at 226 1. 230 St, Net, 3a & 2d Aves. Ladies, Gents and Children’s Furnishings Extra discount to D. W. readers, —— ||| WORKERS’ CENTER || BARBER SHOP Moved to 30 Union Square EREIHDIT BLUG——Main Floor Advertise your Union Meetings here. For information write to || The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City Hotel & Restaurant Workers Hraueh of the Amalgamated Food Workers, 1 xy. G Phone” ‘heInen 234" Husiness meotings held the frat f the month at 6 p. onal meetings—the th rd of the month. Speen ve Board meetings—every day afternoon at 6 aiclock, One industry! One Union! Join and Fight the Common khemy! Oitice epen from ¥ a, m, to 6 p. hi NATUR Massags DR. GE 409 Broad, ‘Tel burst 5004, Tpecial” rates to comrades, own une, the vourgeols age, in dint 0 by thinemthnt 1¢ Hee clamp More und more. | op into two grene Into two great and direc posed clansen! bourgeoisle, letarint—Marx,