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DAILY WORKER, , NEW YORK, MONDAY, SUNE 2, 2, 1930 _ KOREAN WORKERS AND AFL, OFFICIAL POLICE MURDER: “Garrick Gaielies” at Guild GRAND JURY SEC'Y, NEGRO WORKER PEASANTS REVOLT IN JAPAN’S MANCHURIA Fight Both Chinese Imperialist Troops and Japanese Government Forces Chinese Peasants Assist Koreans; After Attack on Consulates and Offices TOKIO, June 1.—A large group|churia are different from the ordi- of Korean workers and peasants in| Naty consulates. Aside from their the Chientao district of Kirin prov-| commercial and diplomatic func- 7 > tions they also exercise govern- ince in Manchuria revolted yester- ; mental power over Japanese and day against the unbearable oppres- | Korean residents in Manchuria and inflicted upon them by , the are actually overlords of Chinese nese imperialists and theif) militarists, landlords, gentry and| lackeys, the Chinese militarists. The capitalists. The so-called Korean rebels raided the centers of Japa- Association in Manchuria is spe- nese influence in Yenki, Lung Chin- also forced to attend Japanese | anese masters in fighting the Kore-| Schools and subjecting themselves an rebels, but the population, largely The Japanese consulates in Man-| Korean workers and peasants. 6 $12,000,000 over last year’s budget, about $9,000,000 of which is due to increased building. This year’s building program also includes a ally organized by Japanese impe- tsun and other towns in the Chien- | to the poison of Japanese imperial- Chinese peasants, were sympa- $12,000,000 Increase in Italian Naval Budget large number of submarines. sion Jay so Therefore, these institutions which rialists and Korean stool-pigeons tao district, attacking Japanese|for the purpose of detecting and consulates, buildings and schools of| suppressing Korean revolutionary the Korean Association. activities. Korean children were | Chinese troops assisted their Jap- | ist propaganda. thetic that all of the rebels escaped aand none was arrested in spite of | he much superior numerical force and arms of the police and soldiers. ROME, June 1.—Mussolini’s war speeches a few weeks ago were ted by a $77,000,000 naval budget which the Minister of y, Admiral Sirianni, brought before the sham Chamber of Deputies for discussion on May 28. The budget bears an increase “Fireproof” Dormitory Fire Menaces Many Out on Long Island, where graft always did grow good, somebody in 1911 arranged to have passed as that 9 firemen were trapped| injured, and a score of nurses escaped by sliding down l!ad- a dormitory for attendants Cc jumping into nets from sec- tral Islip state hospital a $200,000| ond and fourth story v lows. “fireproof” building that burned; For a time hundreds of insane like tinder last night. It burned so! patients were in great danger. Aids (Continued from Page One) Textile Workers’ Union, Pr osecutor | at None Taken | "sed when she attempted to ask a que | Third: Louis P, Marquardt, sec retary of the Georgia State | tion of Labor, is an “assistant” ir Ithe offices of the prosecutor, Soli citor General John A. Boykin, whose name is signed to the indictments Marquardt is one of the most ex- trewe “red baiters” in the Ieis the connection beween prosecttor’s office and the fase’ forces of the A. F. of L. in the state. There is a very evident r ion. nt- ment among workers, however, at | these openly, fascist activities of Nance and Marquardt. This is re- flected in the hostility voiced by such leading elements in the local |labor movement as Mary Barker. | national president of the American Federation of Teachers, who openly denounces the use that is being made of these Civil War insurrection” the Korean revolutionists attacked | laws to illegalize the activities of | are all symbols of Japanese oppres- | the militant section of the working sion and therefore most hated by the| class, and by Jerome Jones, the aged editor of the Atlanta Journal of Labor. Every effort is being brought to | by the prosecution that openly. an- {nounces it is planning and working |for “an electric chair verdict.” JUNE 1 MEETS FOR ALL SOUTH | Protest Atlanta Cases on Gastonia Date GRE June 1.— | Textile workers of Greenville are ‘edera- state. the | bear, however, against such elements | State Federat ation Head RiddledWithoutExcuse| at the Guild Theatre, W on Way to His Home CHICAGO, Ill. (By Mail).—One} 5, of the most glaring cases of police brutality recently took place in Chicago, At 2:30 on the morning] of Wednesday, May 21, a Negro| cigarmaker, Joseph Guillion, 55 | years old, who has for many years lived and worked on the South Side, was stopped by a police squad car} two doors from his home at 5313) La Salle St., and was questioned as to his reason for being there. He! told them that he was on his way} home. Without warning, the police | opened fire upon him with their pis- tols and a machine gun. It was teported by Earnest Wil-| and Edward Knoblock, will be re- liams, the undertaker to whom Guil-| vived by the Players Club at thc lion’s body was brought, that 24) bullets had been fired into his left side, almost tearing it completely | Bondi, Dorothy Stickney and Ernest Cossart are some of the principal away. No one will doubt that this is a move on the part of the police au-| Tuesday, a mystery play authored John Gol | by Joe Byron Totten under thorities in Chicago to precipitate | a race riot. Wave of Lytichings. i the cast is Leo Donnelly and his companions: include Wilfred Lytell, The alliance between the under-| Dorothy Blackburn, Leslie Bingham, | vorld mob and the ruling class po-| John Lorenz and Edwin Forsberg More Rebel as Gandhi burned by lynch gangs, while in the Schemes With Ramsay is clearly shown in these cases | vhere, in one part of the country, Negro workers are lynched and North and West Negroes are openly | | against all forms of brutality leveled | Papaidst workers, Negro and white. | Two hundred and eighty-five Negro jane white workgts participated in | | the meeting, 53 of those present joining the Communist Party to carry forward the work of fighting | against legalized violence against} workers in ered Paes part of the country. | ii t jan Labor Party cabinet, after and torturing without mercy hun- dreds of Indian workers, is arrang- tional oCngress party to compro- mise the matter. geois, nationalist group prefers im- | perialism to a reat prolet peasants’ revolt, and events “Lysistrata” Opens Thursdav The Theatre Guild will present the third edition of “Garrick “MARY BOLAND nieties” ednesday Among the big group are Albert Carroll; Edith Meiser, Philip Loeb, Nan Blackstone, Sterling Holloway, James Norris, Ruth Chorpenning and Thelma Tipson. The music is by twelve composers; the same number of lyricists and sketch writers have been enlisted. Philip Loeb ha staged the production. On Thursday evening, Ariste phanes’ comedy, “Lysistrata,” wi!! have its premiere showing at the Forty- -Fourth Street Theatre. Thi is the Gilbert Seldes version. The leading players include Violet Kem- ble Cooper, Miriam Hopkins, Ernest Truex, Eric Dressler, Mary Blais d Sydney Greenstreet. “Milestones,” by Arnold Bennet Monday. Royale, Tom Beula: Empire Theatre, Powers, Selena John Kirk Beats. the 1 month re. Star comedy, now in Drum at the The Vanderbilt Theatre will offer the title of “Spook Hotise.” At the head TH AT SHOOK TE THE SECOND PLAYHC masterpiece, “Ten Days the World,” equal to which has a world- , is shown now at 2 Playhouse, till usive. It is the on at work, a source of in “Potemkin It is clear that the MacDonald} shot on the streets by legalized] (Continued From Page One.) | spiration for revolutionary activi- gangsters, the police. | fire on the crowd, but the casaulties | ties of heroism. “Ten Days | Negro workers on the south side | yore Slight’—not more than a|That St World” should be | of Chicago are openly resenting this| couple of hundred, evidently, which |scen by every class conseious| most brutal killing. On Sunday.) was considered slight in the first | worker. | May 25, the Communist Party) Rangoon dispatches. aes | staged a mass protest meeting} | killing | ng with Gandhi and the Indian } The Gandhi bour- an and)General Strike May Soon Break Out oward such # revolt. Such negotiations have been often! | clud | INO CRISIS LET UP YET BOSSES SAY They Hope fo for Reviv: all by End of Autumn Having failed to any economic procure | ped dishing out short-term predic- tions, Rather than weakening hii ballyhon abcut recovery and ex | ing himself as only a cheap, nick a star-gazer, Hoover has now taken to the safer of long-term predictions. The latest “hit” from the White House is the rather stale e that “the unem- ployment situation would be correct- ed and normal business conditions would return by late fall.” At least his is what Ed Sorsi, president of the Colombian Republican Lea- miracles with his magic | sixty-day formula, Hoover has stop- | (i BRODSK “For Alt Kinds of Tasers Y Pelephone; Murray Hill S550 |7 Kast 42nd Street, New York but meaningless, business | IDR. J. MINDEL jue, reports after an interview with | ihe White House oracle yesterday. One of the major sports of American“ bourgeoisie today is the dismal game of expressing piow: hopes and The entire c |is a mystery to them in which tail lis head and head is tail and noth- ing is a8 it should be—according to all the rules. Meanwhile, the bourgeois finan- cial and economic surveys continue to publish pessimistic reports—with the usual pious assurance that God’s in his heaven and everything must turn out ail ht in the end. The Guaranty Survey of the Guaranty | Trust Co. represents the general | opinion of the financial repor its latest adm ion that “defini igns of revival are still absent.” ‘The seasonal peak of spring ac- tvity was passed in March, and the normal influences making for cur- tailment are now in evidence,” the survey states: “Business failures are at a record level, and the decline in commodity prices has continued. Both of these conditions represent ng deterrents to business enter- prise and any genuine improvement in the outlook for general trade must await their correction,” it con- LIFE FOR PETTY OFFENSE Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST. i BAST 115th STREBT jecond Ave, New York DAILY EXCEPT FRIDAY Viense telephone for appointment ‘Telephone: Lehigh 6022 ORChard 378% DR. L. KESSLER SURGEON DENTIST Strictly by Appointment 50 DELANCEY STREET Wldridge St. NEW YORK Tel. 4s Cor. SURGECN LeSNTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Rcom 803—Phone: Algonquin 8183 Not connected with any other office 3yGuaa Jlevebnnua DR. A. BROWN Dentist SOL Wast 14th St. Cor. Second Ave, ‘Tel. Algonquin 7248 Dr. M. Wolfson Surgeon Dentist 141 SECOND AVENUB, Cor, 9th St Phone, Orchard. 2333. An case of trouble with your teeth come to see your friend, who has long experience, and can aasure you of carefnl trentment. All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant “ 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx RATIONAL atate cls the hinted at lately by British Labor| Party papers. and other papers, and j were officially announced Saturday | planning to demonstrate on Satur- day, June 7, the first anniversary of the defense of the Gastonia te Vegetarian RESTAURANT The Appellate Division of the} New York state judiciary placed its | PUSH TARIFF AND Poland Provokes War Against Soviet Union a approval on the life term given a|+ 4 : F tile rs? tent colony, The dem-| § ‘in New York by S. N. Ghose, head! Bomtemo and his ot Poa | arerovs Ruth St. Clair, bes heb: 199 SECOND AVEi JE The Polish government continues | an independent Ukrainia ftom the | onstration. will be against the ar- of the Indian National Congres of “di lifting. The amount she is con- Bet. 12th and 18th Ste. its war propaganda and _provoca- | point of view of Polish security was | r and imprisonment of the six| in America. The usual meaningless at a meeting of railway | victed of taking was nominal. She/| Strictly Vegetarian Food tions Against the Soviet Union. In| openly spoken of. This paper is| workers at Atlanta, now iacing the | 4 denial has been issued by the British | | is a dope fiend and hardly respon- | === a recent editorial in the Polish Ga- considered as expressing | electric chair. | The Senate-House tariff confer- | Secretary. of State for India. ailway workers are figh' ble for her actions | —MELROSE zette, semi-official organ of the of the governing clique} Anna Burlak, one of the Atlanta | << 4s_again ready to return the] Yesterday the capitalist press was]. \..06 cut, at the same time sae nes | ssapan “olish government, the question of | i prisoners, was an organizer here for | Smoot-Hawley bill to the, Senats.| given the resolution on India passed | compelled to fight the f ible that another Dair VEGETARIAN the National Textile Workers’ Union |It has changed the flexible tariff} by the Second International execu-| a iion the “Hermanidad Ferrov general strike may sweep the whole aisrides Yup eeTA CaN ii |pefore going to Atlanta to represent | Provision which displeased Hoover | tive committee meeting, May 11- 13,| ; of Cuba. CPicbsase ta athe Bt Onr Place. part of tHe Pan- ation of Labor. 000 railway wo Negro Women Protest Jim Crowing by Gov’t the socialist party internationai to which the Britis Labor Party be- workers have been | on the excuse that hirty-two jailed recently, the International Labor Defense in| @nd Vice-President Curtis, and has organizing the struggle for the lives | | substituted instead a provision em- 1787 pede ds BLVD. Bronx near 174th St. Station) | American There are Fifty-five Negro Gold Star Mothers, who are being used by the longs, which hails such negotiations rs ,000 organized in the | Rey: 4 M. H. the Tariff Commission to | they had something to do with the | Wall Street jingoes to “popularize” and sugar-coat the sacrifices which jot Powers atid Joseph Carr. | powering ow: : in Cuba, only 8 | De i rs 5 ; i ecify rates” which, however, can|@8 the very best way to crente ajo” 7%) | killin of two atniy officers who! the Negro and white workers will soon be asked to make again in the She had only been in Atlanta for) lea Hecome ettective ow the pres: “fully resporsible and fully auto- fas ‘union,” in which there is a es cers new imperialist war, told President Hoover in a petition that they would refuse to visit the graves of their sons on European battlefields if the Jim-Crew ruling separating them from the white women were not abolished.. The War Department, however, ruled that it would ja. few days in this capacity when { she, too, was arrested. There has been a growing resent- ment against the arrest of Anna ident’s approval. Thus the right to} change rates is really transferred | from Congress, where. it now resides, nomous” government in India—none | lof these course, but a real capitalist govern- ment that can kill the Indian work [left wing and outside of which the | eft wing has wide support. The | rank and file are preparing a strike | pu le for July 1, and the left} workers’ republics of tried to break up a meeting at Ar- temise. These workers are eh, non the | National L eH o NE:~ INTERVALD 9149. HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian . ‘ " rlak r o Si 4 i =" " 4 \M Woodside: Dimean, Mills, Poe amp.| Wall Strect wants the president | ist barties. The rerohition makes it creation of a new and genuine | tionalists” — Being fist as tiuch ee oe. a —~ A ‘ side; an, Mills, Poe, Samp- ; hat “no wi al pressure will | union. ee < . i Phone: UNI versit; 65 Even A Dead Soldier Can Be Profitable! | 0, Poinsett and the Brandon Mills. to have the right to. change, the set ag rn by| The Tobaceo Workers also are| agents of Yanltee “imperialism as || 7 = ar: rates. | Machado. = A big sign in the window of the known soldier, there burns a gas main office of the Consolidated Gas | flame to commemorate the sacrifice Co. in New York carries this pa- |! out allied forces during the World y s In her capacity as organizer of the 's union, Anna Burlak has held many meetings at these mills, many of them at midnight, when the night shift gets 80 minutes off for lunch, This means placing highly important economic power in the hands of its direct agent and removing it from the control or in- fluence of Congress where the oppo- | the international. triotic sentiment: Ne “In Paris, under the arch of triumph, at the tomb of the un- Miitder Another Ohio COLUMBUS, Ohio, June 1.—One | “Since the adoption of gas in August, 1921 this flame has never gone out.” Penitentiary Prisoner guards at the London prison farm Sition of the representatives of the | small manufacturers, farmers and petty-bourgeoisie often interfere She has also spoke in nearby | with the plans of the big trusts and towns, stich as Conastee, Clinton, | banks, Hoover’s flexible provision, | Greer, Spartanburg, Seneca, Wal-| | therefore, is of more permanent and | halla, where she did valuable work | base importance to it than the bil-| for the union and where her arrest | liom dollar rates of the present bill. many coming out of the mills dur- ing this short rest period for a breath of fresh air. considering a strike, and from both “AMUSEMENT S> Theatre Guild Productions THE NEW GARRICK GAITIES | f @ AMEO™ asin Tel. SACramento 2592 The Szabo Conservatory of Music 1275 LEXI) ON AVENUB at 86th Street Subway Station NEW YORK CITY Instruction given to Beginners and Advancers in, MUSIC COMPOSITION VOCAL, VIOLIN, PIANO, ‘CELLO Theory and ai other instruments | Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN biSHES with atmosphere where all radicals meet E.12th St. New York pera more Ohio prisoner killed by guards: |near here shot and killed Sam |and imprisonment ‘have become a) Opens Wed. Eve, at 8:30 THRILLER a 1 tral topie of discussion among} Demand the release of Fos- | ie 7 Aftat a third of the penitentiary | Mazel, with the specious extuse that | Cen W. 5: 9 | imitatée, looked in thal calle, were (BE 45 trying to unlock the door |the workers. ter, Minor, Amter and Ray-| trea: | “AT se hice | (ogee canceieam aa See Wenctarian b é j S, wer’ | from the inside, and escape with 45 _ Meeting Today. _ mond, in prison for fighting ‘|| “AnD UNION Workens 8 urned to death, and several shot others said to be in the plan with|, This Greenville textile mill area f+ unemployment insurance. | RESTAURANTS by militia because they protested | Chicago Conference to CHICAGO, Ill, June 1—A con- him, Protect Foreign Born Delegates will be present represent- | |on Monday “at 222 River St. at 12| includes about 40 mills, employing in} normal times 30,000 workers. HOTEL UNIVERSE ga Where the best food and fresh ; rik the sist : " Ry PHILIP BARRY SUED ATE OEE yer | vegetabl served Union activity in this area is now | Labor and Fraternal MARTIN BECK dean strces iD “IE rT M STE ree ea in charge of W. G. Binkley, who is | organizing a preparatory meeting} Organizations o'clock noon, Office Workers Annual Dance. with Eves, 8:50. Mats. Thursday pson and Lowell Sherman! and Saturday at 2:50 Retty Cox | MUSIC BOX frway w. Have Your Eyes Examined and Glasses Fitted by 4 WEST 28TH STREET 37 WEST 32ND STREET 221 WEST 386TH STREET ference of working class organiza- | ing trade unions, workers clubs and 3 18, at the Heekschet Root i | GAs Galled by the Chicago district labor fraternal organizations, WINSTON, BALD. XC, doce Sin Uae SE A REE LITTLE GIRIS?) ™ ee TOPATE” || WORKERS MUTUAL - vvv: of the International Labor Defense | to mobilize against the persecution of the foreign born workers will be held Sunday June 29 at 10 a. m. at Kedzie Hall, 205 S. Kedzie Street. Fight Sedition Law in Pittsburgh, Pa. PITTSBURGH, Pa., June 1.—Lil Andrews and Charles Guynn who have recently been freed of Crim- inal Syndicalist charges in the State of Ohio were the principal speak- | the congressional investigation, the prelude to an attack on the Com- munist Party of the United States. The LL.D. office is located at 23 South Lincoln Street. of a conviction under the Sedition) law in this state in 1927 and against | the Sedition law are in circulation | and it is hoped that a half million signers will be procured for these) 1.—Dewey Martin, writing on “June | 7, the Day That Shook the Entire | Solid South,” says: “The lessons | and experiences of June 7, when workers fought in self defense, and saved themselves from massacre, and the events before and after that day last year, will serve to mobilize many thousands of tobaceo workers who are slaving 11 and 12 hours a day here, and the thousands of tex: tile workers, on starvation wages.” McGRATH GETTING 1.L.D, i Nick Spanoudakis. Ball and entertainment Saturday, June 7 at Workers, Centgr. Communist Activities Bont ¥.C.L. Dance. Saturday, Mas 31, prone Worker Center, 569 Prospect. Ave. near 149t! St. May Day, movies. * Vattinieds for 1.L.D. Needed, comrades with slight ex- in nee in office work to volunteer r services for working un statis- tables, ete. rgom oo 799 B'way, * SHUBERT Great eres and Dancing Cast Revolving Stage THEA. 44th St. W. of By Rito, Mats, Wed. and | with 2:30, Comedy Hit from the French FRANK MORGAN, Phoebe Foster, | Clarence Derwent Second Big Week! 4“ FIRST FILM OF THE FIVE-YEAR PLAN pti la atte th A Great Film Record of a Great Soviet Achieve- ment! The Building of the Turkestan Siberian “Pride of Soviet cinematonraphy” Railroad! OPTICAL CO. under personal supervision of DR. M. HARRISON Optometrist 215 SECOND AVENUE Corner 13th Street NEW YORK CITY Opponite New York Eye and Infirmary oy ee 4 Stuyvesant 3836 Boulevard Cafeteria 541 SOUTHERN BLVD. Cor, 149th Street Where you ent and feel at home. Advertise your Union Meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER ers at a mass meeting in Pittsburgh | petitions. Unit 4, Seeti a: ere: KERS’ CENTER |]; Advestising Wept. on Sunday, June 1, at the Labor| A special leaflet entitled “Smash ALONG FAIRLY : Special, meesing Swit? & be. held. on | TH STREET LAYHOUSE Hee. Sip auth Ave: AGS RaER P || 26-28 Union Sq., New York City tage, 35 petits we i a the Sedition Laws” is being disti=- efreets 6.80. Action against non-at- "usw : Minagidg, Ditectes sride- 50 6 8 BA SHO tional release of the three comrades who are serving five year sentences nd election for dele- WENT EEE a | * in Blawnox workhouse as the result| already distributed, According to the reports of work-| aig to fection Sects Bgeeey | * Now Playing! 16 Wot ot er tory Cty Rae ers who went to see James Mc-) Tuesday, June 3, at at 308 a Phone: LEHIGH 6382 ||] Business meetings held tht first P , ‘ ‘ Lenoe Ava nection at finetionaries ey ieee Monday of the month at . é * Grath at the Bellevue Hospital, he | and delecat: Section C t Ni HP) AW i Ni as . Wise read LL.D. Mass Meeting Against Lynching [2 uihe stone tainly well from ill Ne holds ve Sh dare wih e : ‘stornational Barher Shop | ij Nousy er ote monn. i. i fmabure, ay at 4 WAR be CINCINNATI, Ohio, June 1—Jclectrie chair at Atlanta, Ga. have| the stab wound he received at the | Whipp Ta Pre-conv | L E Bi -@) one iy € es | MW. SALA. Prop. Raa acs tam ect ag Many Negro workers and local |been arranged. The first will be| hands of a Lovestoneita. [ston ind enon. eaten Fg og a r © le ? 2016 Second Avenue, New- York |||] One tndustry! One Union! ola Aaa) The Martine Workers Industrial | at'1800 Bevan ie zi (bet 103rd & 14th Sts) i Fight the Common kt held 30th 7 Negro organizations in this city || i on lay 30tl pi p. m. in the Hdion at’ 140 Broad St, New York, 132 SECOND oder HIGHTH sTREDT Ladies Bobs Our Specialty Office Lpen from ¥ a, m, to ty Fs are rallying to the International Soha Siac the, Beenhs hella N. Ys received & telegram. of erect! tnt RRA wating, St. eat A SOVKINO PRODUCTION Private Beanty Parlor Labor Defense campaign against | will take place day Bist at 7 p.m. Ne ‘the recent mass mneotine (4 x: Baum, ipeaivers, ee ee dag The Bear's Weddin | | Romer ti: ek beg Pit to | in the yard of St. Mary’s Church on ce 1 a a ae “at on B- | wedtiol, 4, Daxiks and Eptertatnment g Cooperators! Patronize je Negro and white work- | Carbine Avenue near Eastern Ave- eR r ate bragher dl ph Ly ata With the teaalh pipiniicts 6f the Russian sttge—KONSTANTINE V, ers against the lynching terror in| nue. Both mecting places are in ‘From @ mass meeting of the ti) A Ti Mea Club entertalic be a ae pen S E R O bg | the Souch and for the liberation of |the heart of the Negro working union we send its best wishes for| ment. Jazz band, Admission 50 cents ON TH SAME PROGRAM— z ! the six workers who are facing the | class section. your immediate recovery as a con- ig biases’ srt 9 AB CHEMIST ‘ zs A DADOR and Fraternal Scab’s Wages Cut by Pittsburgh Cab Co. ‘ of the union, Down with the Love-| aiid Wen nt Bit B Fite “outs = PITTSBURG, Pa.—Even strike-| Formerly the strikebreakers got} stonites!. Revolutionary greetings K paul, i yeti i! We Meet at the— ROOMS aR RIO Aen, rs are apt to balk at wage | cuts, This has been proven among the Pittsburg taxi scabs, who had | ‘also am Goods Called f a Delivered. a réducton to $5 a day Secently, shi" then seekebvonkers, won't be| t@t Minor, Ammter and Ray.) bine Wn Shep 80-28 UNION sQuAnE iy tw aes) oi saceonamanaters iin, thi itvikebreakers received| co tendy to take oha of these “easy” mond, in prison for fighting wt vain Vaan Fresh Vegetables Our Specialt’y || Me Mech 408 Bast 1720 Ste AMES |T aay FOUR 80 ABTS ns this cut they complained, cy | john a -.. for unemployment insurance. 1 7y (aio sus ps oe SUE ————— OR MN he with ba e f uted in the Pittsburgh District. The | first printing amounted to 50,000 | copies practically ail of which are $8 a day and 40 per cent of meter ‘receipts. After the cut they only got $5 a day plus the receipts. The Philadelphia M. W. 1. U. Setids Greetings, * is Unit Meeting: tion 2 discussion on crete expression of our appreciation AS , hig teers Vomen's Councils Meeting, We shall! Council No. 12 wi have a Woture on the situation in iia on Monday for what you have done. exert every effort for the building, for a quick recovery.” tear aie Detnand the release of Fos- * * Counct) No. ® will have a lecture on the Plection Campaign, and the ¢. P. Program, on Bee te ib pe 4, at 8.30 5 ts EAST SIDE THEATRES —SOVKINO JOURNAL — PRESENT DAY PVENTS IN SOVIET R COOPERATIVE CAFETERIA Moved to 30 Union Square EREWMENT BLUG—Main Floor 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N Y¥ LPADY LIVING ALONE wants to + Food Workers Industrial Union W. LR. CLOTHING a] Cleaning, Pressing, Repairing High. Class Work Done