The Daily Worker Newspaper, July 8, 1930, Page 2

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Page Two BOLIVIAN ADMISSION DAIL PRESS IN THAT THE MASSES ALONE FOUGHT But the Militarists Stole the Fruits of Their Victory Because They Lacked True Leaders However, the Oppressed Indian Nation Shows Fight; a Clear Communist Party Needed Bolivian dispatches, quoting “El! Diario” of La Paz, say that the paper assures the impossibility of any attempt to restore the ous reactionary regime nothing about the new regime being reactionary, of lourse), and admit- ting that the ma: “without money, without leaders, and al without arms” overthrew the dictatorship. That the masses had no true Tead- ere such as would have been fur- nished by a strong Communist Par- ty, is evident from the fact that there seems to have been no r ance to the new military dictators, whe came in after the masses had! seized power, when these dictators ordered the masses to surrender ali arms they had seized in the capture of the city. Dispatches from points in Chile, however, quoting travellers from Bolivia, give a view not quite so| beautiful of the “blessed harmony”! S 10,000 Alsace Potash Workers Strike PARIS (IPS).—Almost 10,000 district in Alsace-Lorraine have gone on strike for a daily increase of The strike decision was taken by a central strike com- five Francs. mittee elected by local committees. amongst these workers for many French Communists Support Indo-Chinese PARIS (LP.C.).—The communists | and the revolutionary workers in| general are the only elements in France who fight persistently against the French imperialist terror in Indo-China and in support of the Indo-Chinese national-revo- lutionists, During the course of the debate on the situation in Indo-China in the French Chamber of Deputies, ‘he communist deputy Andre Ber- thon made a_ splendid fighting speech against the crimes of French imperialism in Indo-China and the perfidy of the French authorities towards the Indo-Chinese students arrested in France who have since been deported in all secrecy to Indo-China over Maseilles, Their only “crime” was that they had demonstrated on the streets in sup- port of the demand for the freedom of their country. Amidst furious interruption from the bourgeois deputies and from Workers and Fascists BERLIN (IPS). — In Eythra near Leipzig a group of Communist workers engaged in agitation for the Communist list in the coming elections in Saxony were ittacked by an overwhelming force of armed national fascists. A Communist worker was killed on the spot, a seeond Communist has since died in the hospital and a third Commu- nist is not expected to recover. As usual, the police were conveniently absent. Ten other Communists were injured. In Berlin on Sunday the Commu- nist worker Erich Pollak, was shot down by fascists in the Koepernick- er Strasse. He is in the ospital in a serious condition with three bullet wounds. In Mannheim a gang of fascists attacked a group of members of the A New Form of Labor Enthusiasm MOSCOW, (IPC).—The untiring urge of the workers of the Soviet Union to raise the level of their achievements in the cause of social- ism higher and higher continually Produces new forms of labor en- thusiasm. For instance, two pits in the Donetz basin, “Artem” and “October Revolution” were engaged in @ socialist competition, whereby it was seen that the. latter pit lagged far behind its competitor. A meeting of the miners of the “Artem” pit discussed the back- watdness of their neighbor and de- cided to assist in a practical form 13 More Executions in Indo-China PARIS (LP.S.).—With the 13 executions which have just taken plece in Yen Bey, the bloody balance of French imperialist terror in Indo-China since the national-revo- lutionary insurrection is 68 death sentences, 19 of which have already been carried out. Apart from these 1° legally inurdered, however, there are numerous murders committed by the French troops against the na- Czeck Workers PRAGUE (1.P.S.).—The Commu nist organ, Rude Pravo, reports that a delegation o. Czech workers has artived in Frunse, the capital of ths Kirgisen Soviet Republic in Cen tra) Asia. The delegation has vis- ited Frunse a. the invitation of the large Czech colony The delegation was welcomed in Frunse by representatives of the Shanghai Tramway Workers Strike SHANGHAI (LP.S.).--500 tram waymen went on strike June 18 in the French concession in Shainghai. {cert of the population, and 25 per “Interhelpo.” ing or supposed to exist in Bo- These travellers say that fears are felt in La Paz that there | may be uprisings of the Indians, | These Indians have every justifi cation to rise, as they are practical ly enslaved and terribly oppressed. Pure blood Indians are over 50 per e ent more of mixed Indian and white. Thus they are clearly an op pressed nationality, and should have the right to determine their own form of government, a right denied to them by force, foree backed by imperialism, Yankee or English. The travellers also say that much of the soldiery are “discontented” with the new government, and henes | new “disorders” are feared. The new military dictatorship cannot solve the terrific crisis, and | what is needed now (indeed, before this!) is a Communist Party with a clear policy and ability to lead the masses. potash miners in the Muehlhausen Great discontent has been evident months, | the colonial socialists, Comrade Berthon showed how the great na- tional-revolutionary movements in | China, India, Indo-China and other | colonial and semi-colonial countries | would finally destroy capitalist | |countries. The Communist Party | appealed to the workers, peasants | and soldiers to fraternize with their | | Indo-Chinese comrades and turn| against their own oppressors, the capitalist imperialist bourgeoisie and its agents. During the debate in the Cham- ber, the French Young Communist League organized a fine street demonstration in the XIII Arond- issement of Paris in support of the Indo-Chinese revolution, The young workers carried placards bearing slogans against the French govern- ment, igainst the terror and for the release of the prisoners. Singing revolutionary songs and the “Inter- nationale” the procession marched through the streets and ended up with a huge mass meeting. Clash in Berlin Battle Reichsbanner, seriously injuring 5 of them. In Beuthen on Sunday fascists at- tacked a group of Communist work- ers and two were seriously stabbed. On Sunday evening a gang of na- \tional fascists besieged the -ntrance to the open air bathing strand in Wannsee near Berlin, and beat up all visitors who looked like Jews. |The police did nothing. Later on |they returned and broke the win- dows of the administration build- ing with stones. A storm on the building was prevented with fire hose by the employees of the Wan- see Strand Company. Again the police did not interfere. The fas- cists thave promised another and !more serious raid for next Sunday. The police have agreed to be un the scene, |to abolish this backwardness. A | eroup was formed consisting of the | best workers and engineers of the “Artem” pit and sent over to the | “October Revolution” pit to “take it in tow.” This new form of mu- tual assistance is spreading to the benefit of the socialist competitive scheme and of the development of socialist industryg The Centra! Council of Soviet Labor Unions has dealt with this new development in a specia] ap- peal to all modern and progressive industrial undertakings, to assist their more backward comrades in this fashion. tives inland. Men, women and chil- dren were blown to pieces by the bombs of French military planes an¢é shot down without formality by French punitive columns. Then | there are thousands suffering a liv | irg death in the heli-holes of Poulo | Condor, Lao-Bao, Lai-Chain and | otuer conceutration camps and pris- Le Belle France is teaching the natives of Indo-China what cap- its list civilization means. 2 |gangsters and Garveyites. [AKRON JOBLESS "DEMONSTRATE Greet Nat’! Convention | T.U.U.L. Organizing AKRON, Ohio, July 4, (By Mail). —Five hundred workers partici- pated in the Perkins Square meet- ing Friday afternoon in solidarity with the National Unemployed Con- vention in Chicago and sent greet- ings and pledged to build militant unions and unemployed councils |under the banner of the Trade Union Unity League. Resolutions were adopted demanding the re-| lease of Foster, Amter, Minor and) Raymond imprisoned for — three years in New York for represent- ing the unemployed in demanding relief from the city government. Also for the release of the Atlanta, Ga., Gastonia and California pris- oners facing death and long prison sentences for union activity, also protesting against the murder of union organizers in Chicago and New York by the police, A. F. of L. Much literature was sold in addition to '“Come to the trial at City Hall, — Today in History of | the Workers | | | | July 8, 1809—Thomas Paine, leader in American Revolution, died. 1887—-Edward McGlynn ex-communicated by Catholic church for taking part in New York United Labor Party. 1894 —Martial law declared in Chicago to break strike of Ameircan Rail- way Union. 1920—Conviction of six defendants in Duquesne, Pa., free speech fight, upheld by ap- peals court. 1922—Twenty thou- sand out in general strike in sup- port of textile workers in Atlixo district, Mexico. 1924—Fifty thousand New York women’s clothing workers struck for 40- hour week. TRIAL TOMORROW FOR ELEVEN IN MT. VERNON MT. VERNON, N. Y., July 7.— third floor, Wednesday, at 9 a, m.,” says a leaflet urging the workers of Mt. Vernon to join the Interna- tional Labor Defense, and to sup-| port the young workers who are | the Daily Worker, Labor Unity and Labor Defender. Three workers | made application to the Communist | Party. being rushed to prison for holding | street meetings. The leaflet says: “Sixteen young workers, mem- bers of the Young Communist WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, JULY 8, 1930 HARVEY JAILED IN BALTIMORE National Organizer of Union Badly Beaten BALTIMORE, Md, July 7.— Charged with assault and beaten up {so badly that he has been sent to |the hospital, H. Harvey, national jorganizer of the Marine Workers Industrail Union is held here for $4,200 bonds. With him was ar- rested another M.W.I.U. organizer. Meetings on the waterfront here have been attacked by police called in by the bosses and the Interna- | tional Longshoremen’s Association. | The LL.A. sees that the longshore- men are going over to the fighting industrial union, and its officials are using both police and imported gangsters to try and stop it. At a recent meeting attacked by the police, the longshoremen defend- ed the speakers and threshed the first two policemen, though the meeting was afterwards broken up by police reinforcements. ETS |COPS AND SMASH MEETING) Make It Plain That You Can't Vote For Just Anybody You Want To. NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J., July |7.—The state election campaign | committee of the Communist Party jheld a meeting here, attended by | 1,000 workers largely from the big} Johnson & Johnson factory, The police had refused to grant a per- it, The meeting was at the cor- of French and New Sts. at p. m, O. Blumenburg of the state com- | mittee was arrested before she got | a chance to speak, and a worker in the audience named Collins was ar- rested for merely saying, “Let her | talk.” Both were beaten up on the way to the police station. The judge tried to make them promise not to} hold any more meetings in this town, but they refused. Went Right Back. They were released, and Blumen- burg went immediately back to the | corner to continue the meeting. The Vetei as of Foreign Wars had mobilized in the meantime, led | by one Kessler. Before the speak- ing had started, they attacked pros- pective speakers and members of 8 | Plants Shut Down. | League have already served 10 days GRAFTING FOREMAN DIES. IN FIGHT WITH VICTIMS the audience. Blumenberg and Col- | lins were again slugged, and ser- |ious injuries were given a worker |in the crowd named Sibelia, He land in support of the TUUL and | ventory” before. The Goodyear plant has closed for nine days for “inventory” and 15,000 have been forced to take va-| cations, most all of them without pay. Goodrich closed their tire and | pit departments for 10 days for | “inventory” and 12,000 more are} forced on vacation. Other plants | are running with skeleton forces so that Akron has now about 30,000 in the regular unemployed army} and another 27,000 new recruits. | No plants ever shut down for “in-| Mergers, Speed-Up, Cuts. There is again talk of merger of rubber plants: Goodrich | Fiske which will no doubt go through; Goodyear with Sieberling and U. S. Rubber, and even includ- ing Goodrich with this combination; Falls Rubber with Dayton and with | | other small plants. This will mean | more unemployment, wage cuts and | speed-up by the closing of ineffi-| cient plants and transferring of de- partments. Goodrich has trans- ferred their shoe department to! Hood in Massachusetts where wages | are even lower than in Akron. T. U. U. L, Work Begun. The Trade Union Unity League has begun the work of building the Rubber Workers’ Industrial League and Unemployed Councils for mis- | cellaneous workers. Shop commit- | tees have been formed in two plants | and the unemployed rubber work- | ers are being orga zed accc’dine to the shop where they formerly worked. { Two Finnish Deputies Kidnapped by Fascists (Wireless by Inprecorr.) HELSINGFORS, July 7.—Fas- tists kidnapped two left wing dep- uties in the Finnish parliament on Saturday. The town is full of arm- ed fascists. | MATTHEW WOLL GROWS HOPEFUL. | WASHINGTON, D. C. — “The, country is working toward a read- | justment and a return of employ-| ment,” says Matthew Woll, labor faker and bosses’ agent, expressing one of the wishes and hopes of. capitalism. No facts exist to prove this. All proof is to the contrary. | Shingle Weave On Despite Hoquiam Wash. To the Daily Worker, New York, N. Y. The strike of the Shingle Weav- ers to date is very well. On Mon- day morning the 23rd there re- mained but five strike breakers on the inside of the M. R. Smith Shingle Co. plant, a large number of the strikers who were on picket duty gained entrance to the cook- house where they exhorted the scabs to come out or more drastic efforts they would come out if they were given time to get their belongings, woods where the Co. carries on it | logging operations. These five are regular Federated | Industries men paid by that organ- | ization strike or no strike. The | pickets retired from the cook and) bunk houses to re-organize and go in at a latter date. There is two or three deputies there but they are not of the hard boiled kind and the strikers can brush them aside. It was desided not to make any at- tempt on Tuesday morning, but to in Central Asia government, the Red Army, numer- ous workers’ organizations and, of course, the Czech colonists. The delegation will study closely the sit- uation of the colonists in Frunse anc the working conditions of the workers and peasants in general and then return home to refute the lies of the Czech bourgeoisie with first- hand information. call a special meeting for that evening to better organize their forces and be prepared to take these men out bodily. On Tusday afternoon the Feder- ated Industries men met with rep- resentatives of the Shingle Co, in the mill office, one of the T.U.U.L. pickets crawled under the office and listened in on the conference wanted to quit the fight but the dustries tried to point out where the Co, should still continue the strike. ‘The strike extended the next day. 1,000 men were out, | t They served a fake injunction on the union but it was ignored as will | ily of seven. | is would be used, the men said that! but they hid out by going to the, the manager of the Shingle Co.) spokesman for the Federated In- | in solitary confinement on bread and water for daring to demand the q-hour day, 5-day week, 6 days for young workers, full month’s vaca- tion with pay, for young workers, a minimum wage of $20 a week, équal pay for equal work, and for full social, political, and economic equality for Negro workers, here in Mount Vernon. Eleven more young workers are being tried tomorrow for speaking to and organizing the workers of Mt. Vernon to fight for these demands. The bosses here are afraid that the workers will or- ganize and under the leadership of the Communist Party, the only workers party, and the Young Com- munist League, will force them to give in to these demands, so they try to beat up and arrest all who fight for the working class.” Rockefeller Speed- Up) Kills Pueblo Worker PUEBLO, Colo. (By Mail).—Nick Simonich was killed last Tuesday in the Pueblo steel plant of the Colo- rado Fuel & Iron Co. when a dump- ing-bar slipped, striking him in the face and breaking his neck. Simonich left behind him » fam- He had been employed in the steel mills for 22 years and was known to be very careful, but the inhuman speed-up which is being | imposed on the men by the C, F.| & I. Co. is responsible for many ac- | cidents. According to the company’s rules, Simonich’s life is worth $2,500, but it is very doubtful that Simonich’s | wife and children will receive this money, as the Rockefeller interests | fight to the last ditch before they ever pay out a nickel in insurance or death compensation. FRAME-UP IN SPAIN. BILBAO, Spain.— Because the revolutionary movement in Spain gaining ground the bosses quickly accused Communists when bombs were exploded here. The} bosses’ tactics are similar interna- tionally. The above indictment | duplicates the “frame-up” situation | which landed Mooney and Billings | behind bars for life. Capitalism, | the real dynamiting agency, is a| machine kept running by the whole- sale destruction of life. rs Strike Sell Out Plots be a genuine article, this was for the purpose of frightening the strikers but it was a failure. Tues- day afternoon late three deputies entered the W. I. R. camp and served the fake papers and looked for the “woman” but Comrade Taylor was in Aberdeen 30 miles; | away. This shows plainly that they fear the leaders and the leadership far more than they do the workers, and they know also that each little victory gained puts more fight into the strikers. The Federated Industries is the leader of the mill men as well as other industries and it is in times of strike that they can draw the most out of the treasuries of the member companies, therefore it is | to their interest to see that the strike is continued. The loggers and sawmill men are watching this struggle and if it proves a success then there is a likelihood that they will make an effort to regain their lost grouud. Here is a fertile field for the T. U. U. L. but there is a lack of organ- izers the few that is here have to divide their efforts to carry on LL. D., W. I R. work as well as the T.U.U.L. We need funds with which to spread our propaganda to all of the workers this must now be done while the minds of the workers are ready to receive it. As this story is finished news comes in that at breakfast time a large number of the strikers entered the premises and took out the last of the strike-breakers from the M. R. Smith mill, One of the dicks fired a tear bomb into the cookhouse to run the strikers out but it had the same effect on the strike-breakers | and they came cut into the arms of ‘the waiting strikers | PUEBLO, Colo, (By Mail).—Mel- vin Calhoun, a foreman in the wire mill of the Pueblo Steel Works, was stabbed to death on Friday, June 20, while on his way home. It is com- mon talk among the workers in Pueblo that Calhoun was killed by several men from whom he had been | extorting graft. In his capacity as foreman, Calhoun made a practice of giving preference to certain men in the way of allowing them to} work—providing they paid for this privilege by handing over a certain | amount of graft to him on pay-day. Because of this and because of his constant slave-driving, Calhoun was was knocked down and jumped on by Johnson & Johnson’s fascists. Other workers were also attacked, There will be another meeting soon, A defense corps must be organized. WAR-PLAN SPEED-UP GRAD- UATES 291 RESERVE OFFICERS, PLATTSBURGH, N. Y. — 291 members of the R.O.T.C., from 18 schools and colleges, graduated from the barracks here, becoming, after four weeks of intensive train- ing, commissioned officers in the Reserve Corps. The bosses’ war plans are speeded up at Platts- hated by the men in the wire mills. | To date no one has been :rrested in connection with the stabbing. It is clear that the Pueblo steel workers, driven to desperation by their miserable conditions, are ready burgh, rapidly producing officers for the military expeditions of im- perialism and, when the occasion demands, a war against the Soviet Union. THER FOOLISHNESS OF GOV, ROOSEVELT, ALBANY, N. Y. — Clowning through the period immediately preceeding a crisis, Gov. Roosevelt makes one foolish proposal after | another. “Thousands are idle,” he | said to dairymen here, “If you can do anything possible to create a job, even temporarily, do it.” ao " ene ~ 1 PUR CONN. WORKERS | frihusiastio: Support to Communist Party WATERBUR Conn, July 7.— The State Ratification Convention which took with 77 The position of the bosses when the contradictions of capitalism present themselves is one of baffled stupidity. They are reduced to thinking in circles and in order to strengthen a tottering position re- of the Comunist place 49 here last tes fro workers ot- | sort to police brutality and terror zations present, included 13) against the hungry workers within Negro delegates, and 12 working-| their boundaries and plunder and women, and definitely laun election campaign in the Connecticut. Comrade Wo: | elected chairman ahd secretary. hed the | warfare against the trade rivalry te of | of other countries, was Borgniss | a CHICAGO, Tll.—Sears-Roebuck & It enthusiastically endorsed the | Samvite «betes dine of eae election platform and the slate of | 999,900 for the month of May. candidates of the Party, after the) When a mighty chain organization reports given by Comrades Schneid- | suffers such shocks the bosses’ sys- erman and Orloff, and a lively dis-| tem is rapidly crumbling, cussion from the floor in which 26 | delegates participated, including ~ many of the Negro and women “For All Kinds of Insurance” delegates. Resolutians were adopted, endors- ing the Party platform and candi- dates; in support of the Daily Worker; greeting the war | prisoners; hailing the Chinese and | ‘ Indian _ Revolution; protesting | against the lynching of Negroes; ARL BRODSK ‘Telephone; Murray HUM) KY fast 42nd Street, New York | 1 if Unemployed Councils. || Cooperators! Patronise Contributions and pledges to the campaign fund amounted to $141.10. S E R O ¥ The campaign to get 6,000 signa- | 2% tures to put the Party on the bal- | CHEMIST lot is now under way. | 657 Allerton Avenve The candidates are; For Gover-|{ Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. ¥. nor: Rasmus S, Kling; for Lieut.- | — Governor, Morris Fitch; Secy. of |= State, Chas. M. Smith; Comptroller, |{ 44 (omrages Meet at Anna Sacher; Attorney-General, | Avanti Borgnis. For Congressmen: Edward Mrasco, Bridgeport; Clem- ent N. Nurse, Hartford; Chas. Crasnitzky, Waterbury; Joseph | Schlossberg, New Haven. BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Clremont Parkway, Bronx Demand the release of Fos- |, ter, Minor, Amter and Ray- | mond, in prison for fighting for unemployment insurance. RATIONAL Vegetarian RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVE, JE to act. But this action must be in the direction of organizing under the banner of the militant Metal Work- | ers’ Industrial League, and not in outbursts of individual terrorism. Brilliant Hollywood, skillfully filming its propaganda for American imperial- | TEXTILE WORKERS T0 GREET POWERS IN N. C. \ism, is occasionally shown up as| | pretty amateurish, after all. Virtue CHARLOTTE, N. C., July 7.—| (in capitals), doll-faces glorifying The executive committee here of the | not the American girl but the International Labor Defense and the | pseudo-morality of the American) tile Workers Union have unanimous- | for sleek haired sons of the rich ly decided to hold a joint, meeting | ang dainty bourgeois maidens— of welcome to M. H. Powers, when | these are inevitably put to shame he arrives after his release on bail whenever a foreign picture with a in the Atlanta “incitement to in little attention to realism comes surrection case.” The release on | along. bail of Powers, Joe Carr, Young} « ” ; : 9 ee ‘Slums of Tokyo,” now showing Communist League Youth organizer, | at the 55th Street Theatre, a story and of Mary Dalton, Georgia oF- | of the Yoshivara, amusement center “Slums ot Tokio’ Has Piroka local of the National Tex | petty-bourgeoisie, the happy ending | & Bet. 12th and 13th Ste. Strictly Vegetariun Food om riessant to Dine at Our Pince 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD. Bronz (near 174th St. Station) PHONE:— INTERVALD 9169. Acting In OF | SCENE FROM “SLUMS TOKYO” HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 6865 —_—— Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant spnime ce fs Noes a Saree ce Tokyo, has much to commend it ehed acq electrocution i CON-| besides its wonderful impressionis- mere. ae tic photography. It was chopped} The workers of this city are|up by the U. S. censors, because it pretty well disgusted with their own) deals, not only with the Japanese starvation wages, stretch out sys-|slum proletariat, but with the mad | tem and unemployment. |love of a young Japanese for a| The meeting is Sunday, July ,| prostitute, and, morally, it is not— at the Workers Center, Caldwell | pretty. Ave. and 14th St.,2 p.m. Speakers}. The story, made obscure in places will include Totherow, youth organ-| by the butchery of the censors, izer of the National Textile Work | shows the selfless devotion of a| ers Union, Johnson, of the N.T.W..| young girl, who sacrifices every- and Jennie Cooper, I.L.D. district) thing for her brother and his unfor- organizer. |tunate love. It ends abruptly and 4 picnic and mass meeting will is in many places far from pleas- be held on Sunday to last all day,) ant. And still it agpieves a Great: | July 20, at Mt. Holly Road, near | ness rarely found in the Hollywood | O11 Wizard Place to listen to a re | product. port on the huge National Unem-| The acting is superb, unequaled | ployment Convention. by the best American movies, The po SSS ae | settings are, with justice, com- COURTS HIT WOMEN WORKERS BALTIMORE, Md.—Over 42 nae | cent of the 61,000 women workers | here work more than eight hours | a day, it is reported by the Mary-| land Commissioner of Labor and! Statistics. Thirty-seven violators | of the state law forbidding employ- | ment of women for more than ten| hours a day were reported. Seven of the cases brought to law were all dismissed by the bosses’ courts. pared with those of “Dr. Caligari.” The picture has great defects, It IRKO-THEATRES--LETS GO/] Fare CU AMERICAN PREMIERE | “LOST GODS” | AN AMAZING EXPLORATION FILM ie @, Inside the Line” A Radio Picture ith Betty Compson and Ralph ye Communist Activities Section 6 Will have a membership meeti tonight at 8 p. m, at 68 Whipple s Brooklyn, Oe eee Section 6, Nucleus 3 | Will have a meeting tonight, 7 p.m. | oe TH STREET PLAYHOUSE, (Film Guild Cinema) ! st SPR. 5095 1 PM. to Midnite Popular Prices. EVOLUTION’ Clear, concise, adult presen- tation of Darwin's theory Also “DOCKS OF HAMBURG We Meet ‘at the— Passaic Daily Worker picnic will be Sunday, July 13 at Deer Park, C well, J. Busses leave 25 Ave. at 9 a.m. to 1 p.m, eee * eld ld ‘on | i] Worker Piente Sunday, Augu Daily i ‘Will be held it 17 in Pleasant Bay Park. All organizations are to keep this date open, ae * Painters Fraction. Will be held Wednesday at 8 p, m. at 26 Union Square. Lage * Unit GF, Section 1 Meets tonight a't 8 p.m. Reorgan- trial Wednesday in Mt. Vernon are to wear uniforms, Labor and Fraterna! Organizations Fresh Will hold a lecture tonight on the present situation in China, Com, Beufkin will lecture. EVERY DAY Come where you are welcomed! 188 FAST OTH ST Furnished | 118 FIETH AVENUE, CO roums; all improvement: © sub 177K $’ taation’of unit will be held. | COOPERATIVE CAFETERIA oe ONION on KEW. Mite AN IMane MenOOFA SHAE: Ath oil 26-28 UNION SQUARE a0 et FRESH FRUIT SODAS AND ICE CREAM U. S. 5S. R. CANDIES. COMRADES, WE ARE SERVING DINNER FOR ROYALTON RESTAURANT SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 102 E,12th St. — New York Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF Leading player in Japanese film, | SURGEQN DENTIST “Slums of Tokyo,” now current at A La) joo 115th sTRRME ‘ 55th Street - Playhouse. jean be in: DAILY EXCEPT FRIDAY Please telephone tor appolntmenr Telephone: Lehigh oz? is shot through with despair, unre- lieved by humor or by recognition of the possibility of struggle against intolerable conditions. It is | tragedy without a ray of hope, a/ picture of the lowest strata of the| proletariat without recognilion of the class struggle, without contrast of their conditions with those of the Japanese bourgeoisie. But in its way it is superb and the acting and photography are almost per- fect. i) |] rel. ORChara 3788 f DR, L. KESSLER SURGEON DENTIST Strictly by Appolutment 45-50 NCEY STREET ldridge st NEW YORK \: t vor SURCKEON DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Room 8038- Phone, Algonquin 8148 Not connected with any other offre Workers Cooperative Colony 3-4 ROOM APARTMENTS We have a these MAJESTIC 7 Mats, Wed and THEATRE COO1, A Theatre Guild Pro THE NEW GARRICK GAIETIES GUILD W. 524. evs. 8:30 Mts Th &Sat.2:80 limited number of nts. No investment necessary, ‘The rooms tnee Park. Avail yourslet of ¢ portunity to live in a com atmosphere! IF ‘Take Lexington Ave, White Piaing Subway and get off at Allerton Ave. station, TEL, ESTABROOK 1400 2800 BRONX PARK EAST Our Office is open from 9 a. m. u to O80 pom. daily, a am to 2 pom, on Demand the release of Fos- ter, Minor, Amter and Ray- mond, in prison for fighting for unemployment insurance. Bronx Headfuarters, 2994 rd Avenue, Melrose 0148; Brooklyn Headquarters, 16 Graham Avenue, Pulasky 0634 CIGARETTES Vegetables Our Specialty Banquets and Parties Arranged. rhe Shop WVelegates Council meets the first ‘uesday of every mont at § PM, at 16 West 21st The Shop Is the Baste Unit. Advertise your Union Mi here. For information he The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sn.. New York City T. NEW YORK orry

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