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ee ace feo ‘Two DAILY. _WORKE R, NEW YORK, , THUR DAY, . JULY 10, 1930 RUM ANI AN F ASCISTS | FOOD WORKERS REPULSE | ‘PAINTERS FIGHT |COMMUNISTS IN NEEDLE FISH COMMITTEE MOR:i GAGE MASSES TO. BASEBALL BAT ATTACK WALLSTREET BANKERS To Construct Modern odoen Selec and Electric} Apparatus for War Against Soviet Union American Imperialists Outmaneuver European Rivals; Gain Rumanian Foothold At the time Carol returned to Ru- mania, the Daily out that this meant am ascenitancy of the influence of American im- perisiism in Rumania. The news of Carol's return was paralleled by the news that J. P. Morgan ‘was negotiating to loan Carol’s govern- ment $20,000,000 and that the In- ternational Telephone and Telegraph Co. would receive a telephone con cession from the new Rumanian government headed by King Carol. Further facts are now available concerning the I. T. & T. concession. The I. T. & T. undertakes to grant the Rumanian government a loan in return for the telephone concession. | The Rumanian parliament is now going through the form of approv- ing the proposal. | The I. T. & T. is to pay $48,000,- 000 for the existing telephone equir ment which is owned and op by the government. The govern in turn, is to receive two loans of $4,000,000 each from the I. T. & T. The loans wil] be repayable in five years. As soon is the deal is approved, the I, T. & T. will initiate a $60,- 000,000 program of moder! Rumanian telephone sys next five years government will receive 4 per cent of the gross receipts of the local telephone company and 50 per cent ef the surplus after the pa Worker pointed ; contract away +| advi nent i of 4 per iend to the I. T. é&T. That this nent is closely | connected r preparations of the Rumanian capitalists and their imperialist creditors is clearly indicated by the provision that the I. T, & T. construct, through its sub- sidiary, Standard Electric, a tele- phone equipment manufacturing subsidiary in Rumania, which is to | be placed completely at the disposal | of the government “in case of war.” | There is no doubt that the chief in- tention of this is to strengthen the war apparatus of the Rumanian fas-| cists attack ag: for an imperialist inst the Soviet Union. he American I. T. & T, got the | from big Swedish and German competitors. Com- menting on this, the New York Journal of Commerce, in its July 8th i e, states: “Ur a few weeks ago it was definitely understood on s from Eurone that the com- hiner rman and Swedish interests would be awarded the permanent concession, as well as the privilege of underwriting the loan. The first intimidation that the American in- terests would be awarded the con-| | tract, curiously enough, correspond- | {ed to the return of Prince Carol to; the Rumanian throne and the de-| t of the Bratianu gnfluence in| Bratianu | nanian politics.” The nce” represented “European’ nst American imperialism, Workine Wemen “Old” at Twenty-Five M ef their husbands, of its recent bulletins. earn sufficient to cover the cost of says, union, to seek employment and to the support of the family.” “makes it necessary for many women, ried women are forced to go to work because of the low wages the United States Women’s Bureau admits in one “The inability of a large number of men to living for the family,” the Bureau in every state of the share with husband and father in This is one of the hest answers to the hypocritical lie about the high standard of living of the majo: Bureau is also forced to admit that The ‘an unscrupulous exploita- rity of the American workers, there is tion” of the women workers who are not given equal pay with the men for equal work. In the forty years from 1880 to 1920 the proportion of women working for wages rose from 14.7 per cent to 21.1 per cent of the women population. The proportion of men wage workers in the same period remained almost at a standstill. The bloodsucking bosses show as to the men workers in the matter of “old age.” women are thrown on the industrial ef the men, who are “too old” to talist speed-up at the age of 40 to According to Caroline Manning of the U, Social! Workers anise’ at Boston, the dead- a recent speech to the § just as little mercy to the women The deadline when scrap heap is even lower than that work under the conditions of capi- 45, Women’s Bureau, in line for women in many industriez starts at 25, while a woman worker of 29 who looks for a job, woman.” suddenly discovers that she is “an old “A 28-year-old forelady in a cigar factory who lost her job through @ merger.” Manning said, “was told when she went out for work that she was too old to get a good job,” is hopeless, according to Manning. For women over 40, the situation One woman who was 46, told her, “My hushand and I seem to have passed the age when we are expected to live.” This is what capitalism has t well as to the working man. 0 offer to the working woman as Every worker will contrast this with the tonditions in the Soviet Union where the workers rule. 110,183 More Jobless in Two Weeks in Britain LONDON, July 9.—The number ef jobless in Great Britain has in- éreased in the first half month of June by 110,193. This males the tetal number of jobirss 1,885,300 ago, Since official statistics only nelude the jobless workers who registered and are receiving “doles,” The actual number of the unem- | ployed is much larger than the > whieh is 762,587 more than a year | above figure. Bosses Coin Gold, Miners Die by Thousands Mine accidents caused the death of 7,000 miners since 1870 in three arthracite coal counties of Pennsylvania which produce the entire supply for this country. More than 90,900 were injured in the same area, adding an average of 500 miners each year to the list of those killed. The number killed in the soft coal mines is eyen higher than this. Thus, dvring the first four months of , 489 soft coal miners were in mine accidents. kille: JERSEY WORKERS FIGHT FASCISTS Meet Again Monday to Hear Communists NEWARK, N. J., July 9.—The breaking up of the election cam- ign meeting of the Communist Marty in New Brunswick by the) poli¢e, with the open cooperation id the fascist Veterans of Foreign) ‘ars, was organized by the bosses New Brunswick who want to) keep the workers from hearing the pletform of the Communist Party. The bosses try to prevent the| Communists from exposing the rot-| ten conditions of the workers in New Brunswick, the fact that most of the workers are forced to work rt time at as low as 20 cents an iy at an intense speed-up, and about the huge number of unem- ployed. The Communist Party states that in spite of the terror of the police ‘and the “veterans,” it will continue to hold its meetings in New Bruns- wick and organize the workers there to fight for the 7-hour day, Seday week, 6-hour day 5-day week for young workers under 18, for work or wages, the equality of Ne- gro workers; against speed-up, low wages, for the defense of the Soviet Inion and against imperialist wars,| in the word war and who is now; Iuly The fact that the judge did not. fieptence the workers who were ar- Anti-Lynching Action NEW YORK.—A special meeting of the action committee elected at the Anti-Lynching Conference held on June 18 will take place tomor- row at 8 p. m. at 26 Union Square. Plans for the broadening of the campaign against lynching and the building of a powerful anti-lynching movement will be discussed. All members of the action committee are expected to be present and on | time. | rested at the meeting, shows that they were afraid of the masses of workers who turned out to the | meeting to listen to the speakers {of the Communist Party. The workers who were beaten up at the meeting and saw the police arrest | the sperkers saw also that the po- lice protected the fascist veterans who beat up the workers. This | meeting was a good lesson the workers in democracy. The Communist Party calls upon the workers to attend the meeting of the election campaign committee next Monday night July 14, at Frech and New Sts., at 8 p. m., and to defend their rights to the streets. Dozier Will Graham, Communist candidate for Senate; A. Hartfield, section organizer of the Communist Party; Lottie Bloomenthal of the Young Communist League; and Jo- seph Fofrich, a member of the American Legion, who was disabled a member of the Communist Party, { will hye Committee—Tomorrow NEW YORK,—A strike was | called in a cafeteria in a Wane | Beach yesterday by the Food Work- ie Industrial Union, in which the question of reinstating one of its | members came up. The boss re- | fused to listen and attempted to} assault the pickets. The boss and| his gang attacked, armed with base- ball bats, etc., but the workers re- sisted and established a good strong picket line. The strikes in the bakeries in the | Bronx are proceeding, and picket- | ing is still going on despite the | fascist terror by the gangsters of Local 164 of the A. F. L. FLINT C0, UNICN JOINS ALF. OF L |Chief Strike Breaker) Comstock Rewarded BULLETIN FLINT, Mich, July 9—The metal trimmers, the first to strike, have refused to go back to work unless all are taken back. The police terror continues. Those already arrested will be up in ¢ourt for examination Friday. che Auto Workers Union is issu- ng leaflets pointing out the rea- sons for the failure of this, the ‘argest strike in the history of the industry, and the need for shop organization and prepara- tions. There will be strike movement in’ other plants, Ford has shut down for the week end, and has | already fired 20 per cent of his force outright. Wage cuts con- tinue. RE Bea FLINT, Mich., July 9—At a meeting yesterday at Colburn gas station, ten miles down the high-| | way south of Flint, 500 Flint auto | workers who had been duped by the | Cecil Comstock company union | | voted to join the American Federa- | tion of Labor. Comstpck had just come from a meeting arranged by chief of Police Scavadra with R. J. Whiting, plant manager of the Fisher Body | Works, at which the boss magnani- | mously assured the workers through his agent Comstock that he in-| tended to blacklist only about five per cent of them At the meeting to join the A. F. L., Comstock had himself elected to a soft job, the salaried head of the new A. F, of L.—and company union—local, It was evident from the beginning that Comstock was doing stool pigeon work, smashing the strike, by splitting the ranks of the strik- ers and fighting against mass pick- eting, and that the American Fed- eration of Labor, the Socialist Labor Party and other fakers were aiding him—besides, of course, the police and the company, At that only 500 of the 5,000 who struck came to his latest meeting. The A. F. L. has a poisonous rec- ord in Michigan. Its state presi- dent, Wade, had s specia] house built for him by the General Mot- ors Co. (owner of Fisher Body Co.) in 1928. Whenever the auto work- ers of Michigan showed any un- rest, the A. «. of L. made a grand stand play of “organizing them,” spent thousands of dollars on high priced and harmful officials, and | organized nobody. The Auto Workers Union is fight- ing to stiffen the strike, and to block the natural pessimism of the rank and file of the strikers fol- lowing Comstock’s split and treach- ery. RAILROAD FORTIFIES SHOPS BEFORE WAGE CUT SAN FRANCISCO, Cal. July 9.— Not signs, but walls, point to next season’s conditions in the railroads in California. The Southern Pacific is building high stockades around all its machine shops from Sacra- mento to New Orleans. According to inside dope among railroad workers, the plan is to cut wages of the remaining shop men about in half next winter. Then there will be a strike, and that is what the stockades are for. Fight Lumber Worker} Pickets Are Arrested) MOCLIPS, Wash., July 9.—Eight shingle weavers have been arrested here and charged with trespassing for picketing the Moclips mill. They are held on $100 each. The shingle weavers are fighting a 20 per cent cut. They have had the mill closed down since a couple of weeks ago, when the officers gassed a bunch of scabs and them- selves while trying to drive pickets away with tear gas bombs. LL.D. Boat Ride to Hook Mt. July 19 In order to raise funds for the de- fense of the many persecutions ex- isting in the United States the International Labor Defense is holding a boat ride up the Hudson to Hook Mountain. The boat leaves at 2p, m. from Pier A, Battery, on 19 and you had better ret | firtate in else the boat will leave without you. | | | | | Wages. | the Trade Union Unity League. NEW SELL OUT | Calls Meeting Saturday /TUUL For NEW YORK. rs will be of at meeting urday held 2 p. m, at Irving Plaza to discuss) the attempt of the G.E.B. of th Painters Union (A.F.L) to forc anization to join fting building trades counci. | The painters’ district council took | e from the international bu. y and voted to affiliate the 7,000 o ized paint to th building trades council. Seven locals held meetings, and formed a com- mittee to fight against this action. Local 905 adopted and presented the program for struggle which the Trade Union Unity League advo- ertes, but the committee of the seven locals voted it down, and picked out of it for use only a couple of points; non paying a per capita, and with- drawing of delegates. The complete program is: 1. The election of rank and file action committees in all local unions. 2. The members elected to the Action Committee must agree with| this program. 3. The local Action be united into a joint Action Com mittee. 4, No per capita tax to the dis- trict council and to the brotherhood, 5. Against affiliation to the Building Trades Council. 6. Against injunetions. 7. For the seven-hour day. 8. For unemployment insurance to be paid by the bosses and ad- ministered by the workers. 9. Against the speed-up. 10. Against wage cuts—the en- foreing of the wage scale. 11. We call on the unemployed to join the Building Trades Unemploy- | ed Couneil and fight for Work or| Committee | e 12. indust: 18. Abolition of the right of the boss to hire and fire. 14, Prohibition of all overtime. 15, For violation of all injune tions against the workers. 16. Join the Building and Con- | struction Workers Industrial | League. 17. Affiliate your local union to} ‘or one union in the building The meeting Saturday is called} by the Building. and Construction Workers Industrial League of the T.U.U.L. to plan a struggle along the line of this program. New York painters receive this week a leaflet from the T.U.U.L. pointing out that the worsening conditions, the grow-/| ing unemployment, etc., can not he | cured either by the G.E.B., the rot- ten Building Trades Council, or by the proposals for injunction, ete. which the committee of seven locals has in mind. BUITENKANT HITS LIES OF “TIMES” Fight the Murderous Police Terror NEW YORK.—Jacques Buiten- | kant, attorney for the International | Labor Defense, appearing in the | case of Davidoff and Mishkin, sen- tenced in Bronx Court for distrib- uting leaflets calling workers to the Gonzalez funeral, has anwered a lie of the New York Times about that case. His statement, yesterday, is as follows: “There appeared in this morning’s New York Times a news item re-| porting on the case against Mishkin| and Davidoff, and according to that | article, it states that I made the} statement that the defendants are} not responsible for what statements the Communist Party puts in the leaflets distributed by them. This is absolutely false and untrue, and I never made any such statement. “The leaflet was entitled ‘Mur- derous Police Terror,’ and the judge stated that that constitutes a crim- inal libel. I openly stated in court that that could not possibly be a} libel, when there were three murders and killings on the streets of New York by the police in the past year, to wit, the killing of Steve Katovis, Alfred Levy and Gonzalo Gonzalez. That these men were killed and murdered by the police of New York on public highways, and not one of | them was brought to trial or in any way convicted. “That these leaflets do not con- stitute criminal libels, and that these people had a right to give out these leaflets on behalf of the Communist | Prrty. | “It seems that the capitalist press is inclined to distort my statement for purposes best known to them- selves. “There is no question but that the statement is entirely untrue.” Worker Ex-Servicemen Meet Tomorrow Night) Workers Ex-Servicemen’s Organ- ization will meet Friday, July 11, at 8 p. m. sharp at 26 Union Square. Preparations for the August First Anti-War Demonstrations will be taken up at the meeting and the Recent World War Pension Bill will also be discussed. All Ex-Service- men ere invited and all members miust vattend, « the Communist ”% rebar al tins tiaeiled Z ae Work: Indu Union (cloak}| Anti-Soviet Forgery: makers, dress make furrie ‘ ; | headwear w neckwear wor' Dealers Starring Jers, coat makers) and all other = needle trades workers, members of NEW YORK.—The Fish Com-| the Pa instructed by the| mittee, with all five fishes, will District iat, to attend the| swim into y York Tuesday and racion meeting on Frid aly 11, | begin “hear either in the neny | the analysis of the American | gro Labor Congress of a deliberate “TRADES MEET TOMORROW NEW YORK.—All —All me e or HEARINGS TUES, ' at 8 p. sharp at the Workers | eral Building or at the Department | Center, 8 Union Square, he lof Justice Building at 370 Lexing- | comrades a eleased by the Dis-|ton Avenue. But the committee- | t from all other} men are not going to “investigate” they unit of time th y any lower |unemployment or police brutality. | And they take rooms at the silk- hat Commodore Hotel, | The star performer is scheduled to be Grover Whalen, dealer in |forgeries along with Matthew Woll jof the A. F. of L. who will also be staged in the propaganda drive directed at the suppression of the Communist Party, war against the re and a see eae IS DELIBERATE : Negro Tare Congress) ts of the ‘starving unem- | ployed. Calls to Fight It | Another fine “witness” will be )} Commissioner Charles Wood of the NEW YORK.—The American Ne-| Department of Strike-breaking, who gro Labor Congress has made a|has written a thick book against statement on the lynch horror now| the Communists. All “fair and going on. The Congress says, in | impartial” witnesses. part, as follows: | The committee will stay here “Confirming the of | eight or ten days, fascist Fish says, Ne-| then hold other seances in Buffalo, Detroit, Chicago, Philadelphia and | San Francisco, Los Angeles and | Seattle “if necessary.” are the Party. LYNCH MURDER correctness eampaign of lynch terror against the Negro workers, growing in in- tensity with the deepening of the “Our object,” said Fish, “is to get economic crisis, the growth of mass} unemployment and the sharpening | of the class struggle, come the four} lynchings at Emelle, Alabama, be-| tween the fourth and sixth of July,| with the governor offering $300 act each additional murder. “This terror has been flaming up| for months now and shows no signj of abatement. Eighteen worke have been lynched already tt year—seven more than for the e tire year of 1929 The customa’ charge of rape has not been able to} stand up in these lynehings, has not | been able to cover up the ee q Mb EA pabhicds 2 MERRIE | expedition of Byron De Prorok. “Tn addition to the 18° lynchi The film is billed as an “all-talkie” Bee ynehings) travel film, but that’s an exag- recorded in the Spprestor p there have been scores of guar | Seaton, £0 4b peal nenguna fous disappearances of Negro)" Nothing startling or very new is| HME eevee ikenveal Gb Neseniaen nie revealed, Travel picture after Entertaining, Pt» not startling, is iI \the travel film, “Lost Gods,” at the | Cameo Theatre this week. “Lost Gods” is a picturization of the ex- cavations in North Africa, in Libya and in the Sahara on the sites of ancient Carthage and Utica by the “Lost Gods” Travel Film of _ Northern Africa at Cameo ers have been legally lynched by the state apparatus set in motion against militant Negro workers | travel picture has been shown, but each seems but a sort of reproduc- tion of the last, with the locale changed a bit. | to better their conditions. (“bad niggers,” the southern bosses | call them!) by the industrial barons | t and big planters when other means | « 2 fail. Today, in Atlanta, Georg When someone gets wise enough give us a travel film with sound, so that we can hear the various Ewe “otgativers of the eictecn| peoples show: us on the film, hear Negro Labor Congress and four| | their music and their language, white workers are facing legal then we'll have something to get | lynching in the electric chair for| excited about. the crime, in the eyes of the white| i sip iris can daa ruling class, of advocating race) SOVKINO’S ‘PAMIR’ AT 8TH equality at a meeting of Negro andj 4 white workers held under the aus- ath Pe OUSe aus pices of the American Negro Labor | “Pamir,” the first Russian-Ger- Congress and calling upon’ #6) 5 film, a seeped of the Russians workers to unite in joint struggle German scientific expedition which explored the unknown Pamir region | at the boundaries of China and Afghanistan, will have its Ameri- can premiere at the Eighth St. Deliberate Terror. “These attacks upon the Negro meee are not isolated or acci- ental as the imperialists and their . . . agents, the Were petty bourgeoisie | P/@vyhouse commencing this Friday. (rent-gouging landlords, parasitic| The expedition finally climbed preachers, prostitute intellectuals,| despite the fact that for more than masses be-|@ month they lived at an altitude They are part of a deliberate| of 15,000 feet, suffering from lack us campaign of white | terrorism, intensified by the industrial cri: | “As the expre leadership of the Negro Saket * the American Negro Labor Con-| ete.) would have the lieve, uN ‘LEAGUE CALL 10 AID BRITISH STRIKERS | The National Office of the Trade | | Union Unity League together with | the National Office of the Textile | Workers’ Union and the Workers | International Relief, decided that) we must immediately launch a cam- | paign for the support of the York-| shire Textile Workers, who under/ the leadership of the Independent Strike Committee of the Red In- ternational of Labor Unions, are fighting already the third month against rationalization and against the alliance of the bosses, the Bri- tish “Labor” Government and the reformist trade unions. The textile workers came out on| strike against the 5 to 8 per cent} wage cut, and the speed-up in the industry. | July 19 designated “Textile Solidarity Day,” with a program of | factory gate meetings at noon andj a collection throughout the eity and| open air mass’ meetings in the eve- | ning. Committees from the three or- ganizations must plan to cover all outdoor meetings and picnics on} Sunday, July 20, to collect money | is for the British and American tex- |' tile struggles. facts relating to Communistic activities here, not in Russia.” Fish don’t want to hear about the social- | ist construction, evidently. | That the Fish look upon the | “socialist” party as brother fascists, | is shown by his remark: “We do not propose to investigate socialism, radicalism or pacifism.” IN “DOCKS OF HAMBURG” Willy Fritsch, who has a leading role in “Docks of Hamburg,” show- ing at the Eighth St. Playhouse this week. of oxygen and mountain sickness, They discovered the largest glacier in the world—the “Oshenko”; found many mountain peaks, discovered gold, copper and many other min- erals, New forms of fauna were found and meteorological surveys were prepared, An exact map of | this region was prepared for the first time. The expedition finally clibmed Mount Lenin, the highest peak in the Union of Socialist Soviet Re- publics, 21,000 feet. gress calls upon the Negro and) white workers and agricultural la-| borers, of the South as well as of the North, to: “Smash the lynching terror the hosses, “Support the struggle for full volitical, economic and social equal- ity! “Support the demand for self-| determination for the Negro masses | of the South!” of| AMBRICAN PREMIERE 8 CARLOANING SHOWS BIG DECREASE, | WASHINGTON, D. C.—Revenue| STARTING ‘PAMIR’ {THE ROOF OF THE WORLD} SOVIET ADVENTURE FILM Tuna PLAYHOUSE N 52 W. Sth St, Spr. 5095. Continuous 1 PB, M. to Midnite Popular prices DIRECTOR JOSEPH R. FLIESLER FRIDAY + CLIMBING MT, LENIN freight hauled during the week end- ing June 28 amounted to 936,848 carloads. This is 159,721 less thar those loaded for the same period of 1929 and 68,851 less than the 1928 carloading during the same week}! of 1928, AMERICAN PREMIERE oF soda ERT ain ‘c Communist Activities Passaic ‘Inside the Line” io Picture with Betty ( wane and Ralph Forbes sueally Worker picnic will be neta —— Sun at Dee d f 3 well Mc" ussbe, Seaeh. s6 Davin Support the Daily Worker Drive! Ave. at 9 a. m tod Pp) Get Donations! Get Subs! : “ARTISTS AND MODELS Paris-aiviera Edition of 1930 MAJESTIC op, Mott "at A Theatre Guild Production’ THE NEW GARRICK GATETIE: GUILD W. 524. Bys. Mts.Th.&Sat 0 Pag 6, Seetiow 7. pen air meet tonight at 8.30 p, m. at Seventh St, and “Brighton Hench || We Meet at the— Ave. * Women’s Work Directors! | ., Working Woman is off the press, Call for quotes immediately. i} * 8 Section 5 ane tionarien, Are to attend functionaries class at the district office tonight at 7 p. m. A checkup will be taken. Labor and Fraternal Organizations Joe HIN LL.D, Branch will hold a meeting tonight at 6.30 p,m. at 1179 Broadway Fresh Bakers Open Pike Will be held Friday, July 11 at 96 Clinton St. at 2 * . 2 p.m. Brighton Workers Club. Will hold an outing this Sunday. Meet at 200 Otis Pl, Brighton Beach at 8 a m. * Brighton Wheners Club, Will have a meeting Fi p.m, at 208 Otis W.U, Witt be nia ty 79h St. Pier to Hook Mountain, Meet at 9 am, COOPERATIVE CAFETERIA 26-28 UNION SQUARE FRESH FRUIT SODAS AND ICE CREAM ‘U. SS. R. CANDIES——— con PICNIC PASSAIC UNIT (Communist Party) for the DAILY WORKER ¢ Sunday, July 13th, at Deer Park CALDWELL, N., J. . Busses leave 25 Dayton Avenue from 9 a. m. to 1 p. m. TICKETS 60c; Children 25¢ CIGARETTES hts daddeada dh Our erie, PASSAIC, N.J. | 133 BAST | roomas ait tm jentn, Satay “For AU Kinds Bf tnaurance” (AR BRODSKY Pelephone: Murray HiIl sant ( wast 42nd Street, New . Cooperators} SEROY CHEMIST 657 Allertep Avenue Hstabrook 3215 Bronx, N ¥, Ali \omraaes Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 358 Claremont Parkway, Bronx RATIONAL Vegetarian ' . RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVE, JE Bet, 12th and 13th Bts, _Siiatly Vageiories Food —MELROSE Dairy sentatite omrades Will Alwnaye Find 1% Pleasant to Dime at Our 1787 SOUTHERN BLYD. Breer (near 174th Bt. ON NTERVALD a14e. rHO HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 6865 Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: PRALIAN A place with where 02 E.12th St, = New ¥, Dr. ABRAHAM MARKO! SURGEON DENTIST cor. Secoad ave” New York DAILY EXCEPT PRIVAT Tel. ORChard 8783 DR, L, KESSLER SURGEON DENTIST Strictly by Appotntment 48-50 DELANCEY Cor. Eldridge &t. cai Biggest and BestWork- ers’ Outing of Season Our Build the Baily 3Qé Worker PICNIC ana CARNIVAL vvVvVvYv Held in Co-operation with —All Revolutionary and Sym- pathetic Workers’ Organiza- tions; ~All Party Communist Pap- ers; ~All Daily Worker Readers; —All Workers from the Shops: That We Can Reach; RTT REMEMBER THE DATE Pleasant Bay Park FOOD WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION OF NEW YORK 16 W, 2st 6t, Chelsea 2274 Bronx Hexdauarters, 3994 Avenue, Melrose ites, Sroakiyn leadquarters, raham Avi Putasky o6sa /YOmS% The Shop De tes Council the figs Tuesday of every mon t 8 M.. bp a 6 West 2ist st. ‘The Shop I» the Baste Gait. Advertise your Union M. here. For information white te The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union 8n.. New York City OTH ost Fi 2 elm Gung 1 Cont 1 eS M. Popul: Lage, Mianite "EVOLUTION” , concise, adult jon of Beenie Alo “DOCKS OF HA mtg