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DATLY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1930 BOSSES COVER UP OF POLICE GRAFT IN DETROIT TO HELP 0U Boss Gov’t Forbids Vet Worker’ on i Ex-Soldiers Rally Behind Commu for Fight for DETROIT, Oct. 9.—Graft and corruption, inspiring to robbery, participation in kidnapping plots, as/| well as beating down workers is the job of the Detroit police department. These heroes in uniform who jail every day workers are part and parcel of the Detroit underworld, which was lately exposed by dif- ferent witnesses, who are engaged in all kinds of rackets. The graft and corruption went so far that the Detroit bosses in order not to expose too much their police and courts had to appoint an inves- tigation grand jury in order to squash all these charges, which have been made lately by the Det- roit underworld, The proceed of the grand jury are as usual ret. Despite the closed doors, we are able from time to time to get crumbs of information of the testi- monies of the witnesses about the role of the Detroit police. One of the members of a kidnap- ers gang, who is already sentenced has nothing to lose when called on the witness satnd before the grand jury in speaking of the “honesty of Murphy’s police” openly stated: “When I walked the street a cer- tain (?) officer always approached me and said ‘give me fifty dollars.’ And I had to give it to him, or go to jail whether he had anything on roit police are courageous, brave| who were working for wages ten| Unemployment in the last year is me or not.” The same gentleman of the un-|phy’s promises. The Detroit workers | derworld, Andrews’ explained an al- EXPOSURES Au MEN Ape EQUAL BEFORE ee LAw 8 a T FAKER MURPHY ‘Daily | | > : ee 5 Posting the Party} leged feud between two highly! laced police “officers said: ‘One was sore at the other, be-| cause he thought he is taking the |most of the ugderworld graft and| they had a fist fight over it in Al Thorps’ saloon.” | This fellow Andrews should be known was sentenced to 50 years in jail and of course, being sore at | the betrayal of his close friendship, THE ADVENTURES OF BILL WORKER Ha |G the Detroit police, could afford to talk the truth and on the question of what was the attitude of the pol- racket openly admitted: PLAN TO MOBILIZE Soviet Union Ending | Unemployment; Gives| [ BYITS ENEMIES jy of the police department told me once, when I did not give them graft “T swear that one of the =i WOMEN WORKE 8 —‘why don’t you pull off some job and spread a little money around jand we will not be throwing you in jail all the time.’ ” The grand jury is investigating for the last four weeks the killing of Buckley and nobody knows who really made the job. Mr. | cox, the Detroit police commissioner, before the elections stated that he |already knew who the killer was. Detroit is still waiting for the an- ;nouncement. But the new evidence | brought forward in the fake investi- ation of the grand jury and espec- ally the fact, elections being over, looks as if things are settled. Well, Murphy said that the Det- ci jit | jand honest . .. as honest as Mur- are beginning to learn about it. Shoe Union Joins the Anti-Injunction Fight Continued From Page 1) hailed®to court. Union headquar- ters, situated blocks away from the factories, were closed up and worke ers arrested. “In spite of the persecution, how- ever, the shoe workers resisted the injunction and violated it by mass picketing. “The Independent Shoe Workers of New York City and vicinity know that to deny the workers the right to Organize is equivalent to denying them the right to earn a living and will fully support the Trade Union Unity Council Con- ference to organize to smash In- junctions on Oct. 10 at Manhattan Lyceum at 7:30 p. m. sharp.” Party Activities, Entertainment and Dance For Sec. 4 of the C pices of the Harlem fi Saturday. Oct. 11, 2 jan Comrades, p.m., at the Italian ‘Workers’ » 2011 Thi Ave, Admission, 35 cents. gine e's « Unity Co-op. Party Fractio Will meet ‘Wednesday Mat 8 P. m., at 143 BE. 1 tendance of every comradé {s urgent. * # * Y. ©. L. Red Dance Bronx Unit 5 at $041 Third (between 174th and 175th Sts.) urday, Oct. 11. an interesting Av i Sat. Special features and show will go to make @ god time for all. ‘Aamtse Ret, YOUth Dance ission S. rg cents. To be held at Oct, 12 at 8:30 p.m by Harlem Unit 2, Y. CL. Ne: Jazz band, Sa ae Section 5 Red Election Dance. A Red Election Dance will he held Saturday evening, Oct. 18, in the Auditorium of the Co-operative Col. ony, 2700 Bronx Park East. Arranged by Unit 6. Proceeds for Unit and Section Headquarters. TERROR it ¢ Gastonia TL. D. Bra Will meet Wednekdy. Oct. fat 6:30 P.M, at 131 W. 28th St, Room 6. gis tapes All Needle Trades Party Members Thursday, Oct, 9 at & p.m, at 1179 Broadway. i Be ae Attention Section 9. The following notices pe Long Island: i Shige ie . Red Night tonight, the main Tallies will be held at’ corners of Detmire and Second Ave. and Stein- Way and Jamaica. Comrades assianed must be on time. 2. Section mem. bershin meeting. Thursday. § n, m. at 26 Jackson Ave 3. The Red Vamn issued bv the I. Miller Nucleus will be out Friday. Shock troops must report to the section headauarters at 4 p.m. Friday for distribrtion, 4, “vote Communist” Sandwich Siens Committee must renort to Section headquarters for dutv Friday after- noon, 4.30 p.m. and Friday morning at 645 a m. 5. Red Sunday, Oct. 12, all leacue and Party members re- port at the section headquarters at a.m. L deaeh Fd Comrades and Sympathizers You are invited to a vetcherinka in which nit 4F, Section 3 will ereet ¢. Samarodin who has just returned from the U.S.8.R. on Saturday, Oct 11 at & n. m. at 1800 Seventh’ Ave., Coop Hall. Youth ntdoor lection Campaign Meet wil be held by the Young om- munist League, Brooklyn Section, on Friday evening, Oct 10 at 68 Whipple St., Brooklyn * * * @ “6 Alteration Painters 'T.U. Mest tonizht at 8 p.m. ton Rd. Bronx. i * ¢ AD Labor and Fraterns) — “L. Group t 140 Bos. nofen) ‘The Fduentional Directors Of all the local councils of the TLE.W.C.W. will meet Thursday, Oct. 9, at 8 n,m. at 80 FE 11th St., 585. All councils must sented. SO he Plumhers Section, T.U.U.1. Cyd Thursday, 8 p. m. at 16 W. 21st St. % room be ‘repre- -_ * Yorkville English Re 1.L.D. . Today at 8 p.m. sharp at. the Chechoslovakian Hol 847 E. 72nd St. Joe HIN Branch fF. Meets Thursday at 6. 181 W 28th 8t. room ¢ Wie The three Tocal branches of ti ree local ranches 0 he International Labor efense are hold- ing a mass anti-lynch meeting in the rkers’ Home, 308 Elim St., at 7 p. Mm, Oct. 1 Vote Communist. + under aus- | MISLED JOBLESS _ ATTACK NEGROES \Fight Fellow Victims Instead of Bosses NEW ORLEANS, La., Oct. 8— Full of te race ahtred and superior- ity bunk dispensed by capitalist schools and other institutions, and further stimulated by the lynching terror of the bosses which has mur- dered 36 Negro workers already this jyear, several hunderd unemployed |white workers attacked Negro workers engaged on a construction job at Pearl River, La., an isolated |hamlet 60 mles north of here. Serious rioting is reported to have | | i | occurred, with the Parish officers aiding the attack on the Negro | workers. Re ee: In Chicago, Hl., a few weeks ago a similar riot occurred, this time with the Negro workers, led by the Negro petty-bourgeois fakerss, at- tacking foreign-born workers. The spectacle of workers fighting jeach other over the few jobs the bosses are handing out, is just what the bosses desire. As long as work- ers fight among themselves the bos- ses will be able to get away with murder. And it’s nothing less than {murder to throw 8,000,000 workers on the streets to starve. Workers! The Communisst Party calls on all workers, Negro and white, native and foreign-born, to unite for the real fight, which is againsts the bosses who have’ de- | creed that millions of workers must | starve this winter. The fight is not | Negro against white workers or na- tive born against foreign born, but Class against class, the workers, Ne- gro and white, native and foreign- born, employed and unemployed, | against the bosses and their vicious | system of lynching, race hatred and mass uemployment and suffering. Workers! Unite under the banners of the Communist Party! Down with race hatred and prejudice, Fight against lynching and race riots! Vote against the bosses starvation system! Vote Communist! AFL Fakers Fightjng Jobless Relief, Urge Voluntary Lay-Offs CLEVELAND, Oct. 8 —Admit- ting that 550 members of the Cleveland loca’ of the Amalga- mated Association of Street Rail- | way Employes are starving on part time work, many working only one day a week, the labor fakers in the union are putting forward a fake solution designed to rob those work- ers on full time without materially benefiting the 550 on part time. The proposal, which 18 com- pletely in line with the official A. F. of L. policy of opposing social insurance and genuine relief for the 8,000,000 jobless workers in this country, is for the full time workers to lay off every eighth day so as to “provide 2,000 working days to be distributed among the 550 extra men.” et | Wo rking Wom en Drive for Subs Ten million women in the United | States work for wages and 23,000,. “ | ” 000 more housewives work either in |the factories or at home, for part wages. That is the first chapter of | Full Insurance Also) NEW YORK. Speaking at a | conferer.ce’ of the Pcoples Lobby at} |the Civic Club Monday aftorncon, | Robert Dunn, secretary of the Ie- | bor Research ociation, atiacked the unemployment relief schemes} | proposed by the republican, social-| | ist and demecratic parties and ed out that unemployment in- list country decreasing in the Soviet In the U. S. S. R. the num- et 9 but Union. the story to Le told by the U. S.| census for 1920. ber of jobless registered Oct. 1, | a9e0- ss 977 a tk ‘ | 1980," is 370,000, and there is little Tn ton gests ince We kat B0V-| Goube these will be eliminated by ernment census of 1920, the num-| *. ber of women wage enrners has| tHe end of the third year of the grown by nearly 18 per cent. This | Five Year Pizh. ae |mesns that for every six women The reason fcr the great drop in} age, sevén are now working,|the tremendous development of in- Behind thn Fibcies is ee very | dustey under the Five Year Plan. |uncraployment and low wages for|The development of large-scale men workers. Women are working|farming has also helped to reduce | long hours in factories and shops to| Unemployment by cutting immigra- | earn not only their own living but/tion to the cities. | |a ving for the family. Capitalism| There is now an absolute dearth | while lying about Communists as| of skilled labor in the Soviet Union. “breaking up the home,” has brcken|A few days ago Kalinin, chairman | up millions of homes. | of the Central Executive Committee Millions of women workers are to|0f the Soviet Union, reported that: be organized! The American Fed-| “There is a shortage of labor power eration of Laber has betrayed the|in all branches of industry. Our small number of organized women | labor exchanges are practiczlly in the A. F. of L. and the millions | empty. of unorganized. It is only the Trade} Workers who remain’ unemployed Union Unity League and its indus-|for the present and those who may | trial unions thet fight militantly to|/be out of work for certain periods improve the conditions of the wom-|in the future have to protect them | years | the unemployment question in Eng- en workers. Equal pay for equal work is their fighting demand. “The Working Wornan” stands for the or- ganization of all women industrial workers in unions affiliated with the Trade Union Unity League. 1} stands for the organization of the 23,000,000 housewives into proletar- jan women’s organizations. Organ- ize the unorganized! Support the “Working Woman” drive for 1,000 new subscribers; for a sustaining fund of $2,000 and for the uilding of wonien workers cor- respondents circles. Only a few} weeks are now left of the drive and| the districts have hardly begun the work of attaining their quotas. Get the “Working Woman” into the factories. Arteff Plays Build Needle Strike Fund! NEW YORK.—The Workers The- atre, “Arteff” will give five per- formances for the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union “Organize and Strike Fund” of $50,000, part of the T.U.U.L. fund of $10,000, The money will be needed in the coming dress strike. The Arteff per- formances begin Saturday after- noon and evening, Oct. 11 and con- tinue: Tuesday evening, Oct. 14; Thursday evening, Oct. 16 and Sun- day evening Oct. 19. Labor and Fraternal Or- ganizations, ‘chi and Dance For workers and workers’ children, is now taking registrations. Classes open on Oct. 15 Register at the fol- lowing branches of the W.I.R.: 10 B. 17th St., 1800 Sevnth Ave., Bronx Co- operative, 2800 Bronx Park East. * * W. I. R. Symphony Orchestra Will rehearse evry Sunday at 10 1 m. at the Hungarian Workers’ Home, 350 FE. Sist St. Everybody welcome to join; classes for berinners. Rar aay 3 A Grand Rangnet Given By the Anti- Fascist Section of Harlem Sunday, Oct. 12, at 2 p.m. Admis. sion 75 cents At & p. m. the dance will follow, having been preceded by the banquet. There have been printed two sets of ets: the 75 cents ones the » 25 cents, is rood for the dance ember the address, Italian ar for the banquet and dance. oth " for the benefit of + Spanish Weelsly 0; munist Party, will 1, at_the Harlem C; and Lenox Ave. Admission 500 in advance, 75e at the door. American Jazz and Tatin American Dances to- | gether with other features will mark | a pleasant evening. Please keep this | dat open. i * * Special Midnight Performance of | “Storm Over Asin”. and Soviet newsreels at the Sth St. | Playhouse, 52 W. &th St Saturday | midnight. Octoher Jt Arranged by Brownsville Gehoot No, 3. A Spectal Showing of the Soviet Masterpiece. A Shang hai Document, will be given at the John Reed clubrooms, 102 W. 14th St. on aSturday, Oct, 11, at 8 p. m, Admission 50c, Introductory talk by H A. Potamietn. am : * Counell 0, 20 U.CW.C.W. Lecture tonight at %:30 p. m., at 962 Sutter EG Brooklyn. The Printing Workers Industrial League will meet Thurs, Oct. 9, 6:30 p. m., the most complete system of social insurance in the world. This insur- ance embraces all workers and covers in addition to unemployment | not only temporary disability, be-| cause of sickness or accidents, but alsq old age pensions, medical as- sistance, rest homes and sanitarium care, and special aszistance to mothers. _ The payment for unemployment has been stecdily rising. It is based on the wages and qualification of the worker, former wages and the cost of living in his locality. There are three categories. The benefits are paid for the full period of em-| ploymert up to 18 months. The social insurance funds come} in monthly payments from all the| state enterprises, factories and of- fices as well as all private business —in other words from all employ- ers of labor. The average sum paid is 12% per cent of the monthly pay- roll, in addition to free mcdical service, practically free housing and other benefits. MILL VICTORIES BUILD THE NTW PATERSON, N. J., Oct. 9—A series of small strikes, victoriously fought to finish under the leader- ship of the National Textile Work- ers Union here is teaching the Pat- son mill hands what can be done by orgazization. The Columbia Silk Mill has a shop committee. The workers with their past traini.g in the Associated Silk Workers Union had some hesi- tancy about calling ‘out all the crafts, including the winders, but with the assistance of the N.T.W. this was done, the boss, Katz, was prevented from giving the work to commissioners, and everyday pick- eting won the strike. The weavers gained one cent a yard, the winders, $2 more a week, the loom fixers got an increase, the stool-pigeon fore- man was’ fired- and the eight hour day was won for all, With the help of the N.T.W. in the Medal Silk Co. an elected shop committee went to the boss with demands. The boss tried to put up a W. 1. R. Ora W. be R. Supp W. LR. Ie the w. : Support the Struggl JOIN LOCAL at 15 7. 3rd St. Rm. 3. It is ex- Gamelx important, that all comrades attend. WORKERS INTERNATIONAL RELIEF _ MEANS. Solidarity in the Class Struggle \__ Workers’ Co-operation—Not Charity izes Relief for Economie Conflicts, W. I. R. Oraanizes Relief Durina Catastrophes, Floods, Famine. Drought 1. R. Conducts Summer Camos for Workers’ Become a Member of Workers International Relief Initiation 25¢-—Dues 100 3 Month Branches in Harlem, Bron, Brook! in. Coney Ii 10 East 17th Street —He Hears a Presid 5 BEEN Cyep PITALISIA APDONALD PIECES OF SILVER ARE UP 'Dhile Sailors Mutiny| But Allow. “Socialist” Against Rotten Food LONDON, Oct. 7W—Ramsay Mac- Derald, prime minister of Great Britain, has decided to ape the lead of their majestic puppets, the King and Queen, who have just an- nounced, with a blare of trumpets, that they were dcing their Lit to solve the unemployment problem which is gripping England by pur- chasing four more aztomobiles. Remsay has even gone them one better, by asking for a cocl ten thousand boost in wages. This is his contribution toward solution of land. Ramsay paints a pathetie pic- ture of his present hardships, on $25,000 a year, and pleads with elo- quence for the boost to $35,060. “At Downing Street,” (the London offi- cial residence), “I have to employ four more servants than at my country home, and you know the wages servants demand these days is something awful. Then, I need some more dozens of suits of clothes than formerly.” While Sailors Mutiny. At the same time comes news of | a mutiny of sailors on the British battleship, Revenge, now in the Mediterranean. The reascn? Rot-) ten food and a ruthiess system of discipline. Those ungrateful wretches, it seems, also want a change—not a ten thousand increase in wages, but merely decent food and better working conditions. But the answer of Ramsay and his naval hierarchy to such demands is “To the brig with them." Already forty sailors are in irons. But it'll take more than the brig to end the mass unrest which is now sweeping England. It'll require more than irons to halt the revolu- tionary uphecvals of which this mu- tiny and the recent wool strikes are but heral Tariff Gouge Benefits Big Bosses Canton, 0. Editor, Daily Worker: When the high tariff grafters start a campaign to raise the tariff} they hand labor the bunk that they) wish to maintain the American! standard of wages and living but there is nothing in their tariff bills to insure that labor will get “Amer- ican” wages and standards of living. The wages they shall pay is al- ways left for the employers to decide and they work their prices up as high as the tariff goes and then they hire their labor just as cheap as they can. Labor is always the loser when the tariff is raised. They pay more for what they buy and nine times out of ten they get a wage cut. The tariff was raised twice in the last ten years, but how much have wages gone up in the last ten years? a. A bluff and stalled around, but the workers stood firm and the shop was settled with the ‘eight hour day won and an increase of three- fourths of a cent a yard. Aided by the N.T.W. the Bluebird Silk Co. workers have also won back a four cent cut that the Associated told them to accept. BLUE BIRD THEATRE Cor, Saratoga and Tivonia Aves, B'klyn NOW PLAYING An Amkino Masterpiece “NEW BABYLON” rts “All Labor Struacles, Strikes, Lockouts. Red Cross of the Workina Class, Children. les of the Workers! NEW YORK MWe TRAY RUNNERS ent Make a Speech — By RYAN WALKER. 2 —— a erararyTmaa eat TAM PEDDLING A FINE LINE | | ae hack’ SHIRTS FOR AMERICANS yo TO WEAR. / ‘g , wing th ce a] GOAL COPS E° EAK ELECTION MEET Election Meet WILKES-BARRE, Pa., Oct. 7.--A meeting, called by the A. L. D. L. D., Lithuanian workers’ literary society, was broken last night by the city police. About 250 Lithuanian work- ers, most of them miners, had come to the hall at 325 E. Market St., to hear a Communist speaker explain the issues in the present election campaign. phe coal operators are deter- mined to use every method at their disposal to crush any attempt on the part of the anthracite miners to organize for the struggle against the rotten conditions in the mines and against the sell-out agreement put over by the fascist Lewis lead- ership of the U. M. W. of A. The Anthracite Section of the Communist Party has announced a huge Election Rally to be held at the Polish Hall, $25 E, Market St., Wilkes-Barre, on Wednesday, Oct. 8, at 7:30 p. m. The Communist Party points out the role of the “socialist” party at this time. At teh same time that the police stopped the meeting where a Communist speaker was scheduled, a few blocks away in the “socialist” hall James Maurer of Reading, scab agent, par excellence, the “social- ist” candidate for governor, was permitted to spout his poison in or- der to fool the workers with “rad- ical” phrases and keep them from engaging in a real fight against the bosses. Register Today! Vote Communist! ‘Perth Amboy Toners SUPPORT STR ‘ing part time. to Forest Meet, Oct. 21 PERTH AMBOY, Oct. 8. ers of Perth Amboy and vi ity wishing to attend the Madison Square Garden demonstration to greet Foster, Minor and Amter on the day of their release, October 21st, should immediately register at the Workers Home, 308 Elm St., where reservations can be made for transportation on trucks that will be hired for the purpose, The Communist Party Unit of | Perth Amboy will hold a mass elec- tion rally in the Columbia Hall at 8 p. m., October 17th. All workers are invited and urged to attend. The Communist Party is begin- ning two classes, one in English.and the other in Fundamentals of Com- munism, to be held weekly at 308 | Elm St. Perth Amboy, N. J. All | workers wishing to attend should | register immediately. STEEL BOSSES SPEED UP WAR PREPARATIONS CLEVELAND, Oct. 8.—The Cor- rigan-McKinne steel bosses in this \city are one step ahead of “Uncle Sam” in preparing for the next war. A picture of each worker is being filed with his application, giving de- tails about his age, whether or not he is married, the size of his family, the amount of his insurance if he has any, the names of the lodges and organizations he belongs to, etc. In |this way the bosses are checking up | on each man to see where he stands. | Not only are these tactics being used | to intimidate the workers, but they j will come in mighty handy when the next war breaks. | Of the 3,500 workers who worked | in the Corrigian McKinney plant in | this city in 1928, between 1100 and | 1,200 only are left in the sohp. And over half of this number are work- 43rd St. and HIPPODROME = j3"4,St.an BIGGEST SHOW IN NEW YORK JACK LONDON'S “The Sea Wolf” with Milton Sills JOE COOK in his newest maddest musical “FINE AND DANDY” ERLANGER'S Theatre, W. 44 St. Pen, 7963 Eves. 8:39. Mats. . and Sat. 2:30 NINA ROSA New Musical Romance, with GUY ROBERTSON, ETHELIND TERRY, ARMIDA, LEONARD CEELEY, Others MAJES' ‘A., 44th, W. of Broadway Bvs. 8: Sat. 2:30. Chi RKO e - MW. WOODS Presents ERNEST HEMINGWAY'S A FAREWELL TO ARMS NATIONAL 72E4. 41st ae of Ith Ave. Eves. 8:45, Mats. 30 Wednesdey and Saturday 2: Broadway Daily from and 46th 10:30 a. m. GLOB: HER MAN with Helen Twelvestreet, Ricardo Cortez, Phillifs Holmes and Marjorie Rambeau 42nd Street and B'way CAME (Wisconsin 1789) ALL TALK AND SOUND AFRICA SPEAKS ‘The Strangest Picture Eyer Filmed A. H. WOODS presents “THE 9TH GUEST” Sensation of All Mystery Plays with ALLAN DINEHART and All-Star Cast ELTINGE THEA. 42nd St. W.ofB’way Eves. 3 ARTHUR HOPKINS Presents | TORCH SONG New drama by Kenyon N ‘THEA, 45t) Plymouth {REM 8 Ey ‘8:50. Mats, Thurs. & Sat | LYSISTRATA 234ist Year The Comedy Mit You Rear About PATRE of Bway 44TH STREET} Eves. 4:30, Mate, Wed, & Sat, 2:30 “UP POPS THE DEVIL” | A Genuine Comedy Hit | with ROGER PRYOR MASQUE 45th St.stog@, of By Mats, Wednesday and Saturday 2:30 CIVIC REPERTORY Fourteenth Street and Sixth Avenue 180; Mats. Wed., Sat. 2:30 GALLIENNE, Director Today Mat.—THE CRADLE SONG | Tonight—THE LADY FROM Evenings EVA L ALFAQUE- QUE and THE GR COCKATOO Night—KOMEO D JULIET Seats at Box Office, ‘iso at TOWN HALD 113 W, 4rd St. | Tom. “UNION SQUARE THEATRES NOW PLAYING! \ Dynamic — Powerful — Realistic Sovkino Masterpiece A striking impressive film treatise on peasant life +... @ worthy artistic effort, unwound in force- ful reel . . . says Irene Thirer, Daily News. ~ MAXIM GORKY’S CAINS ARTEM _ Added Attraction The Miracles of the Wolves A French Historical Masterfilm of the Hundred Years’ War ACME THEA. Union Square (Between 4th Ave. & B’way.) Popular Prices — Mats. Wed. & Sat. "8:30 |) FAKES BANTED \N.T.W.LU. Back Fight | for Better Conditions | NEW YORK.—A fine | working class solidarity dis- | played in the last two weeks when | the trimr-ers, members of Lozal 24 | of the company union of the Mellow |firm, lccated at 53 E. 36th St, j walked out in a strike demonding increased wages, in defiance of the | officials of the union. | The workers in the other dspart- }iments, 3 s of the Needle mple of Trades Iv du alt went on a | sympathy strike with their fellow | workers, dem: z in addition to an increa union conditions ks these work- ting and calling in the buil to Yesterdey the Needle s’ Industrial Union held an open air meeting at 36th | St. and 6th Ave., which was one | ings the Anti-Injunction ; dealing | Conference. | crowd of workers | were formed. Not only did | speakers address the toilers in the | street but also those that jammed the windows of buildings in the heart of the needle trades section. The speakers ‘called for a united | front and denounced the officials of the company union who forced its | members to go back to work. The Needle Trades Workers’ In- dustrial Union is continuing the | strike and calls upon all workers in | the vicinity to strike fcr union con- | ditions, and to organize shop com- | mittees, “For All Kinds of Insurance” (CARL BRODSKY Telephone: Murray HIM Shi 7 Kast 42nd Street, New York 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 BrogagN ¥. DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Reom 8u%—Phone: algonauin 8183 Not eonnected with any other office Advertise your Union Meetings here. For information write to The WAILY WORKER | Advertising Dept. | } , 50 East 13th St. New York City MELROSE — Dai VEGETARIAN at KESTADRANT iradeo Will Aiwnyy Find 1¢ Plensnat to Wine at Our Pines 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD. Brons (nen 176th St station » P HONK: INTERVALE 9149. RATIONAL | Vegetarian RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVEi.JUE Bet. 18th and 18th Ste, Strictly Vegetarian Fi | HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phones UNI versity 6868 “hone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN UISHES Aa rai 02 E. 12th St. New York STEAM HEATED room (for girl), sunny, use kitchen, low rent. Miss HERMAN, 69 EAST THIRD ST, ovat