The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 14, 1930, Page 3

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mer Page three — ES S Bifalo issues Challenge | INTERNATIONAL a = to Connecticut in Drive; a via ‘3 SPs ate Second Jamboree Sunday < in 1 PAY © This “Relief” Is Only Slow Starvation For the Jobless While you're eating the slop that the bosses pass off as “relief,” strengthen’ your forces, the Unemployed Councils, for immediate demands and for the mass movement to get a million signatures to force the Congress of Wall Street. to grant real, bread-and-butter relief as embodies in the Work- ers’ Unemployment Insurance Bill. " Abov ephoto shows one of the many “charitable” slumgullio! n houses in New York. BLACKLIST IN GUISE OF “AID” “Liberal” Paper Wants Police Supervision (By a Worker Correspondent) PHILADELPHIA, Pa.—The Phila- delphia Record organ of the Demo- cratic Party here and sponso? of opsn Sundaye, beer, wine, etc. making it the liberal paper of the city has come forward with a plan to solve unemployment. The plan includes very vitious fea- tures against the interests of the 250,000 unemployed worers of Phil- adelphia. Particularly vicious is the plan to have the police register unemployed men and women and have the police stations serve as “unemployment agencies.” At the police stations the workers according to the plan, will be re- quired to furnish all kinds of in- formation to the police... Workers! fight the demagogues and liberals, and their fake unemploy- ment relief by organizing into pow- erful Unemployed Councils and fight- ing for real demands, defvimentY —c. R. LOW WAGES MAKE BOSS MILLIONS Leaves Money to Cath- olie Church (By a Worker Correspondent) CHICAGO, Ill.—This is from the Chicago Daily News: “The will of the late Martin Daw- son, pioneer Chicago candy manu- facturer and head of the firm bearing his nam at 1520 South State street, in which he bequeaths most of an estate valued ‘at $2,000,000 to the) Roman Catholic church, was filed in the probate court today.” The workers got nothing. There were 150 working there. It’s about time the workers told the bosses to go to hell and take things over them- selves, NEWARK WINDOW CLEANERS STRIKE ‘All Out Except in One Shop; Keat Misleads NEWARK, Nov. 13.—Highty-five window cleaners of this city went out on strike Tuesday. Bosses refuse to sign an agreement to recognize the union or the demands for a 45-hour week, $46, no discharge after two weeks employment, employing only anion men, all old union men to be aeinstated. For some months all the renegades ‘and betrayers among the window cleaners under the misleadership of {infamous Krat tried to play the same trick as in New York in 1929. Krat _ in conspiracy with the bosses suc- ceeded in throwing out most of the militant members of the unon from the shops in order to make the job of defeating the strike so much easier. ‘When the strike was called, all the workers responded to the strike call, except the American Window Clean- ing Co., which is supplied with prb- fessional scabs. To win the strike the window cleaners must follow the policies ad- vooated by the Trade Union Unity League, which are: 1—Spread the strike throughout the entire district. 2--Elect rank and file strike com- mittee. 8—Mass picketing of the shops. 4—Clean out all the professional AFL, takers such as Krat and Co. 5.—Build a strong industrial union fas part of the Building Maintenance a a Su Boise Mines and Lumber Camps Are All Closed Down (By A Worker Correspondent) BOISE, Idaho.—Ninety per cent of the workers are like myself here, at the point of starvation. I am now 15 years old‘and never in my life have I found it so hard to get something to eat. There are hundreds of little children that don’t get a meal a day. Here the streets are lined with job- less men looking for work. The lum- ber camps are closed down. The| mines are all shut down. Men and women and children are sleeping out on the banks of the river and there is nothing to eat. Boise is 95 per cent superstitious, but, Comrades, I surely will do all I can to try and get readers for your paper, so send me some more sample copies. I will scatter them all around! Don't fight! Daily Worker! culation! SHIP OFFICERS IN NAVAL RESERVE In Preparation of Im- | ‘perialist War (By a Worker Correspondent) NEW YORK.—I note in the Daily | Worker of Nov. 11th, an_ article, stating, that the officials of the I. S. U. would conscript the seamen for the next imperialist war. We should not be surprised, however, at hearing this, for this has already been done a lpng time ago by the Standard Oil Co. and others making their ships officers Naval Reserve men in preparing for the coming slaughter, ‘by teaching them the arts of war. This only proves to show the will- ingness of the corupt leaders of the I. 8. U. to co-operate with the Wall Street bankers in laying their plans |for the next Imperialist war. So far | a> good, but something has gone wrong, by heck, in other words, the seamen are waking up and are no longer falling for the rotten bunk, that the union officials are trying to hand out to them, It is an estab- lished, and long known fact, that this now almost extinct dues collect- ing agency, dominated by a few no- forious and internationally known “Labor Racketeers, is always ready to play the part of Judas to “the seamen and rust to the aid of their masters, the ship owners. And now, since the seamen are deserting this graftridden outfit, and refuse to support it or shell out their hard earned few dollars in the form of paying dues, etc. And with the help of the rest of his gangsters, veritable “Wolves in Sheepclothing” of this anti everything remnant of what was supposed to have been a union, in their desperate attempts to Salvage their pie cards, are resorting to their favorite methods of bull- dosing the seamen, threatening to knocking their blocks off, having them put ashore or by waving a flag under their ioses to ascertain their patriotic status with the object in view of using the deportation gag, in case they happen to be born out~ side of this free country. Fight! Spread the On to 60,000 cir- | | | | Out of a job? Got spare time? You can earn a little money and take a crack at the system by sel- ling Daily Workers. Come up and we will explain. 35 East 12th St. Industrial Union affiliated with the Trade Union Unity League (T. Us U. L.), 98 Mercer St., Newark, N. J. ‘The policies persued by the A. F. of L. in the window cleaners situation is another link in the long chain betrayals by the A. F. of L. ers, the ambition of the fakers is to serve the bosses for the graft they receive in return. Window cleaners, get in touch with the TT.U.ULL. of+ NOISY MEETINGS HINDER GROWTH Disappointed In Party) Meetings (By a Worker Correspondent) CHICAGO, Ill—I’m a sympathizer of the Communist Party. For certain reasons I have not yet poined the same. Itryto do my best for the working class in every way. I attend the meetings quite often and am very enthusiastic, I wish to bring to ypur attention the question of discipline in regards to the meetings. I've been attending the meetings for three years and am certainly looking for improvements. I wish every worker would realize how far suche “little things” can go. Meetings Disputed. I was in the army, that was when| I went to fight for “democracy” and know something about “little things.” The thing that I dislike most when I attend a meeting is when people leave their seats while the meeting is going on. They're walking up and down the aisle, some are just “fol- lowing the crowd.” It looks as though they have no confidence in the speaker or as though they are not interested. It looks stupid; it is bad manners, bad Communist manners, which is bad Communist discipline, No real results, no real organiza- tions may come out of hush meet- ings. It tends more to disorganiz- ation or to demoralization. Now these little things sltould be told to the audience in advance. POLL 84 VOTES IN CAMDEN COUNTY No Meetings Were Held No Work Done (By a Worker Correspondent) CAMDEN, N. J.—After many com- plaints to the press for the lists of the election results for the Commu- nist candidate in Camden county today finally the published which I enclose. We got 84 votes in the county. . But I do not know how many they stole from us because nobody was there to watch. And I have more to say. That the Philadelphia district did neglect and made no efforts to extend any election canipaign in Camden as a whole, not one meeting or open air meeting. No leaflets in any form has been distributed no special edition of the Daily Workers. —P. A. New Party Quarters Open in Kansas City KANSAS CITY, Mo., Nov. 13—As a result of the growth of the Party in Kansas City, it has been found neces- sary to open a new large headquar- ters, located in the heart of the city, at 104 E. 8th St. The new center provides the Party with a large meeting hall, seating about 300. A reading room, library and book section are being prepared. Open forums every Sunday afternoon at 3, are being run, On Sunday, Nov. 16th, Mother Bloor speaks at the Forum on unemployment. In the evening of that day, a vetcherinka and entertainment in celebration of the opening of the new Workers Center, and in honor of Mother Bloor, will be held. As a result of the Nov. 7th cele- bration in Kansas City, which was the largest ever held, many new members have been taken into the Party, and the Party sympathizers are working enthusiastically to make all future affairs successful. Don’t miss full circula- tion tables each Wednes- fice at 93 Mercer St,, Newark, N. J. and learn to fight to win. day in the Daily Worker. “District 4 (Buffalo) is officially |in the campaign and we are asking Daily Worker.” This is ‘the challenge received from K. Ilmoni, Agitprop director of Dis- trict 4, Buffalo, and upper New York. Its quota is 500 subs and bundles by December 1. The Connecticut quota is 570 by December 1, both quotas doubled by January 1. Upper New York is also arranging revolutionary competition between various units in Buffalo and between the sections of District 4. The city of Buffalo with a quota of 175 is challenging the rest of the district with a quota of 325. Iimoni ends up his letter with this interesting announcement: “Start- ing next week we will be able to make regular payments for our payments.” Club Jamboree Sunday Red Boosters News Dick Voss sayas, “I was arrested yesterday selling Daily Workers. They let me go. place today. The Same cop walked up, ‘You Back?’ he said. ‘Yes,’ I told him. ‘And ; Till come back if om . you arrest me 100 times.” He was} not arrested. Voss is a member of the Red Builders News Club. Next meetidz, jamboree ¥ 4 and hot dogs Sun- day night, 27 E, Dick Voss 4th St, 8 p. m. Distribution of prizes. All unem- ployed workers who either sell Dailies or intend to sell, invited. Connecticut Plans For 60,000 Drive ticut is being mobilized be- hind the campaign for 60,000. R. S. Kling, District Daily Worker agent, sends us the letter and bulletin which has been issued by the District Buro. Quotas have been assigned. There are lively points in both the letter and bulletin: “Our member- ship has increased and is still in- creasing but the Daily Worker ac- tivity has lagged behind, as the chart will show. Our district is next to New York and the Daily Worker is a daily paper for our cities, the same as it is for cities in New York State. Went back to the same challenging District 15 (Connecticut) | you to publish the challenge in the this Man Gets all C2: “The Turkey- wall quve. The Turkey To Ke Norkers. Nor To the Exploilery. cameo} X Got Balled Out | In “Red Sparks” “In this way no district in this country has a better chance to build the Daily Worker circulation, and yet our activity for the Daily Worker is so poor that we got balled out for a whole column in | the Red Sparks section of the | Daily Worker Oct. 15. | “We have less subscribers than we | have Party members. This is one | reason why so few of our comrades} jare active: they do not read the of-| | ficial organ of our Party and there- |fore are not politically informed of | | what is happening in the Party and} in the field. Every Unit Must Select Its Factory “Every unit must coricentrate on} a large factory in its territory sell- | ing the Daily Worker every day. Sell | in the morning before going to work, | at noon-hour, and after work as the workers leave the shop. “Do not order too many copies to start your factory sales, but gradual- ly increase your order as you need more to sell. “Your unit must organize a Red Sunday to establish a carrier route. Select a section of the city most favorable for a route; every com- rade must get 18 cents a week sub- scribers; after a few weeks these subscribers should be visited to get long term subscriptions; if this method is kept up it is then only a question of time hefore you will have subscriptions scattered all over your city. An unemployed comrade or a boy should be secured to deliver the papers; as the route grows he can make it worth while. “If you get something on the boss write it up and send it in.” DECLARE MARTIAL LAW IN ALL PERU Call General Strike; 14) Strikers Shot (Continued from Page One) in Lima in the British cotton mill of Duncan, Fox & Co. The workers de- manded higher wages. The miners have refused to take the miserably low wages that were be- ing forced on them by the American | and British imperialists with the aid | of the Cerro government troops. Most of the Peruvian miners aré Indians and are bitterly exploited by the for- eign capitalists. They have shown determination in their struggles. The United Press dispatch says that “the government announced that all workers participating in the threatened general strike would be charged with sedition.” The Cerro government came into power through a revolt against the Leguia clique which was a tool of American imperialism. Cerro and his gang of fascists used all the usual phrases about reforms when he came into power. One of Cerro’s first acts was to declare any criticism of his regime as a penal offense. The bourgeois group which Cerro represents continued the oppressive measures against the Per- uvian workers and peasants that the Leguia government had carried far. The present strike is the most mil- itant and serious in the history of Peru. It shows the workers and peas- ants are not giving up the struggles as Cerro requested them to do when | he came to power. They are putting | forward their own demands and fighting for them. Cerro will now attempt a feign of terror against the workers organizations s0 that the for- eign capitalists will feel secure in their exploitation of the Peruvian masses. The copper mines !n which the leading clashes are taking place are 16,000 feet up in the Andean moun- tains. It is difficult for the Cerro government to send troops to the rines quickly. Furthermore, ff the announced general strike takes place and the railroad workers join it, the workers will be in a good position to give a severe blow to the fascist Cer- To regime. The American imperialist mine lackeys are leaving the strike area. United States Minister Frederick M. Dearing (in reality an employee of the Guggenheim copper trust) has “officially requested the Cerro gov- ernment to protect” Wall Street's nationals. This is the preliminary step for the sending of marines to Peru in the event the workers and peasants make headway against the Cerro regime, and in the event that the general strike leads to a revolu- tionary situation imperaling the im- perialist domination in Peru, \ LIBERAL LAWYER STABS DEFENSE Neal, of Gastonia Case Before Fish Committee CHATTANOOGA, Tell., Nov. 13. — John Randolph Neal, “liberal” lawyer, attorney for the A. F. L., who was hired by the International Labor De- fense to help defend the Gastonia cases last year today went the way of most liberals. He came voluntarily before the Fish committee with a story carefully modeled on their “the- ory” that Communism “is a racket” and said whatever was suggested to him to stab in the back the I. L. D., the Gastonia boys, and to cripple all future cases by propaganda designed to prevent collection of defense funds. Neal, a former dean of a law school in Nashville, showed his Southern ruling class outlook by this action, just on the eve of the death trial of six workers’ Organizers in Atlanta. Tries to Hurt Defense. Neal, prompted by his knowledge of \the Fish Committee's line of argu- ment, stated that the funds for the defense of the Gastonia case were all supplied by the Garland Fund, which he now advocates shall be curbed by law. He repeats the Fish committee and police department lie that the money was given to the I. L. D. for defense. He wants laws to prevent such collections, and to prevent bail collected by the I. L. D. is used for the Communist Party purposes. Neal states that he agrees with all the purposes of the Fish committee. He specifically states that he is in favor of deporting the foreign-born, and of preventing any Russians from coming into U.S. He proposes that the Com- munist Party be “conditionally out- lawed.” Neal severed connections with the Gastonia defense soon after it was found that while pretending to repre- sent the boys on trial at Charlotte because the Gastonia strikers defend- ed their lives against an organized lynching party of the Manville Jenckes Mill led by the chief of pol- ice, was all the time turning over in- formation to the Muste United Tex- tile Workers Union in Marion. The U. T. W. was and is the deadly enemy of the strikers and the defendants, AFL. Head Is Spy. At the same hearing of the Fish Committee, Amyon, president of the Tennessee A. F. L. admitted his spy- ing for the police, and boasted that he could arrest all the leading Com- munists in the South immediately. The workers, thousands of whom have been defended by the I. L. D., know how the defense money is raised and how it is spent. They know that the Communist Party, its newspapers ant its members are the most inde- fatigable supporters of the I. L. D. in all its campaigns, and that the fight will go on to give every class war prisoner as much defense as it is humanly possible. \Series of Wage Cuts | made binding. 2 MURDERED BY GERMAN POLICE Proposed by Bosses (Cable by Imprecorr) BERLIN, Nov. 12.—Two workers, wounded when police shot into a Communist demonstration at Dussel- dorf, have since died of lung and head wounds. A worker who thrashed Zoergiebel, former chief of police, was sentenced to five months imprisonment, altho the usual punishment for such as- saults is a fine. The prosecutor de-| manded years of imprisonment. The Junge Garde, organ of the| Young Communist League, was sup-| pressed by the police today. The Berlin master bankers are de- manding a wage cut as compensa- tion for the minimal reduction in the| price of bread. They demand a ten} mark weekly wage cut, and a pro-| portional slash in wages for lesser | paid workers | Disturbances took place today at the| Berlin University when fascist stud-| ents beat up political opponents with| brass knuckless, etc. A girl student | was knocked down and kicked. When | the police arrived they showed great | consideration for the fascist attack- ers, -~d made few arrests. | The Saxon metal workers refuse to} accept the arbitration decision pro-| viding for a wage cut. Employers demand the wage cut decision be A strike is likely. Five thousand Westfalian textile workers are striking against wage cuts. Cologne metal bosses are look- ing for scabs for 50 factories to en- force wage cuts. The locksmith’s strike in Berlin is still proceeding. WILD BATTLE AT ZELGREEN FRONT. ‘Heroically Hold Picket Line for Hour and Half (Continued from Page One) who tried to tear them down. The plate glass front of the Ze-l green cafeteria was smashed within | |the first ten minutes, as the first eight or ten.cops stationed before the place charged with swinging clubs into the mass of pickets. From that moment on it was a battle. The cafeteria was full of AFL. sluggers, who made several sorties to try and beat up a few workers but soon ducked into their hole again. Besiege Zelgreen. After a considerable number of police had gathered, there was a period from 12:20 to about a quarter to one when Zelgreen’s was besieged. The police clustered thickly along the sidewalk and held a space fifty yards along clear of all, allowing no passage. The pickets ringed this line of cops in solid masses, singing and shouting. A placard or several pla- cards would go up, and a dozen cops would swing their clubs on the heads of men and women and try to cap- ture them. Then would follow a melee, in which the police would be separated and a dozen isolated éghts rage. ometimes the police broke through and made arrests and some- times not. The arrested workers were shoved into the entrance to the Greek cafe and pool hall, which is the same outer entrance as that of Zelgreen’s. ‘The crowd booed and jeered as the police were plainly seen slugging and clubbing the arrested workers they had crowded into the entranceway. Leaflets. the militant industrial unions of the T.U.U.L. and explaining that the fight to mass picket at Zelgreens is a fight to save the right to strike in New York, that the courts have outlawed picketing and only mass violation of court orders will save it for the work- ers, was thrown into the air; the leaflets were passed around, picked up and read. The crowd of spectators filled the opposite sidewalk and jammed the street. Traffic was stopped, and the police mounted trucks and street cars and forced the drivers to plow through the human masses. Only by a miracle was no one run over. Through the big crowd a half dozen news boys circulated, selling the Daily Worker, whose city edition carried a headline, “Rally to Smash the Bosses’ Injunction Weapon, Today at Noon!” Arrested Are Militant. After one p. m., four patrol wagons one after another, began to carry away the arrested workers. They were driven out to the wagons, one by one. between solid lines of police, many of them bleading from the head, mouth and nose. But every one raised his clenched fist and shouted, “Smash the Injunctions,” “Picket Zelgreen Cafeteria.” Loud cheers from the still undefeated mass pickets ans- wered them. Police squads made sudden rushes into the crowd to seize another victim, here and there. The demonstration lasted until about 1:30, growing smaller as some of the workers went back to their jobs. It was nearly 2 before traffic ‘was resumed. Whalen Comes. About 1:30, a swarm of screeching police motorcycles dashed up Eighth Ave., followed by a police car with a | Ukrainia the A storm of leaflets, signed by all | |\Pilsudski Forbids STRIKE WAVES I Running of Numerous Workers’ Candidates WARSAW.—In upper Silesia the| Silesia the authorities have arbitr-| arily struc off the name of the former | Communist Seym deputy, sme | from the election list. Luck and Kovel in Western election agents who of the anti-fascist were arrested and In filed the lists peasants league, the list rejected. In Cracow the lists of the workers and peasants block and of the left- wing Polish Socialist Party have been rejected by the authorities. In Kalitch the authorities have re- fused to accept the election iist of the left-wing peasant organization “Samopomoc.” en In the constituency Krasnystav- | ~ Hrubieszov-Yanov the election auth- |orities have declared the list of the workers and peasants block to be null and void, In Grodno the list of the workers | and peasants block has also been de-| clared invalid and the chief candi- date Comrade Svitsuna arrested. The workers and peasant election list in the Ostrov-Mazoviecka con- stituency has been thrown out When the results of these “elec-| tions’ becomes known the social democratic press will undoubtedly rub its hands at “the decline of] Communist influence”, as it did after the Finnish elections which were conducted on similar lines. | AFL FAKER ASKS COP TO CLUB AT JOBLESS MEET SEATTLE, Wash., Nov. 13.—The Seattle Central Labor Council has had to recognize the unemployment situation to the extent of permitting public debates on jobless insurance. They announce that open discussion is allowed. But yesterday when Horski and Spear of the University of Washing- ton debated, Spear against and Hor- | ski for insurance, the Central Labor | Council secretary, Doyle, conferred with a policeman as to how to clear out the Communists who were not only flocking into the hall to take part in the discussion, but were | standing at the entrance and distrib- uting leaflets calling for organiza- | tion and struggle to force the na-j| tional government to grant real in- surance and the city to give immed- iate relief. Doyle said to the cop: “I’m going to call the wagon and have the Com- munists clubbed.” The cop said: “No, that would be | tang to rect SHANGHAT EXTEND I ssue Arrest Warrartts Against Leaders textile workers in agains SHANGHAI.—The of the Hunfeng spinning mills are strike The local Kuomingtang organization refuses to recognise the strike because it is being led by a Shanghai on wage cuts. stri committee elected by the workers and not by the lpcal Kuo- mingtang mandarins. An arrest warrant has been issued against the ¢ committee. ers of the food and drink trades in Shanghai are also out de- spite the refusal of the Kouming- nise their action, The newspapers report that the police have discovered plans for a general strike of the ri haw cool- ies in the foreign concessions. Three of the leaders have been arrested and |further arrests are expected. The Chinese industrial ar experiencing a series of strikes the strike wave is extending. S$ are DEMAND STERN ACTION AGAINST USSR ENEMIES MOSCOW.—Immediately the news of the discevery of a new counter- revolutionary organization by the |State Political Administration (O. |G. P. U.) became known factory | meetings were held in numerous fac- |tories in the big inrustrial towns in |the Soviet Union. The resolutions | aflopted at these meetings condemn the treacherous activities of certain |small groups of specialists who wish for a restoration of capitalism and do their best to hinder the building up of the new world of socialism, The right-wing opportunist deviation created good ground for their activi- ties as a result of the throttling of bolshevist self-criticism, the ignoring of the proposals of the workers and the reposing of blind trust in the specialists. The resolutions demand stern punishment for the guilty sbotagers, and promise that the workers will redouble their efforts in order to make good the damage done by the counter-revolutfonaries. “For All Kinds of Insurance” a great shame for you, to have work- ers clubbed, and it will advertise the Communists. I had better ask them to go, myself.” But when the police found they would not leave the entrance, he be- gan to make threats too. The de- bate will continue. policeman drivin git, and none other than Grover Whalen, supposedly no longer police commissioner, got out with his bodyguard, surveyed the scene hurriedly, and went over the street to a big hotel, evidently to hold @ conference with police neads and give his expert advice on how to club workers, Zelgreen cafeteria did not do any business yesterday noon. Injunction or no injunction, that place was most thoroughly and effectively picketed! “From now on the fight goes on to smash the injunctions. The masses of workers and unemployed, organ- ized and unorganized, have decided they will keep their right to strike,” said Fred Biedenkapp, chairman of the Smash The Injunctions Commit- cil, yesterday. “Let the bosses, the A. F. L,, the injunction judges and the A. F, L. judges take notice,” he said, “that there is a limit to their power, They can not condemn the workers to take the wage cuts, the long hours, the sell-out by the A. F. L. and remain quiet. They can not take away the right to strike! Under the leadership of the Smash The In- jumctions Committee of the Trade Union Unity Council, the workers fight on, and demand of the masses is ‘Down With The Injunctions!’” At Jefferson Market Court, charged under “Paragraph 600,” for trial on a clear cut case of defiance of out- rageous injunctions, are: Mollie Ber- shen, Sarah Greenblatt, Bessie Segal, Joe Gabal, Lillian Gallatin, Dora Walters, Manuel Rivera, Herman Bloom, Alex Hanerian, Cellia Samor- odin, Vincent Guerrera, J. Goldberg, ‘Anna Chalit, B. O. Elighman, Gus Goidas, Tony ,Thomas, Sam Santos, Reva Mala, Anna Lyons, Rose Cutler, Miriam Adams, Dora Schwartz, Hen- ry. Rowley, Wm. Edwards, Albert Martinez, H. Bresler, and Sam Rosen. ‘There are others whose names were not secured last night. One woman picket came into court with her head a mass of bandages. JOBLESS. BUFFALO, N. Y¥.—Paul Unick, homeless, jobless, stole some coal from the East Buffalo R.R. yards. He was arrested and charged with petty lar- ceny. The boss court in which he the workhows- tee of the Trade Union Unity Coun- | | | WHAT CAPITALISM OFFERS THE | was tried punished him for his) “erime” with a thirty day term vial (CARL BRODSKY Telephone: Murray Bill S55¢ 7 East 42nd Street, New York Cooperators! SEROY 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook $215 Bronx, N. ¥. DEWEY 9914 — Oftice Hours: 9 A. - M9 P.M, Sunday: 10 A. M1 P.M. DR. J. LEVIN | SURGEON DENTIST 1501 AVENUE U Ave, U Sta., B.M.T. At East 15th St. BROOKLYN, N. ¥. DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Room 808—Phone: Algonquin 8188 Not eonnected with any | other office | 3 7~-MELROSE—, Dairy nesravnant ‘omrades Will Always Find ft Pleasant ¢o Dine at Onr Pince. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Brons (near 11éth St. Station) ALD 9146. |] PHON Bi INTERV RATIONAL | Vegetarian || RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVE: UB Bet. 12th and 18th Sts. Strictly Vegetarian Food HEALTH FOOD ) Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 5865 Rone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A piace with atmosphere ’ meet New \ork Advertise your Union Meetings here, For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept 50 East 13th St. New York City

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