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age Two DAIL .Y WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY SEPT’ OMBER 15, 1931_ NTWU Protests Holden; Hits Lies of Sherift GREENVILLE, 8. C., Sept. 14— onal Textile Workers Union to Governor Blackwood arolina vigorously protests ping and beating of Clara r of the nged the r’s request to Sheriff Bram- , declar- report nd not Bramlett y made such statements Our union holds you ble for the future safety of zers.” of Greenville have red up by the kidnapping ng of Comrade Holden that ssses and even their tools in the A. F. of L. bureaucracy ry to make a gesture of the attack on zer. Attack on | For instanée, L. E. Brookshire, pres+ |ident of the South Carolina Feder- Jation of Labor declared it was a sad state of affairs in any commu- | nity when “five men can take a| woman out and whip her as much as | they please.” He made this comment only after | being shown an editorial from a | Columbia boss newspaper, in which |even that boss paper questioned the | |silence of the A. F. of L. misleaders. |At the same time, Brookshire at- | tempted to play on local boss-inspired | prejudice against so-called “outsid- Jers,” declaring that the NTWU “has | been bringing mostly outside organ- |izers in here.” He attempted to cov- jer up the fact that hundreds of tex- | tile workers have been condemned to | starvation even while on the job, | merely declaring that the bosses do not pay enough “for them (the work- lers) to live comfortably.” 125 DELEGATES FROM THREE STATES AT MINE MEETING (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) failed to find any evidence, when all of as ter a consultation between Lane the sheriff, the sheriff carried out a fourth raid and was at where the former membership list of the I. W. W. was hidden under the floor. Most of the workers have since turned in their cards to the Ww and are members of the LEXINGTON, Ky., Sept. 14—One hundred and twenty-five miners’ delegates from Southeastern Ken- tucky, Tennessee and Virginia were present today at the District Confer- ence of the National Miners’ Union. The delegates all laid great stress on the need of organization and solidification of the union, with its entry into new sections and for the mass defense of the Harlan miners facing the threat of death sentences in punishment for their militancy in the strike. Following discussion of the strike situation and the murderous attacks on the strikers by the thugs of the eoal operators, the conference decided on a joint petition of the National Miners’ Union and the International | Labor Defense for a rank and file delegation to take to Governor Samp- son demanding the right of the min- ers to organize into the N. M. U., cessation of the terror against the miners, the murder of strikers, raid- What’s On— DAY . D, Nat Turner Branch hold an open air meeting at and Lenox Ave. September fat 8 p.m Par Valk On War at the Spartacus Club d War-Preparations will ject of a discussion to be Young Communist League WEDNESDAY Steve Katoyis ILD air meeting will be held at 8 p.m., Sept. 15 es of the’ Interna~ tase. niht an indoor meeting held at 257 E. 10th St. at Comrade Taub will speak. Se © will be § p.m, Nat Turner ILD hold its regular membership 149 West 136th St, at PLUMBERS HELPERS BALL Young and Adult Workers Attention! Are you out for a swell time? Are you interested on seeing the First Ameriean Youth Union grow and succeed? Come to the Plumbers Helpers Ball to be held Saturday night, Septem- ber 19, Hoffmans Mansion, 142 Watkins Brooklyn. Phil Conn and his famous ety Club Or- hestra will ente with some snappy music. There will be danc- ing and all fhe rest. Attend and ou will not forget it. Building Maintainance Workers. will hold its regular membership meeting Sept. 16th, 8 p.m. at 228 EB. %6th Street, 8rd floor, Freinds of the Soviet Union, wil its re meeting at 1844 Piti Lecture and discuss All workers are invited, * * * mbership , 8 p.m follow. Sheet Metal Workers will hold a meeting at 5 E. 19th Street to discuss the building up of the Metal Workers Industrial League. All members must attend. cast Bronx Branch, FSU Pauline Rogers, recently returned from the Soviet Union, wiil speak at the East Bronx Branch of the Freinds of the Soviet Union, 1610 Boston Road, at 8 p. ma on “The American Crisis and the Soviet Un- ion, All invited, + THURSDAY Metal Moulders hold an _importan ship meeting at 5 E. 19th St, as part of the drive to build up the MWIL. ts pea International Labor Defense Brownsville Br, will hold an open-air meeting at Oswin St. and Dumont Ave., at 8 p.m, oh Oe will t member- International Workers Order, Br. 500 will hold a regular meeting Sep- tember 17th, 8 p. m, at 3 12th St. There will be a discus: on the militarization of the American Youth All are invited. Printing Workers Industrial League The regular membershsip meeting of the PWIL will take place Septem- her 17th at 7 p. m. at 5 EB. 19th St. All members are urged to attend. * * PLUME S HELPERS BALL Young and Adult Workers Attention! Are you out for a swell time? Are you interested in seeing the rst American Youth Union grow and succeed? Come to the Plumbers Helpers Ball to be held Saturday night, Septem- ber 19, at Hoffman's Mansion, 142 Watkins St, Brooklyn. Phil ‘Conn his famous Variety Club Or- ‘a will entertain with some py music, There will be danc- and all the rest, Attend and ing you: will not forget It. le to go directly to the spot | ing of homes, arrests by gunmen em- ployed by Sheriff Blain and other county officials acting under orders of the coal operators, and demand- ing the use of the Sheriff's Gunmen | Funds for unemployment relief to be administered by workers and farm- ers. The petition will also demand the right of the workers and farmers of Harlan County to bear arms and to defend themselves, and the repeal of the banding and confederating law and the Criminal Syndicalism law. ee PITTSBURGH, Pa., Sept. 14—Joe Moore and Julius Baldwin, shot in the back and murdered by Harlan County thugs, were buried in Jellico, Tennessee, it was learned here to- day. Sheriff John Henry Blair re- fused to allow the families of the murdered striking miners the $50 usually given by the county for burial purposes. He had rough boards nailed together, and threw the bodies of the two boys into these boxes. Prisoners in the jail were to be the Pallbearers. At the last moment, while miners from everywhere prepared to come into Harlan to insist upon seeing their comrade to his last resting place, Baldwin’s sister arrived in Harlan. Determined to avoid the hurried funeral Sheriff Blair was ar- ranging, she asked a sympathizer to help her carry the bodies away from the undertakers over the border and into Tennessee. In Jellico, the rail- road workers, at the miners’ request, held a special meeting at which they offered to defray the expenses of the funeral. Meanwhile, great numbers of min- ers arrived in Harlan. Here every penny in U. S. coin, company scrip— even postage stamps were collected, and all converted into gas and oil, enough for eight cars. Into these cars dozens of miners crowded. They arrived in*Jellico in time to see their comrade buried in Perkins Grove. Both Moore and Baldwin were guarding the relief kitchen estab- | lished by the Penn.-Ohio-W. Va.-Ky. Striking Miners Relief’ Committee. The armed thugs, travelling dressed in armor plate in automobiles with machine guns mounted on a swivel over the rumble seat, roam up and down the Kentucky hills and raid the home of every miner suspected of being a union member. These | raids are carried out without any pretense of a warrant. The bullet holes in the walls of the relief kitchen tell the story of how Baldwin and Moore met their death. So do the bullets in their backs. The thugs have been making a special attack upon the relief kitch- ens. They know how terrific the need for food is—how flux is raging through the coal cabins taking a heavy toll. Meanwhile the miners | and their families look to the “work- |ers up yonder” to support them in | their fight—to send them bread to | ward off the dreaded flux. | Funds are needed for a shipment | of food—send all you can to the | Penn.-Ohio-W. Va.-Kentucky Strik- ‘ing Miners Relief Committee, Room [205 611 Penn Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. BIEDENKAPP AT _ SHOE MASS MEET | | | Preparing for an organization in | the shoe trade, the Shoe Workers In- | dustrial Union has called a mass | meeting of shoe and slipper workers, | today at 8 p. m. at Loraine Hall, 790 | Broadway, Brooklyn. Fred Biedenkapp, who was jailed in Paterson during the last meeting, will be present at this meeting with- out fail, it was announced. A. Lippa, union organizer in Philadelphia will report on the situation in that city. | DANCE RECITAL COURSE FOR WORKERS AND STUDENTS Students’ dance recitals announce a course of six dance recitals to take place Saturday evenings: October 31, November 14, December 19, January 2, February 20 and March 26, at the Washington Irving High School. This organization was formed last season to bring the best modern dancing to students and workers, etc., at mini- mum prices. Subserfption for the six dance recitals will be $2. Tickets are obtainable at the Students Dance Re- | TH E ADVENTURES OF BIL ieiieeetecantone aattecameananeneemet erent Se MN ahem asa L WORKER THIS MAN WILL Not STAND IN THe BRead THIS i WINTER } ie IN Ove a ine) \ THIS ANCIENT PIECE OF CAPITALIST CHEESE WiLL NOT SYAND IN ‘THe BREAD LINE THU WwreQ, LINE ANDY (Retten) AMELLON | STAND IN THe WINTER “TP MoRGan Tatse Two Goeay RonBERS Of THE LABORING Crayy WILL NOT BREAD SINE TH LS Rock feLtere JHIS. 1C€ CREAM Cone AND AIS Dod, ADMiRAl TOGw- WiLe Not STAND IN A Brean LINE THY WINYER. ADMIRAL Teag —Don’t Stand for Breadlines— Wik Tue 8 THE BREAD HE WILL Nor ! — oss SYAND UN ie STANDER. By RYAN WALKER Bur TH STAND LINE - if MAN rie Hoag ECAUSE HE BREAD Ling) THE ROTHER, lon REA {> 30 WORKERS IN MINE AREA JOIN PARTY IN WEEK Election Campaign Rallies Hundreds to Meetings ARNOLD, Pa., Sept. 12—The Com- | munist Party in the Allegheney Val- | Jey, which takes in the entire West- moreland County and part of the Allegheney County, is growing stead- ily in numbers and in political | strength. Large numbers of work- | ers, miners and steel workers, are joining every day. Last week we re- cruited 80 new members. The Communist Party in West- moreland County is taking part in the election campaign with county and local candidates. The candi- dates for the county are: Walter H. | Yost, miner, for county commis- | sioner; Gabriel Williams, also a) miner, for commissioner; Marko Arizena, for sheriff, and Ray Buck- | man, a miner, for county treasurer. John Wilkens, a Negro building trades worker, is the candidate for | constable in Ward 1, New Kensing- ton. John Sahra and Leo Gaibrich are the candidates for council in the Borough of Arnold, Hundreds of workers are attending the election campaign rallies and lis- tening to the Communist speakers and candidates who call upon the workers to organize and fight against starvation and for unemployment re- Hef. A big election campaign rally of the Communist Party will take Place next Wednesday night in Ar- nold, where the borough and county candidates of the Party will present to the workers the fighting program of the Party against wage-cuts and starvation, for unemployment relief by the borough and the county, pending the passage of a state unem- ployment insurance bill. ‘WORKERS VETS 10 OPEN FALL TALKS “Ex-Servicemen and the Bonus” Topic NEW YORK.—The Workers Ex- Servicemen’s League will inaugurate @ series of fall and winter lectures at an Open Forum. The first forum meeting will be held Sunday, Sep- tember 20, 2 p.m. at the WESL headquarters, 79 East 10th St. The topic will be “The Ex-Servicemen and the Bonus,” with E. Levin, chair- man of the Executive Committee, as the main speaker. Further topics and speakers cover- ing the Ex-Servicemen’s connection with world events and the working class struggles will be announced in the near future, EUGENE O'NEILL'S TRILOGY “MOURNING BECOMES ELEC- TRA” NOW IN REHEARSAL The Theatre Guild announces that Philip Moeller is staging Eugene O'Neill's trilogy “Mourning Becomes Electra”. The play opens at the Guild Theatre shortly. “Social Register”, the new John Emerson-Anita Loos play in which Erlanger Productions, will present Lenore Ulric this season, will open in Pittsburgh on September 28, coming to Broadway later. Alex. A. Aarons and Vinton Freed- ley announce their first production of the season, “Singin’ the Blues”, a | colored musical drama which will open at the Liberty Theatre Septem- ber 16, Maurice Schwartz begins his sea- son in English at the Ambassador Theater Wednesday evening, Sep- tember 23. It is his plan to present three plays during the year. He will | open with “If I Were You” by Sho- lem Aleichem. His supporting cast follows: Fernanda Eliscu, Harry Mer- vis, Edward Leiter, Natalie Browning, George Nash and Harry Worth. This play will be followed by “The Seven Who Were Hanged", by Leonid An- dreyev, adapted by Herman Bern- stein, and “The Man With the Port- folio” by Carl Fako, one of the best citals office, 32 Union Sq, ‘nown Soviet writers. ‘FUR WORKERS T0 |fur workers Thursday will act on the |Hold 7 Ship Workers for Membership in \Marine Workers Union SAN FRANCISCO, Cal., Sept. 13.— Seven Portuguese workers, two of them Swift workers, were picked up while working aboard a ship at Sac- ramento, They are held for deporta- tion, the charges being members of the Marine Workers Union. A mass protest meeting was held. ACT ON REQUEST OF UNTY MEET Workers “Will Make} Decision at Meet Called by NTWIU The Cooper Union meeting of the communication of the sub-committee of the Unity Conference asking for delegates to the conference. In the reply of the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union to this communica- tion it is pointed out that the NTWIU “is not controlled by a clique or a political group. It is controlled and managed by the workers. In line with these basic principles guiding our union, we have decided to submit your communication for action to mass meeting of the fur workers.” The NTWIU points out in its an- | swer that the decision of the workers will be the decision of the union. “We renfidont,” states the letter of the union, “that the fur workers who -2uy concerned with the prob- |le mof unity will make a decision | that will best serve the interests of all workers in the fur trade.” It is expected that the fur workers will come en masse to the Cooper | Union meeting to have their say on | this most important problem of unity which can be accomplished only by unity in the ranks of the workers and not by unity of cliques. | A call for the mass meeting will be issued to the workers in leaflet | form today. |Dog Workers Shop Chairmen Meet Tonight. Tonight, right after work the shop chairmen and delegates of the dog- | skin shops will meet at the office of | the union, 131 W. 28th St. The order |of business will be a report of the executive committee of 25 on the ac- tivities, a discussion on the fake unity maneuvers of the Kaufman- Stetsky clique, and many other prob- lems relating to the campaign to unionize the fur workers. Fur Worxers of Building 315 7th Ave. Called to a Meeting, A special meeting of all fur work- ers employed at 315 Seventh Aye., will take place tonight right after work at the office of the union, 131 W. 28th St. At this meeting special machinery will be organized to spread the union campaign to every shop in the building. Dressmakers of 35th St. Meet Wed. All dressmakers employed on 35th St. will meet at the office of the union, .31 W. 28th St., Wednesday, right after work to discuss the ques- tion of the united front, how it can be concretely put into action. Comrade Ben Gold, secretary of the important problems of the dress- makers. Millinery Membership Meeting Thurs, Since the last membership meet- ing, the Millinery Department has made considerable progress. A num- ber of shops have been unionized. In a number of other shops committees have been organized to prepare for complete unionization of these shops. The Millinery Department of the Industrial Union is now conducting two strikes for better conditions. At this meeting a report will be given on the activities, and the new mem- bers who came into the union as a result of the shop strikes will be of- ficially installed, All millinery workers are called upon to attend this meeting, Effective picketing was carried through in front of a number of the shop strikes conducted by the In- dustrial Union in the branches of the trade. As a result of this picket- ing one bathrobe shop, and one dress shop were forced to conclude settle- ments with the union. The strikes against the other shops continue. Needle trades workers are called upon to assist the strikers on the picket line. NY CONFERENCE OCT. 5 T0 INTENSIFY SCOTTSBORO CAMPAIGN NEW YORK.—With the southern lynch courts adopting the tactic of dragging out the Scottsboro case in the hope that the workers of this country will relax their activity, the Scottsboro United Front Defense Committee has decided to take steps to intensify the efforts to save the nine Negro boys. Ou Monday even- ing, Oct. 5, an enlarged defense con- ference will be held for this purpose, to which every working class and sympathetic organization in New York and vicinity should send dele- gates. The conference will be held }at 8 p. m. in the Finnish Workers | | Hall, 15 W. 126th Street, | This conference will also have as | | one of its tasks the linking up of the | | Scottsboro campaign with the cam- |paign to free Mooney and Billings | ; and the 135 workers who are, in-| volved in the Harlan case. The Oct. | 5 conference will put new life into the Scottsboro campain and seek to enlist lynch plans of the southern | Tuling class. All organizations should | send credentials to the Scottsboro | United Front Defense Committee, 799 | Broadway, Room 410, New York City. | RATIFICATION CONGRESS WILL RALLY WORKERS FOR CAMPAIGN (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) the rates of gas and electricity for small consumers to the original rate. “2) No shutting of the meters till such reduction is instituted. “3) The Public Service Commission immediately to take steps to reduce further the price for gas and elec- tricity 20 per cent for worker con- sumers, in accordance with the re- duced incomes of the workers. “The Communist Party does not | expect that the Public Service Com- mission, which is a ‘public service’ commission in name, will do any- thing to help the workers. ‘On the contrary, the Communist Party tells the workers openly that they will get relief from such oppressive measures and decrees as are made by teh cap- italist government, only through or- BRONX SECTION HOLDS RALLY Party on I Ballot in Worker Districts For the first time in the history of the Party there will be candidates in the coming November elections in every working class district in the Bronx, Out of the eight assembly dis- tricts the Party will run candidates in seven. A mass rally and ratification ban- quet will be held on Saturday, Sep- tember 19, at 569 Prospect Ave., to celebrate the placing of fourteen candidates of the Communist Party on the ballot. One of the outstanding events of this banquet will be the chorus of the Prospect Workers Club. The members of this club collected nearly 1,000 signatures during the campaign. Valuable books will be given to those comrades who collected the largest amount of signatures in the units. All workers are invited to attend the ratification banquet on Saturday night. PIEDMONT PLUSH ONE-DAY STRIKE Compromise at 15 P.C. Cut in Wages GREENVILLE, 8. C.—Workers of, the Piedmont Plush Mill here won @ partial victory in a one-day strike. The 150 workers of the mill all quit work when the manager told them of a wage-cut of approximately 30 per cent. The workers quit in a bedy and went and sat down on the grass outside the mill. They refused to accept the bosses’ suggestion that they go back to work and talk things over after they were at work. In- stead they elected a committee of five, which met with the manage- ment, and a compromise was reached, the workers, however, agreeing to go back with a 15 per cent cut. This was a spontaneous strike on the part of the workers. A complete victory could have probably been won if the workers had insisted and continued the strike for no wage-cut at all. The Piedmont Plush is one of the Greenville mills getting leaf- lets put out by the National Textile Workers’ Union. ganization and struggle. The Com- munist Party is organizing the work- ers for this struggle and will fully | expose the machinations of the gov- | ernment and its departments, as/| clearly controlled and owned by the Rockefellers, Morgans and the Wall | Street pirates,” The Communist Party is mobiliz- | ing a delegation of small consumers | of gas and electricity to appear be- | fore the Public Service Commission jon Friday, September 18, at 2:30 p.m., |and will demand in the name of the | workers of New York, together with the representatives of the Unem- ployed Council and Tenants Leagues, the right to present the situation at the same length at which the talka- tive attorney for the Washington | Heights Taxpayers Association was allowed to present “no issue.” The Communist Party calls upon | the workers and small consumers of gas and electricity to sign the peti- tions that are being circulated by the Unemployed Council and Tenants |League, It also calls upon the house- holders to appear at the open hear- ing on the question at the office of the Public Service Commission at 80 Center St. Room 659, on Friday, September 18, at 2:30 p.m. SNR ORGANIZERS TOTOURNS. Drive Begins Today in South River PERTH AMBOY.—Three organ- izers of the League of Struggle for Negro Rights will start tomorrow on a tour of New Jersey towns.to build the L.S.N.R. and its organ, the Lib- | erator. | The three organizers are V Davis, secretary of the County Committee | of the L.S.N.R., T. ‘Taylor chairman of the County Committee, L.S.N.R. and F. E. A. Welsh, field organizer of the L.S.N.R. They will cover the | following towns: South River, Sept. 16; Perth Am- | | boy, Sept. 17; Woodridge, Sept. 18; | Carteret, Sept. 19; Plainfield, Sept. 20; New Brunswick, Sept. 21; Red Bank, Sept. 22; Long Branch, Sept. || Songs! More of || Them! Many workers, both young and | |old, have sent in songs, but many | more are needed for the new song | book that is now being prepared. |Let us hear from the workers in | the South, particularly the Negro | | workers who are struggling for | Negro rights. What song have you to offer? Send it in immediately | to the Workers Library Publish- ers, P.O. Box 148, Station D, New York City. f Judge Powell Gives Eviction Orders to. Forty-twoWorkers Denied Right of Work- ers to Defend Them- selves in Court BROOKLYN, N. Y. — Forty-two workers’ families were ordered evict- ed within one week by Judge Powell from the Lee Ave. court this morn- ing (Monday). Judge Powell denied any rights of the workers to defend themselves in the court but made a gesture that he would refer their cases to “the Mayor's Committee.” Domenick Flaiani, Communist can- didate for Assemblyman in the 13th Assembly District, appeared in court to defend Ida Fostoff, a mother of 6 children, who, being unemployed, has not a piece of bread at home and ordered evicted by the judge and the landlord. Flaiani pointed out in the court room that “this worker has no bread to feed her children. She is denied a job. The court has no right to evict her from her home.” However, before Flaiani could go further the Judge interrupted and asked, “Are you a member of the Bar?” Flaiani answered that while he was not a member of the Bar he had the right to defend the workers’ rights in the court, and went on in addressing the court, saying, “By evicting this working woman you are denying the very right of happiness that is supposed to be guaranteed by the Constitution of the U. S.” The Judge would not allow Flaiani to go further with his defense, and trying to be polite, states, “If I al- low you to defend this woman in this court, being not\a member of the Bar I would be violating the law and committing a misdemeanor together with you and liable to imprison- ment.” Then turning toward the woman, he said,.“I give you one week's time to move and I will see the Mayor's Committee about your case.” Thus ordering Flaiani to leave the court. Fostoff with five of her children will partake in the delegation which will demand free food and clothing to President Hesterberg of the Bor- ough of Brooklyn Friday, Sept. 18th, when a demonstration will be held at 12 o'clock noon at Borough Hall Plaza, Court and Fulton Sts., under the auspices of the Young Pioneers of America, the Unemployed Coun- cil and the Parents League of Brooklyn. One way to help the Soviet Union is to spread among the 23; Freehold, Sept. 24; Tom's River, Sept. 25. workers “Soviet ‘Forced Labor,” by Max Bedacht, 10 cents per copy. AMUSEMENTS Sensational Drama Wi “WATERLOO BRIDGE” MAE CLARKE, KENT DOUGLASS YROM THE PLAY BY ROBERT kK, SHERWOOD of Human Hearts th 42nd CAMEO BROAD\. AY ST. and NOW VRANZ LEHAWS OPERRTTA “THE MERRY WIDOW” With DONALD BRIAN “Thrift” Prices vs 90 ————=——emenes Mate, f0e tn $1.00 ERLANGER THEA, W. 44th Street PEN. 6-7963, Evenings 8:30 Next Opera beg. Mon,, Sept, 21 “THE CHOCOLATE SOLDIER” Build a workers correspondence group in your factory, shop or neighborhood. Send regular letters to the Daily Worker, BOSSES, AFL IN PLOT T0 CRUSH UPHOLSTERERS Plan Build Local 76 As Company Union to Hit FWIU NEW YORK.—Fearing the growth of the strike movement in the up- holstery trade under the leadership jot the Furniture Workers’ Industrial Union, the leading upholstery em- ployers have launched a campaign to build Local 176, Upholsterers, an American Federation of Labor organ- ization, to head off the unionization of the trade, This move was taken at a secret conference of leading upholstery bosses on September 9th where Nad- ler, foreman of the Rockford shop, acted as the unofficial representative of Local 76, of which he is a leading member. The employers’ policy calls for active participation in rebuilding Local 76 to resist unionization by the Furniture Workers’ Industrial Union. Shops called on strike by the Furni- ture Workers’ Industrial Union are to immediately sign up with Local 76 and the workers forced into the A. F. of L. organization. Through their control of the company union- ized Local 76, the bosses could fight the demands of the upholsterers for week work instead of piece work, a 40 hour week, $1 minimum hourly wage and sanitary conditions. Call a Mass Meet. The Furniture Workers’ Industrial Union is calling a mass meeting, Thursday, September 17, at Manhat- tan Lyceum, 66 E. 4th St., of up- holsterers, strikers and those still working and other furniture workers to expose the latest move of the A. F. of L. and the bosses to crush the strike movement. At a mass picketing demonstration before the Blumenthal and Marion (Eagle) shops yesterday morning at Grand & Driggs Sts, Brooklyn, four workers were clubbed down by the police, and one arrested. Intern’ Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 1 UNION SQUARE 8TH FLOOR AU Work Done Under Personal Care of DR, JOSEPHSON Cooperators’ Patronize SEROY CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue Fstabrook 3215 BRONX, N, ¥. MELROSE DAIRY VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT Comrades Will Always Eind it Pleasant to Dine at Our Place, 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx (near 174th St. Station) INTERVALE 9—9149 VELEPHONE Phone Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY; ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 302 K. 12th St, New York Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 199 SECOND AVENUE Bet. 12th and 13th Sts, Strictly Vegetarian Food SOLLIN’S RESTAURANT 216 EAST 14TH STREET 6-Course Lunch 55 Cents Regular Dinner 65 Cents Advertise Your Union Meetings Were. For tnformation Write to Advertising Department The DAILY WORKER 50 East 18th St. New York Clty