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Rage Two BatlY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, JUNE 16, 1932 allen Trade Union Unity Council Sets Tasks in Election Drive Broad Committees to D 3 groes tention to N NW YORK sive Work for tion campaign in the weré laid down by th Cc. which consist nad comrhittee, cational directors “the educational committees unidig and leagues is to be broad- ened % include workers from every tradé section of the unions and from | | SCHENECTADY CONVENTION ‘DELEGATES! NOTICE! | “NEW YORK.—All delegates to | | thie New York State Nominating | | Convention, Commanist Party, Schenectady, June 17, must call at Room 505, Workers’ Center, for their credentials, Thursday afternoon or Friday. All mass organization delega- tions are asked to bring their | organization banners to the Schénectady Convention. FURRIERS SMASH WOLL CONFERENCE AGAINST THEM Discover A.F.L. Chiefs Conspiring and Walk Into the Meeting NeW YORK—In the fur yestérday it wi called “Com: Movement” had arranged a encé in thé Hotel Governor C at which wefe present Hill thé Amalgamated, Zaritsky Cap afd Millinery, Franey F. of L, Matthew Woll Sorkin, Luki, t dummy e of the Furriérs, and other agents of | the-Bosses. Thé traitor. Dr. wHo ts now being pushed t Handen, as Manager of the defunct Council; Was also present This was supposed to be an emer- genty conference, which 0 work out:.plans for the bankrupt Joint Couneil, so that it can continue to sePue as a scab agency for the bos Workers Invade. w When thé workers learned of this sectét. conference they came in} mm to the hotel and went into thecoiference room. L. Weiss, spokes- | mati of the committee, informed these gentlemen that they have no| businéss to confer about the furriers without the presence of the workers. His ‘remarks received the enthusiastic support of the rest of the workers, and the gentlemen were compelled | to leave the hall . ,_. Fur Shop Strikes. Twelve riew shops struck. them. have already been settled with increases in wages ranging from $3 to $10, the system of work was changed from piece to week work, the hours cut down from 70 to 40 and un- | employed workers placed on the jobs Every. day the number of shop strikes increase. Thé Industrial Union. is also planning a campaign against the overtime and Saturday work. . The first demonstration will | be Cartied through Saturday at 7 a.m. | Musicians’ Concert On Friday Features Revolutionary Music | NEW YORK. - revolutionar music compesed momb2*s of the Musit‘ans’ Club will be played for a nat Fil Friday the ¢#ganizati Ww. Ya6th St. 17th.* On the same program will be a group of revolutionary songs by Con- cha Michel, well-known Mexican singét”- Numbers by their orchestra, piaho quartet and violin solo are featuréd in the program Workers School Excursion Sat. to Help Raise Funds misa Hail NEW YORK. — An unusual moon- | light sail on the Hudson with danc ing, entertainment and refreshments has een arranged by the Workers School for Saturday night, June 18. | Tickétaare one dollar each and ob- tainable at the School Office, 35 EF, 12th St., and the Workers Bookshop, 50 B. 18th St. the excursion will go toward helping the school carry on its highly im- portant -work during the summer. ‘LL. D. in Urgent Plea for: Funds Now Needed to Carry on Campaigns NEW YORK.—Calling attention to the number of defense campaigns which it is at present leading, the International Labor Defense is mak- ‘ig 4M urgent appeal to all working class and sympathetic organizations and sympathetic organizations and and individuals to rush contributions at onée. R More than $10,000 is needed for Scottsboro legal fight alone, it | “4 out. ‘butions to the Inter- Sefense, 80 East 11th | ‘ow York, N. Y. | tions, each trade section is to elect |demonstration and Labor Day elec- Eight of | moert, given by | The net receipts from | '2,000 STRIKERS ‘PICKET HOME OF i reek Work; Special At- ; Reports June 30 |All Demands Are Won | at 5-Star Shoe Shop; Biedenkapp to Speak from those ich have no and leagues, the n committee shall be possible. With the edu- committee as a base the should immediately assign from the shops and to work with these this enlarged élection aign committee. In the Néedle, Building, Office and other where there are trade sec- onal were held Tuesday evening in front of thé honies of I. Miller strike- | breakers. | stein, 173 Amboy St., |seab fitter, more than 2,000 workers demonstrated in angry protest against one of their neighbors carry- ing on such a despicable role. The Streéts were packed and traffic was/ blocked. The second, at thé home of Harry |Kiéin, 151 Duriont St., Brooklyn, | | also a fitter, has nearly 1,000 worker- | neighbors. Klein camé out and tried | |to argue and chase away the crowd,! and was hit by the indignant work- ers. The window of his home was, broken during the fight. | comrades on unions & campaign committee on thé same basis to work with the union élec- tion campaign committee. The T. U. U. C. election campaign ttee and the élection campaign committees of the unions and leagues send delegates to the New York ted Front Election Campaign Committee and work closely with it. It the immédiate task of the union on campaign committees to mobilize to send delegates from @ unions to the Schenectady con- those unions were there at least 25 percent of tes are to be Negroes, a good representation from the omen and young workers. Special 5-Star Shoe Shop Victory. At ‘the 5-Star Shoe Co., which is | |locateq directly in back of the I. Miller shop, in Long Island, a victory | was won.Thé Shoe & Leather Work- |ers’ Union has been organizing the |5-Star workers ever since the begin- | mirig of the Miller strike. Yesterday | efforts will be made to get good rep- {at 11 a.m. the workers declared a resentation from shops, shop groups, |SPPae in thé shop and the boss position groupe of the A. FL, anti} W85 forced to recognize the shop nemployed. committee and the general chair- ~ man and départment committees. ____ Report Jane 30. The victorious workers went back to Following the Schenectady conven-| work with the following demands tion an enlarged meeting of the T.| won: No lay-offs, discharges or dis- C. election campaign Com- | crimination; all help to be hired with the unions and leagues |tne consent and advice of the crew; to be called on June 30th, for a | equal division of work during slack rey ot the Schenectady conven- | period, pricés to be fixed in consulta- | neck-up on activities to be | all work, especially the mo- | The bogs recognized and the work- | s for the July 4th ral- | ers all realized that the victory was cial election campaign |due to the militant fight that the of the T. U. U. C. July | miter strikers are putting up. Fred Biedenkapp, former union or- | The unions are urged by thé T. | ganizer and leader of the shoe strike | Ne 7 of I. MILLER SCAB: NEW YORK.—Two demonstrations | At the home of Jack Gold-| Brooklyn, a| |Want Jobless Not to | 20, so that it will not pass the Home | tion with the shop committee, ete. | Leave for U.S.S.R. to Work on Soviet Film Part of a group of American Négro workers and intellectuals who left Monday night for the Soviet Union to participate in the making of an historical film of Negro life in America, Left to right, front—W. A. Domingo, chairman; Constance W. White, Dorothy West, Juanita Lewis, Louise Thompson, Sylvia Garner, Mildred Jones, L. O. Alberga. Top— Wayland Rudd, Henry Lee Moon, MeNary Lewis, Theodore Piston, Allan | McKenzie, Homer Smith and Harold Williams, The group also includes | Langston Hughes, Negro poet and dramatist. ‘POLICE TRY TO . |“MOTHER’ MOONEY SHIELD “RELIEF” Plans Go on to Demand Release of Mooney CHICAGO, Hl, June 15.—Mrs. Mooney has recovered here eyesight sufficiently to go ahead with plans to appear at a demonstration before the Republican Party Convention and | before the California delegation to the convention, with the demands of the working class that her son, Tom Moo- ney, be released from San Quentin. March Past Office NEW YORK.—The police depart- ment is trying to force the Down Town Unemployed Council to re- route the parade of thousands of un- employed workers next Monday, June Relief Buréau office. When the committee of the Unemployed Coun- cil declared they would march on their route, anyway, the police stated they would consider the matter fur- | blind while attending an Internation- ther. The Home Relief office is at|al Labor Defense conference which Spring and Elizabeth streets. | was discussing plans for her demand. The Home Relief admits there are | 125,000 jobless in the section south of 14th St., in Manhattan, and that only 3,000 get any relief at all, and that the relief for that 3,000 is bes) ing cut moré and more. The demonstration and parade are to start af 10 a.m. Monday at Seventh St. and Ave. A. Mrs, Mooney was suddenly stricken She is 84 years old, has fought for years for Mooney’s release, and has ous speaking campaign. MINNEAPOLIS, Juné ered from: an attack which tempor- arily blinded her, Mary Mooney, 84-year-old mother of Tom Mooney, | will appear at a mass meeting on behalf of her son and the Scotts- boro boys at the Eagles Auditorium LABOR UNION _ |{)tor tors a is Friday, June 17. MEETINGS | With ae is Richard B. Moore, na- *« e U. U. C. to make immediate prépar-| of 1929 and 1930, will speak at 10 ations for a successful T. U. U. C.|a.m, today at the Geller strike head- | election campaien conférence of | quarters and at 2 p.m. at the I. shop delegates on July 2ist to pre- | Miller headquarters. e for the August Ist anti-war | One-Man Picket Line Protests Firing of tion campaign picnic and to map out her activity for the election cam- en. j 4 NEW YORK.—Internal strife flick- What’s On— éred for One brief moment and sud- = |denly died out today in a stormy THURSDAY St dace ihe aah ee | scene before the offices of the New im and Photo League will be| Leader, official sheet of the Socialist 16 W. 21st St. at 8 pun, ee . The issue was the Closed Shop vs. |The American Plan, with the New Leader strongly in favor of the lat- ter. It came to pass that Edward Levin- son, associate editor of the paper, was A mecti Workers’ held at A mesting of all delegates of mags or-| Mee ons and suporters of the Unem- ployed Council will be held at 1400 Boston Road, Bronx, at 8 p.m. This will Be an important meeting and all workers are urged to come. A lecture and discussion on the present situation in Chile will be held at the givén the gate by his boss, Oneal. Workers’ Center, 35 B. 12th St., Room 205, at 8 pm., under theauspices of the Anti- McAlister Coleman, contributing | Imperialist League. A. Moreau will lead the | editor of the paper and an associate | Gscussion. Admission is free. | |of Léevinson’s in the so-called “mil- litant” group in the Socialist Party, rushed into a phone booth of the Rand School building, inscribed upon an improvised placard the flaming Alteration Plumbers will meet at 1130 ern Boulevard, Bronx, at 8 p.m. All| mbers are urged to come to this meeting. A regular meeting of Branch 500, I.W.0.,| CRIN aL ae en nee | words NEW LEADER UNFAIR TO | tpeak on cen the Eeoteemegke: "ill | LABOR, dashed out into 15th Street laved?” and held it aloft (once) in an im- | pressive picketing demonstration. Whereupon several administration stalwarts made a rush for the New Leader scribbler. wrecked the plac- meeting of the mais Rolland Youtn | 27 beyond redemption and shunted 1 be held in the audi-| the portly picketeer into the butld- x Park East at 8 p.m. ling, "ill speak District Organizer) “Several years ago Levinson, the decapitated editor sold a story of the informer type to a New York capit- alist sheet, aimed to involve a worker in the revolutionary movement. | Admission is free, | A special meeting of the Furniture Work- Industrial League will be held at 108 St.. at 8 p.m, All upholsterers and e workers are invited to atetnd this |_A Comrade M. Olgin will speak on ‘The yen Soviet Russia” at Paradise Manor, Eden Ave.. Bronx, at 8 putt, Ad- mission is free. Auspices West Bronx Branch, F-§,U f) German and English Section of the Buehne will meet at the Hungarian Homé, 350 E. Stst Bt. at 8:3 p.m City Conference for Relief of Striking | wits United Council ie Working Class | Women has arranged a cl in publi ; The tee meting mune | «| Minérs on June 17th Center, council * 50 E. 18th st. is askéd fo send NEW YORK. — Preparing to rally workers of the city for strike relief Council No, 34 will discuss the “Commu- i hist Patty Progtam in the Blection Can. support of the East Ohio miners and paign” at 2109 Arthur Avé, Bronx, at| the Colorado beet workers, the New 8:30 p.m York district of the Workers Inter- national Relief yesterday reminded workers’ organizations of the confer- ence to be held Friday, June 17, at 12 noon at the Manhattan Lyceum, 66 Hast 4th St. Besides the national campaign for strike relief of thé bituminous miners and the beet workers, thé confer- ence will consider strengthening the children’s campaign and the Wing- dale children’s4 camp of the Work- ets International Relief. Council No. 36 will have an orgenize- tional talk on “Why Workers’ Wives SHoUl4 Join the United Council of Working Class Women” at 951 Leggett Ave, Bronx, at 8:50 p.m Council No, 29 will have # lecture on ‘Women and ‘War’ at 1780 Bryant Ave, Bronx, Apt. 1-A, at 8:30 p.m. Comrade William Simon, National Secre- |tery of the Anti-Imperialist League, will | speak at the Harlem Wa pepane Youth | Club, 1538 Madison Ave., at 8:30 pt, Sub- | Jeet: “What ts Going On t# chile A regtilar meeting of ‘the Bronx Ieor Youth Branch will be held at 2078 Clinton ve., Bronx, Room 5, at 8:30 p.m eae aa” The Amrican Workers’ Delegation to the javier Union will report at the N. ¥. irban League Bidg., 202 W. 136th St., at 8:20 p.m. under the auspices of the In- | ternational Branch of the F.8.U. JERSEY JOBLESS “PROGRAM” ENDING. NEWARK, N. J., June 7. — The few pennies which jobless Jersey. workers have been getting on state jobs will stop trickling soon. Chester I. Barnard, staté director of “Emerg- enéy Relief” announced that the state “program” will be abandoned, July 1. r of the May ist delégation. to Union will report, under the 1 Branch of the auditorium of 2700 Bronx | suspices of Co-op No, §.U, in the * mitade Mac Weiss will speak on “The of the Press in the Class Struggle” at the hewly-organized Young Workers’ Club, 353 Beekman Avé., at 8:30 p.m. ‘The Concourse Workers’ Club will hold 4n open-air meeting at 170th St. and Wal- ‘New Leader’ Scribe | | tional organizer of the Interfiational Labor Defense, with whom “Mother” Mooney is now on a national tour. On Thursday they speak at the German-American House, St. Paul; in Superior, Wis, on Sunday, and Duluth, Minn., Mond: No Doctor Sent by Health Board to | Worker’s Home (By a Worker Correspondent) NEW YORK, June 10—‘If you cannot afford to have a family doc- tor, call the nearest office of the Board of Health”, reads a conspicu- ous sign in t he subway trains. But Alex Lorenz, whose child is ill with 105 degrees of fever is still waiting for a doctor from the Board of Health to save his baby. Three days ago this worker went to the Board of Health and told of his child's illness. He was promised that a doctor would go immediately to take care of the child. Hours passed, the child's condition became more critical—the. high fever con- tinued unchecked in its destructive work. But no doctor came. Clothing orkers Rank and file workers of the Amalge- | Mated Clothing Workers call all clothing | workers to @ méeting Monday at noon at | | Irving Plaza Hall, to hear the first report | to his union fellow workers of Sante Mira- | bile, May Day delegate to the Soviet Unton | He ‘has just returneds Questions will bé | answered ee Barbers and Hairdressers Bargers’ delegate to the National Nom- inating Convention of the Communist Party will réport af a special meeting called by the Barbers and Hairdressers League to- night (Thursday) at 50 E. 13th St. Dressmakers’ Defense M, Olgin lectures Priday night at Pros- pect’ Workers’ Center, 1157 Southern Blvd, on “Proletarian Culture In the Soviet Union.” All proceeds will go to the cam- Paign for release of Welssberg, Turner, Miller and Adlachi. + Technical Men Regular meeting of the Union of Tech- tical Men at Labor Temple, 14th St. a Second Ave., Room 32, Fridey at 6 p.m. Drug Clerks ‘The Drug Store Wo..rkers’ League calls all drug store workers to meetings in Am- bassedor Hall, June 16, at 10:30 a.m. and 10 pm. Ambassador Hail is at Claremont Parkway and Third Ave. Bronx. Means of protection against the Sherman tacke- teers will be discussed, eco ei Knitgoods Workers Knitgoods workers of Williamsburg will | meet tonight, right after work, at 11 Gra- ham Ave., Brookiyn. eee Dressmakers Negro and white dreesmakrs will meet tonight, right aftr work, in Memorial Hall, 344 W, 36th St., to discuss organization work among Negro dressmakers. “REUNION IN VIENNA” IN FINAL WEEKS AT GUILD Robert’ E. Sherwood’s satire, “Reu- nion in Vienna,” in which Lynn Fon- tanne and Alfred Lunt play the Principal roles, will close its long run on July 2, at the Guild Theatre. The Theatre Guild production has beén running since November 16. Follow- ing a vacation, Miss Fontanne and Lunt will resume their roles for a road tour beginning at the Plymouth Theatre, Boston, on September 19. “That's Gratitude,” Frank Craven's comedy, will be revived this evening at Waldorf Theatre tonight by 0, BE. Wee. Taylor Holmes, J. C. Nugent, Maide Keade, Gerald Kent and Mehrtnann are in the cast. Whitegoods Workers, The Needle Trads Workers’ Industrial Union calls on white goods workers to meet this evening, right after work, at 131 W. 28th St. to discuss tactics to fight wage-cuts. OPEN GARDNER, MASS. CAMP SOON GARDNER, Mass. — Following a successful conference, plans are in full swing for raising funds for the Workers’ Children’s Camp which is scheduled to open here on July 4 at Holmes Park. Trade Union, fraternal and other sympathetic organizations. are ap- pealed to contribute by sending funds to the United Front Camp Commit- tee, Box 23, Essex Station, Boston,| The Trans-Lux Thegtre on Broad- Mass way, is featuring this week the fol« lowing short subjects: “Hooked,” a VOTE COMMUNIST FOR: Sportlight travel film; “In The Bag,’ a cartoon comedy; “Taxi Tangle,” a Paramount short; “Medbury In Aby- sinnia” and “Sea Legs,” a Vitaphone picture, The chiéf itém of interest. at the News Réel Theatre next door is the jobless veterans of the Bonus Army on their way to Washington. 4. Equal rights for the Negroes and self-determination for the Black Belt, NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES EAST SIDE—BRONX VOTE COMMUNIST YOR: 5. Against capitalist terror; against all forms of suppression of the Political rights of workers, JEFFERSOA : Prospecré tse NESDAY TO FRIDAY “Scandal for Sale” With Charles Bickford, Rose Hobart and Pat O’Brien At JEFFERSON—Extra Feature Jack Mulhall in “LOVE BOUND” NEW LOW PRICES MATS. 15 Cents || EVES. 25 Cents Except Sat., Sun. and Holidays ton Ave, Bronx, at 8 p.m. Comrade Marry Wicks will speak open forum of the Irish Workei 2072 Fifth Ave, near 128th St., at 8 p.m. on “The Working Class and the Coming Hiecvons,” MAY DAY CELEBRATION IN MOSCOW SOVIET OFINESE TROOPS IN ACTION EXCLUSIVE SHOWING IN AMERICA UNCENSORED SCENES OF STARVING WORKEKS AND SCAVANGERS OF FOOD (NEVER BEFORE SHOWN) CHILE REVOLUTION (Above Films Subject to Arrival) Re . Council No. 14 will have a lecture at 1 Fulton Ave, Brooklyn, at 8 p.m. f bade Sougt Council No. 95 will Nave 4 lecture On the “Second Five Year Plan’ at 109-26 Union Hal! St, Jamaica. Comrade Lena Davis will speak. rie mere Council No, 10 will have a lecture on the question of “War and Revolution in the Far East’ at 2072 Bath Avé., Brooklyn, at 8 pm. Comrade Doonping, will speak. ‘The Harlem Section Committee of the Communist Part a farewell party to Comrade Joe Kill at th roof gar- den of the Finnish Hall, 15 W. 126th 6t., ate z 5 v4 ! ‘wwA CME THEATRE Mth STREET & UNION GQUARE Sensational Soviet Film YELLOW PASS A Thrilling Drama of Tzarist Mussia, with a Brilliant Cast, Including ANNA STENN Also: Latest Soviet News | 158 tents but in e, $0 if you we Rave a good a complete line of 1 line of et in the same spot since OUR GUARANTEE quantity of yours out, wi We also «art 523 BROADWAY Phone CAnal 6-2985 Mail Orders 62 A: M. to ‘d PM. Exe, Sat, & Sun. idnite Show Sat. RECOVERS SIGHT recently been engaged in @ very ardu- | 15.—Recov- | CAMPERS ATTENTION Genuine U. S. Army Ventilated 9x9 Wall Tents $12.50 cellent condition, ing and fishing suppiles, LUCKE-KIFFE CO. NEGROES HAIL FORD'S SPEECH Shows G.OP. Is Party of Hunger SYRACUSE, N. Y., June 15. “We're sure with you, Mr. Ford, and with the program of the Commu- nist Party”, more than a score of Negro workers here told the Ford, the Communist candidate for vice- president, yesterday, after 500 Syra- cuse workers heatd him speak at an enthusiastic election rally at Pe- lop’s Hall. This was the first time these Negro workers had ever heard the pro- gram of the Communist Party. Their énthusiasm came frm the bottom of their hearts. Ford spoke espécially on the fourth ‘plank of the Communist Platform: “Equal rights for the Negroes and self-determination for the Black Belt.” He described how the burden of the crisis was béing thrown, by the employers, not only on the shoul- ders of the workers generally, but especially on the backs of the Negro workers. Unemployment is greatest among the Negroes, and relief is much less that even the semi-starva- tion relief given part of the white workers, Jim Crowism, lynching, and discrimination on the job and on the bread lines is worse during the crisis than ever before. “Republican Don't Regret.” Ford took up the keynote speech \at the Republican National Conven- tion, and declared: “The Hoover hunger government cynically pro- “|claims that it has no apologies to |make for the 15,000,000 jobless, the 50 per cent wage cuts during its re- jgime. It has nothing to regret for the starving to death of whole fami- lies of. the unemployed, for the ter- rific oppression of all the working class. serve the decaying capitalist system of hunger and death. 25,000 Seek Jobs On | 20 years experience, subway, Transportation. already been most of these have men. line, it appears, until Tammany makes ja final decision as to which set of pirates it will be turned over to, “DIARY OF A REVOLUTIONIST” « CONTINUES AT CAMEO The Cameo Theatre is continuing the new Amkino talkie with English Sub-titles, “Diary of a Revolution- ist,” for a second week. This film was directed by J. I. Urinov and it pictures two important epochs in the history of Soviet Russia. It shows the fighting of the October Revo- lution and the struggles against the remnants of the cld state. It also Amusements LAST WEEKS The Theatre Guild Presents REUNION IN VIENNA A Comedy By ROBERT B SHERWOOD. IEATRE, Sind St. GUILD Werser oF Bway Ey 6.40. Mts Th., Sat. Tel. Co 5-8229 DAILY WORKER PRAISES Diary of a Revolutionist (Tt ie a simple film, maintaining » high artistic quality, but tensely dramatic and thorourhly revealing of the Bol- shevik qualities that overcame all ob- tacles, regardless of physical danger and peroneal sacrifice.” New Amkino Action Talkie With English Titles | EXCLUSIVE SOVIET NEWSREEL— Daieprostroy—Magnitogorsk — Setec- tion of Designs for Palace of the Soviets—Accommo for Chil. for ‘“Five- alt Mining. A es ——— ra AMEO 42" s1 We have a small intending to camp this yéar, pick assortment of them. ft other tents. cuts. stov We bi 1875. GOES A LONG WAY (Corner Spring St.) Filled Promptly . Its concern js not with the suffer- | ing of the working class, but to pre | Eighth Ave. Subway , NEW YORK.—Nearly 25,000 work- | érs, some of them with from 10 to/ have already | ‘applied for jobs on the Eighth Ave. ; according to the Board of , About 1,400 jobs are available, and | farmed out through Tammany herich- ; | The city will run the Eighth Ave. | shows the problems of today and Campaign against sabotage arej| stressed. Communist Party of 8. U. Greeted by Con- vention of NY District NEW YORK. — The Communist Party of the U. S. A, New York district has sent the following cable- gram to the (ares Party of thé Soviet Union: “Communist Party, Soviet Union, Moscow. Warmest proletarian greetings Bol- shevik Party Soviet Union New York District Convention CPUSA pledges most earnest energetic work to rea- lizé demands ECCI resolution and to mobilize largest masses defense Chinese people and USSR.” CONVENTION IN N. J., JUNE 26TH Scores of Meetings Elect Delegates NEWARK,,N. J., June 15.—Prepa- tations for the New Jerséy State Ratification Convention to be held Sunday, June 26, at Labor Lyceum, 704 South 14th Street, Newark, N. J., beginning 10 a. m. sharp are in full swing. A minimum of 300 delegates are expected from shops, unem- |ployed, mass organizations of white and Negro workers and from the farmers of South Jersey, (Ocean, At- lantie County, etc.). The Communist Party has 91 can- didates in New Jersey this year, al- most twice as many as in any pre- vious year. Candidates for U. S. Senator, Congress, Assembly,» Free- holder, etc., will be ratified at the Convention. In the city elections held this spring in Long Branch and Atlantic City the Communist vote increased considerably. THREAT TO EXPEL LATHERS’ LOCAL Vice-President of AFL Aiding Racketeers NEW YORK. —, Acting upon in- struction from William J, McSorley, President of the Lather's Interna- tional Union, and Vice-President of the Executive Board of the American Federation of Labor, Vicé-President Murphy of the Lathers International Union threatened to revoke the Charter of Lathers Union, Local 244, Brooklyn. This action is being taken In spite of the fact that this mémbership has been fighting against a lock-out and strikebreakers for over nine months. The excuse given is that the Inter- national neéds money, and that the per capita tax must be paid regard-- less of thé local’s situation. The real object is to reorganize the union for the pudpose of again admitting the labor hacketeers which hte membership successfully forced out of their ranks niné months ago along with three business agents, The membership realizes that they aré being éxploited and they have drawn sharp lines and are waiting to frustrate this anticipated action which is threatened for today. McSorley emphasized that the mil- itant members that fought for the demands of the rank and file will have to be eliminated from the union, The reason for this is obvious, these militant members have ‘bravely fought the gangsters and racketeérs. VOTE COMMUNIST FOR: 4, Equal rights for the Negroes and self-determination for the Black Belt. Boat Leaves Pier 11, Tickets $1 ¢ach, obtainable at Workers School, 50 £, 1th St. N. ¥. 0. Only —:—WORKERS SCHOOL—:— THIS SATURDAY, JUNE 18, 1932 Moonlight Sail (On the Hudson—S.S. Ossining) DANCING—ENTERTAINMENT—REFRESHMENTS “A Nice Time for Everybody (Foot of Wall Street) Get your tickets now or it will be too late: East River, 7 p. m. Schoo}, 35 E. 19th St. and at Workers about 100 tickets are still to be sold, Arranged by the New York c[oN august 28 F yivd Aug Juvsvo[g uy ‘Od “1 ‘T ATTENTION COMRADES! Health Center Cafeteria WORKERS CENTER 50 BAST 13th STREET Patronize the Health Center Cafeteria and Help the Revolutionary Movement Best Food Reasonable Prices SANDWICH SOLS “ToncH 1038 University Place (Just Around the Cornet) Telephone Tompkins Square 6-9780-9781 DINE IN THE OPEN AIR Garden Restaurant 323 hace 13th STREET er peene Avenue REASONABIS PRIC COMRADELY ATMOSPHERE NO TIPPING MUSIC COCO and SPINICELLI INVITE YOU TO —PATRONIZE—~ A Comradely BARBER SHOP 1500 BOSTON ROAD Corner of Wilkins Avenue BI y. ‘Our work will please the men, the women and the children NO TIPS LIVE THIS SUMMER IN Golden’s Bridge Colony CHAS, COOPER wiM sublet one or two rooms. Electrie, telephone, running hot and cold water, shower, and bath. COMMUNICATE DAILY WORKER or Téephone Katondh 692-3 Build a workers correspondence group in your factory, shop or Workers’ Clubs Shouid Advertise in the “Daily” Tonite Thursday CARL HACKER will speak on “Can the Scottsboro Boys Be Freed?” Held by L. W. 0. Branch 500 (Bnglish Speaking) ot 35 EAST 12th ST., ROOM 310 JUNE 16TH AT 8:30 P. M. ADMISSION FREE Intern’) Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE - 15th FLOOR AD Work Done Under Personal Care of DR, JOSEPAKON a ’ CUT RATE OPTICIANS a Eyes Examined by Registered Op- tometrists—White Gold Rims $1.50 Shell Frames $1.00 117 ORCHARD ST., Near Delancey ‘WATCH! AUGUST 2ist DAILY WORKER PICNIC (Pleasant Bay Park) Bungalows and Rooms to Rent for Summer Season Several very nice wens and bungalows for rent for the summer season. put ful farm in Eastern sylvania. Rua- ning wat Freer il ming, fish- ing. et Reasonal Com! cate with A. Tenn. re by “Box 87, Sta- tion 1, New York. NL, CAMPERS ATTENTION! Army Tents 16x16 and Others Also Camp Equipment —Reasonable Prices— MANHATTAN WIPING CLOTR INO, neighborhood. Send regular letters, to the Dally Worker, yyy 478 Water St., corner Pike St. Phone Dry Dock 4-476