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hens Te: _ DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, JUNE 20, 1932 COMMISSION EXPOSED AS EMPLOYER, | WILDCAT ST trike- B Famous Shoe Organized and Led A Shoe Manufacturers NEW YORK.--U. 5. Commissione: of Conciliation Charles G. Wood has Tecently been himself an employer of labor, and has taken part in or- genizing and leading strike breaking associations of shoe companies. The men that Secretary Doak, “Deporta- tions Doak,” sent to try and break the shoe strike now going on in Proeklyn, the man who hes a long record of strike breaking while government official, has good class} regsens for being on the employers’ side. Senator Frank Hurley. of Holy oke, Mass., in a quarrel with Wood last year, let it out that Wood is the organizer and president of the now defunct Golden Rule Hosiery Co. Hurley charged that Wood enticed workers to invest out of their sav- ings s total of $200,000, and that aitér two y two years of Wood's pperetien Stetsky, Enemy of Fur Workers, Kills Himself Over Crisis | NEW YORK aarles Stetsky formser manager of the New York joint board of the International Fur Workers Union Ned mself with Ses yesterday. He was the man who put through the attacks agai Isft wing workers in the fu in some of their greatest S| Stetsky’s reason for leaving a| well to be that world where the employers pas for such services. ns: he was about to lose cleening racket into which hi the went ies of he work | board. when other equally able enen the fur workers began to do he used to do, on the joint Frameup en PaintShop ‘Strike Leader Fails| NEW YORK The bess of the| Audebon Paint op in tried to frame up Joe Harris leader, on a charge that threatened him if he wo! gn agreement with the Alteration Pginters. The men are striking for their back pay. The basses’ wife = @ fantastic story about hearing threats, but the evidence was so that the judge had to dismiss case The judge asked Harris why the men did not go to the AF.L., and got @ lecture from Harris on the treach- eries of AFL, leaders. Ha baa the Fur Workers in Mass DemonstrationA gainst |: Sunday Work; Jail 12 NEW YORK. — lyr workers dem- | onstrated yesterday in the market | against Sunday work. Police attempt- | img to drive them up to the shops, arrested 12, When these were brought before Magistrate Goldstein | in Jefferson Market Court, he told | them that Sunday work is illegal here, but they should not demon- Strate, they should go through the forms of law. The arrested workers ‘told him, that the law, as remresented | by the police ,tried to club them up ‘te work. Goldstein held three for héaring today, held two more on $100 bail each, and freed seven. Dubinsky Pledges His| Allegiance to Bosses | NEW YORK. —Da sky, who was the leading go-between in the $ell oyt of the dressmakers’ last year by the International Ladies’ Garment Workers, so far as that or-| Banizgtion could manage treach- ery with the Needle Trades “Worker: 8 Industrial leading to victory in many shops, has issued a declaration of ex pulsions and terrorism against tt ‘left wing in the'l. L. G, W. LABOR UNION MEETINGS Clothing Workers file workers of the Amalge- Workers call all clothing werkers to a meeting Mondey st noon at Plaga Hell, to hear the first report union fellow workers of Sante Mira- nile). May Day delegate to the Soviet Union “Me has just returned, Questions will be answered What’s On— JONDAY ‘Worker delegates just returned trom the| Soviet Union will report at the Labor Temple, 14th St. and Second Ave, at 8 p.m under the auspices of the Downtown Branch, 2. . 8. Be i mooting af the City Committee of the W. 1. BR. will be held at 16 W. ist St. at § p.m. All members must be present A lecture will Me held at the Photo. see- thon of the Workers’ Film and Photo League, 16 W. ist Bt, at & p.m. . * L. ‘at Columbia Place Me) State Bt, Brockivs, 8 pm. All members of the W. I. BR. Bond art to report for rehogreal ai 122 Geeond Ave at 8pm. New players are invited “ first plenie of the season of Disc 2 ‘ommunist Party, will be held urday, July 14 All mass organizi 4 not to make any arrangements for that day. e 3. LD. yt be held on Gunde Pg 2% All ins! orgenteetions are pore te,fake any arragaemepts for 43 ) indow | » |found the New York police strike | ER WOOD IS OCK SELLER reaker | Headed Hosiery | Company That Lost $200,000 Workers’ S. Savings nti-Labor Metropolitan Association the $200,000 was gone | Hurley charged that Wood is “in-| | competent, unreliable, and an offici- | ous intermeddler and trouble maker,” and that he was “a stock salesman in wildcat schemes that have as their purpose the destruction of organ- ized labor.” | Although Wood always urges em- | ployers to line up with the A. F. of L. and keep the “radical unions” out Jof the field, by which he means any | union that actually fights for the im. provement of the wages and condi- jtions of workers, he hi dealt so unfairly even with the conservative |unions that the Massachusetts state |federation of labor denounced him as having “engendered distruct, sus- |picion and bitterness.” Hi Wood gets along better with the absolutely company-union- lized Boot and Shoe Workers Union Jof the A. F. of L., which he urged er, 47 Brooklyn shoe companies to sign with when he issued his Tuctions to them g them, as a government official, that they should break their con- je act with the real shoe workers’ un_ Union Unity Leagu famous a Trade Union | Wood also in his book on “Reds,’ |lauds the A. F. of L. Boot and Shoe | Workers and assails employers who S!do not support it Organized Employers But Wood has still closer con- tions with the shoe industry the 1929-30 strike he ealled a ing of all shoe manufacturers Jin Brooklyn and New York, all who | were not in the Boayd of Trede, and jorganized them into the Metropolitan Manufacturers’ Association, of he made himself the actual head, and. while still a government |official, became the directing force in the strike breaking activity of all these compa Wood testified before Commission when it the’ Fish was gathering |material however fantastic, to use in putting across deportation bills to drive from this country foreign born workers who strike for better wages. Fish backs the present Dies deport- ation bill. Wood testified at the Fish committee that in breaking the shoe strike of 1929-30, and he tes- tified in other circumstances, that he “very helpful” and “warmly eommends” the then Police Commissioner, the now badly deflated Mr. Whalen. Wood, The Deporter And when Whalen, himself, testified at the Fish hearings, he said that ‘Wood came to him, and they together sent out questions to 2,500 employes in New Yorls factories demanding they | answer “Where born?” “Port of en- |try2” “Name of ship?” and other questions useful fer deportation of these workers if they should become active in organizing or leading | struggles for higher wages. Wood has not confined himself to lowering standards of living for the shoe workers. During the great strike | of 20,000 textile workers in Elizabeth- ton, Tenn., in 1929, Wood gave advice and assistance to another U. S. Com- | missioner of Conciliation, Mrs. Anna Weinstock, who managed to break the | strike. Then Wood, himself, went to | Gastonia, where the National Textile Workers Union, brother union to the Shoe and Leather Workers’ Industrial Union, was conducting a mill strike. Wood, as U. S. Commissoner of Con- | ciliation, lined up entirely. with the | employers, and endorsed the sending of five companies of state militia to break the strike. Not only that, but Wood acted as a stool pigeon on strike leaders and notified the police of every town to which the strike leaders went to collect relief. Wood's strike breaking in Gastonia Was "sO Open and notorious that even the Washington News, | Scripps-Howard papers reprimanded the Department of Labor for not | discharging him. “Red-baiting is the U. 8. Labor De- | partments initial contribution in ef- forts to to settle the Carolina textile strikes. .Instead of reprimanding and recalling its agent, Charles G. Wood, |for his partisanship, the labor de- partment reasserts its utmost confi- dence in Wood's fairness.” And the Washington News adds, “The depart- ment’s attitude is inexcusable.” There was a big demand then for Wood's dismissal, and the then Sec- retary of Labor Davis, refused. When Doak became Secretary of Labor, he |also kept Wood. These fellows know a good strike breaker when they see | one. | So does I, Miller and Andrew Gel- ler, But just as the Constitutional League was shown up as a mere cover for the racketeer Kamp, so Wood is now being shown up as a disguised employer, a # ptornemonnt strikebreaker. Delegates to Report Again Tonight at F, S. U, Meeting NEW YORK.—Forced to turn away over 400 workers eager to hear worker delegates report, the Down- 4jfown Branch of the Friends of the Soviet Union has arranged for an- a other meeting tonight at 8 pm. at the Labor Temple in the main adui- torium, clothing worker, Santo Mirabile, Marie Perez, tobacco worker of amp, Will be the speakers tonight. , |organizational proposals for a and other | 500 Delegates Adopt Communist Fighting Program Nominate Amter Shepard and | Weinstone (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) pro- gram of action, Before the afternoon session started, there were three conferences: Youth, Negro and Women. Prisoners On Presidium A presidium (committee to preside was elected, consisting of 14 members and representing Buffalo, Schenec- tady, Rochester, Syracuse, Mt. Vernon and Spencer (a farm center). Hon- orary members of the presidium were Mooney, Billings, Edith Berkman, berg, Turner, Miller’ and Adalchi, framed up New York needle trades | workers, York City Unemployed Council, was made permanent chairman of the convention “It is very appropriate,’ said Am. In Sche- nectady, with 100,000 population, there are between 20,000 and 30,000 workers unemployed. Morgan-controlled General Electric Co. Now only Some of those work only two and three days a month, with wages cut | continuously, Work on Soviet Engines In the same city, 6,000 were former. ly employed in the American Loco- motive plant. Now only 1,000 are there, and they have work only be- cause there were some orders from the past two months. Hunger and starvation stalk through the city, even making a pretense to care for the needy. Proposing the Platform, Amter de- clared that there are more than 2,500,000 men,“women, Negro and white unemployed workers in New York state. In New York City alone 60 per cent of the schoot children are undernourished, Some of them faint in school from hunger. In the first half of 1932 there were con- sumed 37,800,000 less quarts of milk than in the first six months of 1929 in New York. Ex-soldiers are star- ving by tens of thousands, Negroes, particularly, face the most acute suf- fering. Employment this year drop- ped 6 per cent. Since 1929, 402,000 from manufacturing establishments alone. Today 42 per cent of the 5,500,000 factory workers in the state gre jobless. Wage-cuts are more than 55 per cent in New York state. Farmers are being ruined by the bankers and trusts permitting the crops to rot and the milk to be de- stroyed. A huge parasite, the gov- ernment machinery, is costing each worker and farmer 31 cents on each of his dollars, This same government machine is used against the worker when he fights against wage-cuts or for unemployment insurance. Who Fights for Insurance? Hooyer and Roosevelt say no un- employment insurance will be al- lowed. But the fight for unemploy- ment insurance, at the cost of the state and the employers, is the very center of the Communist Party’s election campaign. The fight against wage-cuts and the fight against im- perialist war and for Negro equality are Communist Party struggles, but not part of the program of the Re- publican, Democratic or Socialist Parties. The platform adopted at the Schenectady convention declares that the workers’ way out of the horrors and crimes of capitalism for workers and poor farmers is by abolition of | capitalism and establishing of a work- ers’ and farmers’ government. For Immediate Relief. The Communist state platform makes the following immediate de- mands: Social insurance by taxing the em- ployers. Immediate cash relief, the State to at once appropriate $400,000, which shall be used to provide pay- ments of $10 for each unemployed worker without dependents of with one dependent, and $1 additiona) for each dependent, workers, homes to be rented to work- ers at cost, and for additional schools, hospitals, playgrounds, nurseries and parks in working-class neighborhoods, No discrimination against Negro, for- eign born, women or young workers in distribution of relief. No evictions of unemployed or part-time workers for non-payment of rent, free gas and electricity for unemployed or part- time workérs, free food, shoes, cloth- ing, milk, school supplies and medical attendance for children of unem- and make technical arrangements) | the nine Scottsboro boys, and Weiss- | Carl Winters, secretary of the New| ter, in presenting the platform, “that | 1929 advis- |e meet in Schenectady.” In 1929 there | were about 28,000 employed in the 7,000 work there. | the Soviet Union to be filled during; with the relief agencies not | workers have been fired in this state | a NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES Immediate appro-” priation of $1,000,000 for building of | Comes Out for Foster and Ford | Langston Hughes, outstanding American novelist and poet, who has announced he will support Wm. Z. Foster and James W. Ford, Com- | munist candidates for President and Vice-President in this election. | \Throw Hot Tar on |Relief Bureau Head Commodore Laundry) Boast He Placed Strikers Pickets pies on Workers | NEW YORK—The « NEW YORK.—Joseph A. Brady, Commodore Laundry ecretary of New York’s “Emergency its fourth week, and is s| Relief Bureau,” stated yesterday: ever. During the last ten di ‘One ef the principal activities of |bosses, driven to desperation, have | this division has been unceasing sur- veillance over Communistic and other activities.” He stated that his or- jresorted to every sort of tactic to} stop picketing and break the strike. Herman Kramer, a leader at this shop, and already held on two frame | |up charges, had a bucket of hot tar! thrown at him from the roof of the laundry while he was on the picket line. He was severely burned, The same detectives who refused te arrest the men throwing the tar on Kramer, came later with the boss | to union headquarters and arrested | Joseph Stillman, organizer of the | Laundry Workers Industrial Union, on a trumped charge of felonious | in the “Communist” groups. Brady probably means unemployed councils. Walter D, Britt, a preacher, in an address yesterday over WAAT, said: this summer if existing relief ¢Ben- cies continue curtailment of> their programs.” “BRING 'EM BACK ALIVE” OPENS AT THE MAYFAIR RKO Radio Pictures is presenting assault. Eleven strikers are MOW! mrank Buck's “Bring ‘Em Back under arrest, and total bail is $16,000, | ative,” the film record ef that exe plorer’s most recent trek into the | i ie 5 3 | Malayan. jungte, at the Mayfair VOTE COMMUNIST FOR: Theatre. For twenty years Buck has 2. Against Hoover's wage-cutting policy. - been capturing wild animals alive | for zoos, circuses and exhibition pur- |peses, and this is his adventures ig |recorded by the camera. ployed workers or part-time or strik- | ing workers. Immediate abolition of | prison labor and other forced labor. Immediate drastic reduction of rents, | food, gas, electricity prices. Aboli- | tion of child labor under 14. | Pay for Deposits Lost. | The platform demands the pay- ment of the veterans’ bonus. It de- | The Jefferson and Franklin Thea- tres are now showing “Sinners in Chester Morris in the leading roles. Beginning Wednesday, both theatres will present “So Big” with Barbara Stanwyck and George Brant. An added feature, “Roadhouse Murder,” mands immediate reimbursement by|with Eric Linden and Doroth | the state, in full, of the workers’ and | Jordan will be shown at the Jeffer- | small depositors’ losses by bank fail-|son Theatre. ures. The Communist state convention endorsed the six main demands adopted by the National Convention of the Communist Election Cam- paign. (These demands are pub- lished at the top of the first page of the Daily Worker). The state con-| vention declared the Republican, Democratic and Socialist politicians indulge in crocodile tears for the suf- fering of the unemployed, and do this | Al Trahan, Yukona Cameron, Lil- lian Shade, Block ‘and Sully, the Beattyy. J. I. Urinov, director of “Diary of a Revolutionist,” latest Soviet talkie, now in its second week at the Cameo | Theatre, has had his gontract as a ; Motion picture director renewed by Mejrabpomfilm, of Moscow, accord- | adapted from the novel “Week End Girl” by Warner Fabian, is now current at the Roxy Theatre. The Friays, who remain a second week, for unemployment insurance. | “The Socialist Party leaders are! | particularly brought forward by the| | bankers and capitalists to mislead the \ ganization had planted stool-pigeons | "Food riots in this city are inevitable | the Sun,” with Carole Lombard and| The new program at the Palace/ has Buddy Rogers and his orchestra, | Roxy Theatre ensemble and George! for vote-catching purposes. The rep-/ing to cable information received | resentatives of these three parties of | here. | capitalism fight every real struggle| “Week Ends Only,” film comedy | | UMW OFFICIAL ORDERS WAGES CUT IN EAST OHIO) Cinque Strikebreaking Plan Rejected by Men; Relief Badly Needed BRIDGEPORT, Ohio, June 19.— ;An open move on the part of the | United Mine Workers of America officials to sell out the strike of the |:20,000 East Ohio coal }made thursday when John Cinque | president of sub-district 6 of the |U.M.W.A.. spoke at a mass meeting |of strikers of three Rail and River Coal Co. mines at Bellaire, Ohio, and urged the miners to go back to work} | with a 12 per cent wage cut Cinque added that the Rail & River | Coal Co. demands a still greater cut, | Jand indicated that further back- sairs, secr2t maneuvering is taking | place between the operators and the | |U.M.W:A. officials, leading to still more wage cuts | The miners had been getting $4 a| day and 45 cents a ton before the | strike, and Cinque proposes now $3.50 a day and 40 cents a ton. Refuse to Go Back. ‘The strikers have thus far refused | jto heed the strikbreaking advice }of Cinque, they say they did not strike for a wage cut. The National Miners Union is {s- suing a leaflet to the Rail & River strikers urging them to refuse to go ack with a wage cut, and offering |to help build a United Front Rank! and File Strike Committee to carry their struggle to a victory. | | The United Mine Workers officials | | have called a mass meeting of Rail & River strikers to “discuss the sit- uation” and heve invited leading bus- iness men to participate ia the meet- | ing and urge the miners to go beck |to work. ! | The operaters announce daily | through the press that more mines |are reopening, but so far the miners, | by militant mass picketing in viola~ tion of the orders given them by, | their U. M. W. A. officials, have kept | |out all but a few score of scabs. Teil of Starvation. Strikers continue to come inte the Bridgeport office of the Workers In-| | ternational Relief with stories of ut- ter starvation, and of U. M. W, A. officials categorically refusing to sup. | ply any food. | The W, 1. R. opened another soup kitchen in Roydyille Friday and will epen still more kitehens as soon as sufficient food and funds come in. Rush food and funds te Workers International Relief, Room 4, Fretter | Bidg., Bridgeport, Ohio. 5 Brooklyn “Markets Are Struck For Better Wages; Meet Today | five Brooklyn food markets are strik- ing for increase in wages and union conditions under the leadership of the Food Clerks Section of the Food | Workers Industrial Union. They | waiked out of Weinstein’s Cut Rate Dairy at 1411 Ave. J, and 767 Flat- |bush Ave., out of Méndeisohn Pub- | hie Market at 1308 Ave. J.; Midwood | | Public Market at 1220 Ave. J., Con-! fidence Fruit Market at 1401 Ave. J] at 9 am. Thursday. Picketing is go- ing on. The employers advertise in! the papers for clerks, but when these come down, they see the picket | | line and stop. | miners--was | | ‘PUSHED NEARER |Lausanne War Moves pmerely postponed at j by Herriot as “pleasing” and “prom- lof keeping the United Staéts from | NEW YORK.—Thirty workers in| ms International Workers}! Order Gives 31,000 for Shoe Strike Food NEW YORK.—The National Com- | mittee of the International Workers | Order heard a committee of the | Strikers. at I, Miller, Geller and other | shoe shops, and voted to raise $1,000 for relief in this struggle. A cam- | paign will start at once in the New York I,W.O. branches. The National Committee turned over to the Shoe and Leather Workers Industrial | Union at once, $500 and promises the rest within two weeks, AUTO BODY FIRM GIVES FOURTH CUT New 10% Reduction The workers of the Standard Com-= mercial Body Co. of 435 Bast 104tm Street (with branches in Kearny, Tarrytown, 94-15 166th Street, Jae maica, and 931 Bergen Street, Brooke lyn) are incensed against a 10 per cent wage. cut. It. was given to them | without notice, and the men were | working under this cut for nine days 'ANTI-SOVIET BLOC See knowing about it. This is |the third cut in about a year; the first was for 20 per cent and the sec- ond for 10 per cent. | Another grievance of the workers is that they have to work all sorts of hours, whenever the boss wants them to, but they receive straight wages for overtime. Once, when the | workers in this shop were organized, Herriot Pleased by PARIS, June 18.—Satisfaction at if for the anti-Soviet and anti-United iy. SOCStyee Hae ME Ae ‘ ‘ overtime. States “solution” of European inner The Auto Workers Union, 5 Hast 19th Street, has offered to aid the workers, especially since it led a suce cessful strike recently in the Fisher Body in Tarrytown. Food Clerks Strike For 57 Hour Week: AFL Offers 72 Hrs. NEW YORK. — The American Agency, 150 Broadway, is sending scabs to the strike of five food mar- kets on Avenue J in Brooklyn. So far, mass picketing, in spite of five arrests, has kept the scabs out of the shops, Agents of Local 338 of the AFL. Food Clerks Union are on the job, trying to supply scabs. They offer the employers a contract with 13 hours per week and low wages. The strikers demand 57 hours a week for dairy clerks and 62 hours for fruit clerks, with an ineregse in wages and recognition of the Food Workers Industrial Union. contradictions on the question of reparation tributes and war debts— contradictions whieh in reality were the Lausanne Conference—was expressed here by Premier Herriot upon his return to) the capital for a meeting of the French Cabinet, The various representatives at the Lausanne Conference agreed in one of the first sessions on a resolution which suspends a]] German repara- tion tributes and European war debts until a final solution of the question is reached. This resolution is hailed | ising.” “Le Temps” declares editorially that | "Tf Lausanne finally yields what is to be hoped from it, Aristide Briand’s idea of a strong, lasting Eurepean organization will have some chance of becoming a reality,” This same newspaper, after admit- ting that “national attitudes haye maintained their original force’ at the Conference, thereby indicating that the inner European contradic- Say that “the decision is the Jeast dangerous solution one could hope for, at the same time opening the door wide to a united settlement on the European basis first and on the universal later.” While this “universal basis” for the “united settlement” of the question under discussion at Lausanne is clearly a world coalition against the Soviet Union, the European one. is generally considered here as, mean- ing an anti-United States coglition, the purpose of which would be that Santo Mirabile Will Report on USSR Today NEW YORK.—Today, af» noon, in Irving Plaza Hall, Sante Mirabile, an Amalgamated Clothing Worker rank and file delegate to the Seviet Unies, who has recently returned, will re- port on conditions in the Workers’ Fatherland. The meeting is called by the Amalgamated Rank and File Committee, and clothing workers especially are invited. Sante Mira- bile will answer the questions: Is there unemployment in the Soviet Union? Do clothing workers there work only three months out of the year as they do here? Are workers being evicted in the Soviet Union, as they are here? Are the workers the Tulers of Russia? Workers’ Clubs Should Advertise in the $ Daily” the hegemony in the world war against the Soviet Union. It is openly said here that the United States faces that united Euro- pean front which Stimson tried so hard to avoid. ATTENTION COMRADES! Health Center Cafeteria WORKERS CENTER 50 EAST 13th STREET intern Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 15th FLOOR Al) Work Done Under Personal Gare of DR. JOSEPHSON | | Police arrested five pickets the first | day on the excuse that only one can | | picket at a time. Open air meetings will be held at jgorners near the struck shops today | at 3:30 p.m. | | are presenting a complete new vere! sionof their Frolic as the feature of | |the stage show. Joan Bennett and Ben Lyon play the leading roles in the picture. | workers with ‘revolutionary’ phrases jin order to keep them from srruggling against mass hunger and the war of- fensive of the bosses,” says the Com- munist state platform, and appeals for the defense of the Chinese peo- - a me ple and of the Soviet Union. | Aela Over. ane BIG WEEK . EAST SIDE—BRONE RKO gros JEFFERON TODAY TO TUESDAY “SINNERS in the SUN” With The Prospects tei st 25¢ CAROLE LOMBARD—CHESTER MORRIS. he eeaire, Cane: keopeate REUNION IN VIENNA Comedy “By nosewe ©, SHER WooD NEW LOW PRICES + MATS, 15 Cents || EVES. 25 Cents Except Sat,, Sun., and Holidays NOW PLA MAY DAY CELEBRATION IN MOSCOW 1932 (FIRST EXCLUSIVE SHOWING) en SOVIET CHINESE TROOPS IN ACTION HUNGER PARADE UNCENSORED SCENES OF STARVING Wout wreeA CME’ THEATRE Uth STREET & UNION SQUARE GUILD THEATER i, PERG Bt Ev 649. Mite Th ‘Bet a. Co 5-8939 YING! THE HUMAN AND SOCIAL ASPECTS OF NEW RUSSIA! ‘SOIL IS THIRSTY’ THRILLING STORY OF THE COMMUNIST “SHOCK. BRIGADERS” IN ACTION EXCITING! ENTERTAININ: BSCr.:. AM. a Son. ||] 35 Bast 12th Street LISEMENTS ‘DIARY OF AE EVOLUTIONIST. A Be “The S. R. O. house applauded and cheered ing defiance that is magnificent.” —-ROOMS WANTED Rooms are needed for students of the Central Training Schoo! for stx weeks beginning June 13th. Party members and sympathizers who can accomodate without charge one or more students during that period, please report immediately to;— Specify whether male or temalg THE WORKERS SCHOOL tok With English Tit Evolution of a Nation! Irene Thirer, Daily News. li gives the part of a flam- —Howard Barnes, Herald Tribune, WOT OPENS WAY & AMEO 151 | “MAYFAIR os has: Tiger and Python in Fight for Life FRANK BUCK’'S “BRING 'EM BACK ALIVE” Patronize the Health Center Cafeteria and Help the Revolutionary Movement Best Food Reasonable Prices WILLIAM BELL OPTOMETRIST and OPTICIAN Special Bates tp Workers and Families 106 EK. 14th St, (Room 21) Opposite Automat Tel. TOmpkins Square 6-8287 OPTICIANS | Phone Tomking $9. 6-9354 John’s Restaurant E |] SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES Harry Stolper, Inc. heer “ail ‘vndlenie "meet 73-75 CHRYSTIE STREET 302 E, 12th St. New fork (Third Ave. Car to Hester Street» If 6 p. m. Daily Y Bry Bock 4-4522 Patronize the Concoops Food Stores Restaurant | 2700 BRONX PARK EAST CAMPERS ATTENTION! Army Tents 16x16 and Others Also Camp Equipment Reasonable Prices— MANHATTAN WIPING CLOTH INO. 498 Water St. corner Pike St. Phone Dry Dock 4-3426 “Buy in the Co-operative Store and help the Revo- lutionary Movement.” Bungalows and Rooms to|! Rent for Summer Season |MASS- MEETING Monday, June ies \ Labor Templ Mth STREET and § ae AVE. Hundreds turned away from first meting HE ‘AR ANOTHER REPORT 07 THE WORKERS’ BELT. GATION, just returned from the Soviet Union—They will report ms im the Union of Socialist Sovi Bi New york, NF JADE MOUNTAIN AMERICAN and CHINESE RESTAURANT Opes 11 a.m. to 1:30 @. me, Special Lunch 11 to 4,..35¢ Telephone ALg) 41199, Dinner 5 to 10... 55¢ AVENUE hand 13th Ste, | Workers “Angered by , tions are not eliminated, goes on to | |