The Daily Worker Newspaper, June 29, 1932, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Painters’ Page Two = —— PAINTERS FORM NEW UNION AT Committee Has Led and Won Many Small Strikes Already YORK—The Alter Industrial Union will be formed at a meeting held ton: at 8 p.m. at Irving Plaza Hall, 15th St. NEW and Irving Place, on the call of the Alteration Painters’ Organization Committee. This committee was elected by a group of painters meeting in Decem- ber, last year, to discuss fighting of wage-cuts and speed-up in the trade. They found that the A. F. of L painters’ union paid no attention to such things, even though the largest part of its membership was doing work, The committee got to work, Ushed five sections in New Yo Jed a number of strikes, with percentage of victories. For th few weeks, the committee has a tually been functioning as a v and now proposes to formally launc! & unjon. At the meeting tonight officers nd be program of the new under consideration. All alteration painters are invited to witness the procedure. Win Another Strike. Seven painters on strike at the Samuel Samolin shop has won a com- Plete victory. They get their back Wages, recognition of the Alteration Painters’ Union, recognition of the shop committee, and all hiring to be done through the union office, and wages to be paid weekly. The strike at the Skaler Co. is solid. union will SEAMEN BATTLE BALTIMORE COPS Defend Themselves; Hundreds March BALTIMORE, Md., June 28. — A real battle took place on the water- front here Sunday, with large crowds of unemployed seamen holding meet- ings and throwing out the police, with Parades through fhe streets blocking all traffic, with demunstrations be- fore the police station where ar- Tested seamen were held. Guns were pulled by the police. Two po- licemen were beaten up by the work- ers they were attacking. At times about 1,000 were drawn into the Struggle. James Kennedy, a leader of the marine workers here is in the hogpital, charged with “assaulting an officer” and a variety of other char- ges. He was severely injured by a beating given him by seven policemen after he was arrested. He is denicd bail. Three other seamen, C. Stev- enson, W. C. MeQuiston and Charles Limrose are under arrest, the first two charged with “assaulting an offi- esx” and other things and the last “interfering with an officer.” A. B.’s Cut to $40. Things started when the steamship Walter D. Munson, attempted to cut the wages $5 a month. The crew sefuck, and the Marine Workers In- austria! Union and Waterfront Un- employed Council led in picketing the Gécks, the “Anchorage,” shipping of- fees, etc The ship finally signed a skeleton scab créw which was brought from up-town in a tug “oat guards. Meetings continued, and police in-| vaded a meeting of 600 at the foot of Broadway and began to club Kenedy. | ‘The seamen rushed to Kennedy's res- cue, and two cops got a beating. The police riot squad charged in with drawn guns, and finelly arrested Ken- edy. Kenedy was beaten up in the wag- on. The crowd grew to 1,000, and Speaking went on, the police trying occasionally to stop it Following the demonstration the immigration authorities conducted raids, aresting several witnesses, and collecting names to use if the Dies bill becomes a law. What’s’On— ¢ 35, W-E.S.L., will hold an open-air aeeting af McKinley Square and 169th St., 3rOnx, at 8 p.m The Center Branch of the W. 1. R. will havé # taik and discussion on the Bonus ch to Washington at 16 W. 2ist St. at Pm. information in regard to the film, annons or Tractors," communicate with Ind. Workers’ International Relief, Film is 16 W. Dist Bt. MM worker correspondents are asked to tend negativés and pictures of working- pied Ife and struggle to the New York and Photo League, 15 W. 2ist St. ‘A. meeting of Bronx carpenters will be old at 1130 Southern Boulevard, at 8 p.m. Volunteer workers are needed in the Dis- An important assembly of the Second ‘Term Workers’ School will bé held 905, 50 E. 19th St., at 8:35 p.m. iM students should be present. Committee of 25 of U. S. Bank Depositors iil hevé a meeting at 425 Lefayette St. pm. CHURSDAY Comrade Harry Raymond will speak at ne Brightén Progressive Club, 3159 Coney ‘aad Ave, at 9 p.m. on the importance {the Bonus Merch. A speial meeting of thé Fitm Section of he Warkers, Fhim and Phote League will € Hold at 16 W. 2ist St. at 8 p.m. AML veterans and ex-servicemen are tn- ised fo attend © meeting to organize ve Bx-Servicemen's League post in Is] and Brighton Bench. Meeting ‘tt be he at 2033 W. 32nd St., Coney ion | 8 with police | niet LL.D. office, Room 410, 799 Broddway. | : DAILY WORKER, N pW YORK, WED NESDAY, JUNE 29, 1932 Rent Strike at 2504 Olinville, Bronx; | Call for Solidarity NEW YORK, - E Bronx The House Com- Unemployed strike 504 16 notices ‘o.; they given strike. They hbors for with six children, and unemployed, was evicted yester- day from 669 Beck St. Her furniture was ruined. The landlord beat up a fourteen year old bo; FOSTER ARRESTED IN LOS ANGELES; LED THE JOBLESS Demonstration Scene An Armed Camp (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) with sawed-off shotguns, jack: of the clubs and were lined up of all sides P) and approximately 500 policemen were lield in readinéss, | mounted on horses. “Red Squad” In Charge. Directing the Legionaires and po- lice thu: was Hynes, head of the “Red Squad,” whose members had patrolled the Square all morning, with sub-manchine guns held in readiness as the workers shouted, We Want Foster!” and displayed placards protesting police brutality |and demanding the right c# free speech. A huge number of workers were injured as a result of pol clubbing and many temporarily blinded by tear gas bombs. SAN FRANCISCO, Cal., June 28— | A dozen workers’ organizations marched into the hall in a body with their banners anq slogans for fight | against Hoover's wage cutting pro- ;Srom and for unemployment insur- |ance, and hundreds of workers had | to be turned away because all seats | were filled, the stage was full, and the |aisles were full when Foster spoke here Friday. The number who managed to gét | into Civic Auditorium is estimated at |2,000, the greatest outpouring of | workers seen in the Bay Cities for a | Jong time. Demand Right to Vote Foster was greeted with a tremen- |@ous ovation. He aroused further cheers when he assailed the trickery of the capitalist and socialist poli- ticians here, who are trying to keep | the Communist Party off the ballot, trying to disfranchise the workers. More than twice the legally required number of names have been signed to the application blanks for Com- munist candidates to go on the bal- lot, but the California law throws out | the whole ticket if the required num- ber is not filed in each county, and the Socialist Cameron King is leading a fight in San Francisco county to have the 8,000 names collected there put out. | King is actually on the payroll of the Rolph machine. Denounce Shooting of Jobléss Foster foreshadowed the struggle which a few days later developed in |Los Angeles, where he was barred | from all halls, when he denounced | the shooting down of an unemployed worker last week in Los Angeles. The crowd unanimously adopted a resolution protesting the raiding, | jailing and shooting of jobless work- ers and pledging to fight on for unemployment insurance and relisf. Thursday night a thousand workers attended the Foster meeting across the bay in Oakland, Cal. The election struggie here is like- wise a struggle against the Dies de- portation bill; California’ has many foreign-born workers, afd mahy have been deported even under the pres- ent law, Foster called for defense of Hariuchi, Imperial Valley prisoner | whose term will be served within 4 | few days and who is slated for imme- | diate deportation into the bloody hands of the Japanese imperialist | government. ‘First Edition of Foster’s Latest Book Is Sold Out | The demand for Foster's book, |“Towarq Soviet America” (Interna- | tional Publishers), is so great that | the first edition ran out of print be- | fore there was time to prepare for the second one. The Workers’ Bookshop, 50 E. 13th | expects a limited supply in a few | days. Orders will be taken in ad- | vance in the bookshop upon payment | of a small deposit, Island, at 8:30 p.m, | Gets ‘The Imperial Valley Branch, ¥.L.D., will | hold an open-air meeting at 170th St. and Walton Ave., Bronx, at 8:30 p.m. Bib A regular meeting of Post $5 of the Workers’ Ex-Servicemen’s League will be held at 1130 Southérn Botilevard, Bronx, at 8 pm. 40. Ooo | An open-air meeting will be held Freeman and tntervale Aves. Bronx, a D.m. under the auspices of the Committee of 25, U, 8. Bank Depositors. ‘The Trenont Worker’ Civb will have General elections at thelr meeting at 2070 linton Ave. at 8 p.m. The WLR, Band will play at the mé& morial of Comrade Gonzalo Gonzalos at Laurel Gardens, 7 6B. 116th St. 8:30 fm. Band members must be present and on time, “ St., is out of them at present, but | @ HIT ROOSEVELT INSULT T0 THE JOBLESS HERE “Red Rally July 9th Will Expose Plan | for $1 Relief NEW YORK. — The huge election |ratification meeting of the United Front Election Campaign Commit- | | tee, called for July 9, at Coney Is- |land Stadium, will hear James W. |Ford and William W. Weinstone, | |Communist Candidates for vice-pre | idency and the United States Senate, expose the brutal insult to the two | and a half million unemployed in | |New York State by the Roosevelt | | administration, in its “relief” pro- | | gram, broadéas. reports that the magnifi- |cent” sum of $6,546,784 has been ap- | proved for appropriation by the state, | |for forced labor relief to 453 cities and counties for the entire summer. New York City, with over a million | unemployed. and starving, with its | home relief buréaus either closed up | altogether or, in a few cases, offer- ing $1.80 per week per family, is al- | lotted $1,663,000 for the month of | | June, approximately $1 per unem- | | ployed worker, and this to be given | only in return for forced labor. Nothing for Next Month, No provision is made for July, Au- gust, or September for the unem- ployed of New York City. Presum- ably, the grass will be long enough |for them to eat. How much of the | total six and a half million will drop | through the grating in relief ma- |chinery into the strong-boxes of the | gtafters, the papers do not esti- |mate. Roosevelt didn’t announce it. | Nor in their announcements do they jsay nothing about the starvation |wages that are paid on their so- called “public works” jobs, forced la- | bor. } Amter in Yonkers, The Stadium meeting will be pre- | ceded by other election campaign |events. Tomorrow at 8 p. m., at the Westchester Workers Center, 27 Hud- son St., Yonkers, I. Amter, Commu- | nist Candidate for Governor of New York State will speak on the signifi- cance of the election campaign. Ford himself will speak July 5 in | | Jamaika, L. I, and July 6 in Hemp- | stead, The Jamaica meeting will be at Finnish Hall, 109-26 Union Hall St., at 7 p.m. The Hempstead meet- |ing will be in Polish Hall, on Pros- |pect St., at 7:30 p. m. | In Jamaica, just recently, one mil- |lion anda half dollars has been set | aside for the building of a large art- | | ory, while relief stations are closing down; rélief work is being stoppéd. | Yet while the thousands of workers are being denied even a parcel of food, the Republican Party president of the Borough of Queefs (Harvey) and the chamber of commerce, along with the rest of the officials laud this as @ tremendous achievement for the community. Yet another one of the Republican officials here, an alderman by thé name of O‘Connell who is a landlord is theratening workers and their families with >sale evictions. Ford is sch 1 to speak also in Portchester, N, =., July 3, at 2:30 p. |m, at Asehmann’s Hall, 22 South Main Street. LABOR UNION MEETINGS Italian Needle Workers. | Tuesday, at 1 p.m., at Memorial Hall, 344 W. 36th St., Merabolo, rank and file mem- ber of the Amalgamated Clothing Workers, tion to the Soviet Union, will speak in Ital- who was a member of fhe May 1 dele fan on conditions of needle workers if the Soviet Union, All néedle workérs invited. Cloak Finishers. ‘The Left Wing Group of Local 9, L.L.G.W., calls all cloak finishers to a local meeting, tonight, at Bryant Hall to fight for the meeting to go on récord against the reac- | tionary decisions of the convention and | take steps for a real strike. inters General membership meeting, June 29, at) 8 p.m., at Irving Plaza Hall, to organize an | Alteration Painters Union. Clokinakers Boruchowitz speaks at the Cloakmakers’ open forum on Wednesday at 1 p.m. at Memorfal Hall, 344 W. 36th St., on “What Is Happening st the Secret Conferences of thé Offictals of the International and the Bosses and How the Cloakmekers Can Or- ganize for a Real Strike for Union Con- ditions.” AN Cloakmakers invited. Dis- cussion. Pa Dressmakers ‘The block committees of dressmakers on 35th and 8th Sfs. will meet Thursday night at the Industrial Union office, 131 28th BSt., to tke up plans for the organization drive during the coming season, Furniture Workers Ail furniture workers called by the Fur- nituré Workers’ Industrial Union to a meeting Thursday at 8 p.m. at 108 E. 14th St. to discuss the united front in connec- tion with preparation for strike in the coming season, oN eS 4 Laundry Workers Laundry Workers’ Industrial a special membership meeting for ‘Thurs- at 8 pm. at Ambassador Hall, Third Ave, and Claremont Parkway. Organizers and officials will be elected and a report given of the shop delegate conference and Union éalls Mes eae 3 ‘ Rae p ad) New York Workers Driven to Crowded Beach by Terrific Heat Typical seetie at Conty Island where thousands of New York. workers fiec to escape the sweltering heat of the city, 9) ‘The capitalist press yesteraay|Shenard Speaks at Two Meetings | Harlem Thursday | Henry Shepard, Negro candidate for Lieutenant Governor of New York | State on the Communist ticket, will be the main speaker at two meetings in Harlem Thursday night to protest | the police attack on a demonstration of Harlem unemployed workers, Shepard, who was the léader of the} demonstration was arrested by the police. The meetings will take place at 134th Stree and Lenox Avénue, and at 142nd Street and 7th Avenue. The meetings will help to prepare the big election rally at Renaisance Casino on July 8th, whi¢h will be addressed by James W. Ford, Negro worker and Communist candidate for vice- president of the United States. 8 Migratory Workers Killed, 40 Inured In Colorado Wreck CASTLE ROOK, Col., June 28. — Eight men were reported killed and 40 injuréd when 18 cars of a Sante Fe fruit express broke through an unrepaired bridge over an arroyo. The men hurt and those Killed were all migratory workers, riding the freight, looking for jobs. STAGE-SCREEN DANGERS OF THE ARCTIC OPENS AT CAMEO TODAY Earl Rossman, noted explorer, big game hunter and photographer, has just returned from his latest trip into the Arctic with “Dangers of the Arc- tie,” a dramatic motion picture rec- ord of the far north, which opens to- day at the Cameo Theatre. Rossman spent over two years to gather an in- tensive story of life within the shadow of the North Pole. Of thé Eskimos he says: “Theirs is the tre- mendous will to live—the first in- stinct of self-preservation. They must endure terrific hardships and priva- tions to find shéltet and food and ate eternally in conflict wifh the elements. Theirs is a life of stark meving drama with all the dangers of the Arctic thrown in,” Among the many scenes brought back by Rossman is the round-up of 30,000 reindeer, walrus hunting at short range, an exciting whale hunt, |seal hunting, the actual freezing of the Arctic Ocean, the break-up of the Polar cap, the first flight over the entire Alaska range and the first air pictures from the top of Mount McKinley. LENIN QUOTATION INSPIRES SOVIET WRITER IVANOV “We have conquered the enemy be= cause we have won over their work- ers and peasants dressed in soldiers’ uniforms.” 55 This statement by Lenin has been responsible for three gréat modern artistié Soviet works. The first fas @ novel, “The Armored Train,” by Vsévolod Ivanov; the second a play by the same author with the same tit, and now a talking picture, “Si- berian Patrol,” which is now being shown at fhe Acme Theatre, 14th St. and Union Square. Lenin made this | UMW OFFICIAIS | SCAB IN OHIO One Is Only A Cook| But He Stops Relief BULLETIN MOUNDSVILLE, W. Va., June %8—Pickets in boats on the Ohio | River fought a battle with oars and clubs with similatly armed scabs | coming over from the West Virgin'a side. The stabs took the boats af- ter the 500 mass pi¢keting had stop- ped them from crossing the bridge to work in the struck Powhatan mine, in Ohio. awh eae BRIDGEPORT, Ohio, June 28—| The United Mine Workers had a| soup kitchen at Providence, one of} their few gesttires of relief. But it) has been closed for three days be-| cause the cook, Joe Gardner, went scabbing and the ex-president of the local, Mike Miller, is also scabbiiig. Both have been bitter enemies of the} National Miners’ Union. Pacifico, United Mine Workers’ of- ficial, excuses the refusal of the U. M. W. A. to give any substantial re- lief, with the words: “I haven't seen anybody die of starvation.” This same Pacifi¢o, made a demagogic| speech the other day, in which he saiq he was in favor of mass pick- eting. The official policy of the U. M. W. A. officials is for picketing of | groups of three, 50 feet apart, and Pacifico now says he advocated mass | picketing only as an individual. | Young miners and other rank and file members of the U. M. W. are disgusted with the group-of-three ruling, which does not stop the scabs. Tom Hall of the “United Scale Committee predicts there will be 7,000 in the hunger march, though the U. M. W. A. officials are opposed to it. Two marches are scheduled, one in Jefferson County and one in Belmont County. The Workefs’ International Relief Calls a united front relief conference, to meet in Bridgeport July 2. All workers’ organizations shoulq send delegates. The need of relief is des- perate. RAYMOND TO SPEAK ON BONUS MARCH. , NEW YORK. — Harry Raymond, Daily Worker correspondent with the Bontis Expeditionary Forces, will speak on “The Significance of the Bonus March” at the Brighton Pro- gressive Club, 3159 Coney Island Av., Brooklyn, N. Y., Thursday, June 30 at 8:30 p. m. A discussion on the Bonus March will also be held at 2933 32nd St., Coney Island at thé same fime. NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES EAST SIDE—GRONX JEFFERiON ||| FRANKLIN Wi ESDAY TO SATURDAY “STRANGE LOVE OF MOLLY LOUVAIN” —With— Ann Dvorak and Lee Tracy declaration at the time which is now being depicted in the film, “Siberian Patrol.” It was the period of intervention in Soviet Russia and the motion picture deals specifically with the occupation of Archarigel in 1918 by British troops, The film dif- fers somewhat from the play and novel, bué the line of Lenin’s state- ment is carried out. Soviet authori- ties were so pleased with Protoza- noff’s direction of this idea that they released the film as part of the cele- bration in honor of the fourteenth anniversary. VOTE COMMUNIST FO! 1, Unemployment and Social in- sutance at the expense of the of the Commodore strike, AT JEFFERSON—Extra Feature TOM MIX itt ‘The Rider of Death Valley’ EW LOW PRICES MATS. 15 Cents || EVES. 25 Cerits QuebecBossTool Mayor Greeted at City Hall NEW YORK, June 28—In the ab- sence of Mayor Walker, attending the Chicago Democratic Convention, his assistant, Charles F. Kurrigah, gave | Mayor Laviqueur of Quebec, Canada, | an official reception at City Hall today. Mayor Laviqueur is responsible for the persecution of the militant work- ers cf Quebec, many of whom are sentenced to rot in jail and others are deported for no other crime than that of fighting for bread and the right to live. A wave of reaction is let loose throughout Canada, where the Com- muhist Party is declared illegal. The leaders of the Party are jailed. The visit of Mayor Laviqueur to New York is said to be motivated by his desire to inspsct the new liner Champlain of the French Line. The reception given him is undoubtedly due to the reputation that Canadian officials have in the eyes of American Republican and Democratic politi- cians, as well as labor fakers like Matthew Woll, for their ruthlessness in attempting to crush the workers’ movement ih Canada. LL.D. LAWYER JAILED IN TAMPA TAMPA, Fila. June 28—Bernard Ades, International Labor Defense lawyer, was arrested and badly beaten here today. Ades, who was the de- fense lawyer in the Orphan Jones case, came here from Baltimore to defend tobacco strikers who were ar- rested last November at a mecting celebrating the Russian Revolution. TALK ON BONUS MARCH TONIGHT. NEW YORK, June 28. — A lecture and discussion on the bonus march to Washington will be held tonight aat the Center Branch of the Work- ers International Relief, 16 W. 21st St., at 8:30 p.m. Admission free. GUNMAN HAS LAUNDRY STRIK- ERS ARRESTED. NEW YORK, — Two more Com- modore Laundry strikers were ar- rested Monday. They were on a wagon, going around one of the scab routes, and announcing the strike. One of the gangsters hired by the company swore in court they threat- ened him, The judge gave a sus- pended sentence. ; Amusements EARL ROSSMAN’S “Dangers of the Arctic” & tgp obladenh ll WITH ICY DEATH “oMTAY FAI Rios snes: Tiger and Python in Fight for Lifel ( FRANK BUCK’S BRING'EM BACK ALIVE" LAST WEEK Vhe Vhewtre Gatid Presents REUNION IN VIENNA A Comedy, Hy RORHRT B.S fete itor ‘ THEATRE, 5ynd St. GUILD ‘west oF Bway &v 8.40. Mts Th., Sat. Tel. Co 5-8229 SHuste— PHILHARMONIC-SYMPHONY ORCH. Lewisohn Stadinm, Amst. Av. & 188th Willem Van Hoogstraten, Conductor Except Sat, Sun. and Holidays PRICES: 25¢, 50¢, $1.09 (Cifcle GS eke cCONCERTS— EVERY NIGHT at 8:30 7-7575) — LIVE IN A~ 2800 BRONX state and employers, Sor Archangel—Based on Att “NOT TO BE MISSED... ... . - Stands with the very ‘great ‘Rassian films as ‘Poterkin’ and ‘The End of St. Petersburg” © —Merald-Teibune, LAST TWO DAYS wurACME THEA } 1th STRERT & UNION SQUARE TRE 9 A.M. to 1 PM. 15C:,«. jat. & Sun. lidnite Show Sat. Office open from: 9 a. m, Saturday 1 Pp tl WORKERS COOPERATIVE COLONY We have a limited number of 3 and 4 room apartments NO INVESTMENT NECESSARY — OPPOSITE BRONX PARK PARK KAST Comradely atmosphere—in this Cooperative Colony you will find 2 library, athletic director. worktoom for children, workers’ clubs and various cultural activities Tet. Estabrook 8-1400; Olinville 2-6972 Take Lexington Avenue train to White Plains Road and Get off Allerton Avenue m. every day; 9 a. m. to 5 p.m. 0 8 p.m. Sum FIGHT AND STRUGGLE IN THE THE GOLDENS BRIDGE Tt will be CITY!—LIVE IN THE COUNTRY! This can be a reality if you join COOPERATIVE COLONY if interested, communicate with Dr. ROSETSTEIN, 285 CYPRESS AVENUE, BRONX Shoe Bosses’ Call for| Police to Stop Mass'| Protest at Scab Homes NEW YORK. — Fine picket lines at the I, Miller shop every day show | the determination of the workers to win, and show up the lies of the bos- sés and of Commissioner Wood, that I. Miller workers are satisfied”. Demonstrations before the I. Mil- ler and Andrew Geller scabs’ houses have been so effective that the Shoe Manufacturers Board of Tratie sent its lawyer Saturday to Police Com- missioner Mulrooney to ask for a guard of police around each scab’s heme. Mulrooney promised. The striking shoe workers appeal to all workers but especially to em- ployed shoe workers to donate to strike relief. Send funds to the Shoe and Leather Workers Industrial Union, 5 East 19th Street, New York. Steamfitter Officers’ Sell-Out Opens Way for Non-Union Shop | NEW YORK. — The officialdom of the United Association of Journey- jmen Plumbers and Steamfitters of |the United Statés-and Canada, have |capitulated to the bosses’ association of New York and by refusing to call militant picketing, have allowed scabs to énter into the field; preparing the way for open shop and further |Teductions in this line. CLOAKMAKERS T0 PREPARE STRIKE Active Members Call for Committees Now NEW YORK—The Conference of Active Cloakmakers held yesterday, calls on all working in International Ladies Garment Worker Shops to or- ganize committees in each shop to actually control the strike when it comes, and to demand of the Cloak- takers Union that these elected com- metteés be called to a conference to elect a rang and file strike lead- ership. Organization is to proceed on the basis of demands for: 1—Strict enforment of week work throughout the entire industry. 2—Guaranteed minimum wage scales. : 3—Strict enforcement of the 40 hour day, 5-day week in every shop. 4—Abolition of overtime, as long. as there is unemployment. 5—The right to the job, no reors ganization, no discharges after trial period. 6—Unemployment insurance paid for by bosses and administered by the workers. 7—The manufacturers and Jopters to be responsible for union conditions and wages of the workers in the con- tradting shops. ( The meeting of active Cloakmakers , ‘i says: i | Advertisements appeared in all!” “when the sttike call is issued,! New York papers yesterday, that the | we must immediately come to strike! | bosses have smashed the union and /han and not permit ourselves to bs! Jobs are open to “capable workers”, | puldozed by the hirelings of the ma- open shop, chine but fight for our rights and for The Building Trades Department jour strike leadership. ‘The strike of the Trade Union Unity League has | must be OUR strike. We must take steadily called on New York build-|the leadership ino our own hands ing workers to take control them- | because we will have to work in t selves of their struggles, and to fight | shop and not the officials who have in one solid industrial front. well paid jobs.” | | Workers’ Clubs Should Advertise in the “Daily” WATCH THE ADS! REGULAR ADVERTISERS IN THE DAILY WORKER Red Star Press (‘The Road’) Lucke-Kiffe Oo. (Tents) Chester Cafeteria Garden Restaurant Manhattan Wipinj Johi’s Restatrant Hatfy Stolder Optical Co. Concoops Food Stores Camps Unity, Kinderland, Nifgedaiget Lerman Bros. (Stationery) Melrose Cafeteria Sol’s Lunch Kavkaz Restaurant Santal Midy Workmen's Sick and Death Benefit Fund Manhattan Lycetm Bronstein’s Vegetarian Restaurant Sollin’s Restaurant Kale Cafeteria Rollin Pharmacy Dr. Kessler Gottlieb’s Hardware Czechoslovak Workers House Messinger’s Cafeteria (So. Blvd.) Avanta Farm World Tourists, fc. Union Square Mimeo Supply Golden Bridge Colony Camp Wocotona Rusttah Artjatoy Cameo Theatre Dr. Schwartz Acme Theatre Cohen's (Opticians) Cove and Spinicelli (Barbers) Dental Dept., L.W.0. Health Center Cafeteria Jade Mt. Chop Suey = Wm. Bell, Optometrist Parkway Cafeteria Butchers Union, Local 174 Linel Cafeteria Workers Coop Colony Cloth Co. lntern’l Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 15th FLOOR All Work Done Under Personal Care of DR. JOSEPHSON ATTENTION COMRADES! Health Center Cafeteria WORKERS CENTER 50 EAST 13th STREET Patronize the Health Center Cafeteria and Help the Revolutionary Movement Best Food WILLIAM BELL OPTOMETRIST and OPTICIAN Reasonable Prices Special Rates to Workers and Families 106 E. 14th St. (Room 21) Opposite Automat ‘Tel. TOmpkins Square 6-8237 Patronize the Concoops Food Stores A4ND Restaurant 2700 BRONX PARK EAST OPTICIANS CFD Harry Stolper, Inc. 73-15 CHRYSTIE STREET (Third Ave: Car to Hestér Street) 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. Daily Phone: Dry Dock 4-4522 “Buy in the. Co-operative Store and help the Revo- lutionary Movement.” JADE MOUNTAIN AMERICAN and CHINESE RESTAURANT Open 11 a.m. to 1:0 ao om. Special Lunch 11 to 4...35¢ Dinner 5 to 10... .55¢ Bungalows and Rooms to Rent for Surmmer Season Several very nice rooms and bungalows for rent for the summer season, Beauti- ful farm in Eastern Pennsylvania. Run- ning water. Slectticity, Swimming, fish- inc, ete. FeMsonable rates. Comriuni- caté with A. Benson, co. Daily Worker. 197 SECOND AVENUE Between 12th and 3th Sta. Phone Tomkins Sq, 6-9554 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: YPALIAN DISHES ’ A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet (302 E. 12th St. New Yorte ———— AMPERS ATTENTION! Army Tents 16x16 and Others Also Cafip Equipment Reasonable Prices— MANHATTAN WIPING OLOTH INC. ‘42% Water St, corner Pike St. Phone Dry Dock 4-8176 Comradlea Bat at the Parkway Cafeteria | 1638 PITKIN AVENUE Near Hopkinson Ave. Brooklyn, N. ¥, MELROSE DAIRY VtGstarian RESTAURANT BUTCHERS’ UNION Loca! 174, A. MO. © BW. of NA Offiee and Headquarters: Labor Temple, 24% Kast Mth Street Room 12 Regular meétings évery first and third Sunday, 10 A. M. Employment Bui open avery aay ae B. e Frentane te Dine at Oar Place, 1981 SOUTHERN BLVD, Bronx A NEIGHBORLY PLACE TO EAT Linel Cafeteria néar 174th St. Station) TELEPHONE INTERVALE 9—9149 Frigidaire Pure Food—100 Per Cent ‘ipment—Luneheonette and BEAUTIFUL ROOM—All quire all week, Chernoff, 71 B. Ine St.

Other pages from this issue: