The Daily Worker Newspaper, July 4, 1932, Page 2

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Page Two PREPARE NOW FOR NEEDLE CONVENTION! Delegates From Mass District Sessions, Elected by Shops NEW YORK.—Tt hird National Convention of the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union will be held in New Star Casino, New York, Sept. 2. All needle workers, cloakmake: dressmakers, fur workers, men’s cloth- ing workers, cap and millinery work- ers, knitgoods, underwear and all oth- er needle trades workers, are call upon by the NTWIU to elect dele- gates, This convention will be greeted as @ great event, reviewing all str and planning the organization and the tactics of very much greater strug- | gles. It will be greeted and keenly watched by tens of thousands of needle wor! ght wi wing unions, by Ne; tive and foreign-born men, women and yo! On Broad Basis The National Convention delegates will be elected at mass district con ventions in every locality. These dis- trict conventions will be r shop representatives, electe shops, by all workers there, without regard to what union they belong to, or whether ng to Plans should be de at once by workers in the shops to discuss the issues confronting th: needle workers, in order to prop choose ir dele- gates to the district conventions. In the needle tr they es have ben cut all to pic The 40-hour week is wiped out, and in places where the Indus I not p trated ye is common. bseh replace Shops he and pay wares A Mass? Vicious syctem of _ dividing up age cuts ch 900 w than 1 “few week The AF.L. unions and the Amal- | 42.lated have constantly betrayed the} workers, agreed to cuts and ganizations” that means uncmpioy ment, and have broken strike swhere “hey could. Rally to the Third National Con veniion of the Needle Trades Work- 8 Industrial Union. Talk “Dis rmament” And Train Reserves Following closely Hoover's plan for tary “effectives,” the annual ‘raining for Army Reserve Offi and students of the Citizens Mi Training Camps begin this we in eight army posts within the Sec- ond Corps Area. A total of 3,300 young m on the heels reduction of mili- raining Cam their fellow workers of other and receive a patriotic buncom sducaticn. OUT RELTEF IN PHILA. (By a Worker Correspondent) DELPHIA.—For the fo e of Unemp! ment Relief closed its doors he! June 27. Over 57,000 families who were receiving the miserable pit- tance of $1.50 per person per week vere cut off. Guild a workers correspondence group in your factory, shop or weighborhood, Send regular letters wo the Daily Worker. ‘The monthiy membership meeting Film & Photo Section of the Workers’ Film and Photo League will be held at 16 West ist St, at 8 p.m. A Workers’ Ex-Servicemen's League Post fs being formed in Coney Island. All Soldiers ere invited to attend the me to be held at 2033 W. 32nd St., Con Island, Krauss, at 8:30 p.m. The International Labor Defense hold their annual picnic on Sunday, All fraternal organizations are keep this date free. will Aug. asked Distrdict 2, Communist Party, will hold Stpit annual picnic on Sunday, July 24, mass organizations are asked to Sip this date open. ‘The left wing group of the cloakmakers as arranged an open-air meeting near the Co-Operative colony. Silkowitz and Mullins will speak. 'W. 1. R. Band will meet at 122 Second Ave. at 8 p.m. Ail members be on time. For the Ma: Performance at the Red Ratification Rally on July 9 will take place on July 4, 5, 7 and 8 at the Workers’ Cen- #, 36 B. 12th St., N.¥.C., 8 p.m. sharp. Ml werkers are urgently invited to par- pate. Agitprop groups to appear in full e. phe P. To All Mass Organizations ‘The Daily Worker and Freiheit have ar- with Madison Square Garden for ar on Oct. 8, 9 end 10, We ask all 4 Organizations, trade unions and clubs Keep these day free from any affa! Werker-Frethess Basser Committ union, | contracting 1 of the N. Y. “Education Board Closes Night Schools for Foreign Workers NEW YORK.—Citing “economy” as n excuse, the Board of Educati as suspended the summer term e ng school for foreigners at P. S. i , between First and Sec- an announcement made the month, 200 worke! m the Bronx and Brooklyn, 001 only to find sig’ t the session would hool officials “explained” jthat it would cost the city $30,000 eep two schools going for 18 , an indication of the cost of schools by the Tam- not open nig! |running the t ; this high-handed ac- 1e workers collected more than natures on two nights, and presented them to the Board of Ed- cation with the demand that the ‘chool be opened. After evading the |committee which brought the peti- |tions with various excuses, the board letters to the signers that classes are now be- at the Hebrew Technical | finally telling them ng formed High School. | When the workers, many of them | unemployed, came there, they were | | sent told they could attend the classes provided they paid $3 each. Nick Marck, Daily Worker agent, advertising the Mooney-Scottsboro meeting in Duluth on June 20. The meeting was attended by 1,200. ‘| KY. MINERS ARE ON OWN BONDS |Arrested to Cripple the Communist Campaign ! PINEVILLE, Ky., July 3.—The eight | striking miners arrested on frame-up | charges of violating a federal injunc- tion issued to the coal company in ut a year ago, are out on} n bond. Judge J. M. Cochran presided at the pi earing in Lexington, the case over to dering them to bring es at the coal com- e active, and to pun- g militant members nal Miners Union sted men said: the hired thugs of the it makes two more ” Thousands of will vote Communist TAINTS ASKING FOR RECIEP New Orleans Workers Demand Food (By a Worker Correspondent.) ry time one of us Fall River Workers Protest Evictions: Speaker Is Jailed FALL RIVER, Mass., July 3—More than 300 unemployed workers yester- day demonstrated against the evic- tion of five families at an open-air meeting at Eagle and Hope Streets, called by the Unemployed Council. Manuel Perry, organizer of the Na- tional Textile Workers Union, was arrested while speaking. Hundreds of workers followed Perry to the jail, where he was released three hours later under $200 bail. The charge was speaking without a permit and “disturbing the peace.” RIP SHEEPSKINS OFF WAR DOGS ™nose Geneva Screen With Million Aug. 1 “Dailies” While Wall Stre2t is disarming the 's at home by fake disarma- ent talk, it is selling thousands of tons of scrap iron and other war ma- terials to Japan abroad. Ha at its command practically | every daily newspaper in the country, Wall Street hands out stuff like this about the Geneva “disarmament” conference. “A definite British policy on the | Americ: nm disarmament plan may be expected soon, acting Premier Stan- ley Baldwin indicated in the House of Commons today. “I wish it were possible to say what I hope will be possible before | NEW ORLEANS.—Two months ago | this city passed a bill authorizing the What become of this five women and children, altogether, went to the ‘0 demand food. They were 1 usual alibi of these charity mon- ‘We have no money for food. money 1s 30 work: All nishing employment to family heads. our Have you ered here before?” Mrs. Larson, 1563 Chippewa St., the sokesman for thes? workers, replied: | “We have not registered, don’t in- tend to r, and demand food for our starving families and ourselves. This worker also assured the char- ity racketeers that they did not in- tend to starve silently and alone, but were going to organize all their neigh- boorhoods in Unemployment Com- food. She was constantly being inter- rupted by Mr. Blinkley (head of Mayor Wamsley’s democratic forced labor program) with the question: “are you all together?” evidently upsst by the militancy of these workers and called on two cops and a dick to try and get them | separated from each other. Faints From Hunger. The workers were not intaumidated by thes? threats and kept pressing | their demands for food until one of | the women in the delegation fainted) from hunger right When this hapfened Blinkley said: “Allright, we will send an gator to this woman's home and see if anything can be done.” The workers shouted: “We are not cannibals, we can't eat your investi- gators.” No investigator has yet ar- rived and no food has as yet been sent to this worker's home. Only those white workers who vote the democratic ticket are getting the miserable one or two ten hours a day work being provided through this political machine of Mayor Wams- ley’s. For this forced labor they are Paid $2.50 a day and are warned that if they have anything to do with the reds even this miserable starvation pittance will be cut off. Are Coming Back, In spite of this terror on the part of the city officials and the inten- tion to starve the workers into sub- mission to the dictation of their lives they left the fakers with the warning that they were going to be back again] ! if nothing was done and when they did come they would be there in welfare” ) distributed by fur- | mittees and Councils and force them} to turn loose some of the $750,009 for Blinkley was | in the office.| investi- | many days,’ he told George Lansbury, tabor leader, in answer to a question.” | Experience has taught the workers ; a step closer toward bloody war. There is only one English language newspaper in the United States which makes it a daily duty to rip the Sheep's clothing off the capitalist war dog—the DAILY WORKER. One million copies of a special Anti-War Issue will roll from the Daily Worker presses for distribution jon Aug. 1. Get on the job right laway. Write, wire, telephone for |your bundle order. Let the Daily know how much of a part you will have in helping it reach a million new workers in the fight against | world war and for the defense of the | Soviet Union, ; Yew Orleans Jobless “vepare Strike for NEW ORLEANS, La., July 3.—For the first time orgnnized effort under jthe leadership of the Unemployed |Council has forced the “Wel< re” to give some miserable relief without forced labor. Saturday afterncon a meeting was \held with some of the men who are Teceiving one or two days a week work from Mayor Walmsley’s poli- with a view of organizing the work- ers to strike for union rates of pay on all city jobs. Some 300 workers will be involved in this struggle. Negro workers here ere livint in brutally discriminated against in the giving out of re‘-t, Pr workers can get no work unless they vote for the Huey Long faczion «. the Democratic Party. Already these workers are begin- ning to sign the nomination papers to put Ford and Foster the Commun- ist party candidates on the ballot. LABOR UNION MEETINGS ‘The Cloakmakers’ “Committee of 50" will meet today, right after work, at 365 W. 36th Bt. 6 ee Open Forum Thursday. Cloakmakers’ Unemployed Council will hold an open forum on Thursday, July 5, right after work, at Memorial Hall, 344 W. 36th St. eo 8 Open Forums On Cloak Strike. The Central Committee of the left-wing group of cloakmakers continues its open forums today. Yesterday Gutterson and Mallin spoke at the Prospect Workers’ Club, 187 Southern Boulevard. Open-air meet- ings were also held yesterday to discuss the cloak strike, ‘Today at 6 o'clock there will be, att open-air meeting near the co-opera- force tive colony, with Silkowite and Mallin as speakers, Pay on Relief Work | tical whip known as the Welfare} DAILY yA es rEW. YORI » MONDAY, JULY 4, 1932 CUTS RELIEF DOLE Thousands Are Facing Starvation In a statement issued yesterday the Salvation Army admitted that in spite of the terrific and increasing mi among the Negro masses of Harlem, it has ¢ urtailed the meager relief it has been doling out to 100} “distressed families, representing 3,500 men, women and children.” In addi- tion, it h as closed down the bread line, cutting off even the hand-outs of sloppy coffee and stale bread to the starving Harlem workers. The statement tells the bosses that the Salvation Army by handing out starvation relief has helped to divert the Negro masses from revolutionary struggle against hunger. It calls upon the bosses to “dig down” and hang out a little charity to prevent the starving Negro masses from turning to the revolutionary struggle for real unemployment relief and social in-| surance at the expense of the bosses and their government. PARADE READING ON JULY NINTH Demonstration Opens Communist Convention READING, Pa., July 4. — Prep- arations are in full swing for the opening of the Pennsylvania State Convention of the Communist Party. Section conferences are taking place | throughout the state. Workers from | mine, steel and textile towns are elected as delegates to the conven- tion, The miners ofWestern Penn- sylvania who led the heroic strug- gle in 1931, the Anthracite miners, the steel workers of Bethlehem, tex- | tile workers of Allentown and marine workers of Philadelphia, are sending their representatives to Reading to discuss the program of the Commu- nist Party,and lay plans for an in- tensive campaign of the working class against the Hoover-Wall Street | Hunger Program, Parade Saturday, The convention will open wh a big parade Saturday, July 9th, 6 p. m. and workers who are willing to, participate in the parade can do so iby going in trucks which will leave | Philadelphia Saturday, 10 a. m. and 1p, m. from 715 N. 6th St. The trucks will return the same night and the cost for the round trip is only 50c. The Communist Party calls upon , all working class organizations and individual workers to come to Read- ing on July 9th, andparticipate in the opening of the convention, Maurer Challenged. James Maurer, the vice-presiden- tial candidate of the Socialist Party, was challenged to come tothe mass ; meeting which is held Saturday night ‘and defend his “socialist” platform. ‘Thousands of leaflets are being is- sued to the workers of Reading and | to the proletarian rank and file | aising of $750,000 for unemploym2nt that every disarmament conference is; members of the Reading Socialist Party to force out. Maurer not to back STEVE KOSLOV ACQUITTED. MONTREAL. — Steve Koslov, a an worker in Montreal, who! s tried under sub-section 3 of Sec- tion 98 of the Criminal Code on dune 21, was a cquitted. Koslov was originally arrested for distributing leaflets on May 13, announcing an | afiti-deportation demonstration. MUSIC BEETHOVEN'S “EH “EROICA” SYM- PHONY AT STADIUM TONIGHT The second week of the Stedium Concerts begins tonight under the direction of William Van Hoogstra-, jten. The chief musical event this evening will be Beethoven’s “Eroica” Symphony. Other numbers on the program include “Don Juan” by Strauss; “The Moldau”, Smetana and Rhapsody, “Espana” by Chabrier. Programs for the balance of the week follow: Wednesday—Overture to “Oberon”, Weber; Symphony No. 6 in G (“Sur- prise”), Haydn; Overture to “Wil- liam Tell,” Rossini; Sarabande and Dance, Debussy; “Traum” and “Prize Song”, Wagner; Hungarian Dance Nos, 10, 3, 1, Brahms. Thursday — Overture, “Fingal's Cave”, Mendelssohn; Symphony No. 2 in D Major, Beethoven; “Peer Gynt” Suite No. 1, Grieg; The Swan of Tuonela, Sibelius; Overture to ‘Tannhauser”, Wagner. Friday—Overture to “The Marriage of Figaro”, Mozart; Symphony No. 2 in D Major, Brahms; Overture to! “Rosamunde”, Schubert; Diverti-} mento, Wagenaar; “1812” Overture”, ‘Tchaikovsky. Saturday — “Scheherazade,” Rim- sky-Korsakoff; Overture “Sakuntala”, Goldmark; Liebestraum, Liszt; Waltz, “Weinerblut,” Strauss; Danse Ma- cabre, Saint-Saens; March Slav, Tchaikovsky. Sunday—Intreduction to Act III, “Lohengrin”, Wagner; “The After- noon of a Faun”, Debussy; Symphony in D Minor, Franck; Suite No, 1 in D Minor, Op. 43, Tchaikovsky; Over- ture to “Fidelio,” in E Majors Bee- thoven, AMKINO’S NEW SOUND FILM “ALONE” Drama of Fight Against Ignorance worxers ACme Theatre WUth Street and Union Square IN NEGRO HARLEM) |not only refused to pay hehr rent, | land she was “such people always live some way | {of 2504 Olinville Avenue, {at Olinville and Allerton Avenues, ‘save the fascist dictatorship, |“Is MY FACE RED” AT JEFFER- | Jefferson and Franklin Theatres. |“Bring Em Back Alive”. , sound film, The wife and six little children Vet’s Family Fizhts Hunger in Anacostia in the new “Hooverville” established on the disease-ridden Anacostia flats, of a a worker ex-serviceman. All live Discrimination At Home Relief Against Unemployed Negroes | NEW YORK. — Investigation by a Daily Worker reader shows a clear case of discrimination against’ Ne- groes by the Home Relief Bureau. This correspondent three times ac- companied a Negro woman to the bureau formerly located in Public School 93, corner of Herkimer St. | and New York Ave., Brooklyn. The | staff at this bureau is entirely white. This particular woman had two day’s work a week and two orphaned children. The Home Relief Bureau finally eyicted, but claimed that she could pay rent with | her wages, and as for eating—well, | you knew!” At the same time, white families in the same condition were given rent money. Some white families, not all, But no Negro fami- lies got rent money. Bronx Rent Strikers Hold Meeting Tenight NEW YORK.—As part of their or- ganized campaign, striking tenants Bronx, are calling an open-air meeting tonight; and urge all tenants in the neighbor- hood to participate i n the demon- stration, For some time the tenants of 2504, Olinville Avenue, who are 100 per cent} organized, have been leading a strug- gle against the landlord, and are now | ‘on strike for reduction of rents, rec- ognition of the house committee, and no evictions of unemployed workers without consulting the house com- mittee, NEW CABINET IN JUGOSLAVIA BELGRADE, July 3—A new Cabi-) net, headed by Dr. Milan Zrkitch, | former Minister of the Interior in the | Marinkovitch government of Yugo- slavia, was formed here. The new Cabinet is composed of nine Serbs, four Croats and three Slovenes. The change of government aims to the} foundation of which is cracking under the growing discontent of a broad} mass of toilers. STAGE-SCREEN SON AND FRANKLIN “Is My Face Red” with Ricardo Cortez, Helen Twelvetrees, Robert ‘Armstrong and Arline Judge in the cast is now being presented at the On Wednsday “Night World”, co-!| featuring Lew Ayres and Mae Clark, | will begin a three day enzagement at, these theatres. The Jefferson will also show a second feature, “The Of- | fice Girl’, the continental musical | film featuring Renate Muller. “Bring "Fm Back Alive” continues to hold public favor at the Mayfair, where it remains for a third week. The picture is based on the jungle | experiences in Frank Buck's book, It was di- rected by Clyde BE. Elliott. At the Acme Theatre, the Soviet “Alone”, is the principal feature. This is a tense story of a young girl who is sent as a teacher to the nomad tribes of Siberia, and her struggle against the priests and kulaks of the district. “Dangers of the Arctic,” motion picture record of Herl Rossman’s ex- pedition into the far north, is the current attraction at the Camco Theatre. Rossman is noted for his Aretic explorations, He is the artho ef a book on the Eskimo entitled “Black Sunlight”, Two years ago he left civilization to make a new rec- ord of life within the shadow of the North Pole, The result of his work is “Dangers of the Arctic”, “Cossacks of the Don”, Russian sound film, is showing Tuesday and Wednesday at the Hollywood The- atre, Avenue A and 6th St. Emma Cessarskaya plays the chief role. NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES EAST SIDE—BRONS Jpn || FRAMLIN TODAY TO TUESDAY “IS MY FACE RED” With RICARDO CORTEZ HELEN TWELVETREES ‘demanded of the police to Socialist Speaker at Brooklyn Street Meet (By a Worker Correspondent) BROOKLYN.—The other night the Socialist Party held one of its re- gular open-air meeting on Rockaway Parkway and Rutland Road, Brook- disgusted with the previous ous meetings of the S, P., have own across the street number of workers d clalist As a large rted the so- meeting for their own, one booth. Police Arrive. In about ten minutes a squadron} of detectives and two carloads of police drove directly to where our meeting was being held and began to break it up, despite the fact that it-was a legal election rally, and a permit had been obtained. The indignant workers, disgusted with this exposure of alist” tac- tics, went over and demanded an, explanation. The socialist speaker lice and “would again do it” if workers continued to ask him em- barassing questions. And when a woman worker, a furrier, expressed her contempt for him, the speaker “arrest that woman.” To Continue Fight. The S. P. meeting could not con- tinue because of the sharp protest and anger of the workers. We are on the job here to expose them and to carry on a_ relentless struggle against them. J. B. Furniture Workers on Strike in Brooklyn BROOKLYN, July 3. — A militant rike of 20 workers of the Muskin Manufacturing Co., 232 Throop Ave., is now in progress under the leader- ship of the Furniture Workers In- dustrial Union. The strikers are making the following demands; equal division of work, no discrimination; recognition of shop committee; piece work prices must be settled with committee; no “chiseling” on pay- roll at end of week; raise in pay of young workers making between $8 to $15 a week. The strikers are calling upon all furniture workers to appear before the shop, and help these young work- ers picket and win their strike. To Withdraw 700,000 Tons of Sugar From Market te Raise Price HAVANA, July 3—A sugar pool} was made obligatory by a decree of | President Machado signed yesterday. 14 cents a pound. The pool was made obligatory by ‘presidential decree to appease the “prejudices” of United States sugar holders who were reticent to enter the pool fearing to be accused of violating the Sherman Anti-Trust Act. Translated into human terms, this, pool will mean that workers here and abroad will be compelled to pay more for sugar than they are paying. It will mean thet the workcrs will see their real wages further reduced. WALDMAN TO BE S.P. CANDIDATE Utica, July 3.—Louis Waldman, a Jawyer for some of the most corrupt unions in New York, will undoubtedly be nominated ac candidate for Gov- ernor by the state convention of the Socialist Party now meeting here. Amusements EARL ROSSMAN'S “Dangers of the Aictic”, A RENDEZYOUS WITH ICY DEATH Calls for the Police! lyn, The workers of the neighborhood, | slander- | decided to hold a meeting of their | of us noticed a socialist enter a phone | admitted that he had called the po-j The purpose of this pool is to with- | hold 700,000 of sugar from the market | until the price o f crude sugar reaches | RELIEF REFUSES NEGRO 10 CENTS Unemployed Council Will Follow Case NEW YORK.—The following report has just been received from the Un- employed Council with headquarters at 257 Schenectady Ave. “Wednesday afternoon there came an old Negro woman who told us she worked one day in each two weeks doing housework for some woman who gave her this day's work “out of her | kindness.” She had to support her |daughter and son-in-law who were both out of work. The old woman was | apologetic, ashamed that she was | forced to ask for aid but we soon put | her at ease by explaining to her that there are thousands upon thousands who are in a similar position and was like asking for help from her | own folk. “She was already two months be- | hind in her rent and expected to re- ceive a dispossess any day. her to speak to her neighbors and |ask them to accompany her to the nearest Home Relief Bureau and in- structed her to wait for us in her home the following day when we | would come to take her, her family and these neighbors to obtain relief. Ave. and Quincey St. where a Mrs. Warren delivered a pretty _ little speech on the bad times, how hard the city was trying to help along its citizens, how necessary it was to try to get along as well as one could without asking for relief from the ex- hausted city treasury and ended up by telling the old Negro woman that to her home, yet the station she prop- erly belonged to was the one in Wil- liamsburg and that it was there she must go if she had to. ployed Council asked for ten cents to | cover the fare to Williamsburg for the |old woman and the answer was that “Commissioner Taylor specifically in- structed us not to handle any funds and that as much as I would like to help you, yet I cannot without break- jing the regulations.” Her pretty little spe2ch about the big-heartedness of the city could not be backed up by even ten cents! “We collected the necessary fare from among the comrades and sent the old woman to the Williamsburg station. We will soon visit her and learn of her treatement there. JUNIOR MEET IN NEW YORK. NEW YORK. — The Labor Sports Union is opening up its activities for junior athletes with a Junior | Counter Olympic Track and Field | Meet to take place on July 9 at |Macomb’s Dam Park. Track and field for juniors, 17 and under, and 14 and under, are includ- ed in the program, Get your entry blanks from the Vesa A. C., 15 W. 126th St., or from the Vanguard Community Center, 2300 Bronx Park East, or the Labor Sports Union, 799 Broadway, Room | 229, that to come to us, her fellow workers, | We told! “The next day we appeared at the | Home Relief Bureau station at Ralph’ ‘although this station was the nearest | The Committee from the Unem-) |Worker Honor Ryan Walker Wednesday At Memorial Meeting NEW YORK.— Workers of New York will honor the life and work of |Ryan Walker, Daily Worker staff | artist who died recently jn the Soviet Union, at a memorial meeting this Wednesday evening at Manhattan Lyceum, 66 East 4th Street. Speakers will include Alexander | Trachtenberg, associated for many |years with Walker, Jacob Burck, staff artist of the Daily Worker, and cther |outstanding revolutionary artists of the John Reed Club will discuss | Walker's work, A chaik talk tnd numbers by the Young Pioneers, who will present a “Red Pepper” skit, a character cre- ‘ated by Ryan Walker, will be among ‘the other features of the meeting, The memorial is being arranged jointly by the Daily Worker and the John Reed Club. Campaign Throughout Jersey Cities Builds Ford Meeting, July 13 PASSAIC, N. J., July 3. — The workers of Passaic and Bergen counties are carrying on intensive ac- . tivities preparing the meeting for |James W. Ford, which will be held Wednesday, July 13, at Kanters Au- ditorium, 259 Monroe St,, Passaic. Open air meetings are held in Pa- terson, Passaic, Clifton and Garfield. Thousands of leaflets are distributed, Fly meetings with trucks decorated with signsbearing the slogans of the election campaign will be held dur- ing the week in Passaic and Pater= son. The workers of Paterson and Pas- soic will meet.Comrade Ford at the station, from where a parade thru- out the city will be held. The Communist Party calls upon all workers of Bergen and Passaic counties to make this parade and mass meeting a real demonstration against the forced labor system here, A demonstration for jobs, bread and against bosses’ war, Boss Forced to Cancel Wage Cut After 1-Day Building Trade Strike NEW YORK. — Following a one- day strike of the workers of the Skaler Construction Co,, the boss | was compelled to withdraw a $1 a , day wage cut, and the men returned to work Saturday. As a result of the victory, the Co. will recognize the union shop com- mittee; all hiring will be done thru the union office and no workers are to be discharged without consultation with the shop committee. Four pickets who appeared in court yesterday were released. “SOVIET RUSSIA TODAY” HAS FEATURES. NEW YORK. — Articles and phos tos featuring workers’ sports, vaca- tions, and rest homes in the Soviet Union are contained in the July is- sue of “Soviet Russia Today”, just off the press. REGULAR ADVERTISERS |] Red Star Press (“The Road’) | Lucke-Kilfe Co. (Tents) Chester Cafeteria Garden Restaurant Manhattan Wiping Cloth Co. [fi] John’s. Restaurant Farey Stci=er Ontleal Co. Concoops Food Stores Camps Unity, Kinderland, Nitgedaiget (Stationery) feteria ick and Death Benefit Fund Vegetarian Restaurant Kale Ca‘eteria Dr. Kessler Czechoslovak Workers House Aventa Farm Union Scuere Mimeo Supply Camp Wocolona Russian Art Shop | Dr. Schwartz WATCH THE ADS! IN THE DAILY WORKER Cohen's (Opticians) Coco and Spinicelli (Barbers) Dental Dept., 1.W.0. Health Center Cafeteria Jade Mt. Chop Suey Wm. Bell, Optometrist Parkway Cafeteria Butchers Union, Local 174 Linel Cafeteria Workers Coop Colony Sol’s Lunch Sentst Midy Cameo Theatre Acme Theatre Stadium Concerts Intera’l Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 15th FLOOR AU Work Done Under Versonat Care of DR JOSEPHSON WILLIAM BELL OPTOMETRIST and OPTICIAN Spectal Mates to Workers and Families 106 B. 14th St. (Room 21) Opposite Automat Tel. TOmpkins Square 6-8297 THEA., Ave A & 6th St. HOLLYWOOD TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, JULY Sth, 6th ‘The Romance That Thrilled All Russia AMKINO PRESENTS: ‘Cossacks of the Don’ Starring EMMA CBSSARSKAYA —MUSICO— TADIUM CONCERTS ™——" PHILHARMONIC-SYMPHONY OPCH. Lenssen, SS ARLE ATS 138th MATS, 15 Cents || EVES. 25 Cents Except Sat., Sun. and Holidays Will nore vi Conductor MY NIGHT at 30 EVE! | Lemos Be, hae $1.00 "Colbie 1-175) — OPTICIANS C7 Harry Stoiper, Ine. 73-15 CHRYSTIE STREET (Third Ave. Car to Hester Street: 9am, Bio Daily Phone: ie 4-452 ATTENTION COMRADES! Health Center Cafeteria WORKERS CENTER 50 EAST 18th STREET Patronize the Health Center Cafeteria and help the Reyoluticnary Movement REASONABLE PRICES BEST FOOD Comrades—Kat at the Parkway Cafeteria 1638 PITKIN AVENUE Brooklyn, N. ¥. Near Hopkinson Ave. Phone Tomkins Sq. 6-0554 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all adh 302 E. 12th St. CUT THIS AD AND SAVE Our $1 Job Half Soles and Heels A Complete Store for the eee wy) Workers CAPITOL SHOE REPAIR 109 E. 14th St. ALgonquin 4-9268 Office Hours 10-1 & 20:80 Dr. LOUIS L. SCHWARTZ SURGEON DENTIST 127 UNIVERSITY PLACE Corner Mth St. New York ——————— CAMPERS ATTENTION! Army Tents 16x16 and Others MANHATTAN WIPING CLOTH INO. 47% Water St., corner Pike St. Phone Dry Dock 4-3476 a Rt

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