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we Page Two \Frame-up M Irish Militants DOGSKINWORKER aterial on Kept CALLED OUT ON Hidden by BronxJudge) HOUSE OCCUPIED ™ The ‘Ww YORK.—Magistrate James Barrett of the Bronx County Court ruled that the frame-up evidence against the four Irish workers charged with felonious assault for re- sisting an eviction must continue to remain hidden in the minutes of the Grand Jury. Barrett made this de- Jeision when Allen Taub, attorney for the International Labor Defense, de- NEW YORK.—Today, Wednesd: manded the evidence for inspection July 27, at 8 a.m., all dog skin wo by the defense on Monday. ers are called to strike for the fol-) he fight against the star-chamber STRIKE TO-DAY Will Demand July Wage Increases and Jobs for Unemployed lowing demands: |... | methods used by Tammany courts July raises for every dog skin | nq police to hush up the story of worker, the brutal eviction, resisted by the Jobs for the Unemployed. defendants—John Mullally, Hugh mp) SODITACHINE, McKiernan, John Rooney and Martin Equal division of work. | Moriarty of the Irish Workers’ Club— Unemployment insurance fund ta: Garber dane Sam Weinstein, Strike Leader, Framed Up Sam Weinstein, militant worker jand strike leader, was indicted on a charge of manslaughter yesterday in the Supreme Court of Kings County. | He was framed up as a result of his| | activity in the strike at the Muskin| DAILY WORKER EW YORK, WEDNESDAY, JULY 27, 1932 BY REICH POLICE Sharp Protest Forces | Withdrawel (Cable by Inprecorr) BERLIN, July 26.—Police this af. ternocn oecupied the Karl Lie! necht House, headquarters of the “Rote Fahne,” and Communist Par- | Telephonic protests to the | | ty offices. | police department and to the Reichs- wehr brought denials of any know- }ledge of the occupation, A short time later, however, the police was withdrawn with the explanation that | it was all “a mistake.” | A clash between Nazi and workers {took place today when the fascists jhung a fascist flag from a window | \section. Workers quickly gathered, | | hurling stones at the flag. Police in| motor lorries arrived, cleared the jstreets by firing a number of shots. | | er ae | Earlier in the day, the Von Papen |government lifted the martial law! jover Berlin as a pre-election gesture. | | Mobilization of police in the work- | ers’ quarters continued, however, and the ban on the Communist press which had carried the call for a mass | Political strike was not renwved. | At the same time the clocg alliance |of Von Papen and the fascists was | |once more revealed when the govern- | | ment lifted a two-year-old* ban on |Nazi holding office in Prussia. ‘THUGS ASSAULT YOUTH MEETING Invade Cafeteria; Meet KARL LIEBKNECHT Neale Union | strikers. The workers, however, are determined not only to continue the strike all the more militantly, but to |stand by Weinstein no matter what : : {hold a protest meeting at Willis Ave. Union conditions and recognition Let no dog skin worker go up to indifferent to the plight of the dis- Street. Demonstrate your unity and|Club campaign to pay a month's rent your working and living conditions. | Previous promise—loudly proclaimed to give July increases and to re-|family having six children, they broke the terror of the company gainst the bosses, for higher wages} admiration and enthusiasm of the re Furniture Co. 232 Throop Ave., to death a woman in the Bronx. He NEW YORK.—Post two Harlem The Muskin Furniture Co. bosses wil Ihold a series of meetings today frighten the workers into calling off ors, and marines their back pay Post 2 has issued several hundred | happens. The meeting will be held at 125th aig by the hoses and administer [2 Hele. Spread Gf the Needle Trades Workers In- |*24 147th Bt. tonight. the shop. March in united ranks to possessed McPariland family, has solidarity and determination to win|@nd food allowance for one week. Last year thru organized strength, | im magistrate’s court—that $25 was cognize the right to be organized in| ker Indicted union and gave courage to the thou- Wor er Nn IC e and better living conditions. The thousands of fur workers. To Hit Jailing On 9 In |Brooklvn. was picketing in Brooklyn at the Workers Ex-Servicemens League, | hope that Weinstein’s indictment on to demand a Special Session of Con- | bonus in full and unemployment in- leaflets against the arrest of several street and 7th avenue, at 7:30 p.m. ed by the workers. | throughout the Bronx. The club will y the workers. dustrial Union, | The Catholic Charities, callously the strike headquarters, 149 W. 24th | been forced by the Irish Workers’ your justified demands to improve| Officials had tried to ignore their the dogskin workers forced the bosses |far too much rent for rooms for a your union. Thru organized strength sands of fur workers for mass sfrug- | gle against the company union, a- For Manslaughter struggle last year called forth the N.Y. VETS MASS 7 5 Weinstein is charged with beating ' Washington | time of the alleged attack. Post 35 and other Posts of the WESL a charge of manslaughter will gress to pay the former soldiers, sail- surance, leaders of the bonus marchers in Washington, Monday. by the Muskin bosses has been ad- journed until tomorrow. (By a Worker Correspondent) NEWARK, N. J.—The White Star Line, running their boats from New York to Bermuda and Halifax, sells tickets for these cruises in American money, but the crew is paid off in British money, which when cashed brings only $7.20 for two pounds. One worker recently shipped out for a cruise and was forced to work 18 hours for six days in the galley and received only two pounds for this slavery. |Carl Brodsky, Nominee of C. P. at Election Conference Tonight NEW YORK.—Carl Brodsky, Com- |munist candidate in the 22nd Con- gressional district, will speak tonight, | at 8 o'clock, at 1610 Boston Road in {an election conference meet under | the auspices of sections 5 and 15 of | the United Front Election Campaign Committee. pereeren Bo With evietions increasing and un- ? Pree employment mounting, and with an What $s On | unusual display of boss gangsterism in local strikes, the coming Com- nn Reed Pee in. he | munist election campaign is expected |to receive the most active support of the Bronx workers. The delegates at the confernece will elect a committee of twenty-five workers to lead the election struggle. ’ Union | STAGE-SCREEN Daneing. Mente. Admission ‘THURSDAY WW. E, 5. L., Post 38, will hold a special | mesilng at 1120 80 Blvd” Brons, at 8 pm.| “PAGE PYGMALION” OPENS NEXT August First preparations will’ be made, WEEK AT BIJOU THEATRE “Page Pygmalion,” a new comedy Post No. 40 of the Workers’ Ex-Service-| men’s League is ling a membership | by Carl Henkle, is scheduled to open Resting, to Pe ele ott culeomen of Brigh. | next Wednesday night at the Bijou ton and Coney Island are | Theatre, presented by Alan Moryill. Post No. 2, Workers’ Ex-Servicemen's| THe Chief players are Robert Emmett League open-air ting tonight at 125th| Keane, Claire Whitney, Doris Eaton, Bt. and Seventh Ave. Veterans assemble| Carleton Young and Pervy Helton. at headquarters at 6:30 p.m. for special] ~, work, The Provincetown Playhouse an- ba 3 ei |nounces the premiere of Devil's Lit- Voté Communist Club of Yorkville will tle Game,” a new play by Joseph Jay Ingerlid, scheduled to open on Mon- day evening. “My Lucky Star,” a comedy by Joe < Patchin, will be presented this eve- Pauline Rogers, running for Congress in| ~* » the Harlem Disirict, will lecture on the|ning at the Free Theatre on East Communist Party in'the Elections and thelo7th St. A cast of white and Ne- 0 2 b | Rest Wii's Madison Aven second floor "| gro players will include Frank Wil- oe : son, Rose McOlendon, Eddie Quinn, Viola Deane and Doris Remsen, meet at 350 E. Sist St. at 8 p.m. ‘The Freiheit Mandolin Orchestra is ar- ranging a free concert at 108 E. 14th St. at 8:30 p.m. Speakers and music The Laundry Workers Industrial Union | asks ali workers to come to 1130 Southern | Blvd. and help the strikers of the Bronx Home Laundry win their fight egainst|usoyy» gs i derrauan: Mets plete ‘ery ‘cay! |"SOMs” SOVIET FILM OF | UX The next Soviet film to be pre- Sunday in Pelham Bay Parkway. Work- gee have information regarding same| sented at the Acme Theatre will be please communicate with the District Of-| “Soil,” a dramatic and engrossing ea Ue oe picture‘of rural lite in the present- ‘A pocketbook was lost at the Picnic last United Front Election Committee of|day Ukraine, The film, which opens Jugosiav workers’ organizations is ar-{ : fanging ® picnic Sunday, Aug. 7, in the| Oday, deals with the struggle be- 389 Paterson Plani- There will be a very interesting program, dramatics, sing- fing and speakers on the present ion. Admission 25 cents. ‘Tako Lackawanna ‘Ferry at W. 23rd St, or Hudson Tubes to ‘Hoboken; from there Passaic St. car to the Old Gheiter’s Park. | tween the modern and the outlived | viewpoint in the peasant community. Alexander Doyzhenko, director of “Soil,” who in his “Arsenal” gave such a compelling portrayal of the heroic role the Ukraine played in the oe Workers’ Ex-Servicemen’s League hag|Tevolution, has in this pleture un- moved to 127 W. 125th St | folded a stirring narrative of strug- gle between elemental forces both in aature and in human society, In a | series of poignant, dramatic and im- Comrades wanted the Anti-tm- | aginative scenes Dovzhenko shows il Review. Mes Bele on reed ie passing of the old order with BGan top Riu read! its reactionery philosophy and reli- eee gious bigotry and the turbulent rush ‘WEDNESDAY of the new creative forces rapidly Post 35, W.E.8.L..-and the Irish Work- ers’ Club will hold an open forum air| consolidating the new order cf living. at 139th St. and Willis Ave.,/ Bronz, at 6 p.m. Vets will speak on bonus and August 1. 8 The Medical Workers League will have bership meeting at 8 p.m. at 16 Mist Sted A. Raymond will speak on y ‘The Anti-Impertalist League would like volunteer typist help. Office at 799 Broad- way, Room 536. to A yery important special membership meeting of the Alfred Levy Branch of the LL.D. will be held at 8 p.m. sharp at 634 Vermont St Brooklyn, All members ide, agen : A ce agi |the strike, pointing out one of the} | Hearings on the injunction asked | Prepared for Aug. 1 NEW YORK.—Unsuccessful in the | attempt to break up the open-air meeting of the Young Communist | League in preparation for Aug. 1, at | 79th St. and First Ave. gangsters |and hoodlums attacked more than 50 workers headed for the Hungarian] | Workers’ Home Cafeteria yesterday. |+ Pelting the speakers at the meet- ling with rotten vegetables and un- able to proyoke them, the thugs, hired by the Yorkville Cherokee Dem- ceratic Club, hurled ash cans and | stones through the window of the | cafeteria locate at 350 E. 81st St. | and severely injured two workers. | Two Negroes and one Irish worker |led the workers’ defense as cops stood idly by enjoying the brutal at- tack upon the workers. The gather- ing cheered the speaker, who was ex- posing the Tammany gangsters when the attack occurred, Alert workers captured one of the gangsters. The Y. C, L. is calling another meeting at the same place, in spite of the vicious attack. SCHUSTER TO TALK ON WHITE COLLAR CLASS Schuster, editor of the Office Workers’ Union monthly bulletin, “The Office Worker,” will lecture on \the white ce@ir class of European | headquarters, 16 W. 2Ist St, at 7 'p.m. There will be entertainment, dancing and refreshments immedi- ately after the lecture, NOTICE TO ALL LITERATURE AGENTS OF TFUUL The district LABOR UNITY and literature office of the TUUC has been combined with the National Of- fice of LABOR UNITY. All liter- ature agents of the TUUL, party and mass organizations should make pay- ments and get the special Steel and Anti-War Number of LABOR UNITY at Room 414—2 West 15th St., New York City. The August issue is out today. —_ What Is Your Section Doing for the Daily Worker's Circulation Drive? |} LABOR UNION MEETINGS Dress Trade Hoard Meeting | ‘The Dress Trade Board meeting will take place on Thursday, July 28, at 17:30 p.m. in the office of the union, 131 West 28th St. At this meeting concrete plans and arrangements will be made for the or- ganization drive whieh will be started by the Dress Department very soon. The Preparations for the District Convention of the Needle Trades Workers’ Industriel Union will also be taken up at this meet- ing. Laundry work Mt. Vernon and New Rochelle: A meeting’ of all jaun- dry workers of Westchester County will take place at the Workers’ Genter, 421 8. Eighth Ave,, Mt. Vernon, on Thursday, July 28, at 8 . This meeting will lay the basis of organizing the laundry workers into the Laundry Workers’ Industrial Union. Cater aid) Painters ‘The painters and carpenters will hold a mass meeting at the Finnish Hell, 109-26 Union Holl St., Jamatea, on Thursday, July 28, at 8 p.m., to organize @ rank ang file union. All éarpenters and painters of the Starts ion Drive Dress Trade | NEW YORK.—The Dress Depart- ment of the Needle Trades Work- ers Industrial Union, is going ahead | with the plans to prepare an imme- diate organization drive in the dress |trade. The season is gradually be- |ginning and prompt action is neces- |sary in order to stop the wage cuts | Organiza | |and to improve the conditions of the | workers. The Dress Department has ar- ranged section meetings which will take place on Thursday, July 28th, right after work at the following places—in Bronx, at the Italian workers Center—559 East 184th St., and in Brownsville at 1813 Pitkin | Avenue. At these section meetings the trade board will report on the plans and mobilize the workers for immediate action. ‘The™ call" has” bedh ifsuer py” the Dress Department today to the work- at Naunyn Street in a proletarian| ers of the open shops calling on them | to immediately bring in their com- plaints so that the union can help them to organize their shops. 12 ARRESTED IN LAUNDRY STRIKE NEW YORK.—Twelve strikers of the Bronx Home Laundry were ar- rested and held on charges of dis- orderly conduct. The strikers were arrested while following scabs. A hearing on the bosses’ applica- tion for a sweeping injunction to res- train the union from strike activities will be held at the Bronx County Court, 161 St., and 3rd Avenue, Fri- day, July 29th. It is expected that a large number of workers will come to the court to protest against the vicious in- junetion proccedings, A full report of the Bronx strike will be given at a special meeting called by the Laundry Workers Un- ion at Ambassador Hall, 2875 Clare- mont Parkway Thursday, at 8 p.m. A mass demonstration agianst the attempt to saddle the injunction on the strikers will be held Thursday, at 1 pm. The workers will meet at 1130 Southern Boulevard. ‘The Co-operative Laundry of 2700 Bronx Park East has stopped dealing with the Master Laundry because the boss of the above laundry is taking a leading part in the activity of the bosses’ Association to break the Un- ion. The boss of the Master Laundry has caused the arrést of 7 strikers of the Bronx Home and Edison Laun- dry for advertizing the strike. Release of Hungarian Writer Demanded by the John Reed Club NEW YORK.—The John Reed Club yesterday sent a sharp wire of protest to Karolyi, Hungarian pre- mier at Budapest, and to Count Laszlo Szechenyl, his ambassador to the United States, condemning the death sentence passed upon the noy- elist and poet, Friedrich Karikas, and demanding his release. The wire says: “The John Reed countries tomorrow night at W. I. Ru! Club of New York, an organization of revolutionary writers and artists, |denounces as an outrage the sen- tence of death upon the novelist and poet, Friedrich Karikas, and against two other political prisoners arrested with him, We demand the | rescinding of this sentence and the |immediate and unconditional release | of all three.” WIN ICE CREAM Seamen’s Church Institute. New York City. | Daily Worker.:— The militancy and excellent fight- ing spirit of the Marine Workers’ Industrial Union is beginnig to show results. At the Seamen’s Church Instiute, where seamen were foreed to accept a lousy bowl of “soup” or stew, two thin slices of bread and some rotten stuff supposed to be coffee for their dime, before the M. W. I. U. exposed Mrs. Roper and her whole strikebreaking outfit, now the 10 cents meal is a little better, and believe it or not, ice cream is served with it. —Old Sea Dog. NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES pF BRONX JEFFERON WEDNESDAY TO FRIDAY Douglass Fairbanks, Jr. “LOVE IS A RACKET” AT JEFFERSON —EXTRA FEATURE | 1 “Sinister Hands” With JACK MULHALL MATS. 15 Cents || EVES. 25 Cents section should attend for the betterment of their own conditions. Except Sat,, Sun, and’ Molidays Directed by A. Dovahenko, “Arsenal” TODAY, TOMORROW and FRIDAYS === A Ukranian Soviet Epie! SOIL Producer of A drama ef earth drench- ed with the spirit of the Ukraine—a poem in pic- tures—revealing the soul of the peasant in his struggle to conquer, ADDED FEATURES Latest Working -class News The Worker's AGME, THEATRE |*8¢ 9 AM. to 2 P.M. ie, Sat. & BASE LAD FOR | ANTI-INJUNCTION, |Stndents To Picket I. Miller Shop Today NPI YON oP hel rrersrations will be made today for the Av‘i-Tn- |juecHon Genference to be held to- morrow nicht at the Manhattan Ly- ceum, 66 E. 4th St. Reports show that delevates will be | present from all the revolutionary | trade unions, leagues, A. F. of L. |eroups and workers organizations in Greater New York. The final meeting of the Provis- ional Committee for the Anti-Injunc- | tion conference will take place at 5/ p.m. today at 799 Broadway, Room 338, At this meeting final plans will be worked out for the conference, Students to Picket The National Stucsnts League, which is taking an active interest in the anti-injunction fgiht, is send- |ing out 50 students from Hunter, Columbia, C.C.N.Y. and N.Y.U. to} picket in front of the I. Miller Shoe | factory in Long Island City {oday at | 10 a.m. despite the injunetion issued against picketing of any nature. The students have prepared signs, |posters and banners which they will carry on the picket line, All workers are urged to attend the anti-injunction meetings to be! held today (July 27) at 43 Manhat- | tan Ave., Brooklyn, at 8 p.m., Madi- | son Square at 23rd St., Manhattan, ‘at 5 pm., Mermaid Ave. and West | 25th St. Coney Island, at 8 p. m., 18th St. and 5th Ave., Brooklyn, at 8 p.m., Steinway and Jamaica Aves., Astoria, at 8 p.m., and 1538 Madison Ave., New York, at 8.30 p.m. CITY WORKERS RESENT CUT! (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE; ‘wage-cut is spreading to all depart- ments of city employees, including the police and firemen, and is espe- cially vigorous among. the 43,000. teachers, groups of whom have al-| colleagues to resist the wage-cut, and adopt a militant program of activity at an emergency meeting of teachers to be held at the Labor Temple on 14th Street near Second Avenue on Thursday night. While no open opposition to the proposed cut is being manifested by Police and firemen, the majority of these city employees apparently are deeply resentful and maintain that they are being put on the “spot,” and that any open move on their part to fight the wage slash will re- sult in their being penalized in yari- ous ways. | The Communist Party points out | to all city employees that organized resistance to the cut will defeat it, and that the $20,000,000 that the city will “save” through the wage-cut should come out of the pockets of jthe rich in the form of inereased taxes. Fake polls on the wage-cut are be- ing held in various city departments | by Tammany Hall leaders in order to} anee around the ten per cent slash. The proposed cut will be a parti- cularly heayy blow to the 43,000 school teachers, all of whom have already been foreed to contribute four per cent of their salaries for relief to needy children. VOTE COMMUNIST FOR: 1, Unemployment and Social state and employers, In- MEET TOMORROW | ready issued a leaflét-calling on their} 1.L.D. Calls For Mass Picketing To Smash Miller Injunction NEW YORK. — The Interna~ tional Labor Defense calls upon its members to aid in the mass picketing of the I, shop in Long Island City, in or- cer to break t»ru the strike-breaking injunetions’ is by the bosses. Come to strike k er of 41st Ave. . LLC, Tuesday, July 26, at 4:30 pm, PREPARE FOR BIG AUG. 1 MEETING (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) the L.S.N.R.; Eopkir the Communist Party. (3) Seventh St, Park — Young Communist League, Pioneers, all youth organizations, youth branches of all mass organizations except unions, East Midtown Unemployed Council and Downtown Council. The megting will begin at 4 p.m. and the march: to Union Square at 4:30 p.m. Speakers: Chairman—representative of the Young Communist League, Markoff, Party candidate, a Negro youth comrade and others. (4) Madison Square—Friends. of the Soviet Union, Workers’ Interna- tional Relief, International Labor Defense, International Workers’ Or- der, Women's Council, all other mass and language organizations, Ex-Ser- vicemen’s League Post No. 1, Work- ers’ Club and Anti-Imperialist League. The meeting will begin at 3;30 p.m., the march to Union Square at 4:30 p.m. Speakers; Carl Brodsky, chairman; Carl Hacker of the Inter- national Labor Defense, Morris of the Friends of the Soviet Union, Rose Nelson of the Women's Council, Glassford of the Yorkville Unem- ployed Council, Shaefer of the In- ternational Workers’ Order. The central meeting at the Square will be held at 5 pm. There will be th ebands of the Workers’ Interna- tional Relief and the International Workers’ Club, and a bugle and drum corps of the Workers’ Ex-Service- men’s League. The meeting ‘will be followed by an open-air pageant, staggd by the Workers' Theatre ‘Groups. candidate of VOTE COMMUNIST FOR: 5, Against capitalist terror; against all forms of suppression of the political rights of workers. Against the danger of a new reb- ber war. Unite the broad masses for defense of the Soviet Union, for the defense of the Chinese People. Amusements ‘Broadway Demands 6th Week FRANK BUCK’S |-Rma ‘EM BACK ALIVE” | throw a cloak of “voluntary” accept- | PX in “WHAT PRICE HOLLYWOOD” with LOWELL SHERMAN—NEIL HAMILTON —MuUsIO— TADIUM CONCERTS PHILHARMONIC-SYMPHONY ORCH. Lewisohn Stadium, Amst. Av. & 138th ALBERT COATES, Conductor | EVERY NIGHT at 8:30 PRICES: 250, S00, $1.00 (Circle 7-7575)— 1 LIVE IN A— 2800 BRONX Tel. Estabrook 8-141 9 a.m. to Sp. Seturday Jv 9, mw, ~ FIGHT AND STRUGGLE IN THE THE GOLDENS BRIDGE Dr. ROSETSTEIN, 285 CY) | ON TO THE ARBIETER Pi0) WORKERS COOPERATIVE COLONY We have a limited number of 3 and 4 room apartments NO INVESTMENT NECESSARY — OPPGsITE BRONX PARK PARK EAST Comradely atmosphere—In this Cooperative Colony you wil) find « library, athletic director, workroom for children, workers’ clubs and various cultural activities 00; Olinville 2-6972 ‘Take Lexington Avenue train to White Plains Road and Get off Allerton Avenue m. every da: to Sp. m. Oa, m, to pm day CITY!—LIVE IN THE COUNTRY! This can be a reality if you join’ COOPERATIVE COLONY if interested, communicate with PRESS AVENUE, BRONX It will be worth your while \ LR CA RY PPE MS NIC—"OR THE BENEFIT OF —The AR Direction GERMAN COMMUNIST WEDKLY Sunday, July 31st at 11 a. m. at FINK’S PARK—814 East 225th Street, Bronx, N. Y. Programm:—Proletbuehne, Agitproptroup of the Nature Fri ¢ Lexington Express (White Plains Rd.) to 295 St., 1% Block Hast BEITER— ) Tombola, Dance ; « Miller shoe vic'>us ~d Cloakmakers Denounce Dubinsky Settlement As a Rank Sellout ' Thousands Gather af Madison Square Meet and Repudiate Wage-Cut ‘Left Wing Rank and File Group Calls for Unite ed Struggle NEW YORK, — Several thousand cloakmakers came out | yesterday at 2 p.m. to a mass meeting held at Madison Square under the auspices of the Left Wing group of the International Ladies Garment Workers Union and vigorously denounced the wage-cut agreement just concluded by the leadeurship of the i e Unon, 2 wages, The meetin was adrressed| «Now, when the conditions are be- ‘hy rank and file members of coming more unbearable, now, when \the International, including | 10.000 cloakmskers are unemployed muda bo Peek slits Gtalman, | and when the cloakmakers are ready [msaeahy oeksiitz, tala”, | to undertake a real strike for better | Swediow, Stamper, Siekowitz, Shus-| conditions, the officials of the Inter- | terman, Kremer, Landy, Leventhal, in cooperation with the ”| national : Marcus, Levy, Kauffman. | bosses have once more called in Lieu- | The following resolution was un- | tenant-Governor Lehman to help put animously adopted by the thousands lover the sell out. of workers present: | This new agreement with its fake | “We condemn the settlement cor-| limitation which is proclaimed by the | @inded by the International officie!s | International officials as a victory is with the bosses in the cloak trad-|nothing but a trick thru which to |carried thru with the assistance of; cover up the 10 per cent wage reduc- |the Tammany Lieutenant-Governor | tion, standard of production, sample | Lehman. | makers for the jobbers, etc. | “This settlement is an open be-| “It is a wage cut, speed up agree- | trayal of the interests of the cloak-|ment and we call on all cloakmakers | makers, Lieutenant-Governor Leh-|to organize their rank and defeat it. man has for the third time helped| “We further declare that the stop- the International officials and the; page which the International is pre- bosses to carry thru a settlement at paring to cell for tomorrow is nct |the expense of the conditions of the | called for the purpose of organizing |cloakmakers. In 1924 Lieutenant- | the trade or improving the conditions Governor .Lehman thru Governor |of the workers but for the sole pur- Smith’s Committee gave the bosses | pose of extorting dues and taxes from the right to the 10 per cent reorgani- | the cloakmakers. zation. In 1929 Lieutenant-Governor| “When we cloakmakers come into Lehman helped the International of-|the hatls, we must repudiate this | fieials and the bosses to carry thru | treacherous agreement, repudiate the the famous fake settlement which did | International officials, fight for the away with week work and brought | election of our own leaders, elect our sweat shop conditions and hunger!shop committees e WATCH THE ADS! REGULAR ADVERTISERS IN THE DAILY WORKER ar Press ("The Road”) Red Parkway Cafeteria Chester Oafeteria Butchers Union, Local 174 John’s Ri Linel Cafeteria Marry Co. Workers Coop Colony | Camps Unity, Kinderland, Nitgedaiget Sel’s Luneh Lerman er Santal Midy | Bros. (St: Bh Manhattan Lyceum Sollin’s Restaurant Rollin Pharmacy Gottlieb’s Hardware Messinger’s Cafeteria (80. Blvd.) :World Tourists, Inc. Golden Bridge Colony Cameo Theatre Acme Theatre Stadium Concerts y) Workmen's Sick Death Benefit Fund Bronstein's Vegetarian Restaurant Dr, Kessk Czechoslovak Workers House Avanta Farm Union Square Mimeo Supply Camp Woeolona Russian Art 51 Dr. Schwartz Cohen’s (Opticians) Dental, Dept., I.W.0. Health Center Cafeteria Wm, Bell, Optometrist i i ATIE\TION COMRADES! Health Center Cafeteria WORKERS CENTER 50 EAST 13th STREET Patronize the Health Center Cafeteria and help the Revolutionary Movement BEST FOOD REASONABLE PRICES Intern’) Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 15th FLOOR 4D Work Dane Under Persona! Care of DR. JOSEPHSON 6-534 Phone Tomkins Sq, John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with ntmosphere where al) radicals meet 302 E, 12th St. New York OPTICIANS Harry Stolper, Inc. 73-15 CHRYSTIE STREET (Third Ave. Car to Hester Street) 9 a. m, to 6 p. m, Daily Phone: Dry Dock 4-4522 Comrades—Eat at the Parkway Cafeteria 1638 PITKIN AVENUE Near Hopkinson Aye, Brooklyn, N. ¥. WILLIAM BELL OPTOMETRIST and OPTICIAN BUTCHERS’ UNION Beis ta cieagncdinie Labar Cemple, v48 East sth Street Raom 12 Special Rates to Workers and Families Servet rh annie wea. Me” TT 196 B, 14th.St, (Room 21) Borplerment Burday. anon Opposite Aytomat Tel, TOmpkins Square 6-827 DR. A. C. BREGER Surgeon Dentist Special rates to workers and families 200 E. 23d St. | 30-12-30th Aye, Cor, Thrid Ave. | Grand Ay., Cor, 24 New York City 'Av., Astoria, L. 1, & Book Store by Ruderman 29 BAST 1M4TH STREET NEW YORK Tel. Algonquin 3356-8843 We Carry a Full Line of STATIONERY AT SPECIAL PRICES for Organizations Statio Opene: 2707 WHITE PLAINS AVENUE (Near Allerton Ave. Station) 10 per cent of gross proceeds will go to the Daily Worker Raise Funds for Your Organization Through the MORNING FREIBEIT- PICNIC and CARNIVAL SATURDAY, AUGUST 6th 1932 At Ulmer Park, Brooklyn SPORTS—DANCING—ENTERTAINMENT 500 Tickets for $6,00—Order Your Tickets Now! MORNING FREIHEIT OFFICE,35 F. 12th Sti, 6th fl, i