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Co DEMAND McKEE CALL MEETING | OF ALDERMEN 5 Recaive Del of 100 Ele NEW YORK— worke: mobil all parks on the $40 a month will ed worker mitt for 75,000 A.F.L. Workers Su pports Relief March Matthew Woll’s “7-Point Plan” for Labor— a Graft Widespread in City Relief Bureau. ' 2 Employees Charge Two the of the on WHALEN oF AY. ADVERTIZ, ERS clus, on Do YOU AGREE TO THE ANTI TRUST INSTITUTE @ PR WORK @uce GRAFT FOR TRACTORS GAD F zy, \ FORCED LABOR. D0 Work Bureau ef Administra- oyees of tk ergency no revealed tha on were rampant in the distr oney, were trans- their jobs two hours de their charges. The at hundreds of ne relief administra- had been sus two-day a week ls of the bureau 0 a week, “Matthew Il and Grover Whalen, New York ex-police chie Demand “City Open Free Milk Station | Demand Relief Today for the ¥amilies of [HARLEM LEADERS Semen and Grusak SENTENCED TODAY Almost a hundred | d and undernourished militant working-c The Downtown Unemployed Coun- cil, which has been leading the dem-|\Workers, Jam Court a by 0 workers ter- | Onstratio for n’s relief on : & throushout the Bast | the East Side, will lead a a | Room in Protest nediate opening of a|tion today before the Home Relief k station in their neighbor-| Bureau on Elizabeth and Spring) ; Ew YORK—Harlem workers, Ne- The Milk Parade was under | Streets to demand food for the fam-| oro and white, are called on by the ip of the 12th and 13th | ilies of Semen and Grusak, the two tarlem Unemployed Council to be k Committees, affiliated | Workers who died as a result of in-| present at the sentencing today of with Downtown Unemployed Council. | J1res Cie ane Fst woe Eleanor Henderson and Samuel nounted and foot policemen | tending a Communist, election cam-| 2%°V™: deaclere 1 0b) she Hanes d to terrorize the children |paign meeting on the East Side. An|~ : ; started their march to the | Both workers have been held in| : open-air meeting will b2' held tonight S of two capitalist politicians to/at 15th Street and Avenue A at hen demand that they endorse the pro- | 8 o’clock by the United Front Semen- ration for imme- | jail without bail since Mond: they led’ a demon: diate relief for several starving fam- free milk station, but the TAE GAOUR DAY? | he took part in a demonstration for} YOU AGREE TO INTROOUCE — O0YOU AGREE TO BROADEN Tae BASE O 2 Taxation £ VINCREaSEO JPRICE OF iy (wage cuts aap), : STaGGeR ag ge f, propose 7-Point Plan to relieve depression.”—N EWs ITEM By Quirt Sm “row prowowcce SA You Maq aNd / - WIFE DEMANDING MILK Brotherhood Scabs Judge Trying to Send Him to Asylum | NEW YORK. — The Alteration Painters Union won two more shops this week. Both shops are in Browns- ville. The Lucas Paint shop settled with the workers and gave in to the fcviowing demands: recognition of the union, hiring through the union office, and no firing without permis- sion of the shop committee which also is recognized The shop owners had to give the five day week and eight hour day and a wage agreement amounted to 66 2-3 per cent increase. | Minkoff Real Estate Company had | to grant the same concessions as the | Lucas shop with the exception of NEW YORK.—The Tammany police courts which have already jailed two children for demanding that the city | provide them with milk, sentenced | another of the children to 10 days| in jail yesterday for “assaulting” a policeman and are trying to have the child adjudged insane because} free milk. ship for the picnic in a statement issued by the city committee of the order yesterday. Sport Events TO SUPPORT The Labor Sports Union announced that drills, soccer games, baseball jand other events are being prepared. P |The Marine Workers Industrial Union hi as been challenged to a boxing Will Make Labor Day) match by the Alteration Painters Union. A program consisting of a A Real Workers Holiday torchlight parade, mas singing, danc- NEW YORK—The Trade Union ing, movies and fireworks has been picnic at Pleasant Bay Park, Sept. 5, arranged for the evening. It was announced today that the will turn Labor Day into a real workers holiday—a day of demon- management of the Acme Theatre will present a silver cup to the union stration against unemployment and wage cuts, a day of protest against or organization selling the most tick- ets. The cup will be on display at the Workers Book Shop. All unions and organizations are urged to bring their banners and posal for a march proceeded to its destination | without disturbance, At a conference hel ouarters of the We: Covncil on Wednesday sentatives of many wor supporting essed a The children carried empty milk 1 and dozens of placards on re carried the following de- mar Free milk station to be open- | ed by the city in the neighborhood | of 12 and 13th streets; the repeal of the eviction 1 and the end of all evictions cf unemployed workers; | $10 a week cash relief for all fam- ilies of two with $3 a week addi- ional for every dependent; the open- ing of a recreation center in the neighborhood; the closing of specified streets at night to provide children in the neighborhood with playing space; Public School No. 61 to be availabl for meetings of the Block Commit tee, the lot on Ave. C and 13th St. | to be transformed from a dumping ‘ound into a playground, free towels | and soap at llth St. public bath} house; Assemblyman Neustein and Alderman Lassler to endorse change proposals. | Both Assemblyman Neustein and | Alderman Fassler refused to even see | night, | the delegation. The excuse was given resolution Acting Mavor McKee to call 2 meeting of on of Alc receive e Board September 10th te m of 100 wor will elect r for relief. tional workers’ orga ding their voices to McKee call 9 spe Board of i e ad- 2 demand that al r of the 10th the of L, Trade Union Cor employment [Insvrance. 15,000 workers in 80 A. F. of L. unio: in this city. The A. F. Unemployment a delegation of its membe with its demand for At the Confe orgenizations on Wednesday tasks in the mobilization of workers | by th polit for the Relief March were distributed. | home!” Among the organizations represented,| The workers and their children | and the tasks they have been as-|then adopted a telegram to Acting | signed are: The Spartacus Club, to| Mayor McKee demanding that he organize the workers in the 31st St-| receive the Relief Parade delegates preadline; the Yugoslavian Workers’ | sept, 10th. of L. Committee for Insurance is sending, to McKee’ Krusak Defense Relief Committee. Worker Kills Self Waiting for Relief Relief Bureau Refused Aid Repeatedly NEW YORK. — An unemployed desperation over the red tape which the city’s Home Relief Bureaus. In’ a deliberate attempt to make every request for relief from the city heart-breaking experience, the Home Relief Bureaus force every 2 numerable questions about gll sorts of irrelevant matters. When the worker returns to the Bureau with the application he is generally told These tactics are repeated again and gain, When Mrs. Schwartz, 535 Blake Avenue, Brooklyn, a mother of five children and the wife of an unem- Jilies at the Home Relief Bureau on E, 125th Stree. Henderson was arrested for coming to the aid of Brown, a Negro workers, |when a policeman began to club him | with an iron bar in the hallway of |the Relief Bureau. After the cop jhad struck Brown over the head, with the iron bar several times, Hen- |derson, who weighs 85 pounds, grasp- ed the bar and saved the Negro work- jer from serious injury or death. Both workers have been found guilty of | “assaulting” the cop by a Tammany |worker killed himself yesterday in| judge. |. The |Harlem Unemployed {Council | surrounds the giving out of relief by |S conducting a stubborn fight to |force the Relief Bureau to provide | relief to all the starving workers in Harlem, regardless of color or |nationality, and it was at one of these strugles for relief that Henderson and Brown were arrested. Because of their militancy, it is the | worker requesting aid to fill out in-jexpected that the Tammany judge will try to railroad them to a stiff sentence today. Demonstrate at the court today in masses from 9 am. on! Force the court to release these that “they were not at| that his answers are not clear and| fighters for relief for the starving |that he must refill the application. | unemployed! “THE LASH OF THE CZAR” AND PICTURES OF MINERS STRIKE AT ACME THEATRE Biginning today, the Acme Theatre, Nathan Greenberg, the 15-year old boy who was sentenced to be ex- amined for his “sanity,” was one of several hundred children who dem- onstrated on Monday before the Home Rélief Bureau at Elizabeth and Spring Streets. At the trial of the children on Tuesday, several of their {parents who demanded that they be permit- ted to listen to the proceedings were viciously beaten by the police and a h alfdozen workers were sentenced to the workhouse for supporting their demand. The two children who were jailed on Tuesday, Helen Marinich, 13, and Sophie Jacobs, 14, will be sentenced at Children’s Court on 22nd St. this morning, All workers are called on t appear at the court to demand their release and to protest at the bestial attempts of the Tammany courts to have a child sent to an insane asylum because he demanded that the city provide him and other workers‘ children with free milk. Irish Workers Protest Ban on Mrs. Wright NEW YORK.—A meeting of the Irish Workers Club adopted a: reso- lution of protest and sent it to Eamon the terror of the bosses, a day of solidarity of all workers, Negro and white, in support of Foster and Ford, the workers’ candidates, and the elec- tion program of the Communist Party. The picnic will also be a point of mobilization for the workers from the trade unions to support the New York Relief Parade, which will take place Sept. 10. All the local branches of the In- wages which in this case amounted to a 15 per cent increase. Again the Brotherhood is scabbing jon the Alteration Union District | Council 9 leaders aided Lubinsky of | Brownsville in locking out his work- ers Friday and sent scabs with a boss | painter, J. Epstein, to the shop job |at 446 Kingston Ave, The four scabs are protected by dicks and uniformed cops and the gangster official of the Brownsville local, “Jake the Bum,” is slogans to the grounds. Committees elected to work on the grounds must be at the park at 9 a.m. and report to Comrade Nemser- STEEL UNION DANCE OCT. 1 A banquet and dance celebrating the formation of the Steel and Metal Workers Industrial Union will be held Saturday, Oct. 1. The New York local of the S. & M. W. I- U. asks all down there with a crew of his thugs| ternational Workers Order were |working class organizations not to trying to intimidate the pickets. urged to rally their entire member- arrange any affairs on this date ——e ATLEYTION COMRADES! Health Center Cafeteria WORKEKS CENTER BLUM RETURNS AS UNION ORGANIZER Force Parole Bédard Revoke Decision NEW YORK.—A huge mass protest against a decision of the New York Parole Board which denied Leon Blum the right to serve as orgnizer | for the Laundry Workers Union caused the decision to be revoked | yesterday. Laundry workers present at a membership held last night received |the report announcing the return of | Blum to the union with great en- 50 EAST 18th STREET Patronize the Health Center Cafeteria and help the Revolutionary Movement REASONABLE PRICES BEST FOOD MANHATTAN OPTICAL CoO. EYES EXAMINED BY REGISTERED OPTOMETRISTS White Gold Frames. Intern’! Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 15th FLOOR AU Work Done Under Personal Care of DR. JOSEPHSON EAT AT THE ROYAL CAFETERIA 827 BROADWAY Between 12th & 18th Sts.) Royal Dishes for the Proletariat OUR WORKERS MEMBERS OF F.W.LU. Club, to organize the workers in the | Catholic Church breadline on 23rd St.; the 36th St. Block Committee, | to organize the workers in the 38th | St. breadline; the 53rd St Block | Committee, to organize the workers | who sleep in Central Park. NEW YORK.—Leading candidates of the Communist Party will address six central election campaign demonstrations of work- ers in the various sections of the city Friday night. Three demonstrations will be aeld Saturday night. The speakers sched- | uled to appear at the Friday demonstrations | are Israel Amter, of New York; Henry 8 Lieutenant-Govern stone, candidate Bmanuel Levin, Congressional District; G candidate for Chief Judge of Appeals; Carl Brodsky, candidate from the 23rd Congressional ict AMTER Israel Amter, who last week returned from his second up-state campaign tour of 1 and agricultural centers, will 3 the workers in Yonkers. SHEPARD AND BRODSKY Shepard and {Brodsky will speak at the central demonstration in the Lower Bronx, | to be held at Longwood and Prospect | Avenues. | WEINSTONE ‘Weinstone, who, besides being the candi- date for the U. 8. Senate, is editor of the Daily Worker, will speak to the workers of | Brownsville at the Workers Center, 1813 Pitkin Avenue. This will be Weinstone’s Inst appearance at a central demonstration before his departure for an up-state cam- paign tour, scheduled to begin on Sept. 8. POWERS . George E. Powers will speak at the Cen-| tral demonstration in Harlem,” at 135th Street and Seventh Avenue. All meetings held by the Communist election candidates on Seventh Avenue have hitherto been | broken up by the Tammany police, who| have an agreement with the Socialist Party | to drive all Communists off that avenue. As 2 result of the militancy of the workers when the police broke up the last two Friday night meetings on Seventh Avenue, the police have been forced to issue a permit for this meeting. LEVIN Emanuel Levin will speak at the Williams-| burgh central demonstration, which will be held at Grand Street Extension and Have- meyer Avenue. Numerous preliminary rallies have been arranged to precede the central demonstra- tions. From these the work iit march | to the central rallying points for the main | meeting of the evening. SATURDAY'S RALLIES Israel Amter, candidate for Governor of | New York, will speak at Saturday's central election campaign demonstration on Tenth | Street and Second Avenue, Manhattan. | Also on the platform with’ him will be Abraham Markoff, candidate from the 14th Congressional District, and Helen Lynch, candidate from the &th Assembly District, Henry Stepard will be the main speaker | at the Upper Bronx central demonstration, 174th Street and Vyse Avenue. Moissaye Olgin, candidate from the 24th Congres- sional District, will also address the meet- ing. | Carl Brodsky, candidate from the 23rd | Congressional District, and Helen Allison, | from the 14th Assembly District, will speak at Ninth Avenue and West 83rd Street, at | the central demonstration of the workers | of Upper Manhattan. CITY ELECTION the Labor Union Meetings Painters | Locals of the Alteration Painters Union will hold thetr regular membership meetings & sfollows: Local 1, Bronx, 1130 Southern Blvd., Mon- day, 8 p.m. Local 2, Brownsville, 1440 East New York Ave. Thusrday, 8 p.m. Local 3, Williamsburgs, 11 Graham’ Ave., Wednesday, 8 p.m. Local 4, Downtown. 44 & 7th Bt., | 2c for children. | are invited to participate. | ployed worker, filled out th vg |14th St. and Union Square, has application, she was told that she [booked two features—"The Brothers would have to correct several *raige | Seramaeoy and) “Whe. Teen Oe Ae | |akes” she made in. answering the |O28%,” and will present both films | | What’s On— questions. She made im | for four days. “The Lash of The corrections and then igtaan a Czar,” a eripping drama of old Rus- the Bureau. Meanwhile, she and her |‘! 18 adopted from Leonid Andrey- family were completely without food.|°V'S,“‘The Governor.” The film was produced by Mejrappmfilm of Mos- When the Home Relief Bureau |cow and has a brilliant cast headed | again informed Mrs. Schwartz that|by Anna Stenn, Meyerhold, Kachaloy ‘The Taxi Workers Union will meet at its|D@? application was faulty, her hus-/and Chuvelev. “The Brothers Kara- new headquarters at 80 East 11th Street | aNd killed himself with the State-|mazov,” based on Dostoyevsky's great eee pei eee Sauapkivet ene that they would all starve|drama is headed by Anna Stenn and is ae as es We ey would be given any food|Fritz Kortner in the leading roles, a e Bureau and that to prolong|The same program will have as an le suffering was futile. added feature Intimate Scenes of the The Brownsville Unemployed Coun-|Miners Strike in Illinois and the cil is organizing the workers in the| atest picture of the Farmers Holiday vicinity for a mass demonstration in|in_the West. front of the Home Relief Bureau in| This is the last two days of “Clown Precinct 75 to protest at what | George” the Soviet Film at the Acme. amounts to the murder of Schwartz|Ten per cent of the gross receipts z Wome jand to demand that his family be|for the two days including Saturday ermal a caveat, Osaay Islands: 461 susbiled : with dainiediate relief, |midnight performance, will be con- Political Situation in Germany.” Comrade | tributed by the Acme to the Daily Doonping will speak. All workers of omer! Affair Saturday for Worker Fund. — he I. W. O. will install Branch 3, of the children’s section in the Bronx at 3882 Third Avenue. Admission 5c for adults, ea i The Ridgewood Branch, J. L. D., will have an important meeting at Queens Labor Lyceum, Room 16, on Putnam and Forest Avenue, Brooklyn. A W. I. R. chorus rehearsal will take| place at 18 West 2ist Street at 8 p.m... All| Council No. 5 of the United Council of ing-Class Women will hold a lecture Island are invited. A regular meeting of the John Reed club| A j i “SN ‘a ’ wi ‘Srna? uae “auscets, at gue Aid to Schnapp Family | “sswrer" stconn weex ar rooms, 63 West 15th Street, at 8 o'clock, cee tes NEW YORK-—A concert and dance} “Sniper,” Soviet Russia’s motion F. S. U. Anti-War Meetings Waterfront (at noon) open air, South Street and Maiden Lane, Wilson; Mosholu Park, open air 204th Street and Perry, speaker, §, Rice; West Bronx, open air, 187th Street and Gerard, speaker, Leroy; Karl Marx, open air, 158th Street and Broadway, ‘speaker, Dichter; Downtown, is being arranged by the South Brook§n section of the Interna- tional Labor Defense for the benefit| week. The story and direction of of the family of Comrade Schnapp,|“‘Sniper” is credited to S. Timosh- leader of the unemployed who was|enko and the potography is be V. sentenced to 20 days for leading a/Konashevsky. The leading roles are \ccture, 216 East 14th Street, speaker, A. @.| demonstration in front of the Home | played by Boris Shlikhting and Peter Morris, subject “‘Life in the Red Army.” |Relief Bureau for food for starving |Sobolevski. Titles are in English. Al students of Section week-end schoote | WOPKErS. The? Daily Worker in its review i meet at 8 p.m. at 35 East 12th Street.| The dance will be held on Satur-|says: “The picture is clear on the on day, Sept. 3, at 1373-43rd St., Brook-|horror of war, but it is not a pacifist lyn. The proceeds will go tojpicture. It's lesson is ‘Turn the im- Schnapp's family. All workers are/perialist war into a civil war against urged to attend. ‘capitalism,’ ” picture of the World War, remains at the Cameo Theatre for a second ohn es | Comrade Jerome will speak on the situa- tion in Germany at the Harlem Progressive Youth Club, 1538 Madison Avenue, at 8:30 p.m. Comrade Anna Lyons will speak at the Bath Beach Workers Club, 2273 Bath Ave- nue, at 9 p.m. The following open-air anti-war meetings [under the auspices of the F. 8. U. will be eld: Mosholu Park, 204th Street and Perry Avenue; speaker, S. Rice. West Bronx, 167th Street and Gerard Avenue; speaker, 8. Leroy. | Marx Branch, 158th Street and 3 speaker, Dichter. What Are the Communist Party and Workers’ Organizations Doing to Save the “Daily Worker”? 1. September 2, Friday, Branch 64 of the I.W.O. A party in the headquarters, 371 Saratoga Ave., Brooklyn, All proceeds for the Waterfront, noon, South Street -and free. Maiden Lane; speaker, Joe Wilson. Dally Worker. Admission free. Downtown, lecture, 216 East i4th Street; | speaker, A. G. Morris; subject, “Wile in the Sept. 3, Bath Beach Workers Club, 2709 Mermaid Ave., Concert Red army.” i at 8:30 p. m SATURDAY— Sept. 3, Saturday, at Camp Croton Ave., Peekskille, N.Y., at 8 p.m. Papa ashen St recach ulidtan Oe 4 All’proceeds will go for the Daily Worker and the Freiheit. the Williamsburg Workers Club at 43 Man- hattan Avenue, Brooklyn, at 8:30 p.m. Ad- misison 25c. 10 PER CENT OF THE ENTIRE PROCEEDS OF THE ACME THEATRE 14th Street and Union Square . During the Week of Aug. 29th to Sept. 4th Inclusive WILL BE CONTRIBUTED TO THE DAILY @ WORKER WORKERS: HELP YOUR OWN FIGHTING PAPER! Monday, 8 p.m ’ for the Scottsboro boys. The resolu- tion denounced DeValera as acting in the interests of American and British imperialism, workers in the Laundry Workers Union, The Trade Unity Council and the International Labor Defense for one great protest. AMUSEMENTS “The picture is clear on the horror of war, but it is not, just a pacifist picture. It’s lesson is “Turn the imperial- ist war into clvil war against capitalism.”—Daily Worker. Based on ee “Turn Imperialist War Into Civil War” AMERICAN PREMIERE — NEW SOVIET TALKIE "SNIPER WITH ENGLISH TITLES MOSCOW NEWS SAYS:—The film is well directed; one feels the influence of Einstein in Timoshenko's work—his mastery in handling the camera. The photography, as in all Soviet pictures, by far excels the best productions of Hollywood. Much improvement is also noted in the sound technique of the picture; many of the flaws of the earlier Soviet “talkies” have been eliminated mC OMee a en laderd 2 5 c ND BIG ‘co CAMEO 422” s* hone WEEK LAST DAY! CLOWN GEORGE Also: Farmers’ Strike-Daily Worker Picnic Worxers Acme Theatre 1dth Street and Union Square 2ND WEEK! —_ Fannie Hurst's “BACK STREET” IRENE DUNN—JOHN BOLES Daily to 2 p.m. 35c— 11 p.m. to close 35¢ GREATEST OPPORTUNITY FOK WORKERS’ VACATION 15 NOW BEING OFFERED BY OUR TWO COOPERATIVE CAMPS Nitgedaiget na Unity This is a Proletarian Plan to serve you. $12 a Week (Organization Tax 5(c) Week-end Rates: 1 Day $2.25; 2 Days $4.25; 3 Days $6.25 WEEK-END ORGANIZATION TAX 10c PER DAY Bunks for Home Cooking in Nitgedaiget Are All Rented and Profits of both Restaurants go to Communist and Morning Fretheit. “4 : USUAL CULTURAL AND SPORTS ACTIVITY “ravel By Our Own Cabs Direct to the Camps. Our Cabs Have Special Signs On Them Friday, Saturday, Dailies, Daily Worker cape Autos for both camps at 143 E. 1031 at 10 at 2:30 and 7pm. Phone: SPECIAL BUSSES WILL LEAVE ALL DAY SATURDAY St. Dail; ‘high DeValera, Irish President, demanding | thusiasm. freedom of entry to Mrs. Ada Wright} The victory was accomplished |~ and J. Louis Engdahl, touring Europe|through the mobilization of the CAMP WOCOLONA MONROE, N. Y, ERIE B.R. Make Reservations for Labor Day Lodging $3 for Week-end “| —Deposit required for blankets— TO RENT—4 provements—S: Brooklyn. App! WANTED—Double room, preferably Union | Square, reasonable rent, Miss Y., care Daily Worker. WORKERS PATRONIZE COHEN’S DINING ROOM GRILL AND BAR 129 University Pl. Near Mth St. For Lowest Travel Cost Go BY Private Auto TO ANY POINT IN U. S. A. OR SHARE EXPENSE PLAN You Can Go Direct from New York to 2.95 5 Brooklyn CHICAGO for. CLEVELAND DETROIT ST. LOUIS ‘a Special Rates for Groups Representatives in Chicago, Detroit and other points can back at correspondingly low Auto Travel Bureau, Inc. 11 WEST 42ND STREET PENN. 6-3552 Special Reduction of 5% With This Ad 10.50 14.50 of Six Cleveland, bring you rates. Wiener’s Barber Shop 115 Brighton Beach Avenue Near Ocean Parkway BRIGHTON BEACH 10 Per cent of gross income to The Daily Worker Concert and Dance GIVEN BY THE BATH BEACH WORKERS CLUB For the Benefit of The DAILY WORKER Coney Island Workers Center 2109 Mormaid Ave. Coney Island Bronx GREETINGS! WORKERS! Lorber’s Bakery - Lunch 691 Allerton Ave. Bronx, N. Y. We are now ready to serve the proletarians of East Bronx with higher quality goods and better service. FIVE PER CENT PROCEEDS TO DAILY WORKER ON LABOR DAY y only F.W.L.U. members Saturday, Sept. 3rd 8:30 P.M. Admission 25¢ in Adv.—35c at Door Workers, Help Us Make This Bazaar a Success! SIXTH ANNUAL “DAILY WORKER” “MORNING FREIHEIT” , “YOUNG WORKER” JAZAAR MADISON SQUARE GARDEN, N. Y. * Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday and Monday BAZAAR HEADQUARTERS For any information call EStabrook 8-1400 50 E. 13th St., New York (6th floor)