The Daily Worker Newspaper, April 28, 1933, Page 3

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PITRE TEEN RATIO vet sER, NEW YORK, FRID/ Y, APRIL 28, 1938 Page Three Demand Increased Wages and Relief to Meet Inflation Prices! Demonstrate on May First Against the High Cost of Living! DEMAND POLICE DO NOT SENATE VOTES WHITEWASH BACKERS. SILVER COINAGE BLACK BILL FOUGHT BY PAINTERS GERBER INSISTS Wave of Tammany Terror UNION; DEMANDS WAGE INCREASE POLICE CLEAR Hits Scottsboro Meets st 9 Workers in Harlem;Will Be Answered by Meeting at Harlem Office Tonite NEW YORK.—Answer to 4 wave of Tammany police terror and arrests di- rected toward strangling the mass in- dignation of Hatlem against the Scottsboro lynch verdict and toward rippling the Scottsboro march on Means of Debasing Harriman of U. 8. Chamber of Commer¢e in UNION SQUARE Arre the Currency Still More| Agreement With Green and Woll for Bill | pte | (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) WASHINGTON, April 27.— The) wasHIN@Ton, D. C., April 27—) urged the adoption of thé 30-hour bill | ’ i art Serlate voted its approval today of | Resentment against the ‘Black 30-hr.| to make this plan nation-wide. He | if they Severin Natee Sue the Wheeler-King amendment au-) pil] which legalises the stagger plan stated over 5 million workers would| in order to allow time for clearing thorizing the President to issue sil-/ and sweatshop Wages was expressed be put to work although even employ-|the square. Gerber declared, “L ver coinage at a fixed ratio to gold.| test night at a theeting of Painters’|ers generally admit that the 6shour| wouldnt like to march into’ the The ratio has not been determined. | tocal 499 when the thion went on| day will fot increase employment | 3° le ns GRNWAT CEL bea ad 4 An amendment was also intto- record demanding that the A. F. of | materially in t% foe of declining| tay were, ‘Th will be tence coy 10 | een wall be made in an open duced to increase the amount of sil-|L. immediately initiate a strugile for | production ahd speed-up methods to|*eady there. Tt will be necessary to | air mass mecting before the Santa ver the government may feceive/ shorter houts and increased wages to| force the workets to produce the/ MAKe Toom for the other masch com- |ator” office, 2149 Seventh Ave., tonight from foreign powers in payment for) meet higher inflation prices and in-|sanie ainount in a shotter period, | "8 in,” thus insisting that the police | The demonstration will start with war debts from $100,000.00 to) structing the District Council to take] Green also urged an amendment| “tive out the workers after the So- | $39,000,000. ‘This silver can be tsed,| similar action, |to bar foreign goods tinless produced | *ilist meeting. Winter declared that OF RAID ON N. T. W. LU. Letter from the Union to Police and Governor Points to Preparations Made by the Bosses and AFL for Raid NEW YORK.—The Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union has sent | the following letter to police commissioner Bolan, Govefnor Lehman and N. ¥. District Attorney Thomas C. T. Crain yesterday demanding that there | be no whitewashing of tfo charges against the perpetrators, the A. ¥, of L. officials and boss grows, uf the gangster raid on the Union headquarters, April 24. | street corner meetings at busy initer- sections of Harlem. The corner groups will then be led in bodies to the “Liberator” office. This action follows the arrest late Wednesday of 9 Negro and white workers, mén and women, when police attacked an open air meeting before 458 Lenox Avenue. A policeman who tried to disrup’ & Scottsboro meetinig by shouting ahd shouldering his Way toughly through the workefs, was resisted when the [ eee the innoeeht workers of the indus- “Tt has undoubtedty come to-your attention through official channels and daily néwapapers of the out- rageous and criminal attack upoh innocent workers in a raid upon our try and constitutes a consiracy to Jexculpate the gangsters and those who hired them despite the outrage- | lous ofime that they perpetrated. “This criminal atack upon our or- | according to the ametidment, as Hearings on the Black 30-hour bill| under similar conditions. ‘This | the United Front May Day Commit- backing for the issuance of new pa-| with amendments providing for the| amendment is in the interests of the| tee would be glad to accept positions per currency. “Not Inflationary Enough.” During the course of the debate on the Thomas amendment which jestablishment of minimum wage| American industrialists who want to boards and for so-called contfolled| raise higher tariff barriers. production are now being held in} Harriman Joins With Green, | Washington before the House Labor) WH. I. Harriman, President of the on the outskitts of any group of | Workers @athered in the Square and | Would object to any effort to clear | them out. ‘NEGRO TENANTS NOT ON STRIKE Workers came to the defense of the speakers. They forced him to return @ gun which he had drawn to his pocket He then summoned @ radio car of ' union headquarters at 131 West 26th | : i! | ; eae, | police, who dispersed the crowd and i 7 ry ganization is part of a general plan | provides for an elaborate inflationary | Committee. U. 8. Chamber of Commerce, agreed! arlier in the conference, the So- BUT PREPARE 1 i te estado oe, Wena ae | fo extend and implant within the | machinery, Senator Borah declared wp Wiliam teen, peesident of the A with Green Aang Woll, in tavoring| clits had inestea thet, the United eta w hens Redes Nighi Onis 4 5 $4 " herd " il was| FP. 7 -| the 30- e| Front pata re-rotiter tous , ° 5 children gather dally in these head- | Me fadamaellag ithe Bay erty ba InTIAnahary ENOMIEE.” “as a mat-| tee yesterday endorsed the bill and| bill but oppoted the plan for govern: | Madison Sjcnes io, ASAE TW, should NEW YORK—The Daily Worker | h® 54th Street Station the nine ar- i quarters. alent in some of the other branches | ter of fact, the Thomas ainendment | Proposed some amendments. Among! ment control. |not pass the workers in thé Socialist | was misinformed as to the situation tested workers were released under E “This attack was perpetrated bY | G+ the industry. It is because of | and the recetit Emergency Bank Act|the most important of these to the! In a speech before the committee | meeting with its rousing call for re-|in the Hampton Model (gim-orow) | fe Custody of the International La- E gangsters and hifelings of the wn- | ih refusal of our Orgatiization te |machinery prvide for an unlimited | Working class is an amendment that | today Woll opposed the amended) maining in the Square to join in &|Apartnente, 210-1418 West 63d St. hor Defense lawyer fot trial May 6 derworld in the pay Of Oréaniza- | “(vies to the will of the racketeers | inflation of the currency. | workers should not be denied the! Black bill on the grounds that it was| united dethonstration, This was re-|,.- terday’s fs We ate orinting They are: Charles Alexander, or- ie tions whose names we have already tnat thiy attack was made. We The Thomas amendment provides| Tight to “Belong to bona fide labor| a step toward sodializing industry and| ¢.1304 by the United Front Commit- lee pbecaiiive di rere tenth ah rid Botan: ee the pen elie Party in : disclosed to the iigeoettne There | have furnished proof that the same | for the issuance of three billion dol-| Saliaseige sDAMEAIING rears Mees (iereba to the interests of the em-| tee and the police were forced to termined by our reporter yesterday. ienn sd Gonsate af hg ae taht vocation en- , CS f vers, : 5 i ; vs ploye ; » Jackson, : see checoattine seed with guns, | CRBOVerY and racketeering Oreat te overnment bonnie ana vey gov. | BY this means to wedge into the bill| He declared the bill would deny |*8™e tO @ Teviewing stand being! “There is a committee of six, two /Sara Rice, Osais Dias, C. Lalinde; k knives, bludgeons afd lead pipes | izations that were responsible for eat eine veat it provides forthe | ®, Provision to outlaw all working | the workers the right to strike. The| Avenue at 16th Btreet, where the en- |TOm each of the houses at the above | Henry Winston, and another worker 2 and immediately assaulted and at- | gia Dombine and Killing of Natale | oe rnsion of bank crediy by another |cl@es Of@snizations which do hot | championship of Woll of the right to| Avenue st 6th Street. whete the en- |address, clected by 87 families. ‘There | Whose name is not known & tacked innocent workers, metnbers | Bellero and Morris Langer are hg cones ith ae be th y urchase |Pave the official approval of the| strike can only be looked upon as bell on ta gay hip UH “aps aay Te is not a strike at present but the| ‘This is the fourth attempt of Tam- i Of ot organiention, and destroyea | Teeponslble for the criminal raid | Ouce by the Peasral ‘teers banks | StTike-breaking leadership of the A.| another demagogic maneuver since | “GY Om MS Way Claesens offered ‘ag (Committee has sent ita demands to) many police within ten days to stop ; property within thelr readh, Vie-| wpon the union last Monday, Since jbonds by the Federal Reserve banks |p, of 1, Woll has been a notoriously ac- TO fOr his incistooce ae a |the City and Suburban Homes Co. of | mass meetings and Scottsboro protesi ; tims, all ola tinemiployed workers, | ‘lt tald farther crlenl.:\ threats (in the open eng torte 4 puted) Green deplored the fact that the| tive agent of the bosses in breaking tae Te after ROTO eee ene (878 Madison Ave, a Rovkeféller jin Harlem. ‘The last attempt was th j ne ted cid manaded in the hos, | %@, shoot and bomb have i re- provision gives the President power to | spread the work” movement, as a| strikes and in preventing ctruggle balf hour after adjoumment of Bik /ageney and many tenants are with-| arrest of Cyril Briggs, editor of th 4 Te maimed ane yor * One man | ceived by the officers of the unin. | Teduce the gold content of the dollat.' voluntary scheme attempted by sev-|by the most treacherous class colla-| Meeting before allowing the United \holdirg their weekly payments. “Liberator”, when a megaphone Wa: p pitals of New York an ar | “We demand the right to present | It 1s a certainty that the Thomas / eral employers has been a failure and’ boration policies. Front meeting to enter, that this | used for an open air meeting befor é was fatally shot as 4 festiit Of THIS without obstruction and interfer- | Amendment will be passed in & day time was “necessary in order to dis- | Outrageous Rents the “Liberator” office & bfutal attack. | nee all the évidence and testimony | or two at the latest. oe mantle platform, loudspeakers, étc.”| The demands ate for monthly | Criminal Records “Several gangsters, Whose finger- print records disclose théif past ctiminal performances, weré arrest- ed and charged With Homidide, fel- onidus assault, Malicious mischief and a violation of Section 1897 of the Penal Law for thé posséssiof of dangerous wéapéns. The mat- te= is now in the Hands of the dis- trict attorney and withesses have already given testimony and prep- aration is made to present the mat- ter before the Grand Jury on this cotning Monday. 1 the mornitig of the same day, Apfil 24th, 1933, there appeared an article in the publication known as the “Woinen’s Wear Dally” in which Officials of the American Federation of Later stated that a aitipaigii was to commence that méfiing (Aptil 4th, 1933) and that We have to prove that this criminal | | RttAek Was made as part of a cee | | spitacy to establish racketeering in | the industry, as an attempt on the | | part of a group of employers to- | gether with certain officials of the | | Atneri¢an Federation of Labor and | | & goUp Of racketeers to destroy | the union and to frustrate the ef- | | forts of the workers to better their | liviig and working conditions. We | protest against the authorities in an any Way countenancing ap- | proaches to prevent @ full and com- | | plete disclosure of this situation and | | condition.” | Needie Trades Workers Industrial | ‘Union, (Sigted) BEN GOLD, National Secretary. IRVING POTASH, New York Secretary. The avowed purpose of the Roose- velt inflationary program is to raise prices. This will mean an inctease in the cost of living. NEW YORK—The latest issue of the HARLEM LIBERATOR is off the press. All otganizations and sections are urged to call im- mediately for copies at the Libera- tor offices, 2149 Seventh Avenue (near 127th Street), Sd JOBLESS AIM TO OUST RELIEF HEAD NEW YORK.—Mr. Mellon, a su- | Pervisor’ who was drivett out by work- ers from the Coney Island Home Re- | lief Buteau for his brutal treatment of the Unemployed has settled at the Boro Park Home Relief Bureau and Brickla yers Fight — O'Brien indicated that he understood | instead of weekly rent payments and the United Front Committee had of+}a reduction of the monthly rate. fered to use these jointly with the | Rents are around $4.65 at present for Socialist Party and no dismantling | two rooms, $6.50 for three rooms and A. F. L. Officials Racket on P.O. Job Contractor Forces Workers to Return $8.20 a Day on Threat of Loss of Jobs, Cuts Workers’ Pay to $5 NEW YORK.—Another instance of racketeering at the expense of thé | workers in the A. F. of L. unions was exposed last Tuesday night when would be needed. . | | Final Mobilization Points and Rottes | For May Day | UPTOWN DIVISION — Mobilire | 11 am. at 38th and 39th Streets | between 6th and 4th Avenues. Match | west on 39th Street to 7th Avenue down to 27th Street, west to 13th Avenue, south on the waterfront to lth Street, east to 4th Avenue, | porth past reviewing stand at 15th | Street into Union Square, | DOWNTOWN DIVISION—Mobil- ive at 11 a.m. on South Street, from Whitehall to Fulton. March north on Whitehall to Broadway, to Worth Street, west to Chatham Square to Oliver, to Henry, to Jefferson, to \ing immediate repairs. } “Model Apartments” The apartinents, which afe called colored families” have no electricity or baths. There ave common baths in the hall. The tehahts must pay for the installation of a gas stove and are charged 15c to 20c weekly for this a& long as they live there. The com- | | | “model apatiinents for respectable \ | | |. The office of the National Séotts- | bofo Action Committee af 119 W. / 188th Street was visited Wednesday b: & cop who wanted to know if the eém- mittee had a permit from the wel- jover $8.50 for four rooms per Week. | fare department to collect funds. The | Repairs have not been made in many |¢op said he was sent by Mr. Davis | cases and the tenants are demand-| owner of the Amsterdam News. | At the office of the Hatlem Liber- ator, 2149-7th Ave. wotkers rescued a leaflet distributor froin @ sanitation department officer who brought him | to the office to read the “law against | littering the streets” and to try to | frighten the workers from distribut- | ing leaflets by arresting this worker There will be a torch-light parade Saturday night starting from the “Liberator” office to mobilize Harlem |mittee demands itiproved conditions | workers for the May Day dethonstra- in the apartments. tion in Union Square. DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY tenants to any consideration for pay- | ing sich oliffageous rates, the letter | States. that in individual cases, the | “sivsnuctis persuasion” ‘vould be & oo ODES eer are = {2 i | two rank and file members of Bricklayers Loval 9 presented affidavits at | Fast Broadway, to Canal Street, = 4 hen | ¥ Wohi is niirietins ‘a ~ = ds continuing his same ‘btutal prac- " 5 if ” jowner would be willing to tent them wed. sllowing th ws auted ial Government Returns ,cupune 2 ee fl Prac-| a inion membership meeting to prove that they ate forced to return to the west to Allen, north to Houston, lapartments in his 68nd St. apart: | 107 Bristol Street t hs same 2 ni | contractor a major part of their union wages daily. west to Second Avenue, north t0 | onts which adjourn the 6%fd St., outrageous and this briiial. eFiminal, a $50n infocent n called to ous at- tention titat so-called legal repre- and éthes alleged rep- resentatives of the American Fed- éfation of Labor have alfeady com- muhicated with the assistant dis- tricé attornies in charge of the case, in an effort to shift fesponsibility. ‘The Guilty Ones “This is an attempt to cover up the obvious connection between the attack upon our organization and the previous threats and statements of representatives of the American Federation of Labor and certain employers’ groups. This is an at~ tempt to turn the situation against Entertainment and Dance In Support of the DAILY WORKER JIM PHILLIPS=Well-Rao®a Baritone Saturday, April 29th, 8 P. M.| given by UNIT 15, SECTION 2, COMMUNIST PARTY and the ROUMANIAN WORKEAS OLUB At the Crecho-Slovak Workers Home $47 B. tend Séreet Admission 33 Osiits Income Taxes to. Many Rich Estates WASHINGTON, April 27.—The | || Bureau of Internal Revenue an-— | Hounced today that it returned the following amounts collected as in- (come taxes; $78,127 to the estate| (of Walter Long; $50,970 to the | | estate of Henry Herman, both of | | | New York, aitd $37,600 to the estate | | of Robert Jackson of Long teland. ‘Wage Cutters Want | Inflated Currency to Increase Profits |, A questionnaire sent to over 150 jleading American capitalists by the! Natiohal Industrial Conference Board | indicates that more than 54 per cent) of them are in favor of inflation and | devaluating the dollar. These men, who are interested in| making more profits at the expense) of the working class, are naturally) interested in lowering the purchasing | power of the dollar through inflation. | | Among those who answered the ques- | tionnaire are such notorious exploit-| érs of labor as George Housten, Presi- | ponsible with the city for the death Of the Veseia baby from starvation. Aroused the unemployed of Boro| Park, led by the Boro Park Unem- ployed Council is determined to fol- low the example of the Coney Island | workers and drive this tyranical re- presentative of Tammany Hall out of office and to demand immediate re- | lief without red tape and an end to forced labor recruitment to Roose- yelts re-forestation camps. They will| demonstrate for these demands Fri- | day, April 28, 9.30 a. m. in front of the bureau, ANTLFASCIST. PROTEST TONIGHT AT TOWN HALL NEW YORK—Oné of the first ac- tions of the Anti-Fascist Action Com- mittee, elected last Sunday by the anti-fascist conference of Geétman- American workers’ organizations at | which 106,000 German-speaking workers in fraternal, cultural, sports organizations as well as the German they are employed on a government post office job in Jamaica, L. I. for Dave Slote who holds the contract for the gvernment job. Slote is signed up with the union and according to the terms of agreement he is sup- posed to pay the existing union scale | of $13.20 4 day. Since neither the gov- jerfment nor the contractor intend to pay such & wage the contractor has |forced the workers to return $8.20 a |day to him or forefeit their jobs. In other words the workers are being | forced to work for $5 a day. What the | Pake-off is to the officials for cover- (ing up this violation of the union agreement is not yet known, Following this report the union membership voted to refer the ques- tions to the District Executive Com- mittee of the Bricklayers Union de- manding immediate action. Since tc similar Cases of this kind have been | repeatedly buried by the officials, the membership decided to make photo- | stated copies of the affidavits preé- | sented by the workers and to carty }on a stfuggle to expose the vicious | practices of protecting thé bosses in| their policy of fleecing the workets. | Attempts at bribery and threats of | violence against the workers who are | exposing the racketering have alfeady | been made. The local union mem- | bership Voted to notify Slote that he/| will be held responsible for any in-| jury to these or other members of the | |local. The rank and file opposition is | |fallying the membership to a sharp fight against the bosses and the racketeering officials, They are con- | solidating their strength to organize | strikes on the job to maintain the existing union wage scale. { New York Trade Union New WORKERS BEAT GANGSTERS WHO S| The two rank and filers, Samuel Belizzi and Isidor Glick reported that 14th Street, West to 4th Avenue, seman adie ee | north past the reviewing stand at 15th Sreet into Union Square, WHAT’S ON Friday { (Manhattan) SYMPOBIUM—''The Role of Literature in| Phil | the World Revoltition”—Moe Bragin, Bahy, Nathan Adler and Alfred Mars of the Revolutionary Writers Federation, at 129 and Ave. Auspicés: Ameri¢an Youth Federation, 8:30 p. tm. Admission 15¢ } REHEARGAL FOR MAY DAY Danct Pag. | éant at Manhattan Lycetim, 66 B. 4th St, at | 6 p.m. sharp. Workers Dance League. | REGULAR MEMBERSHIP MEETING of | ‘Tom Mooney Braich 1. &. D., 8 p. m., at 618 Broadway. All weleome, } TO THOSE INTERESTED th Singing, foln | the classes in sight-singing, note-reading and eer training. Class meets Fridays, 8 p. | m, 65 W. 10th 6t. Bronx LECTURE—“Libération of Tom Mooney” Also solos, recitations and s one-act play. Admission 10¢. Auspices: Bronx Workers Center, 569 Prospect Ave, at 8:0 p.m. Lecturer: Anna ays. | COMRADE WICKS of the Dally worket | -ditorial staff will speak at a mass mobill- ation me¢ting in preparation for May lst t the Prospect Workers Center, 1157 So. Bivd, Admission free. CONCERT AND DANCE 46 1204 So. Boulé- Yard (near Freeman 8t.) Adinistion 200, Auspi¢es: Hotel and Restaurant Workers’ building and have similar conditions. The committee ih a reply, giving the |owner 3 days to answer points out | that if these same apartments have lower rates, how can the owner justify the 63rd St. rates. If the company doesn’t repiy, a meeting will be called to decide on further steps. DOWNTOWN | . Hellen Restaurant | 116 UNIVERSITY PLACE, N.¥.C. Corner 18th Street STARTLING REDUCTIONS _ Telephone STuyvesahh 9-9254 UNIVERSITY GRILL, Inc. BAR RESTAURANT 7% UNIVERSITY PL, N. ¥. C. Between 10th and ilth St. (es. Pitkin & Satier Aves.) B'kiyn | PHONE: DICKENS 2-382 Office Hears: 8-16 AM, 1-2, 68 Pe, Intern’l Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 15th FLOOS Al Work Dene Under Persone! Gare of Dr. ©. WEISSMAN ee Hospital and Ocolist Prestriptions Filled j At One-Helf Price Pipite, Geld, Fimtet Frames 91.88 Z2YL Shell Frames -—. + $1.06 | Lenses not included | COHEN’S, 117 Orchard St. | BROOKLYN For Brownsville Proletarians || SOKAL CAFETERIA | NEEDLEWORKERS APPRECIATE | THE LITTLE WATCH REPAIR SHOP Unemployed Committee, | LECTURE ON MAY DAY by Jonn Adams of ©. P. at the Tremont Workéts Club, 2075 RAID PAPER STRIKE MEETING <2? °2e"5ue. | groups of the Communist Party, So- | Parka Wy. ee Lact Locomotive | cistist Pariy and Conference for Pro- | Kelly Springfield Tite Company; W.| gressive Labor Action were represent | ©. Dickerman of the American Loco- | @4: Will be @ demonstration against |moiive Works and John Henry Ham-|D". Luther, the ambassador of fas- mond of the Bangor and Aroostock | “ist Germany, 1689 PITKIN AVENUE | Clinton Ave. |Si7 SIXTH AVENUE, AT 2TH STREET LECTURE—United Front of all Workers— | | BRONX Lecturer: Comrade Lichtenstein at the Union | Wotkers Center, 801 Prospect Avé. Hoff, ome da Pie | | (Brooklyn) man’s | Mass Organizations, Workers Clubs, Ete. NEW YORK—Duplicating the murderous attack on the Needle Trades ; Workers Industrial Union Monday, 20 gangsters artned with knives, bottles, | MEET YOUR COMRADES av THB Railroad, Dr. Luther 1s scheduled to spec’. clubs and their pockets bulging significantly, invaded the strike headquafters | prGuLAR MEMBERSHIP MEETING oF “4 ae | - ———ionlght at the Town Holl, 4d St:cc' | of the Hauitable Paper Bag Workers in the Stallan Workers Club, 197 Hum- 18%, Piast: Workers chub, 1807” Hing RESTAURANT (Cooperative Dining Cub Seis rear 6th Avenue. The Anti-Fescist | boldt Street, Wednesday nigitt. SYMPOSIUM-“eligion”, Reverend | N oe ate Dene M ’ h | Action sapeorgblate th vee rahe Again the workers showed their mettle, fighting back so heroically that yale Benim Rouenbiat, “ain a | & CAFETERIA ALLER [Sos RAE It | | i FE: oa m, F. ican ¥ 4) mses. . | ee le ae | ove § OW-Concert 2s rere erzenizations ais uo- the gangsters were routed and some — | if Rockaway mS) Ditkin Corner Saratoga AVES. | rire reeds Proletarian Prices | + 8p. mm te Responsible for Hit- | New Youth Oiub says At the Premier of their number had to be carried | ‘The 17 strikers charged with dis-| D&BATE—"Wwho away. ih | leriem in Germany?’ | Bocial Democratic Party, Production of “1931” by Paule workers’ organizations of New York Claire Sifton will open May 20th to demonstrate tonight at 8 p.m. in! in the | c For many workers this is | Sholem Aleichem Houses | orderly conduct will be tried F Union and in Capitelist Countries. at Land through the duration of the | 6:30 p. m., at 3634 Ocean Parkway. Adimic- mon at door 20c. With this clipping 15¢. Aispices: F.6.0.. Brighton Beach Branch, e * _ ir first strike and first encounter idge Pil court Wednesday, and Benefit Performance, Theatre front of Town Hall against this re- | *e | Bridge Plaza vs Palace, 605 Sutter Ave., near Hinsdale. Ad- reatald °. i y " | ¥4 | With gangsters. those fratied up on felonious assatilt | mission thc. At door 20. . Perties may be arranged now, 3341 GILES PLACE, BRONX, N. ¥.| presentative of the bloody Hitler re- | © F mye P CTU EN = | "i ¥ : Police who were conveniently ab- | Thursday, May 4. Workers are urged | LECTURE—NORMAN TALLENTIRE, Nat'l ° P Vv oO ony _ Liberal, Diseounts | Saturday, April 29th, 8:30 p.m, | gime in Germany, sent. at the time of the attack ar-| to be present in court on both days, Creatas FSU, Topic: Minorities tn tite orkers Cooperative rived on the scene later and assisted the wounded gangsters, held a con- | sulfation with the rest and freed a HELP BUILD THE REVOLUTIONARY THEATRE CARL BRODSKY Will Spéak on the “United Front” S00 BRONX PARK EAST (OPPOSITE BRONX PARK) FURNITURE STRIKER | 2700- OUT ON HIGH BAIL | trials. ‘Admission 25¢ All Weleom: them all, The police then invaded | 4 —————— | Arranged by Unit 15, Section a *| NEW YORK—Max Perlov, a leader | ‘M¢, Headauatters and arrested 2 R AID OF THUGS Saturday has now REDUCED THE RENT JAPAN NIGHT Proceeds for the Red Press in the Newport Furniture strike who) No"ers, charging them with “hold- (Manhattan) ON THE APARTMENTS AND SINGLE ROOMS ¢ Was singled out and arrested on a| 10 an unlawful meeting and pro- | PARTY AND PANCE—"Allee in Runger- CULTURAL ACTIVITIES PLAY AND DANCE “orp ate The caren |e nt ge Sam ait] a tte nae eet op| BEATEN OFF AT | its te ete tic S| tnerten, rues ea at Hua bay: masa { b . | 7 i at Jot $ v% - WTR Mae re orkere Make is Affair continues strong. the bosses’ id thugs. First they Reed oun 450 fixth “ave, “asad uth at) | Clubs and Other Privileges a Success A mass meeting of re-upholsterers,| entered the headquarters, command- ae Pe. | Sun., April 30, 8 p. m GRAND BALL undet the auspices of the DOLL AND re Japanese Workers Center OA Eee 83 EAST 10TH STREET SATURDAY, APRIL 20TH, AT 8:30 P. M. ~ at Tickets 15 Cents STUYVESANT CASINO, 142 SECOND Avs. | jobs?” j (Corner Sth St.) New York City en Proceeds for “Dally Worker” and | SPeeiat Rniertainment, Admission s0e.| LABOR UNION MEETINGS “Roto Shimbun” —— Seccecccss | WORKERS’ RATIONAL, | kts, noneaes fees es Supibethip meat otal Workers ALL OUT THIS— LIVING LIBRARY | cic em, tht hate 3 (By the well-known revolutionary Doctor and Health Tenoher) Sunday Night, April 30 Pre-Bonus March Dance Given by POST 191 Workers Ex-Servicemen’s Leagae MANHATTAN LYCEUM 66 EAST FOURTH &T, * Music by the Melody Girls | No. 1: “How Is Your Stomach?” | Basoy4 Of Pood, Thalgestion, Constipation (80 pheked pager, 0c, (send 75% commiiselon to Workers’ Clubs, or- [rong and Book stores selling our | | Literature, || No, 4 on: if “Sex & Health” | | (in preparation) som, AABIONA La, so, { | | | i | May Day Me alae OCKET book workers will meet on Monday, Mei at O o'clock in the morning, at 95 mi and 6th Ave, slip cover cutters and operators has been called by the Furniture Workers: Thdustrial Union for tonight 8.30 p. m. at 818 Broadway to discuss the ques- tion, “How can we improve our con- ditions? How can we protect our preparations will be made to or- ganise the members of the union and other metal workers to participate in the Joint AML members are id upon to be at the meeting tonight | 7:30 aharp, i | wWorxias—an noche | irom, stnete we. will owe Bryant Park, 40th 8 * P nook ed the workers to line up against the wall and one of their members made & speech claiming they were only friends of Frank Thompson, a worker who was sentenced to 10 days on a frame up charge, and that they would help free Thompson if the workers ended the strike. The speaker produced # written statement from | the boss stating that those arrested in the last few days would be freed if the workers teturned. Reoeiving no response the gang left. ‘Two hours later they returned and without warning began wrecking the hall and using their knives, bottles and clubs on the defenseless workers. Four of those arrested cantiol be located, Persistent demands by the ILD. attorney Samuel Goldberg forced authorities to order the ap- pearance of the gangsters in court Friday morning, Police ate intimidating that the _ FURNITURE UNION NEW YORK.—The third in a series of recent attempts by the bosses to unions SECOND ANNUAL WORKERS Theatre| Spartakiad performance by leading theatre groups fn Bnglish, Jewish, German, ¥: sian, Greek. Manhattan Lyceum, 66 ©. 4th St., from 2:30 to 7 end 8 to 11:30 p. m.| One ticket admits to entire Spartakiad. Ob- NO INVESTMENTS REQUIRED SEVERAL GOOD APARTMENTS & SINGLE ROOMS AVAILABLE Take Advantage of the Opportunity. break up militant trade through gangster-attacks oectirred yesterday at 7 a. in, When 7 gatig- sters broke into the headquarters of the Furniture Workers Industrial Union, 260 Newport St., smashed the windows, then attacked Max Petloff and Jack Novack, ofganizers of the MOnh of ty ters was identified One je gangsi fe as the son of ofe of the bosses of the Newport Parlor Frame Co., 240 New-| | port St., against which the union is | conducting a strike for the last four | weeks for back pay amounting to| $3,000, and against speed-up. About | 60 workers are involved in the strike. Beaten up by the workers who de- | Gite, fended therhselyes heroically against | ments; the anal pag of the gangsters had | Freiheit", trainable st Workers’ Bookshop and from L.O.W.T., 43 B. ith Bt. MAY FIRGT CFLMBRATION—Coneert and Dance, Furniture Workers Industrial Union, 818 Broadway, good |progtam, good band. Speaker: Morgan. SPRING FESTIVAL AND DANOH by the Followers of Nature at Stuyvesant Casino, 140 Second Ave. Admission 850. ANNIVERSARY DANCE AND ENTERTAIN- MENT=Red Hatters Band, N.S.L. Trio, John Reed Artists and others at Irving Plase, 18th St. and Irving Pisce. Nae tional Student ae (Bronx) HOUSE PARTY at Goodwatts, 690 Mace Ave. Auspices: Women’s Council No, 23. Proceeds to, Preiheit and Central Body. ‘Welcome. GYPSY CABARET NIGHT at Co-optre- fiye Auditorium, 2700 Bronx Park Bast. Pro» Frethelt Mandolin { je refresh imisaion 4c,” Proceeds: “Morning Auspices: Women’s Council 22. Ausple: injured gangster may die, in eyent | Jack arrested on a framed- (Brooklyn) of Which they will e-up homi- | up chatwe of assault, Novack will be| SANQUET AND CONCERT tn celebration ide oh against some of the | defended by the N. Y. Dugariet Tnter+ * gris sgiminin ayn ; oe All | Lexington Avenue Plains Road. Station. ‘Tel. to White Stop at Allerton Avenue Estabrook 8-1400—1401 Office open daily Friduy & Saturday Sunday SPRING SEASON \ RATES: $12.50 \ | Every Morning at 10:30 A. M. CAMP NITGEDAIGET SPORT ACTIVITIES io mémbers of I, W. O. and Co-operativ with a letter from your otganization Cars Leave Co-op Restaurant, 2700 Bronx Park Bast FOR INFORMATION REST and RECRBATION per week, inc, lax ° $10.50 per week $2.18 ROUND TRIP call; Estabrook 8—:

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