The Daily Worker Newspaper, May 6, 1933, Page 5

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i & 3 > 4 s a DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, tied Le MAY 6, 1933 Page Five Demand Increased Pay and Increased Relief to Meet Inflation Prices Siipport the Allentown Child STARVING CHILD Unemployed Council “? YEAR TERM Laborers’ Strike In the stronghold of the most powerful rulers of America, in the richest industrial state in the union, several hundred miserably impover- ished, starving child workers have revolted against their sweatshop bosses and have gone out on strike in the tradition of the militant miners and steel workers of this region. adequate unemployment relief, the child toilers on strike are in most in- stances the sole wage earners of their families. The series of articles appearing in the Daily Worker reveal the inhuman exploitation of these enild toilers. Central Labor Council of Allentown have left the plight of these children to Governor Pinchot and to the state which has been responsible jointly with the bosses for the miserable conditions imposed on the child workers. The arch demagogue Pinchot who has figured as a strikebreaker in the coal miners’ struggles has promised the children a minimum wage law and has appointed a state committee to investigate the condition of the children, although the conditions in the sweatshops are well known to Victims of the crisis, their families denied | The leaders of this strike, the Amalgamated Clothing Workers and the | the state department. the capit tin in a statement t papers. than in other cities.” tions v ich have made struggle foi ‘Shee me uggle against me Ne part for the protection of their jobs, the officials surrendered the strikers to the bosses and put through an-agreement which will go ing treech to the working class. 20 to 30 per cent increase in pay, rec- | _ ognition of the union and shop con- ditions. The same officials respon- sible for the agreements which sold} out. the strike of s W, HA T’S ON Saturday (Manhattan) Anni Club, 1598 Madison Ave. ‘ehestra. Refreshments. Admission 30¢. Chgplia at W. 61st St., 8:30 p, m., sdmission 150. ALL COMRADES AND ORGANIZATIONS are asked to settle for tickets of the Work- ers’ Theatre Spartakiade with the office of the LOWT, 42 E. 12th St. HOUSE PARTY — Entertainment, ‘songs, dance, good refreshments, admission free at 40 W. 65th St. at. 8:30°p. m. . Ausplces: French Workers Club. HOUSE WARMING AND DANCE AND ART EXHIBITION at NSL headquarters, 583 Sixth Ave. Admission 15 cents. PHOTOGRAPHIC WORKERS LEAGUE PRESENTS—Modicots—Marionetts! Concert! Dance! at 55 West 19th St. Admission 25c, ‘Good Band. Dance till morning. SPARTAK” ~~ SPORT EXHIBITION and Dance given iy. “hor Sports Union at Har- Jem Labor Tempi., 15 W. 126th St., m. Admission 30c, in ady.; AN INFORMAL PARTY for the benefit of the recognition campaign at 114 W. 2ist St. Janu band and everyting else that goes with it, Admission 56¢. (Bronx) FAREWELL PARTY held at 948 Kelly St., Apt. 7. Auspices: Unit 9, Section 5, ©. P., Sp. m, Admission 10c. SPRING BALL at Prospect Workers Cen- ter, 1157 So. Blvd. Come and meet hun- dreds of friends. PACKAGE PARTY AND DANCE at Recep- tion Hall, 355 E. 187th St. Three blocks east of Concourse. Admission free. Auspices: ‘Mt. Eden Branch, F.8.U. ENTERT: AND DANCE—At the Brook Ave. Workers Club, 489 E. 169th St. Auspices—Brook Ave. Workers Club and the ‘Women Council No. 47. Admission 15¢. SOVIET MOVIZ “RED AND WHITE” will be shown atthe Tremont Workers Club, ‘2075 Clinton Ave... Also Dancing with a Popular Jarz Band. (Brooklyn) ANNUAL SPRING DANCE at the Pr mier Palace, Hinsdale St. and Sutter Ave. Admission 35c. Auspices: New Youth Club. CONCERT AND DANCE at Brighton Pro- gressive Club, 129 Brighton Beach Ave. Big Surprise in store. Something extraordinary. Small cémtesion. Sunday HIKE to Sliver Lake, Rye Lake. Meet Bast 180th St. Bts. Lexington Aye. at 9 a. m. Leader: R. Matthes. Auspices: Nature Friends. BROOKLYN TRACTOR AUTO WORKER SCHOOL will have s general Beaker cotaedtiog at Ukrainian Delly Hell, 15 HIKE—OF WORKERS CLUBS OF CITY OLUB COUNCIL. Meet 9 a.m. at last stop mm Jerome Aye. line. HOUSE P, profits from the blood and sweat of young children. police Laie against the strikers and at the threats by relief agencies the strikers’ families and cut off their relief. investigating committee will only lead the children d to the same conditions against which they struck, down in labor history as an outstand- | bosses. As a further demagogic gesture to smother this struggle, Mrs. Pinchot is attending the hearings, reports of which are being suppressed in She has appeared on the picket line. today she whitewashed the sweatshop bosses by de- claring that “conditions in needle industry in Allentown are not any worse At the same officials have bolstered up and helped to maintain the condi- it possible for the sweatshop bosses to wring It has winked at the In this the; e the full co-cperation of the A. F. of L. and the Amalga- meted off 5 Tho ke of the children of Pennsylvania employed in the sweat- shops 2 more forcefully to the forefront the necessity of rallying our forces to struggle sgainst the employment of child labor, to intensify the unemployment insurance and adequate relief for the unem- ployed ond to fight against sweatshop conditions in the needle trades. Nat’l Shoe Officials Sell Out Tannery Strike LYNN/ Mass., May 5.—A classic example of betrayal of the workers’ interests was recorded Tuesday May 2 when the leadership of the National | Jorkers’ Association concluded an agreement with the Leather Manu- tacturers’ Association sending 7,000 tannery strikers back to work without | paisa After a most militant struggle lasting over 6 s picket- @— the bosses. The agreement, hailed with jubila- tion by the boss press as a peace pact, sent the men back to work, leaving the right to hire and fire to the The union is permitted to} have shop stewards to collect dues The strikers were fighting for a | but the bosses have the right to ex- clude them if in their opinion they are interfering with “the proper con- duct of business or the discipline of the workers.” The bosses may also ‘al thousand | check-off dues from the wages of the shoe workers in Lynn, Haverhill and| Workers. The agreement accepts the Boston were responsible for sanction- | minimum wage offered by the Manu- ing another infamous contract with | facturers Association for week work as the basis of the agreement. Wage | licks for piece work are to be de- | ‘ermined in conference with the boss- | es, Where the union and the bosses) (fail to arrive at an agreement the POTEMKIN AND A PICTURE of Charlie|the agreement is one hington Heights Center, 561/ Strikes or stoppages and referring all | questions which cannot be settled by | | matter is to be referred to an arbi- COLORLIORT BALL to celebrate the 7th| tation committee. The manufactur- ry of Harlem Progressive Youth|ers are not required to hire union sone Suet Or- | workers. The most vicious section of abolishing the bosses and union to the State Board of Arbitration. Sympathetic strikes are also outlawed by terms of the agreement. When the agreement was presented to the workers at a strike meeting at Peabody City Hall by the union Attorney Peter Walsh, it was read with such speed that the workers in the hall did not understand its con- tents. A call for a verbatim reading of the terms of the contract was ig- .;nored. When the vote was called for, only ten workers answered aye. No negative vote was called for. When a worker rose to protest that many for- eign born workers present did not un- derstand the agreement, he was voted “out of order.” Rank and file workers are organizing to bring to the attention of the leath- er workers the meaning of this be- trayal and to build a powerful rank and file movement in the union to prepare for another strike to win the original demands for which the work- ers fought so militantly. LEHMAN APPOINTS ‘WAGE COMMITTEE ALBANY, N. Y¥., May 5.—Governor Lehman today extended an invita- tion to a “group of citizens” to form a Minimum Wage Advisory Committee to consider in what industries the Psa Department should undertake vestigations regarding a minimum wage. The Committee is to determine also the procedure under which the Wage decisions shall be made. Minimum Wage Boards are to be be eerie later for each industry in wi @ minimum wage is to be es- tablished. bar, ‘Admission 1c. At 30 BE: Marks Place, i pt ie. "soron. | “Aurpices: Unit at | The Saal nee announced by thi is ion 1, nor m “ere See Ge hea or govel oes not haye a single rep- Qhalipekt by, Women’s Coun friends are ‘cordially invited to uay by. All proeeeds for the Morning At 4109 Thm ave., -B’klyn. _ _ UBCTURE—"ROOSEVELT'S NEW DEAL. Spesker: H. G. Parmer. Admission tree. At Parkway Workérs Center, Brook- ‘at eit. de resentative of the workers on it. The So-called “labor” representatives are the secretary of the State Federation of Labor, John O'Hanlon, and the president of the Amalgamated Cloth- ing Workers, Sidney Hillman, who im a30 pe mm. recently declared that there have OPEN FORUM- nbsp, me. been “good arguments in favor of é ie rant 1 wage reductions at the beginning of (OVING PICTURE NIGHT: “Ten Days mast ‘Shook the World”, at the German Workers Club, 1536 ‘Third Ave, (a6th St.) Also Dance and Entertainment, 8 ‘Admission l-mperialist rue. At ‘Tremont ‘Workers Club, a ‘Clinton Ave., ‘Brome, turday, May 1, REGISTER NOW! | 3a John Reed Club School ah Poster "Des Begins May 18th, Bat: Design, Life Drawing, Children’s Art Class. For fur- ‘Sherine intceetinn address 588 Sixth Ave. or telephone Grammerey 7-9029. the depression.” Hillman has just been instrumental in putting over a .| Wage cut of 15 per cent on the Roch- ester and Chicago clothing workers These four labor misleaders are to serve with six leading N. ¥. employ- ers including Mark Daly, a bitter en- emy of the workers, representing the Associated Industries and four social workers, LABORERS REBEL Calis Jobless to Action! FOR DISORDER” IN PENNSYLVANIA CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) | | nent fire us. And we can’t afford | that.” | An older girl, who has already reached the staid age of 17, reports that she worked at the presses so | hard that her side was strained and | she had to stay out of work for nearly a year, “Did you get compensation?” asked one of the committee. “What's that?” asked the girl. It) | was explained, and she replied that |no such thing was had in her fac- Insulted and Abused. Besides lies and exploitation of the | worst sort, tale after tale pours from | the mouths of these children on the demands of the boss upon them, and the loss of more than one job, due | to the fact that they repulsed the | vile invitations. “You shouldn’t be such a dumbbell, red-head; I'll show you how to earn) | money—why work in such a factory | all your life?” A foreman, Weisberg | |of the D and D factory again and| |again makes attacks upon the girls. “He feels us all over, and he don’t care where he puts his hands,’ the |red-headed, 15-year-old reports. If | they resent the attentions they are | immediately persecuted or fired. | At the Adelphi plant girls were, | urged to go out with the New York | buyers. “You can earn more if you! go out with them, than if you work lhere.” If they refuse, there are! ‘plenty of others ready to fill their) demands, | “Such God damn dumb girls, I'll | show you how to make your living,”| from another foreman of the Clyde| Shirt Co, “I don’t want to make \it that way. cent living.” SoI quit. But I needed |the dough, so my mother tried and got me back. He made me do all the | work over twice, and never would let) me earn more than a dollar or so./ He'd curse me and yell at me, but I | told him, “You didn’t fire me be-| | cause I didn’t do my work right, you tired. me because I wouldn't let you | fell me all over. So he called me a ‘Don't touch me Elsie, and fired) me again.” “And my brother, he’s 41, and | can’t find a job anywhere, and he really should work. I had to stop school in the sixth grade; I should, be in school.” Testimony was given by girl after) girl, of foul names hurled at them,| of curses and slaps and socks in the jaw, of throwing one little boy down | the steps, because he was so tired he fell asleep, and then when he went | to the squire, the squire said: “I can’t do anything for you, I’m too old.” Abuse Upon Abuse. The children told of being put in the toilet when the inspector came, gel ls Maeiagea oH ag ata va ter and see the miserable condition of the lavatories, of finding bedbugs and roaches from the dirty toilets in their lunch, of burning themselves on the hot irons, after working for fif-| teen hours, and often more a day. Stories that bring back to mind the conditions of the early factories during the 19th century in England; of children falling asleep over their work, as one child did more than once; of girls pressing shirts for hours on end. No lunch period, no| rest time, and ne pay for hours upon hours of overtime. Stories of children getting T.B. in| these sweatshops, due to the gas, leakages in the plants; of the cold winters, working in the place with no heat, with the children so cold that they had to work in their coats and hats, and often they would take off their coats and hats and wrap them around their feet so that they would be able to go ahead with their work; of getting docked ten cents of their lousy two or three dollars pay, for a clean-up woman, who was paid $8 a week, one dollar or even more of which was stolen and pocketed by the foreman. The children in the Friezer mill told of being asked to buy one dollar tickets for a Jewish dance, y at for them, Of ey toiled over ted no electricity to be turned on. The girls told of being forced to take off time to clean the toilets, before the inspectors arrived, and not being paid for the work. Of the pressers, who get 14 cents a dozen for ironing the shirts, starching them, putting the cardboards into themand pinning them into place; of the cuf- fers, who got two cents a dozen; the yokers, a cent and a half per dozen, and the trimmers even less. Many times when the toilets over- flowed the children had to stop work- ing and wipe the floors that it wouldn’t go under the table and wet their feet while they were at work. They told of how the fire escape windows were nailed up in the inspectors the nail would be taken out. Adults Not Wanted. “We don’t want you in the shop,” is the sweatshop owner's cry to the working men and women. who | only the young boys and girls.” A mother of five children reported that she gets at the highest $8 a week, but mostly averages $6. “They don’t want older women or men; they want those little playthings, be- aa put an eleven teen-year-old in my + time, you'll see, they Tammany has let Focus a furious reign of terr ‘inst the jobless in an effort to stifle the rising tide of protest against the new “no rent” and “cut relief” edict of the Home Relief Bureaus Facing the angry demands of thousands of workers at the Bureaus throughout the city, aroused and led by the local Unemployed Councils, in spite of Tammany’s efforts to keep secret its plans of attack, they have unleashed all their forces of police, gangster and court. ‘The attacks and arrests of unemployed clamoring for relief in Bronx, Harlem and Brooklyn in the last week and the brazen sentencing of Samuel Gonshak to two years in the penitentiary for leading a demon- stration of jobless indicates to what lengths and through what method Tammany hopes to enforce starvation in the city, Terror is their answer to the workers cries for bread and shelt But the organized workers and the masses rapidly learning the lesson and power of organization will not be so easily defeated. Everywhere they are organizing anti-eviction and relief committees under the leadership —JUDGE AURELIO Bu (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE: frame-up fall on Gonshak, and thu: as he hoped, deprive the unemployed of their leader. This at the very tir that the relief bureaus have sus ed rent payments and ere cutting lef, dg: re- solely n leader of the Ur ployed Council. The judge, agogic spe prompted by ence of so many wor a that. there of the Unemployed Councils. In greater numbers they loudly tempts to disperse them, next day. Working men and women, mass at the relief bureaus! Picket their doors! Refuse to accept their stalling, their starvation excuses, their red tape! Remain in the bureaus, camp on their door steps, refuse to leave until relief is given! st the marshal and his thugs, force the city to pay rent and provide adequate relief! UNEMPLOYED COUNCIL OF GREATER NEW YORK | DOLLAR DROPS 10 NEW LOW IN INTERNATIONAL CURRENCY WAR WASHINGTON, May 5.—As Roosevelt gets ready to sign the Farm Relief inflation bill passed by the House and the Senate, the dollar dropped to new low levels today, as the English pound crossed the $4 mark. This means @ decline in the value of the dollar since the United I'd sooner make a de-| Off the gold standard of almost 20 per cent. Simultaneously with this development, the House of Commons em- | powered the Bank of England to— Rally your neighbors to res double the Equalization Fund to 350,- 000,000 pounds ($1,365,000,000). This | fund is used by the Bank of England to keep the dollar up and the pound| fall. down, because a depreciated pound means that foreign countries can buy | sified by the announcement by Roose- }more English goods, thus increasing velt that British bondholders will not | British exports. The increase in the | be paid bond interest in gold as guar- fund means that Britain is esrb anteed by the “gold clause’. STAGE AND SCREEN. PUDOVKIN IN TOLSTOr'S | “LIVING CORPSE” The ‘Acme Theatre, beginning today will present a double feature program, “The based on Leo Tolstoi’s famous play “Redemption,” with the noted actor Vsevolod Pudoykin in ‘the leading role of Fedja and “Soviets On Pa- rade,” which returns to the Acme because of popular demand. “The Livi Corpse” was pro- duced by Mejhrosbpofilm and wey directed by Fedor Ozep. Pudovkin is supported by the lead- ing artists of the Moscow Art Theatre and includes Maria Jacobi- ni, Viola Garden, Julia Serda and N. Watschause. The picture, which has English titles, also boasts an excellent musical score. This picture gives a stirring, stark translation of the Tolstoi writing. Pudovkin makes a perfect Fedja. His stolid expression undergoes flashes which make him the center of audience in- terest. The same program will have as an added attraction the May Day | Celebration on Union Square. THEATRE GUILD TO PRESENT “THE MASK AND THE FACE” “The Mask And The Face,” an adaptation by Somerset Maugham of an Italian play by Luigi Chiarelli, will be next and final production of the Theatre Guild this season, open- &/ing at the Guild Theatre next Mon- day night. Judith Anderson and Stanley Ridges will play important roles. “Both Your Houses,” the Theatre Guild production of Maxwell An- derson’s play of crooked politics at the Royale Theatre will close this Saturday night. The play goes to Philadelphia on May 8th for a two- weeks engagement. Milton Aborn announces that be- ginning Monday he wiil present Gilbert and Sullivan’s “Pinafore” and “Trial By Jury” as a double bill at the St. James Theatre. This is the final week of “Yeomen of the Guard” another of the famous ope- rettas, TRADE BUILDING INDEXES DROP — STILL FURTHER The fundamental indexes which are true indicators of effective pur- chasing power are the index of new construction and retail distribution. Both of these indexes show not the slightest indications of “prosperity.” The building industry is now at the lowest level since the crisis. Con- tracts awarded for March declined below February, instead of showing even the usual seasonal increase. During the first half of April, build- ing contracts fell even lower, They are now 50 per cent lower than last year, and lower than they have been for many decades. The index of retail distribution is| still making new lows. The Federal Reserve Bank reports that retail sales for March were 21 per cent below last year; wholesale 20 per cent be- low last year, and chain store sales 17 per cent below last year. Despite the widespread publicity regarding the long-awaited return of “prosperity,” the fundamental eco- nomic indexes indicate that the eco- nomic crisis hag in no sense been al- leviated, are jamming the halls of the relief bureaus, voicing their demands and resisting with mounting militancy at- ‘Wednesday Harlem workers showed the way to the workers of New York when by such militant tactics they forced the Home Relief Bureau at 125th Street to gi two workers and made officials promise an answer on 86 more cases the Living Corpse, »| first time at popular prices, i } | | | film that has come from the Soviet | | liant young Soviet composer, Dmitri | f, and that the rve at home. judge changed th: that the relief mone layed.” The courtroom : led an camp. Twenty-four uniformed j men and a dozen or more clothes men lined the At the trial that pr tence, Judge Aurelio Keep out the true motive of the « onstration. He silenced worker who produced on the w zas bills, <i to tell of ut relief was simply med real relief on the spot to stand eviction notices, starvation at home This testimony s called for Attorney Schreiner of the Inie - | tional Labor Def to prove that tion of the vy ers and their forceful demands at the bureau wer tified by their conditions. Aurelio ranted in court against Unemployed Council He heckled the j the Wo! He said, “I dor want to kn about your rent and food troubles.” All witnesses testified that the chairs the workers were accused of using against the police were wielded by paid thugs in the Relief Bureau on the accused workers. jening her attempts to maintain her| Just before the sentencing, charges trade advantages, which are disap-| of assault were sed against the pearing as the dollar continues to! workers, when the frame-up methods of the police became too obviou but Aiffelio had made sure of his victim. Through a technicality in the “proba- tion law” he finally handed down a two year sentence against Gons although he could make the charge no worse than ies dehy conduct.” | * NEW YORK —Bricks, black-jacks, sawed off billiard cues were used by police and gangsters Thursday night to break up a demonstration of 500 workers in front of the house of | Judge Aurelio, 170 Second Ave., pro- testing the sentence of guilty against six workers arrested for demanding as rie A front “ot on judge's house, surround- ed by workers carrying placards read- ing “Down with Tammany Justice” and “Give Us Bread Not Jails.” While the meeting was in. progress six radio patrol cars arrived, police poured out and made ready to smash the meeting. S. Stein of the I-L.D, was on the platform and shouted: “Work- ers, you have a perfect right to stay here, the streets belong to the work- ers, there will be no disorder if the | trouble makers don’t start it.” The workers pressed closer to the plat- form. Union. Moscow critics called it “the Faced with this militant stand, the prize film of the year.” There is also | Police sent for re-inforcements to a, @ special musical score by the bril- | Democratic club at Second Ave., be- tween 11th and 12th. A gang of hood- Shostakovitch. | lums came carrying sawed off cue The film will be presenied at the | sticks and at the same time a riot Fifth Avenue Theatre, Broadway Se | ras arrived. In a united front the States went The break in the dollar was inten- GARRIS( ON RELEASES “SHAME” on Film Distributors an- that it will run, for the the lat- est Soviet talkie, “Shame ‘Shame’ illustrates the new trend in the Soy- jet Film. Directors Ermler and Yut- | kevitch have deserted the Eisenstein | school of the mass-hero and idoliza- tion of the machine, for the film por- traying the individual and aspects of | the new society that is being build | in the Soviet Union. The film fol- lows the suggestions put forth by Comrade Stalin in his speech on the | Second Five Year Plan for the trans- formation and the development of the people. It certainly is the most mature Garvi nounces 28th Street, for one week, beginning | gangsters and police descended on the May 5. Fifteen cents until 1 p.m. workers, | Reasons Why Every Worker Should See "SH AME” Latest Soviet Sound Film —WITH ENGLISH TITLES— the Communist Party at work in shops. AMUSEMENTS Pp Now! The New Soviet Morality! |. See the 7 | 2. See the Role of agers. 3. See how hostile ents are won over to the Soviet Cause, 4. See the driving er of the Soviet { youth. 8. See honest intellectuals giving their technical skill to the proletariat. ‘The new Soviet morale, 5-YEAR PLAN Fifth Ave. Theatre , BROADWAY and 28th ST. forrw. 15° PEGGY WOOD AND ERNEST TRUEX in| EST SELLERS A NEW COMEDY MOROSCO THEATRE, 45th, W. Byes. 8:60; Matinees & Bat FIRST FILM OF THE SECOND EU D OVKIN in “The Living Corpse” Based on TOLSTOUVS “REDEMPTION” with MOSCOW ART THEATRE CAST of Biway at 2:40 TRE THEATRE GUILD prevents “Soviets on Parade” and ‘BIOGRAPHY May Day Demonstration ep heres aA tl Fe wormerns Acme Theatre AVO Br. #0) Mat. want aan cee ___ ATR ST, AND UNION SQUARE | ae | RKO JEFF OP SON MO St 4 INOW | _ CAMEO ‘Loo in Budap est “AIR HOSTESS” with Bway & 42nd St, with LORETTA oer BROOKLYN | Sralre Reiag) And James Murray, Thelma Toda SPECIAL ADDED FEATURE For Brownsville Proletarians SOKAL CAFETERIA 1689 PITKIN AVENUE eterian and Dairy Rea! one Melee AVE. (Cor. George) Datyn ae | '|AVALON Cafeteria, 1610 KINGS HIGHWAY OPEN DAY AND NIGHT | | DEWRY 9-9512 “RENDEZYOUS” | | RESTAURANT & CAFETERIA Pitkin Corner Saratoga 4 Aves. | WORKERS—EAT AT THE Parkway Cafeteria 638 PITKIN AVENUE | | Near nophinnon Ave. Brooklyn. N. ¥ | ‘All Comrades Meet at the [NEW HEALTH CENTER CAFETERIA! sh Food—Pi Han Prices SF, 197M ST. WORKERS’ CENTER— VETS ON MARCH (CONTIN ! ¢ ‘FORCE COPS TO STAND ) ASIDE AS ITURE IS RE IPLAC ED IN HARLEM id FUR! 0) Negro and ¥ ed N x-Serv a, led by the Ha While the potice a corde of J n of police at bay, B. Drake, an yesterday af- the furnitur ue in Harle 469 1. em Unem ro oy and marvhal Jooked on helplessly, the furniture sailed se ELECT LEADERS "OF V. EF. DAY MA ARCH STARTS nto nd wh An open in ont of the ¥ YORK 5 meetings erans’ Expe- and tomorrow for the march on week. 7 il be hi 142 Se iction was by oda. fal uU TO WASHINGTO! ONE, the Empire Manor, ve., Brooklyn, there will 1UED FROM PAGE etvien saapeen- : All _vetera: dents affected well as those elig- s are invited. sional Organization com- mnounced that V. E. F. will be of leay- themselves. ank danger All nd file ership, of misleaders Parks’ Letter officers nov TON, May 6 adership ided to have igent, composed of pt erans’ march, a letter wa Parks, styling himself natic p, BUTSEE, depend- mand of the B. FE. F. cted by the econo- members of congre: he wa The leite Congressn linois as a me Inc. thousands of way widows, “organizin, DOWNTOWN ee under rank and file rT ; TH S' et to Washington 4s tryi “ ee vane at commander such as W pes te Ea year, to betray the men. Tel. Algonquin / 5856-3588 We Carry a Full Line of ' Navarr Cafeteria Phones: FAN RAY CAFETERIA 156 W. 29th St. Moving & Storage Co., Inc. BRO! 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