The Daily Worker Newspaper, June 1, 1933, Page 3

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S i i | DAILY WORKER. NEW YORK, THUnova1, JUNE 1, 1933 Page Three Pequot Strikers Resist Attempts to Split Ranks Broaden Strike Committee, Organize Mass Picketing to Stop Scabs | SALEM, Mass., May 31.—The cry of “Red agitators” was raised in the | local press today in an attempt to split the ranks of the 1800 strikers of the Naumkeag Steam Cotton Co. The presence of Ann Burlak, of the National | Textile Workers’ Union here and hér conférence with the strike leaders were reported in news headlines. The strikers are refusing to permit this maneuver to split their ranks, recognizing that it is only another I ’ve Got Somet! hing to S ay About It! y Burck. 3,000 AT ANTI- WAR MEET IN| CLEVELAND, 0. Socialist Youth Join But Leaders Break United Front Action | CLEVELAND, 0., May 31—Two| | colorful paradés one from the east| side and the other west side merged |in Public Square at the National Youth Day demonstration. Two hun-{ | dred young Negro and white workers | from Akron joined the east side sec- tion. Three thousand workers par- ticipated in the meeting on the} square. | | workers were injured many seriously.e ‘Attack Youth Day Meet in San Diego, Many Are Injured Hold Many on Frame Up Charge of “Attempt to Murder” After Slugging Them SAN DIEGO, Calif., May 31.—Fifteen hundred young and adult workers from all parts of Southern California participated in a National Youth Day demonstration at Newtown Park. When young workers tock their banners ready to march to a meeting scheduled to take place in one of thé church buildings, they were attacked by police, marines and legionaires. Scores of 00 IN YOUTH DAY They were attacked with clubs, whips and tear gas. The workers ably de: Pro tes t s Continue scheme to force them hack into the| mills to work under the latest com- | fended themselves for half an hour Following the speakers a parade | Eight cps and legionaires were sent Pany speed-up scheme. Over a thousand strikers met last Sunday evening at the North St. Rink | started from Public Square on Eu-| clid Avenue. Fifteen hundred were | in the line of marth, a thousand of; to the hospital ‘The city council had refused a per- MEET IN FRISCO; In Fur Market Against AFL Scabs NEW YORK.—Fur workers dem- onstrated again today in the fur mar- ket. Thousands gathered on Seventh | Ave. prepared to meet the scab agents | but none appeared. Fur workers| mingled with strike pickets who) marched back and forth with signs declaring that they were on strike aganst being forced into the bosses’! union and for better conditions. The new Labor Squad which was announced yesterday in the capital- ist press as a new branch of the detective division of the Police de- partment was mobilized in full force. The squad is reported to have 37 men and will cover only the section from 23rd St. to Fortieth St. and from Ninth Ave. to Fifth Ave. indicating that it has been specially mobilized to help the scab A. F. of L. and fur bosses in their attempts to smash the Industrial Union. UPHOLSTERERS’ MEETING TO- NIGHT ON QUESTION OF UNITY A special meeting of the Uphols- terers’ section of the Furniture Work- ers’ Industrial Union will be held to- night, Thursday, at 7:30 p.m., at the union headquarters, 818 Broadway, RY. 6. The main item on the order of business will be the discussion of the answer which Local 76 has sent on our proposals of the united front of the upholsterers in the city. PROTEST! | Japanese Invasion in China — America’s Part in Partitioning of China Come to the aid of the Chi- nese People in their strug- gle for National Liberation TONIGHT AT 8 P. M. IRVING PLAZA Speakers: WINIFRED CHAPPELL, LI WEI, J. B MATTHEWS, Cc. A. HATHAWAY Ausplees: Friends of the Chinese People * SANDWICH SOL'S LUNCH 101 University Place (Just Around the Oorner) ‘Telephone Tompkins Sqrare 6-9780-9781 PATRONIZE SEVERN’S CAFETERIA 7th Avenue at 30th St. Best Food at Workers Prices MEET YOUR COMRADES AT THE Cooperative Dining Club ALLERTON AVENUE * Cor, Bronx Park East Pure Foods Proletarian Prices Get the Daily, cWorker DELIVERED To Your Home Every Mornine! MAIL THIS AD TODAY! DAILY WORKER 50 East 18th St. New York, N. Please have the DAILY WORKER de- livered at my home (before 7 a. m.) every morni i pay the route- carrier 18 cents at the end of the week. NAME -.....-. ADDRESS - and decided to organize a mass picket line, Monday morning, to prevent any drift back to work. The rank and file strike leaders pointed out that the bosses hope to destroy the soli-| darity of the strikers and break the strike and that unity is therefore the vital issue if the strikers are to win their demands. | The strike committee was enlarged to include representatives from all) departments and now numbers 50 members. | Strikers Send Demands to Company | A motion was adopted to send the following letter to the management “Our strike committee composed of representatives from all departments | stands ready to meet with you at any| time to negotiate on the following de- mands: 1, No increase in work in any de- parment, no research. 2. Seniority rights to be maintain-} ed for all workers. | 3. No discrimination against! strikes, recognition of our mill com- mittee representative to take up all grievances at all times. We do not demand the impossible. We are not unreasonable. We have cooperated extent that we are constantly the suf- ferers. It is impossible for us to do | more! Mayor Bates is again active in the | Situation here. He met with the strike committee last Saturday and tried to convince the strikers that it is im- perative for McMahon to be present at the conference where the strike committee negotiates with the mill management. The Mayor is carefully laying the ground for a scheme to| trick the workers into accepting com-| Pany proposals of more speed-up. Pickets Prevent Scabbery | A mass picket line gathered in front} of the mill yesterday and prevented ane scab from entering. Although the company has not recruited any | scabs they are experimenting on a 30/ loom system using the straw bosses and the office girls each running 30 looms with an efficiency expert timing them. At the same time the company 4s spreading the rumor that if these three can run 30 looms each, regular weavers surely should be able to run | 24 looms. When the picketers stopped a girl man assaulted two of the girl strikers | with a blackjack. The- strikers re- taliated and drove him back inside | the gates. Later the house in which} the girl scab lives was stoned. | The strikers are firm in their in-} tention to keep the mill closed until! their demands are granted, | The National Textile Workers Un-| jon today issued a statement to the strikers answering the “red scare”! propaganda and expressing the need | for unity of all strikers to win their strike. The statement calls upon the strikers to keep control of the strike in their own hands and not permit the Mayor or McMahon io trick them into accepting the company proposals, Seaman Defends Self in Court; Released NEW YORK.—The officials of the} Secmen’s Church Institute had a seaman arrested Sunday night for distributing copies of the “Doghouse News” and “Munson Line Bulletin.” The stool pigeons and officials of the institute went to the night court for the trial. They gloated at the fact that the sailor would not be able to get in touch with the LL.D. “You'll get the works, 30 days, now,” one said to him. In court the seaman defended him- self and exposed the institute so forcefully that the judge hastily dis- missed the case to save them from further exposure. WORKERS STRIKE IN FIVE PLANTS EVANSVILLE, Indiana, May 31.— Workers in five factories of the Globe Bosse World Furniture Co. declared a strike on Monday against the cou- with the mill management to such an| jthe bankers will require on June 15} scab, Alice Mysliwy, the gate watch- \tnat $170,000,000 could be immediately PLAN MORE TAXES| AS CRISIS IN BUDGET GROWS To Place Tolls on Use| of Bridges and Taxis NEW YORK, May 31.—The pro- posals of Samuel Untermeyer, lead- ing Tammany lawyer, that new taxes be imposed to meet the interest pay- ments on the bonds held by the bankers was given strong support in [Downtown Jobless | Form United Front, NEW YORK.—Joint action of the members of the Downtown Unemployed Council and members of Local 2 and 3 of the Worker | Committee on Unemployment at the Home Relief Buro at Spring and Elizabeth Streets, Friday, 10 am. was agreed upon at a lecal executive meeting of the Workers Committee with representatives of the Unemployed Council. Urge Demands Be , ; rag itd . Meucmenes, harees of Mer) Sont Immediately Untermeyer proposes that the} coming payments of $10,000,000 which To Free ( Gonshak ‘Hearing Tomorrow of Worker Given 2 Yrs. for Asking Relief NEW YORK.—Sam Gonshak, un- employed leader sentenced to two years on Welfare Island by Judge Aur- elio on a “disorderly conduct” charge shall be raised by a ten per cent toll on the city bridges, and a 5 cent tax for every taxi ride. He also proposes u tax on rents. It is obvious that the City budget is in a crisis which will soon break into open trouble. The trouble is that the Tammany administration is fighting to maintain the hundreds of | millions of graft that go out every year to faithful Tammany cfficials | who clutter up the city payroll. A recent estimate made showed He is to appear before Judge Bernard L. Shientag, in Supreme Court, Cen- ter and Pearl Street for a final hear- | ing on a habeas corpus writ being is- cut off the budget if the useless Tam- many office-holders were removed from office. will be in court tomorrow, 10 a, m.| | | JOBLESSLAY DEMANDS ON TAMMANY TABLE (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) June 6—editor) against evictions and | Telief cuts and at the same time we will take steps to organize the work- ers for a comprehensive relief and In- surance program.” Every workers organization in the city has been invited to the June 3 conference, a number hailed it when it was first announced. The intérview with the Tammany Officials was opened by Winters who facing O'Brien told of the vacant apartments while unemployed have no shelter. He said “The city re- fuses to pay rent, a city court issues dispossess, a city marshall carries it out, city police assist.” He told of the police terror at the bureaus, the arrests and beating of workers who demand relief and the discrimination against Negroes and foreign born. Attempts of O’Brien and Taylor to take isolated cases among the deleg- ates as merely exceptional cases of the “miscarriage of justice” were spiked by Winters who said we came to protest not against the exceptions | but the rule, this is not a matter of | | ®n individual case, but a deliberate | system of wholesale starvation.” / | O’Brien pleaded poverty of the city. But Winter exposed this when he | | It is to avoid this that Untermeyer and the Tammany Mayor O’Brien are preparing to increase the tax burdens of the people. sued by the International Labor De- fense. Declaring that “only the sharpest kind of mags action can compel cap- italist courts to free class war prison- | ers,” the N. Y. District International | Labor Defense issued a call to all workers. to immediately send tele- | 8rams to Judge Bernard L. Shientag, | and to assemble at the Supreme MEET TONIGHT jater pointed out that the city paid] $16,000,000 to Wall Street bankers, | loaned back $10,000,000 at increased | interest. When O’Brien said that he was only Mayor, that he couldn’t do any- thing, he was told that “As Chief Magistrate of the City you have the power to order the magistrates to dismiss all dispossess notices and the ON HARLEM HOSP. | presenting the Peoples Committe was NEW YORK.—In the list of speak- ers scheduled for amass meeting called June 1 by the Committee on Conditions at Harlem Hospital, the name of William Patterson does not appear. At the general committee meeting held last week Patterson re- elected together with Heywood Broun, J. Dalmus Steele, “Mayor of Har- Jem,” and several others. Reverend Powell, Jr., chairman of the general committee, is;out of town according to his secretary. Court, just behind the City Hall, this Friday, at 9 a. m. sharp to demon- strate for Gonshak’s release and to cheer this militant worker when he walks under prison guard into the court. To reach the court take the BMT to City Hall, or the IRT to Brooklyn Bridge. CEEAR AS NC YEE mas ag COUNCIL BLUFF JOBLESS FORCE) TWO CONCESSIONS COUNCIL BLUFFS, Iowa, May 31. —Militant action of the unemployed won two important concessions here. They are a two weeks postponement of all evictions granted by the Real Estate Board. People’s Committee Against REC ILL ar Eee CEH | Collity. elle! Ooramaiteae ies Gleint Secondly the Pott) cases of all arrested workers demand- ing relief.” The mayor sitting there, fat, well- fed, tried to insult a Negro mother of 7 children who told him that her family was starving. O’Brien looked at her “You look pretty good.” A Porta Rican worker from Harlem told of his family eating uncooked canned goods because he had no gas. As the interview came to a close | Winter asked, “What shall we tell | the workers at the Home Relief Bur- eaus waiting for your answer?” O'Brien evaded the direct question. Can’t Depend On Promises “This shows” Winter said as the Mayor was about to leave the room, them youth and children. | When the American Legion parade | arrived at 5 in the afternoon, they found Public Square deserted as the| large crowd had joined the youth day parade. | The members of the Young Peoples | Socialist League participated. This | was done against the orders of the| leaders who betrayed the member- ship when they broke the decision to} Participate in the demonstration. They now stand exposed as strike breakers. The proposal to send a delegation | to Governor White in Columbus de-| manding an investigation on the con-| ditions in the forced labor camps in the state was enthusiatically en- dorsed. Vets Too Sick to Work in Roosevelt Forced Labor Camps | WASHINGTON .—Veterans, forced by hunger to accept the Roosevelt “offer” of work in the reforestation forced labor camps at $1 per day, are not making such good “timber | soldiers” as the rejected men, return- | ing from camp, indicate. Upon phys- ical examination, many of the men are found to be unfit, physically, for the rigors of forest camp life. In view of the fact that one of the inducements held out to the veterans aésembled here in convention last week was the “opportunity to regain health btoken by privation and the experiences of war,” these revelations are of startling interest to those vets who contemplated accepting the la- bor camp jobs. It is evident that the cast-off can- non fodder, against: whom Roosevelt has levelled one of the most vicious attacks made on any one strata of American people, are of little use to the Morgan-Roosevelt swindlers. Broken in health, facing starvation, they are even rejected from the re- forestation camps. —Veteran Correspondént. Relief Granted in Venice, Cal., After Militant Action LOS ANGELES, Cal. May 31— Thirty workers from Venice, Sootelle and Santa Monica, under the leader- ship of the Venice Unemployed Council forced the County Welfare Center officials of Santa Monica to see their committee and give imme- diate relief and medican attention to three cases presented to them. DEFENSE LEAGUE GROWS VANCOUVER, B. C.—Six new branches have recently been added to the growing organization of the tions of the American Legion parade. Although that parade took place ear- lier in the morning. Eight hundred young workers from Los Angeles were herded into trucks | and forcibly escorted out of the city by police. They were taken thirty miles out of San Diego. This was| done though many needed medical attention. Dozens of police with tear| gas followed the trucks. Many have been arrested. Nine of them are from Los Angeles. They ate | charged with “attempted murder, “riot,” ete The National Youth Day meet was mit for a parade using the provoca-| | organized by a united front confer- ence involving many working class organizations. It includés pacifist and church groups. Hatiier in the} morning a picnic and atiiletics were | held. COAST GUARD PAY CUT FIGHT LOOMS 4) Per Cent Slash 3) Threaten March on Capital GLOUCESTER, Mass. (By Mail). — Effective June 15, the Coast Guards will get a dose of the “néw deal.” They are to receive a 40 per cent cut in pay. Feeling among the men is high and even the capitalist press had to admit it. Many of the men said that they would turn their families over to the Welfare and march to Washington. Already because of their protests eighteen of the peity officers have been reduced in ranks. There are 170 men of enlisted rank, most of them are married. One guardsman stated, “I can’t keep my three kids in school with this, I guess I'll turn them over to the welfare and go to Washington to camp on the White House lawn. Al- | ways wanted to see the town and might as well do it while I’m starv- ing. { The men were given five minutes | HOLD CONFERENCE Arrest 8 on Criminal Syndicalist Charge for Having Red Flag SAN FRANCISCO, Calif, May 31. —National Youth Day here involved youth from many parts of northern California. 800 were at the demon- stration. Hight participants carry- ing a float with a red flag were ar- rested and are charged with criminal syndicalism. A meeting in Larkin Hall was attended by fifteen hun- dred. Speakers were Sam Darcy, Dis- trict Organizer of the Communist Party, Ella Winters and others. Re- solutions were adopted calling for de- fense of the Soviet Union and fer the support of the German toilers against fascist terror. Previously a sport meet was held, Sports organizations from 16 cities took part. On May 29 a Northern California Youth Anti-War conference took place. It was attended by 32 organi- zations. A militant program of ac- tion for struggle against imperialist war was adopted. Legionnaires Beat ' Young Socialists For Pacifism NEW YORK.— While the! police stood by refusing to interfere, Le- gionnaires beat up ten Young Peo- ples Socialist League members who were standing on the curb with plac- ards denouncing war at the Wash- ington Heights Memorial Day parade Tuesday. Saul.Kravin was hit on the head with a rifle butt, knocked on the ground, trampled on by the war mad Legionnairés and was taken to the hospital uncofscious. One Y.PSL. Alton Kastner was bayoneted in the |shoulder and takén to the hospital severely injured. Wheh a YPSL was knocked down at |the feet of an officer and the latter to “decide” between taking the cuts lor being discharged from the service, ‘Twenty-five per cent of the men have stated they will quit if the cut is put into effect. As against economizing on their pay, the men demand that annual target practice be eliminated, saving was asked to arrest the veteran the answer was, “I didn’t see anything.” Previous to the starting of the parade the Y.P.SLs had walked thousands in that sphere alone and not taking bread from their tables. Food allowances have been cut from $1 to 33c a day. In answer to a gneeting “It’s a nice day,” a sentry replied: “Yeah, if you jaround with their placards “Disérm | Now,” “Organize Against War,” and then they proceeded to the curbstone to watch the marchers. They still |held onto their few placards. A | squad of veterans who had been con- can enjoy it.” There is a sentiment for a marth on the capitol among Canadian Labor Defense League in the men, and this may materialize. ‘JOBLESS TEACHERS STATEMENT | CALLS FIGHT ON DISMISSALS. 'List Those Made Butt of School Board Discrimi- | nation Against Militants NEW YORK.—The following appeal to all teachers, is a statement in part by the Unemployed Teachers Association, 323 East 13th Street, which | has been sent to the Teachers Union, Kindergarten-6B Association, Joint | Discrimination in Harlem Hospital, which initiated the fight against the Harlem Hospital butcher shop, is in- cluded within the Committee on Conditions which consists of lawyers, doctors, and representaitves of Har- lem fraternal organizations. uted scrip money as relief to all with- out any investigation. The relief sta- tions had been closed since last Tues- day. Every one received five dollars - scrip, some also getting a sack of our. . . OHIO JOBLESS DEMAND SPECIAL) SESSION FOR TOILERS TO VOICE DEMANDS CLEVELAND, ©., May 31—De- mand is being made upon the state} | legislature that it continue in session er Zion Church, 162 West 137th St. A musical program will be given by Hal Johnson, Chauncy Northern and Dayse Harding. Admission will be free. Arrange door-to-door neighborhood distribution of the Daily Worker; at in Columbus on June 25, following action takén by an enlarged meeting pon system. Wages here are less than 10 cents an hour. Eat in By a Negro Worker Correspondent PROVIDENCE, R. I—A member of the I.L.D., happening to walk into a newly opened “Nickelmat” on 358 Westminster St., Providence, saw an elderly Negro lady and a child being discriminated. The member went to the local pranch office and reported it, and we talked it over and decided to send two Negro members into the pate. Six white workers would fol- Ww. My friend and I walked in and took a seat. The clerks walked by and pretended they didn’t notice us, About three minutes later the six white workers came in and took seats. One of them, Anna Bloch, organizer of the International Labor Defense in this city, sat next to Raymond Harris, young secretary of the 1.L.D., who is a Negro. When the clerk came to ask for Comrade Bloch’s order she de- manded to know why we were not served. To this the manager replied: “We pick our customers.” So I said: “Yeah? Well you come outside and pick your spot.” Demonstration Wins Right for Negroes to the same time canyass for new sub- scriptions. of the State Action Committee in Cleveland. oo | KENOSHA TOILERS START HUN- GER MARCH JUNE 3 KENOSHA, Wis., May 31.—The Un- | employed Councils of Kendsha and} the Local Committee of Action, rep-| resenting 12 workers’ and farmers’ organizations, are mobilizing the un- employed workers and farmers of this vicinity to march to Madison, starting June 3rd. Restaurant ored as quick as he did the white. The manager gave her a scowl and said: “Are you white?” This was enough for us and we told him that if he didn’t serve Negroes promptly we would organize the biggest crowd of colored and white people to come there and protest against discrimi- nation. More sarcastic remarks at the Ne- groes by the manager caused Com- rade Bloch to grab the sugar bowl and throw it at him. The manager went to call the police. Meanwhile the clerk finally put a chocolate soda on the counter for Mr. Harris. In- stead of drinking the soda, we smashed it against the wall. Then we turned and walked out, telling them that if the discrimination kept on, we would organize a demonstration to enforce the 13th, 14th and 15th amendments to the Constitution which says Negroes have equal rights and we mean to see that we get equal rights in this city and state. Since then, two colored members. of the LL.D, went into this place and were served right away as they came GLOVE WORKERS WIN HIGHER PAY * GLOVERSVILLE, N, Y., May 31— Wage increases of 10 per cent were won here by glove and leather work- ers after two strikes. The workers) in the Levor company struck last week, after the boss attempted to im- pose a new wage cut. They demanded a 10 per cont increase and won it. ATTENTION ALL CLUB AND MASS ORGANIZATION SECRETARIES All Secretaries of Workers Clubs, IwO, branches, Fraternal and language organizations, Womens Councils, etc., are invited to a very important meeting called by the District Committee of the Communist Party, tonight, at 6:30 p.m. at the Workers Center, 35 Then turning to one of the clerks, in. ALLAN BONEY, E. 12th St., 2nd floor. The meeting is to be held at Moth- | | until the State Relief March arrives| “that the unemployed cannot depend on the promises and the speeches of good intentions on the part of city politicians, but will have to take | things into their own hands, organize | block committees, anti-eviction com- | mittees in each house and put their furniture back when they are O’Brien stopped. “What” he said, evicted.” |“Put the furniture back in the same | house.” “Exactly” Winters replied. ARGENTINA HITS | U. §. TRADE AS, HULL GROUP SAILS NEW YORK, May 31.—Secretary of State Hull led the American dele- gation to the World Economic Con- ference aboard ship here today for passage to London. Hull said they would “try to agree on fundamen- tals” within a few weeks. At the same time that the Ameri- can delegation sailed, dispatches from Buenos Aires reported that Great Britain had struck a telling blow at American export trade through a rul- ing of the Argentine government roviding that all dollar drafts on he United States must be paid for exclusively with dollars obtained through exports to the U. S. A. Since the U. S. exports much more to Argentina that it imports, this is a serious blow to America’s export trade. It is significant that this or- der follows shortly on the heels of the Anglo-Argentine trade pact, QUEBEC SEDITION CHARGE FAILS TORONTO.—The jury returned a “Not Guilty” verdict in the cases of D. Gagnon and J. H. Trembley, charged with sedition a year ago be- |ary increments, salary reductions and Committee of Teachers Organizations ©— and the High School Teachers Asso- ciation: “The Unemployed Teachers Asso- ciation calls upon all teachers, em- ployed and unemployed, to rally in united protest against the wave of victimization and terrorism sweep- ing through the schools. The pw tive transfers, suspensions and dis- missals is an attempt to stem all op- Position within and without the schools to the imminent loss of sal- | Payless pay days. A cursory view of these recently punished by the education authorities is very illumin- | ating. We list only those that have | come to our attention. 1. Mr. Isidore Blumberg—Teach- ers Committee—Discharged to Pro- tect Salaries. 2. Mr. Ben’ Davidson—Member of the Executive Board of the Teachers Union—Transferred. 3. Miss Dorothy Gushevitz—Un- employed Teachers Association— Dismissed and later reinstated. 4. Mr. Louis Nidel—Member of Teachers Union and Classroom | Teachers Groups—Transferred. 5. Mr. Alfred Kirschner—Mem- ber of Delegate Assembly High School Teachers Association — Transferred to annex. | 6. Mrs. Nina Strull and two | other teachers of her school salary | committee — Threatened with dis- missal and later transferred. | 7. Miss Alice Citron—Unemploy- ed Teachers Association—Question- ed for lecture to a mass meeting of Harlem parents. 8. Mr. Ralph Fagin — Brighton Beach Parent—Teachers Associa- tion and the Unemployed Teachers Association—Transferred. 9. Miss Helen Weinstein—Bright- on Beach Parent—Teachers Asso- ciation and the Unemployed Teach- ers Association—Transferred. Suspended without pay on charges of conduct unbecoming a teacher. ll. Mrs.. Williana Burroughs— Secretary, Isadore Blumberg De- fense Cotimittée—Suspended with- yeniently disbanded rushed for the placards, separated the YPS.Ls from the crowd and proceeded to beat them. Mehtion the Daily Worker in ALL leaflets, posters, cards, issued in your district, section, unit, branch or club, CLASSIFIED LOST—Ladies wrist watch in dentonstration y while on parade, on Lenox Ave, between 128th St. and 140th St., or on 7th Ave. betweeh 140th St. and 125th St. Re- turn to F. W. ¢ /o Daily Worker. Intern’! Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 18TH FLOOR All Work Done Under Pi al Care of | becoming a teacher. APARTMENT .....-._. FLOOR __.__. BOROUGH _._.. he said: “Don’t serve them, let them) get out.” To this Comrade Bloch told | him he wowkd have to serve the col- Assistant Publicity Director, Scottsboro Branch, LLD, Providence. ©. A. Hathaway, District organ- izer will address the meeting. $$ cause they tried to organize an un- employed meeting of French-Cana- dian workers in Quebec City. 10. Mr. Isidore Begun —- Unem- ployed Teachers Ass’n., Member Executive @oard Teachers Union— out pay on charges of conduct un- Dr. C. Weissman NOTE:—Mrs, Williana Burroughs has been active in the attempt to | remedy the wretched school con- | ditions in the Harlem Schools. She | has also actively supported the | campaign to free the Scottsboro defendants. | We cannot accept it as a mere co- | incidence that all the people pun- ished by the school authorities have | I been organizing employed and un- employed teachers. DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet. Pitkin and Sutter Aves, Brooklyn PHONE: DICKE: 3-10 AM, 1-2, 6-8 PM. Office Hours: Spend Sunday, July 30th WITH THE DAILY WORKER Organizations and Workers Keep This Date Open Dr. WILLIAM BELL OPTOMETRIST 106 E. 14th St., near 4th Av. BROOKLYN WILLIAMSBURG WORKERS EAT AT KALE CAFETERIA 286 BROADWAY, BROOKLYN JOSEPH S. LAX, 0.D. OPTOMETRIST 48 Flatbush Ay. penal Livingston Street BROOKLYN, W. Y. (Near Fox Thea. ‘Tel. Main 4-387 To have good vision have your eyes tested yearly Would You Like to Go to the Soviet Union? Would You Like to Go to a Workers’ Camp This Summer? Brownsville Proletarians \ For SOKAL CAFETERIA 1689 PITKIN AVENUE

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