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Page Two 6 | | Gov. Ritchie Tries to Evade Responsibility DeniesA ppeal for Lee | Maryland Officials in/Ritchie Sets Next ~~ DAILY WORKER,.NEW YORK, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1933 Tugboatmen Eager! °U for Strike; Get No Word from Maher Reporter Interviews} Men in Harbor-:. | NEW YORK—“Sure, I’m in favor| of a strike. We work'too damn long} TTF OF NEW YORK —by del Roar Protests on Armwood Lynching; Euel Lee Death Verdict WorkersBlockMove ofSocialists toBreak N. Y. Shoe Strike \Foree Brockton Union \Heads to Reject Plan of “Forward” NEW YORK.—Boston shoe workers | PORT Just a Boy at Heart 5 + wt d ought to get the $10.00-cut-back.” LL the shipping clerks and all ‘the poolroom hangers-on and Lat cute sia ida fon ee Tis was but one ofthe many tubo poe rite nib ead ie eee: A all the catia and all the newspaper boys even, were, j york expres the same - eouvre an oop- vole Campaign Lynching of Lee oat pack tet eahy eration given the NRA and the| surprised when the Champ who was a very efficient and popular | 20—With he had} BALTIMORE, Ma., the cynical preten: been “powerless to Albert C. Ritchie of Maryland, yesterday | attempted to evade responsibility for} the bestial lynching of George Arm- wood, Negro. worker, in Princess) Anne, on the lynch-infested Eastern Shore of Maryland, las Wednesday| night. | In his statement, Ritchie pretends} that he was not responsible for Arm- wood being ketp in Princess Anne, although even the capitalist press reported that the governor had re- ernor Albert C. Ritchie of Maryland, and burned an innocent Negro worker, NEW. YORK.— David Levinson, prominent attorney left this city last night after consultation with International Labor Defense leaders to file a writ of habeas corpus de- manding the removal of the Euel Lee case from the jurisdiction of the courts of the State of Mary- land and Governor Ritchie. BALTIMORE, Md., Oct. 20.—Gov- heeding the call of the bloody gang which two days ago lynched, hanged, Worker reporter yesterday. Members of the Associated Marine | Workers, the men knew of the pend- ng strike only from what they read in the press, William~ Maher; their secretary, had given them no infor- mation. He told the newspaper re- porters to return later in the. day, when he would Jet them know the re- | sults of the executive committee's | meeting. i A watchman, aboard one of the| A watchman aboard one of the| with a strike and that to his knowl- edge most of the men were willing bosses to help destroy the union which fights genuinely in the in- terests of the workers, Boston shoe workers informed the Industrial Union yesterday that Arkin, representative of the Jewish Champ became Exchamp overnight. Everybody said it was al Raw Decision and perfunctory rumors circulated about the, Three Gunmen ‘twisted faces, hand in coat pocket) who visited ' the dressing room before the fight and there was Popular De-,. Forward, socialist daily, approached the Brockton €hoe Union, the newly organized Brotherhood of Allied Craftsmen urging the officials to enter the N. Y. shoe strike. The Brother- | hood was formed recently after the Brockton workers repudiated the Boot and Shoe officials and declared: a strike against payment of union dues to them through the check-off. mand for a return bout. When a week later the tabs ran pictures of the principals and their managers and the promoter signing papers for the return bout all the shipping clerks and all the cus- tomers heaved a sigh of relief but all the newspaper Boys looked at each other and nodded significantly and eyes. Exchamp began leading him’ a dog’s life right off the bat. He was a constant target for the beebee | shot which bewildered him no end. Leaving the ring with Exchamp at: his heels he flopped for the tripping | act and without fail. The Boys thought the Ham was biding his. time. a he said “I don’t. know nothing: + * y| Ham was well set-up but slender fused to order his removal despite| late yesterday gave the final order fo: | PUt ‘ r After Arkin had negotiated for | some of them even knew what they . ine of E ‘oq | @bout it. I don’t go to the union i and his blonde halo made him the the fact that peaaeog pers legal Jynehing of Euel Lee, scl offices deca’ they're always only nag er oe id ase eae | were nodding about. Ideal muckeri He. andchisitolke Had pron: sorming. fo. iy tation easly two years ago on a murder charge.! wanting to cotlect dues. We don't 8 nthe A d. pion poded OF eo} One of the big newspaper Boys! come from Minnesota and talked ‘gained statewide rate al bees = a He set the date for hanging of Euel | get nothing fr them, Many of the | bane erhood, Tien) of 42 mem-| owned a tiny piece of the Exchamp with a strong Swedish accent, Ham in the day. Armwood was lynched 17| Lee for next Friday, Oct. 27. faen off the Varicus tise expeeeaee thn ers, rejected interference. On| and he didn’t nod significantly but spoke of a left yab and a right to § hours after he had been returned to} the Princess Anne jail from Balti-| More where he had been taken sev- | efal days ago. Ritchie reiterated his | statement of the day before that sole responsibility for Armwood’s presence in Princess Anne rests with State's Attorney John B. Robins and Judge Robert F. Duer. As a direct result of the mounting | thunder of mass protest from work- | ers throughout the country, Ritchie | on Wednesday ordered the Ba!timore | Chief of Police to undertake an out- | Yesterday the whole police force of Baltimore was mobilized, uniformed gangsters patroled the Negro neigh- borhoods in plaioons of 4 and 6, and 80 police loaded with weapons stood guard over the Union Trust Bui!tinz, where Ritchie had agreed to hear a demand for a pardon for Lee, on the sole grounds of his innocence, In spite of the terrorization, three | public meetings were held in the | streets, one at City Hall Plaza with | 800 present, and a delegation of 12, | headed by Bernard Ades, Interna-| inion of the officials of the| Of 4,800 workers only 3,500 are re- | ported wo: . They work ten hours and longer a day. The men want the 8-hour day and return of the wage-cut taken last year. Maher stated that he is only demanding the 8-hour day. Work aboard the railroad and deep-sea tugs, are not involved but. many of them stated their sympathy with the men of the Associated. One engineer gaye the Daily Worker re- “O’Brien, McKee, LaGuar dates for the mayoralty are but a single thought. every possible occasion.”—-News Item. Natural pals with a lot in common are these minds with Thursday Arkin visited Brockton | and convinced the Brotherhood of- ficiels that they should send or- ganizers to New York. As soon as word of this spread, the rank and |file stormed the office of the | Brotherhood demanding that they keep out of New York. Because of this protest the Gen- eral Board of the union announced | that organizers will leave only to| rdia, and Solomon, rival candi- much given to fraternizing on C. P. Election “observe the situation.” Boston shoe workets are aroused over this Socfalist strike-breaking Meets sat down at his typewriter and wrote that he was happy about the Ez- champ’s securing the bout because the lad had been a real fighting champion, always gave the fans a run for their money, a natural fight- er, you know, just a Boy at Heart. ‘There was real interest in the fight and the promoters thought both training camps ought to open well in advance, Exchamp was established at Billy Mitchell’s which had all the accessories and was not too far from town. At the same time the big news- the yaw. He got five dollars a day and sent three and a half home. The fourth day he was there Ex- champ woke him with the most si cessful hot foot of his career. attached three matches to the toes with strings and lit them at once, Ham jumped up and extinguished them with his slippers. He walked out to the porch and soaked his foot in a pail. It slowed him down in the ring, too, He took several punches flat- “ + ” | maneuver and the cooperation given ty ae erga ane. ‘Thee Bal, | tional Labor Defense attorney, and| porter a leaflet distributed by the the NRA and the bosses to help de-| paper Boy broke with a platinum-| footed and limped visibly, His nose eas detectives sent to “investi. | 2¢n7Y Williams, Communist Party or-| Rank and File Opvosition of the A. Today and Sunday stroy the union which fights genuinely | haired lady with whom he was ac- = cocoa nig and the te” returned to Baltimore after |®mizer elected to see the governor. | a4, w, and said “That's the real idea. in the interests of the workers. customed to hitting the high spots| doctor spent half an hour trying to ee ee ee 0 ins | They presented him with 10,000 sig- | pe AES stop it, spending less than a day at the scene of the lynching. In a formal “ovinion” on the lynching, Attorney General William natures to a petition demanding life and freedom for Euel Lee, victim of}! a barbaric ruling-class frame-up. He refused to look at them. Even the men in my line ought to go that way.” The Rank and File had distributed a call for tugboatmen of all groups to go out in one united action. As the TO WILLIANA BURROUGHS, Commu open-air meet, Third Ave. and W: Members of the A. F. of L. Boot and Shoe Union local 199 in New York declared their solidarity with the striking shoe workers of the In- dustrial Union on Thursday night at DAY nist Candidate for Comptroller, at ‘arren St., Brooklyn, 8 p. m, and information about his share in Exchamp leaked out to the other boys. This made them wary. Four or five editors neglected to send men to cover Next day all the Boys had their cameras out. There seemed to be no special reason for it, but it was obvious that they had been tipped : | Billy Mitchell's and publicity began to Lane, dr., yesterday rushed to the | “wiitia:ns spoke, demanding that Lee | p, ene > Ri es 2 » Geman aily Worker goes to press, Maher $i ; reat .. |% membership meeting when they|lag. The promoter wired both man-/ off. One of the newsreels showed up ae ie cies eee finery | Be pardoned. When he asked ques-| has issued no call to the men to) BZN GOLD, Communist Candidate for President of the Board of Alder adopted a unanimous resolution con-| agers to put some snap into their|and they never come without a om the Eastern Shore. He declared: “Gov. Ritchie had no authority | in the matter. As a matter of fact, unter the Maryland law, neither tions about the lynching of George, Armwood at Princess Anne the day} before, Governor Ritchie, on whose | head rests the blood of Armwood, told him to confine himself to Euel Lee. | strike, men, at International Workers’ West 107th Street; -at 8:30 p.m. * MASS ELECTION RALLY and ‘torch light parade. Order Plenum, New Star Casino, 101 |qemning their scabbing officials for interfering in the strike. The chairman of the local, accused |of having worked with the Boot and | Shoe officials in their attemot jointly . * Union’ Square, 7:30 routine. Exchamp, who was no slouch at gags, put on his thinking cap. Se | reason. Ham climbed in and Exchamp car- ried him for a minute, then let loose | with a hook that shook him to his . hed the judge nor the State’s Williams showed that the two cases Cit Events | p. m., to 33rd St. ard rs: Pauline Rogers, candidate for | Ti0" fe NEA t0 krenke tha-atiite end 'ANARDS began seeping into edi- Ss bine ee old ta boy was y." R | District Attorney; Alf id ssembly in the | 4, oO i torial offixes relating how an Un-| out on feet. when uppercut attorney. were inseparable, but Ritchie refused c y; Alfred Wagenknecht, candidate for Assembly to force the shoe strikers into the came. The cam groun Carrying one step further this/to answer any questions. | 14th District, Manhattan. |A. F. of L. union, dented any con-| Own Want cee Der Oh i | anaead WE GEE te kee ABE tine t to whitewa the | inti ; nC ion Ww: t je aos = ene net Then Ades spoke, pointing out the | Attention, Y.C.L. Peccey eae: " i i. ‘ * s pire the scab pear a cal Exchamp. Editors knew you canardly| reels afterward and they had done Magistrate Edgar Jones, acting as evidence of Euel Lee’s innGesnce and} All nembers of District 2 ¥.C.L. are| IN-A R RA il and pe rade winding up-at 10th St. and 2nd Ave. ly je sty oh were Li sf oi on : believe such tales but they weren't} ® Marvelous job on it. Exchamp , showed the jurors the body of the et aay , B _| headquarters tomorrow at 10 A. M. ‘f Sia at sent Boys legging it to the camp, le dropper champi iD paalipedlh ene He then adjourned ing the case with that of the Scotts-| mere will be an election campaign | SUNDAY Dledged $1,000 to the strike fund and which was developing an air of sec-| OM a decision but he certainly looked the session indefinitely. boro boys, who the same day were} tag day to raise funds for a special WILLIANA BURROUGHS at the Bronx Workers’ Club, 1610 Boston Road, had already contributed $300 towards this. This should stimulate other recy which made fine copy. the part of the Killer Who Is Just a y lynch trial ‘ rand John Richerdson, a white worker, | pore ordered to @ new Inch ‘isl youth pamphlet on the elections.| Bronx, at 8:30 p.m, (LaGuardia, O'Brien, McKee, Solomon invited.) | mass organizations to come to the aid| ‘The unknown was a harmless look-| Roy At Heart procter bo ee Ee ee ath | itehile isbetied’ cynteally,: without lives bee ee + en eee See Ae, ‘ of the: Herold struggle af the’ shoe,| Img boy who was pretiy fast Om hia) Go) DOr Ree ere thine then Gabe on the charge that he gave George| Ritchie , call he aera tie NYGARD, MINOR, BURROUGHS] GOLD at Rockland Palace, 3 p. m,, |slipper and stitchdown workers. feet but didn’t seem to punch hard) Cown grade. i Armwood a ride followinz his a'leved attack on an 81-year old white wo- man, whose arm he was accused of | “grabbing.” Richardson is held as an accessory “after the fact.” OR. JULIUS WTTINSKY wren the delegation had spoken, | he picked up a prepared statement, showing clearly that he had never had any intention except to make sure not to rob the white ruling class and its gallows of their prey. Election Mass Meeting The Italian Prol. Club of Williams- burg has invited representatives of all political parties to speak at an elec- tion meeting tomorrow afternoon at 3 P. M., in Vienna Mansion, 105 Mont- in Harlem, 158th Street and 8th Avenue. WORKER GIVFS WEEK’S WAGES | Needle Union Shop Meet TO “DAILY” | NEW YORK—M. Shumkin. mem-) | ber of I.W.O, Branch 127, esrns $10 | @ week. This weok’s wages he gave | to the Daily Worker $40,000 Drive. He enough to cop a sneak on Baby Les roy. The mountain air at Mitchell’s was bracing and accommodations were good and Boys are, known for their weakness in respect to expense accounts. Colorful stories were phoned in and the editors apparently thought METROPOLITAN WORKERS’ SOCCER LEAGUE SCHEDULE First Division Red Spark vs. Fichte, 1 p.m, His statement began with the de-| rose st., Brooklyn. A. D. Sugarman : it worthwhile to keep them: there.| 6 As halleng in rkers, | Crotona. H cents that Lee had confessed his will esi oe ee ‘Party, A t Coo er I ] ion To da ihe bateaaes poe Was at emai The (Best few coo Bxchamp corel Gisnibie gu waleoua a yan; ieee J iominic Flajani wil chairman, n into the Un! erson. 107 BRISTOL STREET The delegates stopped him, point-| Admission free, y Harlem Flection Meeti astute of the Boys figured the rumor|” [talia vs. Ecuador, 1 p.m., Hud- 4 ing out this was a lie. neat IE — ariem Efection Meeting | had gotten to the management’s ears! son, PHONE: DICKENS 2-3012 Office Hours: 8-10 AM. 1-2, 6-8 P.M. Ritchie admitted it was. doesn’t matter,’ he said. He went on to state that Lee had “But it been charged with other crimes. I. Amter to Speak I. Amter will represent the Com- munist Party at an election meeting to be held tonight at the American NEW YORK.—Today at Cooper Union at 12 noon the big shop conference of delegates from shops in the fur, whitegoods, tailoring, dress, cloak, knit- goods and in many other branches of the industry is scheduled to take placed called by the Needle Trades Workers’ Industrial Union, The Practical Speakers Conference of the Harlem Section will merge with the Election Campaign Committee in |@ meeting of Captains, Candidates and the Ham was being put in his) place. Exchamp was full of Color. Second Division |Spartacus vs. Red Spark, 11 a.m. To Crotona. supplement the spectacle of his cars| Maple vs. French, 11 am., Cen- “He was proved innocent, and even | saci 2 ks Pl: The conference is called to buil nited f. ent | and speakers tomorrow- morning at| which had been punched into re-j tral Park. To Russia? the courts were forced to acquit him,” ebae & it nee pom Duta ine Tice eee a8 beni tt iia a ane eshte 10 A. M. sharp, at the section head-| sembling ‘tinor pumpkins and his| Herzl ys. Dauntless, 1 p.m, @ | the delegates said, Ra eA 4 . Sgainst the impending drive of the | quarters, 27 W. 115th St, Herman| brows which projected to touch his| Gravesend. the other major parties will a!so speak ° “That doesn’t make any difference,” Ritchie said. “It shows what kind of @ person Lee was” | Election.” HUDSON on “The First Issue of ‘the Present Mor (ei r Will Not | bosses to lower wages and lengthen jhours in the industry, and for the |defense of the standards won in |Mokerwain, chairman of the James Matthews Branch of the L.S.N.R., will lead the discussion on “How to Carry cheeks, he had developed all the man- nevisms of his idols. Through the wide, open smile which proved he! Third Division Spartacus vs. Fichte, 3 p.m., Me- Coombs Dam. z | : jrecent strikes He came to the end of the state-| W.ESL. F A | is Out the Program of the Communist| was just a Boy at Heart he thrust} I.W-O. vs. Juventus, 11 a.m., , .ES.L. Fraction Meeting | The conference will lay the ” a | Astori Army and Navy Store ment, and coldly announced that he| All Velevaty Baste MR ehel| rive Ky 19 or 9 |basis for the strugele of thousands |Party for the Negro Masses. beebce shots which well nigh pene-| Astoria. a had set the date of Lee’s execution for next Friday, Oct. 27. 97 THIRD AVENUE (Between 12th and 13th Streets) Gives Honest Values in Genuine Workers Ex - Servicemen’s League should attend the fraction meeting at the Workers Center, tomorrow | Say Silk Strikers of other workers in the industry, who were forced back to their shops, by the N.R.A. and the A. F. |of L. officials without any gains W.E.S.L. Membership ‘There will be a general membership trated your skin. He had a manner| of tripping people without their| knowing just by whom they were) tripped. Even his opponents had to} Fourth Division S. American vs. French, 1 p.m. Central Park. 1 Spartacus vs. G. Spartacus, C. K. TABACK, M.D. | morning at 11 A. M, first floor. meeting of the W.E.S.L. tomorrow ij p.m., McCoombs Dam. * *. hy ay Physict ™ cc on < (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) |and who work under the same mis- a _| be alert in their footwork to avoid} . . Horsehide Sheeplined Coats;} 5. sinaen wit Ze? ag ee Ce oe JerN negations afternoon. 2:30 P. M, at 40 W. 18 St.) oot educated toe. Wren somebody| ed Spark vs. Hungarian, 1 p.m, Windbreakers, Breeches; High Shoes; Boots, Etc. Office Hours 8-10 A.M.,6-8 P.M. Phone Minnesota 9-5549 | Turkish Workers Club The Turkish Workers Educational Club, recently organized, invites or- | ganizations to seind delegates to the sider a wage proceedings aga’ prese proposal already in the despite the protests st this by National Textile re- ntatives. The board members | Declaring its support of the Nee- |dle Trades Shop Conference and jits intention to mobilize all its af- filiated organizations for the main- La Vanguardia Appears Today La Vanguerdia, organ of the Spanish fraction of the Communist fell for his gags, E: ~p laughed} his infectious laugh which would have been likened to Victor McLaglen’s, only it was not so subtle, “Haw, haw, Exhibition Games Brownsville vs. Youth Culture, 11_».m., Betsy Head. Hinsdale vs. Italian-American, 3 a | re , pm., Betsy Head. DOWNTOW. opening, Sunday afternoon at 2 P.M.) heard th ests wil 1 | sti rate Party, and which has fasted to appear| haw.” Exchamp would laugh “hee, r 2 5 OWN Intern’l Workers Order Food. Gil be served Oriental style | ReeTd, the protests without comment, | tenance of the conditions recently | PaTW. tnd which nag fated to appear | new.” P | Olympie vs. Italian-American, 1 DENTAL DEPARTMENT pein fe ut looked up from inattentive atti-| won by the needle workers, the today and will be published weekly fe ea Fae | \p.m., Betsy Head. | Admission free. __| tudes, obviously startled, Trade Union Unity Council’ de-| td9y, a tar Nonnari vs. Bronx Hungarians, 3 7 Phone: TOmpkins Square 6-9554 | John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY—ITALIAN DISHES 80 FIFTH AVENUE 16TH FLOOR AM Work Done Under Personal Care of Dr. C. Weissman A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 302 E. 12th St. New York JADE MOUNTAIN American & Chinese Restaurant 197 SECOND AVENUE Bet. 12 & 13 Welcome to Our Comrades 7 ° 8 of horsehide ‘Windb: 3, Russia Workers needing full o leather sheeplined Ci Breeches, High Shoe: will receive spe: cial reduetion on all purchases at the SQUARE DEAL ARMY and NAVY STORE| 121 THIRD AVE. (2 doors South of 14th 8 A Wonderfal tr fet Oresataations’ STUYVESANT GRILL AND OPEN AIR TBEER TAVERN 137 Third Avenue Between 4th and 15th Streets oe GRAND OPENING BERMAE | Cafeteria and Restaurant 809 BROADWAY BETWEEN lith and 12th STREETS, N. Y. Cc. All Comrades Meet at the STATIONERY and “IMEOGRAPH SUPPLIES Lerman Bros., Inc. Phone ALgonquin 4-3356 — 8843 29 East 14th St. N.Y.C. ARRANGE YOUR DANCES, LECTURES, UNION MEETINGS at the NEW ESTONIAN WORKERS’ . HOME 27-29 West 115th Street New York City RESTAURANT and BEER GARDEN Manhattan Lyceum Hall - For Mass Meetings, Entertainments Balls, | Weddings 66-68 E. 4th St. and Banquets New York INEW HEALTH CENTER CAFETERIA Fresh Food—Proletarian Prices 69 .. 18TH ST., WORKERS’ CENTER. | FINE CLOTHING FOR WORKERS | SALTZMAN BROS. MEN’S SUITS NEW YORK AIRY, LARGE Meeting Rooms and Hall To Rire- Suitable for Meetings, Lectures and Dances in the Czechoslovak Workers House, Ine. Telephone: RHinelander 5097 This followed over an hour of chal- lenges from worker representatives against the methods by which Frank Schweitzer and other American Fed- eration of Silk Workers’ officials at- tempted to put over a “tentative agreement” for ending the strike. Board and labor misleaders last wee, | in conferences from which, as Burlak | said, “the National Textile Workers’ Union was excluded.” Wagner told Burlak that she | “shouldn't be so sensitive” about the jeonferences because “nobody was ex- feluded.” Burlak, however; stood on her statement. | Throughout the’ hearing workers jfrom both united and national | unions flung into the faces of the | board the repeated challenge: “We | want definite. offers:” and “the workers themselves are the ones to decide this thing finally;” and “we {Won't accept the so-called tentative proposal.” ji ‘ Mrs, Emma Dagon; a mature, slow- spoken representative of a local united union in Phillipsburg, N. J., brought the board members .to: rapt attention when she rose :ard: voltm- teered the answer tothe board’s question, “will the workers accept a $27 a week wage?” “I say we won't accept less than $30 a week,” Mrs. Dagon: said, “and We won't take that without a definite committment on how many. looms we operate, We won't work more than three looms.” ts The board tried to interrupt, tut the woman pevsisted: want-to tell you, I've run five looms-and:I know what my nerves are today,” “What are your wages?” Sidney Hillman, one of the board, inter- rupted, “I’m ashamed to tel! you,” Mrs, I | consider that unfair?” Eiliman put m. “No,” ‘the woman smilingly stood (clared in a statement today that |the needle workers’ struggle to |meintain their strike gains will vi- |tally affect the standards of the workers in all other trades, “The support of the left wing by the dressmakers of Local 22 at the tant and are for a w | struggle with the left wine unions,” the statement declared. “The work- ers in New York have been in the forefront of the struggle for de- jeent living conditions. They have |not depended on the N.R.A. but on | their own struggle. Today’s confer- ‘ence will lay the basis for greater bunity of the workers against the | bosses’ drive to destroy their con- ditivns.” ted front “ | pat, “We won't take that. there are plenty of us eating two meals a day now, and we're willing to eat one, The manufacturers have us.” p ‘Wegner opened the hearing by ask- ing whether it weuld be satisfactory for everybody to “settle” the strike on @ manufacturers’ promise to pay an average of $27 a week in the North if manufacturers in the South paid an averaSe of $22 a week. “The proposed settlement doesn’t say we won’t make less than $27 a week,” Burlak told the bosrd, “and we want to know hew about the Jooms—how many, we want to know phow many hours.” Hillman interjected that the North- ern manufacturers would get their “assurance” of a $22 minimum from the Government. ~ - “Let's talk figures,"Burlak returned. “And we want to know also whether you're going to ask us to go bak to work and have the proposals go into effect sometime in the future. I the Independent Unions, it won't be any settlement at al) You know! | suffered, but not one, two, three with | hereafter, under the editorship of Comrade B. Ibanez. The N.R.A. threatens to outlaw strikes, The Daily Worker fishts the NRA. Fight fer the “Daily” with your immediate contribution. ‘ This “tentative agreement” » was|fitst mass meeting after the strike | = Classified ) 4 At Specal Prices for Qryaaisations jf] ied between National Labor | indicates that the workers are mili-| WILLIAM BELL FURNISHED cole elevator Optometrist 106 EAST MTH STREET Near Fourth Ave. Phone: Tompkins Squai | | | | DR. J. JOSEPHSON Surgeon Dentist Formerly with the I. W. 0. 207 East 14th Street New York City (nee> Third Aver Hard Ham had been picked off al farm about thirty miles away. He had established a bit of a local rep, but he was green as @ columnist’s apartment. 337 W. 14th St. Apt. 74. ROOM FOR RENT—Comradely atmosphere. Reasonable, 203 West 94th St. Apt. 6A. VERY LARGE ROOM—for two. Housekeep- ing. All improvements, fireplace, private entrance. 246 Lexington Ave., near 34th St.) Bassman. FURNISHED ROOM-—for rent. All improve- ‘ments, private entrance. Call evenings. 236 E. 13th St. Apt. 23. SEAMENS CLUB--140 Broad St., needs coal (heating) stove, book case, cheap. COMRADE-—wants share apertment or rent ‘@ room. Kitchen privileges, Bronx. Write H., ¢/o Daily Worker. ROOM—for Rent. 329 B, 13th Bt. Apt. 16. Call all week. Sunday until! MOT THAVEN 9-8749 DR. JULIUS JAFFE Surgeon Dentist 401 EAST 140th STREET (Corner Willis Avenue) Ollnvilte 5-1108 78 DR. S. L. SHIELDS Surgeon Dentist 2574 WALLAVE AVE. Bronx, N. ¥. corner Allerton Avenue DR. R. H. ISAACS Formerly of Baltimore, Md, has moved 12 o'clock, (Brooklyn) FOR BROWNSVILLE PROLETARTANS SOKAL CAFETERIA for Brownsville Workers! Hoffman's. RESTAURANT & CAFETERIA Pitkin Corner Saratoga Aves. Office He to 2 6 to BP. M. Sanday 10 to 12 Noon Near Hopkinson Ave. Brooklyn, N. ¥. m., Central Park. Fichte ys. Jefferson. Pp. Boys High, 11 a.m, BRONX RAPID SHOE REPAIRING 677 ALLERTON AVENUE All work done by factory method. All Soles Sewed. No Nails Men's Half Soles... Ladies’ and Children Rubber™Heelg .... Ladies’ Leather Lit COMRADES MEET IN Field’s Cafeteria 3824 THIRD AVENUE (Near Claremont Parkway) Comradely Atmosphere. lan Prices. ————— ee! GARMENT DISTRICT Proletari: Phones: Chickering 4017—Longacte 10089 COMRADELY ATMOSPHERE FAN RAY CAFETERIA 156 W. 29th St. New York Garment Section Workers Patrontze | Corner eth St. Ms ; Basa: CEac oka aa pane eae at his ofice to New York’ at WORKERS—EAT AT THE C ‘ > READY MADE AND TO ORDER 347 E. 72nd St.” New York!||| week” On one ee ae any setiement witant || ts Ta Street Bevas, Xt dae Cafeteria Navarr Cafeteria * 181 ST. ANTON STREE (NEAR CLINTON STREET) “And if you get a raise of $9 you| the agreement of the National and Phon: Fordham 7-344 1638 PITKIN AVENUE 333 7th AVENUE