The Daily Worker Newspaper, January 1, 1934, Page 2

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swe FUNDS FOR FOOD, HOUSING BADLY NEEDED: SUPPORT| 2:ximnine Today SOCIAL INSURANCE FIGHT Roosevelt Has Refused Food to Jobless Delegates NEW YORK. The need aree thousand dollar fund f nd housing for the «clegates to Yational Unemployed Convention in Washington, D. C., on Feb. 3, & immediate, the National Commit- ‘ee of the Unemployed Council em- 1- Noyed delegates to camp on the wind wept streets. The st ment fol- ows:— “Twice previously mass support nade ible the presentation of ‘syatids for Unemployment and @ J Insurance to Congress. < ite all the efforts of the Fed- State and Local governments “nd all the hardships and sacrifices hat were involved, the representa- ives of the unemployed reached Vashington and made their demands or adequate relief and unemploy- nent insurance heard. “Now, in the middie of the most vitter Fifth Winter of the Cris gain prepare to assemble a large jody of workers’ delegates in Wash- ngton. “The Roosevelt government refv © provide food, lodging e of assembly for the delegates to the Yational Convention Against Unem- jloyment. They would like to see is Ofce again forced to camp on an open wind swept highway. They vant to “discharge” gatherings of ailitant uneraployed in the Capito) of Wall Street. “% minimum 4f $3,000 are needed * once in ordeg to make all neces- ary: provisions for food, lodgings and nlace of asseinyiy for the National ‘onvention Agaiast Unemployment. “RUSH YOU% CONTRIBUTION TH NATIONAL COM- MPLOYED COUN- 80 E. 11th ST., NEW conference of sll will take place 30 p.m. sharp, at th| done under hae alceady ordered 31,000 copies @ Jan. 6 issue. «O* ANNIVERSARY LELEBRATIONS | DISTRICT 1 WELL, Mass—Jon. 6 at 338 Dance Concert and Speake: WHENCE, Mass.—On Jen. 6 at Loom Phters Hall, 35 Margin St. Entertain- ment and Dance. Adm. 25c. YIDENCE, R. 1.—On Jan. 6 at Swedish Aull, 59 Chestnut St RARD, Mass.—On Jan dermicy Road, DISTRIOT ® YORK C¢ry.—on Dec. 30 at Bronx vallaeuen, E. ittth St. Concert and} Dance. STONM.—On Jan. 6 at Workers Center in Worcester, Mass. PISTRICT 2 at (ADELPHIA Feb. {anor Hall, \9t1 W. Girard Ave. oaram arr/nged. TrOWN, Pag te Jen. 7, avrrrow. | n Jan. > “otter + go Jan. 2 Bt. . Adm. 15. 6 at 20 Pow- Girard Good 7_at Workers St. Negro Boys uanian Workers g&Qance Orchestra. ede 6 tsburgh.—an. 1%. sburgh.—Jan 13. sburgh.—Jan. 1% 13. _| solid Section 2, N. Y., Party Members Called to 2! Territorial Meetings NEW YORK.—All street units of section 2 of the N, Y. District of the Communist Party are to attend territorial membership meetings Tuesday, Jan. 2, 6:30 p. m, to hear s report on local Unemployed Council activity. The immediate tasks of units and members will also be discussed. Members of west-side units are to meet at the Spartacus Club, 269 West 25th St., while east-side unit members meet at the Work- ers Center, 50 East 13th St. on the 2nd floor. New York Union to Present Demands to CWA Administrator NEW YORK.—A series of meetings of C.W.A. workers were held throughout greater New York on Friday for the purpose of con- ing the Relief Workers Pro- tective Union and to plan a series of actions for the demands of the C. W. A. workers throughout the city. Delegates from all C. W. A. projects in New York will meet at Irving Plaza, Jan. 2, at 9 a. m., and this mass delegation will pre- sent the C. W. A. demands to Travis H. Whitney, city C. W. A. director, at 10 a. m. After the meeting with Whitney, part of hte delegation will join the general unemployed mass del- egation that will see Mayor La- Guardia at 2 p. m. Preparations are now under for a city-wide conference of C. W. A. workers to be held . Ith at Irving Plaza. Workers from all unemployed locals, and organized and unorganized work- ers on C. W. A. and relief jobs are urged to elect delegates for this meeting. The organization of C. W. A. workers in New York is being the initiative of the Unemployed Councils. Socialist Leaders See Big 1934 New Deal ‘Opportunities’ By SEYMOUR WALDMAN (Daily Worker Washington Bureau) WASHINGTON, Dec. 31—The So- cialist Party appeals to the workers to “rise to their opportunities,” in a statement “surveying the prospects of the new year,” issued here today through Norman Thomas and Louis Waldman, its chairmen. Though professing to see a lack of “fundamental reform” under the Blue Eagle, the Socialist leaders not only fail to make one specific indictment of the National Recovery Act, but ac- tually state that it has made “certain concessions to the workers.” They take this position despite even Ad- ministration admission of the drastic cuts in wages and disregard for the workers’ choice of their own unions under the New Deal. Bracketing itself with the govern- ment, the Socialist Party demagog- ically takes credit for U. S. recogni- tion of the Soviet Union: “The one redeeming feature in our interna-! tional relations for which we have cause to be grateful is that in 1933 we finally ended the policy of non- recognition of Russia.” In pulpit tones, the Socialist lead- ers conclude with a plea for the worker to lie down under the heel of his exploiter, one of the favorable Socialist “possibilities” of 1934: “The DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, JANUARY 1, 1934 Support for National Convention of Unemployed, Feb. 3, Must Be Strength Herd Homeless in Transient Camps, NEW YORK.—All transient un- employed, those who are homeless, those hitchhiking or riding the rods looking for work, those who can’t pay rent, and those who are | trying to keep from starvation by begging, are receiving a New Year’s present from president | Roosevelt in the form of arrest and forcible detention in concen- tration camps. The decree for these “transient camps” goes into effect today. Hereafter, accord- ing to the law decreed by Roo- | sevelt and federal relief director Hopkins, all migratory workers are to be given the choice of jail on vagrancy charges, or iso- lation, with a few cents a week pay in Roosevelt concentration | camps. The news bulletin of the New | York state Temporary Emergency Relief Administration, now under W. A., issued for the use of E. R. office workers and of- ficials, says, “Special attention is requested by the Federal Govern- ment of all State Relief Admin- | istrators and State Transient Dir- ectors regarding action affecting transiency effective January 1. At that time the drive to curb hitch-hiking, panhandling, beg- ging for food at back doors and the practice of obtaining free transportation on railroads will be instituted.” The following statement from the TERA bulletin to its employ- ees reveals that the police will be used to enforce Roosevelt’s decree against migratory workers and homeless unemployed.” Represen- tatives of the transient division are urged) by the federal govern- ment—Ed.) to co-operate with the police and police court judges in cases where transients are ar- rested for vagrancy and see that they are given an opportunity to accept the facilities provided them by the transient division.” This means a choice of jail or transient camp, enforced by the police, for the homeless workers. All other states have received identical in- structions. . Cae Deportation Threats. LOS ANGELES, Dec. — Forced labor camps for “tran- sients” will begin functioning here on Jan. 1, according to plans of relief officials. At a confer- ence in the State building, at- tended by railroad executives, Chamber of Commerce and police and relief officials, it was decided that all persons classified as tran- sients would have to do forced state. Police Chief J. E. Davis of Los declared that “rock piles would be the proper relief to mete out to these transients.” Protest Actions Urged To Stop Mass Murder of 9 Negroes NEW YORK.—An appeal to the ! | miltant nation-wide protests against the plans of the Alabama rulers for @ mass legal lynching on Feb. 9, 1934, of nine Negro workers, as told in the Dai Yorker Friday in a dispatch from Jim Mallory, editor of “The Southern Worker,” was issued yester- day by William L. Patterson, National Secretary of the International Labor Defense. The nine workers, one of them a woman, were slapped into jail in va- rious parts of the State of Alabama, and sentenced ina single day’s mass execution. The Alabama Supreme | Court, before whom the Scottsboro case is to come for review, speedily affirmed the death sentences and or- dered a mass execution of the nine workers. The horrible story of how one of the nine defendants, Ben Fos- ter, was tortured and framed, was told lin yesterday’s dispatch from Jim Mal- llory. The I. L. D, appeal follows, in i labor or be deported from the| Angeles endorsed the plan, and{ | U toiling masses, white and black, for; | | | | | ALBANY, N. Y., Dec. 31.— Failure to protect disabled workers, graft and abuses at the expense of the workers, are revealed in the re- port to Governor Lehman of his Medical Committee on Workmen's Compensation. A nuniber of meth- ods of cheating the injured worker out of his compensation are men- tioned in the report which declares that “notorious racketeering” is going on. These include the failure of the lay referees of the Depart- ment of Labor and the State In- dustrial Board to place on disability lists workers who are entitled to compensation. The report blames this difficulty of injured workers to receive compensation on the fact that the referees are not physicians. t does not point out that these boards make decisions against workers in order to save the em- ployers money—that they are boards functioning in the interests of the employers. The report ad- mits that injured workers are “se- riously handicapped” in attempting to establish the character and ex- tent of their injuries. On this question the report to| Lehman recommends only that a! medical advisory and appeal board, of three physicians be set up and the addition of one physician to the Industrial Board, It makes no mention of control by the workers of distribution of compensation, the committee being content to leave this in the hands of the employers’ government boards. Another series of abuses against injured workers is disclosed in the report. Th include the supplying of “cut rate” doctors, who are often incapable of treating the cases as- signed to them, and failure to sup- ply speciali and adequate med- ical and surgical treatment. The report declares that the city of New York has engaged in the practice of fee splitting. It ad- mits that the State Insurance Fund of New York State has pursued the THE STAR PUPIL “T seek economy power like the President’s. New York’s budget must be balanced, and a major operation will be necessary to do it.”—Mayor-elect LaGuardia. Workers Robbed of Compensation Says Report to Lehman ment of Labor only at the risk of losing his job,” and his chances of proving the inadequacy of medical care are reduced by the fact that the medical records are in the pos- session of the defendant (the em- ployed—Ed.) who can afford to be represented by counsel, and that the most important witness, the physician who treated him, is in the employ of the self insurer the employer—Ed.).” The only recommendation of this important “abuse” is that the em- ploye be permitted to choose his own medical attendant, with certain restrictions. But this in no way removes the threat of loss of his job. The recommendations of the Me- dical Committee, which include registration, do not remove these abuses, which arise from the fact that the Department of Labor boards and the Industrial Board work in the interests of the em- ployers by cutting down compensa- tion and barring injured workers from compensation, and giving in- adequate treatment. The report is to come before the state legislature. :|Farmers Act to Aid Philadelphia Strike of Milk Wagon Men (Continued from Page 1) The Philadelphia Board of Health, and thfir allies the Milk Distribu- tors, are alarmed at the turn events have taken and are attempting to stop free distribution of milk to babies and invalids. Raise Fake Cry The Milk Distributors, alarmed that j their huge profits are being threat- | farmers, in distributing this milk, are! ened» have procured the Board of Health to raise the bug-a-boo of milk —by dell Strike of 300 Coal | Drivers Is Broken AFL Heads Help Coal Companies to End Walkout DETROIT, Mich. Dec. 31—The strike of 300 coal wagon drivers and yardmen which started here Thurs- day is practically over. The coal companies with the able assistance of the A. F. of L. leaders have succeeded in strangling the strike in its infancy. Yesterday, Frank X. Martel, presi- dent of the Detroit Federation of Labor gave the signal for the smash- ing of the strike when he pledged that the union would not interfere with deliveries of coal to welfare families by scab companies, Follow- ing this, the Regional Labor Board and union officials reached an agree- ment ending the strike at J. T. Sin- clair Oo., the largest company af- fected. The demand for union rec- 8,000 Hail ‘Daily’ At Anniversary Celebration In N.Y. Hathaway Urges Wide; Circulation for Paper By ROBERT KENT NEW YORK. — Eight thousand workers, many of them travelling long distances despite damp zero weather, gathered in the Bronx Coliseum Sat- urday night to hail the Daily Worker, Central Organ of the Communist Party, U. 8. A., on its tenth anniver- sary. The celebration was a festival of splendid revolutionary entertainment | and an enthusiastic demonstration by | the workers of their devotion to the Daily Worker. As C. A. Hathaway, editor of the Daily Worker and main speaker of the evening, was introduced by Mich- ael Gold, chairman, the large audi- jence rose and sang the “Interna- tionale.” | Hathaway outlined the achieve- ments of the “Daily” made possible in the face of numerous difficulties by the support of the workers. The audience cheered him when he declared that regardless of any at- tempts made by the bosses in the future to suppress the “Daily,” the American Communist Party would! continue to publish and circulate it just as the German Communist Party continues to print and circulate its Central Organ, the “Rote Fahne "| under the Nazi terror. | He called for immediate intensifi- cation of effort by American work- ers, to broaden the circuation of the Daily Worker among American work- ers as an effective step for heading off the rise of fascism in America, Preceding Hathaway, Moissaye J. Olgin, greeted the Daily Worker in' behalf of the Morning Freheit, Jew- ish Communist daily newspaper, of which he is the editor. Richard B. Moore, National Secre- tary of the League of Struggle for | Negro Rights, cited the role played by the Daily Worker in the battles of the Negro masses against discrimina- tion and lynchings. A group of new Soviet songs by Sergei Radamsky were so popularly received by the audience that this noted tenor, just back from the U. 8. S. R., had to give a number of en- cores. The large audience applauded re- soundingly the splendid programs of new dances, songs and dramatic num- bers presented by the New Dance Group of the Workers’ Dance League, Daily Worker Chorus and the Thea- ‘tre of Action of the Workers’ Labora- tory Theatre. Dancing followed the entertainment and speeches. ea eae pasteurized whole milk for years The conferring a good think to the public. It is a great déal better milk than | roosted in nearby trees, Everybod SI GERSON New Years’ Notes , NEW YEAR’S DAY is, of course, the time for all ers to look over the doings of the past year misty stare out the window and smile sadly. Yes, of sentiment. In the good old Sports Year 1933. Discarding tradition we, too, G | Not that anybody asked us, but we feel it incumbe ; to venture an opinion on Outstanding Achieveme such things as the the heavyweight championship @—-————-—_— by Primo Carnera and the five claimants to the wrestling throne and the sudden attack of pen- nantitis that overcame the New York Giants last year, the most bril- liant sports event was probably the winning of the mile by Jack Lovelock in the record time of 4:07.6 at the Palmer Stadium, July 15th, the fast- est mile ever run by a human being. All other considerations aside for the moment, the award must go to Love- jock ior this race. This was no Lewis-Browning match. Running the mile in time like that is the straight goads; it demands faithful train- ing and phenomenal natural ability. This is one thing the boys can’t put in the bag, much as they would like to. To break 4:10 in the mile de- mands a lot more than an okay in a West 48th St. fight promoter’s office, UT there are a couple of other achievements that we don’t want | to overlook, We're not thinking of any miles under 4:10 right now. We're referring to something like the meet the boys had over at Iron River, Wisconsin, last summer. It seems that there are a bunch of farmers up there who like to stretch their legs in some track competition every once and a while, It gets kind ; of monotonons to pilot the old plow ; around, you know, so the boys have a Labor Sports Union Club up that- away and hold their little meets. Crops haven't been fetching any particularly good prices this year and @ man can’t buy track shoes, and, anyway, there’s dam few cinder tracks a farmers’ athletic club can get. But the boys do their best in old sneakers or barefoot. Well, sir, for one of the Iast meets they held the boys couldn't get hold of any 8-lane cinder tracks, or, for that mat- ter, any two-lane tracks. So they just got out there on a narrow coun- ry road and ran one at a time, The starter got them off with a wave of a handkerchief and time was kept by an Ingersoll, the clocker figuring out the winner at the end. Specta- tors stood along the road and kids ly was satisfied when it was all over and ate their lunches and listened to speeches in the nearby clearing. They tell me that nobody ran the | hundred under ten. I can well be-| lieve it. I can even believe that no- body broke twelve for the century. But I wish I'd been there, anyhow. s 8 Soo NOTES: Mr. and Mrs. Lou Little and all the Little ones will be entertained by Mr. Tiny Thornill and his Stanford boys this afterncon at the Rose Bowl, Barring a California 2 earthquake or a speech by Nicho- las Murray But- Jer, the Columbia jads will get a fearful _ shailack- ing and the Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce a + few bucks and lots of free ad- vertising The Stanford children will wear mole- skins, while Lou Cliff Montgomery Little will adorn himself with sack- cloth or a shroud. Bill Corbus, the DR. JULIUS UITTINSKY 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet. Pitkin and Sutter Aves., Brooklyn PRONE: DICKENS 2-3012 cute child from Stanforc bly keep coming out of afternoon to lead the b. in end sweeps and off-, Cliff Montgomery, the p bia infant, will probably all afternoon in the hope and McDowell may snare ers will be said by the sport writers. Picked Soccer T Play at Croton: NEW YORK. — Two labor soccer matches will today at Crotona Park, booting ground of local teams. All-star teams of t politan Workers Soccer Le filiated with the Labor Spo: and the Eastern Distric League, one of the organiz the Workers Gymnastic a) Alliance. The latter organ. the American section of the Arbelter Sports Internation monly known as the Lucerr national. The first game between division teams will be played and the second game betwe division teams will follow . A curtain-raiser between M. \ executives and the referees’ will be played at lla.m. Th will give the referees an oppo to even matters with the Lea; ficials, and should provide ma: arious moments for the spects National Soccer Ass~catiom Formed These inter-league games m forerunners of many such gan be schduled between LS.U. leagues throughout the country will pave the way for the form of a National Labor Soccer As: tion, the initiative for which taken by the Labor Sports Union conference for the formation of National Labor Soccer Association take place June 30, in Cleve’ Ohio. 1 } Greet Seven Years Labor Soccer Toda Celebrating the seventh ann versary of labor soccer in Ne York City, the Metropolitan Worl ers Soccer League, local Labc Sports Union organization, is hold ing a banquet tonight at th Kavkaz restaurant, 332 E. 14t} St, between Ist and 2n¥ Aves Many leading figures in the New York workers sports movement aré expected to attend. Officers oj the organization will speak on the recent decision of the Labor Sports Union to send an Amer- ican socer team to the World Spartakiade at Moscow, August, 1934, The banquet is open to the pub- lic. The charge for the dinner os fifty cents. CARL BRODSKY All Kinds Of INSURANCE |, 799 Broadway NX: STuyvesant 9-5557 Allerton Avenue Comrades! }- The Modern Bakery | o : Zanes 3 . dangerous for human consumption. the public can purchase from the Dis- , was first to settle Bread Strike a—Jan. 33. * ‘)year 1934 Opens with possibilities that Laide y 2 pee Sere ba lead Ine The farmers and their children have; tributors. The farmers are willing to!} Ofti¢ Hours: 8-10 Am. 1-€, 68 P.M. and first to sign with the —Jan, 13 } the working people, if they will rise ‘Nine innocent Negro toilers will be mum figure” and that this practice} Dee” drinking this milk all their lives.| have the Board of Health make an! SS NE Pa—dan. 15. | to their opportunities, can turn to|Jegally murdered in Alabama by the ie, Secmen aincne s afnpenantiin No dire results have taken place, but| accurate analysis of the milk distrib- es FOOD WORKERS' ~Jan_ 15: the advantage of their class and their | Command of the lynchers’ court. One insurance carriers.” The report re-| 0" the contrary, farm children seem! uted at any time. The farmers them- INDUSTRIAL UNION RACE 7 nation. of them is @ woman. Momentarily veals also, that the decisions of the|t® be ideally healthy. The Board of! selves have such inspections and anal- eS HEIGHTS, Mich—On Jan. @, A “New Era” balked in their murderous program Department of Labor “are often | #ealth, in its protestations of concern| ysis all the time. | 691 ALLERTON AVE. aian Hall, corner Hackly and/ 7H. complete Socialist New Year| #8ainst the Scottsboro boys, the lynch ainfate’” to the wanker: for human rights, is very indignant.| The Milk Drivers Union and the {4 at Finnish | Plessing follows: Jandlords and their legal blood hounds o ‘The farmers, in the words of Shake-|farmers have formed a permanent! COHENS’S aich-—On Jan. 14 st Fitvor,| “Laissez-faire capitalism, which ave planned another holiday of Threat of Firing speare, think the Board of Health| joint committee, which meets every | +7 York, will be the main} had come to be synonymous with the | blood. The blood of these Negro toil-| With regard to “self insurers”|“doth protest too much.” two days and which will continue 117 ORCHARD STREET T ad U i Musteal program srrsnge4.| rugged individualism for which Her-|¢rS is being shed in order to strike] which include the big employers} The Board of Health should tell| aiter the strike to plan and execute | Nt Delancey Street, New York City rage nion \ itoliow. bert Hoover went down defending, ; ‘trot into the Negro people. and municipalities, etc., the report} the public what the farmers already| joint action of drivers, farmers and. Wigiseie Ondeaas s “Ce le Ik friends, wi ini (] EXES EXAMINED DISTRICT ‘ had ceased to exist long before the omrades, workers, friends, We can states that “‘an injured employe can|know very well, that children of| working-class consumers, for better Tel. ORchard 4-4526 aaa Ices Section 5, id niust t at mublee foe 2 : By Dr. A.Weinstein * Mu Qremple, Harding| advent of 1933, It was not the doc-|®Nd must prevent this cruel murder.| file a complaint with the Depart- wealthy parents have been given un-! conditions. ometrist Factory on Premises “\ @& Admission 35e.|trine that was invoked when it was|_ “We cannot hesitate for a moment. Ey SSS eS BUILDING MAINTENANCE WORKERS necessary to’ supply the financiers! Let us throw every searchlight of i ow UNION | bi and industrialists with government Public opinion upon it. Let us offer . ‘ 10 mraaes atees @? Naniagrey Son bad - 6. 7 - i i ce, Tt is tir 4 Rb cg “ x cMoraea| sistance in order to reseue them! sye" Eng Of aeaisance. tt i time! Hail the 5th Anniversary of the Needle Trades Union! BRONSTEIN’S CLEANERS, TERS. AND PRESRERS Musical pro- y Bee, 3 4 and the folly of a system which ae of students, for organized mass | Vegetarian Health 23 Hosen rece: Pil gas Oty ARICT 16 makes it possible for millions to| %ton. N THE fifth anniversary of the Needle Trades the occasion of its fifth anniversary, the Needle 001 RKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION on Jan, 9 im Bo. Omaha. | starve in the midst of plenty. It was, Let us close the xanks of struggle. Workers Industrial Union, the Communist Trades Workers Industrial Uni in ts its Restaurant “ west eth Street, Kew York City ssanelelii a however, resurrected and invoked| Let Us save our own. i “ pap cram Chelsea 3-050% -———— —————__—_______ | Party proudly hails the first and strongest of the revo- iS@ Claremor* lutionary trade unions of the Trade Union Unity League. Five years ago a courageous group of 3,000 dress- when the question was raised of ren- dering direct help to those who were in distress. Laissez faire is now offi- cially dead. With it has also died the “New Capitalism” of 1928, which Wash—On Jan. 10 at Workers %. Pirst St., at 8 p. m. Varkeay Hrons . Good \dmission 10c tm advance; 15¢ offer of unity with the workers in the International Ladies Garment Workers Union in a common program of struggle against the bosses as it has done so many times in the past. the year began. The victory of Hitler in Germany. and the re-arming of the entire world in anticipation of a FURNITURE WORKERS INDUSTRIAL $12 B: ata ney x ott 0: u rk Gramerey, 5 "5-8006 y ARRANGE YOUR DANCES, UNION LECTURES, MEETINGS | ‘ash—On Jan, 12, at Tulip at the METAL WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION os new world war, has brought us face| Makers, driven from the Internationa! Ladies Gar- NE Ww E Ss 7, oO N I A N ‘35 East 19th Street, New York City % \ was going to make everyone rich. to face with a problem that may de-; ment Workers Union by the mass expulsion policy The Indusirial Union has many achievements to E <Granlerey 1-7843 vRicr ee i Pe “Internationally, conditions today; termine whether civilization itself is| of the A. F. of L. officials led by Sigman, founded the u Jan, M. its record in the past five years. Not only has it shown that the militant industrial unions can win WORKERS’ HOME 27-29 West 115th Street Robert Minor, main|#@ much worse than they were when ' to survive.” es i at program, arranged. INDUSTRIAL UNION Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union. Today the Industrial Union has grown into a full fledged fighter, 181 West 28th Street, New York City as serene (etic omar strikes and real gains for the workers, but it has built New York City scr sata ce rance 25c, z 3 not alone for the dressmakers but for w« Ts in many | a powerful union of fur workers who have won back —— Come Away From the Noise and Rush of the City other sections of the industry. their 1926 standards, It has laid the basis for building RESTAURANT and DOWNTOWN ied) FOR REST, QUIET - - AND A LITTLE FUN AT Organized at the beginning of the year of crisis, | the union among wide sections of the unorganized BEER GARDEN CAMP NITGEDAIGET BEACON, N. ¥. Hot and cold running food—See | the Union has been an inspiring example to the labor movement for its unflinching adherence to the line of class struggle and its resistance to the bosses’ policy compelling the workers to bear the costs of the crisis. The Communist leadership of the union has jim loyalty and devotion not only of its own membershi| but outside its ranks, in the locals of the American Federation of Labor. Thousands of workers, facing another wave of persecution, discrimination and ex- pulsions look to the Industrial Union’s program as a guide for their action within the International Ladies. Garment Workers Union. needle workers, The Industrial Union faces crucial struggles in the coming months with the combined forces of the gov- ernment, the A. F. of L., and the bosses determined to crush it. But the loyalty and militancy of the needle workers, which has thus far withstood the ‘provocations and lerous attacks on their will stend solidly bet the or. fights in the interests @f the ~ Long Live the Need! Union! 2k JADE MOUNTALN ‘or & man. mericcn & Chinese Restaurant a 197 SECOND AVENUE Bet. 12 & 13 Welcome to Our Comrades — WORKERS--EAT AT THE Parkway Cafeteria 1638 PITKIN AVENUE Near Hopkinson Ave, —-Brookiym, N.Y. PHONE. BEACON 731 Water in 60 steam heated rooms—plenty of tasty, nutritious the newly decorated social and dining halls. ALL THE SUMMER FUN WITH WINTER COMFORTS Sports—Parties—Lectures, otc. Come for the Week-end—You Will Want to Stay the Week! Rates: $14 per week (includ. tex); $13 for I, W. 0. and Co-Operative Members Cars Leave Daily at 10 A. M. from Co-operative Restaurant 2700 BRONX PARK FAST TEL.: ESTABROOK 8-5141 eaten One private; water; e 319 W. 94th ———— 10th 6. Write ~— Ail Comrades Met at tha th the 14th

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