The Daily Worker Newspaper, February 8, 1934, Page 2

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NRA Regional Board Cheats Shoe Workers Of Referendum Votes Shops Riere Majority Voted for United Are Called ‘Open’ Shops Cabmen Ignore Plan of Mayor Lafuer iia DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1934 Union Conference to Push Fight on Boss Injunctions PUUC Calls Shops, Locals Mect Delegates for Saturday Meet GUTTERS OF NEW YORK 000,00 Lewd PLUNDE! y ‘ } Ruby Bates to Speak in Bronx Tonight for Scottsboro Defense NEW YORK.—Ruby Bates, star Scottsboro defensu witness, will b the main speaker at a Scottsboro anti-lynching meeting tonight, 8 o'clock, in the Epworth Church, 834 Morris Ave., Bronx. The meeting is called by the Nat Turner Club, which points out tha? the case of two of the nine boy will come up again on Feb, 24, in the Decatur lynch court. The meeting will also receive a report from Geo. Stone, Secretary of the Bronx Section of the In- | ~————By JERRY ARNOLD Warden Lawes and | His Teanp 4, PORTS writers have a favorite funnybone. They like to kid about the Sing Sing football team. Of course, lately | that gag has worn thin somewhat. But not so long ago the | sports scribes were having a good laugh about the “college” and the football team of convicts, about the rah-rah spirit in the prison and about the marvelous ingenuity of “Dean” Lewis NEW YORK.—In an effort to chea the United Shoe ers On || ternational Labor Defense on the Washington Conference against unemployment, which he attended. As Strike Goes roy te ) inien an vas declar gional Board tor through month’s Although was courts choke the ‘ork In strike been issued the ur- s, needle said the T. U. U. C European in Stirring Appeal for Scottsbero 9 (Continued from Page 1) nents of lynch terror,” is signed by the follow: e Ds Freidman Fr Henry Lefb’ 2 tre Lureat, Jean L George Jourda Garm Writers No Picketing Where. NRA Meets; Hotel | Officials’ Policy Officials in Sell Oui. Policy Try to Stifle E. Lawes, the warden of the prison. A reeent news item stating? that three of Sing Sing’s best | football players will be lost to| next year’s team because of “grad- uation” brought the point up again, This time sports writers were less hilarious in their greeting, and only & mild wave of humor greeted the event. ING SING’S football team was or- see their hides around here again.’ “That,” continued the Warden in his article, “shows the fine Amer- ican spirit that correct prison lite can give the hardened criminal, Of course, I pointed out that for him te uce sch methods as he proposed was not the correct procedure.” Yeah, but he had the right iden, didn’t he. Warden Lawes? That's the true “American spirit.” Mass Action that | That's the true American college . 1" 1 7 - fanized two years age by that m A WILLING SCAB arent. “liberal” “reformer, Warden | Spirit, too. Some years ago at New SRN ee ne eo, German Youth Resist Nazis; Mass Feb. ll to Aid Them' NEW YORK, Feb. 7.—Just a por~ | appeals to support the struggle of th 2 of th of tae militant re- | German workers against the Nazis. | am youth against | The Feb. 11 meeting, in addition to regime is told in Earl Browder's deyiction of the Ger- from Leipzig that man situation, and Clarance Hatha- “3.3 ested and|way’s description of Negro activity |here, will have a program based n Le! carty- | Policy of the Amalgamated officials, j oll militancy, was seen again yester- ist League ac- None of the and one was carpenter, was 's imprisonment tion camp, Three re sontencsd to and one to ten ths each, the “gupport | Revolution” | actions are lace countries. The ‘L'Humanite” contains daily neously with an V ity | i iY “ : iLovetiae Group Uses ARL. Painters Win, ' leaflets, etc, especially on the life of the German working class under Hitler. The Duncan dancers will give, among other mass dances, an anti-Nazi dance, Proceeds raised will go to the | German Communist Party and Young | Communist League for literature, Tickets are on sale at the Finnish Workers’ Book Shop, 15 West 126th St.; Workers’ Bookstore, 50 East 13th St., and the Bronx Co- operctive Restaurant, 2700 Bronx Park Eest. Prices are $1, and 40 cents in advance, NEW YORK.—The traitorous strike who wait hat in hand for jhe N.R.A.| to “sett!e” the hotel strike and curb day with the announcement by B, Tield, the un‘on’s secretary, that all pickets would be witt wn from any hotel to enable the N. R. A. millinery code authority and Mrs, Roosevelt to put on a publicity stunt for the milli- nery bosses, “In order not to mar the label in- auguration proceedings or to embaz- rass Mrs, Reosevelt the union wil permit the lunchecn to take place at} any hotel even though affected by the strike except the Waldorf,” declared Mr, Field, This is similar to the pol- icy followed by the union in the case of President sevelt's birthday party, when mass picketing ceased in time for the birthday party to be he'd, While hotel pickets pace the streets, hungry in the wind and cold, the its pickets and leave the fat-bellied A. F, of L. officials, the millinery bosses and Mrs. Rooseve't to their good square meal. These belly crawl- ing, sell-cut activities of the officia’s are be’ng denounced by many strikers Led by Field, several hundred hotel Amolyamated officials will withdraw| Lawes—ihe man who doesn’t permit the “New Masses” or “Labor De- fender” to be sent to any inmate of his prison. Sing Sing’s team mej with imme- diate “success” from the start. Sports writers, of course, made fun of it. But by and large the act was hailed by liberal journalists and humen- ‘tarlans as a “progressive step in| prison reform.” eR iS OW bringing football to a penal institution is in itself not a bad thing. It gives a few prisoners a chance to stretch their muscles. The Sing Sing team pleyed games with outside terms and their rreatest rival was the Port Jervis police de- vartment who, it is sald, denutized vrofessional players as policemen for the day in order to beat the convicts, But Warden Lawes won't allow the convicts any benefits withovt rettin -nything in return for the support of the society which harbors him, Lawes is an exponent of the “up- vitht, respectable citizen,” the man ‘hat loves his country, hates the “Reds and cther foreien elements, sbversive to the traditions of Amer- York University they fed us # course in industrial management under o professor named Glover, who made this statement in class one day: “tf I had my way Vd fill ali Union Square with Communists and Iet ‘em have it with machine guns and chlorine gas.” Athletics is like music, A great thing when controlled by workers farmers and musicians. But let it become injected with that “American spirit” (a la Chamber of Commerce ond “There's something about @ soldier that is fine, fine, fine “ Republic Local 601 Accepts Challenge to Basketball Game, Dance YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio—Republic Local No. 601 has accepted the chal- lenge of Shenango Penn Local No. 609 {Sharpsville? and the result will be a basketba’l came and dance at the Ukrainian Hall, 525 W. Rayen Ave., Youngstown, Friday, Feb. 16. Shenango-Penn Locel claims 2 cracker-jack team, but Republic Lo- cal has gone throw7h two e'irmishes with the Reyublic Steel and knows no fear. Half the proceeds of the eve- , Mis i; i ‘ing will go to the “Steel and Metal A | ang: z ne strikers yesterday came to City Hall ning wil Mi a petonn f the committ Andre Malraux, Rene M2 s % duteden i ta DS ie xg Worker” and half to the organizing oP ipete toe Olean aEeTe Zeon Moussinee, Paul Nizan, ee Slander in Attempts | where they were met by LaGuardit's| y jsmbce reading somewhere | WOR Gt shalt to the orem . aul, Georze: er, Viadir 4 x ‘ 2 2 See AGolnh: Rabin, ‘Lee Sablon, | FSU oornes Follies, Ved! ap iag 9 to Break Up the I.L.D. | nrotested police brutality against} tome months laidlantine mended Gaal Gwe ~ (‘0 a 7: Wm, Gand2"l, wi ae ex CUI! pickets at the Waldorf demonstration Pitas so el ciara gripe INTRODUCTORY SALE myentian Snroade Tring Krenss, Harry NEW YORK.—In a malic Monday night. exrts and n $ Bilis, Fyran G Goorge Se iclous at- . Newman, Samuel Smith, Max Lan- Sox e the Jobless Struggles As Delegates “eave unions, ‘ pages as ae ! to Reinstate All of the | over to the Lovestonites, and that| Amalgamated offcia’s have not yet See ae sere part. Carson's Shoe Repair Dept, Soldiers in Havana Scottsboro . the class in Marxism which is being/| replied to the offer of the WIR. ‘One dav,” says Warden Lawes. c ape Colebrati Suspended Members _| conducted at the headquarters of the| oe ee narrating the epis-de, “I received a (Continued from Page 1) | into compar ention was that-there were too Ww youth delezates. ational Labor \merican affiliate. _ HAVANA, Cuba (LR. Havana » 0 Tax Collection Court Orders Zausner NEW YORK.—An crder to restrain Pointers’ trict Council 8 (A. F. of tompt to disrupt the activities of the International Labor Defense, the Lovestone group has been spreading rumors to the effect that the Sunny- side Branch of the I, L, D. has gone Branch is being instructed by Bertram Wolf, a renegade, The New York District of the 1. The Workers’ International Relief yesterday offered to establish relief kitchens in conjunction with the Amalgamated strike committee to provide relief for the strikers. The PITTSBURGH, Pa.—The strike of the hotel workers at the William Penn and the Fort Pitt hote's con- t” into the hex:ts and minds of his “crime-hardenedt” convicts. It seems that in an industrial town near Ossininy a strike was in proz- tess in which Commanists were request from one of my prisoners who was a narticulerly touvth individuel *9 speck to me ‘tt my office. I granted “9 request and the prisoner was led Half Soles and Rubber Heels Good Solid Oak Lez=ther—Expert Work- manship—Done While You Wait 49 CENTS PATRONIZE SEVERN’S Cotsen 4 " ii American steamship line, vrotest'nt| L.) from collecting a 59-cent tax im-|L. D. brands these rumors as slander-|tinued strong today with militant] , A aggre tae : the Scottssoro - Iynch-verdicts, nosed on the members by the Council | Cus lies, promulgated with the inten-| picket lines maintained. Scabs are | ‘"- CAFETERIA + tempt, taba: capitalist press eniuacsy Thins aeueiso (he! laren T of soldiers who|throuzh strong arm metheds, last| ton of popularizing the Lovestone} forced to live in the hotels under| “ ‘warden,’ said the prisoner when || Jth Avenue at 30th St, s of this Jim Crow town to discredit aie to ths) Participated. ‘Windows and doors| summer, was granted to the mem-|Culiit, The class which 4s being con-|heavy guard. ‘Tho strikers ace gaining|“e fecal me in my office, ‘TC heat |! pose Food atWorkers Prices | || mee tanvantinn on ite last aby ore a company union es egal ere smashed by the demonstrators. | bership cf Painters’ local 499 by Judg2 oun Py wie Bekciad is not Ress Brea er Bue BUPEDTY for their eco- sea EE da sree ne sin he i po S slike son, Official | another i ‘on. 8, weenie .| 7. L. D. branch, but a group of in-| nomic demands. with oss rodd: et Am a = i aaa te pitenide tg the ee lt the Parmelee Co. ed ar tine | Ae, a ps : - z fea vem c r of the Br gece al ellectusls who happen to reside in| A militant demonstration at the|'st us out fo- one day, Warden, just MEN ond WOMEN eee on poke expose 2 ie ee of 700 men in unit 3 marave, Tuesday. | Scottsboro bine sn order was pressed by| S!nyside, Furthermore, the class} Pittsburgher Hotel where the man-|one day, and I promise you'll never Dorit try to hide dandruff papers here regarding the Alabama | Here Morrison promised the men /test with thc activit'-s of British | (to Testraining order was pressed By! is not held in the Headquarters of Papers here regarding the Alabama one of the me: agement was reported to have forced with a big hat r a + | Gciegate, J. H. Paxton, ‘The “Stare | Dice company union with company ‘mnerialists in support of American | g poeribere ot the tot Ut thet iO, Branch, its workers to scab at the Penn Hotel| ——waniamasatgh Gomades woloame tf writing up this southern fighter as a|™en to run it. It this group of intervention. rank and file in the past aa resulted in a police attack. Hight ‘ clown, quoted him as intimating at|P@rmelee men that was thrown in be-| eee Hiontha aaatele eoting of-| ,EVery new subscriber gained for | were arrested. De Luxe Cafeteria femoves dandruff and stops e the White House that if given a mule, | tween the strikers as 2 wedge to split) U. §. Embassy in London Gets Scotts- ¢-a14om in control of the Council, | te “Daily” ctrengthens our revolu- | Preparations abe ROW UNder WY! 94 Geaham Ave. Cor, Slenel St ‘excessive falling hair : r 1 2) | their ranks and make the sellout boro Pro From Delegation e to spread the strike. Despite the fact - “<4 ae he would stop fighting for the un-| their EGROON ek “Gf it has; Judte Wi decision de-| ‘ttlonary movement, Ask your fel- |i. the «req scare” has been raised SESE Pee: 2 ORE Tat YOUR DRUG OC DEPARTMENT STORE oe peonilied ae a oe Meanwhile the big companies were| anything to do with Scottsboro, the | *lared that the Council had no right| low worker to subscribe. in the local press, the workers are ee employed Councils he convention | Sending telegrams advising the men| Ambassador will not even read it,”| to collect the tax and ordered all solid!y back of the Hotel and Restau- MEET YOUR COM™ADES AT T""e DOWNTOWN : i . gave Paxton 2 great ovation when he| to report to work at | Was the greeting of the secretary of | members suspended for failure to pay rant Workers’ Industrial Union, lead- answered these crude slanders. Al The following telezram was rr motion of protest was passed. vesterday by a driver of the Capitol | Paxton wrote the Washington Star} Gem Transnortation Co.: a letter as follows: “After reading| “Strike settled. Report for work your reporter's story of my visit to} at once.” | the White House I want to say your| The smaller fleet owners sent sim-| story of my interview with the Presi-| ilar messages to their drivers by post. | e H Gent's secretary is the biggest lle that | card. but forwarded it fo the state Repacr: | tfated in the attempt to con- pds fpehra + Pecarldrel Trade Unien|| ““"“"™""" < ever saw in any capitalist paper in Men Cautions tinue the 50-cent tax, the Zaus- Superintendents and janitors of the Bronx j my life and I have been reading them | for nearly 60 years. The statement | ‘The men, however, refused to re- turn to work. They were susvicious | Buenos Aires Anti-Imperialist Con- 1 teht at 8:30, at the Z. W. ©, Club, ye wm # x vegarding anyone promising m hol é t sae a ‘i bteined anproval of a new 25-cent| ‘ef. is met by the fascist cry for a | Union tonicht at 8:30, i Y rf j of the whole maneuver. In the Brook-| vention Demands Scottsboro obteine proval of & new esnt) 313 W. 180th St. mule or anything else is one of the| tn sribetes Rae ee wesies Hell, the| Boys Ratease \tax from the members. The tax has|~‘ctztorlal regime. BUILDING MAINTENANCE WORKERS | CHINA KITCHEN Girttest lies, Tf the unemployed peo-| “en only avreed to go to work pro-| BUENOS ATRES, Argentina (f, R.| not yet been collected, ‘The Toyalists, the most provocative 1. L, D, BAZAAR SESSION 190 Broadway, New York Clty | CHINESE-AMER“OAN ple me al thes = spe als Bape ed viding the Bronx men would go with| 4.)—A special issue of the imperial-| Zeusner, called to the witness ctand | in their tactics, do not represent any| 1 2. D, Bazaar Delegates will meet on Gramerey 5-0887 CAFETERIA-RESTAURANT { them. Judge Panken, who spoke first ae vedo gh ae ae ee ant at the Brooklyn meeting, told the the mules in the U. S. would not keep | Bronx drivers that the strike was set- myself nor my wife from working to/| tled, but foiled to report the true at- better the conditions of the starv-| titude of the Brooklyn men. ing millions of this country.” Paxton; The Parmelee men, under the in- wrote the following P. S.: “Speaking| fluence of company sto2l pigeons, at- U. S. Ambassador Robert W. Bing- ham of Kentucky to a delegation from the Negro Welfare Association with a protest resolution against the Scottsboro lynch verdict. Birigham, the secretary said, was not in. It has been learned, however, that Bingham not only read the protest, |ment at Washington, eiiiar Sige ist attacks of the U. 8, government against the Negroes, citing the Scottsboro case and the wave of re- cent lynchings as typical examples, was made at the anti-Imperialist convention called here by the Argen- | tine I. L, D, as @ counter-move to the tax to be immediately reinstated, as members in good standing. Close to $100,000 was collected by the Zaysner officiaidom from the . Tax receipts went to pert of a corps of thuzs to maintein the officials in power Frus- | ner clique nas mancouvred a rcferen- dum and by fraudulent metheds has by Attorney Harry Sacker for Local {499 in the metion suit, made a poor ease for himself, Following the judge's decision At- torney 8. Noll, proposed that the question of reinstatement be left to the officials to carry out. Sacker Street Battles Rage In Paris; Spread to Country; Many Dead (Continued from Page 1) strong backing, Late tonight crowds estimated st 15,000 battled police and troops on the Place de la Concorde, the broad open space from which a bridge leads to the Parliament buildings. Fighting between the crowds and police kept ing the strike. A mass meeting is being called on Thursday at 8 p.m. at Moose Hal’, 628 Penn Ave., to prenare hotel and struggle. are urged to come to an organization meet- ing of the Building Workers Maintenance Thursday, Feb, 8, at Manhattan Lyceum, 66 . Fourth St. at 7:30 p, m. All delegates “rom branches and mass organizotions must oring in ads, red honor rolls,-and greetings. ¥. W, I, U. MEETING Curtain, dra] ‘and pillow workers will id a mass Tmceting tonight right after This meeting is restaurant workers to spread the- Cooperative Dining Club ALLERTON AVENUE Cor. Bronx Park East Pure Foods Proletarian Price Directory + ++ FOOD WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION ‘4 West 18th Street, New York City Chelsea 8-0505 FURNITURE WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION 12 Brusdway, New York City Grameroy, 5-8956 METAL WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION BERMAE’S Cafeteria and Bar 3809 BROADWAY 233 E, 14th St., Opp. Labor Temple SPESIAL LUNCH 2c, DINNER 35e. Comrately Atmosphere SOL’S * ANDWICH the imperialist Pan-American Con-| wy; an i in mo ters in sfpeies | sone tag Cae ae the tare Work ‘95 East 19th Street, New York City LUNCH thin b abet ca th ; Pa {n> | wanted it included in writing in the|UD in mony quarters in the neighbor-| “naer the auspices of the Furniture Workers i ag E ie yore seporiey 16 oa ‘wane eB el hagien besahann picts video. A militant) judge's decision, hood of the Place. adustrial Union, Gramercy 7-7842 ‘The concluding session of the con-| of the strike headquarters at 325 W. vention .sent the following message) 4ist St.. and stopped a czb in front to William Z. Foster, who was again| of the Hotel Astor, Another c>b was cheered and applauded for several|-tonped at Sixth Ave. near Forty- minutes, “This National Convention! Third St, Along Ninth and Tenth Against Unemployment regrets ex-| Avenues pas ceedingly that you, the outstanding! cyt of the cars and walk during the Jeader of the American workers, were | early part of the day. unable to attend our convention. ‘This | ngers were made to ret | convention greets you heartily and| A few of the Keystone Cabs at- tempted to operate Iate in the day. hhopes that within a short time you} 2 of the Scottsboro boys was passed py the convention and forwarded to President Roosevelt, een sniae | Rumanian LL. D. Links Scottsboro Fight To Ls O.yn National Campaigns BUCHAREST, Rumania (I. R. A.). ) —While carrying on its work under | 2 | Knitgoods Union Starts conditions of the severest terror, the Rei Aid (I. L. D.) section of Rumania | ding the release of | “You compel me to eat dirt?” asked | Noll of the judge. “I can’t help it,” | Said the judse as he conceded the de- | mand of the rank and file, The or- ganized strength and power of the | rank file painters against the racketeering officials forced the | judge’s hand. Communists Oppose Doumergue The discontent is running hich be- cause of the heavy burdens put on the masses by successive governments since the bezinning of the crisis, The growth of unemployment, cutting of relicf and veterans’ pensions, the con- stantly increased burden of taxes and the government’s wage-cut programs are the beckeround for the present widespread mass upsurge throughout ¥. C. L. UNEMPLOYED MEETING fork active in unemvloyment work includ- cng those in Trade Unions and mass or- ‘anizations will meet tonight at 7:30 at the Workers Center. DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 BRISTOL STREET Young Communist League members of New j NEEDLE TRADES WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION 13% West 28th Street, New York City Lackawanna 4-4016 101 University Place (Just Around the Jorner? phone Tompkins Sqrare 6-9780-9781 ® ICE LINCOLN’S BIRTHDAY WEEK-END AT SKATING IS SWELL! NITGEDAIGET BEACON, N. ¥. -@- PHONE 731 SPECIAL HOLIDAY PROGRAM will be restored to health so that you | Dut were stoned by pickets. S may return to the leadership of the| ‘he drivers went to the garage, but fighting ranks that are being built | ’°!*ed sway, sccint the mstority of ‘’m the struggle against the huncer- the cabs were still packed into the Bet. Pitkin and Sutter Aves. Sroeklyn VRONE: DICKENS £-3018 Office Bours: 6-18 AM., 2-3, 68 P.M. France, Reactionary forces are igre fascist groups, attempting divert. | is leading a campaign on behalf of the innocent Scotisboro Negro boys. | The campaign calls for mass demon- Tember Drive; Calls to Cooper Union Meeting war program of the Roosevelt-Wail | Street government.” Resolutions were passed against | terror of the government practiced | om thé workers; against the govern-| iment’s forced labor program and for) the organization of the relief work- ers; for the immediate payment of! the bonus to the veterans; for the de-| mands of the women, youth C.W.A.,, ‘Negro workers; on the work of the! trade unions in the unemployed| movement; on the demands of the) poor farmers, etc. The draft consti- | tution was adopted. | A resolution was passed demanding | the withdrawal of the police from the convention hall by the District of Co-| lumbia commissioners. Resolutions ‘were passed demanding the release of @ number of political prisoners such as Louis Berger of Baltimore, George Powers of New York, and Angelo Herndon of Atlanta. The release of ‘Tom Mooney and the Scottsboro boys ‘was demanded. ‘The convention demanded the im- mediate release of ih: four revolu- tionary leaders of the German work- ing class, Dimitroff, Torgler, Popoff and Taney. The delegation which went to Hans Luther, wes refused an + = as well as Emst Thacimann, leader of the German Communist Party, } garage. . Although Mayor LaGuardia says that the strike is “cttled to all in- tents and purposes,” the strike is still on. “Our fight now ts for the full nickel and @ solid fighting union rooted in every garaze in New York City,” said Joseph Gi'bert yesterday afternoon. “The fight for the nickel, higher wages and shorter hours for the hackmen has just begun. We will win these demands by our organized might.” Following the false reports that the sell-out ag:cement was ac- cepted, and that the men had re- | turned to work, Norman Thomas, | Socialist leader, not knowing that the men had revudiated the City Hall swindle, told Morris Ernst that “considering the previous chaotic situation in the taxi industry, that | the men have done wonders.” | lel ei cL audience with the representative of | strations, resolutions of protest from Mass organizations, and demonstra- tions before the American Embassy. The Rumanian workers are linking the Scottsboro campaign with the national fight for the release of the striking railroad workers recently sent to prison for long terms. ae es" Australian “Labor Defender” Carries Scottsboro Appeal On Cover NEW YORK.—“Save the Scotts- boro Boys!” is the slogan across the cover of the December issue of the Australian “Labor Defender,” organ of the I. L. D, of that country, copies of which have just been received here A photograph of a Negro boy is the cover picture. The Australian “Labor Defender” carries an appeal for action on be- half of the Scottsboro boys, also, as the leading article in the issue. calls for the flooding of the Amer- ican consulate at 7 Wynard St., Sydney, Australia, with protest reso- lutions to be passed by working class organizations, the Hitler butchers in this country. They left the convention resolution which demanded the immediate re- lease of the four workers’ leaders, LECTURE ON MISLEADERS ¢ Stuart Poyntz will speak of Labor: Schlessingr, Zigman 1 mmerman,” at Irving Plaza, Irving Pl; id 15th St. om Sunday, Feb. 11 at 2.30 . ‘The meeting is under the auspices of Lett Wing Group, Local 22,1. G. W. U. ae It} | NEW YORK.—A decision to launch |°n immediate organization drive of | Initgoods shops and plens for the de- | fense of the Industrial Union shops ogainst the inrords being made by the International throush strong arm | methods were made at a membershiv meeting of the Knitzoods Workers’ Industrial Union this week. Representatives of a Unity Commit- tee of 25 to establish united front action for a 35-hour week and a min- imum wage and for one militant union in the trade were welcomed at the meeting. Fincncial assistance of *35 was given by the Indstriel Union and support was pledged for a mass | meeting at Cooper Union to be held | Thursday right after work. — ARRESTED STUDENT PUT ON PROBATION BROOKLYN, N. ¥.—For leading & boycott against the exorbitant prices of food in the New Utrecht High School lunchroom, last January, Morris Oshatz, 17-year old youth, was found guilty of “disorderly con- | duct” in Coney Island court yester- day. He was put on probation and the masses from develoving revolu- tionary struggles against capitalism, Doumergue, who arrives in Paris tomorrow morning to form his Cabi- net, is renorted to have the sonort of the Jieft Democrats and the Demo- cratic Union ef the Senate, and the Repub'icens, Radics'-S--ia"+5 (“Pro. eressives”), Populists and Neo-So- cialists. The official Socialist Partv refuses sunpert. Leon Blum is considered to believe the s'tuation msy enable him to take the premiership. The Communist deputies sharply oppose Doumergue, and the Commu- nist Patty has issued a call for a united front against all fascist, semi- fascist, and d'ctatorial groups by whatever name they give themselves. Doumerzue is noted for his bitter anti-Soviet position. It was he who, in 1917, negotiated with the Tsar the tronty by which Constantinople was to be given to Russia. Give direct practical aid to the struggle of the German workinz class against Fascism! Have you spoken ruary 11 affair at the Bronx Coli- HANS 1378 ST.NICHOLAS AVE ® 1690 LEXINGTON AYE, 9 _at 179 STN’ _tt 106th ST.NY, Dr. E. EICHEL Dentist 150 East 93rd Street, New York City Jor. Lexington Ave, Tel. ATwater 9-887 ‘Tours: from 9 a.m, to 8 p.m, Sun. 9 to} Member Workmen's Sick and Death Benefit Fund ABBANGE YOUR DANCES, LECTURES, UNION MEETINGS at the NEW ESTONIAN WORKERS’ HOME 27-29 West 115th Street Cars CULTURAL JEVERAL GOOD APARTMENTS New York City RESTAURANT and will come up for final sentence on Felp 1a i seum, all proceeds of which go to the German Communist Party? BEER GARDEN | Lexington Avenues train te White Pisine Road. Stop st Allerton Avenue Station. Tel, Estsbrook 8-1400—1401 Every winter comfort—Sports, Best Food Sixty Steam Heated Rooms. Rate $14 Weekly, 2100 BRONX PARK EAST ~ EStabrook 8-1400 Workers Cooperative Colony 2700-2600 BRONX PARK EAST (OPPOSITE BRONX PARK) has now REDUCED THE ‘RENT ON THE APARTMENTS AND SINGLE ROOMS Kindergarden; (lasses for Adults and Children; Library; Gymnasium; Clubs and Other Privileges : ‘Take Advantage of NO INVESTMENTS REQUIRED $2.45 per day leave 10:30 A.M. Daily, from Reduced week-end fare ACTIVITIES the Opportunity. é& SINGLE ROOMS AVAILABLE Office open daily Friday & Saturdey Sundsy 8 a.m. to 8 pm, ® a.m. te 5 p.m, 10 a.m, to 8 pm.

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