The Daily Worker Newspaper, March 29, 1934, Page 3

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| | Wagner Tells Co. Union Bosses How His Bill Will Help Them Refuse Militant Union| Leaders Right to Be Tiala, Kept Starved, Forced to Do Convict DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, MARCH 239, 1934 To Protest Arrest i@ Boss Violence Rages in = California As Pickers Push Plans for Strike Growers’ Gangs Kidnap of California and President Roose- | velt, demanding a halt to the ter- Page Three : | lj fj Heard on Bill Labor for Company ‘And Framing of Leaders, Sympathizers; ror and recognition of the right | : 7 of workers to organize and strike ‘| By MARGUERITE YOUNG ees | ci oF verter to rnin an INDIANAPOLIS. — Sentenced || (Daily Worker Washington Bureau) robbery and the release of their Hi WASHINGTON, March 28.| —Your organization will} not be affected by the Wag-| ner Bill,’ Chairman Walsh} of the Senate Labor Com-| mittee yesterday told a company- union spokesman who had just tes- | tified that his organization elects | company foremen to represent the workers. This clear announcement that the Wagner Labor disputes bill will) place the stamp of full legal ap-/ proval upon company unions was made in today’s public hearing on the bill. It followed a vehement assertion by Senator Robert F. Wag- ner, author of the bill, that “I have no objection to the company union if it is the free choice of the work- ers, Repeating yesterday's ance of openly union employers that he re-draft his bill to suit them more completely, Wagner explained to George Ed- monds, Philadelphia Chamber of Commerce President, “I have al- Ways, whenever I spoke against company unions, said I meant com- pany-dominated company unions. I don’t know why people insist on misquoting me. Whenever I've mentioned the subject, I have em- phasized employer-dominated com- pany unions. I have no objections to company unions if they are the free choice of the workers.” ‘Then the company union repre- sentative testified, and Walsh de- clared: “You have given an excel- lent example of a company union that is not dominated by the em- ployer.” ‘The company union representa- tive was E. R. Fiske, jr., an unctu- ously deferential youth from the “Cooperative Association of Em- ployees of the Leeds and Northrup Company,” measuring instruments manufacturers. Fiske explained that he and his fellow workers elect a “council.” composed of “elected representatives,” and that this “council represents the employees in all their relations with manage- ment.” Bosses May Come In, “Can empioyer representatives be in this council—can foremen ard superintendents?” Senator Dev's of Pennsylvania asked. “Ves, sir, if elected,” Fiske re- Me also told how the “council” mects on company premises, re- ceives pay for the time spent in r-retings, and “considers matters of t to management, such as waste can be eliminated.” It was this kind of organization that Walsh declared “an excellent ex- rmovie of a company union not cominated by the employer,” one perform- which “twill not be affected” by the | ‘Weener bill. After hearing the company union and other employer spokesmen at length, the Senate Labor Committee fiatly refused to hear Joseph Kis Secretary of the Furniture Workers Industrial Union with 10,000 mem- bers, despite the fact that Chairman Walsh had wired Kiss promising to hear him today and that the com- mittee clerk yesterday confirmed this. The committee insisted that Kiss merely “file a statement for the record.” It also deferred hear- ing Pat Cush, President of the Steel and Metal Workers Industrial Union, who likewise has been pro~ mised a hearing today. promising anti- | to six months’ imprisonment for opposing farm foreclosures, Al- fred Tiala, national secretary of the United Farmers’ League, is compelled to work ten hours a day for the Hickory Furniture Co., a private corporation which has a contract for convict labor on the Indiana state prison farm. He receives rations “insufficient to sustain him at this type of labor,” a league investigator re- ports. ‘Democrat Gets Job ‘Of Borders With ‘Aid of S. P. Heads Chairman of ‘Workers’ Committee Supports Roosevelt a | | | | (Daily Worker Midwest Burean) CHICAGO, March 28.—“Be as Right as Roosevelt,” is the cam- paign slogan of John L. Duffy, Chairman of the Chicago Workers | Committee on Unemployment, who is running for County Commissioner in the Democratic primary. Duffy, an old member of the cor- rupt Kelly-Horner machine, is a logical successor to leadership of |the Workers Committee. His pre- decessor in that office was Karl |Borders, leader of the Socialist | Party, who quit when the Roosevelt government handed him a fat job. The leadership of the Socialist | Party has had no trouble in accept- jing Mr. Duffy as leader of the un- employed organization that they started. The same leaders, Kreuger, Senior, etc., have time after time | rejected proposals for united action with Communist workers and with the Unemployment Councils. The Unemployment Councils have | issued a leaflet calling upon mem- |bers of the Workers Committee to | reject the reactionary united front jof Socialist and Democratic Party | |leaders. The leaflet points out that | |such a united front can only be in the interests of the government pol- | icy of C.W.A. layoffs, relief cuts, and war. Duffy's campaign slogan it- | self proves that he endorses these | Measures. | The Unemployment Councils call | upon all members of the ‘Workers’ | |Committee to join in the Jobs| {March of March 31 at 10 am. at Union Park to stop C.W.A. layoffs, to provide adequate relief, and for | the Workers’ Unemployment Insur- |ance Bill (H. R. 75987.) Restore Wage Cut ‘After CWA Union Enters Protests Wage Cut to Be Paid in Full Socialist Mayor and Bridgeport Toilers Police Unite Against Workers By J. 8S. SOLVENT | BRIDGEPORT, Conn., March 28. | |—Although police testified that the | | Socialist Mayor McLevy had given! orders to allow no more speaking, | jand for the police to disperse the | |snow shovelers’ demonstration, Judge Hugh Lavery found Sam Krieger and one other defendant guilty of breach and levied a fine of $50 and costs last week. An ap- | peal was immediately made. It was quite evident from the evi- | dence given by the police that the sole responsibility for the clubbing | of the workers and the subsequent | arrest of three snow shovelers | rested squarely on the shoulders of | the Mayor, for all the witnesses both for the prosecution and the defense testified that there was no| disturbances or trouble until Mc- | Levy’s order for no more speaking | and for the dispersal of the crowd. | The first witness for the state, | Captain O'Connell, said that he thought that there was not enough clubbing; that the police acted with much restraint and only a few were clubbed. It is interesting to com- pare his statement to the one made by Fred Schwartzkopf, city clerk and right hand man to Jasper Mc- Levy, in a speech delivered near | New Haven. He said, in praising | the police for the manner in which | they handled the demonstration, “If I were handling the situation, I would not have shown such re- straint. If I had a club in my hand I would have used it the way it should have been used.” The police made a despicable at- tempt to frame San Krieger, claim- ing that he called to the snow shovelers to arm themselves; to bring blackjacks, ammunition, etc., to the city plaza demonstration which was to be held on the eyve-| ning of the same day. The defense | so discredited this testimony that | fhe prosecutor did not even men- | tion this in his summary. A city-wide protest is being planned against the decision of the | court, which did not seem to be in| accordance with-the evidence pro- | duced in court, namely, that Mc- | Levy was entirely responsible for | the clubbing and arrest of workers, | who only wanted pay that was com- | ing to them. | It was clearly seen from the statements of the police, the court, Fred Schwartzkopf and the Mayor | that there was a real united front between them. They all agreed that there was not enough clubbing and regretted the “restraint” of the police. The role: that McLevy and | other socialist leaders played in the | demonstration exposed them once again to the workers of Bridgeport. | Housewife in Pueblo, Colorado, Tells How She Gains New Subs. | MANSFIELD, Ohio, March 28.— | | Following protests filed by the C. “Comrades, it is not very hard to get subs for the Daily Worker, especially if one has the time,” | | C. W. A. project at Madison St. on THEODORE JORDAN Framed Negro Worker. Jordan Protest | Meet This Sunday In Portland, Ore. “Save Jordan Commit- tee” Pushes Mass Fight | on Lynch Verdict PORTLAND, Ore., March 28. —| Plans are under way for a large | mass meeting here Sunday, April 1, | sponsored by the “Save Theodore Jordan Anti-Lynch Committee” and the International Labor Defense. A number of organizations have been invited to send speakers to discuss, as a symposium of opinion, the sub- ject: “National Minorities and Ris- ing Fascism.” The meeting will be held in the Italian Federation Hall. “The Jordan case in Oregon; Scottsboro cases in Alabama; and | the growing wave of lynch-terror, operating both inside the legal | structure of society and illegally, | proves to us that there is a vital need for broader education among | the masses on the significance of | the Negro people, as a National | minority group, where the crystal- izing of reaction is concerned,” Rev. Ackerman, chairman of the “Save Theodore Jordan Anti-Lynch Com- mittee” stated. “This forum meet- ing is only a part of the campaign necessary for such education. Our Committee is determined to carry on a constant mobilization of fcrces | _ around this issue.” Organizations that have taken | either a “neutral” or openly antag- onistic stand on the Jordan case, as a part of the rising lynch-spirit, have been invited to participate in the meeting. Invitations have been extended to the N. A. A. C. P., the | Central Labor Council and the So- cialist Party, as well as organiza- tions such as the Council for Social and Economic Research, who have responded to the appeal for sup- port of the campaign. The “Save Theodore Jordan; Anti-Lynch Committee” again urges oragnizations of all kinds and in- | dividuals—workers and intellectuals | —to rush protests to the Oregon | State Supreme Court and Governor | J. Meier, Salem, Oregon. Demand | the unconditional release of Theo- dore Jordan! | Bosses Force 60 Negro. Workers on Chi. CWA | to Work in Blizzard | CHICAGO, Ill., March 28.—Sixty | Negro workers, Jim-Crowed on the | the lake front here, were kept out on the job during a blinding blizzard Monday. Those who could no longer stand it, and who went home, were cut off the payroll for the day. Despite the two fires which the au- thorities were forced to permit the workers, the men stood around shiv- ering in their sparse clothing, barely able to lift a hand. Two inches of snow fell in the morning, and a bitter wind was blowing in from] By MALVINA GOODMAN (Special to the Daily Worker) LOS ANGELES, Cal., March 28,— Vigilantes organized by fruit and vegetable growers and “peace of- ficers” kidnapped Dr. Alexander Irvine, former minister and lecturer, and his niece, Lenora Hardin, Sun- day night in a campaign of terror against ‘the strike preparations of the inhumanly exploited migratory fruit and vegetable pickers and their sympathizers. Irvine was beaten up and dumped in the desert. His niece | was released at El Centro. Ellis O. Jones, veteran newspaper | man, was kidnapped on the streets of Calixico on his way to preside at a meeting of pickers. He has not been heard of since. Ernest Bessig, Los Angeles attorney, representing the American Civil Liberties Union, who was to attend the same meet- ing, spent the night in Calexico jail after appealing to the police for protection against the threats of growers and their vigilante bands. Helen Martin and Kate Dewing were followed by vigilantes and threat- ened with violence, unless they left Calexico, one of the centers of the recent lettuce workers strike. Authorities Make Mass Arrests Supplementing the vigilante ter- ror, the authorities have resumed mass arrests of union members, ar- resting M. Roberts, M. Guiterrez, 8. Guiterrez, J. Alvarado, E. Para and R. Ramirez in the Imperial Valley yesterday, and Graham Groundoh in Riverside. The terror is directed by the re- cently organized Imperial Valley Anti-Communist Association. The International Labor Defense, which is defending many of the arrested workers, has appealed for a na- tion-wide protest to Goy, Rolph Mass Arrests | leaders. | ie ae | Admits Growers Inciting Terror NEW YORK—Fear of a tremend ous strike str le of California fruit and vegetable wor press e in day’s Times by its San Fi correspondent, George P. We! describing California’s and “the flowers that bloom in t spring, tra-la” and the forts of workers to m: istie setting by struggling starvation wages, and Comm for “inciting” the workers to | gle, West makes an enlightening ad- | mission of the grower-: ror: | “Last summer California had half a dozen bloody strikes in its harvest fields, with enraged grow- ers committing most of the vio- | lence, and this year the prospect | is for more. Growers and peace | officers in the valleys are organiz- | ing vigilantes and inducing county boards to pass stringent and prob- ably unconstitutional anti-picket- ing ordinances, while the Commu- nists, led by Caroline Decker, 21, secretary of the Cannery and Agricultural Workers Union, are eagerly preparing to enlist every considerable group of pickers be- hind the demands for higher | wages and better working condi- tions. Newspapers of all shades of opinion predict serious trouble.” | West admits that while the N.R.A, | is doing its best to break the strug- gles of the workers, that best is not enough in view of the rising mili tancy of the bitterly exploited pick- ers, most of whom are Mexican and | Filipino workers, tolerated by Cali-| fornia, he says, “only when it must make use of their services.” To Honor Memory of Morris Langer in Mass Memorial Meet NEW YORK—Needle trades work- ers will honor the memory of Com- rade Morris Langer, murdered fur organizer of the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union, at a mass memorial meeting and concert Sun- day, 2 pm., April Ist, at Central Opera House, 67th St. and 3rd Ave. Morris Langer was killed by a bomb placed by gunmen hired by the bosses and the racketeers of the Fur International of the A. F. of L. Milk Trusts Laune Drive to CutWages, Wipe Out Dealers By Daily Worker Mid-West Bureau CHICAGO, March 28.—The Chi- cago milk trusts have launched a price war with the triple objective of putting over a wage cut on the milk drivers, wiping out the small dealers and enforcing Roosevelt's A.A.A. schemes on the farmers. The price of milk here has been reduced to eight cents per quart after a recent reduction to nine 'Bicknell, Ind., Job-| less Ass'n Formed CWA, PWA Workers | Active in Union | Fae WR Se | _BICKNELL, Ind.—After the C. W. | A. had been in operation for a short | while, the unemployed here, realiz~ ing that it would never absorb all | the unemployed, and finding that relief was not increased to conform | with the rising cost of living, formed | an organization called the North | Knox Unemployed. This organiza- | tion had as its objective the securing of relief or jobs for all the unem- | ployed. Since its formation on Feb. } 11, C, W. A. and P. W. A. workers | have joined, | A committee was elected to go | with workers who had their relief | stopped. Mrs. Sinclair refused to | meet with the elected committee of | the workers, informing them that instead of increased relief they would get relief cuts. Meanwhile, C. W. A. | and P. W. A. workers who were fired were forced to wait five weeks to again get on relief. As a result of their activities, some of the workers were fired from C. W. A. A mass meeting on March 2, and another on March 6 protested these firings. The unemployed, however, | | have won the right to have two rep- | | resentatives on the Relief Commit- | tee of Bicknell, an advisory commit- tee composed largely of business VALUE creates VOLUME! Volume makes it possible for us to sell superior values in Crawford Custom Quality Clothes at the one price of $18.75, therefore the re- sponse is simply tremendous. And little wonder! Many of our Spring Styles con- tain the same identical fabrics that are found in garments priced elsewhere at $40. So follow the thrift-wise crowd... step into a convenient Crawford Store for your new Spring topcoat—suit—sport clothes—or tuxedo. CRAWFORD | CUSTOM quailty CLOTHES No Charge for Alterations i i men and lawyers. W. A. Workers’ Relief Union here, writes Comrade Anna of Pueblo, oo the C.W.A. administration restored Colo. “I am a | pay cuts to skilled and unskilled housewife and As the hearing dragged on with- | Lake Michigan. { out either militant labor spokes- from ten cents, but the consuming masses will “pay the piper” as soon SAW man’s being called, Cush went up to Walsh and asked when he would testify. Walsh replied that he would be “last.” Then at noon, ‘Walsh suddenly announced almost in one breath, “Mr. Kiss will file his statement—the hearing is ad- journed.” The committee walked out as Kiss and Cush rushed to pro- test. Walsh told Cush he might testify tomorrow, but insisted that Kiss would not be heard at all. He did this despite the fact that he has told your correspondent that the hearings will continue at least @ week or ten days more and despite the fact that no other witness has been restricted in time. It was the same procedure—only more raw— as was followed in futile efforts to shut off the testimony of Bill Dunne of the Trade Union Unity League last week. ‘Hit Workers’ Own Unions Besides specifically clothing com- pany unions with legality, it was indicated today, the committee will write into the Wagner bill specific prohibitions against “coercion” by labor unions of workers—which will mean that virtually any union ac- tivity may be labelled “coercion” and severely punished. Moreover the Committee is considering an amendment under which the pro- posed enlarged and more powerful National Labor Board would be stacked 100 per cent against labor, instead of, as now proposed, five-to- two against labor. Even the two labor representatives now proposed would be American Federation of Labor officials. And how safe the bosses know they are was indicated once more today when Henry S. Dennison, president of the Denni- son Manufacturing Co., declared: “We must remember that we em- ployers cannot all deal direct with Mr. (William) Green of the A. F. of L. If we could, our attitude would be different.” Step by step, the Committee as- sured such employers that they will be fully satisfied before the bill comes out of the committee for enactment. Dennison demanded that certain sections which would prohibit employers’ fostering com- pany unions by subsidizing them be eliminated—and again Wagner in- dicated that he was willing. “If that amendment is made, you would favor the bill? Wagner asked Dennison. eGR,” r replied. “In gen- eral, we heartily favor the bill.” workers. The order was made | retroactive to March 2, the day the pay cut went into effect. Under the new rates, skilled C. W. A. workers | will continue to receive $1.20 an hour and unskilled will get 65 cents an hour. In addition, all dis- charged C. W. A. workers, who have been fired on Roosevelt's demo— | bilization orders will receive checks paying them the difference between | the old rate and the new. | The C. W. A. Workers’ Relief | Union, which has led the workers here in militant struggle against the Roosevelt firings and wage cuts, will change its name on April 1 to the Workers’ Protective Union, “I'm not wedded to any of this | language,” Wagner assured. “It’s an object I’m interested in and if some better expressions can be found, all right.” Later Senator Murphy of Iowa reassured A. D. Mallard, represen- tative of the Full Fashioned Hosiery Association of Philadelphia, who complained of the bill’s “ambigu- ities.” “You want to take this view of the bill,” Murphy explained, “it’s something that is set up for you to shoot at. It is being shot at... and out of all this will come the bill the Committee will approve.” In short, the Wagner bill as it finally emerges will very probably be stripped of all provisions which even make substantial promises to labor. The assurance that it will open the door wide to company unions fs in line with the Roosevelt auto settlement, which even A. F. of L. officials now admit lets in company unions. Dennison insisted that “company unions” must remain as a “com- peting form” of labor organization. Then he boldly added: “I have no illusion about the attitude of many manufacturers. I know that if these two paragraphs (restraining em- ployers from fostering company unions) are eliminated as I promise, there will be more company unions under the employer's thumb.” But. he insisted that if this were not re- tained, the labor movement would get “new leaders” and that new movements would “result in enough strikes and bloodshed to set the whole country blindly against any form of unionism.” To Dennison. of course, the “whole country” is the employers of the who'- en ntrv. have two chil- dren going to school. When I find some time I visit workers’ s and give them my old copies of the Daily Worker, or I read certain articles to them and the Daily Worker sells it- self. “The workers realize _ that something should be done and are interested in the Comrade Anna Daily. Worker because in it they can read for themselves the way out of this crisis. “Comrades, especially now, dur- ing this campaign that our Daily Worker is conducting for more sub- California Prosecutor Assists Silver Shirts SAN DIEGO, Cal.—District At- torney Thomas Whelan of San | Diego has refused to prosecute the fascist Silver Shirts for forcibly ejecting C. Leon deAryan, local editor, from a meeting when he} questioned statements made by Dr.! D. W. Webber, Silver Shirts lec. turer. DeAryan was manhandle and thrown out by members with | braided rope whips hanging from their belts. scribers, the workers have to be ap- proached with our paper. “In a short while I secured eight subs and I have several more prom- ised. I shall keep right on getting renewals, new subs and donations for the Daily Worker. as the trusts can accomplish their present objectives and then raise the prices again. As the 375 small milk dealers of the city are preparing a fight against the trusts and the A. A. A. | at a meeting tonight, word comes that more than two hundred driv- ers were notified their jobs would end May first. This is seen as the beginning of an intensive drive by Bordens, Bowman and the Borden’s subsidiary, Weiland, to cut wages of both inside and outside help. On three occasions in the last few months, the drivers have voted against the trusts’ proposed pay cuts from the present scale of forty dollars per week. The union of- ficials, notorious for their racket- ing and class collaboration, could not help but bow before the unani- mous desire of the workers to fight any cut. Queens Judge Rules in Favor of Bus Co. to Break Picketing | NEW YORK.—Under the excuse of “preventing violence” in the strike of Bee Line bus drivers in Queens, Magistrate Frank Giorio in Jamaica Court yesterday issued a statement protecting the bus company and its scabs against picketing by strikers. “A man who wants to work should be able to do so,” Giorio de- | clared as he refused to lower $1,000 | bail of Thomas Meagher, a striker, | | who was accused of “attacking” a | scab. Giorio further said he “would | do away with domineering of work- ers.” QUINCY LECTURE QUINCY, Mass.—The Workers’ Forum announces a lecture on “Events in Aus-| | tria,” by John Weber, Sunday, April 1, | |at 3 p.m. at Moose Hall, 1642 Hancock ‘St. Adm. free. | | | Dicker on R. R. Pay Cut Pending Roosevelt Fishing Trip Hailesiad Union Heads | Say They Don’t Even Think of Strike By SEYMOUR WALDMAN (Daily Worker Washington Bureau) ‘WASHINGTON, March 28.—‘Fur- ther efforts” to reach a wage settle- ment with Federal Transportation Coordinator Eastman and the rail- road magnates will be made pend- ing President Roosevelt’s return two weeks hence from his Florida fishing jaunt, Alexander F. Whitney, Chair- man of the Railway Labor Execu- tives Association, informed the press yesterday just after he emerged from a conference with Roosevelt, Eastman and several railroad own- ers headed by William Thiehoff, the Chairman of the Conference Com- mittee of Managers. Whitney said he had lald “the facts” before the President. y Should a disagreement occur dur- ing Roosevelt's absence from the capital, Whitney announced, discus- sions will be suspended until his return. Whitney and the bosses meet with Eastman again tomor- row. ™-emite nearly two months of ne- gotiations, Whitney made it clear to the Daily Worker and other cor- respondents that he is absolutely opposed to the rank and file senti- ment for a strike not only to pre- vent an attempted continuation of the 10 per cent basic wage cut after July 1, but also to gain an increase to meet the sharp rise in living costs since the acceptance of the wage slash agreement. Talking to the press in the lobby of the White House executive offices, before going in to see Roosevelt, Whitney de- clared: “It’s unfair to the public to make it appear that the men are ready to strike when we are under the National Railway Act.” Asked whether there’s “a possi- bility of a strike” in the event of a deadlock, Whitney replied: “We're a law-abiding organization. The Railway Act will be followed. We'll sit tight.” For a “Compromise.” “In other words, you will call for arbitration under the Railway La- bor Act?” one of the ~ reporters asked him. “The unfortunate thing was that the moment we came here to meet with the railway employers, the impression was that we had a strike vote in our pocket,” Whitney an- swered, Whitney said that “our people are standing pat” on the refusal to ac- cept a continuation of the 10 per cent basic cut. However, he inti- mated strongly that he would ac- cept a compromise somewhere be- tween the owners’ ultimatum to continue the 10 per cent cut (if not an increase to 15 per cent) and his group's bluff for a 20 per cent in- crease over present wage rates. “If the railways would show a de- sire to be fair and restore the money that’s gone to the coupon clippers, we will meet them half-way,” he told the reporters. He flatly re- jected the railroad’s offer to predi- cate the wage scale on the 1931 carloading figures. Long Delay Ahead. It is significant of the anti-strike attitude of Whitney and his “labor” associates that he showed no hesi- tancy in agreeing with his ques- tioners that under the railway act negotiations may go on for four or five months even before the Presi- dent steps in, failing agreement to arbitrate to appoint “a fact-finding commission” to report “the merits” of the case. Nothing supports this “fact-finding,” Whitney said, but “public opinion.” ‘However, should he agree to arbitrate with owners, | | | | Willing to Meet Coupon | Clippers Half Way, They Declare the decision of the Board of Arbi- ration is enforceable in the courts, Whitney admitted. Of course, Whitney did not point out how months of delay and ar- bitration operate to break the mil- | | itancy of the workers. What Roosevelt will do in case | he “steps in,” is perfectly clear in the light of his February 14 letter, proposing the continuation of the 10 per cent basic wage cut for six months beyond June 30, 1934, the date of expiration of the present agreement. This letter, which was | issued nearly simultaneously with | the owners’ demands for another five per cent wage cut, was inter- preted generally as the tactical | “compromise,” designated to fore- stall the expected demand for a wage increase. ‘Whitney announced that there are 1,000,000 unemployed railway | workers, that 400.000 men are work- | ing only part-time, and that 250,000 | railway workers received from $52 to $75 a month during 1933, Another Great Value! S Students’ SUITS Sizes up to 44—s0 many economical fathers can _ be fitted at this price too. CRAWFORD NEVER COMPROMISES ON QUALITY 179 BROADWAY Near Cortlandt St. NEW YORK 826 BROADWAY Cor. 12th St. 41 BROADWAY. anne GOP. 134 S 100 Sth AVE. ; Cor. 15th 462 7th AVE... - Cor. 36th 783 8th AVE. Neor 57th 208 WEST 42nd ST. «Naor 7th A\ 152 EAST 86th ST. Near Lexington A 118 WEST 125th ST. Bet. Lenox & 7th Aves, 1391 ST, NICHOLAS AVE Bet. 17h & 180th Sts, BRONX 10 EAST FORDHAM ROD. 340 EAST FORDHAM Ri fe} 378 EAST FORDHAM. Ri 526 WILLIS AVE. or Jerome Ave, BP Kingsbridge Rd. lear Webster Ave. Near 149h St. BOSTON 339 WASHINGTON STREET New York Bronx Brocklyn NEW Y.ORK*S “LARGEST~ C HIN G: CHAIN 1282 BROADWAY McAlpin Hotel, N.E. Cor. 33rd St. 467 FULTON STREET Cor, Lawrence St., Brooklyn JAMAICA 168-05 JAMAICA AY! Cor. 168th St. At the End of the "L", Jamaica, b. b. BROOKLYN 93 FLATBUSH AYE...... Near L, 1. &, R, Sta, 1700 PITKIN AVE.” Near Rockaway Ave. 1812 PITKIN AYE., Opp. Loow's Pitkin Theatre 1622 PITKIN AVE. Cor, Hopkinson Ave. 26 MANHATTAN AYE. 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