The Daily Worker Newspaper, March 31, 1934, Page 2

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Paze Tro YATLY WORKER. Ds NEW YORK, SATURD AY, MARCH 31, MARCH 31, 1934 ss i \ a All Out to Nazi Consulate, 17 Battery Place, 10 A. M. Today! To Pro test Against ] Nax Pogroms Demonstration Against Nazi Murder and Terror! NEW YORK.—While news of intensified pogroms against working class Jews in Ger- many continue to come in press dispatches, New York k ther in mass in front Consulate at 10 a.m. t+ against the Nazi | tration will assemble 7 Battery Place, the | of the consulate, -at 10 a.m, and later will be turned into a march to Union Square, where a mass meeting will follow. Tt is called by the Jewish Work- ers and People’s Committee Against | Fascism and Anti-Semitism. Many | organizations have issued state- | ments urging their members to take | part. Among these are the Trade! Union Unity League, the Commu-} nist Party, the International Work- ers Order, Icor, Women’s Councils, | Workers Clubs, and others. While protesting against the Naai| terror drive against Jewish workers, the demonstrators will raise the demand for the immediate release of Ernst Thaelmann. leader of the German Communist Party, and 200,000 anti-fascists held in Nazi prisons and concentration camps. All organizations and Party units have been called to come with their banners and placards. Three bands, the Red Front, Workers Interna- | tional Relief, and Prospect Workers Club bands will be in the march Two thousand children of the I.W. Q. schools will mareh in a body. Among the speakers will be M. J.| Olgin of the Jewish Bureau.of the Communist Party; M. Epstein and L. Hyman, of the Jewish Committee | Against Fascism and Anti-Semit- | ism; 8. Almazof of Icor, Schiller of | the L.W.O.; Kingston of the Com- munist Party, and speakers for the Women’s Councils, German <Anti- Fascist Committee, -and others. 2.000 Auto Men in Hudson Co. Strike, Win Pay Increases (Continued from Page 1) | ing the temper of the men, gave an | increase to all workers. The manner in which the strike Was organized in department 3505, the fender department, yesterday was typical of the initiative and militancy of the workers, When the workers were going to work in the morning, a committee got together and talked over the plan for the stoppage. They agreed that a signal would be given when one of them took off his cap and goggles and brushed off the bench. The com- mittee then split up and informed everybody of the agreement. Exactly at 9:05 the designated worker took off his cap and goggles, and began brushing off the bench. Immedi- ately the entire department of 400 men stopped work and began doing the same. The foreman rushed over and de- manded to know what was the mat- | ter. The men told him they wanted a base rate increase from 48 to 50 cents an hour, and a bonus increase from 192 to 300. The foreman called the superintendent, Tom Hoggarth, who told the men to go back and by 11:30 would let him know. When the company agreed to raise the base rate to 50 cents an hour, and to grant the bonus demand, the men accepted. Issue Leaflet on Victory. The Auto Workers’ Union ig is- suing a new leaflet hailing this smashing victory of the Hudson workers and calling on workers in all departments to elect united ac- tion committees. The leaflet states: “Pick out men who have guts enough to fight regardless of whether they are members of the Auto Workers Union, the A. F. of L, union, or are as yet unorganized, ‘We want united action of all work- ers, men and women. Decide on your demands; then stick er and be ready to fight for them.” The leaflet exposes the betrayal tactics of the A. F. of L. officialdom, and calls on the workers to join the Auto Workers’ Union. The action of the Hudson work- ers shows that thousands of auto workers, despite the A. F. of L. of- ficialdom’s treachery, will not take it on the chin, but will fight to en- force demands for higher wages against speed-up and for the right to organize in unions of their own choice. The Auto Workers’ Union is taking further steps to carry out the decisions of the united front conference held last Sunday for united action in the shops, and a mass fight against the sell-out. Tete Candidates Win in Local Amalgamated 3,000 Buffalo CWA ‘Urge Delegates to Pioneer Conference ‘Hotel, Restaurant Vote for Delegates Workers Strike for , NEW YORK—All mass oreanies ae Protest K.—The rank and mated Clothing NEW YORK file of.the Amal, Workers Local 54 elected two delegates to tr Amalgamated Convention, which will be heid in Rochester, N. Y., in May. The delegates, Johikitas and Kon- diat, are supporters of the rank and file program. Johikitas received 166 votes and Kondiat 164. The Love- stoneites and Socialists received the following: Nicolson 74, and Herman 62. Both were defeated by the rank and file candidates. The local also adopted all reso- ions submitted by the rank and file group. Johnson Presents Slave-Union Planto ‘Budd AutoWorkers | Bosses to a. Hane Full Control Over Workers Under Proposal PHILADELPHIA, March 30.— Using the Roosevelt auto “settle- ment” as a base, General Hugh 8. Johnson has proposed the same pro-company. slave-union plan to the Budd auto body workers. Over 800 Budd auto body workers were victimized by the Nationa] La- bor Board and the Edgward G. Budd Manufacturing Company as the result of a strike last year. The | General proposed that one striker | be re-hired for every two men em- ployed during the next 90. days. This leaves the way open for the boss to do as he pleases. The sec- ond point is that when workers are laid off the same amount be laid off in the company union as those be- longing te other unions. No guarantees are given the workers in the Budd plant, and the “merit clause” (giving the boss the right to hire and fire as he pleases) remains in force. Laguardia LaysOff '30000CW A Workers From N.Y. Projects | (Continued from Page 1) | should notify the main office, ginéering department, gineer or the cits borough ei- wide enzineer, who will approve the request and} |{n turn will notify the technical su- pervisor.” La Guardia's Statement Mayor La Guardia, in his state-| ment to thé press announcing the| firing today of 30,000 New York C.W.A, workers, also made it clear that those remaining on “work re- lief” (transferred from C.W.A,) are to be given drastic wage reductions. He said, ‘The city and state are| | compelled to reduce the number on| the pay rolls and to reduce the compensation.” La Guardia announced that $5,- 000,000 less will be spent in April for the unemployed. The amount, he said, will be “$9,000,000 for work and wages, which is $5,000,000 less | than is now being provided.” This drastic layoff and cutting |of relief was La Guardia's anawer| to the demands of the unemployed for continuation of C.W.A. jobs and for adequate cash relief. La Guardia kept his police ready to club C.W.A. workers who protest. He refused to call on Congress to endorse the! Workers Unemployment and Social) Insurance Bill. The Comnittee of One Hundred, which represents many unemployed and workers’ organizations, called on the C.W.A. workers and the un- employed to resist the C.W.O. firing, te demand C.W.A. jobs or adequate cash relief, and to form commit- tees on the job and demonstrate at the C.W.A. and relief bureaus. A send-off mass meeting will be given to the C.W.A. workers’ dele- gates to the Washington Conference at the headquarters of the Commit- tee of One Hundred, 232 Seventh Ave., Saturday, March 31, The returning delegates will re- port back to the C.W.A. workers at a mass meeting to be held at Webster Hall, Tuesday, April 3, at 8 p.m. To review the work since the March 18 Greater New York Con- ference on C.W.A, and Unemploy- ment, the ecnference will reconvene on April 8 at Stuyvesant Casino, Ninth St. and Second Ave. The conference will plan future struggles on a local and city-wide basis for the continuation of C.W.A., for the Workers Unemployment Insurance Bill, and for adequate cash relief. The Committee of One Hundred will meet at 232 Seventh Ave., at 10 p.m, tonight. All projects not represented are requested te have a delegate present, PAINTERS’ PICKET DUTY All Brotherhood Painters should report for pieket duty on Monday, 7 a. m. at the Distriet Council, 244 W. 14th Street. CENTRAL HIGHWAY STRIKI CONFERENCE OF DELEGATES TO 5-Day May Festival and Bazaar — Communist Party, District 2 ~ MAY 23, 24, 25, 26 and 27 Manhattan Lyceum wet 66 East 4th Street (Entire Building) Unions. Mass Organizations, 1.L.D., 1.W.0. Clubs are requested to send delegates Wednesday, April 4th, ¢t 7:30 P.M. to 50 East 13th Street, Room 205 ORGANIZE A BOOTH COLLECT ARTICLES AS { -|cards to the projects to sign up en-| ERR, | 8rievaneces of the workers on the CWA Jobs, Relief, 500 March in in Seranton; | conference is initiated by the Pio- FormerStrikers Demand | | | Plan County-Wide | | C.W.A, Strike |. BUFFALO, N. Y., March 30. |More than 3,000 C. W. A. workers | |here downed their tools at 3 p, m.,| | Thursday, and marched to McKin- | |ley Square under the leadership of | the Relief Workers Protective As- | sociation. | | The demonstrating workers pro-| tested against the Roosevelt C. W. A. firings, demanding continuation | and extension of C. W. A. to provide | jobs for all unemployed worke: guaranteed minimum wages of $ | week, union rates to apply; and the enactment of the Workers Un- employment and Social Insurance | | Bill GH. R. 7598). The call for the strike was issued lie the Relief Workers Protective | Association. The workers downed their tools and marched in orderly groups from the jobs to McKinley Square, in some cases a distance of several miles. As the workers con- | verged on the square, they shouted | greetings to those workers who had arrived before them. With great| enthusiasm, they greeted the pro- gram of the R. W. P. A., and pro- ceeded to elect committees to pre- sent their demands. Telegrams were sent to Roosevelt and to Con- | gress demanding continuation of C. |W. A. and the enactment of the workers. bill H. R. 7598. 1,000 Jom ©. W. A. Union More than 1,000 workers joined the Relief Workers Protective As- | sociation, and took hundreds of | their fellow workers and to organ- ize project committees. eA oe Plan Strike in Scranton SCRANTON, Pa.— Five hundred C. W. A. workers, under the lead- ership of the Unemployment Coun- cils, marched on the Scranton ©. W. A. headquarters Thursday, de- manding continuation and enlarge- ment of the C. W. A. to provide jobs for all unemployed workers, at a | guaranteed minimum wage of $15 a | week, union wages to apply. Unless | | the demands are granted, the work- ers. plan to strike against the 30 cents an hour rate in effect on the P. W. A. jobs. | The workers represented in the march include North Scranton, South Scranton, Old Forge, Taylor, | Throop, Dickson and Olyphant. The C. W. A. authorities were | forced to wire the workers demands to the state C. W. A, headquarters at Marrisburgh. | ae Minneapolis Mass Meet Tuesday MINNEAPOLIS, Minn.—Five hun- | dred ©O.W.A, workers jammed the | Metal Workers Hall at a mass meet- | ing Thursday night to plan a city- wide struggle against C.W.A. layoffs, and to formulate demands for im- mediaté cash relief te all unem- ployed workers. The workers at the mass meeting voted unanimously to call a demon- stration before the Welfare Board at its regular meeting on Tuesday morning. A workers’ committee, representing workers on 15 C.W.A. projects, was elected to present the workers’ demands before the relief and C.W.A. officials. ae iene Anderson, Ind., Demonstration ANDERSON, Ind.—C..W.A. work- ers here demonstrated at the Fed-| eral Relief Bureau on Saturday, Mareh 25, to demand continuation of C.W.A. The 300 workers: yoted to hold another mass meeting on March 29. The Delmo-Remy local of the | Auto Workers Union sent a repre- sentative to appeal to the O,W.A. and unemployed ie unity. Superior, tab) ‘Wonkar Demand SUPERIOR. atiebiRRAS Ls by hundreds of workers, a delegation of working class women presented the demands of the ©.W.A. and Jobless workers for C.W.A, jobs and the enactment of the Workers Un- employment Insurance Bill. The lecal City Council was forced to go on record endorsing the bill and de- manding continuation et C.W.A, Oshkosh Workers Deinoentraia OSHKOSH, Wis.—Despite bitter cold weather, 200 workers demon- strated here on March 24 against Roosevelt, stopping of C.W.A., many of the C.W.A, projects closing down completely. The workers demanded the continuation of O.W.A., and that the City Council endorse the Workers Bill, HR 7598. ere Demonstrate in Stamford Today STAMFORD, Conn, — Elaborate preparations are being made here for a mass demonstration and march of the Stamford unemployed and ©.W.A. workers on Saturday, March 31, at 10 a. m. The march, which will precede the mass meeting, will converge on the Town Hall from two seetions of the city. The workers demand continuation and extension of C: W. A. to in- clude jobs for all unemployed work- ers, and the immediate enactment of the Workers Unemployment In- surance Bill. An elected commit~ tee of workers will also present the | jobs, To Hire AIRY, LARGE MEETING ROOMS and HALL Suitable for Meetings, Lectures and Dances in the Cz¢choslovak | transform their pious wishes into a | reality. | rages. ions were urged to send del to a conference to consider ine or- ganization of children’s which will be held Sunday, at 1p. m,, at 35 E. 12th St. branches, | April 1, The } Lies ities Bod Fail to Mar Taxi. | Men’s Firm Stand. (Continued from Page 1) while the discussions were going on| inside. | As we go to press, union leaders | were at City Hall to place their plan before the fleet owners. | Every capitalist newspaper in the/| city, even the so-called liberal] sheets, such as the New York Post, threw off all their garments of lib- eralism and came out in open sup- port of the fleet owners yesterday. They gave big reports of the! “ousting of the Communist leader- ship from the strike,” of a “revolt! of Bronx and Brooklyn drivers against the Manhattan hackmen.” They told fancy fairy tales about the “ousting of Joseph Gilbert from the union,” through what they vaguely referred to as “a reorgani- zation of the union to save the strike.” The capitalist newspaper editors have obviously overlapped them- selves in the process of trying to Distort Gilbert's Statement Not one statement of Joseph Gil- bert and Samuel Orner, the out-| standing and most militant leaders | of the union, were reported correctly | in the press, if they were reported at all, The union petition of continuing the strike until a settlement and/ agreement is reached with the own- ers was ignored by the press. Only mysterious tales about) “Communist violence,” only the strikebreaking, back-te-work call of Mr. Morris Hotchner, chairman of the United Taxicab Board of Trade and other fleet owners were given preference in the capitalist press, The cab drivers were not fooled | and demoralized by these red scare | stories. The majority of these hackles saw through the splitting tactics of the bosses and their press. They marched in an orderly man- ner from their strike hall and con- tinued their picket duty at the ga- “This Taxi Drivers Union of} Greater New York is ‘here to. stay | and nobody can break it, not even the capitalist press,” Samue! Orner| told the reporters at City Hall yes- terday, The strikers were warned by union | leaders and shop chairmen to be- ware of false rumors and spreaders | of rumors that the strike is over. Only unity can keep the ranks of the strikers together; only a firm unity, regardless of political opinion, will bring the drivers back to the) garages, stronger and better orga-| nized than before. Through this unity and under the leadership of their union, the Taxi Drivers Union of Greater New York, and only through this unity can the hack drivers smash the slave condi- tions in the taxicab industry in| New York. All workers, workers in every in-| dustry, must now rally to the sup-| port of the heroic taxi drivers. All throughout the day, the City Hall was a veritable armed camp. Heavy detachments of the police | and members of the radical squad guarded all hallways and entrances to the City Hall. Fear r Mine Strike; Raise Pay and Cut Hours to 7 a Day (Continued from Page 1) that the miners were ready to strike; and that they would not be | kept back by the Lewis machine, as shown in the growth of insur- gent strikes in many fields, despite the no-strike elause of the agree- ment, The bosses further feared the tre- mendous fighting spirit that is de- veloping among the railroad, auto and steel workers, and knew that a strike among the miners, which could not be controlled by their trusted lieutenants, Lewis & Co., would mean at this time a factor they could not cope with. The lower scale for the Southern fields that still exists in the un- organized fields, the failure to en- force the agreement as to condi- tions,’ where the Lewis leadership allows plenty of room for continued attaeks on the miners, shows that only militant action and rank and file vigilance can force the main- tenance of the gains. What Lewis wishes to conceal from the miners, and what the miners know is that they were and are in a position, through their or- ganized strength, to gain much bet- ter conditions. Price Rises Higher ‘The present increase of 40 cents per day is far exceeded by the rise in prices the miners must pay. There is talk of the probability of a strike of those miners where the operators refused new agreements, as for example, the Fairmont sec- tion. What the developments will be in the Illinois and other V/estern fields, where no increases are given at all, is not yet certain. But the miners there are dissatisfied. The rank and file opposition in the U, M. W, A, is preparing to bring be- fore the miners, through leaflets and the “Coal Digger,” which is | statements alone. | Plant in Kharkov, U.S. | Office, 1514 Prospect Ave. soon to be published as a rank : BeforelaborBoard Mrs. Herrick Abolish Blacklist YORK. — Four Beato of the Amalgamated Hotel and Restaurant Workers’ Union demonstrated yesterday at 3 o'clock at the Regional Labor Board head- quarters, 45 Broadway, recent strike. ‘They had been promised that the | strikers would be re-hired without discrimination, 2,000 remain black- | listed despite the board and hotel owners’ promises. A delegation of five rank and file workers from the ranks of the dem- onstrators who were militantly yell- | ing for their jobs, carrying placards, waving, “We Demand All Strikers Be Reinstated!”, “Fight Against Discrimination on Jobs!” were es- corted by two policemen, who would not allow more than five to see Mrs. Elinor Herrick, head of the board. During the meeting, Mrs. Herrick | carefully maneuvered a postpon- ment of the rank and file workers who were falsely deceived previous- ly to the Labor Board hearing to be held next week between hotel owners and workers. The workers demanded their jobs back, the abo- lition of the blacklist, fingerprinting and photographing of workers on the job. Before the meeting Herrick said, anded, Mrs. the hotel owners also. That's one | of our basic principles of American justice,” when she was told about the discriminating, Policies of the hotels. Meanwhile the Union stated they |will fight for their rights at the| hearings to begin Monday and which will last throughout the week. They will demand that all strikers be reinstated. Workers Arrive in ‘Trucks To Attend 8th C.P. Convention’ (Continued from Poge 1) . 8. R. have! sent a letter of revoltitionary greet | |ings to the Convention, stating: “With outspoken enthusiasm and unshakable confidence, we greet the | convention of the O.P.U.8.A.” The| letter expresses the “boundless in- | dignation” of the Kharkov workers | at the role of the A. F. of L. bu-| reaueracy, the Socialist Party, the | Musteites, and the renegades from | Communism, “who prepare the way for American fascism by breaking the genuine fighting united front of | all workers and toilers,” “With hope and pride,” the let- ter continues, “we salute the growth in political influence and organiza-| tional strength of the C.P.U.S.A. We on our part pledge before the con-' vention to check up and intensify our work, to fulfill our program, to improve the quality of produntion, to master and popularize new tech- | | nique, so as to contribute to the ut- | most of our ability te the socialist construction, to hasten the triumph of the American and World Oc- tober!"” The Polish Buro has added its contribution of $25 to the fund for | Lithuanian | the convention. The | Women’s Society of Passaic, N. J., has sent 41, collected among it! working women members. The first session of the conyen- tion will open early Tuesday morn- ing, and sessions will continue un- til April 8, at which time the broad discussion of reports will have for- mulated a program of action for the coming months of class struggle in this country. Workers are urged to get in touch with the Cleveland District Room 306, at once in regard to housing for the convention delegates. “The Convention,” stated the Kharkov workers, “will mobilize all the Party members and revolution- ary workers as one man, to accom- plish the historical task of winning over the majority of the proletariat for a revolutionary way out of the crisis. We are wholeheartedly in Solidarity with the American work- ers and toilers “at home” in their bitter struggles against the New Deal of American finance capital.” All delegates are to report Mon- day morning to 1524 Prospect Ave., the Cleveland Workers School, for registration. Section 8, Brooklyn, to Hold ‘Daily’ Conference NEW YORK.—Section 8, Browns- ville, will hold a special Daily Worker Conference Wednesday, April 4, 8 p. m., at 1813 Pitkin Ave., with Harry Lichtenstein, District Daily Worker representative, as the main speaker. Every working class organization is urged to send two delegates to this conference and file organ in the U. M. W. A., as well as through mass meetings, the real meaning of the agreement, and to show the miners why the bosses were compelled to make some concessions. They will point out how Lewis robbed them of the pos- sibility of gaining the six-hour day and $6 a day rate, and the aboli- tion of the penalty clause, as well as payment for dead work, and the abolition of the no-strike clause in the agreement, as demanded, by the miners, 9 hundred | “I can't accept your, I have to hear | strikebreaking | Play By Play HE Reupliiancs Alls Star basketball game packed ‘em in last night at the St. Nicholas Arena when 1,500 sport-lovers and Scottsboro sym- | pathizers watched the world’s Negro champions uphold their prestige | by beating the All-Star professional A round of wholehearted applause greeted the Megro champions as | they walked onto the floor to start off the ceremonies, and after the | to demand | All-Stars found the basket in their practice session, Jan end to the blacklist and the jobs| with Yancey of the Rens wasting no time in cutting the net clean from! |they had lost for participating in a| mid-floor. He followed up with a | lead 3 to 0. jone hand shots when he lobbed one | into the net and Ricks of the Rens/ | pushed in another short shot under the net to make the score 5 to 2. Davis pushed one in following a long pass and Spahn made his charity | throw good following a foul to even | the score, 5-all, | The Rens came through with 4! |more points before the quarter ended when Jenkins swished the ball from mid-floor into net, and | Saitch followed from the jump with la side shot, making the score 9 to 5 in favor of the Rens when the quarter whistle blew. . IN THE second period, Hooker Cohen lost no time in trying to catch the smooth-clicking Negro team, when he leaped into the air from mid-floor to add two more markers to the All-Star | Score. Yancey of the Rens pivoted under the net for a basket and Cooper made his free throw good, whereby Davis, on a double foul, made his good.. The Rens fol- lowed with three more field goals when Yancey doubled under the net for a marker, followed in quick succession right from the tip-off by Ricks and Saitch who banged the ball through the hoop from difficult side angles. Goldman and Spahn retaliated with two goals, and Yancey took advantage of a foul shot to make the seore 19 to 12 in faver of the Rens at the end of the half. poutowsna the rst period, the refreshed teams came out for the last stretch. Goldman pushed @ long one-hander through the hoop, whereupon Cohen took advantage | of his pivot position under the net to boost the score by two more points before Jenkins and Saitch came through with a basket and two free throws. Goldman dittoed/ | Saitch’s charity goal with another) lone for the All-Stars, Cooper put in a free throw for the Rens, where- upon he was immediately followed by Ricks’ side and short shat. into the net, putting the Rens well out to the front. Spahn and Goldman added ‘ve pointe: to the Ally ‘Star o Hooker Cohen demonstrated his |; aggregation, 36 to 27. DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet. Pitkin and Sutter Aves., Brooklyn PHONE: DICKENS 2-3012 137B ST.NICHOLAS AVE® 1690 LEXINGTON AVE, STN / the game started free throw to put the Rens in the the total being 28 to 22, favor of the | \ ps THE last period the Rens pushed | their total to 36 markers, adding | 8 points to their final score, while | the All-Stars’ valiant fight to over- | id | take the Negro’ team’s lead was! # stopped with only five points added | to their final szore. Pappy Ricks of the Renaissance team was high-point man, with 10 points, with Goldman of the All- Stars, recent captain of City Col-}| —WILLIAM. -BELL——_. orrctat. Optometrist oF THE 106 EAST 14th STREEP, Near Fourth Ave., N. . Phone: TOmpkins Sq DENTIST 150 E. 9rd St. New York City: DR. EMIL FICHE | | Cor. ington Ave. ATwater 9-8838 Fours: 9 a. m, to 8 p. m. Sun. 9 to 1” Member Workmen's Sick and Death Benefit Fund lege’s cage team, tying honors with 10 markers. $ Between halves, William Patter- son, national secretary of the In- ternational Labor Defense, deliv- ered a stirring talk about the Labor Sports Union, which spon- sored this game, and the contrast | © Home Phone: Office Estabrook 8: DR, S, L. SHIELDS Surgeon Dentist 2574 WALLACE AYE. ‘orner Allerton Avenue Bronx, N.Y, linville 5-1109 with the A.A.U, He described speci- fically the Jim-Crowism, the chau- | vinism existing among the A. A. U. sponsors who viriually exploit | amateur athletes for their own designs, while the L. stands for the very opposite. They fight militantly for the equal rights of | Negro athletes, for the building MOTT HAVEN 9-8740 Dr. Julius Jaffe. Surgeon Dentist 401 EAST 140th Sane (Corner Willis Avenue) of a powerful workers sports or- ganization, for the absolute aboli- tion of discrimination. | This attitude was shown by) worker sportsmen at the game. Both the Negro and white teams were applauded spontaneously whenever they deserved it. The fans appre- ciated their services. They showed it in their attitude. AARON SHAPIRO, Pod.G. CHIROPODIST 223 SECOND AVENUE ALgenquin 4-4432 Cor, 1th st. Selentific Treatment ef Foot Ailments Once again, we should applaud the L.§.U., the arrangement com- mittee and the players, for donat- ing their services to make this game possible for a great cause —the Scottsboro Defense Fund, Renalssance Box Score All Stars FG. F. FG. FT. Saitch f. 2 2 Gohen f. 3 0 Ricks f. 5 0 Rothenfeld't.0 0 Cooper ¢. A) 4 Davis c. 1 » Cs | Yencey'g. 3 2 Spindel g a 0 | Jenkins g. 4 0 Spahn &. 4 | Holt f. 0° @ Goldman f.3 4 Smith f, 0 Davidoft f. 0 9 Gordon f, 1 0 TOTALS — — — — | 1 8 8 8 Referee: Tubby Raskin, Bronx ¥.M.H.A.; Umpire: George Wolfe, Sphas. ‘Eastern L.S.U. District | to Hold 6th Convention NEW YORK.—Following the i | lead of the recent National Con- | vention, the keynote of the 6th Convention of the Eastern Dist- | riet of the Labor Sports Union | to be held in New York tomor- row at the Yorkville A. C., 347) E. 72nd St., will be the organi- zation of labor sportsmen from factories and trade unions into {the L. S. U The Convention will lay out a program of getting the L. S. U. |; members into the “Y’’s and set- tlement houses in order to « these forces into the L. S, U. movement. Also the building of baseball leagues for the summer, the struggle for more fields, and the winning over of more Ne- gro athletes wil be some of the problems to be discussed. Roosevelt Board Aims Heavy Blow At Trade Unions (Continued from Page 1) | tion of all strikes.” Today negotia- tions began about the Nash strikers, where the main issue was the ques- tion cf wages. Leo Wolman is thus the chief screw in a new strike- breaking machine for the auto in- dustry. Parades Record The capitalist press here continues to parade the record of Wolman and make him appesr as a friend of the working men. But the first action in which he took part shows the evil role which this so-called liberal plays for the foulest group of ex- ploiters in the country. Wolman in his first statement pleaded for co- operation from all factors in the industry, but he will have no trouble with his mates on the board. The CUT OUT THIS AD and SAVE Bridge Plaza Workers — Welcome to KALE j | CAFETERIA \ 286 Broadway WILLIAMSBURG Garment Section Workers Patronize Navarr Cafeteria 333 7th AVENUE } ‘ HALF SOLES (White Oak) 19¢ 39c 109 EAST 14TH STREET Tompkins Square 6-9132 Caucasian Restaurant “KAVKAZ” Russian and Oriental Kitchen BANQUETS AND PARTIES 332 East 14th Street New York City We Have Reopened JADE MOUNTAIN American & Chinese Restaurant 197 SECOND AVENUE (Bet. 12th and 13th St.) Going to Russia? Workers needing full outfits of horsehide leather, sheeplined Coats, Windbreakers, Breeches, High Shees, ete., will receive spe- cial reduction on all their purchases at the UARE DEAL Y and NAVY STORE 121 THIRD AVE. (2 doors South of 14th Street) | A Russian and Oriental Kitchen Comradely Atmosphere VILLAGE BAR 221 SECOND AVENUE near 14th Street, New York City Horsehide, Sheepskin Coats, Wind- Breakers, Breeches, High Shoes, Boots, Work Shirts, Gloves, Ete. Hudson Army & Navy. Phone: TOmpkins Square 6-554 A John’s Restaurant i SPECIALTY—ITALIAN DISHES A place with stmosphere where aN radicals meet 302 E. 12th St, New York WORKERS! FOR 105 THIRD AVE, Corner 13th Street ——_ 158 W, 4th st., TASTY, DELICIOUS, WHOLESOME NATURAL HEALTH FOODS Trufood VEGETARIAN Restaurant F EAST OF BROADWAY. OPEN TILL MIDNIGHT | _nemenEresh Food—Proletarian Prices—s0 E. All Comrades Meet at the NEW HEALTH CENTER CAFETERIA Asth St.—WORKERS' CENTER Attorney, Kelley, manufacturers and is connectéd dustrial Democracy. appointment, that it was his ambi- tion long ago to arrive at just such a job some day. They are three birds of a feather, with their “labor’ and “liberal” cloak used to fool the workers, It nevertheless is a hang- man’s committee for real unionism —hanged by a rope of hemp or a rope of silk one is just as dead. It is clear now that the board is trying its best to kill off strikes and genuine union organization, ‘TAXI DRIVERS’ BENEFIT An entertainment for the benefit of the taxi drivers has been arranged the office workers union, for tomorrow, 8 p.m. at the Irving Plaza Hall. Pierre Degey- ter Orchestra, W.L.T., Charles Weidman Dancers, John Reed Club . Joe Gil- bert, Sam Orner will speak. Harry Mar- tel will be chairman, represents the; with the Socialist League for In-! Byrd. the so-- called “labor” representative, is a’ former officer in the U. 8. Marine} Corps. He declared, on receiving his Fine Clothing SALTZMAN BROS, MEN’S SUITS for Workers | Ready Made and to Order }! 181 STANTON STREET \ NEW YORK CITY NEAR CLINTON STREET S ene sti Organizations, etc., who would 168 STANTON STREET on every sale made. “MAX TRAIGER Welcomes workers of I. W. O., Industrial Unions, Mass SPRING SUITS AND TOPCOATS $18.50—$20.50—$22.50 Values up to $35.00 5 Percent Discount for Daily Worker Press Fund like to obtain the FINEST or. Clinton St. Ask for Reseipt

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