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Page Two New York Bosses In Drive to Raise City Subway Fare La Guardia in Tacit Agreement With New Attack on Workers YORK. — Twenty-t real-estate owners’ as: euphoniously known as} orgenizations,” yesterday | their campaign to raise e city’s suby NEW and elevatec d by the g interests 2,000 Aircraft Men Battle Buffalo Cops (Special to the Daily Worker) BUFFALO, N. Y.. April 10.— |) More than 2,000 striking workers || at the aircraft factories here bat- tled with scabs and police late | today as deputies tried to get scabs into the closed plants un- der armed guard The strike for higher wages is led by the Aeronautical Workers Union, which urges all organiza- tions to send protest telegrams to |/ Sheriff Offerman, Buffalo, pro- |/ sting police violence and scab |i Fur Workers Meet | HW] Men, Soviet News Writer ‘Real Reds’ (Continued from Page 1) j paign behind it, reflect a concerted drive by some of the most powerful capital to stop the Roosevelt Adm ration’s demagogie efforts to convince the working class that the “New Deal” means that certain labor rights, such as collective bar- | gaining, will be recognized. The capitalists, with whom Wirt has been working actively for many} months, particularly those of the| Fascist-inclined “Committee for the Nation,” have decided that, now that profits have been recovered through attacks on labor under} 1 wine AND His Theves DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 11, 1984 Wirt Calls N R A. GUTTERS OF NEW YORK Bv DEL CALIPHS OF INDUSTRY. Mooney’s Molders Union Elects Him Convention Choice Case Will Be Appealed to U. 8. Supreme Court SAN FRANCISCO, April 10—The jmolders’ union of which he is a member in good standing has once more elected Tom Mooney as thetr| delegate to the international con- vention in Chicago in August. The application for a writ of habeas corpus in Tom Mooney’s be- half took more time to prepare than Another Title- More Dollars AVING two crowns on his | juices of life are flowing into “Our boy Barney.” His two sheltered Barney Ross other greats under | their | and? of La- - To Discuss Code s 2x-| Ben Gold to Speak in tthe) Irving Plaza Today i {al problem prob- », according to them as well ;W YORK—The Fur Workers Industrial Union issued a call yes- | terday to all fur workers to come neral membership meeting : . in Irving Plaza, 15th and Irving Pl. { Ben Gold, leader of the union. will report on the latest develop- nents about the code and the meas- ures to be taken to prevent the code} from injuring the interests of the fur workers. | The meeting will lay plans to| compel the bosses to live up to all union conditions. | as this def by fur g the wages and li masses of New York w to the} onal City | ment of $126,- Tt is because of these bank-payments that the budget| “Our trade board has laid out al Ge | plan for a mighty offensive,” the LaGuardia when “informed”| call read. “The membership mect- about the drive for a higher fare|ing is a mobilization to deliver the} on the part of these organizations, | last crushing blow to the scab joint| demagogically and cryptically de-| council and its Lovestoneites.” clared “Well, that’s the usual Se ee eee Esciaran aa oot, novere 2 Cab Drivers Hit the on that the pror r ganizations fitted in nicely with hi: “+ \--cent. own schemes to raise the fare on the ays used by all New York cit S as soon as he succeeds i g the wages of the civil employes under the new “Economy Bill his bill has already been passed in the State Assembly and Senate, Under its terms, the county graft offices and all other political spoils are to be tacitly divided be- m the Tammany and the Pu- m gangs, and a $13,000,000 wage mposed on the city employes ne identity of this civic organ- ization’s interests and those of La- Guardia are revealed again in the following sweetened quotation, from yesterday's New York Times: “The administration at present is committed to the principle that there should be no rise in the fare, but if one should be necessary, it should come after, and not before, unification of the B. M. the In- terborough and the city’s indepen- dent system.” An indication of the anti-work- ing-class character of the forces working to put through this sub- way fare raise, together with the demagogic city administration, can be seen in the following list of or- ganizations which signed the state- ment urging the fare increase: Broadway Association Bronx Board of Trade Brooklyn Real Estate Board Central Mercantile Association Central Park West and Columbus Ave-/ nue Association, Chamber of Commerce of Borough of Queens. Chamber of Commerce of State of New on Downtown Brooklyn Association. First Avenue Association. 42d St. Property Owners and Merchants Association. Lexington Avenue Oivic Assoctation. Merchants Association of New York. New York Board of Trade. Real Estate Board of New York. Real Estate Board of the Bronx. Sixth Avenue Association. Staten Island Chamber of Commerce. 34th Street-Midtown Association. 28d Street Association Uptown Chamber of Commerce. Washington Square Association. West End Association. Weet Side Association of Commerce. Sec'y of War Dern Picks Committee to Sneed AntiWarPlan from Page 1) (Continue Chamberlin, trans-Atlantic fiyer; Major James Harold Doolittle, ex- pert flyer and aeronautical engineer; Brigadier General John W. Gulick, United States Army; Edgar S. Gor- rell, president of the Stutz Motor Company, and Major Albert £. Brown, Recorder of the War De- partment General Staff. The practical war nature of the committee is emphasided by the fact that even Dr. Compton has had war experience. He served as an aero- nautical engineer in the army in 1917 and was an associate scientific attache of the American Embassy in Paris in 1918. The appointment of Baker to a high aviation post recalls the fam- ous Graham Committee’s con- demnaiion of his aviation activities during the World War. This com- mittee, which investigated the mon- umental corruption and inefficiency ef War Department officials and business profiteers during the war, reprimanded Baker for failing to court-martial Colonel Edward A. Deeds, the head of the Equipment Division of Aviation under General Squier, for corruption, despite Chief Justice Hughes’ recommendation for court-martial. “With a record thaf affected lives of men and charges of inordinate selfishness supported by specific facts, Deeds should have been placed on trial to be convicted if guilty, to be vindicated if inno- According to the testimony, Secretary Baker prevented such ac- tion,” the Graham Committee re- ported. “Colonel Deeds was there- after banqueted in Washington and praised by General Squier for his record in aircraft production,” the committee report added. Deeds, Baker’s man, was con- victed of criminal business practices by a Federal Jury four years be- fore his government appointment, and sentenced to a year in prson. ‘The case was reversed on appeal and vo retrial occurred. Are you doing your share in the Daily Worker sub drive? Every reader getting only one new sub- seriber will mut the drive over the top! ‘Socialist Move to: ‘Split Unity of Men | (Continued from Page 1) | aaa Tanai Ne | delegations of drivers from the ga- | rages came to the Manhattan head- | | quarters of the union and pledged | their support of the Taxi Drivers} | Union. | “If anyone tries to put Orner and Gilbert out of our union they | will have to deal with the rank | and file hackmen,” said a driver from the 23d St. Parmelee garage. At midnight Monday Samuel Or- | | ner, president of the Manhattan lo- cal, and Joseph Gilbert, the organ- | izer, made a tour of the downtown cab stands, All along the streets the | militant leaders of the recent two strikes were hailed by the hackmen. At Fourth Ave. and 20th St. a large number of hackmen stopped | their cabs and jammed the traffic for several minutes when they spied their leaders. It was revealed yesterday morning by Amicus Most, organizer of the | Bronx local of the union, that the Socialist newspaper, the Jewish Daily Forward, put up the $250 rent money required for the Hunts Point j take over a few more |demagogic promises, it is time to} p making promises. Particularly since the employers have seen labor fight, through strikes, to make good those promises. ! The Wirt charges will show up| the demagogy of the Roosevelt Ad-| ministration; they cannot fail to bring forward the fact that man: Roosevelt officials, while actuals carrying out the commands of the big trusts for lowering labor stand- ards under the N.R.A. codes, and} while driving poor farmers off the land through crop-reduction | schemes to hike agricultural prices, | actually have promoted the fiction| that Roosevelt is carrying out a “silent revolution” to bring about “Social Justice.” These people thus aided in spreading Roosevelt’s dem- agogic promises. | Wirt Prold the committee today) that at a dinner party attended by six “satellites” of the Roosevelt Brain Trust, the political philosophy of the brain trust was discussed, and) that these people declared that Rexford G. Tugwell, Assistant Sec- retary of Agriculture, is of the opinion that “economic planning” means “that business will be largely | required to disappear,” and that it| requires “modifications so serious | as to mean destruction and rebuild- | ing.”. Wirt also declared that | Speaker Henry T. Rainey of the House of Representatives told} someone who told him. Wirt: “Con- | gress will meet and adjourn about | May 15, and in a couple of months | the government will take over a few industries, and in a couple of | months more the government will} industries, | and then I don’t know what will) happen.” Also, Wirt testified, Tug- well was quoted to him as saying that “if we could find some way to stop feeding them (people on relief) we could make better headway to- | ward what we are trying to accom- plish.” | That “what we are trying to ac-| complish,” Wirt contends, is the scrapping of the Roosevelt “Recov- ery” program in order to render the | nation ready for a “revolution”| which would result, says Wirt, in a Communistic system. | Demagogy of “Brain Trusters” | The important fact about all | these matters is that the very of- |ficials of whom Wirt speaks—while | actually carrying out the demands had been anticipated by Attorney| wings, namely, Art Winch and head or two diamond belts around his hips doesn’t seem to be very troublesome or | uncomfortable for Barney Ross, the lightweight and junior | welterweight champion of the world. The boys that hang around the Chicago West Side poolrooms act as though the them when they gustily say, managers, who have cleverly Madison Square Garden has been batting its, head around trying to lof the big trusts under the New Palace. Deal—do spout continuously, in When Matthew Levy, a Socialist | private conversations here in the | leader, got up to speak the applause | capital, about the “Social changes” that he received from his henchmen was mingled with boos from a sec- tion of the hackmen. He immediately blamed this on munists want to speak, let them come up here.” Whereupon, Sam- uel Silver, a taxi driver, asked for the floor. He was immediately pounced upon, beaten and turned over to the police, who took him to ; the station, where he was charged | by Frankel, one of the leaders of | the Bronx local, with inciting to | rlot. The case was later thrown out | of court. At the Bronx meeting about | three-fourths of the people present, @ large number not taxi driv- ers, voted for affiliation with the | A. F. of L. | Considerable discontent was shown by the hackmen ‘present | when told by Samuel Smith that | the dues in the A. F. of L. would | be -2 a month. The dues rate in the | Taxi Drivers Union is 50 cents a | month, There were only about 250 people | Present at the Brooklyn meeting | that was held yesterday morning at {the Amalgamated Temple. This eeting was addressed by Norman Thomas and Herman Goldstein, the president of the local. This group, that was also packed with hench- men of Norman Thomas who were | neither hackmen or members of the | union, also voted for affiliation with | the A. F. of L. Denouncing the lies of the So- cialist leaders, who stated that no gains were made during the course of the past two strikes and who have Jaunched into a vicious slander cam- paign against the Manhattan lead- ership and the Communists, Sam- uel Orner pointed out that “cer- tain achievements were made dur- ing the strike.” “We showed the city that we could not be tricked as has already been done in the case of the Fifth Ave. Bus Co. drivers and the Weir- ton Steel workers,” said,Orner. “We refused to take a plebiscite that would send us back to work and leave us defenseless in face of in- timidation of the fleet owners. “We showed a fighting spirit as has never been seen in any strike in the city. We have taken the first | step in consolidating and strength- | ening our union with the purpose of | improving our conditions and ward- ing off the threat that the fleet own- ers hold over our heads to impose the company union plan.” Orner then pointed out that the strikers did not have unity in their | ranks during the course of the strike. | “There were the Bronx and Brook- lyn leaders who did not help the situation by failing to bring the membership into the mass demon- strations,” said Orner. “Their con- tinued attacks on the Manhattan leaders created confusion and de- moralization among the men. In- stead of unified organizations they ‘chose to work as separate bodies, ‘ making separate decisions and car- ‘rying through separate actions.” “We must fight with all our energy the attempts to force our union into the A. F. of L., whose leadership is responsible for the recent auto strike betrayal.” the Communists and said, “If Com-| \they are accomplishing. The Roosevelt government is ac- complishing “social changes” toward fascism—but the brain trust- |ers and a host of liberals in minor |jobs throughout the Roosevelt ma- chine insist that the regime is “mov- ing left.” They aid in putting over the Roosevelt attacks on the work- ers by spreading these illusions. They cannot or will not listen to such clear-cut pronouncements as Gerard’s Swope’s recent declaration ; that nothing like the recent N.R.A. Code Authorities’ (big business) meeting ever happened “except in (Fascist) Italy.” They refuse to jrecognize that all the mouthing about “social justice” has been ac- companied by the reduction of the worker's real wage, that the C. W. |A. has been scrapped under a de- |clared policy of providing only forced-labor at below-subsistence wages for a small fraction of the unemployed, etc., and these brain- trusters and their satellites—I have heard them babble all over Wash- ington—are continually inspiring ballyhoo, which maintains the il- lusions that Roosevelt is champton- ing the “forgotten man.” Strikebreakers Named by Wirt Dr. Wirt, by taking them at their word, has brought the Roosevelt ad- ministration considerable embar- rassment. The House Committee, which first blusteringly set out to disprove Wirt’s charge, today care- fully restricted the investigation so as to prevent going into anything beyond statements bearing directly on the specific charges. Wirt, was. therefore, a sorry figure. None of the six at the dinner party actually were brain-trusters. He called them brain trust “satellites” but naturally had to admit later that Todd had no connection with the brain trust. “T call that a Communistic ef- fort,” Wirt said. It is, of course, nothing but a plan to force the un- employed into the double harness of factory work and agricultural pro- duction—they are to produce their own food on poor land and work at the bench for a few pennies to pro- vide a minimum in shelter and clothes, “You considered this part of a concrete plan of bringing about the overthrow of our social system?” Wirt was asked. “T certainly did,” he explained. The committee decided later to call Todd to testify, and also Hilde- |gard Kneeland, Home Economics expert of the Department of Labor, who also was named by Wirt as hay- ing made the comparison between Roosevelt and Kerensky. The others named by Wirt as talking over the “Revolution” were Robert Bruere, Chairman of the Cotton Textile In- dustrial Relations Board, who’ per- sonally has participated in strike- breaking under the hated N. R. A. cotton code, but who is considered a liberal; Mary Taylor, A. A. A, Economist, who has been in gov- ernment work many years; Alice Barrows, liberal expert on school buildings, also a pre-Roosevelt of- ficial continuing under the Roose- velt. “silent revolution;” and David C. Vovyle, technical expert of the Public Works Administration, a liberal engineer whose specialty is —wind resistance) \ American civilization has all Arabian Nights.”—-NEWS ITEM. “A University of Chicago professor claims that CLOSED the magical qualities of the Brooklyn Workers Mass at Firetrap, Hit Police Terror 200 March on Relief Bureau Demanding Relief NEW YORK.—More than 200 Ne- gro and white workers, under the leadership of the Unemployment Councils, massed at the fire-trap tenement at, 1599 East New York Ave., Brooklyn, yesterday, to resist the brutal police terror now being used against the workers living in the tenement. The city condemned the fire-trap tenement, and gave the 13 families living in it, 24 hours to vacate, re- fusing to pay the expense of mov- ing or to provide other housing. As the workers massed before the tenement, ten police were at hand, refusing to allow the tenants to re- |turn to their homes Two hundred workers marched in a body to demand that the Home | Relief Bureau provide adequate |housing and moving expenses for the workers. The relief officials promised to investigate, as 400 | workers massed outside the Home Relief Bureau at a meeting. Rally to Halt Sale Of Worker’s Goods PHILADELPHIA, April 10—All workers are called on to mobilize at 744 South 13th Street, Thurs- day at 9 a. m, to prevent the sale of Anderson Wiggin’s house- |hold goods. Wiggitis is danger- ously ill, and moving him may cause instant death, his doctor says, A committee of ten called on the county relief board Tuesday demanding that Wiggins’s rent be paid and the possibility of his death be avoided. Mrs. Collins emphatically refused, saying that it was against the Board’s policy to pay rents. The committee was aroused by her callousness, and branded the board a bunch of murderers, “Mass action of the workers | will break down your policy, as it |has done in the past,” a spokes- man said. ‘Need ‘Brain Trust’ To Fool the Masses, Richberg Declares (Continued from Page 1) would either ally itself with or be overwhelmed by the underes- timated power of the mob,” said Richberg. “In the present day... it is ignorance rather than perversity | that causes groups of uneducated, | poverty ridden workers to be im- patient of the slow process of so- cial betterment which are advo- cated by humane and_public- spirited men with brains,” he con- cluded. In other words—don’t attack the brain trust because men with brains are “educating” the masses to ac- cept lower living standards under the New Deal—by talking of “eco- nomic revolution” they avoid “poli- tical revolution’”—the overthrow the working class of the system which opposes them, Indulging in some brain trust demagogy of his own, Richberg said, “We cannot possibly escape from an economic revolution.” But, he added realistically, “the only present men- ace to our national sanity—and. con- sequent danger of political upheaval -lies in the spread of that in- sanity which animates the league of stuffed shirts.” By the “stuffed shirts league,” Richberg referred, as he explained, earlier, to that least intelligent section of capitalists who are campaigning against the brain trust—apparently an indirect by|a carrier or carriers growing out reference to those working with Dr. William Wirt, Hail 12 Years of Jewish Communist “Morning Freiheit” Celebration in Bronx! Coliseum This Saturday NEW YORK.—in a colorful mass celebration this Saturday evening, April 14, workers from all sections of this city will gather in the huge Bronx Coliseum to demonstrate on the occasion of the 12th anniver- sary of the fighting Jewish Com- munist daily, the Morning Freiheit. This jubilee demonstration will be an outstanding event. In greeting the Morning Freiheit the workers will manifest their readiness to rally under Communist leadership in the oncoming mass struggles against hunger, war and fascism. An unusual program has been prepared for the celebration. An extraordinary feature will be the presentation of Maxim Gorki’s rev- olutionary masterpiece, “The Storm- bird,” in a Jewish adaptation by M. Olgin, This will be a glaring mass Pageant, rendered jointly by the ARTEF players, the Freiheit Gesangs Ferein and the ARTEF dance group. Of no less interest will’ be the participation. of the famous Hall Johnson Negro quartet im a pro- gram of choice songs. The speakers will be Comrades Earl Browder, Gerenal Secretary of the Communist Party of the United States of America, and M. J. Olgin, Editor of the Morning FPreiheit. Both will bring first hand reports from the Eighth National Conven- tion of the Communist Party, re- cently held in Cleveland. Comrade J. Sultan, Secretary of the Central Jewish Bureau of the Communist Party, will be chairman. The workers are urged to secure tickets immediately. The price of a ticket in advance is 40 cents and at the box office 55 cents. Tickets can be obtained in the office of the Morning Freiheit, 50 E. 13th St., sixth floor. No-Strike Rule for Railroads, Eastman Urges (Continued from Page 1) proposal for the continuation of the 10 per cent basic wage cut beyond the expiration of the pres- ent wage agreement, declared, “The willingness of the employees to agree to such a provision is, in my judgment, a very important concession and one of which full advantage should be taken in the public interest. I regard it as, perhaps, the most important part of the bill.” This announcement of the Whit- ney group’s readiness to play with the Roosevelt administration’s con- certed effort to foist compulsory ar- bitration on the American working class follows on the heels of Whit- ney’s recent White House press in- terview, in which he unequivocally opposed the use of the strike, in the face of the strike sentiment of the rank and file railway workers. In discussing the provision of the bill for the creation of a national adjustment board to which unad- justed “disputes between an em- ployee or group of employees and of grievances or out of the inter- pretation or application of agree- ments concerning rates of pay, rules, or working conditions,” Eastman stated that “When the regular members” of the National Adjust- ment Board “who will be equally divided between the two sides, dis- agree, they must call in a neutral member appointed by the mediation board (which exists under the pres- ent railway labor act) to decide the oaga.” Where labor members and the railroad members “are unable to get. together,” said Eastman, “the final decision is to be rendered by a strictly neutral member appointed by the mediation board.” John Finerty of Washington, D. C., and his San Francisco associate, George Davis, but is soon to be filed. Finerty expects the application to be denied in the federal court in San Francisco, and will then appeal to the U. S. Supreme Court and argue the case there. 7,000 Los Angeles CWA Men Demand Jobs and Relief Pledge to Build Union to Resist Firings and Pay Cuts LOS ANGELES, Calif., April 10— Seven thousand C. W. A. workers! demonstrated at the Plaza here| Monday, demanding the continua- tion and extension of C. W. A. to provide work for all unemployed at guaranteed minimum O. W. A. pay, and union rates for all skilled | workers, | The 7,000 workers pledged to build | the Construction Workers’ Indus- trial Union and the Relief Workers) Protective Union to resist the Roose- | velt C. W. A. wage cuts and firings.| One worker, whose neck had been) broken while working on a relief} job, appeared on the platform, be-| lying the supervisors’ claim that | compensation had been paid to in- jured workers. All the workers assembled at the) protest demonstration pledged to} join in the united front anti-war and fascism May Day demonstra- tion here. Grover Johnson, one of the speak- ers, gave a graphic account of the terror and intimidation used against | the Imperial Valley strikers and or- ganized workers. . * * Spokane Jobless Win SPOKANE, Wash.—Workers here, under the leadership of the All Workers Union, forced the County | make up for that Carnera-Loughran | Sam Pian, have a little more reality | flop. Now they go to the smaller jin their statement, “Our boy,)men in the game for the mazuma, | Barney, champion of the world. We| Already, they have the world’s | couldn’t starve with him around.”| heavyweight bout scheduled between And Barney himself, he couldn’t get |Carnera and Baer for June, where | over the fact of ris rapid, sure, steady /they hope to put the Garden on | rise from a Golden Glove champion | its feet again. Now they hope these to the dizzy heights of crowndom. | Under-150-pounders will pull more He's gotten used to being known | than the heavyweights—something as the classiest little fighter in the | UPbeard of in fight history. game. A lot of color, witheut any} | The Garden calls this bout the |bombastie publicity, was woven| “dream match of boxing” because jaround him. Nobody thought he'd, they're starting the old chauvin- istic ball rolling again with dab- bing Ross “the greatest Jewish fighter of recent years,” and Me- Larnin as “the most outstanding Trish boxer of all times.” Any- how, the Garden believes in see- ing dreams fighting than just floating or walking. If the Garden Bowl knocks off | the $300,000 which the promoters are |rubbing their hands about, getting {them all itchy, it looks like the | Baer-Carnera match’ll have to be | called off for a couple of weeks so |as the customers can catch up with | their escaping pockets. A $10 top jrise to his spot when everybody knew him as a kid without the| killer instinct, without the cracking | | wallop that counts, without the good | fortune of having to run to a neu-| |tral corner continually. But the! | boy’s up on top and it’s going to be hard to topple him down, When he beat Canzoneri for the championship, punching away for the two crowns, everybody thought the fight was fixed. Gamely, he and his managers wanted to push those ideas out of everybody’s head. He was rematched with Canzoneri for the title bout in New York. Both men were tremendously popular in their respective cities, | Barney won in Chicago. Now the| fans waited for the match in New York City, Canzoneri’s own, where | there would be more turnstiles turn- ing dizzily, and where Canzoneri would take the crown away with a/ little more dough in his kick. But peculiarly enough, the home-loving | kid from Chicago’s West Side, who | comes from a very religious famliy, who stay at home praying for him when he dances around the ring,| came through a@ain and disap- pointed the guys in the know with @ decisive win, teas ae Roe kinda did right by himself. A poor kid at the beginning, who sparred around for a few bucks a bout, came through with a total of 100 grand, which is some coin in these days. Yet, in spite of all the dough he made for himself, his managers and the promoters worked for their share, while the guys behind the pro- motors sat on their swivel chairs Commissioners to reverse their de- cision to send two aged workers to, the County Farm, and forced the} granting of immediate relief to the| aged couple. | The aged couple had been cut) from relief two weeks previous to} the demonstration, and the County} Commissioners had repeatedly re-| fused to again put them on relief. | TWO MEN KILLED UNDER TRAIN WHEEL NEW YORK. — Two men died today when they jumped or fell before trains. Nicholas Barettisky, fifty, was killed when the wheels of a Third Ave. “L” train rolled over him, and John Mahlin, fifty- five, was struck by a northbound I, R. T. subway express at 12th St. and 7th Avenue. MAY DAY TAG DAYS PHILADELPHIA—The provision- al May Day Committee for Unem- ployment Insurance is calling a special May Day tag day on April 2ist and 22nd. All organizations are asked to participate and make| this a real mobilization for May 1st. 1.W.0. FRACTION MEETING PHILADELPHIA, Pa.—A general fraction meeting of all Party mem- bers in I,W.O. will take place on Saturday, April 14th, at 731 Walnut Street at 8 p.m. City Events SHOE REPAIRERS MEET TONIGHT NEW YORK.—The Shoe Repair Depart- ment of the United Shoe and Leather Workers Union calls upon all shoe repair- ers who work or live in the Bronx to come right after work to a yery important meeting and lecture on the results of the election in the union and the preparation for the general strike of the shoe re- pairers. The meeting will be held at 1532 Boston Rd. Ld The speaker will be George Martin, Organizer of the Shoe Repair Department. MILLINERY WORKERS MEET Rabbi Weinstein will speak on “Nazi Activities in the U. 8.” at a meeting of the millinery workers opposition at 58 ‘West 38th St., at 6:30 p.m. tonight, ATTENTION Y. C. L. ERS All unemployed comrades are to come to the District Office of the Young Com- munist League, 35 B. 12th 6t., today. Possibility for jobs. DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet. Pitkin and Sutter Aves., Brooklyn PHONE: DICKENS 2-3012 Office Hours: 8-10 A.M., 1-2, 6-3 P.M OPTOMETRISTS OPTICIANS |) 1378 ST.NICHOLAS AVE* 1690 LEXINGTON AVE. at 179” ST.NY. at 106tb ST.NY. AARON SHAPIRO, Pod.G. CHIROPODIST 223 SECOND AVENUE Algonanin 4-448? Cor. 1ith st. Solentific Treatment of Foot Ailments with scissors in hand, ready for | their secretaries to bring in those | well-known coupons which make it possible for them to fly-by-night to dine in Florida and to fly-by- day to plank a few across the line | at Saratoga, The boy with the proletarian background comes through in grand | fashion. But don't get the idea I’m giving you a Horatio Alger story. Cr eee Now the match of the year is in the making between Barney Ross and Jimmy McLarnin for the world’s welterweight championship, Ross is going to accomplish the eeeoinatas feat of attaining three les. is something to run after. Pye elit 1H, EVERYTHING’S hunkydory with the Garden now, with men | like Ross and McLarnin maneuvered into their fold. Maybe it’s the Spring in the air which makes them ecstatically jubilant, and maybe they'll popularize again “Happy Days Are Here Again,” or “We're in the Money,” so that you won't feel so mad about tearing loose with sawbucks, And incidentally, America’s very own lady, who so looks after pro- moting big fights for baby’s milk, Mrs. William Randolph Hearst, horned in again. She is crashing these brawny games quite often these days with her milk funds. It won't be long before she'll be get- ting Ross and McLarnin and Baer and Carnera, etc., to plaster their pictures on signposts grinning feebly, “Don't you want nice big strong | men. Attend the fights and see that babies get milk, so they'll be like met.” Kaytee Quintet Faces NewEnglandChamps for Regional Cage Titles NEW YORK.—The strong Kaytee quintet, recently crowned title win- ners of the Eastern L. 8. U. district cage tournament, will face the New England district champions for the regional championship Friday, April 13, at Kaytee gymnasium, 764 40th St., Brooklyn, at 8:30. The winner of this game will play the Roseland Sparks, the mid-west, champions and winners of last year’s national title, for the national L. S. U, title, which will be held April 17. Both games will be followed with @ dance, INAUGURATION CAMPAIGN FOR | WORKERS HEALTH BUREAU | DINNER and @ COCKTAIL PARTY | Medical Units — Workers Int. Relief | SUNDAY, APRIL 15, at 7 P.M. GOLDE TEA SHOPPE, 43 WEST 39th STREET Entertainment t-: Ticket $1.25 Tompkins Square 6-9132 Caucasian Restaurant “KAVKAZ” Russian and Oriental Kitchen BANQUETS AND PARTIES New York Gity 882 East 14th Street Allerton Avenue Comrades! The Modern Bakery Was first to settle Bread Strike and first to sign the Food Workers’ Industrial Union 691 ALLERTON VAE. Willlamsbarg Comrades Welcome ASSEMBLY CAFETERIA 766 Broadway, Brooklyn, N. ¥. HARLEM Spring Dance @ Entertainment Friday MTUGESE icon A pril Piano a 13th vittle Hed Rose! *, UP 8:30 P.M, | PIONEER GRo DANCE MUSIC By Jazz Johnson FINNISH BALL ROOM 15 West 126th Street anon taetouets Admission 25¢ Tompkins Square 6-7697 Dr. S. A. Chernoff GENITO-URINARY 228 Second Ave., N. Y. C. OFFICE HOURS: 11 - 7:80 P.M, SUNDAY: 12-3 P.M. (Classified ) GIRL WANTS cheap apartment, Manhat- tan, immediately: preferably share. Has| furniture. Phone 10 to 6, Wickersham | 22-8294, ROOM FOR TWO with kitchen privileges in Greenwich Village, Landy, 52 Bank &t. GARMENT WORKERS WELCOME SHERIDAN VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT (Formerly Shildkrauts) 225 WEST 36th STREET Between 7th and 8th Avenues We Have Reopened JADE MOUNTAIN American & Chinese Restaurant 197 SECOND AVENUE (Bet. 12th and 18th St) STATIONERY and Mimeograph Supplies At Special Prices for Organizations Lerman Bros,, Ine. Phone ALgonquin 4-3356 — 8843 29 East 14th St. N.Y. ©. CUT OUT THIS AD and SAVE HALF SOLES (White Oak) 39c 19¢ sullivan Heels CAPITOL, 109 EAST 14TH STREET WORKERS COOPERATIVE COLONY 2700-2800 BRONX PARK EAST has reduced the rent, several good apartments available, Cultural Activities for Adults, Youth and Children. Telephone: Estabrook 8-1400—8-1401 Trains. Stop at Allerton Ave. stati Office open daily from 9 am. to 8 an Direction: “.exington Ave, White Plains Priday and Saturday 9 a.m. to § p.m, Sunday 10 am. to 3 p.m, ' ; ¢ =: y seams Baa ie