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| PF AILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, JUNE 19, 1934 Gree Steel Workers Win | Victories in Two Mills in Indiana Indiana Harbor Workers Force Vacations With Pay, Led by S.M.W.LU.; Indianapolis Men Vote to March to Washington GARY, Ind., June 18.—In spite of the fact that the In- land Steel Company at Indiana Harbor is arming to the| teeth against any possible strike, the workers in the mill are carrying on struggles and winning them. that the Inland Steel Company is preparing can be judged from the open statements in¢————— the Gary Post Tribune and Hammond Times, steel trust papers, that 50 Pullman cars have been drawn into the yards to house scabs and that 100 guards in uniform are on constant duty in the mill. These guards are hired through the Calu- met Protective Association, headed by a Mr. Maloney, This same out- fit was used to break the strike of Standard Forgings workers last Oc- tober. The Inland workers claim that there are at least 500 of these guards inside the mill. In spite of this terror, 150 In- land chippers carried through a fight for higher wages during the early part of last week. This fight was led by members of the Steel and Metal Workers’ Industrial Union, who called upon the work- ers to stop work until their de- Arson Plot Used To IntimidateWorkers At Chicago Picnic CHICAGO, Ill., June 18.—Fascist firebugs burned down the dance pa- vilion of a pienic grove near La Grance, Ill, Saturday night, when the owner of the grove refused to be intimidated into preventing a picnic called there by the Workers International Relief. Local business men attempted to stop the picnic because of the pres- ence there of Negro and white workers, united in solidarity. When the picnic was held Sun- day in spite of the arson and threats, a committee of workers vis- ited the owner of the property and planned to hurl back a challenge into the face of the incendiaries. The W.LR. is planning to rebuild the pavilion and in return will re- ceive free use of the grounds for ®& great mass picnic later in the summer. aSSSe Gala Banquet and ' Dance To Welcome BEN DAVIS, Jr. New Editor of the “Negro Liberator” Defense Lawyer of Angelo Herndon Sun., June 24 6:30 P. M. Lido Ballroom 146th and 7th Ave. —PROGRAM— Earl Browder William Patterson Harry Gannes James W. Ford Cast of “Stevedore” Red Dance Groups LW.0. Symphony Orchestra DANCING FROM 10 P. M. TO 3 A. M. Music by Bonelli’s Lido Orch. ADMISSION $1 AT DOOR AFTER 10 P. M. 39 CENTS FOR BROWNSVILLE PROLETARIANS Sokal Cafeteria 1689 PITKIN AVENUE Wiltiamsburgh Comrades Welcome De Luxe Cafeteria The extent mands were granted. The men threw down «their hammers and refused to go to work until the company met with a committee elected by them and negotiated a settlement. On the first occasion, the com- pany promised to pay more money after a stoppage of 45 minutes. The men went back to work, but when pay day came, on the 11th of June, they found they had been gypped. They again refused to go to work and sent their committee to the| company. The company was forced | to grant back pay for one month. Two weeks’ back pay has already been received by the men and the company has promised to pay the rest. The men have now forced the company to promise the elimination of the tonnage system, which has been a constant source of speed-up and of gypping the men, and to in- crease their wages from 52% cents per hour to a flat rate of 66 cents per hour. Steel Union Wins In Indiana Harbor INDIANA HARBOR, Ind., June 18.—Workers of the American Steel Foundries forced the company to agree to give each worker one week’s vacation with pay. The fight for vacations with pay was led by the Steel and Metal Workers’ Industrial Union local of the plant. The demands of the union, which included the six main demands of | the union, were presented to the company on May 21. On June 12 the company posted notices around the mill stating that the vacation demand would be granted. Strike Sentiment Strong In Indianapolis INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., June 18— “Steel workers, prepare for action!” is the slogan raised in a leaflet dis- tributed to the workers of the Chapman-Price Steel Company here by the Communist Party. The Communist Party, through the leaflet, pledged its support to the forthcoming struggle in the steel industry and warned the work- ers against the maneuvers of the Tighe leadership and the proposed government compulsory arbitration board. Sentiment for strike {s quite strong in the Cross-Roads of Amer- ica Lodge of the A. A. (Chapman- Price). One of the resolutions re- cently adopted calls for the organ- ization of a steel workers march to Washington to demand that the six-point program be carried out. Printers’ Strike In Rome, N, Y. By a Worker Correspondent ROME, N. Y., June 18.—Nineteen members of the Typographical Union have been striking at the Sentinel, a local paper, since the first week in May for union recog- ;a@s a means of ensuring a living Police Charge Meet! Protesting Attack On Chicago Negro Militant Organizations | Hit Intimidation of Women Worker (Daily Worker Midwest Bureau | CHICAGO, June 18—Voicing| their whole-hearted solidarity in the fight against Jim-Crowism and fas- | cist attacks on Negro workers, 300} Negro and white workers stood solid | in spite of a police attempt to break | up & demonstration Friday in front | | of the home of a Negro worker who| had been terrorized by hoodlums | egged on by local fascist elements. | When the first squad of police was unable to smash the workers’ ranks, several additional squads were sent and the meeting finally broken up. The demonstration took place in front of the home of Mrs. Lavine, militant Negro worker who, in the last few weeks has been the victim of threats and intimidation started by local businessmen in an effort to drive her out of the neighbor- hood into a Jim-Crow district. Bricks with threatening notes had been hurled through her window on several occasions, and the hood- lums even went so far as to try to threaten her small child. Defense | squads of workers had been sta-| ioned at the home on several oc- casions and twice the sneaking fas- cists who tried terrorism, were roughly handled. The demonstration was called by | the L. S. N. R. and was supported | by the Communist Party, the In-| ternational Labor Defense and the Uneemployment Council, , Police Attack S. PHILADELPHIA, June 18.—One | hundred and fifty pickets sur- | rounded the grounds of S.K.F. In- | dustries ball bearing plant, while | 300 policemen, armed with riot clubs and tear gas bombs patrolled the streets, | Four workers distributing leaf- | K. F. Strikers lets were arrested. Workers of this plant have been on strike for several months for union recognition. The picture above shows police arresting a picket after they had fired on the strikers last Friday, wounding one worker, ry Basic Tasks YCL in Industries as | New Strikes Loom | PITTSBURGH, Pa.—The district convention of the Young Commu- nist League, which took place June 10, fully approved the draft reso- lution of the National Committee and worked out concrete tasks toward the carrying through of the line of this resolution. Thirty-nine delegates were pres- ent from Y. C. L. organization in steel towns and mine fields. The | report made by Dave Doran, dis—/| trict organizer, Y. C. L., raised in| the very center as the main task | of the Y. C. L., the preparations | for the coming steel strike. Com- rades active in the S. M. W. I. U.} and the A. A. as well took the floor and participated in the dis- | cussion, Problems of tactics for | |achieving the united front in the | mills were raised and clarified. | The delegates viewed the coming | steel strike as an integral part in the maturing of the revolutionary crisis, The way out for the youth | in the steel mills, now facing strike wage, later to expect mass lay-offs, was raised sharply to the fore. Tasks of building Y. C. L. nuclei in the steel mills, now to be the leaders in the building of the S. M. W. I. U. and oppositions in the A. A,, later to become the leaders of the youth in the giant conflicts against capitalism, was discussed and concrete points picked out where such nuclei are to be set up immediately. This was particularly raised in connection with the Jones and Laughlin steel mill, the concen- tration point. Doran’s report dealt at length with weaknesses in con- centration, and called for a basic nition and increases in wages, THE GREAT TOLEDO STRIKE (This is the third of a series of articles change both in approach and con- of the enemy cl Concentration Districts Repo point. Y. C. L., and contributed immensely on the discussion on steel, through giving examples of work and ex- periences at Cleveland. A demon-| strative greeting was given Leo Thompson, recently released from a sanitorium to which he was con- fined as a result of serving a long jail term in Blawnox. A resolution on control tasks was drawn up and endorsed by the Convention. Young workers active in building the S. M. W. I. U, and preparing for the strike were elected for the National Convention of the Y. C. L. Mi ON THe CHICAGO, Ill. — The convention of the Young Communist League, District 8, opening with a mass meeting at the Feoples Auditorium on Friday evening, June 8, closing on Sunday, and was hailed unani- mously by delegates and visitors as the greatest convention ever held in this district. From the steel regions of South Chicago, Gary and Indiana Harbor, | from the terror-ridden coal fields of | Irving Herman gave greetings| Southern Illinois, from the recent! jfrom the National Committee of the| strike and unemployed struggles of | 4 | a Selah reciente of Youth St. Louis, from the packing houses and stock yards of Chicago, from virtually every basic industry in this heavily industrialized section, came! the representatves of the revolu- tionary vanguard of the toiling youth, Negro and white, to discuss in the light of recent developments the problems of winning the masses of American youth for the revolu- tionary way out of the crisis, From the coal fields of Southern Tilinois, where the czars of the coal industry have just launched an un- precedented drive of terror, came delegates representing the unem- ployed youth movement that has engaged in many struggles and that won the demands for relief for many youth. Practically all of the youth of this section are the unem- ployed sons of miners, and the most. important work to be carried out by the Y. C. L. is the organization of youth branches of the Unemploy- ment Councils. G ‘ES TO COVER Y. C. L. NATIONAL CONVENTION Harry Gannes, veteran staff writer of the Daily Worker, will cover the National Convention of the Young Communist League to convene from June 22 to: 26 in New York City. Comrade Gannes was National Secretary of the Y: period of its birth and formation, ‘oung Communist League in the , and thus has a comprehensive understanding of the problems of the revolutionary youth movement and is specially qualified to give the readers of the Daily Worker a vivid day-to-day account of this historic gathering. Readers and especially young readers are urged to order special bundles and follow closely the even’ its at this convention through the pages of the Daily Worker, starting Monday, June 25th. lass front. The employers’ main of May, 1934, with the United States Department ° | rt at. Y.C.L. Meetings = —o To Root tent of work at the concentration | where looms a gigantic steel strike, EL Page Three “Negro Liberator” Starvation Threat Is Used to Drive Forced Meet of 300 Hailed By Hughes of [SNR | NEW YORK —Three hundred | Workers and intellectuals at the Negro Liberator Conference in Har-/| | lem, Saturday, came to give their | support to increase the circulation | and influence of the Negro Libera- tor, organ of the League of Struggle! for Negro Rights. Included in the 300 were 180 delegates sent by branches of organizations ranging in breadth of opinion from that of the Communist Party to church or- ganizations. | Langston Hughes, president of | the L. S. N. R., sent the following | telegram: “At this historic moment, when the deep South awake! to the breaking of its own chains, let the Negro Liberator become the deaf- ening voice of Negro might. We were freed by others. Today, let us free ourselves.” | Merrill C. Work, business man- ager; Harry Haywood, national sec- | retary of the L. S. N. R, and Her-| man MacKawain, local L. § N. R.| leader, were the speakers. | Members of the cast of “Steve-| dore” will entertain guests of the | “Negro Liberator” in welcoming | Benjamin J. Davis, new editor-in- | chief, at Lido Hall, 146th St. and} Seventh Ave. on Sunday evening, June 24, | Earl Browder, William L. Patter- | | son, James W. Ford, Countee Cul-| len, and many others, will greet | Davis at this banquet arranged for | the day of his arrival, | | Impending Steel Strike | Demands Winning | | work in the morning. | The St. Louis delegates told the story of the Nut-Pickers’ Strike, its successes and its weak points, ex- plaining how the strike had been instrumental in bringing in youth to the Y. C. L. Chicago youth, | from the packing houses and the | stock yards, needle trades and those active in the fight for Negro rights }and Young Pioneer work added | | their reports to the convention. While the convention showed to} a certain extent the growth of the | League and the prestige of the | League among the masses of youth, | the complete expression of the con- | vention was dissatisfaction with the tempo of the work of the Y.C.L. | in comparison to the deepening of the crisis, as expressed by most of | the delegates. The convention was | not merely a reporting of activities | and a manufacture of paper resolu- | tions, but a point of orientation of | our work, intensified manifold, 80 that by the next convention we can | report a firm grasp on an eyver-| j broadening strata of the working) youth of this industrial area through a mass Young Communist League and affiliated youth organ- | izations, A new District Executive Com- mittee was elected and delegajes were elected to the National C\- vention. It was decided to send 9 | telegram in the name of the Y.C. L. | to the representative of the Hitler | government in the United States Labor on J. Jobless Case Loads Soar Throughout State; Relief Lists In Industrial States Mount Steadily; Strikes By a Worker NEWARK, N. J -“Work or go hungry Spread atdeesonk 8 !" With thes» words F. J. Day, acting director of Camden County Relief, opened the attack upon the s den who struck on the jobs triking relief workers of Came against the forced labor tene cent an hour ruling of the Emergency Relief Administration. Paterson ‘Relie Strikers To March; Mass Meets Toda Hawthorne Men Join As Strikes Spread In New Jersey PATERSON, N. J.—Preparatiot are going forward here for a c' wide demonstration of relief strik- ers and unemployed workers in support of the workers who struck five projects here two weeks ago demanding an end to the forced labor scheme, The march will begin at 1 a.m. today Oval, near West Side Park and proceed to Harrison and Summer Sts., where a mass meeting with | speakers from reach of the projects will speak. Yesterday 300 strikers marched on one of the projects and threw @ mass picket line around the job! where the city had placed 50 at This has been, so far, the only attempt the city had made to start work on the struck projects. All the work- ers came off the project with the strikers, Workers on the relief jobs at Hawthorne, New Jersey, yesterday joined the strike and will march in the demonstration at Paterson today. To date, workers are out in Paterson, Passaic, Clifton, Elizabeth, Perth Amboy, Belleville, Hawthorne, Newark, Camden, and efforts are being made to spread the strikes to every project in the state. The forced labor scheme was adopted on June 4 by the state relief commission, forcing every worker on relief to work five con- secutive 2-hour days—40 hours a month for $4 plus a grocery order. In Paterson yesterday, two work- ers, Al Goldberg, a young unem- ployed worker, and Rose Rosen were jailed for distributing leaf- lets announcing the demonstration and mass meeting. They are being held in bail of $50 each and efforts are being made to raise the bail. A state-wide conference to con- solidate the strike and enlist mass support will be held on Saturday. | time and place will be de- the The termined and announced at mass meeting. STRIKE AGAINST PAY CUT LIMOGES, France, June 18— demanding the release of the heroic; Twenty-two factories were closed | cent wage cut in the porcelain in- dustry. By JOHN WILLIAMSON longed to the union and worked in the plant. at Totowa | for the Daily Worker, This will be followed by a more detailed article in the July COMMUNIST.) . . * ARTIOLE Tit, N THE period of the mass battles around Auto Lite, the workers took up the slogan for a general strike. Out of 108 locals affiliated to the Central Labor Unions, 88 had voted for general strike by June 1. The key to the situation was the pending strike of the Electrical Workers local, composed primarily of power men employed by the Toledo Edison Company. Their going on strike would have immediately paralyzed all industry depending upon power and light and would have galvanized the whole general strike sentiment. The local fakers, seeing the swing of things, put themselves at the head of the general strike sentiment, as described previously, and set June 1 as the day of a mass rally to act upon the demand for a general strike. They, of course, figured at that time that the Auto-Lite strike would be settled before June Ist, and by this empty gesture they would also execute a clever “left” maneuver. During the entire time of the mass battles, all other local strikes were systematically delayed by the Central Labor Union leaders. Strikers Reject Sell-Outs As the efforts to sell out the Auto-Lite strikers were systematically rejected by the militant mood of the strikers’ as the date of June Ist approached with the workers prepared for general strike, all attention of the employers, the government, the arbitrators and American Federation of Labor offi- cials turned to this problem. There was a definite sharp line-up in the situation. On the one side were the workers who were either on strike at Auto-Lite or had voted for general strike, and the Communists and Unemployed Council members, On. the other side were the employers, arbitrators, gov- ernment militia, A. F. of L, officials, including the “eft” phrasemongers Ramsey and Myers, the So- cialist Party, and trailing along at their tail end, the Musteites. The first demanded immediate gen- eral strike and no arbitration of the Auto-Lite strike situation, The second had one common pur- pose—to avoid a general strike at all costs, * . . 94 Graham Ave. Cor. iegel St. EVERY BITE A DELIGHT Communists evaluated the situation at that moment quite accurately as regards the strategy | effort was to kill the general strike, ‘which had already become too alarming and was clearly going beyond all the original purposes of the A. F. of L. officials. To flatly say “No general strike’ would isolate them completely from the workers. There- fore the strategy was to create an atmosphere that things were being settled in favor of the workers. Rush through sell-out settlements under high pressure of Roosevelt, Governor White, Bill Green, Ramsey and Myers, in the Auto-Lite and Elec- tricians strike, and turn the big mass meeting and parade, under an artificially stimulated rah-rah sentiment into a fraudulent “victory” parade. While doing this, bring into action all other forces of the government to at least postpone action if the first tactic didn’t work out successfully. (Our evalu- ation of this strategy was borne out 100 per cent). They started carrying through this strategy by @ newspaper barrage of discouragement of a general strike. John Love, the Scripps-Howard financial columnist, wrote several articles pointing out the alleged failures of all general strikes. The News- Bee‘ the Scripps-Howard paper, wrote an editorial stating in part: “We have an idea that the labor leaders have no stomach for a strike which would tie up the power of the city, It has too much the earmarks of the beginning of the threatened general strike. Certainly the responsible labor leaders are fully aware of the terrific consequences of a general strike and are becoming increasingly alert to some means of avoiding it.” Governor White stepped into the situation and promised early settlement. The newspapers carried large headlines fraudulently claiming that the Na- tional Guard was being withdrawn. Ramsey kept announcing new plans for satisfactory settlement of the strike. Wm. Green and all the International Boards rushed special representatives to Toledo to remind the workers that they couldn’t strike with- out te consent of the International. The News- Bee, under the skillful hand of Heywood Broun, wrote a key front page editorial at the moment when victory for the Auto-Lite strikers was only to be clinched by the workers through continued militant action, rejection of all arbitration, and preparations for a general strike, headed: “Victory for No Side,” which meant defeat for the workers, Federal Strike-Breaking ‘The second phase of the strategy was then undertaken energetically. Proposals were made by Chas. Taft 2d, Federal Mediator, which stated in part the following: “This agreement is entered into this 25th day of Labor by the Electric Auto-Lite Compnay for the purpose of terminating the present difficulties as existing at the plant of the said company. 1) The company understands that all pickets will be withdrawn and all interference with its employees and its plant at once terminated, 2) With that accomplished, the company agrees to submit to the automobile labor board for arbitration all questions in dispute in the present labor controversy whose decisions on all points shall be final and binding on all parties, 3) It is agreed that the plant shall be kept in operation but that no employes not now on the payroll shall be hired pending the decision of the Automobile Labor Board. 4) The Automobile Labor Board is to hear the case during the week of May 28th, 1934, and its decision is to be rendered within ene week from date of termination of hearing. 5) If any question of the interpretation of this agreement arises, the interpretation of Charles P. Taft, special representative of the United States Department of Labor, shall be final.” This was rejected by the strikers. For two days the papers carried headlines “Auto-Lite Settlement Near—Ramsey Hopeful—Strikers Will Vote Tonight —Plant ,Definitely Opens Tuesday” etc, A special strikers’ meeting was called to try to put over the grand sell-out, * * . tT Communist, fraction in the Unemployment Council and Auto Workers Union got these organizations to issue a stirring leaflet warning the workers of such séll-outs and calling for continued mass picketing and holding of ranks solid. This leaflet, plus a copy of the special Toledo edition of the Daily Worker was in the hands of every striker at that meeting. They were read and dis- cussed while the meeting waited for the conferees to come and report. One worker got up on the stage and held up the Daily Worker and there were cheers from hundreds of workers. When Ramsey and the others came, they sized up the moods of the workers (at which Ramsey is very clever) and seeing leaflets and Daily Workers every- where, decided it was impossible to put over the sell-out. Instead he said that the proposals under consideration called for: (1) 5 per cent wage in- crease; (2) immediate opening of the plant; (3) re-hiring of seabs first; (4) then re-hiring of strik- ers as they were needed at the discretion of the company; (5) company would deal with union on basis of those workers prior to February who be- | ‘These proposals were shouted down by the workers and Ramsey joined in saying that they would never accept such an agreement. He proposed to call another meeting to hear any new plans. This was only a postponement of action on his part, Ex-Socialist Busy Betraying On another front the fakers were 4 little more successful. In the Electrical Workers Union, Ben- net, International organizer, and Oliver Myers, local business’ agent and secretary of the Com- mittee of 23 to call-the general strike, were recom- mending to the men to accept a 10 per cent wage increase on condition that they don’t join the general strike. Myers, ex-Socialist and radical phrasemonger, and supposedly preparing the gen- eral strike, spoke three times, pleading that the men accept, knowing full well that they would be used to kill the general strike. The men rejected this. A plea for another 24 hours delay was then fought for and carried by a vote of 175 to 135, On the last day of May, the executives of 93 local unions met together with the Central Labor Union officials, supposedly to plan out the general strike. This body, however, did just the opposite and made two decisions, both of them very insignificant: 1) Adopted a wire to President Roosevelt, reading as follows: “Executive officers represent- ing 103 Toledo Unions as an executive committee by unanimous vote urge you personally to inter- vene in the labor dispute now existing in Toledo, Your personal intervention is necessary to prevent a general strike.” (emphasis mine.—J.W.). Pur- ther, L. Aubrey, chairman of the committee of 23, stated: “It was felt that the President would exert enough pressure to avert the proposed gen- eral suspension of work.” He further anncunced that in deference to the President, the date for a general strike could not now be set. It is quite clear that the News-Bee editorial writers knew their allies. 2. The second decision adopted read: “That we exclude all Communists and radicals from the parade ranks ... that no one will be allowed to Speak except A. F. L, members.” Little was done to make the meeting and parade @ success, Only 10,000 leaflets were issued which didn’t contain a eference to the general strike, but called for support of Pres. Roosevelt. On the last day, in order to try and keep the Communists out, all previous plans were changed, with the parade first ending in the mass meeting. All A. F. of L. locals were lined up under local officers at given pointe, (To Be Continued ® This threat held over the heads of relief workers on strike throughout the state means that all relief will be denied to une employed workers who dare to take action against the hunger and star vation relief rates, and will be used as a threat to drive the strikers back to work. In line with this order from Came den, the Newark Evening News, in an editorial “Protest from Relief Ranks,” has taken the cue from the New York police for a vicious at- jobless. After calling ignorant,” it warns that “agitators are capable of 1g up a lot of trouble, They should be combatted strenuously.” But the News cannot hide the economic cause of this “trouble;” the food orders are “everything they get beyond a few pennies that now and then they scratch together.” In most of the largest industrial centers relief cases took a large | jump between the months of April and May. The twenty-seven largest cities show that relief cases jumped | from 286,631 in the latter part of April to 320,359 in the corresponding period of May. For the state as a whole, during May the persons on relief were more than in the history of the state, with 492,458 persons on the relief rolls, | Jobess Demonstrate in Lincoln LINCOLN, Neb.—Presenting an jeight-point program of demands and grievances, workers, at the call of the Workers Unemployment | Council, demonstrated at the relief | headquarters here on June 13. | The demands include: Immeri« ate full return of F. E. R. A. work with a minimum of 48 hours month- |ly for single men and 96 for married |men at union wages in no case less |than 50 cents an hour; immediate jcash relief and payment of rents, | lights, fuel and clothing; and im- mediate enactment of the Workers | Unemployment Insurance Bill (H, R. 7598). When County Relief Director | Bradshaw refused to give an an- swer to the unemployed demands, the assembled workers voted to ree |turn on the following week. eee | Draft East St. Louis Program EAST ST. LOUIS, Ill—Three | hundred unemployed workers, at an | open hearing on relief called by the | Federation of Unemployed here, jelected a committee of 25 to draft | @ program of action on the workers’ demands. The demands include: | (L) Fifty per cent increase in re- ef; (2) enactment of the Workers Unemployment Insurance Bill (F, |R. 7598); (3) no discriminatiou against Negro workers; (4) no | forced labor, full union rates on all | relief work, A mass meeting was called for Communist leader, Ernst Thael-| here today when workers struck | July 1 at the City Hall when the | mann, and also a telegram of greet- ings to the underground Y. C. L. in| Germany. | | aganst an order establshing a 10 per | committee will present a draft or- |dinance for relief. At this meeting | delegates will be elected to the Un- | employment Council conference to je in Springfield on July 14 and 15. modern one-room . Kitchenette, frigid aire. $28 a month. Call 7 to'® p.m. Popkin, Apt. 4C, 425 East 6th St ~ (Classi PANTS TO MATCH Your Coat and Vest Paramount Pants Co., Inc. 693 Broadway SP 17-2659 WE MATCH ALL SHADES AND PATTERNS ~— WORKERS WELCOME — | NEW CHINA | CAFETERIA Tasty Chinese and American Dishes PURE FOOD — POPULAR PRICES 848 Broadway bet. 1stn # 14th st. UNITY CAME MEMBERSHIP MEETING All members of the old Unity Co-operative Organization are called to a membership meet- ing to be held at the Workers’ Center, 35 East 12th St., Room 204, Wednesday, June 20th at 8 P.M. WORKERS PREPARE! 20 to 50% DISCOUNT SALE BEGINS ENDS JUNE 22 JULY 7 at all Workers Book Shops Join Circulating Library at the New York Workers’ Book Shop, 50 East 13th St., New York City I, J, MORRIS, Inc, GENERAL FUNERAL DIRECTORS 208 SUTTER AVE. BROOKL’ Phone: Dickens 2-1273—4—3 Night Phone: Dickens 6-5369 For International Workers Order YN