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Mass Protest Meet Against LaGuardia Brutality Tonigh Herbert Benjamin, Van Kleeck and Sullivan to Speak at Webster Hall City-Wide Meeting; Will Expose Starvation Program and Terror DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 27, 1934 —__-* “Y.C.L. Convention | Ends With. Election | RIGHT HERE. (Continued M anv P rove) GUTTERS OF NEW YORK Victory Trial pe LIKE A NUT Is a Frame-up cere) 1 VOTED FOR LA GUARDIA 1 m Page 1) in the Corcoran Camp, where 4,000 were camped, we found the young workers organized into de- fense squads. We made the mis- take of not organizing a youth section in the union. After the strike, though many of our com- rades were in jail, we began to build the League units, and we | established four or five. After the strike, when the union was rec- | ognized, the question came up of | J Persecuted Negro Takes Witness Stand Today | FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT and “Putzy” Hanfstaengl are invited to attend (and attend) the Yale-Harvard boat race. . “J. P. Morgan brought the Corsair. . . . And between Morgan on the one hand and President Roosevelt cn the other. . It was a splendid sight.”—The World. By A. B. MAGIL (Special to the Daily Worker) DETROIT, Mich., June 26—The| up a; nst James Victory, \OEAL fr NEW YORK.—Prepared to expose O’Ryan’s police thugs and La Guardia’s pseudo-liberal administration, Herbert Benjamin, Mary Van Kleeck, Richard Sullivan and other well- known speakers will address the large crowd of workers who are expected to be present tonight at 8 o’clock at the city- wide mass meeting in W ster Hall, 119 East 11th St. The meeting is being held by the United Action Confer- ence On Work Relief and Unem- ployment. LaGuardia and his cabinet have increased the hunger and misery of both the employed and the jobless of New York. They have concen- ‘Left Wing Assails Leaders of ILGWU Reports on Convention Tomorrow Night trated on one thing—to pay the NEW YORK. — The Left Wing Wall Street b: ers their iremen-| Group in a statement issued yester- dous interest payments on time. To| day called all dressmakers to attend Section meetings of Local 22, which will take place Thursday, June 28, 8 p.m. sharp, in the usual residen- do this, they have ordered the lay- off of 15,000 emergency relief work- ers by July 1. They have dropped thousands of families from the| Home Relief rolls, and reduced the} food allowances for those still on the rolls. They are cutting the wages of relief workers and city em- ployes. LaGuardia has made no attempt | to solve the unemployed and relief situation. Instead, his administra- tion has committed a succession of | outrages against those workers who | have dared to demonstrate and de- mand their right to food and jobs. His police have clubbed and jailed demonstrating workers, and he has calléd secret press conferences to justify police brutality and to pre- pare the ground for further attacks. He has instituted a spy system, and | workers who haye protested his Teign of terror have been hounded and threatened. Many of those who will speak at the meeting have -witnessed or been | victims of the fascist methods of | the administration. Among these are Samuel Orner, President of the Taxi Workers’ Union; James Gay- nor, Chairman of the United Action Conference, and Paul Crosbie, who has been a victim of LaGuardia’s espionage system. Mr. and Mrs. James Lechay, Joseph Elwell, D.| Jenkins and other workers who were arrested and beaten at the| Department of Public Welfare on| May 26, will also speak. Men Talk Strike in- Birmingham (Continued from Page 1) A cents. The union leaders threaten to call the strike by the middle of the week, if the Regional Labor Board does not act promptly. Two hundred and fifty workers were locked out by the Birmingham Stove and Range Co. The company denies however, that it is a lock- out, but claims this is just the reg- ular shut-down period. New Bomb Blast tial districts, where a report of the convention and the Local Executive will be given. The statement analyzing the achievements of the convention points out the fact that over $200,- 000 of the workers’ hard-earned money was spent at the convention, and that none of the basic prob-| lems of the membership, particu- larly the welfare of the dress-mak- ers, was taken up there. Demands Grow for ThaelmannRelease (Continued from Page 1) meetings. All anti-fascists with cars are urged to co-operate. | “Free Thaelmann” Flag on | Chicago School Building (Daily Worker Midwest Bureau) CHICAGO, June 26—A_ scarlet banner demanding the relarse of Ernst Thaelmann, flew from the flagpole of Herzl High School here all day Saturday. A well-greased pole and cut halyards delayed the work of removing it for many hours. The schedule of anti-fascist ac- tion for the coming week calls for over a dozen open-air meetings and demonstrations, a number of auto \parades to the German Consulate, and daily picketing of the office of | the representative of the murderous Hitler government. | The addresses of most of these | meetings have not yet been an- | nounced, but neighborhood leaflets | will serve to mobilize the workers. | One demonstration will be held at Washington Sq., Sunday, at 17:30 p.m. At 8 p.m, the same night, far South Side workers will assemble at 114th Pl. and Michigan Ave., for an open-air meeting. On the northwest side five street meetings will converge on Wicker Park at 7:30 for a central demon- stration Saturday. Another meeting will be held-at Negro r and world war vet- eran, accused of having attacked and robbed Mrs. Carl Kaye, a south- | ern white woman, on May 12, tot-! tered ba today as witness after witness, both Negro and white, took the stand and testified that they saw Victory at the time the crime was supposed to have been com- mitted. { Victory is being tried on two counts: “Robbery armed” and “As- sault with intent to murder,” con-| viction on either of which is liable | to the highest penalty permitted in| the state of Michigan, life impris- onment. Maurice Sugar, noted La-| bor attorney, is defending Victory | for the International Labor Defense, | which, together with the League of | Struggle for Negro Rights, the Com- |munist Party and other militant) groups, has organized a mass cam-| paign to smash this brazen frame-| up and compel the release of Vic-/ tory. Sugar is being assisted by Frank Jones, Negro attorney re- tained by the Charles Young Post of the American Legion, of which Victory is a member, and Samuel Keene, attorney for the American | Civil Liberties Union. Following the sensational revela- | tion made by Sugar yesterday that | }an official police document had been altered over the week-cnd, the ILD. attorney continued today with the examination of defense | witnesses. The outstanding witness | was the Negro worker, James Spain, who testified that he saw Victory | shortly after he quit work on the | evening of May 12 and gave detailed information as to what he and Vic- tory did together during the next | three-quarters of an hour, covering | ho time between 8:15 and 8:30 p.m., when the crime was supposed .o uave been committed. The truth of Spain’s testimony | was then corroborated by witness after witness who saw him and Vic- tory together at various points on the evening in question. espite the clear frame-up char- acter of this case, the experience of | Scottsboro, of the Sacco-Vanzetti, Mooney and other frame-ups shows that only the broadest and most determined mass protest can free Victory. At a meeting of leading functionaries last night, the Com- munist Party decided to throw all its forces into the Free Victory Campaign and also to intensify the | movement for the fréedom of Ernst Thaelmann, leader of the German | Communist Party. ‘Hague N.J. Machine ‘Frames 3 Workers (Continued from Page 1) Hague machine for about 20 years, granted an injunction today against Picketing the Miller furniture shop. The application for the injunc- tion, filed by another judge, Frank H. Eggers, charged that the union A provocative bomb blast at | 38th and Dearborn, in the heart of|had threatened to “bomb the shop.” the Sunshine Cleaning Plant might be the prelude to a renewed struggle in the been renewed. The strike at the A. & P. and Jaundry and cleaning industry, since | the code for this industry has not} Chicago’s Black Belt, Thursday. | A “Free Thaelmann” newspaper | will be issued here shortly. Chicago Delegation Presents Demands on Nazi Consul (Daily Worker Midwest Bureau) Hill chain stores was settled by the/| 2 More Arrested Alfred H. Hirsch, secretary of the National Committee for the Defense of Political Prisoners, and William | Schwartz, member of the Furniture | Workers Industrial Union, were ar- |tested today in front of the Miller shop. Schwartz had been picket- = BR SURROUNDINGS (Mayorus Liberalu: HABITATS WALL Sr. § CITY MALL and STARVATION BENCHES FoR “HE UNEMPLOYED. iP 6) “Mayor La Guardia proposes part of Welfare Island as a public park.”—-NEWS ITEM. Rank and File Painters Win | Three Pre-Election Victories By H. R. NEW YORK.—Rank and file | members of the Painters (A. F. L.) | Union chalked up three new vic- tories against the Philip Zausner regime Monday night. Local 499 elected an entire rank and file slate; Local 848 elected two ramk and file candidates and in Local 454 the Zausner crowd was defeated. Reports from the 14 locals of Dis- trict Council 9 show that Zausner’s campaign of slander against Louis Weinstock and other rank and file candidates, his raising of the “red scare,” has not advanced his posi- tion in the union. Truth is what will count in the elections Saturday. And through the thin veil of Zaus- ner’s lies, painters of New York are seeing the truth, Zausner, the ex-boss who hired union painters below the scale, who spent union funds to hiré gangsters to smother the voice of the rank and file, has been forced to drop the cry of “Reds! Reds! Reds!” For Louis Weinstock, the rank and file candidate for secretary-treasurer whom Zausner was trying to defeat with such wild shouting, has proven by his work in the union that he represents the wishes and will of | the rank and file to end racketeer- ing and build a fighting union that will assure workers of union condi- | tions, | Zausner’s New Policy | Zausner has adopted a new line |of attack against the rank and file | candidates. In his latest leaflet, is- | sued by a so-called Interlocal Cam- | paign Committee, the little Czar of | the painters advises the union men not to take “chances with experi- mental administrations.” “We must re-elect Philip Zausner, if we are to have a strong and ef- fective union in the trade,” Zaus- ner declared. Just what kind of a union Zaus- ner wants was made clear in 1932 | when Zausner, as a boss painter, Stated that he could not pay the union scale and, in fact, did not pay the union scale on a Brooklyn job. To elect Zausner as secretary- treasurer would be to elect one whose interests lie with the bosses and not the men. Zausner further claims that he is “responsible for the provision that the union wage must be paid on all buildings built and operated by the city government.” On this point it is interesting to note that Zausner allowed union painters to work in the Bellevue Hospital under the classification of laborers for $4 a day. Leaders of Rank and File The rank and file candidates— Louis Weinstock for secretary-treas- urer, Frank Wedl and L. J. Stevens for business agents—have been the leading fighters in the union against the anti-labor policies of the Zaus- ner clique, Zausner aims to deféat this rank and file group by calling them experimenters. Zausner, indeed, has experimented enough with the union. He has| thrown the painters at the mrecy of the bosses. The painters are learning that it will be no experi- ment to elect a rank and file lead- ership, It will be a long step toward winning union conditions, Dockers Keep — Ports Closed (Continued from Page 1) berg, voted 192 to 22 to condemn “Communist control” of the LL.A. and to repudiate connection with the Marine Workers Industrial Union. Se Negro Docker Injured for uniforms. The action was led by @ committee elected by the men and was supported by the Mariné Workers Industrial Union. Stewards on the “Levi,” as the seamen call the Leviathan, were forced to pay $4 a month for uni- forms. When the ship sailed in, organizers of the M. W. I. U. met with members of the crew and helped them organize a committee which presented demands to the chief steward. The price of the uni- forms was cut to 75 cents a month. Seamen reported that two mem- | | | Struggle | and training for new forces for the | | League, she said: bers of the crew, Boatswain's Mate Butchers Union. After the weeks of militant strike, the workers will return Monday, while the actual terms of the settlement are kept secret. The wages have not been settled at all, but are to be decided by the Regional Labor Board. An unidentified Negro ore strike picket was badly cut Friday after- noon when attacked with a knife by ‘Will Tate, T. C. I. scab. The police whitewashed Tate as acting in “self-defense,” claiming he was attacked by “mob. Discrimination Causes Death of Negro Scab A Grand Jury report criticizes the Hillman City Hospital authorities, incidentally revealing that the death of Green Patton, Negro scab, was really the fault of the hospital offi- cials and a result of the official policy toward Negroes. The report states “From reports Green Patton, ‘Négro, was brought to the hospital im an unconscious condition at 1:20 .m. recently, and from the best F our information no doctor at- tended him until 6:30 a.m., the same morning, and he died at 7:30 a.m.” The street car conductor on whose car Patton was allegedly attacked by pickets testified that Patton jumped from moving car and hit F his head on the curb, thus injuring » himself. The conductor also de- clares that Tom Barnes, one of two Negro pickets indicted for murder, was not present on the car. Waiter Attacked by AFLBusinessA gent ~ NEW YORK.—Alexander Taus- vik, militant worker, was severely clawed about the face and neck Max Knippel, business agent of ‘aiters Union, Local 1, A. F. of L., when he went last Saturday to see William Lehman, secretary of the union, to ask for at least a day's work to keep his family from starving. Out of work for two years, Tauszig has been buffeted from restaurant to restaurant only to find the call for a waiter was a false alarm or that the place was “already filled.” He and other militant workers have been un- officially blacklisted by the A. F. ot L. officials because they are in opposition to their bureaucratic tactics and snide business habits. e Ne CHICAGO, June 26.—A delegation | ing with a placard similar to those of workers and intellectuals last|C@tried by the convicted workers, Thursday forced the German Con-|S@ying: “Miller Parlor Furniture sul here to listen to their protest| Company refuses to hire union la- | against the slated murder of Ernst |P0r.”| Hirsch, who had been stand-| In Mobile Strike MOBILE, Ala. (FP).—A Negro dockworker was critically injured as a result of the first clash in Mobile Thaelmann by the Nazi regime. Led by Tom McKenna, secretary of the Chicago section of the Amer- ican League Against War and Fas- | cism, the delegation, composed | largely of seamen, succeeded in get- ting direct to the Consul himself. This is the first delegation in sev- eral weeks that has seen the Con- sul personally, | * Force Consul to See Cleveland Delegation CLEVELAND, O., June 26.—Cleve- land workers and anti-fascists con- tinued picketing of the German Consulate yesterday as Grace Brown and a Hungarian worker were ar- rested. Yesterday's picketing was conducted by the Buckeye Section workers and the entire staff of “Uj Elore,” Hungarian language Com- munist paper. The Consulate building is closely guarded by private police who stop and question people entering the | building. Four arrested strike pickets of the Sherman Cloth factory, mem- bers of the Amalgamated Clothing Workers, jailed with the Thael- mann pickets, sent a message of | solidarity with struggle for Thael- mann. | * | Toledo Workers Picket Nazi Banking Agents TOLEDO, O., June 25.—‘“Free Thaelmann! Smash Fascism! Don’t sail on North German Lloyd, im- porter of Hitler propaganda!” These and other slogans were borne on placards by pickets in front of the Commerce Guardian Bank, St. Clair, corner Madison St., here last Friday. The bank is the North German Lloyd agency in To- ledo. The mass picketing was or- ganized by the Toledo section of the International Labor Defense. Roaring through the downtown business section of Toledo, a Free Thaelmann automobile parade bore signs “Free Thaelmann! Smash Fascism!” Tauszik went for a showdown and was scratched and cursed by Max Knippel, alias Max Gorilla. Leh- man got frightened and slipped out of the office, jing near by, approached when a | policeman arrested Schwartz and |asked the cop: “Why are man?” “Those are Mr. Miller's orders,” the cop replied. He then arrested Hirsch, too. Hirsch and Schwartz are being held on a charge of “disorderly con- duct” on $1,500 bail each for trial | Thursday morning. Industrial Union “Tilegai” Quoting the N. R. A. for authority, District Attorney Lewis G. Hansen characterized the Furniture Work- ers Industrial Union, which has a membership of 10,000, as an “out- Jaw” union and a “mushroom” or- ganization, While the judge nodded his assent, Hansen said: “If this outlaw union can have the right to picket my place, then this ought to be stopped. There is only one legitimate union in this country, the American Federation of Labor.” Several days ago William Betsch, a member of the Woodcutters As- sociation of the A. F, of L., was arrested on Journal Square, several blocks away from the shop, because he talked to a worker of the Miller shop. Judge Rejects Testimony | Judge McGovern ruled out testi- | mony tending to show that a strike was in progress at the Miller shop, Sustaining the objections of the prosecutor to questions put to Max Perlow by Defense Attorney A. J. Isserman, who tried to show that Miller and the other employers had signed contracts with the industrial union and then broken them by moving to Jersey City and firing all union workers, the judge in finding the workers guilty said that “no proof of a strike was shown.” The workers in Miller’s shop were not striking, because they were work- ing, he said. Those who said they were striking were not employed in Miller's shop and were therefore “outside agitators who came here for no good reason.” Under the N.R.A. therefore the strike was il- legal because the N.R.A, says you ; can’t force an employer to hire men of any union, you arresting this SHOE WORKERS MEET TONIGHT NEW YORK.—A general membership mecting of the Shoe and Leather Workers Industrial Union will be held at Irving Plaza Hall today at 5:30 p.m. to discuss the question of a new agreement, between striking union longshore- men and strikebreakers. The strik- ers, members of the International Longshoremen’s Association, are de- manding the New Orleans wage scale of 75 cents an hour and $1.10 for overtime. Patrolling the waterfront are 22 special police officers added to the police force after the strike was called. . Great Lakes Dockers To Vote on Strike TOLEDO, O. (FP).—About 28,000 dock hands on Great Lakes ports will be called to vote on a proposed Strike in sympathy with striking tugmen. The tugmen and dredge- men, who have been out for more than a month, are demanding higher wages, an 8-hour day, a 6- day week and at least 200 working days a year. The employers denied all demands except that for a guar- antee of 200 working days a year. tee Gey We Dock Strike in Birmingham BIRMINGHAM, Ala., June 26— The Birmingham Inland Waterway Loading Dock on Warrior River was tied up today, the entire crew of about 75 workers striking for the dismissal of two foremen. The Gulf- port-Mississippi longshoremen strike has shut the port solid. Major Dent, President of the Port Commission, said the port would remain closed until organized labor is willing to meet their terms, * oar | Boston Men Support West-Coast Strike (Special to the Dally Worker) BOSTON, Mass., June 26.—1 800 of the International Longshore. men’s Association by a standing vote went on record not to handle scab- cargo coming from the West Coast. Two other locals are to take up the question of refusing to handle cargo from the strike area at their next meeting, eo te Win Demands On Leviathan; Union Men Murdered in France NEW YORK.—Stewards aboard the S. S. Leviathan, which arrived here this week from Europe, forced a cut in the price they had to pay Genson and a seaman, both union men, were murdered in Le Havre, France. The union men were at- tacked by fascists. The seaman was stabbed to degth and the boat- swain’s mate was shot by a gen- darme while attempting to rescue his shipmate, seamen say. Hackmen Spread Company Unions Fight Against NEW YORK—The fight of the taxi drivers against the ‘company union menace is flaring up through- out the city and is spreading from garage to garage. Yesterday afternoon a series of protest meetings were held by the Taxicab Drivers’ Union of Greater New York in front of four garages. Today the union has urged the hackmen to pack the 57th Street Magistrates Court to protest against an attempt of the fleet owners and the city administration to railroad Samuel Orner, Joseph Gilbert and William Gandall, leaders of the union, to jail for holding a meet- ing in front of Arthur’s Garage on 2rd Street. The union has issued a call for a mass demonstration in front of Arthur's Garage, 23rd Street, nea First Ave., to be held tomorrow a 3 pm. to protest against the firing of A. Rabin, leading union member, ae refused to join the company lon, ‘ To Hit Injunction in Mass Demonstration in Brooklyn Tomorrow what we were going to do with the new recruits. We classes. We tock up the struggle for relief for the unemployed. We formed a basketball team, ran so- cials for them.” Dealing with the question of the against imperialist war “No one raised the question of developing girl comrades for lead- ership in the Y. C. L. There are two girls in the whole committee of District 13. I’m certain that is the situation throughout the coun- try. We have no girls developed sufficiently to take the place of boys in League activity in case of war.” Comrade L. Patterson, reporting on struggles of the unemployed youth summarized the most im- portant questions as follows: “Our immediate tasks in the unemployed field are to mobilize the toiling young generation for a militant, or- ganized struggle for relief for the unemployed youth, and for the adoption of the workers’ unemploy- ment insurance bill, against mass lay-offs, forced labor, and for the right of the unemployed to elect committees to administer and con- trol and distribute their relief.” Canadian Y. C. L. Greets Meet Meet Greetings were brought to the convention from the Canadian Young Communist League. Another occasion for cheers and prolonged applause was the reading of a téle- gram from the Cuban Y. C. L., which said: “Greetings to the convention of the Y. C. L., which in the home- land of imperialism has been carrying on the fight against im- perialist war, against fascism and for the liberation of colonial psoples. We are confident you will succeed in transforming the league into a mass fighting Y. C. L., under the leadership of the Yeung Communist International, and win the toilers of both con- tinents under the leadership of the Commupist Parties for a Sov- fet America.” A growth of the Young Pioneers from 4,000 at the time of the last Y. C. L. convention to 12,000 at the present time, was reported by Com- rede Kaplan who spoke on work among children. The circulation of the “Young Pioneer” now averages over 14,000. Comrade Kaplan de- scribed the “Young Pioneer” as the best magazine for children in the world revolutionary movement. “We have made a great change since our last convention,” he said. “Then we were still unclear. We are beginning to break through our sectarianism and our bad mistakes. ‘We are laying the base for a mass federaton of workers’ and farmers’ children’s organizations.” He said there were 550 leaders in the Young Pioneers, most of them more ma- ture than at the time of the last convention. A leaders’ publicatien, “The Worker's Child,” is now is- sued regularly. “The Young Pio- neers,” he said, “must become the leaders of the children in the schools. We cannot force our view- point down the throats of the chil- den. We know what we want. We must find what interests the child and infuse a class viewpoint and un- derstanding into those interesting activities and games. We must find the forms of activity, the games, etc. which at the same time will teach them the elementary lessons of the class struggle. Further progress de- pends on the Y. C. L. giving day-to- day guidance and leadership to the Young Pioneers.” Telegrams of greeting were sent to Y. C. L. members in jail in Im- perial Valley, and to Comrades Immonen and Berman, in Mar- quette penitentiary, Michigan, for raising a Red Flag in a Pioneer ADD ONE : JULY f At P I Auspices Communist Party, Cc New York District N NORTH BEACH PICNIC PARK c Astoria, L. I. UNDERWOOD and other TYPE- WRITERS SOLD and RENTED Guaranteed—Lowest Priced Quickest Service Remingtons, Royals, L. C. Smiths and all other makes sold, rented, bought, repaired, exchanged. Rebuilt and re- finished.’ Guaranteed for one year, the seme as new machines J. E. ALBRIGHT & CO. 825 Broadway, N.Y.C. Bet. 12 & 18 Sts. Established 1896 ALgonquin 4-4828 CARPENTER LOCAL UNION 2000 carpe! who have never belonged to the Brotherhood that for the next two months they may join Local, Union 2090 for the sum of five dollars ini- tiation fee, Office of L. U. located at NEW YORK.—To smash the in- Street, Brooklyn, the Communist Party is calling a masa demon- stration in front of the establish- ment tomorrow at 8:30 p. m. For many Weeks the workers of this market have been on strike under the leadership of the Food Workers Industrial Union for shorter hours, recognition of the union and security of the job, ‘ ‘ Labor Temple, 247 E. 84th St., N.¥.C. of Local are held every Thursday at the same address. Tompkins Square 6-9132 Caucasian Restaurant “KAVKAZ”" Russian and Oriental Kitchen BANQUETS AND PARTIES 332 East Mth Street New York City started | | Telegram. * | i yooeeesd Outlaws Its Sport Clubs to Aid ‘New Deal’ ”—Headline in the New York Post. “Their outlawry was inevitable, for athletics had be- comé exceedingly popular among | the workers, and there were work- ers’ footbail clubs and workers’ sports associations and the like in | practically every communion” (The | Post). . . . “Sports in Russia also |has been regimented by the Mos- cow Brain Trust,” Donald Day in the Chicago Tribune. “The yachts, in which the merchants and other bourgeoisie inhabitants of St. Pe- tersburg once sailed the Finnish Gulf, are now in the possession of Leningrad workers’ clubs.” (Mr. Day)... * * * * «“RAEMBERS of the International Olympic Committee are unani- mously convinced that Germany will keep her pledge to show no discrimination against Jewish ath- letes in the 1936 Olympics’”—Wil- liam May Garland, American mem- ber of the Committee, as quoted in the Herald-Tribune: “When the a par with other contestants.” (Mr. Garland).... . ‘HE best way to treat Hanfstaengl is with silent scorn—Heywood Broun, in the World-Telegram. . (Perhaps “Putzy” will become ashamed of himself—Ed.). | . * | «¢ JUST what were Tunney’s present interests? (I asked)’—Richards Vidmer, in the Herald-Tribune, in- terviewing Gene Tunney. “ ‘The acquisition of wealth,’ he (Tunney) answered. ... It is always enlight- ening to chat with Gene Tunney” (Mr. Vidmer).... ee ee #7ARL MARX, Lenin and William Green, enemies of capitalism” John Lardner, in the New York Post. . sOQECAUSE Dr. Henfstaengl is. . . on personal business . . . the American Jewish Committee, the American Jewish Congress and the! B'nai Brith (have) decided that Dr. Hanfstaengl should be shown no discourtesy"—The World-Telegram . «+ (Punctilio—Ed.), Comrades Patronize JADE MOUNTAIN American & Chinese Restaurant 197 SECOND AVENUE (Bet. 12th and 18th St.) Allerton Avenue Comrades! The Modern Bakery was first to settle Bread Strike and first to sign with the Food Workers’ Industrial Union 691 ALLERTON AVE. E & K STUDIOS PHOTOGRAPHERS Real artistic photos for a price you can afford 42 UNION SQUARE—Gr. 5-2419 — WORKERS WELCOME — NEW CHINA CAFETERIA Tasty Chinese and American Dishes PURE FOOD — POPULAR PRICES 848 Broadway bet. 13th & 14th st. LERMAN BROS. STATIONERS and ‘UNION PRINTERS Special Prices for Organizations 29 EAST 14th STREET New York City ALgonquin 4-3356—4-8643—4-7823 WORKERS 2700-2800 BRONX PARK EAST COOPERATIVE COLONY has reduced the rent, several good apartments available. Cultural Activities for Adults, Youth and Children. Direction: ‘exington Ave., White Plains Office open daily from 9 a.m, to 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Telephone: Estabrook 8-1400—8-1401 Trains. Stop at Allerton Ave. station (Classified) FURNISHED room, private entrance, all conveniences, reasonable, near 3nd Ave. Goffen, 317 E. 13th Bt. ORCHESTRA, small, dance, classical, seeks summer job hear city, nightly or week- ends. ALgonquin 4-7954. meet takes place Jéws will be on | I could only cook, I'd come up some day and keep house for you”"—Hugh Bradley to Mrs Babe Ruth. . . . (The advance ot the American sports writer). i |4¢ ANYONE can become a wresiler . but a clean mind is neces. sary,” Jim Browning, former heavy. | weight wrestling champion, | Prospect W. C, Plays | In Finals, Sunday, for |Tom Mooney Trophy | NEW YORK. — The Prospect | Workers’ Club, Eastern District win- jners in the soccer competitions for |the Tom Mooney Trophy and the winner of this Saturday's game be- tween the Chicago Linneas and the Cleveland Aircraft team will meet in Cleveland, Sunday, for the na- tiohal final. The Linneas and the Cleveland boys play the Western | semi-finals in Chicago. The Prospect team won the Eastern District championship by defeating the Gravesend A. C., 3-0, at Crotona Park, last Sunday after~ noon. The winners of the Western | District will have to contend with |the strong defense of Fusha, the | Prospect left fullback, and they will | have to be up to their mettle against, Doc Rubin, who scored 2 of the 3 goals against the Gravesends. In the second division game la: Sunday the Valley A. C. defeate the Spartacus A. C., 2-0. HAYWOOD SPEAKS IN YOUNGSTOWN YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio, June 26.—Harry Haywood, National Secretary of the League of Struggle for Negro Rights, will be the principal speaker at a mass meets ing at Ukranian Hall, 625 W. Rayen Ave., Thursday night, June 28. The meeting is called by the local branch of the LS, NR. . | BILL GEBERT TO SPEAK ON GERMANY CHICAGO, June 26—BIll Gebert, Dise trict Organizer of District 8 of the Com. munist, Party, will speak on Hitler and the German ‘Situation, Wednesday, June 27, at the Wincheysky Club, 4008 W, Roosevelt Road, . * UPHOLSTERERS MEET TONIGHT NEW YORK.—A mass meeting of ups holsterers called by the Furniture Works | ers Industrial Union to take up the quese | tion of preparing to fight for union cons ditions in the shops during the coming season will be held tonight at Manhattan Lyceum, 66 EB, 4th St., 8 p.m. The floor will be ‘open for discussion. Adm. free. 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 Dr. Maximilian Cohen Dental Surgeon 41 Union Sq. W., N. Y. C. After 6 P.M, Use Night Entrance 22 EAST 11th STREET Suite 703—GR, 71-0135 AARON SHAPIRO, Pod.G. CHIROPODIST Sclentific Treatment of Foot Ailments 228 SECOND AVENUE Algonquin 4-4432 Cor. 14th St. Tompkins Square 6-7697 Dr. S. A. Chernoff GENITO-URINARY Men and Women 223 Second Ave., N. Y. €. OFFICE HOURS: 11- SUNDAY: 12-3 CAthedral 8-6160 Dr. D. BROWN Dentist 317 LENOX AVENUE Between 125th é& 126th St., N.Y.O. COHEN’S 117 ORCHARD STREET Nr, Delancey Street, New York City EYES EXAMINED By JOSEPH LAX, 0.D. Optometrist icians Tel. ORchard 4-45%0 ry on Premises | eect KRAUS & SONS, Inc. Manufacturers of Badges-Banners-Buttons For Workers Clubs and Organizations 157 DELANCEY STREET ‘Telephone: DRydock 4-8275-8276 Wholesale Opti: Fi NEEDLE WORKERS PATRONIZE SILVER FOX CAFETERIA and BAR 326-7th Avenue Between 28th and 29th streets Food Workers Industrial Union NICE bright room all improvements for one or two, 317 E. 18th St. Apt. 11-B. Near Second Ave. TWO ROOMS and kitchenette furnished, 3071 Gouverneur Ave., 3-J. One block from Van Cortland Park. Three months from July 1, $35 a month, PROTOSS RETA Rh SECOND Uns a LIGHT, airy furnished room. Couple or single, 18th St., near Second Ave. Write Box 10, Daily Worker. HAIR REMOVED Permanently by Electrolysis E. NELSEN 3017 OCEAN PARKWAY Brooklyn BM.T. to Ocean Parkway Station Esplanade 2-3652 | NEW HEALTH CE All Comrades Meet at the’ NTER CAFETERIA in Prices—50 E. 13th St.—WORKERS' CENTER.