The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 13, 1934, Page 3

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7 A DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1934 Page 3 DEUTSCH URGES NO FIGHT AGAINST AUSTRIAN CAPITALISM Leader Talks Of ‘Lost Cause’) Socialist Heads Mourn Defeat of Bourgeois mander of the Austrian Schutz- bund, at a meeting held Sunday Se i nteband com, ans cy A By McGoldrick | Affidavits Show How} Capitalist Parties were aired yesterday by Nathaniel} J. Palzer, former law partner of the | incwmbent. W orkers Asked to Bar A statement calling on the rank and file membership of the Boot and Shoe Workers Union, A. F. of Move to Split Unity ecopio and their clique are making wild attacks upon the rank and file in their demand for united action THRONGS AT ANTLWAR DEMONSTRATION IN MANHATTAN |Vote-Stealing| Boot and S hoe Un I on Textile Strike . es ‘Charges Made Leader Will Address UTA Unemployed Teachers Association Meets ] at Polls Pee : 3s ; | On Relief Jobs A ‘Democracy’ Wath at | United Shoe Union Secretary Urges A. F. of L. ; \ “We cannot go into the reasons eee ee eae Se Members to Struggle Against Intimidation ttley, a strike leader in for the defeat of the Vienna upris- Joseph D. McGoldrick, defeated aa ks M ie By Lead one of the most active “flying Be: Stes suites, paises ioemer oo: self as city Controller, were stolen, Ta aS tile strike, and now an organizer for the Committee for the Support of the Textile Organiz: ions in the | night at the Mecca Temple under ‘The accusations were made after tes ae af paraigereiee eee | with Local a stile es w eh di ue ‘Cc nag sa! g the auspices of the Socialist Party. | a meeting of McGoldrick’s advisers | #0 ae the ekdace ~ the | Adi ress Lasters F le to the strike an re-sti Ke ig idl i cl who are collecting evidence on the| “~ y, a A committee of the U.S. L. W. U.| movement” at the next regular aries ea emetic ae i union upon individual members| went to the hall, 592 Fulton Street, | meeting of the Unemployed Teach- of Socialists and sympathizers sat basis of which a recount might be who favor the united-action of Cie pbgadly the fasten foci 7 te ons | ries "9 ier = sec y Light af tensely in expectation of hearing MsGoldiae’ was’ detested "by toe | MOP. Workers, has been: issued by 1.| 504 noe -wWorkers-Gnion met last | wciea ne ee eo ae Sue BocoUEN Ge ie En ati McGoldrick Was defeated by the | Rosenberg, secretary of Local 23 of | Wednesday, and asked for permis-| quarters, 11 West Eighteenth St. widespread struggle of the Austrian Tammany candidate, Frank J. Tay-| the United Shoe and Leather Work- h felategse ls iat spaettiaa en lant q abe eee ae aa workers against fascism, an admis- lor, was only 13,855, and is the basis| ers Union, Independent, which pro- ers and heelers, on the question of! also r 1 2 eis 7 ith sign, or at least a few words of ex- for much of the discussion of and | nosed the united front against the snited:: front ‘anid ino “16 aa nd also rhe ss on its m ting wil planation, of how the Austrian So- jdemand for a re-tallying of the! posses, i ace in a on hesertass aia Deputy Commis! mer Grace Gos- cial-Democracy had up to the last ballots. On Monday, Oct. 22, registered d psig of the eeiaienicaeiAn Ras “ ee oe pardine acee r moment before the conflict crippled Charges Vote-Stealing | on the con ms pr iling the defenses of the proletariat, and a brief outline of the present gath- ering of forces massed against Aus- trian capitalism. ‘Instead the audience struggled against the funeral atmosphere of defeat and dejection which un- wound with every speech. Charney Viadeck, business manager of the te counteract jingoist propaganda on Armstice D ay. well Smith, formerly of Columbia University, who is chairman of the City Central Committee of the Speakers at Photo shows thousands gathered at Soldiers and Sailors Memorial, Riverside Drive and 86th St., Now York, following parade from Central Park West and 60th St. The Workers Ex-Servicemen’s League, the Young Communist League, Young Pioneers of America and numerous other youth groups participated in the parade and demonstration, which was organized by the American League Against War and Fascism the Memorial included Dr, Tread- Shedding light on the methods of the capitalist parties in the| elections—methods used continually | against working-class candidates and sometimes against rival cap- italist -party candidates—Palzer’s Statement says: “Credible and voluminous evi- Union and to every local, laying down a program of activity for both organizations to be carried through unitedly, against the seri- ous menace of wage cuts, mass lay- offs and discrimination. Received No Answer Boards. letters were sent to the Joint Coun- .. cil of the Boot and Shoe Workers | tio, While the committee waited out- side, a worker, Rosalino D’Aversa, was beaten up by one of the clique for daring to ask the question, “What is the order of business for tonight’s meeting.” The clique evidently knew that most of the lasters and heelers left teacher projects, especially in continuation schools. The matters taken up at the meeting included plans for making permanent and for extending work relief projects for teachers. The Anti-Multiple Job Committee will give the results of its visits to legislature. | en. |newly-elected Assemblymen and i dence, consisting of many affi- To date, Rosenberg declared, the| this brother is prepared to ask why “d " a Jewish Daily Forward, confessed League, and Mike Stone, chairman of the Youth sec tion of the League. Gavia than. Wuulon,. and. Gear ~|the united front communication is | State Senators in regard Med bs that he was astonished to learn ar arty -workers, and anon have U. 8S. L. W. U. of N. Y., has re |not recorded and why the officials taining support and sponsorship that leaflets were really distributed rookie tadeiale] pointing to the |celved no answer trom the Joint! itnored the communication. A fr teachers’ seatalatioes) ee Po eamartd os pelore ae a N R. A Codes F (0) ste r weatsho existence of discrepancies and ir- |Council or from the local Executive,’ commotion in the hall followed and| Coming session of the Sta’ duced the first speaker insiste e e. e P that everyone repeat the mystic wish which Deutsch echoed in his speech: “The dead of February, they have not died; they will live agein!”’ The background of horror stories was laid down by Gerhart Conditions For Women Workers ® regularities in the count through- out the five Boroughs. “In one election district where | two votes were registered for Mr. | McGoldrick on the Fusion ticket, three members of a family resid- When workers raised the ques- |tion at their meetings, the officials, C. Danner and the rest, played dumb, denying that they ever re- |ceived such communication, and |disclaiming that they know any- the meeting in disgust. The membership of the union is getting ever more dissatisfied by the fashion in which the leaders of the union conduct the business of the union. “I only regret that I could not do so before, as I am working very little and I had to put away a dollar each week in order to cS i in that district, have signed Seger, a former leader of the eyes, fasteners, safety pins and wire.® amas thing about it, although the press| It has been reported that nearly| save enough and send, but now i i 4 ” - . . ‘. fidavits that they voted for " 2 Social-Democrets in the Reich-1$7 Monthly Earnings |” Sweatshops Flourish in| ™ reported these decisions as made bya hundred workers out of the 300) have it and I nding a five stag, who concluded his sere M BS | This report states: P him on that ticket and that many |the y. s, L. W. U., and the official ave it and I am sending a fiv like account with the statement that all “the German workers de- sired was the democratic right to be active in their labor movement again.” ‘Deutsch, whom even bourgeois observers declared killed the revolt of the Austrian workers by delay- ing all preparations until it was too late for anything except “hopeless resistance,” prefaced his speech by saying that since “the geographical center of Europe was Austria, it became easy to maneuvre her fate. Cénsequently Austria had to choose between Hitler and Mussolini.” Deutsch continued to harp on the nationalist theme that not capital- ism oppressed the country’s toiling masses but Italian imperialism, that the liberation of the workers from fascism was to.be achieved not by overthrowing its source, monopoly capital, but by regaining bourgeois democracy, such as rules in Swit- zerland, which he described as a state of democratic liberation,” Reminiscing about what the Social-Democracy had done for the workers in the heyday of its glory, he depicted the public baths, the parks, and the beautiful up-to-date ayartment houses (which few wage workers inhabited, according to statistics). “This is what we must fight to recapture,” he exclaaimed. Concluding with the observation on the “Austrian tragedy” that “even its singing societies were abolished,” hé called on the apathetic audience, “for the honor of our class,” “to retake Vienna as it was!” Viadeck assured the audience folir or five times that every penny of; the four hundred and odd dol- eal => Shown in N. Y., State Labor Survey By Labor Research Association NIRA ballyhoo artists are always lauding N.R.A. for its alleged “aboli- tion” of sweatshop labor but little is said about its equally vicious counterpart—home work. This method of avoiding minimum wages and further undermining the wage level of the entire working class has, | according to capitalist press admis- sions, shown a very sharp growth. Even Mrs. Elinore M, Herrick, di- rector of the New York Regional | Labor Board, according to the New | York Times (Oct. 24, 1934), in an} address to the New York Consumers League, admitted homework to be “the most pressing industrial issue before this State this Winter.” “Women are working for two, three and five cents an hour,” Mrs. Herrick declared, and “because of the confusion characterizing home work prohibitions in some eighty codes, home workers from New York to Texas receive 25 per cent of the wages provided for in codes.” That this cheap labor is not confined to New York alone is fur- ther indicated by a recent report of the Women’s Bureau of the U. S. Department of Labor, which de- scribes conditions in Connecticut of women and children who attach to cards such products as hooks and Median monthly earnings per family were $6.92; that is, half the families received less than $7 for month’s work. An average of 44 persons per family were employed in this home- work. The average earnings per person per hour were 7.9 cents. Yet the lowest hourly rate allowed for factory work in an N.R.A. code covering one of the products is 32% cents. The miserable conditions in which these families exist is described in the report: “Of the 129 families visited, not one could support itself solely on the income from homewoxk. . All the families where no one worked in- side “a shop had to live parily on charity; 47 per cent ... were re- ceiving public aid, 41 per cent had run up debts... .” The chief argument of Mrs. Anna Hochfelder, representative of the “Homework Protective League,” fi- nanced by wealthy homework ex- ploiters and principal fighter against abolition of homework, is that “the women want the homework and would suffer without it.” Yet, ac- cording to “Labor,” |the Bureav’s report declared that its investiga- tors found that in most of the fam- ilies there were unemployed people “who could work in the factory if the work were done there” and “that many of these home workers hoped a Thousands of Homes As Result of NRA | the work would be taken inside the | factory.” The prevalence of such miserable conditions is only further proof that the labor provisions of N.R.A. codes are merely empty promises to the working class. For out of 100 codes containing homework provisions, 65 | supposedly prohibited homework en- | tirely on the effective date of the code, while 18 provide for its elim- ination by a specific date after the code becomes operative. On the | other hand, the way the bosses util- | ize exceptions is indicated by the | fact that the greatest increase in | homework has been in such indus- tries as cotton: garment, handker- chief and knitted outerwear, three of the ten industries whose codes prohibit homework but provide “ex- ceptions necessary to the individual industry.” OPEN UNIT MEETING A report on the Albany Hunger March will be made tonight at an open meeting of a Communist Party unit at 487 Elton Street, Brooklyn, near Sutter Avenue. A Hunger March delegate who witnessed the brutal attack of up-State police will make the report. Workers who are not members of the Communist Party are especially invited to attend, other persons in the same district voted that way. “In another district, a candi- date for office states that while members of his family and some ment house in which he lives, voted for him, he is credited with | only four votes.” Numerous other examples of the violation of the election laws were alleged by Mr, Palzer. On the basis | of all the allegations, a demand for: a recount may be made, Both Bankers’ Servants In any event, observers point | out, the situation will remain fun- | damentally the same, since the| Tammany candidate for Controller has virtually promised. to “go along” with the LaGuardia admin- istration. on most fundamental questions, In either case, it is seen, the masses of New York City will suffer through a crushing tax pro- gram and the slashing of relief. Neither Taylor nor McGoldrick would for one moment dream of hurting the bankers, the greatest | creditors of the city, it. is known. | Hence the newspapers are not par- ticularly violent about the question of a recount, since, as far as the bankers are concerned, either Mc- Goldrick or Taylor will do, al- though the latter may be a some- | what more expensive servant of | | Wall Street | Urge Members of Your Union to Read the Daily Worker! thirty-six tenants of the apart- | organ of the U. S. L. W. U,, the “Shoe and Leather Worker,” did likewise. At the same time, Danner, Pro- Detroit Unions! Open Fight for Workers Bill (Special to the Daily Worker) DETROIT, Mich., Nov. 12. — A new broad movement against the drastic cuts in relief, a movement to fight for adequate cash. relief and unemployment insurance, was: about it. employed by Palper and Deliso, at Broadway and Eighth Street, have been fired, and the officials of the union have done absolutely nothing John Pace, Secretary of the| Michigan District of the Unem-| ployment Councils, addressed the | conference on the situation facing | the unemployed and called for | united struggle. A broad discus- sion took place in which a large number of delegates participated. Build Up a Daily Worker Carrier | Route! i} | Classified dollar bill as my sincere greetings to the Daily Worker.” Thus writes Alex Sylvester, of Baltimore, Md. The Daily Worker is proud of | such Bolshevik readers, but asks workers not to wait until they haye saved up large sums. The “Daily” needs money NOW! Send as much as you can—no matter how little. Send every day—every week—BUT DON’T WAIT! TO LET Five Room Modern Apartment, Cheap rental. Lincoln Pl Utica Ave., Brooklyn, Call “NEvins 8-8365 before 10 a.m, from American Federation of | Labor, Trade Union Unity League ' and Independent unions, Unem- | ployment Councils and other work- ers’ organizations. More than 20,- | 000 workers were represented by | the delegates. i The conference, called by the | Rank and File A, F. of L. Trade Union Committee for Unemploy- | ment Insurance and Relief, decided | to constitute itself a permanent | body, with an elected executive committee of twenty-five to carry | on activities between sessions. | The resolutions adopted pro- tested the cuts in relief, demanded week on relief projects for married lunched yesterday at an enthusiastic | conference in Danish Brotherhood | a minimum of sixteen dollars a| | Hall attended by 167 delegates; NEW CHINA CAFETERIA 848 BROADWAY near 14th STREET on Wednesday, Nov. Announces ROOM will be opened. 14th our UPSTAIRS DINING New Chinese dishes of a Variety will be introduced at our regular PROLETARIAN PRICES. The Upstairs Dining Room will be available free to organizations. Message Service, revolutionary music recording and a loud speaker will also be furnished free. The place being decorated by a famous revolutionary artist will lend a real proletarian home-like atmosphere. THREE DAY SPECIAL The first three days of the opening we will serve a Special 60¢ Chinese Combination Luncheon for 25c—consisting of Egg Roll, Meat Cake, Vegetable, Friend Rice, Almond Cakes and Tea or Coffee. RAD 10 SERVICE BY MEN WHO KNOW HOW @ SPkECiaL DIS. COUNTS TO COMRADE READERS OF THE “DAILY” 4910 THIRTEENTH AVENUE SQUARE RADIO CO. WINDSOR 8-0280 WE GO ANYWHERE BROOKLYN, NEW YORK 3 SECTIONS ENTER COMPETITION PACT lets collected would go to the Aus- tijan working class, announced that hé hoped that all Socialists would support the new movement to con- solidate the Socialist Party with the American Federation of Labor (Which was greeted in absolute sifence), and thus closed the meeting. Hearing Fixed For 7 Boston |Foes of Nazis BOSTON, Noy. 12—Hearing has been set for tomorrow morning, on the motion for the revoking of the sentences of seven anti - fascist workers and students, sentenced to nix months’ hard labor each and $20 fines for demonstrating against the visit of the Nazi propagandist, Ernst Hanfstaengl, to Harvard. The hearing will take place be- lore Judge George James, who im- the savage sentences ,and was ter forced by mass pressure to agree to hear the motion for the re- lease of the seven defendants. The seven prisoners were visited ast Friday by A. W. Warner, at- jorney for the International Labor Defense, and Donald Burke, ILL. D. listrict secretary, and found to be m good spirits with great confi- lence that the workers will rally to their defense and force their re- ease. Sara Barr, who was on a vunger strike for seven days after veing placed in solitary confine- nent for refusing to give her full ife history, stated she is now treated much better as a result of the protests from workers’ and lib- ral groups. She is rapidly recover- ng from thie effects of the hunger trike. However, the food in the jail 8 very bad, and sanitary conditions volting, with buckets in the cells tead of flush toilets. The I. L. D. is urging all organ- tions and individuals to rush test wires immediately to Judge James, Cambridge, | Thirty dollars was sent by the Lodzer branch 24, I.W.0. in New York City, “on account of the col- lection fists.” Is YOUR branch speeding funds for the $60,000 Section 1, 3.and 7 of the New York District of the Communist Party have entered into a Socialist competition in their concentration work on the New York waterfront, the three sections announced yes- terday. In the announcement, the following statement was issued over the signatures of the organizers of the three sections, J, Brandt for Section 1, J. Roberts for Section 7 and J. Robinson for Section 3: “Again the longshoremen of the Atlantic Coast have suffered a great betrayal! “Once more the corrupt Ryan ma- chine in the International Long- shoremen’s Association has succeed- ed in putting over a sell-out agree- ment which spurns the basic de- mands and needs of the rank and file. The agreement incorporates none of the real concessions gained on the West Coast and leaves the longshoremen in a relatively worse Position than under the old agree- ment. “Why is it that, in the face of the general militancy and discontent which characterizes the mood of the East Coast longshoremen, Ryan has again succeeded in betraying them? “Because there is no effective op- Position movement of the rank and file inside the LL.A. and because of the weakness and, in most cases, non-existence of Communist Party nuclei on the docks and Communist IN WATERFRONT RECRUITING CAMPAIGN the revolutionizing of the work- ing class by the Party unless the Party conquers a firm base for itself among the miners, metal and steel workers, railroad work- ers, auto, marine and textile work- ers. It is idle chatter to speak about the leading role of the Party without establishing con- tacts with the decisive strata of the workers, mobilizing these workers and winning them over to our side. Talk about the de- fense of the Soviet Union and struggle against imperialist war is nothing but empty phrases unless systematic work is carried out in the war industries and in the ports... . “During the past two months, there can be recorded a definite in- crease of Party activity on the waterfront in connection with the seamen’s strike, the longshore wage negotiations and the election cam- paign. Two new Party dock bul- letins have been issued, thousands of leaflets and Daily Workers have been distributed and many open air meetings held. “Our concentration work among the longshoremen has been inten- sified—from the outside. But we have lagged behind in the basic phase of our concentration work, namely, activization of the long- shore comrades and contacts to work from the inside, on the docks, Party fractions in the local unions. “This is clearly brought out in the light of the experiences in San Francisco, where the longshoremen ! were able to defeat Ryan's attempts | to sell them out, and were able to win important concessions from the bosses and their arbitration board,! precisely because they fought under | militant rank and file leadership guided by the Communist Party through its longshore members. Winning the Longshoremen “It is the foremost responsibility of our Party in New York generally and the waterfront sections parti- cularly to win the longshoremen for militant struggle against their bosses and misleaders, against the imperialist war preparations—to win the longshoremen for Communism. i drive of the Dally Worker? As stated in the Open Letter: “It is idle chatter to talk about in the local unions, among their friends and fellow workers, etc. “We have not sufficiently pressed and guided the longshore comrades towards initiating small job actions which are the key to winning the lJongshoremen and setting them into motion against the bureaucrats and bosses. We have not centered our efforts on building ‘solid personal contact’ with the longshoremen, to- wards knitting out people into func- tioning dock nuclei, into active rank and file groups and committees. Organizational Gains Made “Only during recent weeks have we begun, on a number of docks, to overcome these weaknesses, to change our approach and methods of work—and to get organizational results. The Section Comittces of Sections 1, 3 and 7 pledge them: selves to extend and deepen this tivity. We pledge ourselves to ‘con- centrate the full forces of the Party to help the longshore comrades in their difficult but most important Party work, enabling them to over- come all the difficulties in this work’ (Open Letter). “In order to help stimulate the waterfront concensration work, Sections 1, 3 and 7 hereby enter into a pact of Socialist com- petition in recruiting of longshore- men. We pledge ourselves to bring into the Party a minimum of forty longshoremen in the period from Nov, 20 to Jan, 21, Lenin Memorial Day. “As individual sections we pledge ourselves to recruit as follows: Sec- tion 1—15 new _ longshoremen Party members; Section 3—15 new longshoremen Party members; Section 7--10 new longshoremen Party members. “The winning section in the So- cialist competition shall, however, not be determined solely on the ‘basis of quota fulfillment. There jena also be taken into considera— ‘tion. the following factors: func- tioning of dock nuclei, issuance and quality of dock bulletins, building of rank and file groups, job ac-/ tions carried through, etc. Concrete Steps “In organizing and carrying through the tri-section recruiting campaign the following steps are a “1) Special Section Bureau meetings to be held together with the longshoré comrades, to review our experiences and tasks in water- front concentration work, to adopt a program of action based on the burning grievances and demands on the docks, to work out organi- zational measures, control tasks, and a calendar plan of two months’ activity to guarantee the carrying through of this pact of Socialist competition, The Section Organizer, The Section Organization Secre- tary, and the comrade responsible for waterfront concentration work to be held directly responsible for ‘carrying through all decisions. , “2) Quotas and tasks are to be + assigned to each concentration unit, with particular attention to the so] to devote one full meeting to dealing with the longshore recruit- ing drive, Socialist competition be- tween units in the section is to be encouraged, “3) One leading comrade of the section is to be assigned to work with one longshore comrade, in re- cruiting contacts into the Party. “4) Reports on the Progress of the longshore recruiting drive are to be submitted to the Section bu- reaus every other week, these re- ports to be printed in the Section org-letters in summarized form. “5 )A bi-weekly digest and check- up of these reports of the prog- ress. of the drive is to be prepared by the District representative, for publication in the Daily Worker every other Friday, starting Friday, Dec. 7, “6) On or about Dec. 15, a joint meeting of the longshore comrades and functionaries of all three sec- | tions is to be held for the purpose jot exchanging experiences and checking results of the first half of | the drive, | “7 At the conclusion of the re- cruiting drive, each of the three Section organizers shall prepare a report on the results and lessons of the drive—one or two of these re- ports to be published in the- Party Organizer of the Daily Worker. “8) A big tri-Section affair is to be held on Saturday, Jan. 19 or 26, to announce the results of the So- cialist competition, to formally wel- come the recruited longshoremen into the Party, and to honor the comrades who have done shock brigade work in the recruiting drive. Comrade Krumbein is to make the welcome address and pre- sent a large portrait of Lenin to the winning Section. “Comrades of Sections 1, 3 and 7% let us entre into this pact of Socialist competition in the spirit of shock brigaders! “Let us fulfill our quotas in less than two months and build a firm Party base among the waterfront workers! | “Make further betrayals of the longshoremen impossibie! “Build the proletarian front improvement in the waterfront ac- | existing dock units. Each unit is| against imperialist war!” couples and eight dollars for single | men, with equivalent budgets for | those on direct relief, a minimum | of seventy-five cents an hour for| unskilled labor and prevailing | union rates for skilled, a maximum 30-hour week, repeal of the State sales tax and immediate exemption of the unemployed from this tax, PAUL LUTTINGER, M. D. — AND — DANIEL LUTTINGER, M. D. 5 WASHINGTON SQUARE NORTH, NEW YORK CITY Hours: 1 - 2 and 6 - 8 P.M. Tel. GRamercy 7-2090-2091 abolition of fiop houses and cash | Telief for single workers sufficient to enable them to live their own | individual lives, additional relief | funds from the State and its poli- | tical subdivisions, and free medical and dental care for the unemployed on the basis of individual needs. Drive for Jobless Insurance DEcatur 2-0695 Dr. Harry Musikant Dentist 795 EASTERN PARKWAY Corner Kingston Ave. Skin, Urinary Lady Physician Brooklyn, N. ¥. |] Hours 9 to 2—4 to The conference decided to or- ganize a city-wide campaign for the Workers Unemployment Insur- | (nee Bill, to include endorsement | of the bill by the City Council. | Nineteen A. F. of L. unions were | represented, despite the campaign of slander and intimidation carried on by Frank X. Martel and his J. WITEK Embalmer — Undertaker Dignified Funeral $135 up | 123 St. Marks Place, N. Y. C. (East 8th Street) Abgonquin 4-3638 Friend to the Working Class DR. J. SAMOSTIE 220 East 12th Street and Blood Conditions in Attendance for Women 8—Sunday 9 to 1 Algonquin 4-4437 Dr. Simo MAyflower 9-7035 clique of top officials of the Detroit | Federation of Labor, There were | also delegates from nineteen in-| dependent and T. U. U. L. unions. | Among the A. F. of L. unions rep- resented were Kelsey-Hayes Wheel, Federal Local 18677, Railway Car- men, Lodhe 1054, Painters Locals 37, 42 and 552, International | Union of Operating. Engineers 5 and 54, Amalgamated Meat Cut- Present this ad for Cooperative Opticians 1 UNION SQUARE WEST Room 602—GRamercy 17-3347 n Trieff Dentist 2300 - 86th Street Brooklyn, N. ¥. organi- zation * discount ters, Hotel and Restaurant Work- ers Union, Journeymen Tailors 229, and Laborers local 1054, and the Railroad Brotherhoods Unity Com- mittee. To Call State Congress Independent and T. U. U. L.| unions included the Mechanics | | | DR. EMIL EICHEL DENTIST | 150 E. 93rd St.. New York City Cor. Lexington Ave. ATwater 9-8838 : 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Sun. 9 tol Member Workmen’: Benefit Fund Fou | -WILLIAM BEL! Optometrist 106 EAST 14th STREET Near Fourth Ave. Telephone ALgom N, ¥. C. 52 I. J. MOR GENERAL Sick and Death 296 SUTTER AVE. Educational Society of America (two delegates from its district! committee), Auto Workers Union, United Brotherhood of Building) Trades, Brass Workers Industrial | Union, Artists Equity, Sheet Metal Workers Society, United Brother- hood of Carpenters, and Detroit | Opticians Association. Joe Friedman, business agent of | Painters Local 42, was elected | chairman, and Richard Kroon, Painters Local 37, secretary of the conference, which met almost ——ALLERTON AVE.— PATRONIZES THE Friendly Bake Shop Formerly the Modern Bakery 691 ALLERTON AVE., BRONX BEST BAKERY PRODUCTS MOST SANITARY CONDITIONS FOOD WORKERS IND. UNION For Internatio! RIS, Inc FUNERAL DIRECTORS BROOKLYN Phone: Dickens 2-1273—4—5 Night Phone: Dickens 6-5369 Bargains simultaneously with the announce- j ment of a new cut in relief for | the more than 60,000 welfare de- Ppendents in Wayne County and the dropping of 2,000 relief workers, Willlamsburgh Comrades Welcome De Luxe Cafeteria 94 Graham Ave. EVERY BITE A DELIGHT Mimeographs Cor. Siegel St. 825 Broadway, bet. J, C. ALBRIGHT & CO. All Makes Rebuilt Duplicating Machines & Supplies -Multigraphs 12th and 13th Sts Tel: ALgonquin 4-4828

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