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Page Two DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 13, 1929 20,000 Dem PHONE COMPANY GETS Ble GIFT Federal } aster Grants It $18,000.090 More The New Y Com- pany is inv s to an amc $18,- y the of the report much, report before it is effective. In all the successive demands for rate increase during the last sévera s, the company has been uniformly vic- torious. The courts know that mon- right and the company 3,312,092. 1924, a statutory the action of Fed- y is alway: is worth $69: On May court affirmed eral Judge Knox m permitting the, company a 10 per cent increase in exchange rates in this city. On May 27, 1926, the Public Service Commis- sion allowed the compary to raise its rates so as to produce an ‘addi- tional $9,111,378, including approxi- mately $7,000,000 which was yielded by the 10 per cent surcharge. In its 1926 decision the majority members of the commission fixed the comnany’s property at $427 069,- 375 in the e' e state and its value in this city 309,233 and per- mitted the incre: ich it was said would yield a return of 7 per cent. The minority members of the commission fav an inerease in rates in the city sufficient to in- crease the net return of the com- pany by $14,8 instead of the $9,111,878 that was allowed. It was believed that it was the difference between these two amounts, $5,731,- 3805, that the company was fighting for. time | litigation involved in| 7 Not content with plastering un d for war on England, Japan grini, an Italian war flier, broug make a flight over the Atlantic in we Misleaders Groom N eaders are trying to boost aviation, too. Here is William Pelli- w Lindbergh i ae ion labels on the or the s ew cruisers just viet Union, the A. ht int othe bricklayers’ union to its name, FLOG RHODESIA SLAVES neero, Government Act Calls tor Youth Torture JOHANNESBURG, S. Africa (By | Mail)—The Native Juvenile Em-| ployment Act in Southern Rhodesia permits the indentured labor of children of both sexes under 14 years of age. It also provides for such penalties as the flogging of young boys. The whips used are of rhinocerous hide, and there are intervals be- tween the strokes, “to let the pain sink in,” as the white overseers say. | Fifteen strokes and more are u: ally inflicted on the y boys. No medical examinations given before or after the floggings; hundreds of the child slaves die under the ordeal. | Starvation wages are paid, but! even this is never received by the | indentured slaves, for they ar forced into permanent debt by th purchase of necessi! stores of the companies, which jcharge whatever prices they please. | iy this way, the natives are often! e at | penalty on the natives. kept enslaved for a lifetime. The agents of the British govern- ment protect the infliction of. this Protests by |natives against the flogging results jin eruel punishment for those pro- | testing. Young Worker Benefits at Bronx YWL Social “Marching Guns” was produced |; at the entertainment given by the Upper Bronx Units 1 and 2 of the Young Workers League Saturday evening, at 1330 Wilkins Ave. Bronx. Over 100 young workers at- tended the play and the dance which | LOCAL MERGER Silk, Knitting Union Join at Meet Tonight A merger of the two textile locals in the New York District of the National Textile Workers Union will officially take place here to-; night, when a joint membership | meeting of both will be held at 7:30) o'clock at 16 West 2ist St. The lo- cals to be amalgamated into one large ene are the Knit Goods Work- ers Union and the Silk Workers ; Union. | The merging of the locals is ex- pected to facilitate the carrying on jof the drive for the unionization of the industry here, according to state- ments made by Sarah Chernoff, or- ganizer of the New York District jof the textile union, | To this meting are invited not | only the members of the union, but |alsc non-union workers, White Workers | to Unite at ‘Champion,’ | ‘Obrera’ Benefit Dance Another opportunity for white and lack workers to get together soci- ally will be given Friday evening, | March 22, at the Imperial Audito- rium, 160 W. 129th St. at the benefit ‘dance for the Negro Champion, of- ficial organ of the American Negro Labor Congress, and Vida Obrera, the Spanish labor paper, Leaflets for the affair call upon the workers of all races to show their working class solidarity by coming together at the dance and | elp break down capitalist-instilled prejudices and race hatreds and to! help build the Negro and Spanish} labor press. “For a United Working Class! For a Militant Negro Press!” are some of the slogans thrown out. | Tickets are now on sale at the} ‘bl onstrate Against Primo De Rivera and Cath WORKERS WILL LATHERS UNION | AFFECT TEXTILE OFFICIALS RUN. MEN OFF JOBS Issue Leaflet on Case, of Suspended Local (Continued from Page One) charges are especially, Delegates Cohen and Flattery, and Secretary Ed Anglin of Local 6. The bosses, without from these officials, are trying to abolish the “day room” a system of hiring men thru the union office. | Abolition of the “day room” would mean that bosses hire men on the open market, picking whom they please, and starving the rest. This means a collanse of the union wage scale of $10 a thousand, and a prac-/| tical non-union condition eve |where. Even now, progressives charge, the little clique of 20 or so which runs the local by undemo- cratic means permits its following \to work under the scale, and thus brings pressure on others to do the same. The leaflet issued by the Progres- \sive Building Trades Group, Lath- ers Section, on conditions in Local 6, reads in part as follows: “The suspension of our local was |due to the fact that all moneys de- jrived from dues, assessments, fines, | ete., was spent by our officers trav- eling from city to city under the pretext of negotiating for territorial |jurisdiction. No honest worker can believe this onen lie. son for our officers traveling from city to city was to influence the In- |ternational organizers to favor them against the men, because our offi- opposition | olic A | | | Part of the $3,000,000 Congre | to keep up the first federal jail Federal House of Detention; it is in here too. uthorities in Madd ‘Fine Fruit of Prohibition Law ss voted for dry spies will be used shown above. Its fancy name is in New York, and is supposed to hold 200 prisoners (they will probably put 400 in it). Tho intended primarily for prohibition cases, workers undergoing a federal frame- up and foreign born workers slated for deportation will be thrown 5 SHOE FIRMS FALL TOUNION | Sign Up, Grant Raises, Drive Gains Headway Far from having reached the peak jof its astoundingly successful three- | week-old organization drive, the In- |Gependent Shoe Workers Union gives eviden: sto leave the New York shoe {manufacturing industry completely unionized. Since the end of last week five more firms Were com- LOCAL 43 ACTIVE AT SUNDAY MEET Int’l Women’s Day to Feature Big Program Members of Local 43 of the. Mil- |linery Workers’ Union will be rep- resented at the pageant of the » of being only on the up- class struggle to be presented at In-| rd swing of the wave that prom- ternational Women’s Day celebra- | 8™OUPS of students marched down tion at 2 p. m, this Sunday at Cen- tral Opera House, 67th St.. and Third Ave. Local 43 will be sup- ported in the pageant by members cers know that their corruption,|pelled to aquiesce to the unioniza-|of the Office Workers’ Union and misuse of funds, violating union|tion of their piants after coming other working class organizations. rules, favoritism and many other result in mass revolt against their crimes, which would mean that they would lose their soft jobs. Secret Accounts. “No financial statements were |followed, which was promoted for Negro Champion, 169 W. 133d St.,;Presented to the membership for the the benefit of the Young Worker, |the Spanish Workers Club, 55 W.|Past three years or more. When- League. Ten dollars was collected for the paper. |Shop, 26 Union Square. John C.) |Smith’s Negro Orchestra has been| lengaged for the occasion. | CLARINA MICHELSON. re 1 the anthra- ania, a terri- tory co’ proximately 6500 Square r ; 184 of these are silk, 61 are knit goods and five are cotton mills. Th Scattered through 88 in the si: counties o wanna, Northumberia Ther cite regi here are about workers ‘aging from 75 to i, though s, tae npc, in Shamo- r 4,0U0 workers, have sprung up ; towns, draw in the oon as the law 14, anc me- Ur the m workers in the anthra , the great major- ity are under 20 years uf age. in a recent report gotien out by the Bur- eau of Women and Childien, of the Penn. Department of Labor and in- dustry, it is stated that one out of every 6 children in Pennsyivania, 14 and 15 years cold, leaves @thool to enter inaustry, the textile mills ab- sorbing 41 per cent of tnem. Child Supports Family. Of ail the 14 and 15 year old chil- miners’ ch: allows, at the times before ' dren im Wilkes-Barre, tne geograpn- ieal ¢enter and second largest city _ of the anthracite, £0 per cent go to _ work to help support the family. These very young workers, under 20, are the quillers, winders, pickers, dorfers, silk carriers, bobbin girls and boys, spinners—in fact, they carry on most of the work of the mills except the weaving and warp- ing. They slave for 9 hours a day— 50 hours a week, and often 54 hours —and get starvation wages. Their average wage is probably about $12 a week, although a great many get 10, $9 and even $8. In most of the mills, the workers are started with $7, $7.50 or $8 a week, and do not get a raise for a fear or more. In a mill in Piymouth, ., the highest wage paid is $12 In the Arrow Silk Mil, in doo, the pickers are getting $7 $8 for two weeks’ work. Wages are paid every two weeks, nd a week’s pay held back, an ef- tive weapon of the boss to hold wage slaves in the mill. This that a new worker, probably has to wait three weeks for first pay. Another trick of the s, used largely in the anthracite, use of the bonus; workers who steadily for two weeks get a nus. Many workers, ‘too ill to can't afford to stay home a er this pressure. Workers, ucing over a certain amount are “rewarded” with a increased speed, that the wey have to produce, is in- “A fellow at our mill got e he made too much,” a me. After “workers -\“You live near the mill, and don’t the amount of work required is in- ereased, or the price reduced, they either quit in disgust, or are fired, and new workers taken on, with less wages. Old Arguments, anthracite bosses The use the musty ies as bosses else- where, as alibis for not paying a living wage. They say, “You live at ‘home, so don’t need so much money,” have to spend money for carfare, and “I am just trying to help your family o1 by hiring you,” and so on, ad infinitum. The truth of the matter is that the wages of the young wage slaves, who do live at home, are a necessary part of the family income. Some of the mothers | will say to you, “I believe in a/ union, but if Jimmy should lose his job, I don’t know what we would do, he is our main support.” A young girl of 17, who was next to me in the mill where I worker, was the sole cupport of a family of six children, besides the mother and| father, who was a miner, and had been out of work for six months, She made $9 a week. A girl making $12 as a winder was fired to make) room for a new girl, hired for $8.) This throwing out of old workers! nd taking on new ones at less wages | is @ common practice among the silk bosses. The pay envelopes are usu- ‘ally taken directly home, unopened, and the money considered a neces-| \sary part of the family budget. Some mill workers in Scranton made out | la budget of bare necessities; they | found that $20.40 was the minimum) needed’ a week. These workers get | jabout half of the wages needed for absolute necessities. | Weavers Rushed. | The warpers and weavers, older! | girls and fellows, work terribly hard | ‘for the money they get. They prob- \ably average between $20 and $30 jin a 50-hour week. “Of course,” one girl said, “in order to make enough, he weavers in our mill have to work ll through dinner hour, and even! ‘come in at 6:30, a half hour early, and work till 5:30, an extra half hour.” Although the workers are only paid from 4% to 10 cents a yard for the different kinds of silk they \weave, if there is any defect in a ‘yard of cloth, often through no fault | |of theirs, in many of the mills they lare docked a dollar for the defective yard. The boss pays them a few cents a yard but they pay the boss ‘a dollar for the same yard. One worker who was told she had to pay | $4 for having ends out for several yards, said that if she was paying for the material she would like to jhave it. This was quite a poser for the boss who had gotten away with this particular kind of graft for lyears, and he finally said, “Well, igive me fifty cents and we'll call it | square.” A worker on tie silks said, ‘My boss must get his all right. I saw ties selling for a dollar made of silk that I only get 6 1-4 cents a the silk bosses to force extra looms on the weavers, until inhuman work- ing conditions result. Worse for Night Shift. The conditions of the day workers with their starvation wages and ex- hausting hours are bad enough, but if anything, the men on the night shifts are even worse off. In most mills these fellows work from 6 at night until 6 in the morning, with a ute off to rest, eat or eep. Where they do get a half hour off, and fall down exhausted on the floor for a few minutes rest, | they are obliged to work until 6.30 in the morning. “It’s pretty bad in winter,” a young spinner, 17, said, “but it’s in summer that we really lose weight.” The deafening noise of the machines, often resulting in poor hearing, the harsh bright blue lights which affect the sight of many workers, and the intolerable heat— in some mills the windows cannot be opened—inevitably result not only in loss of weight but definitely affect the health of these worker's, Working these long hours, 12 hours at a stretch, five days a week, allows these workers no recreation at all the major part of their lives. When they get home from work they have something to eat, go to bed, get up, have something to eat, and go to work, Even on Saturday night, the bosses, sometimes on threat of jdischarge, force these night work- ers to toil from 5 until 11, (They stop at 11 because the bosses can- not extend their profit-making greca into Sunday, when the town is shut down). For these six hours, the workers are given pay for only eight hours. No double time or time-and- a-half. The spinners make from 20 cents to 35 cents an hour—a measly $12 to $21 for 60 hours slavery. “It is like being in prison,” these work- ers say. Strictly Non-union, Oceasionally, although completely unorganized, workers of different mills have gone on strike. Some mills have signs posted up stating that any worker who joins the union or goes to a union meeting will be fired. These terrorization methods of some bosses are supplemented by others, with “welfare” tricks to keep the workers from rebelling. The big Duplan plants, for example, scat- tered through the anthracite region, have lunch rooms with free coffee, free lemonade, gyms and basketball teams, The workers get very little money but a whole lot of coffee. The Duplan mill in Dorranceton even takes over municipal jobs and holds a continuation school in the mill for its workers of 14 and 15 years old. Here hundreds of children get “edu- cated” each week, presumably large- ly in how to become more docile wage slaves. It is said that although up to 16 years of age workers are obliged to go one day a week to a continuation school that in the con- tinuation school in this mill the | Jold about three months too soon, | Ready to Organize. | Are the chances for organizing \these exploited silk workers of the |anthracite region good? Yes. These are many favorable factors, first of which is their terrible exploitation, increased by new wage cuts, speed- s from the | Weekly organ of the Young Workers |113th St., and the Workers Book|ever any honest member demanded | a financial statement the meeting | was broken off by supporters of! this corrupt clique. “Our corporation bosses gangsters and gunmen in conniv- ance with the officials of our local subjecting them to the will of the bosses. This practice results in a reduction of prices so low that one |could scarcely make a living. Our good union men who were laid on of earning a living, because they fought for the maintaining of union rules and standards, Men Starving. “The conditions in our trade are ups and other profit-making schemes jput over on them. Then they are} used to unions and strikes, because | probably in every family at least one| | member belongs to the miners union, | Fundamentally they are independ- | jent and willing to struggle as is| |shown in the occasional strikes and | \their resentment at any new “in-| justices.” Although they will stand} a whole lot that they are accus-| tomed to, when the bosses put any- thing new over their reaction is po- tentially militant. They are mostly | notive-born which enhances a feel-| ing of independence among the |workers and they do not and will not suffer from fear of deportation. The jfact that they all speak English is| of course a great help in organiza- tion work. (The fact that almost all the mills are silk and are there- fore not so apt to close down as cotton, knit goods or wool is also a favorable factor.) The difficulties of organizing the workers in the anthracite region lie partly in the fact that the mills are} widely scattered through this region | \covering 500 miles, The workers are y-actically all tied up with the United wine Workers Union through their |families. (What a world of differ- ence it would make in organizing these silk workers if the National Miners Union were in control.) The idea of a textile workers union has been to a great extent discredited by the actions of the United Textile Workers organizer, whose habit has been to lie Jow until a strike occurred, rush in, sign up the workers, collect their money, and not show up again. Several workers have said, “I don’t intend to line any organizer’s pockets with money any more, when the union does nothing for the workers.” The great majority of the workers are very young, and of course some of the young girls in the mills labor under the delusion that they will get married and live happiy ever after —outside the mills. But perhaps the greatest difficulty is the universal fear the workers have of losing their jobs. Work is often slack, and be- cause most of the workers do live at home they generally want to work in one particular mill near where they live, to save carfare and get to work and back quicker, In spite of these difficulties some organization work has been accom- plished. A local has been established in one of the mills. Workers of other mills are visited and called to meet- more locals in the mills of the Anth- ings and before long there will be | :; very bad. The delegates absolutely bosses to reduce their standards and wages. “Instead of carrying on a cam- Paign to organize the non-union men on the jobs our officers are bought by the bosses to leave the job non- union, “Men are starving while waiting © be sent off the list and the fav- orites are given jobs ahead of their turn in violation and contempt of all the basic union rules.” Progressive Demands. _ Demands put up by the progres- Sives are: (1) a meeting of the lo- cal with a full report, (2) right to elect their own officers, (3) repre- sentation of laymen on district council, (4) no more unnecessary delegates appointed by the interna- tional, (5) election of job stewards by the men on the jobs, (6) job stewards to meet regularly twice a month and report, (7) stewards to call regular meetings of the men on the job, weekly, (8) job stew- ards to get co-operation of officers, Spanish Chorus Sings ‘Sandino March’ Here Latin American workers and peas- ants, together with the workers of the United States, will be the joint force which will shatter the power of Yankee imperialism. And repre- sentatives of all countries in the two Americas will unite next Saturday | evening at the “Sandino Ball” in the | chorus which will sing the new musical composition, “The Sandino March.” | Not only men, but Spanish-Amer- | ican women will appear among the | singers of the popular marching) song, which has been printed on the circulars distributes among the La- tin workers in Harlem. The ball and entertainment, of which the singing is only a small part as there will be many special Spanish dances in costumes, will be held at Lexington Hall, 109-111 F. 116th St, and tickets can be ob- tained in advance from the Workers Book Shop, 26 Union Square, the Spanish Workers Center, 57 W, 113 St., at 1800 Seventh Ave. and at the Negro Champion, 165 W. 183d St. HRY TO BLIND COSTA RICA SLAVES. SAN JOSE, Costa Rica (By Mail). -+The Republic Tobacco Co., a Brit- company controlling the tobacco racite affiliated with the National yard for.” It is not uncommon for {workers are apt to become 16 years Textile Workers Union, plantations in Costa Rica, has intro- the ‘shelf’ and had no means at all! refuse to do any work along union | lines and defend the members on) the job against the attempt of the, across with wage increases and other jcrimes against the members, would | improvements of conditions. In addition to this the union’s strike headquarters report that | three strikes called yesterday morn- ing and the evening defore are still in progress, with expectations that the bosses will be forced to capitu- \late momentarily as conferences tlements with the union are the Monte Carlo and Floral Shoe Com- | panies, settled after short strikes, hire|and the Wolmicar Shoe Co., signed | women. ‘up after a five-day battle. This shop and those owned by the Septun Shoe Company were sikned up yes- |terday, the strike in the Phil Jay ting only a few hours, while the Septun strike carried on since Friday morning. The shops on strike are the Gold- stein Shoe Co. of 127 Spring St., the Dan Palter Co., 151 W. 26th St., lof New York, and the Chandler Shoe |Co. of Brooklyn, All other shops are lin Brooklyn, since the industry is | concentrated in that borough and, in Long Island City. The news of the victorious strikes and the subsequent gains in wages as well as other conditions has spread to all sections of the indus- try. Scores of workers are coming |into the union headquarters repre- |senting themselves | from their shops. | Many committees are coming to ithe union from workers employed lin the big Long Island factories where hundreds are employed. Prep- arations are under way for extend- jing the struggle into that territory. Organizing Campaign, Announcement was made from the offices of the Hotel and Restau- rant Workers Union, affiliated with the Amalgamated Food Workers Union, that an organization drive is about to be inaugurated. To this end | the union is calling a membership meeting for this Thursday afternoon |at 3 o’clock at the union hall, 133 W. 51st St. In a letter to its membership, the union secretary, S. Kromberg, re- counts the exploitation the workers lin that trade are compelled to en- jdure because of the absence of or- | ganization, and calls upon them to join in the drive to unionize as great a part of the industry as pos- sible. |have already been held with them. | The five employers reaching set- | Gertrude Prokosch, who taught | dancing at the Bryn Mawr summer school for working girls, will be in charge of the dancing. “The Primi- \tive Dance,” “The Dance of the Ma- |chine Age,” and “The Dance of the Revolution,” will be featured at the pageant, Many Speakers. “Fight the War Danger” will be |the main slogan of the meeting when | Speakers will express the economic jand political aspirations of working Speakers include Rose | Wortis, secretary of the Needle | Trades Workers’ Industrial Union: |to keep the members in fear and|Shoe Company an dthe Phil Jay | Albert Weisbord, of the National wners and Their Slaves Textile Workers’ Union; Juliet | Stuart Poyntz, head of the Depart- |ment for Work Among Women of |the Communist Party of the U. S. |A.; Kate Gitlow, secretary of the | United Council of Working Women; |Pauline Rogers, of the New York | Working Women’s _ Federation; Gladys Schechter and Sulvia Mille, of Millinery Local 43 and Anna | Fox of the Amalgamated Clothing Workers. Negro Problems’ Will |Be Taught at Workers [School Friday Night igs | The course in “History and Prob- Md d didi in did dl die di, lems of the American Negro” will begin this Friday evening at 8:30 P,M. at the Workers School, 26-28 {Union Sq. Otto Huiswood, in- | structor, is head of the Negro Dept. | of the Communist Party of the U. S. A., and has long been identified as lment and in the struggles of the Negro workers. \ The Workers School offers free scholarships for this course to Ne- gro workers. Already over 380 scholarships have been given to Ne- gro workers who participated in the recent dressmakers strike. In addi- tion many members of the Brother- hood of Pullman Porters and of the ;American Negro Labor Congress \will have been given scolarships The Workers School urges black and | white workers to take this course to |learn more about the Negro prob- ‘lem in this country; its significance for the working class movement; the struggle for racial emancipa- tion, class divisions among the ne- groes and the policy of the revolu- tionary working class movement on the Negro Question, 3 lRestaurant Union for a leader in the workingclass move- | APRIL Daily duced the block insurance scheme to blind the workers, * Farewell Performance! ISADORA DUNCAN DANCERS in a Program of Revolutionary Songs and Dances at MANHATTAN OPERA HOUSE 18, 19, 20, 21 TICKETS ON SALE at— Worker Office, Room 201, 26 Union Sq., New York City & at Box Office POPULAR PRICES MANY RALLY 10. HELP STUDENTS: AGAINST RULERS ‘Police Charge; Shoot and Use Sabers | MADRID, March 12. — Great crowds gathered in Madrid tonight , |after a day of demonstrations by . | striking students, during which the ~ |police at one time fired into, the | demonstrators, wounding one stu- |dent probably fatally and: several ‘others less seriously. | At 8 P. M. 20,000 persons, includ- t 1 jing hundreds of students, were | jgathered in the area ardtind the | Puerta Del Sol Arch and Aléala-and |Sevilde Streets. sairalh Heavy forces of police...mounted and afoot, were on, guard,,..During the evening students gathered at | various points. Police charged the crowds.itepeat- edly to keep them circulating. | Fought Police.':e ©» | The shooting today came’ after |numerous students had fought with |Ppolice in several sections!” It oc- |curred in the’Paseo De Lit’ Castel- |lana, outside the office of Premier Frimo De Rivera. oe | ‘The’ student critically “wounded |was Emilio Marchessi, nephew lof an artillery colonel involved in ithe recent revolt of that corps |egainst the government. * Shortly before the shooting, Alcala Street toward the* headquar- |ters of ‘the Patriotie Union; ‘shout- ling insults at the governmént,-They - | were charged by mounted ‘police and |dispersed. Other students’ started toward the Catholic newspaper De- bate, but were routed by police after séveral were wounded. The police vsed sabres in. the encounter. .tAt least one student was. cub. 9:...!: Against Catholics. Meonwhile other students. sur- rounded the’ newspaper A. B. C. and‘ * stoned the premises. When they were pursued by . police they, 2an toward De Rivera’s office. Two students and a lieuteriant ‘of * police were injured in anéther sen- |counter outside the ministry of pub- \lic instruction. . y The strike is due, to. gon satisfaction among students ‘af “ré-~ cent actions of the goverhment” af-** |feeting education. . aD age | La wstudents objected to the. gov- [ernment order«permitting :twa.Cathe . \olic ‘universities. ryn..by the Jesuits, , | and Augustinian Fathers to issue. | degrees in law, claming that the cur- tieulum did not coincide witt “the state universities. sinh he : Thé stvike has spreadefrony Ma- drid to citie sthroughout Spain. ~All students were reported on stuike in -, | Barcelona, although the government .. |said the strike there was*“partial.”” In bourgeois soriety, living is but a means to Increase ne | tated labor. 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