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Page Two _ eee alge Bird b thal = ___PAILY WURKEK, NEW YORK, MONDAY, JULY 1, 1979 ee ales Siig) le SI \ ss POWER TRUST Getting im Ready Barly for tapes War DISCOVER PLOTS. Driver, aheee Others Die When Train Hits [F ALL PICKETS IN Bae Ey : CHIEFTAIN ON. ANVILLE BOARD: Foe of Loray Strikers! Bribed Press | (Continued fro TO RAID TENTS, DYNAMITE RELIEF FUR STRIKE THIS MORNING AT 1:20 Boston Boss on Rocks After Union Fight (Continued from Page One) Special Committee to Sell Daily Worker (Continued from Page One) | = | . | One) of the sharpest attorneys in C: babeas corpus writs for the hear- meeting tomorrow, immediately ylina to railroad to the electric ing of 47 of the arrested strikers work, at Stuyvesant Casino, chair 15 textile strikers hecause | in Charlotte. 149 Second Ave., where leaders of me mutowned G cet et «| In Gastonia, where the framed oes Un TEDOEE SOEs ng ee police was killed during his at- | workers lie in jaii, the Loray strik- ae SAR Maye see ty ae tempt to commit a second Ludlow | ers have moved to the new tent de. At the same time they wi Massacre in the tent colony of review the entire strike situation, the evicted strikers. Graustein fir when, in April o t be- ne notorious colony, just outside of the city lim- its, It was established by the Workers International Relief after the police raids had driven workers ‘and prospects for the near future. en ee ® Fur Boss Goes On Rocks. came known by his from the first tent colony. Con- BOSTON, June 30.— The | fur International Paper and Power Co. stant threats by mill agenis have Pup, nent y Bere) In age had bought f two Boston | been made against this news colony, . Shop) the ‘Needle Trades. “Worker Beeiieners, the Herald the Culcunsbe Podae na eaten As ‘ we Industriel Union had been conduct- Traveler. ganize 250 of the mill company’s ) ver and three p s were killed at an open crossing in Great Barrington, Mass., when | 8 @ Strike for the past 20 weeks, Later, the facts come out, stated men, attack the colony and tear, @,!"ain struck a bus. Open eros: together, withthe fact that drivers are exhausted after long hours | Y¢stex¢ay formally went into bank- hy witnesses in the Federal Trade down the tents, dump the strikers’) °f gruelling slavery, cause many accidents, via 4 oa esi . 2 Commission hearing, ir n furniture into the creek, load the et — EA Sat ee ak Pee BEA ns Bis eR Ie The fe uggle pening this peas had taken over t icy, Arousing “air consciousness” in schoolboys is part of Walt strikers’ families on trucks without " | ’ . tat ees bea a pean a eK ee in secret, of the Chicago Daily ect’s preparation for the coming imperialist war, for arousing \license plates and kidnap them over RENT STOPPAGE Beal § Father, Rail Vi orker. Vosces in the fiche. Moonen ene Journal, along with $600,000 worth| the interests of the youth in the air corps means a plentiful supply |the state line into South Carolina, of 2, yellow “Forward,” the. bosses \ and of the preferred bonds and a million} of cannon fodder for Photo above shows a group of Frustrate Conspiracy. t ; the scab company union, the “Joint Council,” had engineered a frame- up, the Skolnick case, by means of which they hoped to send four work- dollars worth of the common bond Brook: Particularly significant in t hase is the fact that Samuel Thomson, publisher of the Journal, | yn boys whom cached. to Visit Him; Aids Defense (Continued from Page One) Corrupt Misleaders Work jand their awareness that the raid | to the Daily Worker and that’s an- fy. chcteman of! the Publishers? [as scheduled fer siday, appa-| Tenants League Backs the railroad bosses laid off most of| other thing that makes me proud of ¢r8 to prison, Last’ week this Association Committee on paper. | avo ° e ‘ge eas jake the outrage: | Movement the watchmen anyway.” jhim. I couldn't be without the)ftame-up attempt finally fell to n nmitt n pa ry Another plot was discovered to Hos oe P Daily Worker for a day. I cer- Pieces. So flimsy was the evidence fact of the craft cons H cin Carpenters nion apt d to eee aN I told those labor fakers that I) 8)Y y sae : iS ee ea contenck with 0 blow up the Workers International! poginning today a large number|¥a5 Droud of my choy, and T'm| ‘sity hope and expect that every| concocted by the right wing gang vapers that they will ; St, Gastonia. Exposure of thig |! Harlem tenants are expected ; Prouder now than ever of Fred, now Cee ae corny ee 1D roreed to tees tne datsanailts ee om peaks and boost he sale’) Hutcheson Outdoes Labor Fakers of Past; (scheme also. froustrated it, Buty ae oe meee ene oreenleed bs fae, amen Sead a aoe eal Beanie rs esi back Meeting Today of it. . aa ee Meare AY * A haralave. Ena: . .,.| the Harlem Tenants League. A : est : st ry P 2 3 back F Zee Controls Southern Papers. | History of Once-Powerful Organization others are known to be in prepsra-| sy yesterday the office of the|the Gastonia strikers.” were New Englanders, all of them! The Industrial Union calls upon In the latest meeting of the Pub- : —— ‘ gig |League at 235 W. 129th St, was| Beal has worked in most of the| Workers, W. W. Beal revealed. His all Boston furriers, cloakmakers Nshers’ Association, the owner of the | is the fourth in a se shrewdness. Hutcheson is actually Sell Daily Worker. |swamped with eases where rent textile mills in Lawrence, his father| 8tandfather was a teamster. and dressmakers to a general meet- Prew Orleans States and the Shreve-} of articles by a rank and file bringing the union to ruin. He re-| Dewey Ward and Gladys Wallace | hogs have boosted the already high|said. He started to work in the| “Unless every thinking worker ing tomorrow, Monday, immediately Nort Times, Ewing, charged that| building trades worker on the con- | minds one of that fable of Krylov |are in charge of a committee selling | rents on old and otherwise unfit| mills when he was under 16. Two) Tallies to the defense of my boy after work, at 22 Harrison Ave. A the I. P. P. C., through Graustein,| ditions of the workers in that in- about the pig that destroys the |and distributing the Daily Worker,| apartments occupied by Negro of his brothers are mill workers, |&d the 13 other Gastonia strikers report on the progress of the New had bought control of the editorial | policy of many pa in the South. Graustein’s act dustry. It is par y timely at the present time when the open- shop drive of the b , the intro- mee __ | Who are faced with electrocution at Knows Mill Workers’ Hardships. | the hands of the North Carolina “My boy knows something of the) courts, the mill bosses will do what roots of the feeds on. tree whose fruit he|Labor Unity and the W. I. R. peri- | workers. odical, Solidarity. Strikers’ boys| St. Phillips Church, 134th St., are covering Gastonia and other} near Seventh Ave., which is said to York furriers’ strike will be given, and also on the situation in Boston. A meeting of the Boston cloakmak- | ities extended to} fable is per- Mobile, Atlanta, and into the Caro- | duction of rationaliz schemes it might be, | mill towns with these periodicals,|own over $1,000,000 worth of © ips of the mill workers, for | they want with these people’s lives.” ers’ branch will be held on Tuesday, linas. and the b ies of the bol could be placing them on the news stands| property (collecting from praying, P® Slaved for the textile bosses in| esterday. in Au Renn corrupt of is of the building re approriate?. . and attempting to establish regular | Negroes), has increased rents as/L#Wrence for a long time. Since he/ William Lavarre, one pariner in| tades unions are attempting to History of Carpenters’ Union. | routes. | much as $11 per apartment over the a8 18 he has worked at some of Hl Come to control of the Columbia Record, the| beat down the standards of the beginni gs of trade unionism) 4 YLoray Senin wlan: aaked |b the | old rents. he OKs slave shops in Lawrence. | Augusta Chronicle, the Spartanburg | Workers.) ng American carpenters may be | trike Mewiney totusin conyioe the | Circularize Tenants. He worked in the Crescent Worsted | Bivaid and Spartanburg Journal, oe hk traced about 100 years back. Al-|naily Worker, answered: “I den’t|, The Tenants League has circu- Mill, South Lawrence, as a bobbin CAMP WOCOLONA ; ; i ready 854 in in 1867 i ae hts {| setter for $4 a week. Pegiied ‘dering a law ith BOS eR COTE ready, in 1854 and again in 1867/1 ¢6q that, I know how to work.” larized the block, which extends | *“ Si vther partner) Harold Hall, to ex- y JOSEPH COHEN. here was unsuccessfu! movement for cs ie ath i hae aes | from Seventh to Lenox Aves. on| ‘“He’s slaved in the Pacific Print, pose the whole Power Trust-Grau- icle IV. uniting the local organizations that | 7h Poy te him: This Daily | 135th St., and also the Watt Terry| Wood, Everett, Arlington, and for Your Vacation and Week-Ends tein deal in connection with these | ite Gatpentere Union: existed at that time into one car- er tells you how “o keep irom | block, Several apartments in this| Ayre Mills in Lawrence, My boy| working your fool head off for the | section t, 1881 that | Loray bosses. BECAUSE— penters’ union. It was not until Augus Lavarre and Hall hed stood up for his fellow- are already organized. Un-| alw: four papers. employed workers are asked to re-| Slaves ; The gr ni f rpen- taken $870,000 from Graustein to e great union of the carpen 6) Lectures and symposiums on in the mills. He was fired ton. Easy access—Monroe, N. Y. fifty miles from New York City, one and a half hours by Erie R. or about two by automobile over id roads, Low ‘rates: $27 0 week (823 nembers)+ $5.50 per day ) to members). Reduced < for June’ and specinl ‘s to. organizations, All servations shonid be made Te peas ip ; : State mls, 8 1) It is 2 Workers Cooperative current. questions and: prob- buy control of the papers beforé the hich bears the impressive /36 delegates from twelve local unions Organization Progresses. port to the Harlem Labor Center to-| from the Pacific Mill for union ac- Camp and membership is open lems of vital significance to ¥ : ling |name, United Brotherhood of Car-| gathered in Chicag, i onpanined: é = Gay istri [davtties: | to you at a small fee, giving the working class, two conspirators had their falling | enters and Joiners of America, is ae : e He Heat a Redan | Newsboys and organizers in a a to aed thousands of cir-| tivities, | you the right to substantial The onteoncting beanie Orie i CODICES: & Ica, resent Brotherhood which then i eculars on the muleting of york-| “Pr y i ReCGSUOR tm Bares eRe . $e naw giant whose condition| had only about 2,000 member fleet of eight autos have been sent | g of the work. Fred was a strike leader of the! equal voice in the formulation sata hoe the eG rene ee Spartanburg, S. C., is the town| in which Fred E. Beal, southern cr- | ranizer of the National Textile} Workers Union, was arrested and | prought back to North Carolina to | be framed-up on a murder charge. | Tt is not known how many textile mill town papers Grausteiu con- | ers by the landlords and the be-' textile workers in Dover, N. H., five AY a eV- | meetings to be held at the new tent | ttayal of them by the A. F. of L.,| years ago. One time the mill bosses Sera rpenters unions remain- | eolony, A. Wagenknecht, national because of its discrimination policy. had their thugs set upon him and ed in existence. The New York car-! secretary of the Workers Interna-| 4M overflow meeting is expected | beat him. But they didn’t scare him penters, for example, clung to their tional Relief, Thursday addressed a|te take place at the Public Library, | any, independent organization, and it was|peeting of potential organizers, | 103 W. 135th St., tonight at 7:45.) “He edited a paper one time. The not until 1888 that they joined the composed of strikers and sovtherr | Speakers will include Richard. B. mill bosses tried to buy him off, of- new union. mill workers, and plans were made | Moore, president of the Harlem Ten- fered him advertising to sell out, | y a z For! in all directions to announce mass’| a long time after that, however, sev- eral othe n of policies. It offers you modern accomm equipped bungalo tages with electricity, water and other conveniences. Plentiful, wholesome food, skillfally prepared’ and xp- petizingly served. Exhilarating sports, including lake bathing. boating, tennis, grows stead worse. A great share of the blame for this must fall on the corrupt leadership. Humility and submissiveness in their relations with the employers and the iron hand in their relations with the workers are the chief char- acteristics of the present “leaders” the finest to Jurisdictional disputes continued Saicle:. ses TE a | i to organize for the National Textile | ants. League; Grace Campbell, vice Threatened to wreck the pat if hi handball, baseball, ete. Graustein’s method has been ‘a of the Garpentars! Union, jfor a long time between the Brother-| workers Union throughout the | President of the League; and J.| didn’t sell out. eee matics, music and danc- deposit of $5 per Beers wns nepers “he con- Wholesale Expulsions. hood | and ihe Amalgamated Wood | county and state. Letters and com- | Louis Engdahf, editor of the Daily| “Well, I gacss you might know! ere tagecsirel fella! te decir | Tee ee sae eae ee Ae tir ie in exist-|mittees are continually arriving, Worker. he didn’t seil out. : FOR FURTHER INFORMATION WRITE OR PHONE: the Power Trust as part owner of | filers from the union if they dare at that time. After many de- \:king for organizers from the | “Fred’s my own flesh and blood, structive disputes that weakened ‘ i iti | both unions, efforts to unite the two |" a nas be iaseeh el organizations were finally success-| TT ie ape wernithed $60 for Gee | ful in April, 1912. anville, Va., remitted $50 for Gas- | ‘Another Mival: | tenia relief, and asked for a speaker. | es __ | Gastonia City Engineer Leeper | @ The present Carpenters’ Union| appeared Friday with a police | also had many difficulties with an- guard at the tent colony to deliver other rival organization, which was} 14 tents confiscated from the old an American branch of an English |{ent colony and placed in storage| (Continued from Page One) carpenters’ union. After many con-|by the city. This was a few hours munists offered resistance flicts the Brotherhood succeeded in| pefore the contemplated masked |therefore their immunity is aoe in a A ae this rival union.| mob raid. | withdrawn. ut the Brotherhood, which once Peek ee Workers Defy Socialis icial. fulfilled its task with some degree| The Gastonia city officials have | BERLIN, eu WeeeWenen nee of effectiveness, has failed to keep| Stated that they intend asking the /12.. of the Berlin organization of Camp Wocolona, Iic., 799 Broadway, New York New York Phone—Stuyvesant 6015 to express an independent opinion is a mere trifle. Things have come their plants when they filed thei statements of ownership with the | n epyernment. This lays the basis|to such a pass that not only in- for prosecution—except that such |dividual members, nor even individ- big concerns as power trusts ure jual locals are thrown out, but several | never very seriously prosecuted by dozen locals at one time. Thus, for any capitalist government. example, President Hutcheson of the And in Gastofia? The Gastonia |Carpenters’ Union, w ith one stroke Gazette has rot appeared in the list |of his pen, suspended 65 New York of papers made known so far as be- | locals in 1916 because the New York ing controlled by the shadow secret workers protested against Hutche- hand of the Power Trust. But it|son's crass betrayals. i Martin (‘Skinny’) Madden, a labor faker, who ruled over the building trades in Chicago for many years, and I naturally feel bad to see him! in jail, but I’m proud of him, “Fred it was who introduced me! Camp Phone—Monroe 89 and now Register At Once for the 4th of July! Special Entertainment Provided for This Week-End FRIDAY—Campfire; SATURDAY—Open-Air and Dance s notorious that the Gastonia Ga- te is the creature and hireling of the Manville-Jenckes Co. And one Carnival Graustein’s jobs is to be a|was in the habit of taking graft] pace ‘with the requirements of W: 1. R- to remove three tents still si cxatic pax ; SU cl i YEW OPEN- of AR. ie che Manville-Jenckes Co.|from both sides. In this war, he|changed industrial conditions, The |<tanding on the property where the eee Caicratis juasty cb Ger SUNDAY—Concert and Opening of NEW OPEN-AIR THEATRE used to swindle both bosses and) trustification of the building trades | Union hall now held by Gastonia) oo” kuonstler in bs : a i “ sukkera! ite!sealinad, however tial |caiibe meroaly oy ee Ae deputies was erected. Wagenknecht |™22_ Kuenstler in a membership Friendly Atmosphere Our busses for this week See aai ; 2 7. J, R, |meeting. Kuenstler tried to defend The | Stated immediately that tne vis thy |the socialist. police chief of Berlin, F Be, |Zoergiebel, for sending the police mete i n the | return of the union hall and the| 6, shoot into workers’ demonstra- Fresh Food leave: Bathing of all the existing craft union pee building trades officialdom, jowever, is unalterably opposed to| ae amalgamation since their, tatereata | leased plot on which it stands and tii an May 1, are bound up inextricably with the |that the deputies be ejected. Th in a scala interests, not of the workers, but of| Flooring is being laid to make Ac UPpOE TIN Stone. Zhe ace the ‘employers, who are well satis- | Possible the storing of considerable | democrats declared in the discus- fied with craft unionism and its vantities of potatoes, cabbage, | sion: “The police acted like wild Madden’s ‘division of the workers, ‘cnions and beets collected for strike | beasts on May 1. Communist Activities * : | Monday Wednesday Friday Saturday Rowing, Fishing Sports from 1800 SEVENTH AVE, cor. 110th St. Entertainment Cultural Activities Hiking New York Office: 1800 SEVENTH AVE. Tel. Monument 0111-0112 \the rapidly increasing pellagra (a|protest. While Kuenstler was mak: aisease caused by a too restricted |ing his closing speech those remain- diet) a distribution of green vege-|ing in the hall continually inter- ‘tables and 85 gallons of buttermilk |rupted him. The left wing social | |was made Thursday. democratic leader, Beilig, declared | | —___——_- | F if the union became too weak, there would be no one for him to mulct. ,He therefore at times undertook} struggles against the bosses and RE LEAG even secured certain advantages for 2 the workers. ae Hutcheson, however, is far worse. . jHe has all of Madden's traitorous Branch Post Office Not) characteristics without Taking Its Literature The post office branch in the Sea- men’s Fenwrch Institute, 25 South 3t., refuses to accept for mailing the literature of the Marine Work- $17.00 per week |be given in Russian, Polish, English, Wh ckages of [MANHATTAN J) 4 Ukrainian, Ps Sie cae |the Communist Party had won a |} ° Wee Sate nase | It Is the ultimate aim of this |moral victory on the First of May. ||} - Telephone: INGDAL Marine Workers’ League en Unit 8, Section 4. mentee RO work "(“Capital”) "to “reveal | the ieee aGelal democestic meating closed) ti : ro u ie “4 were presented for eae Lie cpreanee, ace bre ela? pel jay Succi Vaiseed Iatécantonal Lance | sridut acenes “ef ernat’ exehtement | t ingdale ! ee Whe member of the league the pos meetings are held every Wednes¢ Defense Cooperative Sippinier ead fe Workers clerk refused to accept it. night at 1328 Lenox Ave. or Fifth| | 5 When asked why, he referred to/Ave, and 193rd &. | oeyeney LeRoy will lead discussion | im i H is * * . o the return address, which is 28 Units 7F, 9F, Section 1. ly meeti , today Another Big Railway Merger Seen; Wabash Indystrial activities of the Com-| munist Party and lessons from recent left-wing lead strikes w be dis- cussed at the meeting et Fourth St. at 6:30 p. m. tomorrow. South St., the address of the Tnter- penn Seamen’s Club, where the Jeague is located, and gave no other reason. YOUNG PIONEER CAMP OF W. I. R. Beto None,” Ie Key), ness 3a, gue: =| Line in Gobbling: Role OPENS JULY 8TH ee East N. Y. International Branch. Note of Convention of | WASHINGTON, June 30.—For-| | mation of a fifth trunk line railroad | | to serve the populous and profitable le St. CAMP NITGEDAIGET THE FIRST WORKINGCLASS CAMP — ENTIRELY REBUILT 175 New Bungalows - - Electric Light Director of Sports, Athletics and Dancing EDITH SEGAL NAACP at Cleveland ie meeting will be held at 313 Hins- tonight. ’ n> ie ay | Kaeo - CLEVELAND, (By, aneyiesa Brownsville International Branch. territory between New York and : i ° -| A meeting w held at 8:30 p.| 16 ‘nob aay's feelings and be |m. Wednesday at 154 Watkins S | mideastern cities was proposed to- ficial as possible” were the watch- . | ats Re et words. which deadened the conven- [rors ma BRONR To OT day in a new merger petition which | tie proceedings of the National As- | |the Wabash Railway announced it | for the Advancement of McKinley Square Unit, C. Y. L. | will file tomorrow with the Inter- | r vel-| 4 air meeting—the first of Commission. ed People here. It was wel An open @ afitgt of State Commerce Commi aah by the Hon. J. D. Marshall, | et een fe pialdctoanran nat The road wants to gobble up nine yor, who in his speech of greet-| 5 p. m., at aa i ie Brook Ave. | important eastern lines and to ac-| to the delegates hoped that they Branch 1, Section 7. quire part interest in five other “be happy and comfortable in| pioomfield will lead discussion on | Toads. The merger (if it goes thru) ” |New Developments in’ the Muste|is one of a series initiated among Movement and the S. P." at 715 E. 138th St. at 8:30 p, m. tomorrow. the big railway trusts who are fight- ing for profits among themselves, at Labor and Fraternal | Workers ! y N y iN (eve striking textiie egies your chil- and unemployed dren today for the miners’ children a vaca- W. I. R. Camp, Wing- tion in a workers’ camp! dale, N. Y. A working- Rush contributions to class camp for workers’ Camp Department: children which only charges the cost of main- Workers International Educational Activities Under the Direction of JACOB SHAEFFER THIS WILL BE THE BIGGEST OF ALL SEASONS DIRECTIONS: Take the Hudson River Day Line Boat—twice daily— 75 cents. Take car direct to Camp—20 cents. tion : 5 0 Director of Dramatics JACOB MASTEL of the sessions were occupied | financial reports, ministerial in- ns and drives for funds which the same time seeking to stamp out the competition of the smaller fry. tainance. Maximum 100 rades. roe poihaapiaiewei a Stren condor aracat"| Organizations) =) DAIRY COMBINE Relief pe ey CAMP NITGEDAIGET LOCAL NEW YORK W.TR. 799 Broadway, Room 221 we night of the convention. T am considered a conserva- ‘This makes me happy, for it to me that the ideas for ‘I have been fighting have mplished.” A new combine of dairies, the Birt- chard Dairies, Inc., composed of three of the largest dairy concerns, has begun operation in the Tidewa- ter area. It will act towards in- creasing prices, it is reported, [___MANHATTAN.__1 1 Union Square New York City BEACON, N. Y. New York Telephone Esterbrook 1400 Gastonia Protest. Telephone Beacon 731 A mass meeting to protest against ¥ the Gastonia frame-ups will be held this evening at the Russian Club. 4652. Fourth Avenue. Speeches will ey Pe cae net a Ake einen t —