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2 ad _ DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK TAU RSDAY, _SULY 25, 1929 Page Five NEGRO CONGRESS RES SUPPORT F THE U.S. SR. to Unite (Continued jrom Page One) the Chinese masses of the fruits of the revolution, leaving the imperial- sts in control of vast areas and re- | sources of China. Chiang is the leader of the treacherous Chinese bourgeoisie (merchants, landlords, bankers, ete.), who, preferring to share with the foreig. imperialists in the exploitation and oppression of the Chinese masses to seeing hese masses liberated and in con- trol of state power. betrayed the ul- | timate aims of the revolution, which were to drive the imperialist oppres- ors out of China. This act of be- rayal of the Chinese masses to the Amperialists is typical not only of the Chinese bourgeoisie but of the bourgeoisie of all oppressed groups, | as clearly demonstrated in the his- | tory of the liberation struggles in| Africa, in India, in the West Indies, and by the Negro masses in the | United States, That Chiang Kai Shek does not represent the Chinese masses is | clearly demonstrated by the state-| ment of the Chinese workers in the United States, denouncing his pro- vocative acts against the Soviet Union, by the unanimous denuncia- tion coming from the Chinese stu- | dents and workers resident in Soviet Russia, and, from the necessity with which he is faced of maintaining power by wholesale slaughter and terrorism. Even while he plays his role of puppet-tool to the imperial- ists of England, the United States, Japan, etc., in provoking war against | the Soviet Union, his power is! threatened by the advance of sev- eral workers and peasants armies in | Fukien, Kiangsi and Kwangtung provinces. If Chiang hopes, by his imperialist venture against the first | workers republic, to divert the at- tention of the Chinese masses from | his regime of murder and treachery, ts is destined to be sadly mistaken. Ve are convinced that now, more than ever before, the Chinese work- and peasants will rally against this imperialist’ tool. In his own armies he will face desertion by the thousands as the clacs-conscious Chi- nese workers and peasants rally for the class struggle, for the defense of | the first workers republic, the So- cialist Fatherland of the workers of | the world, and for the overthrow of the imperialist bandits who seek to | involve China in an attack on Soviet | Russia. The class-conscious Negro workers of the United States clearly under- | stand the nature of the attack upon the Soviet Union. For years, the | Soviet Union has been a thorn in) the side of the imperialists and a| stumbling block to their schemes for | further wars of oppressior and for | intensified exploitation and repres- | sion in the colonies. For ten years pat Russian has stood as a bea-| {f on light..the revolutionary rallying \F nter for .1] the oppressed classes | and races of the world, It is a re- alization of this fact that accounts | for the enmity of world imperialism | to Soviet Russia, for the refusal to) recognize the Soviet Government, | and for the open charge of the im- | perialists that Soviet Russia has given moral and financial support to the revolutionary movements in the colonies. If there was doubt as to the origin | and nature of the present attack upon Soviet Russia one has but to) read the articles and editorials ap-| pearing in the imperialist press to, realize the unanimity of the British, | United States, Japanese, French and | other imperialists in their hostility | toward the workers’ republic. Col- umns of type are being given over | to the attack on Soviet Russia. We} see the significant phenomena of | capitalist papers like thé Daily News, whose policy ordinarily is one | of vicious attack on the. colored races, and whose subsidiary, “Lib- erty” magazine is now running a serial “The Red Napoleon,” in which every effort is made to arouse the’ white workers of this country to racial hetred of everything colored— ——————————————————— EE ee a “. i p the cudgels for the Chinese mili- larists, for Chiang Kai Shek and ther tools of world imperialism. | Negro workers! Chinese workers! Oppressed workers of all races! We must meet the imperialist attack up- on Soviet Russia with iron working- class solidarity! It is class against class! The imperialists and their lackeys against the oppressed races and classes—the oppressors and ex- ploiters against the workers, and peasants of all races, This is the! issue! The attack on the Soviet Un- | ion by the Chinese militarists is only | §, the first move in a general imper- | ialist offensive against the first workers’ republic. Negro workers! Rally to the de- | fense of the Soviet Union! | Defeat American, imperialist in-| trigues in China! Oppose Wall Street loans to the Chinese tools of World Imperialism! Oppose the sending of munitions, arships and advisers to China! Demonstrate August 1 against Im- rialist War! . Against the attack in the Soviet Union! -(Signed) Council of Directors, American Negro Labor Congress. Calls for Oppressed | today |your fraction works elects deleg: we see this chauvinist paper taking |, Built to Crush Out Workers’ Lives cave me Hundreds of duplicates of this new type Christie super-speed tank have been contsructed and are being built by the Wall Street government in preparation for the coming imperialist war, for use _against workers. Communist Activities All units and all members attention! Main tasks for the Units: (1) Defend the Soviet Union, Fight \against the war danger. ‘This is the main task of the Party units, (2) Prepare 4s the anti-war con- ference July (2) Unite to tak issue in all org: ilization for the up, raising the zations, of mob= nt-war conference a) the units (5) Discussion in the units on Len- inist war tactics and aims of Inter- natonal Red Day. (0) Gastonia defense, Eiverzthing to be mobilized for the WIt and week starting July 27th Make the conference on July 20th a mass event, to help establish the Gastonia De- fense Committee of the ILD. (7) Prepare the election machinery for putting the Party ticket on the ballot. (8) vill be informed. Take the preparatory steps |for the TUUC and the conference on August 25th in preparation for tl Cleveland Conference. (9) Every Party comrade mui pay his day’s wage, Funds are, needed to carry on the struggle against the war danger. DIRECTIONS ‘TO ALL FRACTIONS IN TRADE NS AND LAROR ORGANIZATIO (Fraternal, wo- men’s organizations, workers’ clubs, ete.) Meet Immediately on the war dan- |wer, as follows: ‘To prepare for r jing the question ofthe tasks in_r don to the defense of the Sovie Union, Mobilize the masses for a struggle against the war provoea-| tions. See that the organization in which ex to the anti-war conference July 25 (three to five delegates) and to the | Gastonia Conference of the ILD July 26th. Do everything to make the events in which the Party participates suc- cessful, Immediate tasks for all New Jer- sey and up-state New York units in Ine with a program of work sent out today are: (1) Get resolutions passed in all workers’ organizations for defense of the Soviet Union against the war provocations of the Nanking govern- ment backed by the foreign imper- ialists, Immediate arrangement of open air meetings on issue. (2) Immediately send material for special anti-war issue of eyery shop paper we issue. (3) Elect committee of three to carry thra other preparations for August Ist An open air demonstra- tion in every town must be arrang (4) Immediate mobillzation for Second Metropolitan Trade Union Unity Conference in New York Au- gust 20th and National Conyention in Cleveland August Zist. (3) Arrange house to house col- lections and at least one tag day for Gastonia Defense before July 29. DISTRICT COMMITTER. Yorkvitle C. Y. After the unit meeting at 7:30 p. tomorrow unit members will par- le to the open air rally at 110th St. and Fifth Ave. by arrangements with the District Buro Bring ban- ners, drums, horns and any instru- | ment useful in the demonstration, | « m, Unit 1F, 2A, he Comintern Address will be di dat the Workers Center, oth t 6 p. m. today. tive meeting will be held | Eyl p. m., at the fifth floor, Workers Center. ee eed Landy Teaches Communist Class. A class in the Communist . originally scheduled to meet Tuesday night to be taught by Ba Wright, will meet every Fri- | |day night at 7 p. m. at the Workers fes jCenter, A, Landy, will teach. Unit 14, ‘Section 2. A meeting will be held today, 6:30 p. m., at the Workers Center, Room 600. ill be discussed at 6 p, m, to- The C. at the * on 1 Members Meet. memberehip meeting will Secti A sectio be held by Section 1 at 26 Union Square, fifth floor, at 6:30 p, m. to- morrow. * * Unit 12F, Section 1 International Red Day will be dis- cussed at the unit meeting W. 27th St. at 6 p. m. today. USSR Defense Demonstration. A mass open air demonstration ‘wit | be held tomorrow at Intervale and Wilkins Aves. by Branch 4, Section 5 Gap aent War Between China and the U. 8. R.” will be discussed ROO Factory Gate Meeting. A. factory ar Sag dee held today at posite * be DP. m. opposite the Abso-Fresh Burd Company, Flush- ing and Wyckoff Aves. under the gunn} ces of Shop Nucleus 1, Section ‘Labor and Fraternal Organizations W. I, R. Wants Chauffeur. A chauffeur is wanted to drive a Workers International Relief car. Phone Mott Haven 5654, asking for Louis A. Baum. Harlem Bromee ee club. will pa’ the I. R. pienic saturday at Plens- a Bay Park, Meet at club rooms at 1492 Madison Ave, Meet at the club rooms at 1492 Madison Avg.. for the Sunday hike. in Workers Club, against the im- eet attack on the Soviet Inion will be held tomorrow at the Bronx Workers Center at 1320 Wilkins Ave. | lizations of which | Mani- | at 101) |Section of the All-America Imperialist League, will speak, [BROOKLYN Schecter at Boro Park Workers Club, Schecter, of Millinery Lo- Anti- at Workers’ Club tomorrow at 8:30 p. m. at 1378 43rd St. * * * Workers Glub Meets The Workers Club of Brownsville will meet at 154 Watkins St. tomor- row night, es, ie Brighton Open Air Meet. n open air meeting will be held 7th St. and Brighton Beach at 8:30 p.m, today under the of the’ Brighton Beac orkers’ Club the Women's | Council, | at and eee dae | Brighton Beach Concert To Ald LD «WwW. i “Polikushka” will jown at the idnight concert and moyie enter- |tainment to be given at Lakeland Theatre. Brighton Beach and Lake- land Place, Saturday, August 10, at 1:30 p. m,'for the benefit of the In- | ternational Baber Defense and. Work fers International Relief OPEN AIR MEETS | The following list of speakers at open-air meetings today was issued last night with instructions that all {speakers assigned to such meetings must attend. Tenth St. and Second Ave., at 8:15 p.m. Speakers: I. Zimmerman and C. Alexander. Fiftieth St. and Fifth Ave., at 8:15 p.m. Speakers: Dunje and Bloom- field. Comrades to report 42 Bay 28th St. at 8 p. m. | 42nd St. and 18th Ave., at 8:15 p.m. Speakers: Pearl Halpern. To report to 48 Bay 28th St. at 8 p. m. Steinway and Jamaica Ave., As- toria, L. I, at 8 p. m. (Astoria train to Hoyt). Speakers: Harfield, Geo! Powers, Ross and M. Rock. 132nd St. and Lenox Ave. at 8 p. m. Speakers: R. Moore, Fanny Austin, Garcia, Nessin and Patter- son. Brownsville Open-air Meeting, 154 Watkins, at 8 p.m. Speakers: Pri- moff and L. Baum. 150 Varick St., at 8 p. m., Stoney and Patterson. Speaker: William- son. * * Young Communist League demon- trations on Friday, in preparation for August First: Wilkins and Intervale, at 8:15 p. m. Speakers: D. Malkin, D. Lar- _min, E. Epstein, L. Bobrusky, A. Ayeroff, S. Michels, C. Winters, P. | Chaliff. A. Ayeroff in charge: 110th St. and Fifth Ave., at 8:15 p.m. Speakers: M. Himoff, M. Perl, V. Kovaks, M. Silvis, Albert, M. Hel- |fand, S. Slipyam and Casey. M. | Helfand in charge. 182nd St. and Lenox Ave., at 7:45 |p. m. Speakers: E. Welsh, S. Dan- \iels, L. Gannes, S. Brody, L. Oken. L. Gannes in charge. Grand St. Extension, at 8:15 p. m. Speakers: M. Hoffer, M. Gross, Wilson, R. Thacher, M. Stone, M. Spector, D. Davis, R. Sachs. lin charge. | Stone and Pitkin, at 8:15 p. m. Gross Speakers: S. Gudisman, Ryant, L. |Chernenko, Magitson, M. Lurye. | Monday. | Whitehall and South Ferry, at 8 ip. m. Speakers: M. Duke, B. In- trator, Klinghoffer, N. Amter, E. | Marshall, E. Wall, F. Rothman, F. Bailinson, J. Rubinstein. M. Duke lin charge. | Bath Beach—Fifth Ave, and 50th | St. Speakers Litvak, Godessof, Ya- \ris, Mankofsky, Nestor, J. H. Steeie. pee in Spare: |Another | Kills Self Because of Poverty LANSING, Mich., July 24.—Pov- \erty was the cause of the suicide Monday night of Mrs. Mary Doyle, 24-year-old mother. Because she felt that she could not afford the luxury of a second child, she forced her husband to buy the poison which ended her life. The Gastonia Textile Workers’ trial starts July ©"! Twenty-three workers face electrocution or prison terms! Rally all forces to save them. Defense and Relief Week July 27—August 3! Sign the Protest Roll! Rush funds to International Lat r Defense, 80 East 11th Street, New York. The Earl of Kinnoull . Joins “Labor Party” LONDON, July 24.—The Mac Donald imperialist “labor” party hac taken to its bosom another peer the Earl of Kinnoull, proving oncc again that the difference between the ‘hidebound tories and the “la- horites” is the difference between Harriet Silverman, of the New York ‘tweedledum and tweedledee, bd hj terests of the capitalist war” C. | food. MEET IN IRVING PLAZA TONIGHT 20 Worker Bodies to) Participate (Continued from Page One) bureaucrats of the American Fed- eration of Labor, and have militantly | fought the exploitation and the! speed-up system of the bosses. must recognize the seriousness of the present situation and the danger which threatens the Soviet Union jand the working class of the world. | “It is the duty of the workers of our industry to rally to the defense of the Soviet Republic, which is steadily and persistently going ahead with the reconstruction of Ru: and ‘the improvement of the conditions of the workers, and is serving as an inspiration to the workers of all countries. “The workers of our industry must join hands with all other mili- | tant workers of this country in fe world-wide anti-imperialist war dem- onstration August '1, and the prepa- ratory conference which is to take place Thursday, July 25.” On Tuesday, the conference of the | women’s organizational department of the Independent Shoe Workers Union unanimously passed a resolu- tion calling upon all workers “to op- pose all war activity and to refuse to serve in any capacity in the in-} and | to “defend the first workers’ and | peasants’ government of the U. S.| S. R. against any and all attacks by the imperialist and capitalist gov- ernments.” L. S. U. Supports Aug. 1. The Labor Sports Union an- nounces that it has completed plans to actively participate in the} cnormous Anti-Imperialist War Day | demonstrations throughout the cour- | try on Aug. 1. In the larger in- dustrial centers, where the workers will demonstrate in the streets, the members of the L. S. U. will march at the head of ah demonstrators, wearing athletic uniforms. In those sections of the country where in- door mass meetings are held, L. S. U. sections wil] furnish athletic pro- grams. | “SOLITARY” FOR CLINTON JAILED | 1,568 Closely Guarded After Mutiny DANNEMORA, N. Y., July 24.— Some 150 Clinton prisoners who led the mutiny of 1,300 against fright- ful jail conditions were forced in solitary confinement today while of- | ficials conducted the traditional “in | vestigation” into the insurrection in| which three defenseless priconera | were shot and some 20 injured. Most of the 1,568 inmates were denied customary “privileges” like the ten-minute exercise. The few permitted to walk the yards did so} under extra heavy guard. Man after man refused to tell de- tails of the protest demonstration when three officials barraged them with questions. They sneer at the investigation, which they know from bitter experience is conducted for the benefit of the records. The mass protest, in which the participants |faced certain death rather then drag cut a weary existence in the disease. breeding cells, was caused, as offi- cials know, by the long hours en- forced in the prison industrial plants, lack of free time and rotten >—.—$$ > Letter to Governor Said Workers Would Defend Headquarters) GASTONIA, N. C., July 23—| | Following is the letter which) Governor Gardner is subpoenaed | by the International Labor De- fense to show at the Gastonia trial, July 29. It was sent by Roy Stroud, of the strike com- mittee, on May.16, just after the first union headquarters and re- lief station was destroyed by Manville-Jenckes hirelings, and \ plainly warns the governor that the strikers would defend them- selves if another such raid were attempted against their new head- quarters, then building. The striker wrote Gardner: “Sir: “The textile strikers of Gas- tonia are building with their own | |hands a new union headquarters to take the place of the one de- || molished by thugs while state | | militia men were looking on. The new building is about to be fin- ished and the dedication will takc place next Saturday evening be- fore thousands of workers. “It is rumored around Gastonic that enemies of the workers, in- spired by the mill owners, ar: plotting to wreck our new head { quarters within three days afte dedication. The strike committe took the matter up today and dc- cided that it is useless to expect the one-sided Manville-Jencke: law to protect the life and prop- erty of the many striking textil ' workers of Gastonia. “Every striker is determined tc , defend the new union headquer: | | ters at all costs. || Gigned) “Chairman of the | Strike Committee, Roy Stroud.” } ——$$—$—$— | Standard company already holds a} | the |must now realize the role which they HUGE ANTI-WAR Rockefellers Grab ‘Doheny’s Imperial ‘Pan-Amenica Co.’ CHICAGO, July 24.—The Stand-| stock, ard Oil Company of Indiana by ac- jority. quisition of the Pan American Standard of Indiana is one of the Sia SS aa largest refining and marketing oil Petroleum and Transport Company, compant ia the’ anidereats ce hile jis planning one of the biggest oil’ pan-American is a leader in the mergers since the days of the old/crude oil field, with properties in Standard Oil trust, the United States, South America and Mexico. Announcement: of the plans were|*"n. ; : 3 jmade yesterday by Edward G. Seu- The Pan-American, an essentially | bert, president of the company, ‘Thai imperialist venture, was originally eed eoapeny dente igs ¢|owned by Doheny, The Standard of | |Indiana, at the time it was in re- bellion against the Rockefellers under President Stewart, some time of auch Indiana held a ma- controlling interest in the voting} stock of the Pan American company, but does not own a majority of all Boek. ago entered into a deal with Do- s we heny to take over half his stock. The consolidation will bring under, This gives the Rockefellers, who one company properties valued at| have now ousted Stewart and taken $755,000,000, Pan-American has 1,-| over the Indiana Standard, a chance 000,000 shares of $50 par class A to finish off the Doheny holdings, stock and 2,422,041 eres of $50|and add’ the Pan-American to their class B, The class is voting |other imperialist enterprises. MAKE ATTACK MOONLITE KRUZ’ AS PIONEERS 60 HM, SO DUNT ESK Workers " Slugeed By Mees ter ‘Feitlebaum Police, Ship Thugs Guzz Pye de Ducter (Continued from Page One) Goot monnik, ducter. ers were suddenly attacked from Wal, wal, wal! Could dees was the rear by the thugs and the po- | Meester Feitlebaum? lice who had gathered for the at- Could dees was hees seester? tack. One worker, Joseph Esu-| ‘Tree munnuts I dunt seeink you. vin, was hit on the neck So, how’s everytink by you, Maw- and head with a blunt instru- | russ? ment and then trampled by the po-| Yi, yi, yi, yi. lice. He and several others had to|you esking yat. receive medical treatment. On Saturday, when the Young Pioneers held a- demonstration against the Boy Scouts leaving for Fullish quastions Did I comink hirr to gat it hinsults? Tek, tek, tek. His somting rung? Hiss hall rong. Whooy! Gull stuns you got it maybe? the “jamboree” in Europe, it was| Gull stuns mine heye. A_per- reported that the boat at that time | scription I nidd it. wes held up for 20 minutes. Hmmmmmm. You lookink ron Some cf the workers had cam-/40n. Lat’s we'll see whats de met- | eras with them, and the police tried |te*. (Thump, thump, thump.) especially to beat up those and; Oops! A chiroprecter you bicame smash their cameras. already, wot you tritting de patients | ig like ponching begs. I nidd it a per- | | scription, I’m taling you. Ha! Hirr iss wot you nidd it, Party Denounces Attack. The district office of the Commu-! |nist Party, District 2, yesterday is-| Meester Feitlebaum, wot hit’s bad- sued the following statement en the | der dan heny perscription. attack of the police: Hmmmmm. So? - “The furious pogrom of the po-| Look, it stends hirr in de Daily lice on the children who were ccle-| Woiker wot'll be a moonlite hexcur- brating the departure of the Chil-/ sion Haugust Nint hop de Hudson dren’s Delegation to the Soviet Reever, witt moosic witt dencing Union marks a bloody landmark in | hopp witt don witt a costim ball yat. intensified struggle of the} Woops! How moch’ll gonna be? bosses’ government to crush work-| Honly wan duller’ witt feefty ers’ organizations. tcents, chipper dan’ll cust you a per- “Fhe children of the scription, Mawruss han no denger from weoden halcohol. Woops! Goot pye, ducter. Denks |werry moch. Hi’m filling batter halrady. Whee! es Werr you gung all from workers must play in their joint struggle with the adult workers against cap- italist Spurge TS re N.J.BANK CRASH HITS WORKERS “LABOR” DITCHES Headed by Former BRITISH MINERS, Tammany G EAST ORANGE, N. J., July 24.— \Cotton Workers Strike Hundreds of poor workers—many of | Seems Sure them eking out a meager existence | in the textile mills—faced ruin to- he day as the Hobart Trust Company | LONDON, July 24.—The “Labor” of Passaic and two of its subsidiary | $°vernment has now ble that banks were closed by order of the|'t is finding “unexpected” difficulty New Jersey State Department of |im redeeming the many pledges to Banking and Insurance. Total as-| the workers which it made so boun- rey Daily Weiker hoffice to gat it fy flock from teeckets! S$" ea eA SMa sets of the bank are said to be|tifully when the party was “His $5,000,000, although Frank H. |Majesty’s Opposition,” instead of Smith, Commissioner of Building |“His Majesty’s Government. and Insurance, says the capital has| Two of the chief groups of work- Leen impaired to the extent of |ers who continue to suffer as great- $200,000. jly under the MacDonald government ‘ .|as they did under the Tories are the rear e ae ee and sudden re8P-|coal miners and the 500,000 cotton ecutive vice-president, Willard H. | workers of Lancashire. The latter Elliott, a month ago had strength- | threatened to strike en masse if the ened the suspicions of those close employers’ notice of a 12% per cent |to the bank’s affairs that greftwas|Wage cut is not withdrawn by) swallowing the assets. The bank's | July 29. | president is former United States | The Laborites today announced Senator Edward I. Edwards, gov-/|that action n the seven-hour day ernor of New Jersey from 1920-|for coal miners, promised the miners 1923. Edwards is active in the Tam- | jin the Labor party’s election ctam- many Hall organization, whose New | paign, will not be considered until York members are largely impli- | Autumn. cated in the City Trust swindle. | After Sir Horace Wilson, perma- Textile Workers Hit. nent secretary of the Labor Party Crowes of poorly-clad workers ac met with a Lancashire cotton from the mill district gathered at the |employers’ committee this afternoon, office of the Merchants Bank, one | it was announced that the govern- of the subsidiary organizations, at | ment had found “no satisfactory so- | Passaic and Second Sts., this morn-| lution for the crisis in the cotton ing. They were forced back by po- | industry. Kee reserves, summoned by those; 4 poll of Lancashire cotton opera- who breught about the crash. |tives showed that 91.3 per cant of An inventory of the bank stocks |the mill hands were for a strike on hy Commissioner Smith shows that | July 29 if their demands on wages, ‘cnly about 32 per cent of the de-|hours and working conditions re- posits are covered by securities | mained unmet, quickly convertible into cash. The halance is made up of long-term slow paper of doubtful value. The yeal estate shown on the books is lso as fictitious as the famous Fer- vari City Trust entries. Asked whether criminal. action ill be taken against the bank offi- ‘als, Smith conveniently referred tre question to the public prosecu- tor. Farmers, Workers School in Michigan SUPERIOR,* Wis., July 24.— Workers’ and farmers’ mass organi- zations, and units of the Communist Party and Communist Youth League in the Minnesota, Wisconsin and Michigan territories are represented at the Communist Youth League training summer schools here and at Negaunee, Mich. Both courses The Gastonia Textile Workers’ ‘ial starts July 29! Twenty-three / workers face electrocution or | aig being held for six weeks, ‘ison terms! Rally all forces to s a ak cove them. ‘Defenso and Relicf The schools aim to train working youth for service in the class strug- gle, and subjects studied to this end include the history of the American international working class Week July 27—August 3! Sign “e Protest Roll! Rush funds to "aternational Labor Defense, 80 Py and Fast 11th Street, New York. ement, public speaking and| Not only has the courzcatnieierkers’ correspondence, orged the weapons that bring | | ft haa also called men who are to After every revolution marking a Aa 1,000,000 TOILERS ON ROLL, |. LD, GOAL IN DRIVE Call on Workers to Aid 15 Victims | Daily Worker The mass protest petition will be Din. y the answer of the toilers down in the mine, of the steel workers, of | Pleasant Bay Park the fellow textile workers, of the car || workers of New Orleans, the auto ers of Detroit, to the Gastonia jterror. (Continued from Page One) raise $50,000, to gain members for the I D, to reach 100,000 by the | end of the trial, to carry on the W. | I. R. work of feeding 100 families | of Gastonia strikers. } picnic Watch for Announcements Y | wo! The International Labor Defense jand the Workers International Re-| \lief, sponsoring Gastonia Defense and Relief Week, have received as- ees ances from thousands of workers the signatures will reach more than a, million. They must come from jevery section of the working |that is fighting the horrors that {drove the Southern textile workers to go out on the streets to strike. ‘dof insurance” ARL BRODSK 5550 7 East 42nd Street, New ‘York “For Any Ki C class Telephone; Murray Hil. The million signatures will say to the bosses, “We know your prepara- | Coonerators! Patrenian \tions for imperialist war against the Soviet Union. We know that speed- S E R O Y {up and wage-cut, that drove the |Southern workers into the ate CgEMIST jare the ear marks of the period Bea eT 5 |directly before the war.” 657 Allerton’ Aveiie ‘ Estabrook Bronx, N. ¥. Every worker must realize the im- portance of one million signatures for the Gastonia strikers. Their trial begins Monday. The electric chair is waiting unless the workers heed the call of the fifteen who wrote to the International Labor | Defense, at 80 E. 11th Street, N. Y. yesterday, the following message: Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST 249 EAST 115th STREET Cor. Second Ave. New York Office hours: Mon,, Wed., Sat, 9.80 #to 6 P.M m. to 125 Tues, ‘Thurs. 2 to 8 p.m, Sunday, 10 a olp.m. Please telephone for nppointment. Telephone: Lehigh 6022 | “Only by workers being aroused to the realization of our danger and of the importance and significance of the Gastonia case can we be saved| The lower middle class, e ten-| manufacturer, the shopkeeper, from electrocution or the peniten San he tee ct ee ae | tiary.” again bourgeoisie, u electrocuted! | from fon their They shall not, he electrocuts fractio f the middle They shall not serve long years in |are therefore not revolut the Southern dungeons! conservative-—Karl Marx They shall be returned im- aa mediately to the ranks of the mili- DR. J. MINDEL tant workingclass movement! Send your delegates to the Gas- SURGECN DENTIST | tonia Defense and Relief Week Con- 1 UNION SQUARE Reom 803—Phone: Algonquin 8188 ference in Irving Plaza tomorrow! 5 Not connected with any ight. : Pe other office REFUSE BAIL 2 TO MINERICH) ** 2 ot 351 E. 77th St., New York, N. Y. Tel. Rhinelander 3916 Comrade Militant Miner Held in| Coaldale Jail | POTTSVILLE, Pa. July 24.—/ Squire Fisher of Coaldale today re-| fused the International Labor De-| |fense offer to bail out Tony Min- Unity Co-operators Patronize SAM LESSER Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailor 1818 = 7th Ave. New York Between 110th and 111th Sts. erich, National Executive Board |} Next to Unity Co-operative House member of the National Miners’) Union, who was arrested on a MELROSE framed up charge here several} a, days ago. Dai vi 'TARIAN ineri q ive i ALY RESTAURANT Minerich has been very active in omenaee yn aie eae joceeueee ace work for the N. M. U., jand in the fight against the Lewis bureaucracy in the old United Mine | | Workers. He served 45 days re- cently for yiolation of a federal | anti-strike injunction. Pleasant to Dine at Our Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx (near 174th St, Station) PHONE:— INTERVALE 9149. MEET YOUR FRIENDS at Messinger’s Vegetarian and Dairy Restaurant 1763 Southern Blyd., P-onx; N. ¥. Right off 174th St. Subway Station Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx trial starts July 29! Twenty-three worke-; face electrocution or prison terms! Rally all forces to save them. Defense and Relief Week July 27—August 3! Sign | the Protest Roll! Rush funds to International Labor Defense, 80 East 11th Street, New York. | RATIONA | Vegetarian RESTAURANT | 199 SECOND AVEl UE | Bet. 12th and 18th Sts. Strictly Vegetariun Food |FURNISHED ROOMS, Now is your opportunity to get a room in the magnificent Workers Hotel Unity Cooperative House 1800 SEVENTH AVENUE OPPOSITE CENTRAL PARK Cor. 110th Street Tel. Monument 0111 Due to the fact that a number of tenants were compelled to leave the city, we have a num- ber of rooms to. rent. No security necessary, Call at our -HEALTH FOOD ottice for further information, Vegetarian ; RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNlversity 5865 All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S “Tel: DRY¥dock 8880 FRED SPITZ, Inc. FLORIST NOW AT 31 SECOND AVENUE (Bet, 1st & 2nd Sts.) Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant Flowers for All Occasions| | speciaLry: 1aLian visuEs 15% REDUCTION TO READERS A_ place with atmosphere OF THE DAILY WORKER where all radicals meet 302 E.12th St. New York = Patronize No-Tip Barber Shops 26-28 UNION SQUARE (1 flight up) 2700 BRONX P’ “K EAST (corner Allerton Ave.) Advertise your Union Meetings here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City Hotel and Restaurant Workers Branch of the Amalgamated Cooperators! PATRONIZE | ,BERGMAN BROS. saga eee: Worrene od yaad Cigars, Cigarettes, Candy, Toys 649 Allerton Ave. BRONX, N. ¥. Telephone: Olinville 9681-2—9791-2 Tie ESS M sear of