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D ATLY WORKER, W YORK, THURSDAY, AUGUST 22, 1929 AORLD WORKERS American Masses Ready ~ TONOR SACCO, HIT GASTONIA TODAY U.S. and Abroad (Continued from Page One) protest’ against the war plots against the U. S. S. R. 4 Expect Vast Demonstration. re-echo in the Charlotte court when | the trial of the 16 workers charged | with murder opens there Monday. The New York District of the In- Gastonia is the chief sector on the Big Demonstrations in | battlefront of American labor today, | knecht sai fighting the war against wage-cuts and rationalization, the speed-up, for Gastonia Campaign ‘Opens Aug. 24 With Tag Days; Expect $15,000 From New York, Saturday and Sunday while he is yet young,” Wagen- id. “Thousands of signa- |tures on the mass protest continue |to pour in demanding the release | Page Five GERMANY ASKS COURT REFUSES Fraternal Organiza AGREEMENT. ON QUICK TRIAL IN YOUNG PAYMENT HARLEM ARRESTS Britain and U.S. Strive Party Speakers to!/™ For Her Support Continue Meetings | Freihelt Mandolin Ore The orchestra, under the | of Jacob Schaefer, April, and invites the mandolin to ptional players will be in- to the orchestra; others will instruction in the cl now conducted, The club rooms, 14th St., are open Mondays and at 8.00 p.m 106 ursdays Brass WLR. The W.LR tions JAPANESE MOVE. OPS TOWARD SOVIET BORDER and for that reason Gastonia is the | of the strikers,” Wagneknecht said. battle of every working man, wo-| Engdahl stated that the Interna- man and child in America. tional Labor Defense, country-wide, This was the gist of the declara-|Was using every ounce of strength i > ont 5 egister with Comrade Col at its | (Continued from Page One) (Contmed from PagelOxs) f° register. with Comrade Cohen. at its sion of reparations does not’ affect being demanded by the police in the between 4 and #, or to send in Appli- ‘Sparta Tashington ai jeations by mail’ A meeting wil be that count: No one has raised | Washington Heights Courts. ‘i ufficient number ness band and invites called as soon as a (Continued fror Page One) new ¢ th The mass protest of the workers of New York is expected to be of | such great proportions that it will | tions made tday by Alfred Wafen- knecht, secretary of the Gastonia Joint Defense and Relief ‘Committee, J. Louis Engdahl, secretary of the jInternational Labor Defense and |James Reid, president of the Na- tional Textile Workers Union All are working night and day lin the fight to save the Gastonia | prisoners, by means of. the Gasto- |nia Joint Defense and Relief Cam- paign. “There are new locals of the In- |ternational Labor Defense forming | everywhere. The other day we re- |eeived word of eleven new branches s and vacations both on jof players have the part of judges and police officers are being used as subterfuges to de- | lay an actual decision. [wv ty The ten members of the Com-|%, SaccerVanzett! memorial munist Party, some of them arrested | the Ukranian Hall, 1 two and three times, appeared in the | Thursday events s ; Ip.m. There will hington Heights Court on Mon-|lish and Ukray ned up. any objections to the three billion dollar reduction proposed by the Young Plan. In fact, owden, “Jabor” chancellor of the exchequer, who represents the bankers and in- dustriali: ingland, has express: ed hir n favor of still lower reparations, payments from Ger- Sneeo Meet. will hold Jersey Workers Jersey City City be n ummer fes * which th sharper The de union | ternational Labor Defense and the/on the mobilization of the workers |in Chicago and environs alone.” New York Local of the Workers In-/quring Gastonia defense and relief| “There is a nation-wide wave of ternational Relief are jointly ar-| week, Aug. 24 to Sept. 2 to save the |police terrorism against labor,” anging this great Sacco-Vanzetti| Gastonia strikers who go on trial |Engdahl stated, “because of the Jersorat Gastonia Defense and Re-| Aug, 26 at Clarlotte, N.C |growing militancy of the workers. ef demonstration. They stressed the necessity of tag | The fact that the bosses are cutting Yesterday noon and evening 12/ days, of the descent into the streets | wages and speeding up the workers mobilization rallies were held in 12| by workers during the Gastonia de-|everywhere is the reason for the different sections of the city in|fense and relief campaign every day |growth in militancy, With the in- | preparation for today’s demonstra-/ of the drive, Aug. 24 to Sept. 2. jerease in the fighting mood comes tion, Gastonia is the keynote of} «we expect to raise $15,000 in| corresponding increase in police the Sacco-Vanzetti meetings, and|New York alone during tag day. |ppression. Gastonia is one sector special emphasis is being laid on ‘The subwa the intensive Joint Defense and Re-| gates, workers in factories, every |Of the period in which the capital- 2 |by means of these tag days,” the |Viet Union with the hope of de- order to raise all available funds, and signatures for the mass protest petition, and create a storm of pro- test to save the Gastonia prison- ers from the chair or long terms in prison. The International Labor Defense, on the second anniversary of the murder of Sacco and Vanzetti, calls on the whole working class to mobil- ize for the growing campaign to free the Gastonia prisoners. Mobilize at the Sacco-Vanzetti- Gastonia demonstration this after- noon a tfive o'clock at Union Square, New York City, and in other cities | wherever mass demonstrations are held to commemorate the memory of Textile Not cne life in the electric chair. Not one day in prison. and Vanzetti! Mobilize to liberate the Gastonia prisoners. Signed—International Labor De- fense, J. Louis Engdahl, National Secretary. ‘NO ARBITRATION,’ Tag Days Saturday, Sunday | functionaries pointed out. stroying the First Workers’ Repub- New York workers will be called) ‘They said that tag days on Aug. |lic in the world.” upon at the demonstration to ac-| 94 and 25, and on the last three days| Reid stated that the National tively participate in the Gastonia| of the drive Aug. 31, Sept. 1 and 2|Textile Workers Union is most in- Defense and Relief Tag Days to be’ will be among the principal features | terested in the case, inasmuch as held Saturday and Sunday. These | of the campaign to raise funds. | the defendants on trial are all mem- tag days must yield at least $10,000, “The masses are responding with | bers of the N. T, W. U. it is declared. enthusiasm to our campaign and| “Our members in the North, as The huge demonstration in Union | there will be armies of workers de-| Well as the South, are mobilized to Square today is part of the demon-|scending into the streets, going be- jsee that the Gastonia strikers are strations being keld today and to-'fore factory gates, increasing the | freed.” He said that the N. T. W. morrow in every industrial section | numbers of signatures on the mass | U, would be on the streets, before of the country and in many foreign’ petitions, making house to house | the shop gates, in mass meetings, cities. In ease of rain it will be|collections Aug. 24 to Sept. 2,” postponed till tomorrow at the same Wagenknechi said today. hour, The fight to save the 23 strikers | In addition to the Union Square and members of the National Tex- | demonstration, four section meet- tile Workers Union is also a fight ings will be held at 8 o’clock to- against the wage cut, against speed- night at Tompkins and Hart Sts.,/up which saps a man’s strength Washington and Claremont Park- way, 146th St. and Seventh Ave., . ind E. Seventh St, and Brighton I L D St: t t R ll 3each Ave., Brighton Beach, A e e ° a emen a 1es meeting will also be held tomorrow | Sous : ight at 50th St. and Fifth Ave, t D aoe tee Millions to Gaston Drive A large number. of militant work- ing class organizations are cooper-| Two years ago at midnight the ating with the I. L. D. and W. I. R.’ capitalist class pulled an electric in today’s demonstration. Many’ switch, unleashing a death dealing prominent leaders of the struggles | current that hurned out the lives of of the American workers will speak |jhosa two brave fighters for the including William Z, Foster, Robert | working class, Bartolomeo Vanzetti Minor, Max Bedacht, William W.) and Nicola Sacco. Weinstone, J. Louis Engdahl, Alfred| Today the capitalist handis itch- | Wagenknecht, H. M. Wicks, M. J.\ing to pull another switch. This | Olgin, Juliet Stuart Poyntz, Jack time, not in “blue-blooded Boston,” Stachel, Fred Biedenkapp, Harold | but in the heart of the pellagra Williams, George Maurer, Karl country, Charlotte, North Carolina. Reeve, Ben Gold, Rose Wortis, Re-| This time, not two lives, but six-/ Sacco and Vanzetti and prepore for becca Grecht, Sam Darcy, H. Sa-/ teen are in danger. Sixteen valient | the defense of the Gastonia workers zer, George Pershing, Harriet Sil-| fighters for the working class, mem- | who go to trial on Monday, in Char- verman, Sidney Bloomfield, Walter bers of the strong, unbeatabie Na- | iotte, North Carolina. Burke, Jim Reid and others. | tional Textile Workers Union, are in} Prepare for the Joint Gastonia De- .tabgP anno |danger of electrocution because of |fense and Relief Week, Aug. 24 to Huge Protests Abroad | their loyalty to the working class. | Sept. 2, during which every worker The extent to which the dimen-| Pecause they waged a war against | is called on to aid in the Tag Days ions of the Gastonia case have | bosses who force men, women and | to go forward on the streets, in the ‘own internationally, _ enlisting| children to waste their lives in the| shops and factories, at the shop Fores of millions of workers on be- textile dens, twelve hours a day, | gates, to raise the sorely needed half of the strikers, can be guaged| for $10 to $12 a week, they endan- | funds to fight the huge treasure by the many protest demonstrations | gered the profits of those bosses. | chest of the textile mill _ barons being arranged in foreign countries.) In America that is the greatest | placed at the disposal of their pros- The wave of international protest|¢rime. Endangering the profits of | ecutors. which may soon exceed even ‘at! the boss is punishable by death. And) Build the International Labor De- for Sacco-Vanzetti, indicates that | the capitalist class sits like a horde|fense into a mass organization of the capitalists of this land will be of jackals waiting to gorge on the | the workers in the shops, miles and foreed to deal not «aly with the| bodies of sixteen young men and | mills, and on the railroads. Amerjean workingelass but with the| women, Fight for the National prolefariat of the world. | m 0 r < General Strikes the International Labor Defense, in| ganize the brutally exploited South- Not only cabelgrams of protest, thousands of cities of America, in| ern textile workers. but general strikes such as in Monte-| Europe,.in South America, in Asia,| Uphold the right of the workers video, Uruguay and Rosario, Argen-| Africa, prepare for new struggles | to defend themselves against the at- tina, are being called to commemo-| with the capitalist jackals. rate Sacco-Vanzetti’s execution by, The memory of Sacco-Vanzetti | protesting on behalf of the Gastonia| sweeps through the world like a strikers, | clear call to greater battles. Demonstrations are ‘9 be held in| The International Labor Defense | every big city of the world, Moscow, | of the United States, throvgh its Paris, Berlin, London, and in every| campaign of publicity, its hundreds big. industrial center. of thousands of pamphlets, its speak- The Working Women of Germany,| ers, its organizational activities has in convention at Hamburg, joined the| let the world knows what to expect long list of protests in a cablegram MARION NTW AND they sent yesterday to the nations: office of tne Gastonia Joint Defense and Relief Committee. Cuban Emigres Send Solidarity the streets, the factory |of that field. These are earmarks | lief Campaign from Aug. 24 to Sept. | place will be utilized to raise funds |ist nations are encircling the So-| the week of Aug. 24 to Sept. 2, in| But the millions of members of | Workers Union in its efforts to or- | | tacks of the police of the exploiters. | Remember the murde rof Sacco | | many, and would go as far as to open the question of cancellation of } | day morning, when the whole pro- | ceeding was continued until Tues- §, Soviet Fliers, Receptio; The deleg r Sept lub t 1 here Every we the whole thing. Yesterday new continuances following ons at the 4 ia _ fy ere. ridon' 9 German Support Sought ight over ihe energetic pro-| 1% conferen by the a t., New York. All welc sar NN % en ea .|are to take part in the special meet- The reviving imperialism of Ger- |tests of the Communists, represent-| are, to take pai | many is playing the game at the /¢d by Attorney Jacques Buitenkant |'" unbiand ManOD anal SRR ERE Sate > . he ernationa 7 ense, | Th p.m, 1 Hague forall i ie worth |of the International Labor Defense, | Thu pete Bem I iinaria tats who demanded an immediate trial. | 72% Hal, 8: ‘Friday, Au Grdet to Bene bed Gar Judge Luigi Delagi refused to pro-| 6.30 p.m., 175 5th Ave., room 304 ist class and their social democrati agents into the orbit of Ame imperialist influence against Britain, reduces the reparations through the ; Young Plan, Then the English social democrats in the labor ernment, speaking in behalf of Brit- ish imperialism, counter, after a long deadlock, with intimations of fur- ther debt reductions and eventually cancellation, while at the same time ordering immediate evacuation of German territory. The Germans are getting all they can from both sources without yet \definitely committing themselves to j either side of the world-wide imper- ialist conflict. Cannot Solve Contradictions. It is pointed out, however, that even though Germany were further relieved of reparations payments it would not aid British industry |cept to a minor degree inasmuch as it would deprive Germany of a gu |anteed market through paymen |kind. But the heavy Wall Street investments in German industry will |be an incentive to aid Germany se- cure markets at the expense of Bri- | tain and Germany itself will, of /candidate for congress and F Hunt's Point, at 8 p. m., speakers,|“' 1°4 ¥ necessity, enter into fiercest compe-| Austin, candidate for alderman. 8 sf “ke i 2 i ae 5 pe 0 am Nesin, S. Pollock; Tompkins \tition with Brii'’sh ind The Perry Murphy, candidate for i |fact that German indus’ {more highly rationalized t : ish and can undersell British prod- jucts makes the position of the lat- jter more difficult. Hence nothing that happens at the Hague or any jother conference can fundamentally Jalter economic forces that, in the |last analysis, always determine po- litical alienments, Order Given Soldiers. | The Frankfurt correspondent of |the Vossiesche Zeitung reported to- day that the commander of the Bri- tish forces of occupation at Weis- baden had received official teleg- lraphie orders from London to be- gin preparations for evacuation, be- | ginning in September and to be com- pleted in thirty da s far i | START FUND FOR ‘Vote Communist’ Says | Party Button (Continued fi ment, the capit: | political cha m Page One) t el nd all its when they are redoubling their ef- forts to avert another Sacco-V: murder on a larger the Gastonia consy | time to build the Communis lutionary struggle against the cap- italist state and all its forces.” Party contribution lists are being distributed among workers in strat- egic shops in the city, the campaign committee reports. Signature Drive Progresses. Section One of the Party has won the first heat in the signature race gov- | | which at all times maintains a revo- | ae Bath Beach Sacco Meet.. The Bath Beach Branch of the ILD | OPEN AIR MEETS Perth Ambo: jf. at 8 p.m, 308 Elm St., speaker, G. Spiro; Jer-| sey City, N. Y. (Ukrainian Workers’ Home, 160 Mercer St.), 7:30 p. m., speaker, A. Suskind; Newark, N. J., speaker, N. Kaplan; Paterson, N. J. (Main and Bank Sts.), 8 p. speaker, N. Ross; to report to 154 Watkins St. at 8 p.m. D. Morgan and A, Schalk; 79th St. and First ceed with the case even after the Communists had definitely announc- {ed that they would continue to hold open air meeting in Harlem while the present cases were pending. The case involving Irving Dunjee and Fred Taylor, arrested for dis- jtributing literature at an open air meeting at 188th Street and Seventh Avenue was then set for Sept. 20. The case growing out of the ar- rests on Tuesday night, August 13th, of Abe Tomkin, Nat Cohen, Leonard Patterson, Harold Williams, Jack Rosen, Sol Harper and J. Louis} Engdahl was continued until Thurs- day, August 29th. | The same fate met the case of | Fred Taylor, Howard Williams, Abe |Ave., at 8:15 p. m., speakers, Eber,| Suskin and Bernard Lewis, was set| Myer; Brighton Workers’ Club, E.| for today. ln i nh Awa Ghe ceeoiof Harold Williama; Dich ee ote ee trict Negro Director, Communist | § p.m. speakers, Paul Miller, A. Party, Albert Weisbord and’ Albert Striz; Steinway and Jamaica Ave., Glassford was also put off until| Astoria, L. I, at 8 p. m., (Astoria train to Broadway), speakers, Wm. | August 29th, Frank, Harfield; 132nd | St. All the arrests were made in the 21st Aldermani the 21st Con- HADI elee A nich oies | Letiox Ave.) at'@ pl in, speakers Al Overgaard, Harfield; 163rd St. and H m., th and 1 District in Harlem, where 3. Moore is the Communist (assembly. | The workers in Harlem are plan- | A: ning enegetic activities to build the ington and Claremont Parkway, at Harlem branch of the International!8 p. m., speakers, Sazar, C. Weiss- Labor Defense in order to be able |berg, S. Ziebel; 146th St. and 7th the better to fight the police perse-|Ave., at 8 p. m., speakers, I. Zim- cution that is being lirected against/merman; Union Square, 5 p. m., them. | speakers, C. Reeve, J. L. Engdahl,| One of their first activities 1:nder |W. Foster, Williams, Bloomfield, W. |the banners of the LL.D. will be to| Weinstone, Sazar, M. Bedacht, R. join whole-heartedly in the Ten-Day | Minor, J. Stachel, F. Wagenknecht, drive of the Gastonia Joint Defense |G. Pershing, R. Grecht, H. Wicks, | 4 and Relief Campaign, August 24 to/J. S. Poyntz, Olgin, G. Maurer, F.| September 2 | Biedenkapp, R. Wortis, W. Burke. . Garcia, G. Welsh, L. Baum; Wash- | ‘ | | | George M. Cohan Ready | te to Launch New Season. AT TRE PALACE COHAN is ready to| new season. His latest Geckce M 2 launch hi Theatre next Monday night. Cohan w and Hart St. at 8 p. m., speakers,| W Cent of the Cc. 2, 9.00 All heer worke bu p.m er St * Athletes, Attention! will cer and thos building of through athletic ited. Oe: Workers School Volunteers, The ation ades who are or on. hats. he W knowledge Ary, y Pa of the speakers. Jean Schwartz and oth Workers Si for the fall te unemployed, who ha on vac: * demonstra up t mor Nat K I r Wath Cominunist Activities Section 7 Open The following outdoor electi paign rallies have Brooklyn August All members of and candidates for the executive unit organi members of Pes, A special meeting for sion of the Tenth Plen be held Friday, Aug. the Workers Center |the new headqua |corner of 28th St effort, “Gambling,” which is playing ee WORKER ' jat_the Werba’s Brooklyn Theatre Beginning “Monda f J | this week, will come to the Fulton units of Sections will meet to discuss the jof the Tenth Plenum of the C Aug. Air Rallies. been a ged f hursda venth Stre: Ave.; Frida 1 St. and Fif 24, 8.00 p by Section 8.00 p.m., § on Beach * Section 2 ‘ommittee of Section all section sub-commi 6 p.m., at the Worke floor. A representati *. will be present Cae Un 14, Section 2 the discu um thesis w 3, 6.30 p.m, Mili cam- m., , unit buro members, hea 1. 6 to have A number ns are missing ained for t' leader, been tortu ther So Savras, i t citi nd | of oj th and fe live are rs|Harlem Tenants Open -|Air Meeting Tonight Tena ai The Harlem hold an oper night s League will meeting to- jth Ave, e to meet 0 p.m., and e where 1&8 |march to thi Richard B. Mc ty candidate for |21st district, and ot tive workers will meetir cc 1 Build Up the United Front of t| the Working Class From the Bot- tom Up—at the Enterprises! |“For Any Kind of Insurance” (FARL BRODSKY Telephone: Murray Hil, S550 7 East 42nd Street, New York >, Unity Co-operators Patronize SAM LESSER Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailor 1818 - 7th Ave. New York Between 110th and 111th Sts. Next to Unity Co-operative House Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF ON DENTIST 115th STREET . Second Ave. ffice hours: Mon., Wed., 2 to 6 P. Thurs., 9.30 a, m. to 12; % to 8 pom. Sunday, 10 a. m. to 1 p.m. Please telephone for appointment. Telephone: Lehigh 6022 or yy et th tr Tues., to 1 R. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Reom 803—Phone: Algonquin 8188 Not connected with any other office Fa — i- rs ve in in Cooperators! Patronize 's not only the author and producer, but will play the leading role in the production. Others in the cast in- de Mary Philips, Isabel Baring, Middlemass and Harold | Outside of the mystery play men- Patronize No-Tip Barber Shops 26-28 UNION SQUARE Q. flight up) SEROY CHEMIST 657 Allerton Estabrook 3215 Avenue Bronx, N. Y. Broadway footlights in September; Y, Z,” a melodrama by Sam For- | ‘vest booked for the following month; “True to Form,” a comedy by Cohan and a musical play also by himself. Marco revue, a feature of the bill at the Palace this week. | eee ee eee shown at the Film Guild Cinema, | represents the first work of Alex- ender Strizhak and Dmitri Poznan- ski. To the technically-minded, their achievement is incredible. Not only do they bring to the screen every possible detail and nuance of tech- nique, but they give the film “such a marvelous fluency,” as one critic characterized it. “Her Way of Love” “A Night in Venice,” the revue starring Ted Healy, will reach its 100th performance tonight at the | Shubert Theatre. | Wilton Lackaye, who has not been | | seen on the stage for the last three | years, will make his reappearance this autumn. Greetings Their message of cclidarity car.e on the heels of ene from the Ass - viation of Revolutianry Cuban nists, who promised their moral support, The cablegram from the German working women was as follows: “The convention of Working Wom- en at Hamburg expresses violent protest today against American ter- rorism and we demand the immedi- ate freedom of the 23 strikers, mem- bers of the National Textile Work- ers Union, at Gastonia.” These expressions of international protest also include the petition stamped with the seals of 18 French trade unions, demanding the imme- diate release of the Gastonia pris- oners. the International Labor Defense has called upon all the branches of the 1. L, D. in every country not only to demonstrate, but to collect funds on behalf of the Gastonia strikers. { WALL STREET PLANE NEARLY CRASHES. ANNAPOLIS, Md., Aug. 21— Lieut. Alford Williams, navy speed ilot, narrowly escaped disaster to- day in an attempt to test the speed’, of his “Mercury” seaplane, the Wall Street entrant in the Schneider Cup Race on the Severn River when swells from speedboats nearly up- set the Schneider cup plane. He was taxiing between 80 and 90 miles an hour, preparatory to a take-off. ie i He has been engaged by getting enough signatures to by Erlanger and Tyler, to play a place the Party on the ballot in the | leading role in “Mixed Jury,” the is like a symphony of sombre music, with the beautiful landscapes pro- f mpions,” Grecht said. | tioned above, Cohan has four other 2700 BRONX P/~K EA Comrade “Right now, when militant work- | plays scheduled for this season, They a SOOrBee .Aiisrton Aver F Pil t ers Sonor the memory of the legal are: “Sporting Blood,” a play by MR as oat rances rila |murder of Sacco and Vanzetti, and| Lewis B. Ely, which may see the Mea CAS ie ade es gt M FE i Lah Hares “Indian Summer,” the Fanchon- | MIDWIFE: 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 ‘ood Workers BUSINESS MEETING eld One on the firet Monday of the month at 3 p, m, Indastry—One Fight the Common Enemy! Office Open from 9 a. m, to 6 p,m, it., Phone Circle 7336 Union—Join 351 E. 7/th St Tel. New York, N. ¥. Rhinelander 3916 MELROSE— ¢, VEGETARIAN Dairy RESTAURANT | omrades “Will Always Find It Pleasant to Dine at Our Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx 74th St. Station) INTERVALB 9149, (near PHONE MEET YOUR FRIENDS at Messinger’s Vegetarian The International Executive of | UTW FOR UNITY Rank and File Unite For Struggle (Continued from Page One) tile workers against the bosses and the bosses’ agents inour ranks!” In sharp, brief phrases, the con- ‘ditions the Clinchfield mill hopes to |impose upon the workers are listed. | “Only a militant struggle of all tex- | tile workers united together can win | our demands. The textile kings are | united against us. We must unite all textile workers against the boss- es. Only courageous leaders and militant policy can win.- “The bosses’ agents in our ranks must go. We want leaders who will lead our struggle against the bosses —not leaders who compromise with the bosses. The Hoffmans, Me- Mahons in our ranks must go. The mill workers must control their own union,” . In Greenville, where the U. T. W. has also betrayed the struggle (in that instance by deserting the field), textile workers are uniting with the N. T. W. U. for common struggle. The Charlotte Conference, calied for Oct. 12 and 13, of textile workers of five states, will have many dele- gates who were members of the ‘Muste U. T. W. union before they were betrayed by it, William Mur- dock, organizer in charge of the sub- ‘there, SAY N. J. CARMEN Vote Tonight; Workers Want Strike Action (Continued from Page One) of the union throughout New Jer- sey. So strong was the disgust at the sellout moves of the union lead- ers that William Wepner, president of Newark Loval 819, made his way from the Labor Lyceum with diffi- culty while Public Service Workers hurled questions and accusations at him. That the union misleacers are working for betrayal was openly charged by hundreds of workers. They charge that attempts are be- ing made to lure them into another agreement as disastrcus as that made three years ago. Under this, 11 to 18 hours a day to complete the nine hours, since they are laid off when rush periods subside. Build Up the United Front of the Working Class from the bot- tom Up—at the Enterprises! district office of the N. T. W. U. in Greenville, said today. Tonight workers from many mills in and around Greenville will hear Murdock and Phifer speak at 9 mass. meeting in the unidn headquarters . the men are forced to put in from|. Sixth Assembly District. In the| play by Fred Ballard in which Mrs. | “7 ‘he counterpoin 28rd District, Brownsville is running | Fiske will open her season at the a close second, and Harlem is third | Avon Theatre in October. Full credit must also be paid to} Vladimir Semenoy for his photo- ||| Comrades in \in the 17th A. D. The drive will| EERE ASAD graphy, each scene like a painted | Patronise |] Right off 174th St. Subway Station be continued at nights, the com- RUSSIAN AUTHORS TURN OUT | Masterpiece. One gets the thrill of |] Laub Vegetarian & Dairy | mittee reports. | A MASTER FILM the soil, of the life in Russia, as he | Restaurant “Her Way of Love,” the latest|beholds these people and these | Brownsville Tenants in Sovkino film which is now being scenes given to us by the camera. Protest Meet. Against) Rent Hogs Tomorrow 211 Brighton B | |FURNISHED Now is your opp get a room in the Throngs of working class tenants ‘are expected to attend the mass/| meeting called for tomorrow night, 8 o'clock ,at 154 Watkins St. to protest against the intolerable hous- ing conditions and exorbitant rents | in Brooklyn, and register their de- | termination to roganize a powerful tenants movement to fight the ra-| pacious landlords, following the ex- | ample of Harlem tenants. | Frederick Makel, president of the | American Negro Labor Congress; |Rebecca Grecht, election campaign divector of the Communist Party, | N. Y, District; Richard B. Moore | president of the Harlem Tenants | League, and Grace Campbell, vice- | president of the Harlem League, will be the principal speakers. Har- oli Williams is to act as chairman of the meeting, Claudette Colbert has been en- gaged for the leading role in Elmer | Rice’s comedy, “See Naples and Die,” | which will be produced shortly by | Lewis E. Gensler. It is planned to begin rehearsing in September with the Broadway opening set for Mon- day, October 7, American Premiere “Wrath of the Seas,” or “BATTLE of JUTLAND” HEAR AND SEB Le Maire—ALL-TALK nedy, “BEACH BABIES” 1800 SEVENTH Cor. 110th of tenants were c security necessary, office for further All the units of the Party are instructed to immediately settle Tel: L | cannot atmply dy-made state | and wield tt for ft own purpose... This hee Commune (Paris Commune) breaks the modern mtitte J mower Marx, 000 for tickets for ‘Daily’? Carnival. OF THE DAILY Brighton Bench, at Brighton Beach B.M.T. Station Workers Hotel Unity Cooperative House OPPOSITE CENTRAL PARK Tel. Monument 0111 Due to the fact that a number leave the city, we have a num- ber of rooms to rent. No FRED SPITZ, Inc. FLORIST NOW AT 31 SECOND AVENUE (Bet. 1st & 2nd Sts.) " Flowers for All Occasions 15% REDUCTION TO READERS each Ave. RATION ROOMS | ortunity to magnificent 199 SECOND AV Strictly Vegetarix AVENUE Street Restauran ompelled to Call at our information. RESTAUR 1600 MADISON Phone: UNIversit DRYdock 8880 Phone: Stuyvesant 381 SPECIALTY: ITALIA) where all 302 E, 12th St. WORKER and Dairy Restaurant 1763 Southern Blvd., 7 onx, N.Y. Vegetarian RESTAURANT © Bet. 12th and 13th Sts, All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health 558 Claremont Parkway, Bronx HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian A place with atmosp! radicals meé AL a E1.UE n Food it ANT AVE. y 5865 John’s Restaurant N DISHES New York