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Page Four Walkout of Women Workers i in ‘Cannery, in Oakland, (By @ Worker Correspondent) OAKLAND, Calif. (By Mail).— wing worked in the cannaries tere am writing about the con- ditions the cannery workers slave under. | PORTO RIGAN WORKERS LOOK J COMMUNISTS | Betrayal ‘By Fakers Has Taught Them This is the concluding letter of this series from our Porto Rican worker corespondent, in which he exposed the labor fakers who act, as Wall Street's hirelings in op- pressing the Porto Rican workers and peasants. He also has shown to what misery V’=!! Street by these labor misleaders, such 2 Marin and Iglesias, and the cialists,” have reduced the workers and peasants of the West Indian Island. We hope to print further letters from this Porto Riezn worker in the future, and urge other Porto Rican workers to write us on con- ditions both among the Porto Rican workers in Porto Rico and in the United States. wi ded “so- Defying the cowardly and yellow } leadership of the “Free Workmen's federation of Labor’ (Federacion ibre de P. R.), a Porto Rican rami- fication of the craft-ridden A. F L. a recognized strike-bre ruling class and i] fit of the Ameri . confidential ally of bloody Ameri-} ; can imperialism in Latin-America, the workers and farmers of Aguirre and Maunabo have just recently held'a huge meeting in that section | of Porto Rico energetically and pug- | naciously protesting against the in- human speed-up and the 12-hour i day, calling upon the worke the entire land to fight for the establish- 4 ment of the eight hour day, the five day week and better wages, | Porto Rican workers can no longer be fooled by the picayunish and dastardly leadership of the “Free Workingmen’s Federation of | \ Labor,” who with their pacifist | phraseology and class-collaboration| | tactics have made large portions of | our working population victims of | the terrific rationalization campaign inauguarated by the dollar-blinded bosses thruout the island at the end! Of the last gory imperialist-war. | Porto Rican workers are begin- ning to realize that only thru a re-| lentless and militant struggle against the bosses can they expect less hours and er wag }o obtain these they must do way with the treacherous labor tisleaders and hirelings of Ameri- caf-imperialism and set up a strong amt-powerful labor organization un- ler'the banner of the Red Interna- fional of Labor Unions, leader of all| the revolutionary labor bodies in Latin-America, and the world over. Start a strenuous and determined fampaign to organize the hundreds $f thousands of exploited and-peasants throughout the and, Vhat-they may be a position to @ffectively and aggres-ively fight back. the wage- hing onslaughts ef the-bosses and that they may be} 4lso in a position to militantly fight | for the cight our day, a five da ’ and a ng wage and for ether immediate demands, such as iz an unemployment fund, soup kit- é ehens and housing for the poor and destitute. ete. Needless to say, the Porto Rican workers are already organizing un- der militant leadership outside of j the Free Workingmens’ Federation. And they are also realizing that the j fight is ao ijonger an_ industrial | struggle but 2 political struggle for | power a3 wel | They «re jocking to the Com- munist Party. (To Ke Concluded) Open ” Today On Low Wage Charges By Carpenter Union 65% eontractors against whom plaint was filed by the Neo district council of the © Union is all that the union has 6 far accomplished in its polite ei- forts to compel contractors to abide by established scales. Hearings will begin today by State Industrial Commissioner Frances Perkins. Only half the prevailing $1.50 an) hour was paid carpenters by some | dozen employers, Charles A. Judge, union president, charged last week. Little can be gained by the in- | vesti; tion, however sweeping, rank- | and-file union men claim. They re- | fer to Perkin’s letter to illustrate | their distrust, quoting the letter the | commissioners’ “recognition of the | Comptroller's jurisdiction in the! matter and under the statute.” | The men condemn the legal ap- A = ta the grievance by the| ders. “A fighting union with! ik and file control would get the Hl Wage rate on the job without ving: to cry in.court,” they say. | p glected to say that the more work !” DAILY Ww ORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, AUGUST 23, 1929 is 300 girls are employed and here the conditions are terrible. At present it is peach season. California a te. .Its rich va abundance of fruit and vege great canning lleys give an and during the season thous: They pay us 14 cents a box for of wo are employed in the | eutting and stoning the peaches. canneries, These boxes are weighed and re- In the Neilson Packing Co. about gardless of size and the quality of | the fruit we get the same weight on all. But these boxes are usually overfiiled. When we get good fruit only we can ke three to four boxes an hour. But that means we must rush without glancing up or stoppiai. Lately the boxes were coming overfilled with small light weight peaches and it took us longer than usual to cut them. With the ut- most speed we could oniy cut from two to two and a half boxes an hour. On Saturday, Aug. 3, the wemen stopped working and put up a kick to the boss, Miller. We noticed that when the inspector came eround te weigh the boxes they were according to weight, but as soon as he left they put up larger California, Results in Big Gain for these Bitterly Exploited Totlers boxes, This strike of the women was only about an hour in dura- tion, because the hoss realized that when the experienced help left. he could not get the peaches canned and they would spoil. a a result the boxes are more to the standard and it showed to many that getting together means the betterment of conditions. In another letter I will tell more of the slave conditions of the can- nery workers. | A. ALDEN. Coal Operators in n Kentucky Herd Miners Into United Mine Workers o f America WITH THE SHOP PAPERS (BAKER FAKERS’ B.M.T.WORKERS |““Blow thd Man Down” at * * KERS have written us many letters about the shop pager rément, telling us, besides the bouquets, how we might ee department. ures and sketches in the last few shop paper columns added to them 100 percent,” worker. “Use more of Says one e been pointed out through these work- hope the workers who wrote these think we’ve But if they think we haven't, we want them sin, All workers are asked to write us their opinion of lepariment; tell us if you'd like to see it appear more what you think would improve it. ny shortcomings har time. wrades in charge of shop papers, send them in so may review them. you co that we Wrecking the Bosses’ Scheme JHEN the shop papers start exposing some of the particularly pet W schemes of the bosses intended to pull the wool over the eyes of the slaves and make them willing sheep, well, when the shop papers begin to start exposing they make a thorough and neat job of it and the result of an exposure by a shop paper is one little bosses’s scheme shot so full of holes, that Swiss cheese is as smooth as marble com- pared to that bosses’ scheme. is week we'll let the workers reading this department in on views of some of the shop papers in active battle against the bosses’ schemes. . . Training the Workers Gun on a “Welfare” Scheme RST we see the workers at the Colt Repeating Arms Co. plant in New Haven, Conn., training the “Workers’ Gun,” their fighting shop paper, on the company “benefit” plan in that factory: “The bosses take off 50 cents a month for what is called the Mu- tual Benefit Association, You are entitled for one dollar a day benefit if you are sick one week or more, and for 500 dollars if you die. “This kind of benefit is all fake. For, if we are sick over a week, we need more than a dollar a day for doctor and druggist bills, and if we cannot afford to stay away from work more than five days, then we don’t get a penny. Besides, we don’t get a penny if we are fired or discharged. We demand government insurance providing for full pay in case of illness or accident. Let the State of Connecticut tax the bosses for this social insurance. “Of course, we cannot expect the bosses’ government to do aaything for us. They never did, and never will do anything but bad for the workers. “We should organize ourselves eee, and fight for a workers’ and far- N. MILL STRIKERS mers’ government which will serve at Cambria Mill the interests of the workers.” ra Bat A Paradise on Earth H1E power of the shop paper is shown in the Arcadia Mill, in Allen- town, Pa., where the “Arcadia Textile Worker” has been issued by the workers of Arcadia Mill local of the National Textile Workers Union. was something in the nature of The “Arcadia Textile Worker” what the Arcadia slaves had been eagerly wanting for, for a long while, and naturally they very enthusiastically received it. With- in two hours after the first appear- ance of the “Arcadia Worker” the company, scared as all get out, by the workers reception of the shop paper, rushed off the press and dis- tributed throughout the mill a ri- diculous leaflet in which they tried nothing less other than to prove to the workers, whom they had been | slave-driving right along, that the Arcadia Mill was nothing less than an actual paradise on earth for the workers in that hell-hole. Didn’t the Arcadia bosses give | the workers plenty more work ' CA than every other mill in the section? True, it did. But it ne- | was given in the shape of laying | off many workers and then making {| the workers do their work. More work is correct! A MILITANT SLOG! * . * The Boss Faw Down and Go Boom! (From the “Arcadia Textile Worker”) When we get wise we'll organize, Organize, then arise, ‘Then the boss won't he so wise, He faw down an’ go boom! ir. Reinhardt we don’t like— s a kike. n we'll strike; ‘hen we organize and strike ‘ie'll faw down an’ go boom! ’, workers all, we'll organize, (cls and men when we get wise- When together we arise The boss faw down an’ go boom! Shattering the Bosses’ Mirror HEN there's another scheme of the bosses—and that is to issue 2 newspaper ostensibly for the workers—shooting out its poisonous stuff, designed to make the workers willing sheep. These boss papers will adopt tricks” us handing out gravy to workers, that is kidding them about. th + and tell of the wonderful benefits the So and So company slaves; the moral being, of course, “ain't it the herries to work for dear old So and So.” The Harnisfeger Mirror Company in Milwaukee, Wis. adopts this trick, The workers here have answered the bosses’ paper with a shop paper for and | by the Harnisfeger Mirror workers. The “P. and H. Looking Glass” shows the bosses’ paper up thoroughly by exposing the “paytriotic” bunk handed in it, One thing that has opened the eyes of the Harnisfeger workers to the difference between the “Mirror,” a paper for and by the bosses, and the workers’ own paper, the shop paper, the “Looking Glass,” is the fuct that you don’t see letters from the workers themselves in the bosses’ paper, such as the following, which the shop paper printed: “Dear Editor: “Please notice that Mr. Standfuss is a slave driver who heads every reason of fault. Go after him, he orders every instructor. Now the foremen are competing against each ether for so-called bonus for con- tinuous flow of production. Tools wees ext, Af the foreman orders “UNION LABEL” DRIVE STARTS Ts ‘a Means of} Workers (By a Worker Correspondent, The Goldstein-. ata Daily Only Splitting ward clique of local 51 FP. of 1. Bake s Union, is once more starting a “union label” dr This means actual scabbing against the Am gamated Food Workers Union. The | clique is distributing the handbills with the request to eat only “union | made bread.” The ‘the bread | which is baked in shops which have | not the International Union label is | unsanitary, and disease spreading. | 12-14 Hours for Local 500 Members. | Now let me as a baker put this | question to the Goldstein-Forward dlique When the bakers under the | ¢ | cligue work 12 and 14 hours nightly | under the speed-up system, can the | bread which they make be good for | one’s health? Can these bakers be in good | health after such long hours of hard | work? And particularly in the | ata control which reigns in the baker shops of local 500? Finally, will the new attacks on all fr against the bakers and cafeteria | workers of the Amalgamated Food | Workers better the terrible condi- tions of the workers in local 500? How Fakers Talk About “Unity.” | You will tell the Forward that we | are, that is, local 500 is, and has | been, ready to unite into one union with the A. F. W. U. If you think | that the misleading tricks which you are carrying on will bring unity, you are sadly mistaken. The result will be that the members of local 500 will wake up and end your misrule. | And then the members of lacal 500 will, together with the A. F. W. build up a strong union of the work- ers and for the workers. There will be no place in this un- ion for the Goldsteins, Barrons, and the other misleaders of local 500. And now about the new “settle-| ments.” You “settle” shops with | long time contracts without any con- | trol by the union. The baker help- ers are entirely non-union workers | and they are forced to slave more than ever. If you call such shops union shops and conrpare them with the condi- tions in the shops controlled by the | A. F. W. U. (which you call scab | shops), where all must be union | men, then I say you are all open traitors to the bakers, and the bak- ers of all nationalities will reckon with this and put you out of your fat-salary jobs. M. B. Militarist Agitating, For Bi¢ger Imperialist Air Building Campaign | JOBLESS WORKER KILLS SELF. | SAN DIEGO, Cal, Aug. 21— Scrapping of the five year military air construction program on the| grounds that it has already become | inadequate was advocated by Repre- | sentative Frank James of Michigan, | chairman of the House Military Af-| fairs Committee today. “As soon as congress convenes again, am going to recommend the scrapping of the program,” he said. “Where five millions were author- | ized before, fifty millions are needed now.” Alive to U. S. interests in the armament race which features the | opening sparring leading to im-| perialist war, James expressed his decision to push cruiser construc- tion, Out of work for a long period of e, Louis Zukerman committed | suicide by poison in the Broadway Central Hotel, 673 Brogdway, where | re had registered as Poris Rubin- tein. BRUSSELS (By Mail).—For tak- ‘ng part in an anti-imperialist war lemonstration outside the Chinese Consulate, three Communists were sentenced to two months’ imprison- ment, HAVE LEARNED OF junions are so unnatural that it is a |of capitalist “justice” \cized more brutality than was ever about Russia and about our leaders. DISGUSTED BY AMALGAMATED | Would W elcome a Mili- tant Union (By a Worker Correspondent) Having read in the Daily Worker a great deal about the convention to held in Cleveland at the end of month for the purpose of or- g ng a new national central la- bor organization to fight the treach- ery of the American Federation of Labor, I wish to tell you that the wo! of the Brooklyn-Manhattan T it are very much in favor of such organi For more than ifteen years they have been sold out and neglected by the Amalgamated Street Car and Electric Railway Workers union of- s. This lousy bunch of crooks starts an organizational campaign, leads the men to the point of calling a strike, and then permits the B. |M. T. to harge the union men and does nothing about it. I can assure you that if we had not already had enough experience with the A. F. of L. we learned still more about the way this so-called labor organization is handling the strike of the street car workers in New Orleans as well as their plan to sell out the street workers in New Jer: The workers of the B. M. T. hope that the convention will organize and create a section for transportation wor When that is done the men can join up and start building a real | trade union, a union that wiil fight to abolish the slavery as it exists today on the transit lines. In these so-called days of “eivil- ization and enlightenment” the B. M. T. makes the slaves work seven days a week and when some of the men do take a day off they do not have sufficient means to live. I know a great many men are still waiting for organizers to come and sign them up. There is no doubt about it, that the transit workers do want a union, they really need one and they need it badly, so let’s get ready. B. M. T. BUTTON PUSHER. CLASS STRUGGLE Gastonia Strikers Now Know of USSR KERMIT HARDIN, Striker). The Gastonia murder trial set for | August 26th, marks a milestone in the history of the American labor movement. Although the jury prac- tically already have their instruc- tions and the capitalist press have the millowners whitewashed, the fact that the workers are innocent and the officials criminals is not jaltered in the least. During the course of labor struggles in the ast, the workers everywhere have nessed :many incidents of cypitalist terror. But Gastonia leing in a more vicious field where trade By (Gastonia crime to even protest against the conditions, bids fair to be a picture in its most vicious mood. Nowhere in any class struggle has been a greater display of patience or law abiding attitude than hag been shown in Gastonia. From the beginning the police have exer- seen in strikes in the past. The workers have been forced to con- tcnd with more frightfulness and more undermining methods of strikebreaking than is usually used in breaking a strike, First trying to break our ranks with dirty lies Secondly by actually trying to bribe the strike committee, and third with a bloody attack of police brutality and by wrecking our headquart+rs new ones he loses his bonus. The man who doesn't have tools loses his time and half premium so that he now can make only time and quarter, therefore make his hare wages only, If he asks the foreman for a raise or new tools the foreman loses his bonus. —P. & H. WORKER. “Dear Friends: “This is to let you know that the crowding on the excavator floor still goes on. You wrote about it in the ‘Looking Glass’ some time ago, A fellow has to have a dozen eyes, so as not to get hurt. Do you 4hink the factory inspector could make them do things different? —X.Y.Z. “Friends: “Here is my kick for the ‘Looking Glass’ to print. Net enough that we have to breath the exhaust gas dust and dirt all day, but now by order of Ceaser they shove their paint sprayers under our nese at any odd moment the spirit moves them. What the hell next for the measly pay we get?—ASSEMBLY MAN.” “Dear Editor: “Tam writing you that I have been gassed in war, one of my lungs | good ‘beginning of what is yet to is about gone, what is left over is very poorly. The stink at the work in the machine shop is very terrible-for my health. The wages are so little to feed my family and the hours are too muc). Poo -°> er use bad English, will help good wher time comes.” Arthur Hopkins will open his sea- son at the Plymouth Theatre on Wednesday evening, Sept. 4, when he will present “Blow the Man Down,” a comedy drama by Kate Parsons. Walter Huston will play the leading role. The settings and costumes have been designed by‘ Robert Edmond Jones, and the play is being staged by Hopkins. The play will have a try-out week at Jackson Heights beginning next Monday. Two other plays are announced for the season by Arthur Hopkins, The scripts are as yet untitled but they include a comedy by Philip Barry, author of “Paris Bound” and “Holi- day,” and another by Sidney Howard. A fourth play, ty Donald Ogden Stewart is also in preparation. Robert Halliday, who has been on | a vacation in Scotland, returns to the cast of “The New Moon” at the | Imperial Theatre tonight in the lead- ing role, Guy Robertson and Queenie Smith are featured in “The Street Singer,” the new musical comedy which be- gan a four weeks’ engagement at the Garden Pier Theatre, Atlantic City, prior to its New York showing. “Me for You” the new Aarons and Freedly musical show went into re- hearsal today. Owen Davis, Kichard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart are the! authors and Victor Moore, Jack Whiting, Lulu McConnell, and Betty Starbuck are in the cast. In the cast of “Murder on the Second Floor,” which A. H. Woods placed in rehearsal today, are Lau- | rence Olivier, 0. B. Clarence, Phyllis Konstam, Drusilla Wills and John Turnbull. | Max Gabel, who has taken over | the Public Theatre on Second Avenue for his production plans, will stage | “The Gclem” sometime later in the season. Women Resume Derby | In Wall St. Air Stunt To Boost War Aviation | DOUGLAS, Aris, Aug. 21.— Slightly uneasy because of the troubles which have beset their ad- venture since they left Santa Moni- ca, Cal., Sunday, entrants in the women’s air derby of the national air races resumed their eastward flight today, The race is a stunt to | stimulate interest in war aviation. At two minute intervais, starting at 6:20 a. m., sixteen pilots took | off on the lap which will end at Mid- land, Tex., tonight. Engine trouble caused Elizabeth Von Mack of De- troit, to ieturn here shortly after her plane left the ground. She ex- pected to make a second start later, | UNION LEADERS’ SON IS GOOD MINE BOSS. CARDIFF (By Mail). — When miners who had not paid dues in the South Wales Miners’ Federation were, according to custom, pre- vented from descending the Tilery pit by the union card examiners, they were later allowed to descend by mine manager Major Richards, who told the examiners that in future show cards must be held off the colliery premises. Richards is the “son of the Rt. Hon, Tom Richards, secretary of the federa- tion. and reiief store which they knew to be our chief hope of victory. Through all this bloody campaign there still existed that seemingly super-human pacience that is typi- eal cf the souckern jillsman, Night alter the night the National Textile kers Union !eacers implored the workers not to be provoked, But on the Tt of Jane Th, this was.de- stire: tc end, The strikers were forced to shoot in self defence. Be- cause of this outburst of militancy, sixteen are facing death in the hands of the mill barons. We have learned how. desperate the enemy is that we Lave to fight. We have learned that other work- ers everywhere are exploited and that slavery is not a matter of course. ~ We have learned the truth about Russia. We have learicd about the war danger and tat the tactics of the scuthern mil! bosses go hand in hand with America’s preparation for a new world war. For us it has been a great awaken- ing. Workers who a few months ago had never heard of a union haye become some of the most militant fighters in the class struggle. Our minds that were a few months ago saturated with “loyalty” and “patriotism” are today filled with thoughts of unionized labor and better conditions. The dictator- ship of the bosses is a great step nearer to its end. Gastonia is a come, and the same determination that drove the Gastonia strikers to |}19th to August the Plymouth in September IN “HOLD EVERYTHING” Alice Boulden, who is appearing |in “Hold Everything,” now current at the Broadhurst Theatre. ‘International Labor Defense Week at Camp. Huliet Now Going On PHILADELPHIA, Aug. —The banner week for Camp Huliet, the only workers’ camp in the Phila- delphia area will be this week. This camp has set a: 2 25th as Interna- tional Labor Defense Week. forces of the Philadelphia District I. L. D, are now busily engaged in making this week the biggest I. L.| D. event of the year. All workers at the camp as well as all visitors will be enrolled as members of the I. L. D., who will |furnish prominent local as well as| national speakers every day. There has been arranged a unique Ball Masque, a chance for everybody to masquerade himself or herself. Water sports and games will hold the attention of both young and other workers thruout the week. A Negro orchestra will furnish the musie. “Nadia,” the famous Duncan dan- eer of New York City is coming for the entire week. To see Nadia is worth coming to the camp, even | were there no other events. Novel- ties galore, as well as special sur- prises will furnish fun for every- body daily. All the proceeds for this week will go to help fight the Gastonia frame-up, the Flynn Anti-Sedition Law, the Bethlehem raids and the bosses terror, thru their hirelings, the police and private gunmen now existing in Philadelphia. There will be speakers from the Loray Textile Mill Strikers of Gas- tonia. On Saturday and Sunday, special busses will leave from 1124 Spring Garden Street, at 2:30 p. m. Satur- day and 9:00 a, m. Sunday morning. These two days will see a splendid climax of this week. All workers desiring further in- formation call Poplar 4299 make arrangements for a visit. to Camp Huliet. Soviet Workers in Industrialization Day Thruout USSR MOSCOW, (By Mail).—In accord- ance with a decision of the Soviet Labor Unions, the 6th of August was Industrialization Day. Although noramlly the 6th of August is a holiday, work was carried on all over the Soviet Union. The wages earned by the workers on this day will be invested in the industrializa- tion fund. All reports showed that the 6th of August was celebrated with great enthusiasm and increased labor intensity. Only in very few cases were infringements of labor discipline reported. In the evening meetings took place everywhere at which lectures were made concern- ing the significance of industrializa- tion day and of the Five Year Plan, ete, le August | All} and | BOSSES THERE ‘SEEM IN CONTROL OF FAKERS’ UNION |Fear Growth of the | National Union | (By a Worker Correspondent) | MERCER, Ky., (By Mail).—Ken- |tucky miners are now being herded into the U. M. W. of A. by the coal | operato! A few days ago in one Hopkins County, Kentucky, company store 418 miners were given obliga- tion. Three weeks ago 462 were obligated on the court yard at Madi- sonville, Kentucky. Tuesday night, July 30th, 1200 were reported to have been obligated at Providence, Kentucky at the time. This drive is being openly pushed by all the operators of Hopkins County except one. This county has -been known for the last thirty years as the |worse anti-union county in this country. | Sudden Interest in UMWA, Clayton Curd an operator of Cen- tral City, Kentucky told Wm. Wil- cox of Hillside, Kentucky to cut loose from the National Miners | Union and line up with the boys. He said “We are going to make her go this time and we won’t have any ks or grafters in it either.” Wilcox asked him why he was so | anxious for the union now. He said “We have made a great mistake in the past and now we see that we | must have a union.” Bosses Fear Militant Union. This means that they see the growth of the National Miners Union everywhere and are getting ready in case of a strike this winter, | They expect John L. Lewis and his | gangsters to help them to keep these miners working if we should call a national strike. They may feven go so far as to give them a | raise, Forced to Join. Many of the Kentucky miners see jthis thing now and practically all of them will see it before we are through. Several miners told the tives that were sent in there to get the facts on this drive, that they would soon be forced to join. They pay no initiation fee and are told that the dues will be only 55 cents a monh. Anyone wishing to may write to Wm. Wilcox at Hillside, Kentucky or to Wm. McCoy, Mercer, Ken- | tucky and see what they have got |to say about it. | We say, build the National Miners |Union and make such things as |these impossible. Isolate these thieves and these gangsters on the outside and leave them out. That is the only way that you can ever | get rid of them. We do not need them any more than a dog needs fleas. Every miner can talk to his neighbor or buddy and get him to join. Get busy around your place. \Italian Attempt to Locate Long Lost Polar Crew Failure OSLO, Norway, Aug. 22.—Ad- vices received here today from Kings Bay in the Arctic reveal that ill- jlueck has befallen the explorative Italian expedition of Gianni Alber- tini which is seeking if possible to find trace of the six men who were carried away in the envelope of the Italian Polar dirigible Italia when it crashed in a sturm after a flight over the pole in the Spring of 1928. One of Albertini’s sailors aboard the Arctic steamer Sucaid is griev- ously ill. Another is snow blind. Two fell into an 80-foot crevasse and were rescued with the greatest difficulty. Many of the dogs of the ‘expedition upon which depends the success of the attempts to explore the ice wastes of the Arctic regions “AMUSEMENTS- jare ill. CAFE GRIS-NEZ, France, ao ‘es —The 65-year-old German swim- National Miners Union representa- ° battle will be found in the next big drive against the bosscs, mer, Dr, Schiff, abandoned an at- |tempt to swim the English channel | today after being in the water for nearly six hours. He entered the water here at 8:14 p. m. yesterday and abandoned his efforts at 2:10 a. m, today. Amer: ican “Wrath of the Seas,” or “BATTLE of JUTLAND” HEAR AND SEB Geo, Le Maire—ALL-TALK Comedy, “BEACH BABIES” ere All the units of the Party are instructed to immediately settle for tickets for “Daily” Carnival. |