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THE DAILY WORKER FIGHTS for a Workers-Farmers Government To Organize the Unorganized Against Imperialist War For the 40-Hour Week FINAL CITY EDITION Entered as second-class matter at the Post Office at New York, N. ¥., under the nct of March 3, 1979. Published 1y except Sundvy by The Company. Inc.. 26-28 Union Square, Vol. VI, No. 158 Comprodally Publishing New York City, N. Y. NEW YORK, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1929 SUBSCRIPTION RATES: In New York, by mail, $6.00 per year. Outside New York, by mall, $6.00 per yenr. Price 3 Cents ce ren ed; low ces ‘ ver Bl a Gases cont Muar ceeecen © RT ee ade —O : aaa ee ———— aE the e ‘6 ! r} | . | = Ne!’ Is Reply WAVE OF TERROR Torture 2 Gast $0 A _| Unanimous ‘No!’ Is Reply orture astonta ied i ‘s R i f Gitlow Defendants to Wring TO ATTACK TWO W W i ] 4 J b » | to esolutions o Itlo me ; eyenaants lo vin, HILE BOSSES L A YERS ’ | ht. e S : | P Slab t Them ¢, P. DAILIES *.! at Cleveland Convention 7) DEPORT MANY. atements from Them 6, P, ATTEMPT LEGAL MURDER Rejected Resolution Disguises Basic Issues of |2 Already Handed Back Carter and McLaughlin Slugged in Gastonia Workers Rush to deta Right to Organize for Self-Defense in Struggle’ to Machado Prisons; | City Hall; Beaten All the Way to Shelby Daily” and Jewish Oellien, Demos Martin and Others Beton braie rd | More Will Follow Morning Freiheit B " P hed ‘ | ei hice : ; y s, Beat. t, Meeting Smashe Gitlow Labor Party Theory Based on Wrong) —— “We Heard Scuffling, Banging, McLaughlin = Armed Thugs, , Cut, g * ry : eye | anes pale Ce ° . ee Policy of United Front from Above | Police Hunt Victims | Pleading, Aw, Quit!,” Say Schechter, Bush Chicago Office Raided Progesiition Witnesses in Gastonia Casé Tangle | sro ae CLEVELAND, 0., Sept. 8.—All resolutions presented to) U, S§. Anti-Imperialist ys a ccna . jaseieted . pines ine) ndetve Police Aid Zionists in| Themselves in Own Net of Proven Falsehoods ij Ini venti rer i " he Gi , N. C—‘I’'m ready |statements alleged to hav a es the Trade Union Unity Convention were unanimously adopted" T oaoue Protests to die for the union!” This was the | made by both Carter and McLaugh- Cleveland with the exceptions of the resolution on the labor party pre-| Veececann inate’ by. George: Chrver, |B: . ; Be : F TNESS ORGANIZERS 60 sented by Benjamin Gitlow, and on the Gastonia trial which was) Another wave of terrorism is|one of the 16 workers now on trial| Called to testify by the defense,| When they saw the strong Work- ‘ introduced by Frank Vrataric. These two were practically the) sweeping across the cities and arm | for their lives in the Mecklenburg |McLaughlin, a alight, bisck chaired ets Guard i aoe of Hes Daily ay vant : ves lands of Mexico, carrying with it| County Courthouse, according to the |twenty-three year old youth, popular | Worker, Jnion Square anc 7 PANERA Seg Conyenuoal pe. the day toy epione mass deportations to fas Cuba, | testimony today of Sheriff Allen of |with his fellow-defendants, related) Morning Freiheit, 30 Union Square, SE T crew. The utter hankruptcy of¢ suppression of the press, and.in-)Cleveland County, N. ©. To thejon the witness stand how he was/a small group of socialists and | the Cannon group was evi-| ff NS tensified br-tr“ty. |mill: owners this is proof of con:|nearly beaten to death by Gastonia | Zionists who intended to attack the | = denced by complete silence A telegram received today states: summate villainy, It was to Allen’s| police. During this testimony the|offices of the two newspapers . : ar i s. from that ie Sies received “Second wave of terror initiated. jail in Shelby (home of Clyde Bioey) |jury was sent away from the court-|quiekly melted away last night. Defense Brings Out the SecondGathering Aided th only the two votes cast by those who | Two political refugees deported vio-| that Carter and Louis McLaughlin, | room. They were part of those who at- Masked Mob Raid By Defense Corps ve proposed them. Two resolutions on Wae RE E lently, Police ordered by govern-! another of the defendants, were} “They beat me in a room in the | tended a mass meeting held at Las s ili in the same subject, introduced by the , ae ment hunting political refugees for | spirited away following the raid on|City Hall in Gatsonia, with their|Cooper Union, arranged by the By SENDER | GARLIN By LISTON OAK. OF resolutions’ committee, were adopted collective depo:'ation to Cuba, un-/ the union headquarters on the night |fists and blackjacks, and they kept |United Hebrew Trades. By SE} HARLIN. Gee 2s ° 5 a. however. ‘ ‘ ‘| der Machado fascism. Printing shop | of June 7. jon shouting: ‘Did you shoot Ader-| ‘Towards the end of the meeting) CHARLOTTE, N. C., Sept. GASTONIA, N. C., Sept. 8. 4 “The National Convention of the Qa" suppressed, seized, confiscated. All! That they were hustled off—hands |holt? Who gave you the guns?’” it was announced from the platform|8,—The star witnesses of the|—Another attack by the tex- T. U E L ” the rejected resolution republic in terror.” r manacled—to the jail in the adjoin-| Hear Cries. _ __ that _a demonstration in favor of| mill bosses’ prosecution failed’ tile mill hirelings, led by the said, “takes note of the splendid) ey | The waves of suppression began ing county in order to force a “con-| Vera Bush and Sophie Melvin, | Zionism British imperialism |+> nine even dimly in the trial| Manville-Jenckes “Committee irit of struggle shown by the tex- Hired Propagandist’s With the incrcased friendliness be-|fession” from them was brought |two of the women defendants, testi-|would be held in front ot ine two | © ¢ ants dnler 100" isle Guee Ga SR Re Saale ener ee ° pag: ~ |tween the Mexican government and| out in the cross-examination of the |fied that from an adjoining room|Communist newspapers, al! those|Of 16 Gastonia defendants in| o .” took place in Sout EZ Sou ey act list nec: ing Suit Worries Hoover Wall Street. ‘The masses that sup-|¢ eriff when prosecution attorneys (Continued on Page Threc) present being urged to participate. the Superior Court here yes- Gastonia yesterday. It was st fas tataviitelivia of tulle eee ported the government against the| : : See Hrgeatuce only (a, tew piviennictal ters. similar to the June 7 raid against : s apts Seige WASHINGTON, Sept. 8.—State | reactionary church-feudal forces in-| right wing ga appeared and Span aie = i the strikers’ tent colony which re- is just because they have been ei ghtine |department officials revealed here|the recent revolution are already | | when they saw that the vorl a monE Mie eee ote sulted in the strikers’ fighting in # stieiital, ABFscdata iof, all workers in tooday that the United States. is betrayed. F sin Oa W¥s were ready to resist them slunk into eee co hat the workere formed a|selt defense and the attempt now the whol try,” the rejected |ot in accord with the British labor| The Calles-Gil government, buck- | oe F the adjoining streets. BineOvesy ke the police, but /S°ime on to murder 16 of them ae ee ee ceva i f|ling before increased pressure from | is conspiracy to attack the police, but |Fe on oe ate te the Chan renelatiaes declared, completely leroy mnacity?. watt all submit a | Wall Strect, is inatiating this tee Ready To Defend. it merely succeeded in exposing | through process, 7 guising the elementary issues of the |‘Tuiser “parity” and will submit a | Wall Street, is eheoets| When news of the possible attack |further its collection of bought-up |l0tte court room. i ter proposal. The state depart-|ror to drown in blood the forward c 1 he attack was suadeseavoreaue d Saar ees Octane Cie eae “eoremuge iW loge “collabora: \aweep of the revolutionary working-| on the two working class news- witnesses. izers of the National Textile Works 2 Pee merece on Pele fetense "ty aa, vi wae ded nay) depart class. | oa ere eariat ie: working) class |” At the same time, the defense |) (rian going’ 6 a previously h eign Of union cam sents, to see that the American| The Cuban iascst, Machado, om-/ End “Strike”; Will Demand Rebuilding of |sections of the city, hundreds of|counsel, by eross-examination, re-| Sivertised moos ectine. Fatalities % gr a imperialist idea of “parity” of the|der the thumb of American impe-| : es workers hurried to Union Square, | vealed in open court the brutal reign | "eve narrowly avected cable esnventin comemns the 007: is pidopter, or rine vialism, is working and in glove! Form Fake Board Arabians’ Houses = |trom the Bronx, Brownsville ‘and \¢ terror pnlesshed upon the mill | ei we Rcemte le capitalist frame-up of these textile "@Vies 18 @dop , i with Macion | geek ii jother places to help defend them. | vorkers during the Gastonia strike,| The pig eergoe ahve wintoee e workers as an-attempt to drown in| | Both governments interpret equal |v bers! of the Mexican| ‘The “strike” of embroidery work-| FEZ, Morocco, Sept. 8.—Berbers| At the meeting a communication {he destruction of the first union points out that Vs ay’s vicious if blood the growing resistance of the| ity'in cruiser strength in a way *°| International Labor Defense have jers, pleaters, hemstitchers and tuck-| and Arabs in this recently con- | was read from William Green, presi-| headquarters and relief store, and (etoer is bron an sch saad id workers to exploitation and oppres-| .. Cgntinued on Page Three) {been killed in xecent months, vic-lers, conducted by the scab.Interna-| quered French and Spanish colony dent of the American Federation of the need felt by the strikers to pro-|8%4 e_ National Textile Workers! n sion by the bosses and their strike-| ~ 9 aa tims of the brutal reaction of the/tional Ladies’ Garment Workers’| are growing very restless over the |Labor, in which he Stated that he ‘tect at all costs their new headquar- raped fat’ “wor! sia! must protect » breaking government,” it continues. | bourgeoisie. In addition the masses | Union has ended. news of the Arabian revolution \fully supports the Zionists in their ters, which they had built with their ae sebpvrmect murderous y. “We pledge ourselves to do every- 4 IRLS JAILED have not forgotten Julio Mella, the According to the agreement of the| against England in Palestine and imperialistic policies, 4 Ganignande: _ Heat te Siler rae - an thing in our power to save the lives : leader of the Cuban party who was) mpany union and the employers! ‘he mcvement of the Druses and | Blames Communists. Car cA rece on orda: Sees ae ae k of these workers and free them from shot .n the back in Mexico City|sn impartial chairman similar to| Arabs in Syria against both French| A. I. Shiplacoff, manager of the, Hetero sackecn thettins wicel Core ee means £ the clutches of the capitalist jailors. |more than six months ago, by that in the cloak trade will be ap-/and English imperialism. Pocketbook Makers’ Union, who pre-) Herbert C. Jackson, the first wit-|¢ reatened to attack another meet- This is our duty to our class. We 0 ID ARMORY agents of Machado. | pointed who will see to it that the) A huge mass meeting in Fez to-|sided at the meeting, devoted a aaa Tec oe teed eh Raa ies Hee ae ile same night at Mc- @ will defend these heroic workers to The telegram was received at the |e ets wages are reduced, their) Jay adopted a series of resolutions /large Portion of his speech to de- sean ers bs ae = Sed als San een le, but feared to do 80 be- a the finish. This convention hails the eee national office of the International | yours lengthened and their work| otesting the attacks on Arabs by |nouncing the Communist Party. He ae Peers perked wiih tocka| eitse) there! s strong ——- de- a heroi: f the Gastonia ‘Kers in x Conti n PY Two) q the Zionists, and demanding that said that the Communist Party has sae - RULED Reset pial e corps een nized. 1 revisting the textile barons’ on.|Handed Red Leaflet| ‘tinued on Page Two tO cas ales antiounosd that thelthe Bvitiah rebutld Arabian’ prop: incited the Arabs: against the Jews |“bosamen™ and eae eel caae | Organizers Beat Up. 2 slaught on the tent colony, trade) tg Negro Soldier: seab union and the manufacturers, ¢Tty destroyed by Zionist raiders or in Palestine and is responsible for heard: Beal say, in a speech to the| Hugo Oehler, Southern Organizer union and relief headquarters and 8 qeLS Rh ‘ ; 2 |burned or blasted during bombard-|the fighting there for the last two heard Beal say in a speech to of the N. T. W. U., Dewey Martin, calls upon the workers of the whole y, irl berdtof tae % J . (Continued on Page Three) ments by the British troops weeks, aesead as ie the ea aoe Mike Harris, James Robinson, “Si gusta de ‘ our girl members of i1e Young Se 8 * * * the mill, and if anybody bothers (70 ' es i (Continued on Page Two) Communist League were arrested in ogy ? | CHICAGO, Sept. 8—With the |you, shoot and shoot to kill.” This Gerson and Walter Passmore were rae ‘ ; Figthing Continues. I » Sey : sak the sixth variation al! injured by a mob of 200 led by : vont of the 369th infantry armory, | | JM, Palestine, Sept, 8; American Legion us their ally, the is approximately the sixth variation 2 ¢unye" 4 2¥ & overseers, thugs Lenox Avenue, and 141st Street, | 5 t 5 JERUSALEM 5 Pal lestine, Sept. * | Zioni t-fascists rd soci-lists of of this statement as testified to by ane anwar ont opine 2 ill : yesterday when they were giving | seuutden skirmishes continue to de- Chicago attacked the Chicago of- |state witnesses, and reveals the con. |2"¢ hangers-o oray mills ; out leaflets to the Negr ional | a velop throughout the country, in|; ; Pe hene (ace e on d perjured character of When they were stopped near the gro national 5 3 |fices of the Freiheit, Jewish Com- |tradictory and perjured character o: zi ti 1 in South G J guardsmen who were on their way OX ° ilors | spite of the huge numbers of B: a ae Be es irday |the testimony of the prosecution | Union meeting place in Sou as- 0 Camp Smith, Peekskill, Nv¥, fr/-> Danish Sailors [ish‘troops, equipped! with arcillery, | Manist daily, at % a. m. Satarday |*he testimons tonia. They weve on their way te f INVANES US. R. two weeks training. Those arrested Drown in Baltic | a Blanes, Sanks and plenty of machine |... brutally assaulted several work-| Under cross-examination, Jackson te eee oe ee and taken to the 14th precinct sta- Roker poe : Will’ Organize Shop section of deruaalem(fightirie took ltt. The connection of the Amer- jadmitted he had done electrical They took a taxi. Within a short —— tion house at 239 W. 123d Stt. we HELSINGFORS, Finland, Sept. 8. 1 poe x 1 s |ican Legion with the Zionist fas-|work for the Manville-Jenckes com- 4.” | Ray Leventhal, Georgia K: Lil t 5 ers a ed f. & |place in the strect, with one Arab|‘¢@! 12 a lpanerat tie Lord ill prior to be- | distance of the meeting place, the : hane’s Troops Cross Ray bother BNE Nae uil-|—At ae ey pee een | Committees land one Zionist wounded. On the|‘isti was seen in the fact t ue Ne er salle i Ete mob of mill owners’ men stopped the = ! y Levine, when the Finnish steame: | I ad- |e a deputy sheriff. Jacks Border in 3 Raids The leaflets pointed out that the sank in a heavy storm yesterday. Jaffa road a British patrol fired i: An organization meeting of clean- id inserted two larg nts in the Chicago edition | was placed in a state of consider- taxi at the point of a gun. ; i > P m ar * | ” /" crimiuately into a group of feathers pee a eS ‘ia oe . “Get the hell out of here, you | ay : guardsmen were being trained to| Some 200 passengers—many of | ors and dyers. will be held. tonight “ccrimitately into s group of Aza jsliat Forward, hinting at able confusion when defense coun-| “Get the, hell out of here, yum we R, Sept. 8. |“become cannon coutiete torn the: ent shildren, bout na mapa at the Workers Center, 26-28 Union \ore arguing about the si n. laact re eh rt Rake ice. In|YOu,” Tom Carver and Will Goff, The Tass news agency reports bosses in the next war.” It told of the week end—were on board when Square, under the auspices of the ity wo ica) corie Mate enh Neawe: PSEE ‘of, the, Zionist fasciat-ao-.| oa fee 2S Stee Roce. tlieaders of ‘the: Committee sae. ibn ae troops of the Chang Bevel John Porter, New Bedford, Mass., the disaster occurred. The inade- Trevle Union Educational League. ye ay Ayal, t campaign against the Com.\TePly he stated that he “did not) igng militarist government of Man- Ss churid" invaded Soviet Union ter textile striker who is now in Fort Leavenworth prison because he real- quate equipment of the ship pre- vented most of them from getting The meeting will take up the ques- tion of organizing the workers of munist Party for s stand again: British imperialists and their have time” to do so, and was then confronted with his testimony be- shouted. Oechler demanded to know, “Who tory in several places yesterday, es-|ized the army is a tool of the cap- to the top decks when the fore Part|the trade into shop committees @ iackeys, the Zionists, against whom | (Continued cn Page Two) ares Paha ane Pa POON gt a A an ey eee te ee ed sretnst-the ob -serehip suddenly. diuyed. which ‘will include workers in all f @ | the oppressed Arabs are in revolt, —_—_—. arovsk and Blagovestchensk reg-|workers. It also told of the Gas-| ‘branches of the industry—drivers, |a campaign of intimidation is being | bie" tert FREE CITY OF DANZIG, Sept. | branches | of Anpinidetion |200 Dead, Thousands Be an Some: avtiony nity ths Conia. strike and the 16 workers now |g All 25 hands are believed to|spotters, pressers, dyers, washers, waged. Besides. intimidating. news | 00 i ee and artillery at Poltavskaya. Workers and peasants, in their resolutions passed at village and factory meetings demand the pun- ishment of the perpetrators of a ilar outrages ldét week, and of the Manchurian government which has} been executing and torturing hun- dreds of jailed Soviet workers for- merly employed on the Chinese Eastern Railwa; The Soviet Union workers realize fully that the Chinese war lords are not acting alone, but are the agents of imperialist powers. | North Carolina. ‘Priest Blesses Sellout |of New Orleans | Street Carmen Strike | ees NEW ORLEANS, La., Sept. 8.— Great gratification is expressed ‘here at the sell-out of the car strike |which took months of combined ac- ‘tivity of the City Council, courts, Public Service, Inc., and the A, F. of L. to bring about, by those who ‘engineered it. |have drowned when the Danish coal |steamer Dan sunk in the Baltic to- \day. Belief was expressed that the ship had struck a floating mine, left un- \discovered since the close of the last |world war. No trace of the steamer jwas found by search expeditions. | OHIO TYPOS GAIN CINCINNATI (By Mail)—News- paper printers gained an increase of $2 a week in wages. ie University eredited wit of Washington, is benzine cleaners, tumbler workers, etc. To Unite Committees. “As the first step towards uniting 8. Beaten Up; One the ranks of the workers for a struggle against the bosses,” says a Severely Cut CHICAGO, Sept. 8—Three pick- statement issued yesterday by the} T. U. E. L,, “we will unite all shop | conference which will mobilize the Shop were viciously attacked yester- workers for a struggle against the day by gangsters of the right wing bosses and their agents on the fol- Cap and Millinery Union. One of lowing demands: for the 8 hour, 5 the strikers, Izidore Gentner, was day week; for a minimum living Severely cut and had to have three wage; equal pay for equal work for |Stitches taken in his wound, committees into one shop delegate |¢ts of the Rich and Mayer renté Ue held tomorrow at 8 p. m, at the | men, ATTACK PIGKETS e=: into refusing to handle the-| steamers, checkers, shippers, office | | (Continued on Page Two) [Party Press Conference of ‘sand secretaries of language bureaus will | A conference of all editors |Communist Party newspap National Office, 43 East 125th St., |to take up the Gastonia trial. | CANADA WIREMEN GAIN. | MONTREAL (By Mail).—Elec- Starving, Result of Philippine Typhoon MANILA, P. L, Sept. 8.—Two hundred are dead in Southern Luzon today, with thousands homeless and starving, as a result of a typhoon yesterday. The Filipino peasants re kept, so poor under the Amer- ‘an regime of high taxes and low for produce that there are no stores of food to fall back upon in the stricken area. The only relief measure under- taken so far by the U. S. imperi EVICTIONS IN ~ MARION FOUGHT Charge Guardsmen Are Highway Robbers MARION, N. C., Sept. 8—Pre- paratory to the wholesale eviction of strikers from company houses scheduled for tomorrow which the rank and file committee of mili- red: it the final touch in|men, women, Negro and young| The Needle Trades Workers’ In-| (vical workers here have gained the |ist governors is to send the de- tants announce they will fight, na- e ‘The final rites were consummated | cheating carmen who put up a cour- arkeea) for the elimination of dustrial Union which is leading the 44-houy week and wage inereases. | stroyer Edsall to the east ¢ and tional guardsmen are paroling the Postoffice Clerks to with help of clergy. John O'Grady, /ageous, militant fight for decent | hemicals injurious to our health; strike, fesued a statement tode de-| Rates. will gradually: be increesed (te cecven the damaged territory |highways and searching. all visitors |@ priest, connected with the Cathol-| wages and better conditions. | | to $1 an hour, Fight for 44-hr Week Denounce Speeding Up The National Federation of Post Office Clerks whose national con- vention ended Saturday at the Hotel Commodore went on record in favor of the 44-hour week and denounced the speed-up forced on the clerks by the government officials, By a majority vote the delegates made th2 fi_* for the 44-hour week “the paramount issue” of the organ- ization for the next two years. How- ever, inste: ' of formulating a mili- tant policy to reduce the working hours, the convention passeed a re- solution praising Congressman La- Guardia, republican candiate for | Mark in Charlotte By LISTON M. OAK. Of all the malicious lies printed against the defendants and their union and the International Labor Defense the most vile is contained in the Charlotte Observer of Sept Foulest Textile Boss Slander Says ILD Wants Conviction Stream of Lying Propaganda Reaches High | Observer Editorial level of venomous slander, This latest piece of viciousness of the Charlotte Observer is on a par with the worst lie that the or- |gan of the Manville-Jenckes Com- pany, the Gastonia Gazette, was no discharge; no lay-off, sharing of jnouncing the attack on the workers. work; for sanitary conditions; for|It points out that the gangsters sick and unemployment insurance|were hired by supporters of Max paid by the bosses and managed by |Zaritsky, head of the company the workers; two weeks vacation union, and adds that in the future with pay for all workers.” the militant workers will defend | themselves. Office Workers Dance | This Saturday Night 'Grafters Laud Thomas, _| Socialist Candidate The Office Workers’ Union will | express its solidarity with the 16| Because “he would bring dignity Gastonia textile strikers on trial in| and character to the mayor's office,” Charlotte, N. C., by donating 10 per the Rey. Norman Thomas, socialist cent of the proceeds of the Fall party candidate, has gained the Roof Garden Dance to be held on| praise of the Citizen’s Alliance. the top of the Heckscher Founda-| The kind words for Thomas were tion, 104th St. and 5th Ave., Satur- j voiced officially by the league in 4th. This editorial makes the base- ever able to manufacture against day at 8 p. m. \its organ, The Searchlight, yester- Paul A. Vaccarelli, president of | the Loyal Labor Legion, who on Labor Day presented Edward F. McGredy a rzedal for being “the most, outstanding labor leader of | 1929” was revealed yesterday as with army planes. Vaccarelli Is Exposed as Paul Kelly, Noted Gangste \Is Buddy of Edward F.McGrady; Former Owner ef Brothels; Racketeer, Aid of Brindell New York and before he “reformed” and changed bis name to Vaccarelli was the outstanding gangster of his period. During the wer Vaccarelli, in as- sociation with Brindell, building mayor of New York City. Among other resolutions was one demanding a flat increase of $600 a ycar in salaries of post office ss and a 20 per cent bonus for steht work less charge that the I. L. D. “would the N. T. W, U., the I. L. D., the be sorely disapyointed if all the de- |W. I. R. and the Loray strikers and fendants should be acquitted—be- leaders. cause such an end of the Gastonia | The stream of poisonous propa- ;case weuld leave them without. a ganda against the sixteen strikers martyr.” and more oa the same | (Continued on Page Two) | . This dance is part of the organ- jday. The league had been created ization campaign carried on by the largely by the Hylan ri¥als to Tam- union through the summer. John C.|many Hall, who fo.rd in Tammany Paul Kelly, notorious gangster and | trades union racketeer, who served racketeer of a decade ago, who then|a term in Sing Sing for taking vied with the well-known gunman, |bribes from building trades con- Monk Eastman. tractors, published a patriotic ma- Smith's Negro Jazz Orchestra will|corruption a useful excuse to plead furnish the music, Refreshments | for their election to office and thus | will be served. ~ obtain the keys of the city graft. ' it was learned, was the owner of the 18,000 members of the New the largest number of brothels in| (Continued on Page Three) Vaccarelli or Kelly, at one time, gazine called Uncle Sam, to which) to the strike zone. While this is generally under- Stood as a move to keep away Na+ | tional Textile Workers Union -or- ganizers who have already exposed the sell-out policies of the United Textile Workers and discredited Alfred Hoffman, Muste man and | Continued on Page Three) Four Staten Island Bus Strikers Jailed Police out in full force to protect scabs and the arrest of four strik- ers were the highlights in the Staten Island bus strike yesterday. The four strikers arrested ow charges of stoning a bus driven by a strikebreaker were Jack Perrine, N. Piautilla, Andrew Vandedetti and Joseph Tamotti. Build the United Front of | the Working Class. a te A