The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 23, 1929, Page 1

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_ talist and labor bureaucrat conference agreed to let the workers of THE DAILY WORKER FIGHTS For a Workers-Farmers Government To Organize the Unorganized Against Imperialist War For the 40-Hour Week Batered as second-class mutter at the Cost Uttice at C.I. AT WORKERS CENTER, TOMORROW, 8 P.M. Re w York, N. ¥. under the act of March 8, 1879. FINAL CITY EDITION . Ine. 26-28 Union Square. New York City. SUBSCRIPTION RA’ Outside New York. by mall 66.00 ver year. VES: tp New York by mall. $8.00 per sear Price 3 Cents Vol. VI., No. 223 <=. NEW YORK, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1929. Hoover Declares War on | Workers! | Working Men and Working Women:— Hoover has held a conference of capitalists and reformist labor bureaucrats. This conference discussed the critical economic situation disclosed and aggravated by the Wall Street crash. Hoover and his capi- America pay the expenses of the crisis. UNEMPLOYMENT IS GROWING! All of the bosses’ agents in America, from Hoover to Lovestone, declared that the Wall Street crash has nothing to do with the economic 4conditions of the country. These conditions, they say, are wonderful, | but you workers in the Chrysler plants and other auto factories who | have since been discharged,because of the closing of the plants, and you workers in the large radio plants of the Majestic and other cor- porations who have been thrown out of a job since the crash, and you workers from the East, West, North and South of the United States that have since lost your job because of overproduction, you cannot feed Yourself and your family with the nice phrases of prosperity freely distributed by the above gentry. And you workers who, though still employed are faced with the most systematic wage-cuts ever initiated }, RAISE BAIL ON in the United States, will have to make up for your losses out of the propaganda of Hoover and Lovestone. A. F. OF L. JOINS HOOVER’S WAR AGAINST WORKERS! The bureaucrats of the A. F. of L. pretend to speak in the name of ‘ American labor. Hoover called them in to discuss plans how the bosses can continue operation of industries in the crisis without disturbance by what they call “labor troubles.” Hoover and the capitalists know that the pressure of the crisis will force the working masses to organ- .ize and fight against the bosses as the only means to secure a decent existence. The program agreed upon was: Make the workers pay! The A. F. of L. bureaucrats accepted this program and pledged themselves, | on their part to make the workers submit. They pledged themselves | «that “no movement should be initiated for increase of wages, and that | every cooperation should be given by labor to industry in the handling | of its problems.” You workers of America might have the illusion that | the bureaucrats of the A. F. of L. ought to discuss the question how | "Soon in Mines | ber, printing trades, building trades, | | were also reported on, and general | TUUL Board \\,$, MOVES ON Sees Big Fight Bie Seale FOR The National Executive Board of | the Trade Union Unity League at its meeting Thursday night care- fully considered and worked out the general details for most active struggle in the mining, steel, marine| transport, food workers, textile and| needle trades industries. , | Automobiles, shoe, chemical, rub-| Slogan of War Preparations Industry Mobilized Fairy Tale of Naval Disarmament WASHINGTON, Nov. currently with the annow ment of the inclusion of the See: ry of the Navy Adams in the American dele- agriculture and other indu&tries! steps taken to gain more informa- tion, work out programs, and stim- ulate organization. | “Operators Fight.” | ‘The Lewis-Fishwick struggle in| the United Mine Workers of Amer- Continued on Page Three) Con- 2 lconference, an appointment that ‘proves (since Adams is what |known as a “big navy man”) that | of chatter about “reductions” and talk of “peace,” comes the further war measure providing for the in- dustrial mobilization of the country “in an emergency.” This scheme is described in the annual report of the Engineer Corps made public by the War Department, jand is already ‘n operation. The The $2,000 bail for release of|¢cuntry i: divided into six districts George Saul, arrested for speaking |or “proc rement are*~" with head- for the International _Labor De- |quarters in New York, Philadelphia, fense at a National Textile Workers’ |Buffalo, Pittsburgh, Chicago and mass meeting November 18, Was /San Francisco. Its function simply SAUL 2ND TIME Preacher Asks Floging | Post for Organizers CHARLOTTE, N. C., Nov. 22.— NEW WORLD WAR “Business as Usual” a} |gation to the “five power” naval | is | Hoover has all along been for a big} navy in preparation for war in spite | on Organize Jobless Council in Detroit; | Call Big Mass Meet | DETROIT, Nov. 22. — The Packard unemployed meeting that was called by the Commun- ist Party, Young Communist || League, Trade Union Unity League met with enthusiastic response on the part 6f thousands of unemployed workers. | The speakers outlined plans | |for a mass unemployed council to demand unemployment relief for workers, thrown out on the | streets in the present crisis. The | STRIKES START IN ILLINOIS; | NMU WILL LEAD Lewis Officials Oppose Miners’ Struggle to Stop Wage Cuts \“Old Ben” Must Yield Workers Plan to Shut Down: All Its Mines LOGAN, Ill, Nov. 22—The Il-| linois miners ‘are beginning to strike against the will of the United Mine Workers of America officials. The {men of the Logan mine, the first |to be mechanized in Southern Il- |linois, walked out when the com- pany cut the wages by 54 cents a |day. The wage cut was allowed by the U.M.W.A. The strike is not recognized by the U.M.W.A. It is still on, and National Miners Union speakers will be sent to address the men: “Wild-cat” strikes are noth- ing new in this period here. The National Miners Union calls upon the miners to spread these strikes, based on local grievances, into a strike for the general demands of the N.M.U.: for the six-hour day (Continued on Page Three) | | | i] | workers present voted for another big meeting Monday, November 25, at 2:30 p. m., to be held at 1967 Grand River .West, near | |Cass. A committee was elected | |for leaflet distribution announc- ing the meeting. The majority pregent were workers laid off by Ford, Chrysler, Briggs, Murry, Ody and Hudson companies. The following addressed the meeting: Leo Thompson, Norman Tallen- tire, George Powers, Phil Bart, and many unemployed workers spoke. All Detroit unemployed workers are urged to attend the Monday meeting. 40,000 WORKERS FIRED BY FORD ‘Ford’s Wage Talk Is| | |} Yayon center in \perience the policy of the United ‘Rayon Workers BUILDING BOSSES Rally to Call of New Union DANVILLE, V: National Textile —The PLAN WAGE GUTS om AT CRISIS MEET the southern textile workers be-| Hoover, Contractors cause of its militant policy, has ex- | and Labor Fakers tended its organizational drive in- 5 = to the state of Virginia, the largest | Against W orkers the South, with} Danville as its center. A eae! as The workers in Danville, Schoo-| Drop in Construction field, Draper, ete., are enthusiasti- | = ‘cally willing to listen to the N. T.) A) F. of L. Sells Out to W. U. organizers, because they have learnel from their own bitter Construction Boss Textile Workers’ “Union,” which BULLETIN. Id them out in 1921, allowing the] phe Engineering News-Record re- blacklisting “of many workers and) ports that contracts let for building making conditions worse. jlast week dropped $54,379,000 over The textile towns are company| the corresponding week for last owned, Danville with a population| year. This entails further growth of 35,000 has two industries: tex-|of unemployment in the building tiles and tobacco; 15,000 white | industry. workers are employed in the mills, | . - while the Negroes are engaged in} WASHINGTON, Nov. —Hav the tobacco plants and earn no more | ing lined up the leading misleaders }of labor of the American Federa- |tion of Labor |cutting #heme, (Continued on Page Three) |militant struggles on the part of |the workers in the present crisis, | ‘CELEBRATE 10TH | Hoover met with the building bosses YEAR OF Y C | |today at the White House. 1 Ug da}, 1 the building trades wages are | being attacked by the contractors \all along the line, and further plans jfor onslaught on the living condi- \tions of the building workers were | worked out. New York Youth Hail Sereen Hiding Layoffs | your problems can be solved. But that is not the bureaucrats’ point Need today, The bail has been |told is to provide for manufacture | Anniversary of view. They concern themselves with how the bosses’ problems can | be solved. A. F. OF L. BUREAUCRATS BETRAY WORKERS! You textile workers of the South, who work for eight and ten and | twelve dollars a week, rejoice!, Mr. Green, the president of the A. F. of L., has pledged himself to Mr. Hoover and the American capitalists, that he will not contribute to the crisis by ‘helping you to ask and fight for more wages. And you, workers, in the coal mines and in the auto industry whose wages have been slashed and whose jobs have been taken by machines and by speed-up, don’t be alarmed about the crisis. Mr. Green has pledged the honor of the A. F. of L. that he will not | contribute to the crisis by organizing you and helping you to fight. FASCISM GROWS IN AMERICA! », Mr. Green’s pledges are his signature in the name of the American Federation of Labor to a pact with the American capitalists and the American capitalist government against the American workers. They are official manifestations of the fascist role now being played by the A. F. of L. Fascism is the merging together of the capitalist trusts and corporations with the government and with the socialist and reformist — misleaders of the working class, and the “left wing” reformists, the | Mustes, the Cannons and the Lovestones. This growth of fascism is accompanied by the decline of the power of congress, at the same time more power is concentrated in the executive, in Hoover and Company. The operations of this fascism are directed toward the crushing and @emoralizing of the working class and, first of all, therefore, against the Communist Party which exposes the capitalist schemes and or- | raised to $5,000. . The bail was orig- jinally set at $600, but when that |was provided, they raised it to} | $2,000. Mayor Hoffman, mill boss flunkey |at Mt. Holly, admitted in a long dis- ‘tance telephone call by the N. T. W. U., that he caused the raise in |bail. He said they are looking up | Saul’s record, but that no additional | charges have been filed. | D. S. Hasn, Baptist minister of |GreefWille, S. C., in a speech to a |college press association, advocated ithe whipping post for textile strike ‘leaders and organizers. wry In an attempt to split the ranks lof the White and Negro workers, \the mill bosses of Winston-Salem, land Charlotte have begun discharg- |of war materials, or materials sec-| WasHINGHTON, Nov. 22; jondary but essential for war. Henry Ford’s statement on wages is the smoke screen behind which national and drastic wage cuts are proceeding. . The fact that® a wage slashing campaign was t..e chief issue at the Hoover imperialist crisis conference is shown by the statement in the New York Times: “The wage question was thor- | In a carefully guarded vault’ in| leach area are contracts already | drafted and signed by corporations, for materials produced by their fac- |tories or which can be produced by | rapid alteration, so that within 24) hours after notification, production |for war purposes Will be begun at |top spec 1. of American imperialism are, there-| leaders in the conference as a \fore, preparing to back up the! (Continued on Page Three) Hoover administration’s slogan, | “Business as usual” in an attempt to force the door of foreign markets i ‘now held by other imperialist pow- | { |cation of this is seen in the choice Both sie n val and military arms | ouoghly discussed by the industrial | MINERS’ UNION _+ FIGHTS VERDICT 3 Young Workers Face 10 Year Sentences PITTSBURGH, Pa., Nov. 22.—The conviction of Charles Guynn, 27- lyear-old_ organizer of the National | Miners’ Union, on a charge of “crim- jinal syndicalism” in Ohio was vig- lorously denounced in a statement jissued today from the national head- quarters of the N. M. U., 119 Fed- | Hoover now has the assurance of Leading members of the Com-jthe fakirs in the building trades munist Party, including William{ Continued on Page Three) FIGHT RENT HOGS members of the National Executive Committee of the Young Commun- ist League will speak at the cele- bration of the Tenth Anniversary of the Young Communist Interna- tional, to be held tomorrow at the Moore to Expose Fake Communist League in the intensi- Poon ‘ fied resistance ef the workers} ~ kent Law Juggling against the boss’ rationalization! , eae : drive, the attacks that have been | The Harlem Tenants League is made cn the Communist Interna. |¢alling a mass meeting at Public tional and the Young Communist Libri 103 West 135th St., Monday at 8 p.m. Richard B. Moore, presi- The role played by the Young ing some white workers and hiring + 5 of Dwight W. Morrow (of the House Negroes. jof Morgan) as one of the delegates | jeral St., Pittsburgh. | Guynn, together with Lillian An- |drews and Tom Johnson, the latter | Workers’ Center, 26 Union Sq. International by the Lovestone-Git- | F low renegades, and the role of the |dent of the League, will be the prin- League in the fight against the right danger, all these topics will |cipal speaker. A resolution will be |submitted for approval, calling for McMANUS TRIAL DELAYED. Appearances indicate that the McManus-Rothstein trial may be ditched as a politica] expedient. The \“ilIness” of a- juror is the reason lers, particularly England. An indi- CITY TRUST iH ASE to the naval conference. From this | fact is revealed the whole character | matic fencing between hostile pow- | lers preparatory to war—not prepar- ‘atory to what existing “peace” there lof the naval conference as a diplo-| Indictments for Fraud al” “Unconstitution (Continued on Page Three) CLEANERS FIGHT. jbe discussed at the celebration. |tenants to unite and be ready for a rent strike against the extortions of the landlords, now without any limit because of the trickery and juggling |of the Tammany and republican poli- I Amter, district organizer of District 2 of the Communist Party, | has urged all members of the Party to support the celebration. ganizes the workers for struggle. lgiven for a possible break of the |is. Supreme Court Justice Tompkins . pressions of the colonial and semi-colonial peoples, especially of Latin- Hoover’s moves show that American capital intends to meet the | crisis by moving in three directions. | One: they want to reduce the standards of the workers. Two: they want to intensify their drive for more foreign markets. Three: they try to mobilize large scale emergency investments in railroads, constructions, etc. These capital investments are looked upon | as a means of meeting the immediate crisis and of slowing down its de-- velopment. But the capitalists cynically declare among themselves that the carrying out of these investments require a guarantee of immediate | profits from them. But this is impossible in the face of decline in pro- duction. And even to the extent that the investments could be success- *| fully carried through, under capitalism this will only intensify the basic causes of the crisis by increasing productive capacity still more out of proportion to the available markets. This is therefore clearly no solu- | tion to the crisis, but an aggravation of it. WAGES GO DOWN AND THE SPEED-UP INCREASES! The first step in Hoover’s plan is to intensify the speed-up and to | slash wages. This is supposed to revive the falling profits and help | the American capitalists take more markets away from their competi- | tors. But this measure also, which must meet the energetic resistance | of the workers, cannot solve the crisis for capitalism, even to the extent | that it is successful. The reduction of the earnings of the working | class, as likewise the reduction of the purchasing power of farmers, may | give capitalism immediate profits but sharply cuts down the domestic | market. As a result, the crisis will be intensified. WAR FOR FOREIGN MARKETS! All these inner contradictions of capitalism, sharpened more and more daily by the economic crisis, are driving American imperialism | into a struggle for foreign markets which can only result in war. The | American capitalist class has faced this issue and accepts the inevita- bility of war. The fifteen cruisers now under construction are not the most:important signs of this preparation. The very “peace” treaties ‘ and propaganda, the melodramatic farce of MacDonald's visit to Hoover, | are but screens to the war preparations and maneuvers for position in | the. war. American army staffs, chemical laboratories, airplane fac- tories, arsenals, etc., are working night and day making new engines of destruction, The drive for foreign markets is at athe same time the drive toward the new world war. NEW OPPRESSION OF COLONIAL PEOPLES. Another result of the drive for markets will inevitably be new op- America and Philippines, and China. The American working class must understand that the enslavement of the colonial peoples by American imperialism is part of the game drive of the capitalist~class which is « also directed against the American workers. Effective resistance to the speed-up and wage cuts, and general oppression of the American work- ers, must include also an alliance with the colonial masses for struggle against imperialist exploitation and for complete national independence. PREPARING WAR AGAINST THE SOVIET UNION. American imperialism, similar to all imperialist powers, fears and hates the Soviet Union, not only because it has taken one of the rich- est potential markets away from capitalist exploitation, and is success- fully. building socialism on one-sixth of the earth’s surface, but also and above all, because the Soviet Union and its marvelous progress under working class rule is a living and constant incitement to the workers and oppressed peoples everywhere to throw ‘off their oppressors, the capitalists and imperialists, and likewise set up the rule of the workers and toiling masses. The world crisis of capitalism, in which the Amer- ican economic crisis is now the sharpest expression, brings close and sharp the menace of imperialist war against the Soviet Union. The working class of the U. S. A. must throw all its power into defense of ,the Soviet Union if it wishes to defeat the general capitalist attack. proceedings. Mayor Walker is un- | . wh derstood to have staged the trial as | a part of his election campaign. | vinced that there will be no reduc- |sibility of war between Great Bri tain and the United States,” said Frank B. Kellogg, former secretary good deal. LONDON, (By Mail).—A lockout | has been declated against shipyard | workers throughout Britain by the | Shipbuilding Employers’ Federation. | (Continued on Page Two) WORKERS! YOU MUST ORGANIZE TO FIGHT! The economic¢ crisis, the speed-up, wage-cuts and unemployment, are the realization in life of what the Communist International de- | seribed as the third period of post-war capitalism—a period of the fur- ther rotting of capitalist stabilization, a period of crises, upheavals, wars and revolutions. In such a period, the working class will bear all the burdens and suffer all the losses—unless it will organize and fight. The Communist Party of the U. S. A., section of the Communist International, is the only party which fights against this capitalist of- fensive. It is the only party which exposes the intrigues of the capi- talist class, and its war plans against the workers. It is the only party which explains the economic crisis, and what it means to the workers. It is the only party which exposes the war plots of imperialism. It is the only party which organizes, and leads the working class and the toiling masses in struggle against capitalist rationalization and imper- ialist war. WHAT TO DO. The Communist Party gives the following program of action for | every worker who understands the extreme seriousness of the present period,‘and who wants to fight with his class against capitalism: 1. Organize! Join the militant trade unions, in the Trade Union Unity. League. 2. Support the revolutionary press. Subscribe to and distribute the Daily Worker, and other revolutionary papers. 3. Join the Communist Party. THE PROGRAM OF MASS STRUGGLE, For the struggle against capitalist rationalization and imperialist war the revolutionary trade unions and the Communist Party have clearly pointed out the way. This is the road of mass struggles, or- ganized and led by the revolutionary unions and Party, at the head of the working masses, along the lines of our main slogans: STRIKE AGAINST THE SPEED-UP AND AGAINST CUTS! + FIGHT FOR FULL WAGES FOR THE UNEMPLOYED! FIGHT FOR SOCIAL INSURANCE! FIGHT FOR SHORTER HOURS, FOR THE SEVEN-HOUR DAY! FIGHT FOR HIGHER WAGES! FIGHT AGAINST THE A. F. OF L. WHICH IS THE AGENT OF THE BOSSES! FIGHT AGAINST THE REFORMIST BETRAYERS FROM NOR- MAN THOMAS TO LOVESTONE! FIGHT AGAINST THE IMPERIALIST WAR AND WAR PREP- ARATIONS! WAGE LONDON, Nov. 22.—“I am con- |) ‘yesterday came to the aid of former idge Franc’ X. Mancuso and other irectors of the City Trust Company, |Fear of revealing too much in the |tion of armament if we are to ap- indicted for participating in fraudu- police department can account for a Proach it from the basis of the pos- lent insolvency, and ordered the in- dictments dismissed on technical ‘constitutional” grounds. Mancuso and other bank officials, of state, in a speech on disarmament | according to the evidence, had not | at a dinner of the Pilgrim society jonly been engaged in fraudulent | cleaners, at an enthus jtransactions, but they had bribed Frank H. Warder, former superin- tendent of Banks, to conceal the con- dition of the bank. Mancus~ refused to resign until publicity in the pre- ‘election period made it impossible ‘for him to remain longer on the judi- \cial “bench.” . A court ruling regarding some ‘case in Georgia was used by Justice Tompkins for dismissing the indict- ments against Mancuso and his as- sociates, despite all evidence against hem. Others freed by Tompkins, in \addition to Mancuso, are Anthony di | |Paola, cashier. of the City Trust, Salvatore Soraci, Leonard Rose, |Federico Ferrari, Isidore Siegeltuch jand Francis S. Paterno. OYSTER SHUCKERS ORGANIZE. | BILOXI, Miss., (By Mail).—About, |250 oyster openers of Biloxi have de- icided to organize into a union, and jto demand better wages and condi- tions. ! | ~ BETRAYAL GANG | Decide to Continue the | Struggle, Build Union: | Several hundred striking window | | istic meeting |last night in Manhattan Lyceum, |66 E, 4th St., expressed their de- |termination to continue their strug- igle and to fight unceasingly against |the right wing and American Fed- eration of Labor betrayers who have {split their union, sold out their strike and set up a company union. Present at the meeting were many workers who had at first | been stampeded into following the. company union agents, but who had been quickly , disillusioned when they discovered the true nature of the sell-out agreement signed with the bosses by Krat, Lash, Pelmeri {and company. It was learned from these workers that the Sunshine Window Cleaning Company had |brought five scabs down to the |“union” office, had paid $10 apiece for them and made them “union” men. In the Grand American Shop, Buchwald, one of the company union agents, is training scab learn- (Continued on Page Two) ‘Response to Southern Workers Appeal tor Daily Must Grow! ‘Daily Worker Must Be Rushed South as Mill | Here are some more Workers be rushed to them, Toilers’ Struggles Sharpen and workers’ groups that have re- | sponded to the appeals of the southern workers that the Daily Worker | unionize the trade. CRISIS SHUTS WALL STREET NEW YORK, Noy. 22.—The de- pression in the, basic industries which cut in half the values in the capitalist securities market in Wall Street, has reached a panic stage. The board of governors of the New York Stock Exchange voted to day and Saturday. In Hoover’s optimistic statements, the value of securities continues to drop, showing that the depression is mak- ing inroads into profits. Expose Fake Dress “Strike”; Call for Real Fight, Sunday Social-fascism of the needle trades as practiced by officials of the In- ternational Ladies’ Garment Work- ers’ Union will be analyzed by Jo- seph Boruchowitz, manager of the Joint Board of the Needle Trades Workers’ Industrial Union, speech in which he Will ask, “Have the Needle Trades Workers Gained or Lost by the. Last Cloak Strike?” this Sunday. Boruchowitz will Hall, 8875 Third Ave., Bronx. J. H. Cohen, vice president of the ter, 122 Osborne St., the same date. Local and trade meetings are to be held by the Joint Board as part of its policy of exposing the I. L. G. W. U. “strike” to company- laid to counter the Schlesinger pro- boss move by calling out workers close the market for Thursday, Fri-| spite of} in a speak at 10 a. m. at Ambassador union, will speak on the same sub-| ject at the Brownsville Youth Cen-! Plans will be, i uring the election campaign, the |Tammany machine did not like tc |notify the millions of oppressed |workers in New York that their lrents ‘rere going to be raised. The | (Continued on Page Two) ‘SHOE WORKERS FIGHT LOCKOUT Bosses Get Injunction Against Picketing ; Fifteen hundred shoe workers | were locked out in 12 different shops | operated by the bosses who are mem- bers of the Metropolitan Shoe Manu- facturers Association. This outfit | was organized by the labor-bating Commissioner W. G. Woods, of the Department of Labor. The most significant point in the lockout is that the bosses who are guilty of breaking the agreement jexisting between the Independent | Shoe Workers’ Union and the bosses |have applied for and received from (Continued on Page Two) HOFFMAN CASE IS DISMISSED MARION, N. ¢ | bringing charges against Alfred Hoffman, organizer for the United Textile Workers of | America, to save his before the ing jailed court charges strike- j here today gismissed the jagainst the A. of L. | Workers, the mill hands in scores of southern textile mill centers | have been appealing to you to send,the Daily to them regularly; the response to them has hot been anywhere nearly sufficient to assure these workers, preparing for one of the greatest phases of the class struggle, that they will have the Daily Worker when they go into that struggle. Do we want them to think that we're not with them? Workers, show the southern mill workers. that you're battling side* by side with them, by rushing the Daily Worker to them! Working class groups, adopt southern mill towns and villages and DEFEND THE SOVIET UNION, THE WORKERS’ FATHER. _ ‘¢e to it that bundles of the Daily Worker go to the workers in these LAND! | villages every day. CENTRAL COMMITTEE, Some of the workers and working class groups that have shown COMMUNIST PARTY OF U. S. A. i (Continued on Page Three) ce 4 ‘ for a real fight under the leadership | breaker, Judge Cowper granting a of the Needle Trades Workers’ In-| motion of “non-suit.” dustrial Union. Bronx dressmakers While the charges of “rebellion” will meet at the Royal Mansion, 1315 | against Hoffman and four others Boston Road, near 169th St., Tues-|are dismissed, the state is going day, 8 p. m., Nov. 26. ‘ahead with real efforts to railroad Other meetings will be held at/| militant worke: o escaped be- union offices, 131 W. 26th St., at|ing shot by Sherif 6:30 p. m. Tuesday, Nov. 26, by the; The sort “ey Fur Department of the union; and|by the prosecution s at Bryant Hall, 42nd St. and Sixth | indictment against Hoff who is Ave., Wednesday, Nov. 27, at 1 p.|one of the outstanding s break- m., where Ben Gold, union secretary- | ers of the country, was only a man- treasurer, will lead discussion at a}euver to prevent his role from be: mass open forum of the union. ing too apparent to the workers ' introduced that the of \

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