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> ¥Uic: DAILY WORKER, NEW © AY, APRIL 3, 1930 _ PROGRAM OF (Printed below is the program as amended and adopted by 215 Councils of Ungmployed and milita’ meeting at the call of the Trade City on March 29 and 30. In last “Demands of the Unemployed” w by mistake from a draft which hi proved. The following is the corre unemployed.) . 4, Because the capitalists are unable to keep in cperation their bankrupt industries, based upon private own- ership, wage slavery and the profit system, 7,000,000 American wor! ers are forced to walk the streets in idleness and poverty while mil- lions more work only part time. The workers, after having created untold billions of wealth, are unceremoni- ously thrown out upon the streets to starve, while those who remain at work suffer wage cuts, speed-up, ete., under the employers’ offensive. The economic crisis in this country, | with its huge permanent mass un- | employment, is part of the world isis of capitalism. All told more than 20,000,000 workers are now un- * THE FIGHT AGAINST UNEMPLOYMENT. Jis the fight of the’ whole working \elass. Not only the workers who are out of jobs but also those who lare employed are vitally involved. The employed workers are in dan- ger of being thrown into the army nt unions in 49 cities and 18 states, Union Unity League in New York Saturday's Daily Worker a list of of unemployed, and the capitalis as published, the text being taken eee in ae ‘the great unt ad not been discussed and not ap- | employment, ct statement of the demands of the ‘their conditions. The present ec |nomie crisis, despite all the capital list propaganda to the effect that | wages are not being cut, has been (marked by a general lowering of | wage standards in the various in- dustries. The Department of Labor statisties showed that during De- cember when the total number of Night sticks, tear gas and jails were the answer of the capitalists to the demands of the hungry un- employed. The A.F. of L. and so- cialist party, true to their roles as capitalist auxiliaries, partici- pated in and even led these at- tacks upon the unemployed. In further attempts to demoralize the movement of the unemployed workers, the capitalists and their labor lender lackeys came forward with a whole series of fake pro- posals for the relief of unemploy- ment. These consist of illusory building programs, unemployment census, employment offices, etc. The A. F. of L., which has become a fascist organization, and the so- payrolls decreased 41-2 per cent. The speed-up is being pushed to the limit in all industvies, against unemployment is insepar- ably connected up with the struggle against wage cuts, speed-up and general lowering of the standards of the workers, The fight against unemployment nd capitalist exploitation is worl wide in character. The National Un- smployed Council of the United States declares its solidarity with the oppressed workers of the world | in their struggle againt unemploy- ment and world capitalim. It sup- employed decreased by 2 per cent, | The struggle | | and semi-colonial coun China, Latin-America, ete. | Unemployment is an inevitable | product of capitalism. It must become worse so long as capital- The capitalist syste because of its inability to markets for the masses of com- modities robbed from the work stematically worsen | ism lasts. ind THE NATIONAL UNEMPLO ports the revolutionary struggle of | |the masses of toilers in the colonial | ous cities shall immed ies—India, |large appropriations to initiate the i, Free shall be the work The vari- ely make e. Homes for Workers. Employment este Agencies | plished under control of Page Three FERENCE once, T! general struggle ast unemployment, with the de- al insurance and of unemployed. In all indu shall be im ed council trial cen- J tely set cam- } Th ters there up unempl im- demolition of the slums and the| j. Release of All Class-War Pris- coun- em elief, must be building of workers dwellings. These | oners, including those arrested f igh a made the central point in the elec- hall be rented by the cities to the |r entin the unemple a tion activity. The republican and workers, preference being given to| movement and those for part and in the respe lemocratie par are the official he unemployed and without discrim- | ing in unemployment demonst aim at the | parties of the capitalist class, which ation against or segreg n of | and strikes. ‘uitment of a definite dues pay- is responsible for unemployment and which the exploited workers | cannot buy back, unavoidably | causes “overproduction,” the shut down of industry and inevitable | mass unemployment. This condi- tion grows worse with the deep- ening of the world crisis of capi- taliem. Only the overthrow of the capitalist system and the estab- lishment of a Soviet Government can eliminate unemployment and | the exploitation of the workers. | The Ru ers in the Union n wo roes, at the rate of 10 per cent al attention and wh e program is the forcible i (ele epee PALI evictions of || © spolitiom of ailiyagranty lava: lrawing in Ne- suppression of all struggles of the unemployed workers for non-pay-| 1. The six-hour day for youth un- working class, more intensive ra- ment of rent shall be abolished. |der 18 in all oceu! tionalization and the still further f. Oust the Persecutors of the| m. Prohibtion of employment of regularly and function ager ely | lowering of the living standards of Workers. All federal, state and city | children under 14 years. Government | defense of all the workers’ de-' the working class. The socialist officials and police officials respon-| maintenance of all children, free mands. ees : a third Lppebet oe ible for and participating in the | food, clothing, fare and school sup-| pb, 1 Unemployed Con- ‘8m. Its role is to confuse; divide the | in ations on March 6 shall be | ismissed and punished, rutal and bloody attacks ns workers. « n. Abolition of underground night work and work g. Abolition of Political Blacklist blacklisting of work f is or union activ Abolition 0. plies for all children of unemployed in dangerous industries for women and youth. of discrimination and betray the working class and to lead it into the camp of its class enemies. The socialist party is a defender of capitalism. In order to utilize the election campaign in the most effective manner and concen- trate the attention of the masses on vention’ There shall be nal unemploy Yr demonstration in € July 4th and 5th. The convention shall be made up of the masses of unemployed workers affiliated ing with the and employed in the various industrial] cialist party and Muste groups, countries. Everywhere, through un-| Which cover weit fascism with employment, wage cutting and| Tadical phrases, take the lead in speed-up, the capitalists seek to| all these demoralizing projects which are aimed against the work- ers and which stand in the way of real relief for the unemployed. Such proposals are responses, not to the needs of the workers, but to the mass pressure of the work- ers. throw the burden of the economic crisis upon the shoulders of the workers, The employers and their govern- ment have done nothing to relieve the distress of the millions of un- employed and their families, On the contrary they have not only put | the workers out of the industries The capitali iry to delude the workers into in ity with stories and terrorized them, but have at-|that “prosperity” and the liquida- tempted to deny the existence of the |tion of unemployment are “just mass unemployment, President Hoo-|®round the corner.” But the wave ver taking the lead in this, ‘The|of unemployment rises higher and leaders of the American Federation |Mgher. In the latter part of Janu- of Labor and the socialist party out-|@tYs President Hoover in his cam- | stripped the very capitalists in this |Paign of minimizing unemployment, 4 F 2 sgn e a te in “y cally ev in- lying campaign. The aim of the | Stated that in “practically every in: dusty capitalists and their fascis fee ROA social-fascist labor leader flunlies |¢™Ployment.” But a fow Hoover’s secretary of | is to foree the unemployment issue | into the background so that the at aa’ i ee em- hungry workers might starve in si-|P’oyment had decreased by per lente cent from December. rough i February and March there has been But the unemployed masses have} steady decline given an effective answer to these|The slowing down of industry lies and attacks on the workers. On| constant wiih only negligible f! March 6, in response to the call of |tuations in limited fields. he Communist Party and the Trade | Union Unity League, 1,250,000}. Aegis workers demonstrated in gigantic |in other capitalist countries, meetings and parades against unem-| Workers face permanent mass un- ployment in all of the principal cit- | employment on a gigantic seale. Fgr ies of the United States. This, the | Several yea pre vee greatest mass workers’ demonstra-| Crisis capitalist rationalization, or tion in the history of America, |*Peed up, was throwing hundreds of In the United States, as well as brought the unemployment question |thousands out of work. Factory em- | squarely forward as a live, burning, | Plo. ment was decreasing by more national issue. Alarmed, the capi-|than 200,000 per year in spite of talists attempted to crush this great | huge increases in productivity. The movement of the workers with ter- | 8" 1 rorism and violent repression. The | being further recruited by vast unemployment demonstrations were | armies of workers and small farm- met by massed police who brutally |¢rs driven off the land by the agri slugged and arrested the workers cultural crisis. Before the present wholesale. jeyelical crisis in industry set in, at Such terrorism was practiced |the high tide of 'prospettiy,’ 4.000. a pe . <.1, |000 were unemployed. e workers Te wager eT aGuuey ean | must take up seriously the question ic ¥ \of struggle against unemployment. the typical capitalist police com- The fight against unemployment in employment. | the | 2. DEMANDS OF The workers must struggle fo: such relief against unemployment may be secured under | The amount of relief achieved by capitolism nis struggle will depend upon the jand the militancy with which they juse it against the capitalists. This |very ‘struggle serves to show that the capitalists, although pc ed of almost limitless wealth, refuse to give consideration to the demands lat latter's revolutionary mass action. struggle also exposes t st nature of the government and it is used as an inst against the working ¢ lt v masks the fascist leaders of the A.F, of L. and socialist party and show them in their true light a t agents. It unites the workers, em- ployed and unemployed, for the class struggle generally against capital- > capi- There must be made a fight against opportunism in the unc ployed movement. This manifests itself primarily by minimizing the major demands for social ix e and the seven-hour five-day week, and by stressing such demands as chear street ci far opening is for the unemployed to sleen lin, by minimizing the necessity for lorganizing the unemployed and j using mass action, by trying to con- growing army of unemployed was | fine the movement within capitalist in min a legalist bounds, ete. | In the name, therefore, of the 1,250,000 workers who assembled in |demonstrations on March 6, and o | behalf of the 7,000,000 unemployed | Workers in the U.S.A. and in the Bape ted of the workers generally, |of the workers unless forced by the | unem- | of Socialist Soviet Republics have |“1 atramntg at such blacklisting |28%mst and persecution of foreign councils. The unemployed Unemployment, its causes Pa ee shown to the workers of the world |%. Attempts ab s bi : rkers, through deportation, everywhere shall imme- eCeSsity tor struggle againat 2%, ule the way to abolish capitalism ang | Shall be rigorc Me ly pinisee \f ing, blacklisting, ete. campaign | “employed councils will,” in the its mass unemployment, and to | h. Free Speech and Assembly. Th of all discrimination conven. °o™ing elections, support, the can- build socialism. Their tremendous streets and squares of the cit ast Negroes—full social, politi- tion the greatest possibile number | “dates of the only political party successes in constructing socialist shall be declared open and free for cal, and economic equality, and the of unemployed workers. ‘They Of the proletariat the. Communist saduaiio. iuseeltecbiotets 7. (all workers’ meetings and demon- right of self-determination for the chall regularly credential all dele- | Patty of the United States. industry, in collectivizing agricul- |°) NO'* sero masses, 7 ele 7 : = Fy ture, in raising the standards of | ** 840M pNeecouruaese | gates to the convention. To this | g, R. I. L. U. Delegation, The , s | unempl oyed convention all trade | election of the T.U.U.L. delegates he eee cine are ew cae) 3. ORGANIZATION OF THE UNEMPLOYED. unions shall be invited to send /to the Fifth Congress of the Red tounding the world. mass credentialed delegates. International of Labor Unions must ete Oe BS | tn order for the workers to strug-| 50 per cent of the receipts of the |e. State unemployed demonstra. be utilized as a further caeeaee THE UNEMPLOYED. aan ‘eainst. unemploy. local unemployed councils. Tt shall | tions. The unemploy in and means for bringing the unem- ae ams unemp ey” | pe affiliated to the Trade Union the principal cities st the | Ployed workers and the employed a. Work or Wages. Unemploy-|™oDt they must have the most) tity League, American Section | initiative under the direction of the | Workers into closer organization. AM reer ¥” | thorough organization, nationally and of the Red International of Labo ional Unemployed Council, in| The unemployed workers should par- a eubiis ma be on demand locally. ‘The unemployed movement,! Unions. the o nization of un- any in aot eae das of all unemployed or, workers work- |, EAS sc ga aap pa en ea employed demonstrations, marches | Tespective industries fo selec ing only part time. ‘This shall be | PUilt upon a solid basis of individual) }, Local organization. There shall STF sacs workers’ delegations, to(tion of the R.LL.U, delegation un- ald’ hy dhe -atlte A membership, must he linked with |be local unemployed councils estab- {)° tate capitols, fe make de.|der the auspices of thé respective spon till lie crasenb the revolutionary unions at all} lished in all dustrial centers. ae mands upon the state governments | ational industrial unions’ and na- diseri cticed in industry |Points in direct affiliation and | local T.l U.L, counei should take ment relief. These | tional industrial leagues, a egro, women, your through committees of action, etc.,| the initiative in this work. In the akintist be. tatilised oto é Sid be LMS ‘abail’ he so that the struggle of the em-| larger cities, unemployed councils pees the national; ' Workers Defense, | - ahs nce ployed ani employed workers ean | shall also be organized in the more poids prea Ss z foe |nated in working out this insurance | Ployed and unemployed oo a convention in Chi The y een Wane out mus insurance ‘pe carried on jointly. Special atten-| important city sub-divisions. The lo- | CnVenvon mm he unemployed councils, in The unemployment insur- ed by a tax on all | program. ance pro re in redu s of all hig cials, and by removal of the emption now enjoyed by the chu on their tremendous properties. unemplos insurance shall ‘administered by representatives elected directly by the workers in the shops and by the unemployed through their council, Pending the {adoption of fe ployment |insurance, the national, state and city government ke emer- | gency unemplo, f appro- sriations equal to t full wages |b. Seven-hour Day Five-day Wee There shall be established, eral legislation, the seven-hour day nd five-day week to apply in all | private and government industrie: ‘and plants (with the six-hour a ng, railroading and _ other rdous or unhealthy pa- tions). Overtime shall be abolished oc |. Abolition of the Spoed-up Sys- tem. Establishment of rest periods | |throughout the day. Regulatios of |machine speed by the workers. Abol- ition of piece work. this National Unemployment Con-| ference demands the measures: following | d. Against Wage Cuts and for ' Wage Increases. | |of their tion must be given to draw cal councils all be delegate the of del with a national see- local vu fe Dte dquarters shall be members representation ployed cot Is. esent conference shall elect a provisional National | All local unemployed Executive Commitee to serve un- | must be given concrete tasks to til the coming nati conve! fc J out in specified times. tion. It shall publish a periodical k-up must be made regu tin, of It shall be financed by all work of the councils. A. PROGRAM OF ACTION. Th ternative of unempleyed con her fighting or starv- | f will fight. It is necessary, , that the unemployed de- ion and en- d many ¢ ailure to build more definite org tion nong the unemploy failure to strengthen the 'T.U. unions, ete. These weaknesses m wh a ing. Th ther velop a strong organ age in militant activity in support demands. The March 6th demonstration was a splendid ex- ample of working ¢ solidarity and growing fighting spirit. But it! ment of the moveme the following shall be pw program of act ctively into effect T.U.U.L. EXPOSED STEEL BOSS TRICK TO KEEP WORKERS IN MARCH 6 (By a Worker Correspondent) EAST CHICAGO, Ind—The vampire who is superintendent of the tin mill of the Youngstown Sheet and Tube Co. promised before March 6 to run the hot mill department on the 6-hour shift. Gee, you workers felt good! You thought you’d reached the sky! When ‘the ‘TUUL asked you to come out and demonstrate March 6 with the em- ployed and unemployed workers, you remained silent, altho you really did care. When the TUUL told you the 6-hour day was a joke, a scheme to keep you from the demonstration, your answer was that the manage- ment meant business, that his highness, Lord Chalmers, was a reliable man. Why, they went as far as to pick the extra crew to man Mill No. 12 for the great experiment. Then on the beautiful day of March 10 Mr. Chalmer was in the mill itself telling you that for the time being, at least, the 6-hour shift was impossible. Once more the TUUL was right. Now workers, don’t think for a minute the TUUL enjoyed the trick played on you by the Y. S. and T. Co. No, the TUUL is with you to the limit. Join the Metal Workers’ Industrial League which fights for you and also backs the unemployed im their demands for work or wages, =—STEEL WORKER. Shade Workers Must Fight Cuts (By a Worker Correspondent) CHICAGO.—The Northwest Shade Dloth Co., southwest Chicago, called ip a labor agency. Labor agency tharges $10 of the men who ask for work, Arriving at the company work they, the company, pay 40 cents an hour. But they are talking of cutting wages to 35 cents. Work- érs must fight wage cuts by joining, Trade Union Unity League. —CHI¢ LONGSHOREMEN : “SLAVE ON DOCKS ‘J obless | to Piers (Continued from Page One) chinery has been improved, but the men “have to step on the gas,” as one Negro longshoreman says: “There's a lot of nnemploy- ment now. Very few piers keep more than 25 or 30 men on the job regularly where they used to have 200 to 250. Most of the men are lucky if they make $15 a week. You see them line up 400, 500 and maybe a thou- sand when a ship arrives. The bors picks a couple of dozen. “Then they have to hang around days until another ship arrives. The work is very dangerous. What do they care if their rotten cables break and the load falls on our head. It happens very often. They've cut down the gangs and make ’em speed up to unload a ship in the same time that the larger gangs used to unload them before.” Writing from the South, a New Orleans longshoreman says: “The Workers Flock, ;longshoremen on these docks are or- ganized to some extent in the LL.A which makes no effort to improve | The dues are very | high, being 5 cents on the dollar | our conditions. {On the average we get only three| |days work per week, and out of thi $15 per week 75 cents must go to} the union, or $3 per month... . We are looking with increasing in- |terest tothe Marine Workers League, | Jas the only logical way to orgat-| lize and improve our conditions.” | A typical example of conditions jin New York are those at Pier 14.) The workers get 65 cents an hour. |for about twice as much actual work |they used to put in five or six years | ago. Out of 200 who worked on th | pier five or six months ago, only |25 to 30 are employed now steadi| About seven years ago these workers struck, under the leadership of the 1.L.A. The leaders sold them out. “Furuseth and Olander, of the| International Seamen’s Union,” said | George Mink, “in reality a company union, working together with the government in the imperialist war preparations, try to pitt the seamen! against the longshoremen. They} |must be organized together into one | union, the fighting Marine Workers Union. “We demand: A dollar an hour. | Dangerous or special cargo to pay} a minimum of double time. Enlarge | the gangs. Twenty men to a gang.) Not less than eight men in the hold. | Dock Committees shall be elected by | rffice they put you through an ex- ;mination by three doctors, more trict than the navy, and for this Men! Danger In Painful, Weak — Get Your New Bladder and Spring Outfits * ae the Kidneys | Needle Trade Pee Santal itidy and elps to quickly correct “« i 8, pain- z burning passages. pain- “ase | Non-Partisan tion. Used for nearly half a century, throughout the world. For early celief get from your druggist the original. Santal Midy | Workers School. Women! Children! BAZAAR pe gf Today, Tomorrow, Saturday and Sunday April 3; 4, 5 and 6 STAR CASINO 107TH STREET AND PARK AVENUE ~ Tickets: Today 25e: Tomorrow S5e; Saturday 75e; Sunday boc | Come direct from work and have your supper at the BAZAAR so that you will have plently of time to dance and enjoy yourself with your friends and buy bargains, which has become famous for its wonderful line of CLOTHES for everybody at prices actually be- low cost of pro- duction. |\Mellon | Daily Worker. Blocks Cash | for Jobless War Vets, G0] (Continued from Page One) by the Communist Party in many cities. In New York a conference will be held April 4; Detroit, Sunday, April 13, 2 p. m., 3782 Woodward Ave.; Baltimore, Md., April 18, 8 p.m, at 514 N. Eautaw Street; Philadelphia, April 20, 1 p. m., at 39 N. 10th St.; Cleveland, Ohio, | Sunday, April 6, 10 a. m., at 2046 East 4th St.; Chicago, April 13, People’s Auditorium. Protest Movement (Continued from Page One) ing every effort to holding of a successful Miners’ Union rict scheduled for Zeigler, Ill, Apr and 6. As part of this plan t prevent lers Organizer for the union |the men on each dock to represent Friday in Benton, on a framed up them, They are to inspect all gears | charge. The miners are determined, jand rigging. No ship to be worked | however, to hold their convention. |The meeting broken up at Eldorado jissued slogans demanding work or unless 0.K.’d by the Dock Com- mittee.” eR Oe | wages, the six hour day five day What is the Marine Workers week in the mining fields, unem- League? Read about the coming ployment insurance, and the, imme- convention April 26-27, about the | diate release of all arrested in the Negro longshoremen’s delegation, | March 6 demonstrations, and pro- and the delegation of New Eng- tested the attempt to railroad to land fiishermen in tomorrow's prison the committee elected Southern Cotton Mills and Labor By Myra Page 96 pp. 25 Cents. EARLY REVIEWS “Myra Page is well qualified to write of Southern textile workers. As a southern woman herself, she has lived and worked in mill villages and knows the situation at first hand. “SOUTHERN COTTON MILLS AND LABOR” should be read by every worker in order to understand what is back of the great struggles in the southern textile field.” —GRACK HUPCHINS, author of “Libor and Silk.” - . The author performed a surgical operation upon a portion of the body of American imperialism, an operation which discloses in detail the misery of the masses. This is no ‘study’ by a social welfare worker, Sympathy and un- derstanding are there, but primarily it is an incision, sharp ‘ciless, by a scalpel with a Leninist edge.” WILLIAM FB, Order from WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS 39 East 125th Street New York City Discounts offered on orders in quantity lots DUNNE. councils be corrected in the further develop- To this end, | a. Establishment of local councils , gainst Railroading National convention, |arrested Gerry Allard, Young Min- | the March 6 demonstration in New em- the at | 30. | the | the sa ety ploy ust in t £ ploy the ion | Yor The Non-Partisan Workers Chil- | dre ployed councils and their industrial members in the T.U.U.L. by June tows convel shoe, Local demonstrations—May 1,| conjunction with the International groes, women and youth into ed upon a dues paying member- |The local unemployed councils shall | ees aye Me ae movement, Unions must support ac-| ship, the dues books to be furnished concentrate all their strength for SMe paigr . ie ei. tively the demands of the unem- by the National Unemployed Coun- gigantic demonstrations on May 1,| 9) (Cuss Wat Prisoners, espesially ployed workers and the movement cil and dues to be charged at They shall link up the question of | lose arrested in the March 6 of the unemployed t rally to all rate of two cents or more per week unemployment with the general ee Al ae eae hey shall also ~ |the struggles for the d e of the per member. The local councils of struggle of the workers on May 1. fia & pastign fone eae to * workers in the industries, unemployed shall be affiliated to | This must be made into an even| ()e sormation of workers’ defense on satiben the local T.l The local unem-| greater demonstration than that on| CO"PS, to defend the workers National Organization, The singed cai ie. wabdvided h 6. The slogan of “On to the| 2&@inst the violence of the capital- SEE ae ee et aya «abs sntuatlal in their res-| mass unemployment convention” ists and their agents, employed sha be know! 8 e 4540 1} wile aust So a epHtral. Blows ee ea a he s onal Unemployed Council, It | Pective dustrial wie be : central logan in all! j, Against Imperialist War. De- sha: WeRdeS Sy Cie NEON ee ee Nc. uta enone fend the Soviet Union. The capital- Executive Committee, consisting oy Ahh irs ae a mua feet oe eae He revolutionary unions. ist nations are now rapidly prepar- of 85 members to be elected at the |) ade os. There | Lh? strengthening of the T.U.U.L.’ ing for war against each other, and national conventions of the unem- i SUG: canteie unions undamental to the effec- specially : h ze ea légeds Te hall elect & Bureau OF ate unemployed councils tive carrying on of the straggle of | CSPecially against the Soviet Union, The Above all, they want to smash the first workers’ republic, which is the inspiration and leader of the world’s working elass. Against this devel- oping imperialist war, the masses of workers must be mobilized. They must be made to understand the tremendous significance of the build- jalism now going on in the Soviet Union. We call upon recognition of the Soviet Union by the United States, and we call upon the American working ¢élass to de- fend at all costs, the one govern- | ment of the workers; the’. Soviet Union and we demand the recogni- tion of the Soviet Union by the United States unemployed. local unem- 1 therefore put forth} ity to recruit s into the respective revolu- ry unions. The councils should forward the slogan of 50,000 In order to connect definitely unemployment movement with unions and to build up the lat- it is necessary that the unem- d councils bend every effort rds sending unemployed work- as del to the coming mass on of the T.U.U.L. unions he mining, marine, metal, auto, food and needle industries, Election Campai ed cou must sta: coming congre ing of Soci The unem- work for sional elections | promised relief, a delegation of the councils of the unemployed went up k. ms School, No. 10, Bronx, by |to city hall to remind them that the resolution of the board, together’ jobless were still starving. One workers’ children and their | commissioner, Colburn, had_ sug: » en! , condemns the attack on the gested the jobless be-uset: blazing pai 6 demonstrations, and the! fire trails eight hours a day for iig.cun ‘all of 25 cents a day. When the council ON gaere min of | questioned him he said he meant 25 the | den il 5 hey OAKLA Twenty cents a meal, nothing for elothes oz shelter. The mayor became. angry }when the committee told of hit | pleasure trip to Europe. An Amer: Cal., (By Mail).—|ican legionnaire defended the’ police after the March 6) brutalities, the commissioners left, » When the Oakland|and the police drove out. the, com. Delegation in Oakland. nonstratior city commissioners and Mayor Davis| mittee. last by —TEOVUVC VCC VCVCCCUCCUWCC™ 4| 4 Great Event! A Remarkable 4 Program! 4 Great Holiday! or THE ) MORNING FREIHEIT Sun., April 13, 2 p. AT THE BRONX COLISEUM EAST 177TH STREET SUBWAY STATION, BRONX RIVER EXCELLENT PROGRAM Comrades Foster and Olgin Will Speak A program worthy to be remembered. No worker should miss this great event! m, Tickets in advance 75 cents and $1.00.. On April 13 the tickets will be $1.00 and $1.25.. A ticket in advance will assure you of a better place. ickets to be obtained in the office of the Morning Freiheit, ..........30 Union Square, New York City.