The Daily Worker Newspaper, June 14, 1930, Page 3

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wo DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, JUNE 14, 1930 ~~ Page Three ae = i600 PER CENT STATE JUBLESS AS ANY OTHER Wage Cuts As Low Wages and Unemployment, With Many Hurt In Industry Is Record of South Dakota By ROBERT W. DUNN. Wages and conditions of workers Dakota Central Telephone Co.- 324 females average $59.95 a month ‘Bosses Order Hoover Fakes YORK.—The drive on N ich has been proceeding without interruption since early in the year, is now assuming organized Sharkey Foul A NEW SURVEY OF ART [Looks Like A By W. BURKE. tween Jack Sharkey, “The Gav- IN THE SOVIET a NION U Pubic) (Grast! x Cosity Volume, Bat Good Handbo: ering Also Cinema, Music, Architectui HE heavyweight title bout be-| Voices Of October; Art and Litera-;tion paid to Sc ture in Soviet Russia. By Joseph Cov- the cinema, and in the corn belt state of South! Northwestern Bell Telephone Co. form, dumping off unceremoniously bing Gob” and the pride of the white’ Freeman, Joshua Kunitz and Louis tion paid to the Dakota are just about at bad as in| —282 females average $63.08 a all the slick phrases of the indus- | guard Lithuanians, and Max Schmel- Lozowick. | New York . Vanguard Joseph Fre ] the country generally, is the infor- | month. trialists who promised Hoover that jing, the “foreign invader, cae i Brent 1930. xi plus 317 pages. | f “has I mation contained in the recently is-] Not “Ruined By Cheap, Foreign nothing of the sort would happen. a close in the fourth sound will $4. Illustrated. general outline of art ar sued twelfth annual report of that Labor.” Textiles, steel, autos, coal—all the Max Schmeling Cae t i Me Review Buca: LANDY. Jin the Soviet Unic state’s industrial commissioner. The | Tt is clear from these figures that basic industries have seen drastic uaa oto Heuerenat aie ae y Jattempt to indicate ‘vorkers are few in number—be-| even in the nearly 100 per cent Wa8e reductions of 10 to 25% with- De ate700 000 cg ae Row taste HE November Revolution was not | Pay te on ! " } tween 5,000 and 6,000—but they American staté of South Dakota °Ut a murmur from the great His Ad en Hen S oven, the) ,, Only an economic, social and poli-/™* Se neue : | fare no better than in any of the | there are plenty of workers who are ‘“tationary engineer of the White i aaa sharkevis although | cee revolution; it was also a cul- ae ser roe | more crowded industrial districts of among the 20,000,000 people living House. Fe eae tad himesl? qeite well by| tual revolution in the widest sense. 27. atemr! the East. in the United States who live below Comes now the National City lannemens ne in dor more ef|itWas the Russian Revolution that TEC 00 Some of the larger and presum-|the bare minimum standard of liv- Bank, most powerful in America, | eee ountahing Atos Nished out|titst Tevealed the organic conneg: SU0Y Put | ably better wage companies of the ing, Very few of them could meet With more unctuous phrases about leg Sharkey Te the most clever man-| {0% between the economic, political) jt et ve state report to the commissioner on | what government agencies have de- the “joint responsibility of all [Reece ame Cental ese HAI to the | 204 cultural fronts, and showed how ieuiiae Gadeneieasin. Sovisk: ieee wages paid. These are averages for scribed as a health and decency lasses” and a stern command that Bron miasrdeliverediiy Sharkey: fundamentally important and dec: . fie th ia : full time employment and make no allowances for the 15 per cent aver- | budget. The hazards of the worker's life wages must come down. Hoover Caught Lying. The writer predicted in his pre- ive, how completely interwoven with the other phases of the revolution ing and music ; » find |. Beaus s ri x jvious articles that at this fight any-' was the cultural level and the cul- SRD (unc Ub pitas oe Ye find in American industry are also illus- _ While President Hoover hurrahs |thing may happen and he is not|tural advance of the masses. chapters, three ky even among trade union workers i | trated in this report. Some fatali- for prosperity his own official fact-| Jalone of the opinion that this was| yarxism, of course, always taught KUnit4 one Li cee this country. ties reported by the commissioner: gathering departments brand him la well / pre-arranged act. Now| tho basic dependence of curate moon (other by Lozowick and Freeman in Some South Dakota wage samples | But Dying Is Cheap, Too, a liar. The latest to do so is th | Shareyl andi dehmelingsean have a | the basic lependence of culture upon! .oiahoration. The first are the following. “Clai ae Met a ve of the Market news service in Chicago of) return bout with a “million dollar|tationshin’ of material nnd meatal Freeman, surveys the ps This Means laim No. 39534—employe of the his department of agriculture which| gate. j suons aD, OF maveria’ and. menta”’ ent in Sovieb art and. literature, and A , og | Northwestern Public Service Co. ¢. Jains t fecligaebattert production, establishing the primacy really a gy summary of e Manchester Biscuit Co. — 180 | a5 killed as the result of a severe | oP i ot’ review why so little butter| | The first 17,000 seats were filled|of material production, but at the \S,"Gtly,@ sged summary 0 males, average wage, $110 per) ook while working on secondary Hagens bald why 2) Hale Pek 3 Geet |with the “cream” of American so-|same time showing the fundamental na i a me ; aval kr ae ‘ month; 150 females, average wage,| vires on a pole. is being consumed. Prices are 10c |ciety. There were representatives! influence of mental production upon (roe fn, Have heen. interested in §75 per month. ° { “Claim 39906—employe of the es under a ae fee ana oe of the “four hundred,” grafting|the former. Viewing the two dia- ean ee en Warren Lamb Lumber Co.—301| keystone Consolidated Mines, Inc., : SE oor sous ana politicians, dope peddlers, self-made |lectically, Marxism pointed out tha laborers, $3.29 per day; 116 labor- | with 2 » experi OSE eM eDUnegLs | {business men, racketeers, lawyers,|there are no absolute barriers in : } yeh 201 Vesta giexnerienea a8 8) (Alt does: nots neces follow bankers, labor fakers, bootlegger: ers in logging camps, $3.73 per ¢ miner, was descending a ladder in that low prices of butter increase! i iis nature or society, that things may | \otyme Homestake Mining Co.—762 male |manway when loosened rock | prostitutes, panderers and gunmen. turn into their opposites, and that Chapter Pa ore be cons i s. The industrial| Ses alee a 4 and Freen 1 tl underground, $4 to $6.85 (no indi-| struck him on the head, causing him Paneae Sia a Anant al aa Indeed, the crowd was most color-/ mental production may and often/ theatre, Ct Fou cation of the number in the high/ tg Jose his hold and strike his head |; : : vp ye Importance VA ful. There were Jimmy Walker, does become material production and j, an ext interesting : i Be in this regard. For some time con ClevVISlLON--- ew eCavON Secretary of War Hurley, William| vice versa. Thus, Marx always look-|'°,,” . category). on a timber. He suffered a concus- | <iderable 16% 7 f | 7 zi stl i ay K- | adequately 1 accoun’ we eis Moe in heved covebrai iderable unemployment has been Green of the A. F. of L., John F. ed upon science as a productive & naa _Homestake Sawmill—122 males, | sion resulting in elayed cerebral’ penorted at most of the larger in-| A ; i . . Curry, the Tammany Hall leader;| force, and one of the most basic >” et Chapter five by $5.50 and up. |hemorshage from which he died.” Guatrat districts, Many manatee | — FOX ENE Neu Limbertalist War ever ‘wraten and many other and important elements of mater Lozi, summarizes the | facts John Morrell and Co., packers—|__ “Claim No. 42342—an employe of turing plants are working with high and. low flunkies necessary fot | ‘production, | Yet science ia eakens| eet ne oe oe een 100 mechanical and maintenance | Hanson and Alfson, was fatally in- depleted forces and in some in-| feet to ee the maintenance of the capitalist] eRe oA DACRE DIRE eee nveE Conve workers, 43 to 81 cents an hour; 350 semi-skilled laborers, 47 to 53 cents; 590 common laborers, 43 to 45 cents an hour; 160 female laborers, 30 to 37 cents an hour. Harvard scrubwomen.) Armour and Co.—60 semi laborers, 44 to 55 hour; 50 female laborers, 31 to 50 |1 cents an hour. Swift and Co.—mechanies wages, 60 cents an hour; common laborers, 387 cents. Consolidated Sand and Stone Co. —males average $24 a week. |day. | jured while fixing a windmill.” The stances rather sharp redutions in| ladder gave way 40 feet from the | wages have been ground. | Then there were several quarry (As low as the workers killed by dynamite and a_ tion outle miner named Nels Pihlaja, an em- killed| ploye of the Homestead Mining Co.,! 5 cents an hour; 70| who “was injured by a train of ore! make a liar out of the president common laborers, 40 to 43 cents an|cars hitting and dragging him 30 put it tells the truth about the wey et.” Death resulted the following the employers ‘ave fired their work And a lumber worker who was instantly killed when a cant hook | | slipped and the log started rolling. |He tripped and the log rolled over him. by S. B. ON is now all great inventtons born amids the chaos and isolation of or | research capitalist ety, reported. This | a fact | unemployment or reduced income is i bound’ to be a factor in consump What's A Promise? came like a bolt from the sky, with Not only does the department all the padded atmosphere of “magic” and “wizardry” that ush- ered in the telephone, the phono- graph and the radio. To the working ma: ventions come indeed lik ers and slashed wages in spite 0! their pledge to Hoover to maintair mi corditions intact. The pledge of) born of wizards’ brains. The wide rresident Green of the American! gap which divides them fiom t Sederation of Labor aad other labor! monopolized realms of science and |chiefs to make no attempt to in-|a.t gla’ ly obvious | crease wages or better conditions| and is the result ef an ever more Like se in- here | brain, visualizes another aspect of his device: “Televi: set to nt of will campaign by teley A supreme method for bringing 2pilalist propaganda into the work- | er’s home. valuable system of society. Back of this 17,000 group of the scum of the society were thousands of workers, small storekeepers, white collay slaves, etc, straining their necks to a point in the center of the field, some 150 yards ahead, trying to distinguish one fighter from the other. A weapon superior to the news- mind that this fight was fought for paper, more effec nore efficient thi n the radio! Ameri 2n imperialism. e than the film, nce in the hands of |mendous task of organizing the sc tially a part of mental production. Sen is essentially a summary of what Tee eects Where the strug- [Leonid Sabaneyev has written about gle for power is still on the agenda,’ Soviet music in his volume on “Mod- have had no occasion to strike up against the cultural front on a giani ale. In our practice, it has played blished a= ern Russian Composer p in English by International I i ers. (We have nz space to say any- |@ secondary role. After the revolu- thing about the authors the ves.) tion, however, when the revolution-, Russian literature and culture of ary party is confronted with the tre-' the nineteenth century were essen- tially the expression of the r We wish the readers to keep in/cialist economy, the cultural front) and the tzarist buroerate, Late assumes serious proportions, reveals! the writers of the boursesisie added the benefit of the “Free Milk Fund its full significance and shows how their chapter to the history of Rus for Babies”—truly a “noble aspira-| inseparable it is from the basic ques-! jan Iiterature.. “The World Wa tion.” Of the $700,000 income $300,-| tions of material production. FACGuuath uitens, “hibited ‘the’ Acree |000 of this went to the fighters.| In this respect, the Russian Revo- opment of Russian literature. What |The Yankee Stadium Corp. got a fairly good split for the use of the lution has a wealth of experience t® little was produced was offer us. : : And even though we are Television broadcasting will be of of war corresponde jduring the depression has been defined devision of labor in so- two kinds. Motion pictures will be |Park. Press and other essential|/not yet confronted with the neces- pogis revolution of Februar { q en faithfully kept. ciety with a class “top” and “bot- broadcast from master film prints Capitalist institutions got _ their sity of fighting on the cultural front was equally sterile. It was not until : Wag nempb oymen OLLAATLI any, | a | tom.” | with synchronized sound and talk ;Share. The Free Milk Fund For in the same way and under the same the Bolshevik Revolution of October, eg : : The Sunday magazine sections of and “real” events will be transmit- | Babies organization gets its share Saeed our comrades of the 1917 (November according to the '¢™ ; 28th 1930 DETROIT JOBLESS every capitalist paper y loud ted through the medium of radiv |for the operation of its ry a lappectolied one duty as the new calendar), that Russian litera- une ’ | j and boisterous articles on the “biovs- | camera paying off its many ward heelers,| Communist vanguard to learn from| tyr enterod a new great period of )§ | ings of our modern life’ with all the| The first method will correspond |A-,F. of L. fakers, ete. What is) their experience not only for future! development. A vigorous art i na ES Wels of eclence st thé reach to the vd entertainntent film left for the babies? Certainly ajuse but for use in the immediate! veloped out of the new so “The unemployed situation is de-] masses in the trade unions, factor! iN FRE ch Li OR mace ti Leek wes pach as We knew it in the movies, ‘The | Doble aspiration. class struggle. Hite “ike wicibers ands veloping more and more from day |fraternal organizations, end es-| # rt anis bel By Se Dum blest Orszamert pee omovies: a Soon Sharkey and Schmeling will) The economic and political lessons o¢ Russia, abolishing tzarism and ‘ sadn aaah dal BORIAlIG: toe peach Bie he of it, television in your will amount to an|, Soon ® Oe ober i geet ess rete) aie NS of Russia, abolishing tzarism and to day. Thousands and thousands) pecially to reach new strata of eu le Teethe oUattede State y of. the. present |be Tematched. The fight again will| of the Revolution drew a great deal | capitalism, established their own | of workers are being thrown on the | workers. aes ee Ne ras niet 5 nib ue eo Pe ee cncunantary (b2 boosted up to the limits. The/of our attention. But we have been| government and their own form of streets every day and in order.to| The W.LR. shall issue leaflets' Ford Advises Them to} “meas of mental production el or documentary 8 ees result will be another record gate/ deeply deficient in learning its cul- and they will need no smoke screen, | tural lessons. like the milk for babies appeal, to In this respect, pack in the fight bugs through the| tober” may be viewed as a definite the monopoly of the ruling ¢ of social organization; it they who |now published the newspapers and | books, listened to conce enjoyed take advantage of this favorable! situation we must intensify our ac- tivity and build the Chicago unem- | Anarchy in the sphere lis an extension of the di and distribute widely, stressing the | imrortance of united action of the) employed and unemployed workers | Die in the Country “Voices of Oc- ive from the ployed convention on July 4th and in this campaign. DETROIT, Mich., June 13.—John tion and chaos inherent in cap Q ‘tandpoint. Its power turnstiles and give another example | contribution. It is a general outline SUM au as ee be 5th into a mighty movement.against| It is of course also necessary to Gillespie, commissioner of publi» ‘conomy. : ig diel ag cin banged of “democratic America.” jof art and literature in the Soviet ey ae ey ieee ay ee = the capitalist system,” states the|raise funds for the financing of the works and outstanding member c The sound film czme along one be questioned by the onlooke: ea new lite hemes and ne’ | by the national office of the Trade Unicn Unity League. for strengthening and main-) ing the city, is now trying to ma! am Warner. Thus a doubi the ablest living autho the @ thUdand the coos In. | ining the Convention. (Feeding | the unemployed the goat in a nev iy Was thrown cut of Joint. moti picture theory! Ic ternational Relief have tocether |<! “elegates, other arrangements,| economy schemes he has evolved. Here are some mnct -tour diffe: establ ed it a xiomatic th , worked out glans for a great ma- ete.) . _He has demanded at a city coun- ratented sound systems. The same the motion picture the feeling of tional unemployed Lay Committee Meets June 21 | cil meeting that all those on welfare \-3 true of the color film and also reality is indispensable for the crea- ville the! jobless. On this date, the A broad meeting of the campaign | department lists who refuse to|of a much simpler innovation, wide tion emotion: feeling of broad masses of employed ard un-| committee shall be held on June 21;Shovel garbage for the city at $50 | film. X: F veality” is the very ence of pic- employed workers are to 2] ied | in order to organize and determine |@ month should be taken off th And so with tzlevision. _ Holl ~ ture fac as_the Soviet director, by all pi a-ity | the organizational measures neces-| lists and allowed to starve. Gilles od is already hysterical. Soon Vertoff, calls filmed documents. In mv tlie . ry in every district for the carry-| Pie has been under fire for sudden | “big _ bosse: former haber- this r et the film created on the a coy g out of the campaign. rises in the cost of city paving since | dashers, w cloth-spoi an art: scenario is in- the The national unemployed Solidar- | he went into office. “You are talk-|and storeke:pers—will be tearing inferior to powerful docu- fo proach to new and unemploye. of the campairn aign Committces aign coi mittees to prepare thy Nations! Sol are to be « 1 de v the W.ER. All T.U.U.L. groups, | paign. outline of the cam. paien greed upon by the T.U. U.L. and the W.LR, is as follows: I: is proposed that June 28th shail b the National Unemployment Soli- arity Day. (With the exception) of New York where it is proposed | for July 4th.) | The aim of the Unemployed Soi idurity Day is to carry the slogan and policies of the T.U.U.L. on the Unemployment question to the broad Unemployment Day will be conducted with com- ittees visiting the shops, trade aricns, fraternal organizations, by ngements to have speakers of | the committee to every important af- ir cf the district. Collections are » to be made at every opportun- mn the 2 h there will be shop ces of mate collections, house to house col-! them that if they get relief they lections, tagging during the day, ana the campaign will wind up with a series of open air meetings at all important centers of the city. The districts and local WIR are! to send all funds to the New York ‘office of the WIR and the urgency of this campaign necessitates the strictest financial responsibility. The money collected for the support of the unemployed solidarity campaign cannot he used by the W.I.R. sec: tions for any other work but must come to New York to be used for meeting the heavy expenses of the Unemployed Convention. Conven- the local political machine contro’ ‘ay, coached and fed ing here of saving 10 cents a yardjat each other's throats. Already on paving,” he shouted, “and we are | they have put r feet in the new | throwing away $500,000 a monthon | field. But the air has long ago | these welfare lists.” In the discussion Welfare Com-!T. T., R. C. A., Western Electric missioner Dolan let. it out that Gil- and Genera’ Electric. lespie was lying. The men provided | two years we will witness the com- by the department of public welfare | plete merging of these engineering work for nothing. Dolan “persuades” | trusts with the financial powers of reen. By the very nature o! ision the motion picture barons will be at a disadvantage in all this. And just as today you are able to lister to Will Rogers under the auspices of Squibbs Dental Cream, 0 tomorrow you will have the pos- sibility of both seeing and hearing jought to work without wages, and they do. They need the relief. zed by hunger of his family, x A. Leahy stole $185 from the ‘post office at New Boston, Mich. In |federal court he was sentenced to )10 years in Leavenworth prison. | Why Not Eat Grass? Henry Ford, well-known auto manufacturer and collector of an- tiques, has issued a cure for unem- ployment. “Every farmer with an acre and every workman with a lot; ought to plant everything they can and as much as they can this year. \It is a big step back to employ- | ment,” he says. | Having given this gem of wisdom | der the auspices of the Kwiktie Shoelace Corporation. The glorious wedding science and advertising. A Wall Street synthesis. ey of art, But what is the more serious aspect in the coming of this mighty photo-electric eye? Not an invention is made—even | been monopolized by the giants: A. | In the next | | tHe same authentic lies as the mo-! Comrade n Mo ments like “Turksib,” “Shanghai Document” or the average newsreel. ; Another advantage of the docu- mentary “ilm as a propagator of ideas is its extreme flexibility. The! television camera will lend itself to tion picture camera. In 1924, during a public discus- vealed an heretofore unpublished statement by Lenin urging the com- plete transformation of Soviet Rus- ’s motion picture repertoire on the basis of the documentary or \“unplayed” film. What would Lenin have said about television, he who Greta Garbo or Rowdie Vallup un- |considered the movies “the art which | for us is the most important.” Technology has given the answer |to the long-standing controversy of |fact versus fiction in the movies. Television has uncanned the film. Television has rendered the acted | ; film amateurish and backward. | In the Soviet Union such an in- vention would be used to raise the cultural level of the wor!ers and if ion in Moscow, Dziga Vertoff re-| se * BASEBALL ONNIE MACK’S Philadelphia Athletics continue their climb to a higher position in the American} League with the Washington Sen-)| j ators hot on their heels. Relatively the same position is held by the Brooklyn team in the National Lea- gue. for the World Series? The writer of this column must console himself as a reviewer of baseball and other sports from a) grand stand seat. Professionat sports ‘are not for the workers from the workers class conscious view point but are used by the capitalist (class, not only to fill their pockets with the meager wages of the work- cers for admission tickets but also to serve as a means of diverting the workers from the class struggle. Hoping for the chance to see a pro game will do no good. The work- ers must organize their own base- ball leagues not only as a means ot entertainment but also to serve the class interest of the workers. Militarism and Sports According to recent announce- ments of the capitalist press, Hutchinson of West Point Military Academy has been named the best athlete at this institution. Pershing arch murderer of hundreds of thousands of workers in the last a sword in honor of his athletic rec- ord. means of training the youth for im- Union which does not claim to be Will these two teams hook up| The capitalist class knows/every way. well the importance of sports as a} baseball game were featured. eda z of wri more than a preliminary survey of What is ti evetabe Haveeas the subject. “The increasing atten-| aie of the « Awavcatiae — —_———— ‘of fact, it was the Revolution that = not onl eleased the material pro- and give greater support to aa ‘ e, ¢ rege upport to the ductive forces from the fetters of ree Shaker Gaines pitalist production relations, but ihe: aeeord fais of the Eastern, | With them also the creative intelle District eliminations in the Nationa} | tU@l enersics of the Russian mas vorkera 9 i : This i cated in the tremendou: workers soccer cup competition ."'* Seay 4 haga gett ill Delglaved Ath inerea nventions by workers at the Dyckman Oval, Dy on a 3 e. he Revolution x ae reated the co ions fe devel- Broadway Aves. in New York. The |‘Teated the conditions for the devel schedule is as follo opment of new forr of art and culture. It removed them from the Olympics vs. Freiheit Esthonians vs. Argentine Bronx Workers vs. Italians. The first game starts at 11 a. m. and the last game finishes at 6 p.m. Bring your lunch along and enjoy a good day of sports. The proceeds | from these games will go toward financing the winning team for a trip to Detroit to play a Detroit workers team in the National Finals. We know many left wingers wh« go each Sunday to support the pro. fessional soccer games, directly help- ing the bosses. We ask you to at sphere of profits and price; it un- j}bound them from the ideology and the cash outlook of a class that lives by exploitation; it brought forth new forces with a proletarian class orientation that reaches far into the future of a free, classless society. The policy the * Communist Party of the Soviet Union helped to ther develop cultural revolution. While 1 decrees upon the ar- tend and support workers sports. | tistic and literary tenden ef the *_ * * country. On the contrary, it en- Cleveland L.S.U. in I.L.D. Picnic, {couraged " mpetition among thein The Labor Sports Union Clu ‘and told them to prove their right of Cleveland participated in the tv existence by the inherent worth General| sport events and baseball game at|0f their products. The insipid ery the picnic held under the auspices f the peity-bourgevi ectual of the International Labor Defense, that there can be no “freedom of world war presented Hutchinson with| at Minona Park, Sunday, June 8, 2't” a long o> the proletariat runs These events were successful in the country in its own interest Track events and a/#Mounis only to the demand The| the workers should allow capitalis U. S. athletes thrilled the workers | '? be restored and with it the to the jobless millions, Henry goes on to say that “when people become | too contented there's usually trouble ahead.” He has taken steps to pre- | vent such a catastrophe from hap- perialist wars. That is one of the main reasons why it promotes sports not only in the military institutions, but also in schools, factories etc. Lets make sports serve our class organizations to do likewise. |a minor one—but that its adapta-| Peasants. It would be applied for | bility to war is immediately con-|the advancement and true progress | sidered and perfected. This is espe- | of the formerly oppressed national cially true in this period of frantic | minorities. For that same purrose | preparation for the impending ex-|they are now using the movies and | present with spectacular feats, |40™” of the artist to represent the The International Labor Defense Point of view and the “subjects” of itulist with its exploita- ion of the masses, robber wars, its pare RED SPARKS By JORGE by sponsoring workers’ sports has © blazed the way for other workers’ ‘i The | | S ivi iant— 9 pening in Detroit by speeding up | plosion, In a previous article we the radio at the present time. interests by building up the L.S.U.| sports events were one of the main yon he che ia The Divine Defiant Let?s Go Back to 168 1!— his workers under the guise “of alba shown ee the sound film is| There television will be used to into an instrument of struggle | attractions of the day, and brought WON beso eae Bishop Cannon, who is summoned| A New York daily which is pub- Wage raise and by firing thousands | exploited to perfect the war ma-j help build socialism and a bz‘ter against bosses sports. many young worker athletes and "sir “te: om the other ES aan before the Senate Lobby Investiga-|lishing chunks of the city’s history,|im order that their work might be | chine. In the case of television this | world for the laboring masseq LS.U. News sport enthusiasts to the picnic. Sao eee tion Committee, to tell some of his/ tells us the astonishing fact that|done more cheaply elsewhere. He is even more the case. Here it will be used for “enter-| The Eastern States Athletic Mect} In contrast to the stale and cor- "= * pee dele Bae godly tricks with campaign funds| up till 1682, New York City got has admitted that Ford work isnow| ‘The same day that the enlarged | tainment” and for bombing planes; of the Labor Sports Union held Sat- | yupted professional and boss’ con- °° ‘ eee Tey and the stock market, has. told the| along very well without a police divided among 2,200 manufacturing | television projector was demon-|for commercial advertising and for urday and Sunday June 7-8th was| trolled sports, the L.S.U. worker Wud abe have cane well fo ingoe U. S. Senate to go to hell. Of force, and that up, till 1843 they| concerns. strated in the laboratories of the | capitalist politicians. very successful so far as athletics | amateur athletes at this mect * Chapter on the literature ane eal course, being a Holy Man, he took| only were on duty at night, their) Forest Fires Laid to Starvation. | General Electric Co. at Schenec- is concerned. Two L.S.U. national! brought to the fore the superiority ai ce ee age Oe Nee two hours and a great deal of lan-| duties being more to serve as fire-| Destitution is blamed for the | tady, Dr. E. F. W. Alexanderson, its| **Birth of the Movies. Paris, 1925, records were broken and over 120) o¢ working class sports over bos ‘ nets eget one tor wane guage to say it, but that’s what/men than as strikebreakers as|/arge number of forest fires now | inventor, said to the assembled | |athletes took part in the events. But! sports, eh mE ‘tk 7 cate it amounted to. Somehow, we are|is the chief business of the present|?@ging in northern Michigan by I. | newspapermen: {BRONX WORKERS GIVE $3.60 |from the view point of finances and | “These events held under the aus- serio ev this Rae reminded of the Gastonia prose-|layout. All of which reminds us|S- Booth, deputy fire warden of the “What will this mean in the war | TO COMMUNIST PARTY. Pane saUpnOr rob tae me cnaoe: Ren pices of the IL.D. and under the “The cHy eet yond onal cutor, Carpenter, who attacked al again how well we could get along! State: “We are convinced the Lake | of the future, when a staff offie | At a meeting called by Section 5 Movement it was a failure. About) evision of the L.S.U. show what hook 1 elaWable wasey 4g witness because she didn’t believe it 4 sag bs ni county fires were started mali-| cer can see the enemy through the of the Bronx at 163rd St. and Pros- NY NEMS SU Ne bone a powerful force workers’ sports ital Sa bea a e. d, and who rolled on the floor, "°W Without capitalist cops who, | ¢; i a 4 ; rag ing to days; in spite of the fact that the : ernie would ce D OLS Uses gots! kal ; ciously for the sole purpose of get- television eyes of his scouting | pect Ave., Wednesday evening to ani hain ahead i |are for holding and winning young fu! had it | od in accord frothing at the mouth at the “men-| Pretending to “prevent disorder” ting employment,” said Booth. | planes, or when they can send a | Protest against the police attacking cee Sed ite! - a Protest | workers into the ranks of the mil- wif he ix ches of the volume ace to our religion, institutions”) are the ones to start it. Abolish Begin to Organize. | bombing plane without a man on | meeting held on the same corner | Oe rad : peel ae me eT ent working class organizations. |, ith aah shy ineludedy ete. We call attention to the fact! the police! Let us have workers'| Detroit is the automobile manu- hoard, which can sce the target {Saturday and arresting five com-|“°Crrtaini if we are to build The score card for the day fol- As it sta oP an ini that Bishop Cannon is high church- militia—under wane facturing center of the world. and be steered by radio up to the |rades, a collection was made in the} ,.4 waa's wa een a Ay ble lows: cri ; mber of title “with ne man of the Methodist Church/ , orkers’ Govern: | Phese bitteriy exploited men, while moment when it hits?” name of the Communist Party and ae uneeiee {PAH ony sitet bat After a 10 inning game the L.S.U. jr s to their worth, ete. This South—get the “South,” which is) ment, of course! The whole machine they work, are starving around the Dr, Alexanderson, with all the [$3.60 was collected, ataAneial ha organizational RaBeiED Defenders were defented to the tune ie no doubt due to the fact that the “ Carpenter's Carolina’s own faith.) of a body of plug-uglies for the factory gates now, begging for jobs. | porspicacity of his specialized| The workers, who at times num- |]t costs a great deal of money to| of 15-14 by the Red Ci Sports| book was written for the “general 2), The Methodist Church split on the bosses, armed to the teeth and dis-,Many will form councils and shop, bered 200, listened to one speaker | conduct sports. There are expenses | Club. Both are Cleveland L.S.U. public.” On the whole, the volume © =* issue of path and its “South’ guised as “impartial,” should be | Committees and send their delegates | jafter another very attentively. The | for athletic fields (which are in the | Clubs, is a useful handbook and deserves Hanne aul eat Beye Ma Naitanh oghey tiate CRM bes Ke weaerl® the Nationai Metal Workers’ Con- | over t emrtchs.,., CMFWYP BG | speakers were Jay Anion, Lola Fine |hands of the bosses) prizes, trans-| The track events were run off to be studied. vention, in session in Youngstown, | over the terms of their enslavement, | (one of the arrested workers) and portation ete. and these can only|in fine order with plenty of com-| stock exchange. This is “godliness”| for the workers until they are abol- g | Ohio, Friday, Saturday and Sunday. |they begin to tee that they must Harrison, Joe Harris was chair-'be met by the income at the gates.| petition. Seventeen and i8 workers) Support the Daily Worker Drivel under capitalism, as ished, While capitalist politicians fight organize to fight for themselves. man, ._.. Workers recognize your class duty | participated in each event. ,. | Get Donations! 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