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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, suse f- 11, 198% Page Three Hunger Marchers On the Wey to Columbus |NEED NEW FORCES TO STEM CUTS IN FORCE 20 P.C. WAGECUT ON COTTON WORKERS IN AMSKEOG MILLS by a BUNDLE ORDERS | Today's mail abounded w cuts, and more cuts. District 3, Ph ladelphia, just as we got thru come plimenting them on their increase of CigarMakers Confronted With 27% Wage-Cut; Most of Them Are Layed Off Manchester, New Hampshire @——————___________—_ sion to leave because of illness, and Pd ot they refuse him, he is forced to stay T am writing you & few lines about | 114 die on the job or else get fired, the conditions in the Amoskega mills. | a 7 re |In the card room, one woman was Take the Worsted Department in the} 1014 to run five speeders’ frames, weave room. They work night and white she was trying to run her head to wipe out all traces of our revo- lutionary press in a specific ter- ritory is a mistake. We warn the comrades in Greeley and elsewhere to guard against this situation oc- curring, by drawing in class-con- scious elements to carry on this vital activity of extending the Daily to the workers. As L.M. of Port~ land, Ore., says: “When unemploy= 200, comes back with an announce- ment “Our increase of 200 Dailies use of additional boosters has to be cut out. Beginning Tuesday 450 is to be our daily bundle.” r, D.W. representative evident know how to keep these] ment grows worse, the Daily Work day, for only $15 a week and they| Z recruited from the recent| er is needed to point to the work- -..,/Off running these frames she took ‘ can’t tell if they're getting the right | sick her fee got all swollen and she State Hunger March. Co) in} ers the way out of this economic pay since the company took down all | had to be taken home, Johnstown, Pa., wants his five a day| crisis. We must use all our ener- the price lists so that weavers will | the cigar makers in the 17-20-4 stopped after “we tried hard to sell] gies to strengthen the D. W., see not be able to figure up their Pay-| cigar shop are confronted with a but can’t. Will send payment in full] that circulation is increased in or- They're supposed to be paid by 8\wage-cut of 27 per cent and there on or about May 15.” From Salt Lake| der that workers will be able to 1,000 picks, but the bosses pay them | ic ajo installation of cigar machines, City, Tom ©., declares: “50 will be] resist wage cuts and evictions.” what they wish to, and if you wish| to see the list, the boss picks on you. In the cotton department condi- tions are still worse. They shut down a department for a few weeks, then when they open up they get workers to accept a 20 per cent wage cut, and you are Yorced to sign an agreement, if not, no work. In this way they have cut the wages to such a low degree that cotton weavers now get for running draper looms for five full nights from 14 to 18 dollars a week and in some places as low as nine |The members of the International Cigar Makers Union affiliated with the A. F. of L. have rejected this cut. and the company is lagging on the cut a little bit, but they are laying off the cigar makers by the scores, over a hundred workers have been laid off, the members of this union not only have to fight the company but also the union officials, since the j officials of the union cater to the | mill bosses. These cigar makers are | being threatened with a general la | off since the machine is taking thi enough, owing to reduction on sales.” Figure This One Out Ray P. of Omaha, Neb., springs | a funny one. “Sorry, but in order | to avoid a large bill difficult to pay, | cut the bundle from 20 to 5 daily. Forces here very small. We're at last making attempts to organize a Party unit, and I haven't been able yet to get a worker to sell the Daily.” How, we would like to know, do you expect to organize a unit without first making contacts with | italist poison of Dail Mrs, vs. “Mother’s Day” Trash Johnson, Oakland, Calif., |sends for a 6-month subscription to J., San Francisco, “This thday present to some friends of mine she. We hail this as a powerful antidote to insidious cap~ Mother's Day” pro- paganda used to hide starvation and death Haverhill Unit Starts Action Fifteen Daily Workers a day for four weeks added to present bundle of ten, is the decision of the Haver- workers taking the first fundamen- | Mass. unit “Ths iden’ dacee dollars a week. ; | place, i Z tal step: making contacts with | art them in the homes so they get If a worker wishes to get permis- —Joseph Ribson | i KN 1 workers thru the Daily Worker? | reading it and then to approach | Pictures of the delegates of the unemployed as they came through Akron and Massillon, to meet with other lines of marchers at the state Lonie Council, Negro comrade in|them for subscription,” writes Alfred api . s islature and Governor White for unemployment in- : : : 4 as : ayaa gale ° ‘ . d ‘e A capital, hold a state conference on unemployment, and present demand s to the state leg’ Crum Lynne, Pa., once star seller of | Te (N.Y) f Bellingham “Relief” Assists in Wage Cutting} ‘Strance and immediate reliet, |s0-%5 a day, now cuts to! 20. “Outleies do cies Getic ieee eA BELLINGHAM, Wash—Whatcom, ilies and registered voters are em-| Picture 1, to the left, shows the marchers on the way, at Akron, Picture No. 2, at the .top, is another view of the head of the column. immediately from 50 to 25,” writes} Mm. z. of Unit 3, Hempstead Gorayind the ‘ab of sails Math | ployed cn therolty water job. Picture No. 3, at the extreme right, is C. R. Cowan, a speaker at meet ings held along the way. Picture No. 4, at the bottom, center, is a group | Martin H. in Allentown, Pa. “We GiMbdae. Sone Wesker orks ated Rian - . . 8 ‘ter| The Bloedell Donovan Lumber mill of girls from the Young Communist League who marched from Akron to Barberton with the delegates. No. 5 shows g meeting, |don’t like to do this, but the situa-! oq Daily Worker circulation in New i is oe eee Tee ee announce another wage-cut of 10 pe* tion warrants such action.” We don’t | Bedford, Mass., with commendable the direction of the county commis- cent, bringing the wages as low as like it either, comrades, but would | sioners and the city government, city $2.70 a day for men and $1.98 for MORE FACTS 0 Negro Paper Praises Fight of ECONOMIC SPY appreciate a little less vagueness as | initiative, is down with blood-pois- ening. We're stopping bundle, and water works, etc., are setting a new] the youth in their box factories. This to the “situation which warrants} hope Comrade Porter recovers low wage scale, which is being seized | js the third cut in the same company a . - such action.” Greeley, Colo., cuts out} speedily. upon by corporations who are copy-| since August, 1930, some of the others POLISH ANTI- . Communists for Negro Rights CH RGE ENDS entirely the bundle of nO “All a Here's one of my last few bor: ing their example. amounting to as high as 25 per cent oS forncs jthe comrades are out of town work-| rowed dollars for another month's The county road relief work pays} All employees receiving $3 or more ss Sniasnee) ing for a time,” explains A.C.L. sub,” writes August W. W., New York $2 a day for 8 hours’ work, and this may be withdrawn any time now, due to lack of funds. The city water pays $3 and the Federal City mis- sion, which is operating an indus- trial farm, where they clear the land of stumps and raise vegetables, pays $1.50 a day in groceries or produce. Only married men with large fam- Knoll Co. Slashes Wages; AFL Fakers Wink New York City Daiy Worker: Boss Feingold of S. Knoll & Co. is an A. F. of L. Union Shop and is supposed to uphold union condi- tions but doesn’t. He compels girls to work below the union scale. When these girls complain to the union they are told that the union | in wages received a cut early in Feb- urary, 1931, of 10 to 20 per cent Workers of Bellingham, farmers and workers of Whatcom County, you are called upon to gather in the city of Bellingham to demonstrate against hunger, wage-cuts, high taxes and, rents, evictions, mortgages, ft closures, etc, —L. A. This is discrimination of the rankest kind, but which is not unusual in a femily affair A.F.L. union shop. Boss Feingold whines to the work- ers when work is slack but forgets | to gi» them anything but “speed-up” wheu the shop is busy. Sick Benefit Racket The members of the union are USSR WAR PLANS ‘ ’ ah c " ‘Can’t Overlook Facts KW ” of 5-Year Plan WARSAW. — Referring to an ar- ticle published in the “Przelon,” the organ of the “left-wing” supporters of Pilsu the “Gazieta Varshav- ka,” the organ of the People’s De- mocrats, writes: “As we published the article series of Dmovski a year ago revealing the fact that certain circles in Western Europe were planning an interven- tion against the Soviet Union with the assistance of the Polish and Rou- manian armies, we were told that our Baltimore Afro-American Under Caption of “The Ready Reds” Cites Struggle Against Lynching, Jim-Crowism, Segregation, Ete. BALTIMORE, Md., May 10.—In an editorial in its current issue the Afro-American “of this city highly praises the activities of Communists in the struggle for Negro Rights and against lynching, Jim Crowism and other forms of terrorism and oppres- sion directed by the white ruling class against the Negro masses. The editorial is herewith published in full. The Ready Reds, When the Maryland legislature failed to make satisfactory prog- ress in passing the Jim Crow repeal bill and the measure equalizing col- for rape in Scottsboro, Alabama. Boston Girls’ High School annual dance at snobbishly exclusive Long- wood Towers, excluded three col- ored members of the senior class with their escorts until “the reds” appeared (the League of Struggle for Negro Rights). Their signs bore such mottoes as: “Down With J Towers,” “Down With Race Dis- crimination,” “No More Lynching | In America.” Just ten “reds” made so much noise that the hotel management | IN COLLAPSE Tried to Frame-Up| Against Soviets BERLIN.—The organizers of the j “economic espionage” campaign the Community Party, the revolutionary trade unon opposition and the Soviet Trade Mission, have been compelled to drop their charges inst the Sovief Trade Mission. tead they declared that the Su- me Economic Council was the or- of the economic espionage. against The Communist daily, “Mannheim- Arbeiter-Zeitung” publishes sensa- tional details of a press conference As stated before, we're for com- rades getting jobs, those who are City. “The Daily is excellent food for the mind.” Mind and action, com- lucky enough to locate them. But rade! Supports Fight to § (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONF) cause a wrong had been done and called for some agency to right it. “One of the celebrated lawyers of the South, George W. Chamlee, (engaged by the I. L. D.—Ed. Daily Worker), a lawyer with a name for United Front Spreads; Chicago Defender ave Scottsboro Boys national office (N. A. A.C. P.) in New York shortly after the trial and was told that Robert Bagnall, director of branches, was actually afraid to go South and that Mr. White had been told by the executive board that his pictures were in too many maga- zines for him to safely make the trip himself.” re ” | ity, force, power before judge i i | : A - _ | was “embarrassed,” and the colored | organized by representatives of the| ®ility. Ee an will Took Sato the matter, but, .of compelled to pay 36c¢ a week for a| revelations were inventions and ser-| ored and white teachers’ aslaries, | Wen bors of the class were admit- |1. G. Farben chemical concern, the| oF jury has undertaken the appeal | Afro-American Reports May Day course, nothing is done. sick benefit but you have to be in| ved no one but the Soviets, ‘Today| they found themselves one after- ted “4 a x ; ‘ i i 3 § 5 ed “to avoid an unpleasant situa- | organizer of the campaign, and the] for the young men to the Supreme Parade. Discrimination it before six months before you even} we have a Pilsudski organ which con-| oon facing a delegation of colored tion.” police at which only resentatives! Court of Alabama. With him are When the work in the shop is slack } get any so-called “benefits.” ‘This is| firms the facts published by us." and white radicals, who took pos- WANE Hate onal Get ee See Gi cose ah NEW YORK. — In iis current is- those workers are laid off who are not related to the boss in any way. The draper in this shop is a relation of the boss and a member of the A. F. of L. union, when work is slack ‘he examiner who is also a member of the same union No. 22 is laid off while the draper takes his place. Dayton Teachers Get Dayton, Ohio, Daily Worker: The workers will now have to add \ new union to its ranks: one for the teachers. These reluctant wise just another racket forced on the workers by these A.F.L. fakers to squeeze money out of the workers. These abuses will only be stopped when all workers join the T.U.U.L. the only militant union that serv in the interest of the workers. —A Worker Wage Cut; 130 Fired money with which to buy school ne- cessities. * This state is where they burn up prisoners 300 at a time, where huge surpluses of wealth are in the treas- The “Gazieta Varshavska” also publishes an article entitled, “The People must be told the Truth,” and Gealing with the Five Year Plan in he Soviet Union. The article de- “All those who have seen the th with their own eyes! are una- nimously of the opinion that pres- ent-day Russia is on the path of broad economic development. If is mo-e important for Poland than fo other country to know the tru about what is happening in the U.S. S.R., but as a matter of fact tha which the Polish press publishes as session of the state capitol build- ing and stated their demands in vigorous language, Colored and white cops in Har- lem cracked heads of colored and white Communists who made a public demonstration and parade in protest against the proposed legal lynching of nine colored youths, eight condemned to die and one,. fourteen years old, to a life term, Reds as courageous as the Min- ute Men or the volunteer firemen seem everywhere ready for a dem- onstration against race prejudice, whether it be at hand or a thou- sand miles away. Nobody paid much attention to the abolitionists, the woman's suffragists or the tem- perance crowd at first, but we have the 13th, the 18th and the 19th amendments to the U. S. Constitu- tion now. Dolayed Reports'of Many May Day | of the bourgeois and social democratic press were present, the Communist press repres tives being excluded. The examining magistrate Ritter, who | addressed the conference, complained | that the whole affair had been made | y the press, and in y by the “Frankfurter Zeit- hich by the way is now the rty of the I. G. Farben concern ms its sails accordingly). Rit- ‘d that the categorie denial issued by the Soviet Trade Mission fied and went on to say that the organizers of the espionage were higher up and were attached to the othe® lawyers who, as officers of justice, are brave enough to defend justice, in New York or Alabama.” Gives Lie to N. A. A. C. P.Leaders. In one of the two articles on the case, the Defender staff correspond- ent, Harry B. Webber, gives the lie to the statement of the N. A. A. C. P. top leadership that they had ent- ered the case from the beginning. Stephen B. Roddy, the attorney de- nounced by the nine boys and their parents as a betrayer of their cause, and claimed by the N. A. A. C, P. leaders to be their attorney in the case, is quoted to the effect that he sue, the Baltimore Afro-American, one of the largest circulated papers published by Negroes, carries a front page scream head and article on the New York May Day demonstration of the revolutionary white and Negro workers. The article points out that the fight to save the lives of the nine Scottsboro Negro youths was one of the main points in the demonstration. It further stresses the fact that “all races were there”, that Negro and white workers marched side by side in perfect solidarity and fraternity. It estimates 50,000 workers as partic- 7 hereto iio eN eRa e ‘ sal gaara rc had been retained only by the Chat-|ipating in the parade from Madison " mes have always held themselves | ry from gasoline taxes. This is the | pening in Russia has not even a mod- D Mi { t Th gh t ib t iy. The social democratic press joyfully . ri z, : : : Woof from, the worker, but the day|home of Harding and Doherty of] crate relation to-the real truth.” e Ons ra Ions rou ou oun I takes up the campaign and demands | ‘27°08 Ministers Alliance and had| square to Union Square. in 2 Sinclair Oil fame and the syndicalist, a rich Ohi eaBitaliata, for Harding é CHARLOTTE, N. C,, May 10—Inj Neuch, from Poland. They had been| this campaign is revealed by the | $S@nization. : Schools are partly closed down over | {oo it not one cent for ReHOOI ORDER LI SENT spite of rain, which* prevented the| advertising it for a month, but only| “Bergwarks Zeitung” (heavy indus-| Denies NAACP Leaders Were In NITGED AIGET E Pee ae Penn | hocks for workers’ children ; seheduled outdoor meeting, some 50| 400 caine. The socialist spake Peay iiob: asks nalvely wretter an — d Peehicnane wf ida Wan anon : ren. ieee Bos , Priepigeed the “tankenitey 0 toa | View of the “revelations” (as yet there| “These statements,” says ‘The De- CAMP AND HOTEL LN ire called for a spceial meeting in All Teachers Get Wage Cut T0 His DEA j egro and white workers marched to] jo» have been no positive facts forth-| fender, “lent color to the view that ¢ a NT Zolumbus—no doubt to receive their], Al! the city teachers in Dayton #22. | the hall and held an indoor meet- ee es coming) Communists should be per-|the national association, despite the|| *°CETAMUAN. VACATION PLAGE ain ation of lies to feed the children| pave Dad ‘els wages cut and 130 -— ing here on May 1, Five joined the For First Time. mitted to be members of the workers ; : OPEN THE ENTIRE YEAR : ; A. C. P, in the case’ has entered it $17 A WEEK urmnished to them, or they will have | something. Organize with the work-| Li, Chinese militant and for years a| stration May 1, at the City Hall, way, About 200 men, women and| PFO affair, the war preparations| ny since Saturday.” : int o irmain Sway from school. Many Jers and fight ageinst these condi-| student at the New York University,| from which they marched to the} children assembled for a parade| °8tinst the Soviet Union, and last, "T° late atey dectates thetase|l 7 Meagan ee ome f the workers children will have to/tions. Force the bosses to open up| has been refused “voluntary depar-| Workers’ Home and held another] down Broadway to City Hall. About but not least, the necessity of or- portae of the péfander alles the HONE 791 re | tay out of school, thergfore, because | the schools and take back the wage-| ture” and ordered deported to China | meeting. 75 children remained out of school} &*0ization. ne ee ot he workers have no work and no|cut. —C.W.D. | on May 15 by the Department of La- pe a to parade. When the parade reached| , 4 Police detail of about 25 were on w bor, where, upon his arrival in that] ,WAUKEGAN, Ill, May 10—Two| the City Hall they were informed| 2@2d. The lackey press also per- | CHICAGO HEIGHTS, IIL, May 10 thi rd yellow socialist crowd| Tised the city has postponed cutting 2 eps ri 4: € line with lowered costs of labor —Asricultural Worker. | and incorrigible Communists, ring-| bt RA iaaheey They had English| Off the relief till May 15, — Chicago Heights 1s the same town|#/ hood which settled with the In- bbc leaders of revolts against Party and| ona Jewish speakers and a certain| ‘The parade’ was led by a drum baie pret tind komma dustrial Food Workers Union. 7 PRODUCTION UP IN) CPs Remind Jobless | 38620 peo 8 tno. —— corps and the workers sang many| Chiasso arrested: for dhdwsioe ‘ ‘ caudal ak ae bin toce. be oe aaa in| “No one outside of the Utopian So- | SORES and shouted slogans for reliet| overs’ school and held under a This Is Capitalism | 04% Chinese militants directly in} its hae even claimed that it] 2d against increasing worsening of] s14q 009 pond, ‘The workers here are 1 0 V | ET U NI ON aE yaa of Chiang Kai-shek’s firing would be impossible to conquer with- their conditions. At the Bayliss Park being terroriead by the police. “But y PHILADELPHIA, Pa, May 10—| "908°", a tast December. out opposition, without a dictatorship | Several hundred workers gathered to} 159 workors, Nogro and white, at- aS come when they too are forced nto the soup lines. vhen the schools open on full or part. ime. * Children Must Buy Supplies The children will have to buy their mn supplies which were formerly laws. 800,000 was donated by the now getting the dose that the work- ers have always got for teaching our children the glory of the capitalist system. Come on, teachers, wake up, learn Cal. Fruit Growers Force 15% Wage Cut Santa Clara Valley, Cal. Daily Worker: All through this valley, Prune and ther fruit growers have cut wages 9 workers 10 to 15 per cent. This eason promises large growth, which teans more speed-up as well as wage ut for the workers in the orchards. Santa Clara Prune Growers Asso- lation filed an application with tate railroad commission to reduce ates for electrical agricultural power. “Present rates are said to be out (mainly so, of course) materials and supplies. The districts affected by the dpplication, which is directed against the Pacific Gas and Electric Co., include San Jose, Santa Clara, Los Gatos, Saratoga and Cupertino. Well, the fruit companies no doubt will get a reduction. With cheaper labor, materials and power, ‘millions will be profited, while the workers receiving 25-30c. per hour will be on slow starvation list. Build Agricultural Workers Indus- trial Union and fight wage cuts! MOSCOW.—The reports for the ” In the evening a mass meeting was te every class conscious worker his bakery *st half of April show that the pro- | Lombard st. recently, which was so] partment of Labor while walking and |“? PANE ata with abate BU spibikerd Grasent hace richie siniiae tert ct the Deedes. 6 lie. Leas manor mane uction of the most important | interesting that the “jobless forgot| lodged in a police station overnight | jence.” Li was placed under $3,000| After the speaking a hard times sup- salen pi ' ie cae ea val Ga tanches of Soviet industry is stead-| they were living under capitalism."| and held incommunicado, Next bail, unusually high in deportation| P* and dance followed. The chief of police came down in Grery, Hour. Only, Sha. best material = y inereasine, Coal production in te first half of April was 19,584,000 mms, or an increase of 6 per cent. he increase of production in the on Basin was 10 per cent. " .| The charges against Li were the] their sympathizers in the form of 1,500 In Worcester. here, at 114th St. and Michigan Ave., pk oa cauoigs and is entitled to be patronized by sil the TE OPC INP ab eased bare pie ge during une S2me as placed against all mlitants| militant muss protests ‘Teo Hsuan Li| WORCESTER, Mass, May 10--| had’ ren a teen esmigan Ave. ANNoUNcr inhabitants. One hundred percent setistas roduction in comparison with the| new wave of wage-cuts, Participating in working-class activi-| will be deported for the firing squad.| The May ‘Day observance in Wor-| cheered the speakers for social in- ees tae, tion guaranteed to every customer, tst half of March increased by 13.3 ties, “belonging to an organization] In their campaign to deport Li,| cester, Mass., held in the Common,| surance and defense of the Soviet wr cent, 1,837,000 tons, or an increase of 115 advocating the overthrow of the gov-| Bebritz Serio, Kenmotsu and other] attracted at least 1,500 workers. For| Union. G & G. BAKERY per cent. “ernment by foree and violence, and] militant workers, the Department of| anproximately two hours thre: Com- In the evening ® program and ® by ‘The production of steel was 1,775,- aStributes, publishes and circulates! Labor is carrying out the policy laid} munist speakers, Dawson, Pace and| meeting v: held at Strumils Hall. er . NY ) tons, or an increase of 14.7 per| Coking production was 2,849,009 Rolled tron The Marine Workers’ Council of the Unemployed held an affair at 213 Gov't Refuses Him “Voluntary” Leave NEW YORK, May 10.—Tao Hsuan country, he would face a firing squad in the usual manner of anyone sus- pected of revolutionary activities, was announced today by the Interna- tional Labor Defense, the organiza- tion handling his case since his ar- rest last December. In the demand before the Depart- ment of Labor to permit “voluntary departure” for Li it was pointed out by Shorr, Brodsky & King, attor- neys for the International Labor De- fense, that in the supposed amnesty granted in China to political prison- ers there was a provision that “all” afe freed except “all unrepentant Tao Hsuan Li was arrested last December by two officials of the De- But they were reminded. Suddenly @ squad of bluecoats and plain- clothes police with clubs crashed in and ordered everybody out. The po- lice are part and parcel of the sys. tons, or an increase of 12.4 per cent, morning Li was taken by the two officers to his room, making an in- tense search, where books by Lenin were taken as evidence against him. literature advocating the overihrow of the government Yy force and vio- Communist Party. Teles Ree 800 At Perth Amboy. PERTH AMBOY, N. J., May 10.— Eight hundred came out on demon- hundred demonstrated here May 1 ‘The at Browning and Genesee St. police were there, but the workers were so determined the dicks only listened. The evening indoor mect- ing had 275 present. Pier Socialists “Deplore.” DETROIT, Mich., May 4.—Follow- ing the demonstration by 35,000 workers here May Day there was a concert in the evening at Danceland Auditorium, attended by 3,000. In competition with this concert for militant workers and unemployed, of the proletariat, and without the placing of an iron hand on the old cases. Commenting upon the Li case, the International Labor Defense stated that “unless quick action is taken by all workers’ organizations and down by the Fish Committee in its report.” : ‘ ao COUNCIL BLUFFS, Iowa, May 10. At 10:30 a. m., May 1, there was mobilization of all members of the Trade Union Unity League at the headquarters, Ninth St. and Broad- that the mayor wasn’t in to receive the delegation, which had a set of demands worked out for the city to act on, Relief for the unemployed was to be cut off on May 1 and the demands were that the relief should be continued and also certain cases should receive immediate attention. This action on the part of the mayor clearly shows that he was afraid to meet the delegation and answer their demands. However, the workers of Council Bluffs are determined to re- ceive them in the near future, Be- cause of the demands that were listen to T. U. U, L. Organizer Pap- con, In this city there isn't one member of the Communist Party and all these workers are new elements celebrat- ing May Day for the first time, Pe, ee Skers, outlined for the workerg the msomterment iin, on Sgete ‘diplomatic action.” Another aim of counci the membership of such bodies being after all legally recog- d positions in the German fac. | formed its notorious task of misrep- resenting facts about the meeting, especially in distorting the substance of the speeches and in minimizing the attendance, etc. In the latter case they could not find time to add that extra zero to their “150.” A second gathering, in the evening at the Lithuanian Hall, proved still more successful. The bourgeoisie ress, in this instance, were forced toadmit an attendance of 500. Daily Worker readers can easily draw their own conclus: tended the first May Day meeting everheld here. ‘There were other full uniform, with the rest of his gang. The town has 22,000 people. aS See Stee ROSELAND, Ill., May 10.—The first May Day demonstration ever held 107th and Indiana Ave. The hall “received no funds from any other fact that they stated in a release to all newspapers in the nation last week that ‘Stephen R. Roddy, at- torney on the scene, announced that he had been retained by the N. A Beantiful Rooms Heated Modernly Equiped Sport and Cultural Activity Proletarian Atmosphere borhood— THE WELL BRONKX, N. Y. is the only bakery in the It, therefore, deserves to be patronized by WATCH DAILY WORKER FOR Union), is TO the Cooperative Houses and all inhabitants of Allerton Ave. Neigh- G. XG. BAKERY 691 ALLERTON AVENUE THE G. AND G. BAKERY (Settled with the Food Workers Industrial the same block with the co-operative houses, 691 ALLERTON AVE., BRO! KNOWN neighbor- located on the same side and in