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| } Renegades Give Support to Paterson Strike Breakers xitlow in Vicious Attack Against (ational Tex- 4 title Workers Union secretary of the mmunist Party, majority eaders expelled Party for trea- lass. has come the silk and dye son, in the strikebreaker, This follows osely upon the heels of the act of Ma Bert Miller) elled member of the Part who only i out the highway con- tion workers of White Plains, t used detectives and the in his ends. nt issued to the press. the National nion and the Strike Com i the dye This General Gitlow ip—a 8 of e Communist working 9 the not 4 Front composed Textile Associated Silk k- ront s now taking ~ was set up and aware. This united for the p rn Down Allentown. tral Falls wor! ik Conference 19 been 0 ont has been | rson. The only thing reventing the broadening of d Front in Paterson are ers of the Associated, U. T.| ted by Benjamin Gitlow and t renegades. But est pt at sabotage of the gle of the workers, these work- realize who ‘ike—the W. officials, Benjamin G and the i Gitlow received $3,000 for this dirty job from the Garland Fund—and now ts trying to deliver d Front General Strike | Committee called the strike on July 22, and the workers in the silk and| dye shops, who work under miserable conditi for shamefully low wages and long hours, came out on strike. What was the position of the Asso- ciated and U. T. W. leaders—Gitlow nd the others? They told the work- ers to remain in the shops. What is this but open strikebreaking? All talk of the Associated and U. T. W.) calling a strike on August 3 had no} meaning. When the workers were | ready to go out on strike, the Asso- ciated and U. T. W. leaders called MONDAY | Young Defenders No. 1 have a membership meeting | 7 at 1400 Boston Road which | tat 8:20 p.m, All invited. will s Pray Stale | Drug Clerks, Attention! A very important meeting of drug jerks will be held July 27 at 108} E. 4th St. (2nd floor) at 8 p.m. All i} members ™ t he present Non- | members in 1, Medical Workers’ Industrial Li ue. Friends of the Soviet Union x ng of the F. S. L ghton } Beach Branch will take place July 27, at the Workers’ Center, 179 Nep une Ave. Brooklyn, at 8 p.m. Ad-| mission free! All invited! | at Wan) | Workers’ Ex-Servieemen’s League | The W. EB, l., Branch 2. will hold | an open-air meeting at 116th St. and P. ct Ave. Bronx, at 8 p.m. Good speakers will be present and a dis cussion will be held on August Ist and war preparations. All workers ex-servicemen invited, ! vTURSDAY | Unemployed Clothing Workers Unemployed! Come in masses to the mobilization at Irving Plaza. 15th St. and Irving Place, this July | 28 at 1 pm. a ae Children's School and Reereation Center. | Registration for summer_ school and recreation will begin July 28 at 140 Neptune Ave, Monday, August Work and play will start under the supervision of trained instrue- tors Aug. 8. The fee for the month of August will go to the Daily | Worker and Morning Fretheit | police, | to try to “settle” the strike! on them at work, tc scabs. to stay become Bosses’ United Front. This is the position of the silk and dye bosses. These same bosses today are telling their workers to join the Associated. Mayor Hinch- cliffe is advising the workers to join the Associated. ‘The m: tion authorities are in Paterson to the Ass | bludgeon them into joining sociated. Mayor Hinchcliffe ganizing a group of so-called cal” lawyers, who have figured past strikes defending the such as ney for Haywood in function of these so-called “radical” lawyers, will be to support the strike- breaking Associated and U. T. W. and to send the workers back to work Workers ar > the Associ in workers, Morelli, who was the attor- 1913—and the being sent by ted to get cards Does the Asso- and un to work ciated fight for the demands that he workers want? It does not. It yy as the agency of the as a bosses’ union, like ne m) unions in the needle h the bosses use against ths in of the workers, by hav- ing seeret racketeering agreements with the union officials. August 3 is a strikebreaking August 3 or, as Gitlow proposed July a strikebreaking day. If; as is will trades, whic 27, is now declared, the Associated call a “strike” on July 28, it will likewise be a strikebreaking day. The strike has been on since July 22, and the Associated and U. T. W. with the assistance of the renegade ‘om Communism, Gitlow, and the have been consciously this way acting as pigeons of the the working and dye workers of Pat- erson will join the ranks led by the United Front General Strike Com- mittee and the National Textile rkers’ Union, the only union rep- senting and fighting for the inter- of the silk and dye workers all the country The American of Labor, this including U. T. W. and the ich Rave amalgamated and af- iated to the A. F. of L., is selling out all strikes. The silk and dye orkers must not forget that Wk and other textile workers of Elizabethton, Tenn., Marian, N. C., Danville, W. Va., and the upholstery workers of Philadelphia, were openly sold out by the A. F. of L. and U. T. W. officials. The U. T. W. of- ficials of Allentown are doing every- thing in their power to seil out the strike in that silk city, but the rank and file, which has united with the Paterson workers through the Na- tional Textile Workers’ Union the United Front General Strike Committee, are taking the matter into their own hands. Join the United Front! This is what the United Front General Strike Committee and the National Textile Workers’ Union of Paterson are asking you to do, Your leaders are preventing the unity of over Federation he struggle of the rank and file of the | of Paterson, | silk and dye workers Push these strikebreaking officials aside! Join the United Front! Elect your strike committees in the shop! Elect a delegate to the United Front General Strike Committee! Make this one powerful united front of the | rank and file against the strikebreak- ing officials of the Associated and U. T. W., Gitlow, the Musteites, who are working in the interests of the silk and dye bosses. The bosses will have to settle with the United Front and General Strike Committee and the National Textile Workers’ Union. They have tried to break the strike of the miners by | “settling” with the A .F. of L. But the miners will accept no settlement unless it is made with their own union, Now Mayor Hinchcliffe, the bosses, some so-called “radical lawyers,” the immigration authorities and the conciliation committee are going The fake strike of the Associated which | will be called will be for the pur- pose of splitting the ranks of the workers, Do not allow the strike- breaking officials to split the ranks and sell out the strike! The united | front of the workers can defeat any combination of the bosses and their stool-pigeons, The bosses can settle with the silk and dye workers only through the United Front General Strike Committee and the National Textile Workers’ Union! The Communist Party of U. S, A solidly supports the genera! strike of the silk and dye workers of Pater- ‘Textile son led by the National Workers’ Union and the United Front General Strike Committee. Communists are among the strikers, playing a leading part in the strike. The Communist Party calls on the workers to repudiate the strikebreak- ing officials of the Associated and U. T. W., and to join and build up the National Textile Workers’ Union, the only unton that fights for the in- terests of the workers of your indus- try during and after the strike, when their | day. | Associated, | the | and | the National Miners’ Union. | Our Champion---Our Press Our modern, — yin a giving this week to e Communist Press Start the week with a masse immigration Reseue your “Daily” and “Freiheit” out of distress. DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, RES OF BILL WORKE Now THAT A He ) PER YOUNG Plonecoy OL SHeviic DisciPLine is I PieRPont A STUDY CLASS ta é ) 4H (AND f /eup ee | OUR ARTIST S DW Wave hegre | | Sax, Red Peppers eRe a “YoU CAN E Pmmanir | Te KIDS mousy | | 200 ARE To { | Pl ov PAINT ‘The CARRY Accumubated Fe eeetGNeD lal | « se Ye ear | Banners fon - Se | al To WiDENT to eure Their Duties. A cal ; re Cont alte rues OUR Adeusr = To Promore ne’ Waal Yeu Jo, J ALS. AND | Commissary 1ST” (Tm UST Demons ; IGREAT]I & Existence oF the MUST HN HewRY}-—|] | YOU ARE AL so | WELL srocicen | ALREADY bestia ~ LABORER” a cee Tr ce ) | \ Tobeapiwour — if gn Rs » = - HAT STRICT [= Si | STUDY Chass: Yo Be Cowninued Relief Stations To | Be Open to 10 P. vu. [WO AFL LOCALS | rms acs oe) AUD MINE STRIKE |Penn-Ohio Striking Miners Relief} Committee will be open until 10 p m. every night except Sunday for | the collection of food, money, shoes | a pare Members Sweep Aside and trousers for the striking miners. Opposition Central Station: 240 E. 9th St. eg es aI Other Stations: 830 Westchester; NEW YORK — The strike of 45,- | Ave, 237 East 106th St., 11 Clinton | o99 miners under the leadership of | St. 140 Neptune Ave. 61 Graham /the revolutionary National Miners | | Ave., 1844 Pitkin Ave. 48 Bay 28th| Union is drawing the sympathy of | St. | ever-widening circles of the Ameri- jean working class. | Two A. F. of L, painters’ locals, Nos. 1011 and 261, have voted to tax | themselves twenty-five cents each for | miners’ relief despite attempts of | their officials to prevent this show of | | solidarity between the workers in the | A. F. of L. and the revolutionary | miners’ union. | The rank and file of the paint- Needle Trades Workers Prepare for August First ers’ locals had to wage a stubborn NEW YORK.—A call was issued | fight against their officials before the | this morning by the Industrial Union | fioor was granted to a striking min- er to permit him to make a plea; for solidarity with his fellow work~- | to all active needle trades workers to report to the office of the union, | | 131 W. 28th St. Monday morning/ ers in the coal regicns. |for picketing in the fur market;| The money that the painters taxed | | where a number of dogskin shops | themselves for the relief of the strik- Also to picket the | ing miners will be sent to the Penn- | shop of Rubinger Knitting Mills, 305| Ohio Striking Miners’ Relief Com- | Seventh Ave. | mittee next Friday, the painters an- Bronx Dressmakers Called Upon to} Assist in Picketing. \“TRIAL BY JURY” and “PINA- | The committee of the striking) FORE” AT ERLANGER THEATRE | shops of the Brown Dress Co., 2378 | eer 4 | Milton Aborn is presenting a doub- | Belmont Ave. and the Grace Drest |i, pill of Gilbert and. Sullivan, ‘Hes | Co., 696 187th St., negotiated with 7 " | the firm. The boss was ready to | ginning this evening at the Erlang- er Theatre. \ give an increase in wages, but the © ‘4 “6 | “Trial by Jury.” which has not | workers insisted on full recognition | af ane en | of the union. The spirit of the strik- | P®@™ Seen here in many i gal }ers is excellent and they are deter- | e fe gel Relasinpritsecid nar mined to go on with the fight. | fore” for whose re-staging there an- pe ty | pears to be demand. Meeting of Fur Finishers Ruesday| "rie players in “Trial by Jury” are: Peg le eiiaby orrale Ream Frank Moulan; Frederick Persson, J ing 7 2 | |Howard Marsh, Joseph Macaulay, been arranged at Irving Plaza, 16th ki - y William Danforth, and Theo Pen- St. and Irving Place, Tuesday, right | |. | 5 nington. after work. At this meeting final Blane fon ia delve anne Tia The cast for “Pinafore” will be: | | Plans for the drive against finishing | yyoujan, Macaulay, Marsh, Danforth, | | contracting will be made. All fur Persson, Theo. Pennington, and Fay are still on strike. | finishers are called upon to attend | rempleton. | this meeting. | ee Prepare for Mass Participation in HIPPODEOME : On the screen: “Hush Money,” August 1 Demonstration. | A call was issued by the Indus- | with Joan Bennett, Hardie Albright, | trial Union to all needle trades work- | OWen Moore, and Myrna Loy | ers for final mobilization for Aug. 1.| Vaudeville: Ruiz and Bonita, Bob | A special leaflet is being issued by | Albright, Murray and Allen, Mills | the union. and Shea, May Joyce, Case Broth~ Shops are called upon to come ers and Marie, Helene McGinnis and with placards. Sister, and “The Enchanted Forest.” The Hippodrome is also present- | _ ing the official pictures of the Jack FRITZ REINER CONDUCTS AT | Sharkey-Mickey Walker boxing con- | STADIUM TUESDAY | test. | __ William van Hoogstraten concludes | NgyGHBORHOOD THEATRES |his three weeks as conductor of the EAST SIDE-—BEONS Stadium with his concert this eve- | ning. Fritz Reiner opens his two | weeks as director at the Stadium on | Tuesday. Programs of the week fol- low: | Monday “Egmont” Overture, Bee- thoven; “Francesca da Rimini,” Fan- tasia, Tchaikoysky; Passacaglia and JEFFERION Fugue, Bach - Respighi; Symphony | “ssa No. 1 in © minor, Brahms. 8 kers | Tuesday: Toccato and Fugue tn |C major, Bach; Symphony No. 4 in | E minor, Brahms; Don Juan, Strauss; Meistersinger” Prelude, Wagner. | Wednesday: Overture “Benvenuto Collini,” Berlioz; Pictures at an Ex- | |position, Moussorgsky - Ravel; La | | Mer, Debussy; Bolero, Ravel. r Thursday: “Ruslan and Ludmille” Overture, Glinka; Symphony No. 2 in B minor, Borodin: Spanish Ca- prica, Rimsky - Korsakoff; Polka and | Fugue, from “Schwanda,” Weinberg- ler: Mephisto Waltz, Liszt; Till Eu- lenspiegel, Strauss. | Friday: Overture “In the Spring,” | Goldmark; Streets of Pekin, Hadley; |The Afternoon of a Faun, Debussy; Dances of Marosszek, Kodaly; Ex- cerpts from “Petrouchka,” Stravin- sky; Daphnis and Chloe (2nd suite), Ravel. Saturday: Academic Festival Over- ture, Brahms; Symphony No. 5 in © KESSLER Surgeon Dentist Announces the Removal of Hi» Office to 853 BROADWAY Corner Mth St., Rooms 1007-1008 minor, Beethoven; Symphonia Do- mestica, Strauss. New York City Sunday: Overture “Neues vom HFFECTIVE JULY Ist Tage.” Hindemith; Symphony No. lin C minor, Brahms; Fantasia “Ka- marinskaia,” Glinka; Sorcerer’s Ap- prentice, Dukas; Polovetzkian Danc- es, Borodin, . M. 'T. Station tn Building) the conditions of the workers can be protected only by a militant union. Join the Communist Party, which is made up of the best workers, the best fighters, the class conscious workers of the entire country and world! SyGnaa Neyedunya DR. A. BROWN Dentist 401 EAST 140 STREET (Corner Second Avenue) GLENMORE SHOE STRIKE STRONG Boss Frames Up Active | Shoe Striker NEW YORK.—In the second week | of the strike in the Glenmore Shoe | Co. which 1s led by the Shoe and} Leather Workers’ Industrial Union against a lock out of the workers | when workers refused to accept the wage cut, the bosses did not succeed to break the morale of the strikers. Regardless of a few professional scads, known to the shoe workers, | Strikebreakers wherever shoe wor ers went on strike, the production in| the shop is crippled. The bosses tried other methods to break the strike. One of the bosses by the name of Meltzer, arrested Rudomin, an active member of the union, on @ frame-up charge of felonious as- sault, Rudomin was put under $1500 bail which was reduced to $1,000. ‘The case comes up on Wednesday July 29, 1931. But these methods will not stop the shoe workers in the Glenmore to fight against wage cuts and discrimi- nation. The strike in the Glenmore is a turning point in the life of the Shoe and Leather Workers Industri- al Union since the last general lock- out against the Independent Shoe Workers Union. It is the tirst mili- tant struggle in the ladies’ shoe dustry since 1930, and shoe workers in New York are looking and watchs ing this struggle because the win- ning of this struggle means an in- tensified campaign for the organi- zation of the shoe workers in tae strugg'e for better conditions, short- er hours, apainst wage cuts. deal BUSINESS SCHOOL DAY NING Commercial—Secretarial Courses AND © Individual Instruction Open the entire year 14th St, at 2nd Ave., N.Y.C. TOmpkins Square 6-6584 Order Literature for| August Ist Those District and Section Lit- | erature Agents who have not or- dered their August (First pam- phjets must do so at once by wire in order to get their literature on time. CENTRAL AGIT PROP DEPT. PROTEST FRAME IN LINDEN TUES. Rail- Negro Worker roaded to Jail LINDEN, N. J., July .—Colored and white workers of Linden will hold a protest meeting Tuesday night, July 28, against the frame-up and sentencing to three years in jail of Jacob Peters, a Negro work- man. On Dec. 29, 1930, a woman was attacked and robbed in Kenilworth, N. J. She raised the cry that the robber was a “6-foot Negro,” al- though she admitted it was too dark to see the face of her assailant. Raids and arrests of Negro work- ers was at once instituted by the police and Ku Klux mobs. The In- ternational Labor Defense and the League of Struggle for Negro Rights. protested these wholesale arrests, The workers were released. The matter was dropped until June 10, when police arrested Jacob Peters and charged him with this hold-up. He was sentenced to three Years in state penitentiary. Al- though six months had passed and | the woman had originally admitted she had not seen the face of her assailant she now claimed she rec~ ognized Peters in a passing car. In spite of the testimony of white and colored workers that Peters was working in Linden at the hour of the attack in Kenilworth, he was failroaded to jail by the boss courts, ‘Tuesday night's meeting is called by the L. S. N. R. and the I. L, D. to denounce this outrage and or- ganize a mass demand for Peter's re- lease. The meeting will be held in Progress Hall. ‘A New Soviet PRODUCED IN THE U.S.S.R, BY UKRAINEILM Awakes Worker by Worker oth Ave HIPPODROME Porras IGGES? SHOW LN NEW YORK #KO OAN ACTS SPEND YOUR VACATION AT;— “The Farm in the Pines” Blectric Light, All Improvements Near M, Lake, R.F.D, No, 1 Box 78 ‘M. OBERKIRCH, Kingston, N.Y. "A JEW AT WAR A Tense Drama of a Jewish Worker Who to the Senseless Slaughter of 10 ALM. Oe R ud K and BROADWA}S|1 P.M. (WIS, 1789) LPM 50° ° POPULAR PRICES , {0 ,, eee ae premnernee re eeenestrer saree terete mare eee eee ee Film!~ in the Last War! 42ND STREET GiLBERT and SULLIVANSt: BIG DOUBLE BILL “Trial by Jury” and “Pinafore” with FAY TEMPLETON “Thrift” Prices by) Oa donw M 50¢ to $1, Me to $1.50 ERLANGER THEA,, PEN, 6-7963. W. 44th Street Evenings 8: (New Modern Air Cooling Ststem) MUSIC PTADIUM CONCERTS Philharmonie-Symphony Orch, “ LEWISOHN STADIUM Amsterdam, Ave and 138th St, Willem Van Hoogst » Cond. EVERY NIGHT AT 8,30 Pricex: 25c, 50e, $1, (Circle 7-7375) RED FRONT OUR BATTLE IS GREAT, OUR FIGHTING IS VITAL COME TO WOCOLONA PROLETRIAN CAMPS MAKE US READY AND STRONG PROLETARIAN CULTURE, SPORT AND RECITAL TEACH US TO FIGHT WITH A SONG \HIT SELL QUT BY HILLMAN GANG Amalgamated Rank and File In’ Revolt NEW YORK. — Enraged by the treacherous class collaboration policy of their corrupt officials. the militant rank and file members of the Amal- |gamated Clothing Workers have organized an Amalgamated Rank and File Committee and issued a call to the membership to reject the treacherous agreement prepared by Hillman, with the bosses and the | police. The call points out that the Men’s Clothing Workers had voted for a big | general strike. “We. votel to put forth demands to the bosses which would improve the conditions of all workers in our industry. But instead jof carrying out our decisions for a | real strike they are calling a fake | stoppage, instead of our demand, they | bring us a treacherous agreement which will forsen the conditions of all workers in the trade and swell the {army of the unemployed. “Brothers unemployed! Come to the meeting Monday and organize! Mobilize every tailor to protest against and reject the treacherous agreement! Let your betrayars now know that you will not allow your- selves to be starved to death. “Clothing workers! Smash the treacherous plans of the Hillman clique! Reject the sell out agree- ment. Demonstrate for a real strike! For the demands of the rank and file.” FRIEND’S The name of quality & Service Delicatessen and Restaurant Lunch 40 cents—Dinner 65 cents 79 SECOND AVENUE Bet. 4th and 5th Sts. BIG TUUL PICNIC STARTS CAMPAIGN May Hear Foster on Miners Strike The Trade Union Unity, League expects to have the biggest picnic of the year at Pleasant Bay Park on Sunday, Aug. 2. Preparations are being made to handle a capacity crowd at this annuel One Big Picnic. ‘The unions, leagues and minority groups in the A, F. of L, are pre- paring to make a strong organiza- tional drive, which is expected to win masses of workers to the T. U. U. L. The One Big Picnic is being looked to as the rallying point at which to start the drive. Much interest is being shown in the speech that kill be delivered at the picnic by William Z. Foster. It is expected that in addition to the call for the organizational drive he will give a report on the mine strike situation. Foster’s talk is of special interest because it is expected that this is the only time that he will speak in New York this summer, and therefore the only time when he will be able to give to the workers of New York his view on the mine strike led by the T.U.ULL. ‘Tickets in advance 25 cents, at the gate 35 cents, MELROSE DAIRY WEGETARIAN RESTAURANT Comrades Will Always Find It Pleasant to Dine at Our Place, 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD. Bronz (near 174th St. Station) HONE INTERVALE TELEP! on 914y Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 199 SECOND AVENUE Bet, 12th and 13th Ste. Strictly Vegetarian food eeeeeneEEtene eee Unusual Wholesome Dishew Made of FRESH VEGETABLES & FRUITS APTER THEATRE SPECIAL LUNCH 50c DINNER 65¢ | ARTISTIC SURROUNDINGS { QUALITY FOODS Grufood EGET. VaesraunawisN 1538 West 44th Street 110 West 40th Street (East of Broadway) ‘True Food Is the Key to Health Patronize the Concoops Food Stores AND Restaurant 2700 BRONX PARK EAST “Buy in the Co-operative Store and help the Left Wing Movement.” We Invite Workers to the BLUE BIRD CAFETERIA GOOD WHOLESOME FOOD Fair Prices A Comfortable Place to Eat 827 BROADWAY HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian Restaurant 1600 MADISON AVENUE Phone University 6865 Phone Stuyvesant 8816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES Luss 302 £. 12th St. New York cos Aeiyet All Kinds of ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES Cutlery Our Specialty Cooperators’ Patronise SEROY CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 5215 BRONX, N. Intern’! Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 1 UNION SQUARE 8TH FLOOR AU Work Done Under Personal Care of DR. JOSEPHSON — AU Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant Between 12th and 13th Sts. 558 Cliremont Parkway, Broux THE FRONT LINE The W. I. R. and I. L. D. COME TO NITGEDAIGET COME TO UNITY AND KINDERLAND— THEY ARE ALL WITHIN THE REACH OF YOUR HAND for information call at the office of all 4 camps COMMUNIST PARTY OF U, 8. A, . Tel. Algonquin 1248 DISTRICT COMMITTEE, DIST. 2. 32 UNION SQUARE, ROOM 505, TEL. STuy. 9-6332 Are first in line of Workers’ Battle, against starvation, gorillas and police that beat and handle us like Wocolona works this week for W. I. R. Camp Unity—for the militant I. L. D, The W. T. R. hands out food “and clothes to strikers The I, L. D. sets our prisoners free, s cattle,