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: | i ; Pase two DAMN N TWU PREP: ARES TOs STRIKE EVERY DYE SHOP IN PATERSO (CONTINUED FROM PAGER ONE) , meetings of the United Front Gen- eral Strike Committee at two meet ngs of the whole body of strikers hese demands be sent by the tlement Committee to, the manu y after tonight's The United Front General Strike ttee rendered the “high” talk n Federation of Labor om the Association is about their campaign Will Elect Settlement Committee. now a part, among the dye workers as another publicity stunt designed to fool the silk workers on the eve of their sell- > of the red emplo: agreement with the silk bosses, ito believing that they are seriously nt action and to : confuse and split r rs who are now pre under the} Front General ke Com- and National Textile Work- ‘his move is another ng attempt on the part} of L. leaders who have strike of the textile he last fifty-five years. Workers Know A. F. of L. Fakers, WEDNESDAY Every Paterson worker knows that Seon acca ae { L. and the Associated h are now one to remedy the terrible conditions of 3,000 dye workers Everygne remem- how e A. F. of L. chiefs and systematically be- S of the dye work- The lat k of the Muste, 7. and Gitlow combination with to the dye workers is part general scheme to nego- | ts and get some the bosses which further wage cuts| rse conditions soon after the rkers Industrial the A. F. Brownsville Section Miners Relief. Brownsville F from sin A. F. This has been the invari e of the textile work Steve Katovis Br. LL.D Se = kis . the orkers Hospital Wor Union are doing everything possible | Hosp. Wks. to prevent this sell-out. Only the themselves will decide on| ment. Only th erecognition of | ittees and the National | "Textile Workers Union will guaran- tee the demands won by the | workers. D. Bails Arrested Workers. The trial of Willie Goldson and} Columbus Vann, the two canst 's arrested on suspicion of be- “red torture hounds” hired to} c ympathy for the strikers, is heduled for Friday, Aug. 7, in the | Dist. Criminal Court. Vann, ac- cused of disorderly conduct, is out on $500 bail and Goldson, accused of alt and battery, is at liberty on | $1,000 bond, bail for both having | been furnished by the International Labor Defense. Worker FRIDAY— Friends of the Soviet Union | ud concert to be held 7 in. Coney Island, a ~ Au Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S | Vegetarian Health | Restaurant |] 558 Cleremont Parkway, Bronx | NINTH ANNUAL MONSTER | Picnic--Carnival of the MORNING FRETHEIT Saturday, August 8th LMER PARK 25th Ave., West End Line, Brooklyn, N. Y. The Rally of All Militant Working Class Organizations Speakers—M. BEDACHT Sports—Games—Proletarian Mass Play Good Dancing Orchestra—Refreshments LIVE IN A— WORKERS COOPERATIVE COLONY, We have a limited number of 3 and 4 room apartments NO INVESTMENT NECESSARY — OPPOSITE BRONX PARK 2800 BRONX PARK EAST Comradely atmosphere—In this Cooperative Colony you will find a Ubrary, athletic director, workroom for children, workers’ clabs and various cultural activities Tel. Estabrook 8-1400; Olinville 2-6972 ) Take Lexington Avenue train to White Plains Road and Get off Allerton Avenue Office open from: 9 a. m. to 8 p.m. every day; 9 n,m. to 5 p. m. Saturday 10 9, m. to 5 p.m. Sunday ———————————————————————————————— ONE MORE MAKES FOUR! WOCOLONA WAS NEITHER HERE NOR THERE, FINALLY IT MADE THE VITAL RAMP. NOW IT 18 A PROLETARIAN RESORT. A WORKING CLASS CAMP! YES! ONE OF THE FOUR THE PIONEER FOR PIONEERS NITGEDAIGET WAS CAPTURED FOR A WEEK BY THF PIONEERS, READY AND GAY. GO TO THE WORKLEK, NEW YOR, | Win. NESDA1, AUGUdi 131 oy | THE ADV EN 'TURES OF BILL WORKER —A Lesson In Capitalist Justice— - LANDLORD. “THE LA. \ WE HAVE THROWN YOUR STUFF INTC ca ee PORE Ne VT STREET - BECAUSE Y You Bibaer EIN YO Rie ~ ) Kiby Come on! f {a5 ISRENT, HE NEVER MADE } THE WIEA SELLS ARE GR.BUILT AHoUsE Pur | |} EVICTING a la Tee JUNGE SAYS ed | WOMAN AND Herd Susy Pay OR a KIDS. Levs Pur guOUT 7—— HER THINGS || BACK IN THE {Boose i —z ae We YeOkterS THINGS nee Here KIDS Arn: me ss By RYAN WALKER A TERRIBLE THING To 4 KILL The | j \ Aiaaer.” | ROWA IW THE STeceT SHE SIHIA® Yo, FFICER, “* EE nals. Vib Teach em { To gh baw (To Be Comrinven} ce ¢ = s . . { jmasses, not only in Amierica but PA-OHIO RELIEF Perntovn Counc PROTEST SCOTTSBORO-CAMP [Seb ev CALLS CLUBS TO AID COLLECTIONS Clothing and Tents Are Still Vital For Miners’s Relief NEW YORK. — The Penn-Ohio Strikir Miners Relief Committee, Room 330, 799 Broadway, near 11th St., calls upon all workers and work- ers’ clubs in the New York district to aid it in the collection of food and clothing for the 150,000 miners and their fami who are now starving in the e area In order to facilitate the collection of strike relief, the Relief Committee | began yesterday to make collections of food and money |ton Beach, Brookiyn, the first sec- tion covered, responded very satis | factorily, the Brighton Beach Work ers Club and Women's Council 17 aid- ing a great deal in the collection. Other Clubs Follow. Othe: clubs and mass organiza- tions should immediately follow the lead of these two organizations and get in touch with the Penn.-Ohio | Striking Miners Relief Committee with a view to organizing section col- lections similar to the Brighton Beach | collection. Clothing and tents remain a vital need to the striking miners and their families. only clothes be sent in that can be utilized now. Many sympathizers with the strikers are | sending in heavy overcoats ant other heavy clothes before the time would come to distribute it to the miners, | the clothes that are too heavy to be | worn in the summer. More than $300 | | has been realized in this way | miners’ relief. The Relief Committee also for | an- | Mrs. Filipoviteh, the wife of the | storekeeper who was murdered by | the coal operators’ gunmen because | he was supplying food to the strik- ing miners, THE Brownsville Drug Store BR, ESECOVER PHARMACIST 459 Stone Ave., Cor. Sutter BROOKLYN, NEW YORK Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 199 SECOND AVENUE Bet, 12th and 13th Sts. Strictly Vegetarian food Patronize the Concoops Food Stores anD Restaurant 2700 BRONX PARK EAST “Buy tn the Co-operative Store and help the Left Wing Movement.” WORKERS’ HEADQUARTERS— LABOR TEMPLE 15 WEST 126th STREET Telephone HArlem 17-5750 RESTAURANT, POOL ROOM, STEAM BATH, SWIMMING POOL, HALLS FOR RENT FOR ALL OCCASIONS sectional | Brigh- | It is advisable that well-meaning apparel altogether useless to the miners now. Since moths would destroy the| j the Penn-Ohio Striking Miners Re-| | lief Committee has decided to sell all} nounces that it has sent a check to} Two Eviction Cases | The Downtown Unemployed Coun- | cil on July 31 put back the furniture of John Mitchik of 166 East 2nd St. | Mitchik, who has been unemployed | for more than nine months, is the father of four children. The coun- cil rallied the workers on 2nd St. between Ave. A and Ave. B to help put in the furniture. Four mem- bers of the Council were arrested at this time but were later released. | Right after this evietion the Coun- | cil put back the furniture of Mike Stanchik of 711 East 12th St. The Council rallied many workers from a mass meeting at 7th St. and Ave. A who helped put back the furniture. |Stokowski Offers High! Praise For Moscow | | PRAISE FOR MOSCOW—14 pt Speaking of the Moscow Opera Jouse, of which Albert Coates is the conductor and General Musical Di- |rector, Leopold Stokowski, brilliant |conductor of the Philadelphia Or- chestra, back from Europa, praised it last week as the finest grand opera he had ever heard. Stokowski said: |- “It was simply marvelous. I had | never heard opera until I heard this | finished Moscow company sing. The | big thing there is the spirit; they jare alive and enthusiastic, and they are singers. There is |a |surprising equality in the entire company; ing Particular singer stands out as ex- eeptional. If any part of it is out- stamding it is the chorus, composed xelusively of artists. One hears the mass.chorus and yet hears the indi- vidual singers in the chorus — they are such singers. | “Not only can they sing éxcep- | nally well, but each one is an ac- | tor. They are acting all the time. The great chorus moves back and 1 along the stage and never re- laxes a minute, thus giving a perfect picture. Nothing I have ever heard | compares with it. You look back | across the audience |and [find them | breathlessly still. No one moves. They sit enthralled. They have floated | out of themselves.’ Workers Correspondence is the | backbone of the revolutionary press. | ‘ ( BUSINESS SCHOOL DAY AND EVENING Commercial—Secretarial Courses Individual Instruction Open the entire year 14th St. at 2nd Ave., N.Y.C, TOmpkins Square 6-6584 4 NEIGHBORLY PLACE TO EAT Linel Cafeteria Pure Food—100 per cent Frigidaire Equipment—Luncheonette and Soda Fountain 830 BROADWAY Near 12th Street 29 EAST 14TH STREE! NEW YORK Tel. Algonquin 3356-8843 We Carry a Full Line of STATIONERY AT SPECIAL PRICES for Organizations PAIR OF GLASSES—Found at the T.U.U.a picnic Aug. 2nd. Owner may have same by identifying them and paying for this ad. Call at Nat'l Office Daily Worker and be for Alice PIONEER CAMP WITH THE PIONEERS FOR YOUR VACATION TODAY! GO!—STRONG! ae ES AR RE ERIE PREETI ET VACATION : i- Beautiful Mountain | Views, quiet resting place. good food, $13.50 weekly—Avanta Farm, Ulster BUTCHERS’ UNION oca) 174, A, MO. & BW. ot Nw Office and Headquarter: Labor ‘Cemple, 24% East Mtb Street Room t2 Regular meetings every first third Sunday, 10 A, M. Employment Bureay open every aay até P.M, and Build your press by writing for it | HILL ATTACKS AUGUST 22 {CONTINUED FROM P BONED munist Parties of the world are mobilizing the international working class in the fight for their uncondi- tional release. In this connection, the Interna- tional Red Aid has issued a call for world-wide demonstrations on Au- gust 22, the anniversary of the mur- der by the State of Massachusetts of Sacco and Vanzetti. The Interna- tional Red Aid has sections in 64 different countries, with a total membership of 8,379,556. Its call is issued “to the toiling masses of all | lands,” and is in part as follows: “Four years ago, on August 22, 1927, the two Italian workers, Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti were murdered in the electric chair by the bourgeois courts of America. When the crime, with which they had been charged, was committed, both men were miles from the scene where it had occurred. Moreover, Celestino F. Ma“eiros, imprisoned on another murder charge, publicly con- fessed to having committed the deed. Nevertheless, the ruling class went | ruthlessly ahead with its dastardly scheme to have them killed. “Like Mooney and Billings, Sacco and Vanzetti had been picked out to show the working class that the bourgeoisie weré not to be trifled with, that opposition to their system of exploiting the masses would not be tolerated. “Today the class struggle rages in America, as in every other capital- ist land, with ever greater fury. The Tuling class, at the slightest sign of revolt on the part of the exploited NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES EAST SIDE—BRONX “Raise a mighty protest against the attempts of the American ruling class to electrocute the eight Negro boys at Scottsboro—a protest so widespread and so strong that it will not only save their lives but will help to prevent the repetition of such crimes in the future. “Down with the White Terror of the bourgeoisie: Expose the connec- tions of he social reformists in the frame-ups against militant workers! For the release of Mooney and Bill- ings, McNamara and Schmidt, the Centralia, Woodlawn prisoners! Smash lynching! masses, uses the most brutal methods to crush such resistance. There has ‘een a wholesale shooting down of striking miners in the coal fields of Pennsylvania, Ohio, West Virginia and Kentucky by the thugs and deputized gunmen of the mine own- ers. There was the frame-up of strike leaders in Gastonia and Im- perial Valley, Mooney and Billings, McNamara and Schmidt, remain in California's prisons after many years. The same is true of the Centralia prisoners in Washington. There has been a renewed wave of lynchings aimed at crushing out the growing militancy of the Negro workers and alternatively the use of the courts to accomplish the same object under the guise of legality, as in the Scottsboro case. All this terror and oppression is part of the preparation of the capitalist class for their new imperialist war and the attack upon the Soviet Union. “Demand the immediate, uncondi- tional release of all political pris- oners from the dungeons of the bourgeois prison hells! “Long live the International Red Aid, the helper and supporter of persecuted revolutionaries in all lands! “tong live the International Soli- darity of the Toiling Masses of all countries and all races!” MELROSE DAIRY VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT Comrades Will Always Find it Pleasant to Mine at Our Place. 1187 SOUTHERN BLVD. (near 174th St. Station) PHONE INTERVALE 9—9119 “Workers and peasants, and all sympathizers with the © world-wide .uggle against capitalist exploita- tion and imperialist oppression! Commemorate the martyrdom of Sacco and Vanzetti by huge demon- strations in all the cities of the world, exposing the bloody deeds of the bourgeoisie against the toiling ARLUSEMENTS First Showing at Popular Prices! Beginning This Rriday Bronx o. THEATRES table Wednesday to Friday | JEFFERYON KO 8 is & sabe gee JOE E. BROWN tos xe. ONA MUNSON in BROADMINDED Sun. and Hol, Prospects i6ist Fritz & Jean abert Earl La Vere Jeanette Mae Lang and Lawley Andre Du Vai Pat Lane Sybnaa Nevedunua DR. A. BROWN Dentist 301 EAST 40H STREED (Corner Second Avenue) ‘Pel. Algonquin 7248 Unusual Wholesome Dishes Made oi FRESH VEGETABLES & FRUITS AFTER THEATRE SPECIAL LUNCH 50c DINNER 650 ARTISTIC SURROUNDINGS QUALITY FOODS Trufood EGETAR ViteraunantsN 153 West 44th Street 110 West 40th Street (East of Broadway) e Food In the Key to Health We Invite Workers to the BLUE BIRD CAFETERIA GOOD WHOLESOME FOOD Fair Prices A Comfortable Place to Hat 827 BROADWAY Between 12th and 13th Sts Russia’s Remaking—A Talking Film (in English) See Soviet Russia Smashing Its Way to Socialistic Success Bhan samme te R 42ND STROET K and BROADWAY WIS. 1789) ° rorulaR PRICES, ,, if, to M. mo | “& JEW AT WAR” pays | A TENSE SOVIET FILM DRAMA MUSIC GULBERT «= SULLIVANGSS, STRIKE AT VANITY MILLS CONTINUES Millinery Dep’t Starts Unionization Drive NEW YORK.—The strike against the Vanity Knitting Mill, 136 W. 21st St., and the Rubinger Knitting Mills, 305 7th Ave., conducted under the leadership of the Industrial Union, continues. The maneuvers of the firm to break the ranks of the strikers have proven in vain, The workers stand united and are deter- mined to carry on the strike until they have won their just demands. Inspired by the example of these strikers, the workers in other shops are taking up the struggle against wage cuts. They recognize that with the help of the Industrial Union they will ‘be in a position to gain improvements in their conditions during the present season. el Moet 3 The trade commitee of the Millin- ery Dept. which met last night dis- cussed very concretely plans for the organization drive during the pres- |ent season. The victory of the work- ers in the Berg & Aronoff Shop, won as a result of the united strug- gle of the blockers and trimmers, has brought the question of the united front very concretely before the millinery workers. There is a movement in many of the shops to unite the ranks of the workers against the wage cuts which the bosses are carrying through with the aid of the officials of Local 24. ‘The fake stoppage planned by the Zaritzky gang is recognized by the workers as a maneuver to help carry through the schemes of the bosses and fill the treasury of the Zaritzky clique. The Industrial Union plans to begin an organization drive for union conditions. A meeting of the Organization Committee and active members in the millinery trade will be held at the office of the union ‘Thursday, right after work. Active millinery workers are called upon to attend this meeting and help in the | work, : HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian Restaurant 1600 MADISON AVENUE Phone University 5865 BIG DOUBLE ‘Trial by Jury’ Gratin CONCERTS BILL Philharmonie-Symphony Orch. é ‘9 with PAY WISOHN STADIUM PINAFORE” pemeie ron || amsters Ave and 138th St, bal bees i WES. FRITZ, REINER, Conductor, “Thrift” Prices Mats, 50c to $1. Sat. | Mats, 500 to $1.50 BRLANGER THEA, W, 44th Street VY NIGHT AT 8.30 Prices » 5Oe, $1. (Clrele 7-7575) ri Pe ae Bvenings 8:30 ie Seat iSiath ty “Ruddigore” cu | SIPPOBROME °°.,°s° allie SHOW LN NEW YORK Bus The Secret Call’ Incl. Richard Arlen JOE MARKS Pegay Shannon Become a regular worker corres- pondent for the Daily Worker. Write for the Daily about your day. to day struggles. OUR HERALD KINDERLAND AND UNITY DEVOTE THIS WEEK TO OUR HERALD, OUR LEADER—OUR PRESS. GO FOR YOUR VACATION WITH THE MILITANT SPOKESMEN OF THE REVOLUTIONARY WORKING CLASS RED FRONT OUR BATTLE IS GREAT, OUR FIGHTING IS VITAL * PROLETRIAN CAMPS MAKE US READY AND STRONG PROLETARIAN CULTURE, SPORT AND RECITAL TEACH US TO FIGHT WITH A SONG COME TO WOCOLONA 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 32 UNION SQUARE, ROOM 505, TEL. STuy. 9-6332 BIGGEST PICNIC OF THE YEAR ANNUAL EVENT OF THE DAJLY WORKER Will be held Sunday, August 16th, At Pleasant Bay Park, N.Y. Blocks of Tickets at 25c to be sold at 35c can be procured by all mass organizations at office of the Daily Worker, fifth floor. while they last! BUILD YOUR FINANCES! Get them now DON'T DELAY! Phone Stuyvesant 3816 Jobn’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: (TALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where al) radicals meet 302 E. 12th St. New York oe SPEND YOUR VACATION AT:i— “The Farm in the Pines” Dlectric Light, All Improvements” Near M. Lake, R.E.D. No, 1 Box 78 M, OBERKIRCH, Ki N.Y. Gottlieh’s Hardware’ 119 THIRD AVENUE Near 14th St. Stuyvesant 5974 AN winds of ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES Cutlery Our Specialty Intern’l Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 1 UNION SQUARE 8TH FLOOR AM Work Done Under Persona} Oare ‘af DR. JOSEPHSON Cooperators’ Patronize SEROY CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue Hatabrook seib BRONX, N.Y. Advertise Your Union Meetings Here. For information Write to Advertising Department The DAILY WORKER 50 East 13th St. New York City ee nee , j