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i h DAILY WORKER, NEW BAGS _THUR sDAY, JUNE a2, 1932 “WE'RE WITHA YOU, BOYS, WE'RE WETEE You"/ axe aut MAIS PROCECOED TO CASA IN O& THE WAR CONTRACTS ALTHE SOLDIERS LEFT FOR FRANCE ie muce TOUTEn DEN@CLRACY OF MS. @. ake GQ REIGM OF ROR AGAINST THOSE WHO OP. POS ED “THE WAR TO END GLL WARS” IND THE'4.00" DIO THE! ECRUITING OW THE Sandctity OF AMER WAS AT STAKE ou BaByY OcRACY IS IT WAS, We WE FIGHT TAGT DIRTY KILLER? AND, * DEM At STAKE Rochester Workers Challenge Buffalo on State Convention Pledge to Send More Negro Delegates to Lead Communist Election Campaign ————— IN RY it NEWS FLASHES N.Y. JOB AGENCY | BERLIN, June 1.—The Von Papin support of the fascists ands. willing | 1,000 Demonstrate on Cabinet of aristocrats, monarchists|/to pay the-price by dissolving the | duis and represents a | Reichstag, calling for new elections 47th sti eet All Out in Anti- Imperialist! Demonstration This Saturday | To Protest Against Japanese and U. S. Plans for War on Soviet Union WALKER GETS MONEY; JOBLESS GO WITHOUT ' 5 + , persons were seriously wounded in-a j ___| A Shakespearian production, a nov- P peeigged tebe ioe the film “Black and White.” The | delegation will be reported to a mass|| Gard Rest: t bet he poli ‘ms ; . arden hestauran : elty in this day and generation, will Negro fesse leesdesges big Neg atte cb! <2 case will sail on the “Muropa” on| meeting at 10 a.m. Wednésday at Rallying Place for Demonstration Changed to South and, A mass demonstration of protest) against the Japanese war on Chin: and the intensified preparati for war on the Soviet Union—the So- cialist Fatherland, will be held Sat- | urday, June 4, at 12 o'clock noon, starting from South and Broad Sts The Communist Party, the Trade Union Unity League, the Unemploy- Broad Streets and it is the duty of the American workers now to proceed from pro- |paganda .» action, declaring inter- national solidarity with the revolu- tionary workers of China and Japan and in defense of the Soviet Union. Stop the production and shipment of ammunitions from the United States! | EvidenceMayor Owned Bonds of Company on City Contract (CONTINUED YROM PAGE ONE) owner in the company that gets the contract, There’s money in that thar trea- sury for Jimmy, but not for the job-| less. Walker, at the conference of may- ors in Detroit yesterday, called for |ment, wishing to crush the workers’ rich agrarians, transformation cabinet till the fas- | cists take power, declares Rote Fah: organ of the Communist Party o! Germany. The decisive forces of the German bourgeoisie hesitated to establish anj| open fascist dictatorship for the mo- resistance gradually. The new Cabinet would be unable to master Germeny’s difficulties. The threatening fascist dictator- ship is only possible after two years of Bruening government, supported in September and withdrawing under some form the prohibition of the storm detachments. | The Reichswehr Minister Schlei- cher is mote important than Papen. Schleicher is now securing the sup- port of the nationalists and fascists. | Such a cabinet might have taken place under Wilhelm Second. SUPPORTS NATIONALIST DICTATORSHIP | Papen, former military attache to| the German Embassy in America, is (By a Worker Correspondent) NEW YORK.—Oyer one thousand | workers demonstrated in front of the Hodge Employment Agency on 47th St. and Sixth Ave. on Tuesday in support of a workers’ delegation that had gone in to demand a refund of a@ woman worker's fee and came back partially victorious. When the delegation reported to the workers that the woman worker, who had paid $7 for a $50 a month job anq worked only two days be- NEW YORK.—Rochester has chal- lenged Buffalo to send as many de- legates to the State Nominating Con~- vention of the Communist Election Campaign from its Unemployed Groups and Block Committees as Rochester will send from Negro Or- ganizations as yet not penttrated by cur organizations. The comrades in Rochester recognize the weaknesses in their work among Negroes so far and are coordinating their ectivities Than Buffalo Sends of Jobless Mass Organizations. particularly the International Workers Order and the various language organizations have been doing very little to collect sign« atures, or penetrate into other or« ganizations The EBlection Campaign Committee urges all the organizations to mob- {lize, a hundred per cent. for the Red Mobilization Week to be held June 11 to June 18. 10,000 signatures must be collected in this week. Drive the J: ii rialist re- ; " ‘ i . ‘ oa Council, the Friends bas calles pudeey iam pring aganteveds federal aid for the unemployed. by the social-democracy. The tolera-|teader of the reactionary fascist wing | °SUS*, “ditions were not as repre-|for the Election Campaign with all| The Mass Organizations are also iet Union the Marine Workers In- | P! - a Oh peo} th “We have taken care of our own|tion policy prevented nothing but|of the Center Catholic Party and sented, had received $4.20 refund] of their day to day activitics. From/urged by the United Front Com- dustrial Union, the International La-| Defend the Chinese People and the “mut now | . |after a previous reftisal, a larger|Rochester come reports of delegates | mittee, to send speakers to the ber Defense, the Workers Interna- tional Relief and many other work- ing class organizations call upon the workers to participate in this de- monstration. From South and Broad Streets the | demonstration will march past the| Japanese Consulate on Broad Street to Wall Street and Hanover Square. This demonstration ust be a warning to the bosses of this coun- try that New York workers will do their duty in defense of the Chinese people and the Soviet Union. While the Red Army of China pushes for- ward, the Japanese Communist Par- ty is rallying the masses of Japan | t the defense of China against Jap- anese imperialism. Shipments of war material leave U. S. ports everyday} 2 Leaders of April 22nd March on City Hall Now Out on Bail | Jones and Ferrari, two of the leaders of the march on city hall} April 22nd, have just been released on bail. These two workers together with Powers, Gramatakis, Stack, Lerner | and Cornius were arrested April 22/ when 3,000 unemployed workers marched on city hall demanding re- lief. The workers were attacked by Walker’s police and brutally beaten Those arrested were taken down the city-hall basement beaten uncon- ‘cious and sent to the hospital. Charges of felonious assault, dis- orderly conduct, inciting to riot, etc., Grawyjntakis is now being held for deporlation to Greece in spitt of the} faet that he is “legally” in this coun- | , fought in th ld war ; . . ‘ . f : 2 aa oes — FE a lie: ISM a Big Wasi in| teresting 2 ae jobless workers,|Spanish Police Fire | Night for Negro Film | worker. WORKERS CENTER AU work tone Under Rersonal Can ' test is being | Flushing, Ohio, to elect a rank and| however, to realize that the mayor| A | * They also demand no wage cuts Adige protest meeting 1 being ie Bing, Onis te Ce ee ae aids nu oats, eae | Oe Strikers to Halt (Cast Going to U.S.S.R. 50 EAST 13th STREET allied by the’ International Labor Defense and the Marine Workers In- Soviet Union! Down with Japanese and U. S. im- perialism! MASS PICKETS DEFY MILITIA, STOP OHIO MINES BRIDGEPORT, Oh Ohio, June 1.—All attempts of the coal operators to re- open their mine in East Ohio with the help of the state militia have | been failures. The strikers have kept jthem closed by mass picketing, al- | though the United Mine Workers’ officials ordered them not to picket. Yesterday the Amsterdam miners held an enthusiastic meeting, called by the National Miners’ Union, and jelected @ rank and file united front strike committee to take charge of |their section of the strike. These |miners are determined the U.M.W.A. |shall not sell them out as it did the |northern West Virginia men @ few |days ago, when it made a contract ae them at the rate of 22% cents ton. ie Under the leadership of their own committee, the strikers mobilized to |mass picket Wolf Run Mine of the Warner Collieries, which, it was threatened, would re-open today. The Amsterdam meeting sent a telegtam. to Governor White of Ohio, | |demanding he withdraw the armed |guards and state militia from the |coal fields and turn over the money now spent on the national guard to | Telief of the striking miners. | | | | |in Amsterdam. | the Republican Party. It may be in- for a long time,” he said, the end is in sight. And yet our hos- pitals are jammed to overflowing with undernourished children, and long lines are formed by others wait- ing a chance to get in.” “You don’t have to wait until you see @ man fall dead to know he is starving to death. You can walk | along the streets of our city any time | now and see the signs.” Owned Bonds. Among the hundréds of thousands |of dollars which Mayor Walker got from “good friends,” the Hofstadter Committee yesterday turned up one donation whieh Samuel Seabury, | chief inquisitor, fixes on as providing | necessary technical grounds for ac- | tion to remove Walker from office. This rather trivial grab by the mayor, in comparison with the really huge sums he got away with else- where, is connected with the funny brass traffic signs on Fifth Ave. It seems that a company called the “Reliance Bronze é& Steel” was| formed and shortly after Mayor | Walker began to deposit coupons} from its bonds in his own private account in the Federation Bank of the A. F, of L., this company got the contract to put up the brass lighting Standards for the city, Walker on the stand has been forced to admit owning some of the bonds of the Reliance. Harry J. Rosenblum, treasurer of the Reliance, yesterday testified to the contract. company which was applying for, and did get, a city contract. The Hofstadter Committee, which disclosed these facts, is mostly seek- ing election campaign material for who even admits in conferences with other mayors that they exist, is living |So Walker was a bondholder in a| Statement of the Relief Commission paved the way to fascism. The So- cialist and Communist workers must join hands outside the parliament, repeating the experiences of the} | Kapp Putsch and Cuno strike, PAPEN RECKONS ON FASCIST SUPPORT. | The Von Papen government is} formed without a parliamentary basis, as a result of an agreement) among industrialists, agrarians and | |@ controlling interest in the Catholic maintains close relations with reac- tionary circles in France. Being a fanatical anti-Communist, he supports the idea of intervention against the Soviet Union. He holds| organ, “Germania,” which launched notorious anti-Soviet attacks. Pa- pen long ago openly supported the idea of a pure dictatorship baseq on the nationalists. CHICAGO RELIEF STATIONS TO BE CLOSED JUNE 5 Condemn Workers to} Starvation; Flop Houses Closing By BILL GEBERT. CHICAGO, Ill.— The Governor Emmerson Emergency Relief Com- mission has anounced that after June Sth it will close down its 36 sta- tions in Chicago and 10 in the sub- urbs of Cook County, that will stop all family relief, which means that 111,136 families who received mis- erable relief, averaging $21.38 a month, ts stopped. According to a it means that 450,000 men, women and children, who were receiving} miserable relief, are condemned to (CONTINUED ON PAGE THREE) Spread of Movement | Ladies Garment Workers officials with |and Miller, on a frame up charge | these fighting workers. Cabaret Party Friday) LL.G.W.U. Workers! Protest Your Officials, Frameup of Weissberg | NEW YORK. — The International the aid of the bosses of Needleman & Bremmer are attempting to send Weissberg to. jail for being in the forefront of the struggles of the | dressmakers. This case follows close- ly the conviction of Turner, Adalchi in connection with the strike of this firm. This case was previously thrown out of court on disagreement of the jury, but the I. L. G. W. U. officials have revived it as an attack | on the Industrial Union. | The workers must rally to the de- | fense of Weissberg, an active ana | militant dressmaker. We also must utilize this occasion to demand the immediate release of Turner, Adalchi and Miller. The workers of the In- ternational must demand that the workers of their locals repudiate the active support given by the officials to the courts in the conviction of NEW YORK. — A Bon Voyage balance. The job agency had called the po- out. When asked why they did not help get the worker's money back. they told her to go to the license bureau at 8 Reade St. She went there with two workers and was told that nothing could be done. The worked had paid, in addition to the fee, $3.40 cents carfare to and from the job and received $6.50 in wages. The Unemployed Council has won several victories for workers gypped by these sharks ‘and is pre- paring for greater organizational steps to protect the workers now that the Tammany police have exposed their alliance with the sharks. The only thing that has saved the workers from arrest is the militant attitude of the workers in the “slave market.” Because the Daily Worker is leading the workers in the fight against gyp agencies, the police have threatened the sellers on 49th St. and Sixth Ave. General Electric Workers Demand $8 Per Week Relief SCHNECTADY, N. Y., May 31.— A delegation elected by hundreds of laid off General Electric workers has notified Burton Delack, manager of the company, that it will appear be- fore him June 1 with demands. The first demand is for relief to be paid by the company to the amount of $8 per week with additional $1 for each dependent for each laid off for the employed workers and a min- imum wage of $15 a week in the delegation went back to demand the} elected from large factories, from A. F, of L. locals and from organizations e ; with whom there has been no con- \lice and six Tammany thugs charged | into the agency Clearing the workers | tact up to the present time. “It is much more difficult” says the United Front Election Campaign Committee “to carry on activitics in Rochester than in a city like New York, but in comparison New York lags far behind. BONUS MARCHERS NEED CAR The Provisional Bonus March Committee of the Workers Ex-Ser- vicement’s League requests the use of tee to Washington to prepare for tie National Bonus March. Any com- rade who has a car for the vets requested to report to 1 Union 8q., Room 1715, before noon today. TONIGHT! THURSDAY! Harry Raymond will speak on “WHAT PROGRAM FOR THE WORKERS IN THE COMING ELECTION CAMPAIGN” Held by L.W.O. Br. 500 (English Speaking) At 35 EAST 12TH STREET*-Room 310 JUNE 2nd at 8:30 P, M. Admission Free ATTENTION COMRADES! Health Center Cafeteria Patronize the Health Center In New York the} an automobile to take the commit- | Workers’ Clubs Should Advertise in the “Daily” Workmens Circle Branches and other language organizations for the pur- pose of getting them to elect dele- gaios to the State Nominating Con- vention. N.T.W.LU. Supports Convention The Needle Trades Workers Indus< trial Union Executive states: “All needle trades shop and trade committees must immediately take up the question of electing déle- gates to the New York state nomin- sting convention for the Cormmun- ist Election Campaign. There must be in particular a large representa- tion from the shops of the Needle ‘Trades Workers Industrial Union, open shops and wherever possible from International shops. Shops is|which elect delegates should imme- diately repotr to the Industrial Un- ién the names of the delegates.” Arranged by the New York | ON AUGUST 28 2 yea Aug yuesvag Ut “T'S Intern’ Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 15th FLOOR N’S ustria) Unis test inst t Refusal of the U.M.W.A. officials) in |Cabaret Party has been arranged for | plant. Sfutal attacks ‘nd framing by the | sive any relief endangers the pretty well, on the stock of companies |. "ot er Se hse aniglopets? amauta AY evening, dune 3, at 254 west | ‘These demands and others were||. Cafeteria and Heip _ the a ae : ‘ trike. R at draw the money from the cit; : : ‘ i Revolutionary Movement ‘This demonstration will take p | ‘5 the workers still is paralyzing the | Sored by the Co-operating Commit-|ing which elected the committee. Best Food Reasonable Prices mn Friday, June 3rd, at the Stuyve- ed No. 4 Fretter Bldg., Bridgeport, Ohi country. tee for Production of a Soviet Film jant Casino. hes no | is The socialist-republican police is | Negro Life. Hall, In addition, thousands of y All workers are urged to attend and ose The commitice has almost com-| workers have signed petitions for Eyes Examined by Registered Op- voice their protest against the brutal Attacks of the bosses against hungry (memployed workers What's On— YY The English-Speaking Section Prolet-beebne wil) meet at 350 EB Bist St at 8:30 p.m, Beeman Tallentire, recently returned from | 3 iet Union, will speak on “What T Man All workers are invited the Soviet Union,” at Paradise} , 12 W. Mt. Eden Ave, Bronx, at 8) ae inder the suspicec of the West Bronx ate ae ot the| SHAKESPEARE’S “TROILUS AND | CRESSIDA” OPENS NEXT MONDAY, | be offered by the Players’ Club Mon- | day night at the Broadway Theatre, | when it will present “Troilus and Cre- sida” for the first time in this coun- |try on any pro fessional stage. The engagement will be for one week on- ly, “Troilus and Cressida” is, with | the possible exception of “Titus An- | dronicus”, the least known of Shake- speare's play ‘s. It deals with the Tro- seldom has anything for the starving | Workers Defeat At- tempt to Jim-Crow_ | NEW YORK.—Militant action by a delegation of eight white and Ne- gro workers yesterday defeated the attempt of the landlord of 55 West llth Street to discriminate against a Negro worker calling at that ad- dress, When Juanita Lewis called to visit a friend living in that house, she | continuing its work in the interests |meeded. The peasants are also in- of “peace and democracy” by shoot- ing down strikers. In Malaga four At Ceuta strikers smashed into stores and took whatever food they volved in the strike movement At Seville the government has or- dered troops to remain in the bar- racks ready to attack if necessary. NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES | pleted its selection: of a cast of Ne~ gro workers writers and artists to go to the Soviet Union to take part in The meeting was May 26 in Turn jobs or immediate relief for the laid | cff General Electric workers. The management's answer to the midnight of ete: 14, | Crescent Park, Schnectady. AMUSEMENTS The Theatre Guild Presents REUNION IN VIENNA COUNSELLOR-AT-LAW e eo + jan war and its ssenes are laid in |was informed by the landlord that | ABT SIDE—BEONE & aomeds i by uid tional Directors of the Loreal! and around Troy. Henry Herbert has | she could not use the passenger ele- -By ROBERT 6. SHER WuU: ilmer Rice Otto Kruger 1.0.W.0. 1 mee ATRE, Send San entra! office at to pn meet at! wade a new acting version of "Troi-|vator but miust use the freight ele- RKO Qos y GUILD ‘esr oF nwa he Mente jus and Cressida”, The cast includes | vator where garbage and freight were Ev 8.40. Mts Th., Sat. Tel. Oo 5-8229 W. 45 St. By, 8:20 prs see Plymouth % ar wr sefermaton ond sertction tr ‘Rt| Otis Skinner, Baith Barrett, Blanche | being hauled. FON ‘Thurs. & Sat: 2:20 4 ELE ehpagauerters, 16 w. 2st 81. Tel.) Yurke, Charles Coburn, Eugene Pow-| The discrimination was reported to Bess ers, George Gaul, Mrs. Coburn, and|the League of Struggle for Negro Prospects iit AO af, Not to make eny ararngements for Aug. 28, en the annual picnic of the 1 L. D. will e place. delegate conference called to mpaign against misery tking-class children by June 17, in- scheduled ‘The mass fpobilize @ broad ed starvation of the W. 1. k stead of June Members of the International Workers Club will meet at 8 p.m. at the Hungarian Workers’ Home, 350 E. Bist &t Comrade Harty Raymond will sreek st| company of “Counsellor-at-Lax.” | apartment ‘houses, Except Sat,, Sun, and Holidays Py. at ie p. the workers cen-| Elmer Rice, author of “Counsellor- iLL M HAVE UNIFORM RATES * Pi + Ba P, A; 2 » Room 310. ‘osram | at-Law”, is now in Russia. Cable ad- aT ‘ , ALL CAMPS HAV. R. Lea’ Bnet Qoming Bisstion| vice from Rice state that conditions |peemmmaee WORKERS! Stick with your fellow workers! ving | ler A, ttery Park: at 2 p.m. ‘The Bros LL.D. will meet a1 "Moo Boston Road a Seerte Section oft the Herlem Pro- ‘oath Sis will meet at 1838 Mad- ison Ave. at 8p Gemsnde Notman Talientire, recently Remar from, the Boviet Union, wil speak tI Saw In the Soviet Union” at adie Manor, 11 W. Mt. Eden Ave. at under the auspices of the West Branch, F.S.U. All friendly organizations are requested | Augustin Duncan. Otto Kruger has taken over the leading role of George Simon, played by Paul Muni, for seven months in Counsellor-at-Law”, Elmer Rice's comedy at the Plymouth Theatre. | Muni left the cast to fulfill a mo- | tion picture contract in Hollywood. Kruger has been playing the role for the past four months in the Chicago are so favorable and his experiences so interesting that he will make an extensive tour of Russia METAL WORKERS EXECUTIVE MEETS THURSDAY NEW YORK.—The executive com- mittee of the Metal Workers. Indus-~ trial League will meet Thursday, June 2, at 7:30 pm. at 5 Hast 19th Street. VOTE COMMUNIST FOR: Against Hoover's wage-cutting policy. Rights, and a delegation of eight workers forced the management to have the worker taken up in the pas- senger elevator. This militant action of white and Negro workers is in sharp contrast to the recent servile decision of the bourgeois Négro judge, Judge Toney, who upheld discrimination against Negro workers by the landlords of “WEDNESDAY TO FRIDAY ‘The World and the Flesh’ GEORGE BANCROFT and MIRIAM HOPKINS At JEFFERSON—Extra Feature TOM MIX, in his first talking. pletare “DESTRY. RIDES AGAIN” ‘NEW LOW PRICES MATS. 15 Cents || EVES. 25 Cents PLAYING! A thrilling story of the revolt Sho} SOYUZKINO'S SUPREME ACHTEVEMENT ‘Golden Mountains’ the workers in of Old Petro A: film inspired by MAXIM GORKY—A Picture No Worker Can Miso! ——ADDED ATTRACTION—— Scenes from the Working Class Front-—Presented by WIR ae A CME, THEATRE NOW PLAYL he Great PUTILOY Machine The Month of June GO TO YOUR THREE Per Week .. Org. Tax . Press Tax. . ‘Teta! 9 A. M. to 1 P.M. 180 Sie a ben. Midnite Show Gat. SPECIAL RATES START THE SUMMER XIGHT! in the proletarian camps Every dollar spent by a worker on rest and vacation muat go to the institutions of our moyement . Nitgeraiget :.: Kinderland :.: Unity For information on Nitgedaiget and Unity call City office: EStabrook 8-1400 and for Kinderland Tompkins 6-1 ' : is ideal for vagation PROLETARIAN CAMPS FOR WEEK ENDS !1~GO TO YOUR OWN CAMP! DINE IN THE OPEN AIR 323 EAST 13th STREET Near Second Avenue REASONABLE PRICES COMRADELY ATMOSPHERE NO TIPPING | tometrists—White Gold Shell Rims $1.00 117 ORCHARD ST,, Near Delancey » SANDWICH SOLS “unc 103 University Place gdust Around the Corner) Telephone Tomptins Square 6-9780-978) ims $1.50 10th Morning Freihet Excursion on the Hudson to Hock Mountains on the 5.5. ‘ SATURDAY, JUNE 11th (Near South Ferry) DANCING—-ENTERTAINMENT--G90D FOOD TICKETS 8 CENTS IN ADVANTS "arernont’ A CT Tee PER